The Santa Fe New Mexican, Nov. 2, 2014

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Santa Fe Real

Estate Guide

Nove mbe r 2014

Locally owned and independent

Sunday, November 2, 2014

www.santafenewmexican.com

The best properties on the market. Home, inside

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3 ELECTIONS 2014

In final stretch, Dems reach out to Hispanics By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

LAS VEGAS, N.M. — It was the last Saturday before the 2014 general election, and the 150 or so Democrats who had gathered in the cavernous hall adjoining Charlie’s Spic & Span Bakery & Cafe were enthusiastic. They came to eat green chile stew and posole at the popular restaurant and to cheer their own candidates, who heaped praise on one another and gleefully bashed the Republicans. Some speakers also made appeals to Hispanic solidarity, which normally helps Democrats in Northern New Mexico but shows serious signs of softening in the current election, especially in the bitterly fought gubernatorial race between incumbent Republican Gov. Susana Martinez and Democrat Gary King, who has served as attorney general for nearly eight years. Nearly all the Democrats’ statewide ticket was there, including U.S. Sen. Tom Udall, who is facing Republican Allen Weh. San Miguel Democratic Party Chairman Martin Suazo, who introduced the speakers, touched

Attorney General Gary King greets supporters during a Democratic Party campaign event Saturday at Charlie’s Spic & Span Bakery & Cafe in Las Vegas, N.M. STEVE TERRELL/THE NEW MEXICAN

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Boosting patient satisfaction B Christus St. Vincent poised to launch plans to win C back community confidence. LOCAL NEWS, C-1 b

Painted faces mar national parks P G Graffiti desecrating landscapes sparks social media furor, creates headaches for managers. PAGE A-2 fu

New mindfuln ness sessions help Drug Court offfend ders battle addictio ons and a stress. LOCAL N NEWS S, C-1

Monte del Sol boys win thriller M Dragons make two saves in shootout. SPORTS, D-1 D

Deputies shared similar hopes until tragic night Two lives: Martin, Chan both had Farewell: First responders join promising careers, close families hundreds in honoring slain deputy

on one big problem New Mexico Democrats are facing this year. In several races, Democrats with Anglo surnames are up against Hispanic Republicans. “They want you to know they’re Hispanic, but they don’t want you to know they’re Republican,” Suazo said.

Please see STRETCH, Page A-5

INSIDE u Political attacks turn shrill in battle for the state House. LOCAL NEWS, C-1

2 explosions in week raise questions for space industry By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Fiery failures are no stranger to the space game. It’s what happens when you push the boundaries of what technology can do, where people can go. And it happened again to Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo. In the past decade, the space industry has tried to go from risky and government-run to routine private enterprise — so routine that if you have lots of money, you can buy a ticket on a private spaceship and become a space tourist. More than 500 people have booked a flight, including Justin Bieber, Ashton Kutcher and littleknown space scientist Alan Stern. But it all depends on flying

becoming safe and routine. This week hasn’t helped. Three days after a private unmanned rocket taking cargo up to the International Space Station blew up six seconds into its flight, a test flight of SpaceShipTwo exploded Friday over the Mojave Desert with two people on board. The developments reignited the debate about the role of business in space and whether it is or will ever be safe enough for everyday people looking for an expensive 50-milehigh thrill ride.

Please see SPACE, Page A-6

INSIDE u Investigation begins into SpaceShipTwo explosion. PAGE A-6

Today

Pasapick

Partly sunny. High 61, low 38.

www.pasatiempomagazine.com

PAGE C-8

El Día de los Muertos Celebration of Life Teatro Paraguas Studio, 3205 Calle Marie. Poetry, music, dance performances, drumming and dance procession, bonfire, community altar and dinner, 4-9 p.m., $7 adults, free for kids under 12, 424-1601 or 603-7997.

AP

Fall back sRemember to set your clocks back from 2 a.m. to 1 a.m. today.

Index

Calendar A-2

Obituaries Mary Harpole Brockwell, 87, Oct. 12 William P. Gonzales (Willie), 49, Santa Fe, Oct. 24 Richard Dana Jay, Santa Fe, Oct. 24 Kenneth R. Jones, 82 E. “Betsy”

Classifieds E-8

(Winchell) Kiddy, 56, Reading, Pa., Sept. 29 Tonita Payton Dr. Juan Guadalupe (Lupe) Rodriguez, Oct. 28 Eleanor T. Sanchez, Oct. 28 Patrick White, 69, Santa Fe, Oct. 29

Family members follow as pallbearers carry Deputy Jeremy Martin’s casket out of the Capital High School gymnasium after his funeral service Saturday. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

By Uriel J. Garcia and Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

hey were chosen at random, two young sheriff’s deputies assigned to transport a petty criminal 430 miles from Santa Fe to Safford, Ariz. Jeremy Martin and Tai Chan left early that Monday morning in an unmarked Ford Explorer. Martin would return home in a casJeremy ket escorted by fellow officers from across the state. Martin, 29 Chan remains locked in a jail in Las Cruces, accused of shooting his fellow deputy several times in the back and arms during a heated argument at a hotel. Before the violent clash that ended one of their lives and permanently altered the other’s, the two deputies shared some things in common. They were both relatively new to law enforcement but were on their way to promising careers. They both treasured time with their families. Martin was a married father of three with a fourth child on the way. Chan was preparing for his first child. Tai Chan, 27, is charged in And now their names will be etched side by the shooting side in one of the darker chapters of the Santa Fe death of County Sheriff’s Office. Martin. What led to the deadly argument, or what it was even about, remains unknown. But the stories of Martin and Chan’s lives up to that moment reveal the depth of what was lost when, according to police, Chan began pulling the trigger.

T

Crossword E-14

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

By Dennis J. Carroll For The New Mexican

Jeremy Martin was born in Massachusetts, but his father moved the family — including Jeremy’s two older brothers and older sister — to Arizona when Jeremy Martin was still a child.

The community he served and those he served with said farewell Saturday to slain Deputy Jeremy Martin, reflecting on his deep roots in his faith and recalling his dedication to his family and his job with the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. Law officers and emergency responders from around the state joined several hundred friends, family and community members in the Capital High School gymnasium to “escort our precious brother to the threshold of eternity,” said the Rev. Jim McAtee of the Pecos Valley Cowboy Church, which Martin and his family had attended. Following the service, bagpipers — composed of first responders from Santa Fe, Los Alamos, Bernalillo and Española — led mourners out of the gym, and dozens of police and other emergency vehicles gave Martin a loud, stirring send-off as they escorted

Please see LIVES, Page A-4

Please see FAREWELL, Page A-4

Early pain

PAGE C-2, C-3

Comics Inside

Family, colleagues recall Martin’s service and faith

Lotteries A-2

Opinion B-1

Sports D-1

Time Out E-14

Six sections, 76 pages

Real Estate E-1

165th year, No. 306 Publication No. 596-440

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

NATION&WORLD

In brief Police seek hit-and-run driver who killed 3 trick-or-treaters

U.N. set to release landmark report on climate By Karl Ritter The Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — The United Nations’ expert panel on climate science on Saturday finished a report on global warming that the U.N.’s environment agency said offers “conclusive evidence” that humans are altering the Earth’s climate system. The document, which combines the findings of three earlier reports, was adopted after all-night talks that went on until 5 a.m. Saturday by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The scientists and government representatives on the panel, who jointly approved the document line by line, then rested for a few hours before resuming the session in Copenhagen to finish the document. The report is scheduled to be released Sunday. Apart from discussing the human influence, it is expected to describe how climate impacts, including melting Arctic sea ice and rising levels, are already happening and could become irreversible unless the world curbs its greenhouse gas emissions. The panel says scientists are now 95 percent certain that the buildup of such gases from the burning of fossil fuels and deforestation is the main cause of warming seen since the middle of the 20th century. The panel’s vice chairman, Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, wrote on Twitter that the report was adopted Saturday afternoon following round-the-clock talks. The U.N. Environment Program said the report “offers conclusive scientific evidence that human activities continue to cause unprecedented changes in the Earth’s climate.” In an interview with The Associated Press, U.N. program head Achim Steiner said the world has the technology and capacity to act, and needs to do so urgently. The cost of achieving emissions cuts increases exponentially with each year “because you will have to make far more drastic changes in our economy,” Steiner said. While the panel tries to avoid explicitly telling governments what they should do, the report will present scenarios showing that warming can be kept in check if the world shifts its energy system toward renewable sources like wind and solar power and implements technologies to capture greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.

An Instagram posting shows an overlook of Crater Lake in Oregon with a rock painting. As investigators find more of the faces in some of the West’s most picturesque landscapes, park managers are trying to figure out how they’ll get rid of the graffiti. COURTESY INSTAGRAM

Painted faces at U.S. parks need painstaking removal might not be able to reach it until next summer. The National Park Service said last week that it has found paintings in Yosemite, Death Valley and Joshua Tree in California; Crater Lake in Oregon; Zion National Park and Canyonlands in Utah; and By Lindsay Whitehurst The Associated Press Rocky Mountain in Colorado, where Colorado National Monument also was tagged. SALT LAKE CITY Zion National Park is home to red-rock bluffs, series of graffiti-like paintings on rocks sweeping canyons — and now a backpack-sized in national parks across the West set drawing of a woman smoking on a rock near a trail off a furor on social media this month, named for emerald-colored pools of water. angering people who say they have desIt’s not the first time rangers have had to clean ecrated some of the nation’s most famously pictur- up, though paint is an unusual choice for vandals. esque landscapes. They’ve also created a headache Supervisory ranger Ray O’Neil said minor graffor park managers who have the delicate task of fiti is scratched onto rock every day. Rangers carry cleaning the sites without causing further damage. nylon-bristle brushes and water to brush it off as It won’t be easy to get rid of the paintings, phothey see it. tos of which were posted on Instagram and TumAt Joshua Tree in California, the Park Service is blr and then picked up by hiking blogs. Sandblast- dealing with graffiti it believes is from Nocket, and ing and some chemical strippers can cause even also a cleanup project at the historic Barker Dam, more damage to irreplaceable natural features, which is nearly covered with scratched-on graffiti. especially near ancient rock art. “Even though people know they shouldn’t do In some cases, workers use plastic kitchen it, as soon as someone else has done [it], they just spatulas to painstakingly scrape off paint. Workers jump right on board,” said cultural resources chief test different chemicals to figure out which will Jason Theuer. Sandblasting the structure originally loosen the material without damaging rock, then built in 1902 to provide water for cattle could cause rinse it off with lots of low-pressure hot water, gen- microscopic cracks, creating a home for water and tly scraping each layer away with the spatula, said bacteria that cause more damage. Instead, they’re National Park Service spokesman Jason Olson. using paint to fill it in. “They will repeat that as often as it takes until Rangers deal with graffiti nearly weekly there. they remove all the paint or until they can’t In some cases, graffiti near ancient petroglyphs or remove any more,” he said. He said Friday he pictographs is nearly impossible to remove and didn’t know how much it might cost to remove rangers have to leave it. the paint in eight parks across California, ColoEven if the rock art itself isn’t damaged, the soil can contain other essential archaeological clues rado, Utah and Oregon. One colorful painting of a woman with blue hair at Crater Lake National Park like microfossils that can be damaged by cleanup chemicals. is already covered in ice and snow and workers

Sites require careful cleanup to prevent additional damage

A

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Thailand’s military government, which seized power from an elected government in May, is considering a law BAAN KLANG, Thailand — The that would ban the dog meat trade, a dog-eating community here, a small move that animal rights activists backminority of rice farmers and day laboring the bill are portraying as a way the ers, has long understood that its culinary junta can enhance its image internationhabits do not sit well with people from ally. other parts of Thailand, especially the The national police, pressured by pet-loving urban middle and upper some of the same activists, began a classes. crackdown two years ago on the dog But these days, they feel under siege. trade, arresting those involved in the By Thomas Fuller The New York Times

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WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has scaled back its plan to assemble an overseas spy service that could have rivaled the CIA in size, backing away from a project that faced opposition from lawmakers who questioned its purpose and cost, current and former U.S. officials said. Under the revised blueprint, the Defense Intelligence Agency will train and deploy up to 500 undercover officers, roughly half the size of the espionage network envisioned two years ago when the formation of the Defense Clandestine Service was announced. The previous plan called for moving as many as 1,000 undercover case officers overseas to work alongside the CIA and the U.S. military’s Joint Special Operations Command on counterterrorism missions and other targets of broad national security concern. Instead, the training schedule has been cut back, and most of those involved will be given assignments that are more narrowly focused on intelligence gathering.

Scientists predict possible range of Ebola cases in U.S. STANFORD, Calif. — Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to emerge in the United States by year’s end as infected people arrive here from West Africa, including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from the deadly disease. No one knows for sure how many infections will emerge in the U.S. or anywhere else, but scientists have made educated guesses based on data models that weigh hundreds of variables. Last week, several top infectious disease experts ran simulations for The Associated Press that predicted as few as one or two additional infections by the end of 2014 to a worst-case scenario of 130. New Mexican wrire services

business on the grounds that they did not have licenses required for the slaughter or transportation of animals. The police have set up sting operations in the forests where dogs are slaughtered and have arrested what they describe as dog meat kingpins, who export trucks loaded with the animals to Vietnam and China, both countries where dog eating is prevalent. Dog lovers far outnumber dog eaters among Thailand’s nearly 70 million peo-

ple. The residents of this picturesque village profess to be both. “We only eat the fierce dogs — the dogs that bite people or kill chickens,” said Praprut Thanthongdee, 45, a rice farmer who has eaten dog since he was a child. As he spoke with a reporter, he stroked the neck of his pet dog, Money, a white and brown mutt who serves as guard dog, companion in the rice paddies, hunter of dangerous snakes and assistant in herding the water buffalo.

Calendar

Michael Campbell

Mike Reichard

Pentagon lowers spying ambitions overseas

Under pressure, Thailand dog meat trade might be banned

Contact us The Santa Fe New Mexican

LOS ANGELES — Authorities searched Saturday for the driver and passenger of an SUV who fled the scene after the vehicle struck three teenage girls who were out for a night of trick-or-treating in California. Witnesses said the black Honda was abandoned a short distance from the Santa Ana crosswalk where the 13-year-old girls were hit. On Saturday, investigators tracked the SUV to the address where it was registered, but the owner has since moved, Santa Ana police spokesman Anthony Bertagna said. The girls were not the only trick-or-treating fatalities in the U.S. on Halloween, but other drivers stayed at the scene and reportedly were cooperative. In Irvine, Calif., police said a man was struck and killed while trick-or-treating with his 4-year-old son. In New York state, a 3-year-old boy was killed and a 16-year-old girl was seriously injured when they were hit by a car while trick-or-treating. A 2-year-old in Florida was fatally struck by a bus Friday evening while trick-or-treating with a group. He was in a stroller with two other children when the adult pushing them across a street realized he had dropped his cellphone. The man stopped the stroller in the median and told the children to stay while he retrieved the phone. The toddler got out of the stroller and was hit by a driver who did not see him in the street, authorities said.

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Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014 ELECTION NIGHT PREVIEW: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. With KSFR radio host Xubi Wilson and political commentator Joe Monahan, presented by Journey Santa Fe, no charge. GRATEFUL DEEDS: 2014 GRATITUDE AWARDS: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St. 988-4226. New Mexico Literary Arts presents 2014 Gratitude Awards to poet Miriam Sagan and to Collected Works owners Dorothy Massey and Mary Wolf, followed by a reading by Sagan and an interview with Wolf and Joan Logghe, 3-4:30 p.m., no charge. GREGORY ZEIGLER: Op. Cit. Books, Sanbusco Center, 500 Montezuma Ave., 428-0321. The author reads from and signs copies of his new novel, The Straw That Broke, 2 p.m., no charge. LYDIA MILLET: Op. Cit. Books, Sanbusco Center, 500 Montezuma Ave., 428-0321. The author discusses her books Pills and Starships and Mermaids in Paradise, 3:30 p.m., free tickets available at John Cocteau Cinema (418 Montezuma Ave.) and Op. Cit. PIE TOWN CONSIDERED: St. Francis Auditorium, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W.

Lotteries Palace Ave., 476-5068. Screening of the short film Pie Lady of Pie Town, plus an illustrated lecture by photographer Joan Myers, with images from her book Pie Town Woman; pie will be served, 2-3:30 p.m., no charge. EL DÍA DE LOS MUERTOS CELEBRATION OF LIFE: Teatro Paraguas Studio, 3205 Calle Marie. Poetry, music, dance performances, drumming and dance procession, bonfire, community altar and dinner, 4-9 p.m., $7 adults, free for kids under 12, 424-1601 or 603-7997. NEW MEXICO PERFORMING ARTS SOCIETY SILENT AUCTION: Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa. Live entertainment, lunch and auction, noon-2:30 p.m., $34, holdmyticket.com, 886-1251. SOCIAL DANCE CLASSES: Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 W. Rodeo Road. Beginning West Coast swing class, 2-3:15 p.m.; waltz class for all levels, 3:30-4:45 p.m., $35 per class, preregister at 955-4008. VIVOS ENTRE LOS MUERTOS: El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, 555 Camino de la Familia Day of the Dead and 20th anniversary celebration, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., call 992-0591 for details. SWIM-A-THON: Santa Fe Community College’s School of

Fitness Education will host a Swim-A-Thon from 9 a.m. to noon at the William C. Witter Fitness Education Center. Proceeds will help endow an Exercise Science Scholarship for Hispanic and low-income students through the SFCC Foundation. Contributed funds will also help support maintenance of facility equipment. Space is limited. Registration for the event is $20. For more information, please contact Herman Garcia in the Fitness Education Center at 428-1751. BERLIN WALL: At 2 p.m. at Brigitte Brüggeman Studio, 667 Canyon Road, celebrate the 25th anniversary of the crumbling of the Berlin Wall. Heidemarie Sieg will offer a reading, question-and-answer session and book signing of After the Bombs — My Berlin. For more information, call 575770-2726. INTRODUCTION TO MOGADOA: From 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., at the MogaDao Institute Studio at the Railyard, 703 Camino de la Familia, No. 3103, a free program titled “Introduction to the MogaDao Institute Class” will be held. For more information, visit www.mogadaoinstitue.com or call 690-1928.

NIGHTLIFE Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014 COWGIRL BBQ: Blues/soul/

Roadrunner 3–15–16–22–26 Top prize: $35,000

Pick 3 D: 2–2–1 E: 7–4–6 Top prize: $500

Hot Lotto 5–18–27–31–42 HB–18 Top prize: $1.8 million

Powerball 1–3–13–25–38 PB 17 Power play 2 Top prize: $178 million

Corrections 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. rock singer/keyboardist Zenobia, noon-3 p.m.; folk singer/ songwriter Eryn Bent & Troupe Red, 8 p.m.-close; no cover. 19 S Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Nacha Mendez, 7:30 p.m., call for cover. 808 Canyon Road.


MIDTERM ELECTIONS

Republicans setting pace in Colorado’s early balloting her precinct, and Cremonesi said her job was to reach the 400 who had not yet mailed MANITOU SPRINGS, in their ballots. “It was really Colo. — It was warm and overwhelming,” she said. sunny and smelled of spiced Years of Republican stumtea inside a roadside cafe bles, combined with booming here in the mountains, but as growth along the diverse a dozen Democrats waited and increasingly urban Front for Sen. Mark Udall’s camRange of the Rocky Mounpaign bus to arrive for a lasttains, have helped Democrats minute pep rally, the air was turn this state’s political roslaced with dread. ter as blue as the cloudless In the final polls before sky on this autumn morning. Election Day, Udall was trail- Democrats control both Sening his Republican challenger, ate seats and the governor’s Rep. Cory Gardner. Early mansion, and have majorities voter returns tracking Coloin both chambers of the state rado’s first major election Legislature. But this year, run entirely through mail-in Republicans believe they can ballots showed that Repubride a wave of voter disconlicans had turned in 104,000 tent — with new gun control more ballots than Democrats, laws, health care reform and though they were hoping to an uneven economic recovclose the gap. ery — back into power. Democrats had spent the “Let’s claw back that lost campaign assailing Gardterritory,” Bob Beauprez, the ner’s positions on abortion Republican hoping to unseat and birth control, trying to Gov. John W. Hickenlooper, paint him as a Cro-Magnon said at a rally last week. “Let’s opponent of women’s repro- make Colorado a red state ductive rights — was their again.” strategy failing them? As the campaign closes, “I’m really worried about Democrats are still trying to Gardner and Udall,” said convince voters that Gardner Michael Merrifield, a Demo- is more conservative than the crat running for a state Senearnest, grinning Republican ate seat, who attended the who has lofted ahead in polls Udall rally. “I’ve even had and won an endorsement Democrats say to me, ‘I’m from The Denver Post. Speakjust tired of hearing about the ing to students at Colorado women’s issue.’ ” College, in Colorado Springs, “I live in a Democratic dis- Udall pointed out that Gardtrict,” said Alma Cremonesi, ner opposes same-sex mara property manager in nearby riage and said his positions Colorado Springs. “They’re on climate change, renewable not voting.” energy and college loans Cremonesi said she had a show no vision for the future. thick stack of papers with the As he does at many stops, names and contact informaUdall brought up his passion tion of hundreds of likely for mountain climbing to Democratic voters — the describe what has become fruits of sophisticated voter a bitter, high-spending race. turnout operations that in “You don’t schmooze your recent years have helped push way up a mountain,” he said. Democrats over the top here “You don’t climb it by accident. You don’t trash-talk and in tight elections across the country. There are about your way up a mountain. 600 registered Democrats in You just go climb it.” By Jack Healy

The New York Times

Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-3

Women the main target in final push nization is spending millions to elect Democratic women. “There isn’t a race is this WASHINGTON — Their grip country where the women vote on the Senate majority slipping, isn’t critical,” Schriock said. anxious Democrats aggressively She acknowledged that Democourted female voters Saturday crats’ traditional advantage with on the final weekend of a midwomen would shrink considerterm campaign that will decide ably because women typically the balance of power in Congress vote in smaller numbers in midand statehouses during President term elections. Barack Obama’s final years in Public research polls suggest office. that women have moved in the At the same time, some RepubGOP’s direction since September. licans offered a softer tone as party In last month’s Associated leaders began to outline plans for Press-GfK poll, 47 percent of likely a GOP-controlled Congress even female voters said they favored a with polls suggesting more than Democratic-controlled Congress a half dozen Senate contests are while 40 percent wanted the deadlocked. Republicans to take over. In a poll “We want to engage members released last week, the two parties from both parties in the legislawere about even among women tive process, to get our democracy — 44 percent prefer the Republiworking again the way it was cans, 42 percent the Democrats. designed,” said Senate Republican Speaking on a conference call leader Mitch McConnell, who with volunteers, Senate Majorwould ascend to majority leader ity Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., From left, Democratic Senate candidate Alison Lundergan if he holds his seat and his party described Iowa Rep. Bruce BralGrimes of Kentucky and former Secretary of State Hillary Clingains six more. ey’s Republican Senate opponent, ton wave to a group of supporters Saturday during a rally in Without getting specific, Joni Ernst, as “a woman who is Highland Heights, Ky. TIMOTHY D. EASLEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS McConnell predicted that Repubafraid to come and tell people licans would “be able to work how she feels.” Gary have a different vision, a about where we are across the with the president to ensure solid, “If we win Iowa, we’re going to vision rooted in the conviction country,” he said in an interview, pro-middle-class ideas are signed be just fine,” Reid said. “Iowa is that in America prosperity does citing Democrats’ shrinking into law.” critical.” not trickle down from the top, advantage with women in key Plagued by poor poll numbers, Women’s votes have shifted it comes up from folks who are races. Obama has avoided the most sharply between presidential “I don’t think they ought to be competitive elections, but he used working every single day.” years and midterm elections. In The election three days away bragging,” Priebus said, asserting 2012, women broke for Obama his last radio and Internet address will decide control of the Senthat “even Mitch McConnell” was by an 11-point margin, according before Tuesday’s election to seek ate, the House and 36 governors’ outperforming Democratic chalsupport from women, who are to exit polls. In 2010, when few seats. lenger Alison Lundergan Grimes candidates raised social issues as expected to play a pivotal role in Republicans appear certain among female voters. races from New Hampshire to a major campaign theme, female of at least three new seats in the Women were the focus in Iowa. voters split evenly between DemSenate — in West Virginia, Mon- Kentucky on Saturday as Hill“When women succeed, ocratic and Republican House tana and South Dakota. There ary Rodham Clinton, appearing America succeeds,” the president candidates. said. “And we should be choosing are nine other competitive races, with Grimes, endorsed a higher Democrats have put women’s including six for seats in Demominimum wage and equal pay for health and reproductive rights at policies that benefit women — cratic hands. women in remarks to more than because that benefits all of us.” the center of Senate campaigns in The head of the Democratic 1,000 people at Northern KenAlaska, Iowa, North Carolina and Obama made a similar pitch National Committee, Rep. Debbie tucky University. especially Colorado. Saturday night in Detroit while “It’s not, as Alison rightly said, Half the ads aired by Sen. Mark appearing at a rally for the Demo- Wasserman Schultz of Florida, said she was optimistic despite only a woman’s issue,” said ClinUdall, D-Colo., and those who are cratic candidates for the Senate, polls showing her party struggling ton, a possible 2016 presidential backing his re-election have critiGary Peters, and for governor, just to maintain the status quo. candidate. “It’s a family issue. It’s cized GOP Rep. Cory Gardner on Mark Schauer. The rare Senate “Democrats will hold the Sena fairness issue.” women’s health issues. candidate who’s asked Obama to ate,” she said Saturday. In New Hampshire, DemoSome ads have claimed that campaign with him, Peters also Her GOP counterpart, Reince cratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen is Gardner wants to ban certain has a comfortable lead in polls. Priebus, was campaigning with trying to win a second term and kinds of birth control. Gardner Republicans “don’t have an facing a strong challenge from has tried to nullify the attack by agenda for the middle class. They Gov. Scott Walker, R-Wis., and former Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass. proposing that birth control pills don’t have an agenda for Detroit. pointed to increasing signs that be available over the counter, Shaheen planned to campaign Republicans will have a good They don’t have an agenda for instead of requiring a prescripwith EMILY’s List president election night. Michigan,” Obama said. “The tion. Stephanie Schriock, whose orgagood news is that Mark and “I’m feeling pretty confident By Steve Peoples

The Associated Press

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Lives: Before trip, no sign of tension Continued from Page A-1 Martin’s father, James Martin, was a Christian missionary who worked on the Apache reservation in White River, Ariz., and with the Pima Indians near Coolidge, Ariz. “Most of [Jeremy’s] growing up was near Indian reservations,” said Jeremy’s uncle, Paul Martin, of Tulsa, Okla. When Jeremy was 14, his father died of an aneurysm. He was just 50, Paul Martin said. The sudden death forced Jeremy, the youngest of the children, to become “a man,” his uncle said. “I remember he played the saxophone at his father’s funeral,” Paul Martin said. He said his nephew dropped out of high school and at age 17 married wife Sarah and began a family. He worked construction jobs — sometimes with his father-in-law — to support his family, his uncle said. Like his father before him, Jeremy and his young family were deeply religious. “He had a rough start,” Paul Martin said of his nephew. “He had to work hard. He got married very young. But he never wavered. He married that gal, and they have done very well.” But Martin was already thinking about a new career.

Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputies speak about Jeremy Martin during his funeral service Saturday at Capital High School. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

a screwdriver,’ ‘Hand me this,’ and make ’em feel like they were helping us out.” Yeager said the young deputy also enjoyed the outdoors, was fond of camping and fishing, and always involved his family in his visits to the wilderness. Martin’s uncle said it wasn’t unusual for his nephew to have a few beers, but he said the young man wasn’t known “to drink to stupor,” or for having a bad temper. “I would like to know what the argument was about,” Paul Martin said. “Because my nephew would not have started something.”

A local boy Tai Chan, 27, was born and raised in Santa Fe. He was a good student who avoided trouble, said his mother, JoAnn Chan. But when he did get in trouble with his teachers, Chan knew that he would also get disciplined at home, so he would always fess up to his mistakes, his mother said. “We taught him that he knew that he had to be held accountable for everything he did,” JoAnn Chan said. After Capshaw Middle School, Tai Chan attended Santa Fe High School and graduated in 2005. There he developed a musical interest and at age 13 taught himself how to play the guitar. His brother, Tru Chan, said one day his older brother told him he wanted to play guitar, so he started teaching himself country songs with music-instruction DVDs. “Whenever he set his mind to something, he would do it,” Tru Chan said. During his teenage years, the aspiring deputy Rollerbladed at the De Vargas Park skateboard park, the brother said. Tru Chan described his relationship with his brother as “closer than most siblings.” He said he would always go to Tai Chan for advice. “With every situation, he would think about it and give me the best answer.” After his high school graduation, Tai Chan left Northern New Mexico and attended New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Tru Chan said his brother was an athletic person who loved sports, playing soccer, volleyball and dodgeball. As he did in high school, Tai Chan only aimed for good grades, A’s and B’s. He was disciplined, his brother said. “I’ve always said Tai was the most strongest out of all of us in the family,” Tru Chan said. “Emotionally, mentally and physically.” Tai Chan graduated in 2010 with a criminal justice degree and the next year joined the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. He told his brother he hoped to one day join a federal law enforcement agency and work his way up. The brother said Tai Chan never said what agency, but that he planned to focus on being a good sheriff’s deputy.

A new start Santa Fe County Cpl. James Yeager met Jeremy Martin before he moved to Santa Fe or became a law enforcement officer, via a shared passion — Jeeps. “I’m the one that talked him into coming to Santa Fe and joining the sheriff’s office,” Yeager said. Yeager was searching Craigslist for some parts for his Jeep. Martin was selling tires that Yeager was interested in, and the corporal, who also had moved to Santa Fe from Arizona, said he called Martin, and “we just struck up a conversation.” Yeager said Martin asked where in Arizona he was from, and when he answered Scottsdale, Martin cracked, “Oh Scottsdale, huh? That’s for all the snobby people.” Martin told Yeager he

Tai Chan, right, and his brother, Tru Chan, in the 2004 Santa Fe High School yearbook. COURTESY PHOTO

Jeremy Martin is shown on a boat in a photo posted for a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for his family. A friend said the young deputy was fond of camping and fishing. COURTESY PHOTO

lived in Phoenix with the working folk. “I got to know his sense of humor right then,” Yeager said. Yeager told Martin he was a police officer, and Martin said he had a strong interest in law enforcement but that it was hard to get on a force in Arizona. Yeager told Martin that the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office had testing coming up. Martin showed up “kind of rough with a big beard,” Yeager recalled, but he excelled on the preliminary tests. Martin trained to be a law enforcement officer at the New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy, and his first and only job in law enforcement was at the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. “We had been friends since the day he started here,” Yeager said with emotion in his voice. Martin was mechanically inclined, Yeager said, and the pair spent hours working on their Jeeps together. They worked at the Martin house, a mobile home off N.M. 14 accessorized by a boat, a motorcycle, a fire pit surrounded by tiki torches, lounge chairs and a child’s play set. The Martins had three young children, and Sarah Martin is pregnant with a fourth. Sarah Martin declined to be interviewed for this story. But posts from her Facebook page offer a glimpse of the way she approached life and her marriage. “Did you ever think about the blessings of being at home?” she wrote in late August. “I was thinking about this last week — about how hard my husband works so I can do all the things that are so easy to take for granted on a daily basis. When our husbands are at work they are making the selfless sacrifice of being away from our children so that we can stay home and nurture and watch over them.” She added a quote she had read: “We need women who set their hearts on making their homes pleasant, sunny, and fragrant for the husband. He who works from dawn till dusk for the home and wife and babes, look forward to the warm welcome that awaits him when the long day is over; of the bright smile and the love words that will be sure to greet him when he crosses the threshold of his own little Eden; of the cheerful fire in winter and the humble meals made so delicious by the love that prepares it and the sweet words that season it.” Jeremy Martin’s page was dominated by pictures of his family and law enforcement-themed memes, including several devoted to officers killed in the line of duty. “More than anything, he was a family man,” said Martin’s uncle, Paul Martin. “He would have done anything in the world for his family. They were first place in his heart. His job was second. And I know he was a good Christian man because of the way he was raised.” Jeremy Martin’s mother, Linda Martin, also lives in Santa Fe and is a teacher at Capital High School. “He was a very devoted husband and father,” Yeager said of the deputy, who was 29 when he died. “His kids would come out, and we’d be working on the Jeeps and he’d ask his son, ‘Hey, hand me

A mutual love of family Like Martin, Chan loved to hunt and fish with his family. He also liked to snowboard and ski with his younger brother, Tru Chan. The brother said they recently got into golf. Their mom, JoAnn, said every vacation Tai Chan took turned into a family vacation. They would sometimes visit Durango, Colo., to get away from Santa Fe. Family members said Chan wasn’t a heavy drinker and never lost control of his temper. During family dinners, Chan would discuss his job with his parents, who say he took the profession seriously and wanted to do nothing to jeopardize it. “He never let the authority get to his head,” JoAnn Chan said. “He never said he ever abused his power while he was on the job.” While he was still in college, Tai Chan met a woman who would become his wife, Susana Gonzales. The couple dated for seven years before they married. But the honeymoon was shortlived. The couple divorced in June 2013, three months after they got married, the Chan family said. Susana eventually married Tai Chan’s best friend, Josh Sexauer. Tru Chan said his brother “fell out of love” with Gonzales and he was happy “that two people he loved found each other.” In 2012, before he married Gonzales, Tai Chan met Leah Tafoya. Like Chan, Tafoya was involved in law enforcement as a probation and parole officer with Santa Fe County. They met through a mutual friend, Tafoya said. The couple met again in 2013 at the Department of Corrections gym and became friends. The next year, the friendship blossomed into a relationship, Tafoya said during an emotional phone interview. They moved in together. Tafoya would place little notes in his lunch box before he left to work in the morning. “At least one of those notes every week says, ‘Thank you for making me bright and shiny,’ ” Tafoya said, crying. “Because when I first met him, I was in such a dark place, and he brought me back to life.” Tafoya, who is now 10 weeks’ pregnant, said the couple planned to get married after the baby was born. They were hoping for a boy. “For right now, we’re calling him ‘baby Chan.’ ” The Saturday before the deputies left for Arizona, Tai Chan and Tafoya had a barbecue at their house. A few close friends and some of Chan’s cousins were invited to the get-together. To Tafoya’s surprise, it was at that event that Chan excitedly told the attendees that he and his girlfriend were going to have a child. “I wasn’t ready to come out,” Tafoya said during the in-person interview. “I didn’t realize that this was going to be my coming out party. He was so excited.”

Committed deputies Sheriff Robert Garcia described Chan and Martin as hardworking, committed deputies. They had unblemished records with the force and Chan, the nephew of County Commissioner Robert Anaya, had recently received a letter of commendation for his work on a burglary case. Yeager knew both deputies but was closest to Martin, whom he also supervised. “If you asked him to do something, he

did it. He didn’t fuss about it, he didn’t question it,” Yeager recalled. “He’d say ‘Sure, you got it, sir. I’ll do whatever you need.’ He was very respectful and knew his job very well for as young as he was and his position.” Yeager said Martin rose from cadet to Deputy I and then Deputy II in his three years with the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. He had recently joined the traffic homicide team and became a field training officer who helped new deputies get acquainted with the force and the city. “He had a great future here at the sheriff’s office,” Yeager said of Martin. “Everyone he came into contact with liked him. He had a real good way of talking to people, even in a bad situation.” Yeager said he was also friendly with Tai Chan and that Martin knew him, too. “We are a small department,” Yeager said. “Everybody knows everybody. Everybody is friendly. They were friendly in work and never had an issue.” Tafoya said Martin was excited about going on the trip with Chan. The two deputies had texted each other a few times over the weekend while finalizing details. “They weren’t best friends, but they were friends,” Tafoya said of the deputies’ relationship. “There was no bad blood there.” The trip went smoothly enough that on the way back, they decided to stop for the night in Las Cruces, where Chan had gone to college. They checked into room 7111 in the Hotel Encanto, one of the city’s nicer hotels, and Chan called up his old friend, Sexauer, to join them for drinks. Sexauer met them at the hotel. By then, Chan and Martin had already been drinking, Sexauer later told police. Chan told Sexauer he didn’t want to drive because he had a duty vehicle, so Sexauer drove them to Dublin’s Pub near the college campus. There, Sexauer later told police, Chan and Martin continued to drink and got into a heated argument. They started pointing fingers at each other and at one point had to be separated by a bartender. Sexauer told police he had never seen Chan become “hostile like that,” according to the criminal complaint. Sexauer left the pub. Chan told him that he and Martin would take a cab back to the hotel. According to police, the argument continued back at their seventh-floor hotel room. At 12:31 a.m., Sexauer said he got a call from Tafoya, who told him she had just been on the phone with Chan and was worried. She told him she heard someone yell “Please don’t, please don’t!” followed by the sound of gunshots. Police say Chan fired several shots from his Glock semiautomatic handgun, striking Martin in the back and arms as he fled for the elevator. Police found Martin staggering and bleeding profusely on the second-floor lobby. They found Chan slumped in a stairwell outside the locked door to the hotel roof, smelling heavily of alcohol, according to the criminal complaint. Sexauer did not return phone calls seeking comment for this story, and police reports do not say what the deputies were arguing about. Tafoya, on advice of Chan’s lawyer, John Day, declined to discuss what she and Chan had spoken about while they were on the phone or any other aspect of the argument and shooting. Chan’s family also declined to talk about it. Chan has pleaded not guilty. His lawyer says police released inaccurate information in the criminal complaint, but he has declined to elaborate. The last time Yeager saw Chan and Martin was Monday morning. They were together in the parking lot, getting ready to leave for Arizona. “They were happy,” he said. “Kind of lighthearted to be going on an expedition that was business.” Contact Uriel J. Garcia at ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com or 986-3062. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068.

Farewell: Martin ‘had your back,’ says deputy Continued from Page A-1 his hearse away from the school in a convoy of flashing lights and blaring sirens. Martin, 29, was reportedly shot to death early Tuesday in the course of an argument with a fellow deputy, Tai Chan, at a hotel in Las Cruces. Chan, currently held in the Doña Ana County jail, has pleaded not guilty to an open count of murder in Martin’s death and has lost his job with the sheriff’s office. The two had stopped in Las Cruces on their way back to Santa Fe after delivering a prisoner to Safford, Ariz. After a night of drinking and arguing, they returned to the Hotel Encanto, police said in court documents. The fight apparently continued at the hotel, although police have released no details about the dispute. Martin was remembered as a young, kindhearted man with a great sense of humor who mastered every task he took on and had made up his mind years ago to become a police officer. His older brother, James Martin, a former North Texas lawman and now the pastor of a small church in San Diego, recalled how Jeremy Martin had married his wife, Sarah, when he was only 17, and how he used to “rattle off police codes” as the two brothers bounced around the desert in a Jeep they had repaired. Jeremy and Sarah Martin have three young children, two boys and a girl, and Sarah is pregnant with their fourth child. James Martin also told the gathering that his younger brother was a man of deep Christian faith and urged mourners that when they are “reflecting on the life of Jeremy, [also] reflect on the life of Jesus. … He touched the heart and souls of [everybody] he met. I don’t think he ever met a stranger.” Said McAtee: “We are all candles burning … and we can’t fix this.” He reminded the mourners that “Jeremy is home safe, but we have a ways to go.” Martin’s fellow deputies sat in folding chairs on the gym floor; the 23 who worked the same shift as Martin were seated only a few feet from the flag-draped coffin. Five of them, each fighting back tears, recalled Jeremy as both a cherished friend and, as Detective Joshua David put it, a “deputy through and through.” “If he went to a [crime] scene with you, you knew you were safe,” said Deputy Vincente Ontiveros. “He had your back.” Added David: “He gave his all to the citizens of Santa Fe County.”


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Stretch: Early voting ended Saturday Gov. Martinez spends attacking Gary King. He’s going to win on Whether or not that’s true, Tuesday!” the GOP is drawing more HisDespite the polls and the panic support than usual this national pundits who have year. An Albuquerque Journal declared Martinez a safe bet to poll last week showed Martinez win re-election over King, Bregtaking 40 percent of the Hisman’s statement prompted wild panic vote in her race against applause. Even before BregKing. And some believe incum- man’s speech, a Las Vegas Dembent Republican Secretary of ocratic Party volunteer told a State Dianna Duran’s Hispanic reporter he’d been helping with name is helping her against her the party’s phone bank effort, Democratic opponent, Maggie and “80 percent of the people Toulouse Oliver. I’ve called say they’re voting for Shoring up the northern Gary,” the man said. That would Hispanic vote probably is a big be a feat even in San Miguel reason the Democrats spent County, in which Democrats the crucial last Saturday of the outnumber Republicans 71 percampaign in Las Vegas and cent to 13 percent. Mora, where a similar event was The general election battle planned later Saturday. for governor has seemed cruelly U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján, who lopsided since right after the gave the most rousing speech of June primary. Martinez, whose the day, used ethnic pride as a campaign already had amassed rallying cry during his time on millions, and the national stage. He didn’t even mention Republican Governor’s Associahis own opponent, Republican tion immediately began running rancher Jeff Byrd, whom he attack ads against King. Though easily defeated two years ago. the national group’s ads ceased Instead, Luján concentrated on after a few weeks, Martinez’s Martinez. He brought up a 2010 campaign, under the direction conversation that was caught of her political consultant, Jay on tape and released earlier McCleskey, has been relentless, this year in a blistering article bringing up decades-old votes about Martinez in Mother Jones from King’s legislative career magazine. In that tape, Matt and criticizing his performance Kennicott, then a campaign as attorney general. aide and now a spokesman for Not only was King unable to the Human Services Departeffectively fight back on the air ment, said Luján’s late father, because of his anemic fundraisformer state House Speaker Ben ing, his campaign also was full Luján, was eloquent in Spanish, of organizational problems. He but when he spoke English, he went through three campaign sounded “like a … retard.” managers and has been funcAfter telling how his mother, tioning without one since midCarmen Luján, had cried when September. that story broke, Luján said, “We Some Democrats have wordon’t let people make fun of the ried that other candidates also way we talk.” could be affected by a blowout When some audience memin the governor’s race. Toulouse bers booed the word “retard,” Oliver has been running neck Luján said. “Don’t boo. Vote.” and neck with Duran in the There was no doubt that secretary of state’s race. And the audience was charged up. incumbent state Land CommisEnthusiasm was on full display. As was some obvious wishful thinking. “There is a momentum,” said GREAT GIFTS FOR DADS state Democratic Party ChairWE BUY AND OLD GRADSPENS man Sam Bregman, wearing a Sanbusco Center • 989-4742 big, black cowboy hat. “I don’t www.santafepens.com care how much more money

Continued from Page A-1

0

$

U.S. Sen. Tom Udall receives his ballot and voter verification during the final early voting session at the Santa Fe County Fairgrounds on Saturday. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

sioner Ray Powell Jr. is facing a tough challenge from rancher and Republican Aubrey Dunn Jr., who has been running scathing TV ads against Powell for about a month. Powell only recently began running ads of his own. Asked why he’d taken so long, Powell said Saturday it was due to a lack of campaign money. Then he joked, “I finally went to the plasma center enough times to get the money.” Besides the races mentioned above, voters also will vote on state attorney general, a race in which Democrat Hector Balderas is running against Republican Susan Riedel; state auditor (Democrat Tim Keller vs. Republican Robert Aragon); and state treasurer (Democrat Tim Eisenberg vs. Republican Rick Lopez). Also up for election is the entire House of Representa-

tives. Several constitutional amendments and bond issues also are on the ballot. Saturday was the last day of early voting. According to figures on the secretary of state’s

U.S. Rep. Ben Ray Luján gave the most rousing speech Saturday in Las Vegas, N.M., using ethnic pride as a rallying cry during his time on stage. STEVE TERRELL/THE NEW MEXICAN

website, as of Saturday morning, 186,959 people had cast ballots at early voting centers, while 43,826 absentee ballots had been received so far. In 2010, the last year in which there was a

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gubernatorial race, there were 215,113 early in-person votes cast, which was almost half the total votes cast in that election. In 2010, 88,848 people cast absentee ballots in the state.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Space: Some experts Virgin Galactic rattled by crash but undeterred say private firms might not be best fit By Kenneth Chang The New York Times

Continued from Page A-1 “It’s a real setback to the idea that lots of people are going to be taking joyrides into the fringes of outer space any time soon,” said John Logsdon, retired space policy director at George Washington University. “There were a lot of people who believed that the technology to carry people is safely at hand.” The stakes are high for New Mexico, where taxpayers footed the quarter-billion-dollar bill to build a futuristic hangar and runway for commercial spaceflights near Truth or Consequences, part of a plan devised by Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson and former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson. The question for space tourism might be “if it survives,” Logsdon said. But he thinks its momentum in recent years will keep it alive. Branson expressed the same view Saturday after arriving in Mojave, Calif., to meet with the project workforce reeling from the accident. “We would love to finish what was started some years ago, and I think pretty well all our astronauts would love us to finish it, love to go to space,” he said. “Millions of people in the world would love to one day have the chance to go to space.” Federal estimates of the commercial space industry — only a little of it involving tourism — exceed $200 billion. NASA is counting on private companies such as SpaceX and Orbital Sciences to haul cargo to the space station. They are also spending billions to help SpaceX and Boeing build ships that will eventually take people there, too. Internet pioneers Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos have gotten into the space game. Aviation entrepreneur Branson and others are pushing a billion-dollar space tourism industry. The Virgin Galactic and Orbital accidents have nothing in common except the words “private space,” Stern said. Still, it raises issues about the space industry. Some experts said they worry that private industry may just not be as safe as the government when it comes to going into space. Jerry Linenger, a former astronaut who narrowly survived a 1997 fire on the Russian space station Mir, said private industry lacks the experience and the advocates for safety that NASA had when he was launching into space. He pointed to former moonwalking astronaut John Young, who NASA encouraged to raise safety issues and slow things down. Watching the Orbital Sciences accident Tuesday,

Linenger said, “it was blatantly obvious that it is a dangerous operation that is very nearly on the edge,” yet private companies talk of doing it better, faster and cheaper. Then they find out that was naive, he said. American University space policy professor Howard McCurdy, who wrote the book Space and the American Imagination, said NASA in the 1990s and private companies tout lean management to get things done faster, better and cheaper in space. But he said that leaves no margin for error and “is like flying an airplane without a qualified pilot. You really need to do it right.” McCurdy pointed to all the Silicon Valley whiz kids in space and worried that they come with the same Microsoft attitude of pushing a product out and fixing it on the fly. “I’m not sure that works for rocket ships,” McCurdy said. “That may work for cellphones, smartphones and computer programs.” With space, he said, “you’re working much closer to the edge.” Logsdon said he wouldn’t fly on commercial spaceflights now, but Virgin Galactic customer Stern said he had no qualms about it: “Let’s not be Chicken Littles,” he says. He recalled the early days of aviation or the early days of jet test piloting in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, when people died pushing the boundaries of technology. McCurdy said the private space industry seems to be having the same growing pains and failures that NASA and the military had when the first astronauts watched a rocket blow up in front of them. It seemed that in the first five years of U.S. rockets, one blew up every other week, but it wasn’t quite that bad, said Roger Launius, associate director of the National Air and Space Museum. This week seems a lot like those old times, he said. Launius wonders if the public will support private efforts despite the visible failures and if the for-profit companies can tolerate the risk that comes with space and accidents. Orbital’s stock price has dropped 13 percent since Tuesday’s accident. For Stern the answer is obvious. “I want to be part of the opening of this future frontier,” the former associate administrator of NASA said. “I want to make that better future a reality. “No frontier has been one without the risk of life and limb,” he added. “I stand with the brave pioneers of space who do this for all mankind.”

