Santa Fe New Mexican, Nov. 13, 2013

Page 1

From soups to salads, savory sage is winter’s go-to herb

Locally owned and independent

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Taste, C-1

www.santafenewmexican.com 75¢

End of line for Lamy?

Amtrak considers rerouting Southwest Chief. LOcaL news, B-1

SPACEPORT AMERICA

Smooth blast-off for research rocket Payload manifest

Looted art now online

Nasa’s SL-8 commercial space research rocket, launched Tuesday, carried several payloads from universities, government agencies and a private firm.

Site crashes amid demand. Page a-5

NC-3: NMSU, free floating controls algorithm experiment

Typhoon aid arrives

PTS4-4: NMSU, free floating controls algorithm experiment

Desperation leads to tragedy in hard-hit Philippines. Page a-3

PTS4-5: SatWest, iridium telemetry experiment PTS4-6: NASA, power supply system

County’s drilling ban spurs lawsuit

PTS10-7: Universitat Politècnica de CatalunyaBarcelonaTech PTS10-8: New Mexico Tech, structural health monitoring for spacecraft

7-watt blade antenna PTS10-9: Embry-Riddle, FAA, GPS tracking system PTS10-10: Department of Defense, ORS, GPS and IMU (inertial measurement unit) experiment Image courtesy UP Aerospace

Mora commissioner says board is ‘ready for fight’

NASA’s SL-8 suborbital rocket launch Tuesday was the 20th vertical liftoff from Spaceport America in Southern New Mexico. The rocket rose 383,000 feet — or more than 72 miles.

By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

In a dispute being watched around the United States, a statewide oil and gas association and three Mora County landowners are suing the Mora County Commission over its ban on oil drilling. The lawsuit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque, claims the county’s action in April violates the plaintiff’s civil rights and is unconstitutional. “What the Mora County Commission has done with this ordinance is an insult to the U.S. Constitution and every free citizen,” said Richard Gilliland, president of the Independent Petroleum Association of New Mexico, in a news release Tuesday. The group is one of the plaintiffs in the case. Mora County Commissioner John Olivas said Tuesday he had not seen the suit, so he declined to discuss the legal action itself. However, he defended the commission’s vote. “I was in a position to protect our resources in Mora County,” he said. “We’re ready for this fight.” The ban, which passed the commission on a 2-1 vote, says it “shall be unlawful for any corporation to engage in the extraction of oil, natural gas, or other hydrocarbons within Mora County.” Other plaintiffs in the lawsuit are landowners Mary L. Vermillion, who, according to the suit, owns less than an acre of land and its mineral rights in Mora County, and the JAY Land Ltd. Co. and Yates Ranch Property, which together own 125,000 acres known as Ojo Feliz Ranch.

Please see DRILLIng, Page A-4

PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

NASA offers space for science on $600,000 launch to help advance industry

Index

Calendar a-2

Classifieds c-3

ethanol policy fuels loss of prairies Scientists warn of dangers as 1.2M acres of grassland vanish in push for corn By Chet Brokaw and Jack Gillum

The Associated Press

ROSCOE, S.D. — Robert Malsam nearly went broke in the 1980s when corn was cheap. So now that prices are high and he can finally make a profit, he’s not about to apologize for ripping up prairie land to plant corn. Across the Dakotas and Nebraska, more than 1 million acres of the Great Plains are giving way to cornfields as farmers transform the wild expanse that once served as the backdrop for American pioneers. This expansion of the Corn Belt is fueled in part by America’s green energy policy, which requires oil companies to blend billions of gallons of corn ethanol into their gasoline. Ethanol has become the No. 1 use for corn in America, helping keep prices high. “It’s not hard to do the math there as to what’s profitable to have,” Malsam said. “I think an ethanol plant is a farmer’s friend.” What the green energy program has made profitable, however, is far from green. A policy intended to reduce global

Please see eTHanOL, Page A-4

The New Mexican

SPACEPORT AMERICA he temperature near the rocket launchpad dipped below 45 degrees Tuesday as the sun crawled over the San Andres Mountains in Southern New Mexico. A dozen college students, some firefighters, a hotel cook, a few news media personnel and people with a vested interest in the rocket’s successful launch at Spaceport America stood around shivering, waiting for the final countdown. New Mexico State University engineering students Gerardo Martinez, 25, and Armando Muñoz, 21, watched anxiously. They had an apple-sized plastic payload inside the rocket with a small camera attached. The battery life on the camera was good for a little more than two hours. They had been out at the pad at

T

From left, New Mexico State University engineering students Gerardo Martinez, 25, and Amando Muñoz, 21, rejoice as the rocket lifts off. The two were part of a three-person team with a research payload inside the rocket.

7 a.m. to make sure their payload was working. The launch already had been delayed once, and 9 a.m. was ticking up fast. Martinez, a graduate student in NMSU’s mechanical engineering program, and Muñoz, an undergrad who is studying aerospace engineering, were part of a three-man team testing an algorithm for free floating mass control within the walls of the rocket. “The microgravity lasts a couple of minutes,” Muñoz said, adding that the team was “trying

Obituaries

www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Brazilian folk dance, 7 p.m., the Lensic, $25-$45, 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

DOUG DREYER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Staci Matlock

Pasapick Balé Folclórico da Bahia

It’s not hard to do the math there as to what’s profitable. ... I think an ethanol plant is a farmer’s friend.” Robert Malsam

Today Partly cloudy. High 54, low 31. Page a-6

Comics a-8

Martha K. Iwaski, Sept. 29 Lineberry, Novella Avenell Stiles Jacques, Nov. 22 Michael Anthony “Elvis” Alvarez, 55, Santa Fe, Nov. 3 Angelina Delgado Martinez, Santa Fe, Nov. 10 Nila Jaramillo Haught

Lotteries a-2

Opinion a-7

Michael Ward Schaefer, 41, Santa Fe, Nov. 7 Ramon “Ray” E. Lujan, 85, Rio Rancho, Nov. 10 Mary Jo Chavez, 41, Nov. 9 Hugh Edward Hanagan, Nov. 10 Jeanette “Jen” Lisa Anaya, Santa Fe, Nov. 7 Robert Michael Sanchez, 52, Oct. 15 Page B-2, B-3

Police notes B-2

Editor: Ray Rivera, 986-3033, rrivera@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

to find a way to determine mass, the location of the center of mass and mass distribution of an object [when it is weightless].” They also hoped to capture pictures from inside the rocket as their payload floated. If the camera battery died, they would lose a part of their experiment, though not all of it. The NASA SL-8 suborbital rocket launch was the 20th vertical liftoff from Spaceport America, said David Wilson,

Sports B-5

Please see ROcKeT, Page A-4

Hopes for Michigan St. Spartans hold off Wildcats. sPORTs, B-5

Time Out c-8

Travel c-2

Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010

Report aims to fix gaps in tribal justice In some areas of Indian Country, violent crime is 20 times national average By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — A national panel of judicial and law-enforcement experts traveled the country taking comment on public safety issues on American Indian reservations, where federal statistics show the violent crime rates can be 20 times the national average. In Palm Springs, Calif., the Law and Order Commission heard about the patchwork of legal systems imposed on tribal members. In Alaska, commissioners talked with a leader who told them each of the dozens of Native women they had met that day had been raped. In Phoenix, they heard from Navajo police who said drunken drivers often travel onto the vast reservation undetected because of a lack of communication between tribal officers and outside law enforcement. What the commission came up with is a 324-page report that seeks to close gaps in public safety in tribal communities.

Please see JUsTIce, Page A-4

Three sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 317 Publication No. 596-440


A-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

NATION&WORLD

MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000

t -32.43 15,750.67 t -0.03 1,101.47

NASDAQ COMPOSITE STANDARD & POOR’S 500

s +0.13 3,919.92 t -4.20 1,767.69

In brief

Selling a holiday

WASHINGTON — Adding pressure to fix the administration’s problem-plagued health care program, former President Bill Clinton says President Barack Obama should find a way to let people keep their health coverage, even if it means changing the law. The former president, a Democrat who has helped Obama promote the 3-year-old health law says Obama should “honor the commitment that the federal government made to those people and let them keep what they got.”

Will shopping put an end to Thanksgiving Day?

Clinton to Obama: Keep the coverage

By Anne D’Innocenzio

The Associated Press

Israel halts plans for new settlements JERUSALEM — Israel’s prime minister on Tuesday abruptly halted a plan to explore the potential construction of thousands of new homes in West Bank settlements, saying it had created an “unnecessary confrontation” with the international community that threatened to weaken his campaign against Iran’s suspect nuclear program. The plan announced by Israel’s Housing Ministry earlier in the day had prompted a Palestinian threat to walk out of U.S.-brokered peace talks and drew angry criticism from officials in Washington, who said they had been blindsided by the move.

White supremacist finds out he’s black Craig Cobb, 61, who has tried to create a white enclave in tiny Leith, N.D., submitted a DNA sample to Trisha Goddard’s talk show and got the results back during a recent taping. Goddard read out the results to Cobb in front of a studio audience. “Eightysix percent European and 14 percent sub-Saharan African.” The audience erupted in cheers and laughs as a grinning Cobb began to protest. Cobb told the Bismarck Tribune on Monday that he doubted the validity of the test and said he planned to take up to three more DNA tests and publish the results.

Oldest cat fossil found in Tibet LOS ANGELES — Scientists have unearthed the oldest big cat fossil yet, suggesting the predator evolved in Asia and spread out. The nearly complete skull dug up in Tibet was estimated at 4.4 million years old — older than the big cat remains recovered from Tanzania dating to about 3.7 million years ago, the team reported. The new specimen is closely related to the snow leopard, said study leader Jack Tseng of the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The find was detailed in Wednesday’s Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. The Associated Press

The new World Trade Center tower knocked Chicago’s Willis Tower off its pedestal as the nation’s tallest building when an international panel of architects announced Tuesday that the needle atop the New York skyscraper can be counted when measuring the structure’s height. COURTESY PHOTO

One World Trade Center named tallest U.S. building By David B. Caruso

The Associated Press

N

EW YORK — They set out to build the tallest skyscraper in the world — a giant that would rise a symbolic 1,776 feet from the ashes of ground zero. Those aspirations of global supremacy fell by the wayside long ago, but New York won a consolation prize Tuesday when an international architectural panel said it would recognize One World Trade Center as the tallest skyscraper in the United States. The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, considered a world authority on supersized skyscrapers, announced its decision at simultaneous news conferences in New York and Chicago, home to the 1,451-foot Willis Tower, which is being dethroned as the nation’s tallest building. Measuring the height of a building would seem to be a simple thing, but in the case of the new World Trade Center tower it is complicated by the 408-foot-tall needle atop the skyscraper’s roof. The council’s verdict rested on a conclusion that the needle should be counted as part of the building’s total height. Without it, the tower would be just 1,368 feet tall, the same height as the original World Trade Center. That would make it smaller than not only the Willis, but also a 1,397-foot apartment building being built a short subway ride away near Central Park. Speaking at his office in New York, council chairman Timothy Johnson, an architect at the global design firm NBBJ, said the decision by the 25-member height commit-

Contact us The Santa Fe New Mexican Locally owned and independent, serving New Mexico for 164 years

UNIQUE THIS WEEK

Home delivery

Wednesday, Nov. 13

986-3010 1-800-873-3372

circulation@sfnewmexican.com

Owner

Publisher

Ginny Sohn

Ray Rivera

Tamara Hand

Classified line ads

Editor

Al Waldron

Operations Director

Mike Reichard Circulation Director

William A. Simmons

Advertising Director

Michael Campbell

Technology Director

Tom Cross

Group Controller

Secretary/ Treasurer

986-3000 1-800-873-3362

classad@sfnewmexican.com

Browse or place ads at sfnmclassifieds.com Fax: 984-1785 Billing: 995-3869

Obituaries 986-3000

classad@sfnewmexican.com After 5 p.m. death notices: 986-3035

Printed on recycled paper

Advertising

995-3852 1-800-873-3362

To reach us

The Santa Fe New Mexican P.O. Box 2048 Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 Main switchboard: 983-3303 PUBLICATION NO. 596-440 PUBLISHED DAILY AND PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT ONE NEW MEXICAN PLAZA, SANTA FE, NM. POSTMASTER: SEND ALL ADDRESS CHANGES TO CIRCULATION, P.O. BOX 2048, SANTA FE, NM 87504 ©2013 THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN ISSN-1938-4068

When architect Daniel Libeskind won a public design competition for the World Trade Center master plan in 2003, his original vision was for a twisting, angular spire filled with hanging gardens. Height was part of the appeal. At the time, his design of 1,776 feet would have made the so-called “Freedom Tower” the tallest skyscraper in the world. If they were to stand side by side, the Willis Tower would probably appear to be the larger building to most bystanders. In fact, someone standing in the Willis Tower’s observation deck would have to look down to see One World Trade Center’s roof. This marks the second time that the Willis Tower has lost a “tallest” title in a disputed decision. Back in 1996, the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat sparked controversy when it declared the Petronas Twin Towers in Malaysia taller than the Willis. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel seemed nonplussed with Tuesday’s decision. “I would just say to all the experts gathered in one room: If it looks like an antenna, acts like an antenna, then guess what? It is an antenna,” he told reporters. The new World Trade Center tower remains under construction and is expected to open next year. When it does, it will be the world’s third-largest skyscraper, behind the 2,717-foot Burj Khalifa in Dubai and the 1,972-foot Makkah Royal Clock Tower Hotel in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Even that distinction may not last: Six even taller towers are under construction in Asia.

Calendar Daily and Sunday: $51.25, 3 months EZpay: $12.95 per month Weekend paper: $41.55, 3 months If your paper is not delivered by 6 a.m., please report by 10 a.m. to Circulation at 986-3010 or 1-800-873-3372.

Robin Martin

tee had more “tense moments” than usual, given the skyscraper’s importance as a patriotic symbol. “I was here on 9/11. I saw the buildings come down,” he said. Over the past few months, the council had hinted that it might be open to changing its standards for measuring ultra-tall buildings, given a trend toward developers adding “vanity height” to towers with huge, decorative spires. But the council also has a history of disallowing antennas in height calculations. The Empire State Building’s landmark 204-foot needle isn’t counted in its height measurement. Neither are the two TV antennas atop the Willis Tower, which had been the country’s tallest building since it was completed — and named the Sears Tower — in 1974. But in the end, there was unanimity on the committee that One World Trade Center’s reach for 1,776 feet — a number that echoes the founding year of the United States — was an artistic architectural expression. “This was a quest to put something meaningful and symbolic on that site because of the horrible history of what happened on that site,” said Antony Wood, the council’s executive director. Tourists photographing the skyscraper Tuesday mostly agreed that when it comes to height measurements, this spire should count. “For any other building, no. But for this one, yes,” said Cary Bass, of Lake Mary, Fla., as he waited to enter the National Sept. 11 Memorial at the new skyscraper’s feet. “Those people deserve it,” he said, referring to the attack victims.

NEW YORK — Last Thanksgiving Day, Kimberly Mudge Via’s mother, sister and nieces left in the middle of their meals to head for the mall. Now, Via says she’ll never host Thanksgiving dinner for her relatives again. “They barely finished,” says the 28-year-old who lives in Boone, N.C. “They thanked me and left their plates on the counter.” That scene could become more common in homes across the country. Black Friday shopping, the annual rite of passage on the day after Thanksgiving, continues to creep further into the holiday as more stores open their doors a day early. It’s a break with tradition. Black Friday, which typically is the year’s biggest shopping day, for a decade has been considered the official start to the busy holiday buying season. Stores open in the wee hours of the morning with special deals called doorbusters and stay open late into the evening. Meanwhile, Thanksgiving and Christmas remained the only two days a year that stores were closed. Now Thanksgiving is slowly becoming just another shopping day. Over the past few years, major retailers, including Target and Toys R Us, slowly have pushed opening times into Thanksgiving night to one-up each other and compete for holiday dollars. Some initially resisted, saying that they wanted their employees to be able to spend time with their families. This year, more than a dozen major retailers are opening on Thanksgiving, including a handful like Macy’s, J.C. Penney and Staples that are doing it for the first time. The Gap, which operates its Old Navy, Gap and Banana Republic, is opening half of its stores on Thanksgiving morning. Roger Beahm, professor of marketing at the Wake Forest University School of Business in WinstonSalem, N.C., expects that it’s just a matter of time — he estimates five years — before most chains open all day on Thanksgiving. As for Christmas, he says that day is still sacred among shoppers. “The floodgates have opened,” Beahm says. “People will turn Thanksgiving Day shopping into a tradition as they historically have on the day after Thanksgiving … And stores don’t want to be left behind.” Indeed, retailers say they’re just doing what shoppers want. And they know that opening earlier gives them a chance to be the first to grab shoppers’ dollars. That’s an important opportunity for chains, which can make up to 40 percent of their annual revenue during the last two months of the year.

advertising@sfnewmexican.com Fax: 984-1785 Legal ads: 986-3000

Newsroom 986-3035

Please recycle

News tips 986-3035 newsroom@sfnewmexican.com

Business news: 986-3034 Capitol Bureau: 986-3037 City desk: 986-3035

Pasatiempo: 995-3839 Sports: 986-3045, 1-800-743-1186

Letters to the editor

986-3063 letters@sfnewmexican.com P.O. Box 2048, Santa Fe, N.M., 87504-2048

Online 986-3076

CAROLYN KASTNER AT O’KEEFFE MUSEUM: The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum curator lectures on her book Jaune Quick-to-See Smith: An American Modernist, 6 p.m. 123 Grant Ave. CULTIVATING THE EMPTY FIELD: ZEN MASTER HONGZHI: Upaya dharma talk presented by Joshin Brian Byrnes at Upaya Zen Center, 5:30-6:30 p.m. 1404 Cerro Gordo Road. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: At 5:30 p.m. at the Santa Fe Public Library, Main Branch, 145 Washington Ave., “Understanding the Language of Dreams” is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. The talk is free. Reservations required. Call 982-3214. FREE VACCINATIONS: From 10 a.m. until noon at Somos Un Pueblo Unido, 1804 Espinacitas St,the Santa Fe County Community Services Department and the New Mexico Department of Health are sponsoring a free flu and pneumonia vaccination clinic. LOCAL POWER AND WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT IN A CONFLICT CONTEXT: PALESTINIAN WOMEN CONTESTING POWER IN CHAOS: A lecture by Islah Jad of Birzeit University, Palestine at School

Lotteries for Advanced Research, noon, 660 Garcia St. JAN ZIMMERMAN: At 5 p.m., the author discusses her book Social Media Marketing for Dummies at Op. Cit. Bookstore, 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101, Sanbusco Center. NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE BETTY WILLIAMS & YOUTH UNITED COMMUNITY EVENT: Betty Williams will be interviewed by students and be awarding Hooked on Books Reading Awards at the Scottish Rite Center, 6 p.m., 463 Paseo de Peralta. SEX, WINE, AND WAR: At 3:15 p.m. at St. John’s College, 1160 Camino de Cruz Blanca, tutor Lynda Myers presents and introduction to Aristophanic comedy through its depiction in ancient Greek art. YESTERDAY AND TODAY: LAND GRANTS, 19TH-CENTURY FEDERAL POLICY, AND NEW MEXICO POVERTY: From noon to 1 p.m., a Brainpower and Brownbags Lecture with Mike Scarborough at the New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., enter through the museum’s Washington Avenue doors.

NIGHTLIFE

Wednesday, Nov. 13 CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Flamenco guitarist Joaquin

Gallegos, 7 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: The Daniel Murphy Band, folk rock, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Latin fervor with Santastico, 8 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. LA CASA SENA CANTINA: Best of Broadway, piano and vocals, 6-10 p.m., 125 E. Palace Ave. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Omar Villanueva, Latin fusion, 7 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. THE PANTRY RESTAURANT: Acoustic guitar and vocals with Gary Vigil, 6 p.m., 1820 Cerrillos Road. TINY’S: 505 Electric Jam with Nick Wimett and M.C. Clymer, 9 p.m., 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117.

GoLF coUrSES QUAIL RUN GOLF COURSE: 3101 Old Pecos Trail. Website is www.quailrunsantafe.com or call 986-2200. TOWA GOLF COURSE AT BUFFALO THUNDER RESORT & CASINO: 17746 U.S. 84/285. Website is www. Buffalothunderresort.com or call 455-9000. MARTY SANCHEZ LINKS DE SANTA FE: 205 Caja del Rio Road. Website is www. linksdesantafe.com or call 955-4470.

roadrunner 1–31–32–34–35 Top prize: $105,000

Pick 3 8–5–1 Top prize: $500

Mega Millions 20–30–32–42–71 MB 15 Megaplier 5 Top prize: $149 million

Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035. SANTA FE COUNRY CLUB: 4360 Country Club Road, No. A. Website is www. santafecountryclub.com or call 471-0601. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service @sfnewmexican.com.


nATIon & World

Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Hawaii Senate OKs gay marriage bill

Airlines, U.S., reach deal on merger

By Oskar Garcia

The Associated Press

By David Koenig

The Associated Pres

DALLAS — American Airlines and US Airways reached a deal with the government that lets the two form the world’s biggest airline and opens up more room at key U.S. airports for low-cost carriers. The settlement announced Tuesday — if approved by a federal judge — would end a fight with the U.S. Justice Department and head off a courtroom showdown later this month. It preserves hub airports in Phoenix, Philadelphia, Charlotte and four other cities for at least three years. And it caps a series of mergers that have already eliminated four big U.S. airlines and stoked fear about higher travel prices. For American, the nation’s third-biggest airline, the deal lets parent AMR Corp. exit bankruptcy protection, repay creditors and reward shareholders. At US Airways, the No. 5 U.S. carrier, shareholders will own 28 percent of the new company, employees stand to get more pay, and top executives will realize their dreams of running an airline even bigger than United or Delta. The Justice Department said it extracted the largest divestitures ever in an airline merger. Attorney General Eric Holder said the agreement would ensure more competition on nonstop and connecting routes throughout the country. For American and US Airways customers, they’ll get reciprocal frequent-flier benefits in January and, executives said, more service to more places eventually. Doug Parker, the US Airways CEO who will run the new airline, even suggested that customer service will improve because workers will share in a more prosperous industry. William Baer, assistant attorney general for Justice’s antitrust division, said that even a few more gates and flights for low-fare carriers would help consumers. He said that when Southwest picked up slots at Newark, N.J., as part of the 2010 merger of United and Continental, it had a ripple effect that reduced fares on many routes. The airlines were close to finishing the merger in August until the Justice Department and several states filed an antitrust lawsuit to block the deal, saying it would reduce competition on hundreds of routes around the country and lead to higher consumer prices. A trial was scheduled to begin Nov. 25. To avoid the uncertainty of a trial, American and US Airways agreed to give up about 15 percent of their takeoff and landing rights at Reagan National Airport near Washington — they’ll still be the biggest airline there — and a smaller number of slots at LaGuardia Airport in New York. They also agreed to give up two gates each at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, Los Angeles International, Boston’s Logan Airport, Dallas Love Field and Miami. That could help competitors grow at airports where gates are in short supply. And they promised to maintain flights to cities in six states that sided with the Justice Department. The settlement still needs the approval of a federal judge in Washington, but that is expected to be a formality, and the companies expect to close their deal in the first half of December. In afternoon trading, shares of US Airways Group Inc. rose 25 cents to $23.52, which would make the post-merger company worth more than $16 billion. AMR shares, which trade only over the counter, jumped 6 percent to $12. Shares of United, Delta, Southwest and JetBlue also climbed. When the deal closes, American and US Airways will begin coordinating prices and schedules as if they were one.

InsIde u What merger means for air travelers. TrAvel, C-2 u Sunport could lose some Southwest flights. loCAl, B-1

A-3

Survivors carry clothes along a road at typhoon-ravaged Tacloban, Philippines, on Tuesday. Four days after Typhoon Haiyan struck the eastern Philippines, assistance is only just beginning to arrive. AARON FAVILA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Aid operations pick up pace in Philippines Eight crushed to death amid looting By Jim Gomez and Kristen Gelineau The Associated Press

TACLOBAN, Philippines — Relief operations in this typhoon-devastated region of the Philippines picked up pace Wednesday, but the minimal amounts of water, food and medical supplies reaching the hardest-hit areas were causing increasingly desperate survivors to take matters into their own hands. In the first reported deaths as a result of looting, eight people were crushed to death when a wall collapsed as they and thousands of others stormed a rice warehouse on Leyte Island, the worsthit region by Friday’s storm, said National Food Authority spokesman Rex Estoperez. The looters in Alangalang municipality Tuesday carted away up to 100,000 sacks of rice, he said. Since the storm, people have broken into homes, malls and garages, where they have stripped the shelves of food, water and other goods. Authorities have struggled to

stop the looting. There have been unconfirmed reports of armed gangs involved in some instances. The incident shows the urgency in getting food and water distributed to the disaster zone. Aviation authorities said two more airports in the region had reopened, allowing for more aid flights. U.S. Brig Gen. Paul Kennedy said that later Wednesday his troops would install equipment at Tacloban airport to allow planes to land at night. Tacloban city was almost completely destroyed in Friday’s typhoon and has become the main relief hub. “You are not just going to see Marines and a few planes and some helicopters,” Kennedy said. “You will see the entire Pacific Command respond to this crisis.” A Norwegian ship carrying supplies left from Manila, while an Australian air force transport plane took off from Canberra carrying a medical team. British and American navy vessels are also en route to the region. The damaged airport on Tacloban, a coastal city of 220,000, houses makeshift clinics, and thousands of people looking for a flight out. A doctor here said supplies of antibiotics and anesthetics arrived

Tuesday for the first time. “Until then, patients had to endure the pain,” said Dr. Victoriano Sambale. The winds leveled tens of thousands of homes in the region, which is used to typhoons. In some places, tsunami-like storm surges swept up to one mile inland, causing more destruction and loss of life. At least 580,000 people have been displaced. Most of the death and destruction appears concentrated on the islands of Samar and Leyte. The damaged infrastructure and bad communications links made a conclusive death toll difficult to estimate. The official toll from a national disaster agency rose to 1,883 on Tuesday. President Benigno Aquino III told CNN in a televised interview that the toll could be closer to 2,000 or 2,500, lower than an earlier estimate from two officials on the ground who said they feared as many as 10,000 might be dead.

473-9600

Sat November 16 5 pm

of Santa Fe

Spanish - French - Italian 839 Paseo de Peralta

Ken Collins

FINE FURNITURE

MATTRESSES • UPHOLSTERY • PATIO FURNITURE

504 W. Cordova Rd., Santa Fe • Just up from Trader Joe’s • 982-5555 Mon, Fri, & Sat 9-7, Tues-Thur 9-6, Sun 1 1-6 • leishmansofsantafe.com

De Bella Collectibles British Family Heirlooms

PREMIER

Earrings & Pendant

PRECIOUS METALS

BUY • SELL • TRADE

Coins ~ Currency ~ Gold ~ Jewelry 855A Cerrillos (next to Who’s Donuts) 505-989-7680 • M-F 10-5, Sat 11-4 www.premierpreciousmetals.com

GUARANTEED LOWEST RETAIL PRICE IN THE USA.

Conversational Classes 992-0418

505-982-6256 • www.mcpartlonroofing.com

Santa Fe’s Local Source Since 1997

Select Stressless® Ambassador, Consul, or Diplomat recliners.

is taking orders for Thankgiving Dinner www.walterburkecatering.com

Burma to Myanmar

Save your roof with Membrane Technology

$4OO OFF

O NOFFER E V. 2 NDS 5th

Walter Burke Catering

Travel Bug

Brian McPartlon Roofing LLC.

HONOLULU — The state Senate passed a bill Tuesday legalizing gay marriage, putting Hawaii a signature away from becoming a same-sex wedding destination. Gov. Neil Abercrombie, who called lawmakers to a special session for the bill and has vocally supported gay marriage, said in a statement he will sign the measure. It will allow thousands of gay couples living in Hawaii and even more tourists to marry in the state starting Dec. 2. “I look forward to signing this significant piece of legislation, which provides marriage equity and fully recognizes and protects religious freedoms,” Abercrombie said. President Barack Obama praised the bill’s passage, saying the affirmation of freedom and equality makes the country stronger. “I’ve always been proud to have been born in Hawaii, and today’s vote makes me even prouder,” Obama said. Senators passed the bill 19-4 with two lawmakers excused. Cheers erupted inside and outside the gallery when the vote was taken, with a smattering of boos. Senate President Donna Mercado Kim, who voted against the bill, banged her gavel and told members of the public to quiet down. More than half the chamber’s lawmakers spoke in

support of the bill, with many urging the public to come together to heal divisions within the community. “This is nothing more than the expansion of aloha in Hawaii,” said Sen. J. Kalani English, a Democrat from Maui. Sen. Sam Slom, the chamber’s only Republican, said the government should stay out of legislating marriage. “People have differences, and you can’t legislate morality. You can try, but you can’t do it,” Slom said before voting against the bill. An estimate from a University of Hawaii researcher says the law will boost tourism by $217 million over the next three years, as Hawaii becomes an outlet for couples in other states, bringing ceremonies, and honeymoons to the islands. The study’s author has said Hawaii would benefit from demand for gay weddings, with couples spending $166 million over those three years on ceremonies and honeymoons. The Senate took up the bill a second time because of changes made in the House, where the bill was amended and eventually passed. The House amendments delayed the dates ceremonies could begin, slightly expanded an exemption for clergy and religious organizations, and removed regulations determining how children of samesex couples could qualify for Native Hawaiian benefits.

