Santa Fe New Mexican, Jan. 25, 2014

Page 1

Demonettes win 16th straight by beating Los Alamos Sports, B-1

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Saturday, January 25, 2014

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75¢

Speed-van bribery linked to N.M.

New head of arts group ‘fits right in’ David Setford takes the helm of the Spanish Colonial Arts Society and draws praise.

Ex-Redflex executive says ‘gifts, bribes’ used to secure contracts; Santa Fe official says deal legit

LOcAL newS, A-6

including New Mexico. The Chicago Tribune ran several stories starting in 2012 that revealed Redflex Traffic Systems likely bribed city officials to instigate the city’s red-light camera program. The organization filed a lawsuit in Arizona Superior Court, alleging former top executive Aaron Rosenberg largely was to blame for the troubles in Chicago. But Rosenberg has fired back, filing a counterclaim in Arizona Superior Court saying he was merely “carrying out orders.” Additionally, Rosenberg accuses the company of bestow-

By Chris Quintana

U.S. stocks tumble on emerging turmoil

The New Mexican

The private firm that operates the photoenforcement vehicles in Santa Fe has been under fire over allegations of bribery in Chicago, and new testimony from a whistle-blower alleges those same practices occurred in 13 other states,

The Dow, on Friday, saw its biggest one-day decline since June, plummeting 318 points. PAge A-2

ABSENT WITHOUT APPROVAL

Please see BRIBeRY, Page A-4

SAnTA Fe TRUAncY RePORT Santa Fe schools’ 201314 80-day attendance: Elementary schools E.J. Martinez: 92.38% Tesuque: 92.71% Acequia Madre: 92.72% Kearny: 93.02% Ramirez Thomas: 93.42% Chaparral: 93.61% Nava: 93.61%

Piñon: 93.63% Salazar: 93.63% Amy Biehl: 93.82% Sweeney: 94.06% Agua Fria: 94.22% Carlos Gilbert: 94.87% Wood Gormley: 95.16% El Dorado: 98.21% Community schools El Dorado: 98.21%

A photo-enforcement vehicle operated by Redflex is shown on U.S. 84/285 in 2009. NEW MExiCAN FiLE PHOTO

Jaramillo’s face missing from City Hall wall

Gonzales: 93.92% César Chávez: 93.24% Aspen Magnet: 91.27% Secondary schools Academy at Larragoite 51.62% Santa Fe High: 79.60% DeVargas Middle: 89.76% Capital High: 90.87% Ortiz Middle: 91.58% Capshaw Middle: 92.14%

Unconventional portrait of former mayor vanishes without a trace By Daniel J. Chacón

The New Mexican

Portraits of all of Santa Fe’s past mayors line one of the walls in City Hall. Arthur Seligman? Check. Ralph Emerson Twitchell? Check. George Gonzales? Sam Pick? Larry Delgado? Check. Check. Check. Debbie Jaramillo? Che…. A picture of Jaramillo, the city’s first female mayor, is missing from the wall. Why? Debbie “Mayor Jaramillo’s photograph Jaramillo was in the hallway with all the other mayors,” city spokeswoman Jodi McGinnis Porter said Friday. “The photograph was removed. It just disappeared one day.” Jaramillo had a stormy tenure at City Hall, where she was known for making ad hominem attacks on city councilors and anyone who challenged her. She also came under criticism after her brother, Isaac “Ike” Pino, who was city manager at the time, hired her brother-in-law as police chief. At one point, a local sign painter covered the sign outside City Hall with a sign reading “Jaramilloville Municipal Building.”

Santa Fe High School students are dismissed at the end of the school day on Friday. According to recent data, Santa Fe High’s attendance rate is just under 80 percent. CLyDE MuELLER/THE NEW MExiCAN

Lawmakers propose bill that suspends truant’s driving privileges By Robert Nott The New Mexican

N

early one-third of Santa Fe’s public high school students and about 1 in 5 elementary and middle school students are habitually truant, according to a new report by the school district. According to state regulations, a student is habitually truant if he or she has accumulated 10 or more days of unexcused absences

within an academic year. Based on state data, 51,034 of New Mexico’s 335,000 public school students — some 15 percent — were classified as habitually truant in 2011-12, according to the report. In Santa Fe, many schools are maintaining attendance rates of at least 90 percent, which might sound high, but that means many students still could be missing up to 17 days a year, and therefore would be classified as habitually truant, explained Richard Bowman, the school district’s director of account-

Please see JARAMILLO, Page A-4

ability and achievement. Santa Fe Public Schools wants all of its schools to attain a 95 percent student attendance rate. Right now, however, only three schools are accomplishing that goal. The news comes as two state legislators — Sen. Craig Brandt, R-Rio Rancho, and Rep. Larry Larrañaga, R-Albuquerque, are proposing a bill that would suspend driving privileges for teens who violate the state’s compulsory school attendance law by being

Ex-Mayor Debbie Jaramillo’s photograph is missing from a wall of portraits of past mayors at City Hall.

Please see TRUAncY, Page A-4

DANiEL J. CHACóN THE NEW MExCAN

Grim search continues

Climate change sweeps away ski shop

Thursday’s fire killed at least eight elderly residents at a Quebec retirement center, and 30 are still missing.

Store owner: Santa Fe Mountain Sports a victim of drought

PAge A-3

By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Pasapick

Obituaries Leo David Maes, 63 PAge A-10

www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Santa Fe Pro Musica Music of Vaughan Williams, Barber, and Beethoven, featuring violinist Cármelo de los Santos, 6 p.m., Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St., $20-$65, 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

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Calendar A-2

Classifieds B-7

Today Partly sunny. High 52, low 25. PAge A-12

Comics B-12

Kendel Fesenmyer stood among the ski wear and “store closing” banners at Santa Fe Mountain Sports, holding a helmet she was buying for her daughter. She wondered where she would go now for the kind of personalized attention she and her family had received at the locally owned store for the last 18 years. “They always knew what they were doing, and they were always helpful,” Fesenmyer said. “It concerns me that local businesses are having such a tough time.” Co-owner Dan McCarthy told employees and customers about the closing Thursday. There is

Lotteries A-2

Opinion A-11

Michael Svoboda, 21, waxes a pair of skis at Santa Fe Mountain Sports on Friday. The shop is closing after 18 years, owner Dan McCarthy says. JANE PHiLLiPS/THE NEW MExiCAN

no definitive date for the store to close its doors, he said, but it will be around the time Ski Santa Fe closes in early April. McCarthy said the fine snowy years he had enjoyed in Santa Fe in the 1970s and 1980s dwindled

Police notes A-10

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Dennis Rudner, drudner@sfnewmexican.com

Sports B-1

Time Out B-11

shortly after the store opened. The store survived the advent of the Internet and online shopping, and even the opening of mega-outdoor sports giant REI. But it faced a bigger challenge. “Climate change has been

Life & Science A-9

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the biggest factor,” he said. “We’ve been in a drought for the last several years. … We’ve been swimming upstream for 18 years. Now, finally, we’re getting swept away,” he said. Santa Fe Mountain Sports caters to people who pretty much live to ski, snowboard or mountain bike whenever they have free time and money to spare. Fesenmyer said it has provided a place to shop for serious high-end gear and clothes. Longtime customers Kenny and Caren Kahn said they trusted owners Dan and Annie McCarthy and staff. “For 18 years, Dan’s known how I ski,” Kenny Kahn said. “Every recommendation he made was right.” McCarthy, a ski racer and 30-year ski coach, said it’s been tough going since the day they

Please see SKI, Page A-4

Two sections, 24 pages TV Book, 32 pages 165th year, No. 25 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

NATION&WORLD Syrian sides to meet face to face GENEVA — Bending to intense international pressure, Syria’s government and the Western-backed opposition agreed Friday to face each other for the first time since the start of the uprising against President Bashar Assad. After three days of hostile rhetoric and five hours spent assiduously avoiding contact within the United Nations, the two sides will meet “in the same room,” said the U.N. mediator trying to forge an end to the civil war that has left 130,000 people dead since 2011. Mediator Lakhdar Brahimi met separately with Assad’s delegation and representatives with the Syrian National Coalition, who arrived at the U.N. European headquarters five hours apart to ensure their paths would not cross.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — An environmental official says the company in the West Virginia water crisis immediately knew a second chemical leaked from its plant into the river, telling its workers in an email. However, Freedom Industries did not let state government officials know about the second chemical, which was discovered in later testing. State environmental department official Mike Dorsey says most company employees also did not skim far enough to see the information. Dorsey made the remarks Thursday on MetroNews radio, explaining the 12-day delay in the second chemical’s disclosure. A chemical used to clean coal spilled from the tank into the Elk

Flight from risk The downturn began Thursday following signs that manufacturing was contracting in China, a major importer of raw materials and a key driver of global economic growth. The values of currencies in several emerging markets have dropped. Those markets include Turkey, Russia, South Africa and Argentina. “All of that is making the market very sensitive and very vulnerable to growth expectations in emerging markets,” said with Anastasia Amoroso, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Funds.

MAVERICKS SURFING COMPETITION MAKES WAVES

Grant Baker surfs during the Mavericks Invitational contest in Half Moon Bay on Friday. The surf competition delivered massive waves up to 50-feet swells and, in the end, South Africa’s Baker took home the crown. Baker, 40, also won the competition in 2006 and is considered one of the world’s foremost big-wave riders. Each year, if conditions are right, the contest is held at the perilous surf spot. Two seasoned watermen have died there, including legendary big-wave rider Mark Foo from Hawaii in 1994. Only surfers invited to the event can participate. This year, invitations went out to 24 of the world’s best big-wave surfers. JUAN PADO/SPECIAL TO THE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER

River Jan. 9. About 300,000 people were without water for days. Freedom told environmental officials Tuesday that a second, less toxic chemical also was mixed in the tank. A call to Freedom Industries was not immediately returned Friday.

More riots spread through Ukraine KIEV, Ukraine — As riots spread from Ukraine’s embattled

FORT WORTH, Texas — A judge on Friday ordered a Texas hospital to remove life support for a pregnant, brain-dead woman whose family had argued that she would not want to be kept in that condition. Judge R. H. Wallace Jr. issued the ruling in the case of Marlise Munoz. John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth has been keeping Munoz on life support against her family’s wishes. The judge gave the hospital until 5 p.m. CST Monday to remove life support. The hospital did not immediately say Friday whether it would appeal. Munoz was 14 weeks pregnant when her husband, Erick Munoz, found her unconscious Nov. 26, possibly due to a blood clot. Both the hospital and the family agree that she meets the criteria to be considered braindead — which means she is dead both medi-

capital to nearly half of the country, President Viktor Yanukovych promised Friday to reshuffle his government and make other concessions — but a top opposition leader said nothing short of his resignation would do. Hours after the president’s comments, huge fireballs lit up the night sky in central Kiev and plumes of thick black smoke rose from burning tires at giant barricades erected by protesters. Clashes resumed at the barricades, which are just yards from lines of riot police and also made

cally and under Texas law — and that the fetus could not be born alive at this point. But the hospital had not pronounced her dead and continues to treat her over the objections of both Erick Munoz and her parents, who sat together in court Friday. “Mrs. Munoz is dead,” Wallace said in issuing his ruling, adding that meant the hospital was misapplying a state law that prohibits the removal of life-sustaining treatment from a pregnant patient. Larry Thompson, a state’s attorney representing the public hospital, had told the judge the hospital had a legal responsibility to protect the unborn fetus. “There is a life involved, and the life is the unborn child,” Thompson said. But Jessica Hall Janicek and Heather King, Erick Munoz’s attorneys, accused the hospital of conducting a “science experiment” and warned of the dangerous precedent her case

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up of bags of ice and scraps of furniture. Angry demonstrators hurled firebombs, rocks and fireworks at officers. Riot police responded with tear gas and several dozen protesters were rushed to a makeshift medical triage area to be treated. “We will force the authorities to respect us,” 27-year-old protester Artur Kapelan said. “Not they, but we will dictate the conditions of a truce.” The Associated Press

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could set, raising the specter of special ICUs for brain-dead women carrying babies. The case has raised questions about endof-life care and whether a pregnant woman who is considered legally and medically dead should be kept on life support for the sake of a fetus. It also has gripped attention on both sides of the abortion debate, with anti-abortion groups arguing Munoz’s fetus deserves a chance to be born. Several anti-abortion advocates attended Friday’s hearing. Hospital officials have said they were bound by the Texas Advance Directives Act, which prohibits withdrawal of treatment from a pregnant patient. The hospital said in a statement Friday that it “appreciates the potential impact of the consequences of the order on all parties involved” and was deciding whether to appeal.

Dow downer The Dow has fallen every day this week, leaving it down 3.1 percent. That decline is the Dow’s worst weekly performance since mid-May 2012. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 is down 2.2 percent since last Friday. That’s the index’s worst weekly slide since November 2012.

Small caps hit hard Smaller companies had even larger declines than broader U.S. market. The Russell 2000 index of smallcompany stocks fell 2.6 percent, compared with the Dow’s decline of 1.6 percent.

Biggest losers Railroad operator Kansas City Southern fell the most in the S&P 500 index, plunging $18.43, or 16 percent, to $98.85 after its earnings fell short of what analysts’ forecasts. Tool seller W.W. Grainger Inc. dropped $12, or 5 percent, to $244.66 after reporting income that also disappointed investors. Enginemaker Cummins Inc. fell $5.16, or 4 percent, to $126.88.

Seattle’s best Two leading companies from Seattle, Microsoft and Starbucks, were among the bright spots in an otherwise gloomy market. The software maker rose 86 cents, or 2.4 percent, to $36.92. Its quarterly revenue and earnings beat Wall Street expectations because of strong sales of its new Xbox One console and Surface tablet. Starbucks, meanwhile, was the third-biggest gainer in the S&P 500 index. It rose $2.24, or 3 percent, to $75.63, because its quarterly earnings benefited from lower coffee costs and growing global sales.

Europe and Asia The worries about emerging markets also sent overseas markets lower. Japan’s yen surged, which hurts the prospects for Japan’s export-driven economy. The Nikkei 225 fell 1.9 percent. France’s CAC-40 index fell 2.8 percent and Germany’s DAX lost 2.5 percent.

Treasuries and commodities Bond prices rose as investors moved money into lower-risk assets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note declined to 2.74 percent from 2.78 percent late Thursday.

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Fear is back in the market. Investors are fretting about China’s growth, a plunge in Argentina’s peso and the profit outlook for U.S. companies. Investors are dumping risky assets like stocks and currencies in countries with troubled governments. They are buying safer ones like bonds and the Japanese yen.

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Saturday, Jan. 25 ARTIST TALK: From 2 to 4 p.m. at the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, 108 Cathedral Place, Tony Tiger discusses his exhibit Full Consciousness. BEE HIVE MUSICAL STORY TIME: At 11 a.m. at Bee Hive Kids Books, 328 Montezuma Ave., movement and songs are offered for ages two to five. GETTING THE HEALTH CARE YOU DESERVE: At 11 a.m. at the main branch of Santa Fe Public Library, 145 Washington Ave., a free talk by Santa Fe physician and author Lawrence Lazarus will be held. JUAN BLEA: At 5 p.m. at Op. Cit. Books, 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101 in the Sanbusco Center, the author reads will read from his biography Journey to Aztlan. PETER S. BEAGLE: At Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., The Last Unicorn, a two-day exhibit of works by the screenwriter; also, a talk, a reading and screenings of the film: noon, 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m.; conversation with Beagle and George R.R. Martin 5 p.m. The cost is $12 for each event, $20 for screening and conversation. Call 466-5528. ZIA SINGERS: At 3 p.m. at Immaculate Heart of Mary

Lotteries Retreat and Conference Center, 50 Mount Carmel Road, the chorus will perform And Ain’t I A Woman. Cost is $20, students, no charge. Call 225-571-6352.

NIGHTLIFE Saturday, Jan. 25 ANASAZI RESTAURANT & BAR: Guitarist Jesus Bas, 7-10 p.m., 113 Washington Ave. ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN!: Andy Kingston Jazz Trio, 7:30 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Roots-rock duo Man No Sober, 2-5 p.m.; banjo-driven roots-rock duo Todd & The Foxx, 8:30 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Singer/ songwriter Edmund Gorman & Friends, 7 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Funk and R&B band Soulstatic, 8 p.m., 100 E. San Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Pat Malone Jazz Trio, featuring vocalist Whitney Carroll Malone, 6-9 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. MINE SHAFT TAVERN: Local musicans’ jam, 7 p.m., 2846 N.M. 14. PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL: Pianist Robin Holloway, 6-9 p.m., 540 Montezuma Ave.

SANTA FE PRO MUSICA: At 6 p.m. at the Lensic, classical weekend with music of Vaughan Williams, Barber, and Beethoven, featuring violinist Cármelo de los Santos, 211 W. San Francisco St. SECOND STREET BREWERY: Hot Honey, Appalachian country singer/songwriters Lucy Barna, Paige Barton, and Lori Ottino, 6 p.m., 1814 Second St. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: MVIII Jazz Project, 7 p.m., 1607 Paseo de Peralta. SWEETWATER HARVEST KITCHEN: Hawaiian slack-key guitarist John Serkin, 6 p.m., 1512 Pacheco St., Building B. THE PALACE RESTAURANT & SALOON: Rock and blues band Fun Adixx,, 10 p.m., 142 W. Palace Ave. TINY’S: Showcase karaoke with Nanci and Cyndi, 8:30 p.m., 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. VANESSIE: Pianists Doug Montgomery (6-8 p.m.) and Bob Finnie (8-11 p.m.), 427 W. Water St. WAREHOUSE 21 CONCERT: At 7 p.m., Alohi and the FreeLife and Catnip Tea, 7 p.m., 1614 Paseo de Peralta. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@

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Corrections A story on Page B-2 in the Jan. 24, 2014, edition of The Santa Fe New Mexican about a District Court decision that ordered the state Department of Health to reinstate a former employee who won a whistle-blower case listed the wrong date for the lawsuit’s filing. Jennifer Smith’s Whistleblower Protection Act case was filed in 2011, not 2001.

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


NATION & WORLD

Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Egypt bombings fuel fear of new insurgency Many fear a return to police state despite democracy pledges By Maggie Michael The Associated Press

An emergency worker on Friday walks past a sign that reads ‘Look out for our residents’ as he searches through the icy rubble of Thursday’s fire that destroyed a seniors’ home in L’Isle-Verte, Quebec. Authorities are using steam to melt the ice and to preserve any bodies that are buried. At least eight are dead and 30 missing. RYAN REMIORZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Quebec retirement home fire leaves eight dead; 30 missing Many residents used walkers, some had Alzheimer’s, most were over 85 years old The afternoon temperature was around 3 degrees. The L’ISLE-VERTE, Quebec — confirmed number of dead Using steam to melt the ice, climbed to eight with the disinvestigators searched the covery of three more bodies. frozen-over ruins of a retireQuebec Provincial Police ment home Friday for victims Lt. Guy Lapointe said of a fire that left at least eight exhausted investigators would people dead and about 30 miss- suspend the search overnight ing. and resume Saturday morning. The tragedy cast such a pall He said authorities decided to over the village of 1,500 that give the search crew a break psychologists were sent door from the brutal cold and the to door. difficult work. “It’s absolute desolation,” The work is specialized, and Mayor Ursule Theriault said. there is a limited number of The cause of the blaze that people who can be assigned to swept through the three-story the task, he said. building early Thursday was “The decision was taken that under investigation, and police it was better for the safety, for asked the public for any videos the well-being of our crew, to or photos that might yield clues. let them rest,” Lapointe said. Witnesses told horrific tales “Meanwhile, we’re looking at of people trapped and killed by bringing in more equipment for the flames. Many of the 50 or the steam.” so residents were over 85 and Agnes Fraser’s 82-year-old used wheelchairs or walkers. brother, Claude, was among Some had Alzheimer’s. the missing. She said she knew Pascal Fillion, who lives she would never see him again nearby, said he saw someone because he lived in the section use a ladder to try to rescue a of the building destroyed by man cornered on his third-floor the flames. balcony. The man was crying “It’s done,” Fraser said. out for help before he fell to the Quebec Minister of Social ground, engulfed in flames, Fil- Services Veronique Hivon said lion said. many of the village’s volunteer The spray from firefighters’ firefighters had relatives at hoses left the senior citizens the retirement home. She said home resembling a macabre psychologists will be knocking snow palace, the ruins encased on doors throughout the comin thick white ice dripping with munity. icicles. “People are in a state of Search teams of police, fireshock,” she said. “We want fighters and coroners slowly them to know the services are and methodically picked their there by going door to door. It’s way through, working in shifts an important building that’s a in the extreme cold about 140 part of their community that miles northeast of Quebec City. just disappeared.” The Associated Press

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Hivon said the home was up to code and had a proper evacuation plan. A Quebec Health Department document indicates the home which has operated since 1997, had only a partial sprinkler system. The home expanded around 2002, and the sprinklers in the new part of the building triggered the alarm. Roch Bernier and Irene Plante, the owners of the home, said in a statement that they are cooperating with authorities and offered their condolences to the victims’ families. The fire came six months after 47 people were killed in the small town of Lac-Megantic, Quebec, when a train carrying oil derailed and exploded.

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CAIRO — A truck bomb struck the main security headquarters in Cairo on Friday, one of a string of bombings targeting police within a 10-hour period, killing six people. The most significant attack yet in the Egyptian capital sparked a furious backlash against the Muslim Brotherhood amid rising fears of a militant insurgency. The mayhem on the eve of the third anniversary of Egypt’s once-hopeful revolution pointed to the dangerous slide Egypt has taken since last summer’s military ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi: A mounting confrontation between the military-backed government and Islamist opponents amid the escalating violence. In the hours after the blast, angry residents — some chanting for the “execution” of Brotherhood members — joined police in clashes with the group’s supporters holding their daily street protests against the government. Smoke rose over Cairo from fires, and fighting around the country left 14 more dead.

Saturday, the anniversary of the start of the 18-day uprising that ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak, raised the potential for new violence, as both military supporters and the Islamists vowed to take to the streets with rival rallies. After Friday’s blasts, interim President Adli Mansour vowed to “uproot terrorism,” just as the government crushed a militant insurgency in the 1990s. The state “will not show them pity or mercy,” he said. That could spell an escalation in the crackdown that the government has waged against Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood since his July 3 ouster. Thousands of Islamists have been arrested and hundreds killed, with authorities accusing the group of being behind violence. The Brotherhood, which allied with radical groups while in power, denies the claim, saying the government is using it

to justify its drive to eliminate it as a rival. The crackdown has expanded to silence other forms of dissent, with arrests of secular activists critical of the military, security forces and the new administration. For activists, that has raised deep concerns over a return of a police state despite the government’s promises of democracy. “Execution for Morsi and his leaders!” one man shouted through a megaphone as an angry crowd gathered outside the Cairo security headquarters. “Morsi is the butcher and el-Sissi will slaughter him!” screamed a woman, holding up a picture depicting the Brotherhood as sheep. An al-Qaida-inspired group, Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or the Champions of Jerusalem, claimed responsibility for most attacks, saying they aimed to avenge the killings of Morsi’s supporters in the post-coup crackdown.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

2014 Legislature Truancy: Three schools achieve district’s goal of 95 percent attendance Continued from Page A-1

QUIET DAY AT THE CAPITOL

State Rep. Bill McCamley, D-Mesilla Park, was found working alone in the House chambers at the Capitol on Friday afternoon. Traditionally, most of the legislators take off the first Friday of each session to give the Bill Room time to print out all the bills. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Lawmakers hear water issues By Susan Montoya Bryan

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico lawmakers are being inundated with requests to help pay for water infrastructure improvements, leaving many frustrated as they try to sort out priorities while the state wrestles with drought. From contaminated wells to a lack of storage for drinking water, members of the Senate Finance Committee heard Thursday from state and local water officials and fellow lawmakers about

the growing needs around the state. Sen. Sue Wilson Beffort, a Sandia Park Republican whose district stretches from Albuquerque to some of Central New Mexico’s more rural parts, said the Legislature has been in session only a few days, but most of the requests and proposals crossing her desk deal with w ater. “It’s certainly something that I have to pay major attention to,” she said. “I represent the Edgewood area, and rather than ask me for a ballfield and things like that, they’re asking me for water projects.”

Sen. Carlos Cisneros, D-Questa, said there are at least a few wells in his Northern New Mexico district are contaminated. “There are some problems out there that are predicated on several issues, the drought being at the forefront but also the conditions and aging of our water systems,” he said. “I guess we’re in a perfect storm.” The problem now is deciding which projects should be tackled first. Martinez has asked that lawmakers use at least 60 percent of capital outlay funds on water projects this year.

habitually truant. Based on 80-day attendance records, the Santa Fe district’s data indicate truancy rates range from an average of 19 percent at the elementary and the middle school levels to more than 32 percent at the high school level. The district’s data are based on how many hours — not days — students are absent from school. Technological challenges often frustrate teachers who attempt to update attendance records online, according to Superintendent Joel Boyd, which makes it tough for the district to figure out how many students are missing full days of school. The school board and Boyd received a presentation on truancy this week. The district has created a truancy task force to compile more detailed information and come up with measures to address the problem. Most troubling is the attendance rate at the Academy at Larragoite: not quite 52 percent. Santa Fe High School’s rate is just under 80 percent. El Dorado Community School tops the list, with an attendance rate of over 98 percent. Wood Gormley Elementary School has a rate of just over 95 percent, and Carlos Gilbert Elementary is just under 95 percent. The rest of the schools in the district have attendance ranging from about 89 percent to 94 percent — which isn’t good enough for Boyd, who said ideally, all schools should reach 100 percent. “But we feel 95 percent is a realistic goal,” he said. “Some schools look really strong, some have significant challenges. We do know that we have some truancy issues.” The report cites many factors that play a role in truancy, including boredom, bullying, substance abuse, teen

pregnancy, low self-esteem and lack of parental oversight. Though the state requires school districts to contact parents of truant students with a letter, many participants in a Wednesday discussion said this is not easily accomplished. Sometimes, they said, the mail bounces back to the district unopened, and other times students intercept such missives in an effort to keep their parents out of the loop. Several school board members suggested educators begin reaching out to parents by phone to ensure they get the message. But Santa Fe High School teacher Leah O’Shell said if she had to call every parent of every student who missed a class, she’d be making at least 100 phone calls. The district does not employ truancy officers. Nor does the city of Santa Fe maintain a truancy court. The school district’s report ties academic achievement to student attendance, noting, for instance, that 64 percent of children who maintained good attendance in kindergarten and first grade could read to grade level, whereas only 17 percent of third-graders who were chronically absent in those grades could read to grade level. While not all districts report their attendance and truancy rates, state data included in the district’s report indicate that Santa Fe’s truancy rates are among the highest in the state — though when it comes to elementary schools, Roswell’s rate is over 28 percent. Gallup-McKinley schools have a 13.5 percent truancy rate at the elementary school level, while Española’s is just over 11 percent. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

Bribery: City looking at bids for new traffic enforcement system Continued from Page A-1 ing “gifts and bribes” to win contracts in New Mexico and elsewhere. The photo-enforcement vehicles, which use unmanned radar and cameras to record speeders, which police use to issue citations, were a regular sight on Santa Fe streets until this month, when the company’s contract with the city expired. City officials have not said why the contract was not renewed, but they said Friday it was not related to the bribery scandal. Santa Fe Police Department spokeswoman Celina Westervelt said the city has put out a request for proposals for a “traffic enforcement system.” Santa Fe City Councilor Ron Trujillo said Friday he had pushed the hardest for the speed SUVs, but he also said Redflex never attempted to bribe him.

“I can assure the citizens of Santa Fe that did not happen here,” Trujillo said Thursday. “There’s nothing to hide. It was really about public safety.” Trujillo said he did meet with Redflex employees, but always at City Hall or the police department. He added that he sometimes spoke to company representatives by telephone. Westervelt said no one in the city or the police department had been approached by investigators. Rio Rancho and Las Cruces also make use of Redflex Traffic Systems. KOB Channel 4 news reported that the mayors of those cities hadn’t heard of officials accepting bribes or gifts. Westervelt said the bid period for the traffic enforcement system ends Feb. 10, after which a committee at the police department will sift through the applications and

select a vendor. The vendor then needs final approval by the City Council, which means the city could be without speed vans until March, Westervelt said. She added that the city manager could assign emergency funds to get the speed vans up and running, but it’s unclear if he will do so. As far as applications are concerned, Westervelt said the department would consider Redflex’s bid the same as everyone else’s, regardless of the allegations levied by Rosenberg. “When there’s something more substantial, it might factor in,” Westervelt said. The vans generated 8,850 citations in 2012 and 6,919 citations in 2013. Westervelt said since 2009, the vans have produced $351,000 for the city of Santa Fe. That money covers the cost of hearing officers and

partially funds the paychecks and benefits for three civilian employees and a police officer. City officials have repeatedly asserted that the SUVs represent a safety program, not a moneymaking operation. The New Mexican has reported that a speeding ticket issued as a result of the unmanned surveillance costs $100 but only nets the city between $12 and $18. Half of the ticket revenue goes to the state, another portion goes to Redflex, and the city receives the remainder. The Arizona-based company operates the SUVs and pays for all costs. Redflex, owned by an Australian company, also operates throughout the United States and Canada. Since the program’s beginnings in Santa Fe in 2009, the SUVs have stirred controversy. Perhaps the most notorious expression of displeasure with

Jaramillo: Ex-mayor ready to provide photo Continued from Page A-1 But it was also under her watch that the city acquired the Santa Fe Railyard, which has evolved into a popular retail and entertainment center, and many give her credit for helping get the Genoveva Chavez Community Center built, among other accomplishments. The photo of Jaramillo vanished soon after she left office. “I’m going to say easily six months into Delgado’s term, it was gone,” said Jaramillo, a former city councilor who served as mayor from 1994 to 1998. The picture was unlike any of the others, she said. It was in an oval frame and showed Jaramillo leaning on a wall outside her home with the mountains as a backdrop. The picture was black-and-white but had been colorized, she said. “Like everything I did in life, it was unconventional,” she said. “Just imagine this picture or photo. It is totally different from everything that hangs on that wall because they’re all pretty much headshots, black-and-white headshots of a bunch of men. Most of them of them look like old geezers.” Jaramillo, who peppers her conversations with salty language, said she wanted a photo “that didn’t look like some dead

Maybe somebody really loves me out there. ... but in reality, I don’t think that’s why it disappeared.” Debbie Jaramillo, former Santa Fe mayor [expletive] buried in a coffin.” “I know you can’t print that,” she said. Jaramillo said she doesn’t know who stole her portrait — or why. “Maybe somebody really loves me out there. I try to think positive, but in reality, I don’t think that’s why it disappeared,” she said. “I had many suspicions, or let me just say some suspicions, because there were always people who felt that I went too much against the grain,” Jaramillo said. After Mayor David Coss was elected, Jaramillo said, Coss and his public information officer called and requested a photo of her to put back on the wall. “Larry never really pushed it, which made me wonder, but David was the only

one who made an effort to say, ‘Where is it and how can we get something up there?’ ” Jaramillo said, referring to Delgado and Coss, respectively. Jaramillo said she never followed through because she figured that photo would disappear, too. “What do I have to do? Have them nail it to a wall?” she said, laughing. Jaramillo said she plans to give the mayor’s office a slide to develop into a photo next week. The slide shows Jaramillo around 1998 and is the closest thing to a headshot that she’s got, she said. “That’s what I want to give them because it’s a good shot. It makes me look visionary,” she said. “I want something in color and that makes me look like what I represented. I swear I’m taking it in next week. Hopefully something good will come out of it.” The photo, however, still won’t look like the rest of them, she said. “If they don’t like it and they want to fight me on it, well then don’t put the [expletive] thing up,” she said. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@sfnewmexican.com.

the program came in April 2012, when a man wearing a nightshirt fired multiple gunshots at one of the unmanned vehicles in the middle of the night, knocking the SUV out of commission for several months. In September 2012, the city increased the size of its fleet — from two SUVs to three — to monitor more traffic areas. In October 2012, the city started deploying the speed SUVs daily, instead of just Monday through Friday. Speed SUVs are only permitted to park along city streets, not those maintained by the state, which means major roadways such as St. Francis Drive, Cerrillos Road and St. Michael’s Drive haven’t been scrutinized by the speed-enforcement vehicles. Additionally, the SUVs require at least 150 feet of

straight road for the camera to read speeds correctly, although the program coordinator said operators prefer about 300 feet. Roads also must be wide enough so that an SUV can be parked without impeding vehicular or pedestrian traffic. Private property owners can volunteer to let the SUVs park on their property. During the school year, operators park two of the city’s SUVs in school zones in the morning and afternoon, and they relocate the vehicles at other times. The third vehicle stays in the same place all day. Operators don’t move the SUVs around on weekends. Citations issued from the vehicles don’t affect a motorist’s driving record or insurance. However, unpaid tickets are reported to a collection agency.