Richardson helps negotiate Marine’s release in Mexico the Army is a federal crime, and the country has been tightening The Associated Press up its border checks to stop the flow of U.S. weapons that have WESTON, Fla. — A retired been used by drug cartels. U.S. Marine who fought in In his order Friday, the Afghanistan returned home to Mexican judge did not make Florida on Saturday after spenda determination on the illegal ing eight months in a Mexican arms charges against Tahmoorjail for crossing the border with essi but freed him because of loaded guns, a case that led U.S. his mental state, according to a politicians to bring intense presstatement Saturday from Mexisure on Mexico to release him. Family spokesman Jon Franks co’s embassy in the U.S. Tahmooressi suffers from said the private plane carrying post-traumatic stress disorder, Marine Sgt. Andrew Tahmoortreatment for which Franks said essi, his mother and supportwould be the first order of busiers — including former New ness now that he is back in the Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson — landed at a South Florida air- U.S. Richardson, the former Demport at about 6 a.m. ocratic governor who grew up Tahmooressi was freed Friin Mexico and has negotiated on day night and reunited with his mother, Jill, and then boarded the a range of international issues, said he met with Tahmooressi in flight to Florida in San Diego. jail in the border city of Tecate, “They’re just spending time and he had talked to Mexican together, trying to figure out what’s next,” Franks said. “They officials to urge them to release need some time to decompress.” Tahmooressi on humanitarian grounds. “I respect Tahmooressi, 26, has said he took a wrong turn on a Califor- Mexico’s judicial process, and I am pleased that Andrew was nia freeway that funneled him into a Tijuana port of entry with released today and will return home to his family,” Richardson no way to turn back, and that said in a statement Friday. he had no intention of illegally Saturday brought another bringing guns into Mexico. His outpouring of support and comdetention brought calls for his freedom from U.S. politicians, mentary from Democratic and veterans groups and social Republican political figures media campaigns. A U.S. conalike. U.S. State Department gressional committee held a spokeswoman Jen Psaki said hearing on the case. in a statement that the agency In Mexico, possession of was pleased with Tahmooressi’s weapons restricted for use by release. By Curt Anderson and Julie Watson

A team of about 15 investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board began its inquiry Saturday into the crash of a Virgin Galactic space plane Friday in the Mojave Desert. Richard Branson, the billionaire entrepreneur who started Virgin Galactic with the goal of taking tourists on short flights into space, also arrived at the Mojave Air and Space Port in California, where the space plane, SpaceShipTwo, disintegrated during a test flight Friday, killing one pilot and leaving the other severely injured. “We are determined to find out what went wrong,” Branson said during a news conference at the spaceport Saturday morning. Scaled Composites, the company that designed and built SpaceShipTwo, identified the crew member who died as Michael Alsbury, 39, the co-pilot. The pilot, who survived by parachuting from the doomed space plane, is Peter Siebold, 43. He was badly injured and is to undergo surgery. “He is alert and talking with his family and doctors,” Scaled Composites

This three-image combination shows the SpaceShipTwo rocket separating from the carrier aircraft, left, prior to it exploding in the air, right, during a test flight Friday. KENNETH BROWN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

said in a statement Saturday. During Friday morning’s test, SpaceShipTwo was carried by a larger plane to an altitude of about 45,000 feet before being released. Soon after the space plane’s motor ignited, something went wrong. The plane fell to the ground in pieces about 20 miles northeast of Mojave. This was the first test of the plane using a new motor. More than 700 people, including celebrities like Ashton Kutcher, Tom Hanks and Katy Perry, have reserved seats on

Virgin Galactic. The price of a ticket is $250,000. “We do understand the risks involved, and we are not going to push on blindly,” Branson said. “To do so would be an insult to all those affected by this tragedy. We’re going to learn from what went wrong, discover how we can improve safety and performance, and then move forward together. “Of course, anyone who ever wants a refund will get a refund,” Branson said. Branson said that on Friday

one new customer signed up for a flight after news of the crash, to show support for the company. He said the company had not spent any of the $80 million it has collected in deposits. Instead, the money “gave us the confidence to do the program, because these people were so committed,” Branson said. This is the second time tragedy has struck the spaceport in connection with Scaled Composites; in July 2007, three people died when a rocket system test went awry.

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NATION

Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-7

Report says 60,000 veterans receive triple benefits In majority of cases, multiple payments are given to those who are severely disabled report shows the need for better coordination among government programs that are facing WASHINGTON — Nearly severe financial constraints. The 60,000 veterans were triple dipSocial Security Disability Insurpers last year, drawing a total of ance trust fund could run out of $3.5 billion in military retirement money in as soon as two years, pay plus veterans and Social government officials say. Security disability benefits at the “We should fulfill our promsame time, congressional audiises to the men and women who tors report. serve, but we need to streamline It’s all legal. these duplicative programs,” said The average payment was Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., who about $59,000, but about 2,300 requested the study. veterans, or 4 percent of the total, Veterans groups disagree. received concurrent payments They say the retirement money of $100,000 or more, the Govern- was earned for years of service ment Accountability Office said. in the military, while disability The highest payment was to a payments are compensation veteran who received $208,757 in for service-related injuries and combined payments in 2013. wounds. Some lawmakers say the In most cases, veterans who By Matthew Daly

The Associated Press

receive a combination of benefits are severely disabled. About 4 in 5 veterans who got triple payments had a disability rating of at least 50 percent, the GAO said. Nearly half of those receiving triple payments were at least 60 years old. Louis Celli Jr., a Washington representative for the American Legion, said critics of the multiple benefits are “misguided and uninformed.” He said the report “should simply be filed in the category of one of Sen. Coburn’s parting shots to loyal upstanding American patriots who have sacrificed so much for this country.” Coburn, a longtime critic of government spending, is retiring at the end of the year. He said in an interview that the report raises legitimate questions about whether disability benefits are getting to those who truly need them.

“This is billions of dollars a year in duplicative payments,” Coburn said. “We ought to reassess and say, ‘Are we doing more than take care of people in need?’ I’m not against the military. I don’t think they should be triple dipping.” Most Americans would find it hard to understand how someone making $86,000 a year in taxexempt VA income qualifies for Social Security Disability Insurance, when civilian workers are disqualified from the program if they make as little as $13,000 a year, Coburn said. Only 17 percent of those who received multiple forms of compensation had suffered a combatrelated disability, according to the GAO. Veterans have long been

exempted from rules that deny Social Security benefits to anyone with other income exceeding $13,000 a year. But until the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, veterans were barred from receiving both military retirement pay and Department of Veterans Affairs’ disability benefits. Under a Civil War-era statute, the Pentagon docked retirement pay dollar-fordollar up to the amount of disability benefits from the VA. With bipartisan support, Congress changed that law in 2002, gradually restoring military retirement pay to veterans also drawing disability benefits from the VA. “Our nation’s status as the world’s only superpower is largely due to the sacrifices our

veterans made in the last century,” Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., said in March 2002 when the bill was being debated. “Rather than honoring their commitment and bravery by fulfilling our obligations, the federal government has chosen to perpetuate this longstanding injustice,” Reid said. “Quite simply, this is disgraceful and we must correct it.” At the time, then-Sen. John Warner, R-Va., a former Navy secretary, posed a question to fellow senators: “How can we ask the men and women who have so faithfully served to sacrifice a portion of their retirement because they are also receiving compensation for an injury suffered while serving their country?”

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A-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

WORLD

Nigerian extremist says kidnapped girls were married off Friday night, the Boko Haram leader also denies there is a The Associated Press cease-fire with the Nigerian government and threatens to kill an MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — unidentified German hostage. With a malevolent laugh, the “Don’t you know we are still leader of Nigeria’s Islamic holding your German hostage extremists tells the world that [who is] always crying,” he taunts. more than 200 kidnapped “If we want, we will hack him or schoolgirls have all been conslaughter him or shoot him.” verted to Islam and married off, A German development dashing hopes for their freedom. worker was kidnapped at gun“If you knew the state your point in Gombi, a town in Nigedaughters are in today, it might ria’s northeast, in July. Police lead some of you … to die from reported he was ambushed as he grief,” Abubakar Shekau sneers, drove to work. addressing the parents of the Germany’s Foreign Minister girls and young women kidFrank-Walter Steinmeier last napped from a remote boarding school more than six months ago. week told reporters in Abuja, In a new video released late Nigeria’s capital, that he had no By Haruna Umar and Michelle Faul

new information about a German abductee. In the new video, Shekau wears a camouflage tunic and pants and the black and white flag of al-Qaida is by his side. He is flanked by masked and armed fighters standing in front of four military pickups mounted with anti-aircraft guns. Boko Haram has looted many weapons and vehicles including armored cars from Nigeria’s military. The military has several times claimed to have killed Shekau, and says any new videos are made by a look-alike. But the United States has not removed a $7 million ransom on the head of the extremist leader.

On Oct. 17, Nigeria’s military chief, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, announced that Boko Haram had agreed to an immediate cease-fire to end a 5-year insurgency in which thousands have died and hundreds of thousands have been driven from homes in northeast Nigeria. And government officials said they expected the Chibok girls to be released any day. But Shekau denies in the video that he has agreed to any truce and says he is dedicated to fighting and dying a martyr’s death to guarantee him a place in paradise. The fighting and abductions have continued, with Boko Haram seizing the commercial

center of Mubi this week and fighting raging Friday around nearby Vimtin, the village where Badeh was born. And the only news of the girls has come from Shekau, who appeared to dash hopes that they would be released in an exchange for detained Boko Haram fighters. “The issue of the girls is long forgotten because I have long ago married them off,” Shekau says with a chortle. The extremist fighters have ordered girls to stay out of Western-style schools and get married. Boko Haram is a nickname meaning “Western education is sinful” in the Hausa language.

An earlier video in May showed some of the kidnapped girls, including two explaining why they had converted to Islam. Unconfirmed reports have indicated the girls have been divided into groups and that some have been carried across borders, into Cameroon and Chad. There also have been reports that they were forced to marry fighters who paid a nominal bride price equivalent to $12. Some 276 girls and young women were kidnapped in the early hours of April 15 from a boarding school in the remote town of Chibok. Dozens escaped on their own in the first couple of days but 219 remain missing.

Peshmerga from Iraq prepare for Syria battle By Elena Becatoros and Bassem Mroue The Associated Press

MURSITPINAR, Turkey — Iraqi peshmerga fighters prepared Saturday to battle Islamic State group militants in the Syrian border town of Kobani, just hours after they arrived in a town that’s become a focal point in the battle against the extremists. The force brought in badly needed heavy weapons including artillery, heavy machine guns and anti-tank missiles, material that could tip the balance of power in favor of the embattled Kurds fighting there. The deployment came as Syria’s al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front scored a major victory against a moderate rebel faction, capturing their headquarters as well as the mountainous strategic region of Jabal al-Zawiya in the northwestern province of Idlib. Jabal al-Zawiya was one of the first areas to fall out of President Bashar Assad’s control after the uprising against his government began in March 2011. The push in Idlib against the moderate rebel faction could be a blow to the U.S. as it plans to work with moderate rebel factions in the future to fight jihadis and Assad’s forces. Shorsh Hassan, a spokesman for the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, or YPG, said the peshmerga and the YPG are preparing a role for Iraqi Kurdish troops. Hassan’s comments came after some 150 peshmerga fighters on Friday night entered Kobani to fight the extremist group that controls parts of the town. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Saturday that the peshmerga force had yet to take part in any battles in Kobani. Mustafa Bali, a Kobani based activist, said the peshmerga force will play a supporting role and will mostly work inside the town adding that they still haven’t deployed. He added that YPG fighters will benefit from the weapons that the Iraqi Kurds brought with them. Since mid-September, Islamic State group fighters have captured dozens of predominantly Kurdish villages near Kobani and entered the town they have been trying to capture for weeks. More than 200,000 people have fled to Turkey and more than 800 people have died, activists say. Islamic State group positions in Kobani also have been targeted by more than 150 airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition over the past weeks. On Saturday, the U.S. Central Command said American military forces conducted five airstrikes near Kobani that suppressed or destroyed nine Islamic State group fighting positions and struck one building used by the jihadis. The Observatory said the Islamic State group launched another offensive Friday night on YPG-held areas in Kobani but failed to advance. The group, which relies on reports from activists on the ground in Syria, said that more than 100 jihadi fighters have been killed over the past three days in the clashes, as well as the U.S.-led airstrikes. An Associated Press reporter on the Turkish side of the border facing Kobani said it sounded like several explosions struck the town early Saturday, though no more information about them was immediately available.

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110214_Santa_Fe_Spadea_Back


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Our view B-2 My view B-3

OPINIONS

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Connections — virtual vs. real. Page B-3

A negative election? Just wait

Be more like (gasp) Texas

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or a long, long time, people in New Mexico — and specifically, Santa Fe — have had a love/ hate relationship with Texas. Well, it actually can sometimes get a little short on the love and long on the hate. But as much as it hurts to say it, when it comes to reviving New Mexico’s economy, the Land of Enchantment should take some lessons from the Lone Star State. While New Mexico has been sputtering, Texas is on a roll. More people have moved to Texas than any other state in the country: A net gain of more than Rob 387,000 in the latNikolewski est from the 2013 census. Commentary In fact, five of the 20 fastestgrowing large metro areas in the U.S. are in Texas — Austin, San Antonio, Houston, Dallas and Fort Worth — and smaller communities such as oil-rich Midland and Odessa grew at 3 percent or better. “Sure, people move there for jobs, but they’re low-quality jobs that don’t pay much,” critics say. But that’s not what the statistics show. Median household income in Texas has moved up nine places since 2000. Democrats in New Mexico have been hammering Republican Gov. Susana Martinez on the state’s poor economic numbers. Fair enough. Like NFL quarterbacks, governors get too much credit when things are good so they have to take the hits when they’re bad. But for 62 years, Democrats have controlled the state House of Representatives, and for 77 of the last 81 years, they’ve controlled the Senate. If the New Mexico economic landscape is less than ideal — and it has been — the party running the Legislature for decades has to accept some responsibility for that. Earlier this week, the pro-growth Tax Foundation ranked U.S. states by tax climate. New Mexico finished 38th. Every other state in the Rocky Mountain region finished in the top half of the rankings. Texas finished 10th and has made a concerted effort to avoid overregulation. “The classic social contract is — we’re not going to do a ton to help you but we’re not going to get in your way,” author Erica Grieder told the BBC last year. “That’s not 100 percent true of the state but there’s that strand in the state.” The title of the book Grieder wrote? Big, Hot, Cheap and Right: What America Can Learn from the Strange Genius of Texas. Texas is also one of the few states with no state income tax, and it’s one of 24 states that has passed right-towork legislation. Last year, Albuquerque attorney and longtime Democrat David Buchholtz broached the subject to me and offered a New Mexico compromise: Pass right-to-work legislation but carve out an exception for publicsector employees. “People I trust tell me up to 25 percent of companies looking to relocate will not put a state on their list that is not a right-to-work state,” he told me last September. “We desperately need to create private-sector jobs, and if we’re missing 25 percent of the opportunities, that’s not a good thing for us.” The idea received criticism from the left (predictably) and from the right (too watered down), but give Buchholtz credit for offering an idea to stimulate New Mexico’s economy. Speaking of which, can you imagine how bad our numbers would be if it weren’t for the oil boom in southeastern New Mexico? The oil patch has almost single-handedly kept us afloat. And just as in North Dakota, crude production in Texas is exploding. I’m not saying New Mexico should mimic every last thing that Texas has done (they can keep Jerry Jones), but it would be foolish to not take a hard look at what it’s done and apply some — or even a lot — of those lessons. With our natural beauty, we’ll always be the Land of Enchantment. But let’s not be in a state of denial. You can contact Rob Nikolewski through the website he edits, www. newmexicowatchdog.org.

‘‘I

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

AnnaMaria Cardinalli helped save the bell

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write regarding the article (“Century later, bell set to toll at San Miguel Chapel,” Oct. 23) on the ringing of the bell in the San Miguel Mission’s bell tower after more than a century of silence. Your article, while admittedly referencing a “variety of fundraisers,” was itself curiously silent on a very important contributor to this restoration. AnnaMaria Cardinalli, a prodigiously talented classical and flamenco guitarist and another Santa Fe treasure in her own right, performed a series of concerts at the San Miguel Mission every Thursday evening throughout the spring and summer, raising more than $8,000 for the restoration of the bell tower. The city of Santa Fe and its citizens, as well as everyone who appreciates the mission’s singularly rich history, owe a debt of gratitude to AnnaMaria and her parents, Giovanna Cardinalli and David Padilla, for their selflessness, generosity and foresight in raising funds for such a worthy cause and bringing celestial music back to our ears and city. Michael Gary

Santa Fe

Support reusables It should surprise no one that the residents of Santa Fe have been unwilling to replace their usage of plastic bags (“Shoppers fail to use reuse bags,” Oct. 23) with reusable ones. Why should they, when they can now get paper ones instead? Unfortunately, most people will not change their habits or behavior (even for the better) unless forced to do so. The only way to get folks in the habit of using reusable shopping bags is to stop providing any alternative — plastic, paper, or otherwise. If retailers only provided reusable bags at the checkout and charged for them, people would start using reusable bags and remember to bring them when they shop. It’s not rocket science. Folks in Europe and environmentally conscious Americans have been using reusable bags for years. If the Santa Fe City Council really wants to affect a change, then it needs to create a crisis and ban all bags except reusable ones. Period. People will moan, groan and complain, but then they will get over it and do what they should have already been doing all along.

less demand for scarce water resources and with less waste and pollution. James Reed

Santa Fe

Behind the driving curve I am a citizen of New Mexico and a 78-year-old veteran. I thought it might be helpful to other aging New Mexicans to tell them what awaits them as they get older. After you are 75 years old, you will be required to renew your driver’s license every year instead of every three years (the fee is waived). If you should happen to have a medical problem (undefined) that could affect your driving, you will be required to have your doctor sign a Motor Vehicle Division form that requires an evaluation on whether you are a safe driver. If the doctor does not sign the form, you will not get a new driver’s license. My doctor required that I take the exam. It just so happens that New Mexico does not have such a test but relies on an Arizona firm to give me a test. So I must call Arizona to schedule a time to take the test in Albuquerque. I live in Los Alamos and my neurologist says that driving to Albuquerque is out for me. The Arizona firm notified me that it charges a $50 nonrefundable deposit to take the test and $160 per hour to administer the test, and the test takes 3 ½ to four hours to complete. If I include transportation and other costs, including a 7 percent state of New Mexico gross receipts tax, it will cost me $800 to $1,000 to maybe obtain a new license to drive locally — only to doctors’ appointments, grocery stores, church and other local activities. Come on, New Mexico, could not New Mexico handle this activity for less and help an aging veteran? Robert Villarreal

retired scientist Los Alamos

A desecration Is not the imminent desecration of the sacred and ancient Chaco Canyon and World Heritage Site by increased oil and gas drilling akin to desecrating the Santa Fe National Cemetery and tearing down the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi to extract the natural resources likely buried beneath them?

Shirley Cruse

Bill Gould

Santa Fe

A 21st-century plan Kudos to Esha Chiocchio for her article (“PRC’s big decision: Wasteful coal or renewables?” My View, Oct. 24). Her article clearly explains the failure of the Public Service Company of New Mexico to realistically consider and communicate the enormous annual quantity of water required for their proposed plan for generating electricity — a quantity of water that will more than exceed twice the annual usage of the city of Santa Fe while outsourcing the nuclear power component. Alternative power generation does exist as gas is readily available locally and declining in cost. Wind and solar are naturally available and abundant. To me, the PNM plan appears to be a 20th-century plan. We are already 15 years into the 21st century (counting year 2000 as year one). We need a 21st-century solution for electrical power generation now and into the future. Let’s hope that the Public Regulation Commission will choose a 21st-century program that will address power needs with much

We welcome your views Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. We do our best to get every opinion in the paper. It doesn’t have to agree with ours. In fact, the wider the variety of ideas on the Opinions page, the better our readers are served.

Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com

Santa Fe

Stinky situation Among the people who do the really important work that keeps this city running smoothly, I would like to publicly thank the employees of Animal Control for the prompt and efficient removal of the deceased skunk from Don Diego Avenue on Saturday, Oct. 26. Well done! Stephen C. Dubinsky

Santa Fe

Off balance The quick-triggered sheriff’s deputy accused of shooting his partner was indeed a scary pre-Halloween scenario. One hopes that the law-enforcement selection process includes mental and emotional stability. Art Judd

Santa Fe

We try to run them in their turn. They’re all 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, address and telephone numbers so we can verify that you wrote it. Email to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.

sn’t this the worst election you can remember?” Several people, including those from both political parties, have made that comment to me in recent weeks. I believe they’re mainly talking about the negativity, which turns voters sour and dour. Of course, reporters have a slightly different definition of a “bad” election. That’s an election that is boring and predictable because it’s so one-sided that everyone has known for months who is going to win. Having covered — and survived — a few of these through the years, I do have to admit this election is pretty bad under either definition. Steve Terrell Back in October 2012 in this column, I Roundhouse pondered the possibilRoundup ity that Gov. Susana Martinez — if the campaign funds kept pouring in and her poll numbers remained good — might run a largely positive campaign, relatively free of attacks on whoever ended up as her opponent. I based that on the fact that in 2006, then Gov. Bill Richardson, who was miles ahead of Republican John Dendahl in polls and money, didn’t run a single attack ad on TV. Instead, he ran (purposely) comical campaign spots and coasted to victory. Still, even though Martinez has several times more campaign cash than her opponent, Gary King, and has maintained double-digit leads in the polls for several weeks, she has relentlessly attacked. The TV front is so one-sided it almost seems brutal. Former prosecutor Martinez basically has run the campaign like a trial with King as the defendant. But is this really the worst, the most negative campaign ever? I think every campaign feels that way by the end to people involved or paying close attention. But I believe as a civilization we sometimes have an overly sentimental view of some distant golden age in which statesmen robustly debated “the issues” and shunned all mudslinging. Remember those noble elections of yore, where every debate was just like Lincoln and Douglas going back and forth and every campaign ad was as cheerful as, “I Like Ike”? I don’t. Even back in the years when negative ads didn’t dominate prime-time TV in the weeks before an election, there often would be extremely nasty “whisper” campaigns — has Candidate X stopped beating his wife? Does Candidate XXX have out-ofwedlock children he’s hiding from us? This might be the most vile, soulcrushing election in this enchanted land since 2006, when the congressional race between then Rep. Heather Wilson and Attorney General Patsy Madrid caused many voters — well, at least this one — to stop watching television altogether in mid-October for the duration of the campaign. (Except when I got the assignment to cover a Wilson/Madrid debate for the paper.) In that race, national money was gushing in from both parties, and every time you turned on the tube it seemed like an ongoing domestic dispute. You probably could argue that the tenor of the election just seems more negative this year because of more money from more “independent expenditure” groups filling the airwaves. Chances are, the next election won’t be much better. The one bit of good news: It’ll all be over after Tuesday. The Full Ginsburg: That’s what national media types call it when someone appears on all five American major Sunday morning talk shows on the same day. (It’s named for William Ginsburg, Monica Lewinsky’s lawyer who accomplished that media feat on Feb. 1, 1998.) I’m not claiming that, but I’ve got a bunch of TV and radio appearances to discuss the election scheduled in the near future. On Monday night, I’ll be on a panel hosted by blogger Joe Monahan at 5 p.m. on KNAW, 891. FM. On Friday, I’ll be a member of The Line panel on KNME’s New Mexico in Focus, which airs at 7 p.m. on channel 5. And next week I’m taping a post-election segment for Diane Kinderwater’s Issues and Answers, which will be broadcast on KSUN, Channel 11 soon after that. Last week, my colleague Patrick Malone and I talked politics on Dave Marash’s Here and There on KSFR. It already aired, but you can find the podcast at http://hereandtherewithdavemarash.libsyn.com. Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnew mexican.com. Read his political blog at www.santafenewmexican.com/news/ blogs/politics.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Get ready and vote!

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he election — finally — winds up Tuesday. After countless hours of rallies, debates and TV and radio ads, the voters finally get their say. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Election Day, and people who want to be better informed can catch up on issues and news about the candidates at our website, www.santafenewmexican.com/elections/. This election season, rather than being a time to focus on our state’s challenges and look for solutions, has turned into a dismal slog through charges and counter-charges. The negativity would not have been so depressing had the two candidates for governor, at least, shared their positive vision for New Mexico and laid out a plan to get us there. As a result, many voters will be casting ballots against, rather than for, particular candidates. That’s always a shame. More encouragingly, we think that many down-ticket races — statewide contests that aren’t as high-profile as the races for governor or U.S. Senate — did feature candidates who aren’t afraid to state their differences with opponents and present their ideas for change. Too much special interest money still has turned these otherwise solid contests into negative slug fests. Still, in the races for attorney general and secretary of state, voters have clear choices of philosophy and ideology. It’s possible to cast votes for a candidate, as opposed to just saying no. Starting Wednesday, the entire political landscape of the country — a GOP-controlled Congress in both houses — could be in play (or not). In New Mexico, it’s hard to say what will change, with control of the House of Representatives the biggest question mark, and several statewide races too close to call. In individual legislative districts, where the races are tight, every vote truly matters. As voters go in to the polls on Tuesday, remember that waiting in line is privilege — so many people around the world still aren’t able to cast a vote, and so many people sacrificed so today’s citizens could vote. The ballot is long, two pages front and back. Voting will take less time if you are prepared going in and know what is on the ballot. In addition to contested races, there are uncontested races, judicial retention questions, five constitutional amendments and three general obligation bond questions. Whoever wins, whoever is in control, we would like to think that once the votes are counted, the different candidates will shake hands and get to work fixing problems and finding solutions. It’s a long shot, but, hey, we can dream. Get out and vote on Tuesday. It’s your right, but more importantly, it’s your responsibility. Here is a recap of The New Mexican’s endorsements in contested or retention races.

Congress U.S. Senate: Tom Udall U.S. House: Ben Ray Luján

State races Governor: Susana Martinez Secretary of State: Maggie Toulouse Oliver Attorney General: Hector Balderas State Auditor: Tim Keller Commissioner of Public Lands: Ray Powell State Treasurer: Tim Eichenberg

Legislature House District 43: Stephanie Garcia Richard House District 50: Matthew McQueen

Judicial races Supreme Court: Edward Chavez, yes on retention Court of Appeals: Linda M. Vanzi, Jim Wechsler, Cynthia A. Fry, yes on retention Court of Appeals: J. Miles Hanisee, contested race District Court: Sarah Singleton, Raymond Z. Ortiz, T. Glenn Ellington and Mary Marlowe Sommer, yes on retention Sheri Raphaelson, no on retention.

Santa Fe County Advisory question on decriminalization of marijuana, yes

Constitutional Amendments 1. Yes, Constitutional Amendment 1 2. Yes, Constitutional Amendment 2 3. No, Constitutional Amendment 3 4. No, Constitutional Amendment 4 5. Yes, Constitutional Amendment 5

Bonds Yes on Bond A, Bond B, Bond C.

What happens with a GOP Congress?

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y now, I’m sure you’re asking yourRepublican senators have positions on self: If the Republicans take control the Affordable Care Act that are nuanced of the Senate in next week’s elecin the extreme. Get rid of the program tions, what would it mean to but keep the part about people me? with pre-existing conditions. Or the bit that lets young adults Excellent question! stay on their parents’ policies. “We’ll get things done, and McConnell himself has said that it means a stop to the Obama he wants to let his home state agenda,” said the embattled Sen. of Kentucky keep its extremely Pat Roberts, R-Kan. Did you popular version of the program, notice that “get things done” is which is known as Kynect. immediately followed by “stop?” (“The website can continue, but What do you think that means? Gail in my view the best interests of Well, we know that if the Collins the country would be achieved Republicans win the majority, all The New York by pulling out Obamacare root Senate committees would have Times and branch.”) Republican chairs. The Energy We look forward to seeing Committee, for instance, might that legislation. be run by Lisa Murkowski of Cynical minds might presume that, Alaska, a moderate who is in the pocket of with a Republican majority, the Senate oil and gas lobbies. This would be a drawould simply continue in its current state matic change from the current situation of dysfunction, working diligently on an in which the Energy Committee is run by agenda (defund Planned Parenthood, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, a moderate who is in the pocket of oil and gas lobbies. strangle the Environmental Protection Agency in its crib) that will die for lack of On a far more exciting note, the Environment Committee could wind up being 60 votes. Democrats, meanwhile, would fall back in love with the filibuster. led by James Inhofe, the author of The Or maybe not. Some people believe Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming that the Republicans would be eager to Conspiracy Threatens Your Future. prove that they really, actually, genuinely Under the Republicans, the Senate can get things done and would work with would be an extremely open body, in the White House on matters of common which the minority party would be perinterest, like tax reform. mitted — nay, welcomed — to submit “Tax reform” would probably mean clever amendments designed to make the lowering some rates and making up for majority take difficult or embarrassing the lost revenue by closing tax loopvotes that could be used against them in the next election. The minority leader, holes elsewhere. The House Ways and Mitch McConnell, has complained about Means Committee did some work on the Democrats’ heavy-handedness on this that recently, and the committee chairfor years and will undoubtedly be eager man actually unveiled a plan. Then John to change things if he gets in control. Boehner made fun of him. The plan never came up for a vote. The chairman And what about substance? Republican is retiring. voters would have every reason to expect that the first item on McConnell’s agenda There are a few matters in which a would be repeal of Obamacare. But many Republican Senate majority would make

a critical difference. One is the budget. This is stupendously important, but since we may have to spend the next two years discussing fiscal cliffs and the rules of reconciliation, it doesn’t seem fair to make us start early. Also, there’s the matter of presidential nominations. “Two words: Supreme Court,” said Chuck Schumer, the third-ranking Senate Democrat. “If they have the majority, they have far more say over who’s the nominee.” That could have an impact for decades to come. However, it presupposes that there will be a Supreme Court vacancy. On the plus side, the next two years will be a boom time for prayers for the good health of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Presuming the current justices continue in good form, the Republicans could still block other presidential nominations and we would have to get used to government by acting-heads-of. But that’s already pretty close to the norm. One Republican representative recently denounced President Barack Obama for creating an Ebola czar instead of giving the job to the surgeon general, apparently unaware that we have had no surgeon general for more than a year, thanks to the National Rifle Association’s opposition to the administration’s nominee for the job. Tracked down by The Huffington Post, Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah claimed he really did know the surgeon general’s post was vacant, and that anybody from the office could still do the Ebola job. “I know there’s some confusion there, but I don’t think I was confused,” he said stoutly. See, Chaffetz is perfectly willing to live with an acting surgeon general. And maybe someone could talk Eric Holder into hanging around for a while longer.

COMMENTARY: PETULA DVORAK

There’s no such thing as female Viagra

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udith Reid-Haff wore a dark blazer, a skirt and mile-high patent red platform heels for the big day. It’s not every day, after all, that you get to tell a federal panel about your sex life. Reid-Haff, 66, and two buses full of other brave women — and some equally brave men — descended on the Food and Drug Administration’s Silver Spring, Md., campus Monday with a group fighting for women’s health equity called Even the Score to demand that the agency take a more serious look at treatments for female sexual dysfunction. In red heels, black pumps, comfort flats and combat boots, they marched through the FDA campus. These are women who want to want to have sex. But their bodies are telling them no. You’ve heard of this, right? Maybe the problem will sound more familiar if it’s “mansplained” — Viagra. That pill was pushed through in a matter of months when it left a lab 16 years ago. And hallelujah, all these men could have sex again. Today, Viagra is a staple of health insurance plans, gauzy television commercials and Internet ads. Even companies that don’t want to let insurance plans cover birth control hand out Viagra like Skittles. And since the little blue pill hit the nation’s sex scene, more than 20 drugs to treat male sexual dysfunction have come to the market. How many are there for women? Zilch. Zero. No such thing as a female Viagra. “When I finally asked my family doctor about it, about not wanting to have sex, I couldn’t believe there was nothing I could take. It just didn’t exist,” said Katherine Campbell, 30, who came from Indianapolis to testify before the FDA this week.

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

“It’s in your head,” is what so many people told her. Or, “You already had kids, so that desire to procreate is gone,” others said. It goes back to society’s maddeningly confused treatment of women, hypersexualizing every darn thing about us — from Halloween costumes to sandwich ads — but wigging out when women want to talk about their own sex lives. “At first, it was: ‘Here, take an antidepressant,’ ” Campbell, the mother of two little boys said. “I was happy, sure. But I still didn’t want to have sex.” But there was something wrong. It’s called hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), and the FDA is holding its first-ever public workshop this week on patient-focused drug development for it. “It’s important that the FDA focus on women’s needs,” said Reid-Haff, who came to Washington from Temecula, Calif., with her husband, Derek Haff. After surviving breast cancer, ReidHaff noticed her sexual libido drop. And it was a long road to find a doctor who would listen to her. Same thing happened to Carmon Friedrich, 53. Doctors had a hard time believing there was something in her biology that could be fixed. Heck, I had a hard time believing she’d ever want to have sex again. Friedrich, from a small town in California gold country, has 10 children and has been married to her husband for 30 years. They had “duty sex,” she said. But both of them wanted it to be more. “The Bible says don’t deprive one another,” said Friedrich, who is active in her church and is training to become a Christian sex therapist. “We want to have a good marriage and that intimacy, that connection. That togetherness you have with sex is

part of a good marriage,” she said. Whatever the reasons for wanting to have sex, the treatment of this disorder by the FDA is where the outrage in this story lives. Susan Scanlan, a longtime women’s advocate on Capitol Hill, has been fighting inequity in women’s health care for years, from spending on breast cancer research to the inclusion of women in clinical trials. There are plenty of clinical trials for drugs that could treat low sexual desire in women. But, Scanlan said, the FDA doesn’t approve the drugs because of the possible side effects, like “drowsiness, fatigue, dizziness and dry mouth.” Earlier this year, the FDA approved Xiaflex, the 24th drug out there to treat male sexual dysfunction. The possible side affects of that puppy? “Heart attack. Sudden death. And my personal favorite, penile rupture,” Scanlan said. The advocates arrived at the FDA on Monday morning with a letter signed by 80 experts in men’s sexual health from across the country urging the administration to approve a treatment. “As clinicians, we see on a daily basis the impact that sexual dysfunction has on the affected woman as well as her partner,” the letter said. “As scientists, we have witnessed that the approval of novel drugs and devices for men’s sexual health has led to a greater understanding of human sexuality and overall health,” they wrote. “As humans, we believe in gender equality and while we appreciate that our understanding of women’s sexual health has lagged behind that of the male by at least two decades, we are catching up.” It’s about time. Petula Dvorak writes for The Washington Post.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


OPINIONS MY VIEW: HOLLIS WALKER

THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS

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Hollis Walker is an interfaith minister and the author of The Booby Blog: A Cancer Chronicle, published last month. Her website is theboobyblog.com.

THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: MIKE ANDBERG

Connections: Virtual and real link us all

Your life is in your hands ast month I celebrated the two-year anniversary of the luckiest day of my life — Oct. 23, 2012, the day I found a cancerous lump in my left breast. Maybe most people wouldn’t think finding cancer was lucky. But consider the alternative. I didn’t have health insurance. I’d had a mammogram about a year before, and it had been clear. I wasn’t likely to pay for one out of pocket any time soon. Who knows how long it might have been before that lump was discovered? In a year’s time, that cancer could have spread beyond my breast. I could have found myself living on borrowed time. I’m not going to lie and say that I was one of those women who had regularly checked her breasts for signs of cancer. In fact, I was the opposite. I have “dense” breasts, as they’re called. Though I’d tried to do breast self-exams when the concept had first been promoted, my breasts felt like bags of marbles. I didn’t think I’d ever be able to distinguish a cancerous lump from my bumpy tissue. So I just made sure I went for annual mammograms and had my doctor do breast exams. The reason I found my lump? I awoke that October morning and heard a voice in my head say, “You have a lump in your left breast.” Since I don’t usually hear voices in my head, I felt my breast with my hand. There it was. A hard little knot about the size of a pea. I had the usual rounds of tests followed by a lumpectomy and radiation. My cancer was caught very early. Today I am cancer-free and my prognosis is good. During October, National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we were overwhelmed with stories in the media about the disease. But we haven’t heard much about breast self-exam. That’s because selfexams have fallen out of favor with cancer organizations. A U.S. government task force that creates guidelines for things including cancer screenings has actually recommended against breast self-exams. The main reason it isn’t popular is that some studies show it doesn’t reduce mortality from breast cancer. But there’s a lot more to consider than whether we die of the disease. How about quality of life? Whether we lose one or both breasts? What about how much time those of us who will eventually die of breast cancer have to live after initial diagnosis? And consider this: According to some sources, 40 percent of women find their breast cancer themselves. Some 20 percent of breast cancers aren’t detected by mammography but can be felt by human hands. Dr. Marisa Weiss, a leading breast cancer oncologist and founder of www.breastcancer. org, is an outspoken advocate of self-exams. She argues that the studies that diminished the value of the exams were flawed and didn’t take into account many factors. Moreover, she says, “This kind of flawed advice truly disempowers women by suggesting that they need not take proactive steps in examining themselves for signs that something may be wrong.” One in eight American women will have breast cancer in her lifetime. You could be one of them. But you could get lucky, like me. Go see your doctor every year for a clinical exam and get that annual or biennial mammogram, based on your specific risk factors. And once a month, take your life in your own hands. Do a breast self-exam. (Type in “breast self-exam” online and you’ll find dozens of explanations of how to do it.) It’s free, easy and takes mere minutes. It can’t hurt. And it could save your life.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

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was walking a beautiful, chamisa-lined bike trail through my neighborhood the other day — vivid colors, pleasing odors, sounds of soaring birds everywhere. Cutting across the trail, apparently en route from school to their homes, two young boys wandered together, saying little to each other, listening to the far more important sounds reverberating from the older boy’s hand-held, electronic device. “Gotta get you some weed/gotta get me some weed” was all I heard the singer rap through background music no finer than what a Fisher Price keyboard could produce. The youngest boy, about 7, looked up to the 12-year-old and his video screen often. Both meandered on, heads glued to flashy images, ears attending solely to the song. Later in the day, strolling through the vibrant Santa Fe Plaza filled with people and activity, I noticed a teen sitting on a bench by herself, immersed in her own world, never looking up from her iPhone screen. It was as if a 15-foot bubble existed around her, keeping out a world of invaders who might enter her space. Perhaps she was actually trying to connect, not disconnect from the world. It’s the way connections are made now, through a text, a Facebook message, a tweet, a whatever. In the act of finger digit communication, however, it seems everyone who is making these connections is alone while doing it. I had 50 years of non-tech living in which I made contact the “old-fashioned” way. Call me a betweener, a man sandwiched like a floppy disc between toast and tablet, but I am concerned. Electronic devices at first seem to expand, if not improve, connection with others, but I wonder about the quality of human connection made. Yet, at the same time, others might ask, “Who really needs all the face time anyway?” So, what would someone like Steve Jobs tell his kids to do?

From a recent New York Times piece by author Nick Bilton titled, “Steve Jobs Was a LowTech Parent,” Mike Bilton writes Andberg how Jobs and other tech CEOs put serious restrictions on their kids’ use of technology. These entrepreneurs say they’ve seen the dangers of technology firsthand — the bullying from other kids, pornography and kids becoming addicted to their devices. The CEOs also agree children under 10 are the most susceptible to addiction. Some CEOs don’t allow their children any gadgets during the week, some only in the living room, others unlimited use so long as their kids are in the living room. Jobs even said he made it a point that every evening the family ate dinner together to discuss “books and a variety of things. No one ever pulled out an iPad or computer.” My downfall from electronic advancements was television. For the same reason today’s kids love to focus on a screen, so did I. And here I am right now, writing in the privacy of my own room, connecting to my website, Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Google+, sending my thoughts out to the entire world. I’m torn between two worlds, clinging to the one I know best, yet relying on technology to get most of my faceless message out. Using a word check to review this writing, I’ve just been alerted I’ve used the word connection too many times. But that’s not surprising. Human connection is, and always will be, one of the greatest needs we have, in whatever form it takes. Yet, even in our modern world, it’s difficult to avoid fuzzy connections, both electronic and interpersonal. Mike Andberg is a Santa Fe writer and blogger who regularly posts on his website www. mikeandberg.com. He works for the Santa Fe Humane Society.

A young woman uses a cell phone on the Santa Fe Plaza.

MY VIEW: CLAIRE CARILLO

Dangerous high-interest loan practices matter

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n a spirited defense of lenders’ rights to loot low-income borrowers, newspaper columnist Michael Swickard, host of the syndicated radio show News New Mexico, tells us it is not our business to pass judgment on lenders charging “out of this world” (100 percent to 1,500 percent) interest rates. Passing judgment would be like telling someone that they should not have married their spouse, he says. It would be the intrusive and impolite action of a do-gooder busy body. Probably someone who has no idea of what is really going on. The problem with Swickard’s analogy is that we have many independent studies that confirm exactly what is going on. Storefront borrowers suffer twice the rate of bankruptcies as the rest of us. A large number of them fall into lasting cycles of crushing debt and poverty. High-interest loans are every bit as dangerous to the public as many products and behaviors that we do have the

common sense to pass judgment on and regulate. We don’t tolerate the sale of dangerous and unproven medications, the use of lead paint on toys, or that speeding drunken driver who just crossed over the center line. Sometimes passing judgment is a good thing. Swickard frets that rules such as interest-rate caps might put the legal loan sharks out of business. Half of payday and title loan borrowers run into serious financial problems. If half of a restaurant’s customers get food poisoning, would we regret putting it out of business? Any loan with interest and fees exceeding 40 percent is financial poison. The best possible outcome is the borrower gets ripped off. A frequent outcome is financial ruin. He claims that putting storefront lenders out of business would drive more borrowers to the knee-breaking mob lenders. Interesting speculation, but it seems likely storefront lenders actually create more business for the knee breakers by putting borrowers in hopeless

financial straits in the first place. There are legal alternatives to loan rip offs. Native Community Finance and the Community Loan Center offer loans to the same customers with APRs ranging from 16 percent to 25 percent. Consumers do not know about them because they have limited resources for advertising and storefronts. Borrowers desperate for a loan don’t know where to find them. A cap of 36 percent APR on all loans, and a minor infusion of treasury and investment funds by state and local government in low-cost lending businesses, would allow these responsible business models to flourish and provide affordable financing to many lowincome borrowers. Experience shows it can be done at no cost to taxpayers and with considerable benefit to our economy. When North Carolina banned payday loans, two of every three former payday loan consumers surveyed said they were better off. Many said they

got more disciplined in their budgeting, while others may have found cheaper sources of financing. Despite Mr. Swickard’s admonition that “you cannot impose smart on borrowers,” they all figured out that 200 percent to 500 percent APR loans only made their financial problems worse. They just needed a statutory push. New Mexicans took out about 400,000 loans at APRs over 175 percent in 2012. I suppose we can let them and our state wallow in the social and economic chaos that results: kids that don’t get fed properly, parents who can’t get to work because of repossessed cars, and families that get evicted from their homes. After all, as Mr. Swickard says, it’s not our job to pass judgment. And we probably should not pass judgment on that burglar who just ran off with Swickard’s safe and kidnapped his dog either. Claire Carillo of Santa Fe is tired of the debt trap.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014


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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Obituaries C-2, C-3 Police notes C-3 Family C-7 Celebrations C-7 Weather C-8

LOCAL NEWS

Random acts of kindness: Being mindful and mannerly are skills you master as a child. Etiquette Rules, C-7

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3 ELECTIONS 2014

Battle for House raises pitch of political attacks Rhetoric builds as Democrats hope to hold on to power, while Republicans see chance to seize control By Milan Simonich The New Mexican

Because Republicans have a chance Tuesday to take control of the New Mexico House of Representatives for the first time in 60 years, attacks against candidates of both parties have been shrill, deceptive and often false. Geoff Rodgers, a Republican from

Los Alamos, is running for the seat in House District 43 and trying to clear his name at the same time. An advocacy organization that is promoting Democratic candidates, ProgressNow New Mexico, recently posted an Internet story saying Rodgers was arrested in Florida 19 years ago on an unspecified charge. ProgressNow alleges Rodgers concealed this informa-

tion from voters. “I can categorically say I’ve never been arrested,” Rodgers said in an interview with The Santa Fe New Mexican. ProgressNow employees, he said, didn’t bother to ask him. A review of court records in Florida tends to support his statement. Though two traffic citations for men named Geoff Rodgers surfaced in Internet searches, none matched the date of birth for the 52-year-old candidate in New Mexico. Moreover, information published by ProgressNow is contradictory. It says a

case in Florida was opened against a Geoff Rodgers in January 1995, but that his unspecified offense occurred 10 months later. Rodgers’ opponent, state Rep. Stephanie Garcia Richard, D-Los Alamos, has faced a similar unfair attack from a political organization helping Republicans, Advance New Mexico Now. The group incorrectly described a bill that would have expunged certain arrest and criminal records, then falsely advertised that Garcia Richard had sup-

Please see ATTACKS, Page C-4

Geoff Rodgers, left, a Republican from Los Alamos, is vying for the seat in House District 43, currently held by Democrat Stephanie Garcia Richard. The race is one of a dozen that will be closely watched Tuesday.

