Santa Fe New Mexican, January 14, 2015

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Terra Restaurant defends its title this weekend at the tasting event to crown the best soup in Santa Fe and raise money for charity. TASTE PAGE B-4

How should police officer shootings be dealt with?

Wrongful death suit filed against police

PNM blames increase in power costs on errors

The family of a man who died after fighting at Tiny’s Restaurant and Lounge in 2013 is suing an officer and others. LOCAL, PAGE A-6

Costs passed on to consumers were off by more than a $1 billion because mistakes were made on estimates to close old power plants. LOCAL, PAGE A-6

Snow ‘fabulous’ for recreation Drivers find roads slippery, resulting in several fender benders during commute

DA’s filing of charges against Albuquerque pair sparks debate By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican

Dashboard camera video from state police Officer Oliver Wilson’s patrol car in November 2013 showed a five-minute high-speed pursuit that ended with the officer shooting and killing Santa Fe resident Jeanette Anaya. After state police investigated the incident, the case was forwarded to District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco, who, as per usual practice, presented the recording and other evidence behind closed doors to a grand jury, which found the shooting justified. “I would have certainly been happier about that if it had been presented to a judge [in open court],” said Tom Clark, a lawyer for the Anaya family, who has filed a notice of intent to sue the state. “That way, everybody would have known not only what the wit-

Please see POLICE, Page A-5

INSIDE u Albuquerque police killed a man Tuesday. PAGE A-4 u Decision puts DA in spotlight. PAGE A-6

From left, Angel Brandstetter, 21, Daria Matakovich, 18, and Sage Awn, 23, build a snow bear during a storm Tuesday outside the Youth Shelters and Family Services building at St. Francis Drive and Agua Fría Street. The National Weather Service said about a half-inch to an inch of snow fell in Santa Fe on Tuesday, and more snow was expected overnight. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

By Daniel J. Chacón

DA’s decision shakes up cops policing selves

I

f anything is clear from the James Boyd case in Albuquerque, it’s that police cannot investigate themselves and protect the public’s interest at the same time. For too long, that has been how the system worked — or failed to work. Some three dozen police shootings occurred in Albuquerque during the last five years. Any and all public complaints led nowhere until the U.S. Department of Justice investigated, saying Albuquerque police engaged Milan in “a pattern or practice of use of Simonich excessive force, including deadly Ringside Seat force.” Police involved in shootings always said they were out of options, that they had no choice except to open fire. Fellow department members who reviewed these

Please see DA, Page A-5

Obituaries Antonio Cristobal Jaramillo, Jan. 5 Michael Robert Soto, Jan. 8

Index

Calendar A-2

Lydia L. Archuleta, Dec. 16 Irene Josephine Smith, Jan. 5 Mark Delgado, 45, Jan. 5 PAGE A-8

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The New Mexican

M A pickup traveling on Walking Rain Road collided with a school bus Tuesday morning. Police responded to about 20 accidents as a snowstorm hit Santa Fe. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

odest snowfall painted Santa Fe’s adobe brown cityscape a fluffy white Tuesday, making for postcardperfect scenery across the City Dif-

ferent. While the drifts weren’t deep, the snow created slick conditions during the morning commute, causing dozens of traffic crashes in the Santa Fe area. But it wasn’t all bad. The snow also brought much-needed precipitation to the area and improved skiing conditions in the nearby Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

“The people who are up here playing hooky are certainly having fun,” said Candy DeJoia, a spokeswoman for Ski Santa Fe, which reported receiving 5 inches of snow as of late Tuesday afternoon. “Everybody that was here said it was just fabulous,” she said. For motorists, however, the wintry blast was anything but fun, especially during the morning drive to work. Santa Fe police reported about 20 automobile accidents Tuesday, including a pickup that had rear-ended a school bus and a vehicle that became “high-centered” near Nina Otero

‘Hebdo’ keeps up Muslim attacks, drawing more threats First edition since massacre in Paris; paper isn’t backing off PARIS — In an emotional act of defiance, Charlie Hebdo resurrected its irreverent and often provocative newspaper Tuesday, featuring a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad on the cover that drew immediate criticism and threats of more violence. The newspaper unapologetically skewered other religions as well, and bragged that Sunday’s turnout of a million people at a march in

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Tony Furtado Band

u Europe’s Muslims are feeling the anger over the Paris terrorist attack. PAGE A-3

Bluegrass/roots fusion, 7:30 p.m., Gig Performance Space, 1808 Second St., $25 in advance at brownpapertickets. com, $28 at the door.

By Martin Benedyk and Lori Hinnant The Associated Press

Please see SNOW, Page A-4

Paris to condemn terrorism was larger “than for Mass.” “For the past week, Charlie, an atheist newspaper, has achieved more miracles than all the saints and prophets combined,” it said in the edition’s lead editorial. “The one we are most proud of is that you have in your hands the newspaper that we always made.” Working out of borrowed offices, surviv-

Today Snow and rain later in the day. High 39, low 20. PAGE A-7

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

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Poll shows Americans want labels on GMOs

Take Back Our Republic members want to curb money’s hold in politics By Matea Gold The Washington Post

By Mary Clare Jalonick The Associated Press

POPE CALLS FOR WARTIME TRUTH IN SRI LANKA Pope Francis walks past Sri Lankan dancers Tuesday upon arrival in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Francis called for reconciliation and justice in Sri Lanka as he began a weeklong Asian tour, saying the island nation can’t fully heal from a quarter-century of brutal civil war without pursuing the truth about abuses that were committed. ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In brief

suspect who was coming at him with a knife. Taylor, 43, could face up to three years in prison if he’s convicted.

Virginia lawmaker wins election amid sex scandal

U.S. aims to cut methane emissions by nearly half

RICHMOND, Va. — A state lawmaker who resigned his seat following a sex scandal involving a teenage employee won it back during a special election Tuesday. Apparently the majority of voters in Joseph D. Morrissey’s Richmond-area House of Delegates district were OK with his conviction in the scandal involving his 17-year-old secretary, whose nude photo was found on his cellphone and allegedly shared with a friend. Morrissey has repeatedly denied the allegations, saying his phone was hacked. The young woman, who denies they had sex, is now pregnant. In unofficial returns, Morrissey defeated Democrat Kevin J. Sullivan and Republican Matt D. Walton by a comfortable margin. Morrissey won 42 percent of the vote, compared to 33 percent for Sullivan and 24 percent for Walton. The 57-year-old bachelor, who fathered three children out of wedlock with three different women, said in a telephone interview that the results show people aren’t interested in the drama that landed him in jail.

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is putting the energy industry on notice that it intends to curb methane emissions by nearly half through regulations affecting oil and gas production. A broad, preliminary plan — expected to be unveiled this week — aims to cut emissions 40 percent to 45 percent by 2025 compared with 2012 levels. Reductions are to come from a mix of voluntary steps by industry and regulations from both the Environmental Protection Agency and the Interior Department, according to two people familiar with the plan. President Barack Obama has long wanted to cut methane as part of his broader effort to slow global warming. The oil and gas industry has insisted such rules aren’t necessary because the industry is already working to reduce methane leakage.

Officer on trial in fatal beanbag gun shooting MARKHAM, Ill. — A suburban Chicago police officer had better and safer options than to fire beanbags to subdue a confused, knife-wielding 95-year-old World War II veteran, a prosecutor told the court Tuesday at the outset of the officer’s trial on a felony reckless conduct charge in the man’s death. With all of their police equipment, training and “common sense,” Craig Taylor and the other Park Forest officers didn’t have to storm into John Wrana’s room at an assisted living center on July 26, 2013, Cook County State’s Attorney Lynn McCarthy said during her opening statements. They did so, though, and Taylor ended up firing five beanbags at Wrana. Taylor’s attorney, Terry Ekl, countered that Taylor did what he was trained to do to subdue a dangerous

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HARRISBURG, Pa. — Pennsylvania’s capital is facing a lawsuit believed to be the first filed under a new state law designed to give gun owners and gun rights groups a better chance at dismantling illegal municipal firearms ordinances. The lawsuit filed Tuesday in Dauphin County court named as defendants the city of Harrisburg and various city officials. Houston-based U.S. Law Shield and two members of its Pennsylvania chapter filed the lawsuit, asking the court to stop Harrisburg from enforcing various firearms ordinances. The 48-page complaint said the defendants possess and use their guns in accordance with state law. After Gov. Tom Corbett signed the law last year, the National Rifle Association lauded it as “the strongest firearms pre-emption statute in the country.” The law took effect last week.

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New GOP group nixes big donors

Debate continues over use of genetically modified organisms

WASHINGTON — A large majority of Americans support labeling of genetically modified foods, whether they care about eating them or not. According to a December Associated Press-GfK poll, 66 percent of Americans favor requiring food manufacturers to put labels on products that contain genetically modified organisms, or foods grown from seeds engineered in labs. Only 7 percent are opposed to the idea, and 24 percent are neutral. Fewer Americans say genetically modified ingredients are important to them when judging whether a food is healthy. About 4 in 10 said the presence of such ingredients was very or extremely important to them. That’s higher than the share who say it’s important to know whether a food is organic, and about on par with the share saying they consider the amount of protein in a food an important factor. Genetically modified seeds are engineered to have certain traits, such as resistance to herbicides or certain plant diseases. Most of the country’s corn and soybean crop is now genetically modified, with much of that becoming animal feed. Modified corn and soybeans are also made into popular processed food ingredients such as corn oil, corn starch, high-fructose corn syrup and soybean oil. The Food and Drug Administration doesn’t require labeling of genetically modified foods, saying those on the market are safe. Consumer advocates backing labeling say shoppers have a right to know what is in their food, arguing not enough is known about their effects. The AP-GfK poll comes as several states have weighed in on the issue. Vermont became the first state to require labels for genetically modified foods last year, passing a law in May that will take effect mid-2016 if it survives legal challenges. Maine and Connecticut passed laws before Vermont, but those measures don’t take effect unless neighboring states follow suit. Ballot initiatives to require labeling were narrowly defeated in California, Washington and Oregon in recent years. The food industry and seed companies have aggressively fought attempts to force labeling. The food industry has faced pressure from retailers as consumer awareness of GMOs has increased. The retailer Whole Foods plans to label GMO products in all its U.S. and Canadian stores by 2018.

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Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 PRESERVING THE PLACES NEW MEXICANS LOVE: From 6 to 8 p.m., a talk by Beth Mills, conversation director of the New Mexico Land Conservancy, in conjunction with the exhibit End of Days at the Community Gallery, 201 W. Marcy St., inside the Community Convention Center. Event is free and open to the public. Send an email to rdlambert@ santafenm.gov or call 955-6705. FINANCIAL PEACE UNIVERSITY: At 6:30 p.m. at Santa Fe Church of Christ, 1205 Galisteo St., a free preview of David Ramsey’s Financial Peace University will be offered. The classes will be held at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 4 through April 1. Call 983-8636. TONY FURTADO BAND: Gig Performance Space, 1808 Second St., Suite H, gigsantafe. com. Bluegrass/roots fusion, 7:30 p.m., $25 in advance at brownpapertickets.com, $28 at the door. BRAINPOWER & BROWNBAGS LECTURE SERIES: Meem Community Room, Fray Angélico Chavez History Library, 120 Washington Ave. “Films Made in New Mexico: A History,” by Jeff Berg, noon to 12:45 p.m., no charge, 476-5200.

SANTA FE INSTITUTE COMMUNITY LECTURE: James A. Little Theater, New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Road. The free series continues with “Eating Our Words: What the Language of Food Says About Us,” by linguist Dan Jurafsky, 7:30 p.m., santafe.edu. SANTA FE SCIENCE CAFÉ FOR YOUNG THINKERS: Georgia O’Keeffe Education Annex, 123 Grant Ave. “Too Cool to Resist: The Mystery of Superconductivity,” by Ross McDonald of LANL, 6 to 7:30 p.m., a lecture series geared toward ages 13 to 19, no charge. SANTA FE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM: 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 989-8359.; From 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., bilingual preschool by museum admission. Saturday, Jan. 17, 2015 LIFESTYLES FROM MARS TO EARTH: From 2 to 4 p.m., a workshop with Mollie Parsons, education director at the Santa Fe Botanical Garden, in conjunction with the exhibit End of Days at the Community Gallery, 201 W. Marcy St., inside the Community Convention Center. Event is free and open to the public. It’s an event for children of all ages. For more information, send an email to rdlambert@santafenm.gov or call 955-6705.

WASHINGTON — Conservative political consultant John Pudner said he realized that voter attitudes about political money had curdled into dangerous cynicism after several encounters he had last year. “People said, ‘Oh, you’re in politics — isn’t the whole deal now that people give a million dollars to politicians and get millions back?’ ” Pudner recalled. So Pudner — who gained notice last year for helping tea party-backed candidate Dave Brat unseat thenHouse Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va. — decided to make an unusual move. He signed on to run a new group, Take Back Our Republic, charged with the difficult task of building conservative support for reducing the influence of wealthy interests on politics. The nascent organization, which officially launches Wednesday, aims to alter the hostile posture of many Republicans toward new laws that would curb the reach of big-money donors. Still, the group is likely to meet with substantial skepticism on the right. Brad Smith, a conservative law professor and former member of the Federal Election Commission, called the idea of the GOP rallying around new campaign finance restrictions “a reform fantasy.” “A lot of conservatives, particularly tea party folks and populists, share the general distrust of big money and power,” Smith said. “But then they begin to see how laws purporting to regulate money in politics work, and they get very wary.” GOP attitudes toward campaign finance regulations have changed drastically since the days of Barry Goldwater, who argued that strict rules were necessary to preserve the integrity of the political process. In the past decade, Republican opposition to new restrictions has mounted in the wake of the 2002 McCain-Feingold Act, which reined in the ability of parties of bring in big dollars. Republicans were quick to embrace new avenues for big-money spending unleashed by the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision and have largely resisted efforts to require more disclosure of politically active nonprofit groups. But Pudner said he is optimistic that he can make the case that the right should change its approach. “To any conservative saying, ‘Why are you getting involved in that? That’s a liberal issue,’ I would say, ‘I think everyone is starting to realize that money in politics is an issue,’ ” he said.

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A story on Page A-1 of the Jan. 11, 2015, edition incorrectly reported that 49 homeless people died of exposure during two winters in the mid-2000s. The story should have said that 49 homeless people died of various causes during the winters of 2005-06 and 2006-07, straining existing resources and moving the faith communities of the city to provide a winter emergency shelter.

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NIGHTLIFE Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Chuscales, 7 to 9 p.m., no cover. 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756. COWGIRL BBQ: Railyard Reunion, 8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St., 982-2565. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Buffalo Nickel, 7:30 to 11 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St., 982-5511. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Wiley Jim, 7 p.m., call for cover. 330 E. Palace Ave., 954-9668. PALACE RESTAURANT & SALOON: Anthony Leon, 8:30 p.m. to close; call for cover. 142 W. Palace Ave., 428-0690. TERRACOTTA WINE BISTRO: Ramon Bermudez, 6 to 8 p.m.,

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.

no cover. 304 Johnson St., 989-1166. TINY’S: Electric jam with Nick Wimett, 9 p.m., no cover. 1015 Pen Road, 983-9817. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition or view the community calendar on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.


NATION & WORLD

Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

Obama proposes new cyberattack protections

Islamophobia on rise in Europe Muslims feel backlash after Paris terror attacks

By Erica Werner The Assocaited Press

ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

a sense of being threatened,” said Imade Annouri, a Green parliamentarian of Belgium’s regional legislature of Flanders and an expert on integration issues. TellMAMA, a British group that tracks anti-Muslim attacks, reported 50 to 60 cases of specific online threats to individuals over the weekend. “The sheer volume is unbelievable,” said the organization’s director, Fiyaz Mughal, who fears virtual assaults could spur real ones in the street. Mughal said that after the slaying of British soldier Lee Rigby in London, the group was able to gauge how threats made on Twitter and Facebook translated directly into attacks on individuals or mosques. Mohamed Ali Adraoui, a fellow at the European University Institute, suggested that hatred of Islam could morph into an assault on a mosque, in France or elsewhere. “If you can do that in Charlie Hebdo offices, you can do it in a mosque,” he said.

Romney is talking to supporters about a third run for White House sonal traveling companion during the 2012 campaign and the wife of New Hampshire’s national committeeman, Steve Mitt Duprey. Romney Romney also reached out to his chief Iowa strategist in 2008 and 2012, David Kochel in Des Moines. Calls from Romney also went to several boldface names in Republican politics, including his 2012 running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, who said Monday he would not run for president in 2016. Romney’s move toward the 2016 campaign comes after months of insisting that he would not seek the White House for a third time.

for doing so, the White House said, as long as they took steps to protect consumers’ personal information. In addition, Obama is proposing to prosecute the sale of botnets, computer networks created to carry out cybercrime, and give courts the power to shut down those involved in denial of service attacks and other fraudulent activities. He is also seeking to criminalize the overseas sale of stolen financial information. The White House said the measure would update the organized crime law — the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act — to apply to cybercrimes, including ensuring that the penalties associated with them are in line with other infractions. The new effort comes a day after Obama called for federal legislation intended to force U.S. companies to be more forthcoming when credit card data and other consumer information are lost in an online breach like the kind that hit Sony, Target and Home Depot last year. Businesses are still wary of new federal requirements, and Obama now faces a Congress controlled by Republicans who are skeptical of his proposals. But initial reactions from some companies that would be affected were positive.

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ATLANTA — Mitt Romney and his wife reached out to former staff and supporters in key states over the weekend, making contact just hours after shocking many by signaling interest in a third run for president. The Republican Party’s 2012 presidential nominee told a private gathering of New Yorkarea donors on Friday that he is again seriously exploring running for the White House. The next day, Romney began phoning former backers in Iowa and New Hampshire, including Jim Merrill, a top Romney staffer in New Hampshire during his 2008 and 2012 campaigns. “We had a great conversation. He made it clear to me he is seriously considering the race,” Merrill said Monday. Romney also called a handful of others supporters in the state, while his wife, Ann Romney, phoned Susan Duprey, her per-

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Tuesday unveiled new proposals to protect businesses and the government from cyberattacks, including increasing the prosecution of crimes conducted through computer networks and toughening penalties for them. Under the steps outlined by Obama, companies that share information about cyberthreats with the government would be shielded from liability. The president promoted the initiatives — which would need congressional approval — at an afternoon appearance at the National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center in Arlington, Va., part of a focus this week on cybersecurity and privacy in advance of his State of the Union address Jan. 20. Obama, breaking with tradition, is dribbling out advance word of the agenda he will announce in the prime-time address. The measure Obama is proposing would encourage companies to share cyberthreat information with the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity center, which would swiftly pass it on to other government agencies and industry groups voluntarily formed to share such material. Companies would get “targeted liability protection”

Muslims walk past racial slurs painted on the walls of a mosque in 2010 in the town of Saint-Etienne, France. Tensions have dramatically increased in France since last week’s terror attacks in Paris.

s

WASHINGTON — Defiant congressional Republicans attacked President Barack Obama’s agenda from all sides Tuesday, ignoring veto threats and pushing bills to uproot his policies on immigration and Wall Street, force approval of energy pipeline legislation he opposes and make him justify any new federal rules before he makes them. The Senate debated legislation to force the administration to allow construction of the Canada-to-Texas Keystone XL oil pipeline. And the House passed a regulatory reform bill that the White House says would impose “unprecedented and unnecessary” requirements on agencies trying to write rules. It would require more justifications and notice. That was to be followed by votes Wednesday on two other bills: One would alter a key section of the 2010 DoddFrank financial overhaul in a way that would help banks, and the other would block Obama’s executive actions on immigration, including removal of protections for immigrants who arrived in the country illegally as children. Obama has threatened to veto all four pieces of legislation. Republicans had no plans to stop there. Citing the terrorist attacks in Paris, Republican senators on Tuesday proposed restrictions on Obama’s ability to transfer terror suspects out of the federal prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, for the remainder of his term — making it more difficult to close the facility.

The New York Times

Sa

GOP puts pressure on Obama agenda

By Julie Hirschfeld Davis

Sa

Minister Laurent Fabius said last week. “It’s barbarity.” Concerns about a backlash against Muslims were discussed Monday during a counterterrorism meeting at the InteBy Elaine Ganley rior Ministry. “We said above all, pretty The Associated Press unanimously, that in France there are 5 or PARIS — Firebombs and pig heads 6 million Muslims. These [terrorist] issues thrown into mosques. Veiled women subconcern 1,000 individuals,” said Socialist jected to insults in the street. The Interlawmaker Patrick Mennucci. “We should be net awash with threats against Muslims. careful not to stigmatize anyone.” Europe’s Muslims are feeling the heat of a Yet Muslims and some experts said that fierce backlash following last week’s terror it was inevitable that Muslims would fall attack against French satirical weekly news- under suspicion after the attacks, despite paper Charlie Hebdo. a unity march on Sunday — described as An official who keeps track of Islamothe largest in French history — in which phobic attacks in France said there were throngs of Muslims participated. 60 incidents — attacks and threats — in the The rising far-right in France and other six days since that attack. European countries has been driven by A climate of fear is taking hold in Europe, an anti-immigration, anti-Islam message. stoked by rightist rhetoric equating the National Front leader Marine Le Pen seized millions of peaceful Muslims with the few upon the Charlie Hebdo attack just hours plotting murder and mayhem. after it happened, suggesting it was a vinAbdallah Zekri, head of the National dication of her party’s xenophobic stance. Observatory Against Islamophobia, said Extreme-right groups across Europe have that since last Wednesday’s massacre at increasingly been striking a chord with Charlie Hebdo, 26 places of worship around ordinary citizens voicing fears their culture France were attacked by firebombs, gunis being uprooted by an alien civilization. shots or pig heads, with a mosque in The fledgling German group that calls Le Mans hit with four grenades. There itself Patriotic Europeans Against the were 34 insults and threats. Islamization of the West, or PEGIDA, drew The three-day terror spree in Paris its largest crowd ever Monday night — a claimed the lives of 17 victims, and trauma- reported 40,000 — at its weekly rally in tized a continent already brimming with Dresden. anti-immigrant sentiment. Brothers Chérif Anti-Muslim and anti-Jewish incidents and Saïd Kouachi — the al-Qaida-linked rose throughout 2014 in France, which has suspects in the magazine attack — were Europe’s largest communities of both relikilled in a shootout at a printing plant north gions. of Paris; their apparent accomplice Amedy The attacks have had an effect outside Coulibaly was shot dead in a near-simultaFrance, too. In the Netherlands, Muslim neous raid at a Jewish market, where he had groups and the government met Friday holed himself up with hostages, killing four. and said they plan to register anti-Muslim French authorities are warning the incidents. A burning object was thrown at a nation against linking French Muslims with mosque in Vlaardingen, on the outskirts of Rotterdam. terrorists.“The terrorists’ religion is not “Everyone has this uncomfortable feeling, Islam, which they are betraying,” Foreign

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Albuquerque street after a report of suspicious criminal activity. The officers arrived and took one man into custody, ALBUQUERQUE — Just but another ran away. Police say a day after a district attorney the man later fired shots at the announced murder charges officers, and at least one officer against two Albuquerque police returned fire. Police say the officers, authorities said another man was wearing body armor, city police officer fired his and a weapon was found. weapon and killed a man TuesAlbuquerque Deputy Chief day night. Robert Huntsman told reporters A police statement said the that no officers were seriously latest shooting happened just injured. before 5 p.m. after officers were dispatched to a busy eastern The Associated Press

Duke City police kill man with gun

Threats: 3M copies of magazine printed Continued from Page A-1 ing staff published an unprecedented print run of 3 million copies — more than 50 times the usual circulation. It was to appear on newsstands Wednesday, one week to the day after the assault by two masked gunmen that killed 12 people, including much of the weekly’s editorial staff and two police officers. It was the beginning of three days of terror that saw 17 people killed before the three Islamic extremist attackers were gunned down by security forces. Before the new edition was even released, one of Egypt’s top Islamic authorities had warned Charlie Hebdo against publishing more cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Dar al-Ifta, which is in charge of issuing religious edicts, called the planned cover an “unjustified provocation” for millions of Muslims who respect and love their prophet and warned the cartoon would likely spark a new wave of hatred. Indeed, criticism and threats immediately appeared on militant websites, with calls for more strikes against the newspaper and anonymous threats from radicals, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, a U.S.based terrorism monitor. The latest cover shows a weeping Muhammad, holding a sign reading “I am Charlie” with the words “All is forgiven” above him. Zineb El Rhazoui, a journalist with the weekly, said the cover meant the journalists are forgiving the extremists for the attack. Renald Luzier, the cartoonist who drew the cover image under the pen name “Luz,” said it represents “just a little guy who’s crying.” Then he added, unapologetically: “Yes, it is Muhammad.” Speaking at a news conference in which he repeatedly broke down crying, Luzier described weeping after he drew the picture. “I wrote ‘everything is pardoned’, and I cried,” he said, adding that at that moment the staff understood the drawing

Cartoonist Renald Luzier, who chokes up for a moment, is the cartoonist who drew the cover image for Charlie Hebdo. He said Tuesday in Paris that it represents ‘just a little guy who’s crying. Then he added, unapologetically: ‘Yes, it is Muhammad.’

Snow: No one was seriously hurt in wrecks Continued from Page A-1 Community School. Santa Fe schools had no closures or delays due to the storm, which hit as most schools were starting for the day, and the district’s students were not sent home early. Sheriff’s deputies responded to 14 weather-related crashes in unincorporated Santa Fe County, two involving minor injuries, and state troopers handled six non-injury collisions. There were injuries in some of the crashes in the city, but “nothing serious,” police spokeswoman Lt. Andrea Dobyns said. Jason Frazier, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Albuquerque, said Santa Fe received a half-inch to an inch of snow. He predicted an additional inch to 2 inches overnight. “As we get into the day tomorrow, the snow showers should kind of taper off through the day, generally ending by the early evening hours,” he said Tuesday. Temperatures will be cold, with highs only in the mid-30s, Frazier said. “Fortunately, we’ll get a nice break from this winter activity,” he added. “Basically, Thursday through the weekend, we’re expecting this storm system to clear out and to generally experience mostly sunny skies

Traffic travels along N.M. 599 during a snowfall Tuesday afternoon. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

through that period.” Despite the thin layer of snow that fell Tuesday morning, Dobyns described the road conditions as “treacherous.” “The roads are getting worked on, but even the main roads are pretty slick,” she said. It wasn’t for lack of trying. The city, which had three crews working in eight-hour shifts and eight snowplows per shift, alerted workers to be ready before the snow started falling. “We called in our crews at midnight last night and had our guys on standby overnight for when the snow actually started,” city spokesman Matt Ross said Tuesday. “They were ready to go as soon as the snow started.”