NO W SAT OPE N U 11a RDAY m-4 pm

Contact Joe DeBella: 505.231.5357 • joseph.debella505@gmail.com

Multimedia Graphic/Web Designer Multimedia Graphic/Web Designer needed for ad layout for the pages of The Santa Fe New Mexican, its magazines and its website.

Full Time/Full Benefits

Pre-order your Holiday favorites or book your party today! Pastry gift baskets & gift certificates available 505-988-1111 • 401 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe

info@SwissBakerySantaFe.com SwissBakerySantaFe.com

Medical/dental insurance w/dependent & domestic partner coverage available • Paid vacation • Paid sick days & holidays, personal day • 401K • Paid term life insurance

Requirements

• High competence with Mac platform Adobe CS Suite • Competent in HTML, CSS and web design • Accurate, fast keyboard skills • Flexible personality & good sense of humor • Can-do, problem-solving attitude • Excellent memory & detailed-oriented • Bend, lift & carry 25 pounds regularly

Apply

by cover letter and resume to: Tamara Hand The Santa Fe New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe 87504; or by email to: thand@sfnewmexican.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

You turn to us. 164 Years of Trust and Reliability in the Santa Fe Community


A-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Ethanol: Corn prices doubled after mandate HistoRy of EtHAnol policy

Continued from Page A-1 warming is encouraging a farming practice that actually could worsen it. That’s because plowing into untouched grassland releases carbon dioxide that has been naturally locked in the soil. It also increases erosion and requires farmers to use fertilizers and other industrial chemicals. In turn, that destroys native plants and wipes out wildlife habitats. It appeared so damaging that scientists warned that America’s corn-for-ethanol policy would fail as an antiglobal warming strategy if too many farmers plowed over virgin land. The Obama administration argued that would not happen. But the administration didn’t set up a way to monitor whether it actually happened. It did. More than 1.2 million acres of grassland have been lost since the federal government required that gasoline be blended with increasing amounts of ethanol, an Associated Press analysis of satellite data found. Plots that were wild grass or pastureland seven years ago are now corn and soybean fields. That’s in addition to the 5 million acres of farmland that had been aside for conservation — more than Yellowstone, Everglades and Yosemite National Parks combined — that have vanished since Obama took office. In South Dakota, more than 370,000 acres of grassland have been uprooted and farmed from since 2006. In Edmunds County, a rural community about two hours north of the capital, Pierre, at least 42,000 acres of grassland have become cropland — one of the largest turnovers in the region. Malsam runs a 13-square-mile family farm there. He grows corn, soybeans and wheat, then rents out his grassland for grazing. Each year, the family converts another 160 acres from grass to cropland. Chemicals kill the grass. Machines remove the rocks. Then tractors plow it three times to break up the sod and prepare it for planting. Scattered among fields of 7-foot tall corn and thigh-high soybeans, some stretches of grassland still exist. Cattle munch on some grass. And “prairie potholes” — natural ponds ranging from small pools to larger lakes — support a smattering of ducks, geese, pelicans and herons. Yet within a mile of Malsam’s farm, federal satellite data show, more than 300 acres of grassland have been converted to soybeans and corn since 2006. Nebraska has lost at least 830,000 acres of grassland, a total larger than New York City, Los Angeles and Dallas combined. “It’s great to see farmers making money. It hasn’t always been that way,” said Craig Cox of the Environmental Working Group. He advocates for clean energy but opposes the ethanol mandate. “If we’re going to push the land this hard, we really need to intensify conservation in lockstep with production, and that’s just not happening,” he said. Jeff Lautt, CEO of Poet, which operates ethanol refineries across the country, including in South Dakota, said it’s up to farmers how to use their land. “The last I checked, it is still an open market. And farmers that own land are free to farm their land to the extent they think they can make money on it or whatever purpose they need,” he said. Yet Chris Wright, a professor at South Dakota State University who has studied land conversion, said, “The conversation about land preservation should start now before it becomes a serious problem.” Wright reviewed the AP’s methodology for determining land conversion. The AP’s analysis used government satellite data to count how much grassland existed in 2006 in each county, then compare

A combine works its way through one of Robert Malsam’s fields near Roscoe, S.D. Malsam nearly went broke in the 1980s when corn was cheap. Now that prices are high and he can make a profit, he’s not about to stop ripping up prairie land to plant corn. DOUG DREYER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

each plot of land to corresponding satellite data from 2012. The data from the U.S. Geological Survey and the Department of Agriculture identify corn and soybean fields. That allowed the AP to see which plots of grassland became cropland. To reach its conservative estimate of 1.2 million acres lost, the AP excluded grassland that had been set aside under the government’s Conservation Reserve Program, in which old farmland is allowed to return to a near-natural state. The AP used half-acre sections of earth and excluded tiny tracts that became corn, which experts said were most likely outliers. Corn prices more than doubled in the years after Congress passed the ethanol mandate in 2007. Now, Malsam said, farmers can make about $500 an acre planting corn. His farm has just become profitable in the past five years, allowing him and his wife, Theresa, to build a new house on the farmstead. Four miles south, signs at each end of the town of Roscoe announce a population of only 324. But the town, which relies in part on incomes like Malsam’s, supports a school, a restaurant, a bank, a grocery store and a large farm machinery store. The manager of the equipment dealership, Kaleb Rodgers, said the booming farm economy has helped the town and the dealership prosper. The business with 28 employees last year sold a dozen combines at about $300,000 apiece, plus more than 60 tractors worth between $100,000 and $300,000, he said. “If we didn’t have any farmers we wouldn’t have a community here. We wouldn’t have a business. I wouldn’t be sitting here. I wouldn’t be able to feed my family,” Rodgers said. “I think ethanol is a very good thing.” Jim Faulstich, president of the South Dakota Grasslands Coalition, said the nation’s ethanol and crop insurance policies have encouraged the transformation of the land. Faulstich, who farms and ranches in central South Dakota near Highmore, said much of the land being converted is not suited to crop production, and South Dakota’s strong winds and rains will erode the topsoil. “I guess a good motto would be to farm the best and leave the rest,” he said.

August 2005: President George W. Bush signs the Energy Policy Act of 2005, requiring oil companies to add ethanol to their gasoline. Corn is selling for $1.95 a bushel. January 2007: Bush calls on Congress to require production of 35 billion gallons of renewable and alternative fuels in 2017. It would be a huge increase in the ethanol mandate. Corn is selling for $3.05 a bushel. February 2007: Barack Obama, the junior senator from Illinois, declares his candidacy for president. In his speech, he hails “homegrown, alternative fuels like ethanol.” December 2007: Congress passes the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. Bush signs it into law. It expands the renewable fuels standard to require 36 billion gallons of ethanol and other fuels to be blended into gasoline, diesel and jet fuel by 2022. Corn is selling for $3.77. January 2008: A study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences predicts that the ethanol mandate will increase nitrogen pollution in rivers, worsening the Gulf of Mexico’s dead zone. February 2008: A study in the journal Science warns that if U.S. biofuel policy encourages farmers to plow into untouched grassland or farmland that has been set aside for conservation, it will undermine efforts to reduce greenhouse gases. That’s because plowing into grassland releases carbon dioxide. The Department of Energy responds that the new fuel standard can be met without plowing into any conservation land. 2008: The amount of farmland set aside for conservation decreases. About 34 million acres are enrolled in the government’s voluntary Conservation Reserve Program, a drop of about 2 million from 2007. May 2009: President Obama’s EPA takes the first steps toward implementing the new ethanol mandate. 2009: Enrollment in the Conservation Reserve Program falls again, this time by nearly 1 million acres. March 2010: After lobbying from the agriculture industry, EPA publishes its final rule on the new ethanol mandate. The new analysis shows ethanol is 21 percent better than gasoline, slightly better than required by law. As part of the analysis, the government assumes corn prices will rise only slightly, to $3.59 a bushel, by 2022. August 2010: Corn sells for $3.65. 2010: For the first time on record, ethanol is the No. 1 use for American corn, eclipsing livestock feed. Some 2.4 million more acres disappear from the Conservation Reserve Program. February 2011: Corn sells for $5.65 a bushel. 2011: Farmland acreage set aside for conservation continues to fall, this time by 173,000 acres. About 4.8 million acres have been lost since 2006. January 2012: A 30-year-old federal subsidy for ethanol expires, along with a tariff on imported ethanol. Corn sells for $6.07. 2012: Another 1.5 million acres of conservation land disappears, bringing the total to more than 6 million since 2006. March 2013: A new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences uses satellite data to show that rising corn prices have encouraged farmers to convert grassland to cropland, which releases carbon dioxide into the air. The Renewable Fuel Association responds that “the extremely high rate of error associated with the satellite imagery” makes the study’s results “highly questionable and irrelevant to the biofuels policy debate.” Corn sells for $7.13. May 2013: Des Moines Water Works in Iowa reports historic levels of nitrates in the drinking-water supply, blames agricultural fertilizer. July 2013: The NOAA announces the size of the Gulf of Mexico dead zone has increased. August 2013: EPA finalizes renewable fuel standard for 2013, requiring 16.55 billion gallons of biofuels, mostly ethanol, to be consumed in U.S. this year. Corn sells for $6.21.

Rocket: ‘We’re part of something important’ Continued from Page A-1 communications director. It was the 12th launch at the spaceport for UP Aerospace, a Denverbased company that specializes in launching SpaceLoft rockets with reusable launch hardware systems. Justin Lisonbee of Albuquerque waited for the launch with his four children. Their friends and former Denver neighbors, Jerry and Tracey Larson, started UP Aerospace. The family had helped wrap the rocket in an insulated blanket the night before. Now they wanted to see it fly. “I used to watch Jerry building rockets in his garage,” Lisonbee said. Denny Muñoz, who cooks breakfasts for Holiday Inn Express customers in Truth or Consequences, the nearest city, joined the group waiting for the rocket launch in the pre-dawn hours. It was her first launch at the spaceport. She hopes to see a lot more. “I’m going to be their first tour guide,” a confident Muñoz said. “They don’t know it yet, but I am.” Called a “Flight Opportunities” program launch, NASA paid about $600,000 for the flight and made space available on the rocket for research payloads. The SL-8 on Tuesday carried payloads for NASA, two New Mexico universities, the Federal Aviation Administration, the U.S. Department of Defense and the

private company SatWest. Schafer Corp. in Albuquerque integrated the payloads into calculations for the rocket’s flight. “It is an art to balance and check all the payloads,” Wilson said. Laguduva Kubendran, head of NASA’s Flight Opportunities program, said the agency puts out a call for payload applications for one to two flights a year. The program’s goals are to further space technology and facilitate the industry. He said NASA has about 120 projects in the payload pipeline. How soon those payloads will get into space depends on funding, he said. Funding continues to plague other parts of Spaceport America’s endeavor to become the nation’s prime commercial spaceport. A new operations office and emergency response center were just completed. Managers need to improve 23 miles of the southern access road from Las Cruces, which ultimately will cost more than $14 million, all from public sources. And the New Mexico Spaceport Authority needs to come up with funding for a visitors center in Truth or Consequences and a visitors complex at the spaceport to fulfill its promise as a major tourist attraction. “We’re working on private loans for the visitors centers,” said Christine Anderson, executive director of Spaceport America. The spaceport’s plans will get a boost if Virgin Galactic is

finally able to begin commercial flights in New Mexico next fall. At about 9:14 a.m., Martinez and Armando Muñoz looked a little resigned to the idea that their camera would be dead. “We have two minutes left on the battery,” Martinez said. But the countdown commenced, and at 9:15 a.m., the rocket lifted off. It roared into the air, racing 383,000 feet above the Earth, a little more than 72 miles, before arcing and falling back down. Martinez, Muñoz and the others cheered. Then the two engineering students gave each other a high five. Regardless of what happens to the camera, they hope to learn something

from the payload that took them a couple of years to put together. “It feels like we’re part of something important,” Muñoz said. “It makes all the late nights and allnighters worth it.” White Sands Missile Range staff helped the scientists and engineers track the trajectory so a helicopter could retrieve the rocket and its payloads 25 miles from the launch point. Once the payloads are retrieved and returned to researchers, they will begin their work gleaning information from the data. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.

Students, journalists and other bystanders wait for a rocket launch Tuesday at Spaceport America in Southern New Mexico. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Justice: Report proposes tribes get more control Continued from Page A-1 The report, “Strengthening Justice for Native America: A roadmap,” was released Tuesday, a day ahead of the White House Tribal Nations Conference. The recommendations now go to Congress and the president. Among the report’s 40 recommendations is giving tribes more control over crime and justice on their reservations, including an expansion of authority to prosecute non-Indians. The Tribal Law and Order Act and provisions of the Violence Against Women Act do that to an extent. But Commission Chairman Troy Eid said federal laws and policies overall remain outdated and stand in the way of making tribal communities safer. “If you can imagine a world where tribes have that authority, and you respect federal constitutional rights … it starts to be a solvable problem,” he said. “People know what to do.” The commission has set a 10-year goal to implement the recommendations, a date that would mark 100 years since American Indians were granted the right to vote. Some of the recommendations will require acts of Congress, while others, such as requiring federal officials to testify in tribal court cases, can be implemented through policy changes, Eid said. U.S. Department of Justice spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle said the department shares the commission’s commitment to strengthening public safety systems on reservations and recognizes that more needs to be done to combat crime. The agency has prioritized Indian Country cases in the past few years and built on partnerships with tribes. “We look forward to studying the recommendations and working with stakeholders on solutions that can address the most challenging public safety issues confronting Native American communities,” Hornbuckle said. The nine-member commission was established through the Tribal Law and Order Act, which expanded the sentencing authority of tribal courts that meet certain criteria; allowed for the appointment of special U.S. attorneys to prosecute violent crimes on reservation land; and revamped training for reservation police officers. The report touches on that law but also looks at grant funding for tribes, victim protection, policing Indian Country, tribal court systems that and educational services for tribal youth incarcerated in federal facilities. One chapter of the report is dedicated to Alaska, a state with about 230 Native villages that was exempt from federal legislation to combat crime in Indian Country. Commissioner Jefferson Keel, a former president of the National Congress of American Indians, said those carve-outs should be eliminated, with Alaska Native communities given the ability to administer court systems that would instill respect for the law. “Justice should not be tainted by race,” he said. NCAI spokeswoman Melinda Warner said what she found interesting was that the federal government has provided almost no education funding for juveniles in federal lockups, or resources for rehabilitation. She said the benefit of the report is knowledge about the shortfalls in Indian Country. “Without knowing exactly what’s going on, we can’t adequately fix it,” she said.

Drilling: Lawsuit describes ban as unconstitutional Continued from Page A-1 “But for the ordinance, JAY and Yates would seek to lease their oil and gas estate to a corporation for the purposes of exploring for and extracting oil and natural gas, or otherwise seek to extract these minerals themselves,” the suit says. Vermillion “would seek to lease her oil and gas estate to a corporation for the purposes of exploring for and extracting the oil and natural gas” but can’t because of the drilling ban. The Independent Petroleum Association has at least one member who holds valid oil and gas leases in Mora County and would like to drill there, according to the lawsuit. The ordinance says, “The People of Mora County recognize that water is essential for the life, prosperity, sustainability, and health of their community and that damage to natural groundwater and surface water sources imposes great tangible loss, to the People, natural communities and ecosystems of Mora County, not just for today but for future generations. The People of Mora County recognize that they may be forced, without their consent, to endure or attempt to repair harm inflicted on their environment and their vital water supply, which they have no equivalent governing authority to prevent under current state and federal law.” However, the lawsuit claims the “true purpose” of the county law is not to protect the water, but to stop the “lawful development of oil and natural gas” and to ban hydraulic fracturing in the county. “If defendants’ true goal was to protect surface and groundwater supplies within the county, the ordinance would address other industries that are known sources of water pollution, such as the agricultural industry,” the lawsuit argues. Mora was the first county in the United States to impose an outright ban on all drilling. Shortly before that vote, the San Miguel County Commission rejected a similar drilling ban. However, that county is considering an ordinance that would outlaw the practice of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.” That’s a controversial process that uses high-pressure fluids through well-bore holes to force fractures in shale and other rock formations. It allows oil and gas trapped in the rock to flow out. In 2008, Santa Fe County, in response to a Texas company’s plan to drill in the Galisteo Basin, adopted a law that doesn’t actually outlaw drilling, but places enough restrictions that those in the oil industry have said it amounts to a ban. Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.


NATION & WORLD

Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Demand crashes website showing stolen Munich art By Kirsten Grieshaber The Associated Press

BERLIN — A website featuring artworks from among a massive trove discovered in a Munich apartment crashed Tuesday because of heavy traffic, officials said, as a handful of potential heirs came forward to claim art possibly looted by the Nazis. Authorities posted 25 paintings from the more than 1,400 paintings, drawings and other works discovered in the apartment of 80-year-old Cornelius

Docs urge wider use of cholesterol medication By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press

The nation’s first new guidelines in a decade for preventing heart attacks and strokes call for twice as many Americans — one-third of all adults — to consider taking cholesterollowering statin drugs. The guidelines, issued Tuesday by the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology, are a big change. They offer doctors a new formula for estimating a patient’s risk that includes many factors besides a high cholesterol level, the main focus now. The formula includes age, gender, race and factors such as whether someone smokes. The guidelines for the first time take aim at strokes, not just heart attacks. The definition of high cholesterol isn’t changing, but the treatment goal is. Instead of aiming for a specific number, using whatever drugs get a patient there, the advice stresses statins such as Lipitor and Zocor and identifies four groups of people they help the most. “The emphasis is to try to treat more appropriately,” said Dr. Neil Stone, the Northwestern University doctor who headed the cholesterol guideline panel. “We’re going to give statins to those who are the most likely to benefit.” Doctors say the new approach will limit how many people with low heart risks are put on statins simply because of a cholesterol number. Yet under the new advice, 33 million Americans — 44 percent of men and 22 percent of women — would meet the threshold to consider taking a statin. Under the current guidelines, statins are recommended for only about 15 percent of adults. Some doctors not involved in writing the guidance worry that it will be tough to understand. “It will be controversial, there’s no question about it,” said the Cleveland Clinic’s Dr. Steven Nissen. “There is concern that there will be a lot of confusion about what to do.” The government’s National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute appointed expert panels to write the new guidelines in 2008, but in June said it would leave drafting them to the Heart Association and College of Cardiology. Roughly half the cholesterol panel members have financial ties to makers of heart drugs, but panel leaders said no one with industry connections could vote on the recommendations. Heart disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. High cholesterol leads to hardened arteries that can cause a heart attack or stroke. Most cholesterol is made by the liver, so diet changes have a limited effect on it. Millions of Americans take statins, which reduce cholesterol dramatically and have other effects that more broadly lower the chances of heart trouble. Statins do the most good for: u People who already have heart disease. u Those with LDL of 190 or higher, usually because of genetic risk. u People ages 40 to 75 with Type 2 diabetes. u People ages 40 to 75 who have an estimated 10-year risk of heart disease of 7.5 percent or higher, based on the new formula. (This means that for every 100 people with a similar risk profile, seven or eight would have a heart attack or stroke within 10 years.)

Gurlitt, the son of a dealer who worked with the Nazis. But the website — www.lostart.de — was overwhelmed by interest, according to Sabine Kramer from the government-run Lost Art Internet Database. As German officials scrambled to respond to criticism that they have been slow to make details public, several families came forward to stake their claims. Among them were the heirs of Fritz Salo Glaser, a Jewish lawyer from Dresden, who a lawyer says owned 13 of the 25 paintings listed online.

Officials had initially released few details about what was found in Gurlitt’s apartment in part of an ongoing tax investigation, but the haul was known to have included works by Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso and others. Bowing to demands to release more information, the government said Monday it believes about 590 of the more than 1,400 artworks may have been stolen by the Nazis. Looted art was stolen or bought for a pittance from Jewish collectors who were forced to sell under duress during

the Third Reich. On Tuesday, Jewish groups and art experts welcomed the publication of the 25 paintings, but demanded that the rest be made public quickly. “It’s an important signal that the government intervened after the outrage about the silence surrounding the looted art,” said Deidre Berger from the American Jewish Committee in Berlin. “But it’s too little, too late. If the government is serious about this, they should get the information up in a way that everybody can access it.” Among the paintings listed

online as formerly belonging to Glaser are Otto Griebel’s Child at the Table, a watercolor featuring a red-cheeked boy with tousled blond hair, and Conrad Felixmueller’s Couple in a Landscape, painted in an expressionist style. Chris Marinello, a lawyer for the family of Paris art dealer Paul Rosenberg, said he had sent a letter of claim to Augsburg for Henri Matisse’s Woman Sitting in an Armchair and was “going through the information that has Henry Matisse’s Sitzende Frau. been released” about the newly STAATSANWALTSCHAFT AUGSBURG identified works.


A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

From left, Karan Soni, Charlie Saxton, Joe Dinicol, Maya Erskine and Jon Daly star in Amazon’s original series Betas, which debuts Nov. 2. ERICA PARISE/AMAZON STUDIOS

TELEVISION

Amazon fills its video cart with 2 new comedies By Derrik J. Lang

The Associated Press

C

ULVER CITY, Calif. — There’s a new kid on the block at Culver Studios. Inside a towering soundstage, just around the corner from where such television comedies as TBS’ Cougar Town and Showtime’s Episodes have been filmed, another production is in full swing. A set depicting a high-tech, two-story office is hosting a boozy party scene for Betas, a comedy about a quirky crew of app creators in Silicon Valley. But unlike its neighboring productions, the new series will likely never air on TVs. Instead, it will stream on them, in addition to many other devices. Betas is one of the first original series from Amazon, the online retail giant who’s taking a cue from Netflix and Hulu by producing its own shows that will only be available on Amazon Instant Video, a content service for paying members. “In the old days, I remember if you were a film actor, you didn’t do TV,” said Ed Begley Jr., who stars in Betas as a goofy, patriarchal investor. “That wall came down many years ago. Now, I think the same thing is happening on the Web.” Amazon’s move into content creation is another click in the evolution of online video, legitimized earlier this year by the success of House of Cards, the political drama from online streaming service Netflix Inc. starring Kevin Spacey. That show was nominated for a best drama Emmy, alongside the likes of AMC’s Breaking Bad, which ultimately nabbed the prize. Over the past year, Amazon.com Inc. has bolstered its streaming video library beyond typical movies and TV shows by locking down the exclusive streaming rights to such buzzed-about series as Downton Abbey, Falling Skies, Justified and Under the Dome. The Seattle-based

Newsmakers Famed British composer John Tavener dies at 69

John Tavener

LONDON — British composer John Tavener, whose career was boosted with the help of The Beatles and who often is remembered for the elegiac song performed as Princess Diana’s coffin was carried out of Westminster Abbey, died Tuesday. He was 69. Tavener’s publisher, Chester Music, said he died at his home in Child Okeford, southern England. An imposing figure, Tavener was strikingly tall — 6 feet 6 inches — thin, and wore his hair long. Tavener was born on Jan. 28, 1944, into a music-loving family in north London. Tavener studied composition at London’s Royal Academy of Music. His 1968 cantata “The Whale” brought him fame with the help of The Beatles, who released it on their Apple records label. Tavener’s later, better-known works flowed from his conversion to Orthodox Christianity and his collaboration with Mother Thekla, a Russian emigre and Orthodox nun. “He was an extraordinary British composer whose music will stand for some time,” said Daniel Jaffe, reviews editor at the BBC Music Magazine. The Associated Press

TV

1

top picks

7 p.m. on NBC Revolution As Miles (Billy Burke) and the gang try to find a way out of their dangerous situation, Rachel and Gene’s (Elizabeth Mitchell, Stephen Collins) relationship struggles take a toll on Charlie (Tracy Spiridakos). Neville (Giancarlo Esposito) takes a gamble with the Patriots in the new episode “Come Blow Your Horn.” 7 p.m. on ABC The Middle Tired of being the butt of her family’s jokes, Frankie (Patricia Heaton) busies herself with caring for a dog she rescued and finds comfort in the animal’s unconditional love. Sue (Eden Sher) makes the school volleyball team, but there’s a catch. Axl (Charlie McDermott) seeks help with his schoolwork from Brick (Atticus Shaffer) in the new episode “The Jump.” 7 p.m. on CW Arrow After arranging for A.R.G.U.S. agents to kidnap him, Amanda Waller (Cynthia AddaiRobinson) tells Diggle (David Ramsey, pictured) that Lyla (Audrey Marie Anderson) has gone missing in Moscow. Oliver and Felicity (Stephen Amell, Emily Bett Rickards) decide to join Diggle on his rescue mission to Russia, but things get complicated when Isabel (Summer

2

3

company is hoping to now build hype — and attract subscribers — with its own shows. Amazon’s foray into original programming kicks off with Friday’s debut of the political comedy Alpha House, featuring Mark Consuelos, Clark Johnson, Matt Malloy and John Goodman as senators who live together. Goodman, an acting vet with a seemingly ubiquitous presence on the big and small screen these days, didn’t notice much of a contrast between Alpha House and the other TV productions he’s worked on. “The only difference was that we could curse very heavily, but that’s the only difference,” said Goodman. Amazon reportedly spent $50 million to produce Betas and Alpha House, along with three children’s shows, for Amazon Prime, a premium service that provides free twoday shipping, streaming video and other perks to members who pay $79 a year. The company ordered full seasons after offering up 14 pilots for Amazon customers to stream and critique. “It was a super unconventional way to go through the pilot process,” said actress Maya Erskine, who plays the acerbic love interest on Betas. The first three episodes of Alpha House will be available free to all Amazon customers beginning Friday, as will the first three Betas installments when it launches a week later. The rest of the episodes will then only be available to Amazon Prime subscribers each week. That means no binge viewing — for now — a deliberate decision by Amazon to get viewers tweeting about the shows. Amazon isn’t waiting around to see if comedies Betas and Alpha House go viral, though. The company is now in search of its very own buzzworthy dramas in the mold of House of Cards and Orange is the New Black.

Today’s talk shows

Glau) shows up and insists on coming along in the new episode “Keep Your Enemies Closer.” 8 p.m. on NBC Law & Order: Special Victims Unit The issue of sexual assault in the military is in the spotlight in this new episode. A young officer (Shiri Appleby) is gang-raped, and the prime suspects are several men from her unit, but she and her commanding officer (Terry Serpico) won’t cooperate with the detectives. Amaro (Danny Pino) asks his soldier ex-wife (Laura Benanti) for help and learns some grim facts about what female service members deal with in “Military Justice.” 8 p.m. on CW The Tomorrow People Stephen and Russell (Robbie Amell, Aaron Yoo) encounter a potential new break-out during a night on the town. They report back to John and Cara (Luke Mitchell, Peyton List) about the newbie, but they want to keep a low profile. John agrees to accompany Russell home for his father’s funeral in the new episode “Sorry for Your Loss.” Mark Pellegrino also stars.

4 5

3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Matt Lauer (Today); tWitch; Kellie Pickler performs. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show People who are sick of raising their loved ones’ kids. KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren

6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan Will Arnett; Jim Gaffigan; M.I.A. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show TBS Pete Holmes Show Guest Rory Scovel. 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Will Arnett; Jim Gaffigan; M.I.A. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Comic Bill Cosby; actor Chris Pratt. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Journalist Chris Matthews. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Ac-

tor Ray Romano; actor Eddie Cibrian; The Killers perform. FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS Pete Holmes Show Guest Rory Scovel. 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actress Kaley Cuoco; Kellie Pickler performs. 12:00 a.m. CNN AC 360 Later E! Chelsea Lately Comic James Davis; comic Heather McDonald; actor Tim Allen. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Actor Ice-T; video game demo; Thomas Rhett performs. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly


Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Journalists failed public on ‘Obamacare’

T

he headline (“Costly plans not optimal fit for some self-insured,” Nov. 11) begs the question of timely journalism. The Obama administration has known since July 2010 that the self-insured or single payer would get hosed with what we who fall into this category would most definitely not call an Affordable Care Act. Not optimal? We were flat lied to by Obama, he sheepishly offers a recent apology, and this is all OK? Had you vetted this law (and this president) instead of accepting the lame reasoning of then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi that we have to pass the law to know what’s in it, then and only then would you come off as reputable. After the fact, observations as reflected in this headline are patronizing, pathetic and totally unacceptable by any journalistic standard.

