Santa Fe New Mexican, Oct. 19, 2014

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Shelter opens doors to overnight guests as weather cools Local News, C-1

Locally owned and independent

Hilltoppers give peak performance at Rio Rancho Shootout Sports, D-1

Sunday, October 19, 2014

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Report details blunders in effort to control Ebola

Union OKs hospital deal

The World Health Organization finds there was not one pivotal blunder, but a series, that boosted the virus. Page A-8

Nurses and support staff at Santa Fe’s only general hospital overwhelmingly ratify a contract, ending months of acrimonious negotiations that centered on staffing standards at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. Local News, C-1

Bishops scrap welcome to gays

Restrictions create obstacles for budding local industry, patients States issue vertical IDs primarily to make it easier to determine the age of the cardholder. The ID is still valid after the cardholder turns 21, but many local businesses won’t serve alcohol to vertical ID holders, just to be safe.

Banks’ new rules burn medical pot business

Vertical ID bans leave some young drinkers dry

Synod concludes with signs of split at Vatican By Nicole Winfield and Daniela Petroff The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Catholic bishops scrapped their landmark welcome to gays Saturday, showing deep divisions at the end of a two-week meeting sought by Pope Francis to chart a more merciful approach to ministering to Catholic families. The bishops approved a final report covering a host of issues related to Catholic family life, acknowledging there were “positive elements” in civil heterosexual unions outside the church and even in cases when men and women were living together outside marriage. They also said the church must respect Catholics in their moral evaluation of “methods used to regulate births,” a seemingly significant deviation from church teaching barring any

By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican

After a recent two-day motorcycle ride in Colorado, Jay Bennett stopped in Taos on his way back to Santa Fe and ordered what he said was a delicious local amber ale. That night, he and his girlfriend went out to dinner in Santa Fe at La Choza on Alarid Street. He wanted another beer. But instead of getting an IPA, Bennett got a shot of reality. Even though Bennett is 22, he said, the bartender wouldn’t accept his Washington state-issued identification card because it’s vertical instead of horizontal. It’s not the first time this has happened to him, and he’s not alone. Others have reported that other Santa Fe

Patient care coordinator Garrett Thompson helps a customer at NewMexiCann Natural Medicine on Wednesday. Photos by Jane Phillips/The New Mexican

By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican

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Please see ID, Page A-4

Today Scattered thunderstorms. High 69, low 43. Page D-6

Obituaries

Dorotha Helen Gosling, 84, Linda S. Bell, 75, Santa Fe, Oct. 10 Las Cruces, Oct. 15 Stella Ortiz, 93, Arthur (Arturo) Santa Fe, Oct. 16 Carolyn Well, Carrillo, Oct. 14 Santa Fe, Oct. 13 Flavio Garcia, Oct. 17 Page C-2

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Of Montreal Indie rock, Pillar Point opens, 8 p.m., Skylight, 139 W. San Francisco St., $20 in advance online at holdmyticket.com.

Index

A client pays cash Wednesday for medical marijuana at NewMexiCann Natural Medicine in Santa Fe. The company, and other businesses like it around the state, could generate about $20 million in sales this year, but there’s no place to put the cash since banks began refusing deposits from cannabis businesses a few months ago.

Please see WELCOME, Page A-5

or the first time since opening his medical cannabis business, Len Goodman feels like a drug dealer. Goodman and his wife, Susan, are owners of NewMexiCann, a state-licensed provider of medical marijuana to some 1,300 customers. With one location in Santa Fe, they soon hope to expand here and open a shop in Taos. But as of this week, they have no bank to service their business or their customers. Len Goodman said his patrons cannot use credit cards, so they must pay with cash or a check. His 23 employees are paid with dollar bills stuffed in envelopes, and he has to shuffle money off-site several times a day to seven different safes at undisclosed locations. All vendors — such as a janitorial service — have been pre-paid until the end of the year.

‘Personally, I would have been very worried and saddened … if everyone had been in agreement or silent in a false and acquiescent peace,’ Pope Francis told the synod after Saturday’s vote.

Please see BURN, Page A-5

Andrew Medichini/The Associated Press

Indian schools struggle with decay, poverty Similarities at many of 183 sites overseen by feds include decrepit facilities, low student performance By Kimberly Hefling The Associated Press

WINSLOW, Ariz. — On a desert outpost miles from the closest paved road, Navajo students at the Little Singer Community School gleefully

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taste traditional fry bread during the school’s heritage week. “It reminds us of the Native American people a long time ago,” says a smiling 9-year-old, Arissa Chee. The cheer comes in the midst of dire surroundings: Little Singer, like

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so many of the 183 Indian schools overseen by the federal government, is verging on decrepit. The school, which serves 81 students, consists of a cluster of rundown classroom buildings containing asbestos, radon, mice, mold and flimsy outside door locks. The newest building, a large, white monolithic dome that is nearly 20 years old, houses the gym. On a recent day, students carried

chairs above their heads while they changed classes, so they would have a place to sit. These are schools, says Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, whose department is responsible for them, “that you or I would not feel good sending our kids to, and I don’t feel good sending Indian kids there, either.”

Please see SCHOOLS, Page A-4

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

NATION&WORLD Hong Kong protesters hit streets, sparking new clashes By Michael Forsythe and Alan Wong The New York Times

HONG KONG — The police clashed with hundreds of prodemocracy protesters in the densely populated Mong Kok neighborhood early Sunday in the second straight day of violence after demonstrators recaptured blocks of city streets from the police. More than 100 police officers — many with shields, batons and helmets — faced off against an even greater number of demonstrators and their supporters on Nathan Road, one of Hong Kong’s busiest shopping streets. The police turned a stretch of the southbound lanes of the thoroughfare into a parking lot for their vans and buses. Officers advanced on the barricades just after midnight. At least three people were hurt, the police said in a statement, which also said that a police officer suffered a shoulder injury. Members of a first-aid station set up by protesters said several protesters were hurt. The clashes erupted after demonstrators, who had been staging a sitin in the area around the intersection for almost three weeks, were largely cleared out early Friday in a swift police operation. That backfired that evening and early Saturday, when thousands of demonstrators outnumbered the police, leading the officers to withdraw after clashes that police say injured 15 officers and 26 protesters. The Mong Kok neighborhood is one of three in Hong Kong that for the past three weeks has been the site of demonstrations by people demanding democratic elections to choose Hong Kong’s top leader. The clash Sunday morning followed an announcement Saturday by Hong Kong’s government that it would hold talks with student protest leaders Tuesday, the start of a formal dialogue that could ease tensions. Separately, in his first public comment since the start of the protests, Hong Kong’s police commissioner, Andy Tsang, condemned “radical” protesters for charging the police line and said they had broken the law by gathering in Mong Kok on Friday. Hong Kong returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. As part of the transfer agreement, the territory was to be allowed to run its own domestic affairs. But Beijing has final say over any changes to Hong Kong’s mini-constitution. The protests were set off when China’s legislature, run by the Communist Party, created guidelines for the 2017 elections that effectively ensured that only candidates approved by Beijing would appear on the ballot for chief executive.

Yachts that have broken away from their moorings sit on a rock Saturday in Hamilton Harbour after Hurricane Gonzalo hit Bermuda. Gonzalo crushed trees and flattened power lines during an hourslong battering. DAVID SKINNER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bermuda clears mess left by Hurricane Gonzalo Hawaii threatened by Ana with sustained 80 mph winds; storm to downgrade to a tropical storm by late Sunday By Josh Ball and Danica Coto The Associated Press

HAMILTON, Bermuda rews cleared away downed trees and power lines Saturday after Hurricane Gonzalo battered this tiny, wealthy British territory for several hours but caused no deaths or serious injuries. The storm’s center crossed over Bermuda late Friday and Gonzalo quickly moved northward over the Atlantic on a track that could take it just off the shore of Newfoundland in Canada early Sunday. More than 18,000 homes in Bermuda were still without power Saturday night, but Premier Michael Dunkley said cleanup efforts were going smoothly. He said the U.S., Britain and other nations have offered assistance. Gonzalo approached Bermuda as a Category 3 storm then weakened to Category 2 strength just before coming ashore with sustained winds of 110 mph. Even after beginning to move away, its fierce winds battered the island for hours. Maria Frith, who owns Grape Bay Cottages on Bermuda’s south coast, said in a phone interview that the hurricane woke her up before dawn when it tore the patio roof off her house. “To be perfectly honest with you, I was terrified, partly because of the noise,” she said. “It was really scary.” Some Bermudians woke up to toppled concrete walls, uprooted palm trees and boats run aground. Gonzalo ripped part of the roof off the island’s legislature as well as the roof of an exhibit at the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum & Zoo. No catastrophic damage was reported on Bermuda, which has one of the highest percapita incomes in the world and is known for strict building codes meant to ensure homes can withstand sustained winds of at least 110 mph.

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Officials: Forensic evidence supports Ferguson officer Forensic evidence shows Michael Brown’s blood on the gun, uniform and inside the car of Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, law enforcement officials said, information they believe potentially corroborates the officer’s story that the unarmed 18-year-old tried to take his gun. The evidence will make it harder for the Justice Department to prosecute Officer Darren Wilson on federal charges that he violated Brown’s civil rights, said the officials, who asked their names be withheld Michael because of the sensitivity of the case. Brown Such evidence would also make it difficult for a county grand jury to indict Wilson on state charges, such as murder or manslaughter, said county sources who also are prohibited from talking on the record about the pending case. The St. Louis County police, the FBI and a county grand jury are investigating the shooting. The Justice Department is investigating Ferguson and St. Louis County policing practices and whether they have violated the rights of residents. Wilson, who is white, fatally shot Brown, an African American, on Aug. 9 in the majority black St. Louis suburb of Ferguson. The three-minute encounter on a sunny Saturday afternoon has rocked the metro area, which remains on edge as it faces continued protests and waits for the grand jury to decide whether Wilson should face any charges in Brown’s death.

College: Arrests, injuries during pumpkin fest KEENE, N.H. — Keene State College officials say off-campus gatherings coinciding with an annual pumpkin festival in the New Hampshire city of Keene escalated, leading to arrests and injuries. School officials provided few specifics on Saturday’s melee but said Keene State students and out-oftown visitors were involved. Student Ellery Murray told The Boston Globe she was at a party that had drawn a huge crowd when people started throwing rocks, pumpkins, buckets and other things. She said police responded in riot gear and used tear gas to break up the crowd. New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan said state and local safety officials worked to defuse what she called “the situation.” Emergency officials said hours after the commotion broke out that they were still working the scene and couldn’t provide any details. College President Anne Huot said in an emailed statement that the festival has been promoted by others “as a destination for destructive and raucous behavior” and the college had tried on the front end, in working with the city and campus, to prevent this from happening. “We deplore the actions of those whose only purpose was to cause mayhem,” she said, adding that the students involved will be held accountable.

Va. police say remains found; could be of missing student CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Police searchers found human remains on Saturday that could be those of a University of Virginia sophomore who has been missing since Sept. 13. Further forensic tests are needed to confirm whether the remains are those of Hannah Graham, but Graham’s parents were notified of the preliminary findings, Charlottesville Police Chief Timothy Longo told a news conference. The Albemarle County Police Department also said a volunteer search for Graham that had been planned for Sunday has been canceled so law enforcement can turn their attention to the new evidence. Longo said a search team from the Chesterfield County Sheriff’s Office found the remains on an abandoned property in southern Albemarle County — the same region where police found the body of 20-yearold Virginia Tech student Morgan Harrington three months after she vanished in 2009. Last month, after arresting a suspect in Graham’s disappearance, police said they found a “forensic link” between the two cases. New Mexican wire services

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The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Gonzalo weakened as it moved away from Bermuda on a track that would take it past Newfoundland and then across the Atlantic to Britain and Ireland. Late Saturday, the storm was centered 360 miles southwest of Cape Race, Newfoundland, with maximum sustained winds of 90 mph as it moved northeast at 39 mph. Forecasters said it would pass close to Cape Race early Sunday. Officials said there could be some flooding. Hurricane warnings were in effect for the Grand Banks area, where three major offshore oil installations are located. Operators of the Hibernia, Terra Nova and SeaRose sites announced no plans to evacuate the three crews, which generally total more than 700. Across the Atlantic, Britain’s meteorological agency issued an alert for strong winds and heavy rain expected Tuesday from the remains of Gonzalo. It warned of the potential for significant disruption of travel and difficult driving conditions. Gonzalo earlier claimed one life in the Dutch territory of St. Maarten and the hurricane center said it could still whip up dangerous surf on portions of the U.S. coast and Canada. In southern Mexico, the brief Tropical Storm Trudy was downgraded to a tropical depression as it continued to dump heavy rain. Authorities warned of the danger of flash floods and landslides. Also in the Pacific, Hurricane Ana was weakening a bit as it moved to the west of Hawaii, producing high waves, strong winds and heavy rains that prompted a flood advisory. The center of the storm was about 135 miles southwest of Honolulu, the National Weather Service said. Forecasters said the storm, which had sustained winds of about 80 mph, was likely to pass closer to Kauai late Saturday than originally expected but was staying out to sea. The hurricane is expected to gradually weaken and become a tropical storm by Sunday afternoon. The American Red Cross closed its evacuation shelters on the Big Island and opened shelters on Oahu. Island Air suspended its Maui and Lanai flights Saturday afternoon and all flights Sunday, but airports remained open.

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Sunday, Oct. 19, 2014 HIGH DESERT WINDS: St. Francis Auditorium, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave. Wind ensemble; Meditations, music of SaintSäens, Alfred Reed, and John Barnes, 2 p.m., no charge, concordiasantafe.org. SANTA FE SYMPHONY: The Lensic, Fall Gold, featuring guest conductor Oriol Sans and guitarist Jason Vieaux, music of Tchaikovsky, Rossini and Márquez, 4 p.m., $11-$76, discounts available, 983-1414 or 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org. OF MONTREAL: Skylight. Indie pop-rock band, Pillar Point opens, 8 p.m., $20, holdmyticket.com. “THE EFFECT OF GAMMA RAYS ON MAN-IN-THE-MOON MARIGOLDS”: Santa Fe Playhouse, 142 E. DeVargas St. Paul Zindel’s 1964 play, directed by Quinn Mander, 2 p.m., $20, discounts available, 988-4262, closing night. GALLERY PANEL DISCUSSION: David Richard Gallery, 544 S. Guadalupe St., 983-9555. Panelists include art critic Peter Frank and Albuquerque Museum of Art curator Andrew Connors, 2 p.m. DAVID BACON: LAND AND WATER USE: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. A conversation with

Lotteries the KSFR radio Living on the Edge host, 11 a.m., presented by Journey Santa Fe. FRIENDS OF THE SANTA FE PUBLIC LIBRARY BOOK SALE: Southside Branch, 6599 Jaguar Drive. $4 bag day; includes children’s books, and VHS videotapes, 1-3:30 p.m., santafelibraryfriends.org. MAX EVANS AND ROBERT NOTT: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. The local authors celebrate Goin’ Crazy With Sam Peckinpah and All Our Friends, 3 p.m. BANDELIER WILDERNESS DAY HIKE: The hike will start at the Ponderosa Campground at Bandelier National Monument at 8 a.m. The total hiking distance is around 8 miles and hiking time should be five to six hours. Bring plenty of water, lunch and snacks, good hiking shoes and appropriate clothing for the weather. Call the visitor center at 672-3861, ext. 517, for details and to sign up. SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS GIRLHOOD (BANDE DE FILLES): Marieme, 16, starts a new life after meeting a group of free-spirited girls. This film directed by Céline Sciamma is a coming-of-age story that is set in the projects of Paris; 7:30 p.m. at the Center for Contemporary Arts. Tickets: tickets.ticketssantafe.org.

TOY RUN: Starting at 9 a.m. at Santa Fe Harley-Davidson, the Pueblo of Pojoaque Boys & Girls Clubs hosts it 10th Annual Halloween/ChristmasToy Run. At the store, there will be a visit from Santa Claus for the kids as well as free breakfast and drinks for everyone until noon. The bikers will then travel to the QB’s Sports Bar in Pojoaque where they each donate an unused toy and stay to enjoy a benefit dance from 1 to 6 p.m. For more information, call 455-3659. WALKING IN HARMONY: At 6 p.m. at the Aldea Community Labyrinth, Vista Precioso and the Labyrinth Resource Group will host an outdoor labyrinth walk, followed by an indoor potluck supper. The walk will be accompanied by crystal bowls soundscape by Rick Bastine. For more information and directions to this free event, visit www.labyrinthresourcegroup.org or call call 670-1106.

NIGHTLIFE Sunday, Oct. 19, 2014 DUEL BREWING: CD-release party for folk singer/songwriter Jim Keaveny’s album Out of Time, 5-7 p.m., no cover. 1228 Parkway Drive. EVANGELO’S: Tone and Company jam band, 8:30 p.m., call for cover. 200 W. San Francisco St., 982-9014.

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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. For more events, see the Family Page in today’s edition, Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com.


WORLD

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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After weeks of delay, U.S.-led strike kills 8 in Syrian town Iraq appoints two Airstrike targets State-held to fill security posts Islamic gas facility State was enabled in part by disenchantment among Sunnis. For interior minister, a BAGHDAD — After weeks of coveted post overseeing the negotiations, Iraq’s Parliament nation’s police forces, the lawapproved on Saturday two nom- makers approved Mohammed inees to lead ministries respon- Salem al-Ghabban, a member of sible for the nation’s security the Badr Organization, a Shiite forces, filling voids that highpolitical group that controls lighted sectarian tensions in the a militia fighting alongside government as the country tries government forces against the to mount an effective military Islamic State. response to the Islamic State. The Badr Organization had Prime Minister Haider albeen pressing al-Abadi to name Abadi had struggled to fill the one of its members to reflect the powerful Cabinet posts as he party’s strong showing in the sought candidates with enough recent parliamentary elections. support to win approval but not Al-Abadi had been reluctant so contentious as to undermine to pick a Badr candidate because the tenuous unity government he feared that appointing someof Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds. one closely associated with a The ministries — interior militia would jeopardize his plan and defense — are particularly for a more inclusive administraimportant because each controls tion. The Badr Organization’s an array of security forces fightarmed wing has been accused ing the Islamic State, also known of torturing and killing Sunnis, as ISIS and ISIL. Many lawmakespecially during the sectarian ers, regardless of their misgivings violence of the mid-2000s. about one candidate or the other, Al-Abadi had won praise welcomed the vote as a matter of from Sunnis for resisting the survival for the country. candidacy of the Badr Organiza“We have two names for two tion’s chief, Hadi al-Ameri. Badr ministries and it’s not about officials, however, reportedly their personalities,” Mithal althreatened to withdraw from Alusi, a Sunni lawmaker, said. the government if one of their “It’s about Iraq and about the members was not nominated situation we are in right now.” for the post. Al-Abadi, a Shiite, has been Al-Ghabban, a longtime activunder pressure to form a more ist against Saddam Hussein, representative government that was detained in 1979 and later can bridge the country’s divides lived in exile in Iran. His canand win the trust of Sunnis didacy was opposed by some alienated by the highly sectarian Sunni lawmakers who said alpolicies of his predecessor, Nouri Ghabban was simply a proxy for al-Maliki. The advance of Islamic al-Ameri. By Kirk Semple

The New York times

Cautious optimism over kidnapped girls Report: Boko Haram agrees to truce and to free 200 abducted Nigerian schoolgirls By Chika Oduah and Michelle Faul The Associated Press

ABUJA, Nigeria — There’s no dancing in the streets, but people in the hometown of more than 200 kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls are cautiously optimistic about news of a ceasefire with the Islamic extremists who abducted their daughters six months ago. “We don’t know how true it is until we prove it,” said Bana Lawan, chairman of Chibok Local Government Area. “We will know the negotiations were successful when we see the girls physically. And then we will know it is true. And then we will celebrate.” Community leader Pogu Bitrus says “people rejoiced, but with caution.” Both men said residents have been disappointed too many times in the past by reports of progress by Nigeria’s government and military that later proved to be false. That is why they are skeptical of the army’s announcement Friday that Boko Haram extremists have agreed to an immediate cease-fire. Some reports said the truce includes an agreement to free the girls missing from Chibok town. But government spokesman Mike Omeri would say only that

authorities are “inching closer to the release of the Chibok girls.” On Friday, French President François Hollande welcomed the “good news” and told a news conference in Paris that the girls’ release “could happen in the coming hours and days.” France has been involved in negotiations that led to the release of several of its citizens kidnapped by Boko Haram in Cameroon. Neither Hollande nor Nigerian government officials gave any details. There was no immediate word from Boko Haram, which limits its public engagement to video announcements by its leader, Abubakar Shekau. Last year, when a government minister announced an agreement, Shekau quickly denied it. He said at that time that whoever the government negotiated with did not speak for him, and that he would never talk to infidels. Chibok community leader Bitrus told The Associated Press in a telephone interview, “We are waiting, hoping that it is really true and that the people who negotiated on Boko Haram’s side, that they are the genuine leaders.” Boko Haram — the group’s nickname means “education is sinful” — drew international condemnation with the April kidnapping of 276 girls and young women at a boarding school in the remote northeastern town of Chibok. Dozens escaped in the first couple of days, but 219 remain missing.

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By Elena Becatoros and Diaa Hadid The Associated Press

MURSITPINAR, Turkey — A U.S.-led coalition airstrike on a gas distribution facility in a stronghold of the Islamic State group set off a series of secondary explosions and killed at least eight people in eastern Syria, activists said Saturday. The airstrike targeted a distribution station in the town of Khasham in the oilrich province of Deir el-Zour late Friday, Deir el-Zour Free Radio, an activist collective, said on its Facebook page. The collective named four of those killed and said another four charred bodies were placed in a nearby mosque. It said the slain men were mostly fuel tanker drivers. Another activist group, the Deir el-Zour Network, described “long tongues of flames” from the strike. The incident was also reported by the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on a network of activists inside Syria. The U.S.-led coalition has aggressively targeted Islamic State-held oil facilities in Syria, which provide a key source of income for the militants. But such strikes also endanger civilians, which could undermine long-term efforts to destroy the group. Other airstrikes late Friday targeted oil wells in the Deir el-Zour province, the activists said. There was no immediate comment by the U.S. military. The U.S.-led coalition began a bombing campaign against the Islamic State group, also known as ISIS, in Syria in late September after striking at the extremists in neighboring Iraq, where they

Backdropped by Kobani, in Syria, a Turkish forces armored vehicle patrols the border road Saturday in Mursitpinar on the outskirts of Suruc. LEFTERIS PITARAKIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

also hold swaths of territory. In recent days, much of the coalition’s strikes have focused around the Syrian border town of Kobani, also known as Ayn Arab, which Islamic State militants have been trying to seize since mid-September. On Saturday, Islamic State militants fired a barrage of mortar rounds toward Kobani, focusing their efforts near the border crossing with Turkey. Some of the shells landed in Turkish territory, but did not cause any damage. As gun and mortar fire in the town echoed across the border, at least five coalition airstrikes sent plumes of black smoke into the sky. Idriss Nassan, a senior Kobani official, said the airstrikes had helped halt the advance of the militants. But he said the Kurdish fighters defending Kobani would need more weapons and ammunition to save the town. “Airstrikes are not enough,” said Nassan. “It’s reduced ISIS, but it’s not enough to defeat them,” he said. The Kurdish forces’ efforts to rearm have been stymied by Turkey, which has long viewed the main Kurdish fighting force in Kobani — the People’s Protection Units, or YPG — with suspicion over its links to the Kurdish PKK insurgent group operating in Turkey. Turkey has also demanded that the coali-

tion widen its campaign against the IS group by providing greater aid to Syrian rebels, who are battling both the extremist group and President Bashar Assad’s forces. Syrian government airstrikes on a rebel-held town near Damascus killed at least 16 people late Friday as part of intensified efforts by government forces to secure approaches to the capital, activists said.

At least five strikes targeted the town of Douma on Friday evening, said local activist Hassan Taqulden and the Observatory, which said the bombs killed at least three children and one woman. “There are people under the rubble and we can’t help them,” Taqulden said. An online video purportedly showing the aftermath of the strikes showed a bloodied little girl with a bandage around her head and a toddler on a hospital cot. The video appeared genuine and was consistent with Associated Press reporting. Syrian state media said late Friday that government forces had attacked “terrorists” in Douma. The government routinely refers to rebels as terrorists, and does not acknowledge civilian casualties. Syria’s air force has stepped up its bombing of Douma over the past three months as part of a broader battle to assert government control around Damascus and prevent rebels from staging attacks from the city’s outskirts. Rebel attacks have also killed scores of civilians.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

ID: Businesses fear the repercussions of selling alcohol to a minor Continued from Page A-1 bars, restaurants and liquor stores won’t serve alcohol to someone with a vertical ID even though they’re old enough to buy alcoholic beverages. “It doesn’t make sense to deny people something they’re legally allowed to buy,” said Brian Sweeney, who witnessed a group of men who were “clearly over 21” leave Marble Brewery in Santa Fe after they were denied service recently. “We live in America. If you’re 21, you should be able to buy alcohol,” he said. The practice of not accepting vertical IDs comes at the same time the city is trying to breathe new life into its nighttime economy and make Santa Fe a more hip and happening place. At least one Santa Fe business, the Cowgirl BBQ , displays a sign inside the restaurant stating that vertical IDs are not accepted as proof of age. Nicholas Ballas, one of the owners, said they don’t accept vertical IDs to ensure that no one under the age of 21 is consuming alcohol. “If they have a corroborating form of state-issued ID that shows that they’re 21, we’re more than happy to serve somebody,” he said. “But the vertical ID alone has been abused notoriously, so we’re just being extra careful.” The issue is not unique to Santa Fe. The Internet is riddled with stories of people with vertical IDs who have been denied alcohol even though they’re of legal age to buy it. States, including New Mexico, issue vertical IDs to people who are under 21 primarily to make it easier for law enforcement, as well as retailers, to determine the age of the cardholder. The ID is still valid after the cardholder turns 21. While at least one state — Arizona — makes it illegal to sell alcohol to anyone with a vertical ID regardless of age, New Mexico doesn’t. “Many establishments have adopted this as a corporate practice, because their insurance company requires it or to minimize the risk of accidental alco-

Aiming to err on the side of caution, Cowgirl BBQ does not accept vertical IDs alone as proof that a patron is old enough to buy alcohol, owner Nick Ballas says. A sign behind the bar, left, informs customers of the restaurant’s policy. PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

hol service to minors,” S.U. Mahesh, a spokesman for the New Mexico Alcohol and Gaming Division, said in an email. “The law is a floor for standards, not a ceiling, and businesses are free to adopt more strict practices in line with their own policies.” Sarah Carswell, general manager at La Choza, expressed surprise that one of her bartenders wouldn’t accept Bennett’s vertical ID. She said the restaurant doesn’t have a “set policy” and that servers are free to use discretion. “I try to respect people’s personal boundaries without saying it’s a house policy,” she said. “So, if somebody who is 19 years of age and has just been through the certification process [to serve alcohol] and it’s their first night out on the floor and somebody presents them with a vertical ID, a very classic default would

be, ‘Oh, I’m sorry, I can’t accept that.’ But I think it’s ridiculous,” she said. “I can’t imagine not accepting a vertical ID as long as all the information that’s on the license provides us with the information that we need in order to verify the age of the person ordering the beer.” Bennett said his ID isn’t expired because he renewed it before leaving the country to study abroad for four months. He said it’s vertical because he got it just weeks before turning 21. “Of course, a refused beer here and there isn’t a tragedy, but it seems to me that the vertical ID policy is an unnecessary handicap on local businesses,” said Bennett, who was so incensed by his experience at La Choza and elsewhere that he penned a “My View” published in The New Mexican. “As I suggested in the ‘My View’ article, scanners and black lights would provide better protection against fraudulent identification and ultimately save businesses money,” Bennett added.

CeCe Martinez, who works at Rodeo Plaza Liquors on Rodeo Road, said the store will accept vertical IDs to sell cigarettes but only sometimes for alcohol. “Every now and then, we’ll tell somebody, ‘We’ll take it this time, but not again,’ ” she said. Businesses, however, fear the repercussions of selling alcohol to a minor. A first offense carries a fine of up to $2,000 and a one-day suspension of alcohol sales. For three or more offenses within a 12-month period, the penalty is a $10,000 fine and a revocation of the state-issued license to sell liquor. “It’s a very serious thing, and so we’re really, really careful about that,” said John Rickey, general manager at La Fonda on the Plaza. A man from Midland, Texas, recently wrote a letter to the editor stating that his 21-year-old daughter was denied a glass of wine at the bar at La Fonda because she has a vertical ID. “She is currently working an internship at a resort in northern New

Mexico and was aware that she might be carded, so she brought not only her valid Texas driver’s license, but also her birth certificate, her Social Security card and her current university identification with photograph. She was still denied service,” Kelly Cook wrote. “I am wondering where common sense went in Santa Fe.” Cook did not respond to a message seeking comment. Rickey said La Fonda will accept a vertical ID if the cardholder can provide proof showing that they have a new ID on the way after they’ve turned 21. “We’re trying to be a responsible business doing the right thing, and I understand some people may be upset about it and it might cause some hurt feelings here and there,” he said. “But I would rather do that than have one of my staff get in trouble or the hotel get in trouble. There’s a lot of risk in regards to that, so we try to err on that side of caution.” Rickey said New Mexico’s liquor laws require the buyer to have a valid form of ID. “Even if you’re as old as me, and I’m in my mid 50s — what little hair I have left is gray, so it’s real obvious that I’m not under 21 — technically for a server to serve me, they should be seeing some form of identification,” he said. Sweeney, who said he witnessed four men leave Marble Brewery on a recent Monday after they were refused service over the vertical ID, said the policy of not accepting vertical IDs is hurting businesses financially — and it isn’t helping Santa Fe’s reputation. “Santa Fe certainly has a reputation as not being a haven for younger people, and the mayor is obviously going to great pains to change that,” he said. “This seems to me a natural change to be made to make the city more welcoming to young people, especially the nightlife.” Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @danieljchacon.

Schools: An estimated $1.3B needed to replace, refurbish facilities Continued from Page A-1 Federally owned schools for Native Americans on reservations are marked by remoteness, extreme poverty and few construction dollars. The schools serve about 48,000 children, or about 7 percent of Indian students, and are among the country’s lowest performing. At Little Singer, less than one-quarter of students were deemed proficient in reading and math on a 2012-13 assessment. The Obama administration is pushing ahead with a plan to improve the schools that gives tribes more control. But the endeavor is complicated by disrepair of so many buildings, not to mention a federal legacy dating to the 19th century that for many years forced Native American children to attend boarding schools. Little Singer was the vision in the 1970s of a medicine man of the same name who wanted local children educated in the community. Students often come from families struggling with domestic violence, alcoholism and a lack of running water at home, so nurturing is emphasized. The school provides showers, along with shampoo and washing machines. Conflicts and discipline problems are resolved with traditional “peacemaking” discussions, and occasionally the use of a sweat lodge. Principal Etta Shirley’s day starts at 6 a.m., when on her way to work, she picks up kids off the bus routes. Because there’s no teacher housing, a caravan of teachers commutes together about 90 minutes each morning on barely passable dirt roads. All this, to teach in barely passable quarters. “We have little to work with, but we make do with what we have,” says Verna Yazzie, a school board member. The school is on the government’s priority list for replacement. It’s been there since at least 2004.

Students carry chairs between classrooms last month at the Little Singer Community School on the Navajo reservation in Birdsprings, Ariz. Buildings at the school have problems with asbestos and radon. The Obama administration is pushing ahead with a plan to improve the schools that gives tribes more control. But the endeavor is complicated by disrepair of so many buildings and other issues. PHOTOS BY JOHN LOCHER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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The 183 schools are spread across 23 states and fall under the jurisdiction of the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Education. They are in some of the most outof-the-way places in America; one is at the bottom of the Grand Canyon, reachable by donkey or helicopter. Most are small, with fewer than 150 students. Native Americans perform better in schools that are not overseen by the federal bureau than in schools that are, national and state assessments show. Overall, they trail their peers in an important national assessment and struggle with a graduation rate of 68 percent. President Barack Obama visited Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota in June, where he announced the school improvement plan.

Students and faculty recite the Pledge of Allegiance during an assembly Sept. 26 at the Crystal Boarding School in Crystal, N.M. The school is one of 183 for Native American students run by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Indian Education.

Already, tribes manage about 120 schools, and the plan will turn the rest over as Washington shifts to more of a support role. The plan also calls for more boardcertified teachers, better Internet access and less red tape, making it easier to buy books and hire teachers. The Interior Department wants to help schools accelerate the use of Native American languages and culture.

But the rundown state of many schools cannot be ignored. More than 60 are listed in poor condition. Less than one-third have the Internet and the computer capability to administer new student assessments that are rolling out in much of the country. An estimated $1.3 billion is needed to replace or refurbish these schools, or at least hundreds of millions to

fix parts of them. But since the 2009 release of about $280 million in stimulus money, little has gone to major school construction or renovation. So Jewell is in a tight spot. She recently visited Crystal Boarding School on the Navajo reservation in Crystal, N.M., where some classes are held in a building constructed by Depression-era workers. The school is now primarily a day school, but about 30 kids stay in dorms there, in part because they live too far to catch buses that begin running at 5:30 a.m. There’s a waiting list for dorm space, but a second dorm was condemned. Jewell was met by hugs from the kids, who performed songs in the Navajo language. She thanked the students for “making do with this school the way it is.” Later, she told school leaders she couldn’t promise the money will be there to build a new school. “For schools throughout Indian Country, this is a chronic problem,” she said. “I don’t want to stand here and make promises I can’t keep. What I want to say is, I get it.” uuu

These schools are the legacy of 19th century assimilation policies that still exist, in part, because of the government’s treaty and trust responsibilities. Thousands of Native American children were once taken from their homes — some forcibly — to attend boarding

schools far from their families. That was the case for many parents of current students in the bureau’s schools; some were as young as 5 when they went away. Marie Williams, personnel coordinator and special education teacher at Little Singer, said she and her boardingschool mates were pulled so far from their roots that when they watched a John Wayne movie, they celebrated when the Indians were killed. She grew ashamed of her background, she said, only embracing her Navajo heritage when she went to college. “That kind of scarring and longtime mistrust is something that is hard to understand if you are an outsider,” said Don Yu, an Education Department official brought in to help the Interior Department improve the schools. “Any kinds of changes to the system, even under this administration, it will be met with a lot of skepticism.” Other complex issues are at play, too, including the difficulty persuading teachers to work in remote reservations where quality housing is lacking. One commission after another has tried to fix things. A panel in the 1920s said the students should be treated as “human beings.” The late Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., took a run at the issue with another commission, in 1969. The effort to shift more control to tribes has drawn praise from some school leaders. “It’s an important step for us to go ahead and take control over what we know we can do best,” says Kimberly Dominguez, Crystal’s vice principal. Others, though, say Washington is merely washing its hands of its responsibilities. Aubrey Francisco, 40, who attended Crystal and sends his 6-year-old son there, questions whether Navajo leaders can continue the school’s legacy. “With the tribe and its limited resources, they need to take that into account,” he said. He credits the school with preparing him for a career in the Navy. Ahniwake Rose, executive director of the National Indian Education Association, said her organization is cautiously optimistic, partly out of appreciation that Obama is seemingly engaged — a rarity for a president, she said. At Little Singer, Shirley, the principal, said she has some optimism, too, despite being let down so many times. One glimmer of hope: A House spending bill contains nearly $60 million for construction at Little Singer and two other bureau schools. All school officials can do is wait and see if Congress provides the estimated $20 million it would take to build a new school. “We need to get the kids out of the environment,” Shirley said. “That’s what’s really driving this. I lose sleep over it, just thinking about it.”


Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Welcome: Burn: Rules make it harder for some to buy medical pot Further discussion expected Continued from Page A-1

Continued from Page A-1 form of artificial contraception. But the bishops failed to reach consensus on a watereddown section on ministering to homosexuals. The new section had stripped away the welcoming tone of acceptance contained in a draft document earlier in the week. Rather than considering gays as individuals who had gifts to offer the church, the revised paragraph referred to homosexuality as one of the problems Catholic families face. It said “people with homosexual tendencies must be welcomed with respect and sensitivity,” but repeated church teaching that marriage is only between a man and a woman. The revised paragraph failed to reach the two-thirds majority needed to pass. Two other paragraphs concerning the other hot-button issue at the synod — whether divorced and civilly remarried Catholics can receive Communion — also failed to pass. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the failure of the paragraphs to pass meant that they have to be discussed further to arrive at a consensus at a meeting of bishops next October. It could be that the 118-62 vote on the gay paragraph was a protest vote of sorts by progressive bishops who refused to back the watered-down wording and wanted to keep the issue alive. The original draft said gays had gifts to offer the church and that their partnerships, while morally problematic, provided gay couples with “precious” support. New Ways Ministry, a Catholic gay rights group, said it was “very disappointing” that the final report had backtracked from the welcoming words contained in the draft. Nevertheless, it said the synod’s process “and openness to discussion provides hope for further development down the road, particularly at next year’s synod, where the makeup of the participants will be larger and more diverse, including many more pastorally-oriented bishops.” A coalition of small pro-life groups, Voice of the Family, said the outcome of the meeting had only contributed to “deepening the confusion that has already damaged families since the sexual revolution of the 1960s.” The gay section of the draft report had been written by a Francis appointee, Monsignor Bruno Forte, a theologian known for pushing the pastoral envelope on ministering to people in “irregular” unions. The draft was supposed to have been a synopsis of the bishops’ interventions, but many conservatives complained that it reflected a minority and overly progressive view. Francis insisted in the name of transparency that the full document — including the three paragraphs that failed to pass — be published along with the voting tally. The document will serve as the basis for future debate leading up to the October 2015 meeting of bishops which will produce a final report for Francis to help him write a teaching document of his own. “Personally, I would have been very worried and saddened if there hadn’t been these … animated discussions … or if everyone had been in agreement or silent in a false and acquiescent peace,” Francis told the synod hall after the vote. Conservatives had harshly criticized the draft and proposed extensive revisions to restate church doctrine, which holds that gay sex is “intrinsically disordered,” but that gays themselves are to be respected, and that marriage is only between a man and a woman. In all, 460 amendments were submitted. “We could see that there were different viewpoints,” said Cardinal Oswald Gracis of India, when asked about the most contentious sections of the report on homosexuals and divorced and remarried Catholics. German Cardinal Walter Kasper, the leader of the progressive camp, said he was “realistic” about the outcome.

“About a month ago, they decided to shut down all the cannabis accounts. They said, ‘You have two weeks. We’re cutting you a check. Goodbye,’ ” said Goodman of his longtime financial institution, the State Employees Credit Union. He went to the credit union and retrieved a cashier’s check, with his business deposits totaling $400,000. At a time when there are more and more medical cannabis providers, there is also increasing uncertainty over U.S. banking regulations for the industry, which has made businesses hypersensitive about security and has imposed more barriers for patients. There are 13,000 registered medical cannabis users in New Mexico and 23 producers. Albuquerque attorney Jason Marks said at least half of them are having issues with banking. “There are patients who are not able to purchase with a credit card — it’s a huge problem for patients who need courier service,” Marks said. “There are security risks. All these are problems nobody wants to see happen. We have a small crisis on our hands.” Marks, who represents 18 growers in the trade association, Cannabis Producers of New Mexico, is working to educate New Mexico banks about the new regulations and hopes the situation can be resolved in the coming months with one of them moving to accept deposits. The U.S. Congress also is moving to clarify some of the regulations, which are impacting the industry in other states, but Marks doesn’t expect that relief to come soon. Duane Herrera, executive vice president of the State Employees Credit Union, used to handle accounts for Goodman and other providers. “We were happy to have those accounts,” he said. What changed were new clarifications from the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, a branch of the U.S. Treasury Department, that beefed up bank reporting requirements after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to curb money laundering. He said credit unions are not set up as commercial banks, and his does not have the staff needed to provide the due diligence to comply with the investigative and paperwork edicts. “I feel bad for them,” Herrera said. “The law was passed in New Mexico, and it is legal to have a medical marijuana business in the state, but they’ve made it really difficult to handle the banking. We just couldn’t do it.” The initial policy was issued in February 2014 and known as the Cole Memo, for Deputy U.S. Attorney General James Cole, who reiterated the federal government’s position that “marijuana is a dangerous drug and that illegal distribution and sale of marijuana is a serious crime that provides a significant source of revenue to large-scale criminal enter-

prises, gangs and cartels.” As part of that enforcement — and other issues related to money laundering, where money is raised through illegal activity and then washed through legitimate businesses — the government requires banks to submit Suspicious Activity Reports for depositors making unusually large cash deposits or rotating money through several accounts. But the Treasury Department, in clarifying the rules for cannabis businesses, went further than saying banks must just file the paperwork. It also required them to verify it and “develop an understanding of the normal and expected activity for the business, including the types of products to be sold and the type of customers to be served,” according to the rules. The rules also say institutions should submit a report when “the business receives substantially more revenue than its local competitors.” There are other requirements as well, including the need to reverify information on a regular basis. Federal regulators have said the policies are meant to give financial institutions more comfort in servicing the cannabis accounts and to move the business out of the shadows and into mainstream banking. But it isn’t working that way in all cases, according to one report. “The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) attempted to clear the air, issuing guidance in February that tacitly acknowledged the legality of banking marijuana,” according to an article by Brian Kindle published in August by the Association of Certified Financial Crime Specialists. But “several months later, the effect of that guidance remains hazy. Comments by FinCEN Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery indicate that while a small handful of institutions are providing services to the legal marijuana industry, many others have terminated relationships with customers tied to the marijuana trade.” Kindle wrote that “anecdotal evidence suggests that a growing number of marijuana businesses, particularly in Colorado and Washington, are running funds through personal accounts or simply accumulating ever-increasing piles of unbankable cash.” Attorney Marks thinks that larger states with multinational companies and more commercial banks are handling the issue better than New Mexico. “If we had more banking options, we wouldn’t be in quite the corner,” Marks said. Len Goodman said there is an extensive questionnaire in Oregon for growers who want to use banking services there. He is taking that form to New Mexico lenders to show them how others are navigating the reporting requirements, but he has not yet received a firm commitment from any of them. In Washington, state regulators got involved in lobbying local banks to accommodate the industry. The issue has even frustrated related businesses, such as one owned by Robert Davis, founder of Peace Medical Marijuana Consultants in Albuquerque. Davis contracts with thera-

A customer pays cash for medical marijuana at NewMexiCann Natural Medicine in Santa Fe on Wednesday. There are 13,000 registered medical cannabis users in New Mexico and 23 producers. JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

pists and medical providers who can advise patients on the state Department of Health program, which is open to those with any of 16 qualifying medical conditions, including cancer, AIDS, chronic pain, post-traumatic stress disorder and epilepsy. He then helps them make their application to the state, which must verify the paperwork and documentation. “We help patients gather medical records and answer a lot of questions,” Davis said. Davis started the work when his mother was diagnosed with AIDS and he learned how difficult the application process is. He has an office in Albuquerque and is now expanding to Las Cruces. He doesn’t sell cannabis directly to patients but is still stigmatized as a business owner. “I hired a company to do our payroll and signed all the paperwork, and as soon as it hit the upper levels, I never got a call back,” he said. “It’s a pain in the ass. We’ve been a legal business for seven years,” he said. He pays his two employees in cash and has a limited checking account, which is set up under the name “Peace MMC.” Goodman is the former

owner of a tile company in Santa Fe and a part-time business consultant. He and his wife have 23 employees and paid the state of New Mexico $175,000 in gross receipts taxes last year, which must be sent in quarterly. They also withhold IRS and Medicaid tax for those on their payroll. Susan Goodman said most of their obligations were pre-paid before the credit union account was closed. But the clock is ticking, and they need to find a resolution before January. “Everything I know we owed I pre-paid to January,” she said. “I even pre-paid our cleaning service until the end of the year.” The providers are more concerned about the impact to customers — one-third of whom used to pay with a credit cards online and ordered products through a courier service. Many of those patients, such as those in hospice care or in rural areas, can’t come into the retail shop off San Mateo Road. For security reasons, the business was originally set up to be as electronicpayment friendly as possible. “Now you have to send us a check or money order,” Len Goodman said. “A lot of those

people we won’t see again.” In a recent newsletter to patients, Goodman writes, “Many of our patients have expressed real concern for our safety at NewMexiCann now that we can only take cash. Thank you all for your concern. We have set up procedures that limit the likelihood of exposure due to our cash on hand. “We have made arrangements for our cash and deposits to be removed from our premises daily. It is now moved by courier daily to an off-site secure lockup location. … This will help a great deal to insure the safety of our patients and staff.” Goodman is hoping to expand his business next year, when the state approves an increase in production for each licensed grower, but that will be more difficult without banking services. Marks said the industry is young and growing and doesn’t have problems with toxic real estate assets or a declining customer base. “This is such a regulated area, you’re not going to have those problems,” Marks said. “I think the banks that take this on will be happy to have the New Mexico cannabis producers as customers, and all the other banks will be sorry.” Goodman estimates producers in New Mexico will generate $20 million in sales this year. “It’s a lot of money, and it’s all going to go to one bank — if they want it,” he said. Contact Bruce Krasnow at 986-3034 or brucek@ sfnewmexican.com.

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NATION

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

U.S. must High court allows Texas to use voter ID law nail down stance on cruelty edent,” she wrote, citing a 1966 decision striking down Virginia’s poll tax. WASHINGTON — The The Texas law was at first Supreme Court on Saturday blocked under Section 5 of the allowed Texas to use its strict federal Voting Rights Act, which voter identification law in required some states and localithe November election. The ties with a history of discrimicourt’s order, issued just after nation to obtain federal permis5 a.m., was unsigned and consion before changing voting tained no reasoning. procedure. After the Supreme Justice Ruth Bader GinsCourt in 2013 effectively struck burg issued a six-page disdown Section 5 in Shelby sent saying the court’s action County v. Holder, an Alabama “risks denying the right to case, Texas officials announced vote to hundreds of thouthey would start enforcing the An election official checks a voter’s photo identification in sands of eligible voters.” ID law. February at an early voting polling site in Austin, Texas. On Justices Sonia Sotomayor The law has been challenged Saturday, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a request to proand Elena Kagan joined the hibit the state from requiring certain forms of photo identifi- by an array of individuals, civil dissent. cation for voters to cast ballots. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO rights groups and the Obama The law, enacted in 2011, administration. requires voters seeking to After a two-week trial in Sepfied birth certificate to get one. Ginsburg also said the law cast their ballots at the polls tember, Judge Nelva Gonzales Birth certificates ordinar“replaced the previously existto present photo identificaRamos of U.S. District Court ing voter identification require- ily cost $22. The state offers tion like a Texas driver’s or in Corpus Christi struck down gun license, a military ID or a ments with the strictest regime cheaper ones, costing $2 to the law on Oct. 9 in a 147-page $3, for election purposes, Ginspassport. in the country.” opinion. She said it had been burg wrote, but it has not publiThose requirements, GinsShe noted that Texas will cized that option on the relevant adopted “with an unconstituburg wrote, “may prevent not accept several forms of ID website or on forms for request- tional discriminatory purpose,” more than 600,000 registered that Wisconsin does, including ing birth certificates. created “an unconstitutional Texas voters (about 4.5 per“a photo ID from an in-state “Even at $2, the toll is at burden on the right to vote” and cent of all registered voters) four-year college and one from odds with this court’s precamounted to a poll tax. from voting in person for lack a federally recognized Indian of compliant identification.” tribe.” Last week, the Supreme “A sharply disproportionCourt refused to let Wisconsin ate percentage of those votuse its voter ID law in the curers are African-American or rent election. Hispanic,” she noted, adding Texans who lack a required that “racial discrimination in form of identification cannot elections in Texas is no mere easily obtain it, Ginsburg wrote. historical artifact.” “More than 400,000 eligible Texas officials quarreled voters face round-trip travel with Ginsburg’s math, which times of three hours or more to was drawn from evidence pre- the nearest” government office sented to a trial court. In their issuing IDs, she wrote, and they brief urging the justices to must generally present a certiallow the election to proceed under the 2011 law, they said trying to determine the numMISSONI NATIONAL 9am - 5 pm ber of people the law would SALE OCT. 13-24 Monday - Friday deter from voting was a fool’s 15% OFF EVERYTHING errand and called the estimate of 600,000 disenfranchised 982-3298 Sanbusco Center voters preposterous.

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Obama could back Bush-era reading of torture treaty By Charlie Savage The New York Times

WASHINGTON — When the Bush administration revealed in 2005 that it was secretly interpreting a treaty ban on “cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” as not applying to CIA and military prisons overseas, President Barack Obama, then a newly elected Democratic senator from Illinois, joined in a bipartisan protest. Obama supported legislation to make it clear that U.S. officials were legally barred from using cruelty anywhere in the world. And in a Senate speech, he said enacting such a statute “acknowledges and confirms existing obligations” under the treaty, the United Nations Convention Against Torture. But the Obama administration has never officially declared its position on the treaty, and now, Obama’s legal team is debating whether to back away from his earlier view. It is considering reaffirming the Bush administration’s position that the treaty imposes no legal obligation on the U.S. to bar cruelty outside its borders, according to officials who discussed the deliberations on the condition of anonymity. The administration must decide on its stance on the treaty by next month, when it sends a delegation to Geneva to appear before the Committee Against Torture, a U.N. panel that monitors compliance with the treaty. That presentation will be the first during Obama’s presidency. State Department lawyers are said to be pushing to officially abandon the Bush-era interpretation. Doing so would require no policy changes because Obama issued an executive order in 2009 that forbade cruel interrogations anywhere and made it harder for a future administration to return to torture. But military and intelligence lawyers are said to oppose accepting that the treaty imposes legal obligations on the United States’ actions abroad. They say they need more time to study whether it would have operational impacts. They have also raised concerns that current or future wartime detainees abroad might invoke the treaty to sue U.S. officials with claims of torture, although courts have repeatedly thrown out lawsuits brought by detainees held as terrorism suspects. The internal debate is said to have been catalyzed by a memo the State Department circulated within an interagency lawyers’ group weeks ago. On Wednesday, lawyers from the State Department, the Pentagon, the intelligence community and the National Security Council met to discuss the matter, but they reached no consensus. Bernadette Meehan, a National Security Council spokeswoman, said Obama’s opposition to torture and cruel interrogations anywhere in the world was clear, separate from the legal question of whether the U.N. treaty applies to American behavior overseas. “We are considering that question, and other questions posed by the committee, carefully as we prepare for the presentation in November,” Meehan said. “But there is no question that torture and cruel treatment in armed conflict are clearly and categorically prohibited in all places.” In Obama’s first term, his top State Department lawyer, Harold H. Koh, began a push to reverse official government interpretations that two global rights treaties — the torture convention and a Bill of Rights-style accord — imposed no obligations on U.S. officials abroad. Both treaties contain phrases that make it ambiguous whether they apply to U.S.-run prisons on foreign territory. For example, the provision barring cruelty that falls short of torture applies to a state’s conduct “in any territory under its jurisdiction.”