Ski: Decision to close made months ago Continued from Page A-1 opened the business in November 1995. “That year, there wasn’t enough snow for the ski basin to open until January,” he said, sitting among the mountain of inventory he’s hoping to sell before the store closes its doors for good sometime in the spring. McCarthy trained in retail at Alpine Sports in downtown Santa Fe while he was in high school. After he attended Colorado College and worked as a stockbroker for a few years, he and his wife opened Santa Fe Mountain Sports. Almost from the beginning, they had to have investors, he said. “Financially, it has always been a nightmare.” Steve Melander-Dayton is the major owner in the business. He and McCarthy finally agreed a few months ago that it was time to close up shop.

“We’re a little freaked out,” McCarthy said of his family’s situation. “We have two kids in college.” His twin daughters are graduates of Santa Fe High School. The store’s location, 1221 Flagman Way near Baca Street and Cerrillos Road, is its third home. Each time the store moved, it expanded a little to make room for inventory and a thriving repair shop. The store is open seven days a week, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., except Sunday, when it is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dan McCarthy hopes his family can stay in Santa Fe and in the ski industry, but not in retail. Skiing “is truly my love,” he said. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @ stacimatlock.


NATION

Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Former Virginia governor pleads not guilty McDonnell, wife charged with corruption involving maker of diet products

their own recognizance Friday but were ordered by U.S. Magistrate Judge David Novak not to leave the country. The former governor’s lawyer, John Brownlee, told Novak the defendants already have surrendered their passBy Alan Suderman ports. and Larry O’Dell The McDonnells were indicted on 14 The Associated Press counts Tuesday after a lengthy federal investigation of his relationship with a RICHMOND, Va. — Former Virginia former CEO of a dietary supplement Gov. Bob McDonnell and his wife maker. pleaded not guilty Friday to federal Both judges issued strong warnings charges that they traded their influence against leaking sensitive information for tens of thousands of dollars in gifts to the media. Much of the details of the and loans, and both will be allowed to government’s case against McDonnell remain free until their trial. had long been made public through “It’s not guilty, your honor,” McDon- months of news stories based on anonnell said when asked his plea. ymous sources. U.S. District Court Judge James R. “This case is going to be tried in the Spencer set a July 28 start for a jury courtroom; it is not going to be tried in trial. The proceedings are expected to the media,” Novak said. “The gameslast five to six weeks. manship with the media ends now.” An hour before pleading not guilty, Bob and Maureen McDonnell often the McDonnells were released on held hands as they made their way

through the courthouse. Both hearings were packed with family, supporters and the media. Supporters include prominent Republican lawmakers, like House Speaker William J. Howell and House Majority Leader Kirk Cox. At the arraignment, Maureen McDonnell said she was currently taking prescription medication for “concentration and anxiety.” Federal prosecutors allege the McDonnells accepted more than $165,000 worth of loans and gifts from Jonnie Williams, the former head of Star Scientific Inc. Prosecutors say that in return, the McDonnells improperly helped Williams promote his company’s products. The investigation crippled the chances of attaining higher office for McDonnell, once a rising star in the Republican Party who had even been considered a possible running mate for Mitt Romney in 2012. He has apologized for what he

describes as bad judgment and has said he repaid about $120,000 in gifts and loans. But he has steadfastly denied breaking any laws. The indictment handed down Tuesday accuses the couple of accepting gifts such as shopping sprees for designer clothes and accessories, a Rolex watch, $15,000 in catering expenses for a daughter’s wedding, golf outings and a lake-house vacation stay that included use of Williams’ Ferrari. McDonnell also received $120,000 in loans for family real estate ventures, according to the indictment. Prosecutors said the couple in turn promoted Star Scientific’s products and gave special treatment to Williams, including arranging for him to meet a state health official. The couple also opened up the Executive Mansion for a launch party for one of the company’s signature products. The McDonnells and their lawyers say the couple did nothing for Star

Scientific that they wouldn’t do for any other Virginia company. The former governor’s lawyers say in court papers that the gifts weren’t bribes because McDonnell never gave Williams anything that wasn’t a routine courtesy doled out by every politician, from the president on down. In court records, the defense has accused prosecutors of using “deceitful practices” to build its case while ignoring evidence that could potentially exonerate the McDonnells. The charges came 10 days after McDonnell, limited by the Virginia Constitution to a single four-year term, left office. If convicted, the McDonnells could face a long stretch in prison. Twelve of the charges are punishable by up to 20 years in prison, two by up to 30 years. Potential fines range from $250,000 to $1 million.

Museum dedicated to victims of 9/11 finally slated to open Families of some victims critical of high admission price

Emergency crews work at the scene of a massive pileup involving more than 40 vehicles along Interstate 94 Thursday near Michigan City, Ind. At least three people were killed and more than 20 people were injured. COURTESY INDIANA STATE POLICE

Pileup leaves trail of horror Pawlik said during a news conference Friday. “But when people are stuck in their cars, they MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. — look at you like we’re Moses. Cars were mangled, and some ‘Part the water. Save us.’” were burned despite the blowRescue crews quickly set ing snow. Other vehicles were about prioritizing the victims. crushed between jackknifed Who needed help first? And semitractors, so entwined that it who was beyond help? was difficult to tell them apart. Firefighters worked quickly People were screaming, to keep the victims warm while but emergency responders they extricated them. Just as couldn’t see many of them as importantly, Pawlik tried to they quickly tended the victims take their minds off what had amid frigid conditions. happened — even though the Within seconds, traffic along dead weighed on his and other snow-covered Interstate 94 in first responders’ minds. northern Indiana had become “Those are the worst,” Pawlik a mile-long pile of debris after said. “You sit there — they’re white-out conditions swept the last ones to get out but you in during Thursday’s evening know they’re there.” commute. Three people were The chain-reaction collikilled and nearly two dozen sion near Michigan City was were injured. triggered by a sudden burst “It was such a devastating of heavy lake-effect snow scene, you don’t know where to that took drivers by surprise. start,” said Coolspring Township Within about 45 seconds, Fire Chief Mick Pawlik, whose dozens of vehicles — includvolunteer crew was among the ing numerous trucks — were first on the scene about 60 miles crashing into one another. south of Chicago. Pawlik said the scene was “There were people in cars “something that you’ll never that you couldn’t even see,” forget. It’ll live with us forever.” By Charles D. Wilson

The Associated Press

But he acknowledged that first responders were expecting worse. “We’re lucky that there wasn’t 20 people dead and three people injured,” he said. Among the survivors was Jeffrey Rennell, who was driving home to Michigan from a business meeting in Chicago when his SUV suddenly started bouncing off other vehicles like a ping pong ball. Firefighters found it on top of another vehicle and “encased in semis,” Pawlik said. Rennell was trapped for more than three hours in the twisted remains of his Ford Explorer. “There were other people around that he knew weren’t all right,” Steve Rennell said. Pawlik said Rennell’s extrication was the worst of the five or six that crews did Thursday night.

could be a more nationally important site than this? It’s a national tragedy and people come from all over the country, all over the world, to see it.” Under the pricing plan By David B. Caruso approved by the foundation’s The Associated Press board, there will be no admisNEW YORK — After years of sion charge for relatives of 9/11 victims or for many thousands delays due to funding disputes, of construction workers, police engineering challenges and a officers, firefighters, and others disastrous flood, a museum who assisted in the rescue and dedicated to victims of the 9/11 cleanup operation at ground terror attacks will open to the zero. Children under age 5 public in mid-May in a giant cavern beneath the World Trade and under will also get in free. Admission will also be free for Center Site — with a worldclass admission price of $24. everyone between the hours of National 9/11 Memorial and 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Tuesdays. Museum President Joe Daniels There will continue to be no said Friday that tickets would charge to enter the World Trade go on sale for the museum in Center memorial plaza, which March for the spring opening. is already open. About 5.3 milThat $24 price is in line with lion people visited the plaza other major tourist attractions in New York City. It costs $18 to ANNUAL WHITE SALE take a ferry to the Statue of Liberty, $25 to see the Museum of SHEETS & DUVETS Modern Art and $27 to visit the 20%OFF observation deck of the Empire 982-3298 State Building. Sanbusco Center But the fee drew protests from critics, including some relatives of 9/11 victims, who said the high price would keep average Americans out. Unlike many other big museums in the city, there won’t be the option of paying less than the “suggested donation.” New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio was among those who expressed displeasure. “I’d like to see them do better,” he said Friday. But he also said the best way to lower the admissions charge would be for the federal government to cover a portion of the museum’s operating expenses. “I think we deserve substantial federal funding at this museum,” de Blasio said. “What

this year to see the two huge fountains that sit in the original footprints of the twin towers. Some 9/11 families have been critical of the foundation, saying the steep ticket charge is a disgrace. Retired Deputy Fire Chief Jim Riches and Sally Regenhard, who each lost firefighter sons in the attacks, have lobbied for the entire site to be turned over to the National Parks Service. “It was never intended to be a revenue-generating tourist attraction with a prohibitive budget and entrance fee,” they said in a statement.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

St. Michael’s LOCAL NEWS announces Candidate paid staffer less than minimum president’s resignation Council hopeful reports paying field coordinator $10 an hour By Milan Simonich

The New Mexican

Michael Segura, a publicly financed candidate for the Santa Fe City Council, paid a campaign worker less than the city’s minimum wage. The city attorney’s staff began reviewing the situation Friday. A spokeswoman for the city said the inquiry had not been completed. Segura, who is seeking election in the north-side District 1 in the March 4 municipal election, stated in a campaign expense report filed with the city clerk that he paid his field coordinator, Joseph Ortiz, $10 an hour. Ortiz worked almost 50 hours. Santa Fe’s minimum wage is $10.51 an hour.

Michael Segura

Segura first said he thought the minimum-wage law applied to employers with 25 or more workers, but then he gave a different explanation for Ortiz’s lower pay rate. “I wanted to pay him more money, but he didn’t want it,” Segura said. “It was his decision.” Ortiz could not be reached

for comment. Asked if he knew the $10 pay rate was below the city’s minimum wage, Segura said: “Yes, I was aware.” But, he said, Ortiz realized that the campaign had limited resources and he asked for less pay. “We’re trying to save money,” Segura said. “It’s a non-issue.”

He said he had not been contacted by the city attorney’s staff, but would add 51 cents an hour to Ortiz’s pay, if necessary. Segura, like all publicly financed council candidates, received $15,000. He is competing with Signe Lindell for the open seat in District 1 now held by Councilor Chris Calvert, who didn’t seek another fouryear term. Lindell is financing her campaign through private contributions. She has raised more than $32,000. She said Segura accepted the public’s money to pay for his campaign, and he was obligated to obey the minimum-wage law. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat blog on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com.

Pledging kindness

Sullivan to step down in June after three years as leader of high school By Robert Nott The New Mexican

After serving four years as president of St. Michael’s High School, Marcia Sullivan is stepping down effective June 1, saying, “It’s time for someone else to come in.” Sullivan announced her resignation to school leaders Wednesday. “This is a position that requires enormous energy,” Sullivan said by phone Friday afternoon. “It’s almost like a relay race, and I feel I carried the baton for as many laps as I could and did the things this school needed done over the past four years.” After working in three different positions at the former College of Santa Fe from 2004 to 2009, Sullivan, a native of Kansas, joined the private Catholic high school as a consultant Marcia for its 150th anniversary celebrations. Sullivan In May 2010, she assumed the presidency of the school, succeeding Saundra Johnson Austin. St. Michael’s High School serves about 650 students in grades 7-12 on an annual operating budget of about $5.7 million. The school employs about 70 people, and tuition is $7,360 per year. St. Michael’s was founded as a boys school in 1859 at the bequest of New Mexico Archbishop Jean Baptiste Lamy and was initially overseen by four French Christian Brothers. It became co-educational in the mid-1960s, and moved to its current home on Siringo Road in 1967. In 2008, the school adopted a principal/president model of leadership, with the principal overseeing academics, student well-being and discipline, and the president tending to administrative and financial affairs. The school hired Sam Govea as its principal shortly after Sullivan came on board as president. It was Govea who announced in fall 2012 that the school would begin random drug tests of students, using hair samples. Those tests, which generated controversy at the time, still occur.

Please see ResiGn, Page A-7

SPANISH COLONIAL ARTS SOCIETY

From left, Anna Diaz, Gabriella Gabaldon, Susannah Murray and Zoe Carson, all age 12 and all sixth-graders at Carlos Gilbert Elementary School, give a Stand Up For Kindness presentation to a fourth-grade class at the school Friday. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Program educates students on importance of sympathy, standing up against bullying

By Anne Constable

The New Mexican

or disrespect among others and does nothing to stop that behavior — and an “upstander,” who abriella Gabaldon steps in to right wrongs, espouse wants everyone to be tolerance and stop bullying. kind to one another — Since last Monday was Martin forever. This attitude Luther King Jr. Day, the presentwill create a safe community with ers also discussed the idea of safe schools, she said. public role models who have The Carlos Gilbert Elementary served as “upstanders” — includFourth-grader Andres Griego, 10, listens to a group of sixthSchool student was one of about ing King, Jackie Robinson, Nelson grade students speak about Stand Up For Kindness at Carlos 45 sixth-graders from that school Mandela, Rosa Parks and AbraGilbert Elementary School on Friday. who took part in a “Stand Up ham Lincoln. Gabaldon was one For Kindness” movement this of four girls who spoke about is to gather 10,000 signatures on had stood up for other kids. past week, aimed at educating King to fourth-graders in Linnane Several said they had no one to the petition by the semester’s younger students about the need Blake’s class. stand up for them. When asked end. to project kindness, stand up “I think they really believe whether they had been bullied, At a time when school safety for others who are being bullied kindness is important, and they most of the kids in the class and security is on everyone’s and intercede when someone is wanted to share that with the raised their hands. When asked mind, particularly in the wake in trouble. Students from Nava, school,” said fourth-grader Tula if they had ever acted as a bully, of last week’s school shooting in Sweeney and Wood Gormley Stanford after the presentation. only one raised his hand. elementary schools also took part Her classmate Raul Daood said Roswell, the Stand Up For KindThe sixth-graders urged all the ness adult organizers feel a projin the program. the display taught him that “if we students in the school to sign a The Carlos Gilbert students are mean to others, we should ect like this can work toward offpledge in which they promised to setting potential acts of violence broke into groups of four or so change our behavior.” be kind and stand up for others. to visit all the classrooms Friday. The fourth-graders appeared in schools. “This isn’t a pledge for a day. It’s They spoke about the difference to comprehend the difference Sixth-grader Zoë Carson said a pledge forever,” sixth-grader between being a bystander — one between being a bystander and who simply watches bullying Anna Diaz told the kids. The goal Please see KinDness, Page A-10 an upstander. Several said they By Robert Nott The New Mexican

G

Threat of clown act leads school to ‘shelter in place’ Gonzales Community School’s leaders enacted a precautionary “shelter in place” drill Friday morning after a 23-year-old man reportedly threatened to dress up like a clown, barge into classrooms and take photos of the terrified children’s reactions.

On Thursday evening, a friend of the man tipped off school Principal Michael Lee, who in turn contacted the district’s head of safety and security, Gabe Romero, as well as police. Officers found the man who was suspected of making the threat, as well as his mother, and suggested that he undergo a mental evaluation. The man is not being charged with any crime at this time and thus is not being identified, according to Santa Fe Police Department

New executive director aims to take museum ‘to new places’

spokeswoman Celina Westervelt, who said the police will keep the man on its radar. Romero said the man is a former Gonzales school student. “Shelter in place” means a school continues to operate, but no one can enter or exit the building, Romero said. The district also placed some of its private security officers on that campus for the rest of the day, he said.

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

The New Mexican

David Francis Setford, the new executive director of the Spanish Colonial Arts Society, was wearing his signature green eyeglasses and a matching tie when he came to an interview with the society’s board. His distinctive appearance prompted Mark Rhodes, a member of the search committee and the society’s acting director, to note, “You’re going to fit in perfectly in Santa Fe.” Actually, that’s something Setford might already know. In 2002 and 2003, he ran his business, ArtReach International, from Santa Fe, and his in-laws live here. Setford, who has 30 years of experience in museum and nonprofit arts management, as well as for-profit management of fine-arts expositions and fairs, plans to begin his new job Feb. 3. David Francis The society’s previous director, Setford Donna Pedace, resigned in March 2013. The society’s mission is to collect, preserve and exhibit Spanish Colonial Art. It operates the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art in a John Gaw Meem building on Museum Hill and presents the Traditional Spanish Market, held annually on the Plaza, and the Winter Spanish Market, which was staged in December in Albuquerque. Setford is not an expert on Spanish colonial art. “My job is to run the museum and look after it financially and take it to new places,” he said Friday. As for the art side, he added, “I’ll be learning more than I know now.” Rhodes said in this economy, small museums are looking for directors who can raise money as well as “orchestrate captivating exhibits.” Setford, he pointed out, “has done work in the private sector and in the museum sector. He struck us as very qualified to do fundraising and equally qualified in taking us to the next level of recognition.” He said Setford consistently increased revenues at museums where he worked, and the private exhibitions have been successful. “He has consistently brought himself to speed on every art form he’s involved with.” Setford, who will be moving to Santa Fe with his

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LOCAL & REGION

Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Interior Secretary Spaniards, Indians exercised diplomacy Jewell visits N.M. S

“Over the past few years, LAS CRUCES — After a hike we’ve seen a through Southern New Mexigroundswell of co’s rugged desert landscape, support from Interior Secretary Sally Jewell many in the said Friday it’s clear why the community state is known as the Land of to ensure that Enchantment. these landSally Jewell Jewell toured Broad Canyon scapes are outside Las Cruces before head- celebrated and passed on to the lining a public meeting centered generations of New Mexicans on federal legislation for proto come,” Jewell said. “Those tecting the Organ Mountains efforts also have the potential and other scenic areas in Doña to drive significant economic Ana County. benefits to the region through The legislation would carve a boost in tourism and outdoor out 780 square miles — about recreation.” one-fifth of the county — and Jewell also met Thursday designate it as the Organ Moun- with U.S. Border Patrol officials tains-Desert Peaks National to underscore her agency’s Monument. It would include commitment to cooperate when eight new wilderness areas fea- it comes to law enforcement turing steep rock outcroppings, along the U.S.-Mexico border. petroglyphs, ancient lava flows Critics of the legislation have and sites such as Billy the Kid’s voiced concerns about law Outlaw Rock, Geromino’s Cave enforcement officers having and the Butterfield Stagecoach adequate access to the area to Trail. patrol for drug smugglers, gangs Jewell said the area has a and other illegal activities. rich history as well as many The Southwestern Border opportunities for enjoying the Sheriffs’ Coalition is among outdoors through hiking and those leading the charge against hunting. the proposal. The Associated Press

Resign: Enrollment declining at school Continued from Page A-6 And last March, St. Michael’s was in another uproar when Sullivan announced that the school was not renewing Govea’s contract. Many parents and students voiced support for Govea, and by May, Sullivan announced she had reconsidered the decision. She asked Govea to return for another year. On Friday, she said she has offered him another one-year contract for the 2014-15 school year. Sullivan said her resignation this week has nothing to do with the controversy surrounding Govea’s contract last year. Nor was she fired, she said. Max Myers, chairman of the school’s Board of Trustees, noted in a letter posted on the school’s website Friday that Sullivan had done an exceptional job with financial reporting and budget development. He praised her for taking a lead role in the development of a three-year strategic plan for the school. In a phone interview Friday, Myers reiterated those

accomplishments and said Sullivan was “never afraid to step out there and do what she needed to do” to get the institution into financial shape. “It’s like running a small city,” he said of Sullivan’s job. Sullivan said Friday that enrollment at the school had been decreasing by about 50 students per year over the past few years. This year, enrollment was a little more stable, though St. Michael’s has lost 10 students since the start of the school year. Since August, Sullivan said, the school has cut about three staff positions in response to declining enrollment and a tighter budget. Sullivan said she gave notice Wednesday so school leaders can put together a search committee and hire the right person to replace her. Likewise, she said, that gives her time to explore her options and consider career moves. She and Myers both said the school will maintain its principal/president model. Sullivan declined to reveal her salary.

hortly before Juan de Oñate departed southern Chihuahua with a caravan on his way to settling New Mexico in 1598, his expedition underwent a review by a royal inspector. Its purpose was to establish that Oñate had acquired the proper supplies for the important task ahead. His inventory included a long list of items as gifts for Indians. They ranged from butcher knives, scissors, thimbles and thread, Flemish mirrors, cloth hats, toy trumpets and flutes for children, glass earrings, awls and tobacco to more than a thousand religious medals made of alloy. In the beginning, missionaries handed out such gifts, as they attempted to win over the Native people. But by the 1700s, that duty had been delegated to Marc soldiers and governors. Simmons The reason was that Trail Dust the distribution of gifts to nomadic tribes had become a key feature in making peace and preserving it. That so, the finest gifts, usually presented to Indian leaders, had the effect not only of honoring them, but also of confirming their high status and nourishing a new loyalty to the Spanish government. In early 1786, for instance, New Mexico Gov. Juan Bautista de Anza met a delegation of Comanches at Pecos Pueblo. In a ceremony establishing permanent peace, Anza bestowed upon the tribe’s high chief, the title “General of the Comanche Nation.” Then he presented him with a cane, or staff of office, a sword, banner, medal, a head dress of scarlet cloth and a horse. Earlier, England and France had started the custom of presenting official peace medals, usually of silver, to loyal Indian chiefs. Belatedly, Spain was forced to follow suit. After it acquired French Louisiana in 1763, the Indian chiefs there refused to accept Spanish allegiance until they received new medals, and of equal weight in silver to the old ones from France. Spain complied. It struck eye-catching medals adorned with the bust of King Carlos III, and they were widely distributed along the frontier. Several went to

wife, Lindsay, and daughter, Verity, said he will begin the drive West early next week. Half French, half British, he grew up in England and earned a bachelor’s degree in art history from Leicester University and a master’s degree in museum studies from the University of Manchester. According to a news release, he has researched and written extensively on European and American fine and decorative arts of the 19th and 20th centuries. Setford has lived and worked in the United States since 1990, when he moved to West Palm Beach, Fla., where he became chief curator for the Norton Museum of Art. He founded ArtReach International to bring affordable collections of European art to museums to the U.S. that “they couldn’t necessarily organize themselves,” but after Sept. 11, 2001, people were reluctant to put their art collections on planes, and then the recession hit. From 2003 to 2005, Setford directed the American International Fine Art & Antique Fair in Palm Beach, and from 2008 to 2012, he was director of The Hyde Collection in Glens Falls, N.Y., where he obtained funding for the popular exhibition, Modern Nature: Georgia O’Keeffe and Lake George, in association with the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe. He also helped develop events involving the Hyde and the local symphony, theater festival,

opera and orchestra, and he was responsible for a successful capital campaign, according to a news release. Most recently, he was hired to help launch the opening Jan. 18 of the new Wiener Museum of Decorative Arts in Dania Beach, Fla. He speaks French and Italian, and he hopes to pick up more Spanish. Rhodes said the museum formed a committee to lead a national search for the director and utilized a professional head hunter to assist in screening. “We spent a great deal of time looking for someone who was going to be a good fit,” he said. Setford sees his job as twofold, “to make sure that we have great programs, the best programs we can afford … and at the same time to widen the audience and also the group of stakeholders,” such as donors and board members. Santa Fe is a town where there’s already a lot going on, he noted, “But sometimes a museum needs to make a bit of a splash.” Brian Colón, president of the society’s board, said, “I think he brings fresh perspective and energy that will allow us to take the museum and our market to the next level.” Citing Setford’s diverse résumé and experience putting on markets, he added, “We have not had one person at the head of the society who has brought that entire skill set to the table.” Colón said Setford’s salary will be between $80,000 and $90,000.

the Comanches visiting Pecos, and later a Navajo leader was decorated with another. The royal presidio of Santa Fe maintained a special fund, the fondo de aliados. It paid for gifts to nomadic Indians who had made peace and for feeding them whenever they came to the capital for talks. Comanches, to the end of the colonial period, remained the primary beneficiaries of the fondo. Because of their strength, the Spaniards regarded them as the most valuable of their Native allies. Strangely, the gifts showered upon the Comanches included military uniforms, arms and equipment, and army emblems. They symbolized the closeness of the new relationship between the tribe and the New Mexicans. The Comanches, however, did not include the people of Chihuahua and Durango far to the south in their circle of friendship. Rather, they looked upon them as fair game for raiding. By the dawn of the 19th century, huge Comanche war parties were beating a well-worn trail southward. Reports say chiefs and some warriors wore parts of military uniforms and rode to battle in formation to brass bugle calls. Both clothes and the bugle were surely gifts of authorities in Santa Fe. In 1808, the governor of Texas sent Capt. Francisco Amangual with 200 men to find a direct road from San Antonio to Santa Fe. The expedition carried mule loads of small gifts for the Indians. When the men reached Comanche

country on New Mexico’s High Plains, they received a warm welcome from the Indians who professed to be their brothers and allies. That was a pleasant surprise for the Spaniards. Amangual gave a portion of the gifts to chiefs in each village, so they could hand them out to tribesmen as they thought best. Evidently, that was standard procedure. A chief named Quegue, the captain relates in his journal, met them on the trail. “He carried a cane and wore a medal with a picture of our king tied around his neck.” Upon arriving at the large tepee village, other chiefs came out to greet the expedition. Some were dressed in long red coats with blue collars, cuffs and white buttons. One Comanche was decked out in a short red coat, blue trousers, white stockings and English spurs. Others wore red neckties. Capt. Amangual was amazed at how “very well dressed” the Indians were in the “unusual clothes.” For us today, the scene is hard to imagine. We know that the Comanches donned this apparel to show the Spaniards they were friends and allies. It was part of the ritual of primitive diplomacy in New Mexico 200 years ago. Now in semi-retirement, author Marc Simmons wrote a weekly history column for more than 35 years. The New Mexican is publishing reprints from among the more than 1,800 columns he produced during his career.

s e t o N e Lov

sHoW soMEoNE spECIAl You CARE

Happy Valentines Day to my beautiful granddaughter Katie B! You’ll always be my true love! Love, Mimi

Director: Has degrees in art, museum studies Continued from Page A-6

Three mounted Comanche Indian warriors, photographed in 1892. COURTESY PHOTO

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

Keep the Faith Places of Faith & Service times in Santa Fe ANGLICAN

St. Thomas The Apostle Anglican Church An Anglican Holy Communion service is celebrated every Sunday morning at 11 a.m. by St. Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church. Services are held in the chapel located on the 3rd floor at Christus St.Vincent Regional Medical Center, 455 St. Michaels Drive, Santa Fe. Members of all faiths and traditions are welcome to attend. For information, contact Rev. Lanum, 505-603-0369.

BAPTIST

First Baptist Church of Santa Fe First Baptist Church of Santa Fe, 1605 Old Pecos Trail. Come join us this Sunday! 9:15 a.m. – Bible Study for all ages; 10:30 a.m. – Worship Service (interpreted for deaf).Wednesday – 6:15 p.m. – Bible Study/Prayer Meeting led by Pastor Lee H erring; Adult Choir Rehearsal; 6:30 p.m. – “Ignite” for Youth. Childcare available for all services. For more information, please call the church office at 983-9141, 8:30 – 4:00, Monday - Friday, or visit our website www. fbcsantafe.com.

Rodeo Road Baptist Church The church will be observing the Lord’s Supper during the January 26th worship hour at 10:45am. This is a special time of remembering the sacrifice of our Lord and our new life in Him.An 8-week study of the book, Becoming a Contagious Christian begins on Sunday February 2nd at 9:30am. The cost is $10.00 per person and pre-registration is required. 3405 Vereda Baja (One block south of Rodeo Road on Richards) Visit us on the web at www. rrbcsantafe.com Call (505) 473-9467 Like us on Facebook

BUDDHIST

Prajna Zendo Meditation, Koan nstudy, private interviews with two qualified Zen teachers. Retreats, classes, book study, dharma talks and more. Prajna Zendo is committed to its members and all beginners and practitioners who walk through its doors. Based on thelineage of Hakuyu Taizen Maezumi Roshi. Upcoming three-day retreat: February 20 - 23. Sunday service, zazen and dharma talk starting 9:00am.Tuesday evening zazen at 7pm.Tuesday through Sunday morning zazen at 6am. Call 660-3045 for more information. 5 Camino Potrillo, Lamy, 15 minutes from Santa Fe just off of Hwy 285 Next door to Eldorado. www.prajnazendo.org

Thubten Norbu Ling Buddhist Center Thubten Norbu Ling provides education and practice in Tibetan Buddhism following the tradition of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and in accord with the lineage teachings of Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche. Classes are offered to all levels of western students seeking a path to personal clarity and wellbeing, and are generally held on Sunday morning and on Wednesday and Thursday evenings. Practices and meditations are offered on Tuesday evenings, and on weekend mornings. Our resident teachers are Geshe Thubten Sherab and Don Handrick. 1807 Second Street, #35. For more information visit our website

CATHOLIC

The Church of Antioch at Santa Fe Bishop Daniel speaks on how Christ calls us to the Unity of Love. Sunday at 8:45 a.m. in the Loretto Chapel, 207 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM. Pastor, Most Rev. Daniel Dangaran, D. Min, Assoc. Pastor Rev. Mother Carol Calvert, Resident Priests Mother Jenni and Father Doug Walker invite you to come home to God, who has always loved you! (505)983-9003 http://coasf.org We are a community of Faith in the Catholic Tradition (non-Roman) offering the Sacraments within a context of personal freedom, loving acceptance, service and mysticism.All are welcome.

CENTER FOR SPRITUAL LIVING

Santa Fe Center For Spiritual Living We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, creativity and service.Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s.All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when Live Video Streaming starts at www.santafecsl.org. Special Music: Lisa Carman, singersongwriter. Message:“What is a Consciousness of Abundance” by Rev. Dr. Bernardo Monserrat. Information on workshops, classes, concerts,rentals,past lectures videos available at www.santafecsl. org - www.facebook.com/SantaFeCSL - 505-983-5022.

Everyday Center For Spiritual Living Everyday CSL is a spiritual community committed to empowering people to live joy-filled lives. Our Sunday service celebrations speak to living our lives to the fullest with rockin’ upbeat music to open our hearts. Come join our community as we grow together into our best lives. Two new classes, Exploring the Roots of the Science of Mind and The Principles of Successful Living, begin February 3rd and 4th! Visit us at www.everydaycsl.org for more information. We are located at 2544 Camino Edward Ortiz Suite B (across from the UPS Distribution Center).

CHRISTIAN

The Light at Mission Viejo Sunday Service 10:30; Men’s Prayer Ministry: Monday- Thursday Morning Prayer 6 a.m.; Women’s Ministry: Monthly on 4th Saturday,9- 11 a.m.; Missions:Palomas,Mexico,monthly,second weekend; Youth: Amped- 6 p.m. Fridays; Consumed- Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; Singles (30+) meet monthly, 1st & 3rd Tuesday at 6 p.m.; Mid-week Spanish Service, Wednesday at 6 p.m.; Homeless Ministry, monthly 3rd Saturday; Mid-Week Prayer: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. Information: 505-982-2080. www.thelightatmissionviejo.org

Congregation Beit Tikva

Holy Trinity Orthodox Church

Located at 2230 Old Pecos Trail, our synagogue follows Traditional Reform Judaism led by Rabbi Martin Levy and Cantor Michael Linder. Shabbat services are on Friday evenings at 7:30 pm.Torah Study on the Book of Exodus is on Saturday mornings at 9:15 am. On Sunday, January 26th, from 10 a.m. to noon, the 92nd Street Y Program on DVD will be Full Court Press: Inside the Obama and Bush White Houses with Robert Gibbs and Ari Fleischer, press secretaries for Barack Obama and George W. Bush. The cost is $12 at the door. Brunch is available for an additional $5 before the showing of the video. Kabbalah and all other Adult Education classes will resume shortly. For more information on these classes and details of our trip,“2014 Israel Spring Adventure,” please call 505.820.2991 or visit our website http://beittikvasantafe.org.