Those in need In response to the devastating typhoon in Southeast Asia, United Church of Santa Fe is receiving financial donations for Church World Service, a global, grass-roots agency that has worked in the region for decades. Because CWS partners with local communities, they were already on the ground before the typhoon hit, which also keeps their administrative costs low. Although CWS is historically a church-based organization, its commitment is to helping

Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Ray Rivera Editor

A stronger mayor? Worth considering

T people in need, regardless of race, color or creed — and not proselytizing. For more information, please contact United Church, 1804 Arroyo Chamiso, Santa Fe, N.M., 87505, or 988-3295, or unitedchurchofsantafe.org. Rev. Talitha Arnold

Santa Fe

Skating family I would like to thank Genoveva Chavez Community Center staff and the city manager for their assistance with the Santa Fe Skating Club’s Family Tree that is currently

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

on display at the Chavez Center. If you’re a regular visitor to the Chavez Center, perhaps you’ve seen the tree that is downstairs in the café area, and probably wondered why it’s there. In February 2014, the Winter Olympics will take place in Sochi, Russia. U.S. Figure Skating started the Destination Sochi Family Tree Program to assist with the travel expenses of the families

of the 15 U.S. Olympic figure skaters who will be competing in Sochi. The Santa Fe Skating Club is supporting this effort, and each leaf on the Santa Fe tree represents a $5 donation. There’s more information on the program at www.santafe skatingclub.org. Tammy Berendzen

president, Santa Fe Skating Club Santa Fe

COMMENTARY: PETULA DVORAK

Veterans Day honor for women who saved lives WASHINGTON rom 8 a.m. until just before dark on Monday, the female veterans told their stories. “I’d go into the medical closet and cry, cry, cry,” one said. “The men got Purple Hearts. We got broken hearts,” another one said. “The sound. That sound of the helicopter. You heard that sound and you knew more were coming,” another woman said. For more than two decades, America didn’t want to hear the stories of nurses and other women who served in Vietnam. They were scorned and disrespected. When they began pushing for a memorial to the women who served, detractors worried that would open the floodgates to even more memorials — such as for scout dogs. But supporters said the fantastic, perfect Vietnam Veterans Memorial by Maya Lin — the Wall — was nevertheless incomplete. Former Sen. Frank Murkowski, R-Alaska, said, during one of the 1988 congressional hearings, that there was a “void.” Larry Sudweeks knows about that. “Larry had this hole. Like a big old void,” said Larry’s wife, Loretta Sudweeks, as she pointed to Larry’s chest. The void in Sudweeks’ life goes back to his time in Vietnam, where he spent 45 days in the 93rd Evacuation Hospital in Long Binh. He knew it was the nurses who kept him alive. But once they made him strong enough, he was flown back home, back to family and away from that place of blood and gauze and death. Another broken, dying soldier took his bed before Sudweeks got a chance to thank them or even get their names. His was a common experience. “I can’t remember your name, but I just wanted to say thanks for saving my life,” read one of the notes left on the National Mall on Monday. It was signed, “One of Many.”

F

Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001

OUR VIEW

Patrick Walker

Santa Fe

A-7

The rest of America had the same problem: never getting the women’s names, never having the time to thank them. It wasn’t until 1993 that the Vietnam Women’s Memorial (a sculpture by artist Glenna Goodacre, a part-time Santa Fe resident) was dedicated to honor the ones who volunteered to serve, who stayed while others were flown out, who did the comforting but were never comforted. There was no draft for women. About 11,000 — most of them nurses — raised their hands and went over on their own. A few hundred of them came to the women’s memorial in D.C. this Veterans Day to remember, to talk, to embrace, to share and to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their memorial — and two decades of America finally acknowledging their service. Sudweeks, 66, finally got to say thanks, too. He lives in California. And he came to the wall a couple of years ago to see the names of his buddies who died, to get that closure. “But he kept circling that women’s memorial; he was drawn to it,” Loretta said. He still didn’t know who the women were who saved him. Meanwhile, Annie Koch Voigt, 68, one of the women who kept him alive those 45 days, wondered about him too. This was many, many years after those dark days of war. After children and grandchildren and other wars. Voigt had this one picture she took of a wounded soldier on Easter Sunday, when they all wore nurse whites rather than their fatigues. And it haunted her. She remembered his unusual name. She remembered he was nice and courteous. Most men spent just a couple of days at her evacuation hospital, then were flown away. But Sudweeks was there for weeks and in bad condition.

MAllARD FillMORE

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

Part of her didn’t want to learn his fate. You never knew who made it and who didn’t. And, sometimes, it was best not to know. And part of her didn’t want to revisit that time in her life. Like the men, the women who served in Vietnam were often scorned when they returned to America. It was especially bad for women, who were judged as harlots for having served among the men. The television show MASH didn’t help either. They’d say “Army nurse” and all people heard was “Hot Lips Houlihan.” So many of them folded their uniforms, put away their caps and stayed silent about their service. Not anymore. It was Gen. Colin Powell who first publicly thanked the nurses who saved him. “Gen. Powell said words we’d never heard before,” said Diane Carlson Evans, president and founder of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial Foundation. Powell dedicated that memorial 20 years ago and returned to the Mall on Monday to remind America what women had done in that war. “The nurses were the ones who never got respite,” he said, and he asked everyone, on this Veterans Day, to give thanks “especially to the women who served silently.” Voigt decided to end her silence. She looked up Sudweeks’ unusual name and found his address in California. She mailed him the picture, the details of his wounds and her memories. “It took me three or four tries to finish reading that card,” Sudweeks said. “It was her.” At the memorial, all three of them hugged. And Sudweeks finally said “Thank you.” This commentary was first published in The Washington Post.

he Santa Fe City Council will consider tonight whether to put a proposal on the March municipal ballot that would change how the city is governed. For almost a year, a citizens charter review commission met to consider how better to run the city, with discussion of the mayor’s role one of the biggest debating points. In our minds, the charter commission’s initial proposal handed too much power, with not enough checks, to the mayor. Mind you, there were good reasons even for the initial recommendation. Charter commissioners discovered that there is a revolving door of city managers, as well as an unreasonable expectation of citizens in terms of what the mayor can do. With the current system, the mayor is first among equals, voting only in case of a tie and having little actual power except the bully pulpit. The mayor cannot even fire the city manager he or she chooses; that’s something the council must do. We support checks and balances, but we also know that having a clear line of authority and accountability can mean great efficiency in accomplishing goals and setting policy. As is often the case in a democratic system where open discussion takes place, the first charter commission recommendation is being tweaked — with encouragement, we might add, from many hardworking members of the commission who understand and embrace the give and take of policy. A resolution, co-sponsored by Councilors Peter Ives and Rebecca Wurzburger, takes the notion of creating a strong mayor but tones it down somewhat. It now balances the mayor’s authority with council advisement — something we had suggested might work better than an all-powerful mayor. The resolution also limits the mayor’s power to appoint: He could select the city manager, city attorney and city clerk, rather than all department heads as originally suggested in the commission recommendation. The council would advise and consent, much like Congress does with certain presidential appointments. The mayor, though, could fire his appointees without council approval. We support that, because it gives top employees one, not many, bosses. The mayor also would get a vote, not just as a tiebreaker, but on every issue that comes before the council. In this scenario, the mayor would be a full-time employee; there’s no mention of salary in the resolution. As is already in place in the city charter, the council would set that salary. Language that still might be tweaked is the sentence that states the mayor “shall not be otherwise employed or self-employed.” We think the council should discuss whether this would exclude, for example, a smallbusiness owner who wanted to keep a hand in at the shop while still working 40 hours a week as mayor. We don’t want to see the pool of potential mayors limited to retirees and wealthy people. Wording that just requires the mayor to be on the job full-time would suffice. Earlier, we were skeptical that a resolution on the mayor’s job worthy of being considered by voters would be ready in time to make the March 4, 2014, ballot. With the work put in by commission members over the course of 16 meetings, hours of discussion and further adjustments in the Ives-Wurzburger resolution, the City Council should vote tonight to put a stronger mayor proposal before voters. Then, citizens will be able to decide for themselves.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Nov. 13, 1913: Tesuque — The Buffalo Dance at Tesuque the other day drew many Santa Feans who motored out to the famous pueblo to see the Indians in their glory. The dance did not begin until 1 p.m. It was pronounced a great success by Indian dance connoisseurs. Nov. 13, 1963: Santa Fe police cleared 29 major cases by arresting the violators during October. The department’s monthly report shows residents reported 73 cases involving larceny, auto theft, burglary, aggravated assault and robbery. The department received reports of stolen articles valued at $17,220 and recovered articles valued at $13,235. Officers arrested or cited 1,063 persons into court and these persons paid a total of $3,148 in fines. Nov. 13, 1988: Doctors say they’ll wait at least a week before deciding whether to perform a multi-organ transplant on a New Mexico girl being treated with a new drug that may make the operation unnecessary. The 3-year-old girl has a disease that prevents her intestines from absorbing food and liquids so she is fed intravenously with a high-protein solution that can lead to liver failure. The new drug she’s being given is experimental and has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


A-8 THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

13, 2013

PEANUTS THE ARGYLE SWEATER

LA CUCARACHA

TUNDRA

LUANN

RETAIL

ZITS

STONE SOUP

BALDO

KNIGHT LIFE

DILBERT

GET FUZZY

MUTTS

PICKLES

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PARDON MY PLANET

BABY BLUES

NON SEQUITUR


Obituaries B-2, B-3 Police notes B-3 Sports B-5

sports,B-5

LOCAL NEWS

Owner of St. Kate’s pleads in fraud case

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

B

No. 2 becomes No. 1 as Spartans beat Kentucky

Historic train could be rerouted if Amtrak can’t reach cost-sharing agreement with states, railway

Man schemes to exploit program for veterans

Law requiring Southwest to land in Albuquerque expires in October

By Tom Sharpe

The New Mexican

An Albuquerque building contractor and developer pleaded guilty Tuesday to defrauding a federal program that sets aside federal contracts for businesses owned by servicedisabled veterans, including work at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. Max R. Tafoya, 63, who also has a company that owns the vacant St. Catherine Indian School property in Santa Fe, and son-in-law Tyler Cole, 41, of Los Ranchos de Albuquerque pleaded guilty to the fraudulent scheme in federal court in Albuquerque, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said. The plea agreements mean Tafoya will be required to serve 57 months in prison and Cole a 37-month prison term. But a judge will determine later if they will be required to pay restitution or fines and forfeit assets derived from their criminal activity. In February 2012, a federal grand jury indicted the two men on charges of conspiring to defraud the government of nearly $11 million by falsely claiming that Tafoya Construction Inc. is qualified to participate in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Service-Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business Program. To qualify for the program, a business must be at least 51-percent owned by service-disabled veterans, and one of them must hold the highest officer position in the business and manage it. The indictments charge that Tafoya, a military veteran who does not have a service-connected disability, paid his stepbrother, Andrew Castillo, a service-disabled veteran and

The Associated Press

Please see fRaUd, Page B-4

Man gets probation for latest DWI charge Mares sentenced in 2004 for vehicular homicide in drunken-driving accident By Chris Quintana

The New Mexican

A man who pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide 10 years ago received a 90-day suspended sentence and a year probation for his latest drunken-driving charge. Nick Mares, 33, received his sentence Oct. 15 in the Santa Fe Magistrate Court after pleading no contest to a misdemeanor DWI charge. As part of the plea deal, Mares also has to install an interlock intermission in his vehicle Nick Mares and attend a DWI compliance course. He also has to spend 24 hours volunteering at the Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Fe. He will pay $241 in fines, and Mares is not allowed to consume alcohol or enter “liquor establishments.” The New Mexican initially wrote about Mares in 2003, following a fatal accident in which Mares killed his passenger, Albertano C’de Baca, while driving drunk along Cerrillos Road, according to court documents. The most recent drunken-driving charge emerged in July. A police report said Mares had backed a pickup into a taxi in a parking lot at Cheeks, a strip club, 2841 Cerrillos Road. After pounding on the taxi’s front passenger window and

Please see dwi, Page B-4

Sunport braces for fewer flights

The 3 Southwest Chief Amtrak train leaves the Lamy station as it makes its way to Albuquerque on March 13, 2012. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Change of course By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican

A

mtrak’s Southwest Chief might no longer run through Lamy — the stop for train passengers heading in and out of Santa Fe since 1879 — unless New Mexico taxpayers help upgrade and maintain portions of the rail line. Otherwise, the historic passenger route between Chicago and Los Angeles, started in 1936 as the Super Chief, might be rerouted through Wichita, Kan., and Amarillo, Texas. From Amarillo, the rerouted passenger train could follow an existing track west into Albuquerque,

even though that would mean sharing it with more than 100 freight trains a day on one of the busiest railroad freight routes in the country, New Mexico legislators were told Tuesday. The potential change in passenger rail service — which Amtrak says will come if it can’t reach a new agreement by 2016 regarding track conditions — has communities in northeastern New Mexico, Colorado and Kansas pressing for a cost-sharing agreement among the three states, plus Amtrak and the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad. Among those appearing before the Legislature’s Transportation Infrastructure Revenue Subcom-

In brief

inside u A map of the current Amtrak Southwest Chief route. Page B-3

mittee to endorse state funding for the track were Raton Mayor Pro-Tem Chris Candelario; Mora County Commission Chairman John Olivas; Las Vegas, N.M., Mayor Alfonso Martinez and Santa Fe Mayor David Coss. Ray Lang, Amtrak’s senior director of national/state relations, said his corporation’s official position is that it would like to keep the Southwest Chief on the same route because of its historic relationships

Police arrived at E.J. Martinez Elementary School, 401 W. San Mateo Road, a little before 10 a.m. Sunday where they found a broken glass door and loose bits of candy leading to a home in a subdivision in the 1600 block of Calle Preciosa, a news release stated. At the home, officers found a Santa Fe’s board of education will 16-year-old who said he and his hold a joint meeting with the city of 15-year-old friend had just broken Santa Fe’s city council at 5:30 p.m. Thursday at the districts’ Educational into the school. A photo from a police Services Center, 610 Alta Vista St. The news release shows two buckets of two governing bodies will discuss col- candy outside the home, and a police spokesperson said it’s likely the candy laboration between the schools and the city, including a future teen center, fell from the buckets while the teens fled from the school. early-neighborhood notification proThe teens also temporarily got cedures and truancy prevention. Visit away with a monitor, a keyboard, a www.sfps.info for a full agenda. radio and a walkie talkie in addition to the buckets of Halloween candy. The news release also stated that security footage showed the boys inside the school wearing all-black, A pair of teens who allegedly robbed stealing items and wiping down sura local elementary school left a sugary faces they touched. trail that led to their capture, according Police gave the duo an arrest citation, to a Santa Fe Police Department report. but they were released to their parents.

School district, city plan joint meeting

Police follow trail of candy to teens

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

Please see coURse, Page B-3

Chaparral mixes marbles with math Chaparral Elementary School hosts a Super Science and Marble Math Madness event from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the gym. Fun science and math events will combine with marbles and candy, and participants can learn how to put together a super-science fair project. The school is located at 2451 Avenida Chaparral; call 467-1400 for more information.

ATC open house for admission’s lottery The Academy for Technology and the Classics, a district-chartered high school service grades 7-12, holds an open house at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday for students and families who are interested in applying for the admission’s lottery. The high school is looking to expand by 50 students next year. Lottery applications are due by Feb. 21,

ALBUQUERQUE — Airport officials are bracing for significant Southwest Airlines flight losses next year when part of a federal law expires that now forces many flights to or from Dallas Love Field to land in Albuquerque. The provision known as the Wright Amendment only allows direct flights to or from Love Field to destinations within Texas and nearby states. It has benefited Albuquerque because Southwest flights headed farther west have needed to land there before sending passengers on to destinations like Los Angeles or Las Vegas, Nev. The amendment is set to expire in October, and airport officials expect Southwest to cut its flights to Albuquerque International Sunport. “It’s going to be a negative impact, there’s no doubt about that,” city Aviation Director Jim Hinde told the Albuquerque Journal. “[It’s] certainly not going to be positive.” Southwest says it’s “too early to tell” what the impact will be at Sunport. “We’re excited that we’ll be able to offer nonstop service out of Dallas Love Field, but at this point, we do not know what our service options will look like,” Southwest spokeswoman Michelle Agnew told the Journal in an email. Southwest has been the Albuquerque International Sunport’s leading carrier for decades, typically representing as much as 60 percent of the airport’s business. This month, it has 38 of the airport’s 78 daily departures and has maintained its dominant position even after the recent elimination of several short-haul routes from Albuquerque to cities like El Paso, Lubbock, Midland and Tucson. Airport officials think it’s possible destination cities may be cut, but more likely is the number of daily flights. “We do think there will be some frequencies that go away,” said Dan Jiron, the Sunport’s public relations and marketing manager. “There may not be as many flights to Los Angeles or Vegas or some of the other destinations west simply because they don’t have to stop in Albuquerque now.” While city officials can only guess at Southwest’s plans, they say they’ve been preparing for several years to weather potential cuts and expect to remain in solid financial shape. The Wright Amendment, part of the International Air Transportation Competition Act of 1979, was designed to protect the then-new Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

2014, and the lottery takes place Feb. 25. Visit www.atcschool.org for application forms and more information.

Drury construction almost complete The northbound lane of Paseo de Peralta near Marcy Street is closed for road improvements that will help facilitate access to the new Drury Hotel. The hotel incorporates the old St. Vincent Hospital. Brian Nenninger, project development manager for Drury Hotels, said Tuesday that the work should be finished by late Friday. This is the completion of a project begun last month, and unless there is a request from the city, there will be no further need for motorists to detour around the construction site, Nenninger said. The New Mexican

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

FUNERAL SERVICES AND MEMORIALS

MARTHA K. IWASKI

NILA JARAMILLO HAUGHT

Artist, healer, trickster, friend-- will be celebrated Saturday November 16 at the Folk Art Museum, 6 pm to 8 pm. Martha left peacefully September 29, 2013, watched over by her Nisha, the world’s most coddled standard brown poodle and perhaps the one boy she deigned to invite into her bed. Martha was born in Clovis, NM, August 21, 1934. Her lifelong enchantment with Northern New Mexico began in childhood on San Juan and San Ildefonso pueblos. Martha started her artist’s journey at the age of four when her father, an Austrian-born archeologist, took her to study painting with Po Povida, the son of famed potter Maria Martinez. She learned to paint in the vivid colors that became a hallmark of her artwork. Her senior year in high school, Martha was first-chair trumpet in New Mexico’s allstate band. She created a family legend when wind blew away her music just as she started a big solo. She didn’t miss a note. It was perhaps the first in a lifetime of ignoring inconvenient interruptions. Martha was a polymath, earning a bachelor’s degree in zoology from UNM, a law degree from the University of Denver, and a PhD in psychology from Antioch University. After retiring as a director at the Institute for American Indian Art, she studied Jungian psychology in Switzerland, shamanism in the Amazon, and Tibetan Buddhism everywhere. Inspired to pursue her considerable healing gifts, Martha became a doctor of oriental medicine. She was among the first U.S. students trained by Sensei Nakazono, a renowned Japanese acupuncturist and Aikido master. In her thirty years of practice, countless clients benefited from her care and compassion. An accomplished contemporary artist, Martha painted to provoke and inspire. She wrote that she was "interested in portraying the controversial; the mystery, the joy, the wonder, and the spiritual process of life and how we interact with ourselves, each other, the earth, and the greater universe." She delighted in ambiguity, distortion and dislocation of form. As she put it, "You try and upset the human experience." Her passionate art reflected her remarkable life. Martha was a world traveler and world citizen. In 1962, she was in the inaugural class of the U.S. Peace Corps, where she met her lifelong friend Margaret. Ever pragmatic about putting others’ talents to her best use, Martha chose assignment to Peru with Margaret because, as Margaret puts it, "I could speak Spanish and she knew there would always be an interpreter handy." Their four-woman team landed in a coastal fishing village and discovered that everything and everyone smelled of fish. So Martha got her group adopted by U.S. fishing crews, who cheered their idealism and kept them supplied with American toilet paper, Kleenex, Joy dishwashing detergent, cases of Budweiser Beer, many bottles of Scotch, and cases of Dr. Pepper and 7Up. A natural athlete, Martha was a fine tennis player, a wicked skier, an annoyingly adept golfer. She picked up clubs late in life and hit golf balls 150 yards. She was militant about forgetting which ball was hers, a lapse that let her claim the one closest to the green. In August, she was on the fairway, claiming friends’ balls, three days before her cancer diagnosis. She was a fierce outdoorswoman, inveterate traveler, long-distance hiker, and the trickster companion that campfire stories are made of-including the scary ones. While working near Philmont as a camp counselor, she lived on horseback, often disappearing into the wilderness for days with her friend Susan. Mary Lou, her friend of 59 years, is still jumpy from their three-week Grand Canyon river trip, a wooden-dory odyssey Mary Lou remembers chiefly for the moment Martha leaned over and softly inquired, "What would you do if you had a scorpion on your life jacket crawling up to your face?" With strangers as well as friends, Martha was generous with practical jokes. If a tourist asked for directions, she often sent them the wrong way with a gleam in her eye and a giggle at their backs, in hopes that a visitor to the City Different might wander off to an authentic Santa Fe experience-random, spontaneous, slightly eccentric. In sum, like Martha. Martha was a foodie and a serious vegetarian cook. Friends looked forward to brisk fall days when she prowled the Santa Fe Farmers Market, whipped up feasts in someone else’s kitchen, and demonstrated her uncanny ability to time an exit--just before it was time to clean up. Her cooking exploits occurred in alternate spatial dimensions, evidenced by the fact that every recipe she swore came together in 20 minutes inevitably took hours and every pot in a house. Martha ate in Andiamo’s like it was her kitchen, developing a hopeless addiction to profiteroles. Whenever her family came to Santa Fe, only the Shed would do. She loved Call the Midwife, The Good Wife; The Daily Show; Broadway musicals; Hillary Clinton; political debates when progressives won; dressing up for Halloween and denying being in costume; reveling in all rituals of Christmas peculiar to Santa Fe. She was an outspoken feminist and fierce supporter of equality for all. A master gardener, she coaxed astonishing beauty from flowers, just as she created it in her art and her life. Martha was preceded in death by her mother Gladys Leo Mathews, life-long teacher of the pueblos; her father Edward Henry Iwaski, and her beloved sister and best friend Elizabeth Ann Gerdin. She is survived by friend and brother-in-law Rudolph Gerdin, niece Lynda Webb, nephew Andrew Gerdin, and three grand-nephews, two grand-nieces. All who knew and love Martha are invited to help us celebrate and remember her.

LINEBERRY, NOVELLA AVENELL STILES JACQUES Known by her family as mom and Grandma, and to everyone else as Novella or Mrs. L, began her earthly journey on July 18, 1939 in Lampe, Missouri as the second child of Ralph Garland Stiles and Goldie Pearl Jones Stiles, baby sister to Alfred and eventual older sister to twin sisters Leota and Leona. Along her journey she was married for 21 years to Del Jacques and together they raised two daughters, Deborah and Kathleen. In the middle of her journey she met and was married for 25 years to Edwin Lineberry. ECL continued his journey to the heavens on July 28, 2002 leaving her to continue her own journey here on earth. On November 2, 2013 she joined Ed with a smile on her face and peace in her heart. She was surrounded by the love of her family as she left our arms and flew into his. Novella’s life on earth was successful in all ways and though her journey was peppered with "bumps in the road" and was not always an easy one she faced it with courage, humor, dignity and always an underlying love that she gave freely and accepted with grace. Now her family and friends are left to their Earthly journeys without her as she continues hers in the Heavens. She will be greatly missed by all who were fortunate enough to have been touched by her love, she will never be forgotten or without the love that flows freely from realm to realm, so take our love to the heavens with you and we will keep yours forever in our hearts safe in the knowledge that you have eased our Earthly journey by paving the way and leaving a path for us to follow in this life until we catch up to her in the next. Your loving family and friends. Private interment was at the family farm. A celebration of her life will be held at a later date. Please visit our online guest book for Novella at www.FrenchFunerals.com. FRENCH - Lomas 10500 Lomas Blvd NE 505-275-3500

ANGELINA DELGADO MARTINEZ Of Santa Fe, NM passed away on November 10th, 2013. She was an artist who was a Third Generation Tin Smith who participated in the Traditional Spanish Market for over 70 years. She achieved the Master’s Award and also The Governor’s Award of Excellence in Art. She will have a Memorial Mass on Friday November 15th, 2013 at San Isidro Church at 10:00a.m. with a burial to follow at Rosario Cemetery.

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

PAUL ORTEGA

HAPPY BIRTHDAY DAD!

MICHAEL ANTHONY "ELVIS" ALVAREZ Alvarez, Michael Anthony "Elvis" age 55, was born on January 14, 1959 in Santa Fe, NM and passed away on Sunday, November 3, 2013 in Santa Fe, NM. "Elvis has gone to be with the Lord". He was preceded in death by his parents, Alberto and Josie Alvarez; two brothers, Orlando Alvarez and Salvadore Alvarez; sister, Diana Alvarez. Michael is survived by his son Mikey Nieto; brother, Jose Alvarez; sisters, Viola Montoya and husband Eddie, Braulia Alvarez, Erlinda Sena, Sylvia Sanchez and husband, Ronnie; granddaughter, Chantelle; girlfriend, Katie Ortiz as well as other family members and friends who loved and will miss him. Michael was an active member of Devine Destiny Church where he loved to play the drums for worship music. He loved to sing and play the guitar, very friendly, outgoing and well known. A Memorial Service will be held at Devine Destiny Church, 702 Bishops Lodge Rd. Santa Fe, NM.(1-505-577-7414) on Thursday, November 14, 2013 at 6:00 pm, followed by a potluck reception. Arrangements by Direct Funeral Services 2919 4th St. NW. ABQ. 505-343-8008.

We miss you and love you so so much! We know you are watching and taking care of us. From above you’re our Guardian Angel. Gone but never forgotten. Happy Birthday! Love and always, Your wife, kids and family

Our mom, Nila J. Haught, has quietly passed away. Mom represented all that was vibrant and meaningful in life. Her generosity knew no bounds; her friendship knew no limits. She was strong in faith and determined in her conviction. Born during the Fourth of July holiday, Mom was colorful, extravagant and explosively energetic like a firecracker. Mom was born in Fairview NM, and grew up at Canon Plaza and Ojo Caliente NM, where she baled hay and herded cows as a child and could ride a horse comparable to any cowboy. She graduated from El Rito Normal School and met our dad, her husband of 47 years, Earl Haught, at the El Rito Ranger Station, where they both were working at the time. Mom and Dad eventually settled in Santa Fe, where she lived the last 46 years of her life. Mom was artistic and had a deep pride for her rich Hispanic culture, which she shared with us. She supported aspiring artists and cultivated an expansive art collection. Mom stayed home and raised us, her daughters LaNelle, Janelle and Juanita. In addition to being our mom, she volunteered in the community and kept all her friends and neighbors well fed. For many years she participated in the Women’s Rodeo Roundup and rarely missed the Rodeo de Santa Fe. She also took great pride in never missing any of her beloved granddaughter, Tas’ volleyball games or dance recitals. Mom was preceded in death by her husband of 47 years and our wonderful Dad, Earl Haught; her parents Alfonso and Alcarita Jaramillo of Canon Plaza NM; in-laws Earl and Isabel Haught, of Follansbee WV; sister Bertha Jaramillo, brother Perfecto Jaramillo and brother-in-law Oscar Saiz. She is survived by us, her three daughters : LaNelle, Janelle and Juanita, and her beloved granddaughter, Tasmerisk. She’s also survived by her sisters, Elva Threet and Lydia Saiz; brother, Alfonso Jaramillo; sister-in-law, Madge Jaramillo and brother-in-law, Clair Martinez. In her last months she was lovingly cared for by Margaret Cesena and Naomi Roy. Mom was the person her family and friends turned to when in need. In lieu of flowers, and in memory of our mom, do something thoughtful for someone in need, in the example she set for us, or make a donation in our mom’s memory to: Kitchen Angels 122 Siler Road, Santa Fe NM; (505) 471-7780. Rest peacefully, Mom. Services will be announced at a later date.