CHRISTUS ST. VINCENT

New ‘mindfulness’ sessions help Drug Court offenders conquer addictions, stress

Hospital eyes ways to boost patient satisfaction New projects include wing for private rooms, clinic on south side By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

With seven months of tense labor negotiations over, administrators at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center are turning their attention to a year of planned expansions ahead. There was no decisive thud two weeks ago at the conclusion of the bitter contract talks, which at times mirrored an arm wrestling match between the hospital’s leaders and their union counterparts. Instead, both sides walked away with what they wanted most, and neither got everything they desired. A firm commitment from the hospital to minimum staffing levels equal to at least 40 percent of comparable hospitals for nurses, and 33 percent of like institutions for support staff, sated the union. And the hospital got the language it wanted rewarding nurses and techs with more money if patient satisfaction improves. Now, with a three-year labor contract in place, the hospital is turning its focus to a series of ambitious projects that all aim to raise patient satisfaction, a goal that topped the hospital’s list of priorities during the recent negotiations. “Our biggest opportunity has been enhancing the service, or the patient experience,” said Bruce Tassin, Christus St. Vincent CEO. What he calls “opportunity” could just as aptly be described as a gap. Last year, Christus St. Vincent registered a woeful patient satisfaction rating of 52.3 percent, far below the state average of 64 percent and the national average of 70 percent. The only redeeming aspect of the hospital’s patient satisfaction rating was that even as low as it was, it marked a steep improvement from just a few years ago. The consequences of poor patient experiences don’t end with damage to a hospital’s reputation. Tassin acknowledged that last year’s low patient satisfaction rating cost Christus St. Vincent more than $2.1 million in funding from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. But during the year ahead, the hospital is investing in a series of projects — technological, physical and geographic — with an eye on sending patients home feeling better about their care.

Carolyn Riman, a yoga instructor, leads a mindfulness class in First District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer’s courtroom. The class has been added to the First District’s Drug Court and Treatment Court programs to help people battling addictions. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Learning healthy habits By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

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iggles and stocking feet aren’t something normally associated with a courtroom, but that’s what you’ll find if you enter state District Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer’s courtroom on a Thursday afternoon. Offenders in the First District’s Drug Court and Treatment Court programs are now required to participate in mindfulness and body awareness exercises, Marlowe Sommer said, because studies have shown that they can help reduce recidivism, especially for people who struggle with addictions. The components

Sunday SPOTLIGHT were added to the court programs about six weeks ago. Drug Court, aimed at repeat offenders with addiction issues, and Treatment Court, for those with both mental health and addiction issues, are designed to help offenders battle their problems through intensive supervision, drug testing, counseling and frequent face-to-face interaction with a judge. Lee Swanson, the District Court’s

Please see HABITS, Page C-6

Christina Sandoval of Santa Fe, who has been battling a drug addiction for 30 years, has a laugh with Ray Olson during a recent mindfulness class. Olson leads the yoga and meditation sessions.

Please see HOSPITAL, Page C-3

Accusations fly as Taos airport expansion stalls Second runway, funded by state and federal grants, meant to improve safety concerns By J.R. Logan The Taos News

The expansion of the Taos Regional Airport remains stalled as town officials await permit approval from the county and a lawsuit seeking improved zoning works through the courts. The airport expansion, which includes the construction of a

second runway, was proposed decades ago but was long opposed by Taos Pueblo. The town, which owns the airport, and the tribe came to agreement on the expansion in late 2011, clearing the way for the project to begin. The new runway is meant to improve safety at the airport, and almost all of the $24 million project is being

funded with federal and state grants. But satisfying the concerns of the pueblo government did nothing to quiet a vocal group of opponents who continue to attack the project. Some critics argue the new runway will worsen noise from increased air traffic. Others claim it will benefit only the wealthy. The primary concern of those bringing the lawsuit is the town failed to give residents in the airport area adequate notice of the

project and had, until recently, completely avoided getting a development permit from Taos County. The plaintiffs in the suit contend the town and county must create common-sense zoning around the airport before building a new runway that will change approach and take-off patterns for aircraft. But in separate responses filed in the lawsuit this week, both governments argued they have

Please see AIRPORT, Page C-5

Expansion plans at the Taos Regional Airport, which is used by both private aircraft and commercial charter operations, have been held up for decades by permit issues and lawsuits. TAOS NEWS FILE PHOTO

PUBLIC OPENING | MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS AND CULTURE

Sunday, November 2, 2014. Free Admission. Panel Discussion with the Artists, 1:00 and 3:00 pm. Led by Guest Curator Dr. Letitia Chambers

Meet the Artists Reception, 4:00–6:00 pm. Featuring Ten Monumental Sculptures by the Leading American Indian Women Sculptors of the 20th and 21st centuries.

$35 per person. $30 for MNMF members. Reservations are required and seating is limited. Purchase tickets in advance at MIAC gift shop or call 505-982-5057.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

FUNERAL SERVICES AND MEMORIALS

DR. JUAN GUADALUPE (LUPE) RODRIGUEZ DEC. 23, 1920 - OCT. 28, 2014 Dr. Juan G. (Lupe) Rodriguez passed away peacefully on October 28, 2014 surrounded by his loving family in Lexington, Kentucky. He was born on Dec. 23, 1920 in Espanola, New Mexico, the oldest of 7 children of Manuel De Atocha Rodriguez and Lugardita Salazar Rodriguez. He graduated from Santa Fe High School and received a Bachelor of Science from New Mexico State University in 1943, and a M.S. (1946) and Ph.D. from Ohio State University in 1949. He was a Professor of Entomology at the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture from 1949 until his retirement in 1989, where he specialized in the nutritional ecology of insects and mites. After graduation from New Mexico State University where he was active in the R.O.T.C., Lupe was inducted into the United States Army in the fall of 1943. He had obtained a civilian pilot’s license while in college and initially trained as a pilot intending to join the Army Air Corps. He was then placed into the 422nd Infantry Regiment, 106th Division as a technical sergeant because the US had an increased need for ground forces. He was deployed to Belgium in November 1944 and then wounded and captured at St. Vith by the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge six weeks later. He spent the next 4 months as a prisoner of war in prison camps and being forcemarched around Germany by the German army. He was liberated on April 16, 1944 by Allied forces. He returned home to the United States where he received a Purple Heart and an honorable discharge on Dec. 7, 1945. Lupe attended graduate school at Ohio State University on the GI Bill, where he met his wife, Lorraine Ditzler. While finishing his Ph.D. they married in Wooster, Ohio in April 1948. He received a teaching and research position at the University of Kentucky in 1949 where he had a long and distinguished career spanning 4 decades. His research centered on the nutritional ecology of insects and mites. He was active in many professional organizations and received many awards and honors. Among his many awards were the University of Kentucky Alumni Association Distinguished Research Award, the Thomas Poe Cooper Award for Distinguished Achievement in Research, the American Registry of Professional Entomologists’ Outstanding Research in Acarology Award, and the Kentucky Academy of Science Distinguished Scientist Award. He was on the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Acarology, the President of the North Central Branch of the Entomological Society of America, the President of the Kentucky Academy of Sciences, and Chairman of the Centennial Committee of the Entomological Society of America, among many other distinguished offices. He was named a Fellow of three professional societies: the Royal Entomological Society of London, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Entomological Society of America. In the 1960’s his laboratory housed the first scanning electron microscope on campus where some of the first moon rocks from NASA were inspected. Three newly discovered species of mites were named after him by other acarologists and he received an honorary doctorate from the University of San Carlos in Guatemala. He was active in professional organizations long after he retired. In all, he published 142 articles in refereed journals, contributed to and edited/co-edited 6 books, and held 15 professional offices. After retirement, Lupe and Lorraine enjoyed traveling in the Americas and abroad. They were often hosted by fellow scientists and former graduate students who he had mentored. He became active in the Ex-POW movement in the 1980’s and continued that activity for the rest of his life, serving as Commodore of the Daniel Boone Chapter of the American Ex-Prisoners of War service organization. He enjoyed watching UK basketball and was physically active throughout his life, playing tennis, golf, racquet ball and swimming into his 90’s. He enjoyed his investment club ’The Short Street Syndicate’ and the Kiwanis Club and held offices in both. He was active in the Roman Catholic Church his entire life, at the parishes of St. Peter, St. Paul, the UK Newman Center, and most recently at Mary Queen of the Holy Rosary. Lupe is survived by his wife of 66 years, Lorraine; sister Flora Russel (Dan) of Lakewood CO, brothers Rev. John C. Rodriguez of Espanola, NM, and Gerald Rodriguez (Kathy) of Santa Fe, NM; daughters Carmen R. Segnitz (Jan) of Monte Sereno, CA, Teresa (Joe LePla) of Seattle, WA, Carla R. Sasser (Dell) of Slade, KY, and Rosa (Ross Traut) of New York, NY; grandchildren Marisa Segnitz Gerston, Rohner Segnitz, Zoe Segnitz Kranzler, Max Segnitz, Katherine Sasser, and Cora Traut; 3 great grandchildren, and numerous nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his parents, a daughter Andrea Maria, two sisters Bertha Martinez and Angelina Valdez, and a brother Manuel J. Rodriguez. The family would like to especially thank his long time caregivers and Hospice of the Bluegrass for his extraordinary care. A visitation will be held at the Milward Funeral Home, 391 Southland Drive in Lexington on Wednesday Nov. 5 from 5 to 8 pm. A funeral mass will be held at Mary Queen of the Holy Rosary Church, 601 Hill N Dale Rd. (off Clays Mill) in Lexington on Thursday Nov. 6 at 1:00 pm following a rosary at 12:30 pm. More information is available on the Milward Funeral Home website, www.milwardfuneral.com . He will be interred at Calvary Cemetery in Lexington following the funeral mass. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the New Mexico State University Foundation Inc.; please specify the J.G. Rodriguez and Angelina R. Valdez Endowed Scholarship. See www.foundation.nmsu.edu for more information.

E. "BETSY" (WINCHELL) KIDDY Elizabeth W. "Betsy" Kiddy, 56, of Reading, passed away quietly on Monday, September 29, surrounded by her husband Greg, and Betsy’s immediate family. Dr. Kiddy received her doctorate in Latin American Studies from the University of New Mexico and her bachelor’s degree in music composition from Hamilton College. As professor of history and director of Latin American and Caribbean Studies at Albright College, in Reading, she joined the College’s faculty in 2001 and earned a reputation as a dedicated teacher, gifted scholar and devoted colleague. Fluent in Portuguese and conversant in Spanish, she studied and taught Brazilian and Latin American history, women, gender and family studies in Latin America, ritual studies, myth and folktale, and the African diaspora. Frequent travel to Brazil to conduct research resulted in numerous publications including her book, Blacks of the Rosary: Memory and History in Minas Gerais, Brazil. Dr. Kiddy’s most recent scholarship examines the cultural and environmental history of the people living along the 2000 mile São Francisco River. Betsy Kiddy loved music, especially Brazilian jazz and samba. Likewise, she adored dance. Once she found the Brazilian martial art of capoeira, Betsy’s heart never left that magnificent nation. In 1990, Betsy met her future husband and best friend, Greg Kiddy, in Santa Fe, NM. Soon after they married in 1991, Betsy and Greg traveled almost every year to Brazil researching, learning, and enjoying life. Born in Kingston, New York, Betsy was raised in Westchester County, New York. Besides her husband, Betsy Kiddy is survived by her parents, Tony and Harriet Winchell of Kennett Square; her sister, Susan Winchell of Silver Spring, Maryland; her brother, David Winchell of Port Jefferson, New York, and her youngest brother and sister-in-law, Thomas & Lisa Winchell of Canton, Massachusetts, and their sons-our three nephews, Ethan, Calvin, and Dylan. A memorial service will be held to remember Dr. Kiddy on Sunday, November 9th at the Albright College Chapel at 10:00 a.m. followed by an informal reception. Betsy’s remains will be interred at the family burial plot in her beloved Adirondack Mountains of New York, and near the São Francisco River, Brazil. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be to Albright College to support the Betsy Kiddy Student Travel Fund which will help promote the travel of Albright students to Latin America. Contributions should be sent to Albright College, Office of Development, 13th & Bern Streets, Reading, PA 19612-5234. Edward J. Kuhn Funeral Home, Inc., West Reading is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may be recorded at www.kuhnfuneralhome.com.

ELEANOR T. SANCHEZ WILLIAM P. GONZALES (WILLIE) William P. Gonzales (Willie) 49, of Santa Fe, NM passed away on October 24, 2014. He was preceded in death by his parents, Raymundo and Virginia Gonzales, and niece, Odette Rivera. He is survived by his sons, Patrick Gonzales of Anacortes, WA, Kristopher Gonzales (Louisa Gorospe), grandchildren, Kruz Gonzales, Alyssa Gorospe all of Albuquerque, NM, sister, Ruth Martinez of Santa Fe, NM, brothers, Pepper Gonzales of Pecos, NM, Ray Gonzales (Dorothy) of Santa Fe, NM, and numerous nieces and nephews. Willie’s extended family was with Beaver (Sauter Toyota) for more than 20 years. Willie was a kind person when he entered your life, you would not forget him. He had a passion for outdoor activities. He was an artist and loved to draw. His two passions were his two sons and family. Willie will be missed, we all love you. A Rosary will be held on Monday, November 3, 2014 at St. Anne’s Catholic Church at 7 p.m. A Mass of Christian burial will be held on Tuesday, November 4, 2014 at 11 a.m. at St. Anne’s Catholic Church with burial to follow at Santa Fe Memorial Gardens Cemetery. Pallbearers will be: Sons, Patrick Gonzales and Kristopher Gonzales Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

MARY HARPOLE BROCKWELL Mary Brockwell, 87, died peacefully on October 12, 2014 with family at her side and her recently-departed Bill welcoming her from beyond. Born Annis Mary Harpole, she arrived on this earth June 22, 1927 as the only child of Jim M and Myrtle Harpole of Pittsburg, Kansas. She spent her growing up years developing her musical talents and loving disposition. Mary was Homecoming Queen in 1949 at Pittsburg State Teachers College, and was dubbed "Queen of the Gorillas" by her children years later. While working as a secretary for Warren Petroleum in Tulsa Oklahoma in 1950, she met her life mate, Bill Brockwell. Fortunately, his sense of humor and itinerant job as a baseball umpire did not deter her, and they were married on October 13, 1951. Together, they enjoyed many adventures as they raised seven children and moved sixteen times across the mid-west, south and mountain west in their nearly 63 years together. Mary was recognized and appreciated as an artist, lovely soprano, extraordinary knitter and fashionista - but the focus of her life was creating and maintaining a welcoming home environment for Bill and their seven children, their friends and growing extended family. She will be remembered for her lovely grace and manner, unconditional love, her easy laugh, and sense of humor. Mary was recently preceded in death by husband Bill, and is survived by seven children, five spouses of those children, nine grandchildren, twin great-grand-children, and two cousins. The family is particularly grateful for the love, care and support from the staff at El Castillo and Del Corazon hospice. A funeral Mass of the Resurrection will be held on Friday, November 7, 2014 at the Cathedral Basilica of St Francis at 10 am. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica , 801 S. 8th St., Atchison, KS 66002 (www.mountosb.org).

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Eleanor T. Sanchez departed this world on October 28, 2014, following a lengthy illness. She was born, lived and worked in Santa Fe, and spent her final days in Albuquerque with her immediate family. She was preceded in death by her mother, Juanita Sanchez, her father, Arturo Sanchez, her brother, Pete Sanchez, her brother, Jimmy Sanchez, her niece Denise Sanchez and nephew Alan Romero. She is survived by her daughter, Michelle Sanchez; son, Andrew Sanchez, Sr.; daughterin-law, Donna Sanchez; grandchildren, Andrew Sanchez, Jr., Christopher Viens, Peter Sanchez, Shawn Duran, Alex Duran and Audrey Duran; and great-grandchildren, Andrew Sanchez III, Angelo Sanchez and Madison Barker. She is also survived by her sister, Ida Romero; brother, Tony Sanchez; sisters-in-law, Marie Sanchez, and Donna Sanchez; and brother, Gil Sanchez. She was a beloved aunt to Kathy DeJonghe, Cindy Sanchez-Perraglio, Tony Romero, Roberta Aragon, Stephen Sanchez, Lionel Sanchez, Donald Romero, David Romero, Paula Henderson, Paul Sanchez and Susan McIntyre. In her prime, Eleanor was a force to be reckoned with. She was an amazing woman with a contagious sense of humor who lived her life with gusto and passion, and was never one to shrink from what needed to be said. Eleanor had unlimited capacity of love for her family and friends. Although Eleanor will be missed dearly, the family takes solace in the fact that she will join our already departed family members in a better place, free from the pain her body imposed on her in the end. The Rosary for Eleanor will take place on Friday, November 7, 2014, 7:00 p.m., and a Memorial Service will take place on Saturday, November 8, 2014, 1:00 p.m., both at FRENCH - Wyoming. A reception will follow the Memorial Service on Saturday. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in Eleanor’s name to F.A.T. Katz (www.fatkatzabq.org) or Watermelon Mountain Ranch (www.wmranch.org). Please visit our online guestbook for Eleanor at www.FrenchFunerals.com

PATRICK WHITE FLAVIO GARCIA The family of Flavio Garcia would like to extend a sincere thank you to everyone for the love and support shown to us during our time of loss. The lovely flowers, delicious food, cards, kind words and attendance at Flavio’s services offered a great deal of comfort. We would also like to extend a sincere thank you to Father Daniel Gutierrez and all the staff at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis for the beautiful services honoring Flavio as well as Rivera Family Mortuary. Flavio will be missed but will forever remain in our hearts. With love, Helen, Natalie, Tina, JoAnn, Shirley, and Marcos

TONITA PAYTON 1937-2014

FRENCH - Wyoming 7121 Wyoming Blvd. NE (505) 823-9400

KENNETH R. JONES Kenneth R. Jones, 82, son of Ray and Mary Jones, sibling of Art, Mike and Carol, is now walking the gold streets of heaven. He lived a regular life, attended Santa Fe High School and served in the Air Force as a photographer in the Korean War and was stationed in Japan where he married Midori Kewano. They had two children, David and Evelyn. He lived in Santa Fe, Springer, Arizona and El Segundo, California where he owned a factory for his inventions. His company was one of the first in the US to import electronics from Japan and he established as excellent working relationship with Japanese companies. He invented and produced psychedelic lighting for dance clubs and many other things. His hobby was exploring for gold and he owned many gold claims in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada and Mexico but never developed them since he was busy with his inventions. Always inventive and interested in creating things he entertained us with his wit and charm. Thanks to the staff of Casa Rael and hospice who eased his life at the end, his friends Manuel Gonzales and Victoria and Londa who visited him faithfully and his brother Mike and sister Carol who loved and cared for him through all of his trials and triumphs. Services will be held at a later date when family and friends can be gathered together. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhom e.com

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.

Opening Summer of 2015

SANTA FE MEMORIAL GARDENS 417 E. RODEO ROAD, SANTA FE

Our beloved Mother, grandmother, and sister has gone to join our Savior Jesus Christ. She is preceded in death by her parents Romolo and Maria Carrillo, paternal father, Carlos LeRouge, son Anthony Rathke, and sisters Adelaida Rivera, Priscilla Garza, Erlinda Maestas, and Josephine Ontiveros. She is survived by her daughters Cora Le Rouge, Yolanda Martinez, LoriAnn Miera. Her sons Robert, wife Naomi Payton and Christopher Payton. She had 13 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren and many nieces and nephews. Her sisters Celina Le Rouge and Diana Jurado, husband Armando, brother Carlos LeRouge Jr. All services to be held at The Light at Mission Viejo, 4601 Mission Bend November 3, 2014 Viewing @ 6pm Memorial @7pm November 4, 2014 Burial Service @ 11am with reception to follow. Pall Bearers will be the grandchildren.

Patrick White, age 69, passed away at St. Vincent Hospital, Wednesday, October 29. He was born in Panama, August 18, 1945, and came to the United States with his mother and sister in 1968first to Florida, and then to Santa Fe in 1972. He was born with disabilities and did not finish high school, completing the eleventh grade. During the past two years, he took courses to get his GED but couldn’t pass algebra. Patrick worked as a janitor at De Vargas Mall and Paper Tiger, before working as a New Mexican newspaper street vendor. Mr. White was a true Lamb of God, without negativity, anger, or ill will. He was cordial, genuine and friendly with everyone, and had a child-like innocence that uplifted the people he met. He did not drive a car, so could often be seen walking in Santa Fe. He never had material riches but in spirit he was always full-never complaining and cheerful until the end. He is survived by his sister Kathleen White of Santa Fe. Graveside services will be held on Monday, Nov. 3 at 10 a.m. at the Santa Fe Memorial Gardens at 417 Rodeo Rd.

505.989.7032

WWW.RIVERAFUNERALHOME.COM


LOCAL & REGION

Search resumes for missing girl RIO RANCHO — Albuquerque-area law enforcement agencies are asking for the public’s help in the search for a missing 10-year-old Rio Rancho girl. Rio Rancho police asked residents Saturday to search their homes and property for any sign of Alexandra Greenwall. She was reported missing Thursday and was last seen Wednesday night. Her mother says she may have run away after being punished.

Authorities, who have now been joined by the FBI, say they are concerned because of how long she’s been gone. According to state police, the girl may have headed to Madrid, where her biological father lives. The girl is described as 4-foot-5 with a light complexion, blue eyes, freckles and long dark hair. She may be wearing pink tennis shoes and carrying a pink backpack. The Associated Press

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u A thief stole a 5-year-old boxer dog valued at $1,500 Friday from the backyard of a house in the 1600 block of Berry Street. u A burglar broke into a home in the 3000 block of Plaza Blanca on Thursday and stole perfumed bath soap and underwear. u Police arrested Alicia Quintana, 31, of Santa Fe on Friday on a warrant charging her with violating her conditions of release. u A thief broke into a Chevrolet pickup in the 700 block of Don Gaspar Avenue on Thursday or Friday and stole paperwork from the owner. The burglar removed the lock on the driver’s side door. u Police arrested Jody Martinez on a shoplifting charge Friday at Sears. According to the report, the officers found him in possession of morphine and diazepam, a prescription drug used to treat anxiety, so

Martinez was charged with drug possession as well. u Leo Griego of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on a warrant charging him with failing to pay fines. u A burglar punched in the driver’s side door of a 2003 Chevrolet pickup in the 900 block of Ninita Street on Friday and stole a large, heavyduty hydraulic jack. u A thief stole an iPad and a jewelry box Friday from a home in the 500 block of Camino Cabra. u Police arrested Nicolas T. Quintana of Santa Fe on several outstanding warrants. He allegedly attempted to flee officers who contacted him at a home in the 100 block of West San Francisco Street, so he was charged with resisting arrest.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611

Death notice RON REHORN Clarence Ronald Rehorn Jr., known his entire life as Ron, passed away in a one-car accident on his way home from work on Oct. 30, 2014. He died at the scene. No one else was injured. Ron was 50. Except for a few short absences, Ron lived his entire life in Santa Fe and the vicinity, spending much of his adult life working in the service industry as a bartender. Ron’s excellent sense of humor, charm and charisma made him a perfect match for the Santa Fe service industry, and he was loved and liked by literally thousands of people. Ron loved the outdoors and rural living, and sought places to dwell nestled at the foot of Rowe Mesa, his favorite stomping grounds. Hiking, gathering firewood and exploring in the piñon and juniper forests with his friends and family were among his favorite pastimes. Ron attended school at Carlos Gilbert elementary, De Vargas Junior High, and Santa Fe High School. He was a member of the Santa Fe High Jazz Band and marching band as a trombone player during his high school years. He made the All State Band two years running during that time. Ron was an avid backpacker, backcountry skier and outdoorsman. He could play a mean mouth harp and was invited from time to time to

join the musical talent playing at his bar. Ron never met a musical instrument he didn’t like and played many of them with heart. Just Ron Rehorn don’t ask him to sing, his friends would comment. All who knew Ron were blessed by his friendship and love, but especially his parents, Jean Stratton of Santa Fe, Dr. Clarence Rehorn of Santa Fe, his daughter Krista and granddaughters Bridget, Giselle and Hera, his niece and nephew Anna Gear and Nick Cicchini, and his siblings Kevin and wife Debbie of Santa Fe, Don of Santa Fe, Jennifer and partner Daniel Ortiz of Albuquerque, and John and wife Kathy of Durango, Colo. Ron is survived by the aforementioned loved ones, along with numerous aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews and cousins. A Celebration of Life will be held Sunday, Nov. 8, at the community center in the Eldorado subdivision. The Rev. John Kinsolving will officiate. Prior to the celebration, interment of Ron’s ashes will occur with family and close friends. Contact Don Rehorn at 351-2424 if you were a friend of Ron. For more information, contact Jean at 989-7577.

Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Hospital: Salary increases tied to goals same time Presbyterian Healthcare Services plans to open The boldest and most expen- a similar group of medical sive of the lot is a $40 million offices across the street on expansion to add a wing of St. Michael’s Drive from private patient rooms and conSt. Vincent’s main hospital. vert some existing semi-private Tassin wasn’t fazed that a rooms, shared by more than one competitor is opening up a patient, into private occupancy. stone’s throw from his front It bucks the trend in contemdoor. porary medicine that focuses “Presbyterian is a good orgaon strategies to keep inpatient nization,” he said. “They cover stays short, rather than investa large amount of the state ing in lavish physical improveemployees [with insurance ments that had been common plans], and I believe it’s just a at hospitals during the past two natural for them, because they decades. have such a large number of “The role [now] is to keep covered lives, that they should people healthy and out of the provide the care more directly. hospital, so the trend is to not For a community our size not to invest in brick and mortar, but have more than one health care we haven’t had an upgrade since entity in it is highly unusual. It’s the ’70s in our patient towers,” just the nature of the evolution Tassin said. of it.” Currently, Christus More than the encroachment St. Vincent can accommodate of Presbyterian onto Chris40 patients in private rooms in tus St. Vincent’s turf, the new the 268-bed hospital. After the south-side clinic is inspired by revamp, about 90 private rooms the city population’s shift to the will be available. Industrywide, south, Tassin said. The hospital spacious private rooms tend to wants a convenient location for reel in patient satisfaction ratings patients to get preventive care of around 90 percent, Tassin said. in the fastest-growing part of the city. A formal announcement of the plan to add more private rooms “The whole expansion to the is expected within a couple of south side, it’s really the new months. model of care,” Tassin said, “bringing care closer to the St. Vincent plans to open a community.” south-side clinic on Beckner Road in March, around the The clinic will house a hand-

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ful of general practice doctor’s offices, a relocated south-side pediatric office, a lab, X-ray services and rotating specialists. Though they aren’t as visible as the hospital’s expansion, two technological projects launching soon at St. Vincent will be tangible to patients and employees. In December, a new call system will be unveiled. When a patient buzzes for assistance in his or her hospital bed, the call will go out to all caregivers of the patient, regardless of where they are in the hospital. The system aims to alert care providers more quickly when a patient is in need. In February, a new scheduling system feature will notify employees by text message and email whenever there is a vacancy on a particular shift, such as occasions when a co-worker calls in sick. Pearl Mohnkern of the hospital’s human resources office said the hospital’s current, outdated system sometimes requires 20 phone calls before a shift vacancy is filled. In the midst of labor contract negotiations in July, St. Vincent hit a patient satisfaction rating of 64 percent, according to Mohnkern. She said that statistic, coupled with the changes planned in the year ahead,

leaves nurses and techs in a strong position to meet patient satisfaction goals that could trigger salary increases of up to 3.5 percent over the next three years. The patient satisfaction goal to trigger the bonuses is 67.7 percent. “We’ve got some work to do, but we were in the 40s and 50s last year,” Mohnkern said. The pending changes at St. Vincent come in the wake of its bitter public fight with its own employees that in some corners of the community left the hospital’s reputation bloodied and bruised, Tassin recognizes. In making their case for firmer staffing standards, nurses warned during negotiations that there weren’t enough of them on duty to safely care for patients. Tassin said the hospital’s administration plans a public outreach campaign to counter the concerns raised by the union. “It may have even made people believe we’re not here for the right reason,” Tassin said, “so we want to get back out there and tell our story.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.

Funeral services and memorials RICHARD DANA JAY Richard Dana Jay, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, passed away peacefully on Friday, October 24th after a brave and courageous battle with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). Richard, the youngest of four children was born in New York City, on October 26, 1944, to Nelson Dean Jay, Jr. and Diana Draper Jay Bigelow. He was the grandson of the famous interior decorator Dorothy Draper. Richard truly was a renaissance man who lived an incredibly full and adventurous life. Richard was a feel good machine. His fun-loving spirit, humor, optimism and positive attitude energized anyone who came into contact with him. Richard was the life of the party. In his early days he was a great woodworker and fantastic mechanic. He knew how to fix things. He was the most gifted storyteller and treated strangers like true friends. He liked to cook, entertain and loved to see people happy. He was infatuated with the outdoors and enjoyed many activities including fly-fishing, kayaking, mountain biking, hiking, camping, exploring, traveling, and, most importantly, flying and skiing. Flying was a passion he shared and he could just about fly anything with wings. His father taught him to ski when he was five on the old Hyde Park rope tow. Anyone who watched Richard ski or tele-mark would always state he was one of the most beautiful skiers they had ever seen grace the Rocky Mountains. He danced on skis. More than anything, Richard was an unbelievably devoted father and grandfather. At age 3, Richard and his family moved from NYC to the beautiful Pojoaque Valley. He grew up on a Ranch in Pena Blanca where his family introduced Black Angus Cattle and traded alfalfa to Maria’s Kitchen in Santa Fe for family meals. During this time, he learned mechanics and the workings of ranch life. As a young boy, Richard attended Green Fields Day School in Tucson, AZ. and graduated from St. Michael’s high school in Santa Fe, NM. While attending Fort Lewis University in Durango, CO, Richard was drafted in the United States Air Force where he served as a Weapons Crew Chief on A-26 Aircraft in Vietnam. After serving his time with the military, Richard moved to Vail, CO pursuing his love of skiing in the Rocky Mountains. He moved back to New Mexico the following year and attended the University of New Mexico. He suffered a broken back during a car crash coming down the Santa Fe Ski Basin. After his recovery, Richard worked at Alpine sports and bartended at La Posada, where he met his wife, Whitney Neal, vacationing from Kansas City, MO. In 1971, they married, and he began his lifetime career in real estate. They had two children, Trevor Dana Jay, in 1972 and Richard Tyler Jay, in 1975. During this time, Richard started his own real estate firm, Richard Jay Associates. In the mid 80’s, he moved to Colorado working as the Real Estate Director for Keystone Ski Resort and then selling Real Estate in Aspen, CO. Missing New Mexico and his family, Richard moved back to Santa Fe and was one of the original key players in the formation of Santa Fe Properties and managed at French and French Fine Properties. He was an enthusiastic realtor who worked over forty years in the business. In 1997, Richard married Donna Roullier and adopted her son Fitz Jay. Richard is preceded in death by his father Nelson Jay, his mother Diana Draper, his brother Dean Jay, and Whitney Neal Jay. He is survived by his oldest brother George Jay and his partner Sue Shellenberger, his older sister Susan Jay Dean and her husband Hal Dean, his sister Wendyl Jay and partner Bill Bailey, his son Trevor and his wife Dina and their children Alison and Cooper, his son Tyler and his wife Melissa and their children Lucas and Jocelyn, and his son Fitz and his partner Megan Shaffer, and his many nieces and nephews. It was only fitting that his last words before he passed serenely was "Whoa, I’m heading down the trail. Heading down the trail. Down the trail…." Richard’s wish is for you to support the ALS of New Mexico Chapter (www.alsanm.org). Santa Fe Association of Realtors (SFAR) raised over $50,000 for ALS of New Mexico Research in Richard’s Honor. Please come help us celebrate Richard’s wonderful life on November 15th from 6PM - 8PM at The Peters Projects, formally known as the Gerald Peters Gallery, 1011 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM.

Academic Excellence Safe Environment ADMISSIONS OPEN HOUSE NOVEMBER 6, 2014 6:00 PM

Championship Athletics Inspired Fine Arts 100 Siringo Road Santa Fe, NM 87505 505.983.7353

IN LOVING MEMORY FIDEL LEE GUTIERREZ November 3, 1962November 3, 2013

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


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Attacks: GOP last had control Candidates tackle domestic violence of state House in 1953-54 session for candidates looking to win over undecided voters before Election Day. ALBUQUERQUE — In the “Men and women alike frown final stretch of New Mexico’s upon domestic violence. It’s one election season, domestic of the most emotionally gutviolence has come into focus wrenching issues out there,” said through a series of television Albuquerque pollster Brian Sanads and campaign emails. deroff. “If people are still undeFirst-term U.S. Sen. Tom cided, then it takes a more emoUdall, a Democrat, is running tional issue to try to persuade TV spots touting his support them to support a candidate.” for anti-domestic violence Another factor is that and anti-stalking legislation. women are more likely than Former prosecutor and judge men to be registered as DemoSusan Riedel, a Republican crats, so pushing an issue like vying to be New Mexico’s next domestic violence — which top cop, has unveiled her plan typically affects more women for expanding legal services than men — could end up widand shelter options for victims. ening the gender gap in some Domestic violence has been races, Sanderoff said. in the national spotlight thanks Federal statistics show 1 in to high-profile cases involving 4 women across the country athletes, and political observers will be severely assaulted by an say the issue can be powerful intimate partner. In New MexBy Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

Democratic Rep. Nate Cote is retiring. ported the measure. In fact, she The Republican candidate is was the only Democrat in the a familiar name, Rick Little. He House of Representatives to defeated Cote in 2010 but then vote against it. Republican Vickie Perea lost to him two years later. Garcia Richard called the of Belen, the incumbent by Mariaelena Johnson, who has attack on her “a blatant lie.” appointment, is being chalbeen a leader in voter registraDemocrats now control lenged by political newcomer tion drives, is the Democratic the House 37-33. The election Matthew McQueen, a Democrat candidate. between Garcia Richard and from Galisteo. Johnson was at the center of Rodgers is one of a dozen that Democrats had long held this political storm in the 2012 elecwill be closely contested Tuesseat. But after Rep. Stephen Eas- tion. She says the Otero County day. Those races will determine ley, D-Santa Fe, died last year, Clerk’s Office staff called the which party has the majority in Martinez chose Perea to fill the sheriff with a false charge that 2015 and ’16. vacancy. voters in Chaparral were unruly. Asked if Democrats would Eight deputies arrived and put District 7, continue to control the House, up yellow tape around the pollGarcia Richard did not hesitate: Valencia County ing place. “Absolutely,” she said. Nobody was arrested, but Rep. Kelly Fajardo, R-Belen, is Republicans have been less Johnson said the election was so being challenged by Democrat bold in their predictions. They disorganized that the last perTeresa Smith de Cherif. say they have a chance to flip son in line in Chaparral voted Fajardo and political groups enough seats to become the at 10:45 p.m., more than three aligned with her have tried to majority party for the first hours after the polls had closed. paint Smith de Cherif, a physitime since 1953-54, when they Despite Johnson’s name reccian, as a resident of Florida. led 28-27. ognition, Republicans regard Smith de Cherif lives and practhis seat as a likely pickup. These will be the other pivtices in the Los Lunas area but otal races on election night: owns property in Florida. She District 23, Bernalillo said she treats 4,000 patients House District 30, and Sandoval counties a year in New Mexico, and Bernalillo County that Fajardo’s claims about her Republican Rep. Paul residency are intended to trick Pacheco, a retired police officer, ProgressNow New Mexico voters. is being challenged by Demoalso has been pummeling Rep. In the House, Fajardo faced crat Catherine Begaye, a lawyer. Nate Gentry, R-Albuquerque, criticism from her own colPacheco won this seat two years in ads and Internet postings. ago by less than 1 percentage The organization says its efforts leagues this year for skipping a high-profile vote on raising the point. could help Democrat Bob Cofminimum wage. The proposal fey upset Gentry on Tuesday. failed. District 37, Among ProgressNow’s allegaDoña Ana County tions against Gentry are that he District 8, used an assumed name when Republican Rep. Terry Valencia County checking into a hotel last year McMillan and his Democratic for a government conference in Democrat Frank Otero, challenger, Joanne Ferrary, iniDenver. The group’s innuendo a farmer and retired state tially finished tied — 6,247 votes is that Gentry, who is married, employee, says his own party each — in the 2012 election. was with someone other than didn’t pay much attention to McMillan won by eight votes his wife. him until recently. Otero said after a recount. Their rematch he, too, could pull an upset Gentry said in an interview may not be as close, but it will that the allegations by Progress- Tuesday. be one of Tuesday’s mostHe is running against Repub- watched races. Now are false. lican Rep. Alonzo Baldonado, “I don’t have a fake ID with whose district is seen as much some alias on it. I checked into District 4, safer for Republicans than the hotel with probably 11 other San Juan County Fajardo’s. Otero says his doorlegislators, and I provided my The incumbent, Republican knocking campaign and Baldodriver’s license and my credit Rep. Sharon Clahchischilliage, card for incidentals,” Gentry said. nado’s refusal to vote on the bill benefited from a scandal in winto raise the minimum wage are Convention costs were covning this seat two years ago. two reasons the seat is in play. ered by the National ConferHer opponent in 2012, ence of State Legislators, not longtime Democratic Rep. District 36, taxpayers. Gentry said he did Ray Begaye, couldn’t explain Doña Ana County not know how he could have discrepancies in his reimbursebeen listed in hotel booking Democratic Rep. Phillip ments for travel. This time records as Jim Smith and John Archuleta of Las Cruces broke Democrats have nominated Smith, as ProgressNow alleges. his right hip, femur and wrist in Harrison Todacheene in hopes He questioned the authenticity a fall, then lost his right leg to of regaining the seat. of the group’s records. amputation because of an infecGentry said Coffey also has tion. Now 110 pounds lighter, he Contact Milan Simonich at pounded him in ads instead of is campaigning in a motorized 986-3080 or msimonich@ articulating any vision for the wheelchair. sfnewmexican.com. Follow his state. Fliers featuring Gentry’s Republican Andy Nuñez, Ringside Seat column and blog at arrest 12 years ago on suspicion the mayor of Hatch, is trying santafenewmexican.com. of aggravated drunken driving to regain this seat. But when have flooded neighborhoods in Nuñez represented the district, his district. he was a Democrat for 10 years “I made a very serious misand then an independent for take when I was 27,” Gentry said two. He switched to the Repubof the drunken-driving charge. lican Party after losing the 2012 election to Archuleta. It was dismissed because prosecutors did not pursue the case before the statute of limita- District 15, Th o tions lapsed. Bernalillo County e Gentry, an attorney and once Democratic Rep. Emily Kane, Th an aide to former U.S. Sen. Pete a fire captain in Albuquerque, Domenici, aspires to be speaker is trying to win a second term. f of the House. Her challenger is Republican Coffey, 54, who teaches gifted Sarah Maestas Barnes, a lawyer. students at Highland High School, said he can derail GenDistrict 24, try’s political career Tuesday. Bernalillo County “I think we’re going to win In a rematch of a 2012 race, this thing,” Coffey said. Rep. Liz Thomson, a Democrat, He said he and his supporters is being challenged by Repubare working hard, canvassing lican Conrad James. James held neighborhoods and talking to this seat for one term before voters. Thomson defeated him. A first-time candidate, Coffey said he does not like the direcDistrict 53, parts tion the state has gone under of Doña Ana and Republican Gov. Susana MartiOtero counties nez, a heavy favorite to win reThis is an open seat because election in the governor’s race.

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District 50, parts of Santa Fe, Torrance, Valencia and Bernalillo counties

VOTE! GENERAL ELECTION

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — An animal resembling a gray wolf has been spotted roaming the far reaches of northern Arizona, officials said, and tests are planned to determine exactly what it is. The animal has been seen and photographed in Kaibab National Forest north of Grand Canyon National Park with a collar similar to those used in a wolf recovery effort in the Northern Rockies, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said. The animal could be from that population of about 1,700 or a wolf-dog hybrid, said agency spokesman Jeff Humphrey. Officials will test its feces to determine further details. Humphrey said the animal should be treated as endangered until more is known about it. “Our immediate concern is the welfare of this animal,” he said.

A group of fewer than 100 endangered Mexican gray wolves lives in portions of eastern Arizona and western New Mexico, but Humphrey said the animal does not appear to be from the Southwest population. Wolves in the Northern Rockies have fuller bodies and less pointed ears than Mexican gray wolves. Wolves largely were exterminated early last century in the lower 48 states, except in the western Great Lakes area. They’ve been absent from the Grand Canyon region since the 1940s. The Fish and Wildlife Service in recent years lifted protections for the animals in the western Great Lakes and the Northern Rockies. A federal judge recently ordered the protections reinstated in Montana. The Associated Press

Santa Fe County Votes! Santa Fe County voter turnout was 25.87% compared to 20.26% statewide in the New Mexico Primary Election!

WHEN

November 4 7:00AM - 7:00PM

Your Vote Is Important!

WHERE

Your participation in the General Election determines who will represent our community

All Santa Fe County Precincts Call the Santa Fe County Clerk’s Office to find your precinct location (505)986-6280

For polling places and more information: http://www.santafecountynm.gov /clerk

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Wolf-like animal seen in N. Arizona

ico, the incidence of domestic violence is slightly higher, with 1 in 3 women experiencing domestic violence sometime during their lives. The New Mexico Coalition Against Domestic Violence said it’s grateful for the elected officials who have supported efforts over the years to end domestic violence. Alisha Chavez, a spokeswoman for the group, said the domestic violence case involving Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice and his thenfiancée has spurred even more commitment among advocates to raise insight into the culture of domestic violence. “We hope New Mexico legislators will stand behind us as we continue to advocate for positive social change in our state,” Chavez said.