We invite you to experience the mystery and beauty of the

Temple Beth Shalom

Temple Beth Shalom is a handicap accessible, welcoming Reform Jewish Congregation with a great religious school and preschool (www.preschool.sftbs.org). Friday services begin at 6:30pm. Saturday mornings,enjoy bagels,lox,and Torah study,at 9:15.Stay for morning services at 10:30. Pray and study with Aaron Wolf at the Monday morning minyan, 8:00-9:00 am in the Upper Sanctuary. It’s the end of the month and that means Friday Night Live! Join us for a wonderful musical service beginning at 6:30 pm on January 31. 205 E. Barcelona Road, 982-1376, www.sftbs.org.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

First Church of Christ Scientist, Santa Fe Our church is designed to support the practice of Christian healing. Services consist of readings from the King James Bible and Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. Sunday service/Sunday School/Child care at 10:00 a.m.”Truth” is the Bible Lesson for January 26. Wednesday meetings at 12:10 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Readings are on a timely topic followed by sharing healings attesting to the practical presence of God in our life. The noon meeting is informal. Bring your lunch and friends. Please join us! 323 East Cordova Road. www.christiansciencesantafe.org

DISCIPLES OF CHRIST

First Christian Church of Santa Fe First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Santa Fe, 645 Webber Street, worships at 10:30 on Sunday mornings.We are an open and affirming congregation with communion open to all who wish to partake.Viento de Gracia (Disciples of Christ) meets in the same building with services in Spanish on Sundays 5 p.m. and Thursdays at 7 p.m. All are welcome. Located two blocks south of the state capital building.We support global hunger relief through Week of Compassion, Christian Ministry through the Disciples of Christ, and local hunger relief through Food for Santa Fe. We can be found on the web at www.santafedisciples.org

LUTHERAN

Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church

1701 Arroyo Chamiso, between Old Pecos Trail and St. Micheal’s Dr. 505-983-9461Services 8 & 10 a.m. every Sunday with Bible Class at 9a.m. Coffee and hospitality follows each service.This Friday the Men’s Lunch Bunch meets at 11:30 to hear John Driscol speak of his life in Japan as a Buddhist Monk. Call for reservations. All are welcome.

10A Bisbee Court, www.holyfamilysantafe.org A family oriented church with a special mission to ASD Spectrum Children. Sundays: 10:30 Eucharist with Choir Practice starting at 9:45, Tuesdays: 10am Prayer Shawl Ministry (come to learn or come to create) Thursdays: 12:15pm Noonday Prayer or Eucharist A sensory break room is available during all services. Please contact us at (505) 424-0095 or email us at holyfamilysantafe@gmail.com.

Church of the Holy Faith Episcopal Celebrating 150 years of Episcopal Worship in Santa Fe, welcomes all people to an ever deepening relationship with The Lord Jesus Christ. Services each week: Sunday: Spoken Eucharist at. 7:30a.m.; Choral Eucharist at 8:30 and 11:00a.m.; Adult Forum at 9:50-10:30a.m.; Children’s Chapel at 8:30 a.m.Tuesday :Taize Contemplative Eucharist with Healing 6:00p.m. Wednesday and Thursday : Holy Eucharist at 12:10p.m: Monday- Friday 4:30p.m: Evening Prayer. Youth group meets at 12:30p.m. first and third Sundays. Children’s Adventures Christian Education on Tuesdays at 4:00-5:30 p.m. seasonally. Call for details: 505-982-4447. 311 East Palace Avenue, in Historic Santa Fe. www. Holyfaithchurchsf. org.

St. Bede’s Episcopal Church St. Bede’s is a Christ-centered servant community rooted in Holy Scripture, tradition and reason as practiced by the Episcopal Church, located at 1601 S. St. Francis Drive. Holy Eucharist on Sunday January 26, 2013 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. (7:00 p.m. in Spanish) The Rev. Catherine Volland will preside and preach. The Parish annual meeting will take place at 12:00 p.m. Visit www.stbedesantafe.org or call 982-1133 for more information. St. Bede’s welcomes traditional and nontraditional families. The Episcopal Church welcomes you. La Iglesia Episcopal les da la bienvenida.

Eastern Orthodox Christian Church! Our Services include Great Vespers every Saturday at 5:30pm, Matins on Sunday at 8:15am, and the main Sunday service, the Divine Liturgy, at 9:30am. Our Weekly Classes: Wednesday book study. Classes are led by Fr. John Bethancourt and all are welcome. 231 E. Cordova Road 983-5826 FrJohnB@aol.com. www.holytrinitysantafe.org.

PRESBYTERIAN

Christ Church Santa Fe (PCA) Our Presbyterian church is at Don Gaspar and Cordova Road. Our focus is on the historical truths of Jesus Christ, His Love and Redemptive Grace... and our contemporary response. Sunday services are 9:00 and 10:45 am (childcare provided). Children and Youth Ministry activities also available. Call us at (505)982-8817 or visit our website at christchurchsantafe.org for more information.

First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) Re-Connecting with the love God has for us and we have for each other: MorningSong Service at 8:30 and Worship Service at 11:00 a.m. celebrated by the Rev. Dr. Harry Eberts III. Childcare available. Annual meeting between services. Morning Prayer Wednesdays at 7:00 a.m. TGIF Concerts every Friday at 5:30 p.m. More information at www.fpcsantafe.org or by calling 982-8544. Located downtown at 208 Grant Ave.

Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS)

Westminster Presbyterian PC(USA)

209 East Barcelona Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505 Sunday service (Jan. 26) schedule: Divine Service: 9:30AM, Sunday School: 10:40AM. The Epiphany Season celebrates the message that Jesus Christ is the Savior for all people. The Epiphany message emphasizes God’s inclusive desire that all people would know and confess Jesus Christ as Lord. Immanuel Church is just west of the New Mexico Children’s Museum which is at the corner of Old Pecos Trail and East Barcelona Road. 983-7568 www.ilc-sfnm.org

Westminster Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) A Multi-cultural

METHODIST

St. John’s United Methodist Sunday, January 26: Find a warm and welcoming church home at St. John’s. We have two worship celebrations on Sunday morning at 8:30 and 11am in the Gathering Room. Pastor Greg Kennedy will preach at both services. Make new friends at Fellowship Time (conversation, tea, and coffee) at 9:30am; and try one of our Sunday Classes for all ages at 9:45am. Children’s message and nursery at both services.St.John’s is on the web at www.sjumcsantafe. org, on Facebook, and by phone 505-982-5397.

Faith Community St. Francis Dr. at West Manhattan 11 AM on the Third Sunday after Epiphany, January 26th “Messy and Disorderly” REV. DR. BARBARA BOYD, preaching Scripture: I Corinthians 14:37-40 ALL ARE WELCOME! Also: Sunday at 9:30: “Theology 101 – The Old Testament; Following Worship: The Annual Meeting of the Congregation Thursday at 5:30 PM – Taizé Services PEACE, JOY & BLESSINGS UNTOLD for singles and married; seekers and doubters; slackers and workaholics; can’t sing, black and proud; no habla ingles; tourists; bleeding hearts… AND YOU! Contact us at 505-983-8939 (Tues-Fri, 9-1) or wpcsantafe@gmail.com

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIS

UU Congregation of Santa Fe 107 West Barcelona (corner with Galisteo). If you value freedom to follow your own path to spiritual truth and meaning in an inclu-

EPISCOPAL

Holy Family Episcopal Church

ORTHODOX

JEWISH

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Eckankar For people of all beliefs, a community HU chant will be held at 10:00 a.m., on Sunday, February 1, at Santa Fe Soul. The twentyminute chant includes singing HU, a universal word that opens the heart, followed by a silent contemplation period. Eckankar, Religion of the Light and Sound of God offers ways to explore one’s unique relationship with the Divine through personal inner and outer experience. For information visit Meetup.com (Santa Fe Spiritual Experiences Group), or call 800-876-6704. For an uplifting video on the HU song, see www.miraclesinyourlife.org

The Celebration

The Celebration, a Sunday Service Different! Now in our 22nd year as an ongoing experience of spiritual community. We do not subscribe to any particular creed or dogma, but do our best to honor all paths in our spiritually eclectic service.We may be one of Santa Fe’s “best kept secrets” except we don’t want to be any more! The speaker for Sunday, Jan. 26 is David Henry,“What Matters to Me.” Special music by .Bob Yonker. Come see what it’s all about, Sundays, 10:30am, NEA-NM bldg., 2007 Botulph Rd., enter around back. www.thecelebration.org. 699-0023

Unity

Today and Tomorrow! International author, teacher, creative muse & Santa Fe resident, Julia Cameron will be teaching “Creativity Bootcamp”, a 2 day workshop, January 25 & 26, $150. Class today is 10:30-4:30. Sunday12:30-4:30pm. Please join us this Sunday at 10:30 for music, meditation, and Rev. Brendalyn’s message, “Too Deep For Words”. This message will support you in listening with your heart to Spirit which has Its own language. Monday nights feature “Becoming A Vibrational Healer” with international teacher and minister Tom Newman, 7-8:30pm. We offer Silent Meditation, Wednesdays, 6-7pm. For a hands-on experience, check out “Creative Mastery of Your God-Given Potential” with Rev. Brendalyn & Art Therapist Valerie Valentine on Wednesdays, 7-9pm. Call 505-9894433 unitysantafe.org Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way (North side of 599 bypass @ Camino de los Montoyas (2.4 miles from 84/285, 8.4 miles from Airport Road).All are honored and welcome.

sive, supportive community, Unitarian Universalism may be right for you. Programs each week for children, youth and adults. We nurture hearts and minds, practice beloved community and work for justice. For up to date information go to http://www.uusantafe. org or (505) 982-9674.

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

The United Church of Santa Fe Ancient Truths, New Life. 8:30 Contemplative Communion and 11:00 Worship, led by Rev. Talitha Arnold and Rev. Brandon Johnson, with Pianist Jacquelyn Helin and the Early Choir and the Sanctuary Choir, directed by Karen Marrolli. Children’s Ministry and Young Adventurers also offered at 11:00. At 9:45 Youth Confirmation and Children’s Games and Music. Childcare offered through the morning. Study groups, choirs, youth programs offered throughout the week. All welcome! United Church--a community that seeks to “love God, love neighbor, and love creation.” 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). unitedchurchofsantafe. org. Facebook, too!

Need to add your organization? Contact Keyana at 995-3818 • kdeaguero@sfnewmexican.com


Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

LIFE&SCIENCE

Health Science Environment

Two ailing sisters receive lung transplants from same donor

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Inequality is detrimental to your health

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Irma Myers-Santana, left, and her sister Anna Williamson visit Jan. 14 in Williamson’s hospital room in Houston. Earlier this month, the sisters ended up in the same operating room, each getting one lung from the same donor. PAT SULLIVAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Breathing easy again By Ramit Plushnick-Masti The Associated Press

HOUSTON hey quibble, joke and share knowing looks, finishing each other’s thoughts and making snide comments — like many sisters. But a recent heated argument was unlike any other they’ve had, and it ended in a most surprising way. For months, 71-year-old Irma Myers-Santana and her younger sister, Anna Williamson, 69, had been debating who more urgently needed a lung transplant, each wanting the other to go first. Earlier this month, though, the sisters ended up in the same operating room, each getting one lung from the same donor in what doctors at Houston Methodist Hospital say is a first for their facility. “It’s never happened. … We’ve transplanted siblings before, but years apart,” said Dr. Scott Scheinin, who did Myers-Santana’s transplant. “It’s a little bit of serendipity.” The sisters both became ill about 10 years ago with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a little-understood scarring of the lungs that often requires a transplant and kills more people than breast cancer every year, said Scheinin. Doctors, assisted by a computer program, look at blood type, height and severity of illness to match a donor and a transplant patient. The likelihood that Myers-Santana

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and Williamson would meet all three criteria at the same time was small, Scheinin said. The sisters’ situation was further complicated because they insisted on a “bloodless transplant.” They are Jehovah’s Witnesses and do not believe in receiving blood transfusions. They live in California, but Houston Methodist Hospital is the only facility in the country that does such transplants. “The irony of this whole thing is that we’re sisters, we’re both Jehovah’s Witnesses, we have the same blood type and we got [the lungs] from the same donor,” Williamson said, her eyes tearing up as she sat next to her sister, able for the first time in years to complete a sentence without coughing. “It’s a miracle to have all those things lined up like that,” Williamson said. Until the transplant, Williamson coughed all day and had to be attached to an oxygen tank constantly. About a year ago, her doctor told her she needed a transplant. “I couldn’t talk; I couldn’t laugh,” Williamson recalled. So, Williamson and her husband headed down to Houston 10 months ago. Within six months, Myers-Santana, who had a sudden, violent decline in her health and could barely breathe, joined Williamson, hoping she, too, would be a viable candidate for that type of transplant. Then the waiting began, with the sisters

housed just 10 doors apart in a Houston RV park. On a few occasions, each woman was offered a lung, but they bickered over who should take it. “If we hadn’t had the transplant when we did, she would be dead right now, dead,” Williamson said adamantly, her sister sitting beside her in the hospital room. Myers-Santana agrees with that, yet believed Williamson needed to have the first transplant. “Her coughing just hurt to my core. You can’t help someone that coughs like that,” Myers-Santana said. “It’s so hard to watch, and so I felt she needed it more than I did. “I can live with a cough, but she can’t live without oxygen, so I win,” Myers-Santana shot back, smiling at her sister. In the end, though, the individual lungs weren’t a match. Now, less than two weeks after the surgery, Williamson has the right lung and Myers-Santana has the left. They have on makeup, their hair is done, and they joke with their doctors — extending an invitation to Santa Barbara for free manicures and pedicures at Williamson’s salon. Their husbands and children linger in the background. Colorful balloons wishing them well float above. They can talk, joke and laugh without an oxygen tank. And they can breathe easy.

The irony of this whole thing is that we’re sisters, we’re both Jehovah’s “ Witnesses, we have the same blood type and we got [the lungs] from the same donor. It’s a miracle to have all those things lined up like that.” Anna Williamson

Food-service inspections For the period ending Jan. 16. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 827-1840. COWGIRL HALL OF FAME BBQ, 3145 Guadalupe St. Cited for low-risk violation for unsealed bar floor area. FLYING STAR RESTAURANT, 500 Market St. Cited for high-risk violation for failure of refrigerators to keep adequate temperatures. Cited for moderate-risk violation for dust in walk-in cooler fans. Cited for low-risk violation for storing dish rack on floor. SANTA FE COMMUNITY COLLEGE CAFETERIA, 6401 Richards Ave. Cited for moderate-risk violation for lack of labeling on bulk food containers (corrected). Cited for low-risk violation for dish rack on floor. SANTA FE BREWING CO., 35 Fire Place. Cited for high-risk violations for three-compartment sink connected directly to drain line, lack of soap at hand-wash station, lack of paper towels at sink in bathroom, exposed insulation, three-compartment sink used for hand washing. Cited for moderate-risk violation for unsmooth keg room walls. Cited for low-risk violations for lack of toilet paper at dispenser, restroom

door not self-closing. LA PLAZUELA AT LA FONDA, 100 E. San Francisco St. Cited for high-risk violations for food buildup on can opener, dented cans mixed with good stock, improper storage of meats, lack of cover on ice tea machine, lack of sneeze protector on buffet line, storing equipment under unshielded drainage pipes, problem with food preparation dates, problems with refrigeration units, lack of test strips for high-temperature dishwasher, water pooling on the floor under ice machine, chemical spray bottles not labeled, employee bare-handed contact with ready-toeat foods, employee drink in food prep area, wet wash rag out of sanitizer bucket, ice in hand-washing station. Cited for moderate-risk violations for rusted refrigerator floor, unapproved refrigerator, food and grease buildup on equipment, dust and mold buildup on vent fans. Cited for low-risk violations for no covers on toilet roll dispensers. SUBWAY, 66 E. San Francisco St. Cited for high-risk violations for failure of refrigeration unit to keep adequate temperatures, employee drink in food prep area, ice pooling from leak in condenser unit.

ecently, I was seeing a patient for some chronic injuries from a bad fall. He is a hard worker, has always done manual jobs, and as the result of previous work-related accidents, he suffers from chronic knee and back pain. Surprisingly, he asked me what I thought of his chances of getting disability. I asked why, when he had always worked despite his injuries? “My unemployment just ran out, and I’m at the end of my rope. I don’t know what else to do.” Wendy Food stamps cut, unemployment Johnson benefits curtailed, public libraries Health Matters and schools starved of resources, infrastructure crumbling — cutbacks in public programs and the erosion of our social safety net are symptoms of our growing economic inequality. The disease of inequality is clearly bad for your health in other ways, too. The more we know about inequality and health, the more it becomes clear that the health risks of living in an unequal society affect us all — rich and poor alike. Inequality has been getting a lot of attention lately since President Barack Obama’s December speech, when he called it the “defining issue of our time” because it threatens the very essence of the American dream and democracy. The United States has more wealth concentrated in fewer hands than any other developed country except Singapore. Yet despite being overall wealthier than many other rich countries, we experience the worst life expectancy, higher infant mortality rates and higher rates of violent crimes. Even within the United States, differences in inequality among metropolitan areas track with health outcomes. More economically unequal cities have higher death rates. Here in Santa Fe, we rank poorly on the inequality scale, in the 94th percentile, which means that the distribution of wealth in Santa Fe is more unequal than all but 6 percent of counties, according to one measure of inequality called the Gini Index. Why does greater inequality lead to poorer health? There are several explanations. First, stark economic divisions create more stress for everyone. In addition to poorer measures of physical health, unequal societies have higher crime rates, worse mental health and addiction problems. Living in a town or country marked by those issues is stressful for everyone. There’s also the argument that living in an unequal world creates extra stress, especially for those at the bottom or middle. You might be comfortable, but comparing yourself to others who have so much more creates its own stress, especially when the rich are able to access resources that should be available to everyone. Imagine how you feel sitting in coach in a plane with a first class compared to one without, especially when the line for the coach bathroom is 12 deep. In more equal societies, the sense of common good and solidarity with your neighbors is stronger, and people are more likely to help each other in times of need. Another argument is the one illustrated by my patient. More unequal societies tend to have a weaker safety net, and that in turn exacerbates the health effects as well as the inequality itself. When the poor cannot access health care and other support in times of need, they risk falling into greater poverty and requiring even more government assistance. In turn, social programs get even less support as the rich increasingly are able to opt out of even broad-based initiatives like social security and public education. We find ourselves today in this kind of vicious circle. What can be done? Santa Fe led the nation by raising the minimum wage. Now many other states and localities are following suit. Even some on the right have acknowledged that raising the minimum wage is good for the economy. Putting money in the hands of the poor and middle class stimulates job growth more than concentrating wealth with the 1 percent. So when considering these economic issues, remember that your vote might be linked to your life expectancy. What country would you rather live in: the one with just one bathroom for 95 percent of the passengers or the one where we’re all in this together? Dr. Wendy Johnson is the medical director of La Familia Medical Center in Santa Fe.

FDA studies caramel coloring in soda By Mary Clare Jalonick The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration says it is conducting new studies of the safety of caramel coloring in soft drinks and other foods, even though previous research has shown no identifiable health risk. The agency’s announcement comes in response to a study by Consumer Reports that shows varying levels of 4-methylimidazole — an impurity formed in some caramel coloring at low levels during the manufacturing process — in 12 brands of soda from five manufacturers. The FDA says it has already studied the use of caramel as a flavor and color additive for decades and it has no reason to believe the coloring used is unsafe. The agency said it is also reviewing new data on the safety of 4-methylimidazole but did not say what that data is. “These efforts will inform the FDA’s safety analysis and will help the agency determine what, if any, regulatory action needs to be taken,” said FDA spokeswoman Juli Putnam.

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com

There are no federal limits on the amount of 4-methylimidazole, which the FDA says can also form in trace amounts when coffee beans are roasted or some meats are grilled. The Consumer Reports study urged the agency to set a maximum level of the substance when it is artificially added to foods or soda, to require labeling when it is added and to bar products from carrying the “natural” label if they contain caramel colors. “There is no reason why consumers need to be exposed to this avoidable and unnecessary risk that can stem from coloring food and beverages brown,” said Consumer Reports’ Dr. Urvashi Rangan, a toxicologist and lead investigator on the study. Though studies have not been conclusive about whether 4-methylimidazole is a carcinogen, California includes it on the state list of carcinogens and a state law mandates a cancer warning label on products that have a certain level of the substance. In reaction to that law, Coke, Pepsi and other soft drink makers have directed their caramel-color suppliers to reduce the levels of 4-methylimidazole. It is not

found in all caramel colorings. Over an eight-month period, the study found that single servings of two products purchased in California, Pepsi One and the beverage Malta Goya, exceeded the 29 micrograms of 4-methylimidazole that are the threshold in California but carried no warning. Consumer Reports has asked the California attorney general’s office to investigate; a spokesman for the attorney general says the office is reviewing the request. PepsiCo spokeswoman Aurora Gonzalez said the company is “extremely concerned” about the study and believes it is factually incorrect. Gonzalez said the average amount of soda consumed daily by those who drink it is less than a 12-ounce can, so the samples actually do not exceed the limit of 29 micrograms a day. The drinks tested were Sprite, Diet Coke, Coca-Cola, Coke Zero, Dr Pepper, Dr. Snap, Brisk Iced Tea, A&W Root Beer, Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, Pepsi One and Goya Malta. Consumer Reports said there was no significant level found in Sprite, and consistently low levels were found in Coke products.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


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LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

DNA match gives police new lead in old rape case By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

On Oct. 11, 1992, a 16-year-old girl was raped at gunpoint in Santa Fe. She was taken to a hospital after the crime, where a nurse examined her and took a sample of the attacker’s DNA as evidence. The DNA could not be analyzed at the time, but more than 20 years later, experts are moving forward with an investigation. Santa Fe Police Department spokeswoman Celina Westervelt said the state crime lab has been able to process old evidence from the department’s cold case files and now can compare DNA samples from the files to samples in a national database. Westervelt said two rape kits — files of an attacker’s biological evidence obtained from a rape victim — have triggered new leads in decades-old cases. The first was that of David Anthony Garcia, 46, in connection with a 1991 case in which a woman was kidnapped and raped. Garcia was living in Roach, Mo., when police discovered the connection, but he has since been extradited to New Mexico to face trial. Westervelt said the victim in that case was “overwhelmed” when she heard that police have charged a suspect in her case. “She was so thankful for the closure we could give her,”

In brief

Agency reaches deal with worker

The state Department of Health has reached an out-ofcourt settlement with a former employee it was ordered to rehire. Jennifer Smith filed a lawsuit in 2011, claiming she had been fired from her $48,000-a-year job as a health educator in the AIDS Services Program for pointing out that federal grant money was being mismanaged. A jury found in Smith’s favor in August — and awarded her monetary damages including attorney’s fees, which totaled about $400,000 — and District Judge Raymond Ortiz ordered the Department to rehire her Wednesday. But Smith had not yet received the payout or started working for the agency again when attorneys in the case reached a settlement Thursday. According to Smith’s attorney, Diane Garrity, the details of the agreement must be kept confidential for the next six months. How much Smith received in the settlement and whether or not she’ll return to work at the agency won’t be public until then. According to information

Westervelt said. “She remembered the attack like it was yesterday. We want to make sure we’re giving the victims a sense of justice and preventing future attacks.” In the 1992 case, police records say the teen had been driving with a friend when the two got into an argument. The girl left her friend’s vehicle, an affidavit states, and started walking along Second Street. A white van pulled alongside her, and a man in the front passenger seat offered her a ride home. But he said the van was running out of gas, so they would need to go get his car. The affidavit says the van’s driver dropped off the teen girl and the male passenger at a car on Hopewell Street, and the man drove the girl to her boyfriend’s home. But no one was there. According to the affidavit, the two headed to a park on Navajo Street, where the man “reached over and started to hug and kiss” the girl. The teen started to cry and tried to escape, the affidavit says, but the man “pulled out a small handgun and pointed it at her chest.” The assailant told her, “Shut up. The doors are locked, and I have a gun.” She responded, “You might as well shoot me.” After the attack, the teen ran to a store to seek help, and she was taken to a hospital. Officers have yet to charge anyone in connection with the

case, as they are awaiting test results, but police have collected a new DNA sample from a “person of interest” who lives in Santa Fe, Westervelt said. She said police can’t arrest and charge someone with rape based solely on a match between an old DNA sample and a new one in the national database. Instead, investigating officers have to collect a new sample and then proceed with the investigation. Westervelt said the person of interest does know why police took his DNA. She said investigators have been making a concentrated effort to sift through the 100 or so evidence kits in the freezer with the hope that they may find a new lead in the murder of Susan LaPorte, a 25-year-old woman who was visiting Santa Fe when she was raped and strangled to death. DNA evidence from the Albuquerque rape and murder of Maria Padilla — which occurred seven months prior to LaPorte’s death — matches DNA taken from LaPorte. However, neither DNA sample has ever been matched to a sample in the national database. Police told The New Mexican they still believe there may be more related victims. And Westervelt said the suspect could still commit a felony and have his DNA taken at “any time.”

presented in December at a Legislative Finance Committee budget hearing, the Department of Health has had so many workers’ compensation and employee liability cases in the past year that its riskmanagement insurance rates will increase $2 million in fiscal year 2015.

driftwood, as they all release toxic chemicals when burned. u Keep the doors of a woodburning appliance closed unless loading or stoking the live fire. u Keep a fire extinguisher handy.

Tips for safely burning wood

Three men are facing criminal charges of trying to obtain New Mexico driver’s licenses During the wintertime, by using documents that falsely residential wood smoke is the claim residence in the state. main source of fine-particle State Taxation and Revenue pollution causing poor air qualSecretary Demesia Padilla says ity inside the home. Burning 39-year-old Felipe Paez-Marthe right wood, the right way, tinez and 38-year-old Melchor in the right wood-burning Mayancele-Guallpa paid at appliance can reduce harmful least $1,100 each to get fake air pollution. residential documents from The state Department of 27-year-old Manuel CalzadiasHealth recommends burning Valenz of Albuquerque. dry, seasoned wood in a wood Paez-Martinez is a Mexican stove to reduce particle pollucitizen who lives in Georgia, tion. A moisture meter, availwhile Mayancele-Guallpa is an able at local hardware stores, Ecuadorian from New York. can test the wetness of wood The men were arrested before burning. Wood should Wednesday after they arrived only be used if the moisture in Albuquerque to get their content is 20 percent or less. Here are some other burning New Mexico driver’s licenses. Padilla says Calzadias-Valenz tips: told investigators he has been u Never burn household helping immigrants living garbage; cardboard; plastics; outside New Mexico get state foam; colored ink on paper, driver’s licenses by giving them boxes or wrappers; coated, false residency documentation painted or pressure-treated for $1,000 to $1,200 apiece. wood; plywood; particle board; any wood with glue on it; or The New Mexican

property after the Santa Fe Preparatory School principal reported that a student’s laptop computer had been stolen. Students were able to find the laptop using a tracking application. u A resident in the 500 block of Oñate Street reported that he realized one of his handguns was missing, and he suspected that one of the people working on his home in September had stolen the firearm. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A TV, a shotgun and a laptop computer were stolen from a home on Camino del Rincon between 7:30 and 11:30 a.m. Thursday. u A resident on Tierra Grande reported that someone tried to break into his home

Kindness: Shooting in Roswell resonates with Santa Fe students Continued from Page A-6 that although Roswell seems far away, that event does impact other students in the state who feel for their peers elsewhere and thus need to promote kindness and understanding. Carlos Gilbert Principal Kim Pietrocci said her sixth-grade teachers took the time to discuss that shooting incident with their classes last week. The Stand Up For Kindness movement will continue

while he was inside the house at about 3:29 p.m. Thursday. u Pipe fittings and faucet fixtures were stolen from a shed on Los Jimenez Road between Monday and Thursday. u Someone broke into a home on Vereda de Valencia between 7:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. and stole various electronics.

LEO DAVID MAES

Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use as the city renegotiates its contract with Redflex Traffic Systems.

the United Church of Santa Fe, is the behavior of bullying adults who don’t consider how their actions are interpreted by observant youth. When Johnson, who was present at Carlos Gilbert on Friday, asked sixth-grade student Susannah Murray what she would say if she saw an adult demonstrate bullying behavior, Susannah said she would tell them, “That’s immature.” For more information on the program, contact Bryant at 467-2577 or debryant@sfps.info.

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Rivera Family Funeral Home Santa Fe (505)989-7032 Larry Roybal, 74, Santa Fe, January 16, 2014 Jirina Emerson, 81, Santa Fe, January 17, 2014 Prudy Jaramillo, 66, Santa Fe, January 20, 2014 Baby Mayakala Garcia, Santa Fe, January 20, 2014 "DITTY" MAES 63, peacefully entered into eternal life following a lengthy illness. He is preceded in death by his parents, Margarito and Lila Maes. He is survived by his wife, Rita Maes; son, JD Maes; daughter, Monique Maes; son-in-law, Gene Doyle; grandson, Joaquin Doyle; aunt and uncle, Genevive and Manuel Alcon; mother-in-law, Georgia Bueno and a large extended family. A visitation will be held on Monday, January 27, 2014 from 5 to 6 pm at The Cristo Rey Catholic Church where a rosary will be recited from 6 to 7 pm. A rosary will be recited on Tuesday, January 28, 2014 from 8:30 - 9:00 am at the Cristo Rey Catholic Church where a Mass of Christian Burial will take place at 9:15 am. Burial to follow at 11:15am at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. The family expresses their deepest gratitude for the professional medical care provided by Dr. James Ziomek and Dr. Charnes Chiu throughout the years.

DWI arrest u City officers arrested Nicholas Zvelebil, 28, 1514 Corte la Cañada, at 2:32 a.m. Thursday at Camino Alire and Paseo de la Conquistadora on charges of aggravated drunken driving.

through the school year, according to Debra Bryant, who teaches anti-bullying classes for the district’s Office of Student Wellness. She said the program, which includes the distribution of purple Stand Up For Kindness T-shirts, is sponsored by the Interfaith Leadership Alliance of Santa Fe, the Buckaroo Balland Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. One challenge facing the movement, according to both Bryant and Brandon Johnson of

Funeral services and memorials

3 men arrested in license scheme

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u City officers arrested Larry Mercardo, 22, 1106 N. Riverside Drive, at 11:58 p.m. Thursday on a charge of driving with a revoked license after they stopped him at St. Francis Drive and Ninita Street. u A resident in the 300 block of Palomino Street reported that someone stole an Xbox video game console from the home between 8:20 a.m. and 6:10 p.m. Thursday. u A man reported that someone stole his blue Ford Ranger parked in the 3400 block of Zafarano Drive between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Thursday. u City officers arrested Ronny Montano, 43, 426 Brunn School Road, on a charges of larceny and receiving stolen

Fourth-grader Joaquin Bas, 10, signs the Stand Up For Kindness pledge at Carlos Gilbert Elementary School on Friday following a presentation. LuIS SáNCHEZ SATuRNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Mario Hinojoza, 31, Santa Fe, January 20, 2014 Kathryn Olafson, 50, Santa Fe, January 20, 2014 Ross LewAllen, 76, Fe, January 21, 2014

Santa

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Our beautiful Son. Its been two long years and not one moment goes by wishing to see your beautiful smile again. There are days and nights we look up to the sky and stars hoping to see you. How we miss you son. Until we meet again you’re so dearly missed by many. We love and miss you so much. 2 Year Anniversary Mass will be held at the Cathedral at 12p.m. Sunday, 1/26/14. Two Years and it seems like yesterday. We Share your stories, and the moments of you daily. O nly you Isaac could’ve touched so many of us. Yet you never wanted credit, you made us laugh, smile and Everyday people share their times of how they were touched by you A Father, Fiance, Son, Brother, Uncle, Nephew, Friend... We all Remember your smile and love you had for all of us Son we miss you so much, you were ONE OF A KIND!

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Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

Tragedy unfolding in Middle East

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ragedy stalks the land in Syria and Iraq. In Syria, more than 130,000 people have died in the civil war that has ravaged the country since the war began in March 2011. In Iraq, more than 8,000 people died in mainly sectarian Bill Stewart clashes in 2013 alone, Understanding although Your World U.S. and foreign forces are long gone, and there is a new — and divisive — Shiite government in Baghdad. Despite the bloodshed, indeed perhaps because of it, the fractious Syrians sat down together this week in Montreux, Switzerland, for the first time since the war began. It was not an auspicious opening, with an angry opening salvo from the Syrian government representative, but at least an international conference to find a political solution to the conflict in Syria had begun. Montreux sits along the shores of Lake Geneva in the shadow of the Alps. The city is a byword for luxury, and it is sadly ironic that the Syrians, the Russians, the Americans, the Europeans and the U.N. meet in such splendid surroundings while much of Syria itself lies in ruins, 9.5 million have been driven from their homes, and those in refugee camps are hungry, helpless and in great distress. For months, U.S. and Russian diplomats had struggled to persuade Damascus and the Syrian rebels to attend what has become known as “Geneva 11.” In May 2013, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov agreed to try to “bring both sides to the table.” Their efforts seemed futile but gained greater impetus after a chemical weapons attack on the outskirts of Damascus last August killed hundreds of people.