Two days later, Ramos entered an injunction blocking the law in the current election. The question for the justices was what to do about that injunction while appeals proceed. Greg Abbott, the state attorney general and the Republican candidate for governor, told the Supreme Court that Ramos had acted too closely to the election and had “unsettled a status quo that had prevailed for 15 months and governed numerous elections without a hitch.” He accused his adversaries of litigation gamesmanship in not seeking a preliminary injunction while the case was moving forward in the trial court. A ruling on such an interim injunction, he said, would have allowed an orderly appeal. On Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans stayed Ramos’ injunction. It said a change in voting rules so close to an election would cause confusion among voters and poll workers.

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NATION

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-7

Social Security benefit hike Gay-rights group backs expected to be under 2% use of HIV-prevention pill Annual cost-of-living raise $20 a month for average recipients By Stephen Ohlemacher The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — For the third straight year, millions of Social Security recipients, disabled veterans and federal retirees can expect historically small increases in their benefits come January. Preliminary figures suggest the annual cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, will be less than 2 percent. That translates to a raise of about $20 a month for the typical Social Security beneficiary. The government is scheduled to announce the COLA on Wednesday, when it releases the latest measure of consumer prices. By law, the COLA is based on inflation, which is well below historical averages so far this year. For example, gas prices are down from a year ago, and so is the cost of clothing. Prices for meat, fish and eggs are up nearly 9 percent, but overall food costs are up less than 3 percent, according to the government’s inflation report for August. Medical costs, which disproportionately affect older people, are only 1.8 percent higher. But good news at the pump means bad news for benefit increases. Many older people who rely on Social Security are feeling the pinch of tiny benefit increases year after year. “You lose that increase, not only in the short-term, you lose the compounding over time,” said Mary Johnson of The Senior Citizens League. “For the middle class, for people that don’t qualify for low-income programs, they are dipping into savings or they are borrowing against their homes.” The Senior Citizens League projects the COLA will be

1.7 percent, which is in line with other estimates. Economist Polina Vlasenko, a research fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research, projects the COLA will be between 1.6 percent and 1.8 percent. Congress enacted automatic increases for Social Security beneficiaries in 1975, when inflation was high and there was a lot of pressure to regularly raise benefits. For the first 35 years, the COLA was less than 2 percent only three times. If the COLA is less than 2 percent next year, it would be the fifth time in six years. This year’s increase was 1.5 percent, the year before it was 1.7 percent. Susan Gross gets hit twice by the small COLA. She cares for both her disabled son and her 89-year-old mother, both of whom get Social Security benefits. A 1.7 percent increase comes to $12.60 a month for her son, said Gross, who lives in rural Barboursville, Va. “That won’t even pay for his prescription program,” she said. Gross, who works in an accounting office, said her family makes due by growing and canning much of their own food, which they can do because they live in the country. “It makes our grocery bills less,” she said. More than 70 million people receive benefits affected by the annual COLA. About 59 million retirees, disabled workers, spouses and children get Social Security benefits. The average monthly payment is $1,191. The COLA also affects benefits for about 4 million disabled veterans, 2.5 million federal retirees and their survivors, and more than 8 million people who get Supplemental Security Income, the disability program for the poor. By law, the cost-of-living adjustment is based on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Cleri-

cal Workers, or CPI-W, a broad measure of consumer prices generated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It measures price changes for food, housing, clothing, transportation, energy, medical care, recreation and education. The COLA is calculated by comparing consumer prices in July, August and September each year with prices in the same three months from the previous year. If prices go up over the course of the year, benefits go up, starting with payments delivered in January. This year, average prices for July and August were 1.7 percent higher than they were a year ago, according to the CPI-W. The September report — the final piece of the puzzle — is scheduled to be released Wednesday. Once it is released, the COLA can be announced. It would take a dramatic increase in consumer prices for September to nudge the COLA above 2 percent. “In general I don’t think there was a huge increase in prices in September,” said Vlasenko, the economist. “Fuel prices probably dropped and they have a ripple effect.” According to AAA, the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline is $3.14. A month ago, it was $3.37. Advocates for seniors say the government’s measure of inflation doesn’t accurately reflect price increases faced by older Americans because they tend to spend more of their income on health care. The rise in medical costs has slowed in recent years, but that may be little comfort to someone who is suddenly hit with a serious illness. Older people on Medicare usually have their Part B premiums deducted from Social Security payments. The good news is that the premiums, which cover outpatient care, are scheduled to stay the same next year — $104.90 a month.

riage and anti-discrimination issues, joined those ranks with the release of a policy paper NEW YORK — The largest strongly supporting the prevenU.S. gay-rights organization tive use of Truvada. Saturday endorsed efforts to “HRC does not take this posipromote the use of a once-ation lightly,” the policy paper day pill to prevent HIV infec- said. “We recognize there is still tion and called on insurers to ongoing debate … and that there provide more generous cover- are those out there who will age of the drug. disagree with our stance.” Some doctors have been Truvada has been around for reluctant to prescribe the a decade, serving as one of the drug, Truvada, on the premkey drugs used in combination ise that it might encourwith others as the basic treatage high-risk, unprotected ment for people with HIV. In sexual behavior. However, 2012, the Food and Drug Adminits preventive use has been istration approved it for preendorsed by the Centers for exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP Disease Control and Preven— for use to prevent people tion, the World Health Orgafrom getting sexually transmitnization, and many HIV/AIDS ted HIV in the first place. advocacy groups “Today, there is an unprecThe Human Rights Camedented chance to end the HIV/ paign, which recently has AIDS epidemic, in part through been focusing its gay-rights PrEP’s aggressive prevention of advocacy on same-sex marnew HIV infections,” said Chad

By David Crary

The Associated Press

Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign. “There is no reason ... to discourage individuals from taking control of their sexual health and talking to their doctor about PrEP.” The CDC says studies have shown that Truvada, when taken diligently, can reduce the risk of getting HIV by 90 percent or more. Research discussed at the International AIDS Conference in July found that use of the drug does not encourage risky sex and is effective even if people skip some doses. As part of its announcement, the Human Rights Campaign called on insurers, regulators and Truvada’s manufacturer to take steps to reduce costs, raise public awareness, and make the option available to all medically qualified individuals who could benefit from it, regardless of ability to pay.

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A-8

EBOLA

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

Ebola quarantine protects, fuels fear Report details blunders in effort to contain disease By Kevin Sack, Jack Healy and Frances Robles The Associated Press

of London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Little went smoothly. WHO’s Looking back, the mistakes Guinea office was accused of are easy to see: Waiting too not helping a team of experts long, spending too little, relying get visas to that country. Some on the wrong people, thinking $500,000 in aid was held up by small when they needed to think red tape. big. Many people, governments In early July, Piot “called and agencies share the blame for for a state of emergency to be failing to contain Ebola when it declared and for military operaemerged in West Africa. tions to be deployed,” he said. Now they It didn’t happen. share the herculean task of Countries fell short trying to end an epidemic In Guinea, the ministry that has sickof health at first would give ened more WHO information only on than 9,000, lab-confirmed Ebola cases, killed more hampering the investigation. than 4,500, Peter Piot Messages to the public about seeded cases the lethal nature of the disease in Europe and discouraged people from seekthe United States, and is not ing treatment. When masked even close to being controlled. teams arrived to disinfect hot Many of the missteps are zones, people thought they detailed in a draft of an internal were spraying toxic chemicals World Health Organization and attacked them. report obtained by The AssociEarly international aid was ated Press. It shows there was mishandled. Guinean President not one pivotal blunder that Alpha Conde set up a panel with gave Ebola the upper hand, but the ministers of health, coma series of them that mounted. munications and social affairs to Nearly every agency and gov- fight the disease, but the minisernment stumbled. Heavy criti- ter of health couldn’t formulate cism falls on the World Health an effective strategy and little Organization, where there was money was dispersed. Finally, “a failure to see that conditions a new committee of indepenfor explosive spread were pres- dent experts was appointed and ent right at the start.” funds began to flow. WHO — the United Nations’ In Liberia, early government health agency — had some messages stressed that Ebola incompetent staff, let bureauhad no cure, so sick people saw cratic bungles delay people and little reason to go to a hospital, money to fight the virus, and and the disease spread even was hampered by budget cuts more. In August, the governand the need to battle other dis- ment quarantined a Monrovia eases flaring around the world, slum, sparking clashes with the report says. security forces that killed a teen. In a statement, WHO said the Ultimately, health officials realdraft document has not been ized they couldn’t track or limit checked for accuracy and that Ebola spreading in the slum. the agency would not comment Many bodies were dumped into until it was finished. WHO’s nearby rivers. chief, Dr. Margaret Chan, did In Sierra Leone, the governnot respond to AP requests for ment sent politicians to warn comment, but told Bloomberg people about Ebola rather than news service that she “was not relying more on charitable fully informed” as the disaster groups and medical professionevolved. “We responded, but als, said Joseph Smith, a comour response may not have munity activist in the capital city matched the scale of the outof Freetown. Some feared it was break and the complexity of the a government conspiracy to use outbreak,” she said. Ebola to wipe out opposition Outside experts say the point supporters ahead of a national now is not to grab necks or find census planned for December. fault, but to learn from mistakes. “They believed that the whole “By the time we recognized situation was a kind of lie,” this was serious, the genie was Smith said. already out of the bottle,” said In Spain, where a nurse got Michael Osterholm, a UniverEbola after taking care of a patient sity of Minnesota public health who died of it, debate raged over expert. “Nobody is to blame whether protective gear protobecause everybody is to blame.” cols were being followed. Health Ebola had caused two dozen workers protested about a lack smaller outbreaks elsewhere in of training; the government overAfrica before it appeared in the hauled it and adopted new equipwestern part of the continent ment standards. earlier this year, “so people were caught off guard” by its rapid Ebola in the U.S. spread, said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National CenOn Sept. 20, Ebola made a ter for Disaster Preparedness 5,700-mile trip to the United at Columbia University. “We States, when a Liberian man, thought we would do what we Thomas Eric Duncan, flew to usually do and that this would Dallas. His infection was concome under control, but that firmed on Sept. 30. Two nurses didn’t turn out to be the case.” who cared for him before he died now have the disease. The Centers for Disease ConEarly blunders trol and Prevention has been The first mistake came Jan. harshly criticized by many who 11 at a hospital in Gueckedou, say it offered shifting advice on Guinea, where the grandmother protective gear to hospitals and of the first two children known failed to assess correctly what to have died in this outbreak risk Duncan’s infection posed sought care. It was a rare oppor- and to whom. tunity — most people just seek In fact, the CDC had been help from traditional healers. But among the earliest responders instead of detecting and stopping when Ebola surfaced in Africa, the disease, the hospital comsending five people to Guinea pounded the problem: Two new in late March and two more to chains of transmission began, Liberia in April. In late May, the among patients and health work- situation seemed in hand and ers, and in another village. WHO advised CDC that its staff On Jan. 27, local health officould leave. cials and Doctors Without But cases surged in June and Borders missed a chance to five CDC workers returned to diagnose Ebola after seeing bac- Guinea. In July, more went to teria in blood samples — they Liberia and Sierra Leone, and concluded cholera might be the to Nigeria after an Ebola death culprit. Ebola wasn’t confirmed occurred there. By late August, until March 21. By the end of the 100 CDC staffers were tracmonth, it had spread to Liberia. ing contacts, educating health In April, Doctors Without workers, communicating with Borders warned that the outthe public and training officials break was out of control, but on how stop sick passengers a WHO spokesman insisted it from getting on planes. Gregg Mitman, a University wasn’t. In May, the funeral of of Wisconsin medical historian a traditional healer in Sierra who was in Liberia in June, Leone spread the virus to hunsaid the response by CDC and dreds of people. “It was a turning point. It refu- others was slow, but noted that eled the epidemic in Guinea and WHO and CDC had tight budit was the start of major epidem- gets. After the 2008 financial ics in Liberia and Sierra Leone,” crisis, WHO lost more than said Dr. Peter Piot, co-discoverer 1,000 staff and was left with only two Ebola experts. of the Ebola virus and director

By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press

DALLAS — The refrigerator in Youngor Jallah’s apartment broke down last week. But when she reported the problem to the front office, the complex’s manager said that a repairman would not be sent until Monday. That is the expiration date for the 21-day, self-imposed quarantine that Jallah, her partner and her four children have endured since the day her mother’s boyfriend, Thomas Eric Duncan, was hospitalized with Ebola. Because her mother was at work, it was Jallah, 35, who last cared for Duncan — but, she said, never touched him — before summoning an ambulance. The complex’s manager urged Jallah to move her food to the apartment across the stairwell, which has been empty since a new renter decided against moving in after hearing about the neighbors. When the landlord sent a maintenance man to deliver the key, he arrived wearing two pairs of rubber gloves. As the Ebola scare spreads from Texas to Ohio and beyond, the number of people who have locked themselves

away — some under government orders, others voluntarily — has grown well beyond those who lived with and cared for Duncan before his death on Oct. 8. The discovery last week that two nurses at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital here had caught the virus while treating Duncan extended concentric circles of fear to new sets of hospital workers and other contacts. Officials in Texas announced Thursday that nearly 100 health care workers would be asked not to use public transportation or go to public places for 21 days, the

maximum incubation period for Ebola. When officials revealed that one of the infected nurses had flown from Dallas to Cleveland and back, nearly 300 fellow passengers and crew members faced decisions about whether to quarantine themselves. “Ebola is jerking us back to the 19th century,” said Dr. Howard Markel, who teaches the history of medicine at the University of Michigan. “It’s terrible. It’s isolating. It’s scary. You’re not connecting with other human beings, and you are fearful of a microbiologic

time bomb ticking inside you.” While a quarantine is designed to protect those on the outside, it also fuels the community’s fear, and sometimes its cruelty. In Payson, Ariz., paranoia ignited after word spread that a missionary, Allen Mann, who had traveled to Liberia on a church trip was spending three weeks under a self-imposed quarantine. Mann, 41, said an anonymous commentator on a local news website had suggested burning down his house. “People had this lynch-mob mentality,” he said.

war. They emphasized that he had contracted Ebola when he helped carry a sick woman just days before he was to make his long-awaited journey to the United States — though all SALISBURY, N.C. — With hymns and were insistent that he did not know what disprayers for answers, family and friends gathease she was suffering from. ered at a North Carolina church on Saturday to “Let’s not forget how he died. He died helpbid farewell to Thomas Eric Duncan, the first ing someone,” said Harry Korkoryah, Duncan’s person to die of Ebola in the United States. half-brother. “He answered that call from God.” Duncan’s mother sat weeping with other Undercurrents of frustration and doubt ran relatives in the front row of the small, redthroughout the morning service. carpeted sanctuary of the church they attend Several relatives implied strongly that they here, Rowan International Church. About 30 did not believe the hospital’s or officials’ narraother congregants stood and sang “I Must Tell tives of what had happened to Duncan during Jesus” and “We have a God who never fails.” his illness in Dallas. “The day will come when A slideshow of photos of Duncan in Liberia we all have answers for what happened to played in a loop over the dais. In eulogies, rela- my brother,” said Josephus Weeks, Duncan’s tives remembered him as a giving man who nephew. had shown courage throughout his 42 years, The New York Times even as bullets flew during the Liberian civil

Dallas victim recalled as ‘gentle, generous man’

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Our view B-2 My view B-3, B-4, B-5, B-6

OPINIONS

B

Busker ordinance makes for a duller Plaza. Page B-5

What makes a negative ad work?

MY VIEW: RUSSELL BAKER

Pursuing the art of excellence at NDI

P

eople around the world dance. We dance for joy at personal celebrations and to express community pride. On the stage, dance is entertainment and artistic expression. This year, NDI New Mexico will serve more than 9,000 public elementary schoolchildren in 91 schools across the state of New Mexico. Along the way, children are becoming healthier, more engaged with school, learning about respect and developing self-confidence. NDI New Mexico is proud to be recognized by The Wallace Foundation for our after-school arts programs. With this national leader in philanthropy and education, we will be hosting events Thursday and Friday to discuss a recently released report, “Something to Say: Success Principles for Afterschool Arts Programs from Urban Youth and Other Experts.” The report showcases how high-quality arts programs can impact youth positively and calls out specific principles that make programs for youth really work. The Wallace Foundation’s mission is to foster improvements in learning

and enrichment for disadvantaged children and the vitality of the arts for everyone. Moreover, the foundation seeks to catalyze broad impact by supporting the development, testing and sharing of new solutions and effective practices. NDI New Mexico is featured in the “Something to Say” report as one of eight exemplary and highly effective organizations employing the 10 success principles The Wallace Foundation recommends. This kind of recognition puts New Mexico atop a good list for a change. At NDI New Mexico, we believe that the arts have a unique power to engage and motivate children. We teach children that it takes energy and effort to do something with excellence, whether it is learning a dance step, taking a math test or applying for a job. We teach that working hard, doing one’s best, never giving up and being healthy lead to success. For 20 years, NDI New Mexico has served children with the goal of inspiring them to be their best and giving them some of the important tools they

Russell Baker with students at NDI. COURTESY PHOTO

need to be successful in life. We have seen the powerful impact our programs have on the many children who have found ways to overcome obstacles in their lives and have become more engaged in school. We are also proud that we teach nutrition and physical health, and help kids understand the importance of being healthy in a state that is faced with significant health risks and issues. The arts are a powerful way to reach children, and we believe participating in the arts is an important part of developing into a full human being who contributes to our society and the greater world. Children need to know what excellence is in order to help make New Mexico an excellent place to work and to live.

We are very excited to share The Wallace Foundation’s findings and recommendations with our community, in particular its best practices for arts programs and working with youth. We invite the public and all our fellow nonprofits to join us for a series of events in Santa Fe and Albuquerque this week (please visit www.ndi-nm.org for more information). We will have a lively discussion among our caring, youthserving communities. If we can all be our best at nurturing children by inspiring them, challenging them and bringing out their best, New Mexico will be a better place. Russell Baker is the executive director of NDI New Mexico.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Protocols for Ebola should be in place

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egarding the lack of protocol for patients who possibly have Ebola — the lead story in the news for months: What is going on? Apologies such as, “Oops, my bad” from the Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC: ‘We could have done more,” Oct. 15) just don’t cut it. Likewise the expression, “Our thoughts and prayers are with the patients’ families.” This is not a time for bureaucratic fumbling and crocodile tears. If this isn’t fixed, the United States could end up like Liberia. The most powerful nation in the world is starting to look like a Third World country. If the CDC is ineffective, it is time for President Barack Obama to take over. I am not going to live in fear of undiagnosed and untreated Ebola patients standing next to me in the supermarket checkout line. Get your act together! Adele E. Zimmermann

Embudo

Judicial races As the November election approaches, most New Mexican voters concerned with social justice, educational and environmental issues are focused on the gubernatorial race. It is always too easy to ignore critical judicial races. If Gov. Susana Martinez is re-elected, it is the New Mexico Supreme Court and Court of Appeals that will serve as our only real counterbalance to reactionary forces funded by such heavyweights as the conservative Koch brothers. It is crucial to vote yes to retain Justice Edward Chavez on the state Supreme Court. Vote yes to retain Judge James Wechsler on the state Court of Appeals. Vote no against retention of Judge Linda Vanzi and against Judge J. Miles Hanisee on the state Court of Appeals. Vote yes for Kerry Kiernan to replace Martinez-appointee Hanisee. Justice(s) matter! Ouida MacGregor

Santa Fe

Suffering Israelis Once again, Don Liska rails against Israel and ignores the facts in his letter (“Gazans suffer,” Letters to the editor, Sept. 22). He uses the same terminology as he has previously, calling Gaza a crowded cage in which people are trapped and defenseless. Balderdash! I have pointed out that it is Israel that reacts to the endless lobbing of rockets and bombs into Israel by Hamas, not the other way around. Liska has had the audacity to state that Israel does not have the right to retaliate. How absurd is that? He speaks of Gazans suffering from post-traumatic stress. Does he not think that Israelis also suffer from the stress of living in constant fear that Hamas will shower their villages and homes with weapons of destruction from across the border? I suggest that Liska learn the facts before spewing anti-Israeli nonsense and misinformation. William W. Derbyshire

Santa Fe

Goodbye, Augie Have you noticed that Augie isn’t opening the door for us at the downtown U.S. Post Office these days? Truly one of Santa Fe’s own, Augie Sandoval worked for the United States Postal Service for 40

years, starting his tenure on Cathedral Place and moving over to Federal Place when the new structure was built about 35 years ago. He was a fixture there, always sitting on his stool, opening the door, saying “hey” or smiling at us when we stopped in to mail our packages and envelopes. This fall, when I went in to send some green chile to my son, Sid, I asked Steve behind the counter where Augie was and learned that he had quietly passed away several weeks earlier. For me, Augie Sandoval was a true Santa Fe treasure — I was always comforted and reassured somehow by the predictability of his presence at the door. He enriched our little town; he was Santa Fe’s official “greeter.” Now that he’s gone, I feel as though an era has passed. The Santa Fe that embraced Augie and was embraced by him has lost a sturdy golden thread that wove us all together. And now, those of us who were fortunate enough to know Augie must learn to open that door for ourselves and each other. R.I.P. Augie Sandoval. You will be missed. Two Masses are being held at St. Anne Catholic Church for Augie Sandoval — one is Sunday, Oct. 19, and one is Nov. 9, both at 6 p.m. at the church, 511 Alicia St. Nancy Avedisian

Santa Fe

New Mexico politics like a trip to Wonderland

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eading about New Mexico even take a toke from the Caterpilstate politics induces the lar’s hookah. After all, thanks to the queasiness and vertigo that City Council’s new ordinance, we accompanies a steep drop citizens are safe to hug a down a rabbit hole. bong and feel happy. Locally, our mayor Alas, even as a child, I and City Council seem was uncomfortable with to enjoy the celebratory a Wonderland where high spirits of the Mad logic and rationality don’t Hatter and his friends. apply. I confess that now, Lots of noise and clatter, silliness still fills me with but the decision to spend anxiety, especially when it (at a minimum) $50,000 comes to state politics. Dorothy to invite The Bachelor to We in New Mexico Klopf their party doesn’t strike don’t need a White Rabbit me as especially sober Commentary to tell us we are late to any and sensible. Who wants sort of economic recovto talk about our continuery, even a sluggish one. ing problems with reservoirs, police, Of all the states in the nation, New crime and unemployment when we Mexico is always in the running for can talk about Saving the Planet or Worsts — for poverty, unemployMore Bells for Bikers? ment, education and child welfare. I know, I know. I should join in Crazily, two successive governors with the spirit of Fanta Se, maybe from two different parties, who

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

have both failed to improve on our state’s dire statistics, have nevertheless been seriously considered for national office. Reading about the contest between Gov. Susana Martinez and Attorney General Gary King is like revisiting an episode in Alice in Wonderland. The Democrat’s candidate seems to be running only because Daddy Wanted It. The Republican candidate Wants to Be Vice President. Neither appears particularly focused on the task of fixing our state’s intractable problems. Consider the question of education. Both candidates agree that without improving our schools, New Mexico will retain the title for Worst State for Child Welfare. Both insist that a good school system and an educated workforce are essential to attracting business to the state. What are their ideas?

Republican Susana Martinez presents herself as a photogenic defender of New Mexican children. As governor, she has to date failed to convince the Democratic-dominated Legislature to approve her choice for secretary of education, Hanna Skandera. Together, she and Skandera have so far failed to end the practice of social promotion, and they have recently been sued for their controversial and troubled assessment system for teachers and schools. She gets a D for Political Persuasion, an F for Compromise but an A for Gridlock. Attorney General Gary King seems, if possible, to have even more unlikely ideas for educational reform. Although his details are few and fuzzy, his plan can safely be summed up as Throw More Money At the Problem. Now King wants to

Please see POLITICS, Page B-4

I

got in a discussion on Facebook last week with a friend who, commenting on the recent TV ad attacking Secretary of State Dianna Duran, said, “no one watches these ads. … I don’t watch local TV. They waste an enormous amount of money on nothing.” It’s not the only time I’ve heard this. Most intelligent people, when discussing campaign ads, usually express disgust or wry bemusement. But on the other hand, most political campaign consultants I’ve ever known definitely aren’t stupid and definitely work to avoid wasting money. The discussion reminded me of an article I wrote a dozen Steve Terrell years ago in which I Roundhouse interviewed a couple Roundup of experts about the art of the attack ad. I’ve had many discussions about this through the years with Brian Sanderoff of Albuquerque’s Research and Polling Inc. Back in 2002, he told me that sometimes negative ads work on a viewer without that person being aware of it. “People always say advertising doesn’t affect them,” Sanderoff said. But he added that some who make this claim will pay extra for products from companies that spend millions on advertising. For that same story, Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, told me, “Whenever ads present accurate information which is disturbing about a candidate — that he’s been arrested for spousal abuse or that he lied about his résumé — that can work.” Such commercials also frequently work, Sabato said, if they reinforce negative perceptions of the candidate that the public already holds — as long as the commercial doesn’t make claims that prove to be distorted. Sanderoff described for me the triedand-true blueprint for attack ads: The target of the ad is always shown in unflattering black-and-white photos — sometimes shown moving in slow motion, making him or her look ominous. The music, when the narrator is talking about the opponent, also is ominous, usually in a minor key like a movie soundtrack right before someone gets killed. In some ads, the candidate paying for the commercial appears and offers a ray of hope in fighting the evil of his or her villainous opponent. “The ‘good guy’ is always in color,” Sanderoff said. “And the music changes to uplifting music.” Some believe that the real purpose of attack ads is to get people disgusted with politics and stay at home on Election Day. “Unfortunately, negative ads have deflated turnout,” Sanderoff told me. But not every attack ad is a winner, my experts pointed out. “Some ads do backfire,” Sabato said. “Those that go too far on a personal level, talking about your opponent’s private life, that can cause a backlash.” And, he said, attack ads can backfire if the public perceives a candidate is trying to make political hay out of a tragedy. He gave the example of a Maryland candidate who ran ads many believed were attempting to capitalize on the D.C. sniper shootings that at the time were fresh on the minds of voters. Negative ads also can backfire, both Sabato and Sanderoff noted, when they are obviously inaccurate. Sanderoff gave the example of New Mexico’s 1982 U.S. Senate race, in which incumbent Republican Harrison Schmitt, in the final weeks of his campaign, ran commercials that blamed Democratic challenger Jeff Bingaman, who was then state attorney general, for the 1980 prison riot. Although the Attorney General’s Office investigated the riot, the Corrections Department was responsible for managing the prison — as news media and the Bingaman campaign pointed out repeatedly. Schmitt lost that election. But what’s frustrating — for the candidates on the receiving end of such attacks as well as reporters who try to “fact check” such ads — is that many candidates routinely get away with distorting their opponents’ records. And whenever I’m doing an “Ad Watch” for The New Mexican, I know in my heart that no matter how many people read my article, a zillion more will hear — and possibly believe — the distorted attack. But I’ll keep trying. Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnew mexican.com. Read his blog at www.santa fenewmexican.com/news/blogs/politics.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

COMMENTARY: WALTER PINCUS

Fight against Islamic State is no game 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

Don’t panic, get prepared

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he Ebola virus is dangerous and deadly, making caring for patients a singular act of bravery. Witness what happened in Dallas, where two nurses who assisted a patient now have confirmed diagnoses of Ebola. Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person in the U.S. to have a confirmed diagnosis, was deathly ill, but some 70-plus health workers cared for him at risk to their lives. Hear the story of Joshua Mugele, a U.S. doctor who was assisting in Liberia last summer when the outbreak began there — he did not catch Ebola, but other caregivers who worked on that first patient have died. (You can listen to the story at NPR.org, “Panic in the Parking Lot: A Hospital Sees Its First Ebola Case”) Both the modern Texas hospital and the more basic facility in Liberia have this in common: Workers were unprepared to deal with Ebola. It can be deadly. It is spread through close contact with bodily fluids of an infected person. Catching it early seems to be key in helping people survive. Because this virus is not spread through the air, we should not panic here in the United States despite the diagnosed Ebola cases. However, our medical system must use the threat and challenge of containing Ebola to reassure everyone that hospital and emergency workers are prepared for an epidemic. The appointment of an Ebola “czar” by the White House should be used for broader preparedness. In Santa Fe, Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center last week isolated an emergency room patient who had been to Africa as a precaution. The patient did not have Ebola, but it is reassuring to see that our hospital is considering travel history when treating the sick. It is our only brush with a possible case of Ebola so far, but St. Vincent nurses used the incident to speak out. They say they do not feel ready to handle an Ebola case. (Fortunately, the hospital did have a coordinated disaster drill April 26, and workers trained in donning protective gear April 20.) However excellent that training was, it’s time for another round of preparedness. In Texas, it appears that hospital workers did not don proper protective gear until two days after the sick man was admitted. They waited for confirmation that he had Ebola (and that safety blunder comes on top of the hospital’s initial error in sending Duncan home from the ER despite workers being told that he had been exposed to Ebola). Once in the hospital, Duncan was not isolated immediately. Caregivers’ protective suits did not cover their necks, and some nurses even claimed that they were told they didn’t have to wear face masks. To prevent further tragedies, hospitals across the country must double down on preventing the spread of this — or any other — contagion. Recommendations from public health workers around the country include having a buddy system to help medical workers remove protective gear correctly. During removal is when risk of contamination is greatest. Another worker told CNN that a person who suspects Ebola can have someone call ahead so the hospital can admit the patient through an isolated entrance rather than the regular ER entrance. Other health care specialists think that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s assertion that any hospital can treat Ebola is incorrect, and that Ebola-infected patients should be directed to locations that specialize in treating contagious disease. Both nurses in Dallas have now been moved to hospitals with specialty wards. As for the rest of us, rather than panic about the Ebola threat, we can place our energy toward helping fight the disease in Africa, where there truly is an epidemic. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerman gave $25 million toward that cause. Such groups as Doctors Without Borders, Samaritan’s Purse and UNICEF could use cash donations to buy necessary medical equipment and supplies. The high mortality rate in Africa isn’t just because Ebola is deadly. People are dying because there aren’t enough doctors and nurses or basic medical supplies to treat the sick. The West must do more. If humane reasons aren’t enough, then use self-interest. The best way to prevent Ebola from spreading would be containing it at the source. And while the disease is fought in Africa, the United States must prepare its health care system and safeguard brave health care workers.

Election season

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nce again, The Santa Fe New Mexican will be making endorsements in the 2014 general election in contested races. Our endorsements will begin running Tuesday. Please read our election coverage in the daily newspaper and online at www.santa fenewmexican.com/elections. Tuesday: District Court and statewide judicial races. Wednesday: Constitutional amendments and bonds. Thursday: Area legislative races. Friday: Statewide contests. Saturday: U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate. Sunday: Governor.

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he air war against the Islamic State is not some video game that the U.S. military is being asked to play and quickly win. We must realize that American men and women are risking their lives against an enemy that will not quit just because we tire of viewing the fighting or reading about setbacks. Or, more likely, we begin running short of funds. This is warfare. Tens of thousands of U.S. service personnel are involved. Critics who repeatedly have called for putting more U.S. forces at risk as ground-based forward air controllers or doing front-line special forces missions have failed to learn from Vietnam, Iraq and even Afghanistan. “This is a lesson we’ve learned from 13 years of war — that the best counterweight to groups like this [Islamic State] on the ground are local indigenous forces, people that know the ground, know the culture, know the tribes.” That’s what Rear Adm. John Kirby, Pentagon spokesman, said to reporters Wednesday. President Barack Obama has said it must be Iraqi boots on the ground in Iraq, and Syrian boots in Syria. We can’t do it for either country. Eventually we will leave, and — as in Iraq — what little we accomplish can all but vanish if the country’s leaders lose their people’s support. “If the Iraqis aren’t willing and committed and able to sustain those gains, then they will be fleeting,” national security adviser Susan Rice said Sunday on NBC’s Meet the Press. So this time, there’s an effort to do things differently. The Iraqis must lead. They must have the capacity and the will to hold the line against the Islamic State on their own, Rice indicated. What about the United States establishing a no-fly zone or buffer zone inside Syria at the border to host refugees and provide a space to train troops to fight both the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the Islamic State, as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and others have sought? The buffer zone would require tens of thousands of boots on the ground — so who would have to lead in providing them, other than the United States? For Washington it would mean a new congressional authorization, since in no way could opposing Assad be tied to al-Qaida terrorism. Remember that the Republican-controlled House in September 2013 looked

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talib fires three shots at pointblank range at three girls in a van and doesn’t kill any of them. This seems an unlikely story,” writes Malala Yousafzai in her memoir, I Am Malala. “When people talk about the way I was shot and what happened I think it’s the story of Malala, ‘a girl shot by the Taliban’; I don’t feel it’s a story about me at all.” But it is. Malala’s story, the story of “a girl shot by the Taliban,” has tremendous power because it is a story not of tragedy but of faith. “While boys and men could roam freely about town, my mother and I could not go out without a male relative to accompany us, even if it was a five-year-old boy! This was the tradition,” Malala wrote elsewhere in her memoir. “I had decided very early I would not be like that. My father always said ‘Malala will be free as a bird.’ I dreamed of going to the top of Mount Elum like Alexander the Great to touch Jupiter and even beyond the valley.” “Malala will be free as a bird.” This was a powerful wish. And now she’s a Nobel Peace Prize winner. “Through hate-filled actions,” Ban Ki-moon wrote, “extremists have shown what frightens them the most: a girl with a book.” Seeing what Malala Yousafzai has already managed to accomplish at the age of 17, you can see what the Taliban was terrified of. Malala is a story. Malala is a symbol. Malala is the thing that frightens the forces of oppression the most: a girl with a book. She was a daughter in a country where daughters are occasion for commiseration instead of celebration. But she had a father who was just as proud to bring a girl into the world. He believed that she had every right to an education. All he had to do was not stop Malala from flying. “Trust your daughters,” he told NPR, “they are faithful. Honor your daughters, they are honorable. And educate your daughters, they are amazing.” “Tell me how can one live without daughters?” sobs Malala’s father in a particularly poignant passage of her book, when he is frightened that Malala will not survive. He is commiserating with a father who had lost his own brilliant daughter — a computer programmer certified by Microsoft at the age of 9. How indeed. The world without daughters is an uglier place. When daughters are not given the same rights to education, when they are forced to cover their faces, treated as less worthy, discouraged and dismissed, everyone suffers — the girls who could be computer programmers and scientists and political leaders, never

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

on the verge of voting against supporting air attacks against Assad for using chemical weapons. Would Congress now support sending U.S. troops to Syria? A no-fly zone would raise less of a domestic political issue, but costs could be a factor. A year ago, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress that establishing a 24-hour no-fly zone over Syria could cost $500 million and require billions to maintain. The most recent air campaign started at $7.5 million a day, grew to $10 million when Syria was added and is bound to rise more. Is the country finally ready for a war tax to cover such a long-term commitment? The United States is making a significant contribution. There have been more than 5,000 sorties flown by U.S. and coalition aircraft since Aug. 8 in support of operations in Iraq and Syria. It has taken about 300 U.S. aircraft, based in the Persian Gulf region on land and at sea, to carry out these operations. Backing up these operations are approximately 10,000 U.S. Air Force mechanics, flight controllers and other ground personnel stationed in the gulf region and an additional 5,000 Navy personnel afloat. Not all these men and women are in direct support of the dayto-day activities, but many are. Last week it was announced that the 1st Infantry Division will establish a

headquarters in Iraq with some 200 of its soldiers joining U.S. service personnel already supporting Iraqis at joint operations centers in Baghdad and Irbil. Soldiers from Central Command, who until recently have been assessing Iraqi security forces, are transitioning into teams that will advise and assist those same Iraqi units working at brigade-level headquarters and higher. Some 12 such teams are already operating, but they are expected to grow to 17 teams, according to Pentagon spokesman Kirby. An additional 300 members of the 1st Infantry Division will deploy to Kuwait and other Central Command locations to back up operations. Since June, Maj. Gen. Dana Pittard, Joint Forces Land Component commander for Iraq, has headed the 1,000 servicemen and women who manage security assistance programs with the Iraqi military and security for the U.S. Embassy and other facilities. In short, Obama has the U.S. military proceeding on the path he has promised to follow, but I’m concerned that most Americans are like the crowd standing around a video game player — prepared to watch for a while but ready to walk away if the game takes too long to win. Walter Pincus writes for The Washington Post.

COMMENTARY: ALEXANDRA PETRI

A girl as free as a bird

Malala Yousafzai meets with youth advocates and U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon at the United Nations in 2013. TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

able to fulfill their potential — and the world that never got to see what they were capable of. Malala’s story is a powerful testimony to what we miss whenever we miss the chance to educate a girl. Her father told NPR that when people ask him what he did to train his daughter, “I usually tell people, ‘You should not ask me what I have done. Rather you ask me, what I did not do. … I did not clip her wings to fly. I did not stop her from flying.’ ” “Malala will be free as a bird.” It sounds simple. It should not be revolutionary. But it is. Look at Malala — penning a memoir, continuing her own education in England, poignantly addressing the U.N. on the power of pens and books, now, winning a Nobel Prize. This is what happens when you don’t clip girls’ wings. Imagine if we’d never gotten to know who Malala was. We nearly didn’t. “I didn’t see the two young men step out into the road and bring the van to a sudden halt,” writes Malala. “I didn’t get a chance to answer their question ‘Who is Malala?’ or I would have explained to them why they should let us girls go to school as well as their own sisters and daughters.” Instead there was a bullet. Malala could have been just “a girl shot by the Taliban” — a sad, too-short story. But instead she

survived, and she’s using her voice. “Today I looked at myself in a mirror,” she writes near the conclusion of her memoir, “and thought for a second. Once I had asked God for one or two extra inches in height, but instead he made me as tall as the sky, so high that I could not measure myself. … By giving me this height to reach people, he has also given me great responsibilities.” She would be intimidating even under ordinary circumstances. She read A Brief History of Time to relax. “I distracted myself from the fear and terrorism by thinking about things like how the universe began and whether time travel is possible,” she told The New York Times. The Nobel Peace Prize committee wrote, “Despite her youth, Malala Yousafzai has already fought for several years for the right of girls to education, and has shown by example that children and young people, too, can contribute to improving their own situations. This she has done under the most dangerous circumstances. Through her heroic struggle she has become a leading spokesperson for girls’ rights to education.” Thankfully, we never had to see what the world was missing. Alexandra Petri, who wrote this column for The Washington Post, writes the ComPost blog for the newspaper, offering a lighter take on the news and opinions of the day.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


OPINIONS MY VIEW: JANE BASKIN

No one’s accountable for mental health crisis

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atrick Malone’s excellent piece, (“Provider shake-up meant to shake down?” Oct. 9) makes me question (again) whether we have a state government in charge or an organized crime outfit. This rubbish just smells worse and worse. u That was a heavy price tag Presbyterian Medical Services paid Jane just to keep Baskin working — $4 million. Phew! u The auditor agreed to reconsider the findings, but the musclemen at the state would not allow it. Phew! u And those involved had to keep their mouths shut. Phew! u State response: “They were informed of their options and chose to settle.” So would most of us, with leg-breakers standing over us. Phew! u The attorney general plans to take seven years to review 15 cases. Bet you a week’s pay I could do it in four months. But then, I might find they did nothing wrong. Phew! u Innocent until proven guilty. A chance to answer charges. Oh wait — that’s America. And this is Mafia N.M. Phew! u And the public can’t see details. Nada. Phew! This scandal just goes on and on. And here’s the part that really frosts me: There’s nothing we can do. Democracy appears to be hiding her head in shame in New Mexico. This administration is not only corrupt. It is heartless. It picked on the most vulnerable, least-able-to-advocatefor-themselves segment of our population … and shut down the organizations that had been their advocates for years. What’s their game? These things are usually about money. Were there hefty campaign contributions from … oh wait, we can’t make unfounded accusations. Apparently, that’s the government’s job. Jane Baskin is a clinical social worker. She is also the author of the novel Jane of the Jungle and the upcoming In the Belly of the Beast, a nonfiction chronicle of her 30-plus years of work with the population so devastated by the Medicaid audit.

My Views We are happy to consider publication of My Views, commentaries of up to 600 words, from writers who live within our reporting area. Provide verification information: full name, home address and telephone number, along with a sentence about yourself for the tagline. All copy is subject to editing for length, grammar, spelling, language and obvious errors. We encourage writers to include a photo of themselves. We do not return edited copy for writer’s approval. However, we try to respect the writer’s voice and edit as lightly as possible. We run My Views on Sundays — and no, we cannot guarantee a publication date. Please note: There’s a three-month waiting period between the publication of a My View and submission of another one. However, we accept letters of up to 150 words in the interim, about once a month. Send your My Views to letters@sfnew mexican.com.

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: BARAK WOLFF

Journey continues in search for ‘good’ death

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bout a year ago, I wrote (“Freedom to choose: Seeking a good death,” My View, Nov. 17) about my growing interest and activism concerning how we deal with the inevitability of death — how we think about it, talk about it, plan for it and ultimately experience it. It is becoming increasingly clear to me that far too often, there is a large gap between how people indicate they wish to die (mostly at home with family and friends free of pain or suffering), compared to the vast majority who actually die in institutions, too often with medical care that they might not fully understand, might not want and that too often does not improve the quality or even the longevity of their remaining life. A few months back, the prestigious Institute of Medicine issued a major research report called, “Dying in America: Improving Quality and Honoring Individual Preferences at the End of Life,” which traces the roots of our current system for dealing with death, highlights many of the problems, costs, challenges, and opportunities for change and improvement. Here is a link to an excellent eight-page summary of findings and recommendations from

this 500-plus-page report: www.iom. edu/~/media/Files/ Report%20Files/2014/ EOL/Key%20Findings%20and%20Recommendations.pdf. This past year, I’ve continued to Barak read relevant articles Wolff and books, participate in training and educational sessions, discuss these compelling issues with various experts, caregivers and with regular folks, and think about how we can collectively close the gap between what people seem to want at the end of life and what they too often experience. Toward that end, here are two, among many, promising developments in New Mexico. First, most folks know that they should be completing an “advance directive” to express their end-of-life wishes in regards to care and treatments. However, in most communities, fewer than half the people have completed and distributed such documents. To improve upon that, New Mexico is now joining other states in implementing a new form that combines patients’ choices for specific

kinds of emergency/lifesaving care with a signed medical order from their primary physician. The New Mexico MOST (Medical Order for Scope of Treatment) form is being used in parts of Albuquerque, Las Cruces and several other areas. It also is being discussed for possible implementation in the Santa Fe area. Intended for those with serious or life-limiting conditions, the hope is that the New Mexico MOST — www. nmmost.org — will be recognized and honored in homes, hospice settings, nursing homes, assisted-living complexes, by EMS personnel and in hospital emergency departments throughout New Mexico. The possibility of a universally recognized and honored end-of-life medical order promises to increase public and professional awareness, stimulate conversations within families and in the exam room, and help close the gap between desires and outcomes. The second development is in regards to “aid in dying,” the practice of allowing a terminally diagnosed, competent adult to legally obtain a prescription for lethal medication in order to reduce pain and suffering and exert a measure of control over his or her

THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS

dying process. This practice has been legal in Oregon and Washington for many years and more recently allowed in Montana and Vermont. Here in New Mexico, a decision last January by the 2nd District Court in Bernalillo County found aid in dying to be a fundamental and constitutionally protected right. That decision is under appeal, but in the meantime, aid in dying is legal in Bernalillo County. Efforts are underway to identify and train appropriate health professionals in the nationally recognized protocols to implement this clinical practice in response to requests from eligible adults. Although rarely used (based upon years of experience in other states), aid in dying is an important end-oflife choice, just like seeking excellent high-tech/state-of-the-art medicine to extend one’s life, or proactively choosing not to have CPR or a feeding tube, etc. There are no “right” or “wrong” choices here. It is our life and our death. We get to decide. Barak Wolff is a “mostly retired” public health worker from Santa Fe who works as a policy analyst for the New Mexico Senate when it is in session.

MY VIEW: JAMES LEWIS AND PETER FRANK

Amendment 5 is good for N.M. As members T of the State he state’s Land Grant Permanent Fund will distribute almost $600 million this year to New Mexico schools and other beneficiaries, a year-over-year increase of more than $60 million. In fiscal year 2016, we expect the Land Grant Permanent Fund and our other permanent endowment, the Severance Tax Permanent Fund, will distribute as much as $850 million in funding to benefit public schools and pay for government services. While many New Mexicans are unaware of these benefits, without them we would all be paying much higher taxes. As members of the State Investment Council, we ask for your vote on Nov. 4 for Constitutional Amendment 5. Amendment 5 will allow us as fiduciaries to better manage the Land Grant Permanent Fund, and should have a long-lasting and valuable impact on the state’s investment returns. When the Legislature passed Amendment 5, both Democratic and Republican legislators overwhelmingly agreed that Amendment 5 is not only critical for New Mexico, it is also common sense. Amendment 5 requires the State Investment Council to increase the standard of care under which it must manage our $14 billion Land Grant Permanent Fund. It raises the current responsibility level of the council from that of “ordinary prudence” to a higher expert standard already adopted by more than 40 states (the Uniform Prudent Investor Act). As well as raising our requirements, Amendment 5 also removes the cap restricting the fund’s international investments at 15 percent — a ceiling lower than what most institutional investors consider to be prudent. Our peer funds across the nation today invest from 18 percent to 25 percent of their assets internationally. If passed, Amendment 5 will give the council and our investment professionals the tools we need to decrease risk and appropriately diversify our portfolio in today’s global economy. The funds that we oversee have grown by $6 billion since our current council was formed in 2010. We have replaced most investment managers and consultants, reconstructed the portfolio, reorganized the staff, adopted codes of ethics and conduct, and the funds have achieved investment returns of 16.5 percent annually over the past four years ending June 30, 2014, more than doubling our target investment return of 7.5 percent. We have also recovered more than $28 million in connection with the pay-to-play scandal that occurred before we assumed responsibility for the funds. Best practices have been put in place to guide the council

Investment Council, we ask for your vote on Nov. 4 for Constitutional Amendment 5. in future years, and best-in-class investment managers and consultants have been retained to guide our investments. New Mexico’s permanent funds are known as “sovereign wealth funds,” and as New Mexicans, we can all be justifiably proud of the fact that New Mexico has the third-largest sovereign wealth fund in the nation. These funds are endowments similar to those held by universities, and they are designed to provide benefits for the generations living today and, just as importantly, for those to come. Endowments generate earnings each year — as endowment funds grow, so do their earnings — enabling programs to improve and providing the “buying power” needed to keep up with inflation and population growth. About 84 percent of the annual earnings from the Land Grant Permanent Fund support public schools, with the remainder supporting our state’s universities, specialty schools (The School for the Blind, School for the Deaf and New Mexico Military Institute) and other governmental beneficiaries. With money flowing in primarily from oil and gas revenues, the funds provide a mechanism that allows depleting energy resources to continue to generate financial benefits long after they have been reduced or exhausted. Each member of the council is a fiduciary for the funds, and as such we are required to invest prudently. We ask for your support in helping us to properly perform our duties to the funds on your behalf. Please vote yes on Amendment 5 on Nov. 4, and support our efforts to protect and grow the permanent fund for this generation, while helping ensure it will provide equal or greater benefits for future generations of New Mexicans. James Lewis is New Mexico state treasurer and Peter Frank is vice chairman of the State Investment Council. Also signing this piece were other SIC members, including Gov. Susana Martinez, Land Commissioner Ray Powell, Department of Finance and Administration Secretary Tom Clifford, Leonard Lee Rawson, Linda Eitzen, Scott Smart, Harold Lavender, John Young and Tim Jennings.


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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

Politics: Governor’s race seems like a clash of oversized egos land nonsense. Tweedledee and Tweedledum add preschools to our failed Agreed to have a battle; system. For Tweedledum said TweeSome inconvenient facts: dledee The most recent data supplied Had spoiled his nice new rattle. by the National Education The race between Martinez Association indicate that New and King seems most like a silly Mexico actually ranks in the contest between two oversized middle of all states for spending political egos. per student. Still more interestRolling out a rushed and coning, on the chart comparing fusing evaluation system that state government expenditures no one understands may be a for education per $1,000 of per- Republican spin doctor’s idea of sonal income, New Mexico was supporting strong standards in tied for second place. We spend education. The practical result the money; we just don’t get has been the demoralization of much for it. teachers and no improvement When I read about the politi- in the classroom. Democratic cal race for governor, I feel like insistence that we spend more I am witnessing more Wonder- — now on early childhood

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education — ignores the hard research that finds the benefits of preschool education to fade by grade three. If you tire of Dee’s and Dum’s partisan squabbling, I suppose you can, like Alice, always seek further adventures in Wonderland. Stroll right over to Santa Fe’s City Hall, where I am sure that merry band of political characters are inventing new diversions. Have you heard the rumors that Fanta Se will host a party to celebrate the arrival of The Bachelor? Dorothy Klopf writes her curmudgeonly point of view from Santa Fe.

MY VIEW: ELLIOT STERN

PNM plan lets down state R iddle me this: Why would a for-profit, electric monopoly knowingly turn down the opportunity to have lower operating costs, increase profits and stimulate the state’s economy through the production of electricity by renewables while simultaneously being able to limit rate increases and lead clean energy development? The answer has to do with the shortsightedness of Public Service Company of New Mexico and Public Regulation Commission leadership, a failure to objectively analyze the costs and benefits of current plans and the lack of will to engage the public and the staff of the regulatory agency charged with protecting the public interest while guaranteeing a profit for that monopoly (itself a conundrum that is often a contradiction). PNM and the PRC have come to agreement on a new plan behind closed doors without public input about a new plan. PNM touts the closure of two of four coal units of the San Juan Generating Station, but presents an Integrated Resource Plan with additional coal capacity totaling 132 megawatts, plus 177 megawatts from a new gas turbine and 40 megawatts of solar. The company wants to sell 134 megawatts of nuclear from an Arizona plant owned by PNM’s parent company to New Mexico ratepayers at a guaranteed profit, when PNM Resources can only sell it on the open market for a loss. At present, renewable, nonpolluting energy resources, wind, solar and geothermal make up less than 10 percent of total electricity generation in our state. Both economic analysis and public opinion are directly in opposition to the assertions made by PNM: A 2013 Colorado College poll found that 56 percent of New Mexico voters picked solar as their first or second energy choice, 43 percent picked wind, 31 percent picked natural gas. Only 11 percent chose nuclear and 8 percent picked coal. Thirty-two percent of voters said the impact of oil and gas drilling on air, water and land was very or extremely serious and an additional 22 percent somewhat serious. Do those results reflect New Mexico voters’ indifference about fuel type used to generate electricity? When maintenance and retirement costs are added to the energy generation costs of coal vs. solar and wind the modeling of present and future energy generation comes down

squarely on the side of the renewables. Even better for PNM’s future, rapid increase in solar and wind energy resources lowElliot ers operating Stern and maintenance costs and increases profits while moderating increases in costs to rate payers now and long term. To solve the aforementioned riddle: PNM and the PRC should integrate renewable alternatives into the energy mix now. Why, when we have incredible solar and wind resources, do we lag behind New Jersey in implementation? New Mexicans get it. Will PRC members who are supposed to regulate the public on behalf of ratepayers truly represent our interests, or will they accept PNM’s business-as-usual plan to reinvest in more coal and nuclear? Water is precious in New Mexico. Coal, nuclear and gas use billions of gallons of water a year. Solar and wind use none. Conserve water; don’t use it on

the production of dirty technology. New Mexico could export solar and wind generation. There are few jobs in coal and no jobs in New Mexico from nuclear. Do you want to create the jobs that we didn’t get when New Mexico lost the Tesla plant? Make a full commitment to replacement of fossil and nuclear energy with solar and wind energy. Use natural gas when necessary for uninterrupted energy availability and power system stability. Make no more long-term coal contracts that make ratepayers vulnerable to huge “stranded assets.” Join me in asking the PRC to reject PNM’s short-sighted plan.