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Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Airport: Earthship community against plan Official reports on the project were to fall on someone’s home, tion Agency said the FAA estithat home’s water supply would mates fuel dumping happens also raise little concern about no obligation to rezone the area be contaminated.” very infrequently, and jettisoned environmental impacts. before crews can break ground. But airport officials and avia- fuel is expected to evaporate The September 2012 federal In the county’s response, before it hits the ground. tion experts insist aircraft that Record of Decision approving County Attorney Robert Malone land at the Taos airport aren’t “Since fuel dumping is a rare the project found an expanded asserts the county has “no legal capable of releasing fuel in event, and the fuel would likely Taos airport is “not expected duty to zone at all, or enact spe- midair. And even if they were, it be dispersed over a very large to have a negative impact on cific airport zoning.” An attoressentially never happens. area, we believe its impact to air quality conditions” because ney representing the town made the environment would not be Airport manager John of the relatively low volume of a similar defense, arguing that serious,” the letter reads. Thompson said no aircraft had flights. “there is no affirmative duty to dumped fuel anywhere near Despite the official position, The study did acknowledge zone the areas that the plaintiffs the Taos airport as long as he Sutton said it would be hard that the federal government estiallege must be zoned.” had been there. “These guys for someone in a position of mates aircraft account for about Attorneys for the plaintiffs don’t just say ‘Fill ’er up, and if authority to allay her concerns. 3 percent of human-caused point to federal rules that state we can’t get off the ground we’ll “Could somebody allay my the town must make efforts “to greenhouse gas emissions in just dump it as we take off,’ ” fears? I’m not sure,” she said. the extent reasonable” to coordi- Thompson said. the United States, though the Sutton said in an interview nate with the county to put zonamount coming from air traffic Nearly all aircraft don’t have that she found information on a ing in place that restrict the use in Taos is “negligible.” the capacity to dump fuel in website authored by opponents of land next to runways. In the The report also concluded midair, and even if they did, of the airport in Sedona, Ariz., decades since the airport expanthat the expansion would have they would get pounced on who also claim to be suffering sion was first proposed, there “no substantial impact” to water by environmental regulators, the health effects of dumped jet has been minimal effort to conquality in the area. Thompson said. fuel. That site included a link trol growth around the airport. This story first appeared in In a 2001 letter to a group to the specs of one business jet However, a spokeswoman for The Taos News, a sister paper of concerned about fuel dumping, that has a system capable of jetthe Federal Aviation Administhe U.S. Environmental Protec- tisoning fuel. The Santa Fe New Mexican. tration said in September that zoning was a “local issue” and that there were no plans to withhold grant funding, even without a change in zoning. Plaintiffs in the lawsuit have asked Judge Jeff McElroy to issue an injunction to stop the project until the county “has properly addressed all off-site impact through its land use planning process.” No hearing date to consider that motion has been set. Among the claims made in * the motion for an injunction, attorneys for the plaintiffs said MASTER YOUR SPORT 3217 Richards Lane Suite B increased airport noise will lessen property values, and the (505) 780-8881 T H R OU G H P R E C I S I O N town will have to compensate TRAINING w w w . i n n e r a t h l e t e n m . c o m landowners for lost property *Bring coupon at time of visit values. There are residents surrounding the airport who complain they’ve had no notice of Paid Political Advertisement the expansion. But not everyone agrees. Former town councilor and real estate agent Rudy Abeyta is representing a vacant, 1.3-acre lot that sits at one end of the proposed runway. Abeyta contends it’s up to Realtors to disclose things like a dump and an airport, and it’s up to property buyers to do their due diligence. He also points out that land values in the area are already lower, in part because of their proximity Bond C is not just about buildings. to the airport. Abeyta was a proponent of It’s about ensuring higher-ed the airport when he sat on the students have the tools to excel council. He lost a bid for reelection in March. in their fields and contribute to Abeyta says residential develur economy. It’s about renovating ou opments on the southeast edge of the proposed runway came old, out-of-date classrooms long after the original airport and providing the technology and nearby landfill were built. Adding fuel to the fire were necessary to compete a couple of sentences from an with other states – and article from Forbes magazine on development at Taos Ski Valley. around the world. The article described changes Bond C is about New B at the mountain since it was Mexico’s future! M acquired by Louis Bacon. Among those changes, according to the story, is improved airport access. “Bacon has been working with the local community to have the airport become a more elite NEW JOBS jetport, capable of handling up to NEW JOBS 45-passenger regional jets,” the article reads. “Eliminating the current three-hour road trip from Albuquerque would be a serious For more info visit higheredbondc.com ty! game-changer.” un o C What an out-of-town jourPaid for by the 2014 G.O. Bond for Education Committee, Fe nalist may have considered a a t Dr. Gerald Burke, Chairman, Executive Committee, n benign couple of lines reignited Sa 1742 Regal Ridge, Las Cruces, NM 575-639-2041 n i conspiracy theories that Taos Ski Valley is a behind-thescenes player in the expansion. Both Taos Ski Valley and the town insist there is no agreement on funding or subsidizing the expansion. Nor are there plans to help pay for future air service into Taos, both parties agree. Previous efforts and commuter air service, some of which enjoyed healthy subsidies, failed miserably. The latest group to speak out against the airport expansion are residents of the Earthship community on the west side of the Rio Grande Gorge. In a letter to the county planning director, Judy Sutton identified herself as a family nurse practitioner, with a master’s degree in public health, and an elected representative of the Great World Community Board — the board that represents many homeowners in the Earthship development. Sutton became a plaintiff in the lawsuit Oct. 21. In her letter, Sutton claimed aircraft dumping jet fuel would contaminate water catchment systems that supply the Earthships. “While this would not be that problematic for normal residences, it will have a disastrous effect on us,” Sutton wrote. “Our entire community’s water supply is roof water catchment. If even a small amount of fuel

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Habits: Programs aim to reduce recidivism Continued from Page C-1 clinical director, said the new mindfulness exercises — cognitive behavior therapy, yoga stretches and meditation — can help addicts to respond more thoughtfully and reasonably to stress. “For a lot of folks, automatic responses are a real problem,” he said. The mindfulness portion of the court programs, held in a group setting in Marlowe Sommer’s courtroom, is led by Ray Olson, 85, a former physician and novice priest at the Upaya Zen Center who taught internal medicine at the University of North Texas Health Sciences Center for 40 years before retiring. He also works with inmates in the state prison system. Olson began a recent session by asking participants to close their eyes and focus on their breathing. He then asked them to become aware of what was happening in their bodies, minds and hearts. “Are you hurting anyplace?” he asked in a calm voice. “Is there anyplace else you’d rather be? Are you angry or sad about something? Are you embarrassed? Are you feeling frustrated? Sad? Angry? What

and heroin two weeks before her 14th birthday and never stopped. “I’ve had this addiction going options do you have for dealing invite you to take charge of your class]. I actually like it. It’s not on almost 30 years,” she said. with this?” own life?” harming me. It’s helping me.” “I’ve never had a program that’s And then: “Can you look at She said the thought was After the meditation and dis- kept me clean.” these feelings and accept them “scary. It’s the first invitation cussion period, the participants Now — after spending a week just as they are?” that I got.” pushed the chairs out of the way in a coma, undergoing a double After directing the particiOlson also reminded the and unrolled bright green yoga mastectomy and living life with pants to move their toes and fin- group members to use a “sober mats, took off their shoes and an open wound in her stomach gers, and then move their heads breath space” when they are stood barefoot or in stocking from flesh-eating bacteria she from side to side, he asked them being triggered or are in a situfeet. Another facilitator began acquired through drug use — to open their eyes and talk ation where the risk of using leading them through a series of she’s more serious about staying about how the exercises made drugs or alcohol is high. simple stretches. sober for her own health, and them feel. “Stop,” he said. “Get out of for her ailing father. Stephanie Loya said mindful “Relaxing,” said a middleautopilot. Observe what is really thinking has made her realize “I used to think my life was aged woman. going on.” that she doesn’t have to reach done at 40,” she said. “But my “Safe,” said a young man with In a recent session, the parfor a pill every time she gets father never gave up hope that a woman’s name tattooed on the ticipants talked about what stressed. I would change. When he dies, back of his neck. makes them want to use again: I want him to know that I was “I have a lot of stress,” said “Accepting,” said another man. anything from anger, boredom, able to get clean.” Loya. At age 15, she got preg“Learning to deal with things fear and feeling overwhelmed nant and dropped out of Santa “I’m happy,” Sandoval added, gives me the time to reflect on to happiness — wanting to cel“happy they brought this proFe High. Now 43, she is the things and think them through.” ebrate or to reward themselves. mother of seven children and gram for us and thankful for “Doing meditation has really As they shared their experigrandmother to 11. She was sen- Judge Marlowe and all the people helped me when I feel really ences, they laughed and joked tenced to five years of probation that work with us. It’s amazing.” overwhelmed and stressed,” a with one another. after pleading guilty in 2013 to The effectiveness of the woman said. “I don’t want to “I thought meditation and three felony counts of failing to mindfulness program will be reach for an anxiety pill or any- yoga was a bunch of crap disclose facts to obtain public evaluated by students at New thing, because I’m in control.” before,” said Daniel Roybal, 35. assistance. Part of her sentence York’s John Jay College of CrimOlson also gives the particiHe said he became addicted to includes paying back $32,000 inal Justice at the end of the first pants homework, such as doing opiates at age 22, when he was for the public aid she received. eight-week session. breath meditations six days a prescribed painkillers after a But she’s so poor right now, she Susan Billings, director of the week. “The guts of this whole car accident. When he was first said, that she’s receiving food district’s Drug Court and Treatprogram is the home practice,” introduced to yoga, he said, “I stamps again. ment Court programs, say they he said. “What we do here is didn’t really put my mind into already have been proven to Christina Sandoval, 40, said just rehearsal for that.” it. Then the next time, I started reduce recidivism, even without she started doing cocaine One woman in the group said paying a little bit more attenit’s “easier when someone does tion and doing it. To tell you the it for you, leads you through it.” truth, it really opened my eyes. I Olson’s response: “May I feel a lot better when I leave [the

the mindfulness component. According to her data, drug courts are five times less expensive than prison, yet three times more effective at reducing recidivism. For example, she said, studies have shown that while about 44.6 percent of people who are incarcerated in New Mexico reoffend within three years, only 15.5 percent of the people who participate in the problemsolving court programs reoffend within the same time period. And Billings said the cost of the programs, at about $20 per client per day, is much lower than the cost of incarcerating someone, at about $92 per day. Funding for Drug Court and Treatment Court comes from the Legislature. Billings said the combined budget for both programs in the last fiscal year was $139,928, which paid for 82 people to participate in Drug Court and 42 people to participate in Treatment Court. The programs aren’t able to serve everyone in the court system who might need the help. “We are limited by our budget,” Billings said. “We can only service so many people at a time, and sometimes when we get an influx, we have to turn people away.”

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Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

FAMILY

Have an event? To be included in the family calendar, submit listings to cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Parental anxiety breeding anxious kids

S

ince the beginning of the 2014-15 school their parents — can adequately protect them year, several elementary teachers have from its dangers. In the language of philosoasked me why so many of today’s kids phy, these fears are existential; they strike at come to school with anxiety issues. the very core of a child’s inalienable That’s a good question, one that I right to a sense of well-being. And so all too many of today’s kids bring think goes to the heart of contemall manner of anxieties with them porary American parenting. to school, including performance The short answer is that many anxiety, test anxiety, separation of today’s kids — I’m referring anxiety, various manifestations of primarily to the children of wellsocial anxiety, and, of course, anximeaning parents who read things ety over attending school at all. like this column — are the objects People who view American parof a tremendous amount of parenenting from the perspective of “outtal concern. This concern ranges John siders” — me and most members from realistic to implausible, an Rosemond of my generation included — can example of the latter being the Living With see this pervasive parental concern parent of an early-elementary age Children and its effects rather clearly. child who will not send her child to A woman from Eastern Europe, school because the child’s teacher for example, told me that from her recently visited Dallas where two culture’s relaxed parenting point of view, the (as of this writing) health care workers have driving force in American mothering is fear. contracted the Ebola virus. Even where the parental concern in question is based on veri- Bingo! Overall, it’s the fear that if the mother is not constantly vigilant and involved, somefiable evidence — kidnapping, for example — it is often inflated far beyond its likelihood. thing will go wrong, and the wrong in question will be apocalyptic. My theory is that over time this overThis ubiquitous anxiety is not limited to arching concern is transferred via psychic osmosis from parent to child. These concern- younger children. infected kids begin to fear that the world is A mother recently asked me what to do not a safe place and that no one — not even about her son who is making B’s and C’s

in honors high school classes. What to do about what? How about do nothing, count your blessings (or lucky stars, depending) and leave well enough alone? This teenager is beginning to act anxious. His mother is all over his case about his grades. Do ya think there might be a connection? Here’s the mother’s apocalypse: She is worried that her son might not get into the “right” college, whatever that is. Along with many other reasonably successful people, I did not go to the “right” college, except that Western Illinois University was all right by me. As anyone who’s been to a high school reunion should know, a person’s success in life is not a matter of what college he or she went to (a handful of highly esoteric professions excepted). I told her to leave him alone, to his own devices; to cease monitoring his grades on a daily basis or even any basis at all. (I could, at this point, go off on a rant about these school websites that promote parental micromanagement, but I do not have the space. Simply be assured that it is one of my most magnificent rants.) Visit family psychologist John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemond.com.

Teaching the art of kindness

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ast week, a social media post brought a smile to my face. At a local high school, students were greeted with Post-It notes on their locker with a message like “You are loved” and “I’m glad you exist.” I was proud of the act of kindness and found it refreshing. That thoughtful deed reminded me of a TV interview I caught recently of actor and champion of local causes Ali MacGraw with Oprah Winfrey. When asked, “What one thing will be your legacy?” MacGraw replied, “Kindness — it affects everything in your Bizia Greene life from how you cut the flowers to how you treat Etiquette Rules! the checkout guy on a Friday night.” Kindness and etiquette go hand in hand. Mindful and mannerly people have an awareness for the people and environment around them and conduct themselves accordingly. That’s a kind way to live. But how do we learn that skill? Harvard University may have the answer. Making Caring Common is a project run by Professor Richard Weissbourd and the graduate school of education. Their aim is to strengthen the abilities of parents and caretakers, schools and community members to develop caring, ethical children in their day-to-day interactions. While the focus is on youth, adults benefit from their strategies. In their most recent study, “The Children We Mean to Raise,” Making Caring Common found that 80 percent of youths valued achievement and happiness over concern for others. And it is this prioritizing of personal success over kindness that leads to negative behavior. Half of high school students admit to cheating on a test, and even more admit to copying someone else’s homework. Incidents of bullying and sexual harassment in middle and high schools are common occurrences. “Any healthy civil society also depends on adults who are committed to their communities and who, at pivotal times, will put the

Family calendar Sunday, Nov. 2 SWIM-A-THON: Santa Fe Community College’s School of Fitness Education will host a Swim-A-Thon from 9 a.m. to noon at the William C. Witter Fitness Education Center. Proceeds from this fundraiser will help endow an Exercise Science Scholarship for Hispanic and low-income students through the SFCC Foundation. Contributed funds will also help support maintenance of facility equipment. Space is limited. Registration for the event is $20. Prizes and awards will be given to the winner of each age group. For more information, please contact Herman Garcia in the Fitness Education Center at 428-1751. EL DÍA DE LOS MUERTOS CELEBRATION OF LIFE: Teatro Paraguas Studio, 3205 Calle Marie. Poetry, music, dance performances, drumming and dance procession, bonfire, community altar and dinner, 4-9 p.m., $7 for adults, free for kids under 12, 424-1601 or 603-7997. VIVOS ENTRE LOS MUERTOS: El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, 555 Caminode la Familia. Day of the Dead and 20th anniversary celebration, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., call 992-0591 for details.

Monday, Nov. 3 NATURE PLAYTIMES: Toddlers, preschoolers and their caregivers are invited to the Pajarito Environmental Education Center in Los Alamos to explore the natural world from 10 to 11 a.m. Each Playtime features a craft, story and outside activity; no charge; 3540 Orange St.; call 662-0460. FAMILY STORY TIME: Families can hear stories and participate in hands-on activities at La Farge Branch Library, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., 1730 Llano St.; 955-4860.

Tuesday, Nov. 4 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m.; Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; 955-4860. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Main Library, 145 Washington Ave.; call 955-6783. FLU SHOT CLINIC: Santa Fe Community College is offering a flu shot clinic from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. — or while supplies last. No charge; Jemez Rooms, 6401 Richards Ave. Call 428-1763 for information. A TRIBUTE TO MARA ROBINSON: Lensic Performing Arts Center. New Mexico School for the Arts students perform choral and instrumental music in honor of longtime New Mexico School for the Arts supporter Robinson, 6-7 p.m., $15 adults, $10 students and seniors, 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.

Wednesday, Nov. 5 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; 955-4863. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; 955-4860.

Thursday, Nov. 6 CHILDREN’S STORY HOUR: Readings from picture books for children up to age 5; 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. at Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St.; no charge, call 988-4226. TRY IT THURSDAYS: Children 16 and under are free on Thursdays after 4 p.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; 955-4863. AFTER-SCHOOL READING: Designed to encourage reading for pleasure for students in grades K-4. Activities include reading aloud, writing stories, games and crafts; 3 to 4:30 p.m. at the Vista Grande Public Library, 7 Avenida Vista Grande in Eldorado.

Caitlin Haacke of Alberta, Canada, responded to social media bullying in early October by starting a positive Post-It note campaign in her high school that has spread to schools across Canada and the U.S., including at a school in Santa Fe. Watch a video about Caitlin’s effort at www.youtube.com/ watch?v=0zLteIn7IS0.

common good before their own. We don’t seem to be preparing large numbers of youth to create this society,” the study finds. As parents, we say we want well-behaved kids, but this study points to what it calls a rhetoric/reality gap. We aren’t practicing what we preach. Youth were three times more likely to agree with the statement: “My parents are prouder if I get good grades in my classes than if I’m a caring community member in class and school.” Students felt that message from some of their teachers, as well. Here are five strategies Making Caring Common offers to help us all have kindness in common. u Make caring for others a priority. Hold children to high ethical expectations. Instead of saying to your kids: “The most important thing is that you’re happy,” say, “The most important thing is that you’re kind.” Make sure that your older children always address others respectfully, even when they’re tired, distracted or angry. u Provide opportunities for children to practice caring and gratitude. Daily repetition — whether it’s helping a friend with homework, pitching in around the house or having a classroom job — make caring second nature.

Faces & places

Friday, Nov. 7 u Expand your child’s circle of concern. Make sure your children are friendly and grateful with all the people in their daily lives, such as a bus driver or a waitress. They also need to consider how their decisions, such as quitting a sports team or a band, can ripple out. Use a newspaper or TV story to encourage your child to think about hardships faced by children in another country. u Be a strong moral role model and mentor. Children learn ethical values by watching the actions of adults they respect. Model caring for others by doing community service at least once a month. Even better, do this service with your child. u Guide children in managing destructive feelings. We need to teach children that all feelings are OK, but some ways of dealing with them are not helpful. To calm down: Ask your child to stop, take a deep breath through the nose and exhale through the mouth, and count to five. Practice when your child is calm. Then, when you see her getting upset, remind her about the steps and do them with her. Bizia Greene owns the Etiquette School of Santa Fe. Share your comments and conundrums at hello@etiquettesantafe.com or 988-2070.

Weddings & engagements

Tricia Lynn Gunther and Kenneth Kapono Bangay plan a July 2015 wedding.

Daniel Aquino of Ohkay Owingeh and Victoria Lovato of Kewa Pueblo were named king and queen of Santa Fe Indian School.

COURTESY PHOTO

Gunther, Bangay Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gunther of Santa Fe announce the engagement of their daughter, Tricia Lynn Gunther of Albuquerque, to Kenneth Kapono Bangay, also of

Albuquerque. Tricia Lynn Gunther is a graduate of The University of New Mexico. Bangay is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Bangay of Kona, Hawaii. He is in the U.S. Air Force. A July 2015 wedding is being planned.

COURTESY PHOTO

Santa Fe Indian School’s king and queen were presented Oct. 11 during halftime of the SFIS/Questa football game. The king is

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Daniel Aquino from Ohkay Owingeh, the son of Fran and Dolores Aquino. The queen is Victoria Lovato of Kewa Pueblo.

SEND US YOUR NEWS The New Mexican wants to celebrate with you. Send us an announcement of your wedding, engagement, milestone anniversary or new baby to service@sfnewmexican.com.

GARDEN SPROUTS: Stories and hands-on activities for children ages 3 to 5 with a caregiver from 9 to 10 a.m., weather permitting; sponsored by the Santa Fe Botanical Garden and Railyard Stewards. Meet at the Santa Fe Botanical Garden on Museum Hill, 725 Camino Lejo. $5 suggested donation; free to members and children under 12. PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes and crafts for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m. at the Main Library, 145 Washington Ave., 955-6783. FRIDAY AFTERNOON ART: A free art program for families from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Main Library, 145 Washington Ave., 955-6783. STORY TIME: Bring your infants, toddlers and preschoolers for stories, songs and crafts; 11 a.m. at the Vista Grande Public Library, 7 Avenida Vista Grande in Eldorado. FAMILY MOVIE NIGHT: This month’s film at the Vista Grande Public Library, 7 Avenida Vista Grande in Eldorado, is rated G and follows the first year in the life a pair of wild bear cubs. Watch this cute and cuddly fun shown at 7 p.m. on our big screen! No charge; popcorn and juice included. IAIA BLOOD QUANTAM DRIVE: Students at the Institute of American Indian Arts are collaborating with Axle Contemporary Gallery, bringing the “IAIA Blood Quantum Drive: Making Relatives” project to the streets of Santa Fe. Directed by Professor Dana Chodzko, the student-designedand-built environment will engage and educate the public about historical and controversial indigenous issues. A reception will be held from 3:30 to 6:30 at the Allan Houser Sculpture/Foundry Building on the IAIA campus at 83 Avan Nu Po Road.

Saturday, Nov. 8 GIRLS INC. FUNDRAISER: Girls Inc. of Santa Fe is hosting its third annual LUNAFEST event, a traveling film festival showcasing short films by, for and about women. The evening will begin 5:30 p.m. with a wine and hors d’oeuvres reception and silent auction at the Pop Gallery, 125 Lincoln Ave. The LUNAFEST films will be screened at 7:30 p.m. next door at the New Mexico History Museum, 117 Lincoln Ave. Tickets are $35 and can be purchased through the Lensic box office, 988-1234. Tickets will also be available at the door. Proceeds benefit Girls Inc. of Santa Fe and the Breast Cancer Fund. FREE WRITING WORKSHOP: Author, columnist and radioshow host James McGrath Morris hosts a free writing workshop for teens — “How To Tell a True Story.” McGrath Morris wrote Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print and Power, among other works. Among the topics of his workshop are how to shape a story, where to begin and end a story, how to create scenes and how to incorporate research into your writing. The event is free, but registration is required. The teen program takes place from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Road. Call 955-2820 for more information.

Sunday, Nov. 9 TALES FROM THE OPERA SWAMP: “Leopoldo the Frog” and other tales from the Opera Swamp, presented by Performance Santa Fe. Tickets $10 per adult with child, $25 for an adult without a child, 4 p.m., United Church of Santa Fe, 1804 Arroya Chamiso, 988-3295. ASSISTANCE DOGS OF THE WEST BENEFIT CONCERT: Jazz Legends Dave Grusin and Lee Ritenour will perform music from their Grammy-nominated album Two Worlds to benefit the training program for assistance dogs. For the first half of the concert, bass player Tom Kennedy and percussionist Will Kennedy will join Grusin and Ritenour along with a 16-member classical string section and a flutist. The performance is at 7 p.m. at the Lensic Performing Arts Center. Call 988-1234.

Editor’s note: Kids Scoop puzzles will return next week.


C-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Some sun

Tonight

Monday

Showers around early; mostly cloudy

61

Tuesday

Sunny

38

Wednesday

Plenty of sunshine

54/29

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

Sunny and pleasant

Thursday

Friday

Times of clouds and sun

In July, Faith Garfield traveled to Iceland, where she captured this shot of a waterfall. COURTESY FAITH GARFIELD

Saturday

Plenty of sunshine

Plenty of sunshine

54/29

61/31

63/36

65/36

63/31

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

53%

72%

44%

42%

27%

23%

25%

32%

wind: SSW 10-20 mph

wind: S 7-14 mph

wind: W 7-14 mph

wind: S 4-8 mph

wind: WNW 4-8 mph

wind: SW 4-8 mph

wind: WNW 7-14 mph

wind: WNW 4-8 mph

New Mexico weather

Almanac Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures H g / ow ......................................... 67 /40 Normal high/low ............................ 61 /32 Recor g ............................... 73 n 2008 Recor ow ................................. 21 n 1929 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.00”/8.63” Norma mont /year to ate ... 0.03”/12.08” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.00”/9.76”

Air quality index

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

64

64

Saturda ’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 .........................................2 Low Monda .....................................1, Low Tuesda .....................................0, Low Wednesda ...............................1, Low Thursda ...................................1, Low Friday ........................................2, 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. ............ 0.01” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.00”/7.42” Las Vegas 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate ................ 0.00”/11.43” Los Alamos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.00”/8.81” Chama 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate ................ 0.00”/13.29” Taos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.00”/5.99”

54 60 60

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

70

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

54 285

10

The following water statistics of October 30 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.782 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 1.838 City Wells: 2.497 Buckman Wells: 2.519 Total water produced by water system: 8.636 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.146 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 10.1 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.10 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

Share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnew mexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed twice a week as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.

180

10

Water statistics

LASTING IMAGES WATERFALL

Sun and moon

tate extremes Sat. High 78 ............................... Las Cruces Sat. Low 16 ................................ Eagle Nest

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

Hi/Lo W 77/47 pc 69/51 pc 64/37 s 69/43 pc 68/44 pc 57/38 c 64/40 pc 67/43 pc 62/38 pc 68/36 pc 67/44 pc 75/52 pc 68/50 pc 74/50 pc 64/40 pc 73/52 pc 70/46 s 66/39 s 78/55 pc

Hi/Lo W 78/50 pc 66/44 pc 52/30 c 78/53 pc 79/51 pc 50/30 c 64/37 c 73/45 pc 55/35 pc 72/49 pc 57/31 pc 73/46 s 65/43 pc 60/35 sh 74/50 pc 56/27 pc 61/30 pc 69/50 pc 76/49 pc

Hi/Lo W 71/39 s 57/38 s 46/18 pc 75/45 s 78/47 s 45/23 sn 55/24 pc 61/32 pc 48/27 s 71/39 s 48/22 s 66/34 s 56/36 s 53/27 pc 71/39 s 51/19 s 54/19 s 74/46 pc 66/40 s

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

Hi/Lo 63/34 77/57 61/44 70/48 70/43 71/34 53/38 68/44 67/41 68/37 65/41 68/46 73/50 64/37 75/49 70/44 77/54 65/45 72/47

W pc pc pc pc pc pc r pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc

Hi/Lo W 63/36 pc 71/49 s 56/36 pc 69/43 pc 73/50 pc 67/37 c 49/29 c 66/41 pc 78/50 pc 64/45 pc 74/46 pc 65/42 s 72/44 pc 56/34 c 71/48 pc 78/50 pc 78/52 pc 59/38 pc 57/28 pc

Hi/Lo W 54/26 s 66/42 s 51/30 pc 60/36 s 72/40 s 56/27 pc 44/20 sn 58/34 s 76/42 s 58/35 s 63/33 s 60/34 s 63/39 s 51/20 sn 65/40 s 69/36 s 70/42 s 54/31 pc 50/20 s

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

Sunrise today ............................... 6:27 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 5:08 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 2:32 p.m. Moonset toda ............................. 1:42 a.m. Sunrise Monda ............................ 6:28 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 5:07 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 3:10 p.m. Moonset Monda .......................... 2:48 a.m. Sunrise Tuesda ........................... 6:29 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 5:06 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 3:49 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 3:55 a.m. Full

Last

New

First ©2014 Raymond James & Associates, Inc. member New York Stock Exchange/SIPC

Nov 6

Nov 14

Nov 22

Nov 29

The planets Rise 4:56 a.m. 6:38 a.m. 10:54 a.m. 12:02 a.m. 7:33 a.m. 3:53 p.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 4:25 p.m. 5:17 p.m. 8:26 p.m. 1:38 p.m. 5:58 p.m. 4:26 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

Think Chapman Homes. Free estimates!

National cities

Weather for November 2

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

Hi/Lo 34/27 47/38 52/46 66/45 51/30 52/39 49/41 48/44 53/39 43/35 42/34 41/40 62/37 72/33 43/33 20/0 57/49 86/75 65/47 43/30 50/27 73/57 67/56

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

Hi/Lo 38/27 59/36 50/34 53/32 63/34 50/33 43/32 56/36 53/28 49/38 50/33 45/34 68/55 69/35 48/34 16/2 44/21 86/75 71/57 51/36 62/49 66/48 69/53

WANT A GUEST HOUSE?

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

Hi/Lo 37/23 67/44 59/39 51/35 51/27 54/41 46/35 67/41 63/38 60/46 60/43 57/43 73/64 50/28 56/44 15/0 49/22 86/73 80/65 60/45 65/43 66/46 74/52

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

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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 45/35 53/35 78/61 42/35 42/23 61/46 47/45 61/35 64/53 49/45 83/69 44/40 54/44 51/41 50/30 72/55 71/50 70/63 65/55 52/47 49/27 47/43 54/50

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

Hi/Lo 53/38 59/42 72/61 50/39 53/38 65/52 48/38 65/51 67/50 51/37 73/54 46/29 55/50 54/32 55/41 47/35 75/66 69/56 69/54 55/49 58/39 50/33 52/40

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

Hi/Lo 64/46 68/51 78/70 57/50 59/36 76/63 56/45 68/48 75/60 58/42 75/55 53/38 57/53 65/40 68/50 47/29 80/69 73/54 70/54 57/53 57/31 57/39 62/44

W pc pc pc pc pc pc pc t pc pc s pc r s pc pc pc s s r pc pc pc

Building and remodeling homes since 1966

Appraisals INSURANCE & ESTATE

Things Finerr SINCE 19288

“We buy every day”

Inside La Fonda Hotel • Please Call for an Appointment 983-5552 Graduate Gemologist on Staff : M B k FGA, DGA, NJA

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) Sat. High: 88 .................... Death Valley, CA Sat. Low: 7 ............................ Brimson, MN

Weather history

Weather trivia™

On Nov. 2, 1861, a hurricane in the Carolinas sank two Union ships. Despite the loss, Union forces managed to capture Port Royal, S.C., five days later.

On which two continents is snow most Q: unlikely to occur?

1

6:30 p.m. on FOX Bob’s Burgers It’s a couple of days past Halloween, but is there ever a better time than another to start a love affair with a ghost? Tina (voice by Dan Mintz) provides her own answer in the aptly titled new episode “Tina and the Real Ghost,” as a spectre that apparently resides in the Belchers’ basement touches her emotions. Nothing necessarily lasts forever, though ... not even an affair with the supernatural.

Hi/Lo 64/52 61/54 79/54 91/77 72/59 61/45 64/50 68/48 61/52 82/64 90/77 77/57 56/52 59/48 63/41 72/59 81/70 86/75 62/53 69/62

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

Hi/Lo 60/50 64/54 76/59 90/76 70/61 57/35 61/50 66/47 62/59 84/64 91/75 80/57 57/52 53/39 63/42 70/55 74/60 86/69 68/53 71/61

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

Hi/Lo 56/46 64/52 78/56 89/76 71/59 61/35 61/47 69/47 67/51 80/61 90/74 71/50 57/50 50/39 62/47 71/56 79/66 78/70 65/52 71/60

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

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

Hi/Lo 72/64 63/60 72/46 66/48 45/36 36/33 85/61 68/50 59/45 93/75 70/46 72/46 68/50 90/78 46/28 82/67 63/59 52/39 52/39 59/40

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

Hi/Lo 67/57 60/49 69/47 71/47 43/26 31/21 87/62 62/50 56/40 86/72 68/49 71/41 59/38 90/78 54/49 71/56 73/62 53/47 54/43 62/42

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

Hi/Lo 65/56 54/43 62/46 73/46 44/29 33/29 88/65 57/45 52/38 87/72 70/57 74/45 57/40 91/78 55/46 70/59 68/53 55/49 52/44 60/45

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

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At 80, MacLaine comes to terms with work, life

top picks

5 p.m. DSC Skyscraper Live With Nik Wallenda A year after he successfully traversed the Grand Canyon, the veteran aerialist who is known as the King of the Highwire attempts his most challenging tightrope walk yet high above one of the windiest parts of Chicago in this new special, which is being broadcast live to more than 200 countries. During the first part of the crossing, Wallenda will walk the equivalent of more than two city blocks up a 15-degree angle. He’ll be blindfolded for the second part of the walk.

2

A: Africa and Australia

TV

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

the surprises, but moviegoers should LOS ANGELES — Shirley take Elsa’s MacLaine pulled no punches words with a when asked about her take on grain of salt. life at age 80. “She really “Well, I’m a lot closer to did lie about dying,” she said, with a chuckle. everything,” Shirley Maybe so, but there still MacLaine MacLaine seems to be a lot of life left for revealed. both the vibrant woman and her But little matter, as it’s what Oscar-winning career. Elsa does that’s of greater imporMacLaine, a part-time Santa tance, as it re-introduces Fred to Fe resident, is among the few La Dolce Vita — both the classic octogenarians who still get Fellini movie, and, for real, its name-above-the-title billing, English translation, “the sweet which she shares with 84-yearlife.” old co-star Christopher PlumWhen asked if she’s had la mer in Elsa & Fred, the upcomdolce vita, MacLaine said, “I can’t ing American remake of the imagine a better life. I’ve sat back 2005 foreign-language favorite. and looked at it and thought, At first glance, MacLaine’s ‘Oh, my. What haven’t I done?’ Elsa is merely the nutty neigh“I can’t think of anything bor to Plummer’s Fred, who has except I’d like to live on a wildpretty much given up on living animal farm,” she continued. in the wake of his wife’s passing. “… But as far as my work and But there’s a lot more to Elsa stuff, I’ve done everything. I just than Fred, or the film’s viewers, want to keep on doing what I’m see coming. Specifics would spoil doing.” By Michael Cidoni Lennox The Associated Press

9 p.m. on ABC Revenge As much as somebody may want to help someone else who’s in despair, sometimes they just can’t ... which is Emily’s (Emily VanCamp) situation in the new episode “Damage.” She fears Charlotte (Christa B. Allen) finally is beyond emotional rescue and struggles to come to terms with that. David and Nolan (James Tupper, Gabriel Mann) reconnect, and they do so in plain sight. Madeleine Stowe (pictured), Josh Bowman and Nick Wechsler also star.

3

4

10 p.m. on HBO Olive Kitteridge Academy Award winner Frances McDormand (“Fargo”) and Richard Jenkins head the cast of this poignant, two-part adaptation of Elizabeth Strout’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about life in a small New England town rocked by tragedy and illicit affairs. Bill Murray, John Gallagher Jr. (“The Newsroom”), Peter Mullan, Rosemarie DeWitt and Zoe Kazan also star. The conclusion airs Monday.

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© Jack Challem

New Research Reveals How Healthy and Unhealthy Foods Affect Our Moods

The independent newsletter that reports vitamin, mineral, and food therapies moods—such as being happy, calm, and energetic—on the days they ate more fruits and vegetables. A “lagged analysis” showed that eating fruits and vegetables predicted a positive mood the following day, suggesting that the healthy foods were leading to better moods (and not vice versa).

Many nutrients, such as omega-3 fish oils and B vitamins, are known to enhance mood and reverse depression. Now, a study by a team of New Zealand researchers has shown that eating fruits and vegetables can help “keep the blues away.”

“Meaningful changes...were observed with the daily consumption of approximately seven to eight servings of fruit and vegetables,” wrote Conner and her colleagues.

Tamlin S. Conner, PhD, and her colleagues at the University of Otago studied the eating habits of 281 students, whose average age was 20 years. The students kept an internet-based food diary each day for three weeks, while also reporting their consumption of five specific foods and their positive or negative moods.

In separate research, Ai Yoto, PhD, and her colleagues at the University of Shizuoka, Japan, studied the effects of L-theanine and caffeine on stress and anxiety. L-theanine, found in green tea, has neurotransmitter-like effects, improving both mental focus and a sense of calm. Caffeine, also found in green tea, tends to increase blood pressure. Yoto’s study focused on eight men and eight women whose average age was 23 years. The subjects were given either 200 mg of L-theanine or 100 mg of caffeine. After taking one supplement or the other, the subjects were placed in a stressful setting, such as trying to answer math problems with one hand in a bucket of ice water. Subjects were classified as “high-response” if they developed high blood pressure while trying to solve the problem. Those subjects had a decrease in anxiety and a smaller increase in blood pressure after taking L-theanine.

The foods included fruit, vegetables, chocolate-coated or cream-filled cookies, chips, and cakes or buns. The negative-mood adjectives were depressed, sad, unhappy, anxious, nervous, tense, angry, hostile, and short-tempered. In contrast, the nine positive-mood adjectives were calm, content, relaxed, cheerful, happy, pleased, energetic, enthusiastic, and excited The individual students reported significantly better

References: White BA, Horwath CC, Conner TS. Many apples a day keep the blues away – daily experiences of negative and positive affect and food consumption in young adults. British Journal of Health Psychology, 2013:doi 10.1111.bjhp.12021. Yoto A, Motoki M, Murao S, et al. Effects of L-theanine or caffeine intake on changes in blood pressure under physical and psychological stress. Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 2012;31:28

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This periodical is intended to present information we feel is valuable to our customers. Articles are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice. The articles appearing in Health Hotline® are either original articles written for our use by doctors and experts in the field of nutrition, or are reprinted by permission from reputable sources. Articles may be excerpted due to this newsletter’s editorial space limitations. If you would like to be added or removed from the Health Hotline Mailing List or have a change of address, please call 303-986-4600 or online at naturalgrocers.com/subscribe. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and offers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.

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Scoreboard D-2 NBA D-2 College football D-4 NFL D-4

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS LOBO FOOTBALL

First win: Shorthanded Thunder get their first win of the season. Page D-2

D

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

No. 4 Auburn holds off No. 7 Mississippi By John Zenor The Associated Press

UNM running back Jhurell Pressley celebrates after defeating UNLV on Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. JOHN LOCHER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Late UNM TD fuels win over UNLV

OXFORD, Miss. — Cassanova McKinzy recovered a fumble in the end zone to preserve No. 4 Auburn’s 35-31 victory over No. 7 Mississippi Auburn 35 on Saturday night Mississippi 31 in what amounted to the first College Football Playoff knockout game. The Tigers (7-1, 4-1 Southeastern Conference, No. 3 CFP) got a

reprieve after Rebels receiver Laquon Treadwell lost the ball at the end of a tackle-breaking catch-and-run to the end zone with 1:30 left. It was ruled a touchdown, but the replay official determined he lost the ball before crossing the goal line. McKinzy dove on it, deflating the Ole Miss crowd enjoying team’s best start since 1990. The Rebels (7-2, 4-2, No. 4 CFP) have lost two straight. Auburn milked a minute off the clock before Ole Miss got the ball

INSIDE u No. 1 Mississippi State stays undefeated in Top 25 action. PAGE D-4

back at its 49 with 26 seconds left and no timeouts. Bo Wallace, who had fumbled at Auburn’s 6 on the previous drive, threw three straight incompletions before a final desperation play went nowhere. The Tigers gained 507 yards against the nation’s top scoring defense, the only unit that hadn’t

given up 20 points in a game coming into this SEC West clash. An Ole Miss offense held to seven points in a loss to No. 16 LSU matched them nearly yard for yard, gaining 492. It was a compelling duel between two teams tangling for playoff shots, and two quarterbacks swapping big plays. Marshall completed 15 of 22 passes for 254 yards with an interception that was Senquez Golson’s nationleading ninth. Marshall ran and passed for two touchdowns.

CLASS A-AAAA STATE TOURNAMENT

Monte del Sol survives thriller

By W.G. Ramirez The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — New Mexico’s Teriyon Gipson scored from three yards out with 1:22 left in the game Saturday, lifting New Mexico to a 31-28 win over UNLV. After squandering a 17-7 halftime lead, and falling behind UNLV twice in the second half, the Lobos (3-5, 1-3 UNM 31 Mountain West) UNLV 28 escaped with their first conference win of the season after UNLV’s Brian McIntyre’s 55-yard field-goal attempt fell just under the crossbar as time expired. McIntyre, a walk-on from Las Vegas’ Arbor View High School, was making his first appearance for the Rebels. The Lobos were led on offense by Jhurell Pressley, who ran for 138 yards on 20 carries and three touchdowns. New Mexico quarterback Lamar Jordan finished with a passer rating of 34.6, after completing just 2 of 7 pass attempts. UNLV (2-7, 1-4) was led by running back Shaquille Murray-Lawrence’s 125 yards rushing and two touchdowns, while quarterback Blake Decker completed 28 of 44 pass

Please see FOOTBALL, Page D-4

LOBO BASKETBALL

Greenwood delivers scoring exhibition By Will Webber The New Mexican

ALBUQUERQUE — So all this fuss about Hugh Greenwood going from worker bee to the dee jay of the honeycomb? Yeah, there might be something to that. The University of New Mexico senior teamed up with fellow UNM 89 guard Cullen Western N.M. 45 Neal to score the Lobos’ first 23 points in an 89-45 exhibition blowout of visiting Western New Mexico University on Saturday night in The Pit. Greenwood sank four 3-pointers in that opening flurry en route to finishing with 18 points and four rebounds on 4-of-7 shooting from distance. Greenwood’s career-high in a regular-season game is 22 points. If he keeps this pace, it’s clear that a player who has averaged just 6.5 points in his three previous seasons as a Lobo might actually become the prolific scorer his head coach wants him to be. “He did some things, you know, that were really indicative of what I thought, or what I wanted him to do,” said Craig Neal, UNM head coach. Until this season, Greenwood’s role was to be a physical defender and an aggressive rebounder while spending part of his time playing

Please see SCORING, Page D-3

Monte del Sol’s Estevan Quintero, right, attempts to deflect the ball from Socorro’s Kol Fuierer during the Class A-AAAA State Boys Soccer Tournament on Saturday at Santa Fe High School. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

Dragons goalie Castillo happy to delay basketball season with two saves in shootout By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

J

avi Castillo is not ready to play basketball, and he prolonged his time off the hardwood with a clutch performance on the soccer pitch on Saturday. The eighth-seeded Monte del Sol boys soccer team was tied with No. 9 Socorro 1-all at the end of two overtimes in a home Class A-AAAA State Tournament first-round match at Santa Fe High, and the victor would be decided by penalty kicks. Castillo, Monte del Sol’s junior goalkeeper, had to keep the Warriors out of the goal in order for the Dragons to face No. 1 Albuquerque Sandia Prep in the quarterfinals on Thursday. Obviously, that’s

a lot of pressure. “I was nervous knowing Socorro 1 that if we lose, we stay home and I’ll probably go to basketball,” Castillo said. “Things were just rushing through my head.” Castillo let Dushan Gacanich’s penalty kick slip through, but he stuffed two shots by Socorro to keep the Dragons ahead in the count. Monte del Sol midfielder Shalto Dascher hit the winner, as he slipped his kick past Socorro goalkeeper Dennis Woods to give the Dragons a 4-2 advantage and a 2-1 win. The Dragons (10-6-2 overall) play the Sundevils at the APS Soccer Complex at 3:15 p.m. Thursday. Castillo was admittedly nervous before the penMonte del Sol

2

alty kicks, and he channeled that energy into saves. “I couldn’t stay calm, and I think that’s what helped me block the PKs,” he said. “That thinking gave me the energy, and it got me pumped. It was just craziness going through my head.” The Warriors (11-9) were so close to advancing after being absent from the postseason since 2008. They forced the Dragons to play from behind nearly the entire match after senior Jose Corral scored in the third minute. Monte del Sol narrowly escaped defeat when forward Omar Ndiaye was fouled in the box by Gacanich in the 78th minute. Senior Irwin Flores converted the penalty kick, and the score held

Please see SOCCER, Page D-3

Portales blowout shows Horsemen are vulnerable

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ronte Staugaard doesn’t conknow that. I think we’re good, too, sider himself much of a prep and we wanted to come out here and football historian. Then again, show it.” who really is? Fair enough. Not exactly The blonde-haired, bulletin board material there. blue-eyed running back He was asked a question and from Portales similarly he was just being humble doesn’t seem to care and honest. much about anything Still, the idea of the Horsebesides the present and men rattling off 45 wins in a future. 48-game span between the It explains a lot about start of the 2011 season and his lack of knowledge Will Webber this past Friday night barely regarding the team his caused him to raise an eyeCommentary Rams had just beaten brow. As recently as last year, on Friday night at Greysuch negligence to the ways hound Stadium. of the St. Michael’s machine would have resulted in a few face-to-face The pomp and circumstance surlessons between the sidelines. rounding three straight undefeated regular seasons by St. Michael’s On Friday, it was Staugaard and meant nothing to him. the Rams doling out the lessons — lessons that indicate the winds of “Yeah, I guess they were good,” he change have blown the Horsemen off said after shredding the Horsemen the prep football perch and left them defense for over 220 yards rushing in a place they’ve not been recently. and a pair of touchdowns. “I mean, we know they are a good team. We Friday’s 33-20 loss, during which

Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Richard Olmsted, rolmsted@sfnewmexican.com

Staugaard and Rams quarterback Matt Martinez had their way from start to finish, likely means St. Michael’s needs nothing less than a 14-point win next weekend against second-ranked Ruidoso to have any chance of earning a first-round bye in the AAAA playoffs. Don’t look now, but the Horsemen are mere mortals. They’re vulnerable. They’re human, after all. More than that, the fear factor they’ve so easily instilled in opponents might be gone, albeit temporarily. The defense isn’t quite as suffocating as fans are used to, the offense doesn’t run the ball with authority like it had in recent years, and the line isn’t the collection of road graters the entire state has come to know and respect. Somehow it seems laughable that the team’s 7-2 record seems insufficient. Don’t think for a second that Santa Fe High, Capital, Taos — or

most anyone else for that matter — wouldn’t want to trade spots with them. Their playoff spot is assured and a first-round home game is a virtual certainty. While November usually means it’s basketball season, at St. Michael’s it’s still very much football season — just as it has been for the last 15 years, something no other school in Northern New Mexico has duplicated. If you’re scoring at home, the Horsemen have gone 24-12 in the postseason during that span; an impressive figure by anyone’s standards. Even so, it’s hard to hold a grudge against Staugaard and his blind eye to history. While it says St. Michael’s ranks among the most consistent winners in state history, the truth is this year might not belong to them. Enjoy it while it lasts — if it does. Anything can happen in the playoffs, and few teams are better in that regard than the Horsemen.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


D-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

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

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

L Pct 0 1.000 1 .500 1 .500 1 .500 3 .000 L Pct 0 1.000 1 .667 1 .500 1 .500 3 .000 L Pct 1 .667 1 .500 2 .333 2 .333 3 .000

Grizzlies 71, Hornets 69 GB — 1 1 1 2½ GB — ½ 1 1 2½ GB — ½ 1 1 2

Western Conference Southwest W L Pct GB Houston 3 0 1.000 — Memphis 3 0 1.000 — Dallas 2 1 .667 1 San Antonio 1 1 .500 1½ New Orleans 1 1 .500 1½ Northwest W L Pct GB Portland 1 1 .500 — Denver 1 1 .500 — Oklahoma City 1 2 .333 ½ Utah 1 2 .333 ½ Minnesota 1 2 .333 ½ Pacific W L Pct GB Golden State 2 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers 2 0 1.000 — Phoenix 2 1 .667 ½ Sacramento 1 1 .500 1 L.A. Lakers 0 4 .000 3 Saturday’s Games Dallas 109, New Orleans 104 Miami 114, Philadelphia 96 Washington 108, Milwaukee 97 Toronto 108, Orlando 95 Memphis 71, Charlotte 69 Atlanta 102, Indiana 92 Brooklyn 102, Detroit 90 Oklahoma City 102, Denver 91 Houston 104, Boston 90 Chicago 106, Minnesota 105 Utah 118, Phoenix 91 Golden State 127, L.A. Lakers 104 Friday’s Games Memphis 97, Indiana 89 Cleveland 114, Chicago 108, OT Milwaukee 93, Philadelphia 81 Phoenix 94, San Antonio 89 Sacramento 103, Portland 94 L.A. Clippers 118, L.A. Lakers 111 Sunday’s Games Sacramento at L.A. Clippers, 1:30 p.m. Toronto at Miami, 4 p.m. Charlotte at New York, 5:30 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 7 p.m.