Ray Rivera Editor

ANOTHER VIEW

EPA pans mine in Bristol Bay The Seattle Times

T Then, on Sept. 27, 2013, the U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 2118, which demanded the destruction or removal of Syrian chemicals by mid2014. That operation is now successfully underway. The resolution also called for the “convening as soon as possible, of an international conference on Syria to implement the Geneva Communique” and for “all Syrian parties to engage seriously and constructively” and be committed to the “achievement of stability and reconciliation.” It is that international conference, usually referred to as Geneva 11, that is going on. The nice words, typically “U. N.-speak,” may well amount to nothing, but the fact that the Syrian government and the rebels are sitting down at the same table is a major accomplishment for Kerry. The current IsraeliPalestinian peace talks also are a major achievement for the secretary of state. Given the history of the Middle East, both sets of talks may amount to little or nothing, but far better to be engaged in “jaw-jaw,” as Winston Churchill once put it, than “war-war.” The talks should have opened in Geneva, but this

being Switzerland, a watchmakers convention had taken up all that city’s hotel rooms, so it was down the road a bit to lakeside Montreux. Then the talks were almost derailed by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s last-minute invitation to Iran to participate in the conference. Tehran accepted the invitation, promising to play a “positive and constructive role,” but the Syrian opposition National Coalition immediately said it would not participate unless Iran was excluded. The U.S. said Ban Ki-moon’s invitation was “conditioned on Iran’s explicit and public support for the full implementation of the Geneva Communique,” which calls for a transitional government in Syria. Iran refused to do that and subsequently declined the invitation to participate. In the wake of the Iranian refusal, the Syrian opposition said it would come, after all, despite days of fierce argument among the various factions that compose its political and military forces. As the various Syrian forces got settled in Montreux on Wednesday, before the scheduled opening of the talks on Friday, there were fierce and fiery statements from all sides. The Syrian Foreign Minister

called the Syrian rebels “evil” and ignored appeals by Ban Ki-moon to avoid invective or even to yield the floor. John Kerry said it was unthinkable that Syrian President Bashar Assad could play a role in any transitional government, even though the major objective of the talks is a transitional body by “mutual consent” of the Assad government and the opposition forces. So, right up until the very last moment, the anger of the various parties has been so intense that it is difficult to see how the conference could achieve anything positive. But the ugly fact is that some 130,000 dead Syrians, almost 10 million displaced people and hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees in camps in Jordan and Lebanon have driven the competing factors to Switzerland. The main U.S. objective is the removal of the Assad government without U.S. military participation. That may not be possible, but achieving that objective is what has driven Kerry to Switzerland. Bill Stewart writes about current affairs from Santa Fe. He has served as a U.S. Foreign Service Officer and was a Time magazine correspondent.

Include more voices in hospital study

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

our article regarding two competing resolutions for a hospital study group for Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center brings to light the absolute necessity to adopt City Councilor Patti Bushee’s version (“Council split over hospital evaluation,” Jan. 10). Because of a chronic illness, I am a frequent patient at St. Vincent. From firsthand experience, I can say not all my visits have been satisfactory. Councilor Bushee’s proposal would bring the most critically affected people to the table in an attempt to improve services at St. Vincent. Consumers and the official employees’ representative know what is lacking at the hospital and how best to meet the needs of the patients. I applaud Councilor Bushee’s efforts to protect the best interests of the citizens of Santa Fe. Anyone who has spent as much time in the hospital as I can see Councilor Bushee’s option as the only

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viable avenue. My health is precious to me, and I know Councilor Bushee is looking after my best interests. John Quintana

Santa Fe

Broader vision Javier Gonzales recently invited former City Councilor Rosemary Romero, author Bill deBuys, Conservation Voters New Mexico Executive Director Demis Foster and New Energy Economy Executive Director Mariel Nanasi to join in a discussion on environmental issues facing Santa Fe. The result was a thoughtful and wide-ranging analysis of Santa Fe’s past, present and future. The high level of the conversation impressed those present — including many previously uncommitted voters. I encourage everyone who missed the event to watch highlights at vimeo. com/84336610. Javier showed that he gets

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

it: Santa Fe — the city — does not exist in a vacuum. It will take collaborative skills to work with the county, the state, tribal governments and the federal government to achieve progress. Watch and listen to this informative discussion and vote on March 4. Tom Noble

Santa Fe

Representing all I have had the opportunity to watch Javier Gonzales interact in different situations with diverse groups of people. What I have observed is that Javier listens when the people of this community talk. One has to truly listen to people

MAllARD FillMORE

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

and be open to their point of view to be able to respond in a constructive way to their concerns. And it is listening that is the basis of coalition building. Javier is a coalition builder because he shows a deep compassion and respect for those around him and is interested in hearing what everyone has to say. We need a mayor who will represent the interests of all Santa Feans and will build the bridges needed to create substantial change. We need someone like Javier who, because he understands our city, offers thoughtful and realistic solutions to its’ problems. Sheila Vaughn

Santa Fe

hree years of study and review by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency put science on the side of opponents of a massive copper and gold mine planned for Alaska’s salmon-rich Bristol Bay. EPA’s final watershed assessment concludes the mine is a direct threat to the health of the source of 46 percent of the world’s wild sockeye salmon. The environmental and economic devastation at risk with the proposed Pebble Mine is on an epic scale. The report helped move Alaska U.S. Sen. Mark Begich, a Democrat, to announce this week his opposition to it as the wrong mine in the wrong place. EPA states that up to 94 miles of streams would be destroyed. Wastewater issues and treatment failures threaten an additional 48 to 62 miles of streams. Add in 5,300 acres of wetlands that would be damaged by the mining proposal, according to the EPA’s findings. Economic trauma wrought by the Pebble Mine radiates out in the same concentric circles suffered by the environment. The EPA report put a value of $674 million on the salmon fishing and processing spread across Washington, Oregon and California. That translates to 12,000 seasonal jobs and 6,000 full-time jobs. Bristol Bay’s salmon fishery also powers trade with Japan and China. All that is put at risk. Large-scale mining in Bristol Bay was a bad idea from the start. In September, one of the partners in the plan, London-based Anglo American, pulled out, leaving Canada’s Northern Dynasty Minerals. Though the EPA describes the assessment as a technical resource, and not a final decision, the warning lights are flashing. Hard evidence on the environmental devastation and the economic losses, and the hardships for Alaska Native cultures, all work against a terrible idea.

20-somethings do need health insurance The Kansas City Star

W

hile overall enrollment in the insurance marketplaces designed under the Affordable Care Act was vigorous in December, more young and healthy consumers are needed to make the complex math of the health reform law add up. About 2.2 million Americans have now enrolled in health coverage through the new insurance exchanges. That’s a welcome number, considering the badly bungled rollout of HealthCare.gov, the online federal marketplace. The website is working much more smoothly now for enrollees, although a couple of the state-based sites still have issues. But more than half of the enrollees so far are in the 45- to 64-year-old age bracket. That group racks up higher medical costs than the 18- to 34-year-old demographic, which accounts for only about a fourth of the enrollment so far. Insurers say they need to have younger consumers in the pool to hold down the costs of policies. The shortage so far of the “young healthies,” as they are called, isn’t necessarily a cause for panic. But more youthful consumers are needed before this year’s open enrollment period ends March 31. Foes of “Obamacare” have targeted young people with unhelpful messages, urging them not to sign up for insurance and pay a fine instead. Talk about bad advice. Many young consumers will find they are eligible for subsidies, enabling them to buy insurance at low rates. Those who choose to opt out will be subject to a tax penalty, and they’ll receive nothing for it. What they will receive is the full bill for any routine or emergency medical expense they may accrue. And a one-time trip to the emergency room — for a sprained ankle, say — can run into thousands of dollars.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Jan. 25, 1914: Frank Springer arrived yesterday from Las Vegas to consult with Donald Beaureguard, the artist, who is to paint several pictures here. Mr. Beaureguard has a studio on the Old Palace.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


A-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Partly sunny

Tonight

Mainly clear

Monday

Plenty of sunshine

25

52

Sunday

Tuesday

Partly sunny

51/20

Partly sunny

49/22

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

Wednesday

Mostly sunny

47/25

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Thursday

Mostly sunny and pleasant

53/28

Humidity (Noon)

Friday

Mostly sunny

56/29

55/26

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

22%

40%

21%

25%

23%

31%

32%

35%

wind: NW 7-14 mph

wind: NNW 7-14 mph

wind: NNW 8-16 mph

wind: SW 6-12 mph

wind: WSW 6-12 mph

wind: NW 8-16 mph

wind: WNW 7-14 mph

wind: W 6-12 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Friday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ........................................... 41°/8° Normal high/low ............................ 46°/20° Record high ............................... 60° in 2013 Record low ................................. -3° in 1964 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.45”/0.45” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00”

New Mexico weather

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64

40

The following water statistics of January 16 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.433 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 3.050 City Wells: 1.362 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 5.845 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.085 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 64.0 percent of capacity; daily inflow 0.71 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Santa Fe 52/25 Pecos 51/26

25

Albuquerque 53/29

87

56

412

Clayton 60/32

AccuWeather Flu Index

25

Las Vegas 55/29

25

Today.........................................2, Low Sunday ......................................2, Low Monday.....................................2, Low Tuesday.....................................1, Low Wednesday...............................2, Low Thursday...................................1, Low The AccuWeather Flu Index™ combines the effects of weather with a number of other known factors to provide a scale showing the overall probability of flu transmission and severity of symptoms. The AccuWeather Flu Index™ is based on a scale of 0-10.

54

40

40

285

Clovis 60/30

54

60 60

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

64

Taos 49/12

84

Española 52/28 Los Alamos 50/28 Gallup 51/11

Raton 57/22

64

666

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 62/29

Ruidoso 54/38

25

70

Truth or Consequences 58/35 70

Las Cruces 60/37

70

70

Carlsbad 64/38

54

Sun and moon

State extremes

Fri. High: 57 ................................ Tucumcari Fri. Low -5 ................................... Angel Fire

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 48/16 pc 42/13 pc 40/-5 s 48/10 pc 52/13 s 40/7 s 47/5 s 56/11 s 43/9 pc 48/9 pc 45/11 pc 49/25 pc 41/12 pc 38/11 pc 52/14 pc 49/12 pc 47/5 pc 48/10 s 48/22 s

Hi/Lo W 60/33 pc 53/29 pc 48/14 s 64/36 pc 64/38 pc 45/9 s 56/21 s 60/32 s 48/22 pc 60/30 pc 50/15 pc 62/34 pc 52/28 pc 48/16 s 61/30 pc 51/11 pc 53/13 pc 62/35 pc 60/37 pc

Hi/Lo W 62/31 s 56/27 s 45/13 s 73/36 s 74/37 s 41/6 s 54/17 s 56/20 s 49/19 s 61/24 s 50/19 s 67/34 s 55/26 s 50/17 s 65/27 s 53/11 s 54/14 s 69/32 s 65/34 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 54/5 48/30 40/13 46/13 50/10 48/-4 33/-4 42/12 50/10 46/9 52/14 45/19 46/16 39/3 46/18 57/10 50/24 44/12 47/12

W s pc s pc pc s s pc pc s pc pc s s s s pc pc pc

Hi/Lo W 55/29 pc 64/40 pc 50/28 pc 56/24 pc 60/31 pc 57/22 s 46/16 s 55/25 pc 62/29 pc 54/38 pc 61/32 pc 60/37 pc 58/31 pc 49/12 s 58/35 pc 62/31 pc 62/37 pc 53/27 pc 51/13 pc

Hi/Lo W 54/20 s 67/36 s 49/21 s 58/25 s 62/25 s 56/22 s 41/8 s 55/20 s 72/30 s 56/33 s 63/27 s 62/35 s 63/29 s 47/13 s 64/33 s 62/24 s 67/32 s 51/21 s 52/13 s

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

Weather for January 25

Sunrise today ............................... 7:09 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 5:24 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 1:44 a.m. Moonset today ........................... 12:27 p.m. Sunrise Sunday ............................. 7:09 a.m. Sunset Sunday .............................. 5:26 p.m. Moonrise Sunday .......................... 2:47 a.m. Moonset Sunday ........................... 1:18 p.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 7:08 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 5:27 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 3:50 a.m. Moonset Monday .......................... 2:17 p.m. New

First

Full

Last

Jan 30

Feb 6

Feb 14

Feb 22

The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 47/35 36/11 20/6 49/28 43/32 26/23 19/7 36/29 28/10 23/-6 18/-6 17/-1 43/18 57/21 14/-2 45/24 41/27 77/60 36/28 19/-6 41/3 62/47 73/55

W r s s pc c sn s s s sn pc c pc s sn r pc s i pc pc pc c

Hi/Lo 40/31 48/24 33/14 52/33 28/15 30/24 35/15 52/28 45/19 19/0 24/3 22/1 62/42 58/32 22/2 34/15 52/20 78/67 62/39 24/2 40/33 65/41 79/54

W s s sn s sn c sn s pc sf sn sn pc s sf s pc s pc sn s s pc

Hi/Lo W 38/32 pc 51/35 pc 24/20 c 36/4 sn 24/-17 sn 31/27 c 23/19 pc 53/36 pc 46/31 pc 23/-8 sn 38/8 sn 24/12 sn 70/37 s 53/16 s 21/8 sn 30/9 pc 53/21 s 78/65 pc 70/50 s 37/0 sn 50/3 pc 63/41 s 72/52 pc

Rise 8:06 a.m. 5:27 a.m. 11:22 p.m. 3:29 p.m. 1:53 a.m. 10:07 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:45 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 10:53 a.m. 5:57 a.m. 12:22 p.m. 10:30 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

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

F

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

285

10

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 23/1 32/9 73/58 23/-7 32/2 39/32 19/10 45/4 59/43 19/8 70/58 14/0 47/37 25/11 35/6 37/16 40/27 67/58 63/46 55/34 38/6 19/4 24/11

W pc s pc sn sn sn s s pc s c sf s s pc s c c pc pc c s s

Hi/Lo 30/10 48/30 72/57 16/-3 4/0 58/40 30/16 58/35 66/47 32/14 74/48 27/1 49/29 40/16 35/23 39/21 65/41 74/54 64/45 50/35 26/20 30/11 34/17

W sf pc pc sf pc s sn pc pc sn pc sn pc c pc s pc pc s pc sf sn sn

Hi/Lo W 45/15 pc 56/29 pc 75/62 pc 17/-8 sn 16/-19 sn 61/50 pc 22/18 pc 63/22 s 69/55 pc 20/19 c 72/48 s 25/16 sn 47/34 c 34/27 pc 52/5 pc 38/24 s 72/46 s 70/53 pc 63/46 s 49/37 pc 29/-18 sn 19/17 pc 28/26 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 Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Cold front

Warm front

Stationary front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Fri. High: 81 ........................... Lemoore, CA Fri. Low: -30 ....................... Watertown, NY

On Jan. 25, 1821, thousands crossed the Hudson River from New York City to Hoboken, N.J., on ice that formed when the temperature dropped to 14 degrees below zero that morning.

Weather trivia™

is the snowiest region in the Q: Where world? The mountain ranges of western A: North America.

Weather history

Newsmakers ‘Personal issues’ drive McDermott into rehab

Tori Spelling

NEW YORK — Tori Spelling’s husband, Dean McDermott, has entered rehab, his publicist, Jill Fritzo, confirmed Thursday. The 47-year-old actor said he’s being treated for “some health and personal issues.” He said in a statement to People magazine that he’s “truly sorry for the mistakes I have made and for the pain I’ve caused my family.” Spelling, 40, is an actress, author and reality star. The couple have four children.

Anderson asks Israel to endorse fur ban Dean McDermott

Pamela Anderson

JERUSALEM — Actress and animal rights activist Pamela Anderson is asking Israel’s prime minister to endorse a bill banning the sale of clothes made of animal fur. Fresh off a honeymoon in Israel, Anderson sent a letter to Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday urging him to support the legislation. If passed, it would make Israel the first country in the world to impose a national fur clothing ban. In her letter, Anderson said the way animals “suffer and die for fur violates Jewish principles.” The Associated Press

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 45/37 59/45 61/45 82/59 61/43 51/27 23/19 70/37 72/58 68/54 87/72 49/27 28/25 52/39 43/34 70/55 73/52 67/56 60/44 81/70

W sh pc pc s pc c sf pc r s s pc c r pc pc pc s s pc

Hi/Lo 41/37 62/49 66/43 87/68 60/50 45/16 21/10 68/50 70/59 76/60 87/72 61/43 27/21 46/37 41/30 70/55 77/57 69/58 65/51 82/68

TV

1

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

Hi/Lo 43/36 55/47 67/54 88/70 57/49 39/22 19/12 66/50 77/66 78/52 87/72 68/40 29/24 47/36 40/33 72/56 78/57 70/59 66/48 80/68

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

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 57/47 pc 46/36 r 57/30 pc 72/47 pc 10/-11 pc 9/-4 sn 65/51 pc 45/37 r 27/27 sf 91/79 s 54/50 r 82/55 s 46/30 c 82/75 pc 23/21 sn 82/68 r 55/37 pc 41/37 pc 32/28 sf 37/34 sn

Hi/Lo 59/50 50/34 59/39 73/43 23/-9 9/-2 69/45 45/39 24/10 94/80 53/35 82/57 42/19 83/73 25/19 77/61 57/50 49/36 30/14 38/31

W pc sh pc pc sn c pc c pc s s s r c c pc pc pc s pc

Hi/Lo 59/52 45/37 59/43 74/42 0/-4 9/-5 71/44 45/37 21/18 95/80 53/34 84/57 36/14 85/74 25/19 76/60 55/33 47/37 26/24 36/29

W c r pc pc pc c pc r s s pc s s pc c pc c pc s sf

top picks

7 a.m. on ESPN2 2014 Australian Open Tennis There’s a women’s singles champion to be crowned today in Melbourne, where action in the 2014 Australian Open moves into its penultimate day. Victoria Azarenka won her second consecutive title Down Under a year ago, defeating Li Na 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 in a match delayed by two medical timeouts and Australia Day fireworks. 6 p.m. LIFE Movie: Lizzie Borden Took an Ax “... and gave her mother 40 whacks” — or did she? Christina Ricci stars in this new docudrama about one of the most infamous crimes of the 19th century — the brutal double murder of Andrew and Abby Borden — and the sensational trial of Andrew’s youngest daughter. Billy Campbell plays Lizzie’s lawyer, Andrew Jennings. 7:30 p.m. on CBS Two and a Half Men When Walden (Ashton Kutcher) complains about feeling crowded in his own house, Jenny (Amber Tamblyn) decides to move in with Evelyn (Holland Taylor) and her boyfriend, Marty (Carl Reiner).

2

Journalists leave traditional media outlets to establish their own brands By Paul Farhi

Hobbs 62/35

285

Pundit and blogger Andrew Sullivan left his position with the Daily Beast website last year and started his own independent blog, the Dish. Other journalists are considering following his digital path. THE WASHINGTON POST FILE PHOTO

The Washington Post

380

380

Alamogordo 60/33

180 10

Water statistics

285

64

Farmington 48/16

Area rainfall

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.04” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/0.04” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................. Trace/Trace Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.08”/0.08” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.00”

Air quality index

Alan (Jon Cryer) becomes the “other man” in Lyndsey’s (Courtney Thorne-Smith) life in “I Think I Banged Lucille Ball.” Conchata Ferrell also stars. 8 p.m. on CBS NCIS A murder investigation becomes a missingpersons case — times two — when Ducky and Jimmy (David McCallum, Brian Dietzen) disappear while transporting a body from the scene of the crime. Gibbs (Mark Harmon, pictured) and the team scramble to track down their missing colleagues in “Detour.” 9 p.m. HBO Movie: The Incredible Burt Wonderstone Pretty much a Will Ferrell movie without Will Ferrell, this 2013 parody of the magic business casts Steve Carell and Steve Buscemi as veteran illusionists who reunite and amp up their act to deal with competition from a daredevil rival (Jim Carrey). Olivia Wilde, James Gandolfini, Alan Arkin and actual magic star David Copperfield also appear.

4 5

or every aspiring journalist-entrepreneur, Andrew Sullivan has been something of a patron saint. The veteran political pundit and cultural blogger left his position with the Daily Beast website last year and started his own independent blog, thereby raising the hopes of media watchers and aspiring pundits everywhere. Sullivan’s trailblazing move raised an intriguing question in an age in which traditional media organizations are shrinking: Could a political and cultural writer with his own following create a freestanding, self-supporting business out of his wits and personal “brand” alone? One year later, as a wave of other journalism stars, including former New York Times columnist Nate Silver and former Guardian writer Glenn Greenwald, prepare to follow Sullivan’s digital path, the answer isn’t entirely clear. As Sullivan has scrupulously reported on his Washingtonbased blog, the Dish, the going hasn’t been easy — and it figures to get even harder as he enters his second full year of operation. At the moment, subscription revenue, the Dish’s sole support, is running well behind last year’s pace. Sullivan’s experience may offer a lesson: Starting a journalism-oriented business on the Web is one thing, but making it pay off is another. To be sure, the British-born Sullivan, 50, established a somewhat quirky business model for his venture. He declared early on that he wouldn’t take advertising and would be supported only by his readers via subscriptions. He also made it easy for nonsubscribers to view his fast-moving stream of content — collected musing on politics, pop culture and sundry other topics — without encountering a paywall. In effect, Sullivan established a “tip jar” format, with readers volunteering to pay him $19.95 a year. Newspapers and other publishers are instituting mandatory paywalls to force readers to buy subscriptions. The results have been mixed. In his first year of operation last year, Sullivan reports, the Dish sold 34,000 subscriptions and generated more than $875,000 in revenue, just shy of the $900,000 goal he’d set for his first year. That left no room for a profit, particularly since the Dish’s masthead lists 10 employees, in addition to its founder. Sullivan, who declined several requests for an interview, hasn’t taken a salary since the site began. “The fact that he’s raised close to $1 million through subscription is quite a feat” and a testament to Sullivan’s star power, says Alan Mutter, a San Francisco-based media consultant and blogger. But Mutter is skeptical about relying solely on subscribers. Soon, a new wave of wouldbe Sullivans will be testing that proposition. The list includes Silver, the statistics whiz who formerly blogged for The New York Times and who is starting up a new digital venture backed by ESPN. Greenwald, the journalist-advocate who

has broken stories about the National Security Agency, is readying a news and commentary site funded by billionaire eBay founder Pierre Omidyar. There’s also Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher, who broke away from The Wall Street Journal to form a news site funded by NBC Universal. And this week, The Washington Post lost Ezra Klein, founder of its Wonkblog policy news and analysis site, who is leaving to run his own shop. A handful of digital journalism entrepreneurs have found success in recent years by starting with small staffs, low overhead and a singular journalistic vision. If the editorial formula clicks, it can attract a vast audience with relatively little promotional expense. The earliest pioneer may have been Matt Drudge, a former convenience-store clerk from Takoma Park, Md., who turned a show-biz email newsletter into a political news and commentary site in 1996. The Drudge Report quickly turned into one of the most popular and influential news aggregation sites on the Web. In 2005, Arianna Huffington founded The Huffington Post on a shoestring budget and built a loyal following with a mix of left-leaning political news, provocative, and unpaid, commentaries and voluminous “aggregation” — links to the work of others. The site was bought by AOL in 2011 for $315 million. Politico, founded by two former Washington Post journalists, succeeded through intense and sustained coverage of a single topic: national politics. So did Business Insider, edited by Henry Blodget, a former Wall Street research analyst who was barred from the business after fraud allegations in 2002. (Jeff Bezos, owner of The Washington Post, is an investor in Business Insider.) Gawker, founded by another British ex-pat, Nick Denton, has mixed salacious scoops and gossip about celebrities and media personalities; its parent company, Gawker Media, now oversees eight sites, including the feisty sports blog Deadspin and Gizmodo, a design and technology site. Visionary journalists were also the driving force behind such leading sites as gossipers TMZ and PerezHilton.com, the show-biz news chronicler Deadline.com and TechCrunch, which focuses on information technology. It’s not clear that Sullivan’s relatively slow start as his own boss says much about the prospects for others who want to do the same, says Rick Edmonds, the media-business analyst for the Poynter Institute, a journalism education organization. Greenwald, Silver, Mossberg and the others, he notes, have deep-pocketed backers who can afford to sustain years of losses and experimentation. Edmonds says the “journalist as brand” is likely to continue. “It used to be that the stars wanted to be at The Washington Post and The New York Times,” he said. “Now, the notion seems to be that the stars come out of The Washington Post and The New York Times.”


SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Markets in review B-6 Classifieds B-7 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

B

Watchful: NYC cops to keep close eye on Super Bowl fans. Page B-5

UNM MEN’S BASKETBALL

Lobos may give their best against Colorado St.

UP next Saturday: New Mexico (14-4, 5-1) at Colorado State (12-7, 3-3), 2 p.m. TV: None Radio: KVSF-aM 1400, KKoB-aM 770 Internet: Live stream on ESPN3

By Will Webber The New Mexican

Who’s it going to be? Kendall Williams or Cameron Bairstow? Maybe it’s Alex Kirk’s turn. Or Hugh Greenwood’s, Deshawn Delaney’s, or anyone else wearing a cherry red uniform. No matter what the occasion, playing against Colorado State’s men’s basketball team always seems to bring out the best in The University of New Mexico. Spe-

cifically, one player. During the Lobos’ visit last year to energized Moby Arena in Fort Collins, Colo., a game in which both teams were nationally ranked, it was Williams who set the world on fire with a career-high 46-point effort that featured 10 made 3-point shots. Earlier this season it was Bairstow. In the Mountain West Conference opener for both teams, the 6-foot-9 senior power forward matched a career high with 29 points while setting a personal standard for rebounds with 14.

Heck, it applies to history, too. The school record for points in a single game is 50 by Marvin Johnson, set on March 2, 1978 — against Colorado State. Williams’ 46 points is the UNM record for scoring in a road game. The Lobos visit Colorado State on Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. in Moby Arena. UNM (14-4, 5-1) is trying to keep pace with red-hot San Diego State while Colorado State is just trying to stay relevant. The Rams (12-7, 3-3) are in the middle of

The Lobos’ Kendall Williams, front, drives against Boise State’s Ryan Watkins, left, and Derrick Marks during Tuesday’s game in Albuquerque. JuaN aNtoNio LaBrEChE thE aSSoCiatEd PrESS

Please see LoBos, Page B-3

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL SFHS 50, LOS ALAMOS 37

BOXING

Feathers ruffled at weigh-in

sweet sixteen

By James Barron The New Mexican

Demonettes’ streak continues with win over Los Alamos

Brandon Holmes attributed it to cranky nerves from two boxers trying to make weight. Or maybe, just maybe, it’s just the preamble to what is to come Saturday night. Either way, Friday afternoon’s weighins for the “Return of the Warrior” boxing card at Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino was not Brandon the usual mundane Holmes event. After Holmes and opponent Brandon Muñoz weighed in for their four-round bout, they posed for their faceoff in front of an audience of about 100 people. That’s when things got testy. Muñoz pressed his head against Holmes, and Holmes pushed back. “We had to make weight, we get grouchy and I snapped,” said Holmes, whose dad, Pat Holmes, is promoting the fight card. Before the scuffle could gain much traction, Muñoz’s team and Rai Dominguez, the head of security for Holmes Boxing Production, got in

By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

f

or the Santa Fe High girls basketball team, 16 is just so sweet. The Demonettes beat District 2AAAA rival Los Alamos in Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium 50-37 on Friday night to pick up their 16th straight win. Santa Fe High (17-1 overall, 2-0 in 2AAAA) has not known defeat since falling to Albuquerque Volcano Vista in early December, but the players are not trying to dwell too much on the current winning streak. “I don’t think about it that much,” Santa Fe High junior post Sabrina Lozada-Cabbage said. “I don’t want it to get in my head. You have to keep it in the back of your mind, but you have to stay humble. That’s what good teams need: To stay humble and not get a big head and not get ahead of themselves.” If the Demonettes needed a lesson in humility, they got it early in Friday’s game. The Lady Hilltoppers (9-10, 1-1) got out to an 11-9 lead at the end of the first quarter. Less than two minutes into the second quarter, Los Alamos was enjoying a 13-9 lead, its biggest of the game. Los Alamos knows it has a good team, and the Lady Hilltoppers showed that to Santa Fe High right out of the gate. “I don’t know that anybody expected us to be able to play with them,” Los Alamos head coach Ann Stewart said. “They were maybe a little taken aback, and we were able to surprise them.” As Santa Fe High sees every game as preparation for the state tournament, it is constantly toying with new schemes. As head coach Elmer Chavez was trying new things, the Lady Hilltoppers were able to exploit them and keep the Demonettes from getting the lead. “We’re changing things up a lot,” Chavez said.

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NFL COMMENTARY

Manning, Sherman both worth celebrating

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inside u Prep roundup: Española Valley girls rebound, rout Capital. Page B-3

Santa Fe High’s Sabrina Lozada-Cabbage, left, attempts to block a shot from Los Alamos’ Alison Crane during the first quarter of Friday’s game at the Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium. For more photos, go to tinyurl.com/Iftbfd4. JaNE PhiLLiPS/thE NEw MExiCaN

Guess what: Sports are supposed to be tough

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ere’s a suggestion than biting the bullet to some seem to folshowing up every day and low when life’s little do the work. roadblocks start getting in In recent days, it has the way: Just quit. come to light that a protest Quit trying. of sorts is in the works that Quit showing up. may or may not involve players quitting during Take a long siesta and try pregame introductions of something else when you Will Webber a critical boys basketball feel better. Commentary district showdown this Oh, and make sure to weekend. surround yourself with Sure would make for fine enablers. Having a support theatre. No denying that. system that allows you to take the easy way out is essential to being a It would also give a therapist the successful quitter. kind of ammunition that would launch a series of lectures, perhaps One thing you shouldn’t do: Quit even a book tour. complaining. The more you talk, the more those around you will rally to Last month during the final round your cause. of the Capital City Invitational at Take, for instance, the culture of Santa Fe High, the powers that be some — not all — high school athpaid tribute to recent Hall of Fame letes and their families. For a select inductee Bobby Rodriguez. During few, quitting is a more suitable option his brief speech to those in Toby Roy-

bal Memorial Gymnasium, the legendary prep basketball coach made reference to all the players whose lives he made miserable by being the hard-edged mentor he was. He explained that he did it for their own good, for the good of the team, for the good of the game. Not once did he apologize. And good for him. The world needs more coaches like Bobby Rodriguez and coaches who adhere to his style. Coaches who instill discipline, demand that things be done right and who put the team before the individual. You knew what you were getting with Rodriguez. If you weren’t fine with it, there were always plenty of good seats behind the basket. At some point in the last generation it has become too easy to point the finger at a coach and blame a kid’s woes on the person in charge. Not enough playing time? The coach

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

obviously has an agenda. Got yelled at during practice? Coach obviously hates the kid. Not all coaches are perfect. Not all of them are right, either. In that same breath, neither are the parents or players who subscribe to the notion that taking the easy way out and rattling every cage is the way to go. If you want to quit, look for the exit sign and bow out gracefully. Or better yet, learn the lesson Rodriguez tried to instill as if he were using a blunt instrument: To persevere, to accept accountability, to understand the sacrifice it takes to drop the me-first attitude and play as a team instead of a group of individuals. In short, learn that life is full of obstacles in which coping with unsavory types is part of the deal, be it jobs, politics or just about anything in between.