Asked whether eight snowplows per shift were enough to handle the snowy conditions, Ross said he thought they were enough to deal with “normal winter weather.” “They’re starting to see some effect now that the sun is out a little bit and it’s warming up some,” he said. Ross said city crews even cleared snow on roadways within the city limits that fall under the jurisdiction of the state Department of Transportation. “The city crews are working on them because either the state is focused elsewhere or just the resources are taxed to beyond their capacity,” he said. The state handles snow removal on state highways

within city limits, such as Cerrillos Road from Interstate 25 to St. Francis Drive, St. Francis Drive from North Paseo de Peralta to I-25, and St. Michael’s Drive from Cerrillos to I-25, David J. Martinez, an assistant district engineer in the maintenance section, said in an email. In the Santa Fe area, Martinez said, the state has three crews: the Santa Fe Patrol, the Cuyamungue Patrol and districtwide crews. The Santa Fe Patrol handles snow removal on I-25 from La Bajada to the Eldorado interchange and a majority of state highways within city limits. “They typically run four snowplows per 12-hour shifts for all of these routes,” Martinez said. The four trucks used by the Santa Fe Patrol are much bigger than city snowplows and carry 10 cubic yards of either a salt and cinder mixture or a road salt product called Ice slicer. “There are occasions when the snow falls and accumulates at a much faster rate than we can attack it, but we do the best we can with the resources we have available,” Martinez said. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @danieljchacon.

CHRISTOPHE ENA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

would be the cover. “It is not the cover that the world wanted us to do,” he said, tearfully putting his head down on the table at one point as colleagues embraced him in a group hug. Charlie Hebdo had faced repeated threats and a firebombing for depictions of the prophet, and its editor and his police bodyguard were the first to die. Many Muslims believe all images of the prophet are blasphemous. The latest issue of Charlie Hebdo maintained the intentionally offensive tone that made the newspaper famous in France. The first two pages included drawings by the slain cartoonists: One showed a wellknown late French nun talking about oral sex; another showed Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders dividing up the world. The lead editorial laid out a vigorous defense of secularism, and of the newspaper’s right to lampoon religions and hold their leaders accountable — and ended with a critique of the pope. But most of the controversy centered on the cover and its depiction of the Prophet Muhammad.

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Games Registration for 2015 began January 12th and will continue Monday-Friday, 8am to 4pm, through February 13th, 9 am at the Mary Esther Gonzales Center 1121 Alto Street. Registration fee this year is $12.00. Late registration: February 16th-20th. Late fee is an additional $10.00. You may also register at Genoveva Chavez Center on January 30, or February 13th. You can participate in one or more of 23 different sports, ranging from archery to track and field, bowling to swimming, for fun, friendship and fitness! You will receive a 15 hole-punch facility pass to the three City Rec Centers. Clinics will be offered in some sports, dates and times will be announced. Please check our website: SFSG50.org for updates.

Van Pelt, with Comfort Keepers, John Ruybalid (NMLS#201470), Reverse Mortgage Specialist with Mortgage Partners- Santa Fe, David Ruyle, Attorney At Law, and Peter Murphy, Financial Planner, will be presenting a free seminar on Thursday, January 22, 2015 from 9:30 am- 12:00 pm at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail. The panel will entertain questions while discussing Aging in Place topics including legal, financial, home care assistance and available resources. Call John to reserve a seat at 505-690-1029.

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THE FCC AND YOU – Nathan Gomme, Executive Director of the New Mexico Commission for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Persons, will share his wealth of information about how the Federal Communications Commission impacts the hard of hearing. Mr. Gomme graduated with honors from Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., and has lived in NM since 2005. Hearing Loss Association of America Santa Fe chapter meeting -- Saturday, January 17, 10 a.m. Vitamin Cottage Event Center, Natural Grocers, Cerrillos Rd. & Richards Ave., Santa Fe. For more information, call 505-428-0698.

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SANTA FE GIRLS’ SCHOOL: has a permanent, new home at 1420 4th Street OPEN HOUSE, January 22, 6-8 pm. (at Berry.) Our Community Clinic for stubborn Give your daughter the best middle school experience possible. Imagine her actively engaged in academics, fitness, fine arts and elective classes. Imagine her finding her voice and speaking confidently in a class of just 15 students. Commit to excellence for your daughter now! Prepare her to enter the high school of her choice. Attend our Open House! Santa Fe Girls’ School, 310 W. Zia Road! Accepting applications for 2015-16. Call 820-3188 or visit our website: www. santafegirlsschool.org.

or acute conditions and emotional balancing is now Saturdays at 9:45 a.m. Sessions are 30-45 minutes. $25.00. The Center is hosting a unique opportunity to study inside a Seimei Buddhist Temple in Saga, Japan. Work with Contemporary Buddhist monks, participate in special ceremonies and then return to the U.S. to take classes & practice. Classes focus on mental comfort, support, pain relief,

RETIREMENT LIFESTYLE and long distance applications. Please call “Switching Gears” is Dr. Alexandra Bakos at 577-7511 for more PLANNING a complimentary workshop offered by Jacqueline Gould, M.A., M.Ed. and sponsored by Peter Murphy of American Prosperity Group. You will learn: 1) Why it is important to have a plan for what you will do in retirement; 2) That everyone goes through a transition cycle and how to minimize the tough phases; 3) How your values, strengths, passions and purpose help you create your retirement vision; and 4) Steps to create your retirement lifestyle vision. The seminar will be held at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Thursday, January 22nd from 6 to 8pm, refreshments will be provided and RSVP is required. Call 505-216-0838 or email Register.SantaFe@1apg.com to register.

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WOMEN’S SPIRITUALITY QUIET DAY with Deborah Smith Douglas on Saturday, February 7, 8:30-3:00 p.m. The Church of the Holy Faith, 311 East Palace Avenue, will offer a pre-Lenten Women’s Quiet Day entitled: “Now the Green Blade Rises: Recognizing Resurrection”, with three presentations by Deborah Douglas, Spiritual Director, author, attorney, and literary scholar, and ample time for quiet reflection.

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Police: Grand jury case skipped Continued from Page A-1 nesses said, but how the case was presented.� That’s the route that District Attorney Kari Brandenburg of Albuquerque, who was elected in 2010, has decided to take in presenting a case involving Albuquerque officers who fatally shot James Boyd, a mentally ill homeless man who’d had various encounters with police before being killed in March 2014. The episode was caught on video from one officer’s helmet camera. The footage shows Boyd surrendering just before the two officers shoot him a total of six times. Brandenburg announced Monday that she had decided to skip the secret grand jury proceedings and file murder charges against the two Albuquerque officers — Dominique Perez and Keith Sandy. The case will be presented at an as-yet unscheduled preliminary hearing before a judge, who will decide whether the case should go to trial. The FBI is investigating the incident, but there has been no indication about whether any federal charges will be filed against the officers. The rare action by Brandenburg, 60, has put New Mexico’s law enforcement agencies in the national spotlight and has added fuel to a debate over how prosecutors should handle officer-involved shootings. The announcement of the murder charges comes after high-profile cases in Ferguson, Mo., and New York City, in which police killed unarmed black men, ignited nationwide protests that were sometimes violent. Grand juries that were presented evidence in those cases declared the shootings justified, prompting skeptics to question how the prosecutors had presented the cases to the grand jurors. “Unlike Ferguson and unlike in New York City, we’re going to know,� Brandenburg said during a Monday news conference in Albuquerque. “The public is going to have that information.� The fatal shooting of Boyd prompted violent protests in Albuquerque, and three weeks after that deadly shooting, the U.S. Justice Department issued a scathing report saying the Albuquerque Police Department had a culture of using excessive force. Former law enforcement officials, criminal justice experts and lawyers contacted by The New Mexican were all surprised by Brandenburg’s decision on how to handle the case. Some praised her action, saying it could quell public anger toward police departments by holding

officers accountable. Others disagreed, saying it could create a precedent that leads to police officers being unfairly targeted. On Tuesday, state police said in a news release that a marked patrol car had been vandalized Sunday in Albuquerque by someone who had spelled out, with white paint, “[expletive] COPS� on the side of the vehicle. Philip Matthew Stinson, a professor at Bowling Green State University in Ohio who studies officer-involved shootings, said state laws can allow prosecutors to present cases via grand jury proceedings or opencourt proceedings. Regarding Brandenburg’s decision, he said, “It’s not inappropriate, but it’s an odd one.� Regardless of the how Brandenburg will present the case, Stinson said, it’s hard to get a conviction of police officers. “Juries are very reluctant to second-guess an officer’s splitsecond decision,� Stinson said. “What we’re going to have here, it would not surprise me at all, when the dust settles, that the officers are acquitted� or there is “a hung jury down the road.� A study co-authored by Stinson found that officers were charged with murder or manslaughter in 41 on-duty, officerinvolved shooting cases across the country from 2005 to 2011. Less than half of those cases resulted in a conviction, the study found. On Tuesday, a South Carolina judge declared a mistrial after a jury couldn’t come to an agreement over whether former Eutawville police Chief Richard J. Combs, who shot an unarmed black man three times in May 2011, was guilty of a murder charge. Stinson said Brandenburg’s decision wouldn’t necessarily start a national trend of presenting evidence in officer-involved shootings in open-court proceedings, because state laws differ as to how charges are filed against murder suspects. Former New Mexico law enforcement officials said the decision to bring charges against the two Albuquerque officers will force other police officers to engage in self-examination regarding how they deal with situations in which deadly force could be used. “I think the effect will be that police will have to think twice before exercising deadly force,� said former Santa Fe Police Chief Ray Rael, who worked as an officer from 1978 to 1999. “In some ways, that’s welcomed. Police officers have to be accountable.� Jeff G. Vick, a former New Mexico State Police officer and

trainer who retired from the force in 2005, said that after viewing the video of Boyd being shot, he believes the shooting was justified. However, he said, “officers also need to understand that they are in jobs where they are going to be scrutinized.� “If they shot somebody, it’s going to be investigated and they need to be held accountable,� Vick added. Former Santa Fe deputy chief Kim Koomoa said she doesn’t believe the public views the criminal charges as anti-police. She added that if police officers are found breaking the law, “they have to answer for it.� Thomas J. Aveni, director of the Police Policy Studies Council, a New Hampshire-based group that studies use of force by law enforcement, said the District Attorney’s Office in Albuquerque decided to take the case through an open-court proceeding as a result of public pressure. This, he said, “could set a dangerous precedent� because police officers could be targeted by elected district attorneys for political reasons. Lawyers who represent people who have been shot by officers said this could become an example of how officer-involved shootings should be handled by prosecutors. Clark, who represents Anaya’s family and also has taken on a 2013 Santa Fe police shooting case in which a grand jury found the use of deadly force unjustified, said, “It’s the proper way to resolve a police shooting. You’ll eliminate this aspect of secrecy.� Clark also represents Roberto Menendez, who was wounded after Santa Fe Officers John DeBaca and Stephen Fonte fired at his SUV as Menendez tried to flee from them in August 2013. The shooting was found unjustified by a Santa Fe County grand jury after Pacheco, the district attorney, presented the case in October 2014. Pacheco has forwarded that case to 5th Judicial District Attorney Janetta Hicks, who has said she would make a decision on whether to file charges against the officers by the end January.

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Steve Terrell of The New Mexican contributed to this story. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @ujohnnyg.

DA: Lawyer denounces charges justified.� Bregman said Boyd had knives and was within strikshootings then reached the ing distance of a vulnerable same conclusion. officer, the unarmed handler of Police will rarely challenge a police dog. fellow officers. Those who do There have been many can expect to be pariahs. instances when that kind of Kari Brandenburg, the district simplistic, broad-brush explanaattorney in Albuquerque, at tion of a police officer shooting long last changed the equation a homeless man would work this week. She charged two offi- almost automatically. This time cers with murder in the shootis different. ing death last March of Boyd, a Video of the confrontation, 38-year-old homeless man with supplied by police themselves, a history of mental illness and shatters Bregman’s starting violence, who had camped illepremise that the shooting was gally on a mountainside. inevitable. Brandenburg will face a Hundreds of thousands of steady stream of criticism from us have watched the video and police, who view prosecutors questioned the judgment of the as the strongest ally they have officers. Boyd packed up his few outside their own department. belongings and grabbed hold of Many of them will say the two his Thermos as heavily armed officers Brandenburg charged officers coaxed him to walk with murder — Dominique down the mountainside into a Perez and Keith Sandy — were peaceful surrender. only doing the job they were He started to comply. What trained to do when they shot should have been a minor item Boyd. Sandy’s lawyer, Sam Bregman, for the police blotter could have ended right there. Instead, often denounced by his critics police fired a flare and began as the voice of weak-kneed libscreaming at Boyd to fall on the eralism because he chaired the ground. A police dog ran toward state Democratic Party, is the him. outspoken champion of police Looking perplexed, Boyd officers who shot and killed pulled two knives. Bregman Boyd. says he took “an aggressive To hear Bregman tell it, his step� toward the dog’s handler, client is an unsung hero, not somebody who should be facing necessitating the gunfire that killed him. But the tape shows a murder charge. police, with an arsenal com“Keith Sandy is following his pared to Boyd, in no immediate training, and very likely saved danger. the life of a fellow police offiBregman scoffs at that assesscer,� Bregman said at a news ment. He says Boyd had toyed conference. In a follow-up interview with with police for hours, and earlier had pulled knives on two me, Bregman called the police park officers. Bregman also says shooting of Boyd “absolutely

Continued from Page A-1

Boyd once used box-cutters to carve up the face of another man, so his desire for violence could not be underestimated. In the view of the state’s leading liberal, this case was nothing more than police doing their job. Bregman will find plenty of dissenters, me included. Instead of being keepers of the peace, the police who faced down Boyd became escalators of unnecessary violence. If a pack of ordinary people, not those in police uniforms, used rifles to shoot and kill a man who awkwardly handled knives from several feet away, the question of necessary force would surface immediately. Police would investigate, saying a vigilante system cannot be accepted. But now Bregman wants the public and prosecutors to suspend with any questions about police conduct in Boyd’s case. It’s always a sad day when a public employee is charged with a crime. It also was a sad day when Boyd, after seemingly giving up, died in a hail a gunfire. Police and Bregman say it had to be. Bergman hasn’t convinced me. Because of the confrontation on the mountainside, a confrontation in a courtroom is appropriate. Ringside Seat is a column about New Mexico’s people, politics and news. Follow the Ringside Seat blog at www. santafenewmexican.com. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@ sfnewmexican.com.

(Bruno Walter, recalling his first hearing of Mahler’s first symphony, in June 1894, at the age of 18.)

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James Rochford

PNM: Plan’s cost hike was due to error One partner at San Juan backs out of increase, others leaving By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Public Service Company of New Mexico has told state regulators that its original cost estimates for a plan to replace power at the coal-fired San Juan Generating Station have increased by more than $1 billion in the last year, due to corrections in calculation errors. Those costs will be passed along to the company’s half-million customers through rate payments. In addition, the Farmington Electric Utility System alerted PNM that it will not increase its

capacity — as planned — at the San Juan Generating Station. That leaves PNM scrambling to find a buyer for space on the coal-fired unit that will become available when other partners pull out of the plant. The New Mexico Public Regulation Commission is in the midst of a 10-day hearing about PNM’s power plan. PNM and its partners at the San Juan coal plant have proposed closing two of its four units to reduce haze in the region under a federal mandate. PNM wants to replace the power generated at those two units with a combination of nuclear energy, natural gas, solar power and more coal capacity on one of the remaining units at San Juan, Unit 4. PNM insists the plan will provide the most reliable power at the least cost to ratepayers.

Suffocated after getting into a fight with another bar patron and then forced to the floor by a group of four men, according to reports.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has approved the plan for closing half of the San Juan plant. The plan, and how PNM wants to pay for it, now need approval from the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission. Many groups, including environmentalists, applauded PNM for planning to reduce overall coal power at the San Juan generating station. But some have pushed for PNM to replace that power with more solar and wind energy and to reduce its coal capacity from 132 megawatts to 78 megawatts at San Juan. On Friday, Pat O’Connell, PNM’s director of resource planning, confirmed during testimony before the PRC that adding an additional 54 megawatts of coal capacity at San Juan’s Unit 4

Family sues city officer over death at Tiny’s

Please see PNM, Page A-8

By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

The family of a man who died two years ago following a bar fight at Tiny’s Restaurant & Lounge has filed a wrongful death complaint claiming a Santa Fe police officer acted negligently when she handcuffed the man and left him facedown on the floor while she interviewed witnesses. James Rochford, 42, suffocated Jan. 18, 2013, after he had gotten into a fight with another bar patron and was forced to the floor by four men who, according to police reports, held him facedown and pinned his arms and legs until police arrived. The men told police they hadn’t hit Rochford, but that someone had sat on him in an effort to keep him down. Other witnesses told police they’d heard Rochford at least twice say, “Get off me, I can’t breathe.” When Santa Fe police Officer Suzanne Brunk arrived, the complaint says, she restrained Rochford with two sets of handcuffs and left him lying facedown while she interviewed witnesses. The complaint filed in state District Court says Brunk should have known that the way she had restrained Rochford created an unreasonably high risk that he would be injured or die. When Brunk realized Rochford wasn’t moving, she tried to revive him but failed, according to reports. Because there was a possibility that Rochford may have died in city police custody, New Mexico State Police took over the investigation. That agency did not provide information Tuesday regarding the status of its probe. City spokesman Matt Ross confirmed that the city police department completed an internal investigation in March, but he declined to comment further on the case due to the pending litigation. District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco did not return a call seeking comment. According to news reports at the time, Rochford — who had recently moved to Santa Fe from Corrales for a job at the state Taxation and Revenue Department — began drinking whiskey and beer at Tiny’s at around 2 p.m. Jan. 18. At 5 p.m., he called another man at the bar an offensive name, and the two faced off and began exchanging blows. Three other men and a woman tried to stop the fight, but witnesses said Rochford seemed to have “superhuman strength” and fought people off “like a tornado,” knocking one man unconscious. Toxicology tests revealed that Rochford, a father of three, had a blood-alcohol content of 0.18 and had other drugs in his bloodstream when he died: an amphetamine, an antidepressant, caffeine, nicotine and marijuana. He also suffered from hypertensive heart disease, the autopsy report said. The cause of death was determined to be traumatic asphyxiation. Rochford’s father, James Rochford Sr., said at the time that it seemed police had made up their minds upon arriving at the scene that his son had started the altercation, and they didn’t fully investigate other possible scenarios. The wrongful death complaint — filed on behalf of Rochford’s 21-year-old son, Evan Rochford — seeks unspecified damages plus legal fees from Brunk, the city and the Santa Fe Police Department.

City’s plan for wireless water meters challenged Man files writ alleging ‘FCC rule violations’ By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

A Santa Fe man who regularly opposes the installation or upgrade of wireless infrastructure filed a state District Court challenge to the city’s recent decision to award an $8.3 million contract for new wireless water meters. In his writ filed last week, Arthur Firstenberg alleges the contract proposes installing the water meters in a Arthur way that violates Firstenberg Federal Communications Commission rules and would expose pedestrians on city sidewalks to hazardous levels of radio frequency radiation. According to his filing, the FCC mandates that the devices be kept at least 20 centimeters away from humans at all times, but the contract between the city and Badger Meter Inc. calls for the 34,000 devices to be installed flush with the surface of city sidewalks, “zero centimeters below the feet of the walking public.” The city acted on false information when it approved the contract, according to Firstenberg, because Public Utilities Director Nick Schiavo first told city councilors that the devices would emit a signal for just one second once a day at 3 a.m., and he later admitted it would actually take an hour for the meters to send their data. Firstenberg’s filing asks the court to either review the decision made by the city and determine that it was “arbitrary,” “capricious” and “not in accordance with law” — or to command the city to void the contract with Badger. Firstenburg said he suffers from electromagnetic hypersensitivity, and his heart, lungs and nervous system are severely affected by wireless technology. For example, he said, he gets cardiac arrhythmia from exposure. Firstenberg is the plaintiff in two other cases related to wireless technology that are pending in the state Court of Appeals, one of which also names the city as a defendant. He said he’s trying to establish legal precedent that protects the rights of all people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity. City officials declined to comment on the pending litigation. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@ sfnewmexican.com.

Bernalillo County District Attorney Kari Brandenburg announced on Monday that her office is pursuing charges against two Albuquerque police officers accused of fatally shooting a homeless man in March. RUSSELL CONTRERAS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DA in the spotlight Kari Brandenburg’s decision to charge Albuquerque officers seems to mark a major shift By Russell Contreras The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE or most of her career, Kari Brandenburg has been a low-key district attorney in Bernalillo County. But at a time when police shootings have elicited huge protests nationwide, the Albuquerque Democrat took a rare step — charging two police officers with murder. Now she’s in the national spotlight, and she’s simultaneously battling bribery allegations from the same police force. “I’m going to let you guys speculate to that,” Brandenburg told reporters when asked if the bribery claims were efforts to prevent her from seeking charges. “I am not going to be intimidated. As long as I have a breath in my body, I will do what I think is right for the people that I represent.” On Monday, Brandenburg announced she was seeking murder charges against Albuquerque SWAT team member Dominique Perez and former detective Keith Sandy for the shooting death of James Boyd, a 38-year-old homeless man. Boyd, who authorities later said suffered from schizophrenia, was shot during a standoff in March in the foothills of the Sandia Mountains. Video of the shooting showed Boyd appearing to surrender before Perez and Sandy opened fire. Attorneys for the officers say their clients did nothing wrong. Brandenburg’s move to seek charges marked a major shift from her previous decisions to not go after Albuquerque officers linked to more than

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40 police shootings since 2010. It also pointed to growing tensions between her office and the troubled Albuquerque Police Department, which suspects Brandenburg of reimbursing burglary victims to protect her son. The district attorney said she had been working on the Boyd case before she heard of those allegations and her decision to seek charges was based on the facts. “I think the motivation is pretty transparent,” she said. No charges have ever been filed against Brandenburg, and she denies any wrongdoing. The case has been sent to the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office, and that office has refused to comment. The situation is unfolding not long after Albuquerque signed an agreement with the U.S. Justice Department to overhaul its police force to address allegations of excessive force. First elected in 2000 as the county’s first female district attorney, the 60-year-old Brandenburg was born in Albuquerque and came to the office after spending most of her legal career as a defense attorney. Her father, Jim Brandenburg, held the same job from 1972 to 1976. But while celebrating career successes, Brandenburg also endured personal tragedies — the deaths of two husbands and a 4-month-old adopted daughter. She is the mother of four adopted children, all grown, including 26-yearold Justin Koch, who has been implicated in theft cases and who police say was the one Brandenburg sought to help through bribery. During her tenure as district attorney, Brandenburg has drawn praise for aggressively prosecuting a man charged with the 2006 killing of a deputy during a traffic stop. She and her prosecutors won a conviction against Michael Astorga

Please see DA, Page A-8

Researcher combines love of food, words in study By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Diners who enjoy a meal at an expensive restaurant tend to describe the food in online reviews using such titillating words as orgasmic, sultry and tempting. Those who have an equally nice time at a

local greasy spoon more often describe the food as if it were their new favorite drug. The difference was among the surprising patterns found in a recent study of almost a million online consumer reviews. The study was led by Dan Jurafsky, a Stanford University professor

of linguistics and computer science who will discuss restaurant reviews, menus, ketchup’s world tour and other delectable tidbits during a lecture Wednesday at the James A. Little Theater. Jurafsky, a 2002 MacArthur Fellow, has combined his lifelong

IF YOU GO What: “Eating Our Words: What the Language of Food Says About Us,” a lecture by linguist and computer scientist Dan Jurafsky. When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14 Where: James A. Little Theater, 1060 Cerrillos Road in Santa Fe

Please see FOOD, Page A-7

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Free Bus Service Monday - Friday In the Counties and Communities of Los Alamos, Rio Arriba, Santa Fe and Taos


Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

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 Tonight

Today

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Coke, Pepsi deliver less guilt in smaller cans By Candice Choi The Associated Press

A bit of snow and rain in the p.m.