NBA BOXSCORES Heat 114, 76ers 96 MIAMI (114) Deng 7-11 0-1 15, Williams 5-9 2-2 15, Bosh 9-17 10-11 30, Cole 4-7 0-0 10, Wade 4-18 1-3 9, Andersen 0-2 0-0 0, Chalmers 5-8 6-10 18, Napier 3-4 0-0 7, Ennis 2-3 0-0 5, McRoberts 1-3 1-2 3, Hamilton 1-1 0-0 2, Dawkins 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-83 20-29 114. PHILADELPHIA (96) Mbah a Moute 4-10 1-2 9, Noel 1-4 0-0 2, Sims 4-9 1-2 9, Wroten 6-11 8-11 21, Thompson 4-8 0-0 10, Davies 7-9 3-4 18, Thomas 4-4 0-0 8, Johnson 2-4 0-0 5, McDaniels 2-4 3-4 8, Shved 1-4 3-3 6, Sampson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-67 19-26 96. Miami 32 28 27 27—114 Philadelphia 30 24 29 13—96 3-Point Goals—Miami 12-24 (Williams 3-5, Chalmers 2-2, Cole 2-4, Bosh 2-5, Ennis 1-1, Napier 1-2, Deng 1-3, Wade 0-1, McRoberts 0-1), Philadelphia 7-23 (Thompson 2-5, Davies 1-2, Johnson 1-3, McDaniels 1-3, Wroten 1-4, Shved 1-4, Mbah a Moute 0-2). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Miami 45 (Bosh 8), Philadelphia 45 (Thomas 9). Assists— Miami 33 (Wade 10), Philadelphia 28 (Wroten 10). Total Fouls—Miami 20, Philadelphia 21. Technicals— Philadelphia defensive three second. A—NA (20,318).

Mavericks 109, Pelicans 104 DALLAS (109) Parsons 7-13 4-4 20, Nowitzki 8-19 1-2 17, Chandler 5-7 1-4 11, Nelson 3-8 0-0 8, Ellis 7-14 3-3 17, Harris 4-7 2-4 12, Aminu 1-3 0-2 2, Wright 6-7 0-0 12, Barea 4-7 0-0 8, Jefferson 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 46-89 11-19 109. NEW ORLEANS (104) Evans 8-19 3-3 22, Davis 9-21 13-16 31, Asik 5-8 3-6 13, Holiday 10-19 1-1 24, Gordon 0-6 0-0 0, Anderson 5-11 0-0 11, Rivers 1-3 1-2 3, Salmons 0-2 0-0 0, Fredette 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-89 21-28 104. Dallas 32 34 20 23—109 New Orleans 26 26 37 15—104 3-Point Goals—Dallas 6-25 (Harris 2-4, Nelson 2-5, Parsons 2-6, Jefferson 0-1, Aminu 0-1, Barea 0-1, Ellis 0-2, Nowitzki 0-5), New Orleans 7-19 (Evans 3-6, Holiday 3-8, Anderson 1-2, Rivers 0-1, Salmons 0-1, Gordon 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Dallas 53 (Chandler, Ellis 7), New Orleans 56 (Davis 15). Assists—Dallas 25 (Harris 6), New Orleans 24 (Evans 9). Total Fouls—Dallas 25, New Orleans 19. Technicals—Chandler, Evans, New Orleans defensive three second. A—14,547 (16,867).

MEMPHIS (71) Prince 1-5 0-0 2, Randolph 6-12 0-0 12, Gasol 9-18 4-5 22, Conley 3-14 3-3 9, Allen 3-7 0-1 6, Carter 3-8 0-0 9, Pondexter 0-1 2-2 2, Koufos 0-2 1-2 1, Udrih 3-8 0-0 6, Leuer 1-5 0-0 2. Totals 29-80 10-13 71. CHARLOTTE (69) Kidd-Gilchrist 2-4 7-10 11, Williams 1-3 0-0 3, Jefferson 8-19 3-4 19, Walker 1-11 2-3 5, Stephenson 1-6 0-0 2, Henderson 4-7 0-0 8, Zeller 3-7 0-0 6, Neal 4-10 1-1 10, Maxiell 0-1 0-0 0, Roberts 2-4 0-0 5. Totals 26-72 13-18 69. Memphis 23 13 15 20—71 Charlotte 15 15 16 23—69 3-Point Goals—Memphis 3-11 (Carter 3-5, Prince 0-1, Leuer 0-1, Pondexter 0-1, Conley 0-3), Charlotte 4-14 (Roberts 1-2, Neal 1-3, Williams 1-3, Walker 1-5, Stephenson 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Memphis 52 (Randolph 12), Charlotte 53 (KiddGilchrist 12). Assists—Memphis 16 (Conley 7), Charlotte 17 (Walker, Stephenson 4). Total Fouls—Memphis 22, Charlotte 16. Technicals—Allen, Memphis defensive three second, Charlotte defensive three second 2. A—18,133 (19,077).

Wizards 108, Bucks 97 MILWAUKEE (97) Parker 5-17 2-2 13, Middleton 2-7 1-2 6, Sanders 2-4 4-4 8, Knight 9-15 3-4 24, Dudley 2-5 0-0 4, Pachulia 1-3 0-0 2, Mayo 1-7 1-1 3, Henson 1-1 0-0 2, Antetokounmpo 2-3 0-1 4, Bayless 5-10 8-8 20, Marshall 1-2 0-0 3, Ilyasova 3-6 1-2 8. Totals 34-80 20-24 97. WASHINGTON (108) Pierce 0-3 2-2 2, Nene 10-12 2-3 22, Gortat 9-14 2-4 20, Wall 6-14 6-9 19, Temple 6-9 4-5 18, Humphries 0-2 0-0 0, Porter Jr. 7-11 6-7 21, Rice Jr. 1-3 2-3 4, Gooden 1-5 0-0 2, Miller 0-0 0-0 0, Blair 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-73 24-33 108. Milwaukee 17 27 24 29—97 Washington 29 20 34 25—108 3-Point Goals—Milwaukee 9-22 (Knight 3-4, Bayless 2-2, Ilyasova 1-2, Marshall 1-2, Parker 1-3, Middleton 1-3, Antetokounmpo 0-1, Mayo 0-2, Dudley 0-3), Washington 4-13 (Temple 2-4, Porter Jr. 1-2, Wall 1-4, Nene 0-1, Rice Jr. 0-1, Pierce 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 48 (Parker 11), Washington 44 (Gortat 9). Assists—Milwaukee 18 (Knight 6), Washington 28 (Wall 10). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 28, Washington 21. Technicals—Milwaukee Coach Kidd, Mayo, Milwaukee defensive three second, Pierce 2, Wall, Washington defensive three second. Ejected— Pierce. A—17,992 (20,308).

Thunder 102, Nuggets 91 DENVER (91) Gallinari 3-6 0-0 7, Faried 3-8 1-2 7, Mozgov 4-6 2-2 10, Lawson 8-12 8-12 25, Afflalo 5-11 2-2 14, Chandler 2-12 1-2 5, Nurkic 1-2 0-0 2, Arthur 1-6 0-0 2, Foye 2-6 0-0 5, Robinson 1-2 0-0 3, McGee 4-6 0-0 8, Gee 1-3 0-0 3. Totals 35-80 14-20 91. OKLAHOMA CITY (102) Jones 9-18 2-4 23, Ibaka 10-19 0-0 23, Adams 6-10 1-2 13, Telfair 1-10 2-4 4, Roberson 2-4 4-4 8, Collison 0-3 2-2 2, Thomas 3-9 6-9 12, Perkins 6-7 5-6 17. Totals 37-80 22-31 102. Denver 17 16 23 35—91 Oklahoma City 29 26 21 26—102 3-Point Goals—Denver 7-26 (Afflalo 2-6, Robinson 1-2, Gallinari 1-2, Gee 1-2, Lawson 1-3, Foye 1-4, Arthur 0-2, Chandler 0-5), Oklahoma City 6-20 (Ibaka 3-7, Jones 3-7, Roberson 0-1, Collison 0-1, Telfair 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Denver 49 (Chandler, Gee 7), Oklahoma City 54 (Thomas, Roberson 8). Assists— Denver 19 (Lawson 5), Oklahoma City 24 (Telfair 9). Total Fouls—Denver 26, Oklahoma City 20. Technicals— Robinson. A—18,203 (18,203).

Bulls 106, Timberwolves 105 CHICAGO (106) Dunleavy 3-8 4-5 13, Gasol 7-12 6-9 20, Noah 4-7 0-0 8, Hinrich 3-8 5-6 11, Butler 6-12 11-15 24, Brooks 6-11 1-1 16, Mirotic 3-6 4-4 12, Moore 0-0 0-0 0, Snell 0-1 0-0 0, McDermott 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 33-69 31-40 106. MINNESOTA (105) Wiggins 3-10 2-2 8, Young 4-9 0-0 8, Pekovic 6-14 5-6 17, Rubio 3-10 0-0 6, Martin 9-14 11-11 33, Brewer 2-5 0-0 4, Dieng 3-4 4-5 10, Williams 1-7 1-2 3, Bennett 6-7 0-1 12, Muhammad 0-2 1-2 1, Hummel 1-1 0-0 2, Budinger 0-2 1-2 1. Totals 38-85 25-31 105. Chicago 27 36 22 21—106 Minnesota 25 24 32 24—105 3-Point Goals—Chicago 9-23 (Brooks 3-4, Dunleavy 3-7, Mirotic 2-5, Butler 1-3, McDermott 0-2, Hinrich 0-2), Minnesota 4-12 (Martin 4-6, Young 0-1, Budinger 0-1, Wiggins 0-2, Williams 0-2). Fouled Out—Rubio. Rebounds— Chicago 48 (Noah 11), Minnesota 50 (Dieng 8). Assists—Chicago 15 (Brooks 5), Minnesota 26 (Rubio 17). Total Fouls—Chicago 24, Minnesota 29. Technicals—Dunleavy. A—19,356 (19,356).

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

W 6 5 4 1 W 5 4 2 1 W 4 5 5 4 W 6 5 4 0

L 2 3 3 7 L 3 4 6 7 L 2 3 3 3 L 1 3 3 7

T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 T 1 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0

Pct .750 .625 .571 .125 Pct .625 .500 .250 .125 Pct .643 .625 .625 .571 Pct .857 .625 .571 .000

PF PA 238 177 178 165 174 151 144 228 PF PA 250 187 185 166 137 202 118 218 PF PA 161 164 217 131 205 196 163 152 PF PA 224 142 205 149 176 128 105 181

National Conference East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 6 2 0 .750 213 167 Philadelphia 5 2 0 .714 203 156 N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 .429 154 169 Washington 3 5 0 .375 171 200 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 4 4 0 .500 227 198 Carolina 3 5 1 .389 177 236 Atlanta 2 6 0 .250 192 221 Tampa Bay 1 6 0 .143 133 223 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 2 0 .750 162 126 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 222 191 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 180 222 Minnesota 3 5 0 .375 139 173 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 6 1 0 .857 164 139 San Francisco 4 3 0 .571 158 165 Seattle 4 3 0 .571 172 150 St. Louis 2 5 0 .286 136 210 Sunday’s Games Arizona at Dallas, 11 p.m. Philadelphia at Housaon, 11 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Kansas City, 11 a.m. Washington at Minnesota, 11 a.m. Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. San Diego at Miami, 11 a.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 2:05 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. Denver at New England, 2:25 p.m. Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m. Thursday’s Game New Orleans 28, Carolina 10 Monday’s Game Indianapolis at N.Y. Giants, 6:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Tennessee

NCAA FOOTBALL The AP Top 25 Thursday’s Game No. 2 Florida State 42, Louisville 31 Saturday’s Games No. 1 Mississippi State 17, Arkansas 10 No. 4 Auburn 35, No. 7 Mississippi 31 No. 5 Oregon 45, Stanford 16 No. 6 Notre Dame 49, Navy 39 Florida 38, No. 9 Georgia 20 No. 10 TCU 31, No. 20 West Virginia 30 No. 11 Kansas State 48, Oklahoma State 14 No. 12 Baylor 60, Kansas 14 No. 13 Ohio State 55, Illinois 14 No. 14 Arizona at No. 25 UCLA No. 15 Arizona State vs. No. 18 Utah No. 17 Nebraska 35, Purdue 14 No. 19 Oklahoma 59, Iowa State 14 Temple 20, No. 21 East Carolina 10 No. 24 Duke 51, Pittsburgh 48, 2OT

College Football Schedule Friday’s Games South Memphis 40, Tulsa 20 Cincinnati 38, Tulane 14 Saturday’s Games East Air Force 23, Army 6 Brown 21, Penn 13 Bryant 31, CCSU 3 Bucknell 27, Lafayette 24, OT Charleston Southern 27, Monmouth (NJ) 0 Delaware 28, Rhode Island 13 Duke 51, Pittsburgh 48, 2OT Fordham 37, Colgate 13 Harvard 23, Dartmouth 12 Lehigh 27, Georgetown 19 Marist 17, Jacksonville 16 Maryland 20, Penn St. 19 NC State 24, Syracuse 17 New Hampshire 49, Albany (NY) 24 Notre Dame 49, Navy 39 Princeton 38, Cornell 27 Sacred Heart 23, Wagner 7 St. Francis (Pa.) 26, Duquesne 16 TCU 31, West Virginia 30 Temple 20, East Carolina 10 Towson 21, Elon 19 UConn 37, UCF 29 Wisconsin 37, Rutgers 0 Yale 25, Columbia 7 South Alabama A&M 25, Jackson St. 14 Appalachian St. 44, Georgia St. 0 Auburn 35, Mississippi 31 BYU 27, Middle Tennessee 7 Bethune-Cookman 34, NC Central 20 Boston College 33, Virginia Tech 31 Chattanooga 51, W. Carolina 0 Coastal Carolina 38, Gardner-Webb 14 E. Illinois 41, Tennessee Tech 10 E. Kentucky 56, Tennessee St. 42 Florida 38, Georgia 20 Georgia Tech 35, Virginia 10 Houston 27, South Florida 3 Howard 17, Delaware St. 10

HOCKEY

Incarnate Word 38, Nicholls St. 20 Jacksonville St. 56, Austin Peay 0 James Madison 31, William & Mary 24 Liberty 28, Presbyterian 7 Louisiana Tech 59, W. Kentucky 10 Louisiana-Lafayette 19, South Alabama 9 McNeese St. 35, Northwestern St. 28 Miami 47, North Carolina 20 Mississippi St. 17, Arkansas 10 Morgan St. 38, Hampton 35 Norfolk St. 12, Florida A&M 10 Rice 31, FIU 17 Richmond 10, Villanova 9 SC State 59, Savannah St. 7 Samford 55, Concordia-Selma 0 Southern U. 28, Alabama St. 21 Stetson 28, Campbell 24 Tennessee 45, South Carolina 42, OT The Citadel 28, Mercer 26 UAB 31, FAU 28 UT-Martin 62, Murray St. 38 VMI 31, Furman 15 Vanderbilt 42, Old Dominion 28 Midwest Butler 62, Morehead St. 52 Cent. Michigan 38, E. Michigan 7 Dayton 42, Valparaiso 19 Indiana St. 20, Missouri St. 18 Iowa 48, Northwestern 7 Kansas St. 48, Oklahoma St. 14 Michigan 34, Indiana 10 Missouri 20, Kentucky 10 N. Dakota St. 37, S. Dakota St. 17 N. Iowa 42, Illinois St. 28 Nebraska 35, Purdue 14 Ohio St. 55, Illinois 14 Oklahoma 59, Iowa St. 14 San Diego 17, Drake 14 W. Michigan 41, Miami (Ohio) 10 Youngstown St. 28, South Dakota 17 Southwest Abilene Christian 52, Cent. Arkansas 35 Ark.-Pine Bluff 24, MVSU 14 Baylor 60, Kansas 14 Grambling St. 35, Texas Southern 7 Lamar 72, Houston Baptist 14 Sam Houston St. 42, Stephen F. Austin 28 Texas 34, Texas Tech 13 Texas A&M 21, Louisiana-Monroe 16 UTEP 35, Southern Miss. 14 Far West Arkansas St. 44, Idaho 28 Colorado St. 38, San Jose St. 31 E. Washington 54, North Dakota 3 Idaho St. 31, Portland St. 13 Montana 31, Sacramento St. 13 N. Arizona 29, Weber St. 22 N. Colorado 27, UC Davis 21 New Mexico 31, UNLV 28 Oregon 45, Stanford 16 Southern Cal 44, Washington St. 17 Texas St. 37, New Mexico St. 29 Washington 38, Colorado 23

GOLF PGA TOUR CIMB Classic Saturday At Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Purse: $7 million Yardage: 6,985; Par: 72 Third Round (a-amateur) Kevin Na 69-68-67—204 Ryan Moore 68-69-67—204 Sergio Garcia 69-68-68—205 Billy Hurley III 67-67-71—205 Gary Woodland 71-70-66—207 Bae Sang-Moon 71-68-68—207 Kevin Chappell 69-68-70—207 Kevin Streelman 68-68-71—207 Brendon de Jonge 70-73-65—208 Patrick Reed 70-70-68—208 Angelo Que 67-72-69—208 Cameron Smith 70-69-69—208 Jeff Overton 68-69-71—208 John Senden 72-68-69—209 Prom Meesawat 68-71-70—209 Seung-Yul Noh 68-69-72—209 Davis Love III 68-71-71—210 Greg Chalmers 75-68-68—211 Danny Lee 69-69-73—211 Brian Stuard 67-72-72—211 Lee Westwood 72-65-74—211 Rory Sabbatini 70-72-70—212 Charl Schwartzel 74-70-68—212 Nicholas Thompson 69-73-70—212 Luke Guthrie 73-68-71—212 Scott Stallings 69-76-67—212 Paul Casey 73-68-71—212 Hideki Matsuyama 70-70-72—212 Jonathan Byrd 70-74-69—213 Jason Dufner 74-70-69—213 Stephen Lewton 74-69-70—213

CHAMPIONS TOUR Charles Schwab Cup Saturday At Desert Mountain Club (Cochise) Scottsdale, Arizona Purse: $2.5 million Yardage: 6,929; Par 70 Third Round Kenny Perry 66-68-68—202 Tom Pernice Jr. 65-67-70—202 Jay Haas 66-62-75—203 Colin Montgomerie 71-67-66—204 Fred Couples 71-64-69—204 Wes Short, Jr. 69-67-69—205 Marco Dawson 69-67-69—205 Gene Sauers 68-68-69—205 Michael Allen 69-66-70—205 Bernhard Langer 66-70-70—206 Olin Browne 68-67-71—206 Paul Goydos 70-67-70—207 Tom Lehman 71-70-67—208 Esteban Toledo 71-67-70—208 Woody Austin 71-67-70—208 Russ Cochran 68-70-71—209 Jeff Maggert 70-69-70—209 Scott Dunlap 69-69-71—209 Jeff Sluman 71-70-69—210

NHL Eastern Conference Atlantic GP Montreal 11 Tampa Bay 12 Detroit 10 Boston 13 Toronto 11 Ottawa 10 Florida 9 Buffalo 12 Metro GP Pittsburgh 10 New Jersey 11 N.Y. Isles 11 N.Y. Rangers10 Washington 10 Philadelphia11 Columbus 11 Carolina 9

W 8 8 6 7 6 5 4 2 W 7 6 6 5 4 4 4 1

L 2 3 2 6 4 3 2 9 L 2 3 5 4 4 5 7 6

OL 1 1 2 0 1 2 3 1 OL 1 2 0 1 2 2 0 2

Pts 17 17 14 14 13 12 11 5 Pts 15 14 12 11 10 10 8 4

Maple Leafs 3, Blackhawks 2 GFGA 29 29 42 32 27 21 36 32 32 28 28 26 14 18 13 41 GFGA 41 22 33 36 36 39 27 31 30 27 33 38 28 37 18 33

Western Conference Central GP W L OL Pts GFGA Minnesota 10 7 3 0 14 35 18 Nashville 10 6 2 2 14 26 21 St. Louis 10 6 3 1 13 25 20 Chicago 11 6 4 1 13 29 22 Dallas 11 4 3 4 12 34 39 Winnipeg 11 5 5 1 11 21 26 Colorado 12 3 4 5 11 29 35 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GFGA Anaheim 12 9 3 0 18 33 22 Vancouver 11 8 3 0 16 37 31 San Jose 13 7 4 2 16 41 35 Los Angeles 11 6 3 2 14 26 23 Calgary 12 6 4 2 14 31 27 Edmonton 11 4 6 1 9 29 39 Arizona 10 3 6 1 7 22 37 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Saturday’s Games Winnipeg 1, N.Y. Rangers 0, SO St. Louis 3, Colorado 2, SO Boston 4, Ottawa 2 Toronto 3, Chicago 2 Tampa Bay 4, Washington 3 Florida 2, Philadelphia 1 New Jersey 3, Columbus 2 Pittsburgh 5, Buffalo 0 Carolina 3, Arizona 0 Minnesota 4, Dallas 1 Vancouver 3, Edmonton 2 San Jose 3, N.Y. Islanders 1 Sunday’s Games Detroit at Buffalo, 3 p.m. Los Angeles at Carolina, 3 p.m. Calgary at Montreal, 5 p.m. Arizona at Washington, 5 p.m. Anaheim at Colorado, 6 p.m. Winnipeg at Chicago, 7 p.m. Nashville at Vancouver, 7:30 p.m. Monday’s Games St. Louis at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m.

NHL SUMMARIES Devils 3, Blue Jackets 2 Columbus 1 1 0—2 New Jersey 0 1 2—3 First Period—1, Columbus, Skille 3 (Gibbons, Foligno), 1:06. Penalties—J. Johnson, Clm (hooking), 4:08; Merrill, NJ (closing hand on puck), 14:04; Goloubef, Clm (interference), 16:45; Greene, NJ (tripping), 19:00. Second Period—2, New Jersey, Zidlicky 2 (Ryder, Severson), 4:32 (pp). 3, Columbus, Foligno 4 (J.Johnson, Gibbons), 12:30 (pp). Penalties—Johansen, Clm (holding), :26; Boll, Clm (elbowing), 4:24; T.Zajac, NJ (hooking), 10:56. Third Period—4, New Jersey, Henrique 4 (Jagr, Zidlicky), 8:54 (pp). 5, New Jersey, Larsson 1 (Salvador, Elias), 10:35. Penalties—Cracknell, Clm (hooking), 8:38; Hartnell, Clm (embellishment), 13:55; Clowe, NJ (cross-checking), 13:55; Zidlicky, NJ (hooking), 15:18; Foligno, Clm (tripping), 17:10; Hartnell, Clm (boarding), 20:00. Shots on Goal—Columbus 8-1115—34. New Jersey 11-6-12—29. Power-play opportunities—Columbus 1 of 4; New Jersey 2 of 6. Goalies—Columbus, Forsberg 0-1-0 (29 shots-26 saves). New Jersey, Schneider 6-3-2 (34-32). A—13,542 (17,625). T—2:28.

Panthers 2, Flyers 1 Philadelphia 0 0 1—1 Florida 1 0 1—2 First Period—1, Florida, Mitchell 1 (Jokinen, Boyes), 9:07. Penalties—Upshall, Fla (tripping), 1:10; Simmonds, Phi (cross-checking), 4:07; Bjugstad, Fla (tripping), 17:44. Second Period—None. Penalties—B. Schenn, Phi (hooking), 7:10; Rinaldo, Phi (embellishment), 11:59; Simmonds, Phi (slashing), 17:07; Kopecky, Fla (slashing), 17:07; Olsen, Fla (hooking), 19:11. Third Period—2, Florida, Ekblad 1 (Campbell, Hayes), 15:38 (pp). 3, Philadelphia, Lecavalier 2 (Voracek, Simmonds), 19:52. Penalties— Upshall, Fla (interference), 5:17; Jokinen, Fla (hooking), 8:28; Mitchell, Fla (delay of game), 9:56; Streit, Phi (tripping), 14:19. Shots on Goal—Philadelphia 9-1018—37. Florida 12-9-9—30. Power-play opportunities—Philadelphia 0 of 6; Florida 1 of 4. Goalies—Philadelphia, Mason 0-4-1 (30 shots-28 saves). Florida, Luongo 4-2-2 (37-36). A—9,774 (17,040). T—2:34.

Chicago 1 1 0—2 Toronto 1 1 1—3 First Period—1, Toronto, Kadri 4 (Winnik, Kessel), 14:10. 2, Chicago, Richards 1 (Seabrook, Saad), 16:28 (pp). Penalties—Bickell, Chi (tripping), 2:24; Carrick, Tor (hooking), 15:02. Second Period—3, Chicago, Seabrook 2 (Kane), 4:18 (pp). 4, Toronto, J.van Riemsdyk 5, 5:22. Penalties—Bozak, Tor (hooking), 3:41. Third Period—5, Toronto, Holland 1 (Komarov), 2:21. Penalties—Robidas, Tor (high-sticking), 3:53; Oduya, Chi (slashing), 8:58; Clarkson, Tor (tripping), 14:41; Seabrook, Chi (boarding), 15:40. Shots on Goal—Chicago 10-11-26—47. Toronto 10-10-7—27. Power-play opportunities—Chicago 2 of 4; Toronto 0 of 3. Goalies—Chicago, Crawford 3-1-1 (27 shots-24 saves). Toronto, Reimer 3-1-0 (47-45). A—19,138 (18,819). T—2:33.

Lightning 4, Capitals 3 Washington 1 2 0—3 Tampa Bay 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Tampa Bay, Callahan 4 (Boyle), 6:06. 2, Washington, Johansson 4 (Ovechkin, Kuznetsov), 12:59. Penalties—Orpik, Was (boarding, roughing), 8:03; Killorn, TB (roughing), 8:03; Fehr, Was (goaltender interference), 10:13; Wilson, Was, major (fighting), 10:13; Gudas, TB, major (fighting), 10:13. Second Period—3, Washington, Fehr 1 (Chimera, Carlson), 2:11. 4, Tampa Bay, Palat 4 (Kucherov, Johnson), 9:29. 5, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 5 (Brewer, Johnson), 12:12. 6, Washington, Brouwer 3 (Johansson, Backstrom), 19:01 (pp). Penalties—Killorn, TB (hooking), 5:33; Palat, TB (hooking), 18:34. Third Period—7, Tampa Bay, Garrison 2 (Stamkos), 2:27. Penalties—None. Shots on Goal—Washington 13-1312—38. Tampa Bay 15-6-7—28. Power-play opportunities—Washington 1 of 2; Tampa Bay 0 of 2. Goalies—Washington, Holtby 3-3-1 (28 shots-24 saves). Tampa Bay, Bishop 7-1-1 (38-35). A—19,119 (19,204). T—2:24.

Penguins 5, Sabres 0 Buffalo 0 0 0—0 Pittsburgh 1 2 2—5 First Period—1, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 6 (Hornqvist, Crosby), 4:26. Penalties— Maatta, Pit (holding stick), 12:40. Second Period—2, Pittsburgh, Comeau 3 (Malkin, Dupuis), 11:54. 3, Pittsburgh, Hornqvist 6 (Kunitz, Malkin), 16:09 (pp). Penalties—Crosby, Pit (hooking), 13:34; Buffalo bench, served by Hodgson (too many men), 14:50; Comeau, Pit (roughing), 20:00. Third Period—4, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 7 (Letang, Crosby), 2:33 (pp). 5, Pittsburgh, Malkin 5 (Crosby, Ehrhoff), 13:11 (pp). Penalties—Weber, Buf (roughing), 2:00; Deslauriers, Buf (hooking), 3:35; Adams, Pit (holding), 10:32; Ennis, Buf (interference), 12:22; Girgensons, Buf (interference), 16:18. Shots on Goal—Buffalo 3-9-6—18. Pittsburgh 12-11-11—34. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 0 of 4; Pittsburgh 3 of 5. Goalies—Buffalo, Enroth 1-6-1 (34 shots-29 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 7-2-0 (18-18). A—18,652 (18,387). T—2:25.

Hurricanes 3, Coyotes 0 Arizona 0 0 0—0 Carolina 2 1 0—3 First Period—1, Carolina, Lindholm 1 (Bellemore, Gerbe), 3:57. 2, Carolina, Lindholm 2 (Nash, Faulk), 17:22. Penalties—Stone, Ari (holding), 1:44; Faulk, Car (interference), 8:59; Tlusty, Car (slashing), 10:47. Second Period—3, Carolina, Tlusty 6 (E.Staal, Faulk), 15:21 (pp). Penalties—Chipchura, Ari (embellishment), 7:29; Gleason, Car (interference), 7:29; Stone, Ari (tripping), 14:52. Third Period—None. Penalties— Tlusty, Car (hooking), 6:30; Chipchura, Ari (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:16; Malone, Car (unsportsmanlike conduct), 18:16. Shots on Goal—Arizona 6-8-11—25. Carolina 12-13-10—35. Power-play opportunities—Arizona 0 of 3; Carolina 1 of 2. Goalies—Arizona, Smith 2-6-0 (35 shots-32 saves). Carolina, Ward 1-3-1 (25-25). A—10,870 (18,680). T—2:28.

Bruins 4, Senators 2 Ottawa 1 0 1—2 Boston 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Boston, Marchand 4 (Bergeron), 18:54. 2, Ottawa, Stone 3, 19:32. Penalties—Wiercioch, Ott (holding), 2:07; Gagne, Bos (tripping), 7:56. Second Period—3, Boston, Fraser 1 (Eriksson, Soderberg), 11:14. 4, Boston, Fraser 2 (Soderberg, Trotman), 12:42. Penalties—Chiasson, Ott (slashing), 17:07. Third Period—5, Boston, Seidenberg 1, 2:08. 6, Ottawa, Zibanejad 2 (Chiasson), 15:43. Penalties—MacArthur, Ott (holding), 9:45. Shots on Goal—Ottawa 5-10-14—29. Boston 10-10-10—30. Power-play opportunities—Ottawa 0 of 1; Boston 0 of 3. Goalies—Ottawa, Lehner 3-1-1 (30 shots-26 saves). Boston, Rask 5-4-0 (29-27). A—17,565 (17,565). T—2:24.

NBA ROUNDUP

Short-handed Oklahoma City beats Nuggets 102-91 The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — Perry Jones and Serge Ibaka each scored 23 points to help short-handed Oklahoma City wins its first game this season. Already without MVP Kevin Durant for at least a month because of a broken right foot, the Thunder said star point guard Russell Westbrook had surgery on his broken right hand Saturday and also will miss at least a month. Kendrick Perkins scored 17 points and Steven Adams added 13 for the Thunder. Ty Lawson scored 20 of his 25 points in the second half for the Nuggets. MAVERICKS 109, PELICANS 104 In New Orleans, Chandler Parsons

scored 20 points and the Dallas Mavericks won their second straight, 109104 over the Pelicans. Dirk Nowitzki scored 17 despite foul trouble, making a 12-foot fade over Anthony Davis that gave Dallas a 109-103 lead with 49 seconds left. HEAT 114, 76ERS 96 In Philadelphia, Chris Bosh had 30 points and eight rebounds for the Heat, which won its second straight. Mario Chalmers scored 18 points, and Dwyane Wade had nine points and 10 assists. HAWKS 102, PACERS 92 In Atlanta, with President Jimmy Carter and rap star T.I. among the sellout crowd, Jeff Teague scored 25 points and Al Horford added 20 in

the Hawks’ home opener. WIZARDS 108, BUCKS 97 In Washington, Paul Pierce was tossed before halftime in his first home game with the Wizards, and Otto Porter picked up the slack with a career-high 21 points. RAPTORS 108, MAGIC 95 In Orlando, Fla., DeMar DeRozan scored 26 points, Kyle Lowry added 21 and the Raptors beat the Magic for the eighth straight time. NETS 102, PISTONS 90 In Auburn Hills, Mich., Joe Johnson scored 15 of his 34 points in the fourth quarter as Brooklyn got its first win. ROCKETS 104, CELTICS 90 In Houston, James Harden had

26 points and eight rebounds, and the Rockets took a 37-22 lead after one quarter in starting 3-0 for the second straight season. GRIZZLIES 71, HORNETS 69 In Charlotte, N.C., Marc Gasol scored 22 points, Zach Randolph had 12 points and 12 rebounds, and the Grizzlies opened 3-0 for the first time. BULLS 106, TIMBERWOLVES 105 In Minneapolis, Jimmy Butler made a surprise return to the starting lineup and made two free throws with 0.2 seconds left to help Chicago weather another absence from star guard Derrick Rose. Butler scored 24 points on 6-for12 shooting in his season debut, and Pau Gasol added 29 points and six

rebounds for the Bulls, who missed Rose because of a sprained left ankle. JAZZ 118, SUNS 91 In Salt Lake City, Derrick Favors scored a career-high 32 points and added nine rebounds, Gordon Hayward had 24 points and 10 boards, and the Utah Jazz beat the Phoenix Suns. WARRIORS 127, LAKERS 104 In Oakland, Klay Thompson scored a career-high 41 points in his first game since signing a contract extension, teaming with backcourt star Stephen Curry to lead the Golden State Warriors past the winless Lakers. Thompson, who inked a four-year maximum extension worth about $70 million Friday, shot 14 for 18 from the floor.


SPORTS

Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-3

PREP ROUNDUP

S.F. Prep senior scores 2 goals E. Mountain knocks Blue Griffins out of girls soccer playoffs The New Mexican

The Santa Fe Prep girls soccer team won’t be moving on in the postseason, but one of its players got E. Mountain 5 one last S.F. Prep 2 moment of glory to end her senior year. Prep senior Grace Barliant scored both goals for the ninthseeded Blue Griffins in a 5-2 loss to No. 8 East Mountain in the first round of the Class A-AAAA State Tournament in Sandia Park on Saturday. Barliant’s season effectively ended in mid-September after blood clots in her lungs forced her to be on blood thinners, and bleeding while on blood thinners could be fatal. Prep head coach Stephanie Coppola cautiously put Barliant into the match, and it proved to be a smart move. “I wanted to see what the speed of play was like to see if it was risky for her,” Coppola said. “I told her to stay away from contact.” Barliant scored her first goal

midway through the first half, but Prep (9-11-1 overall) was still down 3-1 at halftime. Barliant scored again in the second half, but there wasn’t much else the Blue Griffins could do to stop the Lady Timberwolves on their home turf. “They were definitely bigger and more physical,” Coppola said. VOLLEYBALL ESPAÑOLA VALLEY 3, BERNALILLO 0 The Lady Sundevils weren’t really challenged when they rolled over the Lady Spartans 25-11, 25-9, 25-13 in a District 2AAAAA match in Edward Medina Gymnasium to go 8-0 in the district for the second straight year. “It was freakin’ fast,” Española head coach Damon Salazar said. “They didn’t give us the their normal fight.” Elena Salazar had 14 kills, 10 digs and two aces while Celina Naranjo had 12 assists, 12 digs, six kills and four aces for Española (17-3 overall). The Lady Sundevils will now await their opponent in the 2AAAAA tournament championship, which will be played on Nov. 8 at home. DESERT ACADEMY 3, DULCE 1 The Lady Wildcats finished its first 2AAA regular season brim-

ming with confidence after dispatching the Lady Hawks 25-10, 20-25, 25-13, 25-13 in Larsen Gym at the New Mexico School for the Deaf campus. While Desert Academy (12-8, 6-2) got strong senior performances from Cassidy Hart (three aces, 17 assists, nine kills), Tori Heath (15 kills) and Abby Tiarks (three aces, 25 assists, six kills), it also saw a pair of sophomores continue their maturation. Rachel Stumbo had seven kills, while Rebecca Soifer added six. “They started the season playing well, then they had a slump,” said Natalia Passalacqua, Lady Wildcats head coach. “But they are on again, and that is what we need to beat these other teams we are going to face [in the postseason].” Desert Academy is the No. 2 seed for the district tournament, and will face Monte del Sol on Monday in the first round. SANTA FE WALDORF 3, VICTORY CHRISTIAN 0 It’s on to Ojo Caliente and a one-match playoff with Coronado for the 1A top seed for the Lady Wolves (17-3, 11-1). Their 25-13, 25-12, 25-12 sweep of the Lady Centurions in Albuquerque kept Waldorf in a first-place tie with the Lady Leopards. Waldorf head coach Josie Adams feels her team is playing at the level it needs to be this time of the season.

“I just feel we are really ready as a team on every level — offensively and defensively,” Adams said. “We are just killing it at the net.” Waldorf freshman Beatrice Lowe made her return to the court after nursing a sore back and had six kills, four aces and 21 digs. That complemented the 16 kills by senior Cecelia Barnard, while Alex Chastenet added six and Keifer Nace four. Nace also had 32 assists. BOYS SOCCER NO. 5 ABQ. HOPE CHRISTIAN 3, NO. 12 DESERT ACADEMY 1 The final wasn’t what the Wildcats (8-8-1) hoped for in an A-AAAA first-round match in Albuquerque, but the ending lent hope that the program is going in the right direction. Guru Dev Khalsa scored in the final minutes against the Huskies (11-9-1) to cut into a 3-0 margin, but Hope did all of its damage in the opening half with all three goals. “I think we were a little nervous in the beginning,” said Ron Lochner, Desert Academy head coach. “None of these guys have been to state. It’s been five years since then, and none of these guys were on our squad at the time. It was a new experience.” Senior goalkeeper Jasper Grossman saved 11 shots on the day for in his final soccer match.

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 1 p.m. on ESPN — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AAA Texas 500, at Fort Worth 1 p.m. on NBC — Formula One, United States Grand Prix, at Austin, Texas 4 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, Toyota Nationals, at Las Vegas (same-day tape) GOLF 4 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, BMW Masters, final round, at Shanghai (same-day tape) 1:30 p.m. on TGC — Champions Tour, Charles Schwab Cup Championship, final round, at Scottsdale, Ariz. NFL FOOTBALL 11 a.m. on CBS — San Diego Chargers at Miami Dolphins 11 a.m. on FOX — Arizona Cardinals at Dallas Cowboys 2:25 p.m. on CBS — Denver Broncos at New England Patriots 6:20 p.m. on NBC — Baltimore at Pittsburgh RUNNING 7 a.m. on ESPN2 — New York City Marathon 2 p.m. on ABC — New York City Marathon (same-day tape) SOCCER 6:25 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Manchester United at Manchester City 8:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Tottenham at Aston Villa 7 p.m. on ESPN2 — MLS, playoffs, conference semifinals, first leg, Seattle at FC Dallas WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL Noon on FSN — NCAA, Division III, Mount St. Joseph vs. Hiram, at Cincinnati

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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

Soccer: St. Mike’s faces nemesis Sandia Prep CLASS AA FOOTBALL

Continued from Page D-1 through two extra periods. “I hate PKs because a lot of it is luck,” Socorro head coach Dennis Walsh said. “It is what it is, and their ‘keeper came up big. He made a couple good saves, so what can you say? My hat’s off to him.” The Dragons had their chances to take over the match. A goal in the 27th minute was waved off for a foul on Flores, and senior forward Skye Dashcer launched a penalty kick way over the net in the 36th minute. Missed opportunities and the 1-0 deficit caused Monte del Sol to panic late in regulation. “The fact that the ball wasn’t going in was creating pressure, and I think we were all feeling that,” Monte del Sol head coach Mazatl Galindo said. “We had quite a few options, and we were just not putting it on target. I told the guys that the most important thing in a match like this is that you need to relax. In time, you will actually create and generate enough possibilities and opportunities.” Even though the Dragons never led, they controlled possession for most of the match and forced the Warriors to take long shots. “I don’t think the score really reflects how well we played, and I think it was one of the best games I’ve seen from my kids,” Galindo said. “We were a lot better moving the ball and having control.” Regardless of how they won, the Dragons now have a date with a Sandia Prep team that knocked them out in the semifinals last year. “Thinking about last year, I want to get them back,” Castillo said. “If not, then it better be a good match.” Monte del Sol had its hands full in a 3-0 loss to the Sundevils last year, but the Dragons believe they can make them work harder for a win this time around. “We want to make sure that we can do the best that we can, and they will not have it easy,” The eighth-seeded Monte del Sol boys were tied with No. 9 Socorro 1-all at Galindo said. “That’s all I have to say.” the end of two overtimes Saturday. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN It’s not basketball season yet, after all.

Scoring: Greenwood shows off his tattoo trying to get the breast-cancer tat on TV.” point guard for a team that As aggressive as he was in the didn’t need him to produce first half, Greenwood only took points. three shots during the second Neal still expects Greenwood half. He passed up at least two to be his former self. But he open looks from the outside, wants more of the flash and deferring instead to an entry offensive fireworks he has pass to a teammate. never really had a chance to One of those came with four display until now. minutes left in regulation when After sinking his first he ball-faked a defender on the 3-pointer, Greenwood had a perimeter and fired a chest pass chance to show something else. into Devon Williams near the Tattooed to the side of his right lane. Williams spun and dunked hand is a pink ribbon, the uniover the WNMU defense. versal symbol for breast cancer “In the second half, he kind awareness. of played like the old Hugh, After that first bucket, he where he passed up some shots raised that hand to his mouth and made some good plays,” and made a three-fingered ges- Craig Neal said. “But that’s fine. ture as part of the fight against He was just trying to get more the disease. people involved.” “I kind of improvised it,” he The Lobos hit all eight of said, adding that he was well their 3-pointers in the first half aware that the referees had seen as they built a 54-22 lead at him do it and was careful not halftime. Greenwood and Culto repeat the gesture when they len Neal combined for 33 of were looking. the 40 points they would have “I’ve got to be careful when together on the night. The second-half belonged to I do it,” Greenwood said. “Just

Continued from Page D-1

the bigs and the bench. Center Obij Aget scored 10 of his 13 points in the second half and six of his nine rebounds. Neal seemed determined to get as many players into the mix as possible. Held scoreless in the first half, Williams finished with six points and eight rebounds. His first points came in a transition situation early in the second half when he beat the Mustangs’ defense down the floor and took entry pass for an easy layup. UNM led by at least 32 points for the entire second half, giving everyone on the active roster a opportunity to play double-digit minutes. Arthur Edwards came off the bench to score 10 points while freshman Xavier Adams had seven points and six rebounds to go along with two steals. Adams brought the crowd to its feet in the first half when he followed a missed shot by slamming it home when he extended his right hand to snare a rebound before jamming it in.

Cullen Neal had a gamehigh 22 points, sinking 7 of 8 foul shots and turning the ball over just once in 27 minutes as the point guard. He had eight assists to lead both teams. “I thought I played pretty well,” he said. “Got my teammates involved and I was able to score which is what I do best, so I thought I did a pretty good job.” Game notes: The Lobos will have another exhibition game on Friday when they host Adams State in The Pit at 7 p.m. The regular season opener is at home Nov. 14 against Idaho State. … WNMU shot just 27.8 percent (15 of 54) from the floor and had to 21 turnovers to just nine assists. … Forward Jordan Goodman and guard Sam Logwood did not play. Goodman is still recuperating from offseason surgery while Logwood was running a fever and wasn’t cleared to suit up. … Power forward J.J. N’Ganga fouled out in just 10 minutes of playing time. He had thee points (all free throws) and two rebounds.

Questa starts title bid on road against No. 1 Escalante leaving Navajo, N.M., which wasn’t realized for about an hour. The team was schedThe Questa Wildcats were uled to stay in Farmington road warriors on Friday overnight, and didn’t make it night. there until past midnight. They’ll have to be that if The road to Tierra Amathey want to play for a Class rilla isn’t as difficult to naviAA state football title. Questa gate, and the Wildcats (6-4) made its first appearance in will face a 10-0 Lobos team the state playoffs since 2004 that beat them 52-14 on Oct. when it was seeded fourth 24. However, Escalante head in the four-team bracket on coach Dusty Giles said the Saturday afternoon. final score was misleading. The Wildcats, who came “It’s going to be a tough off a long road trip to the ball game,” Giles said. “[The Four Corners area to beat first game against Questa] Navajo Pine 60-0 on Friday, was one of those games will take on a familiar foe where, if you were at the in the top-seeded Escalante game, you saw that Questa Lobos, the District 1AA competed well against us. champions who are 10-0 this The score didn’t reflect how season. The game will be close the game was and how played Friday night at Lobo this game will be.” Field at 7 p.m. With only seven teams in Questa head coach Jesus AA, the playoff format lost a Maes, though, feels the relief of finally getting the program round, meaning that the season will end a week sooner into the playoffs after snubs than last year. Giles feels the the past two falls. “Right now, this was prob- smaller version of AA is not a bad thing. ably the longest week of my “If you look at the seven life,” Maes said. “We’ve been teams in the class, we’ve got waiting for this for three some good football teams,” years. I felt that in my first Giles said. “I know our year [in 2012], we should bracket is small, but I think have been there, and even last year. But I think that this you would be hard-pressed to find another bracket that, is a huge step for Questa to at the start of the playoffs, be in the playoffs.” there are so many teams The week was made longer by the fact that Questa’s capable of winning the state team bus made a wrong turn championship.” By James Barron The New Mexican

home in the 1¼-mile race, Toast of New York, an 18-1 shot, refused to go away. California Chrome surged ARCADIA, Calif. — When toward them both on the the gates swung open for the outside, pulling within half start of the $5 million Breed- a length. But Bayern turned ers’ Cup Classic Saturday at back California Chrome and Santa Anita Park, it did not so held off Toast of New York much resemble a high stakes down the stretch to give Hall horse race as it did NASCAR of Fame trainer Bob Baffert on hooves. his first Classic victory. Bayern, bolting out of the Bayern ran in 1 minute seventh gate, took a hard left 59.88 seconds and paid turn and careened into the $14.20, $8 and $5.20 at 6-1 favorite Shared Belief, and odds. Shared Belief finished the 14-horse field quickly fourth, 3½ lengths behind became bottled up. California Chrome, as he That start set the tone for a lost for the first time in eight wild, contentious and scintil- career starts. Bayern not only lating finish. had to survive a stacked field, The ability to break to the but also a nearly 10-minute front was critical for Bayinquiry by officials over the ern, who was able to use his start of the race. speed from the start. As the field turned for The New York Times

Bayern wins Breeders’ Cup


D-4

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

NFL Week 9

By Brett Michael Dykes The New York Times

Broncos (6-1) at Patriots (6-2)

the last two games, the first Jaguars back to do so since Maurice Jones-Drew in 2011. Time: 2:25 p.m. Line: Bengals by 10½. Well, well, well. Just another Pick: Bengals. silly old football game, no? It merely features one of Buccaneers (1-6) the greatest athlete-versusat Browns (4-3) athlete rivalries — one that Time: 11 a.m. some consider right up there The poor Browns. The with the likes of Magic-Bird team’s 4-3 record would be and Ali-Frazier. It seemed destined from the good enough for first place in the pathetic NFC South, but start, with Tom Brady’s first Cleveland finds itself in last career victory as a starter, in place in the tough AFC North. 2001, coming against Peyton The universe does appear to Manning and the Colts, makhave a heart, though: Cleveing Brady the only quarterland is facing Tampa Bay, the back whose first NFL victory as a starter came in a head-to- NFC South’s worst team. Line: Browns by 7. head matchup against ManPick: Browns. ning. All these years later, the two are clashing again — for the 16th time overall — as the Redskins (3-5) leaders of the two best teams at Vikings (3-5) in the AFC. Time: 11 a.m. Line: Broncos by 3½. According to reports, RobPick: Broncos. ert Griffin III will return from a

Cardinals (6-1) at Cowboys (6-2) Time: 11 a.m. Late in the week, Tony Romo’s status for this game was uncertain, with reports indicating that it would be a game-time decision. But anyone who saw the Cowboys’ owner, Jerry Jones, head to the sideline last week and appear to tell coach Jason Garrett that Romo was returning to the game against the Redskins — despite dealing with pain after being kneed in his back — knows that Romo will probably suit up if he is conscious and able to stand. Jones said in a radio interview that there was “nothing medically” that would prevent Romo from playing, adding that the decision would come down to the issue of “pain tolerance.” Romo had a different opinion, asserting that being able to play depended more on his ability to function as a quarterback on the field. Romo told reporters that pain tolerance “has never been an issue.” “It will be about your ability to be productive in some fashion,” he said. Line: Cowboys by 3. Pick: Cardinals.