By Paul Newberry The Associated Press

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ell, here we go again. Get ready for a Super Bowl week filled with more of the inevitable comparisons between Peyton Manning and Richard Sherman. There’s no better headlines: Good vs. evil. Humble vs. loudmouthed. The well-groomed quarterback vs. the cornerback with dreads. And, lurking just beneath the surface, the undeniable racial overtones. We all love an enticing matchup — it doesn’t get much better than one of the greatest QBs in NFL history taking on the best pass defender in the league with a title on the line — and inevitably will take sides. But Manning and Sherman are both worth celebrating. Sure, they come from diverse back-

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inside u Seattle’s Sherman fined $7,875 for taunting. u NYC cops to keep close eye on Super Bowl fans. u Ex-Cowboy Brent gets 180 days in jail, probation. Page B-5

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

thunder 101, Celtics 83

BASKETBALL basketball

Nba eastern Conference

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

W 22 19 16 15 14 W 31 22 21 19 12 W 34 21 17 16 8

l 20 22 27 30 29 l 12 20 21 26 32 l 8 21 26 27 34

Pct .524 .463 .372 .333 .326 Pct .721 .524 .500 .422 .273 Pct .810 .500 .395 .372 .190

Western Conference

Gb — 21/2 61/2 81/2 81/2 Gb — 81/2 91/2 13 191/2 Gb — 13 171/2 181/2 26

southwest W l Pct Gb San Antonio 33 10 .767 — Houston 29 16 .644 5 Dallas 25 20 .556 9 Memphis 21 20 .512 11 New Orleans 17 25 .405 151/2 Northwest W l Pct Gb Oklahoma City 34 10 .773 — Portland 32 11 .744 11/2 Minnesota 21 21 .500 12 Denver 20 21 .488 121/2 Utah 14 29 .326 191/2 Pacific W l Pct Gb L.A. Clippers 30 15 .667 — Golden State 26 18 .591 31/2 Phoenix 24 18 .571 41/2 L.A. Lakers 16 28 .364 131/2 Sacramento 15 27 .357 131/2 Friday’s Games Orlando 114, L.A. Lakers 105 Toronto 104, Philadelphia 95 Brooklyn 107, Dallas 106 Oklahoma City 101, Boston 83 Cleveland 93, Milwaukee 78 New Orleans 103, Detroit 101 San Antonio 105, Atlanta 79 New York 125, Charlotte 96 L.A. Clippers 112, Chicago 95 Memphis 88, Houston 87 Washington 101, Phoenix 95 Indiana 116, Sacramento 111, OT Minnesota 121, Golden State 120 thursday’s Games Miami 109, L.A. Lakers 102 Portland 110, Denver 105 saturday’s Games Chicago at Charlotte, 5 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Toronto, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. Houston at Memphis, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. Indiana at Denver, 7 p.m. Washington at Utah, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Portland, 8 p.m. sunday’s Games San Antonio at Miami, 11 a.m. L.A. Lakers at New York, 1:30 p.m. Orlando at New Orleans, 4 p.m. Phoenix at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Brooklyn at Boston, 4:30 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Portland at Golden State, 7 p.m. Denver at Sacramento, 7 p.m.

Nba CaleNdar

Feb. 14-16 — All-Star weekend, New Orleans. Feb. 20 — Trade deadline, 1 p.m. April 16 — Last day of regular season. April 19 — Playoffs begin.

Nba boxsCores Friday raptors 104, 76ers 95

toroNto (104) Ross 4-7 0-0 10, Johnson 4-8 1-1 9, Valanciunas 3-5 0-0 6, Lowry 7-11 1-3 18, DeRozan 10-22 13-16 34, Patterson 5-14 1-2 11, Salmons 5-7 0-0 12, Vasquez 1-6 0-0 2, Hayes 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 40-84 16-22 104. PHIladelPHIa (95) Turner 5-17 3-4 13, Young 8-16 0-0 16, Hawes 6-17 1-1 14, Carter-Williams 6-15 5-6 20, Anderson 3-7 2-2 8, Thompson 6-7 1-1 15, Williams 2-5 0-0 4, Allen 1-4 0-0 2, Dedmon 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 38-89 13-16 95. toronto 27 25 28 24 —104 Philadelphia 28 25 25 17 —95 3-Point Goals—Toronto 8-20 (Lowry 3-5, Salmons 2-3, Ross 2-4, DeRozan 1-3, Patterson 0-2, Vasquez 0-3), Philadelphia 6-20 (Carter-Williams 3-5, Thompson 2-2, Hawes 1-4, Williams 0-1, Turner 0-2, Young 0-3, Anderson 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Toronto 58 (Lowry 10), Philadelphia 46 (Hawes 12). Assists— Toronto 28 (Lowry 13), Philadelphia 23 (Anderson, Carter-Williams 5). Total Fouls—Toronto 22, Philadelphia 18. Technicals—Patterson, Toronto defensive three second. A—11,489.

Cavaliers 93, bucks 78

MIlWaUkee (78) Ilyasova 2-10 0-0 5, Henson 4-7 0-0 8, Udoh 1-2 0-0 2, Knight 4-12 0-1 8, Antetokounmpo 3-5 2-2 10, Sanders 3-5 1-2 7, Butler 1-6 0-0 2, Middleton 5-7 0-1 13, Ridnour 1-7 2-2 4, Mayo 3-6 2-2 9, Raduljica 1-3 2-2 4, Wolters 2-4 2-2 6. Totals 30-74 11-14 78. CleVelaNd (93) Deng 4-9 1-1 9, Thompson 6-12 2-6 14, Varejao 8-11 0-0 16, Irving 4-10 1-1 10, Miles 1-6 2-2 4, Waiters 5-13 2-4 13, Sims 0-0 0-0 0, Jack 3-8 3-3 10, Clark 3-3 0-0 7, Dellavedova 0-3 0-0 0, Zeller 3-6 2-2 8, Bennett 0-4 2-2 2, Gee 0-3 0-2 0. Totals 37-88 15-23 93. Milwaukee 23 14 18 23—78 Cleveland 24 22 25 22—93 3-Point Goals—Milwaukee 7-24 (Middleton 3-5, Antetokounmpo 2-3, Ilyasova 1-3, Mayo 1-4, Butler 0-2, Ridnour 0-3, Knight 0-4), Cleveland 4-14 (Clark 1-1, Irving 1-3, Jack 1-3, Waiters 1-3, Deng 0-2, Miles 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 41 (Antetokounmpo 7), Cleveland 65 (Thompson 10). Assists—Milwaukee 20 (Mayo 6), Cleveland 28 (Irving 10). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 20, Cleveland 18. Technicals—Knight, Milwaukee defensive three second, Deng. A—17,147.

Magic 114, lakers 105

l.a. lakers (105) Johnson 2-7 0-0 5, Kelly 5-8 3-3 15, Gasol 8-17 5-7 21, Marshall 7-14 0-0 19, Meeks 7-12 0-1 17, M.Harris 3-8 0-0 6, Young 6-16 3-6 16, Hill 3-7 0-0 6, Sacre 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-90 11-17 105. orlaNdo (114) Afflalo 7-12 7-9 23, T.Harris 9-15 9-11 28, Davis 3-10 0-0 6, Nelson 7-11 4-4 22, Oladipo 5-14 4-6 15, O’Quinn 3-8 1-2 7, Moore 2-3 0-0 4, Nicholson 0-0 0-0 0, Lamb 2-6 0-0 5, Harkless 1-2 2-2 4. Totals 39-81 27-34 114. l.a. lakers 32 23 25 25—105 orlando 28 25 38 23—114 3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 12-22 (Marshall 5-7, Meeks 3-5, Kelly 2-3, Young 1-3, Johnson 1-3, M.Harris 0-1), Orlando 9-17 (Nelson 4-6, Afflalo 2-3, T.Harris 1-1, Oladipo 1-3, Lamb 1-3, Harkless 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 46 (Gasol 11), Orlando 58 (T.Harris 20). Assists—L.A. Lakers 28 (Marshall 14), Orlando 24 (Nelson, Afflalo 6). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 20, Orlando 20. Technicals— Young, Orlando defensive three second. A—16,101.

oklaHoMa CItY (101) Jones 4-6 2-2 10, Ibaka 9-13 2-2 21, Perkins 2-5 2-4 6, Jackson 5-14 3-3 14, Sefolosha 6-6 0-0 13, Lamb 9-17 0-0 19, Collison 3-7 0-0 6, Fisher 3-4 0-0 7, Adams 1-4 1-2 3, Roberson 1-3 0-0 2, Ivey 0-1 0-0 0, Thabeet 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-80 10-13 101. bostoN (83) Green 7-17 1-2 16, Sullinger 3-10 0-0 6, Humphries 3-5 2-2 8, Rondo 2-7 0-0 5, Wallace 4-6 4-6 13, Pressey 2-6 3-4 9, Bass 5-7 1-1 11, Olynyk 2-5 0-0 4, Johnson 3-7 2-2 8, Faverani 1-3 0-0 2, Anthony 0-2 0-0 0, Blue 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 32-75 14-19 83. oklahoma City 27 23 27 24 —101 boston 28 18 13 24 —83 3-Point Goals—Oklahoma City 5-13 (Ibaka 1-1, Sefolosha 1-1, Fisher 1-2, Jackson 1-3, Lamb 1-4, Jones 0-1, Collison 0-1), Boston 5-27 (Pressey 2-5, Rondo 1-2, Wallace 1-3, Green 1-8, Faverani 0-1, Olynyk 0-1, Johnson 0-3, Sullinger 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Oklahoma City 49 (Perkins 9), Boston 39 (Bass, Johnson, Humphries, Sullinger, Faverani 4). Assists—Oklahoma City 24 (Jackson 8), Boston 24 (Rondo 8). Total Fouls—Oklahoma City 18, Boston 12. A—18,624.

knicks 125, bobcats 96

CHarlotte (96) Kidd-Gilchrist 2-4 0-1 4, McRoberts 2-4 0-0 6, Jefferson 11-19 3-4 25, Sessions 3-8 6-6 12, Henderson 4-9 0-0 8, Zeller 2-5 1-1 5, Douglas-Roberts 5-7 0-0 14, Tolliver 1-5 0-0 3, Pargo 4-11 0-0 11, Biyombo 3-4 2-2 8. Totals 37-76 12-14 96. NeW York (125) Anthony 23-35 10-10 62, Shumpert 2-6 0-0 4, Chandler 1-2 0-0 2, Prigioni 1-2 0-0 3, Felton 5-9 0-0 11, Smith 5-9 1-1 14, Aldrich 1-4 0-0 2, Hardaway Jr. 4-8 0-0 10, Tyler 4-8 0-0 8, Murry 3-4 0-0 6, Udrih 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 50-90 11-11 125. Charlotte 21 25 20 30—96 New York 30 37 34 24—125 3-Point Goals—Charlotte 10-24 (Douglas-Roberts 4-5, Pargo 3-8, McRoberts 2-3, Tolliver 1-4, Jefferson 0-1, Sessions 0-1, Henderson 0-2), New York 14-27 (Anthony 6-11, Smith 3-4, Hardaway Jr. 2-6, Udrih 1-1, Prigioni 1-2, Felton 1-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Charlotte 36 (Jefferson 9), New York 45 (Anthony 13). Assists—Charlotte 23 (Pargo 8), New York 23 (Felton 5). Total Fouls—Charlotte 11, New York 19. Technicals—Charlotte Coach Clifford, Henderson, Jefferson, Charlotte defensive three second. A—19,812.

Pelicans 103, Pistons 101

NeW orleaNs (103) Aminu 5-8 0-0 10, Davis 4-12 6-6 14, Ajinca 3-5 0-0 6, Roberts 4-6 4-4 13, Gordon 5-10 3-4 15, Stiemsma 2-2 0-0 4, Miller 0-1 3-3 3, Rivers 6-15 3-3 15, Withey 1-3 0-0 2, Morrow 7-11 3-4 21. Totals 37-73 22-24 103. detroIt (101) Jo.Smith 6-12 0-1 13, Monroe 4-8 0-0 8, Drummond 9-17 3-6 21, Jennings 7-20 12-14 28, Caldwell-Pope 6-12 1-1 14, Stuckey 3-9 3-4 9, Singler 1-5 0-0 3, Bynum 1-2 2-2 5. Totals 37-85 21-28 101. New orleans 25 29 17 32—103 detroit 26 22 32 21—101 3-Point Goals—New Orleans 7-17 (Morrow 4-5, Gordon 2-4, Roberts 1-2, Davis 0-1, Miller 0-1, Rivers 0-2, Aminu 0-2), Detroit 6-18 (Jennings 2-8, Bynum 1-1, Jo.Smith 1-1, Singler 1-3, Caldwell-Pope 1-4, Stuckey 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New Orleans 42 (Davis 8), Detroit 51 (Drummond 20). Assists—New Orleans 15 (Rivers, Gordon, Stiemsma 3), Detroit 18 (Jennings 7). Total Fouls—New Orleans 25, Detroit 21. A—14,107.

Nets 107, Mavericks 106

dallas (106) Marion 2-5 4-4 9, Nowitzki 5-15 8-9 18, Dalembert 0-1 2-2 2, Calderon 5-15 2-2 15, Ellis 5-11 4-6 16, Carter 8-15 1-2 19, Blair 2-7 0-0 4, Harris 4-6 4-4 14, Larkin 0-0 0-0 0, Crowder 0-0 1-2 1, Wright 3-3 2-2 8. Totals 34-78 28-33 106. brooklYN (107) Johnson 1-5 2-2 5, Pierce 4-8 4-7 12, Garnett 5-8 0-0 10, Livingston 1-3 2-2 4, Anderson 0-5 2-2 2, Blatche 4-8 0-0 8, Williams 5-8 8-10 18, Kirilenko 2-4 2-2 6, Terry 3-6 0-0 8, Teletovic 12-18 3-3 34. Totals 37-73 23-28 107. dallas 21 25 24 36—106 brooklyn 18 39 21 29—107 3-Point Goals—Dallas 10-20 (Calderon 3-7, Ellis 2-3, Harris 2-3, Carter 2-4, Marion 1-1, Nowitzki 0-2), Brooklyn 10-27 (Teletovic 7-11, Terry 2-5, Johnson 1-4, Blatche 0-1, Pierce 0-2, Anderson 0-4). Fouled Out—Harris. Rebounds—Dallas 49 (Marion 11), Brooklyn 41 (Garnett 11). Assists— Dallas 22 (Ellis 7), Brooklyn 24 (Williams 11). Total Fouls—Dallas 21, Brooklyn 29. Technicals—Nowitzki, Dallas defensive three second, Brooklyn defensive three second. A—16,110.

Grizzlies 88, rockets 87

MeMPHIs (88) Prince 3-10 0-0 7, Randolph 6-17 3-5 15, Gasol 3-7 3-4 9, Conley 6-11 0-0 14, Lee 6-9 6-6 19, Calathes 1-3 0-0 2, Davis 5-8 0-0 10, Johnson 5-9 0-1 10, Miller 1-2 0-0 2, Koufos 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 36-78 12-16 88. HoUstoN (87) Parsons 11-17 2-2 34, Jones 4-10 0-0 9, Howard 5-10 1-2 11, Beverley 1-11 0-0 3, Harden 2-11 5-6 10, Motiejunas 3-7 0-2 6, Lin 4-6 1-2 9, Casspi 2-7 0-0 5. Totals 32-79 9-14 87. Memphis 21 23 20 24—88 Houston 20 15 29 23—87 3-Point Goals—Memphis 4-7 (Conley 2-2, Lee 1-1, Prince 1-1, Calathes 0-1, Gasol 0-1, Johnson 0-1), Houston 1434 (Parsons 10-14, Jones 1-2, Casspi 1-3, Harden 1-4, Beverley 1-8, Lin 0-1, Motiejunas 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Memphis 52 (Randolph 8), Houston 46 (Howard 12). Assists— Memphis 21 (Johnson 5), Houston 21 (Harden 13). Total Fouls—Memphis 16, Houston 19. A—16,998.

Clippers 112, bulls 95

l.a. ClIPPers (112) Barnes 5-6 0-0 13, Griffin 11-18 4-7 26, Jordan 4-5 2-6 10, Collison 6-11 3-4 17, Redick 5-11 4-4 18, Crawford 6-14 4-5 19, Dudley 0-3 0-0 0, Hollins 0-0 0-0 0, Morris 0-0 0-0 0, Turkoglu 2-5 0-0 5, Green 2-3 0-0 4, Bullock 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-76 17-26 112. CHICaGo (95) Dunleavy 6-14 3-3 17, Boozer 10-17 2-2 22, Noah 6-9 0-0 12, Augustin 3-8 0-0 7, Butler 3-15 2-2 9, Gibson 8-18 2-2 18, Snell 2-5 0-0 5, Mohammed 0-2 0-0 0, James 2-5 0-2 5, Martin 0-0 0-0 0, Murphy 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-93 9-11 95. l.a. Clippers 41 27 24 20 —112 Chicago 26 29 25 15 —95 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 13-21 (Redick 4-7, Barnes 3-4, Crawford 3-5, Collison 2-3, Turkoglu 1-1, Dudley 0-1), Chicago 6-19 (Dunleavy 2-6, Augustin 1-2, Snell 1-3, James 1-3, Butler 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— L.A. Clippers 47 (Griffin 13), Chicago 52 (Noah 13). Assists—L.A. Clippers 26 (Griffin 7), Chicago 27 (Noah 7). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 17, Chicago 17. Technicals—Chicago Coach Thibodeau. A—21,755.

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD spurs 105, Hawks 79

saN aNtoNIo (105) Belinelli 0-2 1-1 1, Duncan 7-14 3-6 17, Ayres 2-3 2-2 6, Parker 5-10 1-2 11, Joseph 4-10 0-0 8, Ginobili 1-3 1-2 3, Mills 6-10 0-0 18, Diaw 8-10 2-2 21, Baynes 2-10 2-2 6, De Colo 4-8 0-0 9, Bonner 1-3 0-0 3, Jeffers 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 41-84 12-17 105. atlaNta (79) Korver 1-3 0-0 3, Millsap 6-17 3-4 15, Ayon 4-7 0-2 8, Teague 4-7 1-1 9, Williams 4-11 3-3 12, Brand 3-6 3-4 9, Nunnally 2-8 1-2 5, Scott 2-7 6-9 10, Schroder 1-4 2-2 4, Mack 2-6 0-0 4. Totals 29-76 19-27 79. san antonio 27 28 29 21 —105 atlanta 14 20 22 23 —79 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 11-18 (Mills 6-8, Diaw 3-4, Bonner 1-1, De Colo 1-3, Joseph 0-1, Ginobili 0-1), Atlanta 2-13 (Korver 1-2, Williams 1-2, Scott 0-2, Mack 0-2, Millsap 0-2, Nunnally 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 60 (Duncan 16), Atlanta 43 (Millsap 8). Assists— San Antonio 26 (Parker 7), Atlanta 18 (Williams 7). Total Fouls—San Antonio 21, Atlanta 17. Technicals—Atlanta Coach Budenholzer. A—17,601.

Wizards 101, suns 95

WasHINGtoN (101) Ariza 6-14 8-8 23, Nene 8-15 2-4 18, Gortat 6-10 2-4 14, Wall 6-12 4-5 18, Beal 8-15 0-0 17, Temple 1-6 1-2 3, Booker 3-7 0-0 6, Seraphin 0-1 0-0 0, Porter Jr. 1-6 0-0 2. Totals 39-86 17-23 101. PHoeNIx (95) Tucker 2-7 2-4 7, Frye 5-10 2-2 16, Plumlee 7-8 0-0 14, Dragic 8-19 2-2 19, Green 3-8 2-2 8, Barbosa 4-8 2-2 10, Mark.Morris 3-4 6-9 13, Len 1-1 2-2 4, Smith 0-3 0-0 0, Marc.Morris 1-3 2-2 4. Totals 34-71 20-25 95. Washington 30 21 31 19 —101 Phoenix 29 28 19 19 —95 3-Point Goals—Washington 6-16 (Ariza 3-8, Wall 2-3, Beal 1-2, Temple 0-1, Porter Jr. 0-2), Phoenix 7-22 (Frye 4-7, Mark.Morris 1-1, Tucker 1-4, Dragic 1-5, Marc.Morris 0-1, Green 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Washington 55 (Nene 8), Phoenix 40 (Plumlee 6). Assists—Washington 22 (Wall 12), Phoenix 19 (Dragic 11). Total Fouls—Washington 24, Phoenix 24. Technicals—Phoenix Coach Hornacek. A—16,198.

Pacers 116, kings 111 (ot)

INdIaNa (116) George 12-22 8-8 36, West 9-14 3-6 22, Hibbert 3-11 4-4 10, G.Hill 3-9 3-3 10, Stephenson 9-19 5-8 24, Scola 3-10 0-0 6, Granger 2-5 2-2 7, Watson 0-5 0-0 0, Mahinmi 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 41-95 26-33 116. saCraMeNto (111) Williams 2-9 3-7 7, Thompson 0-8 1-2 1, Gray 1-3 1-2 3, Thomas 13-31 10-10 38, Thornton 16-27 3-4 42, Outlaw 2-4 0-0 5, Acy 0-1 2-2 2, Fredette 2-5 0-0 5, Landry 2-8 1-2 5, McLemore 1-5 0-0 3. Totals 39-101 21-29 111. Indiana 26 24 29 24 13—116 sacramento 37 23 24 19 8—111 3-Point Goals—Indiana 8-24 (George 4-10, West 1-1, Granger 1-1, Stephenson 1-4, G.Hill 1-6, Watson 0-2), Sacramento 12-32 (Thornton 7-15, Thomas 2-9, Outlaw 1-2, Fredette 1-2, McLemore 1-3, Williams 0-1). Fouled Out—Thompson. Rebounds—Indiana 57 (Hibbert 11), Sacramento 74 (Williams 11). Assists— Indiana 25 (G.Hill 8), Sacramento 14 (Thomas 6). Total Fouls—Indiana 24, Sacramento 32. Technicals—George, G.Hill, West. A—17,317.

timberwolves 121, Warriors 120

MINNesota (121) Brewer 6-11 0-0 15, Love 7-18 11-14 26, Pekovic 11-18 0-0 22, Rubio 4-7 1-2 9, Martin 10-17 3-5 26, Barea 2-4 0-1 5, Shved 2-5 3-5 7, Turiaf 1-3 0-0 2, Cunningham 1-3 0-0 2, Budinger 2-5 0-0 5, Price 1-3 0-1 2, Mbah a Moute 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 47-94 18-28 121. GoldeN state (120) Iguodala 6-9 3-5 16, Lee 10-15 3-3 23, Bogut 4-5 0-0 8, Curry 12-21 3-3 33, Thompson 8-14 0-0 18, Barnes 1-7 0-0 2, Green 1-4 2-2 4, Crawford 2-6 2-2 6, Speights 5-8 0-0 10. Totals 49-89 13-15 120. Minnesota 36 27 28 30—121 Golden state 36 27 35 22—120 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 9-22 (Martin 3-3, Brewer 3-5, Barea 1-3, Budinger 1-4, Love 1-5, Rubio 0-1, Price 0-1), Golden State 9-22 (Curry 6-10, Thompson 2-4, Iguodala 1-3, Green 0-1, Barnes 0-2, Crawford 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 55 (Pekovic, Love 14), Golden State 44 (Bogut 11). Assists—Minnesota 29 (Rubio 12), Golden State 31 (Curry 15). Total Fouls—Minnesota 18, Golden State 26. A—19,596.

NCaa basketball Men’s top 25

Friday’s Games No games scheduled. saturday’s Games No. 2 Syracuse at Miami, 11 a.m. No. 3 Michigan State vs. No. 21 Michigan, 5 p.m. No. 4 Villanova at Marquette,Noon No. 5 Wichita State at Drake, 6:05 p.m. No. 6 Florida vs. Tennessee, 2 p.m. No. 7 San Diego State at Utah State, 9:05 p.m. No. 8 Kansas at TCU, 7 p.m. No. 9 Wisconsin at Purdue, 3 p.m. No. 10 Iowa at Northwestern, 10 a.m. No. 11 Oklahoma St. vs. W. Virginia, Noon No. 14 Kentucky vs. Georgia, 11:30 a.m. No. 16 Iowa State vs. No. 22 Kansas State, 11:45 a.m. No. 18 Duke vs. Florida State, 10 a.m. No. 20 Pittsburgh at Maryland, 4 p.m. No. 24 Baylor vs. Texas, 11:30 a.m. No. 25 Oklahoma at Texas Tech, 2 p.m.

Men’s division I

Friday’s Games east Iona 95, Quinnipiac 73 Manhattan 67, Rider 51 Niagara 80, Marist 74 Stony Brook 67, Vermont 64 south Lipscomb 75, N. Kentucky 74 Midwest: Detroit 73, Milwaukee 54

Women’s aP top 25

Friday’s Games No. 14 Arizona State 65, Utah 62 Southern Cal 77, No. 19 California 70 No. 4 Stanford 72, UCLA 55 saturday’s Games No. 18 West Virginia at Texas, 2 p.m. No. 20 Iowa State at Texas Tech, 6 p.m. No. 25 Gonzaga at Pepperdine, 3 p.m.

Women’s division I

Friday’s Games east Fairfield 63, Canisius 57 Iona 86, Monmouth (NJ) 77 Rider 73, Siena 70 Yale 73, Brown 52 Far West Arizona St. 65, Utah 62 Colorado 68, Arizona 47 Oregon 82, Washington St. 66 Oregon St. 75, Washington 68 Southern Cal 77, California 70 Midwest Loyola of Chicago 75, Drake 69 N. Iowa 78, Bradley 65

avalanche 3, Panthers 2

HOCKEY HoCkeY

NHl eastern Conference

atlantic GP Boston 49 Tampa Bay 51 Montreal 51 Toronto 53 Detroit 51 Ottawa 51 Florida 51 Buffalo 49 Metro GP Pittsburgh 51 N.Y. Rngrs 53 Columbus 50 Phily 52 New Jersey 52 Carolina 50 Washington 51 N.Y. Islndrs 53

W 31 30 27 27 23 22 20 13 W 36 27 26 25 22 22 22 21

l 15 16 19 21 18 19 24 29 l 13 23 20 21 19 19 21 25

ol 3 5 5 5 10 10 7 7 ol 2 3 4 6 11 9 8 7

Pts 65 65 59 59 56 54 47 33 Pts 74 57 56 56 55 53 52 49

GF 141 150 128 151 131 144 122 92 GF 168 132 148 141 124 125 143 151

Western Conference

Ga 109 126 129 163 139 159 154 142 Ga 125 135 140 152 125 142 154 175

Central GP W l ol Pts GF Ga Chicago 53 32 9 12 76 189 146 St. Louis 50 34 11 5 73 173 116 Colorado 50 32 13 5 69 147 129 Minnesota 53 28 20 5 61 127 130 Dallas 51 23 20 8 54 148 153 Nashville 53 23 22 8 54 131 158 Winnipeg 52 23 24 5 51 144 153 Pacific GP W l ol Pts GF Ga Anaheim 53 38 10 5 81 179 130 San Jose 51 33 12 6 72 162 123 Los Angeles 52 29 17 6 64 132 110 Vancouver 52 26 17 9 61 130 130 Phoenix 51 24 18 9 57 147 155 Calgary 52 18 27 7 43 119 165 Edmonton 53 15 32 6 36 135 187 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Friday’s Games Calgary 5, Nashville 4, SO New Jersey 2, Washington 1 Detroit 4, Montreal 1 Colorado 3, Florida 2 Phoenix 4, Edmonton 3 Ottawa at Carolina, ppd. saturday’s Games Ottawa at Carolina, 10 a.m. St. Louis at N.Y. Islanders, 11 a.m. Boston at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Washington at Montreal, 5 p.m. Colorado at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Buffalo at Columbus, 5 p.m. Toronto at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at Dallas, 6 p.m. Anaheim vs. Los Angeles at Los Angeles, CA, 7:30 p.m. Minnesota at San Jose, 8:30 p.m. sunday’s Games N.Y. Rangers vs. New Jersey at Bronx, NY, 10:30 a.m. Florida at Detroit, 3 p.m. Winnipeg at Chicago, 5 p.m. Nashville at Edmonton, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Vancouver, 6 p.m.

NHl sUMMarIes Friday devils 2, Capitals 1

Washington 0 0 1—1 New Jersey 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, New Jersey, Gionta 3 (Jagr), 4:57. Penalties—Erat, Was (boarding), 2:31; Backstrom, Was (cross-checking), 12:24; Fayne, NJ (tripping), 18:08. second Period—2, New Jersey, Henrique 14 (Jagr, T.Zajac), 1:45 (pp). Penalties—Orlov, Was (holding), :41; Wilson, Was (charging), 1:58; Jagr, NJ (slashing), 16:51; Wilson, Was (holding), 19:53. third Period—3, Washington, Chimera 10 (Erskine, Wilson), 10:10. Penalties—Greene, NJ (interference), 7:16. shots on Goal—Washington 7-1410—31. New Jersey 11-12-7—30. Power-play opportunities—Washington 0 of 3; New Jersey 1 of 5. Goalies—Washington, Neuvirth 3-5-1 (30 shots-28 saves). New Jersey, Schneider 9-9-7 (31-30). referees—Francis Charron, Steve Kozari. linesmen—Tim Nowak, Brad Kovachik. a—15,742. t—2:25.

red Wings 4, Canadiens 1

Montreal 0 1 0—1 detroit 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Detroit, Zetterberg 16 (Alfredsson, Kronwall), 12:27 (pp). Penalties—Zetterberg, Det (highsticking), 6:42; Gallagher, Mon (high-sticking), 10:30; Emelin, Mon (boarding), 11:25; Prust, Mon (tripping), 19:15. second Period—2, Detroit, Sheahan 2, 11:48. 3, Montreal, Gallagher 13 (Desharnais, Subban), 12:56 (pp). 4, Detroit, Kronwall 6 (Nyquist, Ericsson), 16:29. Penalties—Smith, Det (interference), 2:19; DeKeyser, Det (cross-checking), 7:22; Pacioretty, Mon (tripping), 7:48; Abdelkader, Det (boarding), 12:40; Subban, Mon (holding), 17:56. third Period—5, Detroit, Nyquist 8 (Zetterberg, Abdelkader), 18:41. Penalties—Subban, Mon (delay of game), 5:41; Moen, Mon (slashing), 11:58; Quincey, Det (cross-checking), 11:58. shots on Goal—Montreal 13-9-9—31. Detroit 8-13-5—26. Power-play opportunities—Montreal 1 of 4; Detroit 1 of 6. Goalies—Montreal, Price 22-15-4 (26 shots-22 saves). Detroit, Gustavsson 13-3-2 (31-30). referees—Ghislain Hebert, Dave Jackson. linesmen—David Brisebois, Matt MacPherson. a—20,066. t—2:35.

Flames 5, Predators 4 (so)

Nashville 1 2 1 0—4 Calgary 1 0 3 0—5 Calgary won shootout 2-1 First Period—1, Nashville, Nystrom 8 (Bourque, Cullen), 1:51. 2, Calgary, Giordano 8 (Russell, Backlund), 3:23 (pp). Penalties—Gaustad, Nas (holding), 2:31; Josi, Nas (delay of game), 13:32; Backlund, Cal (holding), 17:08. second Period—3, Nashville, Nystrom 9 (Josi, Weber), 1:50. 4, Nashville, Nystrom 10 (Gaustad, Bartley), 6:00. Penalties—Backlund, Cal (boarding), 12:45; Clune, Nas (hooking), 19:59. third Period—5, Calgary, D.Jones 7 (Stajan), 1:24 (pp). 6, Nashville, Nystrom 11 (Cullen, Josi), 10:47. 7, Calgary, Backlund 9 (Russell, Stempniak), 12:27 (pp). 8, Calgary, D.Jones 8 (Brodie), 13:36. Penalties—C.Smith, Nas (tripping), 11:01; Gaustad, Nas (hooking), 11:25. overtime—None. Penalties—None. shootout—Nashville 1 (Cullen NG, Legwand NG, Josi G, Ellis NG), Calgary 2 (Colborne NG, Hudler G, Stempniak NG, Monahan G). shots on Goal—Nashville 8-10-70—25. Calgary 6-9-15-1—31. Power-play opportunities—Nashville 0 of 2; Calgary 3 of 5. Goalies—Nashville, Dubnyk 11-18-3 (31 shots-27 saves). Calgary, Ramo (12-9), Berra 6-14-2 (6:00 second, 13-12). referees—Mike Leggo, Brian Pochmara. linesmen—Andy McElman, Jay Sharrers. a—19,289. t—2:39.

Colorado 2 1 0—3 Florida 0 0 2—2 First Period—1, Colorado, O’Reilly 19 (Duchene), 1:34. 2, Colorado, Stastny 14 (Landeskog, Tanguay), 16:13. Penalties—Holden, Col (hooking), 6:03; Weaver, Fla (hooking), 10:09. second Period—3, Colorado, McGinn 11 (O’Reilly, Duchene), 13:00. Penalties—Matthias, Fla (tripping), 15:49; MacKinnon, Col (high-sticking), 19:43. third Period—4, Florida, Upshall 8 (Fleischmann, Gilbert), 5:18. 5, Florida, Upshall 9 (Bergenheim, Gilbert), 18:17. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Colorado 10-9-6—25. Florida 7-9-20—36. Power-play opportunities—Colorado 0 of 2; Florida 0 of 2. Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 25-9-5 (36 shots-34 saves). Florida, Thomas 13-14-3 (25-22). referees—Greg Kimmerly, Francois St. Laurent. linesmen—John Grandt, Pierre Racicot. a—17,274. t—2:19.