MICHAEL WARD SCHAEFER "IT’S ALL GOOD" Mikey 41, passed away unexpectedly of natural causes at home, surrounded by his loving family, on November 7, 2013. He was born in Utica, NY on April 7, 1972 and relocated to Santa Fe, NM in 1984. Although Mikey faced many challenges throughout his life, he was a man that strove every day to be better than he was the day before, who worked hard and loved deeply. He was fun loving and had a sense of humor that elicited laughter from your soul. Mikey was a devoted son, a loving fiancé, a father, grandfather, brother, uncle and friend, whose life ended too soon; Mikey , his love, laughter and sense of humor will be sorely missed. He was an entrepreneur and enjoyed the labors of hard work and cooking a great meal for his loved ones. Mikey shared a love of football and the NY Giants with his nephew, Davey and the majority of his family. Mikey is survived by his loving mother Barbara Simon, formerly Barbara Scampone, and her husband Ronald, his fiancée, Bianca Vargas and her son Francisco, his much loved daughter Cheryl Dean and his granddaughter Nevaeh Peugh, and his sister June Scott, all of Santa Fe. In addition, he is survived by his siblings who reside in NY; his sister Babette Komnick and her husband Mitchell, his brother Albert Schaefer and his fiancée Petra Irvine, his sisters, Cheryl Withers, Cathie Hanna and her husband Harvey and Trina Moore. He is also survived by his nieces and nephews, Nicholas Hanna and his wife Merima, Amber Amidon and her husband Craig, Tanya Withers, Lauren Komnick, Christopher Moore, Robert Moore, Kaleigh Hanna, Timothy Moore, Davey Scott-Murphy and Lillian Estrada. Mikey also leaves behind his great nieces and nephews, Ariana and Jacob Hanna, Lillian Moore, Audrey May Withers, Christopher Moore, Chloe Moore and Emberlynn and Aiden Moore and many friends. A service be held Thursday November 14, 2013 at 6:00 p.m. at the Santa Fe Elks Lodge, 1615 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe NM 87505. Afterwards please remain at the Elks Lodge with us to Celebrate Mikey’s life. In lieu of flowers please make donations to the Santa Fe Police Department’s doughnut fund or preferably Esperanza Shelter of Santa Fe, NM.

MARY JO CHAVEZ On November 9th, 2013 our mother, daughter, sister, grandmother and friend was called home. Mary Jo Chavez was born in Santa Fe on March 19th, 1963 and resided in Santa Fe her whole life. Mary Jo was preceded in death by her father Eppie Chavez and sisters; Patsy, Trudy and Vicky Chavez. She is survived by her daughter, Elaine Chavez; son, Orion Jaramillo Jr.; son, Elliot Chavez and daughter, Audrina Chavez. She is also survived by her mother, Rose Chavez and brothers; Donald, Robert, Teddy, Larry and Matthew Chavez; her uncle: Mariano Chavez and many nieces, nephews cousins and friends. There will be a visitation on Friday, November 15, 2013 from 6:00 to 7:00 pm at St. Anne’s Catholic Church where there will be a rosary recited at 7:00 pm. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Saturday, November 16, 2013 at 10:00 am at St. Anne’s Catholic Church. The burial and reception will be announced at the mass.

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

To place an Obituary ad call: 986-3000

RAMON "RAY" E. LUJAN 85, of Rio Rancho, NM and formerly of Santa Fe, NM was called home on Sunday, November 10, 2013. Ray was preceded in death by his loving wife, Josephine Medina and his brother, Marcello Lujan. Ray is survived by his daughters: Sandra Myers (Tony) and Patty Lujan. Sister, Alfonsita Mignardot and brother, George Lujan (Kathy). Grandchildren: Michelle Duran (Richard Ulibarri), Carlos Duran, John Pecina, Rachelle (Erik Nelson), Chris Urbanic and Paul Myers. Great Grandchildren: Alydra Gallegos, Nicholas Duran, Anthony Pecina-Lliguichushca, Landen Nelson, Dominic Urbanic, and family and friends. Ray was a retired member of Plumbers and Pipefitters Local Union # 412 for 60 + years. His favorite pastime was fishing and being around family and friends. Ray will be forever loved and greatly missed. A special thanks to J.R. Constable with Best Way Home Health Care. A Visitation will be held at Rosario Chapel (in the Rosario Cemetery) on Thursday, November 14, 2013 at 6 p.m. with a Rosary to follow at 7 p.m. A Mass will be celebrated at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church on Friday, November 15, 2013 at 11 a.m. Interment will follow at Santa Fe National Cemetery at 12:45 p.m. The Lujan Family would like to thank everyone during this difficult time for all their support and prayers.

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


LOCAL & REGION

HUGH EDWARD HANAGAN Hugh Hanagan, a truly good man from the Greatest Generation, passed away on Sunday, November 10, 2013. Hugh passed away peacefully in his home five years and one day after his wife Betty passed away. Hugh was born on July 19, 1924 in Duncan, Oklahoma to William and Lucile O’Reilly Hanagan. He was the 6th of eleven children, with the only surviving sibling being Bob Hanagan of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Hugh married Betty Lucille Pickens on February 12, 1954 in Midland, Texas. Betty passed away on November 9th, 2008 and Hugh never fully got over her death. Hugh is survived by his brother Bob and his wife Nancy of Santa Fe, New Mexico, his Son Tim and his companion Gail Aalund of Durango, Colorado, Son Brian of Dallas, Texas, and Son Mike and his wife Danette of Roswell, Grandsons Hondo Hanagan and his wife Dedi of Durango, CO, Craig Hanagan and his wife Ali of Roswell, and granddaughter Megan Hanagan of Ft. Worth, Texas, Great Granddaughters Kinslee, Breleigh and Bayleigh and Grandsons Hudson and Jaxson. Hugh graduated from Roswell High School on May 29, 1942. He enlisted in the Army Air Corp becoming a Radar Technician and proudly served his country in the 314th Bomb Wing in the Pacific Theater during WWII. On December 16th, 1945 Hugh boarded the U.S.S. Lander and left Guam for home arriving in Camp Anzio north of Los Angeles on December 29th, 1945. He was honorably discharged at Ft. Bliss in El Paso on December 31, 1945. After the war, Hugh attended the University of Wichita earning a degree in geology on May 30, 1949. After college, Hugh went to work for Rotary Engineering in the Golden Triangle on the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico for Pauley Petroleum in 1950. After coming back from Mexico, He went to work for Phillips Petroleum Company with one of his assignments being to work on the first well drilled by Phillips in Alaska on the Kenai Peninsula. It was while at Phillips that Hugh met Betty, the love of his life. In 1956 Hugh left Phillips and joined Kewanee Oil Company in Midland. Hugh then partnered with his brother and life-long best friend Bob to form a successful Roswell based oil and gas company, a partnership that lasted over 30 years. One of their major achievements was the discovery and development of the Catclaw Draw Field in Eddy County. Hugh was a great father and husband, but more importantly, he was an extremely kind and gentle man; a very good man with a huge heart and a great laugh. Special thanks go out to Hugh’s care givers, especially Amy and Crystal who helped make his last days as comfortable as possible. A private graveside service will be held. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to your charity of choice. Condolences maybe made online at www.lagronefuneralchapels.com Arrangements have been entrusted to LaGrone Funeral Chapel.

JEANETTE "JEN" LISA ANAYA Jeanette "Jen" Lisa Anaya, born July 14, 1974 went home to be with the Angels on Thursday, November 7, 2013. Jeanette was a lifelong resident of Santa Fe. She attended Santa Fe High School and worked for local restaurant and optical industries. Jeanette was a beloved daughter, sister, aunt and friend, who was a free spirit with a heart of gold. She was preceded in death by her grandparents, Andres and Josephine Anaya and Samuel and Lisaida Roybal. She is survived by her parents, Jake and Teresa Anaya; brother, Mike Anaya, Pat Anaya and Karen Hare; sister, Julie Anaya and John Martinez; nephews, David and John Martinez; nieces, Michaela and Carissa Anaya; her beloved dog Bella, and many special aunts, uncles cousins and friends. A rosary will be recited on Thursday, November 14, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. at the St. Anne’s Catholic Church in Santa Fe with a memorial mass to be celebrated on Friday, November 15, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. also at the St. Anne’s Catholic Church. Serving the family as pallbearers will be Mike, Pat and Julie Anaya. The family of Jeanette Anaya has entrusted their loved one to DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Española Valley. 505-747-7477 - www.devargasfuneral.com

ROBERT MICHAEL SANCHEZ

Robert Michael Sanchez, age 52, passed away October 14 peacefully with his family by his side. Michael is preceded in death by his mother, Mary Alice Sanchez and brothers Mark and Mathew. He is survived by his daughters Serina (Chris) and Stephanie; grandchildren Vincent, Erik and Raylene; sisters Michelle (Richard) and Marlene; special nieces Celeste, Jolene and Jacklyn, and other family that will truly miss him. He loved his family dearly. He enjoyed landscaping, making art, and helping those he loved. A rosary will be held at St. Bernadette’s Church at 6:00 p.m. on November 14.

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

Continued from Page B-1 with communities there. But, he said, Burlington Northern Santa Fe, which owns most of the track, plans to downgrade a portion of it between Newton, Kan., and La Junta, Colo., by the first of 2016, which would mean trains couldn’t go faster than 30 mph. That’s enough for BNSF’s freight trains, but less than half the 79 mph needed for Amtrak passenger trains, he said. Lang said BNSF also has made it clear that it doesn’t plan to continue maintaining the track from Trinidad, Colo., to Albuquerque because it doesn’t use that stretch. The only trains using that section are the Southwest Chief’s two runs a day, in either direction, and the New Mexico Rail Runner Express’ dozen commuter trains a day between Albuquerque and the point near La Bajada where the Rail Runner leaves the main track to follow Interstate 25 into Santa Fe. BNSF has indicated that it wants to share the costs of maintaining the deteriorating sections of track with Amtrak and the states of Kansas, Colorado and New Mexico. The five-way split would mean about $4 million a year for 10 years from each party, which Lang called “the best solution here for the public.” Joe Faust, a BNSF spokesman, said the company has received a formal request from Amtrak concerning such a deal but is aware of what has been suggested to the states. He said BNSF has made no decision on whether such an arrangement is feasible. Lang said Amtrak can’t afford the full cost of the track improvements itself, and he said it’s unlikely Congress will provide the extra money. All of the county and municipal officials at Tuesday’s meeting in Santa Fe as well as most of the senators and representatives on the subcommittee favored the expendi-

Obituaries can be purchased through a funeral home or by calling our classifieds department at 986-3000, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you need to place a death notice after business hours, please call The New Mexican newsroom at 986-3035.

Amtrak Southwest Chief route

The potential change would reroute the train through Wichita, Kan., and Amarillo, Texas.

Chicago

IOWA

ILL.

COLO.

CALIF.

Los Angeles

Gallup

ARIZ.

KAN.

A federal law requires some passenger and freight railroads to implement a “positive train control” system by the end of State officials estimate it 2015. Such systems can autocould cost $30 million to imple- matically apply brakes if an ment a federally required safety operator fails to slow a train for system for the Rail Runner a stop signal or when speed is Express commuter rail system. restricted.

Kansas City

Wichita Raton Las Vegas Amarillo Lamy

MO.

Albuquerque

ture, citing the benefits to the economies of communities along the route. No one from the Governor’s Office spoke at Tuesday’s hearing, but Gov. Susana Martinez reportedly has been cold to the idea of spending state money on the railroad route. She blocked a plan put in place by former Gov. Bill Richardson’s administration to buy about 200 miles of BNSF track between Lamy and the Colorado border. “From New Mexico’s perspective, this is a cheap proposal,” state Sen. Timothy Keller, D-Bernalillo, said of the proposed state subsidy. “This price tag, I think, is very low and very feasible.” In addition to the New Mexico communities north of Albuquerque whose historic passenger train stations would become obsolete, Amtrak would no longer serve Hutchinson, Dodge City and Garden City in Kansas, and Lamar, La Junta and Trinidad in Colorado if the Southwest Chief

Rail Runner faces 2015 deadline

route is changed. “Rerouting trains is very painful, very difficult and very expensive to do,” Amtrak’s Lang said Tuesday. “It’s our corporate position to try and find a way to stay on this route.” Colfax County Commissioner Bill Sauble told lawmakers that “The continuation of the passenger train through Northern New Mexico is vital to the economic wellbeing of each of the counties, cities and towns in the region. In New Mexico, there’s an estimated $29 million annual economic impact from spending related to train passengers. During a recent federal fiscal year, more than 12,500 passengers got on or off the Southwest Chief at the Lamy depot, and nearly 125,000 passengers boarded or disembarked the Chief in New Mexico during that time. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

A draft state rail plan by the Department of Transportation identifies the safety system installation as a high priority for commuter rail improvements. The agency is holding meetings statewide to gather public comments on the plan, which

analyzes passenger and freight rail line needs. Meetings are scheduled Thursday in Farmington, Friday in Albuquerque and next week in Santa Fe, Springer and Roswell.

7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Siringo Road between Botulph Road and St. Francis Drive at other times; SUV No. 3 on Bishops Lodge Road at Valley Drive.

St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624

The Associated Press

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone stole personal items from a home in the 700 block of Kathryn Avenue between 6 and 10:30 p.m. Monday. u A man reported that someone stole his vehicle parked at a hotel on 4044 Cerrillos Road, between 8 and 10 p.m. Monday. The vehicle was later found in the 1300 block of Bishops Lodge Road. u Someone broke into a home in the 7100 block of Mesa del Oro at 5 p.m. Monday. It’s unclear what was stolen. u Elizabeth Loya, 23, 1299 Zepol Road Apt. 114, was arrested on charges of concealing her identity and shoplifting after city officers caught her trying to take a battery charger from Sears, 4250 Cerrillos Road, Monday afternoon. She was also wanted on a bench warrant. u Wilfredo Flores-Diaz, 2800 Cerrillos Road No. 10, was arrested on a charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, specifically a cheese knife, at 3 a.m. Tuesday. u Someone broke into Yoga Source and Rasa Juice Bar, 815 Early St., and stole several items between 3 p.m. Saturday and 8:30 a.m. Sunday. u A UPS driver reported that someone broke into a home in the 3300 block of Vista del Prado Court between 8 and 10:10 a.m. Monday. u A trash-hauling trailer was stolen from a home on Emblem Road between 5 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. Tuesday. u A woman reported that

Call 986-3000

OBItUARy NOtICES

B-3

Course: Amtrak alone can’t afford repairs

someone took her wallet from the trunk of her car parked in the 3400 block of Vereda Baja sometime Sunday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following report: u Someone entered an unlocked van parked on Cibolita Peak and took a pair of vehicle keys and “the vehicle’s paperwork,” at 7 a.m. Tuesday. u Enrique Palomino-Loya, 26, 4850 Airport Road Apt. 125, was arrested on charges of drunken driving and improper insurance after city officers found him asleep while the car sat in the middle of St. Michael’s Drive and 5th Street at 7:17 a.m. Sunday. u Alexander Mendiola, 43, 176 Carson Valley Way, was arrested on his sixth charge of drunken driving in the Wal-Mart parking lot, 3251 Cerrillos Road, at 3:45 a.m. Sunday.

Delta europa Sale Sanbusco Center • 989-4742

u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Kearny Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and on Siringo Road at Calle de Sueños at other times; SUV No. 2 at Nava Elementary School from

New Shipments of Cotton & Linen Robes, and Pj’s 982-3298 Sanbusco Center

www.santafepens.com

reserve for thanksgiving

Canine Social Club your dogs home away from home

989-1362

Copper in Your Water?

Speed SUVs

It Can Be A Health Risk Bring Us A Sample of Your City or Well Water F I L T R A T I O N For A Free Copper Test

www.goodwatercompany.com 933 Baca Street 471-9036

Serving Santa Fe for 25 Years

NEED A STUDIO?

216McKenzie McKenzie St.St.• 505.992.0200 • Downtown Santa FeSanta • M-F: Fe 10-5 SAT: 216  505.992.0200  Downtown M-F11-4 10-5 NEW & RARE VINTAGE WATCHES  REPAIR  • Authorized BAllROLEX & hAmilton RESTORATION deAler  AUTHORIZED SERVICE •  WE BUY FINE TIMEPIECES 

• Authorized rolex Service •

EXCLUSIVELY AVAILABLE . . . • We BuyLUXURIOUS Fine timepieceS • BHWYDESIGNS GEMSTONE JEWELRY

Look ook for us at www.wcwtimepieces.com and on facebook

SOUTHWEST PLASTERING COMPANY,

INC.

MAINTAIN YOUR ROOF & STUCCO

Over 30 years experience in roof repair

Michael A. Roybal

Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220

DWI arrests

WORLD C LASS W ATCHES

Trainmaster Cannonball

Help lines

505-438-6599

www.southwestplasteringcompany.com

Think Chapman Homes. Free estimates!

983-8100 chapmanhomes.com Building and remodeling homes since 1966

VOLUNTEER

Funeral services and memorials

Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Serve your Community, Make a Difference.

Contact Mike Jaffa, 505-992-3087, mjaffa@santafecountynm.gov www.santafecountyfire.org/fire/employmentvolunteer_opportunities_


B-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Coss’ waste removal proposal criticized proposal to remove all waste ignores the real issues facing The head of the Los Alamos Santa Fe and the communities Study Group said the recent around LANL, which is how to effort by Santa Fe Mayor David diversify the region’s economy Coss to have all the waste in so it is less dependent on fedLos Alamos removed is overly eral dollars going to LANL. simplistic and hypocritical. And it is difficult to have that At the Nov. 7 meeting of the debate when Coss and others Regional Coalition of Los Alarepeatedly lobby for increased mos National Laboratory Com- lab spending, Mello said in a munities, Santa Fe Mayor Coss, Tuesday statement sent to the in his role as coalition chairpressargues. man, presented a draft of a city “The resolution is however of Santa Fe resolution that calls not realistic or serious and is for characterization and poten- being advanced for propaganda tial removal of all waste buried purposes primarily, without at LANL’s Area G nuclear and enough thought. It’s a throwchemical dump site. away proposal that dramatiAlthough much of the recent cally narrows, to the point of waste from the weapons plant is absurdity, the economic, social, being shipped to the Waste Iso- and environmental issues facing lation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, Santa Fe vis-à-vis LANL,” Mello other non-lethal waste that has said in the statement. been used since the mid 1940s Coss said last week he plans has been buried and capped on to move forward and ask the LANL property. Santa Fe city council for supLos Alamos Study Group port because the public is askDirector Greg Mello said the ing that the waste be removed. The New Mexican

Fraud: Developer claimed disabled vet was company owner Continued from Page B-1 U.S. Forest Service employee from Tallahassee, Fla., to use his name as the owner of Tafoya’s firm. Castillo was not charged. Another indictment returned last March additionally charged Tafoya with witness tampering and obstruction of justice. Cole, who is not a veteran, completed certifications stating that Tafoya Construction qualified for disabled-veteran setasides, the indictments charge. According to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, between 2009 and 2010, Tafoya Construction was awarded five contracts for work at the Santa Fe National Cemetery, the Fort Bliss National Cemetery in Texas, the Fort Logan National Cemetery in Denver and the Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery in St. Louis, Mo. The release says Tafoya admitted he obtained these contracts through the disabledveterans program by paying

Castillo $600 a week to use his name, that he drew up false documents designed to create the appearance that Castillo was the majority owner and that he lied about this to a Veterans Administration investigator in February 2011. In 2006, another Tafoya company, New Mexico Consolidated Construction, bought the campus of St. Catherine Indian School on the north side of Santa Fe. The city of Santa Fe, which has sought to acquire the campus and to preserve its historic buildings, some dating to the late 1800s, has accused Tafoya of letting the property deteriorate — what its lawyers call “demolition by neglect.” Pueblo Bank and Trust Co. sued for foreclosure on the property last year, accusing Tafoya and his wife on falling behind on payments on a $4 million mortgage. Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com.

DWI: Mares spent 91/2 months in custody Continued from Page B-1 demanding that the driver move, the report said, Mares fled on foot and was later picked up by police on Cerrillos Road near Siler Road. Police said Mares smelled of alcohol, but he repeatedly refused to submit to a Breathalyzer test. In that case, Santa Fe police officers arrested Mares on charges of aggravated DWI, causing an accident that damaged a vehicle and possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, but every charge but the drunken-driving count was dropped as part of the plea deal. Prior to that incident, Mares had pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide in 2004 and received a six-year sentence. Former state District Judge Michael Vigil suspended five years of that sentence and allowed

In brief

Minister sentenced for child porn

ALBUQUERQUE — A former Albuquerque youth minister who authorities say downloaded thousands of images of child pornography has been sentenced to more than eight years in federal prison. Prosecutors say 35-year-old Derek M. Schwartzrock was sentenced to a 97-month prison term Tuesday. Schwartzrock was arrested in April after federal investigators said they found more than 12,000 images of child pornography on his computer and other electronic equipment.

Mares to spend the remaining year on electronic monitoring with an alcohol-detection device. He also received five years of probation, which ended in 2010. Prior to sentencing, Mares had spent about nine and a half months in custody, both in jail and under electronic monitoring. He also spent 13 weekends in jail on a workrelease program. Albertano C’de Baca, Mares’ victim, was born April 27, 1976, and graduated from Santa Fe High School in 1994. Before 2003, he had been living in Arizona, but his mother said he had returned home just a few days before his death. He had planned to attend the University of Phoenix in Santa Fe. According to his obituary in The New Mexican, he was survived by his mother, father, several siblings and a wife. Schwartzrock was the children’s minister at Evangel Christian Center in Albuquerque. He was fired after church officials learned of the allegations.

Priem enters race for Grisham’s spot ALBUQUERQUE — A businessman and retired Army veteran has entered the Republican race for Albuquerque’s 1st Congressional District. Richard Priem announced his candidacy Monday evening for the seat currently held by Democratic Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham. Priem is a former Army Lieutenant Colonel. He is making his first run for public office. The Associated Press

LOCAL & REGION

Bulletin Board Community announcements, workshops, Classes and alternative healing Services in Santa Fe and northern new Mexico

Learn SpaniSh in peru. Info Session Nov. 18. Santa Fe Community College Summer Study Abroad May 31-June 16, 2014. Take a four-credit, two-week intensive Spanish class and explore the Andean culture. Visit Machu Picchu, Valle Sagrado and the Inca Museum. Enjoy a home stay with a host family. Free Information Session Mon. Nov. 18, 2:30 p.m. at SFCC in the West Wing, Room 220, 6401 Richards Ave. For more information, contact Assistant Professor Eva Gallegos at 505-428-1649 or eva.gallegos@sfcc.edu. DougLaS a. puryear MD practice will close December 20, 2013. Medical records may be obtained or transferred by contacting Dr. Puryear 505-983-4867, 4 Camino de Vecinos Santa Fe, NM 87507. VeneraBLe LaMa LoDu rinpoChe aT BoDhi STupa: Friday, November 15, 7 pm, Public Talk: "Living in A Positive Way." (Suggested donation $15), Saturday & Sunday, November 16 & 17, 10 am to Noon and 2:004:00 pm; "Bardo Teaching Retreat" (Suggested donation: $35/day or $65/ weekend). Bardo is the intermediate stage between any beginning and end, especially between death and rebirth. A qualified teacher like Lama Lodü may guide us through a deeper understanding of our mind at this time, and thus present us with an opportunity to achieve liberation. 3777 KSK Lane. Email nobletruth@ earthlink.net for more information. expLoring "ViSuaL MiDraSh" Craig FawCeTT MeMoriaL SChoLar in Residence: Dr. Martin Rosenberg Friday, November 15, 6:30, Saturday, November 16, 7:00. On Friday, Dr. Rosenberg will address the relationship of Judaism to Art & Visual Culture, introducing the concept of "Visual Midrash" which is the subject of his Saturday evening talk and slide show. Because Christianity grew out of Judaism, the Hebrew Bible provided subject matter for countless Christian artists. Since every visual representation is by its nature an interpretation (in Hebrew: a midrash), we can reinterpret these works from a Jewish perspective -- a process Dr. Rosenberg calls "Visual Midrash". hearing LoSS aDVoCaCy, Challenges & Benefits, is the subject of the next meeting of the Hearing Loss Association's Santa Fe Chapter. Richard Meyer, a founder of HLAA and past president of its Board of Trustees, will review how far we have come and what remains to be done to help people with hearing loss lead active and fulfilling lives. Join us for this free meeting, Saturday, November 16, 10 a.m., Vitamin Cottage Event Center, Natural Grocers, Cerrillos Rd & Richards Ave. Hearing loop installed. For more information contact whittwil@verizon.net.

SaVVy SoCiaL SeCuriTy pLanning workShop presented by Peter Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Specialist. This FREE two hour seminar is offered at Garrett's Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Wednesday, November 13th, from 6pm to 8pm. You will learn the following and much more: Five factors to consider in deciding when to apply for benefits; Innovative strategies for coordinating spousal benefits; How to coordinate benefits with other income sources; How to minimize taxes on Social Security benefits; and Special rules on divorced spouses and survivor benefits. RSVP is required. Call 505-2160838 or email Register. SantaFe@1APG.com to register. SaVVy SoCiaL SeCuriTy pLanning workShop presented by Peter Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Specialist. This FREE two hour seminar is offered at Garrett's Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Wednesday, November 13th, from 6pm to 8pm. You will learn the following and much more: Five factors to consider in deciding when to apply for benefits; Innovative strategies for coordinating spousal benefits; How to coordinate benefits with other income sources; How to minimize taxes on Social Security benefits; and Special rules on divorced spouses and survivor benefits. RSVP is required. Call 505-2160838 or email Register. SantaFe@1APG.com to register. The enD oF The TraiL ChapTer oF The SanTa Fe TraiL aSSoCiaTion is a non-profit organization promoting the study of New Mexico History. For $10 a year members receive advance notices of historic programs and field trips. On Saturday, November 16, 1:30 p.m. at La Farge Library, Llano Street in Santa Fe, the chapter presents Irene I. Bleq, who will speak on Commerce and Culture on the Santa Fe Trail. Learn about the flora and fauna on the Trail and the many cultures that traveled to Santa Fe, changing the Territory of New Mexico. Blea will also discuss trading practices and the impact of the Mexican American War. Admission is free. C. g. Jung inSTiTuTe oF SanTa Fe - open puBLiC ForuM Friday, November 15th, 7-9pm, on "Cultural and Intrapsychic Reflections on Radicalization, Terror and Fundamentalism, based on The Reluctant Fundamentalist by Mohsin Hamid." In this panel discussion, local Jungian analysts Donald Kalsched, Barry Williams, & Jacqueline West will show clips from the film and open a group conversation about this vexing and controversial topic. Attendees are encouraged to read Hamid's short novel before the presentation. $10, 2 CEUs. At Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe. For information contact Jerome Bernstein, 505-989-3200. www.santafejung.org

roCk & FLow! gLoBaL DanCe & MuSiC ConCerT on Saturday, November 16. Doors open at 6:30 pm, show at 7pm. Dance performances of funky AfroHouse with Jaime Duggan & Co., West African with Santa Fe favorite Elise Gent and D'jeune D'jeune, and Bollywood and traditional Kathak of India with Alina Deshpande & Co. Spoken word & acapella by Shayla Dawn. A fundraiser for the Golden Acorns Summer Camp Scholarship Fund, the evening also includes a silent auction & desserts in a child-friendly atmosphere. Suggested donation $15, kids free, teens $5. Railyard Performance Center, 1611 Paseo de Peralta, SF 87501. Tickets available in advance & at the door. Information: Golden Acorns 505-795-0979 or www.goldenacornscamp.org paSSporT To reTireMenT eDuCaTionaL workShop - presented by Peter Murphy. This complimentary, full day seminar will take you step-by-step through the important areas of retirement. You will learn how to: Define and Create Your Retirement, Assess the Costs, Evaluate Your Sources of Income, Invest for the Future, Protect Your Health and Wealth, Receive Funds from Your Retirement Plans, and Manage Your Estate Distribution. The workshop will be held on Saturday, November 16th from 9am to 5pm at the Holiday Inn Express, 60 Entrada Drive, Los Alamos. Seating is limited and registration is required. RSVP: LoisGolden@1APG.com / 505-216-0838. annuaL hoLiDay Fair. Come and shop for great Holiday Arts & Crafts. 45 vendors will be selling jewelry, ceramics, sewing, tin, retablos, ornaments, candles, crochet, paintings, woodcrafts, and so much more! County Fair Building, 3229 Rodeo Road, November 16th. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Concession with frito pies, sponsored by Santa Fe County Extension Association of New Mexico. aTC open houSe November 19th 5:30pm. The Academy for Technology and the Classics (ATC) will hold an open house on November 19th, 2013 at 5:30 for students and families interested in applying for the lottery. ATC is a tuition-free public college-preparatory charter school in Santa Fe, New Mexico serving grades 7-12. Lottery applications are due by February 21st, and the lottery takes place on February 25th. All interested families and students are welcome to apply. The high school will be expanding by 50 students. For more information: http://www.atcschool.org/ about/admission.