Ravens (5-3) at Steelers (5-3) Time: 6:30 p.m. It is hard to think of a more competitive NFL rivalry in the modern era than SteelersRavens. Baltimore earned a 26-6 victory over Pittsburgh in Week 2, but the previous five matchups between the teams were decided by 3 points or fewer. The games usually feature physical football at its finest, throwback slugfests reminiscent of the bygone bloody games glorified in grainy NFL Films productions, complete with gravelly-voiced narration. That said, this one could be a bit of a shootout. Line: Ravens by 1½. Pick: Steelers.

dislocated ankle injury to start at quarterback against the Vikings, sending Colt McCoy to the bench a week after he led the Redskins to victory in his first NFL start in nearly three years. Line: Vikings by 1. Pick: Vikings.

Eagles (5-2) at Texans (4-4) Time: 11 a.m. Is there anything the oneman gang J.J. Watt cannot do? At this point, it would hardly be a surprise to see Watt, the Texans’ star defensive end, take a snap or two at quarterback. Watt is even making social statements of late, taking time to ridicule Titans quarterback Zach Mettenberger for posting too many selfies to social media. Watt made the comments after last week’s Houston-Tennessee game, in which he sacked Mettenberger twice, forced a fumble and batted down a pass. Line: Eagles by 2½. Pick: Texans.

Rams (2-5) at 49ers (4-3) Time: 2:05 p.m. Look for the Rams, who rank second-to-last in the NFL in rush defense, to get a steady diet of Frank Gore — who has rushed for more yards against the Rams than any other running back — with a hearty serving of Carlos Hyde on the side. Barring any more specialteams trickery by St. Louis — a strategy that helped the Rams upset the Seahawks in Week 7 — it is hard to imagine Jim Harbaugh’s 49ers dropping to .500 by losing this game at home after a 42-17 rout by Denver. Line: 49ers by 10. Pick: 49ers.

Raiders (0-7) at Seahawks (4-3)

Time: 2:25 p.m. If there was ever a nobrainer of a pick for suicide pools this season, it may be Chargers (5-3) this one. Sure, the Seahawks at Dolphins (4-3) have looked vulnerable on the Time: 11 a.m. field and have been encomThe Chargers have not passed by turmoil off it, but beaten the Dolphins on the they are still close to invinroad in the regular season cible at home. since 1980. Toss in a winless RaidMore recently, the Dolphins ers team that seems to be a have won two in a row. Constrong contender to go 0-16, versely, the Chargers have lost and the ghost of Al Davis is two in a row. likely to remain restless, at Line: Dolphins by 1. least for another week. Pick: Dolphins. Line: Seahawks by 14½. Pick: Seahawks.

Jaguars (1-7) at Bengals (4-2-1)

Time: 11 a.m. Jaguars quarterback Blake Bortles has thrown a leaguehigh 12 interceptions — four have been returned for touchdowns — and Jacksonville is averaging a league-worst 14.8 points a game. On the bright side, former Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson has emerged as a threat in the backfield, rushing for 100 yards in each of

Jets (1-7) at Chiefs (4-3) Time: 11 a.m. It was only a matter of time before The New York Post called on Jets management to fire Rex Ryan. The team’s 43-23 loss to the Bills last Sunday was the final insult, it seemed. On Monday, the headline on the tabloid’s cover screamed, “Fire Rex Today!” Line: Chiefs by 10. Pick: Chiefs.

a Texas State team that won despite surrendering 639 yards of total offense and 32 first downs. LAS CRUCES — Robert Tyler Rogers complete Lowe rushed for two touch36 of his 52 passes for 404 downs, Terrence Franks yards and three touchdowns blocked a punt and returned to lead New Mexico State (2-7, it for a touchdown, and Texas 1-4), but was plagued by two State beat New Mexico State costly interceptions. Larry 37-29 on Saturday. Lowe finished with 65 yards Rose III added 181 yards with rushing for the Bobcats (5-3, a touchdown rushing, and 3-1 Sun Belt), who were led Jerrel Brown finished with on the ground by quarterback 139 yards and one score Tyler Jones’ 82 yards on nine receiving. carries. Jones added 143 yards The Associated Press passing and a touchdown for

Texas State sails past NMSU

TOP 25

Miss. State stays undefeated The Associated Press

STARKVILLE, Miss. — Dak Prescott threw for a careerhigh 331 yards and a touchdown to help Mississippi State beat Arkansas on Saturday. Miss. State 17 MissisArkansas 10 sippi State (8-0, 5-0 Southeastern Conference, No. 1 CFP) trailed until the third quarter and didn’t take the lead until Prescott’s 69-yard touchdown pass to a wide open Fred Ross made it 17-10 with 13:21 remaining. Arkansas had two promising drives in the fourth quarter, but neither resulted in points. Will Redmond intercepted a pass in the end zone with 15 seconds left to end the Razorbacks’ final chance. The Razorbacks (4-5, 0-5) have lost 17 straight conference games dating to 2012. It wasn’t the prettiest game for Prescott — who threw two interceptions — but he made clutch throws during crucial moments in the second half. Josh Robinson caught six passes for a career-high 110 yards. Arkansas’ Brandon Allen completed 22 of 43 passes for 238 yards and the interception in the final seconds. Alex Collins had 93 yards rushing. Mississippi State has won 11 straight games, the secondlongest streak in the country behind Florida State. Prescott is the first Mississippi State player to throw for 300 yards since 2007. He completed 18 of 27 passes.

TCU’s Trevone Boykin went a pedestrian 12 of 30 for 166 yards and a touchdown. The Horned Frogs had a season-low 389 yards of offense Saturday against West Virginia in Morgantown, W.Va. TYLER EVERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

After scoring touchdowns on their first four possessions, the Fighting Irish (7-1, No. 10 CFP) appeared on their way to an easy victory. Navy then scored 24 straight points to move ahead 31-28 with 4 minutes left in the third quarter.

NO. 17 NEBRASKA 35, PURDUE 14 In Lincoln, Neb, Imani Cross had two short touchdown runs after Heisman Trophy hopeful Ameer Abdullah left with a mildly sprained and bruised left knee, and Nebraska beat Purdue to take sole possession of the Big Ten West lead. The Cornhuskers (8-1, 4-1, No. 15 CFP) are a half-game ahead of Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin after their third straight win. Purdue (3-6, 1-4) lost its third in a row. Abdullah, who came into the game third nationally in rushing at 156 yards a game, injured his left knee on the Huskers’ second possession while recovering Tommy Armstrong’s fumbled snap at the Purdue 1. Abdullah returned to carry one more time, losing 5 yards, and didn’t return.

pair of scores and No. 11 Kansas State shut down Oklahoma State’s slumping offense in a 48-14 rout Saturday night. NO. 19 OKLAHOMA 59, Curry Sexton had nine IOWA STATE 14 catches for 159 yards and a In Ames, Iowa, Trevor Knight touchdown, and Tyler Lockett became the first FBS player this had six receptions for 94 yards season to throw three touchand a score, helping the Wilddown passes and rush for three cats (7-1, 5-0, No. 9 CFP) remain FLORIDA 38, scores, helping Oklahoma beat the lone unbeaten team in the NO. 9 GEORGIA 20 Iowa State. Big 12 heading into next week’s In Jacksonville, Fla., Matt Knight had 230 yards passshowdown at 10th-ranked TCU. ing and a career-high 146 yards Jones and Kelvin Taylor comAfter marching for a touchbined for 389 yards rushing and rushing for the Sooners (6-2, down on the game’s opening four touchdowns and Florida 3-2 Big 12, No. 18 CFP). They drive, Oklahoma State (5-4, 3-3) gained a season-high 751 yards upset Georgia, ending a threegame losing streak in the series never threatened on offense in beating the Cyclones for the and quite possibly saving coach again. The Cowboys managed 43rd time in their past 45 tries. only a pick-six by Ramon RichWill Muschamp’s job. The Sooners had 480 yards ards in the fourth quarter in Jones ran 25 times for 197 and led 35-7 at halftime. But losing their third straight game yards and two touchdowns. star wide receiver Sterling for the first time since the 2005 Shepard was carted off with an Taylor, whose NFL father, Fred, season. has his name emblazoned on a apparent leg injury in the first wall inside EverBank Field, carNO. 12 BAYLOR 60, KANSAS 14 quarter and did not return. ried 25 times for 192 yards and Sam Richardson had 239 In Waco, Texas, Bryce Petty two scores. yards passing for Iowa State had three touchdown passes, . two to Corey Coleman, and Bay- (2-6, 0-5). lor scored on 11 straight posses- TEMPLE 20, NO. 10 TCU 31, sions to rout Kansas. NO. 20 WEST VIRGINIA 30 NO. 21 EAST CAROLINA 10 Baylor (7-1, 3-1 Big 12, No. 13 NO. 5 OREGON 45, In Morgantown, W.Va., Jaden In Philadelphia, Kenny Harper STANFORD 16 Oberkrom kicked a 37-yard field CFP) had to settle for field goals ran for two touchdowns and after two of three first-half fum- Temple forced five fumbles to In Eugene, Ore., Marcus Mari- goal as time expired to lift TCU bles by the Jayhawks deep in beat East Carolina for its first ota threw for 258 yards and two past West Virginia. their territory, but still rolled up victory over a ranked opponent The Horned Frogs (7-1, 4-1 touchdowns and ran for two 669 yards in their 14th straight since 1998. more scores in Oregon’s victory Big 12, No. 7 CFP) overcame a home victory. That streak ties 13-point deficit to keep their The loss snapped a five-game over Stanford. Auburn for the longest in the national championship hopes winning streak for the Pirates Thomas Tyner returned from nation. alive. West Virginia (6-3, 4-2, (6-2, 3-1 American Athletic, No. an injury to run for two touchColeman had a career-high No. 20 CFP) led 27-14 midway 23 CFP), spoiling their bid for downs to help the Ducks (8-1, 167 yards receiving and TDs of through the third quarter, but the best eight-game start in 5-1 Pac-12, No. 5 CFP) snap a 72 and 49 yards, the latter put- school history. was held to one first down the two-game losing streak to the ting the Bears up 46-7 early in rest of the game. Playing much of the game Cardinal. the third quarter. B.J. Catalon had two secondin a driving rain storm, Temple Stanford’s stout defense had half touchdown runs for TCU, (5-3, 3-2) played relatively misnot allowed an opponent more NO. 13 OHIO STATE 55, including a 6-yarder with 7:33 take-free and jumped out to a than 30 points in a string of 31 ILLINOIS 14 left that cut it to 30-28. He fin14-point lead in the first quarter. games, the longest streak in In Columbus, Ohio, Curtis ished with 105 yards. the nation. The Cardinal (5-4, Samuel ran for two touchdowns NO. 24 DUKE 51, With TCU starting from its 24, and J.T. Barrett hit Devin Smith 3-3) had allowed just four total PITTSBURGH 48, (2OT) Trevone Boykin threw 40 yards on two scoring passes -- all in rushing touchdowns through In Pittsburgh, Backup quarto Kolby Listenbee to the West the season’s first eight games; the first half -- and No. 13 Ohio terback Thomas Sirk bulled into Virginia 33. Three running plays State beat Illinois 55-14 on Oregon finished with four. the end zone from 5 yards in advanced the ball to the 24 to Oregon climbed to No. 2 in Saturday night, extending the the second overtime to lift Duke set up Oberkrom’s kick. the AP rankings this season Buckeyes’ Big Ten win streak to past Pittsburgh. The Mountaineers (6-3, 4-2) but stumbled with a home a record-tying 20. The Blue Devils (7-1, 3-1 committed five turnovers, all loss to Arizona on Oct. 2. The The Buckeyes (7-1, 4-0, No. Atlantic Coast, No. 24 CFP) held Ducks have since recovered and in their own territory. Both 16 CFP) won their sixth in a Pitt to a field goal to start the they’re gunning for the inaugu- offenses struggled in cold, row -- five by lopsided scores. second overtime, then went 25 windy conditions, and a rain ral playoffs. Now they head into the game yards in four plays, with Sirk’s shower in the second quarter NO. 6 NOTRE DAME 49, of the year in the conference, at second touchdown ending it. practically brought them to a NAVY 39 defending champion Michigan The Panthers (4-5, 2-3) had a halt. State next week. In Landover, Md., Everett Golchance to win in regulation, but Donovonn Young’s 5-yard run Chris Blewitt missed a 26-yard son threw for three touchdowns NO. 11 KANSAS STATE 48, late in the third quarter broke and ran for three scores to help OKLAHOMA STATE 14 field goal with 2 seconds left. up the shutout for the Illini (4-5, James Conner ran for a careerNo. 6 Notre Dame beat Navy In Manhattan, Kan., Jake 49-39 on Saturday night after 1-4). They have dropped four of high 263 yards and three touchWaters threw two touchdown blowing a 21-point lead. their last five. passes, Charles Jones ran for a downs for Pitt.

Highlands falls in home finale to Chadron State on kicker Zach Tapia’s 30-yard field goal with 11:38 left in the second, then In a back-and-forth football game on Sat- 24-21 when quarterback Lance Orender’s urday, the New Mexico Highlands Univer- 13-yard touchdown pass to Travon Payne sity Cowboys didn’t have enough “forth.” with 5:33 left. NMHU left a ChadChadron State (6-3, 5-2) regained the ron State touchdown lead on Derek Jackson’s a 41-yard TD run Highlands 52 at the end of the first to make it 28-24, Chadron State, with Chadron St. 38 half and the start of 2:54 left in the half. second unanswered. On the ensuing drive, Orender fumbled Those proved to be the difference in a at the NMHU 26-yard line, and the Eagles 52-38 win for the Eagles in a Rocky Moun- needed four plays to score on a Jackson tain Athletic Conference game at Perkins 2-yard touchdown run to make it 35-24. Stadium that served as the home finale for The second half didn’t get off to a good the Cowboys. start for NMHU as the Eagles went 41 The two teams traded the lead four yards — all on the ground — and John times in the second quarter. NMHU McClain scored from 1-yard out to make (3-6 overall, 3-4 RMAC) took a 17-14 lead it 42-24 at 12:18 of the third quarter. HighThe New Mexican

lands cut the margin to 49-38 on Orender’s 3-yard touchdown run late in the third, but those were the final points of the day for the Cowboys. Orender finished the day hitting 29 of 49 passes for 369 yards and two touchdowns along with one interception. Chadron State countered with three running backs with more than 80 yards, led by Jackson’s 105 yards on 13 carries and two TDs. Michael Madkins added 94 yards on 24 carries, while Paul had 87 yards on the day. Highlands heads to Spearfish, S.D., to play Black Hills State on Nov. 8 as it finishes the season with two conference road games.

Football: Lobos avenge last year’s defeat their first possession of the second half, the Rebels went attempts for 271 yards. 95 yards in 13 plays, capped by UNLV, looking like an Murray-Lawrence’s second entirely different team than the rushing score of the day, to give squad that opened the contest the Rebels their first lead of the and trailed 17-7 at halftime, day with 5:49 in the third. came out in the third quarter New Mexico capitalized and marched downfield to cut on an interception by Isaiah the gap to three, driving 77 yards in 10 plays, as Murray- Brown, who returned it 43 yards to UNLV’s 4. Pressley Lawrence scored from 1 yard out with 11:46 left in the quarter. bullied his way into the end zone on the next play, as the After holding the Lobos on

Continued from Page D-1

Lobos took a 24-21 lead with 12:05 left. The Rebels answered with a 12-play, 85-yard drive, Keith Whitely pummeling his way in from the 3 giving UNLV a 28-24 lead with 8:28 remaining. New Mexico got revenge for last year’s loss at home and tied the series, 11-11. The Rebels have won five of the last seven meetings, including last season’s 56-42 thriller. While the 2013 clash was

a shootout, this year’s rendition lacked the same offensive fireworks before the teams exchanged touchdowns in the second half. At halftime last year, New Mexico had 436 yards of offense while UNLV had 328 yards, there was just one punt and the score was tied 35-35. This year, New Mexico had 199 yards while UNLV had 147, there were eight punts and the Lobos led, 17-7, at the half.


SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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and compliance – MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head

the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and serded approval of the current grant Human and Disability structure. Maintain the review and recommen Administration, in supervisory/ Work oversee and Social experience Education, (5) years of application process in Early Childhood Minimum of five Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme Elementary vices, services position in human administration provided nt and services manageme cal OR – TAOS appropriate clinical will provide direct psychologi Director will assure CLINICAL DIRECT , and training to The Clinical Director Center Clinical Healing Center. leadership, supervision Health, D.O.J. The Butterfly Healing Butterfly clinical Inc.’s settings, Optum of ENIPC, to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional outreach services Health nt experience. Minimum of marketing and as well as Indian essful manageme LISW d di tion in areas

E

s Director of Athletic

/jobs Athletwww.nmhu.edu n see: ww The Director of job descriptio a Director of Athletics. For a complete personnel activities application for s. l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education ex eriNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE Administrative Balance n that it offers. MINIMUM DII Life in the ex erience. Preferred: a e in those sports . Five 5 ears coachin it to be competitiv an Sports Science. field. Ex erience: ers ip, or Exercise De ree in an Lea University t 3) ucationa n, Business, E of interest; 2) resume; submit 1) a letter Sports A ministratio Candidates must aster s egree in PROCEDURE: APPLICATION .

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SPOUSES SELLING HOUSES ROGER & MELISSA CARSON The remarkable improvements in digital printing are apparent in Flaviker’s wood-look Dakota series of ceramic tiles. The tile evokes the weathered finish and pattern of wood planks. FLAVIKER

Roller-coaster recovery: An uneven third quarter D

epending upon whom you talk to, the real estate market is either doing great or it’s fairly awful. Why such a varied experience? What we all know about real estate: It’s location, location, location. The third-quarter statistics were released at the beginning of October by the Santa Fe Association of Realtors. Across the board, sales in the city were down considerably over this same time last year, and many areas saw a decline in median sales prices as well. Meanwhile, sales in the county increased more than 11 percent from the third quarter of 2013, and the county enjoyed an overall increase in median sales price to $420,393 from $400,000 this same time last year. In the northeast area of the city, sales were the same from 2013, ide al Estate Gu with 38 properties sold Santa Fe Re during the quarter, but the median priced slipped 1.5 percent to $682,500. The northwest area experienced a 50 percent decline in sales, but the median price increased 8 percent to $385,000. The southeast city quadrant experienced the largest decline in sales, with R only 38 homes sold last D -C O N T E M Pc oOmRmAe r A R T quarter as compared to Th e 63 from the same quarter in 2013. The southwest area saw an 8 percent decline MORE HOME in sales but a small This column runs regincrease in median ularly in Home, Santa sales price to $230,000 Fe Real Estate Guide. from $224,500 in 2013. Look for Home inside The areas of Tesuque today’s New Mexican and northern part of and every first Sunday the county had a 50 of the month and at percent increase in sales, www.santafenew with 12 properties sold mexican.com/life/ during the last quarter. home. The median sales price dipped from $562,500 in 2013 to $522,000 for the same quarter. The northwest quadrant had a boost in sales from 44 for the same quarter in 2013 to 50 for 2014, and the median sales price remained relatively unchanged. The southwestern part of the county had a 13 percent increase in closed sales for the third quarter with an increase in median sale price to $291,988. Eldorado had a boost in homes sold by 17 percent, and the median sales price dropped by 3 percent to $336,083. Total sales volume for the area within the city limits was down by almost 23 percent from 2013. Pending sales for the quarter were down almost 30 percent from the same quarter last year, while overall yearto-date pending sales slipped by 8 percent. Closed sales were down by 5 percent; however, closed sales year-to-date were up by 3 percent. The days on market until a sale increased slightly to 170 days this year, compared to 166 days in 2013. The median sales price was down, from $300,000 to $293,750. The average sales price so far this year was $391,180, from $388,008 last year. The percent of original list price received so far this year was roughly the same as last year at 91.5 percent. New listings for this same quarter were down sharply from 2013, while inventory for the year remained unchanged, with 2,315 homes for sale in 2014 versus 2,302 at this same time in 2013. With inventory tight in certain neighborhoods, more and more buyers are electing to build, and land sales picked up in the county by more than 13 percent, with an increase in sales price to $117,500. While Santa Fe remains affordable and interest rates remain relatively low, it is still a great time to purchase a home. While historically the fourth quarter used to be fairly quiet, the last couple of years have seen an increase in buyer traffic and activity. We look forward to the final numbers to see how we fared on this roller-coaster ride known as market recovery. Nov emb er

Artistry and artifice in new tiles By Kim Cook The Associated Press

ile has a rich and varied history in decor, from Roman floor mosaics to majolica to Delft ceramics to Mexican terracotta. These styles and more continue to inspire artistry. Many of the newest collections of ceramic and porcelain tile were on display this fall at the five-day Cersaie international exhibition in Bologna, Italy. Some of the trends:

T

Lupin the 3rd, the creation of Japanese manga artist Monkey Punch, inspires a tile series from Italian ceramics firm Del Conca. It was one of a number of strong visual collections at this year’s Cersaie international tile exhibition in Bologna, Italy.

Master imposters Across the show, faux finishes ruled. What seemed to be barnwood or other timber planking was actually porcelain. Manufacturers can now produce tile that looks — and even feels — like wood, marble, granite or cement, but is thin and lightweight. The application advantages are obvious: A 20-foot slab of slim porcelain printed to look like stone is a lot easier to make and install than the real thing. It can be wrapped up kitchen islands, walls and even ceilings, and is easily cut to accommodate plugs or faucets. Advancements in digital printing have taken faux finishes a long way from earlier versions that looked unrealistic and one-dimensional. Now the detail is more precise, the image is embedded deep in the tile, and the surface texture is transformed. In the U.S., the Reclamation collection from Crossville, based in Crossville, Tenn., is comprised of an urban-industrial mix of cement and tiles that look like salvaged wood in colorways with names like Steel City, Cotton Exchange and Tobacco Road. (www.crossvilleinc.com) Serenissima Cir, based in Casalgrande, Italy, got hold of a palette of brick from Prohibition-era Chicago and used it to cre-

DEL CONCA

ate a tile collection that looks and feels like time-worn brick, right down to the original maker’s “Chicago” stamp. (www.cir.it) Metallic glazes are also evolving. You’ll see patterns with a subtle brush of coppery glitter, while others have dramatic gold, copper and silver finishes — especially striking on 3-D tiles. Antiquing gives mirrored tiles a mercury-glass quality.

Unusual sizes Tile has typically come in standard sizes, squares and rectangles measuring between 4 inches and 12 inches. But larger versions up to 24 or even 36 inches are now avail-

able, and the faux-wood ones resemble planks. Dwell Patterns has collaborated with Heath Ceramics, of Sausalito, Calif., on a hip-looking collection that incorporates a diamond shape and two different hexagonal ones, available in glossy or matte finishes in a broad color palette. (www. heathceramics.com) At Cersaie, hexagons and triangles small and large were shown in earthy hues like cream, mocha, mud and charcoal. Unica by Target Studio’s Origami collection added subtle textural patterns to tone-on-

Please see TILES, Page E-2

2 014

Roger and Melissa Carson are Realtors at KW. Call them at 699-3112, email twicethesellingpower@gmail. com or follow them on Twitter @CarsonandCarson and at www.facebook.com/carsonandcarson.

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52 WEST GOLDEN EAGLE | $1,599,000 Gorgeous custom Las Campanas home with views of three mountain ranges. #201305698 Brunson and Schroeder Team | 505.690.7885

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

‘Smart’ washing machines a hard sell By Drew Harwell The Washington Post

ABOVE: The Cosmati collection of marble and Murano glass tiles by Sicis, an Italian company known for its mastery of the mosaic tile. SICIS BELOW: The Sphere Stripe four tile pattern. Scottish design studio Timorous Beasties has branched out into tile design in collaboration with California-based Cle, and this first collection is called Rorschach. CLETILE.COM

Whirlpool’s $1,699 “smart” washing machine boasts Wi-Fi and a colored control screen, can be started from an iPhone app, and will text or email you when your clothes are ready to dry — preferably, from Whirlpool’s point of view, in its $1,699 “smart” dryer. But if you’re wondering who would want to buy an Internet-enabled washing machine, you’re not alone. Even Whirlpool’s not so sure. “We’re a little bit of a hammer looking for a nail right now,” Chris Quatrochi, Whirlpool’s global director of user experience and connectivity, said last week at a conference hosted by tech blog Gigaom. The buyers of Web-connected washers, more than a year after launch, are still “not at all widespread,” he said. “Trying to understand exactly the value proposition that you provide to the consumer,” he said, “has been a little bit of a challenge.” It’s a big concession from one of the most notable champions of the buzzy “Internet of Things,” in which even our humblest household devices gain Web-enabled powers of their own. At a consumer

No one seems to be beating down the doors for a Web-connected home laundromat. electronics expo in January, Whirlpool said its “kitchen of 2020” would be piled high with not-exactly-necessary whirligigs: stove-tops that display the weather, Facebook photos and Pinterest recipes; music-playing refrigerators; oven burners that flame up via voice command. In the kitchen of 2014, though? No one seems to be beating down the doors for a Web-connected home laundromat. Whirlpool, the world’s largest appliance maker and builder of nearly 2 million washers and dryers in North America every year, would not share sales numbers for its “smart” appliances. But its companion iPhone app, WashSquad, hasn’t exactly blown anyone away. The app, which also lets users assign laundry chores to family members and gives tips on erasing stains, has in the last year been reviewed only 21 times. It peaked at No. 243 in the iOS store’s “Lifestyle” category late last year, fell below 1,500th in January and hasn’t resurfaced since, accord-

ing to data from App Annie, an app-market research firm. Few expected “smart” machines would fly off the shelves. They’re expensive, and Americans don’t typically replace their washers and dryers all that often. But analysts say the problem is bigger than that. Today’s smartest washer and dryer set won’t fold your clothes, erase wrinkles or stop you from mixing reds and whites. It won’t even move a load from one machine to the other. So what’s the point? Or, as Digital Trends blogger John Sciacca put it: “Have we gotten so pathetically lame that you need to be notified by an email that your laundry is done?” The machines could get smarter over time. In less than 10 years, said Whirlpool executive Quatrochi, your washer and dryer will be able to prod you about chores (“Did you want to add this to your laundry list?”) while also tapping into your calendar to remind you how late you are. But there are those who, in a world

rampant with distractions, still admire appliances’ blessed simplicity. “Will I not be able to do my laundry on a Friday night,” Gigaom executive editor Tom Krazit said, “if I don’t download this software update first?” Whirlpool said Tuesday its third-quarter sales worldwide had risen 2 percent, to $4.8 billion, largely on the back of an improving U.S. housing recovery. (Executives said nothing about “smart” appliances in a Tuesday conference call with analysts.) Connecting the Web with the creature comforts of domestic life and suburbia remains one of the biggest intrigues for consumer giants wanting to jump on the next big thing. Google said in January it would pay $3.2 billion to buy Nest Labs, the maker of “smart” thermostats and smoke detectors. New lines of “smart” appliances, from lawn sprinklers to dishwashers, have blossomed in the months since. But even their biggest supporters see how far they still have to grow before they win over the mainstream. “If I could actually [build] a connected solution that folded the clothes,” Quatrochi said, “we could all retire.”

CALENDAR Tiles: More options for shapes and sizes Continued from Page E-1 tone black, white or gray tile in shapes evoking the artistry of Japanese paper folding. (www. targetstudio.net) Ragno’s booth offered an intriguing way to use both their Rewind hexagonal tile and Woodplace faux wood; the different tiles married in the middle with a seamlessness that would have been impossible with ordinary tile and real wood. Another fresh idea was Mirage’s XGone series of hexagonal tiles designed by Javier Deferrari and Lavinia Modesti. Several sizes of hexagonal tiles include some that are notched to connect to others; the resulting pattern, in an array of complementary tonal hues, had a modern-art vibe. (www.mirage.it)

Old world and vintage Neoclassical and oriental tapestry and lace patterns turned tile into elegant wallpaper in the Onice and Wallpaper collections at the Marazzi booth. (www.marazziusa.com) The company also showed an oversize vintage floral in a new way, as a ceiling-to-floor accent on an otherwise solid-color wall, again evoking paper or fabric wallcovering. Ancient Mediterranean motifs printed on matte-finish tile in faded, organic hues bridged the centuries. Panaria’s Memory collection recalls Provencal paver patterns of the late 1800s. And Tagina’s Terre Nostre collection echoes the pavers of Umbrian medieval villages. You can find similar, smaller-scale versions at www. cementtileshop.com. Ceramica Bardelli featured the work of London designer Robert Dawson. He took the

classic Willow porcelain design, deconstructed its chinoiserie elements and printed them on large-scale tiles. The effect is as if an enormous china plate had been shattered, then affixed to the wall. (www.bardelli.it)

Tile as art canvas Ascot has launched Game of Fifteen, a series of tile designs honoring contemporary art. Keith Haring’s radiant baby and running figures pack graphic punch in black on glazed white ceramic. (www.ascot.it) ABK’s Do Up collection includes an image of a contemporary geisha and tiles printed with faux-spray-painted graffiti a la Banksy. (www.abk.it) In a collection called Portland 325, ABK’s Ariana group took inspiration from the walls of an abandoned factory, transforming graffiti into elegant art tiles with iridescent finishes. Sicis showed the possibilities of mosaics by creating wall panels embedded with butterflies, stars and flowers. The vibrant reds, blues and golds were achieved with minerals like copper and lapis. (www.sicis. com) Scottish wallpaper studio Timorous Beasties is moving into tile design through the tile studio Cle, in Sausalito. Medieval damask motifs are combined with ink-blot patterns to create stylized designs that are hand-lithographed onto limestone and marble tiles. Cle showcases several innovative tile artists in its online shop. (www.cletile.com) Finally, at Modwalls, you’ll find mosaic tile made of sliced, recycled wine corks, and pennies. Here, too, a paint box full of hues in glass subway tiles, including orange, lemongrass, pool blue and poppy. (www. modwalls.com)

NOVEMBER

2

CHASING DICHOS THROUGH CHIMAYO – Sunday, November 2, 2-4 PM at Chimayo Museum. Through the unique dichos (poetic proverbs) of his native Chimayo, nationally known author and photographer Don Usner creates a memoir in words and pictures of his life and work in the Chimayo valley while exploring Chimayo’s culture through the medium of language. Meet Don, enjoy readings from his new book, and explore more of his photos on display. Chimayó Museum, County Road 94E behind Ortega’s Weaving Shop, near intersection of Highway 76 and Juan Medina Road/CR98. Free to the public; refreshments provided. Call 505-3510945 for more information.

NOVEMBER

4

92ND STREET Y – The new season of “92nd Street Y” programs on DVD will start at Beit Tikva on Tuesday, November 4th at 3:30 pm and at 6:30 pm. The topic of this weekday double header will be “The Glass Cage,” with Nicholas Carr and Tim Wu, discussing the consequences of automation and computerization. Admission is $12 at the door. For more information: call 505-820-2991 or email beittikvasantafe.org.

THE SANTA FE RAILYARD COMMUNITY CORPORATION will have its monthly Board of Directors’ Meeting on Tuesday, November 4th, 2014 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Southwest Conference Room at Christus St. Vincent’s, 455 St. Michael’s Dr. The public, neighbors, tenants, and all interested persons are encouraged to attend. Agenda will be available 24 hours in advance of the meeting at the office at 332 Read Street (505-982-3373) and posted

at www.sfrailyardcc.org http://www.sfrail- Fe Trail, on Monday and Tuesday, Novemyardcc.org/. ber 10th and 11th, from 3 to 5:30pm. You will learn about: 1) Trust creation and how to minimize conflict in managing estate matters; NOVEMBER 2) Legacy planning and generational training to sustain wealth transfer; 3) Economic realiSANTA FE GIRLS’ SCHOOL: ties and equity/bond investment choices; 4) Tax code changes and planning strategies; OPEN HOUSE, November 5, 6-8 pm. and 5) Insurance protection vehicles. RSVP is Give your daughter the best middle school required. Call 505-216-0838 or email Finanexperience possible. Imagine her actively cialHealthWorkshop@gmail.com to register. 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- HAVE A NAGGING CONDITION? 3188 or visit our blog: blogs.santafegirlss- EXHAUSTED? Receive an individual chool.org. non-touch Seimei session at our community clinic Thursdays (pronounced Say-May.) SesSAVVY SOCIAL SECURITY PLAN- sions are about 35 minutes and cost $20 or NING WORKSHOP – presented by $25.00. First come, first served at our 1360 Peter Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Vegas Verde location near Sprint, in the Santa Specialist. This FREE two hour seminar is of- Fe Budokan building. We work on acute or fered at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa chronic conditions with exquisitely dependFe Trail, on Wednesday, November 5th, from able results using the power of this Japanese 6pm to 8pm. You will learn the following and technique that reflects the healing power of much more: Five factors to consider in de- contemporary Buddhism. Bring us your most ciding when to apply for benefits; Innovative stubborn conditions; all practitioners were strategies for coordinating spousal benefits; trained in Japan. Call Dr. Alexandra Bakos at How to coordinate benefits with other income 577-7511 for more information. Arrive 6:30sources; How to minimize taxes on Social Se- 6:45. curity benefits; and Special rules on divorced spouses and survivor benefits. RSVP is re- SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDEN quired. Call 505-216-0838 or email Register. – is looking for fun & festive musical enterSantaFe@1APG.com to register. tainment, and small choir groups to perform at GLOW - A Winter Lights Event in the GarNOVEMBER den. GLOW opens December 4 and runs until Jan 3 on selected evenings. Early Bird tickets at reduced rates available until November FINANCIAL EDUCATION WORK- 15. Santa, illuminated domes, hot cocoa, live SHOP – This Complimentary two-day entertainment and more. Fun for the whole workshop is offered by five Santa Fe profes- family. Call 505-471-9103, www.santafebosionals at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa tanicalgarden.org.

5

ONGOING & UPCOMING

10

Promote your event here: call 986-3000 or email events@sfnewmexican.com FOR A COMPLETE CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS, VISIT:

NOW INCLUDES FREE CALENDAR LISTING ON EXPLORESANTAFE.COM

PE RH A P S T H E F INEST R E MA INING VIEW LOTS IN LAS CAMPANAS

keith@tierrateam.com

tierrateam.com

Brokers with Sotheby’s International Realty

505 988 8088

Kurt Faust 505 780 1 157

Keith Gorges 505 780 1 152

Eric Faust 505 780 1 159

Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc., Equal Housing Opportunity. Owner/Broker


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-3

We are Las Campanas. LAS CAMPANAS RESIDENTIAL SALES

LAS CAMPANAS ACTIVE RESIDENTIAL LISTINGS

January 1 – October 27, 2014

as of October 27, 2014

Firm #2 17%

Firm #3 8%

Firm #4 4%

All Others 4%

Firm #3 6%

Firm #4 4%

All Others 13%

Firm #2 7%

Sotheby’s International Realty 67%

Sotheby’s International Realty 70%

We are Santa Fe. Many of our brokers have been closely involved with sales and development at Las Campanas since its very inception. Today no other real estate firm in Santa Fe has more experience with sales and listing inventory at Las Campanas than Sotheby’s International Realty. Contact us to learn more about the Las Campanas lifestyle and ownership opportunities that await. Based on market share by dollar volume of sold residential listings, and active residential inventory in Las Campanas. Obtained from the Santa Fe Association of Realtors Multiple Listing Service. Deemed reliable but not guaranteed and subject to change.

16 HACIENDA RINCON $4,750,000 Overlooking the 5th hole of the Sunset Golf Course, this Doug McDowell-built, Tuscan-style home boasts both commanding views and great privacy. Features include an incredible living room, and an expansive portal. Chris Webster 505.780.9500 #201200227

5 CHIPPEWA CIRCLE $2,900,000 Elegant Las Campanas 8,000+-sq.-ft. house with guesthouse on 3.5-acre lot with spectacular mountain and golf course views. This 5BR, 6BA Pueblo-style home beautifully integrates outstanding materials and finishes. Burbic and Yoder Team 505.670.9399 #201301427

40 GREYWOLF $2,595,000 Gorgeous Las Campanas 3BR, 6BA home situated on a premium site in the coveted Club Estates neighborhood. Quality finishes abound. Wonderful media room, observation deck, and a private golf hole. Neil Lyon, CRB, CRS, GRI 505.954.5505 #201400445

N EW LIST IN G

7 BLUESTEM $2,000,000 One of the finest properties in Las Campanas, this four-bedroom, five-bath soft contemporary has breathtaking views, patios and portales, and a guesthouse. An Equity Golf Membership is included. K.C. Martin 505.954.5549 #201402814 NEW LISTING

80 WEST GOLDEN EAGLE $870,000 An outstanding example of contemporary style, this 3,375-square-foot three-bedroom home is walking distance from the clubhouse and fitness center and boasts magnificent attention to detail throughout. Johnnie Gillespie & Marion Skubi 505.660.8722 #201404867 OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3

11 ENTRADA DESCANSO $1,745,000 One of a handful of true estate properties with high-end finishes throughout. All plaster walls and custom woodwork help define the authentic feel of this 5,800-sq.-ft. home which is enveloped by patios and manicured grounds. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201404998 OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 4

1379 CERRO GORDO $649,000 This 3BR, 3BA, 2,200-sq.-ft. house is loaded with high quality Santa Fe-style details and filled with light and color. Set on a lush 2/3 acre, if you love the out of doors, you will love this house. Bob Cardinale 505.984.5114 #201303795 OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 4

47 VIOLET CIRCLE $2,495,000 This superlative Pueblo-style home is the epitome of distinctive modern Southwestern style. The 2.6-acre property offers sweeping panoramas that encompass the Sangre de Cristo and Jemez Mountains. Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117#201404244

NEW PRICE

8 STARLIGHT CIRCLE $1,499,000 Phenomenal home designed and built by renowned builder Kim Dressell. Sangre de Cristo mountain views from the living, dining, master bed and bath, kitchen nook, both den/offices and guest master bedroom. Tim and Paula Galvin 505.795.5990 #201402979 OP EN SU N DAY 1 : 30 - 3 : 30

725-1/2 CANYON ROAD $550,000 Charming adobe circa 1950 zoned RAC off Canyon Road a few steps. Features include wood floors, vigas and beams, and little sun porch off the kitchen, as well as basement and crawlspace for ease of renovation. Katherine Blagden 505.955.7980 #201403621 OP EN SU NDAY 1 - 3

52 THUNDERCLOUD $895,000 1.7 acres with views in gated Las Campanas. Perfect residence or second lock-and-leave home. 2900+ sq.ft. with a separated plan featuring large master suite with fireplace, walk-in closet and large spa bath. Janice Cox 505.988.2533 #201403489 O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 3

321 CALLE LOMA NORTE $475,000 This condominium retreat minutes from the Plaza offers 1,935 square feet of living space,three bedrooms, two baths, an atrium room with clerestory windows, and a courtyard with a sunset portal. #201402187 Paul Stenberg & Lois Sury, CRS, ABR 505.984.5156

“All Things Real Estate” 12 - 2 pm on 1260-AM & 101.5-FM Streaming on ATREradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. OPEN SUNDAY 12:30 - 2:30

41 APACHE PLUME $465,000 This well-maintained home is 10 minutes from Santa Fe on more than an acre and offers three-bedrooms, two baths, bamboo floors, an open kitchen, lovely outdoor spaces, a fenced dog area, and views. Stan Jones, CRS 505.954.5524 #201305806

30 GALLINA ROAD $375,000 This single-level adobe residence has amazing views, tons of Santa Fe charm, exposed adobe walls throughout, and a wonderful patio area, which connects the main house and the studio. Karin Baxter 505.930.1468 #201404142

SANTA FE BROKERAGES | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc., Equal Housing Opportunity

2938 PLAZA BLANCA $295,000 Great, large two-story Park Plaza townhome. Two bedrooms and two full bathrooms downstairs with nice patio. Upstairs has kitchen, breakfast room, large dining/living room with fireplace. 2-car garage. David Dodge 505.984.5152 #201404149

41 VIOLET CIRCLE $1,495,000 Fabulous Las Campanas compound on two hilltop acres. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201404233

Visit onlywithus.com to discover the benefits available through us alone.


E-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate

POUND M O C E T A V PRI POOL G N I M M I W S

OPEN 1-3 EWS LIGHT & VI

OPEN 12-4 EASTSIDE

1422 Bishops Lodge Want more moisture in your Santa Fe

4 Thorpe Way This beautiful custom home with clean, contemporary lines fits beautifully into the landscape setting - quiet and private enough to enjoy starlit skies at night. Master bedroom has Vermont cherry floors, kiva fireplace and outdoor lounge space. Kitchen is a chef’s dream with optimal layout and top-of-the-line appliances. Two-car garage and private entry to guest or children’s quarters with kitchenette. $1,597,000 MLS# 201403647

713 Garcia St. UPPER GARCIA, GREAT VIEW, TALL WALLED

experience? This wonderful family compound features the lushness of Tesuque, a swimming pool, pond with circulating stream, grass lawn, its own well, and many trees in a gated compound with a four-bedroom home, two-bedroom guest house, and barn with stable area and views. $3,995,000 MLS# 201401876

TIERRA TEAM (505) 780-1152 • keith@tierraconceptssantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-8088 231 Washington Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

CLARA L. DOUGHERTY (505) 690-0471 • claradough@gmail.com Dougherty Real Estate Co., LLC • (505) 989-7741 433 W. San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.dresf.com

PRISTINE, TREED HALF ACRE. 3500+, 4 BDRM, 4 BATHS, 3 CAR HEATED GARAGE, 2 TERRACES PLUS LARGE PATIO WITH POND. WALKING DISTANCE TO CANYON ROAD , THE PLAZA AND MUSEUMS. OWNER-BROKER. $1,250,000

NANCY GILORTEANU (505) 820-1003 • ngilorteanu@msn.com

AY OPEN TOD RA NEAR OPE

M OPEN 1-4P ECE I P R E T S A RARY M O P M E T N CO

OPEN 1-3 EWS I V N I A T N MOU

Luxury in Monte Sereno Gorgeous Views and Fine Finishes. 3237 SF on 1.43 acre lot. Privacy only minutes from Santa Fe Plaza and all amenites. One level living with 3 Bedrooms plus den/media and 4 baths. Ideal floorplan for entertaining. Property website: www.MonteSerenoLuxuryHome.CanBYours.com Open Today 1-4.

171 Headquarters Trail First time on tour. Southwestern soft Contemporary located in La Tierra Nueva. Main residence 2BR plus office; 1BR guest house with attached studio. Approximately 7,850 total square feet. Expansive views on 27-plus acres. Features include limestone floors, full length sliding glass wall in great room, high ceilings, and 15 fireplaces.

1016 Calle Bajo New!!!! Must see this one! “Spooktacular” Mountain Views! Fresh, Fun and Fabulously re-conceived home! 3B 3B 2258 sq ft, 1.23 acres. 2 car garage and studio space. Directions: Take Paseo de Peralta to Old Taos Hwy to Calle Largo (Follow the signs).