Coyotes 4, oilers 3

Phoenix 3 1 0—4 edmonton 0 1 2—3 First Period—1, Phoenix, Boedker 15 (Vermette, Korpikoski), 14:17. 2, Phoenix, Vrbata 12 (Hanzal, Ribeiro), 17:10 (pp). 3, Phoenix, Morris 5 (Halpern, Klinkhammer), 18:19. Penalties—Hendricks, Edm (elbowing), 6:48; Chipchura, Pho (tripping), 10:21; Chipchura, Pho (roughing), 15:53; Hendricks, Edm, double minor (roughing), 15:53; Stone, Pho (hooking), 19:24. second Period—4, Phoenix, Ribeiro 13 (Moss, Smith), 3:00. 5, Edmonton, Hendricks 3 (Jones, Gordon), 13:17. Penalties—Smith, Pho, served by Moss (delay of game), :42; Hanzal, Pho (roughing), 8:14. third Period—6, Edmonton, Perron 19 (Potter, Marincin), 1:50. 7, Edmonton, Nugent-Hopkins 14 (Eberle, Hall), 7:50. Penalties—Yandle, Pho (elbowing), 2:16. shots on Goal—Phoenix 15-5-9—29. Edmonton 15-10-14—39. Power-play opportunities—Phoenix 1 of 2; Edmonton 0 of 5. Goalies—Phoenix, Smith 18-15-8 (39 shots-36 saves). Edmonton, Bryzgalov 3-8-3 (29-25). referees—Marc Joannette, Don Van Massenhoven. linesmen—Mike Cvik, Mark Shewchyk. a—16,839. t—2:32.

FOOTBALL Football NFl PlaYoFFs Pro bowl

sunday’s Game at Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Sanders, 5:30 p.m. (NBC)

super bowl

sunday, Feb. 2 at east rutherford, N.J. Denver vs. Seattle, 4:30 p.m. (FOX)

Pro boWl resUlts

2013 — NFC 62, AFC 35 2012 — AFC 59, NFC 41 2011 — NFC 55, AFC 41 2010 — AFC 41, NFC 34 2009 — NFC 30, AFC 21 2008 — NFC 42, AFC 30 2007 — AFC 31, AFC 28 2006 — NFC 23, AFC 17 2005 — AFC 38, NFC 27

Pro boWl MVP’s

2013 — Kyle Rudolph, TE, Minnesota 2012 — Brandon Marshall, WR, Miami 2011 — DeAngelo Hall, CB, Washington 2010 — Matt Schaub, QB, Houston 2009 — Larry Fitzgerald, WR, Arizona 2008 — Adrian Peterson, RB, Minnesota 2007 — Carson Palmer, QB, Cincinnati 2006 — Derrick Brooks, LB, Tampa Bay 2005 — Peyton Manning, QB, Indianapolis

NCaa Football Fbs bowls

saturday’s Game senior bowl at Mobile, ala. South vs. North, 2 p.m. (NFLN)

TENNIS teNNIs

atP-Wta toUr australian open

Friday at Melbourne Park Melbourne, australia Purse: $29.72 million (Grand slam) surface: Hard-outdoor singles Men semifinals Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Roger Federer (6), Switzerland, 7-6 (4), 6-3, 6-3. doubles Women - Championship Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (1), Italy, def. Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (3), Russia, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Mixed semifinals Sania Mirza, India, and Horia Tecau (6), Romania, def. Jarmila Gajdosova and Matthew Ebden, Australia, 2-6, 6-3, 10-2. Kristina Mladenovic, France, and Daniel Nestor, Canada, def. Zheng Jie, China, and Scott Lipsky, United States, 6-3, 6-1. legends doubles Men Championship Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde, Australia, def. Jonas Bjorkman and Thomas Enqvist, Sweden, 4-6, 6-2, 13-11. Junior singles boys semifinals Alexander Zverev (1), Germany, def. Bradley Mousley, Australia, 6-4, 1-6, 6-1. Stefan Kozlov (2), United States, def. Quentin Halys (7), France, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Girls semifinals Elizaveta Kulichkova (4), Russia, def. Sun Ziyue (7), China, 6-4, 7-5. Jana Fett, Croatia, def. Kimberly Birrell, Australia, 6-0, 6-4. saturday singles Junior singles boys - semifinals Alexander Zverev (1), Germany, def. Stefan Kozlov (2), United States, 6-3, 6-0. Girls semifinals Elizaveta Kulichkova (4), Russia, def. Jana Fett, Croatia, 6-2, 6-1. Wheelchair singles Men - Championship Shingo Kunieda (1), Japan, def. Gustavo Fernandez, Argentina, 6-0, 6-1.

GolF GOLF

PGa toUr Farmers Insurane open

Friday s-torrey Pines, south Course (7,698 yards, par 72) n-torrey Pines, North Course (7,052 yards, par 72) san diego Purse: $6.1 million second round Jordan Spieth 71s-63n—134 Stewart Cink 64n-71s—135 Nicolas Colsaerts 69n-67s—136 Billy Horschel 70s-67n—137 Marc Leishman 66n-71s—137 Morgan Hoffmann 72s-66n—138 Gary Woodland 65n-73s—138 Russell Knox 71s-67n—138 Pat Perez 67s-71n—138 Erik Compton 69n-69s—138 Brad Fritsch 69n-70s—139 J.B. Holmes 71s-68n—139 Kevin Tway 69s-70n—139 Justin Hicks 71s-68n—139 Charley Hoffman 69s-70n—139 Scott Stallings 72s-67n—139 Jason Day 66n-73s—139 Kevin Chappell 73s-66n—139 Jamie Lovemark 72s-67n—139 Martin Laird 69n-71s—140 Matt Jones 75s-65n—140 Victor Dubuisson 72n-69s—141 D.A. Points 67n-74s—141 Will MacKenzie 72s-69n—141 Seung-Yul Noh 68n-73s—141 Jim Herman 66n-75s—141 David Lynn 68n-73s—141 Lee Westwood 73s-68n—141 Keegan Bradley 69n-72s—141 Bobby Gates 69n-72s—141 Justin Thomas 68n-73s—141 Charlie Wi 72n-70s—142 Trevor Immelman 68n-74s—142 David Lingmerth 72s-70n—142 Ian Poulter 75s-67n—142 Harrison Frazar 68n-74s—142 Nicholas Thompson 72s-70n—142 Michael Putnam 69n-73s—142 Ryo Ishikawa 72s-70n—142 Robert Streb 73s-69n—142 Robert Garrigus 71n-71s—142 Bryce Molder 77s-65n—142 Cameron Tringale 71s-71n—142 Charles Howell III 70n-72s—142 Rory Sabbatini 74s-68n—142 Phil Mickelson 69n-73s—142 Jonathan Byrd 70n-72s—142 Brendon Todd 69n-73s—142 Tyrone Van Aswegen 66n-76s—142 Camilo Villegas 72s-71n—143 Brendan Steele 76s-67n—143 Brian Stuard 70s-73n—143 John Merrick 69n-74s—143 Justin Leonard 74s-69n—143 Sang-Moon Bae 67n-76s—143 Jhonattan Vegas 68n-75s—143 Tiger Woods 72s-71n—143 Brice Garnett 75n-68s—143 Graham DeLaet 70n-73s—143 Y.E. Yang 76s-67n—143 Bubba Watson 70n-73s—143 Stuart Appleby 74s-69n—143 Michael Block 74s-69n—143 Chris Williams 71n-72s—143 Tag Ridings 73s-70n—143 Greg Owen 70n-74s—144 D.H. Lee 73s-71n—144 Matt Bettencourt 71n-73s—144 Hideki Matsuyama 72n-72s—144 Nick Watney 70n-74s—144 Chad Collins 78s-66n—144 Mark Calcavecchia 70n-74s—144 Tim Herron 70n-74s—144 Aaron Baddeley 71n-73s—144 Steven Bowditch 68n-76s—144 Blake Adams 75s-69n—144 Luke Guthrie 76s-68n—144 Hunter Mahan 72n-72s—144 K.J. Choi 74s-70n—144 Bill Haas 74s-70n—144 Ben Crane 77s-67n—144 Andres Romero 72s-72n—144 Will Claxton 71n-73s—144

eUroPeaN toUr Qatar Masters

Friday at doha Golf Club doha, Qatar Purse: $2.5 million Yardage: 7,400; Par: 72 second round Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Esp66-65-73—204 Steve Webster, Eng 65-69-70—204 Thomas Aiken, SAf 67-68-70—205 Thorbjorn Olesen, Den 68-69-68—205 Adrien Saddier, Fra 70-71-64—205 Johan Carlsson, Swe 69-65-72—206 George Coetzee, SAf 64-69-73—206 Paul Lawrie, Sco 67-70-69—206 Mikko Ilonen, Fin 68-67-71—206 Fabrizio Zanotti, Par 69-69-68—206 Dawie Van Der Walt, SAf65-72-70—207 Branden Grace, SAf 67-69-71—207 Kristoffer Broberg, Swe 69-68-70—207 Sergio Garcia, Esp 71-67-69—207 Matthew Baldwin, Eng 68-66-74—208 Peter Uihlein, USA 70-69-69—208 Simon Dyson, Eng 68-69-71—208 Darren Fichardt, SAf 69-70-69—208 Seve Benson, Eng 68-71-69—208 also Brooks Koepka, USA 70-70-70—210 John Daly, USA 67-69-73—213 Henrik Stenson, Swe 68-71-74—213 Jose M. Olazabal, Esp 69-70-74—213 Martin Kaymer, Ger 70-70-73—213 Ernie Els, SAf 67-76-71—214 Luke Donald, Eng 72-69-74—215 Paul McGinley, Irl 73-70-72—215 Jason Dufner, USA 70-71-78—219

lPGa toUr lPGa Pure silk-bahamas Classic

Friday at ocean Club Golf Course Paradise Island, bahamas Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,644; Par: 73 second round Jessica Korda 69-66—135 Paula Creamer 71-65—136 Michelle Wie 72-65—137 Jenny Suh 71-66—137 Christel Boeljon 71-67—138 Na Yeon Choi 70-68—138 P.K. Kongkraphan 69-69—138 Lydia Ko 68-70—138 Lizette Salas 72-67—139 Sandra Gal 71-69—140 Pornanong Phatlum 71-69—140 Amy Yang 71-69—140 Stacy Lewis 69-71—140 Brittany Lincicome 70-71—141 Pernilla Lindberg 70-71—141 Azahara Munoz 70-71—141 Thidapa Suwannapura 70-71—141 Candie Kung 69-72—141 Hee Young Park 69-72—141 Chella Choi 73-69—142 Danielle Kang 73-69—142 Katherine Kirk 73-69—142 Sun Young Yoo 73-69—142 Amelia Lewis 69-73—142 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 75-68—143 Mi Jung Hur 75-68—143 Laura Diaz 74-69—143 Mi Hyang Lee 74-69—143 Natalie Gulbis 73-70—143 Sandra Changkija 71-72—143 Paz Echeverria 70-73—143 Morgan Pressel 70-73—143 Danah Bordner 69-74—143 Austin Ernst 69-74—143 Kathleen Ekey 75-69—144 Alena Sharp 75-69—144


sPorts PREP ROUNDUP

Española Valley girls rebound, rout Capital The New Mexican

The Española Valley girls basketball team bounced back from a home loss to Santa Fe High in its District 2AAAA opener by routing Española 67 Capital, 67-32, on FriCapital 32 day night at Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gymnasium. The Lady Sundevils (14-5, 1-1) never trailed and had the running clock throughout the second half. They led 29-9 after one quarter and 48-19 at the half. The 35-point mercy rule was in effect for much of the second half, particularly after Española used a 17-2 run to open the third quarter. “We had 14 girls on the bench and every one of them played, so that’s good,” said Ray Romero, Española Valley head coach. “We didn’t want to pour it on. Their coach [Dale Lucero] is a good friend of mine and, really, it was about letting the girls get time and have fun doing it.”

Ashlynn Trujillo had a game-high 22 points for the Lady Sundevils, who travel to Los Alamos next Wednesday. Alexis Lovato added 19 points and Kaitlyn Romero eight for Española, which was outscored 11-2 in the fourth quarter of Friday’s game. Selena Gonzales had 13 points to lead Capital (0-15, 0-2).

win the game. With 2.4 seconds left, Gerty Herrera attempted a shot from beyond the arc but had the ball deflected out of her hands as she was set to release it. Destiny Pacheco was Mora’s lone doubledigit scorer with 19 points. Kristi Wagner had 11 and Drew Hidalgo 10 for Clayton. Now 13-3 overall, the Rangerettes open district play Tuesday at Santa Fe Prep.

CLaytoN 37, Mora 35 In Mora, the visiting Lady Yellowjackets (9-8) avenged an earlier home loss to the Rangerettes by beating them on Mora’s homecoming night. Friday’s game was actually played in the late afternoon, just before the boys’ game. Mora head coach Mark Cassidy said all the non-basketball distractions weren’t an issue. “Clayton’s a very good team, and they came in here as well prepared as anybody we’ve seen,” Cassidy said. The game was close throughout. The Rangerettes had the ball in the waning moments with a 3-point shot to potentially

BOYS

Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-3

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD

Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

today on tV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. UNM MeN’s BasketBaLL 9:05 p.m. on ESPNU — New Mexico at Colorado State

saNta Fe PreParatory 66, estaNCia 46 In Estancia, the visiting Blue Griffins (13-4) wrapped up their nondistrict schedule with a rout of the host Bears. Ian Anderson had 18 points and Will Lenfestey 15 to lead Prep. Francis Castillo y Mulert had 10 and Diego Perea had nine. The Griffins led 31-22 at halftime and steadily pulled away in the second half. They outscored Estancia 55-38 in the final three quarters. Prep opens its district season at home next Tuesday against Mora.

aUto raCiNG Noon on FOX — United Sportscar Championship, Rolex 24, start of race, in Daytona Beach, Fla. BoXiNG 7 p.m. on SHO — Junior middleweights, Jermell Charlo (22-0-0) vs. Gabriel Rosado (21-7-0); champion Lamont Peterson (31-2-1) vs. Dierry Jean (25-0-0), for IBF junior welterweight title, in Washington 7:45 p.m. on HBO — Heavyweights, Bryant Jennings (17-0-0) vs. Artur Szpilka (16-0-0); champion Mikey Garcia (33-0-0) vs. Juan Carlos Burgos (30-1-2), for WBO junior lightweight title, in New York CoLLeGe FootBaLL 2 p.m. on NFL — Senior Bowl, in Mobile, Ala. eXtreMe sPorts

sweet: SFHS wins last 9 by double digits Continued from Page B-1 “We’re trying to work on our future, and we need to work on our present sometimes.” While that is Chavez’s reason for the slow start, the players just think the focus was not there early on. “I don’t think we really came in prepared,” Lozada-Cabbage said. “Once we realized that, we really started stepping it up.” Lozada-Cabbage was actually the catalyst in the Demonettes’ comeback. The 6-foot-2 post scored four straight points to pull Santa Fe High within 14-13 with 5:39 left in the first half. Just over a minute later, Santa Fe High’s Briana Garcia hit a layup to give the Demonettes a 17-16 lead. From there, they never trailed again, and had a 26-20 lead going into halftime. Santa Fe High only allowed three points in the third quarter, but mostly because the Lady Hilltoppers were giving the ball away. “We rushed some things and just weren’t taking care of the ball,” Stewart said. “They weren’t really putting a whole lot of pressure on us, they were just able to get into passing lanes.”

After a rough third quarter, Los Alamos actually outscored the Demonettes 14-10 in the fourth quarter, but Santa Fe High still maintained a doubledigit lead the entire period. One may look at the final score and think Santa Fe High got an easy one, but it’s nothing compared to what it was doing before the district season started. The Demonettes have won their last nine games by double digits, but they had to come from behind against Española Valley and now Los Alamos. If you ask Chavez about it, being challenged is a good thing. “In a way, it’s kind of good that we’ve had some adversity,” Chavez said. “Everything has gone easy for us all year, and I think it’s helping us improve. When you can play not great and still win, that’s the type of team that’s going to be really good in the end.” No surprise, the Demonettes are looking at these challenges as a prequel to something bigger. “It’s good to be challenged a little so we can prepare for state,” Lozada-Cabbage said.

Noon on ESPN — X Games, in Aspen, Colo. 2 p.m. on ABC — X Games, in Aspen, Colo. 7 p.m. on ESPN — X Games, in Aspen, Colo. GoLF 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open, third round, in San Diego 1 p.m. on CBS — PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open, third round, in San Diego 1 p.m. on TGC — LPGA, Bahamas Classic, third round, in Paradise Island, Bahamas 2:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Qatar Masters, final round, in Doha, Qatar MeN’s CoLLeGe BasketBaLL 9 a.m. on ESPNU — Ohio at E. Michigan 10 a.m. on ESPN — Florida st. at Duke 10 a.m. on ESPN2 — Virginia Commonwealth at La Salle 10 a.m. on FS1 — Xavier at Providence 10 a.m. on NBCSN — George Washington at George Mason 11 a.m. on CBS — National coverage, Syracuse at Miami 11 a.m. on ESPNU — Vanderbilt at Texas A&M Noon on ESPN2 — West Virginia at Oklahoma St. Noon on FS1 — Villanova at Marquette 2 p.m. on ESPN — Tennessee at Florida 2 p.m. on ESPN2 — Western Kentucky at Louisiana-Lafayette 2 p.m. on NBCSN — Saint Joseph’s at Richmond 4 p.m. on ESPN2 — Pittsburgh at Maryland 5 p.m. on ESPN — Michigan at Michigan St. 5 p.m. on ESPNU — UConn at Rutgers 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — LSU at Alabama 6 p.m. on FS1 — Georgetown at Creighton 7 p.m. on ESPNU — Kansas at TCU 8 p.m. on ESPN2 — BYU at Gonzaga 9 p.m. on ESPNU — San Diego St. at Utah St. MeN’s CoLLeGe HoCkey 5 p.m. on NBCSN — Northeastern at Notre Dame MiXeD MartiaL arts

Santa Fe High’s Jackie Martinez, right, looks to pass while Los Alamos’ Elena Atencio tries to defend during Friday’s game. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

6 p.m. on FOX — UFC, featherweights, Darren Elkins (18-3-0) vs. Jeremy Stephens (22-9-0); lightweights, Donald Cerrone (21-6-0) vs. Adriano Martins (25-6-0); heavyweights, Stipe Miocic (10-1-0) vs. Gabriel Gonzaga (16-7-0); lightweights, Benson Henderson (193-0) vs. Josh Thomson (20-5-0), in Chicago MotorsPorts 8:30 p.m. on FS1 — AMA Supercross, in Oakland, Calif.

Lobos: CSU forward Avila one to watch Continued from Page B-1 the pack, tied with Boise State and UNLV for fifth place. Lobos head coach Craig Neal didn’t need much time to pinpoint CSU’s top player. He lauded the effort of CSU forward J.J. Avila, a 6-foot-7 transfer from the U.S. Naval Academy. Avila was leading the Midshipmen in scoring, rebounding and assists when he resigned his place at the academy with eight games remaining in his sophomore season in 2012. He redshirted last season but leads the Rams in scoring (18.9 points) and assists (3.5) while second in rebounding (7.4). “He’s one of the surprise players in the conference, for sure,” Neal said. Guards Daniel Bejarano and Jon Octeus also average in double figure scoring. The one thing the Rams lack this season is a reliable big man who can step up and challenge Bairstow and Kirk in the post. After the teams’ first meeting in The Pit, an 80-73 Lobos win back on Jan. 4, Colorado State head coach Larry Eustachy said his club simply had “no answer” for Bairstow. “He was pushing us around and did pretty much what he wanted,” said CSU

head coach Larry Eustachy. Neal knows the challenge of entering what amounts to the Lobos’ toughest venue to date on the MWC road. UNM can equal the school’s best start ever on the road in conference play with a win Saturday, equalling the 4-0 start by the 1984 team coached by Gary Colson. The Lobos already have road wins at Wyoming, San Jose State and Fresno State “We were fortunate to win there last year,” Neal said. “They play hard-nosed defense and it will be another challenge for us that we’re looking forward to.” Notes u All but two of the 11 Mountain West teams have lost at least one conference game at home. The exceptions are San Diego State and Utah State. The Lobos travel to Logan, Utah, for a game Tuesday night. u Speaking of travel, UNM left Albuquerque on Thursday afternoon and will not return until Wednesday, a day after the Utah State trip. The Lobos will play Saturday’s game in Fort Collins, Colo., bus to Denver for an overnight stay and then head to Utah. u Five of UNM’s first eight league games are on the road, including five of the last

seven. The Lobos will also play two of their last three on the road, meaning they’ll have five of seven at home after facing Utah State. u CSU’s Eustachy has never beaten New Mexico. He is 0-4 all-time against the Lobos, although every game has been decided by 10 or fewer points. u UNM leads the Rams 71-43 in a rivalry that dates to the 1940-41 season. u The last five games between the two in Moby Arena have been decided by five or fewer points. The Lobos have won three of them. u Saturday’s game is CSU’s annual “White Out,” meaning fans are encouraged to wear white in support of the fight against cancer. Coaches from both teams will be wearing sneakers in place of dress shoes. u Williams is averaging an MWC-best 5.5 assists per game this season. That’s 1.3 more per game than the league’s second-best disher, Fresno State’s Cesar Guerrero. u Bairstow is the league’s most accurate shooter, converting 56.4 percent of his field goals (123 of 218). u Bairstow and Williams have combined for 316 free throw attempts this season. CSU’s projected starting lineup has attempted 409.

Feathers: Tensions rise, but fights averted Continued from Page B-1 between the two fighters while also intercepting Tony Valdez, who is fighting in the main event against Jaime Gutierrez in a super flyweight bout, as he raced in to back up Holmes. “That’s my brother,” Valdez said. “Birds of a feather. Fight in the ring, out of the ring, he’s not going down alone. I knew that Brandon Muñoz’s team was there, so I didn’t want to be a second late for the fun.” As for the weigh-in portion of the event, Holmes weighed in at 123.5 pounds for the super

bantamweight fight, while Muñoz came in at 120.5. As for Valdez, he was at 117.8 pounds, while Gutierrez was at 119. The two then engaged in a staring contest that lasted for about a minute, with Valdez never taking his gaze off of Gutierrez. “He always wanted to fight me, and he was starting at me,” Valdez said. “So I figured I’d stare back, showing there was no fear here. Don’t go barking up this tree.” Valdez is trying to rebound from a September loss to Felipe

Castañeda for the United States World Boxing Council super flyweight title at the same venue. He hopes that a win over Gutierrez will get him back on track for another title shot in the near future. “I’m just going to work it one fight at a time,” Valdez said. “Focus on this fight first. It would be nice to get a shot again, but that’s down the road.” Taos is a little more than an hour up the road from Pojoaque, and former Taoseño Michael Herrera hopes that he will get a nice crowd out for his

super flyweight undercard bout with Angelo Leo of Albuquerque. Herrera left Taos for Denver in 2009, but he relishes the chance to come back to New Mexico, especially for a fight. “There’s nothing like home,” Herrera said. “Nothing like it.” Notes u There are still $35 preferred seating tickets available for the fight. To purchase tickets or for more information, call 670-2269 or 699-2845. The bout also will be streamed online at www.OrthrusPromos. com. The cost is $9.99.

NHL HoCkey 8 p.m. on NBCSN — Anaheim vs. Los Angeles, in Dodger Stadium rUGBy Noon on NBCSN — USA Sevens, pool play, in Las Vegas 2 p.m. on NBC — USA Sevens, pool play, in Las Vegas soCCer 5:30 a.m. on FS1 — FA Cup, fourth round, Liverpool at Bournemouth 8 a.m. on FS1 — FA Cup, fourth round, Kidderminster at Sunderland teNNis 1 a.m. on ESPN — Australian Open, men’s championship, in Melbourne, Australia WoMeN’s CoLLeGe BasketBaLL 10 a.m. on FSN — FIU at UAB Noon on FSN — Kansas at Kansas St.

today on radio UNM MeN’s BasketBaLL 9:05 p.m. on KVSF-AM 1400/KKOB-AM 770 — New Mexico at Colorado State PreP Boys BasketBaLL TBA on KVSF-AM 1400 — Capital at Española Valley

PREP SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, call 986-3060 or email sports@sfnewmexican.com.

today Boys Basketball — McCurdy at Mesa Vista, 1 p.m. Questa at Coronado, 2 p.m. Santa Fe High at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Capital at Española Valley, 7 p.m. St. Michael’s at Taos, 7 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Thoreau, 7 p.m. Tucumcari at Pecos, 7 p.m. Girls Basketball — Taos at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. McCurdy at Mesa Vista, 1 p.m. Tucumcari at Pecos, 5:30 p.m. Escalante at Santa Fe Preparatory, 6 p.m. St. Michael’s at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Wrestling — Las Vegas Robertson, West Las Vegas at Trinidad (Colo.) Invitational, 8 a.m. Capital, Los Alamos, Santa Fe High at Aztec Tournament, 9 a.m. St. Michael’s, Española Valley at Belen Invitational, 9 a.m. Swimming — St. Michael’s, Santa Fe High, Capital at Farmington Invitational, 10 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

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

SPORTS

HOCKEY

Kings, Ducks say Dodger Stadium ready By Greg Beacham

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Kings stepped out of the home dugout and filed onto the fresh sheet of ice. Instead of a roof over their heads, helicopters hovered in the cloudy sky above Chavez Ravine. Dodger Stadium isn’t a field of dreams for many hockey players, but the Kings and the Anaheim Ducks are thrilled by the chance to play the NHL’s most unlikely outdoor game on Saturday. “We were trying to figure out how we could shoot a puck over the left field wall,” Los Angeles defenseman Robyn Regehr said. “Too many people around, though.” Southern California’s NHL teams came away from Friday’s practices fairly impressed with the ice sheet in place for the league’s first warm-weather stadium game. The temperature was high enough to cause some slush and steaminess on the ice, but it was nothing two Sun Belt teams haven’t seen in actual NHL arenas before. “It’s a different feeling playing outdoors,” Kings defenseman Drew Doughty said. “There are so many different aspects in the game that are going to make it more challenging for both teams — getting your legs moving, getting used to the ice, getting used to the boards. So instead of a skilled, high-paced game, I think you’re going to see a physical battle out there, and I think that’s something a lot of real hockey fans will appreciate.” The teams skated with friends and family on the ice after practice while workers put the final touches on the unique accoutrements for California’s outdoor game. The beach volleyball court in left field is ready, and so is the performance stage in right. There’s a ball hockey court between the mound and the backstop, and a cordon of palm trees just behind the open center-field fence. “This is the crown jewel for hockey in Southern California,” Ducks defenseman Ben Lovejoy said. “We both live in a great part of the world, and this will be a great showcase

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Kansas star Joel Embiid on his way to the NBA? By Dave Skretta

The Associated Press

Calder Fraser, 3, looks for his father, Los Angeles Kings center Colin Fraser, with the Kings mascot, Bailey, during Friday practice for the Stadium Series game in Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Ducks will play outdoors Saturday at Dodger Stadium. ALEX GALLARDO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ball’s third-oldest active park. “I’ve been asking for an outdoor game here for a long time,” Ducks captain Ryan Getzlaf said. “I’m just glad I don’t have to go out and freeze my butt off at one of these.” Dodger Stadium took on a carnival atmosphere, but the event is more than a mere sideshow. The Kings — the home team in this scenario — realize they’ve got two points at stake after losing 2-1 to the NHLleading Ducks in Anaheim on Thursday night. The game has been looming A hockey rink, seen Wednesday, is ready at Dodger Stadium since well before Christmas, for the upcoming 2014 NHL Stadium Series in Los Angeles. with players on both teams NICK UT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS routinely facing questions about how they’ll adapt to the for how far hockey has come in actually has been among the unusual atmosphere and unfathis area.” smoothest aspects of this miliar ice. After talking about The boards, benches and strange chapter in the league’s the game for weeks, players on glass were trucked in from the expansion of its outdoor slate both teams are grateful for the Winter Classic in Ann Arbor, this season. While Southern chance to play it. Mich., but the ice has been built California’s growing hockey fan “The lights are going to be up patiently over the last 10 base embraced the novelty of different, and the glare is going days. The league’s ice-making the concept, the league overto be a little different,” said crew covered the sheet in a priced tickets for the event, Kings center Anze Kopitar, heat-reflecting blanket during forcing reductions to avoid who grew up playing indoors the day and worked through the embarrassment of a nonin Slovenia. “But come game the night to establish a gamesellout. worthy surface. But the hiccups likely will be time, I don’t think we’re going to be worried too much about NHL facilities guru Dan forgotten when fans get a look Craig’s improbable ice sheet at the ice in the middle of base- that.”

NBA

Knicks’ Anthony breaks records with 62 24 of his 34 points in the second quarter, and Deron Wiliams had 18 points and 11 assists as the Nets beat the Mavericks for their fourth straight win. The Nets improved to an NBA best 9-1 in January. Paul Pierce had 12 points and Kevin Garnett added 10 points and 11 rebounds for Brooklyn.

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Carmelo Anthony scored a career-high and franchise-record 62 points, most at the current Madison Square Garden, and the New York Knicks beat the Charlotte BobKnicks 125 cats 125-96 on Friday night to stop a fiveBobcats 96 game losing streak. Anthony made 23 of 35 shots, one when he leapt from halfcourt to beat the halftime buzzer, and even added 13 rebounds in the NBA’s highest-scoring performance this season. Anthony had 56 after three quarters, bettering Kevin Durant’s previous season high of 54, and stayed in for the first few minutes of the fourth to break Bernard King’s Knicks record of 60 points and Kobe Bryant’s arena record of 61, set five years ago. THUNDER 101, CELTICS 83 In Boston, NBA scoring leader Kevin Durant missed his first game of the season, and Serge Ibaka scored 21 points to lead the Thunder to a victory over the Celtics. It was the Western Conference-leading Thunder’s sixth straight victory. Jeremy Lamb came off the bench to score 19 points, and former Celtics center Kendrick Perkins had nine rebounds for Oklahoma City. The Thunder were playing with neither Durant nor Westbrook for the first time since the franchise moved from Seattle in 2008. SPURS 105, HAWKS 79 In Atlanta, Tim Duncan had 17 points and 16 rebounds in another dominant performance against Atlanta, and the Spurs coasted to a win over the short-handed Hawks. Duncan, who blocked four shots, and point guard Tony Parker didn’t return after leaving the game with the Spurs leading 77-50 late in the third quarter. The Spurs used backup players in the fourth. RAPTORS 104, 76ERS 95 In Philadelphia, Kyle Lowry had 18 points, 13 assists and 10 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan scored 34 points to help the Raptors beat the 76ers. DeRozan scored 16 points in the fourth quarter, including seven straight early in the period as the Raptors opened a double-

GRIZZLIES 88, ROCKETS 87 In Houston, Courtney Lee scored 19 points, Zach Randolph added 15, and the Grizzlies held off the Rockets. Mike Miller drew an offensive foul to give Houston the ball back with 8.3 seconds left. But Patrick Beverley shot an air ball 3-point attempt under heavy pressure to give the Grizzlies the victory.

The Knicks’ Carmelo Anthony, left, puts up a shot as he gets by the Bobcats’ Josh McRoberts during Friday’s game at Madison Square Garden in New York. BILL KOSTROUN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

digit lead. Lowry grabbed his 10th rebound late in the fourth, continuing a string of strong games he’s had for the Atlantic Division leaders. He’s a Philadelphia native and played at Villanova. MAGIC 114, LAKERS 105 In Orlando, Fla., Tobias Harris had 28 points and a career-high 20 rebounds to lift the Magic to a victory over Los Angeles. Arron Afflalo added 23 points and Jameer Nelson scored 22 as the Magic won for only the second time in their last 14 games. Rookie Victor Oladipo had 15 points, 12 rebounds and five assists. PELICANS 103, PISTONS 101 In Auburn Hills, Mich., Eric Gordon’s driving layup with 1.9 seconds left gave the Pelicans a victory over the Pistons. Detroit blew a 16-point third-quarter lead, and the Pistons inexplicably didn’t call time after Gordon’s winning shot. NETS 107, MAVERICKS 106 In New York, Mirza Teletovic scored

CLIPPERS 112, BULLS 95 In Chicago, Blake Griffin had 26 points and 13 rebounds to lead the Clippers to a victory over the Bulls. Jamal Crawford added 19 points for the Clippers, who had six players score in double figures and shot 54 percent from the field — including 13 for 21 on 3-pointers. DeAndre Jordan added 10 points and 12 rebounds. CAVALIERS 93, BUCKS 78 In Cleveland, Anderson Varejao scored 16 points, and Kyrie Irving had 10 points and 10 assists, leading the Cavaliers over the Bucks. Varejao scored eight points to spark a 12-2 run that gave Cleveland a 64-46 lead late in the third quarter. Irving, named an All-Star starter for the first time Thursday, had seven assists in the second half. WIZARDS 101, SUNS 95 In Phoenix, Trevor Ariza scored 23 points, Bradley Beal sank a pair of crucial shots down the stretch, and the Wizards opened a four-game road trip with a victory over the Suns. Beal’s 3-pointer with 2:03 left gave the Wizards the lead for good at 96-93. His 15-footer made it 99-95 with 26.9 seconds to go, then he finished with a game-ending dunk. TIMBERWOLVES 121, WARRIORS 120 In Oakland, Calif., Kevin Martin hit a step-back jumper with 8.4 seconds left, lifting the Minnesota Timberwolves over the Golden State Warriors for their third straight victory.