Call 986-3000 or email classad@sfnewmexican.com to place your Bulletin Board ad


WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

B-5

B

Expanded instant replay almost a certainty for next year’s MLB season. Page B-8

NFL

Broncos shun ploy of max protection for Manning By Arnie Stapleton

The Associated Press

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — Peyton Manning is taking a beating. The Broncos’ offensive line is battered and his right ankle is throbbing. And now, here come the unbeaten Kansas City Chiefs, leading the league in sacks. Fans in Denver would love to put a Brink’s truck around their hobbled quarterback for Sunday night’s showdown pitting the divisional rivals who have combined to go 17-1.

They might be surprised, however, to hear Jack Del Rio doesn’t share their affinity for the concept known as “max protect.” That’s where a tight end and a running back are kept in the backfield to help the five offensive linemen keep defenders from reaching the quarterback. The strategy sacrifices options in the passing game to deny the defense pressure on the passer. In Denver’s case, it could keep two of their most productive players in tight end

Julius Thomas and tailback Knowshon Moreno from doing what they do best. Adding another tight end to the mix would sideline Wes Welker. Like both Thomas and Moreno, Welker has nine touchdowns so far. Moreover, heavy doses of “max protect” could actually lead to more hits on Manning. “Ironically, that’s the natural way to start [thinking] is to pack more in,” said Del Rio, Denver’s interim head coach.

Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning fumbles as he is hit by San Diego Chargers outside linebacker Tourek Williams during Sunday’s game in San Diego. The Chargers recovered the fumble and scored a touchdown a few plays later. DENIS POROY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Please see manninG, Page B-8

COLLEGE BASKETBALL MICHIGAN STATE 78, KENTUCKY 74

no. 2 is no. 1

BASEBALL

Spartans hold off top-ranked Wildcats, raising hopes that Michigan State will grab lead

By Nancy Armour

The Associated Press

CHICAGO s the buzzer sounded and his Michigan State teammates raced onto the court to celebrate, Gary Harris held his index finger aloft. No doubt about who’s No. 1. For now, at least. Branden Dawson tipped in a miss with less than six seconds left, and the No. 2 Spartans hung on for a 78-74 victory over top-ranked Kentucky and its latest cast of phenoms in the first game of the Champions Classic on Tuesday night. “We want to be No. 1 at the end of the season,” Keith Appling said. “Not the beginning.” Keep playing like this and the Spartans (2-0) are sure to be in the conversation come the end of March. Kentucky, too. After trailing by as much as 13 in the second half, looking like the freshmen most of them are, the Wildcats (2-1) showed why there’s so much hype surrounding them. Julius Randle almost beat the Spartans single-handedly, scoring 23 of his 27 points in the second half and making a jumper with 42 seconds left that cut Michigan State’s lead to 76-74. But Dawson tipped in a miss by Denzel Valentine, and James Young missed a 3-pointer at the buzzer. “You got guys crying in there, which is a good thing,” Kentucky coach John Calipari said. “I want it to hurt like that. I knew this would get their attention. The biggest thing is if you don’t do this together, you won’t win. You’ll never be a special team.” This was the earliest 1 vs. 2 matchup, and first since Feb. 23, 2008, when Tennessee beat top-ranked Memphis. The Tigers coach then? None other than Calipari. This game had even more hype, mostly because of the Kiddie Cats. Much has been made of the youngsters, with good reason. The last time Calipari had a roster this star-studded, the Wildcats won a national title. This group might be even more impressive. Six were McDonald’s All-Ameri-

a

Please see no. 1, Page B-7

By Mike Fitzpatrick

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Two championships and eight successful seasons in Boston brought Terry Francona exactly zero firstplace votes in Manager of the Year balloting. It took him one year with the surprising Cleveland Indians to bag the prize. Clint Hurdle Francona and Clint Hurdle of the Pittsburgh Pirates won the Manager of the Year awards Tuesday after guiding their small-budget teams to charming turnarounds. Terry In a close vote by Francona the Baseball Writers’ Association of America panel, Francona edged old friend John Farrell of the World Series champion Red Sox 112 points to 96 for the American League honor. “I have a feeling he wouldn’t trade what they did for this any day of the week,” Francona said on a conference

Please see manaGeRs, Page B-8

Head injuries spell tragedy at all levels

held his arms out and yelled after the big dunk, delighting the raucous crowd at the United Center. Parker headed to the bench with his fifth foul. Perry Ellis finished with 24 points and Wayne Selden had 15 for the Jayhawks (2-0), who went 27 for 35 at the foul line, compared to 16 of 28 for the Blue Devils. Wiggins also had 10 rebounds despite battling foul trouble for much of the game. Kansas scored 17 of the final 23 points after Rasheed Sulaimon made a jumper for Duke that tied it at 77 with 3:50 left. Amile Jefferson had 17 points for Duke (1-1), which dropped to 7-3 in the all-time series against Kansas. Rodney Hood scored 11 points. The 10th meeting of two of college basketball’s most successful programs was an absolute classic, an unbelievably well-played game for mid-November. After No. 2 Michigan State held on for a 78-74 victory over top-ranked Kentucky in the first game of the Champions Classic, the Blue Devils and

Please see Kansas, Page B-7

Please see inJURies, Page B-8

From left, Michigan State center Adreian Payne, Kentucky forward Julius Randle and Michigan State guard Gary Harris, right, struggle for a loose ball during the first half of Tuesday’s game in Chicago. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Jay Cohen

The Associated Press

CHARLES REX ARBOGAST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — Andrew Wiggins soared toward the hoop as Jabari Parker made one last attempt to stop his fellow freshman star. No such luck. WigKansas 94 gins owned the end Duke 83 of Parker’s impressive homecoming. The Kansas star scored 16 of his 22 points in the second half, outplaying Parker down the stretch and helping the fifth-ranked Jayhawks knock off No. 4 Duke 94-83 on Tuesday night. Parker, a former prep star at nearby Simeon High School, had 27 points, nine rebounds and three steals in a spectacular return to his hometown. But it was Wiggins who made the biggest plays in the final minutes of a taut thriller between two storied programs. Wiggins drained a stepback jumper to give the Jayhawks an 85-81 lead with 1:33 to go, and then had a fast-break dunk while being fouled by a trailing Parker. Wiggins

I

t seems like the tragedies in football just keep on coming. Hopi High School in Arizona, which is roughly two hours west of Gallup, was having one of the best seasons in school history. After going 5-5 last season, the Bruins finished the regular season 9-1 and had Edmundo outscored their opponents 492-34. Carrillo Their reward was Commentary playing Arizona Lutheran in the first round of the state playoffs on Nov. 9. That’s where everything went wrong. Bruin senior captain Charles Youvella suffered a head injury in the fourth quarter of the 60-6 loss to the Coyotes after scoring the team’s only touchdown in the third quarter. Youvella died from his injury on Monday. In a time where head injuries are a hot topic in football, this tragedy paints a horrible picture of what these injuries can really take away. By now, everyone is well aware that head injuries and concussions are a reality of football, but can we do anything about them? The main objective of a helmet is to protect the player’s head, which is no

Wiggins’ surge helps No. 5 Kansas edge No. 4 Duke

Kansas guard Andrew Wiggins, right, shoots over Duke guard Tyler Thornton during the second half of Tuesday’s game in Chicago.

Managers of the Year: Hurdle, Francona

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

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

sabres 3, kings 2, so

HOCKEY hockey

NhL eastern conference

Atlantic GP Tampa Bay 18 Boston 17 Detroit 19 Toronto 17 Montreal 19 Ottawa 18 Florida 19 Buffalo 20 Metro GP Pittsburgh 17 Washington 19 N.Y. Rangers 18 Carolina 18 New Jersey 18 N.Y. Islanders 19 Philadelphia 17 Columbus 17

W 13 11 9 11 9 7 4 4 W 11 10 9 7 6 7 6 6

L oL Pts GFGA 5 0 26 56 43 5 1 23 48 30 5 5 23 47 51 6 0 22 51 40 8 2 20 49 42 7 4 18 53 56 11 4 12 40 66 15 1 9 36 63 L oL Pts GFGA 6 0 22 50 40 8 1 21 61 55 9 0 18 41 49 7 4 18 34 49 7 5 17 38 46 9 3 17 54 61 10 1 13 31 44 10 1 13 44 50

Western conference

central GP W L oL Pts GFGA Colorado 17 14 3 0 28 55 30 Chicago 18 12 2 4 28 66 49 St. Louis 16 11 2 3 25 54 37 Minnesota 18 10 4 4 24 48 40 Winnipeg 20 9 9 2 20 53 57 Dallas 17 8 7 2 18 46 52 Nashville 18 8 8 2 18 38 57 Pacific GP W L oL Pts GFGA Anaheim 20 15 4 1 31 68 48 Phoenix 19 13 4 2 28 63 58 San Jose 18 11 2 5 27 66 43 Vancouver 20 11 7 2 24 54 54 Los Angeles 18 11 6 1 23 52 44 Calgary 18 6 9 3 15 49 64 Edmonton 19 4 13 2 10 48 75 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Tuesday’s Games Buffalo 3, Los Angeles 2, SO Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1, SO Winnipeg 3, Detroit 2, SO N.Y. Islanders 3, Nashville 1 New Jersey 3, N.Y. Rangers 2 Washington 4, Columbus 3, OT Carolina 2, Colorado 1 Philadelphia 5, Ottawa 0 Florida 3, Anaheim 2 Phoenix 3, St. Louis 2, OT San Jose 3, Calgary 2, OT Wednesday’s Games Toronto at Minnesota, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 6 p.m. Dallas at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Thursday’s Games Columbus at Boston, 5 p.m. Los Angeles at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Anaheim at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. Phoenix at Chicago, 6 p.m. Colorado at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Dallas at Calgary, 7 p.m. San Jose at Vancouver, 8 p.m.

NhL LeAders

Through Nov. 11 scoring Steven Stamkos, TB Sidney Crosby, Pit Ryan Getzlaf, Anh Alexander Steen, StL Corey Perry, Anh

GP 17 17 18 15 19

G 14 8 10 14 11

A PTs 9 23 15 23 12 22 7 21 10 21

NhL suMMAries Tuesday Flyers 5, senators 0

Philadelphia 1 2 2—5 ottawa 0 0 0—0 First Period—1, Philadelphia, Read 4 (Downie, Couturier), 16:24. Penalties—Streit, Phi (cross-checking), 8:06. second Period—2, Philadelphia, Voracek 2 (Hartnell, Giroux), :28. 3, Philadelphia, Voracek 3 (Simmonds, Giroux), 10:33 (pp). Penalties—Borowiecki, Ott (interference), 9:03; Conacher, Ott (crosschecking), 13:33. Third Period—4, Philadelphia, Lecavalier 7 (B.Schenn), 7:57. 5, Philadelphia, B.Schenn 4 (Lecavalier, Gustafsson), 13:32 (pp). Penalties—Michalek, Ott (tripping), 11:59. shots on Goal—Philadelphia 10-1011—31. Ottawa 10-8-6—24. Power-play opportunities—Philadelphia 2 of 3; Ottawa 0 of 1. Goalies—Philadelphia, Mason 5-7-1 (24 shots-24 saves). Ottawa, Anderson 4-5-2 (31-26). referees—Dean Morton, Tim Peel. Linesmen—Michel Cormier, Andy McElman. A—16,398. T—2:25.

devils 3, rangers 2

New Jersey 0 2 1—3 N.y. rangers 0 1 1—2 First Period—None. Penalties—Jagr, NJ (tripping), 10:08; Boyle, NYR (tripping), 14:51; Greene, NJ (tripping), 15:48; Larsson, NJ (high-sticking), 19:30. second Period—1, New Jersey, Carter 1 (Greene), 6:37. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Staal 2 (Zuccarello, Kreider), 6:55. 3, New Jersey, Carter 2 (Larsson, Harrold), 19:13. Penalties—Zidlicky, NJ (roughing), 12:23; Zuccarello, NYR (roughing), 12:23; Hagelin, NYR (hooking), 16:22. Third Period—4, N.Y. Rangers, Girardi 1 (Kreider, McDonagh), 13:18. 5, New Jersey, Zubrus 3 (T.Zajac, Jagr), 17:05. Penalties—Pouliot, NYR (tripping), 1:56; Josefson, NJ (freezing the puck), 5:02; Jagr, NJ (holding), 10:05. shots on Goal—New Jersey 7-147—28. N.Y. Rangers 9-16-10—35. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 0 of 3; N.Y. Rangers 0 of 5. Goalies—New Jersey, Brodeur 5-3-2 (35 shots-33 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 6-7-0 (28-25). referees—Francis Charron, Wes McCauley. Linesmen—Shane Heyer, Mark Wheler. A—18,006. T—2:35.

capitals 4, Blue Jackets 3, oT

columbus 0 1 2 0—3 Washington 0 1 2 1—4 First Period—None. Penalties—None. second Period—1, Columbus, Dubinsky 5 (Letestu), 7:50 (sh). 2, Washington, Carlson 4 (Erat, Grabovski), 14:00. Penalties—Oleksy, Was (interference), 5:07; Bobrovsky, Clm, served by Atkinson (delay of game), 6:03; Columbus bench, served by Comeau (too many men), 11:24; MacKenzie, Clm (slashing), 18:45. Third Period—3, Washington, Ward 9 (Urbom, Laich), 8:56 (sh). 4, Columbus, Boll 1 (Wisniewski, Collins), 11:22. 5, Columbus, Atkinson 5 (Dubinsky), 14:19. 6, Washington, Grabovski 6 (Chimera, Green), 18:15. Penalties—Ward, Was (holding), 5:11; Green, Was (closing hand on puck), 8:06. overtime—7, Washington, Ovechkin 14 (Johansson, Carlson), 1:34. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Columbus 12-8-52—27. Washington 7-13-12-2—34. Power-play opportunities—Columbus 0 of 3; Washington 0 of 3. Goalies—Columbus, Bobrovsky 5-8-1 (34 shots-30 saves). Washington, Holtby 8-6-0 (27-24). referees—G. Hebert, Marc Joannette. Linesmen—Steve Barton, M. Shewchyk. A—18,506. T—2:27.

Los Angeles 1 0 1 0—2 Buffalo 0 1 1 0—3 Buffalo won shootout 2-0 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Williams 7 (Voynov), 1:17. Penalties—Muzzin, LA (high-sticking), 13:00. second Period—2, Buffalo, Hodgson 6 (Ott, Moulson), 12:46. Penalties—Ehrhoff, Buf (delay of game), 7:16; Hodgson, Buf (hooking), 18:39. Third Period—3, Buffalo, Hodgson 7 (Ennis, Moulson), 4:26 (pp). 4, Los Angeles, King 5 (Toffoli, Richards), 16:26. Penalties—Williams, LA (hooking), 3:34; Ott, Buf (boarding), 6:41; Stafford, Buf (slashing), 19:22. overtime—None. Penalties—Ehrhoff, Buf (holding), 4:28. shootout—Los Angeles 0 (Richards NG, Lewis NG), Buffalo 2 (Moulson G, Hodgson NG, Ennis G). shots on Goal—Los Angeles 15-15-123—45. Buffalo 4-3-9-1—17. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 0 of 5; Buffalo 1 of 2. Goalies—Los Angeles, Quick (17 shots-15 saves), Scrivens 1-1-1 (3:40 overtime, 0-0). Buffalo, R.Miller 3-11-0 (45-43). referees—Dan O’Rourke, Ian Walsh. Linesmen—David Brisebois, B. Kovachik. A—18,281. T—2:46.

Panthers 3, ducks 2

Anaheim 2 0 0—2 Florida 0 2 1—3 First Period—1, Anaheim, Cogliano 6 (Winnik, Smith-Pelly), :40. 2, Anaheim, Lindholm 2 (Bonino, Etem), 14:26. Penalties—Vatanen, Ana (tripping), 15:08. second Period—3, Florida, Matthias 2 (Campbell, Barch), 13:28. 4, Florida, Upshall 3 (Gudbranson, Huberdeau), 14:38. Penalties—Weaver, Fla (interference), 7:57; Florida bench, served by Huberdeau (too many men), 10:16; Lindholm, Ana (hooking), 19:38. Third Period—5, Florida, Boyes 6 (Upshall), 4:29. Penalties—Allen, Ana (holding), 9:12; Beauchemin, Ana (hooking), 15:33; Upshall, Fla (hooking), 16:40. shots on Goal—Anaheim 10-11-13— 34. Florida 8-10-7—25. Power-play opportunities—Anaheim 0 of 3; Florida 0 of 4. Goalies—Anaheim, Andersen 6-1-0 (25 shots-22 saves). Florida, Thomas 3-5-0 (34-32). referees—Brad Meier, Mark Lemelin. Linesmen—Greg Devorski, Bryan Pancich. A—13,354. T—2:26.

Jets 3, red Wings 2, so

Winnipeg 1 0 1 0—3 detroit 1 0 1 0—2 Winnipeg won shootout 2-1 First Period—1, Winnipeg, Little 11 (Wheeler, Ladd), 7:10. 2, Detroit, Datsyuk 8 (Zetterberg, Kronwall), 14:44 (pp). Penalties—Clitsome, Wpg (holding), 3:28; Franzen, Det (slashing), 9:05; Scheifele, Wpg (hooking), 14:02. second Period—None. Penalties—None. Third Period—3, Winnipeg, Bogosian 1 (Jokinen, Kane), 10:47. 4, Detroit, Datsyuk 9 (Franzen, Alfredsson), 13:11 (pp). Penalties—Andersson, Det (tripping), 1:55; Wheeler, Wpg (tripping), 11:10; Kane, Wpg (high-sticking), 12:21. overtime—None. Penalties—Kindl, Det (slashing), 3:56. shootout—Winnipeg 2 (Setoguchi G, Ladd G), Detroit 1 (Datsyuk NG, Alfredsson G, Bertuzzi NG). shots on Goal—Winnipeg 8-9-2-2—21. Detroit 16-10-16-1—43. Power-play opportunities—Winnipeg 0 of 3; Detroit 2 of 4. Goalies—Winnipeg, Pavelec 7-7-2 (43 shots-41 saves). Detroit, Howard 5-5-5 (21-19). referees—Chris Lee, Kevin Pollock. Linesmen—Scott Cherrey, Scott Driscoll. A—20,066. T—2:36.

Lightning 2, canadiens 1, so

Tampa Bay 1 0 0 0—2 Montreal 0 0 1 0—1 Tampa Bay won shootout 1-0 First Period—1, Tampa Bay, Malone 3 (Brewer, Crombeen), 5:00. Penalties—Palat, TB (holding), 5:53; Johnson, TB (hooking), 12:40; Barberio, TB (tripping), 18:01. second Period—None. Penalties—Montreal bench, served by Bourque (too many men), 8:54. Third Period—2, Montreal, Briere 2 (Pacioretty), 15:22. Penalties—Bourque, Mon (highsticking), 16:27; Eller, Mon (face-off violation), 18:54. overtime—None. Penalties—Markov, Mon (delay of game), :40. shootout—Tampa Bay 1 (Filppula G, Purcell NG), Montreal 0 (Galchenyuk NG, Briere NG, Gallagher NG). shots on Goal—Tampa Bay 10-13-166—45. Montreal 8-5-13-3—29. Power-play opportunities—Tampa Bay 0 of 4; Montreal 0 of 3. Goalies—Tampa Bay, Bishop 12-2-0 (29 shots-28 saves). Montreal, Price 7-7-2 (45-44). referees—Greg Kimmerly, Mike Leggo. Linesmen—Steve Miller, Vaughan Rody. A—21,273. T—2:51.

coyotes 3, Blues 2, oT

Phoenix 2 0 0 1—3 st. Louis 1 0 1 0—2 First Period—1, St. Louis, Lapierre 2 (Bouwmeester, Pietrangelo), 5:53. 2, Phoenix, Moss 1 (Ribeiro, EkmanLarsson), 7:49. 3, Phoenix, Boedker 4 (Klinkhammer, Klesla), 19:29. Penalties—Chipchura, Pho (tripping), 14:23. second Period—None. Penalties—Backes, StL (interference), 12:14. Third Period—4, St. Louis, Polak 2 (Steen, Backes), 2:49. Penalties—None. overtime—5, Phoenix, Ekman-Larsson 4 (Ribeiro, Doan), :56. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Phoenix 7-8-3-1—19. St. Louis 10-14-13-2—39. Power-play opportunities—Phoenix 0 of 1; St. Louis 0 of 1. Goalies—Phoenix, Smith 11-3-2 (39 shots-37 saves). St. Louis, Halak 9-2-2 (19-16). referees—Paul Devorski, Dennis LaRue. Linesmen—Thor Nelson, Mike Cvik. A—15,678. T—2:24.

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD islanders 3, Predators 1

Nashville 0 0 1—1 N.y. islanders 2 1 0—3 First Period—1, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares 8 (Nielsen), 15:30 (pp). 2, N.Y. Islanders, Bouchard 4 (Nielsen), 17:23. Penalties—Clune, Nas (holding), 4:57; Clune, Nas, major (fighting), 9:46; Martin, NYI, major (fighting), 9:46; Legwand, Nas (elbowing), 10:53; Legwand, Nas (elbowing), 14:44. second Period—3, N.Y. Islanders, Okposo 6 (Tavares, Nelson), 7:07. Penalties—Cizikas, NYI (roughing), 10:35; Weber, Nas (hooking), 14:32. Third Period—4, Nashville, Hornqvist 5 (Legwand, Weber), 14:30. Penalties—Josi, Nas (hooking), 10:05; Ness, NYI (holding), 17:40. shots on Goal—Nashville 10-11-12— 33. N.Y. Islanders 16-9-8—33. Power-play opportunities—Nashville 0 of 2; N.Y. Islanders 1 of 5. Goalies—Nashville, Mazanec 0-1-0 (33 shots-30 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Poulin 2-4-0 (33-32). referees—Justin St. Pierre, Steve Kozari. Linesmen—Derek Amell, Matt MacPherson. A—12,108. T—2:26.

sharks 3, Flames 2, oT

san Jose 2 0 0 1—3 calgary 0 0 2 0—2 First Period—1, San Jose, Couture 8 (Marleau, Kennedy), 1:32. 2, San Jose, Marleau 9 (Pavelski, Thornton), 19:04 (pp). Penalties—Smid, Cal (interference), 7:57; Stajan, Cal (interference), 18:58. second Period—None. Penalties—None. Third Period—3, Calgary, Russell 3 (Monahan), 6:51 (pp). 4, Calgary, Cammalleri 8 (Butler), 10:25. Penalties—Braun, SJ (interference), 6:46; Kennedy, SJ (tripping), 7:49. overtime—5, San Jose, Stuart 1 (Thornton, Boyle), 1:13. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—San Jose 17-11-61—35. Calgary 3-3-6-1—13. Power-play opportunities—San Jose 1 of 2; Calgary 1 of 2. Goalies—San Jose, Stalock 2-0-0 (13 shots-11 saves). Calgary, Berra 1-2-1 (35-32). referees—Mike Hasenfratz, Brian Pochmara. Linesmen—Lonnie Cameron, Anthony Sericolo. A—19,289. T—2:31.

hurricanes 2, Avalanche 1

colorado 0 1 0—1 carolina 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Carolina, Jo.Staal 3 (Gerbe, Dwyer), 12:47. Penalties—None. second Period—2, Carolina, Dwyer 1 (Gerbe, Jo.Staal), :26. 3, Colorado, Stastny 7 (MacKinnon, Landeskog), 14:34 (pp). Penalties—Dvorak, Car (hooking), 13:54; Sekera, Car (holding), 17:46. Third Period—None. Penalties—Johnson, Col (holding), 19:28. shots on Goal—Colorado 5-19-10—34. Carolina 11-12-5—28. Power-play opportunities—Colorado 1 of 2; Carolina 0 of 1. Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 9-3-0 (28 shots-26 saves). Carolina, Peters 3-5-1 (34-33). referees—Eric Furlatt, Kyle Rehman. Linesmen—Tim Nowak, Brian Murphy. A—13,278. T—2:22.

BASEBALL BAseBALL

NL MANAGer oF The yeAr

As selected by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America: 2013 — Clint Hurdle, Pittsburgh 2012 — Davey Johnson, Washington 2011 — Kirk Gibson, Arizona 2010 — Bud Black, San Diego 2009 — Jim Tracy, Colorado 2008 — Lou Piniella, Chicago 2007 — Bob Melvin, Arizona 2006 — Joe Girardi, Florida 2005 — Bobby Cox, Atlanta 2004 — Bobby Cox, Atlanta 2003 — Jack McKeon, Florida 2002 — Tony La Russa, St. Louis 2001 — Larry Bowa, Philadelphia 2000 — Dusty Baker, San Francisco 1999 — Jack McKeon, Cincinnati 1998 — Larry Dierker, Houston 1997 — Dusty Baker, San Francisco 1996 — Bruce Bochy, San Diego Voting (Tabulated on a 5-3-1 basis) Manager, Team 1st, 2nd, 3rd, Tot Clint Hurdle, Pirates 25, 5, 0, 140 Don Mattingly, Dodgers 2, 17, 7, 68 Fredi Gonzalez, Braves 3, 4, 16, 43 M. Matheny, Cardinals 0, 4, 7, 19

AL MANAGer oF The yeAr

Selected by the Baseball Writer’s Association of America: 2013 — Terry Francona, Cleveland 2012 — Bob Melvin, Oakland 2011 — Joe Maddon, Tampa Bay 2010 — Ron Gardenhire, Minnesota 2009 — Mike Scioscia, Los Angeles 2008 — Joe Maddon, Tampa Bay 2007 — Eric Wedge, Cleveland 2006 — Jim Leyland, Detroit 2005 — Ozzie Guillen, Chicago 2004 — Buck Showalter, Texas 2003 — Tony Pena, Kansas City 2002 — Mike Scioscia, Anaheim 2001 — Lou Piniella, Seattle 2000 — Jerry Manuel, Chicago 1999 — Jimy Williams, Boston 1998 — Joe Torre, New York 1997 — Davey Johnson, Baltimore 1996 — Johnny Oates, Texas, and Joe Torre, New York 1995 — Lou Piniella, Seattle Voting (Tabulated on a 5-3-1 basis) Manager, Team 1st, 2nd, 3rd, Tot Terry Francona, Indians 16, 10, 2, 112 John Farrell, Red Sox 12, 10, 6, 96 Bob Melvin, Athletics 2, 5, 11, 36 Joe Girardi, Yankees 0, 2, 5, 11 Joe Maddon, Rays 0, 2, 3, 9 Jim Leyland, Tigers 0, 1, 0, 3 Buck Showalter, Orioles 0, 0, 1, 1 R. Washington, Rangers 0, 0, 1, 1 Ned Yost, Royals 0, 0, 1, 1

SOCCER soccer

NorTh AMericA MLs Playoffs coNFereNce chAMPioNshiP eastern conference

Leg 1 — saturday, Nov 9 Sporting KC 0, Houston 0 Leg 2 — saturday, Nov. 23 Houston at Sporting KC, 5:30 p.m.

Western conference

Leg 1 — sunday, Nov. 10 Real Salt Lake 4, Portland 2 Leg 2 — sunday, Nov. 24 Real Salt Lake at Portland, 7 p.m.

MLs cup

saturday, dec. 7 at higher seed, 2 p.m.

Warriors 113, Pistons 95

BASKETBALL BAskeTBALL

NBA eastern conference

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

W 4 4 3 2 2 W 5 4 3 3 2 W 8 3 3 2 2

L Pct 4 .500 4 .500 5 .375 4 .333 4 .333 L Pct 3 .625 3 .571 4 .429 5 .375 5 .286 L Pct 0 1.000 3 .500 5 .375 4 .333 5 .286

Western conference

GB — — 1 1 1 GB — 1/2 11/2 2 21/2 GB — 4 5 5 51/2

southwest W L Pct GB San Antonio 7 1 .875 — Houston 5 3 .625 2 Dallas 5 3 .625 2 Memphis 3 4 .429 31/2 New Orleans 3 5 .375 4 Northwest W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 5 1 .833 — Portland 5 2 .714 1/2 Minnesota 5 3 .625 1 Denver 2 4 .333 3 Utah 0 8 .000 6 Pacific W L Pct GB Phoenix 5 2 .714 — L.A. Clippers 5 3 .625 1/2 Golden State 5 3 .625 1/2 L.A. Lakers 4 5 .444 2 Sacramento 1 5 .167 31/2 Tuesday’s Games Miami 118, Milwaukee 95 Dallas 105, Washington 95 Golden State 113, Detroit 95 L.A. Lakers 116, New Orleans 95 Monday’s Games San Antonio 109, Philadelphia 85 Indiana 95, Memphis 79 Atlanta 103, Charlotte 94 Boston 120, Orlando 105 Chicago 96, Cleveland 81 Houston 110, Toronto 104, 2OT Denver 100, Utah 81 Portland 109, Detroit 103 L.A. Clippers 109, Minnesota 107 Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee at Orlando, 5 p.m. Houston at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Toronto at Memphis, 6 p.m. New York at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Washington at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Denver, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Utah, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Portland, 8 p.m. Brooklyn at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Houston at New York, 6 p.m. Oklahoma City at Golden State, 8:30 p.m.