Becoming clear

Partly sunny

20

39

Partly sunny

45/21

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

Mostly sunny

Plenty of sunshine

Partly sunny

Times of clouds and sun

46/23

48/22

47/25

48/26

47/26

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

70%

85%

54%

38%

38%

37%

36%

36%

wind: N 4-8 mph

wind: N 6-12 mph

wind: N 6-12 mph

wind: NW 6-12 mph

wind: NW 7-14 mph

wind: SW 4-8 mph

wind: WNW 6-12 mph

wind: WNW 4-8 mph

New Mexico weather

Almanac Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Tuesday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 33 /26 Norma g / ow ............................ 45 /19 Record high ............................... 58 in 1986 Recor ow ............................... -18 n 1963 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.06” Month/year to date .................. 0.06”/0.06” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.20”/0.20” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.11” Month/year to date .................. 0.11”/0.11”

Air quality index

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 285

64

64

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

64 87

64 56

84

666

412

AccuWeather Flu Index

25

40

Toda .........................................3 Low Thursda ...................................1, Low Frida ........................................2, Low Saturda ...................................1, Low Sunda ......................................1, Low Monday.....................................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

25

25

Area rainfall

40

40 285

Albuquerque 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.04” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.08”/0.08” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.02” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.02”/0.02” Los Alamos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.05” Month/year to date .................. 0.12”/0.12” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.46” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.53”/0.53” Taos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.06” Month/year to date .................. 0.06”/0.06”

54 60 60

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

70

180 25

70

70

380

380

285

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

70

180

54

10

Water statistics

285

10

The following water statistics of January 9 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 2.319 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 3.084 City Wells: 1.202 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 6.605 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.082 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 10.7 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.03 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

Sun and moon

tate extremes Tue. High 44 ............................... Cloudcroft Tue. Low 16 ..................................... Clayton

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

Hi/Lo W 41/32 c 37/31 sn 38/21 sn 32/30 c 32/31 c 37/21 sf 36/24 sf 33/16 c 44/25 c 28/19 c 38/33 c 43/29 c 36/30 sn 40/35 sn 34/24 c 41/35 sn 34/30 sn 28/25 c 40/32 c

Hi/Lo W 46/25 sn 42/26 sn 35/6 c 42/26 c 43/27 c 38/8 pc 38/13 pc 39/25 pc 35/11 sf 37/22 c 39/18 sf 47/28 c 41/25 sn 44/24 pc 42/25 c 40/17 sf 38/16 sf 43/28 c 46/29 c

Hi/Lo W 53/26 pc 46/26 pc 41/9 s 51/28 pc 52/29 pc 44/2 s 47/15 s 56/30 s 45/14 pc 50/25 s 43/14 pc 53/28 pc 45/25 pc 42/20 s 55/25 s 41/13 s 42/11 pc 52/30 pc 52/30 pc

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

Hi/Lo 32/20 43/36 30/24 40/30 29/22 30/23 25/17 38/30 32/30 30/23 36/24 41/32 38/35 32/27 39/37 34/23 42/35 34/27 41/33

W sn c sf sn c sn c r sn c c c c sf c c c sn sf

Hi/Lo W 37/20 sf 53/36 c 39/23 sf 43/24 sn 40/24 c 38/16 pc 34/12 pc 42/22 sn 40/23 c 36/23 sf 36/25 c 45/27 c 44/26 sn 37/9 pc 46/28 c 41/21 c 47/29 c 40/22 sf 40/18 sf

Hi/Lo W 50/22 s 56/36 pc 45/19 pc 48/24 pc 52/26 s 50/19 s 40/14 s 46/23 pc 52/24 pc 46/25 pc 52/31 s 51/29 pc 51/29 pc 42/10 s 50/27 pc 54/25 s 55/30 pc 47/25 pc 43/12 s

Sunrise today ............................... 7:14 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 5:13 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 1:15 a.m. Moonset toda ........................... 12:25 .m. Sunrise Thursda ......................... 7:13 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 5:14 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ....................... 2:13 a.m. Moonset Thursda ........................ 1:06 .m. Sunrise Frida ............................... 7:13 a.m. Sunset Friday ................................ 5:15 p.m. Moonrise Friday ............................ 3:12 a.m. Moonset Friday ............................. 1:52 p.m. New

First

Full

Last

Jan 20

Jan 26

Feb 3

Feb 11

The planets Rise 8:21 a.m. 8:27 a.m. 9:17 a.m. 7:14 p.m. 3:25 a.m. 11:04 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:43 p.m. 6:45 p.m. 8:14 p.m. 8:52 a.m. 1:39 p.m. 11:35 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

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

National cities

Weather for January 14

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Anchorage 42/27 c 34/30 i 37/31 sh Atlanta 49/42 r 50/33 sh 48/32 r Baltimore 32/30 pc 31/20 sn 38/22 pc Billings 34/10 pc 34/26 pc 40/32 pc Bismarck 21/-11 pc 37/21 pc 36/19 pc Boise 37/28 pc 34/23 pc 35/28 pc Boston 34/19 s 28/21 sf 31/21 s Charleston, SC 56/53 r 49/34 c 54/36 r Charlotte 47/43 r 42/29 i 48/28 r Chicago 19/14 sn 15/9 c 27/16 pc Cincinnati 28/22 sn 27/16 pc 34/23 pc Cleveland 18/11 pc 14/3 pc 25/19 pc Dallas 39/31 c 42/33 c 51/31 s Denver 32/22 c 41/20 s 54/29 s Detroit 13/4 sn 14/5 pc 22/17 pc Fairbanks 26/5 sf 14/8 pc 19/11 sf Flagstaff 36/30 sn 39/20 pc 44/18 s Honolulu 80/62 s 80/66 s 80/65 s Houston 46/43 c 45/39 c 53/36 pc Indianapolis 23/12 pc 18/13 c 30/18 pc Kansas City 26/1 pc 35/19 pc 44/24 s Las Vegas 59/45 pc 60/39 s 61/38 s Los Angeles 68/55 pc 74/50 s 76/52 s

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 W 29/25 c 34/29 c 79/70 c 19/13 sn 15/-10 pc 55/47 c 30/27 s 38/21 pc 77/62 pc 32/26 pc 63/54 sh 25/14 pc 52/32 pc 39/38 c 28/13 pc 39/32 pc 45/39 c 67/56 pc 64/46 s 49/38 pc 16/-16 c 30/26 s 41/31 pc

Hi/Lo 32/22 40/29 80/65 20/11 20/15 53/43 31/24 40/26 70/52 32/24 68/47 28/12 48/35 34/29 30/24 36/23 45/39 70/50 60/45 49/38 23/17 31/23 33/29

W c c sh c c c pc c c c pc pc pc i c s sh s s pc pc c sn

Hi/Lo 39/25 44/29 79/63 30/17 33/13 52/39 34/26 53/31 68/49 37/25 71/47 27/19 47/44 44/28 43/28 37/25 57/34 73/50 61/47 51/47 32/17 35/23 41/29

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World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Stationary front

Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Warm front

Ice

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Tue. High: 84 .............................. Naples, FL Tue. Low: -35 ........................... Cotton, MN

Weather history

Weather trivia™

Cold air penetrating the natural barriers of Southern California on Jan. 14, 1882, brought a record 15 inches of snow to San Bernardino.

is most of the world’s fresh Q: Where water found?

A: 70% is stored as is on Antarctica.

TV 1

top picks

7 p.m. on ABC The Middle After she finds an old car dealership paycheck, Frankie (Patricia Heaton) discovers that redeeming it isn’t as simple as just going to the bank in the new episode “A Quarry Story.” To collect the money, she has to spend another day working at the car lot. Mike (Neil Flynn) comes up with a way for Sue (Eden Sher) to make up the money she’s losing from reduced hours at her job. Brick (Atticus Shaffer) becomes addicted to old game shows. 8 p.m. on CBS Criminal Minds Nevada isn’t known as a particularly chilly place, so the discovery of frozen bodies there sparks the BAU’s interest in the new episode “The Forever People.” The investigation soon focuses on a cult, with guest star Grant Show (Melrose Place) playing that group’s leader. JJ (A.J. Cook) relives a nightmare when the enemy (guest star Faran Tahir) who oversaw her kidnapping and torture resurfaces. Thomas Gibson and Shemar Moore also star. 8 p.m. on CBS Empire Empire goes public on the stock exchange at what turns out to be an inopportune time in the new episode “The Outspoken King.”

One of the recording artists is implicated in a crime, and Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) helps Lucious (Terrence Howard) give the problem a positive spin. That doesn’t prevent them from being opponents in other matters, specifically an upcoming concert. Gabourey Sidibe guest stars. Malik Yoba and Jussie Smollett also star.

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 50/48 52/39 59/34 84/70 59/46 37/22 52/42 72/45 72/68 66/54 88/75 41/33 46/39 37/34 55/27 72/59 82/61 58/52 53/36 76/68

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Hi/Lo 49/39 60/43 61/41 84/64 59/45 39/24 46/43 69/46 80/68 63/52 85/72 52/29 44/39 43/34 49/37 73/58 81/62 65/55 46/40 81/68

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

Hi/Lo 59/46 48/47 55/30 74/47 1/-6 36/21 66/43 50/45 52/37 90/80 59/34 86/55 41/16 88/77 39/36 80/68 49/37 41/37 45/28 54/27

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Hi/Lo 57/46 46/42 51/34 72/43 8/-7 38/31 57/44 46/43 46/30 94/80 58/44 89/57 42/24 85/76 36/28 91/70 53/40 45/37 45/31 46/31

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Hi/Lo 58/45 48/37 51/39 72/43 17/12 33/21 60/44 50/41 42/34 94/79 59/47 89/57 44/25 83/76 38/36 80/68 50/41 47/43 45/36 46/33

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NEW YORK— Americans want to cut back on soda, and they’re willing to pay more to do it. With people drinking less soda amid health concerns, Coke and Pepsi are pushing smaller cans and bottles that contain fewer calories and, they say, induce less guilt. That all comes at a price: Those cute little cans can cost more than twice as much per ounce. The shift means 7.5-ounce “mini-cans” and 8-ounce and 8.5-ounce glass and aluminum bottles are taking up more space on supermarket shelves. The cans and bottles have been around for a few years, but Coke and Pepsi are making them more widely available and marketing them more aggressively. As part of its “Share-a-Coke” campaign that printed popular names on cans and bottles last year, for instance, Coke says it distributed a million minicans.

NEW YORK — Longtime NBC News correspondent and anchor Ann Curry is leaving her full-time job with the network after a quarter-century. But she will still be seen on NBC platforms, the company said Tuesday in announcing a partnership with her and the media venture she will launch, to be “seeded” by NBCUniversal. The arrangement will allow Curry to report on any platform or network, in or out of NBC News. Her startup will generate content of national and global importance with a multiplatform distribution approach, NBC said.

Amazon signs Woody Allen to create TV series

4

Woody Allen

Amazon Studios is delivering Woody Allen as creator of his first TV series. The Oscar-winning filmmaker will write and direct all of the episodes of the half-hour series. A full season has been ordered for Amazon’s Prime Instant Video, the company announced Tuesday. The series is expected to premiere in 2016. No details on casting were disclosed, nor was the series title announced.

The focus on pushing smaller packages signals a shift from the past couple of decades, when beverage makers measured success by the sheer volume of soda they sold. Yet soda consumption has declined persistently in recent years, with public health officials blaming it for making people fat and calling for special taxes and even warning labels on cans. Instead of fighting what seems to be a losing battle, Coke and Pepsi are pushing smaller cans and bottles that give their products a sense of newness among the growing proliferation of beverage choices. The companies also say the tiny sizes cater to people’s desire for more modest servings. “Coca-Cola is so delicious, but it’s like sun tanning or cigarettes — they’re these wonderful things that we now know are horrible for us,” said Lauren Utvich, a 31-year-old food stylist in New York, who bought the Coke mini-cans when she first spotted them.

Food: Sexual terms common for dessert seared” and — Jurafsky’s favorite — “very naughty deep fried love of food with a passion for pork belly.” linguistics and a skill at devel“We saw a lot of seductives,” oping software for crunching Jurafsky said by phone from large data sets. He’s studied his California home. the origin of food names, the People reviewing less trade routes of certain food expensive restaurants more stuffs and the history of how often used drug references like a common American condicrave and binge. “There were ment, ketchup, began as a Chi- a lot of references to crack,” nese fish sauce. His book The Jurafsky said. Language of Food: A Linguist Ergo, egg noodles at one resReads the Menu was published taurant became the reviewer’s in September by W.W. Norton “drug of choice,” and one and Co. restaurant’s cupcakes “are like Food, said Jurafsky, “is crack,” according to examples enshrined in our religion. It is in the study. in our day-to-day rituals with The foods for which reviewour families. It is our way of ers most often used drug referbonding. The words we use ences were burgers, pizza and and the rituals around food tell sushi. you something about the culThe foods that reviewers, ture, as well.” both men and women, most Jurafsky grew up in a Jewoften described in sexual ish home in the San Francisco terms were, not surprisingly, suburbs, where food abounded desserts. every day. He became a stuThe study also upheld an old dent of cooking and linguistics maxim for service businesses as a boy when he discovered like restaurants: Focus on keepa Julia Child cookbook at a ing your customers happy. friend’s house. The team found that many “That all the sauces had reviewers who had given neganames intrigued me,” Jurafsky tive descriptions of restausaid. “It piqued my young linrants, who had written in the guist interest.” past tense and had used firstA linguist studies not only person plural words like we, languages but also the social, shared something in common cultural and psychological with people who have been underpinnings of words. In the through other types of trauma. study of the online reviews, “There’s a reason in one-star the team used software to reviews that a person says a analyze the words used in waitress ignored ‘us’ and not 887,658 consumer reviews at ‘me’,” Jurafsky said. “It shows sites such as Yelp about more the importance of personal than 6,548 restaurants in seven service.” cities. The study by Jurafsky, Jurafsky has completed Victor Chahuneau, Bryan R. another study, as yet unpubRoutledge and Noah A. Smith lished, with a different team was published recently in First that looks at how the length of Monday, an online journal. words used in menus is linked Reviewers reporting positive to price. His next food interrestaurant experiences altered est? Examining how the lantheir language depending on guage of recipes has changed the food prices. More expenover time. sive restaurants garnered more sexual references, such as Contact Staci Matlock at “orgasmic pastry,” “seductively 986-3055.

Continued from Page A-6

Ann Curry to exit NBC News after 25 years

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Newsmakers

Ann Curry

9 p.m. on NBC Chicago PD Lindsay (Sophia Bush, pictured) may have a new job, but as she and the task force try to break up a drug cartel, she finds she still can use Voight’s (Jason Beghe) help ... despite the title of this new episode, “We Don’t Work Together Anymore.” With Burgess (Marina Squerciati) assigned to the desk, Platt (Amy Morton) becomes Roman’s (Brian Geraghty) new partner. Jon Seda, Jesse Lee Soffer and Elias Koteas also star.

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A-7

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Santa Fe Science Café For Young Thinkers

“Too Cool to Resist: The Mystery of Superconductivity” Ross McDonald Los Alamos National Laboratory Wednesday, January 14, 6 – 7:30 PM Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Education Annex 123 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe Admission is free and all are welcome. Ross earned his PhD at the University of Oxford. Today he pursues his studies of superconductivity at the National High Field Magnet Lab campus located at LANL.

The Associated Press More Info? Visit www.sfafs.org or call 603-7468.


A-8

LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

In brief City seeks applicants for redistricting commission Thursday is the deadline to apply to serve on the new seven-member Santa Fe Citizens’ Redistricting Commission. The commission will be responsible for redrawing election district boundaries for Santa Fe municipal elections. A news release said the panel will start meeting Feb. 1 and is expected to complete its work by June 1, after at least seven public meetings. The city is looking for a voter from each of the four City Council districts and a voter who lives in a southwest-side area that recently was annexed, creating an imbalance in the population of council districts. The city also wants a statistician and a geographer or cartographer who is a registered voter. Those two positions on the commission are open to Santa Fe County residents. Applications are available online at santaf enm.gov/redistricting_commission. They also will be handed out at Wednesday’s City Council meeting at City Hall, 200 Lincoln Ave. There are a number of disqualifiers for service on the commission, including being an elected government official or an officer in a political committee or party. All applicants also must agree not to run for city elective office for two years.

Auditor sides with pueblos in ‘free play’ dispute The State Auditor’s Office has sided with pueblos that operate casinos under 2001 gambling compacts in a long-running dispute between the New Mexico Gaming Control Board and the pueblos about the issue of “free play.” Free play occurs when a casino patron receives complimentary credit to play at slot machines. The state board has argued that free credits used by patrons should be included when calculating the revenue the tribe must share with the state. But pueblos have contended that the board’s calculation, which includes “free play” credits, violates terms of their gambling compacts. The auditor’s report on the issue, which was completed in late December and released by the Pueblo of Pojoaque on Tuesday, says the board is using an accounting method not consistent with the 2001 compacts. The report also says the board “appears to lack established, consistent, clear, and workable procedures for evaluating financial accounting disputes with the Tribes.” The report was drafted under former state

auditor Hector Balderas, who this month became New Mexico’s attorney general.

Police notes

State high court rules on immigration consequences

The Santa Fe Police Department took the following report: u Elias Gonzales, 47, was arrested on suspicion of jay walking, drinking alcohol in a public place and concealing his identity at about 8:48 a.m.

ALBUQUERQUE — The New Mexico Supreme Court says it’s not enough that a defendant hears in court that pleading guilty could result in deportation. The justices ruled Monday in case from Doña Ana County that a defendant was denied effective legal representation because his lawyer hadn’t warned him beforehand about a guilty plea’s immigration consequences. Cesar Favela pleaded guilty to charges of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and driving while under the influence. The plea’s consequences were discussed in court before the judge accepted Favela’s plea, but Favela later asked to be allowed to withdraw his guilty plea. He said he hadn’t understood the consequences. The Supreme Court said the warnings that Favela heard in court didn’t make up for the ineffective legal representation that he received.

Funeral services and memorials

Lawmaker wants required services in abuse cases A New Mexico lawmaker wants to make it mandatory for parents or guardians to receive court-ordered family services when abuse or neglect of a child is suspected. Rep. Kelly Fajardo, R-Belen, said curbing child abuse and neglect is a state priority, and there is room for improvement. “By intervening and requiring parents in abuse cases to seek help, we are adding another layer of protection for our children while at the same time keeping the family together,” she said. Under the proposed legislation, it would be mandatory for families to receive services in abuse or neglect cases that require intervention but may not rise to the level of removing the child from the home. Those services could include drug or alcohol counseling, parenting courses or anger management classes. Fajardo said the goal would be to identify any problems and determine the needs of the child and family. Republican Gov. Susana Martinez implemented a series of executive orders and policy changes last year in response to the case of Omaree Varela, a 9-year-old Albuquerque boy who police say was kicked to death by his mother in December 2013. Police and social workers had investigated prior abuse complaints at the home before the boy’s death, and one police visit was never relayed to the state’s child welfare agency. Staff and wire reports

DA: Maintained strict policies in office, says a former co-worker Continued from Page A-6 for the slaying of deputy James McGrane. Astorga was sentenced to life in prison. “She did an amazing job. I could always call her,” said Darren White, a former Bernalillo County sheriff and a Republican. However, former attorneys who worked under Brandenburg said her staff was often overworked because she refused to be flexible on plea agreements and regularly ordered attorneys to take cases to trial regardless of the chances of success. Meanwhile, she declined to seek charges against officers, even when evidence was strong. “She pursued cases against the average person with little to no evidence,” said defense attorney Cynthia Armijo, who

worked under Brandenburg from 2004 to 2006. “But this is the first time she’s charging officers. I think it might be politically motivated.” Criminal defense attorney Grant Marek, who also worked in Brandenburg’s office, said the office maintained strict policies, and attorneys often followed those practices “blindly” and “didn’t use their discretion.” Specifically, he said, the office refused to consider reducing drunken-driving charges, which can affect defendants’ future chances at jobs. Still, Ralph Arellanes, president of the Albuquerque chapter of the League of United Latin American Citizens, or LULAC, said Brandenburg was able to win four terms with large margins because she’s an

Monday at the intersection of St. Francis Drive and Dunlap Street. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following report: u A burglar hauled off power tools, a Maytag clothes dryer and a microwave oven from a residence on Ocean View Drive in Cerrillos between Saturday and Monday.

effective campaigner. “She’s very personable and she’s a very good communicator,” said Arellanes, a critic of the police department. “People generally like her.” Arellanes said he’s been disappointed with Brandenburg’s refusal to charge officers until now. “Hopefully, this is a change for her,” he said. Nancy Denker, owner of the Albuquerque printing company Focus Ink, said Brandenburg showed “tremendous courage” by filing charges against the officers in the Boyd shooting. Denker prints Brandenburg’s campaign material and said she strongly supports her. “She’s not always perfect,” Denker said. “But right now, I’m very proud of her. I hope her decision leads to a national conversation.”

PNM: Partner Anaheim to leave owns the majority share in the plant and is the operator, has to find a way to sell the extra coal had added $222 million to the cost of the comcapacity at the facility. Farmington’s decision pany’s original power replacement plan, drafted not to buy any of the extra capacity makes the in December 2013. Another $532 million in capi- situation more urgent. tal expenditures that originally was omitted was In a Jan. 7 letter, the Farmington utility told added in August, and correcting a fuel cost error PNM it wasn’t going to buy the additional added another $367 million to the project. capacity due to unresolved issues, including the Meanwhile, on Tuesday, PNM said Farming“significant degradation in [San Juan] Unit 4 ton Electric, which provides power to all of San reliability performance, uncertainty and likely Juan County, had decided not to add more coal unfavorable economics regarding future fuel capacity beyond the 43 megawatts it already supply, uncertainty pertaining to operations and owns at the San Juan generating station. The ownership structure post-2022 and other evaluutility had looked at buying 65 megawatts of ated liabilities unacceptable to the city.” additional capacity currently owned by the city Farmington said it remains committed to the of Anaheim, Calif., and a Utah utility. current coal power it owns at San Juan. Anaheim is one of four partners looking at leaving the coal-powered plant after 2017. It is Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or the same year PNM’s contract to buy coal from smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow the nearby San Juan mine ends. PNM, which her on Twitter @stacimatlock.

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ANTONIO CRISTOBAL "CHRIS" JARAMILLO Antonio Cristobal "Chris" Jaramillo, a lifelong New Mexican, passed away on January 5, 2015. Chris was born February 18, 1929 in Santa Fe. He was raised in the mountain village of El Rito, growing up on the family ranch where he learned the values of hard work, cooperation, and individual strength. He graduated from secondary school at the El Rito Spanish American Normal School in 1948 and then joined the United States Army to serve his country during the Korean Conflict. Sgt. Jaramillo returned home where he earned his bachelor’s degree at New Mexico Highlands University, met and married Anna Marie Angel of Las Vegas, NM, and started a family. Returning to El Rito, he taught the next generation of students at his former high school. Chris became a successful businessman in Albuquerque before joining the workforce at Los Alamos National Laboratory, from which he retired after Anna Marie’s passing. Chris enjoyed introducing his sons to fond memories of his youth, including horseback riding with his brothers, camping with his family, and fly-fishing with the love of his life, Anna Marie. The reverence he felt for northern New Mexico radiated through the love he shared with family, friends, neighbors, and the community that embraced him. He was preceded in death by his wife Anna Marie, parents Roman and Elvira Gonzales Jaramillo, sister Connie Jaramillo Kitzes, and brothers Isaac, Carlos, Rudy, and Ted Jaramillo. He is survived by his brothers Roman Jaramillo, Jr. and Mike Jaramillo (wife Debbie); his sons Anthony Jaramillo (wife Margaret) and Rick Jaramillo; his grandchildren Lauren Lusk (husband Jerry), Rick C. "Little Ricky" Jaramillo (wife Susana), and Alanna Marie Jaramillo (mother Yvonne); his great grandchildren Brady and Sierra Marie Lusk, Jamilla (mother Desiree), Chris, and Gianna Jaramillo; and many beloved nieces and nephews. Interment will take place at the National Cemetery in Santa Fe, NM on Friday, January 16, 2015 at 2:10 p.m. Reception to follow. In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to the American Diabetes Association of New Mexico at www.diabetes.org/in-mycommunity/local-offices/albuquerque-new-mexico/ or to a charity of your choice. On-line condolences can be shared with the family at www.gonzalesfunerals.com.

Irene Josephine Smith, a resident of Santa Fe for 62 years passed away on January 5, 2015, due to a lengthy illness, yet fast unexpected passing. She is preceded in death by father; Belamino Rivera, brothers; Richard and Martin Rivera, grandson; Mark Andrew Velazquez Jr. She is yet survived by her partner of 35 years Jerry Trujillo, daughters; Cindy Ferrero, Angela Smith, Gigi Lujan, Monique Romero, Chantel DuBois, Claudia Trujillo and her many grand and great grandchildren. Please come celebrate Irene’s memorial service of Life at The City of Faith Christian Fellowship, 1601 St. Michaels Dr. on Saturday January 17, 2015 at 10:30 a.m. followed by a reception after the memorial service.

MICHAEL ROBERT SOTO Michael Robert Soto, born September 20, 1992 in Carlsbad, New Mexico lost his life on January 8, 2015. He was the son of Robert Soto and the late Wanda J. Catanach. Michael had worked at Talin World Market, Roof Top Pizza and Blue Corn Café. He truly loved cooking and serving people. Michael left this earth with Love and Compassion for living. His optimism and positive outlook of his surroundings was contagious. He taught; he loved; he made days better and always made people feel special. In his short time on earth, he touched hearts, minds, and souls. Without hesitation, he gave without receiving. He never wasted a day. He lived life to the fullest and encouraged others to do the same. Mikey, or better known as "KRAX" in the graffiti community, and his craft will forever be known for his artistic, powerful expression and God-given smile. His talent and dedication was that of a true artist. Michael is survived by his father Robert Soto; his brother James Catanach, wife Melissa, and their son Tristen; his brother Kyle Catanach, his grandfather Ernesto Soto and his Nana Aggie Cardenas; Mandy Jackson his very special cousin and friend; numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and friends, including the STO and TNR family. A visitation will be held on Thursday, January 15 from 5-7 pm at Berardinelli Family Funeral Service where a rosary will be recited at 7 pm. A funeral mass will be held at St. Anne’s Parish on Friday, January 16 at 11 am. Following mass, please join the family in a walking procession to Warehouse 21 at 1614 Paseo de Peralta, where a celebration of Michael’s life will be held. Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican Call 986-3000

LYDIA (PORKY) L. ARCHULETA Lydia (Porky) L. Archuleta, born August 16, 1966 passed away on December 16, 2014 in Lakewood, Colorado due to a sudden bout with cancer. She is survived by her partner Richard Cook of Colorado. Her mother Jeanette Barnhart and stepfather Robert Barnhart as well as three sisters Gloria Archuleta, Jessica Garcia and Carolyn Narvaiz. Two sons Eric and Danny Ramirez. Two grand sons Adan and Zaden. A multitude of uncles, aunts, nieces, and cousins. Lydia was an exceptional mother, grandmother and friend. She is dearly loved and missed. The memorial will be held at The Vineyard Christian Fellowship, 1352 San Juan Dr. Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Rivera Family Funeral Home (505) 753-2288. 305 Calle Salazar, Espanola, NM 87532 To share a memory, please visit our website at www.riverafuneralhome.com

MARK DELGADO

Mark Delgado, 45, of Santa Fe passed away on Monday, January 5, 2015. He is preceded in death by his father, Alfredo Delgado, brother, Alfredo Delgado Jr., twin brother, Matthew Delgado, and niece, Brianna Garcia. He is survived by his son, Mark Delgado Jr. (Joleen), mother, Mela Delgado, companion, Pamela Romero, stepsons, Leo, Daniel, Steven, siblings, Becky Vigil (Joe), Diane Hernandez (Greg), Cindy Ornelas (Miguel), Eddie Delgado (Gloria), Juan Delgado, Paul Fernandez, Jerry Delgado, eight nieces, and five nephews. A Rosary will be held on Thursday, January 15, 2015 at 11 AM followed by a Mass at 12 PM at Rosario Chapel. Pallbearers will be: Juan Delgado, Paul Fernandez, Jerry Delgado, and Eddie Delgado. Honorary Pallbearers will be: Diane Hernandez, Cindy Ornelas, Becky Vigil, and all nieces and nephews.

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

We are proud to be Santa Fe’s only locally owned and most affordable funeral and cremation service, 40% less than the Texas owned competitor.

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Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Editor and Publisher Robert M. McKinney Editor and Publisher, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

U.S. should aid immunizations around the globe

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COMMENTARY: ALBERT R. HUNT

Pope Francis changes the conversation WASHINGTON n the Reagan era, conservative Republicans felt they had a powerful ally in Pope John Paul II, whose forceful anti-communism and anti-abortion stances played out in American politics. Today’s conservatives are apprehensive about Pope Francis, who has changed the tone and culture, not the doctrines, of the Catholic Church in less than two years as pontiff. He stresses, with passion and authenticity, a commitment to addressing poverty and income inequality more than the social issues that have dominated much of the Catholic debate in America. John Carr, a former top official of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, notes that Francis’ message on abortion is “no obsession, no retreat.” The pope helped broker the recent thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations, to the consternation of conservatives such as Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. Francis now is determined to make addressing climate change a moral imperative for the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics. This doesn’t mean that Francis is the poster pope for liberal Democrats: “He’s challenging everybody,” says Carr, now director of the Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life at Georgetown University. “Most Democrats haven’t been talking about poverty.” He suggested that Francis’ impact is starting to change the conversation among Democrats, along with some conservative Republicans, such as House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.