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Elliot Stern is part owner and business developer with AllTherm/SolarLogic LLC, a Santa Fe-based designer and manufacturer of groundbreaking hydronic heating systems and thermal energy management controls. He is also vice president of the GLAS Foundation, which preserves Tibetan art and culture, and co-chairman of the Sierra Club, Northern New Mexico Chapter Energy Committee.

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OPINIONS

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: RABBI MALKA DRUCKER

Writer’s views on Israel in ‘Pasatiempo’ story cause pain

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was surprised and disheartened to find the recent story (“Fighting Words,” Pasatiempo, Oct. 10) in the magazine we rely upon for upcoming events, not polemics. While Max Blumenthal was a speaker for the Lannan Foundation, perhaps the violent interview belonged in the Opinions section. I haven’t read his book that he says The New York Times didn’t have the courage to review because of “progressive Jewish circles.” Maybe it wasn’t good enough

and not the conspiracy he suspects. What I’m responding to are his remarks in Pasatiempo. He offers a shrill warning to those “who embrace a more humane vision and Rabbi Malka fail to intervene.” Drucker Blumenthal compares Israel to “the tobacco industry, the Mafia and Jim Crow.” He calls this

advocate journalism. I call it a smear. While there is plenty to criticize Israel about, it cannot be compared to these extreme examples of evil. Goliath is another strange comparison for a country about the size of New Jersey in a part of the world with 300 million Muslims and 5 million Jews. Israel has its own reckoning about the spiritual damage of the Gaza War, and I hope that Hamas does its own soul searching. Who puts women and children over armaments? Who has

fired thousands of rockets into Israel? May they be forgiven, too. Blumenthal calls Israel a “settler colonial country” with a “comprehensively militaristic, hypernationalist and messianic society.” Santa Fe is a multicultural city that ideally demands its diverse citizens to be respectful and sensitive of all who live here. Jews who love Israel live here. It hurts them to see two pages devoted to bashing Israel and the speaker screaming that he’s speaking

the truth. I wish Blumenthal would direct his incendiary hatred toward the greatest threats to the world at this moment. Global warming and the Islamic State group would be two suggestions. Then his rage would turn to blessing instead of useless curse. Rabbi Malka Drucker is spiritual leader of HaMakom: The Place for Passionate and Progressive Judaism and author of 22 books, including Rescuers: Portraits of Moral Courage in the Holocaust.

MY VIEW: ROARK BARRON

A duller, less diverse Plaza B uskers are like the wildflowers and mushrooms on the mountains or in the aspen forests above Santa Fe. Part of the pleasure of a walk in these beautiful surroundings is the surprise and discovery of unexpected yet rewarding specimens, which can pop up where we might least imagine them. They bring color and character to our journey. It has felt for the past six months, since the city ordinance regarding busking was made more severe, as if the flowers and mushrooms have been sprayed with a toxic substance. This prevented their popping up and sharing with the viewers and listeners their delightful smells, visual delights and musical passages. This toxic substance in the air also has had effects on those others that must breathe it — the tourists, visitors and locals, causing depression and lack of spontaneous musical inspiration. Our Plaza used to be a more diverse and interesting place, with variety and the unexpected now sorely lacking. For the past five years, I have been bringing my 80-year-old Grand Concert Pedal Harp to the Plaza, mounted on the custom-built, electric-powered HarpMobile. Often I am asked if I am handicapped, and my answer is no, my body works fine, and yes, moving around more than 160 pounds of harp and gear is a handicap. I used to love the feeling that something was being shared that brought joy and wonder to children who might never have seen or heard up close a big harp. My harp can wake up the inner child within us all, who is moved by the sounds of plucked strings and the glistening tones that come from it. It was my pleasure to be the ambassador of this amazing instrument, bringing it to places and plazas that do not often get such royalty in their midst. Since this past May, when the new busker regulations came into effect, I performed on the Plaza only once. During the previous four years, I was there at least 15 times per month, usually around the noon hour for the allowed two hours. I feel the baby was thrown out with the bathwater when the City Council passed the harsh new laws limiting the locations, times and how we can share their musical gifts. Part of my unique musical signature is how I have 58 special sensors built into my harp. This is not allowed under the new regulations, even if I am not as loud as non-amplified instruments such as accordions, banjos, wind or percussion instruments. I understand the ordinance was designed to get rid of panhandlers and those few disrespectful buskers who abused the rights of others, but I feel it has been taken too far into the realm of repression and restriction. I was so happy to share my special service. My reward was

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appreciation. It felt perfect in its way, and most pleasing to feel this one was making a difference in the lives of others who happened upon my wildflowers and mushrooms. Where have all the flowers gone?

Roark Barron with his harp.

to be told that I had made the day for some and brought others out of their bummers and blues. The tips were not bad either, and it taught me that every donation to this musical gift I was sharing was the way the public could share their

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Roark Barron has lived in Santa Fe since the late 1960s. His four children were all born in the home his family and he built out at the end of the Santa Fe Trail. His original harp sound, and compositions are featured on 11 CDs and at RoarkBarron. com. He has won numerous New Mexico Music Industry awards over the 30 years he has been playing professionally. He also now teaches. Roark created a Sonic Sculpture, the WindHarp in the early 1980s. Barron will be performing solo at the Lensic on Nov. 14 as part of the Sacred Body Event. Visit http://sacredbodysantafe.com/.

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Determination of quorum and call to order Welcome from the chair Adoption of agenda President’s report, awards and presentations Employee of the month for September: Pass It Forward – Jeff Hood (Director, YouthBuild Program) nominated Noe Villarreal (Locksmith); WOW Gram – Angela Ortiz (Lead Instructor, Allied Health) nominated Chris Gettler (Security) Public comments Communications: faculty senate, staff senate and student government reports Approval of consent agenda: minutes special meeting, Aug. 5; work session and regular board meeting, Aug. 14; special meeting, Aug. 25; special meeting, Sept. 2; work session and regular board meeting, Sept. 16 Action on items removed from consent agenda Action items, nonconsent: approval of resolution (Tina LaCaze); approval of financial report (September 2014); approval of MOU between SFPS and SFCC; approval of property disposal; approval of contract for legal services; approval of PNM easement for intellirupter Information items: SFCC Foundation Report; strategic planning update; enrollment update for fall 2014 Announcement of next meeting Closed session Adjournment

Meetings are held in the SFCC Board Room, Room 223, 6401 Richards Ave. Board packet materials and information are at www.sfcc.edu/about_SFCC/governing_board. This agenda is subject to change. The public is welcome to attend. Individuals wanting to comment on any agenda item should sign in at the entrance to the meeting. Persons with disabilities requiring special accommodations should notify the President’s Office at 505-428-1148 immediately.

Captivating Tales from the Opera Swamp! featuring the hall ensemble

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Partially funded by the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers’ Tax.

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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

MY VIEW: DONNA REYNOLDS

League of Women Voters an advocate for voters, not parties

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t the League of Women Voters of Santa Fe County’s 3rd U.S. Congressional District candidates’ forum held recently with candidates Jefferson Byrd, Thomas Hook and Ben Ray Luján, Byrd used his opening remarks to read a statement chastising the league for its rules and demanding to know certain league members’ party affiliations. He then walked out of the forum. As a result, voters present didn’t have the opportunity to hear his views on a wide range of important federal issues including the economy, recent military actions against the Islamic State, college costs, health care, energy and climate change. The league values participation by candidates at forums to better educate voters. The league believes forums allow voters to hear candidates discuss issues and get candidates’ positions “on the record” so once in office they can be held accountable. Forums help voters make an informed decision at the polls and give candidates an opportunity to get their message out to the public, as many of these forums are covered by media. The league believes holding a nonpartisan candidate forum is a valuable public service and welcomes the full participation of all candidates. The league is a nonpartisan organization — we neither support nor oppose political parties or candidates. This founding principle requires that all league candidate forums be nonpartisan. At league candidate forums, no

political party can be promoted, no campaign materials are allowed in the room, and partner organizations must agree to honor Donna our nonpartiReynolds san principle. The League’s Voters’ Guide publications also adhere to our nonpartisan principle: No endorsements are made. League members come from all political parties or have no affiliation; they are never required to make their political choices known to be a league member. In Santa Fe, the league has hosted candidate forums for many years using a tried-andtrue format welcomed by the public and candidates. We are, however, always open to suggestions, and this year had several from the 3rd Congressional District candidates. We made accommodations, including allowing candidates to submit a question. Those were asked of the other candidates. The league diligently works on behalf of voters to provide informative forums that cover as many issues as possible. We ask audience members to submit written questions. A screening panel of league or partner organization members reviews the submitted questions, consolidates duplicates so that as many topics as possible are covered, eliminates personal attack questions and forwards questions to the moderator. The moderator

asks all questions of each candidate in rotation for fairness. The league’s candidate forum process helps eliminate voters’ concerns that any campaign has an advantage at our forums. Our voter services procedures are designed to minimize campaign rhetoric and concentrate on the issues that interest voters. We believe an open microphone could allow for questions to be staged. In covering the 3rd Congressional District race through the Voters’ Guide and candidate forum, the league honored its commitment to ensure full participation by all candidates, inviting not only the major party candidates but also a write-in candidate who has met state election law requirements. To our knowledge, the write-in candidate, Thomas Hook, has neither been invited nor participated in other 3rd Congressional District events. Hook attended our forum and publicly thanked the league for inviting him. The League of Women Voters advocates for voters, not candidates, parties or campaign staff members. The league stands ready and committed to educate voters through a variety of nonpartisan voter services in our community. We urge the public to get involved, encourage candidates to participate in these activities and partner with us to grow new voter education opportunities in Santa Fe. Donna Reynolds is president of the League of Women Voters of Santa Fe County.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 19, 1914: Word has been received here that Pascual Martinez of Taos has been notified of his selection by President Wilson for the diplomatic service in one of the Latin American republics. He will likely be named secretary of legation at some point yet to be selected, having passed the civil service examination successfully for such an appointment. Mr. Martinez will resign from the post office service to take the appointment.

Oct. 19, 1964: Moscow — With the Red Chinese A-blast echoing in their ears, the top Soviet leaders Saturday called on all the people of the world to “struggle for the complete ending of nuclear weapons tests.” The Central Committee of the Communist party, which just ousted Nikita S. Khrushchev as its chief, set this as the theme for its Nov. 7 celebrations of the Bolshevik Revolution. Oct. 19, 1989: Washington — The latest government tests show one out of four New Mexican homes has a dangerously high level of cancer-causing

radon, the Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday. The results prompted a call for every home to be tested for the gas. And, whatever remedial action is necessary should be taken by homeowners. Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas produced by the decay of uranium and rock and soil. As uranium decays, it produces radium, which releases radon. Colorless, odorless and tasteless, the gas seeps into homes through cracks in the foundation or through areas around drainage pipes and pumps.

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MY VIEW: DORIS VIGIL MCBRIDE

State needs to buy local and help N.M. small businesses

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or the past 27 years I have been operating a small, female-owned business in Santa Fe. I am extremely concerned about what is happening to many of the locally owned businesses that have been forced to close their doors, as well as to those of us who are struggling to stay in business. Times have been exceedingly difficult, and we need focused leadership to break the current cycle of economic distress. The state of New Mexico must develop a more focused small-business agenda. Every elected official also should be focused on what they can do to assist our state and the local small-business community in bringing about the recovery we so desperately need. One place to start would be with a “Buy New Mexico” initiative. Every trade organization and every economic development agency should sign on to this initiative. Every person who has an opportunity to purchase anything would pledge to purchase goods and services locally from a company based in New Mexico. This might sound simplistic, but it has worked in the past and it can work again. The initiative has to start at the top, and every division of state government must participate. Can you imagine what this would mean for the small-business community and for our economy in general? I don’t know whether the state has ever provided the numbers for the goods and services it purchases with out-ofstate companies. I imagine we would all be surprised by what the number is. Whatever dollars

we can salvage and keep right here in New Mexico to reinvigorate small businesses and to increase tax revenue would be significant. Doris Vigil McBride My business, Santa Fe Computer Supplies Inc., along with many other New Mexico small businesses, has been greatly affected by the purchase of goods and services from out-of-state companies. Some of these companies are huge box retailers that take their profits out of the local economy rather than keeping them here in New Mexico. The state of New Mexico needs additional initiatives to provide preference for small New Mexico businesses that are disadvantaged — such as minority, female-owned businesses headquartered and owned by New Mexicans with annual revenue of less than $500,000. If you are an elected official, please support locally owned small businesses and work to develop a “Buy New Mexico” initiative. We need everyone’s support to make this happen. What do we have to lose but the millions we’re bleeding every year to out-of-state companies who could care less about the economic strength of our beautiful state? Doris Vigil McBride is president and CEO of Santa Fe Computer Supplies Inc.

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. 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 your letters to 150 words. Please include your name, address and telephone numbers so we can verify that you wrote it. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.

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question posed in Friday night’s lecture, $80, 6 CEUs. At Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe. Friday RETIREMENT INCOME SEMINAR lecture tickets at the door; Saturday workpresented by Peter Murphy, Retirement & Es- shop pre-registration call Deanne Newman, tate Planning Specialist. This FREE two hour 505-988-5033. www.santafejung.org. workshop is offered at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Wednesday, OcOCTOBER tober 22nd, from 6-8pm. You will learn how to: Make the most of your retirement income streams; Tap into your retirement accumulations; Understand retirement plan distribution FREE ORCHID WORKSHOP! Come rules; Invest for stability, income, and growth to New Earth Orchids, 6003 Jaguar Dr., Sanpotential; Utilize financial vehicles that could ta Fe, to learn how to care for your orchids. last a lifetime; Protect your income and as- Workshop begins at 10:00 AM on Saturday, sets from the unexpected; and Prepare for a October 25th. Bring your problem orchids more comfortable and rewarding retirement for consultation. Stick around for the Saturlifestyle. RSVP is required. Call 505-216-0838 or email Register.SantaFe@1APG.com to reg- day Sale. For more details, please call 505983-1025 or visit our website at www.Newister. EarthOrchids.com.

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HAMAKOM CONTINUING EDUCATION presents Ethiopian Jews in Is-

PFLAG SANTA FE hosts EQNM for a special presentation on Tuesday 10/28 at 6 pm at Christ Lutheran Church (1701 Arroyo Chamiso). Just how safe are New Mexico public schools for LGBT students? EQNM is taking on Safe Schools as a long-term focus, and has launched the New Mexico Safe Schools Initiative in partnership with Santa Fe Mountain Center, Transgender Resource Center, and Southwest Women’s Law Center. This presentation is an opportunity to learn about this effort and why it is important.

ONGOING & UPCOMING

BOB BENNETT IN CONCERT! HAVE A NAGGING CONDITION? EXHAUSTED? Receive an individual

Christ Church Santa Fe, Saturday, October 25 at 6:30 PM. Bob’s nearly 40 years in Contemporary Christian Music has garnered him awards and acclaim, and an ethereal gift to paint with words the deep meaning of what it is to be human - and a child of God. Master of lyric and melody, Bob weaves memorable moments of laughter and tears into his performances. Christ Church Santa Fe encourages you to join us for this very special evening. The concert is free, but please call to let us know you plan to attend 505-982-8817.

rael: A Photographer’s Portfolio and History. Thursday, October 23 7PM. In this class photographer Irene Fertik will screen photographs of 22 years documenting Ethiopian Jews in Israel. Photographs from this series have been exhibited at venues including the United Nations Palais des Nations, Geneva, Switzerland, the Joint Distribution Committee, Jerusalem, Israel, and the Museum of Tolerance, Los Angeles. Suggested donation: $10. Montecito Santa Fe, 500 Rodeo Rd. For additional information call 505.992.1905 or OCTOBER go to our website at www.hamakomtheplace. org.

non-touch Seimei session at our community clinic Thursdays (pronounced Say-May.) Sessions are about 35 minutes and cost $20 or $25.00. First come, first served at our 1360 Vegas Verde location near Sprint, in the Santa Fe Budokan building. We work on acute or chronic conditions with exquisitely dependable results using the power of this Japanese technique that reflects the healing power of contemporary Buddhism. Bring us your most stubborn conditions; all practitioners were trained in Japan. Call Dr. Alexandra Bakos at 577-7511 for more information. Arrive 6:306:45.

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C. G. JUNG INSTITUTE OF SANTA FE Lecture & Workshop Friday, October 24th, 7-9pm, public lecture by Jerome Bernstein, M.A.C.P., NCPsyA., Jungian analyst: “Borderland Consciousness: Re-establishing Dialogue between the Western Psyche and ‘The Psyche-Left-Behind’,’” $10, 2 CEUs. Saturday, October 25th, 9:00am-4:30pm, workshop to further explore in depth the

WE ARE LOOKING FOR VOLCAMINO DE PAZ MONTESSORI UNTEERS WITH A BUSINESS MIDDLE SCHOOL Open House: Sun- BACKGROUND. Would you like to use

day, October 26, 2 p.m. Discover how the interdisciplinary curriculum at Camino de Paz School actively engages students in intellectual pursuits, meaningful work, life skills and entrepreneurship through project-based learning. Presentation begins at 2:00 p.m. followed by question/answer session and tours of the campus. For more information and directions see www.caminodepaz.net or call 505-231-2819.

your experience to help someone find a job? Please consider volunteering with the 50+ Employment Connection and help others in their job search. We need volunteers with job search experience, a strong business background, or computer tutoring skills to assist job seekers. Please call Georgia at 505-4764623 to schedule a visit at our 2550 Cerrillos Road office (the “glass” Toney Anaya Building) in Santa Fe. Sponsored by the NM Aging and Long-Term Services Department.

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

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-2 Family C-7 Celebrations C-8 El mitote C-8

LOCAL NEWS

Closing Questa mine: Workers begin the process of decommissioning the century-old mine. Page C-4

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Union OKs three-year hospital pact Deal includes minimum staffing levels beginning Jan. 1; contract is first in state with such a standard By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

Union nurses and support staff at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center overwhelmingly ratified a contract Saturday, ending months of acrimonious negotiations that centered on staffing standards.

New Mexico District 1199 of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, which represents about 500 nurses and medical technicians at Christus St. Vincent, voted to accept a three-year pact. Medical technicians unanimously approved the proposal, and 96 percent

of the nurses who cast ballots voted to approve it. The deal includes a minimum staffing level beginning Jan. 1, making St. Vincent the first New Mexico hospital to enact such a standard. Under the new contract, the hospital faces monetary penalties if it doesn’t abide by the staffing standards. “Our folks seem to feel very good about it,” said Fonda Osborn, lead negotiator for the union. “It was a struggle, but they feel like it was worth

it. We survived. We moved the mountain, that’s what we feel like.” The contract also calls for up to 8.5 percent in pay raises and a greater voice for nurses when they’re concerned about patient care or staffing. Additionally, both sides have agreed to drop complaints against each other filed with the National Labor Relations Board. Union and hospital leaders expressed relief that the often heated negotiations that began seven months

The Interfaith Community Shelter is family for those it serves

ago are over. “The final contract fairly represents the thoughtful efforts and dedication of all parties at the table,” said Bruce Tassin, St. Vincent CEO. Saturday’s vote settled months of tension between the hospital and the union over a contract that expired July 31. Twice before that, the union soundly rejected the hospital’s offers, at the urging of the union’s negotiating

Please see PACT, Page C-3

Debate rages over Wilderness Act in midst of climate change Conference marks law’s passage, signals push for its reauthorization By Ed Moreno For The New Mexican

about the kitchen, chopping vegetables and fetching supplies. “Everybody here is family to me,” he said. The shelter is more than a place of respite from the cold or the comfort of a warm meal. It is a community, a haven free of judgment, the only sanctuary for many homeless people, according to Executive Director Joseph Jordan-Berenis. “The shelter is dealing with the chronically homeless,” he said. “The shelter, when it’s open, is their home base. They have a community here. All of us are one community: the volunteers, the staff and the guests.” “They don’t judge you,” Meeks confirmed. More than 40 faith and community groups and about 2,400 volunteers keep the shelter operating during the winter. In the next six months, more than 1,000 homeless people will get a warm bed, a hot meal and a cold breakfast, the shelter estimates. And it

In less than a year, the 1964 Wilderness Act will come before the U.S. Congress to be reauthorized, just as a divide has emerged in the environmental community over how to account for the effects of human-caused climate change. At the heart of the debate is how to manage the nation’s 110 million acres of wilderness in the future and what kind of intervention, if any, would be appropriate. A half-century after passage of the Wilderness Act, the scientific consensus is that expansion of fossil fuel energy production and population growth pose significant challenges to humans and wilderness alike. Two distinct camps have emerged — a traditional view of “leave it alone” and a deconstructionist view that casts the wilderness movement as a quest for spirituality “out there,” whereas nature and humans have always co-existed. The discussion permeated the Wilderness50 conference, which was organized to mark the law’s passage and to press for its reauthorization. The event drew more than 500 wilderness devotees to Albuquerque last week to celebrate the Wilderness Act and was billed as the first national gathering of wilderness advocates in 25 years. U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Sally Jewell opened the conference by highlighting success stories of progress achieved in preserving 109 million acres of wilderness areas and monuments, more than 10 times the original 9.1 million acres designated in 1964, and that wilderness is more accessible to more people than ever. The secretary related that she had hiked around the proposed Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument near Las Cruces with Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich before President Barack Obama issued the monument designation. They found themselves in a land with ancient pictographs, a tarantula, a fox, dinosaur tracks, a stagecoach trail, and the hideout of Apache chief Cochise. Later, with reporters, Jewell illustrated how difficult the path forward may be for managing the wilderness areas in the era of human-caused climate change. “It is not possible to protect everything that we have,” she said. “Climate change feels to me like a freight train moving fast down the track. You can see it, in Alaska coastal erosion accelerating, sacred sites, historic archaeological sites, and modern infrastructure like runways washing into the Beaufort Sea because the pack ice has moved back and the shorelines are being battered,” she said. “The impacts of climate change will continue to impact [wilderness areas], but keeping them in their native state will help mitigate the effect of climate change going forward,” she said. “Wilderness becomes more important at a time of climate change. We learn lessons on how to adapt, and learn what Mother Nature is doing to adapt so that we can mimic that.” Jewell related that when the New Jersey shore was damaged by Hurricane Sandy, critical habitat for bird

Please see HOME, Page C-5

Please see WILDERNESS, Page C-3

Kitchen manager Benjamin Medina serves lunch to Janet Silva and her 4-year-old grandson, Brandon, at the Interfaith Community Shelter. The Cerrillos Road shelter will serve food to children but will not house them overnight. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

A home base for the homeless By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

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ecky Meeks lost her job and home in Wichita Falls, Texas, two and a half years ago. For the first time, she didn’t have a roof over her head. Directionless, Meeks took to the road with her dog and spent three weeks walking to Santa Fe. Someone told her she could get a meal at the Interfaith Community Shelter on Cerrillos Road. “I was just trying to survive,” said Meeks, 57. After repeated visits to the shelter, she started volunteering, doing odd jobs for the crew. She saved money to buy an early 1990s car from one of the volunteers, and some male guests taught her to maintain it. The shelter staff later hired her to clean the building, and she saved enough money to rent a room, ending her homelessness. Meeks is one of many people without a secure place to spend the night who have benefited

From left, Boris Dimitrov works on his paintings while Robert Duran, center, and Jerry Pearson find clothes at the Interfaith Community Shelter during a recent visit to the facility, housed in the old Pete’s Pets building on Cerrillos Road.

from the services of the Interfaith Community Shelter, which is opening its doors to overnight guests for the cold-weather season starting Sunday. Benjamin Medina, 60, is another. He just got an apart-

ment at the Stagecoach Inn after 25 years of being homeless. Medina has volunteered with the shelter since its beginning in 2006 and was just hired as kitchen manager. On a recent Friday, he bustled

Unconventional Santa Fe artist gives 1,500 a lucky-dollar day By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

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atthew Chase-Daniel thought the hard part of distributing 1,500 onedollar bills across town would be raising the money. But dropping, crumbling or throwing 40 to 50 bills around town every day proved the more laborious task.

Sunday SPOTLIGHT “I hadn’t really thought about it in the beginning,” he said. “It turned out to be a huge amount of work.” Chase-Daniel’s project, Dollar Distribution, took place between

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

Aug. 22 and Sept. 14. For a month, he planted dollar bills at street corners, on sidewalks, in library books or in pockets of shirts in thrift stores. And he picked up national attention along the way. The local artist was recently featured on Money.com, a subsidiary of Time Inc.

Please see ARTIST, Page C-3

Local artist Matthew Chase-Daniel is shown Wednesday in the Santa Fe Railyard with the roving art gallery Axle Contemporary, which he manages. Chase-Daniels recently received national attention for his crowdfunded project, Dollar Distribution. JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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LOCAL

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

David Roth, 19, was misidentified as a suspect in a case in which a man exposed himself to a fellow student, police say. Charges against Roth have been dropped.

Police: Woman misidentified man in indecent exposure case Santa Fe Police have dropped all charges against Santa Fe University of Art and Design student David Roth after the woman who accused him of exposing himself to her said she had misidentified him as the suspect. According to police Capt. Louis Carlos, the 20-year-old woman told police late last week that Roth was not the man who had gained access to her dorm room and exposed himself to her. “She said the person we arrested was not the one she thought got into her dorm — even after she saw him in a lineup,” Carlos said. He said the police have another suspect in mind but had not yet arrested him as of Saturday. The alleged incident occurred Oct. 2. Police arrested Roth, a California native with no previous criminal history, Oct. 9. He posted $5,000 bond the next day and was released. The woman initially called campus security, who in turn called the police department to report the incident. The New Mexican

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u Someone cut a hole in the screen of a back window and entered a residence in the 3200 block of La Paz Lane between 3 and 8 a.m. Wednesday and stole $40 in cash. u A business owner in the 800 block of Calle Mejia reported that sometime between 6 p.m. Thursday and 9:30 a.m. Friday, burglars forced open a rear window to the building and stole several items, including an iMac, worth a total of $3,035. u A Santa Fe man reported that someone entered a vacant house on Sombrio Drive between 5 p.m. Thursday and noon Friday and stole $450 in tools. u During the day Friday, someone broke into a home in the 100 block of Mesa Verde Street and stole an Apple MacBook worth $1,138 and a Samsung 26-inch television set worth $602.

DWI arrest u Deputies arrested Jesse Manzanares, 26, of Santa Fe at 11:30 p.m. Friday on Agua Fría Street at Cottonwood Drive and charged him with driving while intoxicated, speeding, reckless driving, resisting or obstructing an officer, unlawful use of a driver’s license, lack of proof of insurance and having an expired registration. The report notes that the suspect refused to submit to a Breathalyzer test and had a number of prior DWI offenses. Deputies administered a blood-alcohol test.

Help lines New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-2255

Funeral services and memorials LINDA S. BELL

FLAVIO GARCIA 6/15/1935 - 10/17/2014 Flavio Garcia passed away peacefully on Friday, October 17, 2014 with family by his side following a courageous battle with cancer. Born in Nambe, New Mexico to Damian and Rosina Garcia, Flavio lived his life in Santa Fe as simply as possible and often stated that as long as he was blessed by the riches of family he wanted for nothing. His career as a professional painter ended upon his retirement from the Los Alamos National Labs in 1997. He was a lifelong member of the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis and a proud and loyal member of the Painters and Allied Trades Union No. 823. Flavio was a loyal husband, father, grandfather, brother and friend. He enjoyed horseshoes, billiards, hunting, camping, family gatherings and reburbishing wood furniture. More times than not, Flavio could be found visiting with family and friends on what became known by all as the "Porch Club". Flavio is survived by his loyal wife of 56 years Helen; daughters Natalie Reyes (Jose), Ernestine "Tina" Jones (Jeff), Jo Ann Ortega (Bob), Shirley Garcia and son Marcos Garcia (Annette). Grandchildren Benjamin Ortega, Gabriel, Nick and Eric Vargas, Andres Garcia (Kayla), Miranda Garcia, Christopher and Jeremy Jones, and Dominic Reyes. Great grandchildren Ryan Vargas and Brody Garcia. Flavio is also survived by a very special brother-in-law Leo Moya. Sisters Cedelia Martinez (Joe J), Cecelia Roybal (David), Darlene Portillo, and Suzanne Virgen. Brothers Manuel Carrillo (Elda), and Brian Salazar. Very special friends, Mary Jane Rivera and Joe Maestas, Osmundo and Tina Herrera, Nick Herrera, Antonio Chavez, Dominic and Imogene Arquero, Tate, Susan HazenHammond and Ken Duerre, Alfonso Martinez, Johnny Montoya, Nazario Roybal and many other relatives and friends too numerous to name. Flavio was preceded in death by his parents, Damian and Rosina, beloved Aunt Elda Carrillo, sisters, Miranda Valdez and Rojiin Rollins. Brothers, Ramon Garcia and Carlos Ortiz. Grandparents, Urban and Teresita Ortiz. A very special thank you to the team of doctors and caring staff at Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center, Paula Deavitt, Nurse April Hunter and all other health care providers who so lovingly and respectfully cared for Flavio during his illness. A rosary will be recited at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis on Wednesday, October 22, 2014 at 10 a.m. A mass of Christian burial will follow immediately at 11 a.m. Interment at the Santa Fe National Cemetery will be held on Wednesday, October 22, 2014 at 1:30 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Flavio’s name to the Christus St. Vincent Regional Cancer Center 490 W. Zia Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com ARTHUR (ARTURO) CARRILLO Arthur (Arturo) Carrillo, Apr. 16, 1937 Oct. 14, 2014 - Beloved son, brother, father, grampo and friend passed away on October 14, 2014 while sleeping. He was loved and adored by those who knew him. He was preceded in death by his mother Ernestine Carrillo, his uncles and aunts: Sam, Victor, Tony and Alejandro, Mary Gallegos, Toby Lopez and Thelma Tapia; cousin Mario Gallegos and nephew Kevin Regner. Art is survived by his sister, Sylvia (Joe) Regner and brother Phillip (Frances) Carrillo; he is also survived by his aunt Fillie Gallegos and uncle Ray Tapia. He was previously married to Lupe Salazar and Lillian Martinez who is the mother of his two daughters who were his "go to girls" for anything and everything. Carolyn (Mike) Carrillo Luna and Christine (Bobbie) Carrillo. Arthur worked hard his entire life whether it was for the many companies he worked for in Michigan, New Mexico and Nevada. While in Santa Fe, Arturo enjoyed raising animals and spent most of his time at the Gallegos family ranch in La Cienega. For many years, Art was known for raising horses, cattle, pigs and lastly chickens. He loved selling his ungraded farm fresh eggs (Rancho Capilla Vieja ). When grampo wasn’t busy with chickens he loved spending his time with his grandchildren who were his world: Kayla Carrillo, Krysta and Kyra Salazar, Scott, Keith, Joseph Hayes, Daniel Otero and Alina Luna. Arturo lived a full and blessed life. He loved to travel throughout the U.S. and overseas and was stationed in Germany while in the Army. He loved to hunt, fish, use his tractor and grow gardens. Art will forever be missed by his many friends, nieces and nephews who he cherished and cousins who he spent time with in La Bajada and many other cousins too numerous to name. Special cousins Danny (Kathleen) Lopez, Vic and Alonso Gallegos. Visitations will be held at Berardinelli Funeral Home at 6:00 p.m. on Monday, Oct.20th where a rosary will be recited at 7:00 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at St. Anne Catholic Church at 11:00 a.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21. Interment will follow at the Santa Fe National Cemetery at 12:45 p.m. with full military honors. Arrangements have been entrusted to Berardinelli Family Funeral Service, 1399 Luisa St., 984-8600. Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

“What we have once enjoyed we can never lose. All that we love deeply becomes a part of us” -Helen Keller CALENDAR LISTING: To get an item on the calendar, deliver your listing to The New Mexican newsroom at

Linda S. Bell 75, of Las Cruces passed away Wednesday, October 15th at a local care facility in Las Cruces following a long term illness. She is survived by her husband Parker of the family home, a daughter, Sheri Bell of Albuquerque and a son Lance Bell, wife Judy and two grandchildren, Wyatt and Lindsey all of Keller, Texas. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Staci Leigh Bell. Linda was born in Las Cruces, October 8, 1939 to William T. Scoggin Jr. and Marie Davenport Scoggin. She is also survived by a sister, Becky S. Espy of Villanueva, New Mexico. She was also preceded in death by a brother, William T. Scoggin, the third. She attended local schools in Las Cruces and New Mexico College of A&M A in 1957 where she met her future husband, Parker. They were joined in marriage on December 20, 1958. Linda gained employment in the City Attorney’s Office of Las Cruces and earned her PHT diploma known as "Putting Hubby Through" degree. Prior to Parkers’ graduation from NMSU, a daughter, Sheri was born. The family relocated to Santa Fe where they resided until June of 1988. A son and second daughter were welcomed into the family in 1970 and 1971. Following the death of daughter, Staci, who succumbed to Lukemia in 1980 at the age of 9, Linda became involved as a director of New Mexico’s Ronald McDonald House and helped steer the project into serving the needs of New Mexico’s families who had children with serious illnesses that were being treated at area hospitals including Bernalillo County Medical Center now UNM Hospital. Upon family relocation back home in 1988 to Dona Ana County, Linda served on the hospitality committee in her local neighborhood association, welcoming new residents to the area. She authored her own Cook Book for the enjoyment of her family and close friends in 2010 which she distributed with love. She was diagnosed with Ovarian Cancer in May 2010 for which she was treated at UNM Cancer Center in Albuquerque and enjoyed an additional four and one half years traveling and enjoying her family activities. At her request she has been cremated under the direction of La Paz-Graham Crematory. Also at her request a private Life Celebration Luncheon will be held in Albuquerque at a later date in the courtyard of the Ronald McDonald House with her immediate family present. The family suggests any contribution in Linda’s memory be directed to ones own favorite charity, or the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund Inc. 14 Pennsylvania Plaza, NY, NY 10122 or Ronald McDonald House of New Mexico 1011 Yale Blvd. NE, Albuquerque 87106. Arrangements were entrusted to La PazGrahams Funeral Home 555 W. Amador Ave. Las Cruces New Mexico. DOROTHA HELEN GOSLING On October 10, 2014, Dorotha Helen Gosling, longtime resident of Santa Fe, New Mexico, passed at the age of 84. Born and raised in Holdenville, Oklahoma by her grandparents, she moved to Santa Fe over 50 years ago. After retiring from the State of New Mexico as a child support officer she focused on being an active member of many community organizations and projects including the Kiwanis Club of Santa Fe, Salvation Army, SF Young Democrats, Land of Enchantment Credit Union, and St. John’s United Methodist Church. She was preceded in death by her daughter, Robin Crossno and grandson, Steven Hall. She is survived by her two sons, Robert Crossno (Pat), David Crossno (Lori), daughter, Elizabeth Ann Hall (Robert), grandchildren: Angelica Hall, Rachel Crossno, Adam Chevalier, Scotty Chevalier, Pedro Rodriguez, and brother, Lofton Crossno (Faye) and many lifelong friends and her spiritual sister Darlene Muniz. In lieu of flowers, the family encourages donations to the Santa Fe Salvation Army located at 525 West Alameda, Santa Fe, NM 87501. A service will be held on Wednesday, October 22, 2014 at 2 p.m. at St. John’s United Methodist Church 1200 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505. A reception to follow the service at the church. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032, Fax: (505) 820-0435; santafefuneraloption.com

CAROLYN WELL OCTOBER 6, 1926 ~ OCTOBER 13, 2014 Carolyn, "Poose," a resident of Santa Fe since the early forties, was born in Alpine, Texas. She spent her early childhood on her family’s ranch. She was the daughter of the late Ford Jackson and Jean Malone. Poose graduated from Stephens College in Columbia, Mo. and attended Loretta Heights College in Denver, Co. Poose was preceded in death by her husband Robert Well. She is survived by her daughters Carolyn Armijo and her husband Anthony Armijo, and Dianna Dilg; son, Hank Well; and grandchildren Caitlin Armijo and Rob Well. Poose was one in a million and was instantly recognized by her red hair and her west Texas drawl. She was a realtor, and a contractor. Poose was devoted to her family; she often cooked wonderful meals for them. She loved her pets and was an avid gardener who grew beautiful roses. Her family loves her very much and will dearly miss her. The family would like to express their sincere gratitude to the staff at Santa Fe Cares Center for the loving care of our mother. We would also like to thank Dr. Bardwell, Dr. Sartorius, and St. Bede’s parish-especially Chris Johnson and Coleen Davidson.

2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OSCAR SIGALA Apr.17, 1955-Oct.19,2012

When a cure was not to be found he wrapped his arms around you and whispered "Come to Me". You did not deserve what you went through, so he gave you needed rest. I just want you to know that you are always in my thoughts and in my heart and how much I love you and miss you Your wife, Carmen

STELLA ORTIZ

Stella Ortiz, 93, of Santa Fe passed away on Thursday, October 16, 2014. Services are pending under the direction of

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

Remember your loved ones on their Birthday, Holiday and Anniversary with a personalized Memorial.

For more Info Please Call 986-3000

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

202 E. Marcy St. Or mail it to P.O. Box 2048, Santa Fe, 87504. You can send an e-mail to service@sfnewmexi-

can.com or send a fax to 986-9147. The deadline for listings is 5 p.m. Tuesday.

PUBLIC NOTICE Santa Fe Memorial Gardens is currently updating our cemetery and cremation records. If your family owns cemetery or cremation arrangements please contact us at. 989-7032

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

505.989.7032

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Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Zoo probes death of Tasmanian devil The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Authorities are investigating the death of one of four Tasmanian devils loaned to the Albuquerque BioPark Zoo by an Australian group. The animal, named Jasper, was provided to the facility last year, along with three others, by the Healesville Sanctuary in Australia as part of an overall effort to start a breeding program for the endangered species, the Albuquerque Journal reported. The devils’ population on the island of Tasmania south of the Australian mainland has been decimated by a form of cancer. Jasper was discovered dead in his outdoor enclosure Wednesday, the newspaper reported. Investigators suspect the

animal was killed by someone who hit it with a piece of asphalt that was found near its body, according to an Albuquerque police report. “Upon hearing about it, the mayor was shocked, outraged, extremely concerned,” said Gilbert Montaño, Mayor Richard Berry’s chief of staff. “These little guys are an endangered species.” The zoo reported finding Jasper’s body in a pool of blood inside its enclosure. An examination of the animal found its skull had been fractured. Authorities are asking anyone who saw something to come forward. “The whole idea to have the animals here was to create a breeding ground,” Montaño said. “We hope this doesn’t jeopardize our efforts to create a habitat for an endangered animal.”

Wilderness: Idea of management differs Continued from Page C-1 species had been damaged by salt-water encroachment, and the ocean had claimed land where a grove of trees once stood. Funds from the hurricane recovery were used to rebuild the beach to allow the red knot bird to feed before migrating south. The “let it be” camp is represented by Kenneth Brower, Dave Foreman and others, who consider the notion of “protecting” the wilderness an abomination and argue that management should adopt the policy that the wilderness needs no help from anyone. They rely on the words of the law itself, that wilderness is a place “untrammeled by man,” or in the words of the chief author of the Wilderness Act, Howard Zahniser, that stewards should be “guardians, not gardeners.” Brower, the son of the late David Brower, a leading environmentalist who led the Sierra Club and other organizations, has taken up the cause of allowing nature to remain in its natural “untrammeled” state. “What sold the public and Congress [in 1964] was a presentation of this very good idea to the American people. We’re losing that idea, and I’m surprised how many people who identify as environmentalists have bought the idea that wilderness is not real, sort of a fantasy, and people are just projecting their wishes on a piece of land,” Brower said. Brower cites arguments that there is no real wilderness because indigenous populations in North America had fully occupied this continent and freely “managed” their lands. “There’s no way to compare the impact of the first nations of America on our land with the industrial impacts that are getting us in trouble,” scoffed Brower. “I suppose you could use the word ‘manage,’ but the fact is the landscape managed them; they lived within their limits.” Foreman, a well-known New Mexican and a founder of Earth First!, told a workshop that “the wilderness is where you go for solitude”: You’re supposed to listen to nature, to the birds and the wind in the trees. You can’t do that with some electronic device hanging from your ears. He complained that federal agencies have not held to the ideal of wilderness management either, in that work crews use chain saws and other mechanical means to clear fallen logs and other obstructions that may pose danger for visitors. “I don’t want to be protected in the wilderness!” he bellowed in a workshop session. He also related an incident when a New Mexico State Police helicopter attempted to rescue a woman lost in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in 2009 in bad weather. The helicopter crashed, killing the pilot and the hiker, while a crew

member survived. “That kind of rescue shouldn’t even be contemplated in the wilderness. They could have hiked out in half a day.” Foreman said, “We need to control our consumption and our numbers and live in a scale that we can continue to live on this planet. Technology got us into this problem, it’s not going to bail us out of this problem.” Some of the momentum for the “deconstructing wilderness” view comes from a 1995 article by William Cronon in the journal Nature. In the article, Cronon tracks wilderness from the earliest times, such as places where Moses was banished and Jesus went for contemplation and revelation, and cites more contemporary figures including Henry David Thoreau, William Wordsworth and Theodore Roosevelt. In time, the notion of wilderness took on a spiritual aspect, as is reflected in many writings about the sacred spaces that constitute beloved landscape wilderness, Cronon writes, which created a division between man in the world and in nature, in the sacred wilderness. Moreover, he writes, young America banished indigenous people to reservations for the sake of a defined wilderness. In this context, Cronon and Brower might agree. In an article in the current Outside magazine, Brower writes: “Deconstructionist theory now divides the [environmental] movement itself, separating wilderness preservationists from newer breeds of environmentalists, like the foodie and smart-agriculture faction, whose hearts are in managed landscape [not in wild and unmanaged country], and from some environmental-justice advocates, who, in their focus on the disproportionate suffering of the poor from pollution and environmental degradation, sometimes view wilderness as an elitist concern.” For Dan Ashe, the director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, there will be innumerable problems due to climate change. Optimistically, Ashe suggested that adaptation to climate change and its effects on wilderness areas may work hand in hand, since the natural processes of controlling or adapting to climate change and evolution of a landscape are long processes. “If you’re a wilderness manager and you see something new and different, our tendency is to fight against those things and say, ‘that is not part of the character of this place,’ so I’m going to manage against that. We need to be able to recognize, is this an invader or is this a pioneer?” Eventually, Ashe said, “I might have to let go of something that has been a piece of the wilderness character, and I need to say that it is no longer going to support that. It’s part of a new structure.

I don’t want to be protected in the wilderness!” Dave Foreman, a founder of Earth First!

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Pact: Hospital staffing deal includes fines Continued from Page C-1 team, because it was dissatisfied with the absence of firm staffing minimums in those proposals. The union argued that insufficient staffing threatened patient well-being and stirred high turnover among nurses. The hospital administration countered that patient care results are its top priority and have been steadily improving for several years. Hospital leaders said they did not believe adding more nurses would further improve successful care for patients, although the union and some national health care experts disagreed. “While it took seven months to reach an agreement, it was because of our unwavering stance that the patient experience must be our first priority,” Tassin said. At the peak of the strife, the union threatened to strike, and the hospital braced for a walkout by advertising nationally for nurses willing to cross the picket line in exchange for up to $6,300 a week in pay. But instead of a work stoppage, the union resorted to picketing outside the hospital to draw attention to the labor dispute. That continued for more than two months until the two sides reached a tentative pact Wednesday. “We appreciate the understanding of our patients, employees and community as

we worked through the negotiations process, and we are pleased that we were able to provide uninterrupted hospital care during this time,” Tassin said. “All of our employees were especially dedicated during these many months to caring for the community.” For about two months, Santa Fe Mayor Javier Gonzales prodded the hospital and the union to continue negotiating. At times, the hospital had told the union that it was done meeting face to face. But pressure from the Mayor’s Office continued, and in-person negotiations resumed. Those talks produced the contract that the union adopted Saturday. It includes a commitment to staff the hospital at a level equal to at least 40 percent of similar hospitals nationally for nurses, and 33 percent of comparable hospitals for techs. Compliance with those provisions will be monitored on every shift, and if the hospital fails to abide by it, it faces fines of up to $900 a day. Funds generated by those fines will pay for nurses’ continuing education classes. Osborn said Tassin’s willingness to sit in on some negotiations at the mayor’s urging helped advance the talks, particularly when the hospital’s CEO personally assured the union that the new contract would grant nurses a forum to air obser-

vations and concerns about patient care and staffing. “I’m hopeful that we can now repair the relationship with management and work together to improve patient care,” Osborn said. “I hope in this process they’ve figured out they need to listen to us, too.” Other provisions in the contract include pay raises for nurses and medical technicians of 2 percent that take effect immediately and 1.25 percent pay hikes each of the next two years. Another 1.5 percent in bonus pay could be earned in each of the next two years by meeting patientsatisfaction goals, and the hospital can award discretionary bonuses of 0.5 percent each of the next two years. “Our ultimate goal was always based on a win-win philosophy that would result in accountability from the union with respect to patient satisfaction,” Tassin said. Patient satisfaction also affects federal Medicaid reimbursements to health care providers, and Tassin has said that St. Vincent lost $2.1 million based on its patient satisfaction ratings last year. Under the new contract, nurses and techs can earn an additional $1 to $3 per hour when they fill in at units outside their normal assignments, or get training that allows the hospital to use them more flexibly. Full-time employees

Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.

vehicle bearing a turquoise license plate. As of Saturday afternoon, police had no new information on the case, according to Lt. Louis Carlos of the Santa Fe Police Department.

In brief El Rancho faces water advisory The New Mexico Environment Department’s Drinking Water Bureau issued a “Boil Water Advisory” Saturday for El Rancho Mobile Home Park Santa Fe Water System. The bureau made the decision after detecting bacteriological contamination (E. coli) in three repeat water monitoring samples Tuesday. The community water system serves about 40 people and is located in El Rancho in Santa Fe County. The advisory does not extend to any other surrounding water systems. Consumers of the El Rancho Mobile Home Park are advised to boil water for five minutes before drinking, cooking, bathing or washing dishes. While most strains of E. coli are harmless, a positive test may signal the presence of other disease-causing organisms.

will have one less personal holiday than in the previous contract, and part-time employees will no longer get Memorial Day off with pay. Osborn reflected Saturday on the days leading up to the first negotiation sessions for the contract months ago, when the union saw itself as a group on its heels, coming off a three-year contract that many of its members viewed as laden with concessions that favored the hospital to the detriment of employees. She said the 40-year-old union was bracing for its last stand with the expectation that the hospital could try to break it during this year’s negotiations. Instead, Osborn said, months of picketing, internal discussions with broad swaths of its membership and unified votes that solidified a minimum staffing provision for the next three years has pulled new, younger members into the bargaining unit’s active fray. “People felt defeated with that last contract,” she said. “This fight was good, in that respect. What do you do for depression? You get off the couch and do something about it. Now people understand that something can be done about these things.”

Governor orders Ebola plan

ART IN ACTION From left, Tram Meeks and Linh Wikinson watch Travis Bruce Black work on one of his pieces Saturday outside his gallery, Canyon Road Contemporary, during the annual historic Canyon Paint/Sculpt-Out. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Armed bandit robs restaurant A man clad in dark clothing, gloves and a mask brandished a handgun and robbed the

Carl’s Jr. restaurant at 1640 St. Michael’s Drive of an undisclosed amount of money shortly before 9 p.m. Friday. According to an eyewitness, the man then fled the scene in a newer model two-door

Gov. Susana Martinez directed the state’s Department of Health to coordinate a preparedness plan in the event that there is an Ebola case diagnosed in New Mexico. The Department of Health will work with other state agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, as well as local hospitals and health care providers, to prepare for any potential cases of Ebola. In a statement, Martinez said, “The risk of New Mexicans contracting Ebola is very, very low, but I want to assure everyone that we are taking the necessary steps to prepare.” Staff and wire reports

Artist: Dollar distribution took a month Continued from Page C-1 Chase-Daniel hails from the East Coast but has lived in Santa Fe for 25 years. He said he and his wife came to the city in 1989 to be with his wife’s ailing mother and never left. To make a living, ChaseDaniel restored houses around town and eventually became a landlord. He’s a tall man with thick hands, and it’s not hard to imagine him wielding a hammer. These days, he helps manage a mobile art gallery called Axle Contemporary that is housed in a silver van shaped something like a mail truck. He and his wife have a son who attended high schools across town and a boarding school for the arts in Southern California before dropping out at 17 to chase his dream of working in the film industry. Now, 19, he lives in California, where Chase-Daniel renovated a storage room into a livable space for him. Speaking of his son’s decision to drop out, Chase-Daniel said, “It was scary. You’re taking a risk. But it can lead to a much happier life.” The idea for the Dollar Distribution project came to Chase-Daniel while he was driving through Santa Fe and spotted an errant $1 note blowing across the road. He watched as other motorists braked and swerved. He assumed they were entranced by the cur-

rency, and he wanted to create a similar response via the Dollar Distribution project. To make the project a reality, he turned to Kickstarter, a crowdfunding site. He offered rewards to those who donated, but they were mostly intangible. For example, he told those who donated the minimum amount that he would take their money, smile and give it away, although those who gave $150 would receive a photocopy of a picture of one of the locations where he had stashed a dollar bill. His fundraising efforts weren’t limited to the electronic realm. People on the street would hand him pocketfuls of change and worn bills. He eventually raised $1,500, electronically and in cash in different denominations, and then went to the bank to get 1,500 one-dollar bills. He said the money was the size of a large brick. Before he started the distribution, Chase-Daniel put the money inside the mobile art gallery he runs with Jerry Wellman so people could have a look at it. He installed a glass barrier, however, to prevent onlookers from being tempted to snag one of the bills. In August, Chase-Daniel set about distributing the bills. Sometimes he would drop the cash while walking through town. Or he would tuck the currency into a nook or cranny where it wouldn’t immediately be noticed. He

would also drive through neighborhoods, crunching the dollar bills and tossing them into driveways. He hid dollars in library books at the Oliver La Farge Branch Library and even on flower blossoms. Because he wanted to replicate his chance experience of encountering a dollar bill, Chase-Daniel strove to drop the bills anonymously. That meant he didn’t often get a chance to observe people’s reactions when they discovered the currency. “What I wanted most for the project was for people to find a dollar and be like, ‘Oh, it’s my lucky day, there’s a dollar,’ ” he said. “That was it. I just wanted that very simple experience of finding a dollar on the street.” He did share one instance when he was able to watch people’s responses. It was during the Indian Market weekend, when tourists and locals flooded downtown Santa Fe and the Railyard, where the new Indigenous Fine Art Market was held. He would place a bill a few feet away from his perch at the Railyard and read a book as he waited for someone to find it. He said most people had the same response: They’d see the bill, pick it up and then swivel their heads to see if anyone had obviously lost it. Then, not finding an owner, they would tuck the dollar into a pocket or wallet and walk away.