NBA calendar

Jan. 6 — 10-day contracts can be signed. Jan. 10 — Contracts guaranteed for rest of season. Feb. 14-16 — All-Star weekend, New Orleans.

NBA Boxscores Tuesday heat 118, Bucks 95

MiLWAukee (95) Butler 4-15 0-0 10, Middleton 3-9 0-0 7, Pachulia 1-4 1-1 3, Wolters 4-8 1-2 9, Mayo 2-6 0-0 6, Henson 7-10 4-4 18, Knight 0-2 6-6 6, Antetokounmpo 4-8 0-0 11, Neal 6-11 3-4 18, Udoh 2-6 3-4 7, Raduljica 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-79 18-21 95. MiAMi (118) James 13-21 3-6 33, Battier 2-6 1-1 6, Bosh 3-9 3-4 10, Chalmers 4-6 6-8 15, Wade 4-7 0-0 8, Lewis 3-3 0-0 7, Andersen 4-6 0-0 8, Beasley 8-12 1-4 19, Cole 3-5 0-1 7, Mason Jr. 0-1 0-0 0, Anthony 1-1 0-0 2, Jones 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 46-79 14-24 118. Milwaukee 23 22 17 33—95 Miami 32 24 28 34—118 3-Point Goals—Milwaukee 11-30 (Antetokounmpo 3-5, Neal 3-7, Mayo 2-3, Butler 2-8, Middleton 1-3, Knight 0-2, Wolters 0-2), Miami 12-23 (James 4-7, Beasley 2-3, Lewis 1-1, Chalmers 1-2, Cole 1-2, Jones 1-2, Bosh 1-2, Battier 1-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Milwaukee 46 (Middleton 7), Miami 46 (Wade 8). Assists—Milwaukee 19 (Knight 6), Miami 29 (Chalmers 7). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 15, Miami 17. Technicals—Mayo. A—19,600.

Mavericks 105, Wizards 95

WAshiNGToN (95) Ariza 10-17 2-3 27, Nene 3-7 8-14 14, Gortat 6-11 0-0 12, Wall 5-10 3-4 14, Beal 2-10 5-6 9, Webster 2-5 2-2 6, Harrington 3-8 0-0 8, Seraphin 0-0 0-0 0, Maynor 1-5 0-0 2, Booker 0-1 0-0 0, Rice Jr. 1-1 0-0 3, Temple 0-0 0-0 0, Vesely 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-75 20-29 95. dALLAs (105) Marion 4-7 0-0 8, Nowitzki 8-19 1-2 19, Dalembert 5-7 5-6 15, Calderon 4-8 0-0 11, Ellis 7-16 4-5 19, Carter 6-13 0-0 16, Crowder 2-5 0-1 4, Blair 4-6 1-3 9, Mekel 1-2 2-2 4, Ledo 0-1 0-0 0, James 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-84 13-19 105. Washington 34 15 30 16—95 dallas 33 28 27 17—105 3-Point Goals—Washington 9-26 (Ariza 5-11, Harrington 2-5, Rice Jr. 1-1, Wall 1-3, Booker 0-1, Beal 0-2, Webster 0-3), Dallas 10-26 (Carter 4-9, Calderon 3-6, Nowitzki 2-5, Ellis 1-1, Marion 0-1, Mekel 0-1, Ledo 0-1, Crowder 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 50 (Gortat 12), Dallas 50 (Blair 11). Assists— Washington 24 (Wall 10), Dallas 25 (Ellis 7). Total Fouls—Washington 20, Dallas 20. Technicals—Dallas defensive three second. A—19,627.

Lakers 116, Pelicans 95

NeW orLeANs (95) Aminu 3-5 0-0 6, Davis 6-11 3-4 15, Smith 4-13 0-0 8, Holiday 2-11 3-3 7, Gordon 5-13 7-7 17, Stiemsma 1-2 0-0 2, Evans 4-13 3-7 11, Roberts 1-5 0-0 2, Morrow 3-3 0-0 8, Rivers 2-4 2-2 7, Amundson 1-2 1-4 3, Withey 2-2 5-6 9. Totals 34-84 24-33 95. L.A. LAkers (116) Johnson 2-4 1-2 5, Hill 7-12 7-8 21, Gasol 6-10 2-2 14, Blake 1-4 2-2 5, Meeks 5-7 2-2 15, Kaman 4-9 0-0 8, Young 7-11 2-2 17, Farmar 4-9 0-0 9, Henry 6-8 0-0 15, Williams 1-1 0-0 3, Sacre 0-2 1-2 1, Kelly 1-2 0-1 3, Harris 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-79 17-21 116. New orleans 19 20 23 33—95 L.A. Lakers 22 33 31 30—116 3-Point Goals—New Orleans 3-10 (Morrow 2-2, Rivers 1-1, Holiday 0-1, Evans 0-1, Roberts 0-2, Gordon 0-3), L.A. Lakers 11-20 (Henry 3-3, Meeks 3-5, Williams 1-1, Blake 1-2, Kelly 1-2, Young 1-2, Farmar 1-3, Johnson 0-1, Gasol 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New Orleans 38 (Aminu, Davis, Withey 5), L.A. Lakers 60 (Hill 11). Assists—New Orleans 23 (Evans 6), L.A. Lakers 33 (Blake 10). Total Fouls—New Orleans 20, L.A. Lakers 31. Technicals—L.A. Lakers defensive three second. A—18,426.

deTroiT (95) Smith 1-6 0-0 2, Monroe 6-15 3-6 15, Drummond 8-10 0-0 16, Jennings 5-14 3-4 13, Billups 0-1 0-0 0, Singler 1-2 2-2 4, Stuckey 2-9 3-3 7, Caldwell-Pope 4-11 0-0 9, Bynum 4-8 6-10 14, Mitchell 1-2 1-2 3, Datome 4-6 0-0 10, Jerebko 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 37-87 18-27 95. GoLdeN sTATe (113) Iguodala 2-6 2-2 8, Lee 6-10 5-6 17, Bogut 4-7 0-0 8, Curry 7-10 9-9 25, Thompson 6-9 0-0 14, O’Neal 7-8 3-5 17, Barnes 4-8 0-2 8, Bazemore 1-2 0-0 3, Green 2-3 0-0 5, Speights 1-3 0-0 2, Nedovic 1-2 2-2 4, Kuzmic 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 42-70 21-26 113. detroit 16 25 30 24—95 Golden state 35 27 32 19—113 3-Point Goals—Detroit 3-18 (Datome 2-4, Caldwell-Pope 1-3, Singler 0-1, Smith 0-2, Stuckey 0-2, Jerebko 0-2, Jennings 0-4), Golden State 8-16 (Iguodala 2-3, Curry 2-4, Thompson 2-4, Bazemore 1-1, Green 1-2, Nedovic 0-1, Barnes 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Detroit 42 (Drummond 14), Golden State 50 (Lee, Bogut 9). Assists—Detroit 16 (Bynum 4), Golden State 28 (Iguodala 11). Total Fouls—Detroit 25, Golden State 25. Technicals—Golden State defensive three second. A—19,596 (19,596).

NcAA BAskeTBALL Top 25

Tuesday’s Games No. 2 Michigan State 78, No. 1 Kentucky 74 No. 3 Louisville 97, Hofstra 69 No. 5 Kansas 94, No. 4 Duke 83 No. 7 Michigan 93, S. Carolina State 59 No. 8 Oklahoma St. 93, Utah Valley 40 No. 9 Syracuse 89, Fordham 74 No. 10 Ohio State 79, Ohio 69 No. 20 Wisconsin 59, No. 11 Florida 53 No. 14 VCU 59, Virginia 56 No. 17 Marquette 114, Grambling State 71 No. 23 Baylor 66, South Carolina 64 No. 24 UCLA 91, Oakland 60 Monday’s Games No. 6 Arizona 91, Long Beach State 57 No. 15 Gonzaga 93, Colorado State 61 No. 16 Wichita State 66, Western Kentucky 49 No. 19 UConn 80, Yale 62 Wednesday’s Game No. 18 Oregon vs. W.Carolina, 9 p.m. Thursday’s Games No. 6 Arizona at San Diego State, 8:05 p.m. No. 13 Memphis vs. Austin Peay, 6 p.m. No. 16 Wichita State vs. William & Mary, 6 p.m. No. 19 UConn vs. Detroit, 5 p.m. Friday’s Games No. 2 Michigan State vs. Columbia, 7 p.m. No. 3 Louisville vs. Cornell, 5 p.m. No. 4 Duke vs. Florida Atlantic, 5 p.m. No. 8 Oklahoma State vs. ArkansasPine Bluff, 6 p.m. No. 12 North Carolina vs. Holy Cross, 6 p.m.

FOOTBALL FooTBALL

NFL American conference

east New England N.Y. Jets Miami Buffalo south Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville North Cincinnati Cleveland Baltimore Pittsburgh West Kansas City Denver San Diego Oakland

W 7 5 4 3 W 6 4 2 1 W 6 4 4 3 W 9 8 4 3

L 2 4 5 7 L 3 5 7 8 L 4 5 5 6 L 0 1 5 6

T Pct PF PA 0 .778 234 175 0 .556 169 231 0 .444 193 209 0 .300 199 259 T Pct PF PA 0 .667 222 193 0 .444 200 196 0 .222 170 248 0 .111 115 291 T Pct PF PA 0 .600 234 186 0 .444 172 197 0 .444 188 189 0 .333 179 218 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 215 111 0 .889 371 238 0 .444 212 202 0 .333 166 223

National conference

east W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 5 5 0 .500 274 258 Philadelphia 5 5 0 .500 252 244 N.Y. Giants 3 6 0 .333 165 243 Washington 3 6 0 .333 230 287 south W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 7 2 0 .778 265 163 Carolina 6 3 0 .667 214 115 Atlanta 2 7 0 .222 186 251 Tampa Bay 1 8 0 .111 146 209 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 3 0 .667 238 216 Chicago 5 4 0 .556 259 247 Green Bay 5 4 0 .556 245 212 Minnesota 2 7 0 .222 220 279 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 9 1 0 .900 265 159 San Francisco 6 3 0 .667 227 155 Arizona 5 4 0 .556 187 198 St. Louis 4 6 0 .400 224 234 Week 11 Thursday’s Game Indianapolis at Tennessee, 6:25 p.m. sunday’s Games Baltimore at Chicago, 11 a.m. Oakland at Houston, 11 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Arizona at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. San Diego at Miami, 2:05 p.m. Minnesota at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. San Francisco at New Orleans, 2:25 p.m. Green Bay at N.Y. Giants, 2:25 p.m. Kansas City at Denver, 6:30 p.m. Monday’s Game New England at Carolina, 6:40 p.m. open: Dallas, St. Louis

NFL TeAM sTATisTics

Week 10

Total Team yardage AFc

offense Denver Cincinnati San Diego Houston Buffalo New England Indianapolis Pittsburgh N.Y. Jets Oakland Tennessee Kansas City Cleveland Baltimore Miami Jacksonville defense Houston Cleveland N.Y. Jets Tennessee Kansas City Pittsburgh Baltimore Oakland Cincinnati Miami New England Indianapolis Denver Jacksonville San Diego Buffalo

yards 4128 3786 3559 3386 3329 3250 3133 3034 2981 2977 2906 2856 2851 2768 2735 2506 yards 2520 2841 2927 2936 2942 2957 3080 3109 3114 3214 3249 3310 3374 3500 3547 3559

rush 947 1081 961 1113 1407 1162 992 725 1161 1289 1001 1071 734 658 783 585 rush 1021 884 664 1034 1067 1145 923 890 1020 1072 1154 1139 783 1377 1031 1173

Pass 3181 2705 2598 2273 1922 2088 2141 2309 1820 1688 1905 1785 2117 2110 1952 1921 Pass 1499 1957 2263 1902 1875 1812 2157 2219 2094 2142 2095 2171 2591 2123 2516 2386

offense Philadelphia New Orleans Green Bay Washington Detroit Seattle Chicago Dallas St. Louis Atlanta Carolina San Francisco N.Y. Giants Arizona Minnesota Tampa Bay defense Carolina San Francisco New Orleans Seattle N.Y. Giants Arizona Tampa Bay Green Bay Detroit Atlanta Chicago Washington St. Louis Minnesota Philadelphia Dallas

NFc

yards 4134 3804 3780 3694 3692 3620 3354 3278 3165 3055 2912 2894 2873 2848 2841 2698 yards 2550 2851 2858 2890 2967 2975 2997 3175 3386 3409 3413 3497 3518 3594 4170 4398

rush 1535 880 1288 1361 930 1534 999 770 994 579 1152 1329 692 842 983 1000 rush 738 948 1059 1110 925 782 862 960 906 1141 1165 1024 1145 1023 1105 1268

Pass 2599 2924 2492 2333 2762 2086 2355 2508 2171 2476 1760 1565 2181 2006 1858 1698 Pass 1812 1903 1799 1780 2042 2193 2135 2215 2480 2268 2248 2473 2373 2571 3065 3130

yards 458.7 395.4 378.6 376.2 361.1 348.1 337.1 332.9 331.2 330.8 322.9 317.3 316.8 307.6 303.9 278.4 yards 280.0 311.4 315.7 325.2 326.2 326.9 328.6 342.2 345.4 355.9 357.1 361.0 367.8 374.9 388.9 394.1

rush 105.2 106.8 108.1 123.7 129.1 110.2 80.6 140.7 129.0 143.2 111.2 119.0 81.6 73.1 87.0 65.0 rush 113.4 102.0 98.2 73.8 114.9 118.6 127.2 102.6 98.9 117.3 119.1 128.2 126.6 87.0 153.0 114.6

Pass 353.4 288.7 270.5 252.6 232.0 237.9 256.6 192.2 202.2 187.6 211.7 198.3 235.2 234.4 216.9 213.4 Pass 166.6 209.4 217.4 251.4 211.3 208.3 201.3 239.7 246.6 238.6 238.0 232.8 241.2 287.9 235.9 279.6

yards 422.7 420.0 413.4 410.4 410.2 372.7 362.0 339.4 327.8 323.6 321.6 319.2 316.5 316.4 315.7 299.8 yards 283.3 289.0 316.8 317.6 329.7 330.6 333.0 351.8 352.8 376.2 378.8 379.2 388.6 399.3 417.0 439.8

rush 97.8 143.1 153.5 151.2 103.3 111.0 153.4 64.3 77.0 128.0 147.7 76.9 99.4 93.6 109.2 111.1 rush 82.0 111.0 105.3 117.7 102.8 86.9 95.8 114.5 106.7 100.7 126.8 129.4 113.8 113.7 110.5 126.8

Pass 324.9 276.9 259.9 259.2 306.9 261.7 208.6 275.1 250.8 195.6 173.9 242.3 217.1 222.9 206.4 188.7 Pass 201.3 178.0 211.4 199.9 226.9 243.7 237.2 237.3 246.1 275.6 252.0 249.8 274.8 285.7 306.5 313.0

Team Averages Per Game AFc

offense Denver San Diego Cincinnati Houston New England Indianapolis Pittsburgh Buffalo N.Y. Jets Oakland Tennessee Kansas City Cleveland Baltimore Miami Jacksonville defense Houston Cincinnati Cleveland N.Y. Jets Tennessee Kansas City Pittsburgh Baltimore Oakland Buffalo Miami New England Indianapolis Denver Jacksonville San Diego

offense New Orleans Green Bay Philadelphia Washington Detroit Chicago Seattle Atlanta Dallas Carolina San Francisco N.Y. Giants St. Louis Arizona Minnesota Tampa Bay defense Carolina Seattle San Francisco New Orleans N.Y. Giants Arizona Tampa Bay St. Louis Green Bay Detroit Atlanta Chicago Washington Minnesota Philadelphia Dallas

NFc

NcAA FooTBALL Top 25

Wednesday’s Game No. 20 Northern Illinois vs. Ball State, 6 p.m. Thursday’s Game No. 8 Clemson vs. Georgia Tech, 5:30 p.m. Friday’s Game No. 13 UCLA vs. Washington, 7 p.m. saturday’s Games No. 1 Alabama at Mississippi State, 5:45 p.m. No. 2 Florida State vs. Syracuse, 1:30 p.m. No. 3 Ohio State at Illinois, 10 a.m. No. 4 Baylor vs. Texas Tech at Arlington, Texas, 5 p.m. No. 5 Stanford at Southern Cal, 6 p.m. No. 6 Oregon vs. Utah, 2 p.m. No. 7 Auburn vs. No. 25 Georgia, 1:30 p.m. No. 11 South Carolina vs. Florida, 5 p.m. No. 12 Oklahoma State at No. 23 Texas, 1:30 p.m. No. 14 Michigan State at Nebraska, 1:30 p.m. No. 15 UCF at Temple, 10 a.m. No. 17 Wisconsin vs. Indiana, 10 a.m. No. 19 Louisville vs. Houston, 5 p.m. No. 21 Arizona State vs. Oregon State, 7:30 p.m. No. 22 Oklahoma vs. Iowa State, 10 a.m. No. 24 Miami at Duke, 1:30 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS TrANsAcTioNs

FooTBALL National Football League

NFL — Suspended Jacksonville LB LaRoy Reynolds four games for violating the league’s policy on performance-enhancing drugs. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed DE Ikponmwosa Igbinosun to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Re-signed LB Justin Staples to the practice squad. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Placed QB Seneca Wallace on injured reserve. Signed QB Matt Flynn. HOUSTON TEXANS — Released S Ed Reed. Placed RB Arian Foster on injured reserve. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed DE Spencer Nealy to the practice squad. TENNESSEE TITANS — Signed WR Devon Wylie from the practice squad. Signed C Kevin Matthews. Re-signed LB Brandon Copeland to the practice squad. Placed QB Jake Locker on injured reserve. Released OL Pat McQuistan. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed WR Nick Williams from the practice squad and RB Davin Meggett to the practice squad. Placed RB Chris Thompson on injured reserve.


SPORTS NBA

Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-7

Northern New Mexico

LeBron scores 33, Heat roll past Bucks SCOREBOARD The Associated Press

MIAMI — LeBron James scored 33 points and got the entire fourth quarter off, Michael Heat 118 Beasley scored 19 off Bucks 95 the bench and the Miami Heat had little trouble in beating the Milwaukee Bucks 118-95 Tuesday night. Mario Chalmers finished with 15 points and seven assists for the Heat, whose previous biggest victory margin was a 12-point triumph over Chicago on opening night. Chris Bosh scored 10 for Miami (5-3). Miami played without Udonis The Bucks’ Ekpe Udoh shoots as the Heat’s Chris Andersen Haslem (back) and Ray Allen defends during Tuesday’s game in Miami. (ill). Shane Battier started in LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Haslem’s place. MAVERICKS 105, WIZARDS 95 In Dallas, Dirk Nowitzki had 19 points to pass Jerry West on the NBA’s career scoring list and help the Mavericks beat Washington. Nowitzki hit consecutive 3-pointers late in the third quar-

ter, the second one putting him at 25,194 points for 16th place, two ahead of West. Trevor Ariza led the Wizards with 27 points, including five 3-pointers. He also had seven rebounds and four steals.

LAKERS 116, PELICANS 95 In Los Angeles, Jordan Hill had a career-high 21 points and 11 rebounds in his first start of the season, and Pau Gasol added 14 points and eight rebounds in the Los Angeles

Lakers’ victory over the New Orleans Pelicans. Nick Young scored 17 points for Los Angeles, which lost five of its last seven before trouncing the Pelicans, who beat them handily last week in New Orleans. Jodie Meeks and Xavier Henry scored 15 points apiece for the Lakers, who led by 20 points in the first half before coasting to their 12th win in their last 13 regular-season meetings with New Orleans.

WARRIORS 113, PISTONS 95 Oakland, Calif., Stephen Curry had 25 points and eight assists, helping Golden State build a 19-point first-quarter lead before sitting out the final 12 minutes of the Warriors’ win over Detroit. David Lee added 17 points and nine rebounds, while Klay Thompson had 14 points for the Warriors, who have won five straight over the Pistons. Curry scored 12 points as part of a 19-4 run in the third quarter then sat out the entire fourth quarter when Golden State coach Mark Jackson emptied his bench.

Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — Ball St. at N. Illinois GOLF 7 p.m. on TGC — PGA Tour of Australasia, Australian Masters, first round, in Cheltenham, Australia 1 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, DP World Tour Championship Dubai, first round, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. on ESPNEWS — Florida St. at UCF FS1 — Wright St. at Georgetown NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN — New York at Atlanta 8:30 p.m. on ESPN — Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers NHL HOCKEY 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Philadelphia at Pittsburgh SOCCER 1:15 p.m. on ESPN — Men’s national teams, World Cup qualifier, Mexico vs. New Zealand, in Mexico City

MIDDLE SCHOOL SCORES

Basketball

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

No. 20 Wisconsin holds off No. 11 Florida The Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. — Sam Dekker scored 16 points, Traevon Jackson added 13 and No. 20 Wisconsin overcame a sloppy start Tuesday night to hold off Wisconsin 59 No. 11 Florida in Florida 53 its home opener, 59-53. The Gators turned up their backcourt pressure to narrow a 10-point deficit to 51-48 with 2 minutes left on two free throws by center Patric Young. Another free throw by Young cut it to 56-53 with 41.8 seconds left. NO. 3 LOUISVILLE 97, HOFSTRA 69 In Louisville, Ky., Russ Smith scored 21 of his game-high 30 points in the first half and Louisville made 12 3-pointers to set the tone for a rout of Hofstra. The senior guard shot 12 of 22 from the field including 5 of 12 from beyond the arc. Wayne Blackshear made three straight 3s for nine points to help Louisville break the game open with a 26-2 second-half run. Luke Hancock returned from an Achilles injury to hit a couple from long range as well as the Cardinals finished 12 of 31 from deep.

NO. 7 MICHIGAN 93, SOUTH CAROLINA STATE 59 In Ann Arbor, Mich., Caris LeVert made his first five 3-point attempts, and No. 7 Michigan had a terrific night from beyond the arc, breezing to a victory over South Carolina State. LeVert finished with 24 points , going 6 of 7 from long distance. Nik Stauskas added 23 points — he was 5 of 6 from 3-point range. Both sophomores set career highs in scoring. NO. 8 OKLAHOMA STATE 93, UTAH VALLEY 40 In Stillwater, Okla., Phil Forte scored 19 points to lead six double-figure scorers and Oklahoma State cruised past Utah Valley. The Cowboys (2-0) hit 10 of 18 from 3-point range in the first half and 14 of 33 from beyond the arc for the game. Forte and Marcus Smart, who scored 14 points, combined to hit 8 of 17 from 3-point range. NO. 9 SYRACUSE 89, FORDHAM 74 In Syracuse, N.Y., C.J. Fair scored a career-high 26 points, Jerami Grant added 16 points and 10 rebounds, and Syracuse beat Fordham. Syracuse, which started the season with a so-so 82-60 win over Cornell on Friday night

after trailing by 14 points late in the first half, left little doubt about the outcome of this one. The Orange had the game in hand by halftime, leading by 25 behind 15 points from Fair as the Syracuse defense clamped down from the opening tip. NO. 10 OHIO STATE 79, OHIO 69 In Columbus, Ohio, Aaron Craft scored 17 points — including eight free throws down the stretch — to help Ohio State hold off neighboring rival Ohio. Amir Williams had a careerhigh 14 points, reserve Sam Thompson had 12 and LaQuinton Ross added 10 for the Buckeyes (2-0). NO. 14 VCU 59, NO. 25 VIRGINIA 56 In Charlottesville, Va., Treveon Graham scored 22 points, including a tie-breaking 3-pointer with 1.1 seconds to play, and VCU beat Virginia. The Rams (2-0) trailed for almost all of the final 10 minutes until Graham’s steal and baseline jumper gave them a 56-55 lead with 1:18 left. NO. 17 MARQUETTE 114, GRAMBLING STATE 71 In Milwaukee, Chris Otule scored 17 points and Steve Taylor added 16 points and 11 rebounds to help Marquette roll over Grambling State.

The last time Marquette (2-0) reached the century mark came in a 102-77 victory over Mississippi Valley State on Dec. 21, 2010. NO. 23 BAYLOR 66, SOUTH CAROLINA 64 In Waco, Texas, Brady Heslip scored 18 points with five 3-pointers and Baylor held on for a victory over South Carolina, without making a field goal in the final 7 minutes and having to wait out a lengthy review after the final buzzer Tuesday before officials determined there wasn’t yet another foul in the game. South Carolina (1-1) was desperately trying to get a tying basket, and the ball was still being batted around when the buzzer sounded at the same time a referee blew a whistle for an apparent foul. The refs reviewed the video before declaring the game was over. NO. 24 UCLA 91, OAKLAND 60 In Los Angeles, Jordan Adams scored 22 points and Tony Parker added 21 as No. 24 UCLA beat Oakland 91-60 on Tuesday night. The Bruins (2-0) pulled away by closing the first half on a 27-9 run to take a 44-24 lead. An 18-2 run in the second half sealed the victory for the Bruins.

No. 1: Spartans return 6 of 7 top scorers two assists of a triple-double, finishing with 22 points, and eight rebounds and assists. cans, and all are considered lottery picks Harris had 20 points and Adreian Payne had in next summer’s NBA draft, with Randle a 15 points and four rebounds for the Spartans. possibility for the overall No. 1. The youngKentucky had strolled through its first sters did nothing to lessen the hype in their two games, with Randle and the other first two games, with Randle averaging freshmen coming up big. But there’s a big 22.5 points and 15 rebounds, and the Hardifference between those non-conference rison twins averaging in double figures. No patsies and Michigan State, and the Sparwonder the game brought out scouts from tans let the Wildcats know what they were almost every NBA team and celebrities up against from the opening tip. including Nazr Mohammed and Detroit Smothering the Wildcats defensively and Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh. leaving them flat-footed with their surprisBut the Spartans aren’t exactly slouches, ing speed on offense, Michigan State had returning six of their top seven scorers. Just a 10-0 lead before Kentucky got its first as important, big-time games like this are bucket. The ‘Cats had seven turnovers nothing new to them, with Izzo routinely before the midway point of the first half, scheduling the likes of Connecticut, Duke, and would finish with 17. North Carolina and Kansas before Jan. 1. And it was clear that, with four freshmen “They’re really good,” Calipari said. “This in the starting lineup and another getting is the second game out and they go heavy playing time, the Wildcats are still 17 assists to seven turnovers? That’s unbegetting used to each other, too. At one lievable. Again, understand we’re not the point, Andrew Harrison rifled a no-look greatest defensive team, but 17 and seven? pass to Willie Cauley-Stein that CauleyWith these lights and all that’s going on Stein wasn’t expecting, and the ball sailed around them? They’re well coached. They out of bounds. played well.” They struggled at the line, too, going just Appling came within two rebounds and 20 of 36.

Continued from Page B-5

“They’re going to get a lot better. Give them credit,” Izzo said. “But I thought we played awfully well for a lot of that game.” Still, the Spartans got in foul trouble midway through the second half, and the slower pace gave the Wildcats time to catch their breath and regroup. It also gave a seething Randle an opportunity to work out his anger. “What I loved about him, he gritted his teeth, was ornery and nasty and he wanted to put them on his shoulders,” Izzo said. “For a freshman, that speaks volumes. He completely did that. You could see it and hear him. Tough kid.” Randle scored nine points in a 13-1 run that cut Michigan State’s lead to 60-59 with 8:05 left, including a “How’d he do that?” off-balance jumper from behind a sea of green jerseys. He and Andrew Harrison each made a pair of free throws to tie the game at 66 with 4:48 left. But Appling drilled a 3, and Harris stripped Randle at the other end. He took it in for a layup that put the Spartans back in front, 71-66, bringing the Michigan State fans — including Spartan in Chief, Magic Johnson — to their feet.