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Still, Francis’ message is unsettling to more than a few conservatives, particularly his focus on climate change and his initiatives to influence the United Nations’ conference in Paris this year. Some prominent Republicans, such as Senate Environment Committee Chairman James Inhofe, are climate-change deniers. Some Catholic business leaders have complained about Francis’ emphasis on income inequality and the defects of capitalism. Ken Langone, the billionaire founder of the Home Depot and a major Republican donor, warned Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York that if the pope kept up the drumbeat, some wealthy Catholics might stop giving to church causes. (“Liberals say popes don’t know anything about sex, conservatives say they don’t know anything about economics,” Carr observed.) And Francis has rattled the U.S. church hierarchy, notably the bishops. American church leaders have long been advocates for the poor and immigrants. But these are edicts many conservatives felt could be ignored; the focus and priorities were the social issues, led by hardline prelates such as Cardinal Raymond Burke, the former archbishop of St. Louis, who refused Communion to any Catholic politicians who weren’t on the right side of the abortion issue. Francis removed Burke as head of the Vatican’s high court. Burke, a Francis critic, recently asserted that a “feminized” church, which permits altar girls, is responsible for a shortage of priests and

some of the pedophilia crimes. Equally important, the pope chose Blase Cupich, the progressive bishop of Spokane, Wash., to be the archbishop of Chicago, the third-largest American diocese. He succeeds Cardinal Francis George, a conservative cultural warrior. Garry Wills, a renowned historian and Catholic scholar, said the pope has sent a strong message to entrenched interests such as those that oppose “Obamacare” for offering contraception coverage, even though the vast majority of American Catholics practice birth control. “Francis has condemned careerism, which will make the bishops pay more attention to Catholic lives,” Wills says. The pope will visit the U.S. in September. He’ll go to Philadelphia and New York and probably Washington. If so, look for visit to the White House, as well as to a soup kitchen or some other venue that serves the poor, and he might accept House Speaker John Boehner’s invitation to be the first pontiff to address a joint session of Congress. Privately, some right-wing Republicans have grumbled about this invitation, but they can’t block it. It’s not hard to envision an exceptional moment in the Capitol as pro-choice Democrats squirm when the pontiff celebrates the sanctity of life and Republicans wriggle when the Holy Father talks about social justice, income inequality and the moral imperative of addressing climate change. Albert R. Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Oldest European-built home? Back East

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s a passionate student of New Mexico history and architecture, I enjoyed Paul Weideman’s recent article about the Boyle House (“The ring cycle: Santa Fe’s newest oldest house,” Art of Space, Pasatiempo, Jan. 2). However, I was a bit surprised by his speculation about it “being the oldest European-built dwelling in the country.” Alas, the oldest buildings are back East. The Jonathan Fairbanks house in Dedham, Mass., built 1637-1641, is acknowledged to be the oldest existing European house in the United States. New England alone boasts more than five dozen houses that date prior to 1700, and scores — indeed probably hundreds — that date prior to the late 1720s, the date reported for the Boyle House. This takes nothing away from New Mexico’s history and accomplishments. As Weideman pointed out to me, the Boyle House still is a remarkable survival for a house “made of earth!” (his emphasis). That is something we all should celebrate and work hard to protect. Kudos to Weideman and The New Mexican for keeping us informed about Santa Fe’s fascinating past and the

past’s continuing presence in our lives. Michael Ettema

Santa Fe

becoming more culturally competent in our evolving world. Good intentions are a big step forward, and proper language is important, too. Honey Ward

Words matter I applaud The New Mexican for publishing professor Jennifer Finney Boylan’s excellent article on supporting transgender youth (“Transgendered youth need our help in finding a way forward,” Jan. 12). Unfortunately, the headline writer used the word transgendered. This helpful explanation from the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (www.glaad.com) sheds light on the subject: “Transgender is an adjective, not a noun. Be careful not to call someone “a transgender.” Do not add an unnecessary “-ed” to the term (“transgendered”), which connotes a condition of some kind. Never use the term “transvestite” to describe a transgender person. … Always use a transgender person’s chosen name. Also, a person who identifies as a certain gender should be referred to using pronouns consistent with that gender.” We are all on a learning curve of

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

Santa Fe

Kudos to Brenner Kudos to Juliana Brenner, a sophomore at Desert Academy, for her courage and hard work in starting a school newspaper (“School newspaper a lot of work, but worth it,” My View, Generation Next, Jan. 9). She indicated she was happy that she didn’t know the work it would take, because she might never have undertaken it if she did. Having started a student paper in junior high many years ago, I know just what she means. My only suggestion would be to involve a caring, knowledgeable faculty or staff member to work with, not dictate to, the students. Such an individual can make all the difference in the success of such a venture and ensure its continuation. Kay Lockridge

he United States, as one of the richest nations in the world, has a responsibility to make sure the dollars it spends in foreign aid make a difference. It is heartening, then, to see projects that work, where a small investment can change lives. One such example is Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which is leading the way around the world to stop the spread of vaccine-preventable diseases by making sure children are immunized. It is estimated that the alliance, founded in 2000, has saved some 6 million lives. With U.S. help, Gavi (originally the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations) can do even more. Already, in the fiscal year 2015 budget, President Barack Obama has included $200 million to help with the vaccination push. It’s a big commitment, but only part of a multi-year cycle that the U.S. should join. On Jan. 27, a conference in Berlin is taking place to secure funding for the next phase of the worldwide vaccination effort. The United States should be a robust supporter of this effort. Any support from New Mexico’s congressional delegation to shore up backing for Gavi would be welcome. Over the next five years, Gavi’s goal is to immunize another 300 million children. The share of children in the world’s poorest nations who receive the 11 vaccinations recommended by the World Health Organization should then increase from 5 percent to 50 percent. The group is seeking to raise some $7.5 billion for the effort, and is hoping that the U.S. will pony up $1 billion from 2015-18. This is money well-spent, both on a humanitarian and practical scale. Lives saved means potential realized, not squandered. Lives saved will become economic capital, workers whose efforts help their countries become better places to live. Lives saved are millions of parents who won’t have to cry because their children are dead from preventable diseases. By making a multi-year commitment, the countries of the world put Gavi in a position to negotiate for better prices among the world’s pharmaceutical companies. (There are other benefits as well; by agreeing to buy an Ebola vaccine, Gavi is making it worthwhile to manufacture one quickly.) The alliance, after all, is a private-public development partnership. One of its key founders, Microsoft’s Bill Gates, knows firsthand the importance of the marketplace. The public health infrastructure that Gavi builds while immunizing children, of course, pays dividends beyond this year’s course of vaccinations. These campaigns save lives and then, over the long term, change lives. The United States should remain a generous partner in this effort.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Jan. 14, 1915: A bill for the establishment of a correctional school for girls may be introduced in the Legislature. The bill will be in line with the recommendation of Governor William C. McDonald in his message that steps be taken for the establishment of an institution for the custody and care of delinquent and unfortunate girls. Women’s clubs throughout the state are interested in the matter and the measure will be urged by the legislative committee of the State Federation. Jan. 14, 1965: Washington — Most of the money for New Mexico included in the president’s proposed aid to education message would go for education of children in low-income families. The proposed bill includes $9,764,587 for New Mexico and of that an estimated $8,351,640 would go to help needy children. The report noted New Mexico has 37,998 children between the ages of 5 and 17 in families with less than $2,000 annual income. Of the remaining money allocated, $699,717 would go for supplementary educational centers and services, $593,744 would go for school library resources and instructional materials, and $119,486 would be used to strengthen the State Department of Education. Jan. 14, 1990: Gov. Garrey Carruthers said Saturday he will ask the 1990 Legislature to approve legislation that would strip teenagers of their driver’s licenses if they drop out of high school. The dropout legislation is part of a package of education bills that will be introduced during the 1990 Legislature, which will meet for 30 days beginning at noon Tuesday, Jan. 16.

We welcome your letters Letters to the editor are among the best-read items of The New Mexican. We do our best to get every opinion in the paper. It doesn’t have to agree with ours. We try to run them in their turn. The letters are edited — for language, spelling and length. To give all readers a chance to speak out, we limit letter submissions per individual to once a month. Please limit letters to 150 words. Please include your name, and give us your address and telephone numbers — home and work — for verification. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.

Santa Fe

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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TIME OUT

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Horoscope 1 6 9 14

15 16 17 18 19 20

23 26 27 28 29 30 32 34

39 40 41

ACROSS Rocker Huey Nascar ___ Bonsai, e.g. Like many residents of Lancaster County, Pa. QB Manning One in a love triangle, maybe Like a majority of Muslims Word before Mac or cheese Make amends “The Sword in the Stone” author, to a chemist? Feedbag morsel Prefix that sounds like 67-Down Pizza, for one Colon part Western Indian Snoozers catch them New title for a 53-Down “The African Queen” author, to a chemist? Part of a 23-Across Modern prefix with warrior U.S. island with a royal palace

43 “The Children of Men” author, to a chemist? 48 Word often in brackets 49 Highly draftable … or a feature of the word “draft” 50 Season after printemps 51 U.S.S.R. security org. 54 Relative of “Voilà!” 56 Margery of rhyme 57 Some Garmin displays: Abbr. 58 “The Island of Dr. Moreau” author, to a chemist? 62 Television genre 63 Put down, as track 64 Like radon 68 Having done away with 69 Improve, as cheese 70 Land bordering Lake Chad 71 Minuscule 72 TV neighbor of Homer 73 Hobbyist’s adhesive DOWN 1 Word in Spanish place names

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015: This year you have the power within you to transform any segment of your life that you choose. Be wary of someone who always seems to add uproar to any situation.

2 Avian source of red meat 3 Prevail 4 “___ it, though?” 5 Chinese toy 6 Followed up with after recon 7 Et ___ (and others) 8 Find, as attack ad fodder 9 BVDs, e.g. 10 Accompanying 11 Steer clear of 12 Made a dash for 13 ___ Street (British journalism) 21 City near a 29-Across reservation 22 Street performer in an “invisible box”

23 Reaction to a pun or a punch 24 Believed gullibly 25 Notable current researcher 31 Prefix with -path 33 Greek walkway 35 Things to cure 36 Full of innocent wonder 37 Chair designer Charles 38 Butler in fiction 42 Takes habitually 44 What gallium will do at about 86°F 45 Taiwanese PC maker 46 Ground-up fare 47 Important feature for a male model

51 Blue Light Special offerer 52 Something to be rubbed out? 53 Figurine on a certain cake 55 About whom Obama said “There is not a bigger giant in the history of American music” 59 “You have gotta be kidding me!” 60 Conduct 61 Bit of barbering 65 Latin I 66 Title for Tarquinius Superbus 67 Give it a go

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes. com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscroptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

Chess quiz WHITE WINS THE QUEEN Hint: Close in on the guy. Solution: 1. Bc1! Qa1 2. Qc2! (threatening Bb2 winning it) [Nakamura-Hawkins ’14].

Hocus Focus

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

Subject: THE ARCTIC (e.g., Which ocean is in the Arctic region? Answer: Arctic Ocean.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. What bear is associated with the Arctic region? Answer________ 2. Name the three largest countries partly in the Arctic region. Answer________ 3. Name at least three more countries partly in the Arctic. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. The Arctic is the region north of 66? 33’ North Parallel. What is that parallel called? Answer________ 5. What is the most numerous indigenous Arctic people in the Western Hemisphere? Answer________ 6. What word means “snowshoe netters,” not “raw meat eaters”? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Much of the land is cryotic soil. What is the more common name for this soil? Answer________ 8. The region’s boundary roughly follows what northernmost line of what kind of growth? Answer________ 9. Term for a line that connects points on a map that have the same temperature. Answer________

1. Polar bear. 2. U.S., Russia, Canada. 3. Denmark (Greenland), Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland. 4. Arctic Circle. 5. Inuit. 6. Eskimo. 7. Permafrost. 8. Tree line. 9. Isotherm.

Jumble

ANSWERS:

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2015 Ken Fisher

Today in history Today is Wednesday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of 2015. There are 351 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Jan. 14, 1784, the United States ratified the Treaty of Paris ending the Revolutionary War; Britain followed suit in April 1784.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You could see a situation develop that might cause you to stand back and rethink a decision. Do not get caught up in a power play. Tonight: Defer to a friend. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You could feel challenged by a partner. The unexpected could occur and force you to change your plans. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Be aware of what is happening with a co-worker whom you see on a daily basis. Someone you care about could be closed down. Tonight: Put up your feet and relax. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH If you follow your intuition, you will land like a cat on all fours. You might have difficulty sorting through information. Tonight: Don’t allow someone to intimidate others. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Stay centered, know your limits and recognize what is needed. You could feel overwhelmed by everything you hear. Tonight: Head home early. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Communication could be challenged, as confusion seems to run through the moment. You might feel overwhelmed by what has occurred. Tonight: Reach out to a close friend.

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Baby shower rules stump grandma Dear Annie: My daughter and her husband are using a surrogate to have a baby. What do I do about a shower when someone else is carrying their child? It is my daughter’s first child, and she and her husband are in their late 40s. Should I make the shower for them as a couple? Does she not get a shower because someone else is actually pregnant with the child? I have no idea what is proper here. Please help. — Grandma-To-Be Dear Grandma: It doesn’t matter who is carrying the child. Any new mother — and your daughter will be one — is entitled to a baby shower if someone wants to host one. Of course, it is better if the shower is given by friends and not immediate family, but these days few people pay attention to those rules. Couples showers have become more popular, since both Mom and Dad (presumably) are raising this child. Whether you do that or not is entirely your choice. Congratulations. Dear Annie: I would like to know why frail, elderly people get to “choose to stay in their home” while the rest of the family runs in circles trying to meet their needs. This is like asking a 2-year-old whether he wants to eat broccoli. My husband and I were stressed out and exhausted trying to care for our parents because they wouldn’t leave their home. We all work full-time, so we took turns making sure they were OK in their old house. No one could get a night’s rest, because the folks were up and down all night opening doors, turning on lights and once, even using the oven and going outside. People are living longer, and when severe physical frailty or dementia sets in, the family suffers. Not only is there the stress of caregiving, but also there is resentment that they refuse to be more helpful and cooperative about their living arrangements. I think some of this stress can lead to elder abuse. Why can’t family and social workers sign these folks up for assisted living? I understand personal freedom, but where is the freedom for the rest of the family? — Still Stressed Out

Dear Stressed:Seniorswhoare still capable of making sound decisions should look into continuing care facilities that allow them to live independently until they are no longer able to do so, and then will transfer them to assisted living or nursing home care. These are not always pleasant choices to contemplate, but the alternative often turns out to be misery for everyone. And once a parent has dementia, it becomes both difficult and debilitating to remove them from familiar surroundings. Those who are adamant about remaining in their own homes should check out whether it is safe. Most people do not remain in perfect health and then suddenly drop dead. Does your home have stairs? Safety bars in the bathroom? Will you someday need to pay for a caregiver? If you become widowed, will the loneliness cause you to decline? At some point, each of us must decide whether staying in our home is truly the best decision, and how fair we are being to our loved ones. Dear Annie: “Getting It off My Chest” moved out of state and is upset about relatives not visiting them. Here’s the other side of the story. Our family members also moved away. They expect us to travel because we are retired and they are working. By the time we visit four different states, we can’t afford trips to any other locations. Maybe “Getting” should look at how selfish they are. Their area may be beautiful, but how many times can we see it before it becomes boring? No one owes them a visit just because they didn’t like cold winters or sticky summers. — Burned Out Travelers Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You often question how much you need to do with or for someone else. You might express a tendency to be excessive. Tonight: Trust that everything will work out. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might want to move in a new direction. The unexpected is likely to occur, and it could take some time to sort out what is really going on. Tonight: Keep to your budget. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Listen to news that heads your way. You’ll correctly sense that you do not have the full story. A financial matter needs some attention. Tonight: Listen to a friend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be in a strange mood, and might feel somewhat negative. A meeting will allow you to revise your perspective. Tonight: Invite a friend to join you.

Cryptoquip

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You could be in the mood to do something a bit different. Curb impulsiveness. Your sixth sense draws some unexpected results. Tonight: Say “yes” to an offer. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Honor a fast change. You are likely to become difficult or uneasy as pressure builds. Detach, and consider revising your thinking and attitude. Tonight: Take off ASAP. Jacqueline Bigar

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2015 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Top 25 basketball B-2 NBA B-2 Prep roundup B-3 Taste B-4 Classifieds B-5 Comics B-10

SPORTS NFL

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Top 25: Miami dominates after halftime to stun No. 4 Duke. Page B-2

UNM MEN’S BASKETBALL

Lobos take big picture approach to Falcons By Will Webber The New Mexican

Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning prepares to take the field Sunday prior to a divisional playoff game against the Indianapolis Colts in Denver. JACK DEMPSEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Elway still wants Manning as quarterback By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — If John Elway gets to choose, his quarterback next season will be Peyton Manning. His coach: To be determined. During a news conference Tuesday, Elway said he did not press Manning for a decision on his future when they met the day after Denver’s 24-13 loss to Indianapolis in the AFC divisional playoffs. The Broncos GM and executive vice president said he expects to reconvene with Manning in about a month to see where he stands — although he’ll touch base with the five-time MVP as he conducts his coaching search. Elway said he has not contacted anybody about his open head coaching job but said coordinators Jack Del Rio and Adam Gase, candidates for other openings, would get a look. He described the parting with John Fox as the culmination of a disagreement over what it takes to win the Super Bowl and stuck to a statement that has lived with him since he signed Manning: “There is no Plan B. Plan A is still the same — to win a world championship.” On behalf of owner Pat Bowlen, Elway thanked Fox for leading Denver to 49 wins and four AFC West titles along with a trip to the Super Bowl in his four seasons in Denver. But Elway said he was disturbed by the team’s propensity to play sluggishly and disjointed in the playoffs. Nobody had a better regular-season record in any of the last three seasons than the Broncos. Yet, Denver lost two first-round playoff games as heavy favorites at home coming off byes and suffered a 35-point thumping in last year’s Super Bowl. “There is no one person to blame by any means. Everybody’s a participant in this and obviously we have not chosen to peak at the right time,” Elway said. “I think if you look at our seasons, we come out of the gate a lot faster than we finish.” Their last two seasons have ended with poor performances in the playoffs as the coaching staff failed to make adjustments and players largely displayed a lack of com-

ALBUQUERQUE — Just as it is in football, preparing for a date with the Air Force men’s basketball team is an exercise in futility. Whereas the Falcons football team makes life miserable on opposing coaches by running a triple option offense that’s tough to prepare for, the service academy’s basketball program is just as big of a pain in the neck thanks to the Princeton offense it has run for years. University of New Mexico Craig Neal thinks he’s found an easy solution for that. He’ll put his findings to a test Wednesday night when Air Force takes on the Lobos in The Pit in a 7 p.m. tipoff. “We won’t focus on personnel,” Neal said. “We’ll basically just focus on principles.”

UP NEXT Wednesday: Air Force (8-7, 1-3) at New Mexico (11-5, 3-1), 7 p.m. in The Pit TV: ROOT Sports. Radio: KVSF-AM 1400 and KKOB-AM 770 Live stats: www.lobos.statbroadcast.com Twitter analysis: @sfnmsports

In other words, avoid the myriad backdoor cuts that lead to open layups and uncontested jumpers against defenses caught playing out of position. It always happens when a perfectly timed screen logjams two defenders while freeing up a Falcon to fire away. No one player on the Air Force roster will become the focal point in Wednesday’s game. Rather, the entire roster and the schemes they

Please see LOBOS, Page B-3

ELI LUCERO/THE HERALD JOURNAL

PREP BOYS BASKETBALL POJOAQUE 47, ST. MICHAEL’S 37

Patient Elks beat St. Mike’s Pojoaque rebounds after frustrating loss By James Barron The New Mexican

T

Please see ELWAY, Page B-3

Source: Garrett, Marinelli set to return to Cowboys By Schuyler Dixon The Associated Press

IRVING, Texas — Dallas coach Jason Garrett fielded questions about his shaky job security for two years before breaking through with the first trip to the playoffs for the Cowboys since 2009. Now he’s all but guaranteed to have the second-longest coaching tenure for the storied franchise behind Tom Landry, the only coach the Cowboys knew for their first 29 years. Garrett has a new five-year contract, and defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli is also coming back on a three-year deal, a person with knowledge of both agreements told The Associated Press on Tuesday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team had yet Jason Garrett to announce the deals. Garrett will make about $6 million annually — roughly $30 million in total value — after just completing his first contract, at four years and $20 million. The Cowboys broke through a three-year rut of 8-8 seasons that ended with losses that kept them out of the playoffs by winning the NFC East at 12-4. Dallas beat Detroit in the wild-card round before last weekend’s 26-21 divisional round loss at Green Bay. “I really believe that we’ve built something here that we’re all proud of and we’re all excited about taking the next step with this football team,” Garrett said earlier Tuesday, before the deals were settled. “I think we have the right kind of guys on our staff, the right kind of guys on our team and we’re excited about the opportunities and the challenges ahead.” The 48-year-old Garrett, a former backup on Dallas’ Super Bowl-winning teams of the 1990s, is 42-32 in fourplus seasons and needs two victories to tie his old coach, Jimmy Johnson, for second on the franchise wins list. Landry is third all-time in the NFL with 250 victories. When he finishes the first year of his new contract, Garrett will have coached the Cowboys longer than Johnson, who won consecutive Super Bowls after the 1992 and ’93 seasons. Landry also won two titles.

Lobos guard Arthur Edwards, left, and center J.J. N’Ganga go for a rebound against Utah State guard Trace Cureton during Saturday’s game in Logan, Utah.

Pojoaque’s James Garcia, right, blocks a shot by St. Michael’s Luke Archuleta during the first quarter of Tuesday’s game in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium. For more photos, go to tinyurl.com/nu36l8b. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

here are wins, and then there are wins. For the Pojoaque Valley Elks, Tuesday night was one of those wins — the kinds that can define a season. While beating the St. Michael’s Horsemen is always big, what the Elks went through to get it made their 47-37 nondistrict road win in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium all the more special. Pojoaque came into the game a wounded group, having blown a 20-point lead against a scrappy Santa Fe Indian School squad to lose 74-72 on Jan. 9. It was a loss so frustrating, Elks head coach Joey Trujillo gave his team the weekend off to reflect and unwind. Monday, though, was a different story. “We talked about it as a team that that game was going to define us,” Trujillo said. “Define us by how we went from here. Were we going to feel sorry for ourselves or were we going to fight back?” The answer came in a constant refrain the Elks (11-5) uttered to each other throughout the evening — patience. Almost every good play was followed by a reminder to be patient, to not take unnecessary risks on defense, to battle the Horsemen post players at every turn, to keep their composure against a team that always kept its head against Pojoaque. “We were telling each other after every score, ‘Keep being patient, keep being patient,’ ” Elks senior guard Anthony Rodriguez said. “If we threw the ball away or got a steal, I’d tell guys, ‘Just keep being patient.’ ” The reward came in holding St. Michael’s (7-7) to just 13 field goals, hustling for a 28-22 rebounding edge and allowing the Horsemen

Please see ELKS, Page B-3

What a shock: College playoff system works

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o this is what a football ship, and that was all college playoff system feels like. … football fans really wanted — a Can we have more? format that determined a champion. No more split national After decades of foolhardy championships. No attempts to make a more coaches voting “mythical” national in protest. No more champion in college arguments about who football, the country really is the No. 1 team finally received somein the nation (Stop it, thing much more TCU fans, and comworthy — an actual plain to your comwinner. The College missioner about his Football Playoff syshalf-hearted approach tem was long overdue, James toward lobbying for and judging by the Barron your “conference” results, it is going to Commentary champion, whoever it be a winner, as well. really was). We can argue that No, it’s not a perfect the four best teams system. In fact, it’s far from it. were not represented in the An eight-team format — or betsystem — Yes, TCU fans, we ter yet, a 16-team playoff that hear you whining — but what can’t be argued is the legitimacy includes every single conference champion and a few at-larges of Ohio State’s championship. — would further legitimize the The lowest seeded team in playoff process and prevent the the format beat the No. 1 and belly-aching from the teams left 2 teams to win its champion-

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

out from being too convincing. The good news is that we’ll get there … Eventually. All the arguments against a playoff system — done mainly to preserve the bowl system in place — fell on deaf ears as the Oregon-Ohio State game on Monday was the most-watched program in ESPN’s 36-year history. In fact, the playoff system did not negatively impact the bowl system much — although attendance was down, ratings were up overall for the obscenely large 39 bowl games. In fact, anyone who argued against the playoff system should be banished from watching college football for the rest of their natural-born lives (and maybe for a while in their spiritual state, as well). They should be punished for deliberately trying to conceal the truth: That a playoff system would be so much more profit-

able than a bowl system. In the next 20 years, we will — not might — see the system grow into an unseemly beast that just might make the NCAA Tournament look like an ill-conceived regular-season prep basketball tournament (of which there are too many to mention). It will get bigger and bigger until it becomes bloated with 5-7 teams that will make it a mockery of its former self. It might even grow enough to cause civilization as we know it to crumble and hurtle us back 400 years into our past. In which case, our future forefathers will correct the sins of their forefathers and forego that silly baseball game. They’ll start with football as our national “past time” and see what happens. It’s an open door that can’t be shut again. We might as well enjoy the ride.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

BASKETBALL Suns 107, Cavaliers 100

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

W 25 16 13 7 5 W 30 26 17 15 14 W 26 20 19 15 14

L 12 22 23 30 35 L 8 12 21 24 27 L 13 19 20 25 24

Pct .676 .421 .361 .189 .125 Pct .789 .684 .447 .385 .341 Pct .667 .513 .487 .375 .368

GB — 9½ 11½ 18 21½ GB — 4 13 15½ 17½ GB — 6 7 11½ 11½

Western Conference Southwest W L Pct GB Houston 27 11 .711 — Memphis 26 11 .703 ½ Dallas 27 12 .692 ½ San Antonio 23 16 .590 4½ New Orleans 18 19 .486 8½ Northwest W L Pct GB Portland 30 8 .789 — Oklahoma City 18 19 .486 11½ Denver 17 20 .459 12½ Utah 13 26 .333 17½ Minnesota 6 31 .162 23½ Pacific W L Pct GB Golden State 30 5 .857 — L.A. Clippers 25 13 .658 6½ Phoenix 23 18 .561 10 Sacramento 16 22 .421 15½ L.A. Lakers 12 27 .308 20 Tuesday’s Games Atlanta 105, Philadelphia 87 Washington 101, San Antonio 93 Minnesota 110, Indiana 101 Phoenix 107, Cleveland 100 Golden State 116, Utah 105 Dallas 108, Sacramento 104, OT Miami 78, L.A. Lakers 75 Wednesday’s Games Houston at Orlando, 5 p.m. San Antonio at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. New Orleans at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Memphis at Brooklyn, 5:30 p.m. Washington at Chicago, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Boston, 6 p.m. Dallas at Denver, 7 p.m. Miami at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Portland, 8:30 p.m.