$1,150,000 MLS# 201401935

$3,350,000 MLS# 201304156

COLEEN DEARING (505) 930-9102 • coleen@coleendearing.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

OPEN 1-3 EWS! VALLEY VI

970 Thunderbird Court Four bedrooms and three and a half baths with two master suites create an excellent floor plan and beautifully scaled public rooms. The outdoor space is complete with a large deck and hot tub surrounded by trees overlooking the valley below. Interior & exterior spaces seamlessly fuse together to offer the ultimate privacy in a serene setting in Santa Fe. $898,000 MLS# 201404839

RACHEL ROSEBERY (505) 570-9365 • rachel.santafe@gmail.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

OPEN 1-3

780 Aspen Compound Well-priced home, quiet location, adjacent to greenbelt. Expansive west views. Spacious living room with high ceilings, upgraded kitchen, huge master. Low maintenance landscaping. Clubhouse pool and tennis. 3 br, 2 ba, 2,400 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.23 acre. Directions: Hyde park Road. Second entry into Estancia Primera. Go 1/4 mile over arroyo bridge. Aspen Compound on right. Turn left into circle. $650,000 MLS# 201402509 VIVIAN NELSON & GAVIN SAYERS (505) 470-6953 • GavinSayers@juno.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 216 Washington Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

TEAM LEHRER & EARLEY (505) 490-9565 • nancy.lehrer@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 982-6207 417 East Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

D RARE LAN RIVER G N I W O L F ALWAYS

Eastside Historic District: 1465 Upper Canyon Road – NOTHING ELSE LIKE IT AT ANY PRICE. 240ft stream through lush meadows & huge cottonwoods. Lovely views. 2/3acre estate-site, generous 11,000SF buildable areas for your compound that may include a quality home, guesthouse, garages, & an art studio,home offices, or shop. All utilities. Large pure water well for intensive landscaping & gardens, ideal pond site. Eastside historic district, Plaza just 17 blocks. Off Canyon Road on pretty lane for privacy. Agents add commission. $776,000

By Owner - Albert Durand 505-660-2282 whirlwind61@gmail.com

$865,000 MLS# 201404773

HEIDI HELM (505) 930-7020 • HeidiInSantaFe@gmail.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

ICED R P Y L W E N ADY E R N I E V MO

404 Plaza Lomas Yours for the holidays. Fine furniture package

available separately. This custom home was completed January 2014 and the single-level 2,200-sq.-ft. residence has two bedrooms and two baths, an oversized two-car garage, and two beautifully landscaped outdoor areas. Many quality upgrades, professional Viking appliance package. Added bonuses are a home office and ample rec/storage room, and storage room galore. $730,000 MLS# 201404862

PENELOPE VASQUEZ (505) 690-3751 • penelope.vasquez@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

TY

TESUQUE USE O H T S E U G

BEAU O D A R O D EL OPEN 1-3

46 Tesuque Village Road A wonderful home surrounded by

9 TARRO ROAD Immaculate, light/bright home in Ladera at Eldorado with mountain/sunset views sited on a 1.15 acre greenbelt lot. 2220 sqft-3 bedrooms plus office or 4th bedroom plus an additional office/studio/mother in law or guest quarters- 2 3/4 baths- 2 car garage-Living room with high ceilings and vigas-Formal dining plus eat in kitchen-3 fireplaces-Solid wood doors- Beautiful lanscaping and so much more. $399,875 MLS# 201404765

beautiful homes in the San Ysidro de Tesuque subdivision—outside of the gated area and accessed directly off Tesuque Village Road. Large five-acre lot, provides privacy and quick access to Santa Fe and Tesuque Village. The studio guest house over the garage is an added bonus. $595,000 MLS# 201403745

TIERRA TEAM (505) 780-1152 • keith@tierraconceptssantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-8088 231 Washington Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

SABINE ANDRAUD (505) 690-4857 • frenchsabine@msn.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-5

Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate

EL

OPEN 12-4 TED A D P U Y L L TOTA

OD FORMER M

2807 Plaza Rojo Park Plazas - This brilliantly renovated contemporary townhouse is light, bright and handsome. Big Sangre views from sundeck. Move-in ready! 2 br, 2 ba, 1,393 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Rodeo Road, south on Camino Carlos Rey, right at first street onto Plaza Blanca, right on second street to end, right into Ristra Plaza, follow to north end of cul-de-sac. $324,500 MLS# 201404598

6 Windstone This former model boasts excellent upgrades like radiant heat, air conditioning, gas cooking, and lovely entry courtyard. Also, heated, finished, two-car garage, quiet location, two fireplaces, and vigas. At 1,579 sq. ft. with three bedrooms and two full baths, the great room lifestyle offers quality, casual living. $315,000 MLS# 201403834

JEAN E NE HERTZ (505) 660-6345 • Jeanne@JeanneHertz.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta, Santa F Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeP F roperties.com

CHARLES WEBER (505) 670-9377 • charle r s.we . ber@sothebys b homes.com Sotheby’ b s Inter t nati a onal Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Aven v ue, Santa n Fe, NM 87501 sothebys b homes.com/sa / ntafe

M OPEN 2-4P ME ADOBE HO

OPEN 1-4 NEW!

7014 Valentine Loop Beautiful turnkey 4 bedroom home ready for the right buyer to move in. Lots of light downstairs with view windows, and an open floorplan with a central gas fireplace that provides both heat and convenience. The kitchen is upgraded with Granite countertops and stainless steel appliances. Property website: Homes4SaleinSantaFeNM.com $295,000 201404947

TEAM E R&L (505) 4707 2277 • rrallph h@ttea amrrandl.com Keller Williams Rea R lty t • (505) 465-9597 130 L Lincoln Aven v ue Suite K, Santa n Fe, NM http t ://w / w ww w.k k wsanta n fenm.com

UCED

PRICE RED OPEN 1-3

To feature your listing please call Wendy Ortega at 995-3892

Feature d 1015 Dunlap Street Beautifully kept in a great convenient location. 2-bedroom, 2-bath adobe with detached garage and mature trees. Upgraded electric, remodeled kitchen, sloped torchdown roof. A picture-perfect property convenient to Railyard, Co-Op, everything. $295,000 MLS# 201403734

CHARLES WEBER (505) 670-9377 • charle r s.we . ber@sothebys b homes.com Sotheby’ b s Inter t nati a onal Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Aven v ue, Santa n Fe, NM 87501 sothebys b homes.com/sa / ntafe

Listings in the

LAS CAMPANAS LA

1002 Calle Margarita Bellamah Beauty! Versatility, privacy and

OPEN 1:30-4

desirable central location with this light-filled home. Fantastic open floor plan with spaces for family room, dining room and living room with wood burning stove. Bright kitchen features gas cooking, newer r solid maple cabinets and breakfast bar. Park-like setting refrigerator, with patio, storage and separate dog yard. Well-maintained and updated -- a must-see special offering. $239,900 MLS# 201403508

, April 27,

Homes

Online: www.san tafenew mexican .com/life /real_es tate

OPEN 2-4

Sunday

2014 THE NEW

Santa F e Area.

OPEN HOUSE OPE 1PM-3PM

602A Ca

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HA 6- 6106 944 Sotheb • jeff f.ha RA K AL by ’s In nte rak 326 Gr rnational Re al@sotheby an alt y • (5 b shomes.com nt Avve. , Sa 05 sotheb byshome nta Fe, NM ) 988-2533 87501 s.com//sa nta fe

JENNIFER TOMES n mes@me.com (505) 690-6477 • JenTo Dougherty t Real Estate Co., LLC • (505) 989-7741 7 433 W. San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 www.dresf.com

OPEN 1-4

(505) 79 M 5-5990 GA LV IN Sotheby b ’s In • tim n 326 Gr ternational Re @galv insantaffe. an alt y • (5 com nt Avven ue, 05) sotheby b shomeSanta Fe, NM 988-2533 87501 s.com//sa nta fe

OPEN 111-4:00 1-4: 4: REDUCED $$50,000 0,000 ,

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(505) 66 NEIL LY YON 0-8600 Sotheby b ’s In • neil@ ter natio nal Realt neillyyon.com 326 Gr an y • (505 nt Avven ue , Sa ) 988-2 nta Fe, 533 sotheb byshome NM 87 501 s.com//sa nta fe

LAS CA LA CAMPANAS OPEN 1:30-4:30

Showcase Properties Specialties in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate

L A E N P IO CA T P ES E C IU X E QU I B A

COME AND VIEW GEORGIA O’KEEFFE’S GORGEOUS LANDSCAPES 130 Yermo Drive, Abiquiu Surrounded by the landscape that inspired Georgia O’Keeffe, this one-of-a-kind property sits high on a mesa overlooking the valleys just minutes from Abiquiu. Composed of two lots totaling 26 acres, it includes a beautiful 3,880-square-foot home with high-end finishes throughout, a gourmet kitchen, tremendous views, and three bedrooms. The property also offers a 1,000-square-foot workshop, a private well, a greenhouse, and a private runway and hangar for an ultralight. MLS#201403924 Offered at $1,150,000 DAVID DODGE | 505.690.5108 david.dodge@sothebyshomes.com JANE REID | 505.629.9821 jane.reid@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | 505.988.8088 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

Open Houses

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Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/home/

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Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-7

Open Houses NORTH WEST

A-38 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 34 Cresencio Lane - Private and secluded near the end of a lush lane with easy access to Santa Fe and Los Alamos, this 4.4-acre property features a main house, architect-designed guest house and studio. $469,000. MLS 201303618. (Hwy 285 N; at 503 intersection. Turn left (CR103), follow to Cresencio Lane.sothe) MaryJoy Ford 505-577-0177 Sotheby’s International Realty.

G-36 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 3012 Monte Sereno - Gorgeous Views & Fine Finishes. 3237 SF on 1.43 ac. Privacy mins from Plaza. One level living w/3 Beds+den/media & 4 baths. Ideal for entertaining. www.MonteSerenoLuxuryHome.CanBYours.com $1,150,000. MLS 201401935. (285 N, Tesuque/Opera Exit. Left under hwy and straight ahead into Monte Sereno. Left at T to near top of hill. Home is on the right.) Coleen Dearing 505-930-9102 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

H-16 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 171 Headquarters Trail - Excellence in Contemporary-style design. This exquisite La Tierra Nueva home is an architectural masterpiece with expansive mountain views, marble floors, plaster walls, stone sinks and vanities. $3,350,000. MLS 201304156. (La Tierra Nueva. 171 Headquarters Trail) Tara Earley & Nancy Lehrer 505-660-1734 Sotheby’s International Realty.

K-17 2:30p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 7 Shorthorn - Sparkling city lights, 360-degree views of Jemez, Santa Clara, Sangre de Cristo, Ortiz, Sandia mountain ranges. Swim by day, gather by night at the stunning pool. Amazing 10+ acre lot is private. $1,175,000. MLS 201403398. (Camino La Tierra west to entrance of La Tierra Nueva.) Maureen Mestas 505-310-1050 Sotheby’s International Realty.

O-16

R-44

HH-25

3:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 1000 Hillcrest - Perfectly located in town, yet a world away atop a hill at the end of a cul-desac, lush, landscaped grounds evolve to dramatic panoramic views of Sangre de Cristo Mountains from openconcept areas. $1,550,000. MLS 201403652. (Bishops Lodge road north to Hillcrest. Hillcrest turns to the right and Stagecoach straight ahead take Hillcrest to the right and house is at top of the hill.) Diane Harrison 505412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

12:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 3600 Cerrillos Road 1007/10 - One of the original true art studio live-work units at The Lofts, all on one level, ground floor, with visible entry and plenty of places for visitors to park right outside the door. $199,000. MLS 201403914. (From town, south on Cerrillos Rd to The Lofts sign at 3600, left into driveway. Follow driveway back to complex, stay left at Y past Bldg 11 to Bldg 10 and Unit 1007. Plenty of parking.) Jody Spehar 505-699-3007 Sotheby’s International Realty.

S-44

JJ-33

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 970 Thunderbird Court - Serene setting with valley view. 4BR/3.5BA with 2 master suites, 3,450 sq.ft., excellent floor plan & beautifully scaled public rooms. Large deck & hot tub surrounded by trees overlooking valley. $898,000. MLS 201404839. (Bishops Lodge Road, right on Valley Drive, right on Vallecita Drive, left on Paseo Del Sur, right on Este, right on Thunderbird Drive) Rachel Rosebery 505-988-7285 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2878 Plaza Verde - A must see Chapman built and Chapman lived in house in the Estates at Park Plazas. 3145 sf 2 bed 2 1/2 bath again a Must See. $499,000. MLS 201302353. (Rodeo Road to Camino Carlos Rey to The Estates at Park Plazas follow Chapman Signs.) 505-983-8100 Chapman Homes/Realty.

S-45 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1200 Gonzales Court - This quintessential Santa Fe style home is minutes from the Plaza and on the way to the Ski Basin. Grand views of the mountains from the covered deck & brick patio, and lovely lush terraced gardens. $715,000. MLS 201403597. (3 br, 4 ba, Hyde Park Road, north on Gonzales, bear left at Y past Bandolina, left on Gonzales Court.) Suzy Eskridge 505-310-4116 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

U-39 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 501 Rio Grande Unit J-2 - Minutes to the plaza. Gorgeous home designed to make the most of expansive views from the 2nd floor living areas, and 2 Huge outside decks. High end finishes throughout! Must See!! Great Price! $410,000. MLS 201403345. (Paseo de Peralta to Griffin to Rio Grande. Turn Right on Rio Grande and continue through to very top, & once you enter the Rosario Hill Compound you will turn right, and park immediately on the left.) Laurie DeDomenico 505660-8216 Barker Realty LLC.

U-45

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 21 Painted Horse - One of the truly great contemporary homes in all of Las Campanas, this dramatic and refined home features staggering Jemez views through the living room’s 25-foot wall of glass. $1,675,000. MLS 201402296. (Wildhorse entrance, left on Painted Horse to end of cul-de-sac.) Owner 505-780-1008 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1202 Gonzales Court - Brand new on the market. Chapman built home, 4 bed 3 bath, living room with fireplace, dining room with wood stove, new stucco, windows, bathroom vanities, VIEWS, views, VIEWS. $625,000. MLS 201404705. (Artist rd. (Hyde Park rd) to Gonzales Road, (left) to Gonzales Court also on left. Follow Chapman Realty Signs.) Philip Meek 505-9838100 Chapman Homes/Realty.

O-18

V-39

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 52 West Golden Eagle - Stately, elegant yet flowing and comfortable. This home is the epitome of lofty country living. Every room has been carefully designed to maximize majestic views of all 5 surrounding mountain ranges. $1,599,000. MLS 201305698. (599 to Camino la Tierra, follow signs toward Club House. Right on Pojoaque Ridge, left on West Golden Eagle, house last on left.) Ann Brunson 505-690-7885 Sotheby’s International Realty.

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 410 Solona Street - Charming downtown two-bedroom home with huge basement, free-standing studio perfect for a home office or artist studio and a sunny greenhouse off the very large living room. Fenced-in yard w/ dog run. $298,500. MLS 201401006. (Paseo de Peralta, Griffin, left Solona, second home on left) Jeffrey Harakal 505-216-6106 Sotheby’s International Realty.

O-40

V-41

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 321 Calle Loma Norte - This condominium retreat minutes from the Plaza offers 1,935 square feet of living space, three bedrooms, two baths, an atrium room with clerestory windows, and a courtyard with a sunset portal. $475,000. MLS 201402187. (Old Taos Highway north, left on Calle Loma Norte, left into cul-de-sac for #321.) Paul Stenberg 505-670-4242 Sotheby’s International Realty.

12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 101-3B Monte Vista Place - Minutes from the plaza! This fabulous condo offers a 2 car gar., 2 fireplaces, cozy living spaces, stainless steel appliances in the open concept kitchen, a large backyard and more. A Must see! $359,000. MLS 201404518. (Bishops Lodge Rd to Artist Rd. Turn Right on Monte Vista Pl. to end. There is a gravel drive to your left with a small sign that reads 101 - B1, B2, B3. Condo is at the end of the drive.) Andrea Lucero 505-780-0311 Barker Realty LLC.

P-14

W-43

12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 41 Violet Circle - Could be the best value in Las Campanas. Phenomenal opportunity, sellers spent more than $2 million to build. Seller is very motivated. $1,495,000. MLS 201404233. (Camino La Tierra, right on Parkside Drive, left on to Violet Circle, home on right.) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1379 Cerro Gordo - This 3BR, 3BA, 2,200-sq.-ft. house is loaded with high quality Santa Festyle details and filled with light and color. Set on a lush 2/3 acre, if you love the out of doors, you will love this house. $649,000. MLS 201303795. (Gonzales Road to Cerro Gorod to #1379.) Bob Cardinale 505-577-8418 Sotheby’s International Realty.

S-22 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1 Altura Vista - Marvel at the many custom features this lovely single level home has to offer. Nestled in the unique Aldea community, this 2,159 square home is balanced and comfortable. 2BR plus a 1BR, 1BA casita. $559,500. MLS 201404051. (599 to La Tierra, to Frontage road to Avenida Aldea to property.) Carol Alexander 505-690-4991 Sotheby’s International Realty.

T-22 1:30p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 11 Calle Festiva - Price Adjusted! Light filled contemporary 3 beds 2 1/2 bath, finished 2 car garage. Sunset views from landscaped portal & deck. Kitchen & baths remodeled in 2012 with the latest contemporary finishes. $499,000. MLS 201404758. (599 to Camino La Tierra to frontage rd west, to Avenida Aldea right, to Camino Botanica right to W. Via Plaza Nueva, left, to Calle Festiva on corner.) Val Brier 505-690-0553 Keller Williams Realty.

U-23 1:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 34 Via Summa - Visit Tessera, the newest Homewise Homes community designed to fit your lifestyle from $293,500. Tucked in the northwest hills, enjoy great views, trails and open space only six miles from the Plaza. $469,900. (Take 599 to the Camino La Tierra exit, then take the Frontage Road south to Tessera. Follow the signs to Tessera Model Homes.) Augusta Candelaria (505) 603-5337 Homewise, Inc.

V-34 12:30p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 123 Spruce Street - A wonderfully updated classic home with charm and convenience. Located in desirable Casa Solana – this is one of Santa Fe’s most convenient neighborhoods. Easily stroll, roll or drive to downtown. $299,000. MLS 201400706. (West Alameda to Spruce Street.) Maureen Mestas 505-310-1050 Sotheby’s International Realty.

NORTH EAST

K-44 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 4 Thorpe Way - Custom home with clean contemporary lines in private, serene setting with majestic views. Master bedroom has Vermont cherry floors, kiva fireplace and outdoor lounge space. Kitchen is a chef’s dream! $1,597,000. MLS 201403647. (Across from The Bishops Lodge, turn onto Lamy Drive. Left onto Bishops Trail and right onto Thorpe Way.) Clara L. Dougherty - Broker Associate 505-690-0471 Dougherty Real Estate Co.,LLC.

SOUTH WEST

VV-28 1:30p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 145 Chili Line - On a great lot with big Sangre views, this 3 bed/2bath home with 3 car garage has ample space for comfortable living. Big open kitchen looks over family room and great out door spaces! $549,000. MLS 201404299. (Richards Avenue into Windmill Ridge at Rancho Viejo. Take East Chili Line to 145.) Carson & Carson 505-699-3112 Keller Williams Realty.

X-35 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1015 Dunlap Street - Beautifully kept in a great convenient location. 2 bedroom, 2 bath adobe with detached garage and mature trees. Upgraded electric, remodeled kitchen, sloped torchdown roof. $295,000. MLS 201403734. (From St. Francis turn west on Dunlap) Charles Weber 505-670-9377 Sotheby’s International Realty.

X-36 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 985 Agua Fria Unit 110 - Discover Santa Fe charm, and not on Agua Fria. This sweet home, tucked into a very private lane, is about two blocks west of St Francis, with landscaped courtyards, a gas-fired stove, and no steps. $329,000. MLS 201405113. (3 br, 2 ba, St Francis to Agua Fria, head west just past Franklin look for 985 Agua Fria sign on the right. There will be no street sign; this is a private road. Drive down lane about halfway.) Julia Gelbart 505-699-2507 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

FF-24 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 4508 C Santa Elena - This bright & cheery environment is certain to please. Great open floorplan, spacious master BA & BD suitable for kingsize bed. 2nd BD offers custom built-in’s for books & toys. washer/dryer & garag $179,000. MLS 201404130. (Zafarano to San Ignacio Rd, rt on Todos Santos St., rt on Santa Elena St. Follow to end of cul-de-sac, last driveway entrance on the right [building 4512]. 4508 has sign in 2nd story window.) Beth Fauré 505-690-2713 Adobe Realty of Santa Fe.

FF-25 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 3433 San Luis St. - MUST SEE! This charming 3BR - 2BA home has an open floor concept living room with wood-planked ceiling & vigas opens to dining room, kitchen & fenced back yard. Refrigerated AC. Drip irrigation $259,900. MLS 201404896. (Take Cerrillos Rd. to Zafarano Dr., go north to Rufina St., turn left and go to San Luis, turn left. Property at end of block on left.) Dave Brazda 505-819-1345 Keller Williams Realty.

R-43

GG-29

12:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 7521 Kachina Loop - Easy living practically downtown in a light filled remodeled home on 2 acres with privacy. Lovely views, no entry steps, a chefs kitchen, 3 bedrooms with private baths, and a bright heated garage. $800,000. MLS 201404902. (From the plaza follow Washington until it turns into Bishops Lodge Road. It’s about 1 mile on the left. Easy.) Anna Vanderlaan 505-231-3410 Keller Williams Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1002 Calle Margarita - Price Just Reduced! Convenient yet private central location. Lightfilled open floor plan with wood burning stove. Gas cooking, solid maple cabinets & breakfast bar. Park-like setting plus dog yard. $239,900. MLS 201403508. (West on Siringo. Left on Calle Margarita, which is four blocks past Camino Carlos Rey.) Jennifer H. Tomes - Broker Associate 505-690-6477 Dougherty Real Estate Co.,LLC.

KK-32 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2938 Plaza Blanca - Great, large two-story Park Plaza townhome. Two bedrooms and two full bathrooms downstairs with nice patio. Upstairs has kitchen, breakfast room, large dining/living room with fireplace. 2-car garage. $295,000. MLS 201404149. (Rodeo Road to Plaza Blanca.) David Dodge 505-690-5108 Sotheby’s International Realty.

LL-31 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 3209 Pueblo San Lazaro - Well designed & beautifully finished 2885 square foot home with soaring ceilings in the great room enhanced by dual sided fireplace with stacked flagstone.Gourmet kitchen, office, 3bedrooms, Turnkey! $439,000. MLS 201404189. (Rodeo Road to Camino Carlos Rey. West on Governor Miles Road to Nizhoni. South on Nizhoni to Pueblo Puye then west to Pueblo San Lazaro.) Carson & Carson 505699-8759 Keller Williams Realty.

MM-19 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 4366 Village Loop - Super Sweet House for a Super Sweet Price! Super Clean home built in 2004. Looks Brand New! Turn-Key and ready to move in! 3 bed/2 bath, Insulated 2 Car Garage, Refrigerated AC, Gas Heat. Come See! $199,000. MLS 201405066. (Cerrillos to Jaguar to Lucia and then Left on Village Loop) Melissa Chambers 505-660-7302 Evolve Real Estate.

OO-13 12:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 7326 Avenida El Nido - From $194,900, Homewise Homes are designed to fit your lifestyle and save up to 45% in energy costs. Quality construction and design at a price you can afford. Special financing may be available. $194,900. (From Airport Rd, turn onto Paseo del Sol WEST. Turn right onto Jaguar Rd to dead end, then turn right on Avenida El Nido.) Cande Toner 505-699-4252 Homewise, Inc.

RR-24 12:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — La Pradera Model Home - 20 Canto del Pajaro - La Pradera Model Home, open Saturdays and Sundays 12-3! Correlada Contemporary features clean lines and modern angle. 1 bedroom attached casita with interior courtyard. $359,900. MLS 201403744. (3 br, 3 ba, Richards Ave. turn right at stop light at the Dinosaur Trail intersection and turn left at 2nd entrance of La Pradera (Camino del Viento) right onto Bosquecillo to Canto del Pajaro.) Bob Lee Trujillo & Ernie Zapata 505470-0002 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

XX-13 3:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 30 Gallina Road, off Highway 14 This single-level adobe residence has amazing views, tons of Santa Fe charm, exposed adobe walls throughout, and a wonderful patio area, which connects the main house and the studio. $375,000. MLS 201404142. (Highway 14 to Bonanza Creek, left on Rancho Alegre, left on Gallina Road; home is on the right.) Karin BaxterKing 505-930-1468 Sotheby’s International Realty.

SOUTH EAST

X-39 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 604-1/2 Galisteo Street - Walk to everywhere from this 2BR, 2BA, 1,465 sq ft adobe on Galisteo Street. Updated with plaster walls, wood doors, radiant heat, double pane windows, maple floors. Quiet, in Wood Gormley district. $334,000. MLS 201204802. (West side of Galisteo street at W. Santa Fe Avneue/Paseo de Peralta.) Katherine Blagden 505-4902400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:30p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 725-1/2 Canyon Road - Charming adobe circa 1950 zoned RAC down off Canyon Road a few steps. Wood floors, vigas and beams and little sun porch off the kitchen, as well as basement and crawlspace for ease of renovation. $550,000. MLS 201403621. (Canyon Road across from Geronimo and just behind Desert Son.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

BB-38 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1467 North Miracerros Loop - This gracious, single-level home is nestled on a spacious, heavily-landscaped lot in the well-established Miracerros neighborhood and is conveniently located to all that Santa Fe has to offer. $490,000. MLS 201403411. (North on Galisteo street heading downtown. Left on Columbia Street. Right on North Miracerros loop.) Ed Schroeder 505-690-1007 Sotheby’s International Realty.

HH-41 12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 2285 Calle Cacique - Single-level residence is close to Quail Run and has easy I-25 access. Tile throughout, no carpet, kiva fireplace, large vigas in living room, separate dining room, A/C even in the sunroom. $339,000. MLS 201404040. (Single-level residence is close to Quail Run and has easy I-25 access. Tile throughout, no carpet, kiva fireplace, large vigas in living room, separate dining room, A/C even in the sunroom.) Karin Baxter-King 505-930-1468 Sotheby’s International Realty.

JJ-37 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2712 Ventoso - Stunning 6 bedroom/ 4 bath house and guest house with all the Santa Fe Charm! 3,500 sq. ft., mountain views with Chef’s kitchen, granite, vigas kivas, nichos all on half an acre central located! $695,000. MLS 201404300. (South on St. Francis, Left on Sawmill, right onto Ventoso. or Old Pecos Trail, right on Rodeo, right on Sawmill, left onto Ventoso.) Mark Banham 505-577-5273 Barker Realty LLC.

MM-37 1:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 46 Calle Cantando - Beautiful lightfilled, tri-level home. 3100 SF. 3 bedrooms with full baths plus 2 offices. Chef’s kitchen. Bamboo flooring. Sangre, Jemez and city light views. 2.5 acres. Private well. Owner/broker $710,000. MLS 201404760. (So. on St. Francis under I25 to "T" at Rabbit Road. Left. First right coming out of turn.) Barbara Blackwell 505-690-9831 Keller Williams Realty.

TT-44 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 41 Apache Plume - This wellmaintained home is 10 minutes from Santa Fe on more than an acre and offers three-bedrooms, two baths, bamboo floors, an open kitchen, lovely outdoor spaces, a fenced dog area, and views. $465,000. MLS 201305806. (Old Las Vegas Hwy to Nine Mile Road then left on Apache Plume) Stan Jones 505-310-2426 Sotheby’s International Realty.

WW-41 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 26 Camino Sudeste - Country living at its best. Charmingly conceived adobe home on 5.6 +/acres, modest horse facilities, mature irrigated gardens, walled front entry. Versatile Santa Fe home with studio/office. Views! $625,000. MLS 201404936. (3 br, 2 ba, Nine Mile Rd. right on West Sunlit Drive, turn left/west on Camino Sudeste, second house on left.) Gavin Sayers 505-690-3070 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

ELDORADO WEST

L-54 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 9 Tarro Road - Beautiful light & bright Eldorado home sited on greenebelt lot with views. 3 beds + office or 4th bedroom PLUS additional office/studio/guest/mother in law quarters- 3 bathsVigas-3 fireplaces-more! $399,875. MLS 201404765. (From 285 turn right on Avenida Eldorado-Right on avenida Casa Del Oro-Left on Tarro Rd (4th street) to home on left.) Sabine Andraud 505-690-4857 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

R-58 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 85 Camino San Lucas - Contemporary style , newly built with many green features and beautiful Euro finishes thru out in Rancho San Lucas. Expansive studio room , 2.5 acres with great mt views, natural gas, 3bed/2bath. $472,500. MLS 201403377. (Hywy 285, turn west onto Spur Ranch Road and go approximately 1 mile to the entrance of Rancho San Lucas, turn onto Camino San Lucas and go to #85. Follow the signs.) Pamela Preston 505-577-7800 Barker Realty LLC.

ELDORADO EAST

X-42

D-66

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1020 Canyon Road, Unit B - Three premier residences: Unit B $784,500, Unit F $769,000, and Unit G $849,000. Adobe homes offer unique floor plans. All three feature 2BR, 2BA, private outdoor spaces and off street parking. $784,500. MLS 201403724. (Paseo de Peralta to Canyon Road.) Rush / Van Camp / Rigatti 505984-5141 Sotheby’s International Realty.

12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 68 Camino Cabo - Belicia EstatesSingle level with split bedroom floor plan, spacious deck, large lot bordering a neighboring "greenbelt". Tile and carpeted floors, tall viga ceiling, Two car garage. Natural gas heat. $350,000. MLS 201404150. (3 br, 2 ba, Avenida Amistad, right turn into Belicia Estates.) Fred Raznick 505-577-0143 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

Y-39

H-72

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 202 Laughlin - Territorial-style condo in a quiet location in So. Capital. Updated throughout w/ tile floors, ceiling beams, kiva fireplace. A bright kitchen opens to living/dining room area. Spacious courtyard! $315,000. MLS 201403948. (Don Gaspar south turn right on Laughlin, right on Granada, left on Laughlin- dead end street.) John Hancock 505-470-5604 Barker Realty LLC.

12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 5 Calle Basilica - Wonderful adobe pueblo custom designed and built Hacienda on premium view 4+ acre lot in Dos Griegos. Open plan, split bedroom home with beam and viga ceilings throughout, and brick and Saltillo tile $465,000. MLS 201404861. (3 br, 2 ba, Avenida de Amistad ( 1st entrance ) off Hwy 285, Left onto Calle Alexia, Right onto Calle Basilica.) Sue Garfitt 505-577-2007 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

Y-42 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 564 Garcia Street - Eastside adobe home with 2 bedroom, 2 bath, and a basement. Walled and landscaped with private sitting and outdoor dining areas. Detached 2-car garage. Lovingly cared for and stylishly updated. $649,000. MLS 201405012. (Paseo de Peralta to Garcia Street; across from the Garcia Street Club Preschool.) Gary Bobolsky 505-470-0927 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Z-38 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 306 Don Fernando - Bright & spacious South Capitol neighborhood home. 1802 sq ft, 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths. Lovely wood floors, great kitchen. Big backyard. Walk to Wood Gormley school, Trader Joes, Railyard, Plaza. $500,000. MLS 201403633. (Galisteo or Don Cubero to Don Fernando.) F O’Mahony 505-699-3985 Evolve Real Estate.

Z-43 11:00a.m. - 1:30p.m. — 521 Camino Don Miguel - Classic Santa Fe style in the heart of the Eastside filled with peaceful spaces and unexpected surprises. From the moment one closes the gate, one enters a world surrounded with imagination and whimsy $997,000. MLS 201400012. (Acequia Madre to Camino Don Miguel.) Stefan Lark 505-501-6100 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Z-44 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 414 Camino Delora Unit 3 - Behind high walls in a garden retreat is the famed Alexander Girard Compound. Elegant, friendly with great views and outdoor living areas. Quiet location just off Canyon Road. Rare and private. $989,000. MLS 201404533. (2 br, 3 ba, Canyon Road to Camino Delora, right to property.) David Woodard 505-920-2000 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

OTHER 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 90a State Road 580 - Dixon (open during studio tour): 2.45 irrigated acres on the Rio Embudo w/ cute, modest house, walled yard for dogs, fruit trees, farm potential, private, views. For artists, a studio! Carport. $241,500. MLS 201305420. (Take Dixon Turnoff (75) from Highway 68. Go through Dixon, then at mile marker 3 turn Right on SR580, keep going until you see signs on left.) Barbara Graham 505-470-2081 Barker Realty LLC. 11:00a.m. - 3:30p.m. — 19 Tanager (Cr 0067) - Perfect for Artists! Energy efficient, comfortable adobe, built 2007. 3 BD, 2 BA, plaster walls, fireplace, 545 sq. ft. studio, garage, open during Dixon Tour! Quiet, private & inspirational. $379,000. MLS 201404276. (From Taos Highway 68, turn in toward Dixon on 75. Turn R. on County Road 67 (first big arroyo on R. with dirt pile, Barker sign. ) Stay right around dirt pile, follow arroyo, see signs/arrows.) Barbara Graham 505-474-0970 Barker Realty LLC.


E-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com

sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 SANTA FE

»rentals«

SANTA FE

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

Vista Linda A PA RT M E N TS

VISIT TODAY! 18 GALLINA ROAD. 11.3 Acres of luxurious country living. Fine finishes and mountain views. Room for guest house or stables. Privacy and convenience. http://youtu.be/WPpYlHezLVQ Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty, 505-988-7285. $900,000. Coleen Dearing, 505-930-9102.

Las Campanas

Bedrooms, 4 Baths, Office, Chefs Kitchen, 3 Car Garage 3,504 sq.ft. Fantastic views. Like new. MLS#201403470 $1,140,000. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818

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

CLASSIFIED DS

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

CALL 986-3 3000 3012 MONTE SERENO. 5 minutes from the Plaza, 3 minutes from the Opera. 3237 sq.ft of Luxury on 1.43 acres. All City utilities. http://youtu.be/T1yPDQaNhfc Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty, Ltd, 505-988-7285. $1,150,000. Coleen Dearing, 505-930-9102.

360 Views, 2 bedroom, 2 bath

CANYON ROAD REMODELED UPDATED

3 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, 3309 sq.ft guest house, garage, chefs kitchen, wood floors, vigas, 4 kivas, great views. MLS#201402480. $1,375,000.00 Taylor Properties 505-470-0818

OLDER ADOBE HOUSE FOR SALE $101,900. Location Cuyamungue, approximately 15 miles north of Santa Fe. Approximately 1800 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 1.5 bathrooms. Beautiful hardwood floors, new septic system, new stucco, private well. On approximately 1/2 acre. Quiet Country living. Call 505-455-2739

4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2,700 sq.ft. home in the College Heights. Fully landscaped large backyard on halfacre lot, radiant heat, kiva fireplace, dog run, 2-car garage. Walk to SFCC, Amy Biehl, Santa Maria, $429,000, brokers welcome. 505-424-3932 or email sumac3b@comcast.net

INVESTMENT PROPERTY 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.

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

CHRISTMAS Or any day you can walk downtown from this all adobe home at 736 C Agua Fria. Priced to sell at $248,000.

IS Vigas- fireplace-wood floors-tiled baths and large lot for you? Go see 422 Kathryn Pl. a well-priced Stamm built home for $ 269,000.

COMING

COUNTRY ENVIRONMENT. Comfortable, fully furnished 1 bedroom. Small yard. Local shopping, restaurants. Non-smoking, no pets. $600 utilities included. $200 deposit. 505-471-0276

1 BEDROOM $750 PLUS UTILITIES

RANCHO VIEJO FSBO

BEAUTIFUL 1207 sq.ft. 3 bedroom, 2 bath with garage. Spanish tiles, large corner lot on cul-de-sac. Lots of charm. 505-920-4905

CHARMING, FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid. Wood, Saltillo floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard, Plaza. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

LAS CAMPANAS Golf Course Home 3 bedrooms, office, detached casita. 3 1/2 baths, 3291 sq.ft. Landscaped. 3-car garage. Radiant heat, AC. Many upgrades. $1,150,000 lchomeforsale@comcast.net Custom Townhome. Near Plaza. Original owner. Fireplaces, portals, deck, fenced, Landscaped. $685,000. 505-573-8968

APARTMENTS FURNISHED

"NEW" 2014 16X80, 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. UPGRADE APPLIANCES INCLUDING WASHER, DRYER. HACIENDA MHP SP#88. $56,062.00 +TAX FINANCING AVAILABLE DOWNPAYMENTS AS LOW AS $3,000.00 O.A.C. CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 DLR#1180

Home to 4212 Vuelta Colorada each day will be a treat. 2 story, 3 bedrm, 2 ½ baths, den, 2 car garage for only $279,000.

Tile floors, refrigerator, gas stove, washer, dryer. Quiet, private, fenced yard. Pet negotiable. 505-471-1270, make appointment. 1 BEDROOM, ALL UTILITIES PAID, $750 MONTHLY . Large kitchen, living room. Hardwood floors. Parking. 1 mile to Plaza; bus service close. No pets. 505-2046160 1 BEDROOM Camino Capitan, in small complex. Kiva fireplace, carpet. Clean, quiet. No Pets. Water & Sewer paid. $670 monthly, $670 Deposit. 505-982-0798.

"NEW" 2014 16X80, 3 BEDROOM,2 BATH. UPGRADE APPLIANCES, INCLUDING WASHER, DRYER. RANCHO ZIA MHP SP#189. $56,062.00 +TAX FINANCING AVAILABLE DOWNPAYMENTS AS LOW AS $3,000.00 O.A.C. CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 DLR#1180

6332 Entrada De Milagro Monarch Properties, Inc. CONDOSTOWNHOMES 1 BEDROOM. Walk to Trader Joe’s and Railyard. Laundry room. Most utilities included. Available November 18. $775 monthly. Call 505-6600421.

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CONDO . Nice and clean. Lower unit across from pool, hot tub, laundry, workout room. Tile counters, dishwasher. Dining area, patio. $925 monthly plus utilities. 505-983-7168.

$875 PLUS utilities. Cochiti Lake, 35 minutes to Santa Fe or Albuquerque. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Garage. Pet negotiable. 505-465-2480. GORGEOUS MULTI -STORY TOWN H O U S E with fireplace, patio & decks, close to downtown. Great opportunity for the right tenant. $1499.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Rancho Siringo Road, fireplace, fenced yard. $729 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Rufina Lane, fireplace, washer, dryer hookups, close to Walmart. $729 monthly.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

TOWNHOUSE, 1200 sq.ft. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Garage, patio, storage. Washer, dryer, refrigerator. Large bright kitchen. Beautifully furnished. Convenient location. $1125 monthly. 866-363-4657

GUESTHOUSES 2 BEDROOM Newly renovated. Good location in town. No pets. Year lease. $740 plus deposit. 505-471-3907 or 930-3907.

CHECKFREE THIS OUT!!

EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936.

WASHER$420 / DRYER IN MOVES YOU IN Every Apt. Home

A 1, 2 &1 3Bedroom bedroom Apts. Apt. plus $0Available Security Deposit Fordeposit Qualified Applicants No required for & Utilities No deposit required for Utilities, How!! Ask Ask me me how! Call Today!COURT SAN MIGUEL

SANAPARTMENTS MIGUEL COURT 2029 CALLE LORCA APARTMENTS ( 12 Mo. Lease,

LARGE CLEAN FURNISHED, 1 BEDROOM GUESTHOUSE. $1,300 includes utilities. On 2 1/2 acres. Private gated driveway. No pets. 505-901-7415

505471-8325 505-471-8325

986-30 000

SUNSET VIEWS CHARMING 1 BEDROOM, 700 SQ.FT. $655, DEPOSIT PLUS UTILITIES. LAUNDRY ACCESS. CATS OK. EAST FRONTAGE ROAD. 505-699-3005.

NORTHSIDE CASITA. Furnished one bedroom. 750 sq.ft. Quiet. Private yard. DSL. Cable. $1000 monthly. Utilities included. 1-year lease. Nonsmoker. 505-412-1074.

HOUSES FURNISHED EAST SIDE FURNISHED ADOBE, ONE BEDROOM. 2 kiva fireplaces, private patio, and skylights. 6 month lease. $1,450 monthly. 800-2725678.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED $1350, 2 bedroom, 2 bath + office. Low utilities, brick tile, patio, solar, Non-smoking, no pets. Available November 1. 505-660-9402

2500 SQUARE FEET

THE STUDIOS at Las Palomas Apartments offer sleek upgraded kitchen cabinets and spacious walk-in closets. Discover the amazing amenities of our community by calling 888-482-8216 to set up a tour today!!! Hablamos Espanol!!

3 BEDROOM 2 bath. No pets, no smoking in home. $1150.00 plus utilities and deposit. Contact for appointment. 505-670-2625 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. Park Plaza. One level detached house. Granite in kitchen. Fenced yard. $1550 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 670-6190.

3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, Tapia Estates. Beautiful contemporary. Vaulted ceilings. Granite countertops. Stainless appliances. Marble fireplace. Open concept. 2 car garage. Lease. No dogs. $1500 plus deposit. 505-4718413. $850 MONTH, 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. 1610-A Jay Street, Santa Fe. Available November 1. Washer, dryer hookups. Free microwave with 1-year lease with optional renewal. Move in: $1500. 1st month rent $850 plus $650 security. Call 505-670-0898 for appointment.

SOFT CONTEMPORARY, unfurnished with open living- dining and chef’s kitchen. TWO MASTER SUITES PLUS 2 GUEST BEDROOMS- office. Sangre Mountain views. Portal with fire pit. 2.5 acres of Sierre Azul. NW Quadrant. $2,800 monthly. WesternSage. 505-690-3067

OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $275 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE

Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266 AVAILABLE NOW! FOR RENT OR SALE. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage. Rancho Viejo. Rent, $1,500 monthly plus security deposit. 505-690-7861. CANONCITO GUESTHOUSE. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Fireplace. Plastered walls, radiant heat. Bright. Washer. Quiet days, starry nights. $1200. Meria, 505-466-6390. CASITA- EASTSIDE. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY! 1 BEDROOM. Quiet area. Washer, dryer. Non-smoking, No pets. $700 monthly, plus deposit. 505490-3248, leave message. CHARMING 5-ROOM COTTAGE. 84 4th of July Canyon Road (13 miles west of Estancia). Private & secure. Section 8 compliant. Hiking trails. Near Manzano Mountains. Call 505-231-3035, 3034.

3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. 1200 sq.ft. East Alameda, pueblo style. Vigas, kiva fireplace. Refrigerator, washer, dryer. Radiant heating. Walking distance to Plaza. No pets, nonsmoking. $1700 monthly. 505-9823907 HOUSE FOR lease. 2 bed, 2 bath, 2 car garage, laundry room, near Rodeo Plaza. By appointment only. 505-982-9629.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

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

Please call (505)983-9646.

Add a pic and sell it quick!

2 BEDROOM, 1.75 BATH. Near Plaza, DeVargas. Privacy fence, washer, dryer, off-street parking. $1350 monthly includes utilities. Small pets considered. 505-907-3336

2 BEDROOM, 2 bath Home in Rowe. Fenced yard, secure compound. All appliances. $750 monthly, first, last, security deposit. 505-4700409.

986-3000 OUT OF TOWN RENTAL

HOUSE FOR rent. 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, with kitchen and livingroom. $1095 monthly plus utilities. Front and back yard. Off Rodeo Road. 505-930-0051 LARGE HOME 4 BEDROOM 3 BATH. Radiant floor heating, outdoor kitchen. Kiva. 3 acres. Gated community. Near Marty Sanchez golf course. Pets OK. $3450 MONTH. 954-261-5800

Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271

RATON, NM: $650 monthly rent or buy, 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2040 sq.ft. Refinished wood floors, new appliances. Available now, pets ok, owner finance, like new condition, best deal in New Mexico. 620 N. 1st, 480-392-8550

LIVE ON CANYON ROAD-walk to Plaza! 1bed, 1bath house, all appliances, 2 parking spaces, $1,250 month. Call text Kathy Rios at 602-291-0695.

ROOMMATE WANTED

PARK PLAZAS 3 bedroom, 2 bath, garage, 1,382 sf. Washer, dryer, kiva, fenced, pets negotiable. Nonsmoking. $1,345 plus utilities. 505470-2917

PRIVATE BATH, SHARED KITCHEN. Washer, dryer. $525. Clean, safe, quiet. No Pets. Month-to-month. Deposit. 2 miles north of Plaza. Shared bathroom, $475. 505-470-5877

PECOS CANYON RIVER HOUSE.

WAREHOUSES

2 bedroom, 1 bath. Fireplace, large front porch overlooking Pecos River. Beautiful setting. 5 miles N of Village of Pecos. Easy access. $950 monthly. Contact Leonard, 505-490-1347.

4 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fireplace. Big yard. No smoking, no pets. $1500 monthly. $1200 deposit. 505-577-2910

"NEW" 2014 16X80, 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. UPGRADE APPLIANCES INCLUDING WASHER, DRYER. RANCHO ZIA MHP SP#26. $56,062 +TAX. FINANCING AVAILABLE DOWNPAYMENTS AS LOW AS $4,000.00. O.A.C. CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 DLR#1180

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath in Pecos. $800 monthly, $500 security deposit. Washer, dryer. References required. No drugs, no pets. 505-470-5568

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

2029 CALLE LORCA required for special )

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, fireplace, wood and tile floors, washer and dryer. No pets. $750 monthly. 505-471-7587 or 505-690-5627.

EASTSIDE LOVELY ADOBE. Secluded, Santa Fe style, updated, ½ acre, organic garden, 5/3, 3015 ft2. Judith, 505-984-9849 $799,599. #20140426. http://www.hardyandcompany.com

GREEN-BUILT, ARCHITECT designed, 3200 sq. ft., 14" exterior walls, metal roof, own well, 10,000 gal. cistern, 6 + acres, views, much more. 505-988-8027

CALL 424-7590

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, 2nd floor. Clean. Newly tiled. Coronado Condos. $675 monthly plus $500 deposit. Plus utiliities. Sherri 505-699-0641

We always alwa get results!