The distribution took a month. Chase-Daniel would sometimes document where he left the bills with photos, and on one occasion, a photographer shadowed him while he worked. He assembled the resulting pictures into a book, which will be for sale soon. Chase-Daniel’s Dollar Distribution is only his latest unconventional art project. In addition to the rotating art gallery in the back of the Axle Contemporary van, he and Wellman dreamed up an interactive exhibit in Taos with potatoes. They invited people to create stamps out of potatoes and then used chile, turmeric and similar brightly colored food stuffs as ink. They put the prints on the walls, and then cut up the potatoes and threw them into a stew. Though the Dollar Distribution project received national attention, Chase-Daniel is unlikely to replicate it anytime soon. It was fun, he said, but it would just be more of the same if he did it again. And he can get bored. He was once a jeweler who loved the process of imagining and creating a new work but was disinterested in making the same piece over and over again. “I got really bored,” he said. “I couldn’t bring myself to get up in the morning to do it anymore. So I stopped.” Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

REGION

Closing Questa mine an emotional, challenging feat Molybdenum mine in midst of being decommissioned

“I don’t think this is unique water collecting in the underfirst phase of its cleanup. That phase would include the demo- ground and leeching polluted in having to close the mine lition of at least seven buildings water back into the river and and go through the CERCLA aquifer. It will be up to regulaat the mill site. [Superfund cleanup] process tory agencies to determine what at the same time,” Flynn said. LeJuste says those buildings amount, if any, of water in the should be down by the first “This mine is unique in terms By J.R. Logan underground will be allowable. of where it’s located and chalpart of 2015. Once they’re out of The Taos News Aside from the mine and mill lenges that are posed by the the way, Chevron plans to consite east of Questa, LeJuste says geography in those areas.” solidate its utilities into a single TAOS — The long blare of Chevron will submit plans next corridor to serve a new water Eventually, the Mining Act the buzzer echoes off steel and month to decommission the treatment plant being built requires Chevron Mine to leave concrete as the 85-person hoist tailings facility on the village’s in the same area. The plant is the mine property as a “self-susshakes and starts its decent into west side. scheduled to be operational no taining ecosystem.” But given the darkness. A couple minutes later than October 2016. Before the closure announce- EPA’s comprehensive cleanup later, the lift comes to a stop Per state law, the Questa mine ment, Chevron already said it more than 900 feet below. list, that benchmark is likely a would remove the nine miles of long way off. must keep infrastructure in Phil Howard, manager and pipeline that carry tailings from place to prevent mine-related, longtime employee of the No matter how much hapthe mine to the tailings ponds. An employee with Chevron Mining leads an underground tour hazardous runoff from enterQuesta mine, knows this ride pens, all vestiges of the Questa Instead, tailings were going to ing the Red River or nearby well. For decades, he and his fel- of the Questa mine Friday. The mine is in the early stages of mine won’t disappear entirely. be processed at the mill site and Most notably, under the current groundwater. The new water low underground miners would closure and decommissioning. J.R. LOGAN/THE TAOS NEWS stored in the open pit. treatment facility will process don their hard hats and diggers closeout plan, the 4,000-footsurface runoff as well as water In addition, the EPA is also — Day-Glo work suits — and wide and 1,500-foot-deep open the massive elevator and walked garet LeJuste said some equipcollected by wells near the Red studying apparent leaks at the do the vertical commute to start into the eerie, orange glow of pit does not have to meet the ment will be donated to the River. Chevron and its contrac- tailings facility that are believed their shift. “self-sustaining ecosystem” village of Questa, the Questa the tunnel. “Now I’m going to tors also plan to update pump to be carrying polluted water Today, Howard is still prorequirement. Instead, a fence school district, Taos County and systems underground to collect be here when they’re taking into the nearby river and cessing the announcement will be erected around the area fire departments. it apart. I’m not sure if I really accumulating water and move it aquifer. The problem was disthree months ago that Chevron want to be. But I’m going to try.” 300-acre hole to keep people The New Mexico Mining Act to the new facility. covered years ago, but a clear Mining was closing the mine and animals out. For a veteran miner like How- requires reclamation of a nonsolution has yet to be proposed But with the same resignaimmediately and permanently. ard, it’s heartbreaking to watch working mine to start within six tion as a homeowner in a town To those who’d like to see all or enacted. The company said the centuryequipment once wielded by months of closure. But things evidence of the mining indusslated to be flooded for by new old molybdenum mine could no Ryan Flynn, secretary of the competent co-workers stacked at the Questa mine are complitry erased from the Red River reservoir, Howard said at least longer compete in a global marEnvironment Department, told on pallets and taken to the surcated by its location in a narrow part of the underground workCanyon, the crater will probably ket. Three hundred employees The Taos News that state agenface to go to the highest bidder. canyon, as well as the fact that be an affront for generations to were laid off. ings will be underwater. cies are working with the EPA Each load taken up the hoist it is a Superfund site under the On Oct. 10, instead of walkto create a unified closeout plan come. But for a few whose lives That happened back in the leaves the underground a little oversight of the U.S. Environwere defined by the dangerous ing off a lift crowded with cothat meets everyone’s requiremid-’90s, when the Questa mine emptier. Each section of wiring mental Protection Agency. It but satisfying work as a miner, workers — many of whom are closed for several years and the ments. However, many of the removed leaves the tunnels a will likely be decades before there might be comfort knowfriends as close as family memdetails on specific remediation underground flooded. When little darker. the entire closeout process is ing all signs of the mine haven’t bers — Howard was giving a miners went back to work, they techniques — such as how to “It’s a hard thing. When min- complete. disappeared entirely. tour of what was once a bustling handle accumulating underfound a mess and some colEven before the closure was mine and is now a virtual ghost ing’s your life …” Howard said, This story first appeared in ground water or how much lapsed tunnels. Environmental trailing off. “But you want to see announced, the EPA proposed town. topsoil to require at the tailings The Taos News, a sister publicawatchdogs like Amigos Bravos a massive cleanup that included have expressed concerns about ponds — have yet to be decided. Chevron is in the early stages it done right.” tion of The New Mexican. an estimated $800 million price When a mine in New Mexico of a mine-wide closure and tag. The remediation includes a closes, it’s required to follow decommissioning. Eventually, laundry list of projects, includrules enforced by the state’s most of the buildings and infraing dredging Eagle Rock Lake Mining and Minerals Division, structure on the surface will be and removing contaminated soil torn down. Most equipment has as well as the rules of the Envialong the Red River. ronment Department, which already been brought to the suroversees water quality. Chevron officials said the face and will be auctioned off or cleanup was not a factor in the The easiest step in what will donated. One employee joked decision to close the mine. be a long process is gatherthat the neat rows of loaders ing mobile equipment to be By far the biggest project reminded him of when his first removed from the site. Right required by EPA will be regradwife had her bags packed right now, things like trucks and exca- ing massive piles of waste rock before she left him. vators are being organized on created when open pit mining Howard is a miner. But was happening under previinstead of leading a well-trained the mine property, and much * ous owners. The job will be so crew in search of ore, he’s help- of it is slated for auction this month. complex that engineers are still ing dismantle the place that The first auction will be held trying to figure out the best way perhaps best defines him. M A S T E R YO U R S P O R T 3217 Richards Lane Suite B Wednesday and Thursday. A list to do it. It could be years before “I was here when we put THROUGH PRECISION (505) 780-8881 any work actually starts there. of items up for auction can be together the hoist. I was the TRAINING www.innerathletenm.com found at www.catauctions.com. In August, Chevron sent state project guy for that assembly,” *Bring coupon at time of visit Howard said as he stepped off Chevron spokesperson Maragencies a proposed plan for the

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C-5

Moms battle over pot in Oregon Groups offer differing views of legalization By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press

Jerry Pearson sorts clothes at the Interfaith Community Shelter recently. The shelter offers meals and services yearround, but on Sunday it opens its doors to overnight guests for the cold-weather season. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Home: Shelter offers meals, social services Continued from Page C-1 will provide close to 50,000 free meals. Guests wandered into the shelter on a recent Wednesday morning for a free lunch of steak and potatoes, bananas and cake. They chatted affably while volunteers worked in a kitchen filled with the sound of clanging metal and the smell of sizzling meat. On Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays all year long, people can come in for a meal or get professional services, such as health care or substance abuse counseling. Partners include Healthcare for the Homeless, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, St. Elizabeth Shelter, the Southwest CARE Center and La Familia Medical Services. Jordan-Berenis called it a “onestop shop” for those in need. The dozens of bunk beds lining a spacious room in the back of the building that’s reserved for men — who make up about 70 percent of the shelter’s guests — were sheetless and empty on a recent visit, but by Sunday night, many of them will be occupied. The smaller women’s quarters are tucked away behind a locked door at the end of the hallway. The separation, said shelter manager Nancy McDonald, prevents problems. On the other side of the building is a smaller, cramped room with foam mats instead of beds and a drain on the floor. People who are drunk — about 15 percent of overnight guests — are permitted to spend the night here in sleeping bags. They’re kept separate from the rest of the population to maintain peace, Jordan-Berenis said. During the winter months, the shelter opens to overnight guests at 6 p.m. most days, although it may open earlier on especially cold evenings. Volunteers sign people in and check to see if they are intoxicated. If the person has a breath-alcohol content of 0.02 or higher, the volunteers tell him or her to come back between 9 p.m. and midnight, when the shelter allows those over that limit to come inside. Jordan-Berenis said the shelter expects its staff and volunteers to show courtesy toward guests who are often dismissed out in the public based on their appearance or mannerisms. “Some of our guests can be tough at times,” he said. “We don’t want our volunteers to be judgmental about who they are as human beings.” A dinner is prepared by a faith or community group. Patrons visit with one another, play cards or watch TV before bed. During the night, paid workers are on hand to monitor activity in the shelter. Some guests require help moving around. Others don’t sleep and want to talk. Verbal or physical conflict, McDonald said, is a rarity, but staff must remain vigilant. In the morning, volunteers prepare breakfast for the 70 to 100 people who spent the night. But by 7:30 a.m., the guests leave for the day, and the staff and volunteers begin to busy themselves cleaning and prepping the shelter for the evening.

Moving forward The Interfaith Community Shelter started in earnest following two consecutive bitter winters — 2004-05 and 200506 — when a total of 49 people had died of exposure. The organization of faithbased and community groups first offered services out of a building at 1601 St. Michael’s Drive in the winter of 200708. The group then spent the

two next years trying to find a permanent location near a bus route. In the winter of 2009-10, they rented the former Pete’s Pets building at 2801 Cerrillos Road. The next year, the city of Santa Fe purchased the building and allowed the group to rent it indefinitely. The city also helped pay for a major renovation that included new showers, bathrooms, a commercial kitchen and laundry facilities. The iconic dinosaurs outside the building, relics of the Pete’s Pet era, got to keep their perch. Many locals and patrons still refer to the shelter as Pete’s Pets rather than the more formal Interfaith Community Shelter. Looking forward, Jordan-Berenis said, the shelter is focused on maintaining its services on Cerrillos Road. He has some plans — he wants to build an outside heater. The last five winters have been mild, he said, but the one coming up may be more cruel. “The shelter has gone through a tumultuous kind of period,” he said. “I feel like we’re now just settling in.” Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @CQuintanaSF.

LAKE OSWEGO, Ore. — Both sides in Oregon’s debate over whether to legalize marijuana are appealing to maternal instincts with the election less than three weeks away. At a Moms Against Marijuana Legalization event on Friday, mothers said legalization would harm children and families because it would increase social acceptance of the drug, its availability and access. “We already have a marijuana problem in Oregon. We don’t need to make it even bigger,” said Mandi Puckett, a mother and director of the No on 91 campaign. Puckett and the other mothers said one of their greatest concerns is that marijuana-infused edibles — such as gummies, cookies, lollipops, sodas, and even microwave popcorn — could easily fall in the hands of children, leading to accidental consumption. Marijuana companies, which stand to make a huge profit if legalization occurs, will be marketing the products to children like Big Tobacco once did, Puckett said. The mothers point to Colorado, where marijuana was legalized this year, and where over 200 pot-infused edibles are available for purchase. Some producers even buy regular sweets in bulk and spray them with hash oil. “What child doesn’t want to eat a gummy peach or a brownie?” said Jennifer Shepherd, a mother who flew to the Oregon event from Denver. “Once they’re out of the package, you can’t tell they have THC in them,” she added, referring to marijuana’s psychoactive ingredient. Last week, the Denver Police Department issued a

Mothers and others who oppose legalizing marijuana in Oregon told reporters Friday in Lake Oswego, Ore., that legalization will harm children, because it will make marijuana and edibles such as marijuana-laced cookies and gummy bears more accessible to children. GOSIA WOZNIACKA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

video in time for Halloween, warning parents that it’s very easy to mistake what looks like regular candy for a marijuana edible. Shepherd, who was spurred to action when a dispensary opened facing her children’s playground, said parents and educators are also concerned that young people will bring edibles to school and will be able to hide them from adults, because the products are small or similar to real candy. She said in Colorado, advertisers have already tried to attract young people by giving discounts on marijuana to those with a college student ID. But marijuana proponents say the existing black market for marijuana already makes children’s access much easier. “The money is going to illegal dealers, drugs, and drug cartels,” said Peter Zuckerman, the pro-91 campaign’s spokesman, at a separate event for moms in Portland. The mothers in favor of Measure 91 argued that legalization would benefit children and families because it would regulate a market that’s illegal and underground. The women are part of the Facebook group Moms for YES on Measure 91, which has over 100 members.

“Right now marijuana is sold on streets, at parks, outside schools, under the bleachers at games. It’s completely unregulated,” said Portland stay-athome mother Leah Maurer. “Measure 91 will bring marijuana off the streets.” Maurer, a mother of three

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children who serves as treasurer of the National Cannabis Coalition, also said 40 percent of the tax revenue collected on marijuana would go to schools and 20 percent to alcohol, drug and mental health services, while the rest would go to law enforcement. “Kids are not receiving drug education at schools. Measure 91 would put that in place,” Maurer said. Oregon’s measure would permit possession of up to a half-pound of pot for people ages 21 and older. It would allow marijuana to be sold legally in licensed shops. It would also allow for possession of up to four plants. Oregon decriminalized marijuana in 1973 and legalized medical marijuana in 1998. There are currently fewer than 100 people in prison in Oregon on marijuana-related crimes, though hundreds more have been arrested in marijuanarelated offenses. Colorado and Washington this year became the first U.S. states to allow recreational sales of the substance to adults.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

Mexican activists say they feel under fire after blogger kidnap

Mexico finds corpses, but not lost 43 Several mass graves uncovered, but still no trace of students By Randal C. Archibold The New York Times

IGUALA, Mexico — With borrowed shovels and pick axes, the farmers drove their battered pickup trucks to a series of suspicious clearings in the countryside, jumped out and started digging. “Hey, hey, it’s a spine,” one of the men, part of a citizen police patrol, called out last week, fishing out what appeared to be a piece of spinal column. Soon came other fragments — a rib? a knee bone? Five mass graves have already been discovered in the hunt for 43 students who disappeared last month after clashing with the local police — and another half dozen secret burial sites like this one are being tested to determine the origins of the remains inside. Even with hundreds of soldiers, federal officers, state personnel and local residents on the trail, the search has still not confirmed what happened to the missing students. Instead, it has turned up something just as chilling: a multitude of clandestine graves with unknown occupants right on the outskirts of town, barely concealing the extensive toll organized crime has taken on this nation. The students were reported missing after the local police, now accused of working with a local drug gang, shot to death six people on Sept. 26. Prosecutors say they believe that officers abducted a large number of the students and then turned them over to the gang. The students have not been seen since. President Enrique Peña Nieto has declared the search for the missing students his administration’s top priority. But if anything, the hunt is confirming that the crisis of organized crime in Mexico, where tens of thousands are already known to have been killed in the drug war in recent years, may be

Eleucadio Ortega, whose son is among the 43 students who went missing weeks ago, waits Thursday with other parents at a school outside Tixtla, Mexico. ‘Somebody knows what happened to him and the others,’ Ortega says. ‘Somebody needs to bring them back.’ JANET JARMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES

worse than the authorities have acknowledged. The federal government has celebrated official statistics suggesting a decline in homicides in recent months. But the proliferation of graves here in the restive state of Guerrero — including at least 28 charred human bodies that turned out not to be the missing students — has cast new doubt over the government’s tally, potentially pointing to a large number of uncounted dead. Relatives of the students, who were training to be teachers and planning a protest against cuts to their college, agonize over the discovery of each mass grave. Some have given up searching on their own, convinced that a mafia of criminals and politicians knows where they are but are not saying. Many still believe the lost students are alive, joining the distressed fraternity of relatives of the thousands still missing from the drug war in Mexico. Such cases are rarely solved. Hours before the latest possible graves were found, María Oliveras, the mother of Antonio Santana, one of the missing students, lit a candle and prayed at the campus where she and other relatives are holding a constant vigil. “I just want to know how he is, where he is and what he is doing,” she said. “When they find

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remains, I don’t want to believe it is him. You have to believe he is alive and for some reason they haven’t turned him over.” In his first two years in office, Peña Nieto has focused on revamping the economy and drawing foreign investors, earning praise from some economists who say he has set the stage for future growth. But critics argue that in the process, Peña Nieto has largely overlooked the lawlessness of towns like this one, 120 miles south of Mexico City, the evidence of which lies literally just under their surface. “Impunity is the main motivation for these numerous

disappearances,” said Alejandro Hope, a former Mexican intelligence official. “We must remember that only one in every five murder cases is solved in Mexico, whereas in the U.S. it’s two out of three cases. This is due to impunity, weak institutions and a decentralized search and localization process.” Members of the farmer brigades searching for the students — calling themselves “community police” who have stepped into the vacuum of authority in southern Mexico — said they were acting on a rash of tips from residents who do not trust any of the professional police. Leaning on a shovel, Miguel Ángel Jiménez, a leader of the community police, said he doubted the students could have been buried in this spot because the growth of weeds over it looked thicker than a few weeks would produce. “But even if it is not them, we can’t let these graves go unsolved,” he said, bringing a halt to the digging. “Once we find some bones, we stop and let the forensic investigators come in.” It will take a couple of weeks for the authorities to test all of the new remains discovered in recent days. Prosecutors have confirmed that the corpses and remains in at least five mass graves uncovered so far are human, but they have not yet tied them to any of the students.

MEXICO CITY — Mexican peace activists and bloggers who try to warn fellow citizens about drug violence said Friday they feel under attack following the kidnapping and possible killing of one of their colleagues. The kidnapping of Dr. Maria del Rosario Fuentes Rubio has sent a chill through the border state of Tamaulipas, where common citizens have used Twitter and Facebook accounts to warn each other about drug gang shootouts in which passers-by can be hit by stray bullets or have their vehicles stolen at gunpoint. The few who dare speak out on the home turf of violent drug gangs insist they will carry on, but they say the situ-

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Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

FAMILY

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

7-year-old should grow into assertiveness Question: My 7-year-old son does well in Now, the qualifier in this equation involves school and sports and has a good number of three words: at this age. At the present time, at friends. However, he often allows himself to age 7, your son is not assertive. That does not mean he will always be unassertbe intimidated by other boys. He is ive. Both behavior and personality a rule-follower and is more worried can change, but whereas behavior, about getting in trouble than defendespecially a child’s, can change fairly ing himself. I worry that other boys quickly, personality characteristics will see him as easy to pick on. Occa(temperament) change over a relasionally, he complains about how tively long period of time. Most shy other boys treat him. What words children, for example, are no longer can I use with him to explain how to shy by the time they’re in their 30s. be confident in himself, his athletic abilities, and not allow himself to be That was certainly true in my John intimidated by other boys? case. I was painfully shy as a child. Rosemond When I went to college, where my Answer: You’re describing a perLiving With reputation didn’t follow me, I was sonality issue, not a behavior probChildren able to slowly come out of my shell. lem. It would appear that your son My mother must have been aware of is not socially assertive, certainly my social insecurities. Nonetheless, not aggressive, a follower rather than a leader, and perhaps a pleaser to a fault. she made no attempt to solve that problem for Personality traits can’t be talked out of some- me. I think she realized that doing so might well have made matters worse in the long run. one, and they certainly can’t be disciplined out of existence. Any personality trait will be Today’s moms believe it’s their job to solve all of their children’s problems, whatever to the individual’s benefit in some situations they might be. The task is an impossible and a drawback in others.

one, which is one huge reason that so many of today’s moms experience parenting as a stressful, anxiety-filled endeavor. To great degree, this issue is about an emotional boundary, or lack thereof. When an emotional boundary doesn’t exist between mother and child, the child’s disappointments and struggles become the mother’s disappointments and struggles. As the mother works to solve her child’s problems, her frustration and anxiety increase along with the child’s feeling that there must be something wrong with him. This quickly develops into a vicious cycle. I encourage you to extend the same grace to your son that my mother extended to me. Don’t take this on as a project. Be supportive, but let your son figure things out on his own. Keep in mind that when all is said and done, your son’s positives greatly outweigh his negatives. I’ll just bet, for example, that he’s considerate and tender-hearted. If so, then I predict he’s going to grow up to be a fine person, and a more assertive one at that. Visit family psychologist John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemond.com.

As children’s books migrate to digital media, parents and experts debate the effect of e-readers on child development

Story time or screen time? By Douglas Quenqua The New York Times

lifford the Big Red Dog looks fabulous on an iPad. He sounds good, too — tap the screen and hear him pant as a blue truck roars into the frame. “Go, truck, go!” cheers the narrator. But does this count as story time? Or is it just screen time for babies? It is a question that parents, pediatricians and researchers are struggling to answer as children’s books, just like all the other ones, migrate to digital media. For years, child development experts have advised parents to read to their children early and often, citing studies showing its linguistic, verbal and social benefits. In June, the American Academy of Pediatrics advised doctors to remind parents at every visit that they should be reading to their children from birth, prescribing storybooks as enthusiastically as vaccines and vegetables. On the other hand, the academy strongly recommends no screen time for children under 2, and less than two hours a day for older children. At a time when reading increasingly means swiping pages on a device, and app stores are bursting with reading programs and learning games aimed at infants and preschoolers, which bit of guidance should parents heed? The answer, researchers say, is not yet entirely clear. “We know how children learn to read,” said Kyle Snow, the applied research director at the National Association for the Education of Young Children. “But we don’t know how that process will be affected by digital technology.” Part of the problem is the newness of the devices. Tablets and e-readers have not been in widespread use long enough for the sorts of extended studies that will reveal their effects on learning. Dr. Pamela High, the pediatrician who wrote the June policy for the pediatrics group, said electronic books were intentionally not addressed. “We tried to do a strongly evidence-based policy statement on the issue of reading starting at a very young age,” she said. “And there isn’t any data, really, on e-books.” But a handful of new studies suggest that reading to a child from an electronic device undercuts the dynamic that drives language development. “There’s a lot of interaction when you’re reading a book with your child,” High said. “You’re turning pages, pointing at pictures, talking about the story. Those things are lost somewhat when you’re using an e-book.” In a 2013 study, researchers found that children ages 3 to 5 whose parents read to them from an electronic book had lower reading comprehension than children whose parents used traditional books. Part of the reason, they said, was that parents and children using an electronic device spent more time focusing on the device itself than on the story (a conclusion shared by at least two other studies). “Parents were literally putting their hands over the kids’ hands and saying, ‘Wait, don’t press the button yet. Finish this up first,’ ”

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Family calendar Sunday, Oct. 19 THE SANTA FE SYMPHONY PRESENTS FALL GOLD: Guest conductor Oriol Sans leads a not-to-be-missed program at 4 p.m. at the Lensic Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $20 to $76. Half-priced tickets available for children ages 6 to 14 with adult purchase (no children under 6 admitted). Call 988-1234. BANDELIER WILDERNESS DAY HIKE: The hike will start at the Ponderosa Campground at Bandelier National Monument at 8 a.m. The total hiking distance is around 8 miles and hiking time should be five to six hours. Bring plenty of water, lunch and snacks, good hiking shoes and appropriate clothing for the weather. Call the visitor center at 505-6723861 ext. 517 for details and to sign up. SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS “GIRLHOOD” (BANDE DE FILLES): Marieme, 16, starts a new life after meeting a group of free-spirited girls. This film directed by Céline Sciamma is a coming-of-age story that is set in the projects of Paris; 7:30 p.m. at the Center for Contemporary Arts. Tickets: tickets.ticketssantafe.org.

Monday, Oct. 20 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.

Tuesday, Oct. 21 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. SCIENCE AFTER SCHOOL: Children ages 6 to 12 are invited to register for wild and wacky science experiments from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.; 955-4863; or the La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; 955-4860.

Wednesday, Oct. 22 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. SCIENCE AFTER SCHOOL: Children ages 6 to 12 are invited to register for wild and wacky science experiments from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at the Main Library, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.; 145 Washington Ave.; call 955-6783. EL AGUA ES VIDA WATER FESTIVAL: Santa Fe Community College presents the free festival from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Jemez Rooms; event includes workshops as well as music, films, artists, food and a pumpkin-carving contest. Call Emily Stern, emily.stern@sfcc.edu, 428-1467, or visit www.sfcc.edu.

Thursday, Oct. 23

A parent reads with a child from a tablet earlier this month in Philadelphia. As children’s books migrate to digital media, researchers are studying the effects, and a handful of new studies suggest that reading to a child from an electronic device undercuts the dynamic that drives language development. JESSICA KOURKOUNIS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

said Dr. Julia Parish-Morris, a developmental psychologist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the lead author of the 2013 study that was conducted at Temple University. Parents who used conventional books were more likely to engage in what education researchers call “dialogic reading,” the sort of back-and-forth discussion of the story and its relation to the child’s life that research has shown are key to a child’s linguistic development. Complicating matters is that fewer and fewer e-books for children can strictly be described as books, say researchers. As technology evolves, publishers are increasingly adding bells and whistles that encourage readers to take detours. “What we’re really after in reading to our children is behavior that sparks a conversation,” said Dr. Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a professor of psychology at Temple and co-author of the 2013 study. “But if that book has things that disrupt the conversation, like a game plopped right in the middle of the story, then it’s not offering you the same advantages as an oldfashioned book.” Of course, e-book publishers and app developers point to interactivity as an educational advantage, not a distraction. Many of those bells and whistles — Clifford’s bark, the sleepy narration of Goodnight Moon, the appearance of the word ham when a child taps the ham in the Green Eggs and Ham app — help the child pick up language, they say. There is some evidence to bear out those claims, at least in relation to other technologies. A study conducted by the University of Wisconsin in 2013 found that 2-year-olds learned words faster when using an interactive app as opposed to one that required no action. But when it comes to learning language, researchers say, no piece of technology can substitute for a live instructor — even if the child appears to be paying close attention.

Kid’s take on movies ‘Dracula Untold’

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Vlad of Transylvania who must fight the mighty Turks. His troops are greatly outnumbered, therefore By Patrick Nguyen, 14 he travels to a mystical mountain KIDS FIRST! critic and asks a demonic figure for help. This classic story is brought back The demon offers to give him great strength, keen senses and super to life in Dracula Untold, which speed for his mortal life. Vlad ultipresents a whole new take on mately agrees and ends up drinkthe Dracula tale by explaining the origins of the deadly vampire. This ing blood, which transforms him version tells the story of Prince into the iconic Dracula.

Dr. Patricia K. Kuhl, a director of the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of Washington, led a study in 2003 that compared a group of 9-month-old babies who were addressed in Mandarin by a live instructor with a group addressed in Mandarin by an instructor on a DVD. Children in a third group were exposed only to English. “The way the kids were staring at the screen, it seemed obvious they would learn better from the DVDs,” she said. But brain scans and language testing revealed that the DVD group “learned absolutely nothing,” Kuhl said. “Their brain measures looked just like the control group that had just been exposed to English. The only group that learned was the live social interaction group.” In other words, “it’s being talked with, not being talked at,” that teaches children language, Hirsh-Pasek said. Today, what Kuhl found is commonly referred to as the “Baby Einstein” effect, named for the enormously popular video series that entranced children from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s, but was ultimately found to have a negative association with language development in infants. In 2009, the Walt Disney Co., facing the threat of a classaction lawsuit, offered refunds to people who had bought the videos. Similarly, perhaps the biggest threat posed by e-books that read themselves to children, or engage them with games, is that they could lull parents into abdicating their educational responsibilities, said Snow of the National Association for the Education of Young Children. “There’s the possibility for e-books to become the TV baby-sitters of this generation,” he said. “We don’t want parents to say, ‘There’s no reason for me to sit here and turn pages and tell my child how to read the word, because my iPad can do it.’ ”

This movie is very dark in the sense of horror. The characters and battles are very graphic and scary. The plot of the movie was very unique, but it lacks fluidity. The cinematography, special effects and animations are amazing, but the editing is a bit choppy and, as a result, it lacks a smooth storyline. The script is a bit disappointing because it uses a lot of typical lines such as, “Let the games begin,” which lacks creativity. The actors are all rising stars.

Luke Evans is superb as Vlad and provides a new look once he is transformed into Dracula. He definitely fits the role with his very masculine presence as the prince and also by showing a dark side when portraying Dracula. I give this movie 4 out of 5 stars because of its confusing plot and weak script. This movie is rated PG-13. I recommend this movie for ages 13 to 18 with parental guidance. Dracula Untold is in theaters now.

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. “GOOD NIGHT, CAROLINE”: Capital High School presents Conrad Seiler’s play about a burglar who hides in the closet of a married couple’s bedroom, forcing the wife to deal with his criminal high jinks. The show opens at 7 p.m. at the Bryan Fant Theater at Capital High, 4851 Paseo del Sol. Tickets are $5. SANTA FE SCIENCE CAFÉ FOR YOUNG THINKERS: Cris Moore from the Santa Fe Institute will lead a discussion on “Music and Math” for teens ages 13 to 19; 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Georgia O’Keeffe Education Annex, 123 Grant Ave. Admission is free, and light refreshments will be served.

Friday, Oct. 24 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. “GOOD NIGHT, CAROLINE”: Capital High School presents Conrad Seiler’s play about a burglar who hides in the closet of a married couple’s bedroom, forcing the wife to deal with his criminal high jinks. The show opens at 7 p.m. at the Bryan Fant Theater at Capital High, 4851 Paseo del Sol. Tickets are $5. WORLD BLACKSMITH CHAMPIONSHIPS AT WILDLIFE WEST: More than 70 professional farriers will compete. Admission, which includes a zoo visit, is $7 for adults, $6 for seniors, $4 for children and free for kids under 5. All proceeds support rescued wildlife; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Visit www.wildlifewest.org. TRICK-OR-TREAT IN LOS ALAMOS: Local businesses will open their doors from 4 to 6 p.m. and set up tables along Central Avenue to hand out treats. A performance by Dance Arts Los Alamos will start at 5 p.m., followed by the High Flyers Gymnastics at 5:15 p.m. The Hallowiener Parade is at at 5:30 p.m. followed by a New Mexico Dance Theater performance at 6 p.m. Find a complete event list at losalamosmainstreet.com/events.

Saturday, Oct. 25 “GOOD NIGHT, CAROLINE”: Capital High School presents Conrad Seiler’s play about a burglar who hides in the closet of a married couple’s bedroom, forcing the wife to deal with his criminal high jinks. The show starts at 3:30 and 7 p.m. at the Bryan Fant Theater at Capital High, 4851 Paseo del Sol. Tickets are $5. POJOAQUE ZOMBIE WALK: The fourth annual free Pojoaque Zombie Walk will be collecting nonperishable food for The Food Depot. Participants will meet at the Pojoaque supermarket at 5 p.m. The walk to Kokoman Fine Wine & Liquor will begin at 6 p.m. Contact Tibo Chavez at pojoaquezombiewalk@gmail.com. WORLD BLACKSMITH CHAMPIONSHIPS AT WILDLIFE WEST: More than 70 professional farriers will compete. Admission, which includes a zoo visit, is $7 for adults, $6 for seniors, $4 for children and free for kids under 5. All proceeds support rescued wildlife; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Visit www.wildlifewest.org. BOO AT THE BARN: Free open house from 1 to 4 p.m at the ARTbarn. Check out the facility and art studio, create a colorful mask, enjoy some tasty treats and view artwork made by students. Costumes encouraged. HALLOWEEN IN LOS ALAMOS: Pumpkin carving at the Fuller Lodge patio from 10 a.m. until noon; Masquerade Recital at Fuller Lodge at 4 p.m.; Pumpkin Patch and Hayride at the Posse Lodge from 4 to 6 p.m.; Pumpkin Glow on the lawn at Fuller Lodge from 6 to 9 p.m. Los Alamos MainStreet will provide entertainment by The Nomads inside Fuller Lodge from 6:30 to 9 p.m.


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CELEBRATIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

As women share stories of loss, pain eases for all

Anniversaries Tafoya 70th Mr. Jose N. Tafoya and Gregoria Herrera were joined in holy matrimony at Our Lady of Talpa Church in Los Angeles on Sept. 17, 1944. On Sept. 14, 2014, they marked their their 70th anniversary with the celebration of Mass and a special blessing at Our Lady of the Annunciation Church in Albuquerque, followed by a dinner with friends and family. Joe and Gregoria met in Oakland, Calif., in 1942 and moved back to New Mexico in 1956. Both worked in Los Alamos, starting in 1956, until they retired in 1989 and moved to Albuquerque. The couple were blessed with three children: Peter Tafoya and wife, Lynn; Karen and husband, John Robinson; and Nina Tafoya.

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me feeling like I had to apologize. Some fter my recent column on miscarremained silent on the matter, leaving riage, I received an outpouring me to deliver an icebreaker. Not knowing of support along with dozens of stories about fellow women’s loss of pregwhat to say can lead to saying nothing nancy. It was a deeply meaningat all, which just reinforces the ful and moving response, and pain. For those who can’t find I’m filled with gratitude for the the right words, just saying, healing it facilitated, along with “I’m sorry to hear your news” is a sense of pride in the strength simple and well-intentioned. and bravery of the women who A therapist wrote in to say opened up to me. that by sharing my experience of The tricky part about not miscarriage, I had helped to norannouncing a pregnancy within malize it for others. Take breast the first trimester is that few cancer, for example, which was Bizia Greene something no one talked about people know your good news, Etiquette Rules! decades ago. Today, football playso if you do miscarry, it can be a very isolating experience. You ers are wearing pink socks in have to decide if you want to expend the support of finding a cure. Perhaps every energy to share the whole story multiple topic has its coming of age. times with the individuals who can proWomen I had known for years, along vide support and guidance. with strangers, shared that they, too, had I wasn’t sure I could manage that and gone through a miscarriage or stillbirth. took the easier route of saying it once, Sharing a common experience does not albeit in the most public of settings. The minimize the uniqueness of each person’s benefit of that setting is having a platform journey. For some women, the miscarriage to voice something personal in the hopes was a quick physical hurdle followed by a that it will bring value to those who read it healthy pregnancy. For others, it was deeply and, more importantly, those who need it. traumatic, physically and emotionally. My message was timely, as it turned For me, the miscarriage has been a long out. October is Pregnancy and Infant physical process while chasing after a todLoss Awareness Month, and Oct. 15 is the dler and feeling doubly exhausted with official Remembrance Day. I read about autumn allergies. I’ll recover in time, but the other women’s journeys and the numerexperience brought up some big-picture ous channels of support out there — webtopics, like our vision of the future as well sites, blogs, social media and local support as how men and women grieve differently. groups. Many sites suggested tips on what How can we help each other when we are to say and how to be helpful. suffering in our own ways? This is very real The takeaway for me was the resoundgrown-up stuff that will require its fair share ing message to talk about it if you want of closed-door and public conversations. to. Wednesday’s New York Times story As an etiquette consultant, there are “Saying it Loudly: I had a Miscarriage” subjects I recommend to steer clear of in questioned why we rarely talk about preg- certain settings or company. Miscarriage nancy loss, despite the statistics telling us is not controversial. It’s common, and every fourth or fifth woman has one. “If that connects us to one another. Sharing every woman who has lost a pregnancy to stories about our vulnerabilities and resilmiscarriage or stillbirth told her story, we iency shows we’re human, and doing so is might at least feel less alone,” wrote Dr. a compassionate gesture to provide hope Jessica Zucker, Ph.D. and healing. The feedback I received and news For more private reflection, try a local stories and blogs I read also included grief support group or find resources at information about how people react when www.october15th.com and related sites. a woman has a miscarriage, a study in Bizia Greene owns the Etiquette School human behavior in times of sadness. of Santa Fe. Share your comments and Some people expressed to me that they conundrums at hello@etiquettesantafe.com were hurt because they hadn’t been let or 988-2070. in on the initial good news, which left

They have five grandchildren, Mark, Diego (deceased) and Leah Tafoya and Hunter and Katy Robinson. They are great-grandparents to Ashley Tafoya. The Tafoya children say that their parents, Joe and Gregoria, always give back to their church, community, family and friends. “God blessed us with parents who are outstanding models of faith, love and commitment,” they said in a joint statement.

Jose N. Tafoya and Gregoria Herrera were married on Sept. 17, 1944, in Los Angeles. They celebrated their 70th anniversary last month. COURTESY PHOTOS

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.

El mitote It looks like The Bachelor’s stint in Santa Fe is paying off for star-sighters. The New Mexican’s own Patrick Malone saw Chris Soules, star of the ABC reality TV dating show, on Thursday afternoon strolling near the Plaza with a woman — presumably one of the ladies vying for his affection on the show — and one of the show’s handlers. They were window shopping on San Francisco Street. Malone even Chris Soules got a photo with the star. Fellow New Mexican reporter Daniel Chacón had a star sighting of his own when he encountered the show’s host, Chris Harrison, downtown on Thursday. Send your sightings to elmitote@sfnew mexican.com. uuu

Good news for the Santa Fe film community: Manhattan has been renewed for a second season. The drama focuses on the building of the atomic bomb in Los Alamos, and it has generally well-received by critics. Manhattan was filmed in Northern New Mexico and on the campus of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design. It features plenty of local talent, including Tailinh Agoyo, one of the organizers of the new Indigenous Fine Art Market. The Manhattan season finale airs Sunday on WGN. uuu

Actor and director Robert Redford, of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and Captain America: The Winter Solider, was seen driving along Old Santa Fe Trail. And he had a canine companion riding shotgun. The New York Times reported last week that Redford, 77, will be honored in April 2015 with the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Chaplin Award. Past recipients of the award, named for Charlie Chaplin, include Alfred Hitchcock, Elizabeth Taylor, Martin Scorsese, Tom Hanks, Barbra Streisand and Rob Reiner.

ON OUR WEBSITE u Follow the El Mitote blog at www.santa fenewmexican.com/news/blogs/ neighbors.

FAMILY

© 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 46

What is a mummy? A mummy is a dead body that has been preserved. When people die, the body usually begins to decay. Soft parts, such as the skin and other organs, soon rot away. But in mummies, the body does not decay. Sometimes the bodies were preserved on purpose. Other times, the body is preserved by accident. It might have been frozen, left in a very dry place or even covered by a peat bog.

This mystifying mummy is trying to trick you. Can you separate fact from fiction? Follow the mummy’s wrappings to check your mummy memory.

False. Mummies, or preserved dead bodies, have been found in such places as the Alps, in Florida and in southern Peru.

Egyptians used a process called embalming to preserve people’s bodies. It took a long time and had many steps. Below are some of the steps, but they are in the wrong order. Solve each math problem, then cut out each step and paste them in order from lowest to highest on another sheet of paper.

5 + 8 - 10

=

The body w with a kind as covered of sa left to dry. lt and

9-2-1-2=

as wrapped The body w linen. s er in lay of arms Good luck ch es im et m so were e layers. wrapped in th

False. They made animal mummies to give the dead food or companionship in the afterlife.

For Egyptians, the scarab beetle was a symbol of life after death. It is found on masks, jewelry and decorations that adorn the tombs holding their mummies.

In ancient Egypt, people wrote with pictures. The symbols in this kind of writing are called hieroglyphics (hi-ro-GLIF-iks). Sometimes a picture meant exactly what it showed. Other pictures stood for letters. The pharaoh’s name was spelled out inside an oval border called a cartouche (kar-toosh). Read the cartouche to find out what the word PHARAOH means.

How many scarabs can you find on today’s Kid Scoop page? Standards Link: History: Analyze the religious and social structures of the early civilizations of Egypt; discuss features of Egyptian art.

MUMMIES EGYPT EMBALMED PRESERVE BOGS SCARAB BEETLE MICE BRAIN SALT HEART TOMBS SKIN ROT

Find the words in the puzzle, then in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.

S A E M S B M O T A L S D M E T R A E H I

I E T B N E V G Y

R P L I B A R A C S T A T R M E L R O T S M A N S M U M P M O I

I E G I U Y E M

N K R I O C G M E D S P S V B E E T L E Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognizing identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

23 - 11 - 11 =

True. They preserved dead bodies so each spirit would recognize its body.

False. People in Chile were mummifying their dead 2,000 years before the Egyptians.

The embalmers took out the brain, lungs, stomach, liver and intestines. The heart was left in the body and all of the organs were saved, except for the brain. It was thrown away. What does this tell you about the importance Egyptians put on the brain?

9 + 5 - 12 = They filled “empty” bod the sawdust and y with spices. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Students identify text that uses sequences; restate facts in text to clarify and organize ideas.

Go on a Hysterical Adventure Look through the classified ads to find something to help you pass each obstacle along the path to the treasure-filled tomb. The obstacles are: • A pit full of tarantulas • A polluted river • A 20-foot tall wall of stone • A 30-foot long tunnel with spikes on the floor.

Use the hieroglyphics pictured here to write your name in the cartouche below.

Standards Link: Research: Understand the organization of newspapers and how to use print materials.

Tomb Adventure Imagine you have found the tomb of an ancient Egyptian leader. You roll back the huge stone at the entrance and… Finish this story.

Standards Link: History: Students analyze the religious and social structures of the early civilizations of Egypt.

… wondering about the past.


Scoreboard D-2 Prep roundup D-3 College football D-4 NFL D-5 Weather D-6

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

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NFL: Cowboys hope to avoid receiving a dose of humility when they face the Giants. Page D-5

HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Prep picks up tempo in 2nd half for win

Penalty saves Florida State’s season

By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

Something was wrong with Santa Fe Preparatory in the first half of its nondistrict match with Albuquerque Bosque School Prep 2 at Sun Mountain Bosque 1 Field on Saturday afternoon, and that led senior Griffin Sides to speak his mind. The Blue Griffins were tied with the Bobcats 0-0 at halftime, and Sides knew they could do better.

“I said to just calm down and pass and just play our game,” Sides said. “I didn’t think we were moving the ball as well during the first half, and I decided we needed to move it faster and play simple ball.” The Blue Griffins picked up the tempo in the second half, and that led junior Adam Weyhrauch to score a goal in the 52nd minute to give Prep a 1-0 lead. Senior midfielder Wyeth Carpenter nailed a bullet from about

Please see PREP, Page D-3

Santa Fe Prep senior Griffin Sides, right, blocks a pass to Bosque’s Aaron McCallister on Saturday at Sun Mountain Field. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

Notre Dame suffers first loss with TD called back By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press

CROSS-COUNTRY

Foley leads Los Alamos to banner day Hilltoppers finish third at Rio Rancho Shootout By James Barron The New Mexican

RIO RANCHO elieve it or not, Sophia Galvez walks on air, and it makes Madison Foley a tiny bit jealous. But just a bit. Even though the Los Alamos senior is the established No. 1 runner for the five-time reigning Class AAAAA girls cross-country champion, the one skill she laments is running nimbly in sand. That’s where her role model, Galvez, comes into play. “She’s the strongest runner on our team for sand,” Foley said. “She’s so light, she kinda floats on it. I really struggle on sand.” Saturday morning was no different for Foley. She lost several positions in the championship race of the highly acclaimed Rio Rancho Shootout while racing the sandy mesa around Rio Rancho High School, but where Galvez floats on sand, Foley plows through grass. Foley picked off INSIDE nine runners over the final mile that took u Find place on the grassy individual soccer practice fields and team results. and took third place PAGE D-3 individually in 19 minutes, 13.03 seconds. It set the tone for a banner day for Los Alamos, which took third in the team standings and was the top AAAAA team at the event. The Lady Hilltoppers were 99 points better than Albuquerque St. Pius X (seventh) and 141 better than Albuquerque Academy (10th), although the Lady Chargers were without top runner Dara Procell. Galvez, by the way, was 39th and the fourth Lady Hilltopper to cross the finish line. And once again, Los Alamos is peaking when the season matters the most. “We’re starting to lower the intensity, but increase the mileage,” Foley said. “That’s really helping, too. For three-fourths of the season, we do a bunch of high intensity, hard workouts.” It was a day in which another reigning champion flexed its muscle in the biggest regular season meet in the state. Reigning AAA (now AAAA) boys champion Taos got their chance to stare down the Zuni Thunderbirds, last year’s AA cham-

B

Please see PENALTY, Page D-4

INSIDE u Baylor, highest scoring team, gets first loss of season. PAGE D-4

MOUNTAIN WEST

Air Force’s ground attack sinks Lobos By Dennis Georgatos The Associated Press

Madison Foley races down from the mesa overlooking Rio Rancho High School at the midway point of the girls championship race Saturday at the Rio Rancho Shootout. JAMES BARRON/THE NEW MEXICAN

pion who moved into AAAA, in the boys championship race and didn’t flinch. Thanks to an eighth-place finish by Roy Madrid and an 11th from Donoven Gravelle, the Tigers took fourth overall and outpointed Zuni 213-236.

makes the kind of mistake that makes stomachs churn. Plus, he’s visible in the community and is engaging with the fans and media. A sophomore on The University of New Mexico women’s team, Josie arrived as one of the most beloved yet least known Lady Lobos of all time. The team basically recruited her without ever actually seeing her play, taking it on merit that if her older brother could make magic on the hardwood, so must she. Doesn’t matter that she looked oddly out of place during Friday night’s Lobo Howl when the players spread the floor and began a four-minute

AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. — Fullbacks Shayne Davern and D.J. Johnson lent a hand to Air Force’s passing game with the pounding of their feet. Their repeated forays up the middle produced 136 yards rushing and three touchdowns Air Force 35 and helped open New Mexico 31 up key passing lanes, including Kale Pearson’s 50-yard throw to Jalen Robinette for the go-ahead score as Air Force hung on to beat New Mexico 35-31 on Saturday. “I think you have to run the ball well and then, when you do, you can get some bigger opportunities for the pass, and today we did,” Air Force coach Troy Calhoun said. Davern finished with a team-high 85 yards rushing. Johnson added touchdown runs of 1, 3, and 6 yards among his 51 yards to help Air Force (5-2, 2-2 Mountain West) remain unbeaten in four games at home. The Falcons beat New Mexico (2-5, 0-3) for the sixth time in seven meetings, overcoming a standout performance

Please see WEBBER, Page D-3

Please see LOBOS, Page D-4

But even as they enjoyed the spoils of being the top AAAA finisher, there was a sense that they didn’t run their best race. Much of that could be attributed to the size and the quality of the field for the championship race, which

had the top teams from across all classes. The higher caliber of runners led to a faster pace and a much more difficult task of picking up spots as the race advanced.

Please see RACE, Page D-3

Aussie brother, sister are first family of Lobo basketball

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — For a few seconds, it looked as if Everett Golson and Notre Dame had another streak-busting victory, this time against the defending national champions from Florida State. As the fifth-ranked Fighting Irish celebrated an apparent goFSU 31 ahead touchNotre Dame 27 down with 13 seconds left, flags flew. The call: offensive pass interference. The touchdown was gone. Golson’s last pass was nowhere close and Notre Dame was done. After leading for most of the game, the Irish lost 31-27 to No. 2 Florida State on Saturday night. Golson was 31 for 52 for 313 yards and three touchdowns, an effort worthy of keeping him in the Heisman Trophy discussion. And Notre Dame will likely stay in contention for the College Football Playoff if it keeps winning. But ultimately Jameis Winston and the Seminoles had just enough to remain unbeaten and run their winning streak to 23. On its last drive, Notre Dame faced fourth-and-18 from its 43 after a sack by Terrance Smith. Golson bought a little time, rolled right and found Corey Robinson right at that first down marker for a first down, silencing the Florida State crowd for a moment. Golson did it again with a 17-yard pass to Will Fuller that gave the Irish a first down at the 20. Then a Golson run up the middle made it first-and-

an’t convert the short jumper or flash their frizzy blond locks and magnethreaten the rim with a throw tizing Crocodile Dundee accent everydown dunk? where they go. Right now, the pair can Who cares? do no wrong if, for no other reason, the Jump as high as a silver-haired librarfrenzied Lobo basketball fan base has ian carrying a sack of rocks? adopted them as the favorite son and No problem. daughter of the cherry and silver. Bury yourself in the back row, looking Doesn’t matter if Josie misses a shot bored to death during the Electric Slide? or Hugh’s alley oop pass gets picked off. Will Webber They’re the Greenwoods. They’re the So what? Commentary When you’re part of the first family of nonstick frying pan of Albuquerque. Lobo basketball, life is good. Real good. And it’s easy to see why. Hugh GreenAt the forefront of that clan is the wood has been a mainstay with the Lobo brother-sister tandem of Hugh and Josie Greenmen since he arrived four years ago. Not flashy or wood, the hoops-playing Aussies who proudly outspoken, he plays the game with grit and rarely

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

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D-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

BASEBALL

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

MLB PLAYOFFS World Series

THE AP TOP 25 Saturday

(Best-of-7)

San Francisco vs. Kansas City All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 21 San Francisco (Bumgarner 20-11) at Kansas City (Shields 15-8), 6:07 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 22 San Francisco at Kansas City, 6:07 p.m. Friday, Oct. 24 Kansas City at San Francisco, 6:07 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 25 Kansas City at San Francisco, 6:07 p.m. x-Sunday, Oct. 26 Kansas City at San Francisco, 6:07 p.m. x-Tuesday, Oct. 28 San Francisco at Kansas City, 6:07 p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct. 29 San Francisco at Kansas City, 6:07 p.m. x-if necessary

NL Championship Series San Francisco 4, St. Louis 1 Saturday, Oct. 11 San Francisco 3, St. Louis 0 Sunday, Oct. 12 St. Louis 5, San Francisco 4 Tuesday, Oct. 14 San Francisco 5, St. Louis 4, 10 innings Wednesday, Oct. 15 San Francisco 6, St. Louis 4 Thursday, Oct. 16 San Francisco 6, St. Louis 3

BASKETBALL NBA PRESEASON Eastern Conference W 2 5 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2

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

L Pct 0 1.000 1 .833 1 .750 2 .600 2 .667 2 .600 2 .600 2 .600 3 .500 2 .500 3 .400 3 .400 3 .400 4 .333 4 .333

GB 1 — 1 1½ 1 1½ 1½ 1½ 2 2 2½ 2½ 2½ 3 3

Western Conference W L Pct GB Golden State 4 1 .800 — Utah 4 1 .800 — Houston 3 1 .750 ½ Phoenix 2 1 .667 1 New Orleans 3 2 .600 1 Oklahoma City 2 3 .400 2 Dallas 2 3 .400 2 Minnesota 1 2 .333 2 Portland 1 2 .333 2 Denver 2 4 .333 2½ L.A. Lakers 1 3 .250 2½ San Antonio 0 2 .000 2½ Memphis 1 3 .250 2½ Sacramento 1 3 .250 2½ L.A. Clippers 1 4 .200 3 Saturday’s Games Indiana 98, Dallas 93 Detroit 104, Atlanta 100 Philadelphia 95, Orlando 84 Miami 111, San Antonio 108, OT Denver 104 L.A. Clippers 93 Friday’s Games Charlotte 96, Washington 86 Orlando 99, Detroit 87 Dallas 108, Cleveland 102 Toronto 109, Oklahoma City 90 Milwaukee 105, Minnesota 98 Miami 115, Golden State 108 L.A. Clippers 101, Utah 97 Sunday’s Games Boston at Brooklyn, 1 p.m. Minnesota vs. Oklahoma City at Tulsa, OK, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Chicago, 6 p.m. Golden State vs. Houston at Hidalgo, TX, 6 p.m. Utah at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.