NBA Calendar Feb. 13-15 — All-Star weekend, New York. Feb. 19 — Trade deadline (1 p.m.) April 15 — Last day of regular season. April 18 — Playoffs begin.

Tuesday Hawks 105, 76ers 87 ATLANTA (105) Sefolosha 2-5 0-1 4, Horford 8-10 5-6 21, Muscala 3-10 0-0 6, Schroder 5-10 1-2 13, Korver 5-8 1-2 15, Scott 3-7 1-2 8, Brand 3-9 0-1 6, Bazemore 7-14 0-0 17, Mack 5-12 0-0 12, Payne 1-2 1-2 3. Totals 42-87 9-16 105. PHILADELPHIA (87) Covington 2-13 3-3 7, Mbah a Moute 1-5 4-6 7, Noel 1-4 0-2 2, Carter-Williams 8-13 3-3 20, McDaniels 5-9 2-2 14, Sims 0-3 0-0 0, Wroten 4-12 1-4 10, Grant 5-7 1-1 13, Thompson 3-4 0-0 7, Sampson 2-4 0-2 5, Aldemir 0-1 2-2 2, Thomas 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-76 16-25 87. Atlanta 25 24 25 31 —105 —87 Philadelphia 20 17 18 32 3-Point Goals—Atlanta 12-23 (Korver 4-7, Bazemore 3-6, Schroder 2-3, Mack 2-4, Scott 1-2, Sefolosha 0-1), Philadelphia 9-25 (McDaniels 2-3, Grant 2-3, Thompson 1-1, Sampson 1-2, Carter-Williams 1-2, Mbah a Moute 1-3, Wroten 1-4, Covington 0-7). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Atlanta 60 (Horford 10), Philadelphia 46 (Carter-Williams 9). Assists—Atlanta 34 (Mack, Horford 10), Philadelphia 20 (McDaniels, Carter-Williams, Wroten 4). Total Fouls—Atlanta 17, Philadelphia 22. A—10,466 (20,318).

CLEVELAND (100) James 11-18 8-13 33, Love 3-11 2-2 9, Mozgov 0-3 2-2 2, Irving 4-14 0-0 9, Smith 10-19 1-1 29, Marion 2-7 2-2 6, Thompson 5-5 0-0 10, Dellavedova 0-1 0-0 0, Miller 0-1 0-0 0, Jones 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 36-82 15-20 100. PHOENIX (107) Tucker 2-6 4-4 10, Mark.Morris 15-21 3-4 35, Len 5-8 3-4 13, G.Dragic 8-15 1-2 18, Bledsoe 3-8 5-6 12, Thomas 1-5 3-3 5, Marc.Morris 4-9 0-0 9, Green 0-2 0-0 0, Wright 2-2 1-2 5, Plumlee 0-0 0-2 0. Totals 40-76 20-27 107. Cleveland 24 27 28 21—100 Phoenix 31 28 26 22—107 3-Point Goals—Cleveland 13-35 (Smith 8-14, James 3-8, Irving 1-4, Love 1-5, Marion 0-1, Miller 0-1, Jones 0-2), Phoenix 7-20 (Mark.Morris 2-3, Tucker 2-5, Marc.Morris 1-3, Bledsoe 1-3, G.Dragic 1-4, Green 0-1, Thomas 0-1). Fouled Out—Smith. Rebounds—Cleveland 50 (Marion 11), Phoenix 44 (Len 10). Assists—Cleveland 16 (Irving 6), Phoenix 23 (Bledsoe 6). Total Fouls— Cleveland 21, Phoenix 20. A—16,819.

Wizards 101, Spurs 93 SAN ANTONIO (93) Daye 2-6 0-0 5, Duncan 5-14 1-2 11, Splitter 4-6 2-4 10, Parker 7-18 0-0 14, Green 4-16 0-0 10, Joseph 2-5 2-2 6, Ginobili 2-8 2-2 8, Diaw 4-8 0-1 8, Mills 4-8 0-0 12, Ayres 4-5 1-1 9, Bonner 0-2 0-0 0, Anderson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-96 8-12 93. WASHINGTON (101) Pierce 4-8 2-2 13, Nene 2-9 3-3 7, Gortat 3-6 1-2 7, Wall 9-15 5-6 25, Beal 4-10 5-6 13, Butler 3-7 0-0 7, Humphries 5-10 0-0 10, Webster 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin 6-8 5-5 17, Miller 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 37-75 21-24 101. San Antonio 24 24 24 21—93 Washington 31 20 24 26—101 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 9-29 (Mills 4-6, Ginobili 2-6, Green 2-10, Daye 1-3, Bonner 0-1, Diaw 0-1, Parker 0-2), Washington 6-12 (Pierce 3-4, Wall 2-3, Butler 1-4, Beal 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 49 (Duncan 12), Washington 54 (Gortat 11). Assists—San Antonio 26 (Joseph, Ginobili 5), Washington 20 (Wall 8). Total Fouls—San Antonio 17, Washington 14. A—18,116 (20,308).

Timberwolves 110, Pacers 101 MINNESOTA (110) Budinger 1-6 0-0 3, Young 5-13 0-0 11, Dieng 3-7 4-4 10, Williams 19-33 8-9 52, Wiggins 7-16 6-6 20, Bennett 1-2 0-0 2, Hummel 3-6 0-0 7, LaVine 0-0 0-0 0, Daniels 2-4 0-0 5. Totals 41-87 18-19 110. INDIANA (101) S.Hill 1-4 0-0 2, West 5-8 2-2 12, Hibbert 4-12 2-2 10, Watson 7-9 2-2 17, Miles 8-18 4-4 22, Scola 3-6 5-10 11, Stuckey 5-8 3-3 13, Rudez 3-6 0-0 8, Allen 1-6 0-4 2, Sloan 2-3 0-2 4, Mahinmi 0-0 0-1 0, Copeland 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-80 18-30 101. Minnesota 25 21 23 41—110 Indiana 21 31 23 26—101 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 10-20 (Williams 6-11, Young 1-1, Daniels 1-2, Hummel 1-3, Budinger 1-3), Indiana 5-18 (Rudez 2-4, Miles 2-10, Watson 1-1, Sloan 0-1, Stuckey 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 43 (Dieng 10), Indiana 57 (Hibbert 8). Assists—Minnesota 22 (Williams 7), Indiana 22 (Watson, Sloan 5). Total Fouls—Minnesota 23, Indiana 19. Technicals—Mahinmi, Indiana Coach Vogel, West. Flagrant Fouls—Hibbert. Ejected— Hibbert, West. A—16,781 (18,165).

Warriors 116, Jazz 105 GOLDEN STATE (116) Barnes 5-8 0-0 12, Green 6-9 0-0 15, Bogut 4-5 1-1 9, Curry 10-16 3-3 27, Thompson 5-8 0-0 12, Speights 4-10 1-2 10, Iguodala 2-4 0-0 4, Lee 4-8 2-2 10, Barbosa 3-13 2-3 8, Holiday 3-10 2-2 9. Totals 46-91 11-13 116.

UTAH (105) Hayward 5-11 6-6 17, Favors 10-16 2-3 22, Kanter 6-13 0-0 13, Burke 7-14 0-0 15, Ingles 4-7 2-2 12, Millsap 2-5 2-2 7, Gobert 4-9 8-11 16, Exum 0-3 0-0 0, Clark 1-2 0-0 3, Williams 0-0 0-0 0, Evans 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 39-81 20-24 105. Golden State 25 28 44 19—116 Utah 26 27 27 25—105 3-Point Goals—Golden State 13-25 (Curry 4-9, Green 3-4, Thompson 2-2, Barnes 2-4, Speights 1-1, Holiday 1-3, Barbosa 0-2), Utah 7-21 (Ingles 2-5, Clark 1-1, Kanter 1-1, Millsap 1-2, Hayward 1-4, Burke 1-5, Exum 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Golden State 40 (Lee, Bogut 8), Utah 53 (Gobert, Favors 11). Assists—Golden State 32 (Curry 11), Utah 14 (Burke 5). Total Fouls—Golden State 16, Utah 18. A—19,911 (19,911).

Mavericks 108, Kings 104, OT DALLAS (108) Parsons 6-16 0-0 13, Nowitzki 5-13 4-4 15, Chandler 6-8 4-6 16, Rondo 10-16 0-3 21, Ellis 11-23 4-5 28, Harris 3-9 2-2 9, Jefferson 0-4 0-0 0, Smith 1-2 1-2 3, Villanueva 0-2 0-0 0, Barea 1-6 1-1 3, Aminu 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 43-100 16-23 108. SACRAMENTO (104) Gay 1-1 2-2 4, Thompson 2-3 2-4 6, Cousins 11-21 10-10 32, Collison 6-20 6-8 18, McLemore 2-8 4-4 8, Williams 5-12 2-4 12, Stauskas 1-3 1-2 4, Landry 7-10 0-0 14, McCallum 3-8 0-0 6. Totals 38-86 27-34 104. Dallas 29 31 20 19 9—108 Sacramento 33 30 20 16 5—104 3-Point Goals—Dallas 6-24 (Ellis 2-3, Rondo 1-2, Nowitzki 1-3, Parsons 1-5, Harris 1-6, Barea 0-1, Jefferson 0-2, Villanueva 0-2), Sacramento 1-18 (Stauskas 1-3, Williams 0-2, McCallum 0-2, McLemore 0-5, Collison 0-6). Fouled Out—Cousins. Rebounds— Dallas 51 (Chandler 17), Sacramento 68 (Cousins 16). Assists—Dallas 23 (Ellis 10), Sacramento 22 (Cousins 9). Total Fouls—Dallas 25, Sacramento 26. A—15,747 (17,317).

Heat 78, Lakers 75 MIAMI (78) Deng 4-13 0-0 8, Andersen 5-6 2-2 12, Bosh 4-17 0-0 8, Chalmers 7-16 5-7 19, Wade 2-5 0-0 4, Whiteside 7-9 1-2 15, Cole 3-6 0-2 7, Ennis 0-1 0-0 0, Granger 0-3 2-2 2, Williams 1-1 0-0 3, Napier 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-78 10-15 78. L.A. LAKERS (75) W.Johnson 3-13 0-0 6, Davis 6-7 0-0 12, Hill 5-12 2-4 12, Price 0-4 0-0 0, Bryant 3-19 4-4 12, Boozer 1-8 0-0 2, Black 3-8 3-6 9, Young 2-11 3-3 8, Lin 3-7 1-1 7, Kelly 3-3 0-0 7. Totals 29-92 13-18 75. Miami 22 22 17 17—78 L.A. Lakers 12 22 19 22—75 3-Point Goals—Miami 2-16 (Williams 1-1, Cole 1-3, Ennis 0-1, Napier 0-1, Granger 0-1, Deng 0-2, Chalmers 0-3, Bosh 0-4), L.A. Lakers 4-23 (Bryant 2-9, Kelly 1-1, Young 1-4, Lin 0-2, Price 0-2, W.Johnson 0-5). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Miami 60 (Whiteside 9), L.A. Lakers 58 (Black 9). Assists—Miami 23 (Chalmers 8), L.A. Lakers 20 (Bryant 7). Total Fouls— Miami 16, L.A. Lakers 14. Technicals— Whiteside. A—18,997 (18,997).

NCAA BASKETBALL Men’s Top 25 Tuesday’s Games No. 1 Kentucky 86, Missouri 37 No. 2 Virginia 65, Clemson 42 Miami 90, No. 4 Duke 74 No. 6 Louisville 78, Virginia Tech 63 No. 9 Kansas 67, No. 24 Oklahoma St. 57 No. 16 West Virginia 86, No. 18 Oklahoma 65 No. 17 VCU 65, Rhode Island 60 Tennessee 74, No. 19 Arkansas 69 Butler 79, No. 21 Seton Hall 75, OT No. 23 Northern Iowa 63, Bradley 52

FOOTBALL Wednesday’s Games No. 5 Villanova vs. Xavier, 7 p.m. No. 11 Iowa State at No. 22 Baylor, 7 p.m. No. 12 Notre Dame at Georgia Tech, 5 p.m. No. 13 Wichita State vs. Southern Illinois, 6 p.m. No. 14 Maryland vs. Rutgers, 5 p.m. No. 15 N. Carolina at N.C. State, 5 p.m. No. 25 Wyoming vs. San Diego St., 9 p.m.

Men’s Division I Tuesday’s Games East Butler 79, Seton Hall 75, OT Iona 74, Fairfield 58 Mass.-Lowell 62, Maine 59 Penn 67, Niagara 56 Syracuse 86, Wake Forest 83, OT VCU 65, Rhode Island 60 West Virginia 86, Oklahoma 65 Midwest Georgetown 78, DePaul 72 Indiana 76, Penn St. 73 Iowa 77, Minnesota 75 Kansas 67, Oklahoma St. 57 N. Iowa 63, Bradley 52 Ohio St. 71, Michigan 52 South Abilene Christian 95, Northwestern St. 81 Kentucky 86, Missouri 37 Lipscomb 60, SC-Upstate 58 Louisville 78, Virginia Tech 63 Miami 90, Duke 74 Nicholls St. 61, Houston Baptist 57 South Carolina 68, Alabama 66 Tennessee 74, Arkansas 69 Virginia 65, Clemson 42 Southwest Stephen F. Austin 109, Cent. Arkansas 58 Texas A&M 74, Mississippi St. 70 Tulsa 66, UConn 5 Far West Montana 86, Montana Tech 44 Santa Clara 77, Saint Katherine 63

Women’s AP Top 25 Tuesday’s Games No. 3 Baylor 79, Iowa State 47 Wednesday’s Games No. 2 UConn vs. Temple, 5 p.m. No. 4 Louisville vs. N.C. State, 5 p.m. No. 5 Texas at Oklahoma, 6 p.m. No. 21 Oklahoma State vs. Kansas State, 6 p.m. No. 22 Iowa vs. Northwestern, 6 p.m.

Women’s Division I Tuesday’s Games East W. Michigan 62, Buffalo 59 Yale 53, St. Peter’s 45 South Campbell 75, Gardner-Webb 74 Coastal Carolina 71, Charleston Southern 62 High Point 67, UNC Asheville 50 Liberty 70, Longwood 48 Radford 55, Winthrop 47 Tulane 71, UCF 70 Southwest Baylor 79, Iowa St. 47 Lamar 82, Cent. Arkansas 46

Mountain West Conference Conference W L Pct. Wyoming 4 0 1.000 New Mexico 3 1 .750 Fresno St. 3 1 .750 San Diego St. 2 1 .667 Nevada 2 1 .667 Colorado St. 2 2 .500 Utah St. 2 2 .500 UNLV 1 2 .333 Air Force 1 3 .250 Boise St. 0 3 .000 San Jose St. 0 4 .000

AllGames W L Pct. 15 2 .882 11 5 .688 8 9 .471 12 4 .750 6 9 .400 15 2 .882 9 7 .563 10 6 .625 8 7 .533 10 6 .625 2 14 .125

Western Athletic Conference Conference W L Pct. Grand Canyon1 0 1.000 New Mexico St. 1 0 1.000 Texas-Pan Am. 1 0 1.000 Utah Valley 1 0 1.000 Seattle 0 1 .000 UMKC 0 1 .000 CS Bakersfield 0 1 .000 Chicago St. 0 1 .000

AllGames W L Pct. 10 8 .556 9 9 .500 7 10 .412 6 9 .400 7 8 .467 5 13 .278 4 12 .250 4 14 .222

NFL PLAYOFFS Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 18 Green Bay at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. (FOX) Indianapolis at New England, 4:40 p.m. (CBS)

Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 25 - At Glendale, Ariz. Team Irvin vs. Team Carter, 6 p.m. (ESPN)

Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 1 - At Glendale, Ariz. AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 4:30 p.m. (NBC)

Divisional Playoffs New England 35, Baltimore 31 Seattle 31, Carolina 17 Green Bay 26, Dallas 21 Indianapolis 24, Denver 13

Wild-card Playoffs Carolina 27, Arizona 16 Baltimore 30, Pittsburgh 17 Indianapolis 26, Cincinnati 10 Dallas 24, Detroit 20

NCAA FOOTBALL FBS Bowls Saturday, Jan. 17 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. East vs. West, 2 p.m. (NFLN) NFLPA Collegiate Bowl - At Calif. National vs. American, 2 p.m. (ESPN2) Saturday, Jan. 24 Senior Bowl - At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South, 2 p.m. (NFLN)

Previous Results Monday, Jan. 12 College Football Championship Ohio State 42, Oregon 20 Saturday, Jan. 10 Medal of Honor Bowl National 26, American 14 Sunday, Jan. 4 GoDaddy Bowl - At Mobile, Ala. Toledo 63, Arkansas State 44 Saturday, Jan. 3 Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl Florida 28, East Carolina 20 Friday, Jan. 2 Armed Forces Bowl - At Texas Houston 35, Pittsburgh 34 TaxSlayer Bowl - At Jacksonville, Fla. Tennessee 45, Iowa 28 Alamo Bowl - At San Antonio UCLA 40, Kansas State 35 Cactus Bowl - At Tempe, Ariz. Oklahoma State 30, Washington 22 Thursday, Jan. 1 Outback Bowl - At Tampa, Fla. Wisconsin 34, Auburn 31, OT Cotton Bowl Classic - At Texas Michigan State 42, Baylor 41 Citrus Bowl - At Orlando, Fla. Missouri 33, Minnesota 17 Rose Bowl - At Pasadena, Calif. Playoff semifinal: Oregon 59, Florida State 20 Sugar Bowl - At New Orleans Playoff semifinal: Ohio State 42, Alabama 35 Wednesday, Dec. 31 Peach Bowl - At Atlanta TCU 42, Mississippi 3 Fiesta Bowl - At Glendale, Ariz. Boise State 38, Arizona 30 Orange Bowl - At Miami Gardens, Fla. Georgia Tech 49, Mississippi State 34 Tuesday, Dec. 30 Music City Bowl - At Nashville, Tenn. Notre Dame 31, LSU 28 Belk Bowl - At Charlotte, N.C. Georgia 37, Louisville 14 Fosters Farm Bowl - At Calif. Stanford 45, Maryland 21 Monday, Dec. 29 Liberty Bowl - At Memphis, Tenn. Texas A&M 45, West Virginia 37 Russell Athletic Bowl - At Orlando, Fla. Clemson 40, Oklahoma 6 Texas Bowl - At Houston Arkansas 31, Texas 7 Saturday, Dec. 27 Military Bowl - At Annapolis, Md. Virginia Tech 33, Cincinnati 17

Sun Bowl - At El Paso, Texas Arizona State 36, Duke 31 Independence Bowl - At Shreveport, La. South Carolina 24, Miami 21 Pinstripe Bowl - At Bronx, N.Y. Penn State 31, Boston College 30, OT Holiday Bowl - At San Diego Southern Cal 45, Nebraska 42 Friday, Dec. 26 Heart of Dallas Bowl Louisiana Tech 35, Illinois 18 Quick Lane Bowl - At Detroit Rutgers 40, North Carolina 21 St. Petersburg (Fla.) Bowl N.C. State 34, UCF 27 Wednesday, Dec. 24 Bahamas Bowl - At Nassau Western Kentucky 49, Central Michigan 48 Hawaii Bowl - At Honolulu Rice 30, Fresno State 6 Tuesday, Dec. 23 Boca Raton (Fla.) Bowl Marshall 52, Northern Illinois 23 Poinsettia Bowl - At San Diego Navy 17, San Diego State 16 Monday, Dec. 22 Miami Beach Bowl Memphis 55, BYU 48, 2OT Saturday, Dec. 20 New Orleans Bowl Louisiana-Lafayette 16, Nevada 3 New Mexico Bowl - At Albuquerque Utah State 21, UTEP 6 Las Vegas Bowl Utah 45, Colorado State 10 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl - At Boise Air Force 38, Western Michigan 24 Camelia Bowl - At Montgomery, Ala. Bowling Green 33, South Alabama 28

HOCKEY NHL Eastern Conference GP N.Y. Islndrs 43 Tampa Bay 45 Pittsburgh 42 Montreal 41 Detroit 43 Washington 42 N.Y. Rangers 40 Boston 44 Florida 41 Toronto 43 Ottawa 42 Philadelphia 43 Columbus 40 New Jersey 44 Carolina 43 Buffalo 44

W 29 27 26 26 23 23 24 23 20 22 17 17 18 15 14 14

L OL Pts GFGA 13 1 59 134 116 14 4 58 146 122 10 6 58 129 100 12 3 55 111 95 11 9 55 120 107 11 8 54 125 106 12 4 52 124 98 15 6 52 117 114 12 9 49 102 113 18 3 47 137 132 17 8 42 114 118 19 7 41 119 129 19 3 39 104 131 21 8 38 96 124 24 5 33 91 114 27 3 31 82 150

Western Conference GP W L OL Pts GFGA Nashville 42 29 9 4 62 130 94 Anaheim 43 27 10 6 60 121 118 Chicago 43 28 13 2 58 134 95 San Jose 44 23 16 5 51 119 120 St. Louis 43 27 13 3 57 140 107 Los Angeles 43 20 13 10 50 121 112 Winnipeg 44 22 14 8 52 121 111 Vancouver 41 23 15 3 49 114 109 Calgary 43 22 18 3 47 123 114 Dallas 42 19 16 7 45 131 139 Colorado 44 18 17 9 45 115 127 Minnesota 42 18 19 5 41 113 128 Arizona 42 16 22 4 36 99 139 Edmonton 44 10 25 9 29 99 149 Tuesday’s Games Carolina 3, Colorado 2, SO Boston 4, Tampa Bay 3 Detroit 3, Buffalo 1 N.Y. Islanders 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 Pittsburgh 7, Minnesota 2 St. Louis 4, Edmonton 2 Nashville 5, Vancouver 1 Winnipeg 8, Florida 2 Dallas 5, Ottawa 4 San Jose 3, Arizona 2 Wednesday’s Games Montreal at Columbus, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 6 p.m. Toronto at Anaheim, 8 p.m. New Jersey at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL

NBA

Miami dominates after halftime to stun No. 4 Duke

Despite returning James’ 33, Cavs lose sixth straight

The Associated Press

DURHAM, N.C. — Angel Rodriguez scored 24 points and Miami shot 67 percent after halftime to Miami 90 upset No. 4 Duke 90-74 4 Duke 74 on Tuesday night, snapping the Blue Devils’ 41-game home winning streak. Manu Lecomte had a careerhigh 23 points for the Hurricanes (12-4, 2-1 Atlantic Coast Conference), who dominated the final 20 minutes with their pesky defense and attacking dribble penetration that the Blue Devils just couldn’t defend. NO. 1 KENTUCKY 86, MISSOURI 37 In Lexington, Ky., Aaron Harrison scored 16 points including five 3-pointers, and Kentucky finally earned a conference victory in regulation by drilling Missouri. After needing overtime to beat Mississippi and Texas A&M by nine total points, the Wildcats (16-0, 3-0 Southeastern Conference) had the overmatched Tigers (7-9, 1-2) under control by halftime with a 44-18 lead. The margin eventually reached 49 in the final minute as Kentucky rolled to its most decisive outcome since last month’s 39-point rout of UCLA. NO. 2 VIRGINIA 65, CLEMSON 42 In Charlottesville, Va., Malcolm Brogdon scored 16 points, and Virginia took command with a 29-6 run to start the second half of a victory against Clemson.

season hitting 48 percent from the field (31 of 65). Rozier hit 4 of 6 from behind the arc. NO. 9 KANSAS 67, NO. 24 OKLAHOMA STATE 57 In Lawrence, Kan., Frank Mason III had 16 points and nine rebounds, Kelly Oubre Jr. added 14 points and Kansas beat Oklahoma State to remain perfect in the Big 12. NO. 16 WEST VIRGINIA 86, NO. 18 OKLAHOMA 65 In Morgantown, W.Va., Jevon Carter scored 18 points and West Virginia got its strongest performance of the season from its bench to beat Oklahoma. Duke’s Quinn Cook, center, goes to the basket against Miami’s Ja’Quan Newton during the first half of Tuesday’s game in Durham, N.C. ELLEN OZIER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Justin Anderson added 15 points for the Cavaliers (16-0, 4-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), who won their 20th consecutive game at John Paul Jones Arena. The win, with former Virginia great and three-time national player of the year Ralph Sampson in attendance, gave Virginia it first 4-0 start in conference play since the 1994-95 season. NO. 6 LOUISVILLE 78, VIRGINIA TECH 63 In Louisville, Ky., Chris Jones had a career-high 11 assists and Terry Rozier scored 16 points as Louisville easily brushed off Virginia Tech. Louisville (15-2, 3-1 ACC) tied a season-high with 10 3-pointers and had one of its best shooting performances of the

NO. 17 VCU 65, RHODE ISLAND 60 In Kingston, R.I., Treveon Graham scored 16 of his 26 points in the second half and Virginia Commonwealth rallied for a victory over Rhode Island. TENNESSEE 74, NO. 19 ARKANSAS 69 In Knoxville, Tenn., Josh Richardson scored 20 points, and Tennessee withstood a furious Arkansas comeback to hang on for a victory over the Razorbacks. BUTLER 79, NO. 21 SETON HALL 75 (OT) In Newark, N.J., Roosevelt Jones scored a season-high 23 points, Kellen Dunham added 21 and Butler knocked off Seton Hall. NO. 23 NORTHERN IOWA 63, BRADLEY 52 In Peoria, Ill., Seth Tuttle scored 15 points and sank four late free throws to help Northern Iowa beat Bradley.

The Associated Press

PHOENIX — LeBron James scored 33 points in his return from a two-week layoff but it wasn’t enough to prevent the Cleveland Cavaliers from going down Suns 107 to their sixth straight loss, 107-100 to the Phoenix Suns Cavaliers 100 on Tuesday night. Markieff Morris scored a career-high 35 points on 15-of-21 shooting for the Suns, who outscored the Cavs 11-3 over the last 3:31. The Cavaliers rallied from a 19-point, thirdquarter deficit to go ahead in the fourth, the first of eight lead changes down the stretch. J.R. Smith, who joined the Cavaliers during James’ absence, scored 29, going 8 of 14 on 3-pointers. James, who took time off to rest his sore left foot and lower back, made 11 of 18 shots, 6 of 8 in the second half. TIMBERWOLVES 110, PACERS 101 In Indianapolis, Mo Williams scored a careerhigh 52 points, most in the NBA this season, and Minnesota snapped a 15-game losing streak with a victory over Indiana. Williams made six 3-pointers, including one that gave Minnesota a 102-96 lead. Andrew Wiggins added 20 points and Gorgui Dieng had 10 for the Timberwolves (6-31), who won for the first time since beating Portland 90-82 on Dec. 10. C.J. Miles had 22 points and C.J. Watson added 17 for the Pacers (15-25), who have lost three of four. Williams surpassed the 46 points scored this season by both Carmelo Anthony and Pau Gasol, which had been tops in the NBA. WIZARDS 101, SPURS 93 In Washington, John Wall broke yet another personal 0-for-forever streak, this one against an entire team, scoring 25 points with eight assists in the Wizards’ win that gave him his first taste of success against the reigning NBA champs. Wall had been 0-7 against the Spurs since he was drafted No. 1 overall in 2010, and the Wizards as a whole had not beaten San Antonio since Nov. 12, 2005 — a streak of 17 games.