LAWRENCE, Kan. — Joel Embiid bends slightly to get through the doorway, and then bends even deeper to peer into the refrigerator. He pushes aside chilled bottles of Coca-Cola and Fanta and then, upon getting to the very back of the cooler, lets his massive shoulders slump one last time. There’s no pink lemonade. Again. This is the guy who’s suddenly the biggest thing in college basketball? The 7-footer who’s gone from raw, unheralded prospect to phenom? The guy who has started to overshadow fellow freshman Andrew Wiggins while leading No. 8 Kansas to the top of the Big 12? Yep, this is the guy NBA scouts believe could be the No. 1 pick in the June draft, worrying not about his future millions but his inability to land a bottle of Minute Made. “Out again?” Embiid asks one of the members of the Kansas communications staff. “You keep drinking it all!” she replies with a smile. The friendly ribbing is part of Embiid’s earnest naivety. It’s almost as if the best player on one of the nation’s hottest teams doesn’t realize just how good he’s become. He runs like a gazelle and his footwork honed on the soccer fields of his native Cameroon would probably astonish Fred Astaire. His touch is smooth as velvet and his work ethic so unfailing that some think he could be the next Hakeem Olajuwon. “Joel has a chance to be an NBA all-star,” Jayhawks coach Bill Self said. “There’s a lot of great players you recruit, and they have great careers for you. But do you look at them and say, ‘He can be one of the best 24 players in the world?’ He can be in that class.” The happy-go-lucky freshman only averages 11 points and eight rebounds, but everyone knows numbers can be misleading. Just ask Oklahoma State coach Travis Ford,

who watched Embiid go for 16 points and nine boards in a high-profile showdown at Allen Fieldhouse last Joel Embiid weekend. “Goodness, he’s so talented,” Ford said afterward, shaking his head. “He’s so good.” Embiid’s backstory is just as good, the kind of stuff Disney spins into feature films. He didn’t pick up a basketball until a few years ago, when a friend informed him that very few 7-footers succeed in soccer. A couple months later, Embiid was lured to a basketball camp in the capital of Yaounde run by Timberwolves forward Luc Mbah a Moute, one of just two players from Cameroon to have played in the NBA. Embiid didn’t think he was good enough to compete at the camp, and even now admits “I didn’t do too good.” Mbah a Moute, however, saw unpolished potential. “He was doing stuff that guys been playing basketball for years do,” Mbah a Moute told The Associated Press. “Some stuff that guys his size have trouble with, he was doing it with ease, like running in transition, catching the ball, spinning and finishing.” Mbah a Moute knew Embiid only needed a chance. He persuaded Embiid’s parents to let him move 6,000 miles to Florida, and helped enroll him at Montverde Academy, one of the best high school programs in the country. Still, Embiid was so raw that he was still playing junior varsity two years ago, or stuck on the bench behind Kentucky recruit Dakari Johnson. But Mbah a Moute knew Embiid would make strides if he could just get on the court, so he started looking for other places to play. Together, they stumbled upon The Rock School in Gainesville, Fla., and unknowingly answered a prayer.

Aldridge has 44 points following All-Star ‘snub’ and our record speaks on PORTLAND, Ore. — Sure, behalf of his LaMarcus Aldridge was play,” Matbummed he wasn’t named an thews said. All-Star starter. But he wasn’t Mo Wilnearly as upset as his teamliams added: mates. “He’s withLaMarcus Or his mom. out a doubt Aldridge “I think everybody around the best me was more upset than me,” power forward in the league.” he said. “I came in tonight Even Blazers owner Paul and Nico [teammate Nicolas Allen, who also owns the Batum] was pretty fired up Super Bowl-bound Seattle about it. And my mom was Seahawks, weighed in on his pretty heated about it. 6-foot-11 forward. “I think I definitely should “If you watch him out there, have been a starter, but it’s he’s so engaged in the games,” over now.” Allen said. “He’s taken on Aldridge let his game more of a leadership role. I answer any skeptics Thursday think it’s evident in all aspects night when he scored a career- of his game.” high 44 points in Portland’s Aldridge is having a career 110-105 come-from-behind vic- season to drive the surpristory over the Denver Nuggets. ing Trail Blazers, who missed He scored the final 15 points the playoffs last year but have of the game, prompting chants gone 32-11 so far this season, of “M-V-P! M-V-P!” from the good for third place overall Portland fans. in the conference behind the His scoring outburst came Thunder and the Spurs. The just a few hours after the Blazers are one win away All-Star starters, based on from their total for all of last fan voting, were announced. season. Aldridge came in fifth place Aldridge is averaging 24.7 in the West: The starting points and 11.6 rebounds. He frontcourt includes Oklahoma has scored at least 25 points City’s Kevin Durant, the Clip- in six straight games, and he pers’ Blake Griffin and Minhas at least 20 points and 10 nesota’s Kevin Love. rebounds in seven straight, Aldridge is already a twotying him with Love for an time All-Star, having been NBA season high. selected the past two seasons The seven-game streak also as a reserve by the confermatches Portland’s franchise ence’s coaches. The reserves record, hit three times by Sidfor this season’s game, set for ney Wicks. Feb. 16 in New Orleans, will He had 13 rebounds to go be announced on Jan. 30. with his 44 points against the Wesley Matthews was Nuggets. In the celebration among Aldridge’s teammates afterward, Aldridge kept a who were miffed he didn’t get tight hold on the game ball, recognized as a starter. and he took it with him off the “His play speaks for itself court. By Anne M. Peterson

The Associated Press


SPORTS

Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

NFL

GOLF

Ex-Cowboy Brent gets 180 days in jail, plus probation

Spieth takes the lead at Torrey Pines By Doug Ferguson

The Associated Press

2012 crash killed fellow player Jerry Brown By Schuyler Dixon The Associated Press

DALLAS — Former Dallas Cowboys player Josh Brent avoided prison Friday and instead was sentenced to 180 days in jail and 10 years of probation for a drunken car crash that killed his friend and teammate, Jerry Brown. Brent was convicted Wednesday of intoxication manslaughter for the December 2012 crash on a suburban Dallas highway that killed Brown, who was a passenger in Josh Brent Brent’s car. Brent could have been sentenced to up to 20 years in prison. He was also fined $10,000. Brent, 25, closed his eyes when the judge read the jury’s verdict. He was kept in custody after the hearing. One of his attorneys, Kevin Brooks, described the former defensive tackle as “somber.” “I’m really kind of overwhelmed with the results,” Brooks said. “It’s kind of what we’ve been fighting for from Day 1. I’m happy for Josh. Josh is still sad and grieving and that’s something he’s going to carry with him the rest of his life.” Brent’s family members and supporters cried and hugged as the courtroom emptied after the hearing. His mother, LaTasha Brent, spoke briefly as she left the courthouse, saying she was there to support her son. Brown’s mother, Stacey Jackson, wasn’t in the courtroom when the verdict was read. She publicly forgave Brent, and said during Thursday’s sentencing proceedings: “He’s still responsible, but you can’t go on in life holding a grudge. We all make mistakes.” Jackson was the last witness the jury heard, and lead prosecutor Heath Harris said her testimony probably helped Brent get probation. “The victim’s family will always have a bearing on the punishment phase,” Harris said. “Should it make a difference? What if she had been wanting the maximum? Would they have given the maximum? That’s why we let the jury decide.” The group Mothers Against Drunk Driving said in a statement that it was “shocked and appalled” by the athlete’s sentence. “This punishment sends the message that it’s OK to drink and drive — but it’s absolutely not,” MADD said.

A technician works on a light post where a temporary surveillance camera is installed Thursday in New York. New York City police are blanketing midtown Manhattan with temporary surveillance cameras as one of many security measures being taken to protect visitors for the Super Bowl. BEBETO MATTHEWS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NYC cops to keep close eye on Super Bowl fans Network of cameras, thousands of police and private security officers part of ‘zone defense’

“Unfortunately, this is the world we live in, so we learned from events around the world.” The temporary cameras for the Super Bowl festivities will suppleBy Tom Hays us have been working very hard to ment a system of thousands of perThe Associated Press make sure we take care of the logismanent cameras covering midtown tical and security concerns so the and Wall Street that the NYPD NEW YORK fans can come and relax and enjoy monitors from a command center hen Super Bowl fans fill what they see on the field.” the streets of New York As a precaution, the officials have in lower Manhattan. The department has pioneered analytical softCity next week, police mostly declined to give specific will be watching them details of the security plans. They’ve ware that allows it to program the cameras to detect suspicious activclosely — in person, in the air and also refused to forecast the costs. ity, such as a bag or other objects on closed-circuit monitors. But at the briefing, the head left in one place for a long time. The New York Police Department of the New Jersey State Police The NYPD also will take lowerhas quietly installed about 200 tem- revealed that up to 700 troopers tech measures similar to those taken porary surveillance cameras in mid- would be assigned to patrols in and for New Year’s Eve, when hundreds town Manhattan to help spot trouble around the stadium. The NFL has of extra uniformed and plainclothes along “Super Bowl Boulevard,” a committed another 3,000 private 13-block street fair on Broadway security officers to bolster security officers in Midtown and elsewhere will mix with the crowd. that’s expected to draw large crowds there as well. Hazmat and bomb squads will during the windup to the game. BanIn Manhattan, the NYPD will ners promoting the fair compete on draw on its experience securing the be on standby. Others officers will patrol with bomb-sniffing dogs. Still the same lampposts with decidedly annual New Year’s Eve celebration less festive signs reading, “NYPD in Times Square, the New York City more will watch from rooftops and Security Camera in Area.” Marathon, the U.N. General Assem- from police helicopters. The NYPD has advised hotels The heavy surveillance is one bly and other high-profile events. welcoming guests for the Super facet of a vast security effort by The department also has studied Bowl to remind their staffs to be on scores of law enforcement agenbombings and other attacks, both the lookout for anyone loitering in cies that spent the past two years domestic and foreign, to fine tune lobbies or guest floors. They also devising their own version of a its approach to guarding against have recommended being suspizone defense to protect Super Bowl potential terror threats. cious of guests booking unusually events that are all over the map. “We’re accustomed to large long stays — a possible sign someManhattan and Brooklyn will events and we’re prepared to one may be using a room as a stagbe the scene of dozens of prerespond to anything that presents ing area for conducting extensive game gatherings, while across the itself,” said Chief James Waters, Hudson River, Newark will stage commanding officer of the NYPD’s surveillance or storing weapons. FBI analysts will monitor the Media Day, Jersey City will host the Counterterrorism Bureau. latest counterrorism intelligence Seahawks and Broncos at hotels Waters described how NYPD the week of the game to watch for there before the kickoff Feb. 2 at officials met with their counterMetLife Stadium in East Rutherford. parts in Boston following the bomb- threats. At a recent security briefing at ing at last year’s Boston Marathon There also have been reports that the stadium, police chiefs and other to assess the risk of future attacks another federal agency, the U.S. officials said success will be meain similar settings. The NYPD National Nuclear Security Adminissured in part by how well authoriresponded by blanketing the finish tration, used helicopters with radiaties conceal all the concern over line area of the city’s own maration detecting technology to fly over potential threats. thon with security cameras — an parts of New York City and New approach that will be duplicated Jersey and map naturally occurThe officials “realize this is the along Super Bowl Boulevard. ring radiation sources as a baseline Super Bowl of football, not secuto measure against possible dirty rity,” said Jeffrey Miller, the NFL’s “We took a close look at what bomb or other rogue activity. head of security. “That’s why all of happened in Boston,” Waters said.

W

Newberry: Both players are decent human beings a different tack in his quest for fame, one grounds. Manning is the white son of that’s very much as privilege, an esteemed member of the odds with the NFL’s NFL’s first family along with father buttoned-down Archie and brother Eli. Sherman image. grew up in the hardscrabble African The cornerback American neighborhood of Compton, may have graduated a guy who surely had more obstacles from Stanford with Richard to overcome to live out his dreams. a degree in commuSherman Given Manning’s lineage and posinications, but he was tion, it shouldn’t be a surprise he never going to be portrayed the same would take a road to fame that’s more as Manning by the NFL’s marketing in line with the league’s corporate machine, by the folks on Madison image — careful with his words, Avenue — and, by extension, white slowly but surely expanding his brand, America. finally feeling comfortable enough to So Sherman veered toward a more display an endearing goofiness with in-your-face approach, epitomized by appearances on Saturday Night Live, his 20-second throwdown of an interthat delightful “Football On Your view with Fox’s Erin Andrews right Phone” commercial and the amusing after Seattle locked up the NFC chamBuick ad. He’s the poster child for the pionship thanks to his tipped pass in NFL, for corporate America — and, by the end zone. His marketing methods extension, white America. may not be your cup of tea, but it has “The NFL is a powerful force in our surely turned him into a household nation’s cultural landscape precisely name and, in all likelihood, will lead to because it has done such an excellent some off-the-field opportunities once job in monitoring and managing its the furor over his tasteless but ultiimage,” said Jeff McCall, a professor mately harmless tirade fades away. of media studies at DePauw UniverWhile some criticism of Sherman’s sity in Indiana. “The NFL’s marketactions was to be expected — the ing strategy is to keep the audience choke sign was too much — and we focused primarily on the game and won’t even get into the blatant racism the teams, and then allow the person- that broke out on Twitter in the afteralities of players and coaches to shine math of his brief interview, there is a within that framework. This allows troubling element in between those the game to stay popular even when two extremes. charismatic players come and go.” There were hundreds, perhaps thousands, of references in the media That said, it shouldn’t be a sur— both traditional and social — to prise that Sherman — a dozen years younger than Manning — would take Sherman being a “thug,” a word that

Continued from Page B-1

B-5

Sherman fined $7,875 for taunting NEW YORK — Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman was fined $7,875 for unsportsmanlike conduct/taunting in the final minute of the NFC championship game against San Francisco. Sherman’s fine was confirmed by the league Friday. Sherman was flagged after he made a choking gesture toward the San Francisco bench that he said was directed at quarterback Colin Kaepernick.

certainly can be applied to any race but carries especially negative connotations when used to describe an African American. “On the one hand, I think you got the explicitly racist reaction, which is predictable in this age of Twitter,” said George Ciccariello-Maher, a professor at Drexel University in Philadelphia who has studied racial issues. “What is more important is the coded language, those people who called him a thug.” For Ciccariello-Maher, the reaction to Sherman’s comments is just an extension of the struggle that outspoken black athletes have been waging since heavyweight champion Jack Johnson dared to stand up the white establishment more than a century ago, a blatant double-standard that

Sherman had just deflected a pass intended for Michael Crabtree in the end zone that was intercepted by linebacker Malcolm Smith and clinched Seattle’s 23-17 victory. Sherman ran over and after tapping Crabtree on the backside and extended his hand for a handshake. Crabtree then shoved Sherman in the face. The All-Pro cornerback then made the choking gesture. The Associated Press

carried on through Muhammad Ali and Deion Sanders and anyone of color who dared speak their mind. That, clearly, is still going strong today. “When Tom Brady goes on an expletive-laced tirade against the referees in November,” the professor said, referring to another white quarterback with a stellar public image, “it’s not a big deal.” In the end, both Manning and Sherman are superb football players with essentially the same goals who, viewed in their totality, come across as decent human beings. Their talents have them headed to the Super Bowl. Their contrasts have made them the headline. And they’re both worthy of your admiration.

SAN DIEGO — Jordan Spieth turned out to be the star attraction Friday playing with Tiger Woods at Torrey Pines. Spieth again showed game well beyond his 20 years with a 9-under 63 on the North Course, giving him a oneshot lead over Stewart Cink going into the weekend at the Jordan Farmers Insurance Spieth Open. Cink drilled a 3-wood from 280 yards onto the green at the par-5 ninth on the tougher South Course for a two-putt birdie and a 71. Woods rarely gets upstaged at Torrey Pines, where his eight professional wins include the 2008 U.S. Open. But in his first competition in six weeks, Woods hardly looked the part as the defending champion. He did not make birdie on any of the par 5s for the second straight day, and a three-putt bogey on the par-5 ninth hole on the North gave him a 71. He was nine shots behind. Phil Mickelson’s ailing back wasn’t much better, though Lefty plodded along and shot 73 on the South to finish eight shots out of the lead. Mickelson contemplated pulling out to rest his back, and said only that he would give it a shot Saturday depending on how he felt. It was the first time Spieth has played with Woods in a tournament — they played a practice round together at the Presidents Cup last fall — and the Texan felt and played as if it was any other round on the PGA Tour. Then again, the first time he played with Mickelson, Spieth closed with a 62 at the TPC Boston last year, a round that led Mickelson to call Presidents Cup captain Fred Couples and lobby for Spieth to be picked for the team. In both cases, Spieth was more interested with the score than the audience. “Any time you can shoot a lower score than a 66 or 65 and you can really get it deep and be in a zone and not worry about what your score is … that’s special,” Spieth said. “That’s proving that I can play my best golf when it matters on a PGA Tour venue. Each time you can do that, you get more and more confident that you can do it more often.” As for playing with Woods? He only shrugged. Spieth grew up watching, idolizing and being amazed by Woods. But this was only a Friday. “They were both rounds that I needed to move up the leaderboard,” he said about playing with Woods this week and Mickelson last year. “They weren’t in the last couple groups on Sunday, so they weren’t to win. They were to get myself up and in a position.” Spieth was at 10-under 134 and will be in the last group Saturday with Cink and Nicolas Colsaerts, who shot 67 on the South and was two shots behind. “I’m looking forward to playing with Jordan. I’ve never seen him hit a ball, so that will be fun,” Cink said. “It’s always exciting to see the young guys play. I’m playing really well. I’m really excited about golf right now and the way I’m playing. I’m having some fun out there and seeing a lot of good things.” The final two rounds will be on the South, which is about 600 yards longer and on Friday played more than 4½ shots harder. Spieth didn’t hit the ball better than his opening-round 71 on the South. His putter made the difference. He rolled in a bending 18-foot birdie putt on the 10th hole and his confidence grew up there. He avoided a three-putt on the 17th by making a 15-footer for par, and he really took off down the stretch. He holed another sidehill birdie putt on the par-3 sixth from about 20 feet, and he made a 15-footer for his final birdie on the eighth hole. The rest of his birdie putts were inside 4 feet. “The kid’s got talent,” Woods said. “He hits it a long way, phenomenal putter. He made a boat load of putts today from the 10- to 20-foot range, and on poa greens, that’s not easy to do. He was pouring them in there. He had speed to them, too. That’s what you have to do to putt on poa. “He putted with a lot of confidence.” That wasn’t the case for Woods, whose only birdies came on his opening hole and on his sixth hole, a flip wedge to 4 feet. He didn’t feel like he was off by much, but that’s all it took. The course is set up in such a way that the thickest grass is just off the fairway.


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

NYSE

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name

Name

Vol (00) Last %Chg

Vol (00) Last %Chg

Markets The weekininreview review Dow Jones industrials Close: 15,879.11 1-week change: -579.45 (-3.5%)

17,000

CLOSED -44.12 MON

TUES

WED

THUR

FRI

16,500

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last Chg %Chg

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last Chg %Chg

16,000 15,500 15,000

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last Chg %Chg

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

14,500

J

A

S

O

N

D

J

Last Chg %Chg

DIARY

Volume

Name

Wk %Chg

YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg

Volume

Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg

Last

Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … %YTD Chg: Percentage loss or gain for the year to date. No change indicated by … How to use: The numbers can be helpful in following stocks but as with all financial data are only one of many factors to judge a company by. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

Stock footnotes: Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.

YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

NASDAQ National Market NATIONAL NASDAQ Name

Wk Chg

DIARY

New York Stock Exchange NEW Name

Last

Here are the 944 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and 670 most active stocks worth more than $2 on the Nasdaq National Market. Stocks in bold are worth at least $5 and changed 10 percent or more in price during the past week. If you want your stocks to always be listed, call Bob Quick at 986-3011. Tables show name, price and net change, and the year-to-date percent change in price.

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

MARKET SUMMARY 52-Week High Low

HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW

-41.10 -175.99 -318.24

MARKET

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name

Div

PE

Last

Wk Chg

YTD %Chg

Wk YTD Chg %Chg

CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Last

Prev.

Last

Prev.

KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.

Last

Week ago

Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds

METALS

Prev. Last day Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.7855 0.7923 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.3043 3.3233 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1267.00 1263.00 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 19.800 20.040 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2155.00 2182.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 733.90 745.00 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1427.10 1461.70


Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-7

sfnm«classifieds to place an ad call

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

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY COMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR SALE 202 E. Marcy Street, Santa Fe

LOTS & ACREAGE

»rentals«

GREAT NEW MEXICO PROPERTIES BIG MOON RANCH NORTHERN NEW MEXICO 988 ACRES. $720,000.00 CALL OWNER, 802-236- 1314

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, RUFINA LAN E. Laundry facility on site, cozy fire place, enclosed patio. Near Walmart. $625 monthly. One month free rent. No application fees. Cozy studio, $750 monthly, $500 deposit, includes utilities, washer, dryer. saltillo tile, great views. No smoking or pets. Call 505-231-0010.

OUT OF STATE

SANTA FE Cozy Cottage

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

FSBO TOWNHOUSE, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, and garage. $179,900. Close to schools, available immediately. Owner - Broker. Please call 505-850-5005.

Now Showing Rancho Viejo Townhome $232,500

Substantial Renovation in 2006. Zoned BCD (Business Capitol District) Approximately 29,511 square feet- East Marcy, East Palace Subdistrict.

PASSIVE ACTIVE SOLAR HOME on 2 Acres. Salida Colorado. 3 Bedrooms 3.5 Baths, Office, Gourmet Kitchen, Adobe Brick & Tinted Concrete, Green House, Energy Star Certified, 2 CG, 3337SF. Call Carol NOW 970846-5368. Western Mtn Real Estate. www.WesternMtn.com

RESORT TIMESHARING

Office, retail, gallery, hospitality, residential, etc. Pueblo style architecture, computer controlled HVAC, cat 6, water catchment, brick and carpet flooring, Cummins diesel back-up electricity generator, multiple conference rooms, vault, climate controlled server room, power conditioners, privacy windows, double blinds on windows, break room, outdoor break area, executive offices, corporate reception, close proximity to restaurants, parking garages and the convention center. Paved parking for 100+ spaces. Parking ratio = 1:275 which includes the offsite parking across the street.

PUEBLO BONITO Emerald Bay Timeshare (Mazatlan Mexico) for sale. Presidential Suite for use 1 week per year anytime except Christmas-New Years week. 21 years left on contract. Price firm at $18,000. Contact John at 505-4383793.

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

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Quaint Southside Townhome Just Reduced! 3 beds, 2 baths, over 1,600 square feet, kiva fireplace, tile floors, large gameroom or office, convenient location, only $220,000. Jefferson Welch, 505-577-7001

STATELY OPEN C O N C E P T , 3400+ Sq.Ft. 1+ acres, unlimited water. Tennis court, hot tub, sauna, gazebo, fountains & ponds. 3+ Bedrooms, 2 Baths (master suite). Nichos, bancos, view. CHAPMAN REALTY: 505-983-8100.

986-3000 CONTACT JOHN HANCOCK 505-470-5604

JHancock@SantaFeRealEstate.com

Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

CUTE 1 BEDROOM DUPLEX, firplace 1875 Calle Quedo B off Pacheco. $750. No pets, year lease. Nancy Gilorteanu Realtor, 983-9302. Love is in the air and we have specials to spare! Call our friendly new management team at Las Palomas Apartments- Hopewell St reet at 888-482-8216 for a tour of one of our sunny Studios or large 2 Bedrooms. We’ve made a lot of changes- you’ll be amazed! Se habla español.

OFFICE- STUDIO NEAR RAILYARD

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

Can also be used as u n f u r n i s h e d a p a r t m e n t . $850 monthly. All utilities included. Reserved parking. Call 505-471-1238 additional details.

1425 PASEO DE PERALTA, 1 bedroom, full kitchen, bath. Tile throughout. Free laundry. $735 utilities paid. No Pets! 505-471-4405 1 BEDROOM, affordable & attractive. Rancho Siringo. Vigas, tile, fireplace, laundry. No pets. $680 includes water. 505-310-1516 1 BEDROOM, with extra office- Exercise Room on Juanita Street. Pet negotiable. Laundry room. $740 includes water. 505-310-1516 2 BEDROOMS. $1250, UTILITIES INCLUDED. HILLSIDEWALK TO PLAZA. FIREPLACE, PRIVATE PATIO. SUNNY, QUIET. OFF-STREET PARKING. 505-685-4704. NON- SMOKING, NO PETS. $945. SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, ZIA VISTA. Looks new! Incredible Sangre Mountain views! Sunny! Gated. Fireplace. Quiet. Nonsmoking. 505-204-2210 COZY CASITA, Near Canyon Road. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, courtyard, no pets, $900 monthly includes utilities. Call Katie at 505-690-4025

ONE BEDROOM, one bath apartment. Twenty minutes North of Santa Fe. $600 monthly plus deposit, utilities. Quiet safe area. 505-929-1237 OUTDOOR PATIO. All tile floors. Washer, Dryer. Parking. Rent $925 including heat, water. Call Sheilah Motelet Realty, Cat considered. Santa Fe 505-660-7045.

PRIVATE COMPOUND 1 bedroom, 1 bath apartment. Private patio, carport parking, laundry facility, no pets, nonsmoking. $650 plus deposit. 505-3102827

COMMERCIAL SPACE 1,900 sq.ft. Warehouse, 600 sq.ft Office Space, reception area, two offices, kitchen, security, fenced yard, On-site parking. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2511.

1 BEDROOM CONDO. Gated, pool, fireplace. $700 monthly plus electric, water and deposit. Call Eddie, 505470-3148. CHARMING 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 2 S T O R I E S , high ceilings, courtyard, yard, fruit trees, hot tub. 2 car garage. Red brick, carpet. washer & dryer, dishwasher, central heat, air. $1,550. 505-204-0421. SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM, 2 STORY . Kiva, AC, new carpet & paint, office, lovely yard. In Park Plaza. Trails, tennis courts. Easy access to everything. Trained dogs OK. $1400 + Utilities + lease, First + Last month. $600 Deposit. Please call, 612-418-6088, or email: ceezee27@outlook.com. ZIA VISTA, top floor. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. 1 year lease. Available 3/1/14 $900 monthly. Sign by 2/6/14; 50% off first month. 432-847-9510

GUESTHOUSES EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936. EFFICIENCY CASITA 530 sq.ft. Fully furnished, full kitchen, deck, sunlit hills. $700 monthly plus propane. $500 deposit. Available now. 505-9835445 EXCEPTIONAL GEM IN PINES O F F GONZALES. Newly refurbished, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher. 840 sq.ft. Covered porch. Private entry. No pets. Year lease, $1500 plus utilities. Available now. 505-982-1552

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146.17 AC. 1 hour from Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Electricity, views of Sangre De Cristo Mnts and Glorieta Mesa. $675, acre, 20 year owner financing. Toll Free 8 7 7 - 7 9 7 - 2 6 2 4 newmexicoranchland.net

LOTS & ACREAGE

ve *Mo r in fo 0 $50 (3) 2.5 Acre Lots, Senda Artemisia, Old Galisteo Road, Close to town. Easy building sites. Views, utilities, shared well. Owner financing. No Mobile homes. $119,700- $129,700 each. Greg. 505-690-8503, Equity Real Estate.

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CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800

RETAIL OFFICE SPACE - 1000 SQFT Open, Bright, Versatile, Fresh Remodel, Parking, Near prominent businesses. St Michaels Dr area. Expandable if need more room. $12 per sq.f.t + utilities. 505-670-9443.

FARMS & RANCHES

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APARTMENTS FURNISHED

805 EARLY STREET. 2700 SQ.FT. ARCHITECTURALLY DESIGNED SPACE, high ceilings, open floor plan along with conventional space. Property can be divided into two spaces. Good for hair salon, art or yoga studio, retail, or office. Call Phillip, 505-9847343 Owner NMREB.

Barker Realty 505-982-9836

SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT... Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!

COMMERCIAL SPACE

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

Moriarty. Two 40 acre Farm-Land Parcels with irrigation and domestic wells, water and mineral rights. Owner Finance. 505-471-0365, 505310-0566.

Brand New Townhomes

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CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared!

for activists rally Immigrants,

Locally owned

and independent

to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

50¢

mexican.com

for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

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

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations

CALL 986-3010

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 Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary last year. near E.J. Martinez the city morning check, and got a a Saturday he the fine by Sovcik paid in early December, fee because Then fora penalty cashed it. would be he owed letter saying late, and his case was his check a collections agency. who were of people later warded to of dozens SUV, paid up and He’s one by the speednotices of default. ticketed erroneous Robbin acknowledged Trafreceived Anthony Santa Fe Police Capt. problems in the he’s corsaid the accounting Program and exact number fic OperationsHe’s not sure the STOP not, but rected them. paid their automated they had who the of people got letters stating calls about tickets and he got many phone he admittedthis year. includfrom issue early of the default notices, resulted A number by Sovcik, mailed to the received or ing the onemade at City Hall the bank but not into Robpayments keeping, were deposited early city that to police for record during the forwarded Others originated Page A-9 bin said. CITATIONS, see Please

The New

living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators

N

Committee some Resources and Natural the comMonday. also asked in towns The committeeclaims offices help resito better pany to establish the crisis affected by will be seeking compensation natural-gas during the dents who suffered Gas Co. officials for losses Mexico link on the outage. New phone line and running. said a claimswebsite is up and New Mexico company’s than two hours, legislators’ For more answered week’s caused last Gas representatives about whatduring bitterly cold questions Natural from El Pasothe huge service interruption An official weather. that manages gas across company Gas, the pipeline delivering interstate also spoke. a lot more the Southwest, Gas purchased New Mexico Page A-10 CRISIS, Please see State 2011 LEGISLATURE cut for the

OKs budget ◆ Panel Office. measures sponsor Auditor’s A-7 ◆ GOP newcomers reform. PAGE for ethics

Terrell

Lois Mexico, by Skin of New Wells and Cady Under the author of in conjunction Rudnick, Modernism of New Southwestern Under the Skin(1933Wells with the exhibit 5:30 Art of Cady Mexico: The UNM Art Museum, Arts. 1953) at the of Spanish Colonial A-2 p.m., Museum in Calendar, More eventsin Pasatiempo and Fridays

The New

at tax agenc

y

Friday, offiup for work not showingfrom top department leave for was to e-mails New Mexican. just who according said by The Mahesh agency about to return to cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one sion in at and who was expected Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were on “essential” that afternoon next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department The resulting and Revenue of personal ed for a day e employe state Taxation

up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked he New Mexican

Art lecture

in North16,000 people without natural among the were still They are days of Mexico whohomes, despite five expected ern New their snow Constable With more than 20 perand Anne gas for heating Matlock less temperatures. relit freezing a fourth of Taos and had been Mexican Ellen Cavatoday, only Arriba County villages Gas Co. put and his housemate, their fireplacetheir cent of Rio New Mexico and pipefitin front of John Hubbard Near on Monday. plumbers huddled by noon stay warm. plea to to licensed naugh, were trying to on meters. out a message morning away them turn Monday they’ve posted a handwritten do not go ters to help Lucia Sanchez, public-information front gate, saying, “Please Page A-10 Meanwhile, FAMILIES, the gas company,us with no gas.” 75, live in PajaPlease see leave both again and San Ildefonso and Cavanaugh, Hubbard small inholding on a rito Village, west of the Rio Grande. Pueblo just

By Staci

sion sparks confu Shutdown workers may By Steve

Pasapick

g homes: in freezin cracks’ Families h the ‘We fell throug

Today

with Mostly cloudy, showers. snow afternoon 8. High 37, low PAGE A-14

Obituaries

Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 Santa Fe, Sarah Martinez Erlinda Ursula Esquibel Feb. 2 “Ollie” Lucero, 85, Oliver Phillip 4 Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 “Trudy” Gertrude Santa Fe, Lawler, 90, Feb. 3 Two sections,

28 pages

No. 38 162nd year, No. 596-440 ublication

CALL 986-3000

FIREWOOD Dry Pinon & Cedar

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HANDYMAN

ROOFING

HANDYMAN

LESSONS

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INTRODUCTORY FLYING LESSONS. 3 HOURS GROUND SCHOOL, 3 HOURS FLYING. $250. LET’S HAVE FUN! PLEASE CALL 505-577-7552.