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

W 5 3 2 1 W 4 3 2 0 W 3 4 3 3 W 5 4 2 0

L 2 3 3 6 L 2 3 4 6 L 1 2 2 3 L 1 1 3 5

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

Pct .714 .500 .400 .143 Pct .667 .500 .333 .000 Pct .700 .667 .600 .500 Pct .833 .800 .400 .000

PF PA 187 154 118 126 120 124 121 185 PF PA 189 136 132 120 104 153 81 185 PF PA 134 113 164 97 134 115 124 139 PF PA 164 91 147 104 119 101 79 134

National Conference East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 5 1 0 .833 183 132 Dallas 5 1 0 .833 165 126 N.Y. Giants 3 3 0 .500 133 138 Washington 1 5 0 .167 132 166 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 3 2 1 .583 141 157 New Orleans 2 3 0 .400 132 141 Atlanta 2 4 0 .333 164 170 Tampa Bay 1 5 0 .167 120 204 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 4 2 0 .667 116 82 Green Bay 4 2 0 .667 161 130 Chicago 3 3 0 .500 143 144 Minnesota 2 4 0 .333 104 143 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 1 0 .800 116 106 San Francisco 4 2 0 .667 141 123 Seattle 3 2 0 .600 133 113 St. Louis 1 4 0 .200 101 150 Sunday’s Games Seattle at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Miami at Chicago, 11 a.m. Carolina at Green Bay, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Baltimore, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Washington, 11 a.m. Cleveland at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Minnesota at Buffalo, 11 a.m. New Orleans at Detroit, 11 a.m. Kansas City at San Diego, 2:05 p.m. Arizona at Oakland, 2:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 2:25 p.m. San Francisco at Denver, 6:30 p.m. Open: Philadelphia, Tampa Bay Monday’s Game Houston at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m. Thursday’s Game New England 27, N.Y. Jets 25 Open: Philadelphia, Tampa Bay

NFL Calendar Oct. 28 — Trade deadline. Dec. 28 — Regular season ends. Jan. 3-4, 2015 — Wild-card playoffs. Jan. 10-11 — Divisional playoffs. Jan. 18 — Conference championships. Jan. 25 — Pro Bowl, Glendale, Ariz. Feb. 1 — Super Bowl, Glendale, Ariz.

# 2 Florida State 31, # 5 Notre Dame 27 # 3 Mississippi 34, Tennessee 3 West Virginia 41, # 4 Baylor 27 # 7 Alabama 59, # 21 Texas A&M 0 # 8 Michigan State 56, Indiana 17 # 9 Oregon 45, Washington 20 # 10 Georgia 45, Arkansas 32 # 14 Kansas State 31, # 11 Oklahoma 30 # 12 TCU 42, # 15 Oklahoma St. 9 # 13 Ohio State 56, Rutgers 17 # 17 Arizona State vs. # 23 Stanford # 19 Nebraska 38, N.western 17 # 22 Southern Cal 56, Colorado 28 # 24 Clemson 17, Bos. College 13 # 25 Marshall 45, FIU 13

AP TOP 25 Summaries No. 2 FLORIDA ST. 31, No. 5 NOTRE DAME 27 Notre Dame 7 10 7 3—27 Florida St. 7 3 14 7—31 First Quarter ND—Robinson 1 pass from Golson (Brindza kick), 2:10. FSU—Rudolph 11 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), :19. Second Quarter ND—Robinson 9 pass from Golson (Brindza kick), 12:00. FSU—FG Aguayo 28, 4:46. ND—FG Brindza 34, :39. Third Quarter FSU—Greene 10 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), 10:37. ND—Fuller 11 pass from Golson (Brindza kick), 7:26. FSU—K.Williams 2 run (Aguayo kick), 3:38. Fourth Quarter ND—FG Brindza 46, 11:40. FSU—K.Williams 1 run (Aguayo kick), 7:39. A—82,431. ND FSU First downs 26 18 Rushes-yards 35-157 26-50 Passing 313 273 Comp-Att-Int 31-52-2 23-31-1 Return Yards 5 22 Punts-Avg. 3-43.7 5-42.2 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-67 9-84 Time of Possession 32:51 27:09 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Notre Dame, Folston 21-120, Golson 11-33, McDaniel 1-3, Bryant 1-2, Carlisle 1-(minus 1). Florida St., K.Williams 8-25, D.Cook 12-20, Winston 4-8, Stevenson 1-0, Team 1-(minus 3). PASSING—Notre Dame, Golson 31-52-2-313. Florida St., Winston 23-31-1-273. RECEIVING—Notre Dame, Robinson 8-99, Fuller 8-79, Prosise 6-59, C.Brown 5-38, Koyack 2-29, Carlisle 2-9. Florida St., Greene 8-108, Rudolph 6-80, Wilson 4-45, O’Leary 3-13, K.Williams 2-27.

No. 3 MISSISSIPPI 34, TENNESSEE 3 Tennessee 0 3 0 0—3 Mississippi 0 14 10 10—34 Second Quarter Tenn—FG Medley 27, 12:40. Miss—Sanders 39 pass from Wallace (Wunderlich kick), 5:08. Miss—Walton 7 run (Wunderlich kick), 1:51. Third Quarter Miss—FG Wunderlich 34, 2:04. Miss—Engram 28 pass from Wallace (Wunderlich kick), 1:50. Fourth Quarter Miss—FG Wunderlich 27, 7:53. Miss—Dodson 8 run (Wunderlich kick), :31. A—62,081. Tenn Miss First downs 10 18 Rushes-yards 28-0 47-180 Passing 191 203 Comp-Att-Int 19-34-3 14-31-0 Return Yards 21 16 Punts-Avg. 9-45.6 9-48.2 Fumbles-Lost 3-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 3-23 2-49 Time of Possession 26:56 33:04 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Tennessee, Hurd 13-40, Peterman 2-9, Pearson 1-3, Pickett 1-0, Scott 2-(minus 2), Malone 1-(minus 9), Worley 8-(minus 41). Mississippi, Walton 10-60, Wilkins 6-45, Wallace 17-33, Kincade 3-15, Mathers 6-12, Dodson 2-11, Liggins 3-4. PASSING—Tennessee, Worley 19-34-3191. Mississippi, Wallace 13-28-0-199, Kincade 1-1-0-4, Liggins 0-1-0-0, Team 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING—Tennessee, Malone 5-75, Pearson 5-26, Howard 2-24, Hurd 2-19, North 1-24, Ellis 1-9, Wolf 1-6, Lane 1-5, Pickett 1-3. Mississippi, Sanders 4-108, Treadwell 4-43, Engram 1-28, Core 1-12, Dodson 1-6, Burdette 1-4, Brazley 1-1, Walton 1-1.

WEST VIRGINIA 41, No. 4 BAYLOR 27 Baylor 13 7 7 0—27 West Virginia 7 17 3 14—41 First Quarter Bay—Coleman 7 pass from Petty (Callahan kick), 14:01. WVU—White 36 pass from Trickett (Lambert kick), 12:02. Bay—FG Callahan 38, 6:29. Bay—FG Callahan 34, 2:33. Second Quarter WVU—Buie 1 run (Lambert kick), 10:56. Bay—Goodley 63 pass from Petty (Callahan kick), 8:25. WVU—D.Smith 9 run (Lambert kick), 4:21. WVU—FG Lambert 54, :00. Third Quarter WVU—FG Lambert 24, 9:28. Bay—Linwood 1 run (Callahan kick), :38. Fourth Quarter WVU—White 12 pass from Trickett (Lambert kick), 11:36. WVU—Alford 39 pass from Trickett (Lambert kick), 7:35. A—60,758. Bay WVU First downs 22 33 Rushes-yards 42-95 50-134 Passing 223 322 Comp-Att-Int 16-37-0 23-35-1 Return Yards 17 1 Punts-Avg. 9-44.8 6-42.7 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-2 Penalties-Yards 18-215 14-138 Time of Possession 29:17 30:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Baylor, Linwood 21-69, Chafin 7-31, Norwood 1-4, Goodley 1-3, Coleman 1-(minus 3), Petty 11(minus 9). West Virginia, Smallwood 20-66, D.Smith 13-60, Buie 9-24, Shell 3-13, Team 1-(minus 2), Thompson 1-(minus 2), Trickett 3-(minus 25). PASSING—Baylor, Petty 16-36-0-223, Russell 0-1-0-0. West Virginia, Trickett 23-35-1-322. RECEIVING—Baylor, Goodley 9-132, Coleman 5-77, Cannon 1-10, Norwood 1-4. West Virginia, White 8-132, Buie 4-63, Alford 4-53, Thompson 3-18, Shorts 2-33, Smallwood 1-23, D.Smith 1-0.

No. 7 ALABAMA 59, No. 21 TEXAS A&M 0 Texas A&M 0 0 0 0—0 Alabama 10 35 7 7—59 First Quarter Ala—FG Griffith 21, 11:07. Ala—Yeldon 9 run (Griffith kick), 4:38. Second Quarter Ala—Yeldon 1 run (Griffith kick), 13:36. Ala—B.Sims 43 run (Griffith kick), 11:06. Ala—Henry 8 run (Griffith kick), 5:26. Ala—Cooper 24 pass from B.Sims (Griffith kick), 4:10. Ala—Henry 41 pass from B.Sims (Griffith kick), :22. Third Quarter Ala—Cooper 45 pass from B.Sims (Griffith kick), 11:47. Fourth Quarter Ala—Flournoy-Smith 14 pass from Coker (Scott kick), 4:16. A—101,821. TAM Ala First downs 8 30 Rushes-yards 24-31 45-298 Passing 141 304 Comp-Att-Int 19-31-1 21-35-0 Return Yards 18 54 Punts-Avg. 9-45.0 4-50.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 2-6 0-0 Time of Possession 23:29 36:31 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Texas A&M, B.Williams 4-21, T.Williams 3-12, Carson 5-6, White 1-4, Allen 1-(minus 1), Hill 10-(minus 11). Alabama, Yeldon 13-114, Henry 10-70, B.Sims 4-54, T.Jones 9-34, Tenpenny 8-30, Coker 1-(minus 4). PASSING—Texas A&M, Hill 17-26-1138, Allen 2-5-0-3. Alabama, B.Sims 16-27-0-268, Coker 5-8-0-36. RECEIVING—Texas A&M, Noil 4-32, Kennedy 4-4, Reynolds 3-42, Niederhofer 3-34, Pope 2-22, Holmes 1-4, B.Williams 1-2, White 1-1. Alabama, Cooper 8-140, Yeldon 3-45, White 3-30, C.Sims 3-14, Henry 1-41, Flournoy-Smith 1-14, Fowler 1-12, Stewart 1-8.

No. 8 MICHIGAN ST. 56, INDIANA 17 Michigan St. 7 21 7 21—56 Indiana 3 14 0 0—17 First Quarter MSU—Langford 32 run (Geiger kick), 9:56. Ind—FG Oakes 27, 2:41. Second Quarter MSU—Price 10 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 12:21. Ind—Wynn 75 run (Oakes kick), 12:07. Ind—Diamont 9 run (Oakes kick), 5:25. MSU—Langford 8 run (Geiger kick), 3:59. MSU—Kings Jr. 14 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 1:14. Third Quarter MSU—Shelton 4 pass from Cook (Geiger kick), 7:52. Fourth Quarter MSU—Langford 12 run (Geiger kick), 14:14. MSU—D.Williams 22 run (Geiger kick), 5:06. MSU—Hill 76 run (Geiger kick), 1:24. A—44,403. MSU Ind First downs 30 7 Rushes-yards 51-330 33-213 Passing 332 11 Comp-Att-Int 24-32-1 5-16-0 Return Yards (-1) 17 Punts-Avg. 4-45.5 10-39.9 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 3-37 4-25 Time of Possession 39:24 20:36 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Michigan St., Hill 16-178, Langford 21-109, D.Williams 5-55, Cook 3-8, Shelton 1-5, Burbridge 1-4, Kings Jr. 1-(minus 5), Team 3-(minus 24). Indiana, Coleman 15-132, Wynn 1-75, Redding 3-14, Roberts 3-8, M.Graham 1-(minus 4), Diamont 10(minus 12). PASSING—Michigan St., Cook 24-321-332. Indiana, Diamont 5-15-0-11, Boudreau 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING—Michigan St., Lippett 7-123, Kings Jr. 6-59, Burbridge 5-48, Price 3-83, Shelton 3-19. Indiana, Coleman 2-6, Cobbs 1-13, Stoner 1-(minus 3), Fuchs 1-(minus 5).

No. 9 OREGON 45, WASHINGTON 20 Washington 6 0 7 7—20 Oregon 7 21 7 10—45 First Quarter Wash—FG Van Winkle 33, 10:20. Ore—Freeman 37 run (Wogan kick), 8:28. Wash—FG Van Winkle 40, 6:21. Second Quarter Ore—Freeman 3 run (Wogan kick), 14:54. Ore—Freeman 1 run (Wogan kick), 8:17. Ore—Marshall 23 pass from Mariota (Wogan kick), 1:32. Third Quarter Ore—Stanford 16 pass from Mariota (Wogan kick), 10:23. Wash—Cooper 3 pass from Miles (Van Winkle kick), 4:45. Fourth Quarter Ore—Freeman 3 run (Wogan kick), 10:56. Wash—T.Williams 7 run (Van Winkle kick), 5:22. Ore—FG Wogan 26, 1:20. A—57,858. Wash Ore First downs 20 29 Rushes-yards 36-133 50-218 Passing 184 336 Comp-Att-Int 24-38-1 24-33-0 Return Yards 4 16 Punts-Avg. 4-43.3 1-36.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-24 7-90 Time of Possession 29:27 30:33 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Washington, Ross 2-44, T.Williams 5-28, Coleman 12-28, Cooper 5-23, Miles 6-13, Mickens 2-12, Hall 1-(minus 3), Team 1-(minus 4), D.Washington 2-(minus 8). Oregon, Freeman 29-169, Marshall 5-30, Bassett 6-20, Tyner 3-0, Mariota 7-(minus 1). PASSING—Washington, Miles 19-281-147, T.Williams 5-10-0-37. Oregon, Mariota 24-33-0-336. RECEIVING—Washington, Cooper 6-48, Coleman 3-34, Mickens 3-22, D.Washington 3-20, Ross 3-15, Pettis 2-23, Lenius 2-9, Perkins 1-8, Campbell 1-5. Oregon, Carrington 5-79, Stanford 5-55, Marshall 5-48, P.Brown 3-99, D.Allen 2-28, Freeman 2-4, Tyner 1-13, Baylis 1-10.

No. 10 GEORGIA 45, ARKANSAS 32 Georgia 7 31 0 7—45 Arkansas 6 0 13 13—32 First Quarter Ark—A.Collins 1 run (kick blocked), 7:09. Geo—Mason 1 run (Morgan kick), 5:41.

Second Quarter Geo—FG Morgan 37, 14:21. Geo—Chubb 43 run (Morgan kick), 9:05. Geo—Chubb 3 run (Morgan kick), 5:35. Geo—Bennett 7 pass from Mason (Morgan kick), 5:17. Geo—Sanders 54 fumble return (Morgan kick), 2:08. Third Quarter Ark—Hatcher 8 pass from B.Allen (run failed), 6:30. Ark—Henry 4 pass from B.Allen (McFain kick), 2:05. Fourth Quarter Geo—Conley 36 pass from Mason (Morgan kick), 13:08. Ark—Edwards 4 pass from B.Allen (McFain kick), 10:00. Ark—A.Collins 6 run (run failed), 5:05. A—54,959. Geo Ark First downs 18 29 Rushes-yards 39-207 37-126 Passing 179 296 Comp-Att-Int 10-17-0 28-45-2 Return Yards 8 0 Punts-Avg. 3-35.0 3-33.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 4-2 Penalties-Yards 9-101 7-79 Time of Possession 25:06 34:54 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Georgia, Chubb 30-202, Douglas 3-10, Team 2-(minus 2), Mason 4-(minus 3). Arkansas, Jon. Williams 18-108, A.Collins 11-31, Walker 3-15, B.Allen 5-(minus 28). PASSING—Georgia, Mason 10-17-0179. Arkansas, B.Allen 28-45-2-296. RECEIVING—Georgia, Conley 5-128, Bennett 3-31, Mitchell 1-12, Chubb 1-8. Arkansas, Henry 5-92, Hatcher 5-36, Cornelius 4-38, Derby 3-45, Wilson 3-29, Jon.Williams 3-12, Hollister 2-21, Morgan 1-18, Edwards 1-4, A.Collins 1-1.

No. 14 KANSAS ST. 31, No. 11 OKLAHOMA 30 Kansas St. 7 14 10 0—31 Oklahoma 7 10 7 6—30 First Quarter Okl—Perine 2 run (Hunnicutt kick), 4:58. KSt—Gronkowski 62 pass from Waters (McCrane kick), 4:01. Second Quarter KSt—McDaniel 5 interception return (McCrane kick), 14:04. Okl—Shepard 47 pass from T.Knight (Hunnicutt kick), 13:36. KSt—Lockett 9 pass from Waters (McCrane kick), 9:33. Okl—FG Hunnicutt 38, 4:24. Third Quarter KSt—FG McCrane 27, 11:48. Okl—Bell 4 pass from T.Knight (Hunnicutt kick), 9:32. KSt—Waters 4 run (McCrane kick), 6:57. Fourth Quarter Okl—Neal 9 pass from T.Knight (kick blocked), 10:35. A—85,019. KSt Okl First downs 17 30 Rushes-yards 32-160 42-198 Passing 225 335 Comp-Att-Int 15-23-0 28-36-2 Return Yards 5 0 Punts-Avg. 5-38.8 2-28.0 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 2-20 3-19 Time of Possession 27:42 32:18 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Kansas St., Robinson 8-66, Waters 10-51, C.Jones 12-46, Team 2-(minus 3). Oklahoma, Perine 24-89, Ross 8-75, T.Knight 6-17, Shepard 1-7, C.Thomas 1-5, Neal 1-3, Bell 1-2. PASSING—Kansas St., Waters 15-23-0225. Oklahoma, T.Knight 26-32-1-318, C.Thomas 2-2-0-17, Neal 0-1-1-0, Team 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING—Kansas St., Cu.Sexton 8-77, Lockett 6-86, Gronkowski 1-62. Oklahoma, Shepard 15-197, Neal 3-33, Bell 3-31, Quick 2-27, Perine 2-7, Au.Bennett 1-19, Flowers 1-16, Ross 1-5.

No. 12 TCU 42, No. 15 OKLAHOMA ST. 9 Oklahoma St. 3 6 0 0—9 TCU 21 7 14 0—42 First Quarter TCU—Catalon 34 run (Oberkrom kick), 9:23. TCU—Doctson 77 pass from Boykin (Oberkrom kick), 7:42. OkSt—FG Grogan 30, 5:20. TCU—Doctson 84 pass from Boykin (Oberkrom kick), 4:41. Second Quarter OkSt—FG Grogan 27, 13:26. OkSt—FG Grogan 28, 7:36. TCU—Catalon 35 run (Oberkrom kick), 1:53. Third Quarter TCU—Gray 22 pass from Boykin (Oberkrom kick), 9:49. TCU—Green 4 run (Oberkrom kick), 2:41. A—43,214. OkSt TCU First downs 12 26 Rushes-yards 39-126 40-261 Passing 132 415 Comp-Att-Int 10-25-2 27-42-1 Return Yards 3 13 Punts-Avg. 9-44.3 5-44.6 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-23 5-45 Time of Possession 27:46 32:14 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Oklahoma St., Roland 2384, Hill 11-52, Team 1-(minus 1), Garman 4-(minus 9). TCU, Catalon 10-102, T.Johnson 7-51, Boykin 9-41, Green 5-22, Hicks 6-20, Listenbee 1-14, Gray 1-10, Joeckel 1-1. PASSING—Oklahoma St., Garman 10-25-2-132. TCU, Boykin 26-39-1-410, Joeckel 1-3-0-5. RECEIVING—Oklahoma St., Glidden 5-59, Ateman 2-(minus 3), Sheperd 1-57, Seaton 1-13, Hill 1-6. TCU, Doctson 7-225, Gray 4-58, Slanina 4-48, Echols-Luper 3-18, D.Porter 3-18, Hicks 2-35, Catalon 2-3, E.Porter 1-5, Story 1-5.

No. 13 OHIO ST. 56, RUTGERS 17 Rutgers 7 0 3 7—17 Ohio St. 14 21 21 0—56 First Quarter OSU—Vannett 12 pass from Barrett (Nuernberger kick), 11:34. OSU—Elliott 1 run (Nuernberger kick), 5:24. Rut—Peoples 1 run (Federico kick), :27. Second Quarter OSU—Vannett 26 pass from Barrett (Nuernberger kick), 13:03. OSU—Apple 4 fumble return (Nuernberger kick), 9:50. OSU—R.Smith 3 run (Nuernberger kick), 4:32. Third Quarter OSU—Barrett 33 run (Nuernberger kick), 13:17. OSU—Barrett 5 run (Nuernberger kick), 8:24. Rut—FG Federico 42, 6:36. OSU—Spencer 11 pass from Barrett (Nuernberger kick), 4:14. Fourth Quarter Rut—Peoples 12 run (Federico kick), 14:54. A—106,795.

Rut OSU First downs 18 31 Rushes-yards 38-149 40-324 Passing 196 261 Comp-Att-Int 18-29-1 19-31-0 Return Yards 0 45 Punts-Avg. 6-36.3 1-53.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-1 Penalties-Yards 0-0 4-28 Time of Possession 31:26 28:34 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Rutgers, Peoples 15-83, Goodwin 11-64, Martin 5-23, Nova 7-(minus 21). Ohio St., Barrett 7-107, Elliott 12-69, Samuel 4-59, C.Jones 5-44, R.Smith 4-21, Wilson 4-21, Ball 1-7, Team 3-(minus 4). PASSING—Rutgers, Nova 17-28-1-192, Laviano 1-1-0-4. Ohio St., Barrett 19-31-0-261. RECEIVING—Rutgers, Carroo 5-100, Goodwin 4-28, Grant 3-8, Burton 2-22, Kroft 2-17, Turzilli 1-17, Patton 1-4. Ohio St., M.Thomas 4-55, Elliott 4-28, Marshall 3-58, Vannett 2-38, Spencer 2-10, D.Smith 1-42, Heuerman 1-16, Samuel 1-7, C.Smith 1-7.

No. 19 NEBRASKA 38, NORTHWESTERN 17 Nebraska 0 14 7 17—38 Northwestern 7 10 0 0—17 First Quarter NU—Jackson 2 run (Mitchell kick), 5:58. Second Quarter Neb—Abdullah 1 run (Brown kick), 10:14. NU—Jackson 5 run (Mitchell kick), 1:52. Neb—Armstrong Jr. 16 pass from Pierson-El (Brown kick), 1:14. NU—FG Mitchell 29, :03. Third Quarter Neb—Abdullah 1 run (Brown kick), 4:27. Fourth Quarter Neb—Abdullah 1 run (Brown kick), 13:16. Neb—Abdullah 1 run (Brown kick), 7:36. Neb—FG Brown 33, 4:28. A—47,330. Neb NU First downs 25 21 Rushes-yards 44-234 34-117 Passing 237 173 Comp-Att-Int 19-30-0 18-39-1 Return Yards 26 0 Punts-Avg. 5-33.4 8-36.9 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 8-83 7-50 Time of Possession 32:49 27:11 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Nebraska, Abdullah 23146, Armstrong Jr. 10-55, T.Newby 4-23, Cross 5-14, Team 2-(minus 4). Northwestern, Jackson 22-128, T.Jones 1-8, Vault 3-5, Green 1-2, Siemian 7-(minus 26). PASSING—Nebraska, Armstrong Jr. 18-29-0-221, Pierson-El 1-1-0-16. Northwestern, Siemian 18-39-1-173. RECEIVING—Nebraska, Bell 5-89, Abdullah 4-13, Pierson-El 3-66, Westerkamp 2-28, T.Newby 2-1, Moore 1-18, Armstrong Jr. 1-16, T.Foster 1-6. Northwestern, Shuler 5-33, T.Jones 3-24, K.Prater 3-21, Vitale 2-22, C.Dickerson 2-21, Green 1-23, Buckley 1-19, Vault 1-10.

No. 22 SOUTHERN CAL 56, COLORADO 28 Colorado 0 7 14 7—28 Southern Cal 28 7 21 0—56 First Quarter USC—Agholor 16 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 10:47. USC—Agholor 18 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 8:12. USC—J.Smith 7 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 2:09. USC—Dixon 15 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 1:16. Second Quarter Col—Adkins II 1 run (Oliver kick), 10:06. USC—Dixon 9 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 5:32. Third Quarter USC—Agholor 75 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 12:35. Col—Fields 2 pass from Liufau (Oliver kick), 7:31. USC—Mitchell 24 pass from Kessler (Wood kick), 6:30. Col—Spruce 5 pass from Liufau (Oliver kick), 3:15. USC—Allen 39 run (Wood kick), :11. Fourth Quarter Col—Gehrke 9 run (Oliver kick), 8:19. A—74,756. Col USC First downs 27 21 Rushes-yards 46-172 33-213 Passing 231 319 Comp-Att-Int 31-49-2 19-28-0 Return Yards 19 58 Punts-Avg. 4-40.3 5-36.2 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 7-61 7-85 Time of Possession 35:57 24:03 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Colorado, T.Jones 11-62, Lindsay 10-55, Adkins II 7-25, Gehrke 3-19, Powell 4-11, Creer 4-8, Liufau 7-(minus 8). Southern Cal, Allen 15-128, Davis 11-97, Toland IV 4-5, Browne 1-3, Kessler 2-(minus 20). PASSING—Colorado, Liufau 23-35-2143, Gehrke 7-13-0-71, Spruce 1-1-017. Southern Cal, Kessler 19-26-0-319, Browne 0-2-0-0. RECEIVING—Colorado, Spruce 9-69, McCulloch 4-44, Goodson 4-30, Fields 3-35, S.Irwin 2-15, Lee 2-8, Creer 2-7, Adkins II 2-(minus 4), Liufau 1-17, Lindsay 1-7, T.Jones 1-3. Southern Cal, Agholor 6-128, J.Smith 4-104, Telfer 4-19, Dixon 2-24, Mitchell 1-24, Allen 1-12, Rogers 1-8.

No. 24 CLEMSON 17, BOSTON COLLEGE 13 Clemson 0 10 0 7—17 Boston College 0 7 0 6—13 Second Quarter Clem—Gallman 17 run (Lakip kick), 11:42. BC—Alston 26 pass from Murphy (Knoll kick), 7:29. Clem—FG Lakip 23, :00. Fourth Quarter BC—Bordner 6 pass from Murphy (kick failed), 10:59. Clem—Davidson 32 run (Lakip kick), 9:35. A—42,038. Clem BC First downs 22 11 Rushes-yards 36-113 36-120 285 143 Passing Comp-Att-Int 29-45-0 9-20-0 Return Yards 10 0 Punts-Avg. 10-41.8 10-50.1 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-30 3-30 Time of Possession 35:42 24:18 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Clemson, Davidson 5-39, Gallman 15-39, Stoudt 8-21, Choice 4-13, Howard 1-4, Team 3-(minus 3). Boston College, Murphy 13-55, Willis 6-30, Alston 5-18, Hilliman 12-17. PASSING—Clemson, Stoudt 29-45-0285. Boston College, Murphy 8-19-0108, Bordner 1-1-0-35. RECEIVING—Clemson, Scott 10-72, M.Williams 8-128, Leggett 2-25, Hopper 2-13, Gallman 2-1, Humphries 1-17, Davidson 1-14, McCullough 1-10, Howard 1-3, Cooper 1-2. Boston College, Callinan 3-64, Alston 3-23, Crimmins 1-48, Bordner 1-6, Outlow 1-2.

No. 25 MARSHALL 45, FIU 13 Marshall 7 7 10 21—45 FIU 7 0 0 6—13 First Quarter FIU—McGough 1 run (A.Taylor kick), 2:00. Mar—Yurachek 1 pass from Cato (Haig kick), :05. Second Quarter Mar—Jean-Louis 13 pass from Cato (Haig kick), 5:32. Third Quarter Mar—FG Haig 35, 9:05. Mar—D.Johnson 46 pass from Cato (Haig kick), 2:21. Fourth Quarter Mar—D.Johnson 27 pass from Cato (Haig kick), 14:40. Mar—Tindal 30 interception return (Haig kick), 13:34. Mar—Butler 61 run (Smith kick), 8:07. FIU—C.Taylor 4 pass from Hilliard (kick failed), 1:50. A—13,163. FIU Mar First downs 18 23 Rushes-yards 26-243 53-177 Passing 214 208 Comp-Att-Int 15-27-1 18-32-2 Return Yards 104 13 Punts-Avg. 3-50.7 6-38.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-65 8-88 Time of Possession 21:51 38:09 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Marshall, D.Johnson 9-117, Butler 6-76, Cato 2-23, Watson 8-22, Holcombe 1-5. FIU, Gardner 25-104, Samuel 7-25, Hilliard 4-21, Caldwell 3-12, Jasper 1-10, Maxwell 2-5, McGough 11-0. PASSING—Marshall, Cato 15-27-1-214. FIU, McGough 14-27-2-176, Hilliard 4-5-0-32. RECEIVING—Marshall, D.Johnson 3-79, Frohnapfel 3-25, Jean-Louis 2-26, Shuler 2-20, McManus 2-15, Hunt 1-39, Wilkins 1-9, Yurachek 1-1. FIU, Smith 8-74, Dan-Fodio 3-40, C.Taylor 3-27, C.White 1-46, Lowder 1-19, Jasper 1-5, Gardner 1-(minus 3).

AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup GEICO 500 Lineup After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway Talladega, Ala.; Lap length: 2.66 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 196.129. 2. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 195.732. 3. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 195.496. 4. (12) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 194.015. 5. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 194.007. 6. (95) Michael McDowell, Ford, 193.693. 7. (33) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 193.603. 8. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 193.498. 9. (32) Terry Labonte, Ford, 193.431. 10. (7) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 193.162. 11. (31) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 191.302. 12. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 190.981. 13. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 193.415. 14. (23) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 193.376. 15. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 193.291. 16. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 192.401. 17. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 192.278. 18. (41) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 192.096. 19. (13) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 191.908. 20. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 191.773. 21. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 190.985. 22. (26) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 190.97. 23. (49) Mike Wallace, Toyota, 184.729. 24. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 191.577. 25. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 191.42. 26. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 191.214. 27. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 191.149. 28. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 191.134. 29. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 191.13. 30. (3) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 191.027. 31. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 190.818. 32. (83) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 190.689. 33. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 190.681. 34. (66) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 190.586. 35. (98) Josh Wise, Ford, 190.507.

HOCKEY NHL Eastern Conference

Atlantic GP Montreal 6 Ottawa 5 Tampa Bay 5 Detroit 5 Boston 7 Toronto 6 Florida 5 Buffalo 6 Metro GP N.Y. Islanders5 Washington 5 Pittsburgh 4 Columbus 5 New Jersey 5 Philadelphia 5 N.Y. Rangers 5 Carolina 4

W 5 4 3 3 3 2 1 1 W 4 3 3 3 3 1 2 0

L 1 1 1 1 4 3 2 5 L 1 0 1 2 2 2 3 2

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

Pts 10 8 7 7 6 5 4 2 Pts 8 8 6 6 6 4 4 2

GFGA 20 20 14 10 17 10 11 8 15 17 15 19 5 11 8 22 GFGA 20 15 18 11 16 10 15 12 17 16 17 21 13 20 10 15

Western Conference Central GP W L OL Pts GFGA Nashville 5 3 0 2 8 12 8 Chicago 4 3 0 1 7 12 7 Dallas 5 2 1 2 6 15 17 St. Louis 4 2 1 1 5 12 6 Minnesota 3 2 1 0 4 9 2 Colorado 6 1 4 1 3 9 20 Winnipeg 4 1 3 0 2 7 11 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GFGA San Jose 5 4 0 1 9 20 11 Anaheim 5 4 1 0 8 18 13 Los Angeles 5 3 1 1 7 13 9 Vancouver 4 3 1 0 6 13 10 Calgary 6 3 3 0 6 15 16 Arizona 4 2 2 0 4 13 18 Edmonton 5 0 4 1 1 11 25 Saturday’s Games Washington 2, Florida 1, SO Boston 4, Buffalo 0 Montreal 3, Colorado 2 Ottawa 3, Columbus 2 Detroit 1, Toronto 0, OT San Jose 4, New Jersey 2 Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Islanders 1 Philadelphia 6, Dallas 5, OT Chicago 2, Nashville 1, OT St. Louis 6, Arizona 1 Tampa Bay 4, Vancouver 2 Friday’s Games Florida 1, Buffalo 0 Columbus 3, Calgary 2 Detroit 4, Toronto 1 Nashville 2, Winnipeg 0 Vancouver 2, Edmonton 0 Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1 Sunday’s Games Minnesota at Los Angeles, 1 p.m. San Jose at N.Y. Rangers, 3 p.m. Calgary at Winnipeg, 5 p.m. St. Louis at Anaheim, 6 p.m.


SPORTS

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-3

PREP ROUNDUP

Española Valley pushes rival to edge West Las Vegas then beat Pojoaque Valley 3-1, giving the Lady Dons their first vicIt was everything a championship game tory over Pojoaque in several years. of prep volleyball tournament should be, “That,” Salazar began, “was fun to and then some. watch. Those kids from West have waited Despite one key player dealing with an a long time for that. Pojoaque’s been on injury and another battling illness, Española top for a long time and [West] finally got Valley pushed one.” Hope Christian 3 Albuquerque Española led Hope 10-0 in the fifth and Hope Christian final game, but one tough rotation sparked Española Valley 2 to five games a late Lady Huskies run. before losing 3-2 Elana Salazar had 25 kills and three in the finals of the Española Volley Tourna- aces while Celena Naranjo had 16 assists. ment on Saturday evening. Nicole Romero had seven aces and Kaitlyn The Lady Sundevils (13-3), ranked No. 3 Romero had nine digs. in the latest Class AAAAA poll, had their The Lady Sundevils return to action in 12-match winning streak snapped with the District 2AAAAA on Wednesday with a 27-25, 25-21, 21-25, 15-25, 15-12 decision. trip to Albuquerque Del Norte, then close “You know what? It was a fun match,” out the regular season next weekend at said Española Valley head coach Damon home against Los Alamos. Salazar. “It was a great day, watching six DULCE 3, MONTE DEL SOL 0 teams that will probably go to the playoffs.” Natasha Cook and Kaylee Maxon each The one-day, six-team tournament started with pool play early on, then settled had six digs while Ariana Rodriguez and into three final matches to close things out. Lizbeth Nava each had four kills, but it In the match for fifth place, Hatch Valley wasn’t enough as the Lady Dragons (3-11, 0-4 2AAA) dropped a home match to the beat Aztec 3-1.

The New Mexican

Lady Hawks. Dulce won by scores of 25-22, 25-15, 25-17. Juliette Welchsler added three kills, three assists, three digs and one ace. BOYS SOCCER MONTE DEL SOL 4, DESERT ACADEMY 0

At the MRC, the Dragons got a pair of goals from Skye Dascher and one each from Abraham Sigala and Omar Ndiaye in a shutout win over the Wildcats. It was the regular season finale for Monte del Sol (9-6-2, 3-2-1 in District 2A-AAAA). The win nailed down second place in the district standings. They now must wait for an at-large postseason berth from the NMAA selection committee late next week. “We will spend the next week practicing and preparing for our next game, but I feel confident we will play one more time,” said Dragons head coach Mazatl Galindo. Monte del Sol led Saturday’s game 1-0 at halftime, then pulled away with three late goals.

Prep: 2 teams could be among top seeds on Thursday. With only two matches left, Prep head coach 20 yards out to give the Blue Hersch Wilson still has no idea Griffins their final goal in a where the Blue Griffins will end 2-1 victory. Dylan Chant scored up in the postseason. on a header for Bosque (14-3-2 “I think we’re in the top-3 for overall) in stoppage time of sure, but who knows?,” he said. the second half, but it wasn’t The Blue Griffins have not enough to stop the Blue Griffins lost since they fell to AAAAAA (15-2-1) from getting their sixth Las Cruces at Brennand Field straight win. 1-0 in overtime on Sept. 16, and “The first half, there was a even though they have not lot of fighting for the ball, and known defeat in over a month, we had a lot more control of it Wilson said he does not have in the second half,” Sides said. to find ways to keep his players “They gave us a little more focused. space, and that allowed us to “We don’t take attendance move the ball better and get our at soccer practices because no goals.” one is never not there,” Wilson Both teams see themselves as said. “It’s a great group of guys one of the best in the state, and who love this game, and all they many predict that Prep, Bosque want to do is play with each and Albuquerque Sandia Preother. We don’t have to do very paratory will make up the top much to focus them.” three seeds in the upcoming Of course the players don’t Class A-AAAA state tournaneed any help keeping their ment. Prep junior Adam Weyhrauch, right, defends the ball against focus. Bosque head coach Klaus Bosque junior Aaron McCallister on Saturday. Although they are not ready LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN Weber said this loss doesn’t to concede that they are already take the Bobcats out of the topthinking about the state tourna3, and Saturday’s match could selves,” he said. “When you go “I’ve definitely never seen ment, those thoughts are hard have gone either way. forward and have good chances, to escape from. With all the tala team freak out that much,” “[Prep] had a little bit of an it’s very easy to point the finger ent Prep returned this season, Sides said. “They’re just used edge [Saturday], and that’s just after the match. But that’s sort to winning, I think, so when we how could they not think about how it is sometimes,” Weber of meaningless. That’s just the got them down they just sort of it? said. “We were ready for it, but emotions that come through panicked. That’s always good “I think state has been in the they got the goals. That’s the after, so it’s nothing serious.” for us.” back of our minds since the way the game goes.” Either way, both teams are Those tempers continued very first match,” Sides said. The Blue Griffins definitely possibly locks to get a bye in the “We just knew that we were after the match when players won the mental battle, too. first round at state. Prep has a started yelling at each other, going to have a really good Bosque seemed frustrated the match against Desert Academy season. As long as we play our but Weber said it is nothing to entire match, and tempers on Monday before the season best, I think we can beat any began to flare after Weyhrauch’s worry about. team.” “They’re more upset at them- finale against Sandia Prep goal.

Continued from Page D-1

Race: Meet provides preview of state finals dards for them. I’m encouraged by that.” On the girls’ side, the Lady “We were trying to go out Tigers were not even close to conservative and stick with full strength, as they had four each other,” said J.C. Santisterunners playing on the soccer van, who was 35th. pitch in a District 4A-AAAA “It just didn’t work out. We got to get our stuff together and match against Las Vegas Robertson. So a 23rd-place finish get ready for state.” was no cause for alarm — for While it might not have now. With so many runners on been the ideal race for Taos, the soccer team, it could lead to what can’t be forgotten is that an interesting pickle come the the AAAA field for the state state meet. meet, which will happen in If Taos reaches the A-AAAA three weeks at the same place, championship match in soccer, will not be as deep nor as big that would deplete the cross as this race. country team and end any “This is by far the most com- chance of its defense of its state petitive field assembled this title. It was a situation both year, arguably in the Southwest teams faced last year, but the region,” said Taos head coach soccer team lost in the semiBruce Gomez. “We’re running finals. It could be a repeat this well, and they have solid stan- November.

Continued from Page D-1

“It’s hard, but it is what it,” said Hannah Gunther, who finished 38th and was the lead Taos runner. While the championship races took center stage, the varsity races provided a few pleasant surprises. Las Vegas Robertson had four runners in the top 19 and sprinted away to the varsity division title with 98 points. Robertson junior Annabella Miller didn’t just surprise the field, but herself by taking second place individually. She was 15 seconds behind Estancia’s Aubry Wrye, who won in 20:10.50. “I finished second?” Miller said. “I thought I was third! I didn’t even know. That’s so cool.” On the boys side, Desert

Academy’s Jeremy Hartse continued his upward arc as the season progresses with a fourth in the boys varsity. His time of 17:39 on the 5-kilometer course, came on the heels of a 12th at the Northern New Mexico Challenge last weekend. It was a finish well worth the amount of work he and his Wildcat teammates put in this week. “Your legs feel drained and you lose blood flow to your arms,” Hartse said. “That kind of stuff happens. You got to have the mentality that this is a training race for state, and it doesn’t matter how high I finish.” But after a performance like that, he knows exactly what Galvez feels on the sand.

Webber: Siblings’ mom again fights cancer Continued from Page D-1 dance number as several types of musical genres played over the loud speaker. Tucked safely off to the side, she smiled and played along — but looked like she’d rather be sitting in a quiet booth eating a sweet roll at the Frontier. “She’s a fan favorite just because she’s Hugh’s sister, number one,” said UNM women’s coach Yvonne Sanchez. “Number two, just because of their circumstance.” Their circumstance has certainly bolstered the love of the Greenwoods. The

players’ mom, Andree Greenwood, proudly beat breast cancer last year before being diagnosed with it for a second time this past offseason. Hugh dedicated his free time to raising awareness for the fight, announcing he’d grow his hair out and then have it cut off as part of a Locks of Love initiative. Aside from the fact that he’s in his fourth year of a solid Lobo career, his family’s very public fight with cancer has made the Greenwoods impervious to criticism. If Lobo fans love anything, it’s their basketball.

They love their local players — the women’s team has five New Mexicans — but what they love even more is someone who stays the course, fights the good fight and remains true to the colors. So go ahead and look the other way when Hugh Greenwood declines the crowd’s call for his inclusion in the Howl dunk contest, deferring instead to a nifty reverse layup. Forgive Josie when she misses an 8-foot jumper during practice (when she made one, she got a standing-O). These are the Greenwoods, the first family of Lobo basketball.