Kansas: Game billed as Parker vs. Wiggins Continued from Page B-5 Jayhawks put on their own show in front of a pro-Kansas crowd filled with breathless NBA personnel drooling over the possibilities for next year’s draft. Billed as Parker versus Wiggins, it was clear from the start there was much more talent on the floor than just the precocious freshmen stars. Jamari Taylor, another Chicago native, had an early block for Kansas and then hustled down to the other end for a trailing dunk. Hood made a jumper and helped set up Jefferson for a layup that

made it 26-all. That’s when Parker began to take over. The 6-foot-8 forward scored 12 of Duke’s next 14 points, showing off his smooth, versatile game. He had two layups and two free throws before closing the stretch with 3-pointers on consecutive trips down the floor for the Blue Devils, leading to a respectful silence from the vocal Kansas fans. Quinn Cook then made two foul shots with 43 seconds left to give Duke a 42-40 halftime lead. Playing with a new, sleek haircut, Wiggins picked up his second foul with 9:30 left

in the first half and spent much of the early going on the sideline. He had six points on 3-of-5 shooting at the break to go along with three rebounds and a blocked shot. He began to pick it up early in the second half, making a jumper on Kansas’ first possession. He also had a nice fast-break basket off a pass from Frank Mason, tying it at 51 with 15½ minutes left. Parker was only getting started, too. He had a towering one-handed jam off an alley-oop from Cook, looking very much like Grant Hill from his days in Durham.

Girls Eighth grade Ortiz 22, Gonzales 20. Top scorers — Ortiz: Briana Jaquez 10; Jennifer Alfardo 8; Gonzales: A’ishah Romero 9; Marisol Sandoval 7. Records — Ortiz 3-1, Gonzales not reported. Pojoaque 27, Taos 22. Leading scorers — Pojoaque: Dallas Archibald 10, Shania Thronas, 5; Taos - Aaliyah Quintana 8. Records — Pojoaque 1-1; Taos not reported.

Seventh grade Ortiz 37, Gonzales 3. Top scorers — Ortiz: Miranda Cortez 17, Kyannah Cole 9; Gonzales: not reported. Records — Ortiz 3-1, Gonzales not reported. Pojoaque 36, Taos 5. Leading scorer — Pojoaque: Adrianna Quintana 17; Sarah Vigil 6; Taylor Roybal 5; Taos not reported. Records — Pojoaque 2-0, Taos not reported.

SOCCER

All-District 2AAAA The All-District 2AAAA boys and girls soccer team, as voted by district coaches. Boys First team Bernalillo — Luis Daniel Aranda, Edgar Armenta. Capital — Jason Alarcon, Jesus Garcia, Helian Najera, Jairo de Paz, Diego Pichardo, Luis RiosOlivas, Los Alamos — Brandon Hodges, Chris Parker, Eric Schmalz, Collin Stone. Santa Fe High — Jose DeLuna, Armando Hernandez, Trent Spencer. Second team Bernalillo — Moises De Santiago, Isaac Gutierrez, Victor Martinez, Ruben Rodriguez. Capital — Rene Arroyo, Brayan Perez, Rey Tapia. Los Alamos — Joe Roback, Thomas Routiaux, William Steinkamp, Skylar Veenis. Santa Fe High — Daniel Matzir, Edgar Sanchez, Eliga Wolverton. Offensive player of the year — Alarcon Defensive player of the year — Hodges Coach of the year — Eugene Doyle, Capital Girls First team Bernalillo — Yadira Alvarez Capital — Teresa Membreno Los Alamos — Chandler Art, Stephanie Blair, Sarah Criscuolo, Kristen Funsten, Jessica Heironimus, Catie McDonald, Meghan McDonald. Santa Fe High — Carley Cook, Bryanna Garcia, Elena Lemus, Mia Melchor, Se’a Torres O’Neal, Tiffany Trujillo. Second team Bernalillo — Lois Delara, Ximena Ruiz, Micheld Martinez. Capital — Ashley Gomez, Yeimy Lemus, Beatiz Lozoya, Sabrina Nottke, Alondra Perez. Los Alamos — Elena Atencio, Julia Haagenstad,

Jordon Henson. Santa Fe High — Eliana Bell, Ursula Vold. Offensive player of the year — McDonald Defensive player of the year — Stephanie Blair Coach of the year — Keith Richards

All-District 1A-AAA The All-District 1A-AAA boys soccer team, as voted by district coaches. First team Strikers/Forwards — Raul Fonseca, Bloomfield; Brandon Trujillo, Las Vegas Robertson; Carlos Ruiz, Taos; Sean Morris, Taos. Midfielders — Grant Longacre, Pojoaque Valley; Sergio Payan, Bloomfield; Amadio Gonzales, Bloomfield; Noah Tonrey, Taos. Defenders — Jacob Pacheco, Taos; Brandon Maes, Las Vegas Robertson; Alex Portillo, Bloomfield; Edgar Fonseca, Bloomfield. Goalkeeper — Ariel Morales, Bloomfield. Second team Strikers/Forwards — Samuel Gutierrez, Bloomfield; Emanuel Martinez, Pojoaque Valley. Midfielders — Matt Mirabal, Taos; Ian Sanderson, Taos; Ian Parks, Las Vegas Robertson; Rafael de la Torre, Pojoaque Valley. Defenders — Michael Salas, Las Vegas Robertson; Gage Kreilick, Bloomfield; Kyle Romero, Pojoaque Valley; Paul Trujillo, Pojoaque Valley. Goalkeeper — German Villa-Gutierrez, Taos. Honorable mentions Striker/Forward — Bryan Maldonado, Pojoaque Valley. Defenders — Nico Cserhart, Taos; Tim Nystrom, Moreno Valley. Goalkeepers — Eli Cain, Moreno Valley; Tyler Nicoll, Pojoaque Valley. Offensive Player of the Year — Raul Fonseca Defensive Player of the Year — Pacheco Coach of the Year — Jarly Lopez, Bloomfield.

HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.

Thursday Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: Pool play/first round (except for Class B) Class AAAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Pool play (A — No. 9 Santa Fe High; C —No. 11 Los Alamos; D — No. 5 Española Valley): 8 a.m. First round, 3:30 p.m. Class AAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Pool play (B — No. 10 Las Vegas Robertson; C — No. 3 Pojoaque Valley; D — No. 5 West Las Vegas): 1 p.m. First round, 7 p.m. Class AA, Rio Rancho Cleveland/Rio Rancho Middle School (first round) Pool play (C — No. 3 Santa Fe Preparatory): 1 p.m. First round, 4 p.m./5:45 p.m./7:30 p.m. Class A, Rio Rancho High School Pool play (A — No. 9 McCurdy; D — No. 5 Questa): 8 a.m./10:30 a.m. First round, 4 p.m./5:45 p.m./7:30 p.m. Class B, Rio Rancho High School Pool play (A — No. 4 Santa Fe Waldorf): 1 p.m.

Friday Football — Class AAA/AAAA playoffs — TBA Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: quarterfinals/semifinals Class AAAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 8 a.m. Semifinals, 4:45 p.m. Class AAA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 3 p.m. Semifinals, 8:15 p.m. Class AA, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 1:15 p.m. Semifinals, 6:30 p.m. Class A, the Santa Ana Star Center Quarterfinals, 9:45 a.m. Semifinals, 4:45 p.m. Class B, Rio Rancho Cleveland (quarterfinals)/the Santa Ana Star Center (semifinals) Quarterfinals, 8 a.m./9:45 a.m./11:30 a.m./1:15 p.m. Semifinals, 6:30 p.m.

Saturday Boys basketball — Santa Fe Preparatory at Mesa Vista, 6:30 p.m. Football — Class AAA/AAAA playoffs — TBA Class A playoffs, semifinals — No. 3 Capitan at No. 2 Escalante, 1 p.m. Girls basketball — Santa Fe Preparatory at Mesa Vista, 5 p.m. Volleyball — Class B/A/AA/AAA/AAAA State Tournament: championships Class AAAA, 3 p.m. Class AAA, 11 a.m. Class AA, 5 p.m. Class A, 1 p.m. Class B, 9 a.m.

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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


B-8

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Manning: Chiefs racked up 36 sacks

BASEBALL

Continued from Page B-5

Boston Red Sox general manager Ben Cherington talks with the media Tuesday at the annual baseball general managers meeting in Orlando, Fla. REINHOLD MATAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Replay in, collisions out? Marlon Byrd to Phillies for $16M

Torre said a written proposal will be developed that will be discussed when GMs gather again during the winter By Ronald Blum meetings, to be held at Lake The Associated Press Buena Vista from Dec. 9-12. “There are college rules ORLANDO, Fla. — Home where you have to slide. I’m plate collisions could become not saying that’s what you’re a thing of the past, along with going to do,” Torre said. “The blown calls on the bases. players are bigger, stronger, As the offseason market for faster. It’s like in other sports. trades and free-agent signings They’ve made adjustments gets underway, Major League and rules in other sports for Baseball is considering some that reason, to protect people.” pretty radical changes for next Torre said collisions when season. pitchers cover the plate on Expanded instant replay for wild pitches and passed balls umpires’ calls is virtually ceralso are an issue. He planned tain to be in place by opening to discuss the matter Wednesday, and there’s a chance a rule day with baseball’s rules could be adopted to prevent committee. A change for 2014 runners from bowling over would need the approval of catchers at the plate. the players’ association. “There’s a pretty good “Suffice it to say, the players possibility that something have some thoughts of their eventually will happen,” MLB own regarding home-plate Executive Vice President collisions as well as a number Joe Torre said Tuesday on of other topics,” union deputy the second day of the annual executive director Tony Clark, general managers’ meetings. a former All-Star himself, said “Whether it’s going to be soon in an email to The Associated enough to have it done this Press. “We’ll be addressing coming year, that remains to them all when we meet next be seen. But I don’t think it’s month.” impossible.” Torre said agreements Outside the formal meeting room, outfielder Marlon Byrd with players and umpires on expanded video review should and the Philadelphia Phillies be in place by January. agreed to a $16 million, two“We expect to be all on the year contract, a huge step up same page by the time we from the $800,000 he earned need to have it,” he said. this year from the New York Virtually all umpires’ calls Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates. other than balls and strikes, And catcher Brayan Pena finalized a two-year deal with checked swings and some foul tips will be reviewable. The the Cincinnati Reds worth $2,275,000. They were the first system was tested last week during Arizona Fall League of the 168 major league free games, with two major league agents to switch teams this umpires reviewing video and offseason. making the final call. Talk of limiting contact at Baseball started using video the plate was the day’s most review in 2008 but limited it interesting development, one to home run calls. Owners that could make Lou Brock’s likely will give their go-ahead shoulder-to-shoulder colliThursday for funding and sion with Bill Freehan during then approve the rules when the 1968 World Series and they meet in January. Pete Rose’s bruising hit on “I’m sure they’ll do as much Ray Fosse in the 1970 All-Star game relics of baseball history, testing as they think is fealike the dead-ball era. sible, but ultimately they’ll

probably go with what they have,” New York Mets general manager Sandy Alderson said. “There probably will be bugs. … It might be a little rough at the beginning, but I think that things will work out thereafter.” GMs are spending much of this week in meetings, finding out which players might be available in trades and what prices agents are seeking for their clients. “It’s not the most conducive time to be doing anything,” Oakland GM Billy Beane said. With MLB receiving a large increase next year in revenue from national broadcasting contracts, agents are asking for more at this early point in the offseason. “I think it’s the agent’s job always to try to get as much as they can get, since they’ve been part of the MLB landscape,” Dodgers GM Ned Colletti said. “I don’t think it’s ever changed.” With 2012 AL Cy Young Award winner David Price two years from free agency, low-payroll Tampa Bay is exploring trades. The Rays’ $65 million payroll at the end of the season was 28th among the 30 clubs. “We just can’t be afraid to make bold moves,” Executive Vice President Andrew Friedman said. “It’s almost become a cliche of one eye on the present, one eye on the future. It’s absolutely our operating philosophy. It’s something that we have to do.” Texas also could make a big trade splash. Rangers GM Jon Daniels will consider offers for middle infielders Ian Kinsler and Elvis Andrus to clear a starting spot for 20-year-old Jurickson Profar. “I don’t think at this point we’re going to go down the same path we did last year where Jurickson broke in as a utility player,” Daniels said. “We’ve got three guys at the big league level. We’ve got

another two guys at Double-A in Luis Sardinas and Rougned Odor that we view as potentially impact big league guys, and I think the industry does, so we’re not doing our jobs if we don’t at least explore it.” While the Rangers are interested in re-signing Nelson Cruz, closer Joe Nathan could be headed elsewhere, perhaps Detroit. Byrd already knows his destination. The 36-year-old outfielder hit a career-high 24 homers last season for the New York Mets and Pittsburgh, which acquired him on Aug. 27. He batted .364 with one homer and five RBIs in six playoff games after hitting .291 during the season with 88 RBIs, one short of his career best. “Marlon adds a significant upgrade both offensively and defensively to our outfield,” Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. said in a statement. “He has been particularly productive against left-handed pitching, which was a serious challenge for us this past season.” Byrd was drafted by the Phillies and began his big league career in Philadelphia. His deal calls for $8 million in each of the next two seasons and includes an $8 million team option for 2016 that would become guaranteed if he has 1,100 at-bats in the next two seasons, including 550 in 2015, or 600 at-bats in 2015. “If you don’t want to give up your first-round pick, Marlon Byrd is arguably the best available outfield bat,” Pirates general manager Neal Huntington said. “We feared he was out of our price range immediately. We stayed engaged in the process, and Marlon and his agents talked about wanting to come back to Pittsburgh. He loved his time there. The environment and playing for a winner and playing in front of that fan base was something that really intrigued him.”

Managers: First such honor for Hurdle Continued from Page B-5 call from Tucson, Ariz. Hurdle was a runaway winner in the NL, selected first on 25 of 30 ballots after taking the Pirates to the playoffs in their first winning season since 1992. “It is so rewarding for me to see what’s happened, the synergy in the city,” Hurdle said in Pittsburgh. “To be a small part of a group that’s able to bring joy at so many different levels — that’s what’s rewarding to me in life.” It was the first Manager of the Year honor for Francona, even though — in an interesting twist — he steered the Red Sox to World Series titles in 2004 and 2007. During his initial season with the Indians, he directed them to a 24-win improvement and their first playoff berth in six years. They lost the AL wild-card game to Tampa Bay, but voting is conducted before the postseason. Francona said he called Farrell, a longtime colleague and once his pitching coach in Boston, on Tuesday morning

because he thought it was funny they were up against each other as finalists for the award. If they heard such news years ago, Francona said, “both of us would have laughed each other out of the room.” Hurdle also was quick with a self-deprecating joke after he won. “There’s guys laughing all over the place,” he said in an interview on MLB Network. “The players know so many times this season we’d have a big series, getting together just trying to break the ice I’d tell them, ‘Hey, look guys, you’ve got to step it up, play big this week because I’m going to get outmanaged. I can tell you one thing that’s going to happen: I’ll get outmanaged. So really step it up.’ And they did. They believed me every series.” Just like Francona, the 56-year-old Hurdle won Manager of the Year for the first time. His highest finish had been third in 2007, when he led Colorado to the World Series. Don Mattingly of the NL West cham-

pion Los Angeles Dodgers came in second and Fredi Gonzalez of the NL East champion Atlanta Braves was third. The only other Pittsburgh manager to win was Jim Leyland in 1990 and 1992, the bookends to three consecutive division titles for the Pirates. After that, they endured a record 20 straight losing seasons — the longest drought in any of the four major professional sports — before going 94-68 this year to capture an NL wild card. Riding a wave of excitement from a rejuvenated fan base in a city finally enthralled by baseball again, Pittsburgh beat Cincinnati in the wild-card game before losing to league champion St. Louis in a division series that went the full five games. Hurdle was chosen second on the other five ballots and was the only NL manager picked on every one. He had 140 points in the 5-3-1 scoring system to 68 for Mattingly, who received two firstplace votes. Gonzalez got three first-place votes and had 43 points.

“But quarterbacks are actually hit more often when you pack them in. And they’re hit far more often in maximum protection. In fact, one of the times he was hit Sunday was on a max protection and the tight end got beat.” When a team packs players in to provide the QB more security, linebackers occupy the rushing lanes and are closer to the quarterback. Keeping extra protectors in the backfield also opens the possibility of more defenders crashing the quarterback’s pocket of protection, disrupting his throws. So, the high-scoring Broncos will stick with their spread offense, which in turn spreads the defense. “More people doesn’t ensure that he’s not going to get hit. I mean, he’s going to get hit some in the flow of the game. That’s just how it is,” Del Rio said. “And I think we do a very good job. I think our guy gets hit less than most, and that’s going to remain a focal point for us.” Manning has taken some nasty hits over the last month, beginning with one from Jacksonville’s Jason Babin, who wasn’t whistled for a low hit on Oct. 13. The following week, former teammate Robert Mathis put two big hits on him, and Manning missed some practice time with a sore right ankle that next week. Manning might be limited Wednesday or even miss practice altogether after aggravating his high ankle sprain Sunday when defensive end Corey Liuget dived at his ankles in the closing minutes of Denver’s 28-20 win at San Diego. Manning limped through the closing minutes after that hit. The Broncos asked the league to look at that hit, contending it was late and low and should have drawn referee a flag. An NFL spokesman, however, told The Associated Press on Tuesday the league deter-

mined the hit was clean. “Of course, I hold my breath,” teammate Shaun Phillips said of seeing Manning so slow to get up. “He’s our breadwinner.” So far, Manning has fumbled seven times and lost five of them, in large part due to the loss of three-time Pro Bowler and two-time All-Pro left tackle Ryan Clady to left foot surgery in September. Clady allowed just one sack in more than 1,100 snaps last season, which he parlayed into a $57.2 million contract on the eve of training camp. His replacement, journeyman Chris Clark, whose only career starts before this season came at jumbo tight end during Denver’s short-lived Tim Tebow era, stepped in as Manning’s new blind-side protector in Week 3. Since then, Manning has been sacked a dozen times and hit 27, and in three straight games, Clark has allowed Manning to be sacked and stripped from the blind side. “I hate these fumbles, but they are all when I’m throwing,” Manning said. “I’m conscious of protecting it when I’m in the pocket but all of them have been while I’m throwing. I haven’t quite figured out how to not fumble when they hit you while you’re throwing, that’s a tough one.” Figuring out how to keep the Chiefs, who have collected 36 sacks, from getting to the quarterback has proved a difficult task for Kansas City’s opponents. One way or another, the Broncos will have to tighten things up Sunday night. “We’re definitely on high alert wanting to protect our quarterback,” Del Rio said. “We didn’t do as well as we can [at San Diego]. We’ve got an even greater challenge coming up this week with a team that’s sacked quarterbacks more than anybody in this league. So, I’m sure that will get plenty of attention.”

Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning throws a pass while playing the San Diego Chargers during Sunday’s game in San Diego. GREGORY BULL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Injuries: Players need better helmets Continued from Page B-5 doubt the most important part of the human body. If the brain goes, then the body follows. On the flip side, the helmet is also used to inflict harm on other players. No matter what kind of tackling techniques a coach can teach for safe tackling, the head is always going to be part of the equation. There is just no avoiding it. The helmet is also used to defend a ball carrier from oncoming tacklers. It is a familiar sight in football to see a player get a concussion from lowering his head to keep forward momentum while also protecting himself from the oncoming defender. The bad thing about this technique is that the defender usually lowers his head too, causing a head-tohead collision. The thing is, you cannot eliminate the use of the head in football. The helmet is the hardest part of the uniform, so naturally it is the primary source of damage infliction in a game where the point is to collide with and take down other players.

By now we all know that head injuries can cause severe short term and long term damage. Former NFL players are now starting to feel the effects of head trauma that they suffered years before, with Brett Favre recently admitting that he suffers from memory loss. But what can we do about it? The NFL considered a measure where they would eliminate kickoffs, but the only way to eliminate head injuries in football is to eliminate the contact altogether. Without the contact, there is no football. The only logical solution is to develop better helmets, which helmet developers are currently doing. Riddell claims that its new 360 helmet has a facemask that disperses energy from frontal impacts. While that is innovative, it only addresses hits taken to the facemask. Until science catches up, players just have to assume the risk they take when they step on the gridiron. Hopefully science catches up fast enough so that we can continue to enjoy the sport we love without suffering any more tragedy.


Travel C-2 Classifieds C-3 Time Out C-8

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

TASTE

Season for

By Carlos A. Lopez Photos by Jane Phillips

sage

I

The New Mexican

t’s the middle of fall, and your herb garden is looking worn and weathered by shorter days and chillier nights, but you’re hungry for a last-minute herbal hit to perk up your winter vegetable sauté for tonight’s dinner. What should you use? Basil is out. It’s been gone for a few months. Your mint probably froze last night. Marjoram might have worked, but you used the last of your stores to add zip to your favorite Italian minestrone. Chervil, chives, coriander, dill, lovage, tarragon — and any herb with summer in its DNA — are all out, too. To answer this culinary pickle, celebrated Santa Fe-area author Deborah Madison turns to sage — the season’s go-to herb known for its velvety texture, robust savoriness and ability to thrive throughout winter. “This time of year, all the nice summery herbs are gone, [but] there’s lots and lots of sage,” said Madison, whose latest cookbook, Vegetable Literacy, was published in March. “Sage is a fabulous cold-weather herb, and during the winter, I’ll cook with it a lot — several times a week, in fact.” As a member of the mint family, sage blooms in the spring and early summer, but Madison, like other culinary experts, said she finds its “sultry” flavor too strong to pair with most summer vegetables like tomatoes, eggplants and peas. For her palate, Madison, whose home garden in Galisteo is dotted with several “mature” sage plants, said she frequently pairs the leafy green herb with hearty cold-season vegetables and poultry. “In fall, sage has a more savory flavor that aligns perfectly with winter squash, potatoes and roast chicken,” she said. “It has a resinous, savory quality [that] brings it down to Earth and makes an interesting balance.” One of her favorite dishes to make this time of year is her winter squash soup, which highlights sage in two ways. First, for the soup’s base, she sautés onions, garlic and fresh sage leaves in olive oil until softened and aromatic. “Unlike volatile herbs whose flavor is best noted when added at the end of cooking,” she said, “sage is one that can marry with the fat at the beginning of a dish.” Next, after adding steamed winter squash (think Kabocha, Red Kuri or even butternut) and water steeped with thyme and onions to the base, Madison then purées the soup through a food mill and finishes it with fried sage leaves. “I fry the leaves very quickly in olive oil until they turn dark green, and float them on the surface of the soup as a garnish,” she said. Along with soups and vegetable sautés, Madison also uses sage to make tea. Steeped in nearly boiling water, she said, the herb takes on a more delicate flavor that brings out its sweeter, minty side. In Greece, she said, sage tea, also known as mountain tea, is used as a restorative drink. During the Middle Ages, Madison writes in Vegetable Literacy, sage was hailed for its medicinal properties, and when steeped in vinegar, it was purported to keep the plague at bay. And because sage contains vitamin A, calcium, iron, potassium and antioxidants, it’s “good for the bones, the heart, the eyes and your blood pressure,” she writes. Like Madison, chef Andrew Cooper of Terra, the fine-dining restaurant at the Four Seasons Rancho Encantado, also champions the healing properties of sage. “When you look at it, sage benefits your health,” he said. “It’s good for the stomach, it’s good for women who

C

Streetcars are making a comeback around the country. Travel, C-2

Sage from Deborah Madison’s garden on Friday.

Deborah Madison sprinkles sage breadcrumbs from her garden on a squash dish Friday.

have cramps, and it helps fight colds and lowers blood pressure.” Cooper, however, holds a deeper connection to sage, especially during the holidays. For him, it isn’t Thanksgiving without the aroma of roast turkey and sage wafting through his home. “Any type of holiday, I think of sage,” he said. “And once the weather starts getting colder, especially around Thanksgiving, I put the basil on hold, and I move onto sage and other hearty herbs.” At Terra, Cooper said he and the kitchen staff use about 4 pounds of fresh sage every week to make several of the restaurant’s signature dishes, including pumpkin-sage pasta served with lamb ragout, apple-sage bread pudding, and a potato-mushroom ragout seasoned with sage and served with fish. For home cooks, Cooper suggests using fresh sage as a finishing herb. When julienned and tossed in a dish’s final moments of cooking, sage will keep more of its floral flavor and bright color, he said. For dishes that require longer cooking time, like stews and ragouts, he recommends using dried sage. Madison also touts sage as a good dry herb. She says it’s best to dry fresh sage in the fall before a hard freeze has hit your garden. To do so, she places leaves on a wire rack or on parchment paper and allows them to dry for several days. “Sage does well as a dry herb,” she said. “Because its aromatic oils are

so strong, sage keeps its flavor. That’s important, because not all herbs do.” When buying fresh sage, Cooper said the leaves should have a smooth, velvety texture and be free of blemishes. Madison, on the other hand, cautions home cooks to only use the designated culinary sage in the kitchen. “The sage we eat is Salvia officinalis. It’s a silvery, soft-leaved plant that forms a large mound when mature,” she said, adding, “Sage brush is not in the same family at all, and they’re not interchangeable in any way. It’s a fascinating family, and there’s lots and lots of sage. But not all of them are the ones we eat.” SQUASH SOUP WITH SAGE From Deborah Madison Makes about 2 quarts 1 winter squash, about 3 pounds, halved 2 onions, ½ sliced and the remainder finely diced 2 thyme sprigs Sea salt and freshly ground pepper 3 tablespoons olive oil, butter or ghee 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 1 tablespoon chopped sage 1½ tablespoons each olive oil or butter or ghee 1 cup small cubes of fresh bread 8 sage leaves Preparation: Scoop out the seeds of the squash. Put them in a wide pot with the sliced onion, a thyme sprig and as much water — up to

Pumpkin sage pasta with lamb ragout. COURTESY PHOTO

2 quarts — as you can before putting in the steaming rack. Place the squash cut side down, bring the water to a boil, then cover and steam until the flesh is tender, 30 minutes to an hour, depending on the variety of squash and its size. When it’s done, scoop out the flesh. A 3-pound squash will yield about 4 cups cooked flesh. Strain the steaming water and set it aside. While the squash is steaming, heat the oil in a wide soup pot, add the onion with the remaining thyme sprig, sage and parsley. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until the onions are golden, 15 to 20 minutes. Add the cooked squash, 11/2 teaspoons salt, and enough of the reserved liquid to achieve the texture you like. A very dry fleshed vegetable, such as the Kabocha, will need more liquid than a Red Kuri or butternut squash. Mash the squash into the liquid and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes. Pass the soup through a food mill or purée it, then return it to the pot. Taste for salt and season with pepper. To finish, heat the oil and butter in a small skillet. When hot, add the sage leaves and fry until dark green, about 30 seconds. Remove them to a plate. Add the bread cubes to the pan and cook over medium heat, tossing occasionally, until crisp and golden, about 5 minutes. Ladle the soup into bowls. Add a cluster of croutons to each, 1 or 2 sage leaves, a bit of fresh ground pepper and serve.

PUMPKIN SAGE PASTA From chef Andrew Cooper of Terra 4 cups all-purpose flour 1½ teaspoons salt 6 whole eggs 1 cup roasted pumpkin purée (as dry as possible) ¼ cup chopped fresh sage Lamb ragout, recipe below Preparation: In a large bowl, mix the flour and salt together. In separate bowl, mix the eggs and pumpkin together. Make a well in the center of the flour mixture, and pour in the egg-pumpkin mixture and sage; mix well. If the dough is sticky, add more flour. Let dough rest for 15 minutes before rolling out into fettuccine with a pasta machine. For each portion, cook 3 ounces of pasta until al dente in boiling, salted water. Meanwhile, in a sauté pan, brown a few tablespoons of butter, and then add cooked pasta. In separate pan, heat ragout until hot and taste for seasoning. Plate the pasta in a large bowl and top with 5 ounces lamb ragout, grated Parmesan cheese, chopped parsley and fried sage. Lamb ragout Braise a lamb shoulder in a moderate oven for several hours until tender, and then shred meat in into 1/2 inch pieces. Reserve the braising liquid. In a large pan, sauté a mirepoix of aromatic vegetables, tomato paste and diced tomato. Deglaze with a generous amount of red wine. Add the shredded lamb meat and reduce to a desired consistency.