Tim Duncan had 11 points and 12 rebounds, and Tony Parker scored 14 points for the Spurs. HAWKS 105, 76ERS 87 In Philadelphia, Al Horford had his first career triple-double, scoring 21 points with 10 rebounds and 10 assists to lead Atlanta to its ninth straight win. The Hawks easily thumped the Sixers even while resting 60 percent of their starting lineup. Leading scorer Jeff Teague, Paul Millsap and DeMarre Carroll all sat out with the team in a stretch of four games in five nights. The Hawks have won 23 of 25 and also won their ninth straight road game. They are in first place this late in the season for the first time since they won the East in 1993-94. Michael Carter-Williams scored 20 points for the Sixers. HEAT 78, LAKERS 75 In Los Angeles, Mario Chalmers scored nine of his 19 points in the fourth quarter, Hassan Whiteside added 15 points and Miami completed a Staples Center sweep with a victory over the Lakers. Chris Bosh scored eight points on 4-of-17 shooting for the Heat, who followed up their surprise victory over the Clippers two days ago by winning an ugly game against the Lakers despite losing Dwyane Wade to a strained left hamstring late in the first half. Kobe Bryant scored 12 points on 3-of-19 shooting in his return to the Lakers’ lineup after missing three of the last four games to rest. WARRIORS 116, JAZZ 105 In Salt Lake City, Stephen Curry scored 27 points and ignited a decisive third-quarter run to lead Golden State to a victory over the Jazz. Draymond Green scored 15 points while Harrison Barnes and Klay Thompson added 12 apiece to lift the Warriors (30-5) to their franchise-best seventh consecutive victory by double figures. Derrick Favors had 22 points and 11 rebounds for the Jazz, who could not overcome blistering third-quarter shooting by Golden State. Utah allowed 44 points on 16-of-26 shooting in that period.


SPORTS

Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-3

PREP ROUNDUP

Tierra Encantada beats Desert Academy The New Mexican

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Tierra Encantada needed a change, so Mark Archuleta reached for his diamond. The Alacranes boys basketball coach called for a 1-3-1 press T. Encantada 50 to turn the tables on D. Academy 42 a 31-27 lead for host Desert Academy at the Driscoll Fitness Center on the campus of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design at the end of the third quarter. The scheme helped Tierra Encantada outscore the Wildcats 23-12 in the final quarter for a 50-42 nondistrict win. “I think it helped,” Archuleta said of his diamond-shaped press. “I know we caused enough havoc for turnovers.” After scoring just 20 points in the first half — and just four in the first quarter — the fourth-quarter run showed the young Alacranes (8-6) what they were capable of. “They were intimidated today, but they can do some wonders when they want to,” Archuleta said. “I tell them it’s all about confidence.” Junior Andres Flores scored 27 points and Cesar Ferrer scored 10 for the Alacranes. Guru Dev Khalsa had 13 to lead Desert Academy (5-6).

LOS ALAMOS 49, TAOS 42 The Lady Hilltoppers kept their impressive predistrict record intact with a nondistrict win amongst snowy conditions in Taos. At 13-2, Los Alamos has already matched its win total from last season. “Everybody is coming together as a team,” said first-year head coach Nestor Trujillo. “We’re just playing good team basketball, and good things have been happening for us.” Ashlynn Trujillo and Makaela Jones had 12 points while Ashley Logan added 10 for the Lady Hilltoppers. Taos drops to 8-8 with the loss. TIERRA ENCANTADA 45, DESERT ACADEMY 26 The Lady Alacranes are proving they are ready for permanent varsity status with a strong win over the Lady Wildcats at the Driscoll Fitness Center. Although Tierra Encantada is a provisional varsity program, it has wins over the varsities of Monte del Sol, Academy for Technology and the Classics and Santa Fe Waldorf. “We’re just improving and making small strides,” Tierra Encantada head coach Mike Velarde said. “The girls are just looking for progress.”

Stephanie Gonzales led the Lady Alacranes with 13 points while Briana Duran added 10. Amelia Linett paced Desert Academy (4-6) with nine points. SANTA FE PREP 51, CAPITAL 36 The Blue Griffins snapped a hurtful fourgame losing streak with a nondistrict win over the Lady Jaguars in Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gymnasium. “We needed this win,” Prep head coach Anika Amon said. “I thought this was the best team effort we’ve had. We were in need of a confidence boost.” Desiray Anderson had a double-double with 17 points and 17 rebounds for the Blue Griffins (6-5), who also got 12 points from Bianca Gonzales. Rachel Friend had 11 points to lead Capital (1-16). WEST LAS VEGAS 62, MORA 43 The Lady Dons (10-5) built a 24-15 lead at the half and used an 18-12 scoring advantage in the third quarter to put the nondistrict game away in Gillie Lopez Memorial Gymnasium. It was a balanced scoring attack for West Las Vegas, as every player scored. Deanna Bustos led the way with 14 points, while Celeste Trujillo added 10. Carmeltia Padilla paced the Rangerettes (5-6) with 16 points, while Brianna Pacheco added 14.

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 7 p.m. on ROOT Sports — Air Force at New Mexico GOLF 10:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) Championship, first round, part I 3 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates) Championship, first round, part II MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — North Carolina at NC State 5 p.m. on ESPNU — Houston at East Carolina 5 p.m. on FS1 — St. John’s at Providence 6 p.m. on ESPNEWS — Texas Tech at Kansas St. 7 p.m. on ESPN2 — UCLA at Southern California 7 p.m. on ESPNU — Iowa St. at Baylor 7 p.m. on FS1 — Xavier at Villanova 9 p.m. on ESPN2 — San Diego St. at Wyoming 9 p.m. on ESPNU — Stanford at California NBA 6 p.m. on ESPN — Washington at Chicago 8:30 p.m. on ESPN — L.A. Clippers at Portland NHL 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Philadelphia at Washington

Today on radio

Elks: Pojoaque makes 11 of 28 free throws Continued from Page B-1 just one offensive board after halftime. Pojoaque helped itself to 11 offensive rebounds overall and four in the second half. “They won every battle,” said Ron Geyer, Horsemen head coach. “They won the battle of rebounding. They won the battle of getting to the free-throw line. We forced 19 turnovers, and they shot poorly from the line, and we still can’t win the game.” St. Michael’s posts Cameron Conway and Luke Archuleta combined for 14 points, with eight of them coming in a third quarter that gave the Horsemen a flicker of hope that was extinguished by the sharp shooting of James Garcia. St. Michael’s, after spending the first half hitting three 3-pointers to stay within 15-11 at the half, re-committed itself to pounding the ball inside. Conway scored on a three-point play, and Archuleta had back to back layups that got the Horsemen within 19-18. Trujillo called a quick timeout to settle the Elks down and send a message to his bigs. “I said, ‘You guys are just standing there,

letting them post you up or cut right by you,’ ” Trujillo said. “ ‘You need to fight for the spot and be in help position.’ ” Conway had just one basket the rest of the way, and Pojoaque worked its way inside. Ryan Maestas scored on a leaner off the glass in transition, then Adan Lopez hit a short jumper in front of the basket on an inbounds lob. In came 6-foot-4, 280-pound Julian Lujan, who scored Pojoaque’s next six points, including a driving layup that made it 29-21 with 36 seconds left. After Conway scored on a scoop layup to cut the margin to 29-23 with :07 left, Garcia came up with the telling blow. His corner 3 in transition at the buzzer hit nothing but net and gave the Elks a 32-23 lead. He hit consecutive 3s in the fourth quarter that upped the margin to 41-26. The Elks spent the post-game passing credit around for Garcia’s performance, in which he hit five triples and led the team with 16 points. “He was taking shots, but they were good shots,” Rodriguez said. “He was making them, and we wanted to get him the ball.” “It wasn’t just me,” Garcia replied.

“There were other teammates who had open looks, and it’s good to get them the ball, too, even when somebody is on.” The only area of concern is one Pojoaque has struggled with all season: Free throws. The Elks made just 11 of 28 on the evening, and Maestas hit four in a row at one point for the team’s high point. Missed free throws helped SFIS rally last weekend, and St. Michael’s got to within 44-36 after Bradley Vaughan’s drive with 1:27 left. But the Horsemen missed three of four tries from the line as they battle their own woes at the stripe (4-for-11 against the Elks). Still, Pojoaque is not taking stock in just one win, no matter how big it is. Garcia pointed out that the Elks’ game against Bosque School, which is a fellow District 5AAA member with St. Michael’s, is just as important at this point in the season. “We’ll enjoy the win, but we got to focus on Bosque on Thursday,” Garcia said. With the District 2AAA season looming for the Elks, every win carries more weight than the last one.

UNM MEN’S BASKETBALL 7 p.m. on KVSF-AM 1400, KKOB-AM 770 — Air Force at New Mexico

PREP SCHEDULE This week’s high school varsity sports schedule. For additions or changes, contact us at sports@sfnewmexican.com:

Today Boys basketball — Desert Academy at Tse Yi Gai, 5:30 p.m. Girls basketball — Desert Academy at Tse Yi Gai, 4 p.m. Wrestling — Rio Rancho Cleveland at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m.

Thursday Boys basketball — Tierra Encantada at Academy for Technology and the Classics, 4 p.m. Antonito (Colo.) at Questa, 7 p.m. Escalante at Dulce, 7 p.m. Capital at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Abq. Bosque at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Horsemen Shootout (at St. Michael’s, round robin format) Portales vs. Silver, 5:30 p.m. St. Michael’s vs. Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, first round) West Las Vegas vs. Rehoboth, 1:30 p.m. Taos vs. Socorro, 4:30 p.m. Girls basketball — Antonito (Colo.) at Questa, 5:30 p.m. St. Michael’s at Capital, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Santa Fe Indian School, 7 p.m. Abq. Academy at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Bernalillo at Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, first round) Taos vs. Shiprock, noon West Las Vegas vs. Hot Springs, 3 p.m.

Friday

Lobos: Neal hopes for more from seniors Continued from Page B-1 represent will draw all the attention. At stake is a shot for UNM to remain in no worse than a tie for second place more than one-fourth of the way through the Mountain West regular season. At the other end, Neal is hoping for more of the same from his two seniors. In the Lobos’ most recent game at Utah State last weekend, guards Hugh Greenwood and Deshawn Delaney both broke out of mini slumps with 22 points and 15 points, respectively. Greenwood’s secret is nothing more than letting the game come to him. The more he presses, the worse it gets. He tends to force shots and not wait for the right moment to generate points. “Well, I don’t think a lot of coaching goes into it when you’ve got a green light,” Neal said, saying his point guard’s patience pays the kind of dividends his aggressiveness doesn’t. “Let me see how I can put this: He’s much more capable of making the shots he’s taking now than the ones before.” The opposite is true of Delaney. Neal

has ridden his senior out of Chicago hard about getting off to fast starts and creating things on his own. To that end, he doesn’t want Delaney settling for 3-pointers when his athleticism makes him one of the conference’s most efficient guards driving the ball. “Guys gotta figure out playing college basketball there’s a reason why you’re open from 3-point range and there’s a reason why you’re not open,” Neal said. “When you start playing your strengths you’re going to be successful.” Prior to Monday’s practice in the Davaolos Center, Neal had some tough talk for the players on his team who haven’t had the best of attitudes lately. He said the appropriate response is cutting back on playing time. He said the fix comes in preparation time between games. “Our new guys need work, and how much work can you do with these games coming so fast?” he said. “We’ll try to get those guys that don’t play as much — the new guys — some reps and get them some work in. It’s just you’re in a fine line of how much work you do with the other team.” As for the team’s big men, he said the

recent road swing that saw the Lobos split games at San Diego State and Utah State gave him renewed confidence in center Obij Aget and J.J. N’Ganga. Aget was 4-for-7 from the floor and 7 of 9 from the free throw line in the two games while N’Ganga was 5-for-8 shooting and 3 of 4 from the stripe. “I think those two guys are growing up before our eyes,” Neal said. NOTES u Neal said most of his players don’t know — or care, for that matter — where the team sits in the standings compared to Air Force now that both teams are four games into the MWC regular season. “They know [Air Force] was within two possessions of beating San Diego State, though,” Neal said. u Nine different Lobos have started at least one game this season. The only exceptions are N’Ganga, junior Jordan Goodman and freshman Joe Furstinger. u Greenwood, Aget and Devon Williams have started all 16 games while Delaney has been in there for 15. u Every player on the team is averaging at least 12 minutes per game this season.

Elway: Manning involved in hiring process Continued from Page B-1 petitive fire. “You want to feel like you go out kicking and screaming when you’re right there,” Elway said. “And I think two years in a row it didn’t feel like we went out kicking and screaming.” Elway said he had no set timeline for hiring Fox’s replacement but added, “Peyton’s going to be involved” in the process. While coaching candidates will be eager to know the quarterback’s plans, Manning will certainly want to know how much things will change under a new coaching staff in 2015. Of equal importance to Manning is figuring out whether his

late-season slide was primarily due to scheme, age or health — he played with a strained thigh on his plant leg for the final month — and also whether he believes Elway can bolster his protection in free agency and the draft. The Broncos made four changes in their offensive line during the season. But pressure, especially up the middle, was a constant concern for Manning, who needs the time and space to step into his throws post-spinal fusion surgery as more of his thrust comes from his hips than his right arm. That was especially important when teams used Seattle’s

Super Bowl template and took away the crossing routes underneath and dared Manning to beat them deep outside the numbers, where his accuracy dipped dramatically. He threw for 39 TDs this season but just three in December, to go with 17 interceptions. After spending $60 million in guarantees to bolster Denver’s defense last year, Elway will have to address his O-line this offseason. “Having been a quarterback, he knows that I’m going to try to take care of him and that offensive line,” Elway said. “We always want to protect the quarterback. I think a change in scenery for those guys might

help them also and we’ll do what we can do this offseason and try to help that also.” That presumably doesn’t bode well for guard Orlando Franklin, one of 17 impending free agents, and several others. Blindside protector Ryan Clady was one of Denver’s nine Pro Bowlers but his play slipped drastically in 2014 and he allowed a sack-strip on Sunday that caused a turnover. Elway brought Fox to Denver in the aftermath of the Josh McDaniels era in 2011, saying he was looking for someone who could create some positive vibes in a locker room that had been beaten down by a losing culture and a videotape scandal.

Boys basketball — Cimarron at Peñasco, 5 p.m. Monte del Sol at Estancia, 5:30 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Des Moines, 6:30 p.m. Los Alamos at Artesia, 7 p.m. Española Valley at Miyamura, 7 p.m. Laguna-Acoma at Pecos, 7 p.m. Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Horsemen Shootout (at St. Michael’s, round robin format) Portales vs. Las Vegas Robertson, 5:30 p.m. St. Michael’s vs. Silver, 7 p.m. Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, second round) West Las Vegas vs. Hot Springs or Zuni, 1:30 or 4:30 p.m. Taos vs. Bloomfield or Hope, 10:30 a.m. or 7:30 p.m. Girls basketball — Monte del Sol at Tierra Encantada, 4 p.m. Cimarron at Peñasco, 4:30 p.m. Abq. Bosque at Desert Academy, 5 p.m. Laguna-Acoma at Pecos, 5 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Des Moines, 5 p.m. Valencia at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Kirtland Central, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, second round) West Las Vegas vs. Hope or Bloomfield, 9 a.m. or 6 p.m. Taos vs. Socorro or Los Lunas, noon or 3 p.m. Wrestling — Santa Fe High, Capital, St. Michael’s, Las Vegas Robertson at Joe Vivian Classic (in Albuquerque), 3 p.m.

Saturday Boys basketball — Tierra Encantada at Abq. Menaul, 1 p.m. Los Alamos at Lovington, 3 p.m. Dulce at Santa Fe Indian School, 3 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Maxwell, 3:30 p.m. Santa Rosa at Peñasco, 5 p.m. Thoreau at Pojoaque, 6 p.m. Grants at Capital, 7 p.m. Pecos at Mora, 7 p.m. Estancia at Santa Fe Preparatory, 7 p.m. Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Horsemen Shootout (at St. Michael’s, round robin format) Silver vs. Las Vegas Robertson, 5:30 p.m. St. Michael’s vs. Portales, 7 p.m. Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, final round) West Las Vegas, Taos vs. TBA Girls basketball — Santa Fe Waldorf at Maxwell, 2 p.m. Pecos at Mora, 5:30 p.m. Grants at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Piedra Vista, 7 p.m. Thoreau at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. Abq. Highland at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Rio Rancho Cleveland at Española Valley, 7 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Coronado at Cuba Invitational, pairings TBA Hope Husky Invitational (in Albuquerque, final round) West Las Vegas, Taos vs. TBA Wrestling — Santa Fe High, Capital, St. Michael’s, Las Vegas Robertson at Joe Vivian Classic (in Albuquerque), 9 a.m. West Las Vegas at Pecos Panther Invitational, 9 a.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 9 a.m. Swimming & diving — Santa Fe High, Capital, St. Michael’s, Los Alamos, Taos at Albuquerque Academy Invitational, 9 a.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com


B-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

TASTE

For more food stories, recipes and restaurant reviews, go to www. santafenewmexican.com/life/taste

In Super Bowl of pizza, this DIY trumps takeout any day By Sara Moulton The Associated Press

Make pizza from scratch for a Super Bowl party? Come on! Why bother when you can snap your fingers and have it delivered to your door? Here’s why: Homemade pizza tastes better than anything you can buy, and it takes much less time and effort than you would think. Making the dough takes just 10 minutes. Then, during the next hour while the yeast is working its magic, you have plenty of time to prepare whichever toppings you and your guests are hankering for — shredded cheeses, sliced meats, vegetables, whatever. The trick is to mix and “knead” the dough in a food processor rather than by hand. It’s quicker and cleaner that way. And as long as you measure the ingredients accurately (going by weight, not volume) and don’t add very hot water, this dough is failure-proof. This recipe makes enough dough for six 9- to 10-inch pizzas. You’re welcome to invite more adventurous guests to roll out and top their own dough. Otherwise, roll out the dough ahead of time and prebake the crusts for them, which speeds up the final cooking time. Pre-baking the crusts also makes them even crispier than usual. For years, I found stretching out pizza dough to be a pretty frustrating process. I’d roll it out in one direction and it would spring right back at me. I’d roll it in another direction and the same darn thing would happen. Then one day a Sicilian pal of mine passed along her mother’s method; she rolled it out on a counter that was lightly oiled, but not dusted with any flour. Eureka! In this scenario, the dough doesn’t roll back; it sticks to the counter. In just a few rolls, you’re looking at a perfectly round, perfectly thin pizza shell. HAVE-IT-YOUR-WAY PERSONAL PIZZAS Total time: 1 ½ hours (30 minutes active); makes 6 servings For the dough: 3 cups (12¾ ounces) all-purpose flour ¼-ounce package (2¼ teaspoons) quick-rising yeast 1 teaspoon sugar 1 teaspoon table salt 1 cup lukewarm water (95 F to 105 F) 1½ tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra 1½ cups marinara sauce 3 cups coarsely grated mozzarella, cheddar, Monterey Jack or other good melting cheese Optional toppings: Your favorite vegetables and meats Preparation: To prepare the dough, in the bowl of a food processor fitted with the metal blade, combine the flour, yeast, sugar and salt. Pulse once or twice. Add the water and oil, then process until a dough forms. It should be soft and slightly sticky. If it is too sticky, add flour, 1 tablespoon at a time. If it is too stiff, add water 1 tablespoon at a time. Lightly oil a large bowl. Shape the dough into a ball and place in the oiled bowl, turning the dough to coat evenly with oil. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place until double in bulk, about 1 hour. Once the dough has risen, heat the oven to 500 degrees. Arrange a rack on the oven’s lowest shelf. Line multiple baking sheets with kitchen parchment. You may need to work in batches. Divide the dough into 6 equal pieces. On a lightly oiled surface, one at a time roll out each piece of dough into a 9-inch circle. Transfer each piece of dough to a parchment-lined baking sheet. If working in batches, transfer, assemble and bake as many pizzas as you can, then repeat the process reusing the baking sheets. Top each pizza with about ¼ cup of marinara, spreading it evenly to within ½ inch of the edge of the dough. Sprinkle with ½ cup of the cheese. Finish with ¾ cup of optional toppings. Bake the pizzas on the oven’s lowest rack until the bottom is golden and the cheese is melted, about 7 minutes. For a crispier crust, roll out each piece of dough into a 9- to 10-inch circle, transfer it to a baking sheet and smooth it out. Bake it for 3 minutes. Remove the crust from the oven, add the toppings, then bake until the cheese is melted, about another 5 minutes.

Homemade pizza tastes better than anything you can buy and it takes much less time and effort than you would think. MATTHEW MEAD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Side Dish What’s on tap in and around Santa Fe

HIGHLIGHT THE SOUPER BOWL Witness the battle of chef against chef as they sling gourmet soup for a ravenous throng, all to benefit The Food Depot; $30 in advance, $35 at the door, $10 for children 6 to 10 years old, free for children under 6. When: Noon to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 17 Where: Santa Fe Community Convention Center More information: www.thefooddepot.org/ SouperBowl

Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010 News tips: 986-3035

ABOVE: Soup is served at last year’s Souper Bowl, which drew 1,500 people to sample Santa Fe’s best soups. COURTESY PHOTOS LEFT: Soup samples are served in 2-ounce cups.

By Tantri Wija For The New Mexican

T

his is the season of competitive sports — college football bowl games proliferate, the Super Bowl looms, and March Madness is on the horizon. But here in Santa Fe, where professional sports only happen on television, once a year the city’s restaurants get together to pit the palates and prowess of their chefs against each other in a battle of soups, the aptly named Souper Bowl. Twenty-nine local restaurants will participate in the annual event, now in its 21st year, slinging soup across the convention center into small cups for the cheers and judgments of the maddening (and ravenous) crowd, which last year topped out at roughly 1,500 people — all for charity. The soups fall into one of four categories: vegetarian, savory, cream and seafood. Chefs are assigned a soup category weeks beforehand, and the results generally represent a wide variety of flavor profiles. Chefs ladle soups out into 2-ounce cups, which, if you have all 29 soups, approximates two very large bowls of a soup that tastes different with every spoonful. Last year’s winner was Terra Restaurant, helmed by head chef Andrew Cooper. Terra, located out at the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado, is a bastion of fine dining, with a rotating seasonal menu featuring a Southwestern bent. Terra won with a recipe that chef Cooper freely admits was invented on the fly, a winter squash soup created by layering in flavors until his palate was satisfied. It began with a trip to the farmers market, where Cooper (and, apparently, many other chefs) saw the bevy of winter squashes available and got ideas. He combined several different squashes — winter squash, butternut squash and spaghetti squash — and combined them into a smooth purée. Then he started tasting. “As soon as I made the soup, I thought, it’s great but it needs something,” Cooper says. Cooper and his staff tried sage, both raw and crisped, and preferred the toasty taste of the singed spice. They then added some chorizo for savoriness, but it became too savory, so they finished it off with, as he puts it, “a quenelle of the maple whipped cream, so it was almost like a cappuccino.” They topped it off with diced and sautéed chorizo and the frizzled sage. In keeping with the title of the event, the Souper Bowl is football-themed, with voting tracked on a massive board covered in little footballs that move toward touchdowns as the votes pour in. Voting is tallied continuously throughout the event as tasters move from booth to booth, sipping each 2-ounce cup in turn and noting their favorites. The atmosphere is raucous and fun, as at least a 1,000 soup-sippers talk about the contents of their cups with everyone else. Each category has a winner, the progress of which the crowd can watch as it evolves, and there is an overall winner announced at the very end of the event. Cooper’s butternut squash soup took home the laurels for best savory soup and best overall soup. The chefs themselves barely got a

EVENTS BRAISING 101 AT THE SANTA FE CULINARY ACADEMY Let Chef Rocky Durham teach you to turn your less-than-prime rib into comfort food gold with this classic technique. $75 When: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14 Where: Santa Fe Culinary Academy, 112 W. San Francisco St., No. 300 More information: www.santafeculinaryacademy. com ‘EATING OUR WORDS’ — THE LANGUAGE OF FOOD LECTURE — AT THE SANTA FE INSTITUTE Explore how the words our mouths use to talk about food influence how we eat, and the other way around, with MacArthur fellow and Stanford

Souper secrets

Defending champ Terra sheds light on what it takes to win the Souper Bowl

Chef Andrew Cooper and Terra Restaurant won last year with a recipe that Cooper invented on the fly. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

ROASTED BUTTERNUT SQUASH SOUP WITH CHORIZO Terra’s 2014 winning recipe 2 tbsp Olive Oil 4 large Butternut Squash (or a variety; Cooper originally used three different ones) 1 Chorizo stick, medium dice 2 yellow onions, medium dice 2 carrots, medium dice 2 celery stalks, medium dice 2 cups white wine 1 tbsp finely chopped thyme 1 tbsp chopped parsley 1 bay leaf, small 1 gallon chicken stock 2 cups heavy cream Salt and pepper to taste Preparation: Cut butternut squash in half, remove the seeds, and roast in oven at 350 degrees for 25 minutes. Cool and remove skin. In a stock pot, render the chorizo for 10 minutes in oil. Sweat the onions, carrots and celery for 10 to 15 minutes over medium heat. Add the cooked butternut squash. Deglaze with white wine. Add the chopped herbs and bay leaf. Add the stock and salt and pepper to taste. Simmer for approximately 15 minutes or until all the vegetables have softened. Add heavy cream and simmer for 5 minutes. Allow to cool slightly, then purée in a blender until smooth and pass through a China cap. Season with salt to taste and garnish with sliced chorizo.

chance to look around, so last year, even as Terra was climbing the leaderboards, Cooper had only a hazy idea he was ladling his way into the soup hall of fame. “We were so busy … we kept hearing Terra Restaurant, but we didn’t know what that was about,” explains

professor Daniel Jurafsky. Free When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14 Where: James A. Little Theater, 1060 Cerrillos Road More information: www.santafe.edu/gevent/ detail/public/1974/ SAY CHEESE, PLEASE! AT THE SANTA FE SCHOOL OF COOKING Guest chef/author/cheese mistress Laura Werlin will teach participants to make mac and cheese and grilled cheese sandwiches, and then serve mac and cheese and grilled cheese sandwiches. And they say Christmas comes just once a year. $85 When: 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 16 Where: Santa Fe School of Cooking, 125 N. Guadalupe St.