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 Noon on ESPN — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Geico 500, at Talladega, Ala. CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE 2 p.m. on ESPN2 — Edmonton at Saskatchewan GOLF 5:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Volvo World Match Play Championship, final match, at Ash, England 9:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Hong Kong Open, final round (same-day tape) 12:30 p.m. on TGC — Champions Tour, Greater Hickory Classic, final round, at Conover, N.C. 3 p.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, final round, at Las Vegas NFL 11 a.m. on CBS — Cincinnati Bengals at Indianapolis Colts 11 a.m. on FOX — Carolina Panthers at Green Bay Packers 2:25 p.m. on FOX — New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys 6:20 p.m. on NBC — San Francisco at Denver SOCCER 6:25 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Liverpool at Queens Park Rangers 8:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Swansea City at Stoke City 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — MLS, Seattle at Los Angeles

LOCAL SCORES

Rio Rancho Shootout Results from the Rio Rancho Shootout cross-country meet, held on Saturday at Rio Rancho High School. Course distance is 5 kilometers. Championship Boys Team scores — 1. Rio Rancho, 73; 2. Albuquerque Academy, 156; 3. Los Alamos, 167; 4. Taos, 213; 5. Volcano Vista, 224; 6. Zuni, 238; 7. Albuquerque La Cueva, 263; 8. Laguna-Acoma, 300; 9. Albuquerque Eldorado, 310; 10. St. Michael’s, 351; 11. Pecos, 362; 12. Piedra Vista, 379; 13. Miyamura, 398; 14. Las Cruces Oñate, 406; 15. Albuquerque St. Pius X, 438; 16. Albuquerque Hope Christian, 440; 17. East Mountain, 460; 18. Kirtland Central, 461; 19. Window Rock (Ariz.), 476; 20. Albuquerque Manzano, 481; 21. Rio Rancho Cleveland, 482; 22. Pojoaque Valley, 485; 23. Belen, 488; 24. Shiprock, 567; 25. Roswell, 574; 26. Santa Teresa, 598; 27. Santa Fe High, 655; 28. Gallup, 719; 29. Santa Fe Prep, 754; 30. Albuquerque Sandia, 760; 31. Ruidoso, 780; 32. Santa Fe Indian School, 920; 33. Mesa Vista, 940; 34. Rehoboth Christian, 968. Top 10 results — 1. Niles Thomas, Miyamura, 15:55.00; 2. Tom Hiett, La Cueva, 16:38.17; 3. Devin Paredes, Rio Rancho, 16:39.88; 4. Aaron Valenzuela, Belen, 16:40.36; 5. Alex Heffelfinger, East Mountain, 16:40.64; 6. Louis Bernardone, Eldorado, 16:41.08; 7. Michael Goke, Rio Rancho, 16:48.50; 8. Roy Madrid, Taos, 16:50.07; 9. Jordan Lesansee, Albuquerque Academy, 16:50.74; 10. Tre’ Riley, Zuni, 16:51.03. Team results Santa Fe High — Christopher Vigil, 44th, 17:37.06; Torin Sammeth, 119th, 18:33.49; Daniel Lujan, 199th, 20:05.58; Nicholas Smith, 218th, 21:04.55; Wyatt Egelhoff, 223rd, 21:38.18; Hiroshi Sutter, 226th, 21:53.95. St. Michael’s — Troy Pacheco, 38th, 17:30.25; Austin Luttrell, 45th, 17:37.08; Kristopher Cordova, 69th, 17:58.10; Javier Malcolm, 93rd, 18:16.66; Adam Nordby, 106th, 18:28.30; Denver Luttrell, 141st, 18:51.69. SFIS — Francis Calabaza, 100th, 18:21.85; Daniel Aquino, 185th, 19:45.74; Jacy Suina, 208th, 20:25.10; Stephen Vallo, 214th, 20:50.29; Emanuel Vigil, 217th, 20:59.80; Quillan Coleman, 220th, 21:17.95; Adrian Tafoya, 225th, 21:52.18. Santa Fe Prep — Kyle Evaldson, 102nd, 18:24.72; Mike Ewers, 146th, 18:55.03; Martin Soto, 160th, 19:12.51; Tristan Olrik, 171st, 19:27.94; Christopher Schild, 179th, 19:33.69; Himal Sage Shahi, 204th, 21:21.27; Xavier Dominguez, 213th, 20:46.66. Pojoaque Valley — Dominic Roybal, 56th, 17:50.24; Derrick Grasmick, 70th, 17:58.72; Adan Lopez, 110th, 18:29.34; Derrick Knight, 122nd, 18:35.26; Avery Torrez, 127th, 18:41.02; Mario Santistevan, 148th, 18:56.57; Isaac Roybal, 155th, 19:04.81. Los Alamos — Greg Ahlers, 16th, 17:03.64; Cameron Staples, 20th, 17:10.92; Forrest White, 32nd, 17:21.29; Hayden Walker, 41st, 17:33.98; Conner Bailey, 58th, 17:52.32; Alex Shirey, 66th, 17:57.76. Mesa Vista — James Espinoza, 63rd, 17:57.32; Brian Gollas, 206th, 20:22.84; Francisco Ortiz, 222nd, 21:28.95; Matthew Sandoval, 228th, 22:53.95; Anthony Vigil, 229th, 23:06.68; Lorenzo Abeyta, 231st, 24:49.32; Charles Buezo, 232nd, 24:50.05. Taos — Donevan Gravelle,11th, 16:51.76; JC Santistevan, 35th, 17:28.75; Mateo Vigil, 74th, 18:01.01; Cade Cannedy, 85th, 18:10.16; Tristan Padilla, 120th, 18:33.81; Theo Hummel, 126th, 18:40.51. Pecos — Christian Anaya, 27th, 17:17.14; Ryan Sandoval, 72nd, 17:59.86; Jason Henderson, 75th, 18:02.59; Julian Garcia, 84th, 18:09.94; Isaac CdeBaca, 104th, 18:26.53; Michael Montano, 123rd, 18:35.29; Carlos Cordova, 135th, 18:48.05. Girls Team scores — 1. Rio Rancho, 81; 2. La Cueva, 135; 3. Los Alamos, 145; 4. Eldorado, 150; 5. Volcano Vista, 153; 6. Shiprock, 211; 7. St. Pius X, 244; 8. Cleveland, 254; 9. Oñate, 280; 10. Albuquerque Academy, 286; 11. Gallup, 338; 12. East Mountain, 400; 13. Valencia, 407; 14. Window Rock, 414; 15. Santa Teresa, 418; 16. Miyamura, 467; 17. SFIS, 472; 18. Pojoaque Valley, 490; 19. Hope Christian, 505; 20. St. Michael’s, 536; 21. Piedra Vista, 580; 22. Sandia, 587; 23. Taos, 587; 24. Zuni, 600; 25. Santa Fe High, 603; 26. Belen, 620; 27. Manzano, 664; 28. Ruidoso, 675; 29. Los Lunas, 740. Top 10 results — 1. Natasha Bernal, La Cueva 18:52.71; 2. Mason Swanson, La Cueva, 19:09.72; 3. Madison Foley, Los Alamos, 19:13.03; 4. Molly Klein, Rio Rancho, 19:16.00; 5. Carisma Lovato, Valencia, 19:17.78; 6. Chamique DuBoise, Window Rock, 19:18.62; 7. Reina Paredes, Rio Rancho. 19:23.77; 8. Addison Rauch, East Mountain, 19:25.82; 9. Arena Lewis, Belen, 19:32.83; 10. Esther Beck, Eldorado, 19:38.41. Team results Santa Fe High — Victoria Quintana, 60th, 21:04.91; Emma Thompson, 113th, 22:29.45; Larissa Aragon, 133rd, 23:00.74; Sierra Sweeney, 150th, 23:30.77; Kyra Hewett, 165th, 24:06.39; Rue Allison, 168th, 24:12.56; Alexandria Sanchez, 188th, 25:37.37. St. Michael’s — Alondra Mendez, 78th, 21:41.35; Kaitlin Dobesh, 81st, 21:47.06; Janai Clayton, 115th, 22:31.41; Jade Vigil, 120th, 22:37.85; Lauren Cordova, 158th, 23:58.22; Kayli Nordby, 170th, 24:26.37; Dominique Martinez, 175th, 24:57.48. SFIS — Jordan Aguilar, 77th, 21:40.89; Karli Najera, 100th, 22:11.25; Elizabeth Lucero, 103rd, 22:13.10; Brianna Garcia, 136th, 23:05.90; Kaitlin Sandoval, 149th, 23:30.68; Victoria Lovato, 162nd, 24:02.28. Desert Academy — Taylor Bacon, 298th, 20:15.21; Aliza Donohue, 95th, 22:04.74. Pojoaque Valley — Megan Herrera, 30th, 20:29.89; Consuelo Quintana, 97th, 22:10.59; Jaylen Quintana, 118th, 22:36.49; Taylor Roybal, 124th, 22:44.44; Dallas Archibald, 139th, 23:12.16; Catherine Jiron, 152nd, 23:44.26; Skyla Montalvo, 171sts, 24:26.92. Los Alamos — Nica Vasquez, 35th, 20:35.20; Talia Dreicer, 36th, 20:37.00; Sophia Galvez, 39th, 20:42.99; Zoe Hemez, 40th, 20:43.25; Anjelika Garcia, 114th, 22:30.93. Taos — Hannah Gunther, 38th, 20:40.38; Elizabeth Reyes, 51st, 20:51.98; Elesia Sanchez, 163rd, 24:02.90; Abigail Gunther, 173rd, 24:42.94; Rachel Montoya, 178th, 25:06.26. Pecos — Cassie CdeBaca, 96th, 22:10.39. Varsity Boys Team scores — 1. Navajo Pine, 104; 2. Aztec, 156; 3. Las Cruces Centennial, 211; 4. Grants, 221; 5. Española Valley, 251; 6. Thoreau, 292; 7. Valencia, 297; 8. Silver, 320; 9. Farmington, 337; 10. Desert Academy, 344; 11. Sandia Prep, 362; 12. Del Norte, 378; 13. Wingate, 387; 14. Socorro, 393; 15. Los Lunas, 416; 16. Cimarron, 416; 17. Navajo Prep, 425; 18. Las Vegas Robertson, 429; 19. West Las Vegas, 436; 20. Tse Yi Gai, 450; 21. Bernalillo, 526; 22. Artesia, 532; 23. Bosque School, 553; 24. Roswell Goddard, 598; 25. Estancia, 606; 26. Miyamura, 640; 27. Cobre, 693; 28. Chaparral, 740; 29. Moriarty, 741; 30. Dulce, 751; 31. Crownpoint, 779; 32. Cottonwood Classical, 783; 33. Mora, 807; 34. Bloomfield, 835; 35. ATC, 874; 36. Tohatchi, 891. Top 10 results — 1. Michael Anzures, Grants, 17:18.82; 2. Luis Quirino, Chaparral, 17:24.64; 3. Augustine Montoya, Estancia, 17:30.63; 4. Jeremy Hartse, Desert Academy, 17:39.00; 5. Damien Cardenas, Socorro, 17:41.27; 6. Alvin Curley, Navajo Pine, 17:45.16; 7. Levi Shije, Sandia Prep, 17:49.02; 8. Gray Smith, Aztec, 17:51.81; 9. Jakob Bernal, Estancia, 17:52.54; 10. Matt Fort, Del Norte, 18:00.96. Team results Capital — Tim Vigil, 27th, 18:27.40; Fernando Flores, 106th, 19:49.18. ATC — Conner Griswold, 56th, 19:06.29; Isaiah Rivera, 203rd, 21:46.49; Sam Shephard, 229th, 23:01.07; Anthony Fano, 234th, 23:12.99; Miguel Vigil, 236th, 23:29.04; George Pachir, 250th, 24:03.85; Tomas Moore, 266th, 30:14.79. Desert Academy — Ben Voter, 71st, 19:24.39; Jonas Kaare-Rasmussen, 90th, 19:34.52; Anish Kumar, 105th, 19:49.16; Jakob Kaare-Rasmussen, 113th, 19:59.57; Alex Kellam, 195th, 21:41.82; Española — Norman Sanchez, 26th, 18:26.53; Jared Garduno, 28th, 18:27.71; Zachary Montoya, 47th, 18:51.43; Ryan Trujillo, 84th, 19:29.61; Mark Ryan Garcia, 98th, 19:40.53; Ryan Baca, 101st, 19:42.90; Caleb Valdez, 138th, 20:24.27. Peñasco — Kevin Romero, 125th, 20:15.05; Tomas Gonzales, 261st, 26:32.57; Jacob Tafoya, 262nd, 26:32.57; Zach Valdez, 263rd, 27:29.69. Robertson — Jalen Jacobs, 51st, 18:53.37; Chris Jones, 85th, 19:30.34; Marcus Romero, 86th, 19:31.32; Josh Valdez, 111th, 19:57.67; August Naegele, 146th, 20:33.41; Dimitri Tafoya, 184th, 21:17.76. West Las Vegas — Kevin Villanueva, 29th, 18:29.03; James Esquibel, 70th, 19:24.25; Miguel Coca, 88th, 19:32.43; Conrad Atencio, 135th, 20:21.61; Enrico Tenorio, 161st, 20;50.08; Caleb Vigil, 251st, 24:16.81. Mora — Casimiro Fresquez, 68th, 19:24.11; Santiago Laumbach, 181st, 21:13.88; Gabriel Montoya, 191st, 21:36.22; Travis Romero, 221st, 22:42.23; Andres Martinez, 226th, 22:54.16; Brandon Dahilig, 252nd, 24:42.73. Girls Team scores — 1. Robertson, 98; 2. Aztec, 124; 3. Centennial, 201; 4. Thoreau, 202; 5. ATC, 209; 6. Farmington, 222; 7. Navajo Prep, 242; 8. Cottonwood Classical, 309; 9. Roswell, 310; 10. LagunaAcoma, 310; 11. Española Valley, 330; 12. Socorro, 349; 13. Jemez Valley, 376; 14. Kirtland Central, 394; 15. Wingate, 415; 16. Cobre, 415; 17. Artesia, 437; 18. Grants, 447; 19. Cimarron, 469; 20. Rehoboth Christian, 501; 21. Del Norte, 519; 22. Silver, 531; 23. Mora, 537; 24. Ramah, 537; 25. Newcomb, 599; 26. Bosque, 616; 27. Santa Fe Prep, 628; 28. Chaparral, 694; 29. Tse Ti Gai, 732; 30. Tohatchi, 788. Top 10 results — 1. Aubri Wrye, Estancia, 20:10.50; 2. Anabella Miller, Robertson, 20:25.36; 3. Kalei Yepa, Sandia Prep, 20:38.82; 4. Skylar Jones, Cobre, 20:40.35; 5. Valene Madalena, Jemez Valley, 20:51.07; 6. Elana Kresl, Aztec, 21:11.85; 7. Mckayla Quintana, Robertson, 21:15.23; 8. Sarah Zachry, Cottonwood Classical, 21:18.25; 9. Alizabeth Williams, ATC, 21:20.56; 10. Chantell Yazzie, Wingate, 21:38.45. Team results Capital — Brandy Romero, 91st, 24:12.64; Maya Flores, 95th, 24:16.48. Santa Fe Prep — Ava Robb-McCord, 50th, 23:15.02; Ariel Whitten, 79th, 23:56.81; Kristin Knight, 198th, 28:07.12; Annika Birk, 211st, 29:19.39; Sarah Raboff, 219th, 30:15.17; Selah Winston, 227th, 31:08.28. ATC — Jordan Enright, 32nd, 22:46.63; Julianna Tibbetts, 42nd, 22:57.79; Raina Wellman, 76th, 23:55.04; Carly Bonwell, 87th, 24:09.12; Grace Graham, 93rd, 24:14.75; Angelicka Lucero, 107th, 24:43.71. Española — Nallely Hernandez, 35th, 22:49.64; Kaylee Chavez, 46th, 23:02.77; Alexis Trujillo, 92nd, 24:14.57; Samantha Sanchez, 102nd, 24:37.17; Meg Martinez, 114th, 25:00.68; Faith Trujillo, 117th, 25:02.33. Peñasco — Estrella Gonzales, 57th, 23:25.08; Nancy Tafoya, 149th, 25:56.07; Alicia Lujan, 185th, 27:27.16; Kathryn Gallegos, 210th, 20:08.73. Mesa Vista —Sarah Espinoza, 97th, 24:18.01; Abrianna Griego, 138th, 25:33.52; Jenai Espinoza, 218th, 30:03.92. Pecos — Faith Flores, 54th, 23:22.67; Ahni Dominguez, 26:38.02; Maria Archuleta, 171st, 26:53.20; Destiny Romero, 179th, 27:09.44. Robertson — Nieves Pacheco, 16th, 21:51.56; Ciara Martinez, 22:12.70; Esperancez Martinez, 69th, 23:49.33; Devyn Lucero, 123rd, 25:11.77; Mckayla Encinias, 150th, 25:56.32. West Las Vegas — Divana Romero, 115th, 25:01.37; Kayla Tarr, 194th, 27:47.26; Faith Gonzales, 201st, 28:14.09; Krysten Cavazos, 232nd, 35:07.22. Mora — Natalia Marrujo, 62nd, 23:30.82; Danika Hurtado, 88th, 24:10.21; Analisa Chavez, 98th, 24:23.19; Luzia Manuel, 169th, 26:48.18; Lorraine Nino, 226th, 31:06.09; April Gallegos, 228th, 31:18.76.


D-4

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

In brief Highlands wins with field goal Zach Tapia’s 46-yard field goal as time expired gave the New Mexico Highlands University football team a dramatic 46-43 victory over Western State on Saturday afternoon in Gunnison, Colo. The Cowboys (3-4 overall, 3-2 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference) scored 10 points in the final minute to win the game. Trailing 43-36 after the Mountaineers (3-4, 2-3) got a tiebreaking 32-yard touchdown run from Austin Ekeler with 1:20 remaining, NMHU drove 75 yards in just 52 seconds to knot things up once again. Lance Orender connected with Tyler Slavin for a 26-yard scoring pass with 42 seconds left to make it 43-all. The ensuing kickoff went to Western State’s Arius Norris, who returned it to his own 30-yard line where he fumbled the ball after being hit by NMHU’s Eric Smith. Jared Koster recovered it on the spot. Two plays later, Tapia delivered the game-winner. It capped a wild fourth quarter that saw both teams combine for 43 points. The Cowboys led 20-16 at halftime and 30-16 heading into the fourth quarter. Orender passed for 405 yards and four touchdowns while running back Vincent Venegas had 30 carries for 197 yards and one touchdown. Slavin had 16 catches for 164 yards and three scores. All told, NMHU had 595 yards total offense.

Aggies handed 6th straight loss In Moscow, Idaho, visiting New Mexico State dropped its sixth straight game as Idaho’s Chad Chalich threw for 192 yards and a touchdown. Vandals running back Jerrel Brown rushed for 151 yards and another score as Idaho (1-6, 1-4) broke a six-game slide with its first win of the season. Robert Montgomery put Idaho up 7-0 early on a 4-yard run less than five minutes into the first quarter. A 49-yard touchdown pass from Chalich to Joshua McCain and a pair of field goals by Austin Rehkow gave the Vandals a 20-10 halftime lead. Rehkow kicked his third field goal early in the fourth to extend the lead to 23-10. The Aggies (2-6, 1-3) then scored on a 33-yard touchdown run by Larry Rose III and New Mexico State trailed by six with 12:05 left. But the comeback hopes were dashed when the Vandals’ Jayshawn Jordan intercepted Tyler Rose and Brown took it in from 14 yards a play later for the final score. The Aggies return home to face Texas State (3-3, 1-1) next week in Las Cruces. It’s the first of three straight at Aggie Memorial Stadium for NMSU, which is now sits alone in ninth place in the Sun Belt. The New Mexican

COLLEGE ROUNDUP

High-scoring Baylor handed 1st loss The Associated Press

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Bryce Petty got knocked around and struggled to find his targets, Baylor piled up the penalties and the Bears’ undeW. Virginia 41 feated season No. 4 Baylor 27 came to a grinding halt. At West Virginia, the fourth-ranked Bears couldn’t muster another comeback as they had last week against TCU. Baylor was held to its lowest point and yardage outputs of the season in a 41-27 loss to the Mountaineers on Saturday. Petty had two early touchdown throws, but Baylor managed just one score after halftime. After the game, Baylor players could hear the Mountaineers chanting “Hail! West Virginia!” from their locker room. “Any game is hard to lose,” Petty said. “It’s about how you bounce back.” Baylor was penalized 18 times for a Big 12-record 215 yards. The old mark of 183 yards was set by Texas Tech against Rice in 2007. “It certainly affected the flow of the game,” Baylor coach Art Briles said. “I never felt like we were out of control or anything along those lines.” The Bears couldn’t overcome a double-digit deficit as they did in a 61-58 win against TCU last week. Baylor (6-1, 3-1) goes from being the Big 12 favorite to a team hopeful to stay in contention for the College Football Playoff, tossed into the mix with the other one-loss teams who now have no room left for error. NO. 3 MISSISSIPPI 34, TENNESSEE 3 In Oxford, Miss., Bo Wallace threw two touchdown passes and No. 3 Mississippi had another dominating defensive performance in a 34-3 victory over Tennessee. Ole Miss (7-0, 4-0 Southeastern Conference) fell behind 3-0 early in the second quarter, but scored the next 34 points to continue their best start since 1962. Wallace completed 13 of 28 passes for 199 yards, throwing touchdown passes to Vince Sanders and Evan Engram. Sanders had 108 yards receiving. Ole Miss came into the game giving up just 11.8 points per game, which ranked first in the SEC and second in the country. The Rebels lived up to those numbers, stuffing Tennessee’s running game and harassing quarterback Justin Worley nearly every time he tried to throw. Worley threw three interceptions and the Volunteers (3-4, 0-3) also lost a fumble.

West Virginia’s Shaquille Riddick sacks Baylor quarterback Bryce Petty on Saturday in Morgantown, W.Va. CHRIS JACKSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

points. Cook finished with 332 yards, Langford and Nick Hill each topped 100 yards on the ground and Tony Lippett had 123 yards receiving as coach Mark Dantonio moved into a tie for second on the school’s victory list at 70. The Spartans (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten) have won five straight overall, 13 consecutive games over conference foes and tied the school record with an eighth straight road win in league play. The Hoosiers (3-4, 0-3) had a scary moment when left tackle Jason Spriggs was carted off the field with 4:54 to play and taken away in an ambulance because of a feared neck injury. Team spokesman Jeff Keag said doctors gave Spriggs a “clean bill of health.”

NO. 12 TCU 42, NO. 15 OKLAHOMA STATE 9 In Fort Worth, Texas, Trevone Boykin threw for a career-high 410 yards with three touchdowns, two on long plays to Josh Doctson in the first quarter, and TCU bounced back afte a loss to Baylor. Doctson had seven catches for 225 NO. 9 OREGON 45, WASHINGTON 20 yards, a yard short of the school record In Eugene, Ore., freshman Royce Free- even with the scores of 77 and 84 yards. B.J. Catalon ran for 102 yards and man ran for 169 yards and four touchtwo scores for the Horned Frogs (5-1, downs and No. 9 Oregon extended its 2-1 Big 12). winning streak over Washington to 11 Oklahoma State (5-2, 3-1), which had straight games with a 45-20 victory. won five in a row, was outgained 676 Marcus Mariota threw for 336 yards to 258 and held without a touchdown and two touchdowns for the Ducks (6-1, 3-1 Pac-12), who won their second for the first time since a 27-0 loss to Oklahoma in the 2009 regular-season straight game as they distance themfinale. selves from a loss at home to Arizona on Oct. 2. NO. 13 OHIO STATE 56, RUTGERS 17 Freeman’s four touchdowns were the NO. 7 ALABAMA 59, In Columbus, Ohio, J.T. Barrett commost rushing touchdowns in a single NO. 21 TEXAS A&M 0 pleted his first nine passes, ran for 107 game for a Duck since Kenjon Barner yards and two touchdowns and threw In Tuscaloosa, Ala., Blake Sims had five against USC in 2012. for three more scores for Ohio State. passed for 268 yards and three touchCameron Van Winkle hit a pair of The Buckeyes (5-1, 2-0 Big Ten) have downs and scored on a 43-yard run field goals for Washington (5-2, 1-2), averaged 56 points in a four-game winwhile leading Alabama to 35 secondwhich hasn’t defeated Oregon since the ning streak since losing at home to Virquarter points. 2003 season. Sophomore Cyler Miles ginia Tech. The victory was Ohio State’s The Crimson Tide (6-1, 3-1 Southeast- struggled to find a rhythm, throwing ern Conference) shut down the nation’s for 147 yards and a touchdown with an 18th in a row in the Big Ten, drawing within two of tying the conference No. 4 offense and dominated a game interception and a fumble. mark set by the 2005-07 Buckeyes. that had produced two straight thrillers. NO. 10 GEORGIA 45, ARKANSAS 32 Eli Apple, a New Jersey native, added Led by Sims, T.J. Yeldon and Amari a fumble return for a score. In Little Rock, Ark., Nick Chubb ran Cooper, Alabama outgained the Aggies It was the worst loss in 12 years for for 202 yards and two touchdowns and 602-172. Texas A&M (5-3, 2-3) has lost Rutgers (5-2, 1-2), which had a threeGeorgia dominated on the road for the its past three games, all to teams now game winning streak end. The Scarlet second straight week. ranked in the top 10. Knights played before their largest The Bulldogs (6-1, 4-1 Southeastern Alabama set a school record for most crowd ever at 106,795. Conference), playing their second points in a quarter and matched the straight game without suspended second-most in a half while racing to NO. 19 NEBRASKA 38, running back Toddy Gurley, led 38-6 a 45-0 halftime lead. Yeldon had 114 NORTHWESTERN 17 at halftime. They were sparked by a yards and two touchdowns on 13 carIn Evanston, Ill., Ameer Abdullah had defense that followed up its shutout ries, all in the first half. Cooper had four 1-yard touchdown runs and quarof Missouri by forcing three first-half eight catches for 140 yards and two terback Tommy Armstrong Jr. scored on turnovers. touchdowns. a 16-yard reception, leading Nebraska NO. 14 KANSAS STATE 31, NO. 8 MICHIGAN STATE 56, past Northwestern. NO. 11 OKLAHOMA 30 INDIANA 17 Abdullah finished with 146 yards on 23 carries to help the Cornhuskers (6-1, In Norman, Okla., Michael Hunnicutt In Bloomington, Ind., Connor Cook 2-1 Big Ten) bounce back from a 27-22 threw three touchdown passes, Jeremy missed a 19-yard field goal with 3:53 Langford ran for three more scores left after Oklahoma drove to the 1, and loss at Michigan State. Abdullah had Kansas State held off the Sooners. and Michigan State scored the final 35 only 45 yards in the loss to the Spar-

Lobos: Late N.M. drive falters plays open up.” Johnson ran for his third by running back Jhurell Press- touchdown after Pearson ley, who had touchdown runs found Garrett Brown for a of 50 and 42 yards and fin63-yard completion to the ished with 148 yards rushing. New Mexico 1. Pearson then “I really thought our kids lofted a pass downfield to played hard,” New Mexico Robinette, who hauled the ball coach Bob Davie said. “We in with an over-the-shoulder fought hard. They just made catch before breaking a tackle some plays on us in the secat the 10 and surging into ond half.” the end zone to complete a Teriyon Gipson shook free 50-yard score. for a 28-yard touchdown run “The DBs were kind of bitto give New Mexico a 28-21 ing a little a bit,” Pearson said. lead midway through the “We hadn’t thrown it that third quarter but Air Force much but the times we did, responded with two quick they kind of jumped the scores, both keyed by long routes pretty fast, so we pass completions, to take thought eventually we were a 35-28 lead into the fourth going to hit that throw.” quarter. Pressley converted a fourth“This week, the coaches and-2 play with a 26-yard said they were going to put it run to the Air Force 17 but more on the shoulders of our was shaken up by a big hit fullbacks and we took it from at the end of the play. The there,” Pearson said. Lobos’ drive stalled and they “When you are able to settled for a 28-yard field goal shove it up in there with by Zack Rogers with 12:01 Shayne and D.J., those big pass remaining.

Continued from Page D-1

Kansas State (5-1, 3-0 Big 12) took possession and ran out the clock. Hunnicutt missed two short field goals and had an extra point blocked. Jake Waters passed for 225 yards and two touchdowns for the Wildcats. Sterling Shepard tied an Oklahoma record with 15 catches for 197 yards, and Trevor Knight passed for 318 yards and three touchdowns for the Sooners (5-2, 2-2).

New Mexico got the ball at its 4-yard line with 2:51 remaining but Lamar Jordan was stopped short on a fourth-down run. Air Force took over on downs and ran the clock nearly out. The Lobos last-ditch play went nowhere. Pearson and Robinette earlier teamed up on a 34-yard completion to the New Mexico 6, and Johnson bulled his way into the end zone for his second score of the day on the next play as the Falcons pulled into a 21-all tie at halftime. Amid a rushing field day that saw Johnson and Pressley both run for a pair of touchdowns in the first half, each team also scored off a turnover. Safety David Guthrie scooped up Pearson’s fumble following a sack and returned it 43 yards for a score, giving New Mexico a 21-14 advantage.

tans on Oct. 4. Northwestern (3-4, 2-2) wasted another big game for freshman Justin Jackson in its second consecutive loss. Jackson had 128 yards and two touchdowns in his third straight 100-yard game. NO. 22 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 56, COLORADO 28 In Los Angeles, Cody Kessler set a school game record with seven touchdown passes, throwing five in the first half in Southern California’s victory over Colorado. Nelson Agholor caught three TD passes from Kessler, who broke the mark previously held by Matt Barkley. Kessler passed the record on a 24-yard pass to Steven Mitchell, who made a diving catch in the third quarter of a blowout victory for the Trojans (5-2, 4-1 Pac-12). Kessler became the first Pac-12 quarterback to throw seven TD passes in the first three quarters, and the junior tied the conference record for TD passes in a non-overtime game. He finished 17 of 24 for 318 yards. NO. 24 CLEMSON 17, BOSTON COLLEGE 13 In Boston, C.J. Davidson ran 32 yards for a touchdown with 9:35 to play and Clemson stopped a Boston College drive in the final minutes to beat the Eagles. Cole Stoudt completed 29 of 45 passes for 285 yards, and the Tigers (5-2, 4-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) got help from a missed BC extra point. The Eagles (4-3, 1-2) moved to the Clemson 29, converted a fourth-and-1 and then Tyler Murphy found an open receiver streaking for the end zone. But Tyler Rouse couldn’t hold onto the ball, and Clemson took over on downs and ran out the clock. Murphy ran for 55 yards on 13 carries and also completed 8 of 19 passes for 108 yards. NO. 25 MARSHALL 45, FIU 13 In Miami, Rakeem Cato set an NCAA record for consecutive games with a touchdown pass with 39, finishing with four scoring tosses to help Marshall remain unbeaten. From Miami, Cato broke a tie with Russell Wilson for the Football Bowl Subdivision mark, connecting with Ryan Yurachek for the record-breaking score with 5 seconds left in the first quarter for Marshall (7-0, 3-0 Conference USA).

Penalty: Irish score disallowed Continued from Page D-1 goal Irish at the 8 with 45 second left. Florida State shut down a screen on first down and broke up a slant on second. Golson faced a huge blitz and complete to Prosise for 6. On fourth-and-ball game, Golson found Robinson all by himself, but flags flew as the Irish celebrated, and the crowd exploded when pass interference was called on C.J. Prosise, who locked up Florida State safety Jalen Ramsey in the end zone, helping Robinson get free. After the last Irish play misfired, Winston took a knee to end it. Notre Dame has a long history of snapping winning streaks, including Oklahoma’s NCAA record 47-game winning streak back in 1957. Florida State’s streak was modest by comparison, but still the best in the nation.

As the Irish harassed Winston with defensive coordinator Brian VanGorder’s blitzes and the Notre Dame offensive line opened up running lanes in Florida State’s defense in the first half, it looked as if ‘Noles streak might become seventh of at least 20 games to be halted by the Irish But the Seminoles had Winston. The Heisman winner showed off his NFL arm on Florida State’s first drive of the second half, driving the ‘Noles to a tying touchdown on 10-yard slant to Rashad Greene. Golson and the Irish’s response: an 83-yard touchdown drive, an inside screen Will Fuller took 11 yards to the end zone. Golson went to the locker room after the score to get an apparent leg problem checked. The junior came away a little gimpy after scrambling to avoid a rush and pushing a pass to Prosise for 13 yards on the play

right before the touchdown. Sophomore backup Malik Zaire began warming up on the sideline, but before Florida State completed its second touchdown drive of the quarter and tied the score at 24, Golson had jogged back to the sideline. He never missed a play. Kyle Brindza’s 46-yard field goal with 11:40 left in the fourth quarter gave Notre Dame a 27-24 lead, but Winston was just about unstoppable in the second half. The blitzes that got to him in the first, he stared down in the second half. The Irish secondary couldn’t stay with Greene, Jesus Wilson and freshman Travis Rudolph. Winston picked the Irish apart and Karlos Williams’ second short scoring run gave Florida State its first lead, 31-27, with 7:23 left in the fourth quarter. Winston finished with 273 yards and two touchdowns.


SPORTS

NFL matchups 49ers (4-2) at Broncos (4-1) Time: 6:30 p.m. When Peyton Manning was looking for a new team in 2012 after the Colts drafted Andrew Luck, one of his suitors was San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh, who supposedly wore a hoodie to watch Manning work out so no one would recognize him and report back to his quarterback, Alex Smith, that he was looking in another direction. Whether he was wearing his signature khakis or had a Sharpie hanging by a string around his neck was not reported, but the clandestine meeting gave fans a chance to wonder what Harbaugh, a quarterback guru, could have done with Manning, who should soon set the career record for touchdown passes. In the end, Harbaugh found his next quarterback on the 49ers’ bench: Colin Kaepernick. Manning found a perfect home in Denver, and Smith landed on his feet in Kansas City — a rare situation that worked out for everyone. Kaepernick has risen to the occasion more often than not. It also provides a good stage for the 49ers’ defense to prove it is worthy of its reputation by shutting down a marquee talent. Line: Broncos by 6½. Pick: 49ers.

Falcons (2-4) at Ravens (4-2) Time: 11 a.m. To say that Baltimore coach John Harbaugh is more laid-back than his younger brother, Jim, is an understatement. Rarely has the difference been on better display than when the elder Harbaugh, discussing this game against Atlanta, took the time to poke fun at his New England counterpart, Bill Belichick. Belichick repeatedly answered questions this month about Tom Brady’s struggles by saying, “We’re on to Cincinnati.” Line: Ravens by 7. Pick: Ravens.

Titans (2-4) at Redskins (1-5) Time: 11 a.m. Washington has struggled to score, has given up the sixthmost points per game in the league, cannot win at home and has been terrible on the road. The team does not seem to have an answer at quarterback and, despite possessing a solid running back, is not showing any commitment to running the ball. While Washington figures out its priorities, Tennessee could win its second straight game. Line: Redskins by 5 ½. Pick: Titans.

Seahawks (3-2) at Rams (1-4) Time: 11 a.m. Austin Davis has made St. Louis interesting, but his solid yardage totals are being undermined by a knack for throwing interceptions that are returned for touchdowns. In five games, he has thrown four interceptions, three of which have been returned for scores. That has gone a long way toward negating his seven touchdown passes. His problems must be music to the ears of struggling Seattle, which is coming off a loss at home to Dallas. Look for Marshawn Lynch to get into beast mode against a Rams defense that is allowing 140 yards a game on the ground. Line: Seahawks by 7½. Pick: Seahawks.

Browns (3-2) at Jaguars (0-6) Time: 11 a.m. Cleveland has plenty of issues to work out before it can be considered a legitimate contender, but none of them should matter as the team travels to Jacksonville to face the hapless Jaguars. With a chance to begin a season 4-2 for the first time since 2001, the Browns are brimming with confidence on the heels of a big Week 6 win over Pittsburgh. “I expected it, honestly,” running back Ben Tate told ClevelandBrowns.com. “I wasn’t really that shocked when we beat them.” Line: Browns by 6. Pick: Browns.

Bengals (3-1-1) at Colts (4-2) Time: 11 a.m. In one game, Cincinnati linebacker Vontaze Burfict was accused of delivering an illegal hit that gave Carolina’s Kelvin Benjamin a concussion and of twisting the ankles of Cam Newton and Greg Olsen with the intent to injure them at the conclusion of plays. The league fined Burfict $25,000 for the ankle twists, but he is appealing. Burfict’s teammate Adam Jones

By Brett Michael Dykes The New York Times

came to his defense. When Jones becomes a character witness, it is clear the situation has gotten out of hand. Line: Colts by 3½. Pick: Colts.

Vikings (2-4) at Bills (3-3) Time: 11 a.m. Buffalo has had a particularly difficult schedule, but Minnesota should be a welcome relief as the Vikings adjust to life with Teddy Bridgewater behind center. One thing is certain: The Vikings will have their hands full trying to contain C.J. Spiller and Fred Jackson. They have combined for 461 yards rushing and 351 yards receiving, with Spiller chipping in another 303 yards on returns. Line: Bills by 6. Pick: Bills.

Dolphins (2-3) at Bears (3-3) Time: 11 a.m. Miami is a talented team that has not shown consistency, and Chicago has defied convention by being terrific on the road and terrible at home. With so many variables on both sides, including the chance that the Bears will be without Lance Briggs, Shea McClellin, D.J. Williams and Jon Bostic, this is an intriguing matchup of teams that have yet to develop an identity. Line: Bears by 3½. Pick: Dolphins.

Saints (2-3) at Lions (4-2) Time: 11 a.m. It is rare for Drew Brees to oppose a quarterback who has more passing yards than he does, but that is the situation he faces against Detroit’s Matthew Stafford. Even with Calvin Johnson expected to sit, the Lions’ offense should be able to move the ball against an awful New Orleans defense. On the other side of the ball, the Lions’ defense, first in the NFL against the pass and second against the run, should contain Brees enough to win. Line: Lions by 3. Pick: Lions.

Panthers (3-2-1) at Packers (4-2) Time: 11 a.m. Aaron Rodgers told Green Bay fans to relax when the Packers began the season 1-2. With three consecutive wins, and a sterling passing line of 15 touchdowns to one interception, Rodgers was right to be confident. If the Packers could put together anything resembling a running game, it is scary to think how good their offense could be. Line: Packers by 7. Pick: Packers.

Chiefs (2-3) at Chargers (5-1) Time: 2:05 p.m. If Branden Oliver, an undrafted San Diego rookie, continues to run as effectively as he has in the last two games, he might render the eventual return of Ryan Mathews irrelevant. In Weeks 5 and 6, Oliver carried the ball 45 times for 215 yards and two touchdowns, breathing life into a Chargers running game that had been underwhelming. As Philip Rivers goes about what is shaping up to be a career season, Oliver could bring the offensive balance the team needs to get to the next level. Line: Chargers by 4. Pick: Chargers.

Cardinals (4-1) at Raiders (0-5) Time: 2:25 p.m. Oakland is deeply flawed, but it is likely to come away with a surprising win at some point. This could be the week, with Derek Carr having found a go-to receiver in Andre Holmes, and with an opponent in Arizona that has struggled to stop the pass, despite the presence of Patrick Peterson. Line: Cardinals by 4. Pick: Raiders.

Giants (3-3) at Cowboys (5-1) Time: 2:25 p.m. Even after Michael Lewis wrote a book about the value of the left tackle, many fans seem unaware of just how much line play affects a team. Dallas, with a star-studded offensive line headlined by Tyron Smith, has run the ball exceptionally well, and Tony Romo has had plenty of time to find open receivers. The banged-up Giants line struggled to protect Eli Manning in Week 6, and the result was evident in the team’s 27-0 loss to Philadelphia. Unless the Giants solve their problems on the line, they will have a difficult time against quality teams. Line: Cowboys by 6 ½. Pick: Cowboys.

Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-5

NFL

Cowboys aim to avoid dose of humility By Schuyler Dixon

NFL GAMES ON TV TODAY

The Associated Press

DALLAS — Tony Romo was in his first full season as a starter when the Dallas Cowboys last strung together enough wins to have one of the NFL’s best records. The franchise didn’t exist the only other time a running back started a season the way DeMarco Murray has. Speaking of history, that’s how the New York Giants categorize last week’s dud in Philadelphia. The Cowboys (5-1) play their first NFC East opponent Sunday after winning at Super Bowl champion Seattle. That triggered questions whether they can live with the sudden — and some would say unexpected — success. After three straight 8-8 seasons and a four-year playoff drought, there’s a pretty simple answer. “Anybody who’s been around here for an extended period of time, you know that humility’s right

11 a.m. on CBS — Cincinnati Bengals at Indianapolis Colts 11 a.m. on FOX — Carolina Panthers at Green Bay Packers 2:25 p.m. on FOX — New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys 6:20 p.m. on NBC — San Francisco at Denver

around the corner,” executive vice president Stephen Jones said. “This team’s been, this organization’s been mediocre the last three-plus years. So no one’s taking anything for granted.” The Giants (3-3) are the team stuck in the .500 rut right now after dropping their first two, bouncing back with a three-game winning streak, then losing 27-0 at Philadelphia, co-leader with Dallas in the division. New York also lost receiver Victor Cruz to a season-ending patellar tendon tear in his right knee against the Eagles, and will be without

leading rusher Rashad Jennings for the second straight game. “I think we’ve responded well to the losses when we’ve had them or when we’ve had a tough game this year,” said quarterback Eli Manning, who was sacked six times and held to 151 yards passing. “We know we have to play better than we did.” Murray is a big reason the Cowboys are in position for their first six-game winning streak since 2007, when they were the top seed in the NFC at 13-3. That was the first full season with Romo, and they lost in the playoffs to the Giants. New York went on to beat undefeated New England in the Super Bowl. The fourth-year back can become the first with seven straight 100-yard games to start a season. With 115 yards against Seattle’s then-No. 1 run defense, Murray tied Hall of Famer Jim Brown’s record of six in a row set in 1958 — two years before the Cowboys debuted.

WORLD SERIES PREVIEW

Shields trade spurred Royals By Dave Skretta

WORLD SERIES

The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The moment Alex Gordon knew the Kansas City Royals were serious about winning can be traced to a cold December day when his wife heard they had traded for James Shields. The franchise had long suffered through a forgettable cast of starting pitchers, from Jay Witasick to Darrell May to Runelvys Hernandez. Hot prospects flamed out. Free agents fizzled. And every year, the Royals languished near the AL Central cellar. But things changed in December 2012. General manager Dayton Moore thought enough pieces had been assembled and all that was missing was the right starting pitcher — someone who could not only be the staff ace, but who could change a clubhouse culture accustomed to losing. Moore called up the Rays and made the deal. “That’s when I knew,” Gordon said, “that we were going for it.” Two years later, a trade that was panned by many has helped the Royals reach the World Series. Shields, the presumptive Game 1 starter Tuesday night against San

WHEN: Game 1, 6:07 p.m. Tuesday on FOX. WHERE: Played at Kansas City, Mo.

Kansas City’s James Shields kisses the trophy after the Royals won the American League series Wednesday in Kansas City, Mo. MATT SLOCUM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Francisco, has been everything Moore had hoped he would be. “Those opportunities to acquire a top rotation starter and an impact pitcher like Wade Davis, they’re not presented year-in and year-out,” Moore said. “We were fortunate the timing of it was such that it was staring us in the face and put us in a position to compete in 2014.” It was a gamble. The Roy-

NASCAR

Labonte retiring after Talladega race By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Terry Labonte will compete in his final NASCAR race Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway. The twotime Cup champion ran 26 full seasons at NASCAR’s top level, and a partial schedTerry ule the last Labonte decade. Labonte first announced his retirement in 2006, at home track Texas Motor Speedway, but he’s raced 41 times since. “You know, it’s only about the third time I’ve said this is going to be my last race,” he said Saturday. “But this is really going to be the last one. It’s been fun.” Labonte, who turns 58 next month, had four scheduled races this season with Go FAS Racing and good friend and crew chief/ owner Frank Stoddard. All four were at Daytona and Talladega, and he finished a season-best 11th at Daytona in July. The final start for “Texas Terry” will be the 890th of his career, which is tied for third in NASCAR. It will be his 61st start at Talladega,

AUTO RACING Noon on ESPN — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Geico 500, at Talladega, Ala.

which is tied for the most. Labonte won his Cup titles in 1984 and 1996, and has 22 career victories. He drove 10 full seasons for Billy Hagan, three for Junior Johnson and 11 for Rick Hendrick. He also has driven for Richard Petty, Roger Staubach/Troy Aikman, Joe Gibbs and Michael Waltrip through his career. Labonte cited his 1999 win at Texas as one of the “coolest” memories of his career. “That’s the first time I think I ever noticed a crowd,” he said. “I was passing Dale Jarrett. We had really run good all day and they beat us on a pit stop and I ran him down and passed him with less than 10 laps to go and I saw the whole place stand up. “I had never noticed the crowd actually stand up at the track and I thought to myself, ‘Oh, man, I better not screw this up because I think there are 200,000 people pulling for me and they’re going to be mad if I don’t win this thing.’ ” Labonte’s first career start came at Darlington in 1980, and looking back, he’s not sure it was the place to debut.

als sent baseball’s top minor league talent, Wil Myers, and a bevy of other promising prospects to the Rays. They were mortgaging their future to win in the present. The trade paid immediate dividends. Shields went 13-9 with a 3.15 ERA last year, helping the Royals to their best record in more than 20 years. And over the course of the season, Davis established himself as one of the most

Donovan retiring after season CARSON, Calif. — Landon Donovan is trying to save his nostalgia for November — and hopefully December, too. The most accomplished player in MLS history figures he would be more reflective about his final regular-season home match with the LA Galaxy on Sunday if he wasn’t

dominant late-inning relievers in the game. This year, Shields has gone 14-8 with a 3.21 ERA, helping the Royals not only return to the postseason for the first time in 29 years but advance all the way to the Fall Classic. He started their wild-card win over Oakland. He allowed two runs over six innings in earning the win in a divisional game against the Angels. And he was good enough to help the Royals knock off Baltimore in the ALCS, running their postseason winning streak to 11 games. “He’s earned the nickname Big Game James for a reason,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. On a team with precious few veterans, Shields has proved invaluable in October. And when he takes the mound against the Giants, he’ll be drawing on the experience he gained in 2008, when he tossed 5⅔ innings for the Rays against the Phillies in the only other World Series start of his nine-year big league career.

returning for the playoffs. Donovan knows the Galaxy can’t afford to turn this visit from the Seattle Sounders into a testimonial. A win is the best way to put the Galaxy on a path ending with his farewell in the MLS Cup in two months. “This isn’t necessarily the end, but I’ll hopefully get a little bit of time after the game to appreciate it all,” Donovan said. The Associated Press

ATHLETE OF THE WEEK Cecelia Barnard Cecelia Barnard played but one volleyball match for Santa Fe Waldorf last week, but she made the most of it. The senior outside hitter recorded 35 kills in 61 attempts in a crucial District 1A match at Coronado on Oct. 8. Her performance led the charge in the Lady Wolves’ 25-22, 20-25, 21-25, 25-15, 17-15 win over the Lady Leopards to create a tie stop the district standings. On the season, Barnard is averaging a tick under 23 kills per match for Waldorf, the fourthranked team in Class A. For her performance, she is The New Mexican’s athlete of the week for Oct. 6-11.


D-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

The weather

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

Drhett B. with Berna B. took this photo of the 9/11 Memorial at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum at ground zero during the Fourth of July weekend. The museum is located in Lower Manhattan, New York.

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Tonight

Today

A t-storm in spots this afternoon

Monday

Partly cloudy, a t-storm in spots

Wednesday

An afternoon t-storm Times of clouds and in the area sun

43

69

Tuesday

70/44

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

Thursday

Friday

A shower or thunder- Mostly sunny storm around

Saturday

Plenty of sunshine

Plenty of sunshine

66/46

65/42

66/40

67/39

68/39

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

52%

72%

42%

52%

60%

39%

34%

31%

wind: SW 4-8 mph

wind: ENE 3-6 mph

wind: ESE 6-12 mph

wind: S 6-12 mph

wind: W 4-8 mph

wind: WNW 6-12 mph

wind: SW 4-8 mph

wind: W 3-6 mph

New Mexico weather

Almanac Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures H g / ow ......................................... 65 /48 Norma g / ow ............................ 67 /37 Record high ............................... 77 in 1954 Record low ................................. 20 in 1968 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Mont /year to ate .................. 0.44”/8.55” Normal month/year to date ... 0.94”/11.64” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.05” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.81”/9.50”

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 .........................................1 Low Monda .....................................1, Low Tuesda .....................................1, Low Wednesda ...............................2, Low Thursda ...................................0, Low Friday ........................................0, Low The AccuWeather Flu Index™ combines the effects of weather with a number of other known factors to provide a scale showing the overall probability of flu transmission and severity of symptoms. The AccuWeather Flu Index™ is based on a scale of 0-10.

54

25

25

Area rainfall

40

40 285

Albuquerque 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Mont /year to ate .................. 0.16”/6.95” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.08” Month/year to date ................ 0.20”/11.32” Los Alamos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.06” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.80”/8.79” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.82”/12.69” Taos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.02” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.27”/5.97”

54 60 60

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

70

180 25

70

70

380

380

285

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

70

180

54

10

Water statistics

285

10

The following water statistics of October 15 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.555 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 4.719 City Wells: 2.458 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 8.732 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.172 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 10.6 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.74 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Sun and moon

tate extremes Sat. High 81 ................................ Lordsburg Sat. Low 33 ................................. Angel Fire

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

Hi/Lo W 77/57 pc 74/56 pc 55/33 r 68/53 pc 75/59 pc 61/43 c 62/42 pc 53/43 sh 59/40 pc 63/46 pc 69/42 r 80/49 s 73/55 pc 70/49 c 65/51 pc 74/35 pc 72/34 pc 64/50 pc 78/56 r

Hi/Lo W 73/52 pc 72/52 pc 60/32 pc 72/52 pc 73/55 pc 62/34 pc 69/37 pc 74/48 pc 58/37 pc 70/50 pc 68/40 pc 76/53 pc 71/51 pc 72/46 pc 73/51 pc 70/38 pc 65/37 pc 72/54 pc 75/55 pc

Hi/Lo W 73/52 t 73/51 pc 61/32 pc 72/53 pc 71/54 t 65/38 pc 68/38 pc 72/48 pc 57/39 t 72/51 pc 68/42 pc 73/52 pc 72/50 pc 74/48 pc 75/51 pc 70/40 pc 69/37 pc 69/54 pc 73/53 t

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 56/42 81/43 60/45 76/50 68/50 56/41 51/39 74/55 64/54 55/45 62/48 75/46 78/55 63/39 79/54 67/46 81/59 65/49 73/37

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

Hi/Lo W 68/39 pc 78/56 pc 65/43 pc 74/47 pc 71/51 pc 72/40 pc 58/34 pc 72/46 pc 71/52 pc 61/45 pc 72/48 pc 70/51 pc 73/52 pc 65/34 pc 73/54 pc 76/49 pc 77/56 t 68/44 pc 70/39 pc

Hi/Lo W 65/40 pc 77/57 pc 67/44 pc 75/49 pc 73/51 pc 68/41 pc 59/35 pc 74/47 pc 72/53 pc 62/45 t 72/47 pc 68/51 pc 74/52 t 67/35 pc 73/53 t 75/50 pc 75/54 t 69/44 pc 70/42 pc

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

Sunrise today ............................... 7:14 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 6:24 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 3:17 a.m. Moonset toda ............................. 4:09 .m. Sunrise Monda ............................ 7:15 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 6:23 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 4:11 a.m. Moonset Monda .......................... 4:41 .m. Sunrise Tuesda ........................... 7:16 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 6:22 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 5:06 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 5:13 p.m. New

First

Full

Last

Oct 23

Oct 30

Nov 6

Nov 14

Rise 6:46 a.m. 7:07 a.m. 12:04 p.m. 1:48 a.m. 9:21 a.m. 5:50 p.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:04 p.m. 6:24 p.m. 9:36 p.m. 3:28 p.m. 7:48 p.m. 6:23 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

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 44/35 76/60 72/52 75/39 58/39 71/42 71/57 85/61 76/54 50/45 55/50 49/46 82/62 71/40 49/44 40/19 68/40 89/79 86/63 54/47 63/40 84/68 78/61

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

Hi/Lo 42/32 70/49 56/36 72/45 71/35 77/51 53/38 73/51 67/44 56/47 57/44 51/42 77/58 72/43 52/45 31/17 66/37 85/77 82/62 57/45 67/50 86/63 79/63

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

Hi/Lo 41/31 74/53 61/47 75/49 71/41 77/50 56/46 77/59 70/49 62/43 59/46 57/47 83/59 74/47 59/46 34/21 66/39 87/76 83/60 63/44 72/46 87/63 77/61

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC

Hi/Lo 58/55 71/55 86/67 48/43 54/41 85/64 70/60 74/55 83/58 72/58 90/68 54/49 71/56 76/58 65/48 72/44 90/66 74/67 79/65 67/57 53/42 71/53 74/57

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

Hi/Lo 61/46 68/49 86/71 56/46 65/44 79/61 55/42 74/56 84/66 56/41 92/70 52/39 73/55 63/40 65/53 73/50 85/65 76/67 73/61 70/57 70/42 54/36 58/43

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

Hi/Lo 64/50 73/56 86/72 61/42 62/39 81/62 57/52 80/58 84/67 61/51 93/69 56/47 63/52 67/51 74/48 77/54 84/66 75/65 72/59 60/53 70/41 59/47 65/54

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

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

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

Cold front Warm front

Ice

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 94 ............................. Cotulla, TX Sat. Low: 17 .............. Bodie State Park, CA

Weather history

Weather trivia™

On Oct. 19, 1961, heavy, wet snow fell on trees still in leaf in West Virginia. The snow broke millions of branches, causing the worst forest disaster since the fires of 1953.

Q: When did the last ice age end?

7 p.m. on FO The Simpsons In the new annual spooktacular “Treehouse of Horror XXV,” after Bart reads a set of Aramaic symbols on the underside of his desk, he and Lisa are hurled into a demon-filled alternate universe. In a parody of A Clockwork Orange, Dum (Homer) wants out of Moe’s vicious gang to please his new girlfriend (Marge). Finally, the Simpsons are visited by the cruder versions of themselves from The Tracey Ullman Show in a send-up of The Others. Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner and Nancy Cartwright head the voice cast. 7 p.m. on CBS Madam Secretary When a crafty Elizabeth (Tea Leoni) is called upon to negotiate with Iran regarding their escalating nuclear program, she is determined to do so peacefully instead of following the president’s (Keith Carradine) preferred go-to strategy of military intervention. Meanwhile, precocious Jason (Evan Roe) interviews his father (Tim Daly) for a school report in the new episode “Blame Canada.” John Finn, Robert Klein and Johanna Day guest star.

1

2

A: Approximately 10,000 years ago

TV

top picks

City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima

Hi/Lo 72/55 88/64 85/63 90/77 75/60 74/50 63/48 63/52 73/66 88/68 90/76 81/64 59/54 64/58 68/50 75/63 84/61 85/72 74/59 69/61

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

Hi/Lo 67/55 71/58 90/67 88/77 76/62 72/49 70/56 65/50 76/52 85/66 87/76 76/59 61/54 60/48 72/53 71/60 87/69 86/78 68/53 69/60

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

Hi/Lo 60/53 73/58 88/58 89/78 77/61 70/47 61/47 64/48 71/59 82/63 87/76 73/58 58/50 58/45 72/56 73/59 87/69 86/78 65/48 70/60

W pc s t t s c sh r s s pc t sh pc pc t t pc 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 73/66 66/61 81/51 67/57 61/50 28/26 88/59 75/55 61/46 79/73 79/63 59/52 70/41 88/77 50/37 70/50 68/55 64/54 64/57 66/48

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

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Newsmakers Medical examiner: Body that of missing actress 7:30 p.m. on FOX Brooklyn Nine-Nine As their traditional Halloween challenge, Jake (Andy Samberg) bets Capt. Holt (Andre Braugher) that he can steal his wristwatch by midnight. Elsewhere, Terry (Terry Crews, pictured) confronts a surly Gina (Chelsea Peretti) about her attitude after she is kicked off her dance team, Floorgasm. Melissa Fumero, Joe Lo Truglio and Stephanie Beatriz also star in the new episode “Halloween II.” 9 p.m. on ABC Revenge The title of tonight’s new episode is “Meteor,” and certainly the return of the longbelieved-dead David Clarke (James Tupper) qualifies as a bolt right out of the blue, even on a show as twist-happy as this one. Needless to say, Emily (Emily VanCamp) is shaken to her core, even more so when she comes to realize her father is not the man she remembers — and that’s sure to be even more true as Victoria (Madeleine Stowe) sinks her claws deeper into him.

3

Misty Upham

SEATTLE — The King County medical examiner has confirmed that a body found in a ravine in the Seattle suburb is that of missing actress Misty Upham, known for her roles in August: Osage County, Frozen River and Django Unchained. In a statement, the medical examiner’s office said Friday that the 32-year-old woman died Oct. 5. That’s the day her family told police that the Native American actress was suicidal. Relatives reported her missing the next day. The medical examiner said the cause and manner of death are pending investigation.

Toni Morrison’s papers to be housed at Princeton

4

Toni Morrison

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

Explore Berlin and its Cold War legacy U.S. spy-plane pilot Francis Gary Powers was exchanged there for a Soviet spy known BERLIN — In January 1989, as Rudolf Abel. In 1986, promithen-East German leader Erich nent Soviet dissident Anatoly Honecker declared that the Ber- Shcharansky walked across the lin Wall could stand for another bridge to freedom and later, century. Less than 10 months as Natan Sharansky, to start a later the border was open, new life as an Israeli politician. and soon Berliners were in a The border was in the middle hurry to tear down the 96-mile of the bridge, still painted difbarrier. However, there’s still ferent shades of green on the plenty to see of the Cold War two sides of the divide. past as Berlin marks the 25th The scenically located anniversary of the Wall’s fall. bridge spans the channel Many of the historical sites are between two lakes. From free, though you’ll need to take the bridge, you can walk or advantage of Berlin’s efficient cycle along the Berlin Wall and inexpensive transport netTrail, which largely follows work — or rent a bike — to get the course of the Wall for 100 around a city that still lacks a miles around the former West single center and whose sights Berlin. Follow the gray-andare widely spread. white signs marked “Berliner Mauerweg.”