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

CLASSIFIEDS YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 Years Experience, Residential & Offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655

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

TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583

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ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.

STORAGE AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL. Airport Cerrillos Storage. UHaul. Cargo Van. 505-474-4330. airportcerrillos.com


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES FURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

BEAUTIFUL ADOBE Casita, fully furnished, Pojoaque. 1 bedroom, 2 bath. No smoking, No pets. $675 monthly, $300 deposit. Call 505-455-3902.

VILLAGE OF CERRILLOS. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. $900 monthly. First, last month plus deposit. Call 505-473-4186.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

LIVE IN STUDIOS 1 BEDROOM, 1 bath, perfect for 1 person. $550 monthly all utilities included, plus deposit. Available 2/1. Between Siringo and Llano. 505-5701413.

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

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

1+ ACRE . Nice touches; tile in dining room, kitchen & baths; nichos; kiva fireplace; flagstone patio with portal; 2 car garage; fenced, pets ok. Convenient highway access for Albuquerque commuters. Available now. Open this weekend. $1600 monthly. 210-426-6366. 1 car garage, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, yard, new carpet. 2642 Calle Primavera. No-smoking. $,1215 monthly, deposit $1000. 505-473-0013. 2 BEDROOM 1 bath. Fenced yard, $995 monthly. Please call 505-6901803. Available for showing Monday through Wednesday. 2 BEDROOM 1 office 1 bath southside house. Yard is completely enclosed, large covered patio. $1,100 monthly plus deposit. No pets, no smoking. 505-660-0084.

2 BEDROOM, 2 bath in Jaconita on Highway 502. $900 monthly plus utilities. $900 security deposit. 505-4552336 3 bedroom 2 bath, 2 car garage on cul-de-sac in Nava Ade. Built in 2000, club house with pool yards away, washer, dryer, gas fireplace, 18ft ceilings, security systems. No pets, non-smoking. Year lease $1,650 monthly, $1,650 security deposit. 505913-0505, 505-438-0501. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Custom Home 2.5 acres. Solar exposure, city lights, ridge above city. 360 views. $1900. John, 505-989-7172.

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! Using

We always Larger get results! Type 986-3000

will help your ad get noticed

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED

COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES

2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $850 plus utilities

LOCATED AT THE LOFTS ON CERRILLOS

This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities

CHARMING AND CENTRALLY LOCATED

3 bedroom, 1 bath, wood & tile floors, enclosed backyard, additional storage on property $995 plus utilities

QUIET AND FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD

3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, AC, 2 car garage, enclosed backyard, washer, dryer, $1200 plus utilities

CHARMING CONDO

2 bedroom, 2 bath, granite counters, washer, dryer, upgraded appliances, access to all amenities $975 plus utilities

SPACIOUS HOME IN DESIRABLE NEIGHBORHOOD

3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, washer, dryer hook-up, large fenced in backyard, 2 car garage $1200 plus utilities

5-PLEX CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ON CAMINO CAPITAN

OFFICES

HIGH-END RESIDENTIAL CUSTOM HOME DESIGN-BUILDER IN SANTA FE SEEKS E S T IM A T IN G PURCHASING MANAGER . Position includes estimating large and small residential construction projects, material take offs, contracting subcontractors and suppliers, entering contracts and prices into Sage Master Builder software, purchasing materials and managing subcontracts. 5 years experience as a purchasing manager and/or construction estimator required. Construction experience and proficiency in Sage Master Builder, Adobe, Auto Desk Design Review and Microsoft Excel a plus. Please mail all resumes to: P O Box 9035, Santa Fe, NM 87504-9035.

Biotest Plasma Center 2860 Cerrillos Road, Ste B1 Santa Fe, NM 87507. 505-424-6250

Book your appointment online at: www.biotestplasma.com NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!

»jobs«

DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted for busy practice. Full time, Monday - Thursday. Experience preferred. Salary DOE. Email resume to: admin@childs2thdr.com HYGEINIST, FULL-TIME for busy progressive office. Please send cover letter and resume to drparker@richardparkerdds.com

LAMCC seeks LPN / RN

ACCOUNTING

3 DAYS a week Santa Fe, Los Alamos office. Non-smoker nonsmoking household, no weekends.

Email resume:

AR ACCOUNTANT

5 years experience. Quail Run. Send resume & cover letter to: jdecoursin@qrsf.com

GREAT RETAIL SPACE! Water Street Store Front

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!

Please call (505)983-9646. RETAIL SPACE SEASONAL PLAZA RETAIL Month-Month Call Southwest Asset Management, 988-5792.

STORAGE SPACE A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 12x24 for Only $195.00. Call to reserve yours Today!!! AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL. Airport Cerrillos Storage. UHaul. Cargo Van. 505-474-4330. airportcerrillos.com

WAREHOUSES 1500 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE. $900. 10x10 overhead door. Bathroom, skylights, large office, 12’ ceilings. 1364 Rufina Circle. Sharp, Clean. Available NOW. 505-480-3432

»announcements«

EASTSIDE ADOBE, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Available now. Sunroom, carport, and storage unit. $1100 includes water. First, last, deposit. 505467-8345

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

FOUND FOUND BLACK and white cat at St. Francis and Llano St. Contact, Santa Fe Animal Shelter.

Classifieds

Get Results! Call 986-3000 to place your ad!

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS YARD PERSON NEEDED

TEMPORARY DELIVERY Drivers, Flower Designers needed for Valentine’s Day. Apply at Rodeo Plaza Flowers, 2801 Rodeo Road, Suite A2. No phone calls.

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

CALL 986-3000 EDUCATION

DESERT ACADEMY OF SANTA FE,

a college preparatory independent IB World School grades 7-12, is seeking qualified candidates for the following positions for the 2014 season:

Drug Test Required. Apply in person at Empire Builders, 1802 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM

APPLIANCES

ART

ROCKY MOUNTAIN TROPHY ELK

MIGUEL MARTINEZ "Girl From Galisteo (1991)" Original oil pastel; Not a lithograph. Beautifully framed. $12,500, Offer. Serious inquires only. Approx. 40"x34". (505) 690-1190.

Women’s Clothing store is seeking experienced high energy sales asscociates. Must be hi end fashion savvy. Bring resume to Pinkoyote.

PLYWOOD. CABINET GRADE. 4’x8’ sheets. Never used. Different thicknesses. 505-983-8448

ROCKS FOR SALE! Small to Large, for landscaping or other uses. Call Herman, 505-819-9033, for appointment to view.

Holy Cross Catholic School is now accepting applications for a Kindergarten teacher, immediate hire, for the last semester of the 2013-2014 school year who has a NM Certification K-8 or Early Childhood/ BA Degree. If interested please contact school office at 505-753-4644.

STEEL BUILDING Allocated Bargains. 40x60 on up. We do deals! www.gosteelbuildings.com Source# 18X. 505-349-0493

COLLECTIBLES MERRY FOSS former latin american ETHNOGRAPHIC and ANTIQUE dealer moving to mexico! Selling her personal collection, household furniture and all contents. By appointment 505-795-7222 or 505-699-9222.

WANTED: WARHOL-HARING Lichtenstein, Hockney, S. Fairey, etc. Buying signed works.

FIREWOOD-FUEL

PETS SUPPLIES

Get Your Male Dog or Cat Fixed for

ONLY $20

Santa Fe Animal Shelter & Humane Society presents

HAPPY NEUTER YEAR

NM’S 2ND largest insurer seeks entrepreneurial candidates with a strong desire to be successful and respected business owners in their community. Award winning training from the University of Farmers. Subsidy packages available for building your agency. For more information, please contact 954-1612.

petsmartcharities.org

FIREWOOD, MISCELLANEOUS Cedar, pinion ponderosa. 1/2 cord delivered $120. 508-444-0087 or 505-2179198.

2 COUCHES for sale, 1 with a hide-abed. $40 each. 505-204-0456.

Where treasures are found daily

Must mention this ad when making appointment. 505-474-6422 JANUARY ONLY BEAUTIFUL KING Blue purebred bull Terrier puppies. All color terns. Blue-Gray, Chocolate, Colored, and 1 Brindle. $250.00 up. 1-505-920-9044. BERNESE MOUNTAIN DOG. AKC. Four years. Seeks friendly AKC male for all paid romantic liason. ASAP. 8865

PittpatTriand

Female. healthy, expense 505-304-

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

VACANCY NOTICE IS

»animals«

In association with

Classifieds

Please submit cover letter & resume to: lgildes@desertacademy.org

Large antler spread- six points per side, 46" length, 38" spread. Nice for home, office, lodge, conference room, gallery, casino, lounge or other. $1200 OBO. Santa Fe, 520-906-9399.

BUILDING MATERIALS

310-259-9188 or zyart@pacbell.net

RETAIL

MISCELLANEOUS

MAYTAG Atlantis over-sized washer and dryer. $200 each. 505-471-6748 or 505-366-3734.

FURNITURE

* Part Time Head Varsity Girls’ Soccer Coach * Part Time Assistant Girls’ Soccer Coach

SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOLS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A

FURNITURE

REFINISHED KITCHEN SIDEBAR. Solid walnut top. 52"Wx20"D. $250 OBO. 505-685-4911, 577-1275.

SALES MARKETING

IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505-989-6330 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: Felisa@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us

2000 sq.ft. Workshop, art studio, light manuafacturing. Siler Road area. $1470 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505670-1733.

PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE IS LOOKING TO HIRE,

COMPETITIVE SALARIES AND BENEFITS. Call Brian, 505-982-8581 OR FAX RESUME TO 505-982-0788

HEALTH TEACHER.

WAREHOUSE WORK SPACE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY

jperkins@cybermesa.com or call Julie at 505-662-4351.

FULL-TIME AND PART-TIME RN’S & PHYSICAL THERAPIST

ROLL OFF TRUCK DRIVER NEEDE D at Capital Scrap Metals. CDL and Medical Card required. Applications accepted at Capital Scrap Metals, 1162 Cooks Lane, Santa Fe.

COZY 1 bedroom plus Loft. Refrigerator, 2 car garage, enclosed backyard. No Pets. $885 monthly, $700 deposit. 480-236-5178.

RAILYARD, DOWNTOWN, CHARMING SOUTHWESTERN CASITA. 1 bedroom, office, laundry. Spacious flagstone great room, chateau fireplace. Walled courtyard. $995 Lease. 505-8984168.

Experienced Assistant Manager for busy, exciting Santa Fe Apartments. Sharp dresser, motivated, organized team player with positive attitude. Great phone, PC, internet skills. $15 hour + bonuses & benefits. Resume & cover letter to: santaferesume@gmail.com

DRIVERS

ADOBE, WALK TO PLAZA, SOUTH CAPITAL. Hardwood floors, vigas, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fenced. Pets okay. Very private. 505310-3399

Calle Miquela. 3 bedroom townhome. 2 bath. 2 car garage, private backyard. Non-smoker, small dog considered. $1,250 plus utilities. 505-235-7151.

Please help us help those coping with rare, chronic, genetic diseases. New donors can receive $100.00 this week! Ask about our Specialty Programs! Must be 18 years or older, have valid ID along with proof of SS#, and local residency. Walk-ins Welcome! New donors will receive a $10.00 Bonus on their second donation with this ad.

227 EAST PALACE

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

»merchandise«

MANAGEMENT

HOMES

CLEAN 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH HOME in Tesuque area 12 min. from downtown Santa Fe. $900 per month + deposit. No smoking, no pets. Credit check & references required. Call 505-321-2402 or 505-220-7254.

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

PERSONAL ASSISTANT: Bathe, dress, feed, medical care, house clean for disabled 155lb man. Communication skills, responsible, PC skills. $18 hourly. jobapppa@gmail.com.

Changing Futures, One Person At A Time Become a Plasma Donor Today

MANUFACTURED 986-3000

this unit is a one bedroom loft, fireplace, and fenced back yard $650 plus utilities

BEAUTIFUL, UPDATED HOUSE. 2 bedroom 2 bath +bonus room, sunroom, garage. Washer, dryer, kiva fireplaces. Wood floors. Landscaping. Pets-negotiable. No smoking. $1425 monthly! Available now. 720-235-8458. http://rentsantafe.blogspot.com/

IN HOME CARE

PUBLIC NOTICES

Call Classifieds For Details Today!

Three room, 600 sq.ft., professional space, good light, ideal share. Faces Palace Avenue, assigned parking. Lease 505-820-7657

2 bedroom, 1 bath, on-site laundry, close to parks $600 plus utilities

986-3000

MEDICAL DENTAL

1,000 SQ.FT, OFFICE, RETAIL. AVAILABLE NOW. $775 monthly. 3022 Cielo Court, Unit C. Spacious, lots of windows. Call Richard, 505-670-1490.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

to place your ad, call

TRADES MAINTENANCE POSITION available; skilled in carpentry, exterior trim, painting, electrical, roofing, stucco, must read and write English and keep good records. 30 to 40 hours per week Monday - Friday with some on-call for emergencies. Pay dependent on experience. Submit resume: 3 Nuevo Milenio Santa Fe NM 87507.

BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING. SIMMONS BEAUTYREST, CALIFORNIA KING. Box Springs & Frame. Good condition. $150. 505-983-3948

CHUCHU - adult male Ridgeback mix is an incredibly loyal dog. Chu loves snuggling, taking walks, playing with friendly dogs, chasing balls, and tossing floppy toys. He is good with kids. Call 505-231-3624 for more information. Friends of the Shelter Los Alamos. GERMAN SHEPHERD, beautiful female 1 year old, imported from Germany. AKC and German registered Champion Pedigree, all generations xrayed. Great guard dog or breeder. 505-660-4505.


Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES

DOMESTIC

to place your ad, call 4X4s

986-3000

B-9

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

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2008 BMW 335xi Sedan. 85,874 miles. Local trade, no accidents. Navigation and great amenities. $20,999. Schedule a test drive today.

2009 Honda CR-V EX-L - Another Lexus 1 owner trade! AWD, leather, Navigation, recently serviced, new brakes, clean CarFax. $18,792. Call 505-216-3800.

2010 Land Rover LR2 HSE SUV. 21,627 miles, Climate Comfort Package, Bluetooth, Sirius Radio. One Owner! The BEST 4X4 BY FAR! $25,995. 505-474-0888.

LOVE FOR YOUR FAMILY

Manny, a handsome gentleman, is a 1-year-old Chihuahua mix who is looking for his new life partner. He loves other dogs and people and would love nothing more than to offer you unconditional love. Call PAWS at 505-466-0091 for more information about adoption.

2013 CHEVROLET Spark Hatch. Incredibly low miles! 4,404 miles. Factory warranty. Great gas saver! $13,599. Schedule a test drive today.

2011 Subaru Outback

Sweet one owner Subie. Power seat, windows, locks. 62k miles. CarFax. 3 month, 3,000 mile warranty included, compare prices! $16,995. Call 877-232-2815.

sweetmotorsales.com

VALENTINE POMERANIAN PUPPIES, gorgeous, registered, first shots, $500-$900. Ready by Valentine’s Day. Gorgeous rare grey Poodle, female, $450. 505-901-2094, 505-753-0000.

GET NOTICED!

»garage sale«

IMPORTS

Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details

CALL 986-3000

2012 CHEVROLET Cruze. 49,535 miles. One owner, no accidents. This car is fully loaded! $16,999. Schedule a test drive today.

2012 Infiniti M37x AWD - Just traded! Gorgeous and loaded, good miles, navigation & technology packages, local one owner, clean CarFax $34,281. Call 505-216-3800.

2008 Land Rover LR3

Top of the line HSE V8. Excellent black exterior, luxurious wood and tan leather, 7 passenger seating, 96k miles, service history, Carfax, Free Warranty. $21,995. Call 877-232-2815.

sweetmotorsales.com GARAGE SALE WEST 4225 SUNDANCE S T . 2008 Smart with 36,000 miles, good condition: $12,000.00. 2005 Honda Goldwing Trike with or without converting kit: $26,000.00 or $25,000.00! Patio set of dining table, 6 chairs, love seat, 2 rocking chairs and coffee table: $500.00! Reclining love seat, 2 end tables, and 2 beautiful lamps: $350.00! Set of 3 bar stools, perfect condition: $120.00! Set of 2 bar stools with wicker seats: $60.00! Navajo rugs, different sizes. Great dresser with shelvings and 2 drawers, good condition: $80.00! Also, scheduled Garage Sale on Jan. 25th & 26th from 8:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.

ESTATE SALES BACK ON THE RACK CLOSING LIQUIDATION SALE! 50% off - Wednesday, 1-22 thru Sunday 1-26; 75% off - Tuesday 1-28 thru Sunday 2-2. Fixtures Display Shelves as marked. 10am to 5pm. 1248 Siler Road. E V E R Y T H I N G MUST GO!

2007 Acura MDX AWD

4X4s

Sweet CarFax certified one owner, 75k miles. Gorgeous Nimbus grey metallic with ebony black leather, accident free, smoke free, all wheel drive. 3 month/3000 mile warranty included!! $19,995. Call 877-2322815.

sweetmotorsales.com

sweetmotorsales.com

INFINITI M35X 2008 Clean, reliable, fully loaded. White with tan interior. 59,500 miles. New tires & brakes. $18,500 Call 629-3960.

Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

2006 FORD-F150 CREW CABXLT 4X4. Two Owner, Local, Carfax, Vehicle Brought up To Date With Services, Drive Ready, Most Options, Working, Transport Crew Truck, Affordable $13,750, WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com PAUL 505-983-4945 2010 Audi Q7 3.6L quattro - Another pristine Lexus trade-in! Only 39k miles, AWD, well-equipped with panoramic roof, new tires, clean CarFax, significantly undervalued at $33,212. Call 505-2163800.

ESTATE SALE. Crystal collectibles, shoe collections, tools, Kachinas, Barbies, Beanie Babies, furniture, glassware, much more! 1109 E Alameda, Thursday- Sunday, 10-6.

Frank and Friends Estate Sale Saturday, 1/25, 9 am- 2 pm 1049 Govenor Dempsey Dr.

2012 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited. 3 piece Hardtop, Automatic Transmission. 15,077 miles. Excellent Condition! One Owner! $29,995. 505-474-0888.

2010 Honda Civic Hybrid - Another pristine Lexus trade-in! Just 39k miles, leather, 45+ mpg, clean CarFax $15,741. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 Land Rover LR2. Climate Comfort Package, Bluetooth, and Sirius Radio. 37,626 miles. New Brake Pads, and New Wipers. One Owner! $26,995. 505-474-0888.

2008 Land Rover Range Rover HSE. Another Lexus trade-in! low miles, clean CarFax, must see to appreciate, absolutely gorgeous $31,921. Call 505-216-3800.

Get your headlines on the go!

Pueblo Pottery, NM Rev. Table- Chair set, 2003 Chevy Tracker SUV, Nav. Weavings, Harlen Lizer Ptg, Books, Patio Furniture, Shop Tools, Hand Tools, Furniture, clothing, Lots of Stuff! Priced Right! 505-471-0802

»cars & trucks«

2004 BMW X3 AWD

Sweet Beemer at an affordable price!! 91k miles. Luxury all wheel drive, leather, power seats with memory, moonroof, CD and more. No accidents, clean CarFax. Price includes 3 month, 3000 mile warranty. $11,950. Call 877-232-2815.

2004 Audi A4 Quattro. Recent lowmileage trade-in, 1.8L turbo, AWD, loaded, clean CarFax and super nice. $10,621. Call 505-216-3800.

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES CLARK CUSTOM Flatbed, 6 1/2 x 7 ft. Good condition, $500 OBO. 505-9131559.

2014 BMW 320i xDrive 6,700 miles. AWD. 17" alloy wheels, heated, power front seats, Hands-free Bluetooth, USB. Transferable 4 year, 50,000 mile warranty. $36,000. Bill 505-920-6634

CLASSIC CARS Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon. 44,325 miles, 6spd Manual, 3 Piece Hardtop, 6 Disc CD, Sirius Radio. Excellent Condition! $23,995. 505-474-0888.

Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 DOMESTIC 2010 BMW 335Xi - Another Lexus trade! Low miles, AWD, completely loaded with Navigation, still under warranty! clean CarFax $27,932 Call 505-216-3800.

2013 CADILLAC ATS 2.0 Turbo, Motor Trends Car of the Year, Loaded with Bose Surround, Sunroof, Heated Leather Seats, Back up camera & many more options. Showroom condition, 7k miles, Thousands Less than new!! $28,500 call 575-770-2236.

1995 MITSUBISHI Montero. 2nd owner, great SUV with new computer and fuel pump. 264,000 miles. $2,300 OBO. Please call 505-231-4481.

2012 Toyota Tundra Double Cab 4x4, rare TRD Rock Warrior, new BFG A/T tires, good miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, HOT! $30,981. Call 505-216-3800. FORD TEMPO 1994. One owner. Records of maintenance. 129,000 miles. 6 cylinder, 5 speed. AM, FM cassette. Great condition. $2000 OBO.

2010 BMW 535Xi AWD. Recent trade-in, factory CERTIFIED with warranty & maintenance until 3/2016, fully loaded, clean CarFax $24,432. Call 505-216-3800.

2001 MAZDA MIATA MX-5, 100k miles. Excellent condition, great body. Many new parts. Dark green with tan top. Classic! $5,300. 505-955-1921.

Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January 25, 2014

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2011 Lexus CT200h - Recent Lexus trade! Factory Certified with 100k mile warranty, hybrid 42+ mpg, 1 owner clean CarFax, forget Prius for $23,841. Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Subaru Impreza Limited Sport - REALLY, why would you buy new? Just 5k miles, heated leather, original MSRP $25k, clean CarFax. $21,871. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 Toyota RAV4 - Just 27k miles! 4 cyl, 4WD, recently serviced with new tires AND brakes, 1 owner clean CarFax, pristine! $18,821. Call 505-216-3800.

Classifieds

986-3000

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

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

SUVs

2008 TOYOTA HIGHLANDERSPORT AWD. Another One Owner, Carfax, 84,000 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Service Records, New Tires, Manuals, Third Row Seat,Moon-Roof, Loaded. Soooo Beautiful, Pristine, $20,750. W E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2004 Volvo XC90 - Another Lexus trade-in! Locally owned, low miles, obviously well maintained, rear DVD & well equipped, clean CarFax $9,871. Call 505-216-3800.

2005 SATURN VUE. 90,548 miles, 4 cylinder, 5 speed manual transmission, power everything! $5,999. Schedule a test drive today.

SPORTS CARS

Where treasures are found daily

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

2007 Subaru Forester Premium

2010 Toyota Prius II - Merely 20k miles! 1 owner clean CarFax, excellent condition and 50+ mpg $17,493. Call 505-216-3800.

Ultra clean, all wheel drive Forester. Premium package has heated seats, panoramic moon roof, power windows, locks and driver’s seat, cruise control and more. Get a sweet deal on this Subie. Only $9,995. Price includes 3 month, 3000 mile limited warranty. Call 877-232-2815.

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

986-3000

2010 CHEVROLET Camaro Coupe 2SS. Immaculate condition, inside and out, low miles! 6,531 miles. $26,999. Schedule a test drive today.

NEW!! 2012 FLAT BED TRAILER. 14,000 pounds. GVW, 18’x8’ extra heavy duty. Loading ramps, tool box & spare. $5,000 OBO. 808-346-3635

GET NOTICED!

sweetmotorsales.com 1992 LEXUS SC 400. Only 101k miles. Garaged. Below book at $5,600 OBO. CD, Sunroof, heated seats. 405-323259 or 505-474-2870. 2010 Toyota Venza - Rare V6 AWD and fully loaded with leather and panoramic roof, low miles, clean CarFax $23,871. Call 505-216-3800.

sweetmotorsales.com

CALL 986-3000

2011 Volkswagen Tiguan S 4Motion - Just 27k miles! AWD, new tires, 1 owner clean CarFax, turbocharged, truly immaculate! $19,971. Call 505-216-3800.

Mercedes-Benz C230 Sport

Absolutely cherry, 87k miles. Loaded, heated seats, moonroof, 6 CD changer, spotless inside and out. Clean title, no accidents, includes 3 month, 3,000 mile warranty. Sweet price only $11,900. Call 877232-2815.

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

SUVs

VANS & BUSES

2007 Chevrolet Tahoe LTZ - Recent trade-in, loaded, leather, buckets, moonroof, DVD, new tires & brakes, super clean! $17,851. Call 505-216-3800. 2012 Toyota RAV4, V6 engine, 28k miles, sunroof, extra wheels & snow tires, $22,475, call 505-6998339. 2009 Toyota Corolla LE. Only 53k miles! Another 1 owner clean CarFax trade-in! Super nice, fully serviced $11,942. Call 505-216-3800.

2009 Volkswagen Tiguan SEL AWD Turbo. Navigation, panoramic roof, NICE, clean CarFax. $15,932. Call 505-216-3800.

Have a product or service to offer?

2012 Honda Odyssey EX-L - Recent Lexus trade-in! Just 22k miles, new tires, leather, navigation, one owner clean CarFax, super nice! $28,472. Call 505-2163800.

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

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Saturday, January 25, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

TIME OUT Horoscope

Crossword

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014: This year you take a bigger role at work and/or within your community. You might even be surprised to see your leadership abilities emerge. Sagittarius makes a great friend. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Dealing with a family member could be discouraging and/or difficult. This situation is not new; however, it does continue to cause you confusion. Tonight: Follow the gang. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You might feel closed off by what occurs, but you need to stay on top of a problem. Understand that an associate closes down when he or she is upset. Tonight: Make dinner for two. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Pace yourself, and be aware of your objectives. You tend to believe that you are in total control of situations in your life. Tonight: Out with a favorite person. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You might consider deferring to someone else, as this person seems much more demanding and less willing to give in. Tonight: Relax with a loved one. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Remain stoic when dealing with an upset loved one, even if you feel as if you’ve had enough. Take a break from your routine. Tonight: Enjoy being more childlike. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might feel as if a loved one has cut you off, or perhaps this person feels that way about you. Perhaps you would like to welcome some distance. Tonight: Order in.

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: HISTORY (e.g., He is credited with discovering Victoria Falls. Answer: David Livingstone.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. For what does the “F” stand in JFK? Answer________ 2. Who is known as the emperor who “fiddled while Rome burned”? Answer________ 3. Vlad the Impaler is associated with which fictional horror character? Answer________ 4. Who was the de facto leader of the Soviet Union until his death in 1953? Answer________ 5. He claimed to have been the first to reach the South Pole by air. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 6. He made the first recorded circumnavigation of New Zealand. Answer________ 7. Which horse won the Kentucky Derby on May 4, 2013? Answer________

8. Who is the only British prime minister to have received the Nobel Prize in Literature? Answer________ 9. Who had affairs with both Julius Caesar and Mark Antony? Answer________ 10. By what name is Islamic law known? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 11. Who was posthumously referred to as Emperor Showa? Answer________ 12. By what name was Tokyo formerly known? Answer________ 13. By what name is “Timur the Lame” historically known? Answer________ 14. The official language of which empire was Quechua? Answer________ 15. Sir Walter Raleigh died at age 65. How did he die? Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Fitzgerald. 2. Nero. 3. Dracula. 4. Josef Stalin. 5. Richard E. Byrd. 6. Capt. James Cook. 7. Orb. 8. Winston Churchill. 9. Cleopatra (VII). 10. Sharia. 11. Hirohito. 12. Edo (Yedo). 13. Tamerlane. 14. Inca Empire. 15. Beheaded. SCORING: 24 to 30 points — congratulations, doctor; 18 to 23 points — honors graduate; 13 to 17 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 5 to 12 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 4 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher

Cryptoquip

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

B-11

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You could be taken aback by a financial venture, and you might not be sure which way to proceed. You will need to use selfdiscipline once more. Tonight: Hang out with a friend at a favorite spot.

Sister always brings guests to dinner Dear Annie: Whenever I invite my siblings over for a family dinner, one sister waits until the very last minute and then brings another person. This isn’t some informal buffet. It’s a sitdown dinner. In order for everyone to have a seat and a place setting, I expect to have an accurate headcount in advance. But my sister does this every single time. Last night, she brought her daughter’s boyfriend. I do not have a lot of chairs in my house, and my father had already brought extras. Since I didn’t know this boyfriend was coming, all the chairs were accounted for, along with the necessary plates and silverware. Worse, they arrived before another couple and took one of the seats intended for them. My niece didn’t even bother to apologize that she had brought an uninvited guest without informing me. I am sick of this rude behavior. When I invite my family members, I always ask for an RSVP, whether by phone, email or text. I also always have been open to including any of the young adults bringing friends, as long as they let me know ahead of time. Even though I wanted to tell this niece that she and her boyfriend could stand, I scrambled and used a piano bench as a seat so everyone had a place. I don’t expect my niece to change her rude behavior. What I want to know is, as the hostess, am I allowed to make specifications regarding attendance in my home? How do I handle such things? — Tired of Rude Family in Carolina Dear Tired: As the hostess, you are obligated to make your guests comfortable, even the last-minute, uninvited ones. However, since this is also family and they come often, please speak up when you issue the next invitation. Tell your sister and her daughter directly that if they are planning to bring an extra guest, you expect them to let you know

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might need to end a difficult situation or cut off communication with someone who has an adverse effect on you. Tonight: Your treat. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You might feel the need to hold back. The less you discuss a problem that’s on your mind, the larger it will become. Tonight: Ready to paint the town red. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH A friend who is older or more serious might not be the best of company. In fact, you could feel as if this person is shutting down. Tonight: Be with a family member who is always upbeat. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You might be overserious or too controlling. If you note others pulling away, take a personal assessment as to what is bothering you. Tonight: Wherever you are, there is a celebration. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH If you have an opportunity to go to a movie or a concert, do. Refuse to take someone’s comments too seriously. Tonight: The spotlight shines on you. Jacqueline Bigar

Chess quiz

WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. Re8ch! Kf7 2. f5! (threatening the unstoppable R(1)e7 mate!

Today in history Today is Saturday, Jan. 25, the 25th day of 2014. There are 340 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Jan. 25, 1924, the first Winter Olympic Games opened in Chamonix, France. On this date: In 1533, England’s King Henry VIII secretly married his second wife, Anne Boleyn, who later gave birth to Elizabeth I.

Hocus Focus

in advance. Otherwise, you cannot guarantee that there will be space at the table. It is also a nice touch to use place cards so that all of the guests have an assigned seat, and the uninvited ones get the piano bench and a paper plate (with a gracious smile). Dear Annie: My husband passed away suddenly and unexpectedly a few months ago. I have had an outpouring of compassion, cards, invitations, etc., from wonderful friends, and I am very grateful. I tried to write a short note acknowledging the thoughtfulness. In December, I received Christmas cards from these friends, but I did not feel up to the task of sending out holiday cards. I’m still feeling a little guilty about it. Was that acceptable? — Doing the Best I Can Dear Doing: Holiday cards are not a requirement, nor is it necessary to respond in kind to cards that do not include a personal message. Ideally, you would have acknowledged each personalized card with a written note or a phone call, and if you were not able to do that yourself, you could have enlisted the help of friends and family. But under the circumstances, we know people understand. Whenever you have the opportunity to let them know their cards were received, please do so. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Perplexed in Pennsylvania,” whose best friend always remembered her birthday belatedly. Humor is usually a good response. That happened to me, but with family members, and there were quite a few of us. My response was to pick out nice calendars in October with a theme that would interest them. Then, at the bottom of the appropriate date, I would put the birthday person’s name, whoever it was. Problem solved, and the recipients usually appreciated the useful gift. — Andy in Ft. Myers, Fla.

Jumble


B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, January WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

25, 2014

THE ARGYLE SWEATER

PEANUTS

LA CUCARACHA

TUNDRA

RETAIL

STONE SOUP

KNIGHT LIFE

DILBERT

LUANN

ZITS

BALDO

GET FUZZY

MUTTS

PICKLES

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PARDON MY PLANET

BABY BLUES

NON SEQUITUR


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