Cooper. “People came up to the booth and told us we were pushing ahead. We didn’t really have time to look up, but kept hearing our name over the loudspeaker … we could tell something was up. We knew we were getting ahead because the line was getting longer and longer for our soup. As we got to the touchdown, we knew we were making a breakaway from everyone else, so we had to work faster. … We were having the best time, we were just laughing and joking,” Cooper says. “It’s a competition, but it’s a fun competition.” And, predictably, once the soup won at the bowl, Cooper began to get requests for it at the restaurant, though it wasn’t on the menu. “I remember people asking to take quarts of the soup home,” Cooper says, “and when I got back to the restaurant, the phone was ringing off the hook asking if we were serving it.” Terra did add the soup to their menu, where it was a popular item until it was switched out for a more seasonal recipe in the spring. This year’s Souper Bowl has migrated to Jan. 17. The event at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center runs from noon to 2:30 p.m., with all voting complete by 2 p.m. (so get there early). While previous Souper Bowls took place the Saturday before the actual Super Bowl, the organizers changed the date around the availability of the convention center. Admission is $30 for adults in advance or $35 at the door, $10 for children ages 6 to 10 and free for the wee ones. There will also be a silent auction, and the Souper Bowl cookbook will be on sale for $20, including the recipe for Terra’s award-winning butternut soup. All proceeds go to The Food Depot, Santa Fe’s food bank, so while you’re feeding yourself on the city’s flavors cup by cup, you’re also feeding the city’s hungry with every mouthful. Everybody wins.

More info: www.santafeschoolofcooking.com EQ-WINE DINNER AT RESTAURANT MARTÍN A fundraising wine dinner to support The Horse Shelter, because every horse should be somebody’s little pony. $150 + gratuity When: 6:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 19 Where: 526 Galisteo St. More information: www.thehorseshelter.org 2015 DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF NEW MEXICO DINNER AT LA FONDA ON THE PLAZA Because the Legislature is almost in session and you want to check out the table manners of the people you voted for. $100 and up When: 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20 More information: www.dpnm.net/ The New Mexican

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-5

To place an ad call 986-3000 or Toll Free (800) 873-3362

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SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

PROUD

50 ACRE TRACT ON ROWE MESA with power & phone available. $5,000 down, $500 monthly, 5 year balloon. Surrounded by National Forest. $150,000. Russ, 505-4703227.

You’ll be to live at 422 Kathryn Place. Charm galore-close to downtownvigas-wood tiled floors-fireplace. Nice yards. $ 269,000.

OWNERSHIP

Looking for a big home priced right? We have a 2000 plus, 2 story home with 2 car garage home for only $279,000.

SANTA FE

FINAL SALE SANTA FE ’s PRESTIGIOUS NORTH-SIDE PROPERTIES. 7.27 Acres on hill-top. 360 degree views, all mountain ranges. Utilities including private well. Price reduced to $239,000. Won’t last, call now! Old Santa Fe Realty, 505-9839265.

REAL ESTATE TRADES

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

TRADE OUR GULF OF MEXICO waterfront home property for similar value Santa Fe home. All offers considered. Information, photos: www.horseshoe32648.com

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Ra n c h o Siringo Road, fireplace, fenced yard. $729 monthly.

3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH, Rancho Santos Unit. Hardwood Floors down, washer, dryer, 2 car garage. No Smoking. Year lease minimum. $1250 monthly plus utilities, cleaning and security deposit. No Section 8. 505-954-1755

»rentals«

GREAT 1 BEDROOM. Fenced yard, washer dryer in unit. Cozy floor plan with spacious kitchen. Plenty of off-street parking. Only $629 monthly. RODEO ROAD AREA. 2 excellent apartments, nice amenities. $699 or $750 monthly. Home for the Holidays!

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

988-5585

Have a product or service to offer?

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By the golf course we have an immaculate 3 bdrm, 2 ½ bath, den home for only $279,000. Immed. Possession. Priced to sell.

MOVE

$185,000 520B ST. FRANCIS DR . 2 bedroom, 2 bath 1,400 sq.ft. condo. Radiant heat, diamond finish walls, gas kiva fireplace, vigas. Conveniently located 1.25 miles to the Plaza. 505-577-1626. www.santafepropertyforsale.com

Close to downtown at 422 Kathryn Pl. Stamm built with all the Santa Fe style, like plastered walls, wood & tiled floors-vigas throughout. $269,000 988-5585

help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000 RIVERFRONT PROPERTY in Village of Pecos. FOR SALE BY OWNER 2.840 acres. Breathtaking views, tranquil setting. $350k. Gene 505920-5629

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

3 bedroom, 2 bath 1,621 sq.ft adobe condo. Central heat and air, diamond finish walls, kiva fireplace, vigas. Conveniently located 1.25 miles to the Plaza. 505-577-1626. www.santafepropertyforsale.com

1994 REMODELED TRAILER 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 16x80. Ready to move-in. Parked, buyer pays space rent. 505-204-2078, 505-484-0428 Sotheby’s International Realty KATHARINE DUKE; 326 Grant Ave. 505.429.1523; 505.988.2533; katharine.duke @sothebyshomes.com

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, solar adobe, 2,000 sq.ft. plus 2 bedroom, 1 bath 1000 sq.ft. Near La Cienega. 2.5 acres. 27242 E Frontage. $389,000. 505-4705877

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For Sale or Lease. 4000 sq.ft. Open space. Ample parking. 505-699-0639

$95,000 CASH, "AS-IS CONDITION" . 2 bedroom, 1 bath. 900 sq.ft. Fixer upper. 3/4 acre. Southside. 5 Ceramic Court. 505-470-5877

104 FAITHWAY: Downtown 7-plex $1,200,000. 1425 PASEO DE PERALTA: Downtown 9-plex $1,350,000. 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY: 8-plex $750,000, 1 3 0 1 - 1 3 0 3 RUFINA LANE: 9-plex, $1,050,000. 1616 BRAE: Triplex $350,000. Lot for Sale: Puesta del Sol, 2.5 Acres, water well, electric near, $185,000. Fo r Details: 505-471-4405. Investors Only, NO Realtors , NO Owner Financing.

FSBO 3 BEDROOM HOME, 1 BATH, 1 GARAGE. All appliances. Ready to move into or good rental. Good location. $228,000. 505-988-1750

2014 "NEW" 16X80 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH MOVE-IN-READY $56,062 + TAX INTEREST RATES AS LOW AS 4.5% DOWNPAYMENT REQUIRED CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 dlr 1180

RANCHO VIEJO Upscale smoke-free townhome, light & bright corner unit, extensive upgrades, lovely portal with mountain & sunset views. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2-car garage. Vigas, gaslog kiva, refrigerated air, washer, dryer, stainless steel appliances. 1650 square feet. $1500. 505463-9334

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CONVENIENTLY LOCATED NEAR ST FRANCIS AND SAWMILL, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, ground level apartment. $895 plus utilities. Living room kiva, high ceiling with vigas, clerestory windows. New built-in microwave oven. Private, fenced patio. Parking in front. Non-smoking. Small pet with permission. Require 1st and $895 deposit. Year lease. Judy, 505-699-8932.

Call and d talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

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It has been 10 years since you were diagnosed. YYou fought the fight and won! Here’s to another 10+ years! You’re our inspiration! Love, Mary, Jose Jr. and Lulu

a c reg g • S ow ho ele ra o • Support local cance rts awareness

Cost: $15 Ribb bo nd day, February 22. Visit 202 E. Marcy St. or cre eate your tribute on nline at

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INVESTMENT PROPERTY

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LOTS & ACREAGE 12.5 ACRE TRACT ON AVENIDA DE COMPADRES & SPUR RANCH ROAD. All utilities including city gas. Great views, horse property. $5,000 down, $500 monthly, 5 year balloon. $120,000. Russ, 505-470-3227.

Sell Your Stuff!

STUNNING & SPACIOUS STUDIO now available with walk-in closet & generous cabinet space. Las Palomas Apartments is clearly your best choice. Incredible value with tons of amenities. Let our professional management team help you make the right decision with your new home. Call us today at 888-482-8216 for a tour! Mencionamos, hablamos espanol!

In Honor Of

ONLINE REAL ESTATE AUCTION Nominal Opening Bid: $25,000. 33 Santa Fe Drive, Abiquiu, NM. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Bidding January 23- January 29. williamsauction.com 800-982-0425. Williams & Williams, NM Broker: Daniel Nelson Re Lic 18340; Williams & Williams Buyer’s Premium may apply for this property.

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

STUDIO & 1 BEDROOM UNITS. R E CENTLY REMODELED! All utilities included. Galisteo. 3 blocks downtown. $675 - $775 plus damage deposit. Available immediately! 635 Chavez Place. 562-412-0341

February is National Cancer Prevention Month FOR SALE #109 RANCHO ZIA M.H.P.

RETAIL SPACE 1607 ST. MICHAELS DRIVE

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

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Thinking of listing your property? Call Katharine, Hablo Espanol.

$219,000 520A ST. FRANCIS DR.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED

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Dead dline is Friiday, Feb bruary 13

NO BETTER DEAL IN NM. 804 Colbert, Springer. Population: 1,047. (2 hours north of Santa Fe on I-25). Price: $39,850. Down: $551. Payment: $350. Sq.Ft.: 1050. Natural gas, beautiful 3 bedroom adobe, metal roof, refinished wood floors. FSBO, 480-392-8550.

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business & service directory« Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month! CLEANING

ACCOUNTING

CONSTRUCTION

HANDYMAN

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MOVERS

STORAGE

A A R D V A R K DISCOUNT M O V E R S Most moving services; old-fashioned respect and care since 1976. Jo h n , 505-473-4881.

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PAINTING CARETAKING

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

CAREGIVER NURSE-AID. 20 years experince. Billingual. References available. Please call, 505-310-5234. Leave message.

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CHIMNEY SWEEPING

Inside and out. Windows, carpets. $18 per hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.

ADDITIONS, GARAGES & Portable Buildings. Starting at $30.00 a square foot. Licensed and insured. Call 505252-0534 or 505-821-3790.

FENCING HAGEN BUILDERS,

Sell your car in a hurry! 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!

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Where treasurees are fou und daily Placee an ad Pl To oday!

CALL 986-3 3000

Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 Classifie MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062.

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INC.

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile, Roofing. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.

CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.

PLASTERING Place an ad Today!

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

Cedar coyote fences, ranchwire fences, walls and gates. A+ Better Business Bureau! Visit our website: hagenbuilders.com 505-670-6069

CALL 986-3000

TREE SERVICE

ROOFING FIREWOOD Dry Pinon & Cedar

Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 145.00 pick up load. Deliver Anytime.

505-983-2872, 505-470-4117 FLOORING RM FLOORING Re-finishing of wood floors. Installation of wood, tile, brick and flagstone flooring. Licensed, Bonded. Senior Discount 15%. 505-469-6363

DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Fruit Tree & Conifer, Pinon, Chamisa, & ornamental. Pruning, removals, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 4734129

TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, home repairs including water damage. Licensed, Bonded & Insured. 505920-7583.

YARD MAINTENANCE

HAULING OR YARD WORK

SPECIALIZING IN YARD WORK, TREE TRIMMING. Trash, brush and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-204-3186. 505-3162936.

FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898 PHIL’S HAULING. Dump runs, cleaning, moving, deliveries, tree removal, hassles handled. Up to 6 tons/ load. Reasonable, reliable, punctual. 505670-6100

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

YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. We Move Furniture. Any work you need done I can do! Call George, 505-316-1599.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

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HOUSES UNFURNISHED

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SOUTHSIDE 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath home with den, fireplace, 1 car garage and storage room. New carpet, paint, stove. Master bathroom totally redone. Close to Camino Consuelo and Siringo. 1-year lease required. $1,200 monthly plus gas, water and electricity. $1,000 damage deposit. No pets. Please call 505-490-3245 to view.

BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN, 1000 sq.ft. One bedroom. Washer, dryer. $1,200. Near community college, 2.5 acres. Private gated property. 505-901-7415. MUSEUM HILL WELCOME LEGISLATURES! 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Completely furnished, high-end, turn-key. Quiet, secluded. $1000 monthly plus deposit. sfedit@comcast.net 505-988-5671

MANUFACTURED HOMES

NORTHSIDE CASITA. Furnished one bedroom. 750 sq.ft. Quiet. Private yard. DSL. Cable. $1000 monthly. Utilities included. 1-year lease. Nonsmoker. 505-412-1074. SOUTHWESTERN CHARM SURROUNDS THIS LOVELY CASITA. 1 lofted bedroom, full kitchen & bath. Large portal. Washer, dryer. Kiva fireplace. Animals welcome. $1250 monthly, includes utilities. DirecTV & Wild Blue already set-up. Call or text Susan: 505-470-3422.

HOUSES FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT DURING LEGISTLATIVE SESSION. Fully furnished, 3 bedrooms. Off Osage. Close to bus-stop. $1100 to March 30th. 505-470-0758

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

MODERN OFFICE BUILDING FOR LEASE $14 PER SQ.FT. ANNUALLY

1441 St. Francis Drive. Take all or part of the building, available up to 3750 square feet. Kitchenettes, private and public baths, and outdoor balcony with views.

Taylor Properties 505-470-0818 Vista Property Corp 505-988-5299

ADMINISTRATIVE

986-3000

1 BEDROOM DELIGHT! Enormous!

1300 sq. ft. with high ceilings, great light, architectural details. Huge bathroom, laundry, radiant heat. Fenced yard. Secure shed. Offstreet parking. Pets okay! Lease. $1275. $500 deposit. 505-7955245.

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Rowe. Fireplace, woodstove, all appliances, 3/4 acre fenced yard. $900 monthly, first, last, security deposit. 505470-0409

3 BEDROOM 3 BATH HOME in Eldorado. Very high quality home, over 3,000 sq.ft. of living including 3 car garage and lots of outdoor parking. Many amenities including a jetted tub in the master bedroom suite. Extra library room, over 1 acre of land. Easy walk to Eldorado community center, all included. $1950 monthly, deposits and pets negotiable.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560. Private room, shared bath & kitchen, washer, dryer. $425. Clean, safe, quiet. No Pets. Month-to-Month. Deposit. 2 miles North of Plaza. 505-4705877

Roomate Wanted in a 3 bedroom, 2 bath House. $600 monthly, split utilities. Colores Del Sol Area. 505-470-7641.

Add a pic and sell it quick!

A CHOICE OF HOMES AT TAPIA ESTATES. 2-3 bedroom. Parking. Yards for gardening with space. Lease. Rent ranging $925-1425. No dogs or smoking. 505-471-8413 BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH. Airport Road area, close to 599 and I25, schools. Gas range, dishwasher, island kitchen, Washer, dryer, central air, 2 car garage. $1300 monthly plus Utilities. 505-819-8619.

Full-time position with Early Head Start program in Santa Fe. Serves as technical support for staff training and development. See website for requirements. Excellent benefits. Apply online at pmsnm.org. Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE, AA, M, F, SO, Vet, Disability. Follow us on Facebook.

Clinician Staffing Coordinator Full-time position supporting Clinician Staffing Manager. Decentralized position requiring detail-oriented individual able to multi-task and function in fast-paced environment. Excellent computer skills a must. Recruiting experience a plus. Excellent benefits. Apply online at pmsnm.org. Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline. 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ AA/ M/ F/ SO/ Vet/ Disability. Follow us on Facebook.

DRIVERS

Driver High tech company seeking mature individual with driving experience. Individual must have clean driving record and be very responsible. Stable employment history very important. Requires 80% travel. Experience driving vehicles used during surveying and road inventory data collection. Retired state trooper or DOT employee preferred. Duties include driving road crew and making frequent stops on shoulder of highway. Job location in state of New Mexico. Salary range of $24,000 to $30,000, commensurate with experience. Health insurance available. Company has been in business for 12 years and offers a stable workplace environment. An EOE company. Must be able to pass background check and drug test.

FAMILY SERVICES ASSISTANT

AMIGOS BRAVOS: Because Water Matters, founded in 1988, seeks Executive Director. For job description and application procedure: http://www.amigosbravos.org/jobpostings

Please send resume’s to west.rjay@gmail.com

DEVELOPMENT & COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER The Mesa Prieta Petroglyph Project in Velarde, New Mexico is seeking a staff Development & Communications Manager to oversee and implement fundraising, events and media. 20 hours per week position. BA or BS and 5 years experience required. Learn more at: mesaprietapetroglyphs.org. Inquire at mesaprieta@cybermesa.com

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

986-3000

Eldorado Area High End Finishes 3 bedroom 2 Full baths, Chef’s Kitchen, Large Portal, Views. 2360 Sq.Ft. Attached 400 sq.ft. Studiogarage. Plus 2 car detached garage. Community water,natural gas. $2185.00 monthly.

ADOPTION

Add a pic and sell it quick!

986-3000

We are in search of a Health Services Director in Rio Rancho, NM. For information call: HR at 505-867-3351 or visit FSIP website at www.fsipinc.org.

Full-time positions in Santa Fe and Pojoaque with Early Head Start program. See website for requirements. Excellent benefits. Apply on line at pmsnm.org. Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE, AA, M, F, SO, Vet, Disability Follow us on Facebook.

Receptionist

Immediate Part-time position available at our dealership. Greeting customers, answering phones, preparing follow up letters and some filing. Email resumes to cassie.wright@ lexusofsantafe.com or apply at Lexus of Santa Fe.

ASPHALT RAKER & SCREED OPERATOR

Two years’ experience, needed for paving crew. Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Espanola Area. Good Pay, Steady Work.

*Health insurance *401K *Salary DOE / EOE *Drug testing Office: 505-821-1034, 8900 Washington NE Albuquerque, NM Fax Resume to: 505-821-1537 Email: frontdesk@ sparlingconstruction.net

! & ! % '% ! !' $% &" !' $ ! ## $ "! * "! ! $") DPMVNO BOE Y CMPDL 6TF MPHJD BOE QSPDFTT FMJNJOBUJPO UP TPMWF UIF QV[[MF 5IF EJGmDVMUZ ( $ ! % $" $"!+ % %& &" ( $ &" " $ %& Rating: GOLD

ADOPTION. A loving married couple wishes to adopt 1st baby. Expenses paid. Legal and confidential. 1-866867-0378 Mariana & Anthony.

" '& "! &"

LOST

, !$ !& $#$ % % %& * $ &"$% "

$100 REWARD! Please help find me. I am a 1994 4x4 Toyota pickup. Burgandy. Xtra cab with camper shell. I went on test drive, but was never returned to my owner. The person that road tested me prevously worked at Santa Fe Cheverolet & Performance GMC. I miss my owner & want to get back home. Please call, 424-1225 or police.

PERSONALS NEEDED INVESTOR for an invention with working prototype. Low-risk investment with possible high return. Patent search completed with promising results. Patent is pending. If interested call 575-375-2030.

SAN JUAN Pecos, 2 bedroom house. Adobe, with 8 acres. Washer, dryer, refrigerator. $1000 monthly plus utilities. Good credit background check. 505-423-3788

Excellent benefits. Apply online at pmsnm.org. Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline1-866-661-5491. EOE/ AA/ M/ F/ SO/ Vet/ Disability. Follow us on Facebook.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299 or 505-470-0818

IMMACULATE 322 Rancho Viejo, kiva fireplace, tile, new carpets. Walled yard, all appliances. $1580 monthly. Patrick Thomas Owner, Broker. 505780-0129

Oversees physical plant operations for Santa Fe facilities, including supervision of department staff. Has group purchasing, vehicle and plant-related administrative duties statewide.

CONSTRUCTION

ÂťannouncementsÂŤ

GORGEOUS 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 2700 SQ.FT. ESTATE- plus art studio that is attached. Light & bright. Saltillo tile, vigas, 3 fireplaces, office, chef kitchen. $2,800 monthly. Pond, kiva fireplace, hot tub in private backyard. 5 minute walk to Plaza. Owners NM real estate brokers. Skye’s the Limit Realty LLC. 505-629-9998.

Manager of General Services

Education Specialist

MANAGEMENT

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

ROOMMATE WANTED

Add a pic and sell it quick!

2ND SHIFT RECEPTIONIST for 2015 Tax Season. Must be bilingual in Spanish, have good people skills, and basic computer skills. Call 505473-4700 to set up appointment for interview.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Please call (505)983-9646.

MANAGEMENT

EDUCATION

505-660-6440

PEACE & QUIET: 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Plaster, stucco. Highway 14 area. $850 monthly. Lease, deposit. References required . 505-473-7155, 505699-0120.

OFFICES

DOMESTIC JOBS

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

ASSISTANT FULL -TIME HOUSEKEEPER

LIVE IN STUDIOS CONTEMPORARY 1800 sq.ft. house. Views, expansive glass, solar 3-zone heating. 1 bedroom, bath, kitchen dishwasher, washer, dryer. 7 minutes to Plaza. $2000 montly. 505699-6640

986-3000

PUBLIC NOTICES JUMPSTART 2015 Write Your Memoir 6-week classes begin January 6 & 7. Includes literary craft, construction and personal workshop of your creation. For other classes, go to imattered.com 505-316-1521. email hello@imattered.com


Wednesday, January 14, 2015 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds MANAGEMENT

MEDICAL DENTAL

to place your ad, call TRADES

Regional Infection Control Nurse

986-3000

FURNITURE

The Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, an award-winning weekly newspaper in the mountain resort town of Angel Fire, New Mexico, has an immediate opening for a Managing Editor. The selected candidate will plan and edit the newspaper, write news and feature stories, take photographs and paginate the newspaper, among other duties. QUALIFICATIONS: Must have a combination of experience and education that is equivalent of: Bachelor’s degree, two years of experience as an editor, reporter or photographer in a news organization, and two years of management experience. Must be deadline-oriented, able to upload the newspaper to the web, and have strong organization, leadership and communication skills. Must be able to bend, lift and carry up to 15 pounds occasionally; have hearing and vision within normal ranges and good eye-hand coordination and manual dexterity to operate a computer keyboard effectively; and be able to sit for long periods. Apply with cover letter and resume by 5 p.m. on Friday, January 16, 2015, Ellen Goins General Manager Sangre de Cristo Chronicle 3403 Mountain View Blvd. Angel Fire, NM 87710 or email egoins@sangrechronicle.com The Sangre de Cristo Chronicle is owned by Robin Martin, 2014 inductee into the New Mexico Press Association Hall of Fame and owner of the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, Taos News, Santa Fe New Mexican and the Raton Comet. Equal Opportunity Employer

MEDICAL DENTAL

C orizon, a provider of health services for the New Mexico Department of Corrections, has an excellent opportunity for an experienced Infection Control Nurse at the New Mexico Regional Office in Albuquerque. Candidates must have 2 years of experience in Infection Control. Corizon offers competitive rates and comprehensive benefits with the opportunity to learn a growing specialty! For more information, contact: Royanne Schissel, Regional DON 505-856-5900 x9217 royanne.schissel@ corizonhealth.com EEO/ AAP/ DTR

Social media savvy and experience in journalism or writing-intensive discipline required. Experience on Macs, Adobe Creative Suite and Final Cut X is preferred.

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! We always get results! 986-3000

Excellent benefits. Apply online at pmsnm.org. Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE, AA, M, F, SO, Vet, Disability. Follow us on Facebook.

CNA’S

WE HAVE CNA POSITIONS AVALIABLE. THE HOURS ARE AS FOLLOWS: 6AM TO 6:30PM, AND 6PM TO 6:30AM.

UNIT MANAGER

WE HAVE A POSITION OPEN FOR A FULL-TIME UNIT MANAGERS. THE POSITION REQUIRES THAT YOU MUST BE A REGISTERED NURSE. THE DUTIES WILL BE TO HELP THE DON OVERSIGHT & SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT. THIS IS A SALARY POSITION. Any one interested please come by and speak to Judy Wilson, RN/DON, or Craig Shaffer, Administrator, 505-982-2574 635 HARKLE Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87505

MDS Coordinator (Santa Fe Care Center)

We are currently looking for a Fulltime MDS Coordinator. Hours will flexible according to census. R e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s : Would be to complete MDS according to State and Federal Regulations. Q u a lific a tio n s : Licensed Nurse, experience in completing MDS. If interested please come by 635 Harkle Rd Santa Fe, NM 87505

NEW HEALTH CENTER & ASSISTED LIVING ADDITIONS COMPLETED! We have Full-Time Positions

RN, LPN, CNA & Activity Director

Open in our clinical areas for all levels of long term care. All shifts available. Experience in geriatric nursing care preferred. Great medical and retirement benefits, shift differential pay & pleasant working environment. Email your resume to humanresources@elcnm.com or fax to 505-983-3828.

RETAIL RETAIL SALES PROFESSIONAL with experience. Jewelry, antiques and gift items. Hourly compensation reflects experience. Things Finer. Resume required. tfiner@aol.com

No phone calls, please. Equal Opportunity Employer

PIANO STEINWAY, Medium Grand, Model M Ebony. Excellent condition. Moving Sale, price reduced to $16,000. 505-881-2711

ALDER CABINET. 3 Drawers, open top with doors. 34.5"Wx58"Hx20"D. $1100.

HORSES

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

TV RADIO STEREO

10 YEAR OLD 1/2 ARABIAN, 1/2 MUSTANG GELDING. Nice & gentle. For pleasure or pack. $800 OBO. 505-4745978, 505-577-0764.

Call Anthony: 505-501-1700. BENCHES, SIDE TABLES, small cabinets, and coffee table, $300 each. 505-699-5987

PETS SUPPLIES

OLDER TEMPUR-PEDIC QUEEN BED. WONDERFUL SLEEP. $228. 505-4700758

STAINED GLASS LAMPSHADES. BEAUTIFUL. Perfect condition. Reasonable. Both would look wonderful in same room. Large, $40. Small, $25. 505-4749020.

LXI PICTURE-IN-PICTURE 27" TV. NOT HD, and OLDER FLAT SCREEN. $40. CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED. Works great. Eldorado area. 520-906-9399

APPLIANCES

1973 KIRBY CLASSIC UPRIGHT VACUUM CLEANER. Works good. Clean. $50. 505-466-6205

CALTHALON XL Convection Oven with crumb tray, baking pan, user guide and broil Racks. Superb condition, $91. 505-470-0758.

COOKING DISCO, DISCADAS. 17" to 32" diameter. Hundreds available. Starting at $60. Sold at Aldona’s Restaurant, 3875 Cerrillos Road. 505-4693355.