By Geir Moulson

The planets

National cities

Weather for October 19

Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

LASTING IMAGES MEMORIAL

PRINCETON, N.J. — The papers of Nobel laureate Toni Morrison are part of the permanent library collection of Princeton University. Princeton made the announcement Friday, shortly before the 83-year-old Morrison took part in a forum at the school where she served on the faculty for 17 years. The renowned author’s papers contain about 180 linear feet of research materials documenting her life, work and writing methods. The Associated Press

The Associated Press

Where the Wall still stands

The Wall’s longest surviving stretch is the East Side Gallery, stretching for more than a quarter mile along the Spree river. Artists covered it in colorful murals after the border opened, adorning it with images such as a boxy East German Trabant car that appears to burst through the wall and a fraternal communist kiss between Honecker and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. They repainted the murals in 2009. At the Berlin Wall Memorial on Bernauer Strasse, a stretch of the barrier stands at the end of a nearly one-mile section of the former border strip, which gives a good impression of how deep a scar the Wall cut through the city. An open-air exhibition is spread along the strip, while an indoor museum will reopen after renovation on the Nov. 9 anniversary of the Wall’s fall. The viewing platform above offers a panorama of the site and downtown Berlin.

Western and Eastern allies The Allied Museum, in the western Dahlem district, focuses on the history of the Western allies’ role in Berlin from 1945 until their last troops withdrew in 1994. West Berlin was made up of the post-World War II American, British and French sectors. Its status as a capitalist exclave deep inside the Soviet occupation zone was secured by the 1948-1949 Berlin Airlift. The original Checkpoint Charlie border guardhouse from the time of the Wall’s fall, from the famous crossing in downtown Berlin, stands outside the museum. Across town in the Karlshorst district, the recently renovated German-Russian Museum concentrates on the history and consequences of Nazi Germany’s war against the Soviet Union, which started in 1941 and ended with the Red Army taking Berlin in 1945. The building includes the room where Germany’s surrender was signed on May 8, 1945.

Layers of history

Soviet War memorials

A third remaining stretch of the Wall runs along the edge of the Topography of Terror memorial site, which includes the ruins of buildings where the Gestapo secret police, the SS and the Reich Security Main Office ran Adolf Hitler’s police state from 1933 to 1945. A few small Wall fragments survive at other sites, as do a handful of the 302 watch towers that once dotted the border’s so-called “death strip.”

World War II left 26.6 million Soviet soldiers and civilians dead, by the official Russian count, and the Soviet Union built three memorials in postwar Berlin. During the Cold War, the best-known to Westerners was the smallest, which is flanked by two Soviet tanks and stands a few minutes’ walk west of the Brandenburg Gate in former West Berlin. The biggest and most spectacular memorial stands in Treptow, in former East Berlin. Memorial slabs depicting the course of the war, adorned with quotes from Soviet leader Josef Stalin, lead up to a mausoleum topped by the figure of a soldier standing on a shattered swastika.

Where spies were swapped The Glienicke Bridge, on Berlin’s forested southwestern edge, was the setting for a few of the Cold War’s most spectacular spy swaps. In 1962,


Open houses E-6 Classifieds E-9 Jobs E-10 Sudoku E-12 Time Out E-16

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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EMPLOYMENT ES OPPORTUNITI S COUNCIL, INC. RN INDIAN PUEBLO ENCE EIGHT NORTHE ER OF EXCELL - A LOCAL EMPLOY

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 and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have New Must of participatio n. State requires in the organizatio Work. Licensed delivered by the network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed LPCC, or Ph.D. ESPANOLA ling mental ealth/sub ERQUE AND e o b an e IST – ALBUQUg FAMILY THERAP t r df d ll r i e i i

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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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DO IT YOURSELF

Ghosts of plumbers past

he com on’t tin

ngrading your bank account. ONY CENICOLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES

By Bob Tedeschi The New York Times

T

he weeks before Halloween are ideal for home improvement shenanigans because the process so nicely replicates the experience of visiting a haunted house: Pay your money. Stumble into darkness. Prepare for trauma from some unexpected place. My DIY fright fest involved updating a master bathroom that is “master” in name only. The tiny space played host to a rusting light fixture, a cracked vanity and a cramped medicine cabinet that probably cost about $12 in 1970. All that was missing were cobwebs and giant spiders. But true to form, the ghosts of contractors past were waiting behind almost every corner to shriek at me. I was already spooked enough going into the job, thanks to a trio of experts I called for advice. Spike Carlsen, the author of multiple home improvement books, including Wood-

Guide eal Estate Santa Fe R

14 Oc tob er 20

When remodeling a bathroom, beware of old work that can seemingly stand the test of time working FAQ (Storey), was among them. In any bathroom, he told me, “You’ve got all that plumbing, vents, a heat source and electrical wires in the walls. It just increases your chances of running into something unexpected.” Carlsen specifically cautioned against what he called the “mushroom effect,” in which a seemingly simple job leads to other unwelcome tasks — like teaching your children not to repeat the things they hear coming out of your mouth or writing checks to contractors to fix what you messed up. It didn’t quite come to that for me. But the job did mushroom, thanks mostly to rookie errors that more diligent homeowners might have avoided.

By Vern Yip

S

MORE HOME To learn more about Northern New Mexico real estate and to see some of the best properties on the market, look for Home: Santa Fe Real Estate Guide inside The New Mexican every first Sunday of the month and at www.santa fenewmexican.com/life/ home.

Please see PAST, Page E-5

Next big influencer of home design: China Special to The Washington Post

our | Inside A Modern Home T

If you want to upgrade a bathroom without significantly downgrading your bank account, don’t tinker with the layout, said Sandra Soria, author of New Bathroom Ideas That Work (Taunton). “The big money-saver in bathroom remodeling is to retain the basic room layout and keep the fixtures where they are when you replace them,” she said. “Moving the guts of the plumbing is costly.” In some cases, that is easier said than done. Bathroom vanities, for instance, have become bigger in the past 20 years to save people the trouble of bending over too much, said Lou Manfredini, a Chicago-based contractor and hardware store owner who hosts the home improvement show HouseSmarts. So any num-

ber of modifications may be needed and, at the very least, Manfredini said, “depending on your layout, you could have an electrical outlet that’ll have to be raised.” To make life as easy as possible, he said, measure the existing units and take photos with your phone before buying anything. Then show these clues to a salesperson and ask for help. My wife and I skipped this step when shopping for the vanity, which was the centerpiece of our bathroom upgrade. We bought a great one with a granite countertop and sink, but when I got it home and unboxed it, I discovered it had no built-in backsplash to match the old one. Not for a second did I consider returning it, though, since I had expended a huge effort to get this 150-pound beast upstairs. And by that time, my frustration level was already elevated from demolishing our old vanity.

ome prognosticators forecast that China’s economy may overtake ours as soon as this year, almost a decade sooner than most predicted just a few years ago. What’s just as astonishing is the rapid pace at which China has morphed from a country caught in an aesthetic time warp to one that’s now on the leading front of design. On my first trip to Beijing more than 25 years ago, I marveled at a country that seemed uncomfortably positioned with one foot firmly committed to communist ideology and the other lunging toward a society where private wealth was not only tolerated but encouraged. Back then, the faded lobby of the Beijing Hotel was considered one of the more stylish hangouts, with its glass cases of Western cigarettes for sale and smoke-choked floor-toceiling curtains framing windows onto the city’s most notable avenue. Bicyclists dominated the roads, and only the homes of the elite sported refrigerators and TVs. Now China is a formidable eco-

nomic powerhouse, and those throngs of bicycles have been supplanted with bumper-to-bumper Porsches making their way to chic shopping streets and one of the globe’s most interesting contemporary art zones. The Beijing Hotel is still there (revamped, of course) but now competes with every top luxury hotel brand in the world. And like many who’ve recently come into money, China’s taken a circuitous route to identifying a sense of personal style. Having experimented with an eyebrow raising more-is-more sensibility for the past decade, new Chinese style has confidently settled into a more restrained and elegant influencer of global home design trends. Of course, it’s of little surprise that the best examples of this new Chinese style reside at the two Chinese Aman outposts: the Aman at Summer Palace in Beijing and at sister property Amanfayun in Hangzhou, which I recently had a chance to visit. The Aman Resort Group has long pursued aesthetic perfection at its properties, notably incorporating centuries of local culture into the creation of environments that are both genuine and remarkably fresh. Recent

OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 4

sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088

61 BOSQUECILLO | $429,000 Beautiful single-level home with detached casita in La Pradera. #201404038 MaryJoy Ford | 505.577.0177

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.

For more information on this page, contact: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

A suite in Aman at Summer Palace in Beijing sparingly employs traditional Chinese red in accents on the lamp shades and on the coffee table for maximum effect. VERN YIP

headlines have bolstered its reputation even further with its Venice outpost, Aman Canal Grande, chosen as the site of the recent nuptials of George Clooney to Amal Alamuddin. Its two Chinese properties (a third is due later this year) showcase this new Chinese aesthetic and, more importantly, provide a clear-cut guide to capturing this chic and trending look in three easy steps:

NEW PRICE

u Search out clean and classic Chinese furniture: Avoid the fussy and embellished Chinese furniture popularly seen in Chinese restaurants and, instead, search out plain pieces with clean, classic lines and simple hardware. Chinese domestic furniture, made for everyday use in the late 19th and early 20th century, features clean lines that

Please see DESIGN, Page E-5

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3

4 MORNING GLORY CIRCLE | $665,000 Salva Tierra home with great spaces to showcase your treasures. # 201404462 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335

208 PLAZA MONTANA | $675,000 This ideal in-town 2BR home features a formal dining room, a great room, and an office. #201401794 Brunson and Schroeder Team | 505.690.7885

to see more extraordinary homes, turn to page E-3

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

NEW PRICE

VILLA DE PIEDRA $4,850,000 Superlative design and exquisite workmanship has resulted in this extraordinary classic Pueblo-style home. Approx. 9,728 sq ft of pure luxury designed with Anasazi and Pueblo influences. #201302437 Paula Berthelot & Team Burbic Yoder 505.695.1000

OP EN SU NDAY 2 - 4

815 EAST PALACE AVENUE, 5 & 1 $2,150,000 Exceptional Eastside estate near the Plaza and Canyon Road. Includes a gracious and historic main house, a studio/guest quarters, and a 2BR, 2BA guesthouse. Beautiful, lush grounds. The Santa Fe Team 505.988.2533 #201304844 N EW PRIC E

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3

328 CAMINO CERRITO $1,149,000 Off Canyon Road, this beautiful Pueblo-style Eastside estate — a 2,298-square-foot residence and a 579-square-foot guesthouse — has the expansive feel of a private compound minutes from the Plaza. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201402662

1122 EAST ALAMEDA $999,000 A magical oasis on the historic Eastside, this home is bordered by the Santa Fe River and the Acequia Madre. Spectacular gardens surround the haciendastyle residence, studio, and separate casita. Stedman/Kehoe/Hirsch 505.501.8002 #201403120

13 CALLE OJITOS $1,695,000 NEW PRICE. This stunning contemporary home has a view of the Sunset Course and a flexible floor plan that includes light-filled living/dining room, a chef’s kitchen, a media room, and a spalike master suite. Gary Bobolsky 505.984.5185 #201403827

N EW LISTING

44 PASEO DEL COYOTE $885,000 An immaculate and beautiful residence, comprised of 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, and an office, all on 2.5 acres with views of both the Jemez and Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Gorgeous finishes. Neil Lyon,CRB,CRS,GRI 505.954.5505 #201404804

NEW PRICE

39 YANA DRIVE $1,199,000 In a gated Tesuque community, this irreplaceable estate includes an artist’s studio, a chapel, and a three-bedroom, 5,129-square-foot home that blends northern New Mexico style with European flair. DeAnne Ottaway 505.690.4611 #201403329 NEW PRICE

1020 CANYON ROAD, UNIT G $849,000 This two-bedroom home of uncommon quality offers hard-troweled plaster walls, reclaimed ceiling beams, high-end kitchen and bathroom fixtures, radiant heating, and charming outdoor spaces. Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117 #201402047

CELEBRATED REPUTATION Centuries-old. Globally recognized. Associated with treasured possessions.

NEW LISTING

404 PLAZA LOMAS $775,000 Completed January 2014. Newly constructed custom home offered fully-furnished. Features two bedroom, two bath, and a 2-car garage. Located in the Plazas at Pecos Trail. Penelope Vasquez 505.954.5551 #201404862 NEW PRICE

MESA ENCANTADO $389,000 A dazzling jewel in the Tesuque hillside wrapped in garden walls with views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Remarkable free-standing 2BR, 2BA, 1,367 sq. ft. condominium residence. #201403044 David Rosen & Christopher Rocca 505.954.0789 OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3

OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3

1467 NORTH MIRACERROS LOOP $490,000 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. Brunson & SchroederTeam 505.690.7885 #201403411 NEW LISTING

45 JOHNSON MESA $335,000 Lovely Rancho Viejo home. Light, bright and open floor plan in a great location within the community. Like new condition. Appliances and fixtures have been upgraded in kitchen and baths. Team Burbic Yoder 505.670.9399 #201404873

OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 4

NEW PRICE

277 LOMA ENTRADA $425,000 Big Sangre de Cristo mountain views from this in-town residence high on the hill. Delightful huge wraparound patio with eastern orientation plus great views from the kitchen, dining room, and study. Abigail Davidson 505.954.5520 #201404436 NEW LISTING

419 KATHRYN $325,000 Enjoy this classic Santa Fe-style residence that is a real home with room to live your dreams. The residence features warm, wood floors throughout, vigas, a fireplace in the living room, 4BR, 2BA. Emily Garcia 505.955.7963 #201404750 OPEN SUNDAY 2:30 - 4:30

OPEN SUNDAY 11 - 1

843A PALACE AVENUE, A $399,000 Exquisite adobe remodel features 1BR, 1BA, open kitchen/living, and private backyard. Located off Palace in the historic Eastside. Covered parking, new kitchen, new bathroom. A downtown gem. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201403764 OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 3

405 GREG AVENUE $319,000 Pre-inspected 3-bedroom, 2-bath home in a close-in location near the Ortiz dog park. Extra large lot, great view, quiet neighborhood, arroyo behind house, wonderful back portal, and mature landscaping. Ricky Allen 505.946.2855 #201401024

“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 1 - 3

1015 DUNLAP STREET $295,000 Beautifully kept in a great convenient location. Two bedroom, two bath adobe with detached garage and mature trees. Upgraded electric, remodeled kitchen, sloped torchdown roof. Charles Weber 505.954.0734 #201403734

115 WEST SANTA FE AVENUE, UNIT H $285,000 South Capital location. This doll house is perfect for a second, vacation, or primary home. Charming updated Santa Fe interior with very efficient design. Private backyard, adjacent to common area. Evelyn Spiker 505.954.5556 #201404004

2703 CALLE CEDRO $249,900 This classic 3BA, 2BA Stamm in quiet central neighborhood has been thoughtfully updated with taste and style. Spectacular kitchen with stainless appliances, unique fireplace and wonderful garden. Katherine Blagden 505.955.7980 #201305824

147 GONZALES, #22 $799,000 NEW PRICE. Classic open-concept home with views. Ashley Margetson 505.984.5186 #201402472

SANTA FE BROKERAGES 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

sothebyshomes.com/santafe


Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-3

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

ND U O P M O C PRIVATE POOL G N I M M I W S

1422 Bishops Lodge Want more moisture in your Santa Fe 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.gorges@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-8088 231 Washington Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

30 OPEN 1-3: DIO! U T S T S I T AR

816 Stagecoach Dr Welcome to the original home of famed artist Vladan Stiha, and his exceptional artist studio that was designed with perfection by capturing all of the day’s natural sunlight. Situated on just under one acre off of Bishop’s Lodge Road, this home features a fully-equipped, private one bedroom guest apartment, 4 bedrooms, 5 baths and a total of 4,878 sq.ft. $675,000 MLS# 201403517

JAMES P. DELGADO & TANYA L. CLOKEY (505) 699-7472 • jamespdelgado@yahoo.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://coldwellbankersantafe.com

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 can include a quality home, guesthouse, garages, & an art studio,home-offices, or shop. 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. Priced-to-sell; Agents add commission. $776,000

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

803-B Acequia Madre Charming 2-bedroom, 2-bath property

6 Arroyo Ridge Road Rancho Viejo Team custom home features 4 beds/3.5 baths, 3137 sq. ft. on 1 acre Estate lot with Sangre views! Tile floors (carpet in bedrooms), granite/tile counters, vigas, skylights, 2 kiva F/P’s, plaster walls, radiant heat & 2 evap. coolers. Entry courtyard, covered back portal, flagstone patio & drip system. New stucco & 2 yrs. on roof warranty. $589,000

on Acequia Madre in the heart of the historic Eastside enchants upon entry. Renovated in 2008 to 2011, this luxurious property offers an inviting floorplan and features top-of-the-line appliances. Completely sophisticated in every way. $695,000 MLS# 201402724

K.C. MARTIN (505) 690-7192 • kc.martin@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

1 Senda Mescal Stunning contemporary on 2.5 acres incredible views, entry garden with Koi pond, spectacular design, spacious feeling, abundant light and a lovely cook’s kitchen, granite counters and maple cabinets. Home has a formal dining room and many French doors for access to the beautifully landscaped outside area. The home is embracing with a feeling of elegance and sophistication. $569,000 MLS# 201404161

637 E Alameda Utterly charming Eastside home by the river! Close to Canyon and Plaza, this remodeled home has 2 bedroom suites, eat-in kitchen, separate dining, and lovely yards front and back. Comes with a precious Short Term Rental Permit: turnkey ready to move in or rent out! 2 ba, 1,409 sq.ft., 0.1 acre. Directions: East Alameda, east of Delgado Street. $559,000 MLS# 201404390

ELAINE RIVERA / LINDA MURPHY (505) 660-7291 • Linda@LindaMurphy.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 216 Washington Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

CENTIV N I L A I C E SP

SE OPEN HOU 10AM-4PM

3 Camino de Colores in Las Campanas New Home

5614 B Hwy 41 Galisteo Open House during Galisteo Studio Tour today. Visit with the artists on tour, and come see this beautiful home with a large studio/guesthouse. You could live here too! Property is on one acre, right on the Bosque, with Golden Cottonwood trees. Come see the beauty of Galisteo - and this beautiful Galisteo home! $450,000 MLS# 201404353

OPEN 1-4

Construction Starting in the $400s...Beautiful Setting...Golf Course Lots Available. Open Sunday. West on Las Campanas Drive...Right on Paseo Aragon to Enter Los Santeros...Call or Text 505.385.8062 for Gate Access Code...Follow to Camino de Colores. $465,000

SIVAGE HOMES (505) 998-1813 • moresalesinfo@sivage.com Sivage Homes • (505) 998-1800 http://www.sivage.com

IEJO

RANCHO V OPEN 1-4

OPEN 12-2 CE! I R P E L B I INCRED

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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

JEWEL E D I S T S A E M OPEN 2-4P

OPEN 1-5 RTY E P O R P R LA SPECTACU

JENNY BISHOP / TRUDI CONKLING (505) 469-0469 • jbishop610@aol.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-9836 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com

1043 Camino Real Extraordinary 2,750 square foot, three bedroom, two and one half bathrooms and two car garage, three fireplaces, and large wrapped portal on .773 beautifully lush acres. Impeccably maintained both on the interior and exterior including the landscaping. The home is 1.8 miles from the Santa Fe Plaza on all paved roads, a five minute drive. $775,000 MLS# 201402956

JANE HILTBRAND (505) 946-8475 • jhiltbrand@santaferealestate.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-9836 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com

MLS# 201402564

LYNNE EINLEGER (505) 660-9074 • leinleger@earthlink.net Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

OPEN 2-4

459 Vista Joya This contemporary studio/loft home by Baker Collins is a showcase of glass and galvanized steel; open floor plan, 20-foot ceilings with steel trusses and art lighting, and an upper wall of square windows facing aspens. Beautiful patios and landscaping; off-street parking. 2 br, 3 ba, 1,800 sq.ft. Directions: From St. Francis, west on Agua Fria, right on Vista Joya. $494,900 MLS# 201404470 KRISTIN ROWLEY (505) 670-1980 • Susan@MunroeSmith.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

OPEN 1-4 UCED PRICE RED

84B Haozous Road Incredible sunset views are to be seen from this Southwestern designed home on 12.5 acres. This home has a game room, den, living room, and dining area, breakfast bar in the kitchen and large bedrooms. Super family home on a beautiful, flat lot. A large 2 car garage accesses the laundry room and kitchen area. $369,000 MLS# 201305758 SILVIA BOBADILLA (505) 470-9344 • silvia.nmre@yahoo.com Logic Real Estate • (505) 820-7000 228 S St. Francis Dr., Bldg. A-1, Santa Fe, NM www.SantaFeLogic.com


E-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

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

OPEN 1-3 CTION U D E R E C I PR

IEJO RANCHO V 4:00 0 3 : 1 N E OP

OPEN 12-4 IEWS V N I A T N U MO

1735 Jay Street This adobe main house is updated, charming and has an office. Blending with the old vigas and charming adobe, you will also find high-beamed ceilings and updated fixtures, all in move-in condition. There is also a guest casita and studio. 3 br, 3 ba, 1,752 sq.ft., 0.16 acre. Directions: Cerrillos Road to Second, go south. Turn right on Jay Street. $349,000 MLS# 201304426

2 Nacimiento Peak The Rancho Viejo Team features this beautiful home located in Windmill Ridge, surrounded by lots of walking trails. Truchas model built in 2006 with 3 BR’s, 2.5 BA’s, 1955+/- sq.ft., 2-car garage, all on a lovely corner lot w/mountain views! Open floor plan, light & bright, kiva FP, radiant heat + refrig. A/C! Spectacular! Well taken care of! $319,500

2807 Plaza Rojo Park Plazas - This renovated townhouse is light,

JOHNNY CHACON (505) 690-1226 • Deborah.Bodelson@sfprops.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

R!

MLS# 201401457

bright and sophisticated in a contemporary style. Big Sangre views from the sundeck. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,393 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: From Rodeo, south on Camino Carlos Rey, right at first street onto Plaza Blanca, right on second street (Plaza Rojo) go to end and turn right into Ristra Plaza. $324,500 MLS# 201404598

JEANNE HERTZ (505) 660-6345 • Jeanne@JeanneHertz.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

TANYA L. CLOKEY (505) 670-5154 • tlc.coldwellbanker@yahoo.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

R!

TOU GALISTEO OPEN 1-3

TOU GALISTEO OPEN 11-3

AY OPEN TOD E NEW PRIC

12 Camino San Cristobal Sited on a large mountain view

5620 NM 41 The Galisteo Orchard House, open today during this year’s Galisteo Studio Tour, is nestled among orchard trees adjacent to one of Galisteo’s oldest farmsteads. Long views to Cerro Pelon Mesa. Two-car garage, pitched roof, storage shed, private well. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,272 sq.ft., 0.75 acre. Directions: Hwy 285 south to Hwy 41 south, 1/4 mile past church on left. $284,000 MLS# 201403548

Great Investment or Family Home 2847 Calle de Molina.

lot, this 2 bd/2 ba Northern New Mexico style adobe home has a separate garage, a kitchen with an adjoining dining room, a den/office, colored concrete floors, tall ceilings, several skylights throughout, gas baseboard heat, walled yard and a water catchment system Turn right at church in Galisteo (CR42) left on Cam. San Cristobal. $320,000 MLS# 201403218

FRED RAZNICK / SUE GARFIT T (505) 577-0143 • WeSellSantaFe@comcast.net Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

IEWS V N I A T N U MO EADY R N O I T C U CONSTR

AMBER HASKELL (505) 470-0923 • Amber.Haskell@sfprops.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

4B/3B/1930sf. Great location near Chavez Rec Center and Pinon elementary school district. Fenced and walled yard, Ready to move in. Great price and floor plan. Two story home with wonderful views and private neighborhood feel. Come see this lovely home. Property website: http://2847calledemolina.canbyours.com/ $265,000 MLS# 201306094

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

3PM-5PM

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

Feature d

127 Paseo Aragon Stunning 2.3-acre view lot in Las Campanas. Community amenities include athletic facilities, club house, golf, swimming, tennis, and more. This is perhaps one of the finest remaining view lots in the area. The lot is subject to a designated developable area for view protection. Owner/Broker. $225,000 MLS# 201202812

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

Listings in the

LAS CAMPANAS LA

OPEN 1:30-4

bedroom/3full baths with astounding views of mountains and the city. Large open kitchen with higher end appliances. Living area with Kiva wood burning fireplace and plenty of room to take in those gorgeous fall views. Don’t miss the private living quarters with it’s own entry. Walking distance to the plaza and area restaurants.

, April 27,

Homes

Online: www.san tafenew OPEN 2-4 mexican .com/life /real_es tate

205 Rendon Road Contemporary yet so Santa Fe, 4

Sunday

2014 THE NEW

Santa F e Area.

OPEN HOUSE OPE 1PM-3PM

602A Ca

home (sub nyon Road three bed lime idea), this Used as a gal lery casita fea rooms and thre exquisite, light-fil (current use ) conditionetures a bedroo e bathrooms. Theled proper ty feaor as a m, and kitc d. In the Doug bathroom and historic attache tures hen hav e also bee Atwill-designed kitchen--all upd d studio fixtures, appliances ate n ele ma and materi gantly update in structure, the d and air bat als. $1,795 d with top -of-the hrooms ,000 ML (505) 21 S# 201303 -line JEFF 944 Sotheby 6- 6106 • jef HA RA K AL ’s Inter f.hara 326 Gr national Re kal@sothebysh ant Av alt y omes. sotheby e., Santa Fe• (505) 988-2 com , shomes 533 .com/saNM 87501 nta fe

$679,000 MLS# 201404763

OPEN 1-4

LISA HARRIS (505) 795-1024 • lisadormanharris@me.com Renaissance Real Estate Group 1675 Sentiero Della Villa, Santa Fe, NM 87506

5 Choc

olate Flo

Sangre de wer Las Campan home in Cristo and San as “Te dia gat for entert ed Las Campan Mountain view e-Off Tour” – Swe s from this ain as. Fabulo epi (4-way sto ing. Direction 4 + office/ ng us chef’s s: p), Chocolate left at the Sun Camino la Tierra, kitchen and but 4.5 bath flow ler’ left Flower. $1,095,00 er gate. Dial 055 at West Wildflo s pantry 0 MLS# wer 5 for acc 201401 ess. Lef t 632 at TI

(505 M Sotheby ) 795-5990 GA LV IN • tim ’s In 326 Gr ter national Re @galv insantafe.c ant Aven alt y • (5 om sotheby ue, Sant a Fe 05) 988-253 , shomes 3 .com/sa NM 87501 nt afe

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

41 S

35 Kosh

ari

PART OF home and THE TEE one-bedro OFF TO UR! A lov om casita sweeping ely three-b in Las Cam views, gra edroom nd por tal, panas. Fea and a lavi spacious tures inc sh maste lude living/dinin r suite. $899,000 g, gourme MLS# 201 t kitchen 401 , 262

(505) 66 NEIL LYON 0-8600 Sotheby • neil@ ’s Inter neillyon nationa .com 326 Gr ant Aven l Realt y • (505 ue , Sa ) 988-2 nta Fe, 533 sotheby NM 87 shomes 501 .com/sa nt afe

LAS CA CAMPANAS OPEN 1:30-4:30

M


REAL ESTATE

Past: Measure before you shop Continued from Page E-1 If you’re lucky, you won’t need to demolish. Usually you can simply shut off the water valves beneath the sink, unscrew the hoses and disconnect the waste pipe, then detach the vanity and haul it away. The plumbing portion of this task was problemfree, since I remembered my advisers’ most important counsel: Use one wrench to gently hold the fixed part of the pipe in place while using another wrench to loosen the nut. (If you twist the pipes, you’ll cause major leaks in your bank account.) I also double-checked the location of my home’s water shut-off valve. If yours is old and rusty, my advisers strongly recommended, have it replaced before starting the project. After the sink was detached, I encountered the ghost of my old vanity’s installer. Based on how the plumbing was threaded through the cabinet’s rear panel, this person evidently wanted his work to live forever. When installing it, he cut holes barely big enough for the pipes to fit through, and then, after putting the vanity in place, he soldered much fatter joints to the ends of the pipes to attach the shutoff valves and discourage anyone from changing a thing for the next 10,000 years. I took my trusty crowbar and tore at the vanity for a half-hour until everything was gone but the back panel. Then I strained my brain trying to remove the panel without damaging the pipes or cutting blindly into the wall. The best thing for the job is a so-called oscillating tool, which lets you make shallow, precise cuts. Just for fun, and because I couldn’t find my oscillating tool, I hacked away at the panel with a drywall saw until it yielded. I did only minor damage to the wall. With the old vanity gone, I marked the places where it had been screwed into the wall studs, so I could easily secure the new one. Next, I lined up the new unit against the plumbing and marked places where I’d need to cut holes. I could have used that drywall saw again, but fortunately by then I had found my oscillating tool (a Dremel Multi-Max, around $70). It worked like a charm. I slid the vanity into place and spent 15 minutes getting the old faucet into the new sink. The trick was remembering how to remove the faucet from the old sink because the screw was hidden beneath the plunger that controls the drain plug. If you’re installing a new faucet with your sink, my advisers suggested, attach the hoses before placing the sink on the vanity, so you don’t have to do it while lying on your back. My hoses were already attached, so I dropped the hardware in place and finished by securing the sink to the vanity with white silicone caulk. Next came the medicine cabinet. As with the vanity, it pays to remove the existing cabinet and measure carefully before you shop. If your new medicine cabinet fits the existing hole, you’ll just unscrew the first one from its wall braces, blissfully slide the new one into place and screw it in. While shopping for new cabinets, you’ll see some surface-mounted models that are also designed to fit into a wall recession. We wasted time and energy by buying a surface-mounted unit that was far too big for our space. We swapped it for a more modest-size recessed unit that was still taller and wider than our existing one, so we had to modify the wall. This turned out to be easier than I thought. I removed three small screws from the old cabinet, slid it out and took out the vertical braces from the studs. Next, I laid the new cabinet onto the wall and traced its outline in pencil, then sliced a hole with my Dremel. The biggest challenge was building new vertical braces inside the wall to support the outside edges of the cabinet. I measured and cut three two-byfours, formed a sideways “U” shape and screwed it into the stud so that the vertical edge ran just behind the raw edge of the wall. (I had drilled holes in the wood before screwing it to the studs.) Then I repeated this on the opposite side. The new medicine cabinet fit perfectly, and a few screws secured it in place. My wife was thrilled. I was relieved. Last, we confronted the old horizontal lighting fixture above the cabinet. We briefly considered replacing it with wall sconces, but my advisers said this would require a level of electrical expertise beyond a typical DIY dilettante like me. At my home’s circuit breaker, I switched off the bathroom’s electricity, unscrewed the existing fixture and unfastened the wires. Then I secured the wires in their proper place with plastic connectors and electrical tape, and screwed the new fixture in place. The bonus: The new fixture was slightly bigger than the old one, so it obscured the scrapes I’d put in the paint while taking everything apart. I got a break. Unbelievable. For those keeping score at home, that counts as plumbing, carpentry and electrical work in one tiny room over the course of a weekend. A more tenacious homeowner might have tried to install a tile backsplash, too, but I’m putting that off until the spookiness of this particular job has faded.

1422 Bishops Lodge

$3,995,000

This family compound features the lushness of Tesuque, a swimming pool, a pond, its own well, and a four bedroom home with a guest house and a barn. MLS# 201401876

Sunday, October 19, 2014

THE NEW MEXICAN

E-5

Cast homework in the right light the contrast by diffusing the light. If your kids study or read on the floor or couch, try parking a floor If you can’t imagine how your lamp behind them to wash their kids can possibly see well enough textbooks in light. “If you’re not to do their homework as they sitting at a desk or flat surface, then sprawl out on the floor, their beds you want over-your-shoulder light,” or the couch; fear not: Though Gallin said. good lighting for the homework As with a desk lamp, the scale of a Stebbins says that layering the be comfortable; if kids are hour (or hours) is often forgotten, it floor lamp is important. If a child is light — that is, using more than one moving away from it or squintis simple to achieve. reading while lying on the carpet or light source in a room — boosts ing, it’s likely too bright. It should “Sometimes we get so focused plopped in a beanbag chair, the light the aesthetics and functionality of not cast distracting shadows, and on making the room look cute, we shouldn’t be too far from the floor. a space. can overlook the importance of the should illuminate an area beyond “You want to keep the light the work at hand, rather than servIn a child’s bedroom or playroom, directed within 24 inches of those spaces having to function well,” she likes to use a flush or semi-flush pages,” Stebbins said. “If her knees says Chicago designer Ruthie Steb- ing as a high-contrast spotlight, Gallin said. ceiling fixture or recessed lighting bins. are the surface, you might be lookto evenly light the room and elimi“The ideal is a well-lit room with Lighting options are plentiful at ing for a floor lamp that has mulnate high-contrast areas — bright extra light at the homework page,” any budget, and online shopping tiple bulbs you can direct around.” she said. “You don’t want an island and dark spots in a room. Then, she can help you narrow the options. With so many kids using computilluminates the space where a child ers for school, parents should take “[You] can always find something of light in a sea of dark.” is working with a lamp. However, the age-old way to pretty at any price point,” said Stebextra care to keep the contrast low Layered light “adds to oversneak in just a few more pages bins, of RHS i + d. “It’s out there.” in the homework space. all ambiance and warmth of the before bedtime won’t hurt them. It stands to reason that kids will “The environment should be as room,” said Stebbins. “If they’re reading a book under be more productive and efficient soft and evenly lit as possible so If your child sits at a desk, look the blanket with a flashlight, they’re when they can see clearly. the high contrast on the screen isn’t for a lamp with at least 60 watts not doing any harm,” Gallin said, “The more easily you can read exaggerated by a high-contrast light of light and tall enough to cover although not being able to see something, the more easily you in the room,” Stebbins said. a wide-enough area to avoid the clearly or straining to see could can learn it,” said Dr. Pamela While these are ideal lighting spotlight effect, Gallin said. Gallin, a pediatric ophthalmologist cause a headache. scenarios, Gallin urged parents to at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. Lamps for the floor and the desk Without good light, “you’re not pick their battles wisely. “Good light will help you learn are commonly turned out with metal causing physical harm,” she said, “If they’re getting A’s and they’re more easily.” “but you’re not at tip-top productiv- shades, but Stebbins prefers paper not getting headaches,” she counand linen shades because they lower seled, “don’t argue about the light.” Light should be bright enough to ity, either.”

By Lisa A. Flam

With so many kids using computers for school, parents should take extra care to keep the contrast low in the homework space.

The Associated Press

A Two Ring Table Lamp, with shad de sold separately. LAND OF NOD

An ambrose table lamp base with a small burlap barrel shade that is sold separately.

The Serena & Lily Studio Task Lamp. SERENA & LILY

RHBABYAND CHILD.COM

Design: Avoid pieces with excessive detailing Continued from Page E-1 easily adapt to nearly every style. Less is more with this look, so avoid furniture pieces with excessive detailing, such as painting and other adornments, which can quickly overtake a space. If you can’t find (or can’t afford) antique Chinese domestic furniture, new production pieces are readily available in the marketplace. Look for well-crafted pieces in natural wood tones (solid is preferable to veneer) and avoid kitschy lacquered finishes for a more timeless feel. Both Aman properties manufactured new pieces to accommodate modern functions (cabinets sport safes and mini-bars) but with traditional lines in mind. The properties generally feature lighter wood tones, introducing another element of modernity, but any natural wood color will work as long as the finish is more matte than shiny. u Smartly employ timeless and graphic Chinese geometrics and calligraphy: Chinese geometric patterns can be traced back thousands of years and are widely seen throughout the country’s most popular sites, including the Summer Palace (where Aman’s Beijing outpost is located) and the Forbidden City. Often based on mathematical principles, incorporating these geometric patterns can bolster the architectural integrity of an otherwise shapeless room. Inherently graphic, Chinese geometric patterns have the ability to add timeless sophistication to

46 Tesuque Village Road

almost any space. Use these patterns smartly by employing them in a series of wall hangings, on a feature pillow on your bed, or through a singular, large accessory. Avoiding overuse is critical in creating more livable spaces that aren’t over themed. If the Chinese geometrics don’t appeal to you, consider a graphic piece of artwork sporting Chinese calligraphy. Calligraphy is considered a high art form in China, with masterpieces commanding top dollar at auction. Most commonly seen as black characters against a white

background, Chinese calligraphy, like the geometrics, is modern, bold and best employed sparingly for maximum effect. u Use a neutral color scheme as your foundation: The subtlety of clean-lined, classic Chinese furniture paired with bolder Chinese geometrics and calligraphy necessitates a partner willing to be a respectful backdrop. This look doesn’t work with attentiondemanding colors. Luminescent neutrals, like soft whites, light tans and pale grays, work as perfect supporting players in this new Chinese style. Having a neutral color

Chinese geometric fretwork graces these floor-to-ceiling wood panels at the Aman at Summer Palace in Beijing. VERN YIP

$595,000

A wonderful, nicely finished home with studio guest house on a five acre lot, surrounded by more expensive homes in the San Ysidro de Tesuque Subdivision. MLS# 201403745

8 Picacho Peak Drive

Vern Yip is an interior designer and star of Bang for Your Buck and Live in Vern’s House on HGTV.

$3,100,000

Tierra Concepts has created this large family compound around an exquisitely landscaped courtyard. With a guest house and phenomenal views. Owner/Broker. MLS# 201204963

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.

scheme as a foundation (on walls, floors and ceilings) showcases Chinese domestic furniture, geometric patterns and calligraphy in a new and completely different light than how they’ve traditionally been seen, creating a fresh and modern outcome. Bold color (the Chinese love red), injected minimally through a single colored lamp shade or accessory, can then accent in a more striking manner. For decades, our homes have largely been influenced by the West, with Tuscan-inspired kitchens and Parisian-like chandeliers pervasively infiltrating every neighborhood. European aesthetics in our spaces referenced cultured and revered societies with great influence. As China overtakes the United States as the globe’s top economy, extending its particular brand of influence, we may see aesthetic aspirations in the United States shifting eastward, too. By harkening back to its revered historical past, folding in a few lessons borrowed from the West and finally embracing the art of restraint, interior design in China is finally emerging to overtake the world’s design stage. Before you know it, the clean lines of a Chinese cabinet will be harmoniously sitting alongside the intricate lines of your French chandelier, reflecting our ever-changing world and the new economic order.

keith@tierrateam.com

tierrateam.com Brokers with Sotheby’s International Realty 505 988 8088


THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

Open Houses

Listings for today.

ge Rd

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

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Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-7

Open Houses NORTH WEST

N-13 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 13 Calle Ojitos - This stunning contemporary home has a view of the Sunset Course and a flexible floor plan that includes light-filled living/dining room, a chef’s kitchen, a media room, and a spa-like master suite. $1,695,000. MLS 201403827. (Enter via Clubhouse Drive. Make a left on Trailhead Drive, left on Palomita Drive, right on Via Pampa, right on Calle Ojitos.) Gary Bobolsky 505-470-0927 Sotheby’s International Realty.

N-32 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 803-B Acequia Madre - Charming 2bedroom / 2-bath property on Acequia Madre in the heart of the Historic Eastside enchants upon entry. Renovated in 2008 to 2011, this luxurious property offers an inviting floor-plan. $695,000. MLS 201402724. (Canyon Road right to Camino Del Monte Sol, hard right to Acequia Madre (one way) on right.) K.C. Martin 505-6907192 Sotheby’s International Realty.

P-14 4:00p.m. - 6:00p.m. — 41 Violet Circle - Sited on a 2-acre hilltop with expansive mountain views. 4800-sq.-ft. main house has 3 bedrooms and 4+ baths and is ideal for entertaining. The 1,700 sq.-ft. guesthouse has 3 bedrooms, full kitchen. $1,495,000. MLS 201404233. (Camino La Tierra, right on Parkside Drive, lLeft on to Violet Circle, home on right.) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

S-21 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 6 Sendero de la Vida - Beautiful custom home on 3 acres with a lovely entry courtyard and an inviting portal. The 3BR interior includes large glass doors, a chef’s kitchen and open dining area, and a spacious living room. $699,000. MLS 201302794. (Avenida Aldea, right on La Vida Trail, left on Tierra grande, left on Sendero de la Vida.) David Sorenson 505670-5515 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.

T-23 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1 Altura Vista - Marvel at the many custom features this lovely single-evel 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.) Danna Cooper 505-670-6377 Sotheby’s International Realty.

U-23 11:00a.m. - 6:00p.m. — 32 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. $495,000. (Take 599 to the Camino La Tierra exit, then take the Frontage Road south to Tessera. Follow the signs to Tessera Model Homes.) Don Egedy 505-670-8696 Homewise, Inc.

U-36 12:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 405 Greg Avenue - Pre-inspected 3-bedroom, 2-bath home in a close-in location near the Ortiz dog park. Extra large lot, great view, quiet neighborhood, arroyo behind house, wonderful back portal, and mature landscaping $319,000. MLS 201401024. (84/St. Francis to Alamo drive, left to Rio Vista place, left on Greg Avenue.) Ricky Allen 505-470-8233 Sotheby’s International Realty.

W-34 12:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1615 Salvador Place - Awesome city location with plenty of charm. This property has a spectacular backyard and is bordering a large green space. $299,000. MLS 201404881. (West Alameda to San Salvador, left at T on Salvador Place.) Ricky Allen 505470-8233 Sotheby’s International Realty.

NORTH EAST

R-42 12:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1024 Bishops Lodge Road, Santa Fe, NM - ADA Compliant single level, beautifully remodeled home, perched privately on a hill. Mountain views all around, adjacent trails, 3 bedrooms 4 baths, heated garage, 2 acres, and much more. Come see. $800,000. MLS 201404902. (From the Santa Fe Plaza follow Washington Ave which turns into Bishops Lodge Road. 1 mile on the left.) Anna Vanderlaan 505-231-3410 Keller Williams Realty.

R-44 1:30p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 1000 Hillcrest - This remodeled contemporary on one in-town acre has an open-concept kitchen, dining room, and living room with Sangre de Cristo panoramas and a deck. The one-bedroom guesthouse is a private oasis. $1,650,000. 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 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

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

U-40

FF-24

BB-38

11:00a.m. - 1:00p.m. — 843A Palace Avenue - Exquisite adobe remodel one bedroom, one bath, open kitchen living, private backyard. Located off Palace in the Historic Eastside. Covered parking, new kitchen, new bathroom. A downtown gem. $399,000. MLS 201403764. (Paseo de Peralta, right on Palace Avenue entryway right before Palace Avenue Grocery. Drive to back, home on the left.) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

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.

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.

V-40 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1145 East Alameda - Adjacent to Santa Fe River Trail, Canyon Rd yet Single level 3 Bed, 3 Ba Pueblo home with high ceilings, 4 fpl, large great room, beams, corbels, rich with all the flavor of Santa Fe charm. $868,000. MLS 201404042. (East Alameda left on dirt Road past Camino Pequedo to a private lane #1145. See Open House sign.) Kristina Lindstrom 505-577-9060 Barker Realty LLC.

V-45 1:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 1214 Calle Luna - Northeast side home, minutes from Plaza yet private and quiet. 3 BR, 2 Bath, 2,748 square ft on 1.33 acres. Brick floors, beams/vigas, 4 fireplaces, wrought iron fixtures, built in hot tub. Must See $745,000. MLS 201402228. (From Plaza north on Bishop’s Lodge Road, right on Hyde Park, right on Gonzales. Corner of Gonzales and Calle Luna) 505660-9657 Prince Fine Homes.

W-42 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 7 Montoya Circle - Eastside Santa Fe adobe. Vigas, plaster walls, views, trees, grass, fireplace, radiant heat, 2 courtyards, updated kitchen/baths, flagstone portal, parking, all within a short distance to the Plaza. $550,000. MLS 201305345. (Cerro Gordo to Montoya Circle) Stan Jones 505-310-2426 Sotheby’s International Realty. 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 309 Armijo/Rodriguez D - Nestled into a view-filled ridge above Palace Avenue is a beautiful Zachery designed home. Fine detailing and superior finishes, wood cabinets, granite surfaces, and elegant fireplaces. $649,000. MLS 201301510. (3 br, 3 ba, Follow Armijo north from Palace, past Hillside and follow the signs to top of hill past where Rodriguez and Armijo join. Visit SantaFeProperties.com for all our open houses.) David Woodard 505-920-2000 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

W-43 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 Gordo to #1379.) Seller/Bob Cardinale 505-577-0343 Sotheby’s International Realty.

W-45 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 147 Gonzales, Unit 22 - Views of mountains and blue sky can be enjoyed from this classic open-concept home blocks from the Plaza and Canyon Road. The sensible, light-filled floor plan includes three bedrooms and baths. $799,000. MLS 201402472. (Up Hyde Park Road or Palace to Gonzales; turn in at 147, then first right and second house on left.) Ashley Margetson 505-920-2300 Sotheby’s International Realty.

W-48 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1567 Cerro Gordo - "The Doll House" Lovely, peaceful and private house at the end of the lane yet minutes to town. Plaster walls, colored concrete floors and vigas. Mountain views. A resting place for the soul. $650,000. MLS 201305248. (Gonzales to Cerro Gordo. Quite far up on the left side. Open House Signs to guide you.) Claire Lange 505-670-1420 Claire Lange Real Estate.

SOUTH WEST

X-35

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.

JJ-28 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 2847 Calle de Molina - Investment potential or terrific family home. Two story with 4B/3B. Nice sized walled and landscaped yard. Photos and info http://2847CalleDeMolina.canbyours.com/ . Central location $265,000. MLS 201306094. (Rodeo Road. South on Paseo de los Pueblos (open house sign), right on El Trebol, Left on Calle de Molina to home.) Coleen Dearing 505-930-9102 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

JJ-30 2:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 2703 Calle Cedro - This classic 3 BA, 2 BA Stamm in quiet central neighborhood has been thoughtfully updated with taste and style. Spectacular kitchen with stainless appliances, unique fireplace and wonderful garden. $249,900. MLS 201305824. (North on Camino Carlos Rey from Zia. Right on Calle Cedro; home is on the left.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

JJ-33 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.

NN-13 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 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 floor plan. $295,000. MLS 201404947. (Airport Rd to Paseo del Sol W. Right on Valentine Loop.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams Realty.

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-23 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 61 Bosquecillo - Beautiful singlelevel home with detached casita in La Pradera with stunning mountain views. Two-car garage, courtyard, large covered front and rear portals and extensive landscaping. $429,000. MLS 201404038. (Rodeo Road to (south) Richards Avenue to (west) Dinosaur Trail to La Pradera second entrance, then Old Dinosaur Trail to Bosquecillo.) MaryJoy Ford 505-577-0177 Sotheby’s International Realty.

SOUTH EAST

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.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.

Y-34 12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 1506 Agua Fria - Agua Fria Charm. Great investment or your first home! One bedroom + office/studio. Lots of parking in back for possible home business. Covered back portal. Great access Santa Fe River Trail + downtown $167,000. MLS 201403875. (St. Francis Drive to past intersection of Avenida Cristobal Colon, 2nd property on left and park behind property. Enter thru 1st door on right.) Rose Lopez-Brown, CRS, Rsps, Sres, Wcr, Ahwd 505-490-0615 Keller Williams Realty.

BB-31 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1958 Osage Drive - Beautiful Stamm home located in Casa Alegre & situated on an inviting cul-de-sac. This charming home offers beautiful wood flooring, tile in kitchen and baths, refrigerated air, large kitchen, & more! $255,000. MLS 201404851. (From Agua Fria, Turn on Osage. Take a left on Osage Drive. House is on the right.) Andrea Lucero 505-780-0311 Barker Realty LLC.

CC-30 2:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 2508 Agua Fria - Looking for a 4bedroom + Office/Den. Great for the person looking for a house and business location. Lots of paved parking for 16 vehicles. Gated access. Private Well. RV parking! By Frenchy’s field $256,000. MLS 201404527. (Agua Fria to Gallegos Lane. Up to the left on the paved road. Located up the hill from Agua Fria Road. Follow open house signs.) Rose Lopez-Brown, CRS, Rsps, Sres, Wcr, Ahwd 505-490-0615 Keller Williams Realty.

X-42 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 505-984-5117 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Y-39 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 115 W Santa Fe Avenue, Unit H South Capital location. This doll house is perfect for a second, vacation, or primary home. Charming updated Santa Fe interior with very efficient design. Private backyard, adjacent to common area. $285,000. MLS 201404004. (South on Don Gaspar, Right on Santa Fe Ave, at end of complex. Call for gate code.) Evelyn Spiker 505930-0999 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. Visit SantaFeProperties.com for all our open houses.) Patrick Kerwick 505-920-0822 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

Z-45 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 328 Camino Cerrito - Off Canyon Road, this beautiful Pueblo-style Eastside estate — a 2,298-square-foot residence and a 579-square-foot guesthouse — has the expansive feel of a private compound minutes from the Plaza. $1,149,000. MLS 201402662. (East on Canyon Road to Camino Cerrito.) Owner/Ray Thuman 505-780-1008 Sotheby’s International Realty.

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FF-40 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 208 Plaza Montana - This ideal intown home features a formal dining room, a great room, a library or office, a kitchen with a large island, master and guest suites, a portal, and professionally landscaped gardens. $675,000. MLS 201401794. (Old Pecos Trail and St. Michaels corner on southside, The Plazas At Pecos Trail—enter, then first left, then left again.) Ann Brunson 505-690-7885 Sotheby’s International Realty.

GG-37 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2486 E Sawmill Road - Rare find in Santa Fe. 4.3 acres of open space and a 930 sq.ft. casita, 436 sq.ft. studio workshop, 2 car garage. Possibilities are endless with this in-city location. Dream home or small development. $980,000. MLS 201403957. (Saint Francis South, left on Sawmill Road for 0.2 mile. Gate on left side. Follow my KW signs.) Tom Trujillo 505-699-4954 Keller Williams Realty.

GG-41 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2142 Calle De Sebastian - over 2000 sf 2 bed 2 bath, great attached studio. 2 car garage, fireplace, oak floors, beams, vigas, a great house in a great location. $429,900. MLS 201402646. (South on Old Pecos Trail to Zia Road. First left and house on left. Follow Chapman Realty signs.) Phillip Meek 505-577-4588 Chapman Homes/Realty.

II-39 12:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 134 Ridgecrest Dr. - Sol y Lomas. Sweeping views privacy from 1+acre lot. Pueblo-style good cond needs updating. Perfect for do-ityourself/contractor. 2 bdrm 2 ba 2fp 2 patios 2 car gar, beamed ceilings, lots of storage. $465,000. (From Old Pecos Trail - west on West Zia, left on General Sage, right on Ridgecrest. Look for "Open House" signs.) 505-9201031 William Morris.

MM-37 1:00p.m. - 3:30p.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.