988-5585

✓ 2-3 Bdrm Apts ✓ Private Patios ✓ Cable & W/D Hook Up ✓ Laundry Room ✓ Se Habla Español ✓ Mon-Fri 8-5, Sat 1-5

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

PECOS PALATIAL PALACE. RUSTIC AFRAME HOUSE on 1 1/2 acre, 1250 SQ FT, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, FIREPLACE, ETC, PETS, HORSES OK, MONTHLYYEARLY $957. MEL 505-228-2533.

SPANISH STYLE, 2-STORY off Governor Miles. 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 bath with den. 2800 sq.ft. on 3/4 acres. $1650, deposit. 505-412-0707

WAREHOUSE OFFICE SPACE ST. MICHAEL’S AREA

Office front, large space, high ceilings in back. Ideal for spinning class, art studio. 505-989-7266

Classifieds

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


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

North Central Regional Transit District Employment Opportunities

santafenewmexican.com

PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT The Santa Fe New Mexican has the perfect position for an early bird who likes to get the day started at the crack of dawn! We are seeking a part-time Home Delivery Assistant to deliver newspaper routes and replacement newspapers to customers, and resolve customer complaints. Must have valid NM drivers’license, impeccable driving record and be able to operate a vehicle with manual transmission. Must be able to toss newspapers, lift up to 25-50 lbs; climb in and out of vehicle, bend, climb stairs and reach above shoulder. Have hearing and vision within normal ranges. Hours are 5 to 9 a.m. Monday through Friday. Pay rate is $10.66 per hour. No benefits. Selected candidates must pass a drug screen.

FINANCE DIRECTOR

Submit references and job application or resume by Friday, November 14th, to: Human Resources The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501-2021 Or email to gbudenholzer@sfnewmexican.com Job application may be obtained at above address or 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. Or you may apply online at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. EOE

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Administrative Office of the Courts Judicial Information Division Information Technology Position The Administrative Office of the Courts in Santa Fe seeks to fill the vacancy for one (1) AOC Software Development Manager. Please visit our Web Site at http://www. nmcourts.gov under human resources/job opportunities or call 505-476-6913 for further information. Remittance of a New Mexico Judicial Branch Application, or a resume, Resume Supplemental Form and proof of education if applicable is required.

YOUR JOB LISTING DESERVES NEW MEXICAN EXPOSURE.

santafenewmexican.com

FULL-TIME PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR The Santa Fe New Mexican is looking for right candidate who has previous experience supervising and training employees to fill our full-time Production Supervisor position. Requirements include: ability to communicate verbally, to work well under fast-paced deadline pressure and to stand for prolonged periods. Must have excellent problem-solving skills and the ability to lift up to a maximum of 50 pounds and to bend, lift and pull up to 20 pounds repetitively. Hours are 7:15 AM to 3:15 PM. with pay dependent upon experience. Selected applicant must be able to pass a pre-employment drug screen. Submit application or email resume byWednesday, October 29, 2014, to: Brenda Shaffer Bshaffer@sfnewmexican.com 1 New Mexican Plaza (off I-25 frontage road) Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No Phone Calls please. Successful completion of a drug test will be required prior to employment offer. EOE

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E-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

sfnm«classifieds »announcements«

»jobs«

PERSONALS

DEAR SHIRTLESS fake-yoga dude at Larragoite Park: You may think you are some light-filled seeker of spiritual truth but you are really just a self-centered jerk. Wednesday morning, my dogs (on leashes) chased after your dogs (NOT on leashes). When my dogs hit the end of the leashes, I did a face-plant in the grass, losing my glasses and injuring my back. By the way, THAT is the reason YOUR dogs are supposed to be on leashes.) You did not have the Mindfulness nor the Humankindness to notice nor to help me up out of the dirt nor to help me find my glasses. (Do you know how hard it is to find one’s glasses when one is not wearing one’s glasses?) Please contact me through this newspaper:I would like you to reimburse me for the cost of this ad and for the six physical therapy sessions it will require to reassemble my back, Schmuck.

LOST

FEMALE BLACK and white tuxedo cat lost on Griffin Street near the cemetery on 9/25. She is small, fixed, chipped and shy. She has a white stripe under her chin and green/yellow eyes. Her lower jaw is white. Reward offered. 650-388-6960. for activists rally Immigrants,

Locally owned

and independent

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

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

50¢

mexican.com

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

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations who paid people Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann

Grimm

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010

Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street of Galisteo on Police Department’s mph stretchtary School early h on a 25

The New

LONG HAIR SIAMESE Flame Point Mix LOST October 24. Paseo Del Sol, Airport. Cream with tan points. Wearing collar with ID. 715-432-5214. REWARD! LOST CELL PHONE, PURPLE, Samsung Intensity3. Sunday, October 5, Los Pinos Road, La Cienega area. IRREPLACEABLE PICTURES. REWARD! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! 505-9899126. MISSING!! BLACK CAT, LONG FUR, WHITE SPOT ON TUMMY- 10 YEARS OLD +, MISSING FROM HOPI ROAD NEAR OSAGE (CASA ALEGRA NEIGHBORHOOD) CALL 505-930-1667.

ISN’T IT TIME TO COME CLEAN? HOUSECLEANING. 20 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE. $15 AN HOUR. Very flexible. Reliable. References. 505-316-4579

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

986-3000

ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEER ENGINEERING PROJECT MANAGER Los Alamos County. $68,704 to $106,338 annually. Requires a Bachelor’s in Engineering or related or equivalent combination of education and experience, and three years experience. Application and full info at www.losalamosnm.us or call 6628040. EOE

DOMESTIC JOBS Laundress & Housekeeper Live on beautiful estate.

505-660-6440

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

CALL 986-3000 ACCOUNTING NEEDED: BOOKKEEPER FOR A SMALL CPA FIRM. Must be well-versed in AR, AP, and GL. Send Resume to: PO Box 5373, Santa Fe, NM 87502

ADMINISTRATIVE ADMINISTRATIVE EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT

to the President and CEO for a nonprofit foundation. See full position description at http://www.museumfoundation.or g/employment

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

to place your ad, call

ASSISTANT PROPERTY MANAGER for HUD Property. Tax credit or HUD preferred but will train the right person. Bilingual in Spanish Required. Benefits after 90 days. Monday-Friday 8-5. Please send Resumes to: Fax: 505-983-1816 or by email: sdca@monarchnm.com. This is an EEO.

EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER with Class B CDL, clean driving record and experience needed for Santa Fe construction company. Call 505-6909727.

DRIVERS

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

COMPUTERS IT VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR AN IT NETWORK ADMINISTRATOR . MUST HAVE A BACHELOR’S DEGREE IN IT AND 5 YEARS OF EXPERIECE IN RELATED FIELD. SALARY BETWEEN 40K AND UP $70K + BENEFITS, DEPENDING ON EXPERIENCE. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL FILLED. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-989-5305 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us . Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us .

Offices Services Manager For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.sjc.edu. Go to the bottom of the home page and Click on—“Administrative Offices” under Santa Fe “Employment.” This is a full-time, 35 hours per week, contract position. Send resume, letter of intent, salary history and names, addresses and phone numbers of three professional references to santafe.jobs@sjc.edu. Resume packets will be accepted until interviews begin. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

SECRETARY WANTED. Person with great computer skills including photoshop. Flexible hours, $10 hourly. Santa Fe Area. Please call 505-988-3322.

SEEKING CARE POSITION Highly skilled care giver. Couples, individual. All levels personal, custodial care. Nurturing happy home life, home management. Meal prep, serve. Wonderful listener, reader. Cleaning, laundry. Handyman, repairs. REFERENCES. 505204-6799.

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

PATIENT REGISTRATION CHECK-OUT SPECIALIST TECHNICIAN TRAINEE Santa Fe Clinic

TWO LOST DOGS, Eldorado. Yellow Labrador Retriever, "Bud dy," and Shepard Mix, "Ella." Doggy neighbors. Lost October 22. Both micro-chipped. 505-216-4563, 505395-2155

NURSING ASSISTANT RN-PACU / HOLDING AREA Santa Fe Surgery Center

Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed position open at our Santa Fe Clinic and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com. Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.

business & service exploresantafetcom CLEANING

Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!

CONSTRUCTION

GARDENING

directory«

HANDYMAN

LANDSCAPING

SAND & GRAVEL

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

A+ Professional Cleaning Service Homes, Office, Move-ins- Move-outs. Also, House and Pet sitting. Dependable, Experienced. $18 hourly. Julia, 505-204-1677.

MOVERS

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

FIREWOOD Clean Houses Inside and out. Windows, carpets. $18 per hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449. GLORIA’SPROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE -Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072.

MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062. Will clean houses and offices. Good references. Reasonable prices. Call Silvia Membreno 505-316-2402

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. New wood, tile, brick and flagstone flooring installation. Licensed, Bonded. Senior Discount 15%. 505-469-6363

BEFORE

THE FROST IS ON THE PUMPKIN CALL GREENCARD LANDSCAPING

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

Add a pic and sell it quick!

PHIL’S HAULING. Dump runs, cleaning, moving, deliveries, tree removal, hassles handled. Up to 6 tons/ load. Reasonable, reliable, punctual. 505670-6100

LANDSCAPING

Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, plumbing, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-3107552. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

986-3000

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877

DCP INC. Interior & Exterior Painting, Drywall, Plaster & Stucco repair. Custom cabinet refinishing. Licensed, Insured. Senior Discount 15%. 505-469-6363

PERSONAL ASSISTANT. Compassionate, educated, discreet. Available for organizing, bookkeeping, household management. Event Planning. Specialize in working with seniors. 505-204-2210.

AC JACK, LLC SERVICES. All your home and yard needs. Flowerbeds, trees, & irrigation maintenance available. Email: lealch32@q.com 505-474-6197, 505-913-9272.

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

PLASTERING RESTORATIONS Re-Stuccos, Parapet Repairs, Patching Interior & Exterior. Call for estimates, 505-310-7552.

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

BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLE PRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RELIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-9821207

PERSONAL SERVICES

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

CONSTRUCTION

PAINTING

HAULING OR YARD WORK

PREP FOR WINTER! Mulching, pruning, clean-up, planting. Get it done right the first time! Have a woman do it. Full service landscape design & installation. Santa Fe. Los Alamos, White Rock. 505-310-0045,505-995-0318 www.greencardlandscaping.com

HANDYMAN

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.

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

ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Foam roof maintenance. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182.

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

STORAGE A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. FIRST MONTH FREE! 505455-2815.

TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. Large load firewood branches, $100 delivered. 473-4129

YARD MAINTENANCE FALL CLEANUP! Trash, brush and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-204-3186. 505-316-2936. YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. We Move Furniture. Any work you need done I can do! Call George, 505-316-1599.

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

Look for these businesses on exploresantafetcom Call us today for your FREE BUSINESS CARDS!*

986-3000

*With your paid Business and Service Directory advertising program.


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL DENTAL

DRIVERS

to place your ad, call MEDICAL DENTAL

986-3000 ART

FULL-TIME ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSESSTAFF DEVELOPMENT COORDINATOR

PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT

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.

The Santa Fe New Mexican has the perfect position for an early bird who likes to get the day started at the crack of dawn! We are seeking a part-time Home Delivery Assistant to deliver newspaper routes and replacement newspapers to customers, and resolve customer complaints. Must have valid NM drivers’ license, impeccable driving record and be able to operate a vehicle with manual transmission. Must be able to toss newspapers, lift up to 25-50 lbs; climb in and out of vehicle, bend, climb stairs and reach above shoulder. Have hearing and vision within normal ranges. Hours are 5 to 9 a.m. Monday through Friday. Pay rate is $10.66 per hour. No benefits. Selected candidates must pass a drug screen. Submit references and job application or resume by Friday, November 14th, to: Human Resources The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501-2021 Or email to gbudenholzer@ sfnew m exican. com Job application may be obtained at above address or 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. Or you may apply online at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. EOE

LPN/RN

WE HAVE A RN/LPN POSITIONS AVALIABLE. THE SHIFTS ARE 6AM6:30PM OR 6PM- 6:30AM, 3 DAYS ON AND 4 DAYS OFF.

CNA’S

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

RN Temporary, on-call position working with The Hospice Center. Provides services in patients’ places of residence. Apply on-line at pmsnm.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook.

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

FULL-TIME MEDICAL ESTHETICIAN for busy medical center. Must have a current license & experience in administrating chemical peels & laser treatments. Fax resume: 505988-3160.

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

EDUCATION

RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE wanted for SANTA FE ANIMAL SHELTER RESALE STORE on Cordova Road. Excellent customer service skills required. Email resume to: ablalock@sfhumanesociety.org STAGER, STORE JANITOR and Bilingual (English-Spanish) Salesperson needed! Stager is responsible for keeping the store and premises of building in clean and orderly condition, accurately and efficiently receive inventory, and assist with merchandise tagging. Must be able to lift and/or move up to 100 pounds. Physical ability test required. Salesperson must have a positive attitude and excellent customer service skills. Sales experience preferred. Background check and drug screen required. Call 505-780-8720 for more information. EOE.

TECHNICAL

BEAUTIFUL 33" high Bronze by Liz Wolf 2/15 less than 1/2 price $3750. Medical issues. Must Sell. Last great piece I own! colavs19@comcast.net or 505-471-4316.

Children’s Services Coordinators -Health and Nutrition -Family Services Full-time positions with Santa Fe Children’s Services Head Start and Early Head Start programs. Require degree and experience working with young children and families. See website for specific requirements.

Apply on-line at pmsnm.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook. LICENSED MASTER LEVEL T H E R A P I S T S : ALBUQUERQUE, ESPANOLA, TAOS OPENINGS: LICENSED MASTER LEVEL THERAPISTS: Immediate Opening all Locations. Serving Northern New Mexico, several locations available, Albuquerque, Espanola and Taos. Openings in outpatient and inpatient ARTC. Experience in individual, group, adolescent, family and couples therapy. Experience working with addictions a plus. Master level, licensed in the State of New Mexico. Must have current and in good standing an LMSW, LISW, LPCC, LMHC or Ph.D. CLINICAL SUPERVISOR: Ta os Openings. Master’s Degree in relevant field required, Independent Licensure preferred, needed to supervise masters level therapists at outpatient behavioral health clinic serving Native Americans in Northern New Mexico. Will also carry a small case load providing individual, group, and family work for all ages. Need professional skilled in clinical and administrative supervision and program development. Experience with addictions a plus. Experience working with Native Americans preferred. ABUSE OUTPATIENT COUNSELOR: Albuquerque and Espanola Openings. Under the direction of the Clinical Supervisor provide a range of clinical services to clients with Chemical abuse and dependency problems Requires licensure, LSAA, LADAC, LMSW, LPCC, LPC, LMHC. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: R C a t a @ e n i p c . o r g or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) or PO Box 969, Ohkay Owingeh, NM, 87566. ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. Generous Benefits Package. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment*

Excellent benefits. Apply on-line at pmsnm.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Hotline 1-866661-5491 EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow our jobs on Facebook. HOSPITALITY

Immediate openings for Full-time and Part-time:

Certified Activity Directors

for all levels of Long Term Care. Experience preferred. Great medical and retirement benefits for Full-time staff, shift differential pay & pleasant working environment. Full time opening for:

Experienced Prep Cook

Must be able to work weekends and holidays. This is an excellent opportunity to work in a great environment with full benefits. English speaking a must. Email your resume to hum anresources@ elcnm .com or fax to 505-983-3828.

IN HOME CARE IN HOME HEALTH CARE WORKER. ESPANOLA area. Working 34 hours a week. Send resume or pick up application. Ecromero@cybermesa.com Hwy 68, County Road 44-A. Building 26 Alcalde. 505-852-0088. Application deadline November 7.

MANAGEMENT MANAGEMENT Director, The Circles

for a non-profit foundation. Program and events management for the foundation’s premier membership program. See full position description at http://www.museumfoundation.or g/employment

Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

986-3000 NM LICENSED PHYSICAL THERAPIST for outpatient orthopedic clinic, November 10-28. Competitive pay. May lead to full-time with benefits. Call 505-992-4995. Fax 992-4985 sfsm@comcast.net Attention Julie.

Hi, my name is: Hannah is quite a charmer. This affectionate and soft 12wk old gal is looking for a home where she can soak up the sweet life of sunbeams and long afternoon naps. While she still enjoys batting around toy mice and crinkly balls every now and then.

For more information contact the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 108 Hamm Pkwy, Española or call (505) 753-8662. More animals are available on the website at evalleyshelter.org.

for fulltime hours with benefit package and desirable working conditions. Interested, qualified applicants email resume to pat.donahue@swentnm.com

»merchandise«

FURNITURE

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

36" ROUND SOUTHWEST PINE TABLE by local craftman with bullet carvings $250. Chairs to match, $125 each. Call Fabio 505-982-3214.

HOSPITAL BED. All steel. Electrical & Manual. New mattress. $100. 505-4711297, Santa Fe.

6 Dining chairs (set), beautiful medium-dark wood with carving. Excellent condition. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.

NEW INVACARE COMPLETE HO M E FILL UNIT. Concentrator, compressor, 2 bottles, regulator, & rack. Retail $3,600. Sell $1000. 505-795-1714, leave message.

6’ DIning Table. Beautiful medium dark wood, with carving on apron. Excellent condition. $500 OBO. Matching chairs available. 505-2319133.

MISCELLANEOUS

OIL PAINTING by Fremont Ellis, Spring on Rio La Plata- ca: 1950s painting size 19"x23" framed 27"x31" price $7,700. 505-699-0657

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES

ANTIQUE BRASS & GREY metal day bed. Complete with bolsters, cover, newly-replaced mattress. Excellent condition. $350. 505-989-7087.

DUNCAN KILN (teachers) model, with furniture kit. $350. 505-471-1297, Santa Fe.

BED: OAK EXPRESS TWIN BOOKCASE BED. 3-drawer, excellent condition. 45"Wx72"L. $350 OBO. 505-466-6205

FANTASTIC SET: top Quality Inks and Technical pen set =leading manufacturers! $40 OBO. 847-507-0025

CASSETTE TAPES. Opera, Classical, & Spanish Guitar. Large collection. $25. OBO. 505-231-9133

BUILDING MATERIALS

COFFEE TABLE, small, medium stain, (pottery barn?), good condition. (hospital area). First, $25, 269-3411021.

REMODEL SPECIAL Excellent quality. GE Microwave $150. GE Electric Oven, $200. Kohler cast iron tub $500. Kohler toilet, $150. Bathroom and kitchen sink Kohler fixtures including hardware. Miscellaneous under-counter lights. 2 custom-colored light fixtures, $250. Best offer. 314-503-3311.

CLOTHING

Seeking Registered Polysomnographic Technologist;

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

1. MEADE ASTRONOMICAL 8" APERTURE REFLECTING TELESCOPE LX90ACF, Value $1799. 2. CELESTRON 1.25" EYEPIECE AND FILTER KIT in a metal, foam-lined carry case, value $150. Total price $1250 OBO. 505-984-2069 or 505-570-9040.

Home Health Aide Part-time positions with Community Home Health Care and The Hospice Center. Must be graduate of Nurse Aide program or have exper in direct patient care in institutional setting or with home health or hospice agency.

MIDCENTRY MODERN chrome chair frames. Need repholstery. $50. 505231-9133. NEARLY NEW heavy dining table. Three chairs and a bench. Used only by a l’il old lady on Sundays after church. $340. Please call 575-6219267.

OAK CORNER 505-471-1086

computer desk. $40.

OFF-WHITE-ULTRA SUEDE Sofa,

NATURAL RANCH MINK COAT of Mink Tails, Full Length 46"L. Straight Sleeve with Bracelet Cuff. 12" side slit. $499. 847-507-0025

PERGO FLOORING, brand new with lining, enough for 2 bedrooms! KOHLER SINK & FAUCET. Plus garage of more great miscellaneous stuff. 505-471-8356. ROASTER - DUTCH OVEN. Large size. Wagner Ware, Magnolite Model 4267P. $60. 505-471-3105

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BUFFALO DRUM. Rawhide lacing, 13". $60. 505-474-9020. CASSETTE TAPES. Opera, Classical, & Spanish Guitar. Large collection. $25. OBO. 505-231-9133

PANASONIC ANALOG TV. 26". Works great. $25. 505-231-9133

FENDI SOFA

RIKON DUST Extractor with dust hood and stand. Used very little. $250. Call 505-466-3534.

BALOUCH TRIBAL RUG. New pictorial. 3’x4.5’ $250 OBO. MOVING, MUST SELL. Call to view in Santa Fe. 518763-2401. Photo Online.

NATIVITY SET, Avon 10 piece painted porcelain. $250. 505-471-1297, Santa Fe.

Large Book Collection. Prices reduced! First editions. Biographies, Novels. No dealers. All hardcover. Great condition. Only $10 or less. 505474-9020

GRIZZLY 6" WOOD JOINER with mobile base. Excellent Condition. $395. Call 505-466-3534.

COLLECTIBLES 1984 HESSTON RODEO JR. BUCKLE & BELT, size 26" waist. $95 for set. REDMAN BELT BUCKLE, solid brass, $30. 505-466-6205

ATTENTION! MISCELLANEOUS C ONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES. VINYL AND STEEL SIDING, vinyl windows, metal brake and metal coil stock. Ladders and ladder jacks. 2 30’ metal walk boards. 2 shell campers for 8’ pickup bed. 8’ tool cap for pickup. 19’ camper RV trailer. 2 desks with chairs and file cabinets. All in Arroyo Seco. Call 505690-1133 for appointment.

TOOLS MACHINERY

TV RADIO STEREO

Black Velvet Painting, vintage 50’s Two unicorns in front of two hearts with words "I LOVE YOU". Framed. $35. 505-474-9020

24" SONY TV. Great condition, $45. 505-471-3105. PAIR BLACK Cabinets- Sideboard,

»animals«

NATIVITY SETS, Avon 1981. 18 piece, white porcelain. $300. 505-471-1297, Santa Fe.

ANTIQUES

E-11

PERSIAN RUG, floral. Antique, Semiantique. 2’x3.10.’ $250 OBO. MOVING, MUST SELL. Call to view in Santa Fe. 518-763-2401. Photo Online.

FIREWOOD-FUEL 20TH CENTURY D E S I G N , M I D CENTURY, BUY AND SELL, 131 West San Francisco Street, Friday & Saturday, 12 to 5, or call for appointment. 505-988-2013 or 847-567-3991.

FIREWOOD Get yours now! Cedar, Pinon, Russian Olive…Quantity discounts. Full cords available. Call for prices & delivery options. 505-231-3035.

APPLIANCES

POTTERY BARN SOFA COVER. New, in package. Reversible, sage green. $50. 505-231-9133

Quality, Stainless steel 3 hole sink, utility sink, wall mount hand washing sink. All complete with sprayers, faucets. $500, 928-242-3708. RICE COOKER - FOOD STEAMER. Black & Decker. Barely used. $14. 505231-9133

ART

Vintage KNOLL Conference- Dining Table Marble Top, Pair STENDIGWASSILY Chairs, Pair Red-Leather DWRChairsOttomans, LEVENGERCherry modular Bookcase- Cabinets. 505-995-1114.

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

QUEEN BED Frame with fat rollers, works fine. (hospital area). $15, 269341-1021.

30-YEAR-OLD HORSE wants stablemate. $400 per month. Includes stall, hay, arena and daily care. Inquire at 505-231-8570.

SEASONED FIREWOOD: P ONDEROSA, $100 PER LOAD. J u niper, $120 per load. CALL: 508444-0087. Delivery FREE TO ALBUQUERQUE & SANTA FE !

ROBOTIC MASSAGE chair. Tan leather. New condition. Top-of-theline quality. $550 OBO. 505-6604505.

HORSE TRAILER EQUIPMENT

FURNITURE

SOFA & Love seat, like new. Sofa Table, Oak Cabinet, Microwave, white. All good condition. All for just $300. 310-918-8819

JEWELRY COSTUME JEWELRY. Assorted necklaces and other items. $30. 505-4713105.

BEAUTIFUL 33" high Bronze by Liz Wolf 2/15 less than 1/2 price $3750. Medical issues, Must Sell. Last great piece I own! colavs19@comcast.net or 505-471-4316.

LAWN & GARDEN 2 MEXICAN TIN MIRRORS, floor length. $300 each. 505-988-1715

BLUE IRIS tubers. FREE. 505-954-1144.

HEREFORD BRAND TEX TAN WESTERN SADDLE 15". Mule Skinner design, sturdy construction, modern seat, leather latigo strap, cinch, tie strings, stamp design. Excellent condition, $350. www.textan.com 520-906-9399 (Santa Fe).


E-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, November 2, 2014

sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES

»cars & trucks«

to place your ad, call DOMESTIC

AAA T-CUP & TOY pups 575-910-1818 txt4pics. $400-$1200 Hypoallergenic,non-shedding. Reg, shots, guarantee, POTTYPAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN. Debit/Credit/PAYPAL. Financing available. HYBRID YORKIES, MALTESE, YORKY-POOS CHIHUAHUAS, MALTYPOOS POODLES MORKIES POMERANIANS. USDA licensed. cingard1@hotmail.com

CHEVROLET IMPALA 2004 118000 miles Brand New Tires. $4,800 OBO Cash Only! Call 505-473-2728.

AUTOS WANTED

MALTESE AND Maltypoos, Shihtzu/Maltese, Morkie/Shihtzu. Reg, shots and health guar POTTYPAD trained. $500+ PAYMENT PLAN Credit cards/ PAYPAL. 575-9101818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com

Add a pic and sell it quick!

MIN SCHNAUZER, Min DOXIE & CHIHUAHUAS Reg, shots, guar. POTTYPAD trained. $300-500. PAYMENT Plan. CreditCds & PAYPAL. 575910-1818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com PARTY POMERANIANS Registered, shots POTTYPAD trained. $800+ PAYMENT PLAN. Credit Cards, PAYPAL. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Taking deposits. cingard1@hotmail.com USDA licensed.

Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS Meet Adoptable Animals

DOMESTIC

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

ADORABLE AND Loveable registered female yorkie for sale. 7 months old. Loves to cuddle and play. $1000. 575779-1737 CHRISTMAS PUPPIES! Labrador puppies for sale. AKC litter papers, six week shots, and more. Call for appointment. 505-469-0055. Taking deposits.

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

986-3000

2007 FORD EDGE-SEL-AWD Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-smoker,Rear Entertainment, Navigation, Loaded, Pristine, S o o o o DESIRABLE $14,950

2011 Audi A3 TDI DIESEL!!! Over 40mpg, heated leather, immaculate single owner clean, CarFax

2009 LEXUS IS250. Looks, drives like new. 53k. Loaded. Navigator, luxury package. Pristine. Garaged. Book $23,500. Asking $21,500 OBO. 505-6999641

$21,471. 505-913-2900

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! FOR SALE BY OWNER. 2000 VW Passat. Silver. 1.8 turbo. 5 speed. 214,000 miles. $1,750. 505-629-8932.

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

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.

986-3000

2007 LEXUS RX350 80k $20,871. 505-216-3800.

4X4s 1985 4x4 Ford F250 Flat Bed. With 6.9 Diesel. $2500 OBO. Call 505-699-4452.

2004 HONDA ACCORD -Dk Grey -auto, EX w/leather and super clean and 1 owner, low miles and ready to go. $11,261. Call 505-216-3800.

HEAVY EQUIPMENT

Saturday, November 1 PetSmart Santa Fe

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

for activists rally Immigrants,

2011 Ford Mustang GT WHite Premium -auto, upgraded sound, low miles and V8 power to boot. You will enjoy this one. $25,671 505-216-3800.

Locally owned

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

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

50¢

mexican.com

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

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann

Grimm

CALL 986-3010

Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street of Galisteo on Police Department’s mph stretcht ry School early h n a 25

The New

2004 HONDA Accord LX. 99K miles. Very clean. Well maintained. No scratches or dents. No rust. Nonsmoker. $3000. Call or text 469-5540177.

Sunday, November 2 PetSmart Santa Fe 3561 Zafarano Drive Noon-4 p.m. Visit sfhumanesociety.org

T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding/Hypoallergenic. $600-800. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed/FREE delivery. Financing available

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

3561 Zafarano Drive 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding, Hypoallergenic. $600-800. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed/FREE delivery. Financing available

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2009 Mercedes-Benz ML550 AWD local trade, Factory Certified 100k mile warranty, fast and loaded, clean CarFax, IMMACULATE! $27,832 505913-2900

2012 RAM 3500 CREW CAB FLATBED, VERY SHARP,BUY OF THE WEEK. T1431 $42,900 CALL 505473-1234. WE WILL BUY YOUR USED CAR REGARDLESS IF YOU BUY A CAR FROM US! COME SEE US TODAY! 505-216-3800

2008 FORD MUSTANG DELUXE COUPE. BLACK. 2 door, auto transmission, V-6. Cloth seats. 80,000 miles. Well maintained. $10,949 OBO. Call 505471-4795.

CLASSIC CARS

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2013 Lexus RX350 AWD recent Mercedes trade-in! rare Saddle leather interior, navigation, heated/cooled leather, single owner clean CarFax, STUNNING! $39,991. 505-913-2900

2011 MINI COOPER Countryman-S. WOW- Just 24k miles! Turbocharged,, single owner, clean CarFax. Perfect! Don’t miss it! $23,871. Call 505-2163800.

CALL 986-3000 2013 JEEP WRANGLER,4DR 4X4 FUN,WINTER READY P1769 $31700 CALL 505-473-1234.

TONY- Young male, Chi- Terrier mix. Friendly and sweet. 1.5 years. SMALL DOG RESCUE OF SANTA FE. Information, 505-438-3749.

VINTAGE 1962 MERCEDES BENZ. 220 SEL. Convertible. Good running condition. Automatic transmission. $25,000. 505-989-4826.

Winterlife

YORKIES! FULL Blooded & Yorkiepoos, Morkies, Shorkies. Reg, shots and guaranteed. POTTYPAD trained. $500+ CreditCards/PAYPAL PAYMENT plan 575-910-1818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com

»garage sale«

1965 VW KARMANN GHIA COUPE. 50 year-old classic. Meticulously maintained, and has been continously garaged. Excellent running condition. Good battery, tires, rebuilt, aircooled engine. No rust! 505-690-2901

2014-15 WINTER GUIDE to Santa Fe a nd Northern New M ex ico

2013 JEEP WRANGLER,HARDTOP 23K MILES PRICED TO GO $35,688T1820 CALL 505-473-1234.

DOMESTIC

SNOWMOBILING how, where, why CUP O’JOE where to go

GARAGE SALE NORTH 520 PASEO de Peralta, Saturday 11/1 & Sunday 11/2, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Multi Family Sale! Furniture, household items, clothing, toys, car seat, and more!! Come check it out!! No Early Birds.

ESTATE SALES

2013 Cadillac Escalade Premium AWD another local single owner trade! over $70k New! heated/cooled leather, navigation, clean CarFax, PRISTINE! $49,991 505-913-2900

2006 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4 ONE OWNER,KEPT NICE, YOURS TO ENJOY $12956- T1816 CALL 505-4731234.

CLOTHING SALE SUNDAY, 1-5 Casual, Contemporary Women’s clothes, shoes & accessories. Armani, Max Mara, Escada, Tahari, Eileen Fisher, Ralph Lauren... Chanel. 1010 MOUNTAIN ROAD (AT THE TOP).

HOT SPRINGS in winter

TAOS REBOOT & regional ski resort news

2001 OLDSMOBILE ALERO For sale by original owner. Fully loaded GLS. 176,000 miles. NADA retail $3,400. Asking $2,750 as is. 505-690-1875.

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Packed with a season-full of fun, including: Local Ski Area Information Lectures and Museum Exhibits Hearty Feasting Fare Santa Fe Coffeehouses

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Sunday, November 9 in the


Sunday, November 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2011 MINI CountryMan auto, prem pkg, roof, prem sound, super fun. $23,871. Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Toyota Avalon XLE Premium another Mercedes trade! Low miles, leather, local one owner clean CarFax $26,721 505-913-2900

to place your ad, call

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PICKUP TRUCKS

IMPORTS

2001 Toyota Camry LE new tires, auto, very well maintianed and low miles $6,981 Call 505-216-3800.

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

2013 MODEL S 85K. 12,900 miles. Loaded, has all premium packages. Black roof, tan leather interior. Coast 93K, Asking $75,000. 575-776-2885

2008 CHEVY SILVERADO2500 DURAMAX

.

2012 Nissan Juke SL AWD only 14k miles, fully loaded navigation & leather, single owner clean CarFax $21,831. Call 505-216-3800.

Another One Owner, Local, Garaged, Non-Smoker Every Service Record, 37,453 Miles, X-Keys, Manuals, 5th Wheel Hitch (Removable), Bed Liner, Leather, New Tires, Every available Option, Pristine, Soooo HARD TO COME BY $ CALL

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WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2001 PORSCHE Carrera 4 Cabriolet. Silver, Black int., top, 6 speed manual, 18" alloy wheels, 6 cd with nav, hardtop. 48,500 miles $26,000.00 OBO 505-690-2497.

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505-983-4945

2012 BLACK CADILLAC SRX. Excellent condition. 22,000 miles. $29,000 OBO. 505-577-1688. TOYOTA HIGHLANDER Limited 2004 Silver Highlander LTD Lthr AC Roof rack. 87000 miles. 3rd row seat. Rear bumper paint scratches. $11,550. 505982-1038

PAWS (PECOS PEOPLE FOR ANIMAL WELFARE SOCIETY) TRAVEL TRAILER FOR SALE 4-horse gooseneck Exiss Event Trailer with living package. AC, heat, microwave, refrigerator, cabinets and sink. Drop down windows. 4 saddle racks, aluminum floors, mats, padded on sides, generator and much more. With generator $17,000; without $14,000. Used very little. Money Supports PAWS Spay & Neuter Program. 505-466-0091, 505-466-1525

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VANS & BUSES

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2007 DODGE-RAM-SLT 1500 QUAD-CAB 4X4

2013 TOYOTA Camry SE..NEW BODY...auto, bluetooth, moon roof, loaded and 1 owner. $19,797. Call 505-2163800.

PAWS SPECIAL. 30’ GOOSENECK TRAVEL TRAILER Great for camping or temporary living. Good shape. $3000. Money supports PAWS Spay and Neuter Program. 505-466-0091

Another Caring Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo DESIRABLE $14,950

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2006 TOYOTA Sienna LE, Light Blue, 7passenger, tow bar, roof rack, 91,500 miles, have Carfax and Experian reports, $11,500/offer 505-466-0714

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»recreational«

505-983-4945 2011 NISSAN Maxima S. Local trade! New tires, single owner clean CarFax. NICE! $17,821. Call 505-2163800.

CAMPERS & RVs

SUVs

2013 TOYOTA Avalon XLE Touring WOW just 3k miles, orig MSRP over $36k, loaded w/ navigation, clean CarFax $29,831. CALL 505-216-3800.

2011 NISSAN Juke AWD-SV..auto,VDC, prem sound, XM. real clean. $19,821. Call 505-216-3800.

E-13

2015 SANDPAPER fiberglass fifth wheel. 42 ft, 5 slides, 2 bedrooms, 2 airs, washer, dryer. 4 seasons outside kitchen. Many more options. 505-315-4630 OBO

2014 Volkswagen Passat SEL 2011 TOYOTA Camry LE just 33k miles, local one owner clean CarFax, pristine condition $15,871. Call 505-216-3800.

Premium TDI rare DIESEL!!! Over 40mpg, every option, heated leather, sunroof, Fender sound, pristine clean CarFax $28,971 . 505-913-2900

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BICYCLES LINEAR ALUMINUM RECUMBENT BIKE. Collapsible. Lifetime Warranty. 42" frame. $2,500 new today. Neck & back friendly. $499. Richard 505-9868367, 505-699-6649.

2009 NISSAN MAXIMA-SFWD A nother

One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, X-Keys, Manuals, Every Imaginable Option, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo NISSAN SOPHISTICATED, $14,950.

2011 SCAMP Trailer, 13ft, propane stove, Marine Battery. Lightweight, Great condition, good tires, one bed plus bed pullout. $6,000. 505-6905887.

2011 TOYOTA RAV4, 58,000 miles, blutooth, records & manuals. Garaged, excellent condition. $17,200. 505231-4481

CAMPERS & RVs

2013 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN-SEL-4MOTION

2011 Ford F150 Crew Cab Lariat

Another One Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Remaining Factory Warranty, 15,790 Miles, Every Available Option, Why Buy New, Pristine, Soooo INTOXICATING BEAUTIFUL $29,450

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

AL’S RV CENTER

4x4 EcoBoost only 30k miles! fully loaded Lariat, pristine, single owner clean CarFax, turbo V6 $34,821 505913-2900 .

2004 FORD ALLEGRO: 31’L, 32K MILES, GAS, FORD V10, "NO SLIDEOUTS", SLEEPS 6, GREAT CONDITION! $19,700.00 575-770-9442, 3447.

505-983-4945 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 TOYOTA/FJ Cruiser 4WD -auto, green with white top, loaded up and service up to date. Come drive it. $26,711 Call 505-216-3800.

Need someone to work on your RV? Call Al, over 42 years of experience. 505-203-6313, 505-5771938.

View vehicle & Carfax:

Halloween Fun at

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2014 RAV4 Limited only 3k and 1 owner. loaded and PRICE way below new...COME SEE IT!. CALL 505-2163800.

2010 TOYOTA Prius II 34k $18,841. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Volkswagen CC Luxury ANOTHER Mercedes trade-in! Loaded, leather, navigation, immaculate, clean CarFax $17,951 505-913-2900

.

2012 Subaru Outback

Marcy Street Halloween costume contest winners: 1st Prize – Wayne Barnard and Amy Fleeson, King and Queen of Hearts; 2nd Prize – Kristi Salazar, Mad Hatter; 3rd Prize – Luis Sanchez, Black Widow. Others included – Natalie Guillen, Green Goblin’s GF; Ray Rivera, Robert Nott; Heidi Melendrez, Sarah Palin; Geri Budenholzer, Lady Bug; Sharon Ahern, Dark White Rabbit; Chris Alexander, Undiscovered British Rock Star; Cindy Turner, Alice; Jeana Francis, Devil; Claudia Freeman, Spidey Witch and Devil’s GF; and Ashley Gallegos, Princess Leia.

2.5i Premium only 20k miles, heated seats, AWD, great fuel economy, one owner clean CarFax $22,871 505-9132900 .

2010 TOYOTA Prius II, •ELECTRONIC THROTTLE control system w/intelligence (ETCS-i) -inc: Eco, EV & power driving modes $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505-216-3800.

NM Plaza Halloween costume contest winners: 1st Prize – Louie Velez, Nacho Libre/Casino Count; 2nd Prize – Cindy San Miguel, Minnie Mouse; 3rd Prize – Connie Rojas, Ghost.

2009 Subaru Legacy GT Limited recent trade-in! low miles, AWD, turbo, heated leather, moonroof, awesome single owner clean CarFax $17,991 . 505-913-2900

2009 Toyota Venza AWD V6 fully loaded, leather, JBL sound, single owner clean CarFax $23,851 . Call 505-216-3800.

2013 VW CC Panorama pwr tilting sunroof, Leatherette seat trim Heated 12-way pwr front sport bucket seats, $25,871. Call 505-216-3800.

Others included -- Jessica Vargas, The Fallen Angel; Gabe DeHerrera, Jason; Gretta Fogal, ‘80s Chick; Geri Budenholzer, The Nice Witch. Also pictured: The Skeleton.


E-14

THE NEW MEXICAN

Sunday, November 2, 2014

TIME OUT

Size isn’t an issue

M

Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014: This year you have the ability to make heads turn when you walk into a room. You will learn to use that gift when need be. Remember, we transform as our desires transform. If you are single, even if you meet someone who knocks your socks off, take your time getting to know him or her. This person’s appearance could be very different from his or her true self. If you are attached, you could see a new addition to your family, or a change involving your home. Know that this will add to your commitment to your sweetie. Pisces can confuse you at times. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You might appreciate a day off. When someone else suggests that very thing, you’ll want to grab the opportunity. You really need to stop worrying about everything so much. A friend is likely to stroll right in through your front door. Tonight: Don’t stay up late. This Week: What you believe will happen is likely to prove inaccurate.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You could be rather fun to be with. Be spontaneous, and bring your friends together. You will be all smiles when you’re surrounded by the people you love. Someone close to you might be a little out of sorts. Don’t take this person too seriously. Tonight: Make nice. This Week: Much of the next few days will be spent mulling over a decision. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You might question your involvement with someone who can be demanding. You also could be mixing work and play a little too much. Try not to overthink. Tonight: Out enjoying every minute of the weekend. This Week: New information comes forward. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH You could be thrilled by what is going on with a child or loved one. A trip might be in the offing, whether it is for business or pleasure. Make this trip worth your time, and incorporate a special visit with a close friend. Tonight: Start sharing some of your ideas for a getaway. This Week: Unexpected responsibilities could create a very hectic few days.

Last week’s answer

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You will want time with a special loved one, and you will make sure that it happens. Hang out together where others will not look for you. This person needs quality one-on-one time. Your personality tends to help others drop their defenses. Tonight: Go for what you want. This Week: Deal directly with others. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Your inner circle seems to be spending a lot of energy on drawing you into their plans. You can’t spread yourself so thin that you won’t enjoy yourself. Someone you meet today might not be as he or she appears. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s wishes. This Week: Defer to others. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Take today to relax and catch up on a home project. You might feel distracted and not sure which way to turn. You also could feel awkward when dealing with a favorite person who seems to be touchy right now. Tonight: You are best on a oneon-one level. This Week: Don’t interfere with others’ plans. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Your resourcefulness will come forward in a romantic or family situation. You seem to have a lot more to give when you relax. You also enjoy yourself more under these circumstances. Listen to your instincts.

Chess quiz

Tonight: Be more playful. This Week: Your mind is a source of unusual creativity. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21) HHHH If responsibilities fall on you, it is because you seem to be able to step up to the plate more easily than many other people can. You tend to be very intuitive regarding what others really need as opposed to what they say they need. Tonight: Order in, if possible. This Week: You will be unusually creative and charming. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH You are likely to make calls to those you care about, but who you rarely see and/or visit with. If you can, fit one or more of these people into your plans for today. You will enjoy all the reminiscing and all the friendly smiles. Tonight: Wherever you are, there is a party. This Week: If you can, work from home. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You have a wild streak, which will make you think outside the box. What you are capable of, especially on a day like today, could set your imagination on fire. Make it a point not to go overboard. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Live it up! This Week: Put the brakes on your love of socializing. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Don’t hold yourself back. In fact, use today’s energy to further your simple vision of a perfect Sunday. Others will seek you out. Choose to go for what you desire today and with whom. Tonight: Make a note to call people back tomorrow. This Week: Be more present in the moment.

Scratch pad

WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. Kc1! (threatens Qb2 or Qb1 checkmate [from Setheraman-Chu ’14].

New York Times Sunday Crossword

y funny feminist friend Gina Barreca just alerted me to a new study in the prestigious British Medical Journal concluding that postmenopausal women whose skirt sizes have increased by just a single size every 10 years have a substantially higher risk of developing breast cancer. Gina wanted to talk with me about it here. Gina: I am furious about this. Gene: I can see why. This study is deeply unfair to women. Gina: Exactly! Gene: Clearly, it is overstating the danger of normal, moderate weight gain. ... Gina: Exactly! Gene: ... since dress manufacturers have cravenly recalibrated their sizes over the years to reduce anxiety in Gene clothes shopping. This means that a Weingarten size 18 from three decades ago might The Washington be labeled a size 12 today, meaning that Post women who only have gained a moderate amount of weight probably would have stayed at the same official dress size over the years, meaning that those whose dress sizes actually increase by one are really gaining more weight than that modest-seeming increase implies. Meaning the study is needlessly alarming and does a disservice to women. Gina: Exac ... wait, no! Gene: No? Gina: That’s not my point at all. Gene:But it’s true, isn’t it? I know a woman who is the same size she was in 1975. Back then, she was a size 4. Now she is a size 0. Same bod. Surely, this sort of patronizing, fashion-industry nonsense must upset you, as a feminist. Gina: This is not what we are discussing. We are discussing a study that makes the perfectly obvious point that weight gain is unhealthy, particularly belly weight, but that chooses to do it through the nonsensical, guilt-inducing metric of “skirt size,” which is shaming behavior, plain and simple. What is this study actually telling us? That women over 50 tend to get more breast cancer and we also tend to put on weight? Yeah? That’s called being alive. I’d love to weigh what I weighed at 25, but to have the British Medical Journal taunting me about “skirt size”? That just makes me want to eat eclairs. This is wildly condescending and paternalistic. Gene: Maternalistic, maybe. From the study’s abstract, I see there are nine scientists who conducted it. Judging from their given names, five are women and four are men. The female majority wasn’t arithmetically established until I checked, and “Usha” is female. Gina: Gene: It means “princess” in Hindi. So I’m pretty sure Usha’s a she. Five to four, girls. Gina: Gene: You are not doing well here. Is all I am saying. Gina: : The gender of the researchers doesn’t matter: It’s the larger issue, you should forgive the expression, that assumes women only remember to be healthy by being instructed through the girly-ness of clothing size. It would be like saying, “We know you can’t wrap your tiny little heads around the great big concept of ‘health,’ so we’ll help you by demonstrating it through a language we know you gals understand so here goes: If you can’t fit into a hula hoop without using a lubricant, you might want to cut down on the gravy.” If you want proof of the study’s condescension, look no further than its final lines: “From a public health prospective these findings are significant as they provide women with a simple and easy to understand message.” Gene: But isn’t it at least an effort to warn women about a health risk? Gina: This study is not going to help women lose weight. What it will help women lose is respect for a medical profession that treats our sex with contempt. And if they want to do tests about whether size matters, most of us would suggest they don’t begin with skirts.


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