DRYER KENMORE 220 volts, white. 30 day warranty. $115. 505-662-6396

DELUXE BREADMAN BAKING MACHINE. Hardly used. $25. 505-982-6438

DRYER KENMORE-GAS. White. 30 day warranty. $100. 505-662-6396

DYSON UPRIGHT vacuum. Like new. $150. 505-470-5348

AUCTIONS

FOR SALE! 1955 BUICK Special, 4-door, 1981 GMC , 2-Ton Dump Truck, $13,500. 2 conveyor belts, $2000. 1 Small Tar Kettle, $600. Call 5 0 5 - 9 2 0 - 1 4 9 6 . Leave message.

Brown Miniature Male Poodle, 25 pounds, sweet, outgoing. Must have secure fenced yard. Shots UTD. $800. More Information: 575-613-2309. MINI DOXIES. Reg,shots and health guaranteed. $650. 575-910-1818 POTTY PAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN credit, debit, PAYPAL. Red & sable. txt4pics. cingard1@hotmail.com. USDA license

MISCELLANEOUS

GE WASHER. Top Load. White, 3 or 4 years old. Very good condition. Works great! $250. 505-204-8615.

GOOD ALFALFA FOR SALE. Some cow hay. Please call: 505-927-7043.

HOLKA ONE ONE Trail running shoe. Men’s size 10. Barely worn (ankle broken). $89. 505-470-0758

PINE BUFFET. 82"Wx20"Dx34"H. $350. 505-470-5348 1

Nominal Opening Bid: $25,000. 33 Santa Fe Drive, Abiquiu, NM. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Bidding January 23- January 29. williamsauction.com 800-982-0425. Williams & Williams, NM Broker: Daniel Nelson Re Lic 18340; Williams & Williams Buyer’s Premium may apply for this property.

WANTED: Any type farm freight wagon or buggy made by Joseph Murphy of St. Louis. Call Tom, 800959-5782.

BUILDING MATERIALS

SANTA FE HARLEY DAVIDSON IS HIRING! Events Coordinator, Motorcycle Sales & Technician Assistant. Send job history and resume to debby@SantaFeHarley.com

SALES MARKETING EXPERIENCED SALES CANDIDATE OUR COMPANY, a Leading Brand in the Construction Materials Industry is seeking an experienced sales candidate to help keep up with growing demand for products and services in Santa Fe and the surrounding area. The right candidate will be responsible for: * Nurturing prospects and leads of builders and remodelers * Demonstrating product emphasizing features and functionality * Exhibit a strong desire to learn and promote self-growth. * Must be pro-active and selfmotivated. * Must have computer skills. This position has an excellent training and compensation program. Our top sales professionals have average earnings in excess of $100,000 annually excluding a number of company paid benefits. Our brand, a rebounding industry along with our broad range of products and services makes this a great opportunity for the right candidate. We are ready to fill this position now! If you have sales and related industry experience please submit your resume via email to dundonj@pellasw.com or fax to 505.314.8869 NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

PRO-PANELS: 3’X18’ 26 gauge ProPanel for roofs. Barn red. $45 per sheet. Have 30 panels. (List $59). 505795-0007

CLOTHING WOMEN’S BROWN LEATHER BOOTS, knee high, size 7, 2" heels. $20. NEW BLACK BOOTS, size 7, 2" heels, $40. 505-927-5428.

FIREWOOD-FUEL FIREWOOD Get yours now! Cedar, Pinon, Russian Olive…Quantity discounts. Full cords available. Call for prices & delivery options. 505-231-3034.

GET NOTICED!

Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details

CALL 986-3000

HOMES DIRECT IN ESPANOLA Sales People/Manager!!! Great schedule. Salary plus commission. Homes Direct is a leading Manufactured and Modular Home Retail sales company. Some sales experience required. Please Fax Resume: 505-242-9555.

TRADES NM SPORTS & PT: Medical Billing. Full-time. No experience necessary. Will train. Please come in for application and bring resume and references. Ask for Dino. (No phone calls please.) 2954 Rodeo Park Drive West.

ALFALFA, ORCHARD grass and fescue grass. $6 a bale. For cows and horses. Barn-stored. 505-852-2581. Leave Messange.

PARTY POMERANIANS Registered, shots POTTYPAD trained. $800+ PAYMENT PLAN. Credit Cards, PAYPAL. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Taking deposits. cingard1@hotmail.com USDA licensed. SYLVANIA TV, 32". FLAT FACE, two front vertical speakers, all input jacks, remote control, very good condition, $60 OBO. CREDIT CARD ACCEPTED. Eldorado area. 520-9068399.

PUPPIES, FREE to good homes!! 10 available. 3/4 Pitbull. 6 weeks. Jeff or Billy Ray, 505-438-2424.

TRINITON SONY TV, 27". $30. Works well. Older model. 505-231-2665

WANT TO BUY NEW OR used plexiglass, used or broken dressers, coffeetables, end table, wood dining tables, insulated glass windows, stained glass, used, broken. 505-553-1253.

WESTIE PUPPY, female, for sale. APR registration documents. 8 weeks. Ready to go. First shots. $600. Cash only. 505-699-1550

ONLINE REAL ESTATE AUCTION

CSR - Full-Time

LPN/RN

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

ALDER TRASTERO CABINET. 30"Wx72"Hx18"D. $950.

The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy St., Santa Fe, NM 87501.

CARETAKER Caretaker for boarding kennel. Looking for a responsible individual or couple to reside on kennel property. Oversee kennels and maintain security from 5 p.m. to 7 a.m. Serious inquiries only. Apply in person at 27712 West. Frontage Road.

Enjoy working with the elderly? Need flexible hours? We are a nonmedical company with a need for caring, compassionate and honest people to provide homecare services to seniors. Make a difference by helping us keep our elderly happy and at home! We have immediate shifts available in the Santa Fe, Espanola and Los Alamos areas. For more information call our 24-hour info line at 505-6615889. HomeInsteadJobsSF@yahoo.com

TEMPURPEDIC PILLOWS (3), excellent shape, $30 each. 505-470-0758.

CLARINET (B flat), wood. Very good condition. Plays beautifully. $58. 505690-7839

Send Cover Letter and Résumé to: Natlaie Guillén, Digital Production Manager nguillen@sfnewmexican.com

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

XRANM has an opening in patient scheduling, reception, M-F, 9a-6p in Santa Fe. HS/ GED, prefer medical office, customer service experience. Excellent salary. Send resume to resumes@xraynm.com, fax: 505998-3100. EOE

WE HAVE RN/LPN POSITIONS AVALIABLE. THE SHIFTS ARE 6AM TO 6:30PM OR 6PM TO 6:30AM, 3 DAYS ON AND 4 DAYS OFF.

The New Mexican offers paid vacation and benefits, in addition to a free gym membership.

»merchandise«

Children’s Services Coordinator Health and Nutrition Full-time position with Head Start and Early Head Start programs in Santa Fe. Requires degree in health, nutrition, or closely related field and experience working with young children and families.

WEB PRODUCTION ASSISTANT The Santa Fe New Mexican has an immediate opening for a Web Production Assistant. The selected candidate will work 5 days a week, 6 a.m. to 3 p.m., monitoring local and national news to keep our website up-to-date. The position may include breaking news and headline writing. Additionally, the candidate will aid in design of special online sections, edit brief audio and video clips and perform a variety of other tasks related to online presentation. Must possess good news judgment, attention to detail and strong problem-solving skills.

»animals«

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

JOIN CORIZON! Managing Editor

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

ANTIQUE OAK DRESSER with carved mirror. 48"Wx79"Hx21.5"D. $950.

B-7

LOCAL PLUMBING COMPANY LOOKING FOR A KNOWLEDGEABLE SERVICE PLUMBER. MUST HAVE VALID DRIVERS LICENSE. MUST HAVE EXPERIENCE. 505-438-7326.

KIVA FIREPLACE Inserts. Custom built to fit any fireplace. 25 years experience. Rusty Dobkins 575-535-2905. SEASONED FIREWOOD: P ONDEROSA, $100 PER LOAD. J u niper, $120 per load. CALL: 508444-0087. Delivery FREE TO ALBUQUERQUE & SANTA FE !

FURNITURE WPA DESK, New Mexico 1930’s, 26x40 inches. Mortise and Tenon, 4 dovetail drawers; Classic, Historic. $375, 505983-9481.

ACROSS 1 Monday Night Football regular until 1983 7 Gobbled, as a turkey 10 Site with a “Buy It Now” option 14 Mecca’s peninsula 15 In the bath 16 “__ Rock” 17 Hires a new crew for 18 Styled after 19 Shot up 20 Confounded British illumination? 23 Jamaican genre 24 Walkway material 25 Meter or liter 29 Med. plan option 31 “Twin Peaks” cocreator David 34 White House maiden name between Pierce and Welch 37 Dr. J hairstyle 39 Lone Ranger and Tonto, e.g. 40 Confounded British posies? 43 First __ 44 Horner’s find 45 Have a strong desire (for) 46 Things to fulfill 48 It’s on the streets 50 Flanders river 51 Vinegar vessel 53 Dangerous snake 56 Confounded British residences? 62 Actor Bean of “Game of Thrones” 63 Aegean __ 64 Give one’s word 65 Stock options, e.g. 66 WWII intel agcy. 67 Look through partially open curtains, say 68 Round components 69 Vague degree 70 Flowed in circles DOWN 1 Prep for a marathon, with “up”

By Harald Hornung

2 N.L. Cy Young Award winner three years after Dwight 3 Nordic language 4 “Voice of Israel” author 5 Rory McIlroy’s milieu 6 Big name in vision correction 7 Like an excited puppy’s tail 8 Takes to task 9 Web business 10 San Francisco-toTeaneck interstate 11 Round servers 12 Iowa State city 13 Swerve from a course 21 “I’ll pass” 22 Clumsy sort 25 Citified 26 “Cross my heart” 27 “Bless my soul!” 28 Howe’er 30 Molten rock 32 Bend 33 Car wash employee, at times 35 Excites 36 Wire thickness unit

1/14/15 Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

38 “Kidnapped” author’s monogram 41 Most eccentric 42 Manner 47 Round components 49 Cloth remnant 52 HP competitor 54 Configure 55 Prepared for a shot 56 Texture

1/14/15

57 “I don’t mind eels / Except as meals / And the way they feels” poet 58 Previously driven, say 59 TomKat’s daughter 60 Lake at one end of the Niagara River 61 Final email step 62 Place for a pedi


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS Meet Adoptable Animals

Saturday, January 17th PetSmart 3561 Zafarano Drive Noon-3 p.m.

Sunday, January 18th PetSmart 3561 Zafarano Drive 1-4 p.m. Visit sfhumanesociety.org to view adoptable animals or visit our Facebook page at www.facebook.com/ sfhumanesociety. Adopt any dog 20 pounds or more for only $15 through January.

CLASSIC CARS

to place your ad, call 4X4s

986-3000

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

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com

2014 JEEP Cherokee Latitude 4WD 17K, loaded, auto, 1 owner...$25,641 Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Lexus GX460 Premium 4wd

2013 BMW X1 xDrive 35i

ANOTHER Mercedes-Benz Tradein! local 1 owner, EVERY option, rare dark brown leather, adjustable suspension, over $64k new, clean CarFax $49,973. 505-913-2900

ONLY 3k miles!, AWD, turbo, every option $50k new, single owner clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $38,751. 505-913-2900

GET NOTICED!

2002 LEXUS LX470 4WD 63K, super loaded and serviced religiously, super nice..$22,981 Call 505-216-3800.

Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details

CALL 986-3000 DOMESTIC

SILKY SCHNAUZER x MALTESE pups Reg, shots, guarantee. Potty pad trained. $800. Payment plan. PAYPAL, CREDIT, DEBIT. Non-shedding, Hypoallergenic. 575-910-1818 txt4pics. cingard1@yahoo.com USDA licensed.

2001 Z71 SUBURBAN 4X4. RUNS GREAT. DEPENDABLE CAR. NEW TIRES AND SHOCKS. CLEAN. 173,000 MILES. $6500. 505-690-4849. MIKE.

2011 Mercedes-Benz GLK350 4matic

IMPORTS

CERTIFIED! w/factory warranty, local trade, just serviced, AWD, ask about finance specials $26,991 505-913-2900

2005 C H R Y S L E R , C R O S S F I R E , STEALS THE SHOW, $9,988- T1914 CALL 505-473-1234.

2011 CADILLAC SRX AWD 44K, Luxury Collection pkg, auto and loaded, just..$26,981 Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Lexus RX350 AWD recent trade-in! LOADED, saddle leather, navigation, single owner clean CarFax GORGEOUS! $38,912 505-913-2900

2010 Acura MDX AWD, pwer HEATED seats, XM, moon roof, loaded with 3rd row seating. In time for changing weather $30,729 Call 505-216-3800.

SMALL DOG Rescue of Santa Fe. 505438-3749 for information on Grover and our other small dogs. YORKIES! Full-Blooded Registered, shots and guaranteed. Hypoallergenic and Non-shedding. POTTYPAD trained. $500-1800 Credit Cards or PAYPAL PAYMENT plan. 575910-1818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com

»cars & trucks«

2011 Mercedes-Benz R350 4Matic

FORD MUSTANG 2012, custom wheels tires, auto, Bose Shaker Sound System, leather, loaded. Approximately 3,500 miles, kept in garage. $21,000 or best offer. Call 505 603 4259 leave message and I will return call, must sell soon.

Merely 31k miles! AWD, factory certified 100k warranty, 6passenger seating!, loaded, single owner clean CarFax, beautiful! $34,9711 505-913-2900

2014 Ford Edge Limited AWD 19K, super nice, new body and loaded...$27,871 Call 505-216-3800.

2010 Audi A6 Prestige quattro Local 1 owner, every option, AWD, Nav, supercharged, clean CarFax, a real gem! $24,932 505-913-2900

2010 Lexus RX350 AWD

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES

ANOTHER Mercedes-Benz Trade-in! local & well-maintained, heated/cooled leather, new tires, NICE Just $23,832 505-913-2900 2013 HYUNDAI ELANTRA, BLUE RIBBON WINNER, $15,999-T1971 CALL 505-473-1234.

"MB" MOTOR~SPORTS, 17" x 7.5", Custom Aluminum Rims! Fits Chevy 4-Lug Cobalt. Sweet~Wheels. $300. Call Jeff or Billy Ray; 505-438-2424.

2011 Infiniti QX56 4x4 loaded! 7-passenger seating, leather, navigation, chromes, over $60k new! Clean CarFax $39,962. 505-913-2900

SIDE TOOLBOX FOR PICKUP. Aluminum clear-coat. New $345, sell for $100. 505-629-6999

SNOW CHAINS: WHITESTAR ALLOY WS16052 Ideal for all vehicles. Cars, light trucks, and SUV’s. Meets Class "S" Requirements. $60. 505-216-6418

2013 MINI Cooper Countryman S

AUTOS WANTED

ALL4, low miles, AWD, navigation, heated leather, hot! clean CarFax $25,971 505-913-2900 .

2012 KIA SOUL A SURE THING $11,988- T1963 CALL 505-473-1234.

2014 BMW X3 low miles and even lower price, auto, moonroof, heated seats, why buy new... Call 505-2163800. 2010 LEXUS RX350 AWD Lexus Certified, loaded up, full svc and ready to go...$29,871 Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Kia Soul !

Donate used cars, trucks, boats, RV, motorcycles in any condition to help support Santa Fe Habitat. Call: 1-877-277-4344 or www.carsforhomes.org Local: 505986-5880.

recent trade-in, local vehicle, back-up camera, super nice, single owner clean CarFax $13,951 505913-2900 2010 CHEVROLET CAMERO, ALL THE GOODS , FREEWAY FRONT RUNNER, $22,999-T1956 CALL 505-4731234. 2014 TOYOTA RAV 4 LIKE BRAND NEW, SAVE THOUSANDS, $24,365 . T1853 CALL 505-473-1234.

$$WANTED JUNK CAR$ & TRUCK$$ Wrecked or Not Running, with or without title. We will haul away for Free! 505-699-4424

4X4s

2006 LEXUS GS300 AWD loaded, nav, leather, 1 owner...$18,981 Call 505216-3800.

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sfnm«classifieds LEGALS LEGAL # 97594 Legal Notice TO FATHER OF C.B. The McKean County Children and Youth Services with its offices located at 17155 Route 6, Smethport, McKean County, Pennsylvania, filed a petition to involuntarily terminate your parental rights to C.B. This matter has been filed in the Orphans’ Court Division of the McKean County Court of Common Pleas under the caption of In the Interest of: Adoption of: C.B. No. 4214-0225. A hearing has been scheduled to terminate your parental rights on February 18, 2015 at 9:00 a.m. in Courtroom # 2 of the McKean County Courthouse, located at 500 West Main Street, Smethport, McKean County, Pennsylvania, 16749. If you wish to defend, you must enter a written appearance personally or by attorney and file your defenses or objections in writing with the Court. You are warned that even if you fail to appear at the scheduled hearing, the hearing will go on without you and your rights to your child may be ended by the Court without your being present. YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO BE REPRESENTED AT THE HEARING BY A LAWYER. YOU SHOULD TAKE THIS PAPER TO YOUR LAWYER AT ONCE. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A LAWYER OR CANNOT AFFORD ONE, GO TO OR TELEPHONE THE OFFICE SET FORTH BELOW TO FIND OUT WHERE YOU CAN GET LEGAL HELP. Northwestern Legal Services 100 Main Street Bradford, PA 16701 (814) 362-6596 Michele AlfieriCauser, Esquire Attorney for McKean County Children & Youth Services Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on January 14, 21 and 28, 2015

To place a Legal Notice Call 986-3000

LEGALS LEGAL # 97864 NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Regular Board Meeting of the Board of Education for the Pecos Independent School District will take place on Tuesday, January 20, 2015. The meeting will begin at 6:00 pm in the Pecos Schools Board Room.

LEGALS Highway, Santa Fe, New Mexico. The NMPSIA solicits proposals to provide professional service for Insurance Broker, Consulting, Administrative Services and Loss Prevention Services. A complete copy of the Request for Proposals may be secured from Ms. Norma Henderson, Financial Manager, Procurement Manager, NMPSIA, 410 Old Taos Highway, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 9882736,norma.henderso n@state.nm.us

Agendas are available at the Administration Office on the day Proposals prior to the Board Sealed should be clearly Meeting. marked "Proposal for Professional ServThe meeting may include Budget Adjust- ices: Insurance Broker, Consulting, Adment Requests. ministrative Service An Executive Session and Loss Prevention may take place dur- Services to NMPSIA" the envelope. ing the agenda to dis- on cuss limited person- Deadline for receipt of Proposals shall be nel matters and/or pending litigation as Wednesday, January per NM Statutes Arti- 23, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. cle 15 Open Meetings 10-15-1 Subparagraph The New Mexico PubH (2 & 8). Action item lic Schools Insurance reserves as a result of execu- Authority tive session if neces- the right to reject any or all proposals and sary. make an award in the FRED TRUJILLO, SU- best interest of the New Mexico Public PERINTENDENT Schools Insurance THE PECOS INDE- Authority, PENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT IS AN EQUAL Submitted by: OPPORTUNITY EM- New Mexico Public PLOYER AND DOES Schools NOT DISCRIMINATE Insurance Authority ON THE BASIS OF 410 Old Taos Highway RACE, NATIONAL ORI- Santa Fe, NM 87501 GIN, RELIGION, AGE, (505) 988-2736 SEX, MARITAL STATUS, HOMELESSNESS Sammy J. Quintana, OR DISABILITY IN Executive Director COMPLIANCE WITH New Mexico Public FEDERAL AND STATE Schools Insurance Authority LAWS.

CALL 986-3000

986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS g Name. The court examined the matter pursuant to Sec. 40-11 NMSA 1978, et seq. and, being fully advised in the premises, FINDS: 1. The petitioner has compiled with all of the requirements of the law for a change of name, including the requirements of notice. 2. No sufficient cause has been shown why the name of the Petitioner should not be changed. IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the name of the Petitioner be and hereby is CHANGED to be Jessica Marie Talbot Submitted by: Jessica Marie Smith Petitioner, Pro Se 2491 Sawmill Rd, Apt . 505 Address Santa Fe, NM 87505 City, State, Zip 605-280-8453 Telephone No. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on January 14 and 21, 2015 LEGAL # 97896 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF Santa Fe FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Mary Suzanne Rodriguez Case No.: 2014-02523

D-101-CV-

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME Published in The San- Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on ta Fe New Mexican on TAKE NOTICE that in January 5 and 14, accordance with the January 14, 2015 2015 provisions of Sec. 408-1 through Sec. 40-8LEGAL # 97875 LEGAL# 97895 3 NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Mary NOTICE OF REQUEST STATE OF NEW MEXI- Suzanne Rodriguez FOR PROPOSAL CO will apply to the HonFOR PROFESSIONAL COUNTY OF Santa Fe orable JENNIFER L. SERVICES: FIRST JUDICIAL DIS- ATTREP, District INSURANCE TRICT COURT Judge of the First JuBROKER, dicial District at the CONSULTING, IN THE MATTER OF A Santa Fe Judicial ADMINISTRATIVE PETITION OF CHANGE Complex, 225 MonteSERVICES AND LOSS OF NAME OF zuma Ave., in Santa PREVENTION Jessica Marie Smith Fe, New Mexico, at SERVICES 10:00 a.m. on the 10th Case No.: D-101-CVday of February, 2015 Notice is hereby givfor an ORDER OF en that qualified per- 2014-02628 CHANGE OF NAME sons or firms are inSuzanne M vited to submit pro- ORDER FOR CHANGE from Rodrigues to Mary posals to the New OF NAME Suzanne Rodriguez. Mexico Public Schools Insurance THIS MATTER came before the court for STEPHEN T. PACHECO, Authority (NMPSIA) office at 410 Old Taos hearing upon a Peti- District Court Clerk tion for Change of

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LEGALS

email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS

By: Deputy Clerk

Court The address of the real property is 6357 Caminito Sonrisa, Submitted by: Santa Fe, NM 87507. Mary Suzanne Rodri- Plaintiff does not repguez resent or warrant Petitioner, Pro Se that the stated street address is the street Published in The San- address of the descrita Fe New Mexican on bed property; if the January 14 and 21, street address does 2015 not match the legal description, then the property being sold LEGAL # 97898 herein is the property STATE OF NEW MEXI- more particularly described above, not CO COUNTY OF SANTA FE the property located FIRST JUDICIAL DIS- at the street address; any prospective purTRICT chaser at the sale is NO. D-101-CV-2014- given notice that it should verify the lo00015 cation and address of LPP MORTGAGE, LTD., the property being sold. Said sale will be made pursuant to the Plaintiff, judgment entered on October 24, 2014 in v. the above entitled ANGELINA RUIZ AKA and numbered cause, ANGELINA M. RUIZ, which was a suit to THE UNKNOWN foreclose a mortgage SPOUSE OF ANGELINA held by the above RUIZ AKA ANGELINA Plaintiff and wherein was M. RUIZ, IF ANY AND Plaintiff SANTA FE COMMUNI- adjudged to have a lien against the TY HOUSING TRUST, above-described real estate in the sum of Defendant(s). $147,860.35 plus interest from February 1, NOTICE OF SALE 2014 to the date of NOTICE IS HEREBY sale at the rate of GIVEN that the under- 3.250% per annum, signed Special Mas- the costs of sale, inter will on February 3, cluding the Special 2015 at 12:30 pm, sell Master’s fee, publicaand convey to the tion costs, and Plainhighest bidder for tiff’s costs expended cash all the right, ti- for taxes, insurance, keeping the tle, and interest of and the above-named de- property in good refendants in and to pair. Plaintiff has the the following descri- right to bid at such bed real estate locat- sale and submit its ed in said County and bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff State: THE IMPROVEMENTS may apply all or any LOCATED ON LOT 33, part of its judgment AS SHOWN AND DE- to the purchase price LINEATED ON PLAT OF in lieu of cash. SURVEY ENTITLED "FI- At the date and time above, the NAL PLAT OF SURVEY stated FOR ARROYO Special Master may postpone the sale to SONRISA SUBDIVISION, COMPRISED OF such later date and FORMER TRACT 5 OF time as the Special THE TIERRA Master may specify. CONTENTA SUBDIVI- NOTICE IS FURTHER SION, PHASE 1 A GIVEN that this sale WITHIN THE CITY AND may be subject to a COUNTY OF SANTA bankruptcy filing, a FE, NEW MEXICO pay off, a reinstateWITHIN SECTION 12, ment or any other T. 16 N., R. 8 E., condition that would N.M.P.M.", FILED FOR cause the cancellaRECORD MAY 15. 1996 tion of this sale. FurAS DOCUMENT NO. ther, if any of these 945425 IN PLAT BOOK conditions exist, at 334 AT PAGES 027-029; the time of sale, this RERECORDED AS sale will be null and D O C U M E N T N O . void, the successful 965019 IN PLAT BOOK bidder’s funds shall 349 AT PAGES 023-026, be returned, and the RECORDS OF SANTA Special Master and FE COUNTY, NEW the mortgagee giving this notice shall not MEXICO, be liable to the suc-

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PORCHE 2006 CAYENNE. Beautiful SUV (taupe & tan), sun & moon roof, interior excellent condition. Runs great! $14,000. 505-920-3849

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LEGALS

LEGALS

cessful bidder for any damages. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption. Jennifer Taylor Special Master Ancillary Legal Support Inc. Post Office Box 91988 Albuquerque, NM 87199 Phone: 505-433-4576 Fax: 505-433-4577

signed Special Master will on February 3, 2015 at 12:30 pm, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State: Lot Eight Hundred Nineteen (819) of Los Campanas Estates VII Unit 1, as the same is shown and designated on the plat of said subdivision, recorded in the Office of the County Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, on December 15, 1997, at Book 377, pages 014 - 018, as amended by the replat thereof recorded in the Office of the County Clerk of Santa Fe County, New Mexico on May 8, 1998 at Book 386, pages 007 011,

Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on January 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015 LEGAL # 97899 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 02225

D-101-CV-2011-

LPP MORTGAGE LTD, Plaintiff, v. ROBIN RIEGOR, LAS CAMPANAS HOMEOWNER WATER COOPERATIVE AND THE UNKNOWN TENANT (REAL NAME UNKNOWN), Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the under-

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The address of the real property is 32 Calle Ventoso, Lot W, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87506. Plaintiff does not represent or warrant that the stated street address is the street address of the described property; if the street address does not match the legal description, then the property being sold herein is the property more particularly described above, not the property located at the street address; any prospective purchaser at the sale is given notice that it should verify the location and address of the property being sold. Said sale will be made pursuant to the judgment entered on December 1, 2014 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the above-described real estate in the sum of $158,664.31 plus interest from November 1, 2014 to the date of sale at the rate of 6.875% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master’s fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff’s costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such

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LEGALS g sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder’s funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption. Jennifer Taylor Special Master Ancillary Legal Support Inc. Post Office Box 91988 Albuquerque, NM 87199 Phone: 505-433-4576 Fax: 505-433-4577 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on January 7, 14, 21, 28, 2015


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, January 14, 2015

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