MM-40 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 24 Old Agua Fria West - Private adobe residence on Arroyo Hondo canyon w/ sweeping views! Mature, gardens surround the 4000 sf house/ guesthouse. Great room, chefs kitchen, library, 5 car garage, 7.9 ac, min. to town. $995,000. MLS 201302855. (Old Pecos Trail south. Over I-25. At T intersection turn right.) John Hancock 505-470-5604 Barker Realty LLC.

TT-45 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 18 Sunlit Drive E. - Enjoy this lightfilled 3br/2ba Northern New Mexico style in Sunlit Hills on 7. 43 private acres with Sandia views. This residence was crafted with quality of living in mind and timeless finishes. $425,000. MLS 201401993. (Old Las Vegas Hwy to Seton Village Rd, left on Paseo de Pinon, left on Sunlit Dr. East) Rachel Rosebery 505-988-7285 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

ELDORADO EAST

F-74 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 45 Camino Costadino - Beautifully customized, artistically fashioned residence in Dos Griegos in a delightful setting with big trees and picturesque views. High ceilings and attractive finishes in a great floor plan. $539,000. MLS 201404690. (Hwy 285 South from I-25 to first stop light, left on Avenida de Amistad, first left on Calle Electra to second left on Camino Costadino.) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.

N-78 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 22 Immanuel - Gorgeous home, fabulous feeling. Enter a brick walkway nestled with trees through a portal to the residence, beautifully sited on a ridge, to see wonderful views. Owner/broker. $595,000. MLS 201404728. (Hwy 285 South/Left on Alma Drive/up Alma aka Principe de Paz to Agua Viviendo/Left on Agua Viviendo/1st Left on Immanuel/to last property on left at cul de sac.) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.

P-76 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1 Senda Mescal - Stunning contemporary design with exceptional views. 3 bed 3 bath 2083 sq ft. Open living plan with a cook’s dream kitchen, formal dining, two fireplaces, exceptional outdoor area with Koi pond. $569,000. MLS 201404161. (Hwy 285 to Left at Camino Acote to Left on Calle Cal to Senda Mescal hope on hill to left.) Jenny Bishop & Trudi Conkling 505469-0469 Barker Realty LLC.

OTHER 1:30p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 725 B Camino Los Abuelos - Open during today’s Galisteo Tour! This was once Burl Ives’ land. Now it is a custom-built adobe home with bordering cottonwoods and an arroyo. A large extra room could be used as your own studio! $395,000. MLS 201401351. (2 br, 2 ba, Los Abuelos to Magee Lane 2nd house on right. Visit SantaFeProperties.com for all our open houses.) Rick Green 505-470-5422 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

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

S U IO TE G I T IVA S E PR R P D AN

1360 Tesuque Creek Road This inspiring home is nestled at the end of a cul-de-sac in beautiful Santa Fe Summit North. The enchanting threebedroom, two-and-one-half bath, 2,150-square-foot home has unspoiled views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains; a lushly landscaped entry courtyard with a fountain and abundant flowers and trees; a wonderful great room with an impressive fireplace, hand-carved vigas, corbels, posts, and beams; a lovely kitchen with an island and open bar seating; a secluded master suite; and an intimate media room. MLS#201403665 Offered at $895,000 DAVID AND BONNIE SORENSON 505.670.5515 | 505.660.0825 david.sorenson@sothebyshomes.com bonnie.sorenson@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY | 505.988.2533 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

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Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-9

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

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

SANTA FE

SANTA FE

Winter-Summer-Anytime-walk to downtown from this all adobe home at 726 C Agua Fria. $ 248,000.

IS Wood floors-fireplace-vigas-tiled floor for you? Good! See this Stamm built home at 422 Kathryn Pl. Priced to sell at $ 269,000.

HERE At 1225 S. St. Francis Dr. we have a great 2 story building with 5 office suites. Only $ 170,000.

Seller will Owner-Carry

To Facilitate a 1031-Exchange Apartments for Sale. Great Income 44 Apartments $3,072,000.00 28 Apartments $1,872,000.00 16 Apartment $1,200,000.00

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

988-5585

INVESTMENT PROPERTY 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.

GREEN-BUILT, ARCHITECT designed, 3200 sq. ft., 14" exterior walls, metal roof, own well, 10,000 gal. cistern, 6 + acres, views, much more. $860,000. 505-988-8027

BRIGHT, OPEN FLOORPLAN. 3 bedrooms. Corner lot, neighborhood parks, easy access to all locations. Possible Owner Financing. Bogle Realty 505-982-7559.

1 BEDROOM $750 PLUS UTILITIES

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.

LOTS & ACREAGE NAMBE LAND, SPECTACULAR VIEWS

Tile floors, refrigerator, gas stove, washer, dryer. Quiet, private, fenced yard. 505-471-1270, Appointment only.

MINUTES FROM STOCKYARDS AND CHURCHILL DOWNS. Two magnificent homes built on 80 acres in 2002 with yesteryear charm! Replica 1800’s & 1900’s vintage farmhouses. 4 barns. 2254 SE Fogel Rd, Corydon, IN. $1,225,000. MLS#201406807 HomesDiane@aol.com 502-649-6291 Diane Thomas, Coldwell Banker McMahan

REDUCED: EASTSIDE G R A C I O U S ADOBE. Secluded, Santa Fe style, updated, ½ acre, organic garden 5/3, 3015 ft2. Judith 505-984-9849 $799,599. Agents offer accepted.

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

OUT OF STATE

EXCELLENT DOUBLE WIDE! 2002, 28’ x 44’ 3 bedroom, 2 bath Partially furnished All appliances Located in Cottonwood Village $30,000 Carrie, 505-577-3569 Espanol, Larry, 505-690-9574

FALL

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.

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

"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

OUT OF TOWN

1 BEDROOM Camino Capitan, in small complex. Kiva fireplace, carpet. Clean, quiet. No Pets. Water & Sewer paid. $670 monthly, $670 Deposit. 505-982-0798.

2 BEDROOM, 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. 3 BEDROOM, 2-1/2 BATH C O N D O , washer, dryer, fireplace fantastic views. $1525 monthly.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

CHECKFREE THIS OUT!! WASHER$420 / DRYER IN MOVES YOU IN Every Apt. Home

RATON NM. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2,040 sq.ft. Totally remodeled. 620 North 1st. $75,000. $3,550 down payment. $650 monthly payment. Owner financed. 480-392-8550. "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

»rentals«

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, 2029 CALLE LORCA required for special )

Las Campanas

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 FOR SALE Mountain Bath near Shown by 0536

505471-8325 505-471-8325

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

RANCHO VIEJO FSBO

BY OWNER. 1861 Sun Drive-- 5 Bedroom, 4 Museum Hill $999,500. appointment. 505-670-

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

Trees, views, partial water rights.. 2.27 acres. $135,000. George J. Chavez Realty. 505-250-3883.

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre 5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo.. Private, secluded, great views. Well water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED "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

2 BEDROOM, $800. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 CHARMING, FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid. Wood, Saltillo floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard, Plaza. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839

SUNNY, LARGE 1 BEDROOM, quiet duplex apartment. Fireplace, Washer, dryer. Off-street parking, 10 minutes from Plaza. $800 + utilities. 505-4383356

SUNSET VIEWS CHARMING 1 BEDROOM, 700 SQ.FT. $655, DEPOSIT PLUS UTILITIES. LAUNDRY ACCESS. CATS OK. EAST FRONTAGE ROAD. 505-699-3005. UTILITIES PAID. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Off Airport Road. No smoking, no pets. $950 monthly, $850 deposit. 505-221-3580.

business & service exploresantafetcom ANIMALS

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

CLEANING

HANDYMAN

LANDSCAPING

MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062. DOG WALKING OVERNIGHT PET SITTING Basic grooming with 14 years experience. Bonded licensed and insured. Operated and owned by local women.

CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, plumbing, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-3107552.

CLEANING

FIREWOOD

directory« PERSONAL SERVICES

STORAGE

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

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

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

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

LANDSCAPING

PLASTERING ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information. JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.

MOVERS

Dry Pinon & Cedar

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

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.

505-983-2872, 505-470-4117 HANDYMAN

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.

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

GLORIA’SPROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE -Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072. Will clean houses and offices. Good references. Reasonable prices. Call Silvia Membreno 505-316-2402

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

ALL THINGS CLEARLY NOW! The YARD NINJA also does windows, high & low, inside & out! Also, Yard Cleaning, Pruning & Hauling. 505501-1331

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

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

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

YARD MAINTENANCE TRASH, BRUSH and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-316-2936, 505-204-3186.

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

Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

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.

TREE SERVICE

YARD MAINTENANCE

PAINTING

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

A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. One month free! 505-4552815.

Berry Clean - 505-501-3395

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

with a classified ad. Get Results!

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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.


E-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

NM JUDICIAL BRANCH IS SEEKING AN  AOC PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICER / LEGISLATIVE LIASION Must have Bachelor’s degree in English, journalism, mass media communications, public relations, advertising, marketing, public admin. or a related field & 7 yrs. exp. in public information, marketing, massmedia,&publicrelations& 2yrs.ofexp.developing&coordinating legislative strategies. (Additional relevant education may sub for exp.)

santafenewmexican.com

Salarypayrange$63K-$98Kplusextensivebenefitspackagesincluding excellentretirementplan.FormoreinformationpleasegototheJudicial Branch web page at www.nmcourts.gov under Job Opportunities.

FULL-TIME PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR

Santa Fe Community College invites you to apply for the position(s) noted below:

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.

Executive Director, Human Resources To apply, go to jobs.sfcc.edu and follow the instructions for submitting an on-line application. For further information or assistance, call (505) 428-1228. Santa Fe Community College is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer and encourages applications from women and members of minority groups.

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

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.

EIGHT NORTHERN INDIAN PUEBLOS COUNCIL, INC. - A LOCAL EMPLOYER OF EXCELLENCE

LICENSED MASTER LEVEL THERAPISTS ALBUQUERQUE, ESPANOLA, TAOS OPENINGS

Submit application or email resume by Wednesday, 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

1 BEDROOM, $750 MONTHLY . Large kitchen & living room. Hardwood floors. Parking. 1 mile to Plaza; bus service close. No pets. Utilities paid. 505-204-6160

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

RESERVE, 1 BEDROOM.

1,400 SQU.FT, 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, granite, CACH, 2 car garage, 3 private decks. $1,800 Monthly. Tommy Gardner (owner New Mexico Real Estate Broker) 505-919-8819.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

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.

2500 SQUARE FEET

Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

»announcements«

Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org 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*

CONDOSTOWNHOMES Pool, spa, laundry. Quiet top floor. Walk to Plaza & DeVargas. $775 monthly. Available 11/1. 505-9551581, 505-795-1724.

Sell your car in a hurry!

LICENSED MASTER LEVEL THERAPISTS: Immediate openings. Serving Northern New Mexico, several locations available. Openings in outpatient and inpatient ARTC. Experience in individual, group, 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: Espanola, 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.

GUESTHOUSES

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!!

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. GUESTHOUSE, UNFURNISHED, 2 bedroom, large yard, Clean. $650. 505316-1424

COMMERCIAL SPACE

4 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fireplace. Big yard. No smoking, no pets. $1500 monthly. $1200 deposit. 505-577-2910 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 + den, office with 2 car garage. Air conditioning and heat. All appliances included. Large windows with mountain views. Rancho Viejo subdivision. Paid trash and gardener. $1375 monthly. Available Now! Non-smoker, pet considered. Please email or call Amanda to schedule a walk-through. meowmontano2@yahoo.com 310989-1281 or 505-699-0823.

DUPLEX AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, washer and dryer in rental, storage area, private yard, and off-street parking. Short walk to Santa Fe University of Art and Design. Pet possible. Looking for quiet, responsible and respectful residents. ½ of duplex. $850. Includes water.

505-467-8437

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

SPANISH STYLE, 2-STORY

LOST

TAOS COMMERCIAL RENTALS on main thoroughfare, Taos. 1250 sq.ft. - 750 sq.ft. Lower level space with parking. Tenant pays utilities. Just off plaza, on Southeast side. 575-613-0200 .

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. LOST CELL PHONE, PURPLE, Samsung Intensity3. Sunday, October 5, Los Pinos Road, La Cienega area. IRREPLACEABLE PICTURES. REWARD! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! 505-9899126. LOST HEARING AIDS somewhere on trails between Dorothy StewartPicacho-Atalaya, Sunday, October 12. Soft gray case. Reward to finder! Call 505-660-6556. Thanks!

PERSONALS

LARGE, CLEAN one bedroom furnished guest house. $1,300 monthly includes utilities. 2 acres in SF Community College District. No pets. 505901-7415.

OFFICES

2 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS, double garage, W/D hookup. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golfing, lake. South of Santa Fe. $900. 505-359-4778.

700 S q u . F t , $700 Monthly. 1,400 Squ.Ft, $1,400 Monthly. Great office space, premium corner, great visibility, parking-views. Convenient. Owner Tommy Gardner-licensed New Mexico real estate broker 505-9198819.

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Quiet cul-desac, large yard on greenbelt. Fireplace, tile, carpet, 2 car garage. $1500 monthly, deposit. No Pets. Open Saturday + Sunday, 10-4. 2820 Vereda Oriente

COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 MASTER BEDROOMS, 2 1/2 Baths, Fireplace, Vigas, Private patio, washer, dryer, garage, blocks to Plaza; Year lease. $1600. 505-250-2501 3 BEDROOM, 3 bath, Rancho Santos Unit. Hardwood Floors down, washer, dryer, 2 car garage. No Smoking. Available November 1st, 1 year lease minimum. $1250 monthly plus utilities and security deposit. 505-954-1755 $875 PLUS utilities. Cochiti Lake, 35 minutes to Santa Fe or Albuquerque. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Garage. Pet negotiable. 505-465-2480.

EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER looking for work. 1 to 2 days a week. Excellent references. Close to Las Campanas and La Tierra Nueva. Available immediately. 505-927-2786.

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

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 one bedroom. 2 kiva fireplaces, private patio, and skylights. 6 month lease. $1,450 monthly. 800-272-5678. EXECUTIVE HOME for lease, 2700 sq.ft. Exquisitely furnished. Available November 1. $3700 monthly. No pets, non-smoking. 214-384-7216

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

FURNISHED. $1500 includes utilities. South Capitol. Near Trader Joe’s and Railrunner. 3-story. 1 or 2 bedroom. 1 1/2 Bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoker. Off-street parking. 505-780-0428. ISN’T IT TIME TO COME CLEAN? HOUSECLEANING. 20 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE. $15 AN HOUR. Very flexible. Reliable. References. 505-316-4579

off Governor Miles. 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 bath with den. 2800 sq.ft. on 3/4 acres. $1650, deposit. 505-690-7159

2 BEDROOM IN CHIMAYO Nicely restored old adobe on irrigated 1/2 acre. Wood, brick floors, vigas, fireplace, washer, dryer. $550. 505-690-1347

LARGE 2 Story Home, 3,600 squ.ft. in Sunlit Hills. $2,300 monthly plus utilities. Located on 6 acres. 505470-6297.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

PARK PLAZA CONDO. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. 2 car garage. Currently being refurbished. New paint, carpet, tile. Available 11/1. $1400 monthly. 505-603-9053

1200 SQUARE FEET. 3 bedroom, washer, dryer. Swamp cooler. Maybe pets. $1,150 plus $500 deposit. In Bellamah. 505-471-0508.

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.

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom, 2 bath house for rent. 4233 Big Sky. 2 car garage, fenced backyard, and clubhouse. Privileges for swimming pool, gym, steam room, hot tub. Trails. Full size washer and dryer. No pets please. Call Carl 505-501-0197. $1,795 per month.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

ELDORADO. LOVELY 2 BEDROOM SOLAR HOME All appliances, fireplace, wood stoves, extra large patio. $1,000 monthly. A must see! House won’t last! 714-633-2987. 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

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

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

Please call (505)983-9646. ROOMMATE WANTED PRIVATE BATH, SHARED KITCHEN. Washer, dryer. $525. Clean, safe, quiet. No Pets. Month-to-month. Deposit. 2 miles north of Plaza. 505-4705877

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

STORAGE SPACE

Newly remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Las Acequias Subdivision. $1200 monthly. Plus utilities. Non-smoker, no pets. 505-438-8142. By appointment.

4000 SQ.FT. 2 large doors. Great for cars, etc. Route 14, San Marcos area. On private property. $650 monthly. 505-438-0722

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.

EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS 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


Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds »jobs«

MEDICAL DENTAL

FORT MARCY Suites is hiring a Maintenance Manager. Email resume to fortmarcyjobs@gmail.com or deliver to front desk at 321 Kearney Ave.

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.

FULL-TIME PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR

ADMINISTRATIVE 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. HUMAN RESOURCES Technician - Los Alamos County. Requires HS/GED and 2 years HR experience. Get full information at www.losalamosnm.us or 505-662-8040. Deadline is 10-31-14. EOE

CONSTRUCTION ASPHALT RAKER, SCREED OPERATOR, LAYDOWN MACHINE OPERATOR & ALL PAVING POSITIONS

with experience, needed for PAVING C R E W . Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Gallup area. Good pay, steady work. Health insurance, 401K, Salary DOE/EOE, Drug testing. Office: 505-821-1034. 8900 Washington NE Albuquerque, NM. Fax resume: 505-821-1537. Email: frontdesk@sparlingconstruction.net EXPERIENCED CONSTRUCTION PLUMBER . Full-time. Needed immediately. Experienced only. 505-474-6199 JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN Full Time Immediate Opening Must be able to pass background check, drug screening and have valid drivers license. Pay DOE. Contact George @Allied Electric 505438-8899.

UNIT MANAGER

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 by Wednesday, 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. EOE

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

Must have 3 years experience, CDL Driver’s license and clean driving record. Must be familar with Loading & Hauling Heavy Construction Equipment. Good pay, health insurance, 401K, Salary DOE, EOE, Drug testing. Office: 505-821-1035. Fax: 505-821-1537. Email: frontdesk@sparlingconstruction.net 8900 Washington NE, Albuquerque NM.

HOSPITALITY

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.

APPLIANCES

SALES POSITION

MAYTAG REFRIGERATOR b o t t o m freezer with icemaker, white, 22 cu.ft. 33"Wx70"Hx33" D. 1 YEAR OLD. $475. 505-263-5610.

Uniform & equipment store serving police, fire, medical, and industrial needs full-time employee for firearm sales; Counter, shipping, ordering, invoicing. Experienced have first priority. Please apply at store. Neves Uniforms, 2538 Suite 200, Camino Entrada, 505-474-3828.

TECHNICAL

Seeking Registered Polysomnographic Technologist;

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

Full-time position working with The Hospice Center. Requires Master’s level Social Worker license and experience in healthcare setting.

Health & Human Services Director

Excellent benefits. Apply on-line at pmsnm.org, Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook.

Shall provide overall admin & operational direction to the Diabetes, CHR, Healthy Kids Initiatives, Social Services & ICWA programs. Nutrition & diet Best Practices, budget & contract mgmt needed. Bachelor’s degree in health or related field preferred 5 to 7 yrs experience.

for activists rally Immigrants,

Locally owned

and independent

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

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

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mexican.com

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

Submit Resume to: Pueblo de San Ildefonso Human Resources endewa@sanipueblo.org Phone 505-455-4155

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 By Julie Ann

Grimm

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

The New

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

MEDICAL DENTAL

ARTIST’S FEMALE FIGURE MODEL for drawing artists. $50 per hour. 314-503-3311.

CAREGIVER, EXPERIENCE preferred. Start Now. 505-316-1424

COLLECTIBLES

ART FRAMED POSTER from LaFonda Hotel until recent remodel. Nostalgic history of Santa Fe. $45.505-467-8199

LUMINOUS FREMONT ELLIS Painting of Trout Lake for sale. Similar to web picture of resort of same name. 505470-6434

ORIGINAL COWNIE TANNING HORSE HIDE WINTER COAT, FULL LENGTH. Early 20th century, Des Moines, IL. Size 40 - 42. Great condition. Asking $350. 520-9069399 (Santa Fe).

BUILDING MATERIALS

EXERCISE EQUIPMENT

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. 2008 SMOOTH fitness elyptical trainer. Excellent condition, like new. ($2500 new.) Will sell for $1000. 505699-3931.

CLOTHING COACH, DOONEY&BOURKE, JAMES KNIGHT. Purses and wallets. Custom, vintage and current styles. All in excellent condition. $30 - $300. 505-6702021. LEATHER COAT. Full-length, black. Size Large Ladies. Supple leather, great shape. Only $25. 505-474-9020

ANTIQUES

NEW BLACK LEATHER JACKET $100. CALL DAVID, 505-310-4179.

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.

CALL 986-3010

paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent

APPLIANCES FISHER & Paykel, single self-clean convection oven with accessories. Very good condition. $300. 505-9894409 JENNAIR GAS Downdraft Cook top. 4 burner, very good condition. $200. 505-989-4409.

FURNITURE 2 MATCHING DISPLAY CASES. 48"Wx18"Dx38"T. Modern, light wood with glass & glass shelves. Sliding doors. $300 for both! 505-690-9235

3X

COLLECTIBLES 1984 HESSTON RODEO JR. BUCKLE & BELT, size 26" waist. $95 for set. REDMAN BELT BUCKLE, solid brass, $30. 505-466-6205 2 BOONES FARM BUCKLES: Strawberry Hill, $25; Apple Wine, $20. 505-4666205

Black Velvet Painting, vintage 50’s Two unicorns in front of two hearts with words "I LOVE YOU". Framed. $52. 505-474-9020

ANTIQUE BRASS & GREY metal day bed. Complete with bolsters, cover, newly-replaced mattress. Excellent condition. $350. 505-989-7087. BED: OAK EXPRESS TWIN BOOKCASE BED. 3-drawer, excellent condition. 45"Wx72"L. $350 OBO. 505-466-6205 COMFY, CAMELBACK couch. Floral chintz slipcovers. Very good condition. 505-989-9194

DO THE LAUNDRY

Hospice RN Case Manager

and live on beautiful estate.

Santa Fe, Hospice Applicants must possess a current license to practice in the state of New Mexico as a registered nurse. Contact: Anne Cain @ 505-982-4098 or by Email: acain@ambercare.com

505-660-6440 SMALL LOAN Company is looking for Full-time Customer Service Reps. Candidates must be well organized, willing to learn, have a can do attitude, reliable Transportation & willing to travel to other locations if needed. We are willing to train the right individuals. Please fax Resume to: 847-5057194.

Sell Your Stuff!

PART TIME SEEKING PART time employee 24 hours weekly. Safe visitation monitoring. Starts at $11.00. Contact 505753-1656. Submit your resume ramon.garcia@crisis-centers.org

986-3000

Q4 NATIONAL

Certified Activity Directors

RETAIL

Social Worker

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today! Immediate openings for Full-time and Part-time:

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

»merchandise«

DRIVERS HEAVY CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT TRANSPORT DRIVER

986-3000

to place your ad, call

MANAGEMENT

Credit Counselor Del Norte is seeking an experienced Credit Counselor to provide expert guidance and solutions to assist our members in meeting their obligations during times of financial difficulty. The ideal candidate demonstrates proficiency in the following skills sets: • Working knowledge of deposit and consumer loan accounts; • Solid administrative skills • High attention to detail; excellent verbal and written communication skills; demonstrated excellence in problemresolution skills, multi-tasking & time management skills.

ONLINE EVENT

COMMERCIAL ONLINE AUCTION ASSETS COAST TO COAST

Oct. 15th - November 12th

Retail | Office | Industrial | Multi Family | Hospitality | Self Storage Development Parcels | Special Purpose | Triple NNN Properties / Credit Tenants

State Leased Office

2025 S. Pacheco St, Santa Fe, NM • 39,110 SF on 1.9 Acres • Long Term Tenant • Great Income

Email your resume to hum anresources@ elcnm .com or fax to 505-983-3828.

Experience/Education Ideal candidates will have a minimum of one to three years’experience in financial services, in a similar or related position. Proficient in MS Office and Windows. May include working some nights and Saturdays. We offer a competitive salary and generous benefits package. Qualified candidates must complete an online application at www.dncu.org No Phone Calls Please

Sperry Van Ness / Team Southwest Wes Hallmark, CCIM 806-797-2190 Ext 202 #9002042

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

CALL 986-3000

Tim House 505-998-1031 Ext 1

www.SVN-Bid2Win.com

BROKER COOPERATION INVITED

All Sperry Van Ness® Offices Independently Owned / Operated

The Taos News is seeking a Circulation Manager Indirect Lending Manager Seeking a dynamic, professional to join our Indirect Lending Team and play an integral role in supporting our company’s mission & vision. This position will direct and coordinate the activities of the Indirect Lending Program including dealer relations, compliance, contract review, loan underwriting, processing, document management, account servicing & funding. Additionally, this role demonstrates a high level of knowledge and experiential practice in auto lending, finance and the impact of indirect lending portfolio on the balance sheet and financial performance of the Credit Union. The ideal candidate will have equivalent to a college degree (BS or BA in a related field) and five to ten years of related experience in a financial institution, including at least five (5) years in a management role. Other key responsibilities include but are not limited to: proven experience implementing and maintaining consumer lending loan origination systems; helping to ensure regulatory compliance; demonstrating strong leadership and exemplary internal and external member service skills. We offer a competitive salary and generous benefits package. For immediate consideration, qualified candidates should submit a confidential cover letter and resume by completing an online application at www.dncu.org. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

E-11

We are looking for an experienced manager to create and maintain a strong, competitive presence of The Taos News throughout Northern New Mexico. This position serves as a liaison between subscribers and the contracted delivery force to ensure seamless newspaper distribution. In addition, this position is responsible for marketing and selling The Taos News by creating and implementing successful home delivery, single copy and NIE sales programs. The ideal candidate will have previous leadership experience (preferably with a circulation background) and possess exceptional communication skills, the ability to motivate and to ensure that customers’ expectations are met and exceeded. Benefits: Health, dental, vision and life insurance after two months; paid vacation; 401K; and subsidized spa membership. Other amenities: Great work environment; outdoor recreation; a lively arts and entertainment scene; and a multi-cultural community. Come live, work and play in one of New Mexico’s most beautiful cities. Please mail or email your cover letter and resume outlining your qualifications and references to: Chris Baker, The Taos News, P.O. Box 3737 Taos, NM 87571, or e-mail to publish@taosnews.com. No phone calls please.

THE TAOS NEWS


E-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

sfnm«classifieds FURNITURE

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

JEWELRY

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

PETS SUPPLIES

PETS SUPPLIES

FAIRCHILD & CO written APPRAISAL AT $8725. Over 2.5 carots total weight, size 7. Would make excellent engagement, wedding or cocktail ring. $5,925. 505-379-3750

BALDWIN STUDIO UPRIGHT PIANO. MODEL B243. BLACK SATIN FINISH. EXCELLENT CONDITION. ORIGINAL OWNER, ONLY LIGHTLY PLAYED. $1950. 505-490-0081.

AWESOME, BEAUTIFUL TINY FEMALE POODLES. TEACUP white female. $450. Toy champagne female poodle $400. POMERANIAN puppies, $500. Tcup, $950. 505-901-2094.

SMALL DOG RESCUE OF SANTA FE. Many small dogs ready for adoption. For information, please call 505-4383749.

»garage sale«

BROWN CORDOROUY R E C L I N E R . Great shape. $75. Fabric couch, southwest-ish, 1 invisible flaw. $100. OBOS. 505-438-7704.

COMPUTER DESK. 505-927-2052.

GARAGE SALE NORTH

$30.

TESUQUE 3 FAMILY YARD SALE, 15 ARROYO GRIEGO ROAD! G R E A T ECLECTIC MIX! Wood cookstove, rain barrels, tools, books, CDs, furniture: love seat, table, chairs, desk, office chair, large mirror, cabinets, Quality clothing. Kitchenware: dish sets, vases, silverware. SATURDAY & SUNDAY, 9-4 p.m.

TOOLS MACHINERY SCROLL SAW, Rigid brand. 16" arm. Solid metal. No plastic. $125. Fabio, 505-982-3214.

STIHL 025 CHAINSAW. Never misses! $225. FABIO, 505-982-3214.

ERNEST THOMPSON TRASTERO, 30w x 15d x 77h". 3 deep shelves; handpainted and antiqued. Asking $6500. 505-660-3143 or email: MsHuguette@aol.com

GIBSON NEZ jewelry circa 1990. From closing of Santa Fe gallery. Bolos, bracelets, buckles, necklaces. Prices, pictures by email: bettyw1952@cox. net.

TABLE SANDER. Rigid brand. $85. Fabio, 505-982-3214.

GERMAN SHEPHARD puppies. Dad and Mom both police-trained. Very smart dogs. Pure-bred. Great bloodlines. Offer great family protection. $450. 505-316-2432.

TV RADIO STEREO

Have a product or service to offer?

24" SONY Flat Screen TV. Great condition, $45. 505-471-3105

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

DENON TURNTABLE QUARTZ DP-33F with Audio Technica cartridge. $150. 505-310-1829 GARRARD GT-35 belt drive, 2 speed 33 45. $200. Cash. 505-467-8199

RARE MEENAKARI enamel necklace set from Jaipur, India. Red, yellow, blue, green Peacock design. Never worn. Perfect condition. $100. 505995-0123. .FABULOUS INDIAN armoire. Very solid and handpainted with delightful designs inside and out. Eldorado 466-6612 or heywilli@gmail.com. $625 Cash only FICUS TREE, artificial. Beautiful, 8’ tall. Great background for home decorating. Only $30. 505-474-9020

»animals«

BERNINA SEWING machine. Bernette model 730A. Excellent condition and well maintained. Low usage. $300 OBO. 505-670-2021.

PETS SUPPLIES ADOPT US

Large variety of Office Furniture and File Cabinets in store! Gently Used Furniture Appliances and Building Materials. Open Monday Friday, 9 to 5.

END OF SUMMER SALE. COMPLETE GARAGES. 24’x24’ garage $9500. 24’ x 30’ $10,500. Complete with concrete. Call for details. 505-332-9902.

OFF-WHITE SWIVEL Barrel Style Modern Chairs (2) for living room. $75 each. 505-471-3105

OFF-WHITE-ULTRA SUEDE Sofa,

FENDI SOFA

YARD SALE: SATURDAY & SUNDAY 8-3 2506 RANCHO SIRINGO DRIVE OFF YUCCA AND SIRINGO. Bowflex, 40 gallon aquarium, oak desk, Rubbermaid commercial utility carts, Halloween and Christmas items, women’s and mens plus size clothing, clown collection, and much more.

Hi, my name is: Talis is a 4mo. old female cat. She is an attractive gal who is great with other cats and loves people. She just wants to be loved and to have a family of her own. Love Talis up and adopt her today!

Meet Adoptable Animals Saturday, Oct. 18 OktoberFiesta at Santa Fe Brewing Co. 35 FIRE PLACE (OFF N.M. 14) Noon to 5 p.m.

Sunday, Oct. 19 PetSmart 3561 Zafarano Drive Noon to 4 p.m. Visit sfhumanesociety.org

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.

We are Thor (white) and Dharma (red),

Excellent condition. Large mature rack, 4 points per side. Looks great in office, home, motel, resort, lodge, conference room. Great gift! $275 OBO. 520-906-9399 (Santa Fe).

NICE 18.5 inch charcoal grill and chimney starter. 505-989-9194

GARAGE SALE SOUTH

Large Book Collection, Dust Jackets, many first editions. All hardcover. Some large cocktail table size. Great condition. Only $2-$7. 505-474-9020

MONTANA MULE DEER MOUNT

LEATHER LOVESEAT. Light beige color. Excellent condition. $300. (Cost $800 new.) 505-989-4409

Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS

MISCELLANEOUS 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.

SWEET, WELL-BEHAVED FEMALE CHIH U A H U A needs loving home and companionship. Healthy. All shots up to date. 505-438-3749

ROASTER - DUTCH OVEN. Large size. Wagner Ware, Magnolite Model 4267P. $60. 505-471-3105 TELESCOPE. TASCO. 900MM Reflector. on tripod. $100. Excellent Condition. Only 1 year old. 505-660-4504.

a pair of sweethearts looking for a new home. We are very playful and love toys as well as other dogs. Our owner Jeff Braucht recently lost his battle with cancer and his final wish for them was that they find a new loving home. We take a bit of time to warm up to new people, but we are great cuddlers once we do. We are a matched set and must be adopted together! If you are interested in adopting us, please inquire at Santa Fe Tails. We are looking forward to falling in love with you. 2109 Warner Circle, Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505)820-0731

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?

AUSTRALIAN SHEPHERD LAS ROCASA LINES, AUSSIE PUPS ready now. 2 black-tri female, $350. 1 black-tri male $450, 1 black-tri female $550. Home raised, breed for temperament. Puppy tested. 1st shots. 575779-9690

Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

CHRISTMAS PUPPIES! Labrador puppies for sale. AKC litter papers, six week shots, and more. Call for appointment. 505-469-0055. Taking deposits.

PATIENT REGISTRATION CHECK-OUT SPECIALIST TECHNICIAN TRAINEE Santa Fe Clinic

NURSING ASSISTANT PAIR BLACK Cabinets- Sideboard,

Santa Fe Surgery Center Part-time

Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions 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.

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

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.

Del Norte is seeking an experienced Mortgage Loan Processor to join our Mortgage Lending Team in Santa Fe. This position is responsible for verifying, compiling and reviewing application information for mortgage loans. Also has responsibility for reviewing loan application files to verify that application data is complete and meets established standards. The position reviews files for all required paperwork and disclosures and gathers necessary documentation. The Mortgage Loan Processor will work closely with the Members, Mortgage Loan Officers and Title companies regarding files in process.

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

Part-time Receptionist Be a part of getting the news out to the community! Sangre de Cristo Chronicle is recruiting for the ideal candidate to fill a part-time Receptionist position (30 hours a week). General duties include answering the phone, greeting customers, entering advertising information into ATEX software and other data entry, taking subscriptions, and making the deposit, among other duties. SOLID HARDWOOD table 16"X 20"X 31"H. Beautifully refinished in turquoise, red and blue. Excellent condition. $100.00. Call 505-995-0123.

Mortgage Loan Processor – Santa Fe

Requirements include: high school diploma or equivalent; data entry and money-handling experience with the ability to be detail oriented and have great accuracy are musts! Good communication skills and ability to be confidential are mandatory.

WINGBACK CHAIR. Nicely scaled not too big, but still with classic lines. 505-989-9194

Pay is DOE. Submit references and job application or resume by Friday, October 10th to:

WONDERFUL TRASTERO from reclaimed wood. Used in entryway for keys, and winter gloves, hats, etc. Hate to sell it but no room in our current house. $325 OBO. 466-6612 or heywilli@gmail.com

Ellen Goins, General Manager/Editor Sangre de Cristo Chronicle Centro Plaza #11 Angel Fire, NM 87710

The ideal candidate demonstrates proficiency in the following skills sets: • Working knowledge of mortgage loan programs & compliance; proven experience effectively processing mortgage loans • Solid administrative skills • Eager to exceed member expectations and demonstrate a commitment to excellence • High attention to detail; excellent verbal and written communication skills; demonstrated excellence in problemresolution skills and multi-tasking Experience/Education Ideal candidates will have a minimum of three to five years’related experience including demonstrated proficiencies in Mortgage Lending software and in MS Office and Windows. We offer a competitive salary and generous benefits package. Qualified candidates must complete an online application and submit a resume at www.dncu.org.


Sunday, October 19, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnmÂŤclassiďŹ eds GARAGE SALE WEST

DOMESTIC

to place your ad, call IMPORTS

986-3000 IMPORTS

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

GARAGE SALE. Paintings, antiques, folk art. Mexican & Art Pottery, furniture. Brass bed, books, clothing. Kachinas. Jewelry. Persian rug, Navajo rug, textiles. Interesting stuff, too numerous to mention. 1121 Agua Fria, SATURDAY & SUNDAY. 9 a.m. to 3 pm. No earlies please.

Âťcars & trucksÂŤ

E-13

IMPORTS

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

2014 JEEP W R A N G L E R , 4 X 4 SAHARA,TRIMED WITH ALL THE EXTRAS, P1770 $33600- CALL 505473-1234.

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

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

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. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY AUTOS WANTED

2008 TOYOTA RAV-4 LIMITED-4X4 Another Local Owner, Records, Non-Smoker, Garaged, X-Keys, Manuals, Loaded, Pristine, S o o o o TOYOTA DEPENDABLE $13,650

View vehicle & Carfax:

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

505-983-4945

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2012 Mercedes Benz C300 White AWD -super clean,auto,low,low miles and 1 owner. Arrive in style for less $27,981 Call 505-216-3800.

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

2014 NISSAN Pathfinder 4WD Silver auto, low miles, fully serviced and ready for its new owner, you’ll love it. $26,811 Call 505-216-3800.

2007 FORD EDGE-SEL-AWD REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle & Carfax: WE WILL BUY YOUR USED CAR REGARDLESS IF YOU BUY A CAR FROM US! COME SEE US TODAY! 505-216-3800

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2012 Mercedes-Benz C300 Sport 4matic low miles, AWD, well-equipped, pristine single owner clean CarFax $26,971

CLASSIC CARS CITROEN 2CV 6 Special 1984 Very good condition. 80,000 miles, rare Perrier edition. New upholstery, good top canvas. Extra wheels and tires. Tools and owner’s manual. $12,000.

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

HEAVY EQUIPMENT

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

So can you with a classiďŹ ed ad

View vehicle & Carfax:

CALL 986-3000

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2012 RAM 3500 CREW CAB FLATBED, VERY SHARP,BUY OF THE WEEK. T1431 $43,499 CALL 505473-1234.

4X4s 2004 CHEVROLET SILVERADO. 4x4. One owner. 81,450 miles, Bed liner. NEW tires. Mechanically sound. $10,800. Call 505-501-1794.

2006 LEXUS IS-250 Another Caring Owner, Records,Garaged,Non-Smoker, New Tires, 45,559 Miles, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo FRESH $17,750

WE GET RESULTS!

TESLA MODEL S 2013, 12,561 miles kept in garage in bad weather, like new. 85K battery. Premium Interior Package (Tan Leather) High Tech Package. High Fidelity Sound Package. Air Suspension . Black ROOF

Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER Silver with grey leather interior. 46K miles. Pristine condition. $11,500. Call 505-4745542.

2006 MERCEDES-R-350 LUXURY MINIVAN Another Caring Owner, Local, Records, Garaged, non-Smoker,All Wheei Drive, 7-Passenger, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo LUXURIO USLY FAMILY ORIENTED $12,850

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2012 Subaru Outback

View vehicle & Carfax:

DOMESTIC

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.

2013 JEEP WRANGLER,4DR 4X4 FUN,WINTER READY P1769 $31700 CALL 505-473-1234. 2011 NISSAN Maxima S. Local trade! New tires, single owner clean CarFax. NICE! $17,821. Call 505-2163800.

2.5i Premium only 20k miles, heated seats, AWD, great fuel economy, one owner clean CarFax $22,871 505-9132900 .

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

2008 CHRYSLER-TOWNCOUNTRY TOURING-FWD

IMPORTS

Another Local Owner, Records, Double Rear Entertainments, 7Passenger, Loaded, Pristine Soooo FAMILY ORIENTED $12,250

1997 SUBARU Legacy GT AWD. 5speed manual. 127,563 miles. New struts, timing belt, water pump, idler pulley, and lots more. $2,800, OBO. 505-412-1509.

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

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

santafeautoshowcase.com

2009 Subaru Legacy GT

505-983-4945

2014 Volkswagen Passat SEL

Limited recent trade-in! low miles,

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

2005 SUBURU FORESTER. AWD. Great winter car. 5-speed. New tires, radiator, battery. One owner. Lots of highway miles. $3,500. 505-466-6007

AWD, turbo, heated leather, moonroof, awesome single owner clean CarFax $17,991 . 505-913-2900

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

$21,471. 505-913-2900

2011 TOYOTA RAV4, 58,000 miles, blutooth, records & manuals. Garaged, excellent condition. $17,800. 505231-4481

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, DPMVNO BOE Y CMPDL 6TF MPHJD BOE QSPDFTT FMJNJOBUJPO UP TPMWF UIF QV[[MF 5IF EJGmDVMUZ level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest).

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.

Rating: SILVER

Š 2014 Janric Enterprises Dist. by creators.com

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.

2004 HONDA Accord LX 2.4. 69,000 miles, great car! Right front fender damage. Must sale! Car in Espanola, NM. 520-661-2789.

2008 FORD MUSTANG DELUXE COUPE 2 door, auto transmission, V-6, black with cloth seats, 80,000 miles. $12,949 OBO. Call 505-471-4795.

2012 Lexus RX 350 AWD LUXURY WOW! Just 29k miles, Head-Up Display, EVERY option, immaculate single owner clean CarFax $37,731 505-913-2900 .

2006 TOYOTA Corolla Great Car! 74,900 miles Single Owner. Salsa Red with beige interior. Yakima Roof Rack included. $8,550. 505-780-5009

10/19/14


E-14

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

PICKUP TRUCKS

2013 Toyota Avalon XLE

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

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.

2010 TOYOTA Prius II, •ELECTRONIC THROTTLE control system w/intelligence (ETCS-i) -inc: Eco, EV & power driving modes $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 Ford F150 Crew Cab Lariat

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

»recreational«

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

BICYCLES

.

WOMEN’S BICYCLE. Heavy duty tread tires. $50. Fabio, 505-982-3214.

CAMPERS & RVs AL’S RV CENTER Need someone to work on your RV? Call Al, over 42 years of experience. 505-203-6313, 505-5771938.

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

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

CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIEDS

Where treasures are found daily

Where treasures are found daily 2013 VW CC Panorama pwr tilting sunroof, Leatherette seat trim Heated 12-way pwr front sport bucket seats, $25,871. Call 505-216-3800.

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

2009 Toyota Venza AWD V6 fully loaded, leather, JBL sound, single owner clean CarFax $23,851 . Call 505-216-3800.

2008 FORD F-150, 4X4 XLT 5.4 Triton. Great truck! Fully loaded. New tires. 72,000 miles. Pampered. $20,000. 505670-2014

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

2013 JEEP WRANGLER 4DR OSCAR MIKE PKG,SPECIAL PKG RUNAWAY WINNER. T1640 $33,300 CALL 505-473-1234.

SPORTS CARS

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

2004 GULF STREAM 28’ B-TOURING CRUISER MOTORHOME. 450 Ford engine. 55k miles. Slide-out. Queen bed. Excellent condition. $25,000. 505-4663580

LANCE TRUCK CAMPER 1121, YR. 2000 NEW ROOF AIR WATER HEATER., 3 WAY FRIG, PROPANE GEN. SLIDE OUT DINETTE. LOTS OF STORAGE., QUEEN SLEEPER OVER CAB, SHOWER AND TOILET. $10,000, 505-795-6210.

2013Volkswagen Jetta SportWagen good miles, excellent condition, fully serviced, one owner clean CarFax $15,841 505-913-2900 .

1995 BMW M3 Original owner. 57,972 miles, garaged. All records, only serviced by BMW. Includes 4 extra Style 23 M3 contour wheels. Additional photos available. $15,000. Serious inquiries only. 505-690-8697.

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

SUVs 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

2013 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN-SEL-4MOTION 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

2001 CHEVY SUBURBAN. 4WD. 110k miles. Blue. Excellent mechanical condition. Great tires. $4400. 505795-8094

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

INFINITI FX35 SUV 2003. White, clean, sunroof, Bose stereo, premium package, 82,200 miles, $11,400. 505-4666863 daytime only.

TOYOTA HORIZON 1992. 1992 Toyota V6 Horizon 22 ft. Motorhome for sale, only 34,730 miles. $10,500. OBO Bathroom, shower, stove, shower, nice wooden cabinets, pullout sofa bed, overhead bed, easy to drive. Great condition. 505-466-8627 2010 8X39 PREMIER BUMPER PULL TRAVEL TRAILER, 2 slide-outs. Selfcontained. 2 bedrooms. Loaded with extras. Must see to appreciate. Excellent condition. 505-697-8361

CLASSIFIEDS GETS RESULTS.

View vehicle & Carfax:

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E-15


E-16

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, October 19, 2014

TIME OUT

Nothing learned

I

Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, Oct. 19, 2014: This year you open up to a lot on a subconscious level. Whether you access this information through your dreams or through unexpected insights, the outcome will be the same. Your home life could be subject to change. Many of you will move, while others will opt to remodel. A new roommate is a possibility. If you are single, you might want to socialize more and expand your circle of friends. If you are attached, the two of you enjoy going out and about, but you benefit enormously from some one-on-one time. Virgo knows how to irritate you. 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 Plans are likely to get confused. You might not pick up on all the details, as you seem to be more distracted than usual. Someone you need to deal with could be unusually difficult. Your natural impulsiveness is likely to conflict with a situation. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. This Week: Tempers flare. Stay steady.’

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Your creativity might enchant others, but it could cause a problem when it comes to making plans. You could come up with so many options that others cannot decide. You’ll gain insight into a loved one by his or her reactions. Tonight: Not a worry in the world. This Week: You are ready for nearly anything.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Be aware of the financial implications of certain choices. You might want to revise your budget as well as how you spend your time. Make a call to someone at a distance. Remember, this person is in your life because he or she keeps things interesting. Tonight: Your treat. This Week: Keep conversations open.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You are more grounded than you might realize. Understand your limits. A close associate seems out of sorts, and could become very controlling as a result. Tonight: Make a favorite meal, and invite a friend or two over. This Week: Tap into your creativity to find solutions.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Your personality often attracts those who are different. Your creativity could take you in a new direction and allow a partner to feel freer. Expect the unexpected. You might want to rearrange a room to create a more comfortable atmosphere. Tonight: Only what you want to do. This Week: You could be wishing for a change.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Speak your mind. Don’t expect someone to know that there could be a problem. Allow your imagination to help you find the words to encourage a loved one to come out of an emotional maze, which is likely self-imposed. Tonight: Squeeze in some one-on-one time. This Week: You are building to a crescendo.

Last week’s answer

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might want to do more for others, but right now you need to care for yourself. If you are not well rested and there is some chaos in a key area of your life, you are not in the position to give to others. Go off and clear your plate first. Tonight: Screen calls. This Week: You hit your power days Tuesday and Wednesday. Go for what you want. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH You know what you want, but you might be somewhat dependent on a friend who hopefully will follow through. You’ll have

Chess quiz

WHITE FORCES MATE Hint: Divert a key defender. Solution: 1. Ba6! (threatens Qb7 mate). Kxa6 2. Qa8 mate!

New York Times Sunday Crossword

Note: Gene Weingarten is on vacation. This column originally ran in 2003. did well on my SATs. How well, you want to know? Well, I’m not going to tell you. I’m not going to tell you because then you will accuse me of being the sort of insufferable twit who remembers his SAT scores down to the digit and is dying to brag about them even, like, 35 years later — as though some multiple-choice exam taken at age 17 somehow validates one’s whole life or has any relevance whatsoever to one’s worth as a human. Math 744. Verbal 724. OK, you dragged it out of me, but I think we can all agree these numbers are meaningless (even if SAT scores have Gene stood the test of time as an amazingly Weingarten accurate measure of future achievement, The Washington earnings, genital size, etc.). Post In fact, I have from time to time ever so casually mentioned my SAT scores to friends and colleagues. For some reason, friends and colleagues find this annoying. (They have all “forgotten” theirs.) And so it is that my editor, Tom the Butcher, recently came up with a nifty plan that all my friends and colleagues thought was really amusing. Tom assigned me to take the SATs again. Which is how I found myself sitting in a very small chair in a room full of nervous adolescents, looking every bit as inconspicuous as a bowling ball in a bouquet. One kid asked me if I was the proctor. When I told him I was there to take the test, he rolled his eyes and muttered to a friend, “Like that’s fair.” “Oh, yeah?” I said. “You try concentrating with an enlarged prostate.” I was, truth to tell, a little tense and surly. The deal with Tom was that I was not allowed to prepare in any way — such as boning up on high school trigonometry — and that in the end I would have to tell everyone my score. (My wife knew I was feeling a little stressed and insecure about this, not to mention a little silly, and so on exam morning she was very supportive. She ran through the checklist: “No. 2 pencils?” “Check.” “Picture ID?” “Check.” Then, as I was walking out, she said, in a singsong voice, “Got your thinking cap on?”) So, yeah, I was feeling a little immature. But as the test began, my adult common sense took over as I leaned into the test booklet with my No. 2, solemnly determined, as a sophisticated plan of action, to kick the living crap out of all the 17-year-olds in America. I figured it would be easy. Then I hit the analogy section and remembered why people hate the SATs. One question came down to this: Analgesic is to Migraine as: (A) Bandage: Wound; or, (B) Decongestant: Cold. First, I marked A, on the theory that a cold has many symptoms, only one of which is relieved by a decongestant. Then, I erased that answer and chose B on the theory that a bandage is not really a “cure” for a wound. Then I erased that answer and went back to A on the theory that an analgesic doesn’t really “cure” the migraine either; it just masks the symptoms. Then I erased that and went back to B on the theory that a medical condition and its symptoms are inextricable, from an epistemological point of view. Basically, I had no idea which was correct. And suddenly I wasn’t feeling all that smart. I got through the test all right, but when I was done, my answer sheet looked like the detritus from a tragic explosion at a soot factory. The hardest part was waiting the three weeks for the test results. It turns out I did pretty well. How well, you want to know? I’m not going to tell you because then you will accuse me of being an insufferable twit. Math 710. Verbal 800. OK, you dragged it out of me. And I have to say I was feeling pretty smug about this until Tom the Butcher helpfully reminded me of something. In 1995, the Educational Testing Service recalibrated its tests, and the average scores are higher now. There is actually a conversion table. It turns out my score when I first took the test in 1968 and my score from last month are virtually identical. In 35 years, I haven’t learned a damned thing.

a lot of nervous energy that needs to be worked out. Go for a lengthy walk and enjoy the fall foliage. Tonight: Join friends, but curb your spending. This Week: The Sun moves into your sign Thursday, and things get better. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might have wanted to spend some time with a friend or get into a good book, but a situation demands your presence. Though you might not be in agreement with what is happening, you will be supportive. A loved will add some mischief to the moment. Tonight: Make it early. This Week: Use Tuesday and Wednesday for important meetings. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Read between the lines with news that heads in from someone at a distance. You might not be getting the full story — in fact, you can count on that hunch being right. Revise your thinking, if need be. Tonight: Cocoon at home. This Week: Do some research, and make a decision by Thursday. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Plan to spend quality time with a loved one or special friend. The one mistake you could make would be to lump people together. Your ability to get past problems emerges as you help someone see his or her way through an emotional maze. Tonight: Opt for togetherness. This Week: Others look to you to take the lead. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Defer to a loved one who is needier and more emotional than you are. Avoid making this behavior a pattern; otherwise, you could find yourself feeling depleted. An authority figure might need some one-on-one time, so make that a priority. Tonight: Just don’t be alone. This Week: Others run with the ball, so take off early Friday for the weekend.

Scratch pad


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