Savory pies deserve a spot at the table By Judy Hevrdejs

Chicago Tribune

Fruit pies, cream pies, cute little tarts. Love ’em all. But one does not live by sweets alone. We love savory pies, too. Hand pies like empanadas and pasties. Phyllo pies filled with spinach. Flaky crusted pies packed with meats or vegetables or seafood. Cornmeal-crusted chili pies and shepherd’s pies with mashed potatoes handling top-crust duties. For Warren Brown, it’s the versatility of pies that prompted his latest book, Pie Love: Inventive Recipes for Sweet and Savory Pies, Galettes, Pastry Cremes, Tarts, and Turnovers (Stewart, Tabori & Chang, $24.95). “You can just be very creative

with a savory pie,” adds Brown during a phone chat. Especially with the color variations from different crusts, whether it’s the cheese crust he uses in a meatball pie or the paprika crust he suggests for a chicken pie. SAUSAGE, APPLE AND SAGE PIE Total time: 1 hour, 15 minutes, makes one 9-inch pie Adapted from Angela Boggiano’s Pie. 1¾ cups flour Pinch salt ½ stick (¼ cup) butter ¼ cup lard or shortening 2 to 3 tablespoons water 2 tablespoons olive oil 2 medium onions, finely sliced 1 pound good-quality sausage meat or ground pork (half stan-

dard grind, half coarse grind) 1 tablespoon each: whole-grain mustard, chopped fresh sage 2 small apples, peeled, cored, chopped 2 tablespoons crème fraîche or sour cream Salt and freshly ground pepper 1 egg, lightly beaten Preparation: Sift flour and pinch of salt into a bowl. Cut fat into cubes; add to flour. Use your fingertips to rub fat into the flour until mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add water very gradually, stirring with a knife. When dough just starts to stick together, knead lightly until it forms a ball. (Or, pulse flour and salt in a food processor. Add cold butter; pulse until crumbly. Add lard and 2 tablespoons water; pulse. Add remain-

Section editor: Carlos A. López, 986-3099, clopez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

ing tablespoon water; pulse again. Turn onto counter; shape into a ball.) Wrap pastry ball in plastic wrap; let rest in refrigerator, at least 15 minutes. (Store for up to 2 days in the refrigerator; or freeze until ready to use.) Heat oven to 400 degrees. Roll out a little less than half the pastry; use to line a shallow 9-inch pie plate. Roll out remaining pastry about ¾-inch larger than the pie plate; set aside. Heat oil in a large skillet. Add onions; cook gently until softened, 8-10 minutes. Add meat to onions. Cook until meat is browned, stirring frequently with a wooden spoon and breaking up meat, 5 minutes. Off the heat, stir in mustard, sage, apples and creme fraiche or sour cream. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Mix well; allow to cool.

Sausage apple sage pie is adapted from Angela Boggiano’s Pie. ZBIGNIEW BZDAK/CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Pile cooled meat-apple mixture into pastry-lined pie plate. Brush edges of pastry with beaten egg. Top with remaining rolled-out pastry, sealing edges by pressing down well. Trim off excess pastry. Crimp edges with a fork or between your thumb and index finger. Brush top with remaining egg. Make a hole or several slashes in the top to release steam. Bake 40-45 minutes.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


C-2

THE NEW MEXICAN

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

TRAVEL

An American Airlines plane and a US Airways plane in Washington. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

More cities turn to once-popular rail systems to add activity, ambiance to urban areas

AMERICAN-US AIRWAYS DEAL

What merger means for air travelers By Scott Mayerowitz The Associated Press

NEW YORK — American Airlines and US Airways have cleared the last major hurdle to merging, but it will be several months — if not years — before passengers see any significant impact. Passengers with existing tickets on American or US Airways — and members of both frequent flier programs — shouldn’t fret. No changes will come immediately. Since announcing the deal in February, the two airlines have been working behind the scenes to try and make the merger as seamless as possible. Following Tuesday’s agreement with the Justice Department, the two airlines said they expect the deal to close in December. But that doesn’t mean everything will happen overnight. When the deal does close, here’s what passengers can expect: Dana Larsen, left, and her niece, Madison Larsen, 7, both of Kenosha, Wis., ride the Cincinnati streetcar in September. The antique trolley is one of several the city has reintroduced to its streets to help reinvent the city. PHOTOS BY MICHAEL SCHMIDT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

New life for

streetcars

By Jason Keyser

The Associated Press

KENOSHA, Wis. hen the auto plant here closed, this prosperous Wisconsin port city on Lake Michigan lost more than just its largest employer. Its sense of vitality seemed to drain away, and city leaders set out to find something that would inject life into the brick-storefront downtown while the economy went through a transition. What they came up with was obsolete: an electric streetcar. Kenosha decided to bring back a relic that once clattered around metropolitan areas in pre-war America but was abandoned on the march to modernity. More than a decade later, the experiment is now popping up all over. More than 30 cities around the country are planning to build streetcar systems or have done so recently. Dallas, Portland, Ore., and Seattle all have new streetcar lines. Most projects involve spending millions of dollars to put back something that used to be there — often in the same stretches of pavement. “It goes along with the revival of inner cities all over America,” said Steve Novick, transportation commissioner in Portland, which has spent more than $250 million to replace the lines the city shut down in 1950. “It’s too bad that they weren’t kept here all along.” Many city planners are convinced that old-timey cars tethered to overhead electric cables or their updated descendants —

W

futuristic and low-slung — ignite economic development in a way that buses cannot — and with a whiff of romance. Embedding rails in roads is part of resurrecting entertainment districts and capitalizing on the return to urban living by young professionals and empty-nesters bored with suburban life. “It really is about creating a certain kind of neighborhood feel and fabric,” said Patrick Quinton, executive director of the Portland Development Commission. Since Portland’s line opened, $3.5 billion in development has sprouted within blocks of the tracks. A section of old railyards and warehouses is now the trendy Pearl District, home to galleries, restaurants, shops and housing. The system has been expanded to nearly eight miles and each weekday carries 13,000 people, who can track arriving cars on their smartphones. Salt Lake City, where the last streetcars vanished in 1946, is set to open a two-mile line next month. It’s part of a planned “greenway” of parks, bike paths and trails designed to attract 4,000 new households and 7,700 jobs by 2030. For technology firms and “talent-driven companies, it’s definitely a selling point” for business locations, said Quinton. U.S. companies are making streetcars again for the first time since the 1950s. Most new systems use sleek cabins with doors that slide open at street level. Just like their forerunners, they run with traffic rather than on separated lines so the systems can cost as little as $50 million, a fraction of the expense of light rail.

LASTING IMAGES PARIS AT NIGHT Leslie Dye of Santa Fe submitted this photo of Notre Dame from a trip to Paris last month.

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.

Travel page information: Brian Barker, 986-3058, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

Airfare During the past five years, the airline industry has seen the combinations of Delta with Northwest, United with Continental and Southwest Airlines Co. with AirTran. The price of a domestic round-trip flight has climbed more than 15 percent since 2009, when adjusted for inflation, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. The merger will give a combined American and US Airways Group Inc. the ability to increase fares. United, Delta and Southwest would be likely to follow. Although it could also pave the way for further expansion by discount airlines such as Spirit Airlines Inc. and Allegiant Travel Co.

Frequent-flier miles

The Southeastern Pennsylvania streetcar heads west parallel to 54th Street during Kenosha Streetcar Day in Kenosha, Wis. The brightly colored antique trolleys creep along a two-mile loop around the city and along the Lake Michigan shore.

Voters in Los Angeles and Kansas City have approved new taxes for streetcar projects. A handful of cities, including New Orleans and Philadelphia, are delighted they don’t have to. Their streetcars survived the mid-century purge and continue making their rounds. Kenosha built its system in 2000 for about $6 million, mostly funded by a federal grant, using 1950s-era cars cast off by the city of Toronto. It revived a line that had carried passengers from 1903 to 1932. The middle-class town of about 100,000 was once a vibrant port, and grand civic buildings from the early 1900s line the grid of broad boulevards and narrow lanes. Today, the city is something of a bedroom community for nearby Milwaukee and Chicago. A more diverse economy is bringing jobs back and the lakefront has blossomed with condominiums, two museums, parks, a heated boat storage facility and a harbor bristling with sailboats. Before the two-mile streetcar loop was laid, the downtown “was very dark,” said Joe Catuara, standing outside his bustling hot dog shop — aptly named Trolley Dogs. “Now it’s lit up more, there are businesses.” A row of shops, bookstores and cafes borders one

side of the line. The annual ridership of about 50,000 isn’t large, but that may not matter, said Mayor Keith Bosman, because the aim is to create atmosphere, much like public art, more than just transportation. He said the line helped hook the developer who put hundreds of new condos on the site of the old demolished Chrysler plant. The city plans to double the system beginning as early as next year with a new leg that would help take in 85 percent of the downtown businesses, as well as residential areas and a hospital, with the goal of luring more offices and housing downtown. Some are unimpressed. It’s a “trolley to nowhere,” said Pat Lawler, 83, sitting on a downtown bench. “In Kenosha, people drive their cars.” Still, the streetcars have soaked into the town’s fabric. The old cars with their rounded edges and original bulbous light fixtures appear in street murals and in black and white photos on the walls of downtown shops, and each year the town holds a streetcar festival. “It makes a bigger town seem smaller,” said Jenna Hass, 29, who pays $1 to ride the streetcars with her 3-year-old son, Tyler,

Your miles will be safe. After the merger closes, the two airlines will likely combine the miles into one program and elite status from one airline will likely be honored on the other. That puts the occasional traveler closer to rewards. The merged carrier will continue American’s participation in the OneWorld alliance, which was founded by American, British Airways, Cathay Pacific and Qantas. Today, it has 13 airlines including Finnair, Royal Jordanian and Japan Airlines. US Airways will leave the Star Alliance, which includes rival United Airlines, Lufthansa, Air Canada and 24 other airlines. Alliances allow passengers to earn and redeem miles on partner airlines.

Destinations A key reason for merging is to link both airlines’ networks, creating a system on par with Delta Air Lines and United, part of United Continental Holdings Inc. There is little overlap between the two airlines’ existing routes. The combined carrier will offer more than 6,700 daily flights to 336 destinations in 56 countries, making it more attractive to companies seeking to fly employees around the globe with few connections. US Airways passengers will gain access to American’s international destinations, particularly London and Latin America. American’s passengers will be able to better connect to smaller U.S. cities that US Airways serves. The combined carrier will have considerable presence in New York; Philadelphia; Washington; Charlotte, N.C.; Miami; Chicago; Dallas; Phoenix; and Los Angeles. It is unclear how many of those cities will keep their levels of service. In past mergers, airlines have promised not to close any hubs but have gone ahead and dramatically reduced service in once-key cities.

Passenger confusion The merger of two airlines often means confusion and hassle for customers. Which terminal or ticket counter do they go to for check in? If there is a problem with a ticket, which company should they call? For a while, United and Continental were issuing two confirmation numbers for each ticket so either airline’s staff could make changes. Problems with the integration of their frequent flier programs angered many loyal road warriors and computer glitches caused repeated flight delays. It could be months, if not years, until all American and US Airways planes get a uniform paint job.

Fisk art collection makes debut in Arkansas museum BENTONVILLE, Ark. — After years of legal wrangling, a renowned art collection including pieces by the famous painter Georgia O’Keeffe and her late husband, Alfred Stieglitz, will make its debut at a museum in northwest Arkansas. O’Keeffe gave the collection to Fisk University in Tennessee in 1949. Last year, a Tennessee judge approved a deal for Fisk to sell a 50 percent stake in the collection to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art created by Wal-Mart heiress Alice Walton. The school received $30 million as part of the deal. Tennessee’s attorney general had argued that selling any part of the 101-piece collection would violate O’Keeffe’s wishes. An exhibition featuring the collection opened to the public Saturday in Bentonville, Ark. It will be on display through Feb. 3.

The Associated Press

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SantafenewmexiCan.Com


Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

C-3

sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad call

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

LOTS & ACREAGE

SANTA FE

»rentals«

Abiquiu

Peaceful, sublime acreage. Panoramic views. Pedernal, O’Keeffe country. Spiritual Retreat. Near Abiquiu lake, 62 acres. Just $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001

PUEBLO STYLE, CUSTOM BUILT 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms. Drop dead Sangre views, minutes from the hospital. LOGIC REAL ESTATE 505-820-7000

SANTA FE

UNIQUE THREE bedroom, three bath, Park Plazas home offers privacy and Jemez Mountain v i e w s . Large family room - guest suite. Beautiful remodeled kitchen. 438-0701 by appointment.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 1804 San Felipe Circle, Beautiful midcentury multi generational Stamm Home, significant additions, upgrades, and remodeling. Must See to Believe. Main, Guest, 3,352 squ.ft., 4 bedroom, 3 bath, cul-de-sac lot on Acequia, 2 plus car garage, private well, incredible irrigated landscaping. $565,000. Sylvia, 505-577-6300.

Cozy Cottage

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

BUILDING SITE 2.5 Acres, all utilities plus well, at the end of St. francis Dr. and Rabbit Rd. on Camino Cantando. Views, views, views! Beautiful land, vigas, latillas and lumber included. $280,000, 505-603-4429.

SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS?

St. Michael Hospital Corridor

Check out the coupons in this weeks

Multi-use 28,000 sq.ft. building, on 1.67 acres. Priced to sell under two million dollars. Owner will finance. Old Santa Fe Realty 505983-9265.

TV book

CONDO NORTHSIDE TOWNHOME, minutes from Plaza. New carpet, paint, updated. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1000SF. Washer, Dryer hook-up. Courtyard. $1300, monthly + gas, electric + DD. 505259-4433. RANCHO VIEJO near SFCC. 2 room, 2.5 bath 1642 sq.ft. grades, storage, 2 car garage, AC/Heat, gas fireplace. Views, parks. $1400 pets negotiable. 670-3581

bedUpW/D, near 505-

ESPANOLA

OUT OF TOWN

PECOS RIVER CLIFF HOUSE $585,000 OWNER IS NMREL MLS#2013 03395 PLEASE SEE PHOTOS ON PECOSRIVERCLIFFHOUSE.COM

Now Showing Rancho Viejo Townhome $237,500

APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750 2 BEDROOM, $800 Utilities paid, fireplace, charming, clean, 5 minute walk to Railyard, No Pets, 505-471-0839

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, Laundry facility on site, fire place, balcony, patio, near Walmart. $625 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RUFINA LAN E, laundry hookups, fireplace, single story complex. $699 month. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RANCHO SIRINGO ROAD , fenced yard, fireplace, laundry facility on-site. $725 month. One Month Free Rent, No Application Fees.

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath in quiet fourplex, near Trader Joe’s. Includes washer, dryer, NO pets, NO Smoking. $850 monthly. 626-466-6737. 2 BEDROOM 1 bath, utilities paid. Off Airport Rd. $850 monthly. $700 deposit. Available November 1st. 505474-2887. 2 Bedroom Apartmant off Agua Fria Behind Home Depot. Available Now! Call 505-603-4622 for details.

ESPANOLA VALLEY Property, 10 acres and old farmhouse. Water rights for irrigation, borders Highway 76 and Santa Cruz River. $375,000, owner will finance. 702-499-9821.

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

2 bedroom, non-smoker, no pets $600, $1200 deposit required. Appointment only. 505-471-2929 RIVERFRONT & IRRIGATED PROPERTIES FROM $34,000

MICHAEL LEVY REALTY 505.603.2085 msl.riverfront@gmail.com PecosRiverCliffHouse.com

575-694-5444

REDUCED PRICES! 3 bedroom, 2 bath plus 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment. $380,000. 5600 sq. ft. warehouse, $280,000. 5 bedroom 4600 sq.ft. 1105 Old Taos Highway, $480,000. 3.3 acres Fin del Sendero, $145,000. 505-470-5877 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

$800 HILLSIDE STREET. 1 BEDROOM. Great neighborhood. Walk to Plaza. Utilities included. Private patio. Clean. Off-street parking, Nonsmoking. No pets. Quiet Tenant Preferred! 505-685-4704 CAMINO CAPITAN, one bedroom, one bath in quiet fourplex, fireplace, off street parking. $650 Western Equities 505-982-420. CHARMING 1 BEDROOM Compound. Private Patio. Lots of light. Carport, Laundry facilities. No pets. Non-smoking. $600 monthly, $600 deposit. (505)474-2827

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

RIO RANCHO ENCHANTED HILLS, SPECTACULAR VIEW, 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, minutes from I-25, RailRunner. See online ad photos, description $265,000. 505-771-2396

HISTORIC REMODELED ADOBE , 1 bedroom 1 bath with yard. In the downtown area minutes to the Plaza. $850 monthly.

Chamisa Management Corporation, 505-988-5299

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

CHECK OUT THE AMAZING AUTUMN MOVE-IN SPECIALS we’re offering this month on our sunny, spacious Studios & Large 2 Bedroom Apartments! You won’t believe the savings! The new management & 24 hour professional maintenance teams at Las Palomas ApartmentsHopewell Street are ready to show you how easy life can be when you love where you live. Call 888-4828216 for a tour today. Se habla español.

DOS SANTOS, one bedroom, one bath, upper level, upgraded, reserve parking. $800 Western Equities, 505-982-4201 NICE 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 1.5 bath. Washer, dryer. Nonsmoking. No pets. $825 plus utilities. Unfurnished. Calle De Oriente Norte. Year lease. 505-983-4734

CLEAN QUIET ADOBE EFFICIENCY APARTMENT

Within walking distance to Plaza, $700 monthly. Water, sewage trash pick up paid. No pets. Non-smoker. Lease. 505-690-1077 or 505-988-1397. CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, new heater, super clean. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References required. No Credit Check. 505-4705188 Large one bedroom including loft two bath $1350 One bedroom one bath $900 Modern kitchens and appliances, New carpet and paint. 505-603-0052. ONE BEDROOM EFFICIEN CY apartment for rent, available immediately. $675.00 per month, including utilities. $300.00 cleaning deposit. No Pets, No Smoking. Contact phone number: 505-204-4777 (please leave voice message). PECOS STUDIO, 3/4 bath wood burning stove. large front yard $400 monthly plus propane. Also, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, garage, storage $750. 505-795-2245

Available Now!

1,2 & 3 Bedroom Apts. $620-1bdrms $680-2bdrms $720-3bdrms Includes: Washer/Dryer and Gas Stove $0 Security Deposit (OAC )

PARK PLAZAS! 2 Bedroom 1.5 bath, 1,350 sq.ft. Private end unit, attached two car garage. $1,150 monthly plus utilities. No pets or smoking. Available 11/15. 505-471-3725. RANCHO SANTOS, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pretty unit, 2nd story, 1 car garage. $1000. Western Equities, 505-982-4201. RARELY AVAILABLE North Hill compound 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2000 square feet. Minutes to Plaza. Mountain & city light views. 2 Kiva Fireplaces, fabulous patio, A/C, washer & dryer, freezer, brick style floors, garage. $1,950 monthly, includes water. 1 level private end unit. 214-491-8732 T O W N H O U S E , 1200 square feet. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Garage, patio, storage, large kitchen. Beautifully furnished. Convenient location. $1100 monthly. 866-363-4657

GUESTHOUSES

15 minute application process

SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS

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

505-471-8325

HOUSES FURNISHED

2029 CALLE LORCA Call for appointment

STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648

SUNSET VIEWS: charming 1 bedroom, 700 sq.ft. $655, deposit plus utilities. Laundry access. Cats ok. East Frontage Road. 505-699-3005.

CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 BEDROOM, 1 1/2 Bath, 2 Car Garage. Washer, Dryer, Dishwasher, Kiva Fireplace, Private Courtyard, Skylights. Sunset, Mountain Views. Walk to Plaza. Small Pets. $1,500 monthly. 505-660-4585.

AFFORDABLE LUXURY ITALIAN VILLA

Sunset views, 5 minutes to town serene mountain location, city lights. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with den. Private gated community. Pet friendly. $2250. 505-699-6161.

service«directory CALL 986-3000

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! ANIMALS

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

FLORES & MENDOZA’S PROFESSIONAL MAINTENENCE. Home and Office cleaning. 15 years experience, references available, Licensed, bonded, insured. (505)7959062.

505 Go K9 Sit Pet Sitting in your home.

References available, insured, Call Michelle, 505-465-9748, michelle@petsits.com or visit 505GoK9Sit.com

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

CABINETRY LOCALLY MADE Cabinetry for Kitchens, baths, bookcases, closet organization, garage utility, storage. 20 years experience. Free Estimates. Call 505-466-3073

CLEANING

GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE

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

for activists rally Immigrants,

and independent

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

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

50¢

mexican.com

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

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

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations By Julie Ann

Grimm

Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary near E.J. Martinez

The New

A+ Cleaning

Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677. Clean Houses in and out. Windows, carpets. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.

MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m, For More Information Please Call Miranda 505-467-8623

DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and office with TLC. Excellent references. Nancy, 505-986-1338. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

HANDYMAN TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583

CALL 986-3010

CONCRETE Cesar’s Concrete.

Concrete work, Color, Stamp, and Acid Wash. Masonry work. Licensed, bonded, insured. License# 378917. Call Cesar at 505-629-8418.

CONSTRUCTION REMODELING. Our Specialty is Showers. Expert workmanship. License #58525 since 1982. Life-time Workmanship Warranty. 505-466-8383

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PROPANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

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

LANDSCAPING

paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent

CHILDCARE

HANDYMAN

Dry Pinon & Cedar Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load. 505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed and Insured. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072

Locally owned

CLEANING

FIREWOOD

A.C.E. PLASTERING INC. Stucco, Interior, Exterior. Will fix it the way you want. Quality service, fair price, estimate. Alejandro, 505-795-1102

ROOFING

COTTONWOOD SERVICES Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework 15% discount, Trees pruning winterizing. Free Estimates! 505-907-2600 or 505-204-4510

MOVERS PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.

PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119.

ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call, Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760. ROOFING PRO Panel, shingles, torch down. Also restucco parapets, repair plaster and sheet rock damage.All phases of construction. 505-310-7552.


C-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES FURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

AWESOME VIEWS, 8 miles from Plaza. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Short term rental for winter season. Wifi, directtv, sauna, utilities included. VERBO# 406531. $1,500 monthly. 505-690-0473

LEASE & OWN. ZERO DOWN! PAY EXACTLY WHAT OWNER PAYS: $1200 includes mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance (HOA). ZIA VISTA’S LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CONDO. Save thousands. Incredible "Sangre" views. 505-204-2210

POJOAQUE CASITA. Fully furnished 1 bedroom, 2 bath. Baseboard heat, lots of trees, open space. $700 monthly plus $350 deposit. Some utilites. No smoking, no pets. Call, 505-455-3902.

$1425 MONTHLY. BEAUTIFUL Rancho Viejo 3 bedroom, 2 bath hom e with gas rock fireplace, granite counter-tops, evaporative cooler, enclosed spacious walled yard. NonSmoker. 505-450-4721. www.ranchoviejo.shutterfly.com/pict ures/16 2 BEDROOM, 1-1/2 BATH Country living on Highway 14, Northfork. Approximately 900 square feet. Horse friendly. $850 monthly. Deposit required. Pets negotiable. 505-920-9748

2 BEDROOM 1 bath adobe home. Freshly remodled. Columbia Street. $1,050 monthly plus utilities. Available now! 505-983-9722.

LIVE AMONG Pines near Plaza. 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Wood floors, kiva fireplace, front, back yards, washer, dryer. NO smoking, 2 car garage. $1,700 monthly. 505670-6554 NAVA ADE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Garage, all appliances. Fireplace, storage unit, Access to clubhouse (workout, pool). Low maintenance. 1500 sq.ft. $1,350. 505-660-1264

REDUCED PRICE FOR RENT OR SALE:

4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage; approximately 3200 sq.ft. enclosed yard, private cul-de-sac, mountain views. Beautiful house in Rancho Viejo. $2,000 + deposit + utilities. Call Quinn, 505-690-7861. REFURBISHED. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH $1000 monthly plus utilities. Nonsmoking, no pets. Behind DeVargas Mall, 10 minute walk to Plaza or Railyard. 505-690-3116, 505-438-8983.

3 BED, 1 bath La Madera Stamm home for rent. Available December 1st. $1600 monthly unfurnished. Oneyear lease. Please contact Amy, 970404-1126. 3 bedroom, 1 bath. Single car garage, quiet street, wood floors, washer, dryer, new fridge. $1100 monthly. Non-smokers. Cats okay. 505-603-4196.

HOSPITALITY

SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS? Check out the coupons in this weeks

TV book

TWO-STORY, 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, 1400 sq-ft, brick floors, vigas, deck, near Chavez Center. Washer, dryer, dish washer, fireplace, garage. No smoking, no cats. $1000 monthly. valmatz@comcast.net. AVAILABLE 11/10/13.

FULL-TIME BOOKKEEPER

THE Santa Fe Animal Shelter seeks a full-time bookkeeper. The ideal applicant must have at least an Associates Degree in accounting, be personable, have excellent communication and organizational skills, and be proficient in Quickbooks and Excel. Multitasking ability, strong focus skills and the ability to meet deadlines is required. Salary dependent on experience.

Fax resumes to: 505-820-6901 or email rhernandez@sfhumesociety. org. No phone calls please. ADMINISTRATIVE

WAREHOUSES

WORK STUDIOS Arroyo Hondo Studio 4 acre compound. 1,000 ft, with loft. Overhead door, views, quiet, W/D. $600, monthly, plus utilties. 505-670-7958.

»announcements«

NEW MEXICO ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES RECEPTIONIST/CONSTITUENT SERVICES ASSISTANT PROVIDE HIGH level professional support to internal/external constituents; assist with meetings and conferences. Required: 5 yrs of administrative experience, (2 yrs association or membership experience preferred), excellent customer service, proficiency in all Microsoft Office programs, excellent written and verbal communication, some travel/extended hours. Excellent benefits package; salary commensurate with experience. Email resume and three professional references to info@nmcounties.org by 11/15/13.

DRIVERS

LIVE IN STUDIOS 3 BEDROOM 2 bath adobe. 1,900 sq.ft. 3 car carport, enclosed yard, pets ok. $1,300 monthly. Includes utilities. $1,300 deposit. Available 12/1/13. 505-470-5877. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Park Plaza, 1 level detached, granite counters, fenced, tennis, walking trail. $1450 monthly plus. 505-690-1122, 505-6706190

4 BEDROOM, 1 3/4 baths, washer, dryer, dishwasher, fireplace, covered patio, storage, central location. $1800 plus utilities, deposit, 1-yr lease, no pets, no smoking. 505-9820266.

505-989-9133

DESIRABLE NAVA ADE COMMUNITY 3 bedroom, plus library, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage, washer, dryer, enclosed backyard, 2 wood burning fireplaces, $1695 plus utilities LOCATED AT THE LOFTS ON CERRILLOS This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities CHARMING AND CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 bedroom, 1 bath, wood & tile floors, enclosed backyard, additional storage on property $1100 plus utilities EXQUISITE SANTA FE COMPOUND PROPERTY situated on 5 acres, boasts majestic mountain views, 6200 sqft of living space, 8 bedrooms, 7 baths, 2 car garage. $3500 plus utilities. Call for personal showing $600. 2 SMALL BEDROOMS. V e r y clean, quiet, safe. Off Agua Fria. Has gas heating. Pay only electric. No pets. 505-473-0278 ARROYO HONDO (SF) award winning contemporary gated 4 acres. Bright, spacious 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, plus guest quarters - studio. $5000 monthly + utilities. 505-9860046 COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. EASTSIDE ADOBE. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, fireplace, hardwood floors, washer, dryer. Off-street parking $1600 monthly, some utilities included. 303-908-5250 ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603 LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271

TESUQUE, 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath on horse property, wood stove, no dogs, horses possible. $800 monthly plus electric. 505-983-8042

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

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

"A PLACE TO CALL HOME"

COZY CONDO WITH MANY UPGRADES 2 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, washer, dryer, granite counters $895 plus utilities

WOMEN’S WHITE Gold or Silver Ring with 3 stones. Found in La Casa Sena Parking Lot on October 30, 2013. 505660-7913.

800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

TESUQUE TRAILER VILLAGE

PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities

STERLING SILVER Women’s Ring, some inlay work and other stones. Found in the area of Rufina Street about 2 weeks ago. 505-473-9594.

Learn While you Earn! ▪ $1,500 Sign-on Bonus for drivers with 1 yr exp. ▪ Professional Averitt Trainers ▪ Dedicated Retail Account ▪ 1-3 Weeks Paid Training ▪ CSA Friendly Equipment ▪ BCBS Insurance, 401(k), Profit Sharing & Much More! ▪ CDL-A & 4 mos.T/T exp. required 888-WORK-4-US AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer

1200 & 600 SQUARE FEET

LOT FOR RENT

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

DEDICATED DRIVER TRAINING PROGRAMS

2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

VACANCY

1/2 OFF FIRST MONTH

Single & Double Wide Spaces

OFFICES $975 + UTILITIES, OFFICE S U IT E , GALISTEO CENTER. Two bright, private offices plus reception area, kitchenette, bathroom. Hospital proximity. Available November 15th. 518-672-7370

NEW SHARED OFFICE

$300 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

Private desk, and now offering separate private offices sharing all facilities. Conference room, kitchen, parking, lounge, meeting space, internet, copier, scanner, printer. Month-To-Month. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280. Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $450 monthly. 505-690-5092

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.

RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.

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

SENA PLAZA Office Space Available Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.

ROOMMATE WANTED 1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.

STORAGE SPACE

AN EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL

Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330

FOUND FOUND, YOUNG FEMALE DOG. Cerrillos and Maez Ave area. Call to describe. 720-620-7497.

HIRING FAIR At the Ski Area in the La Casa Cafeteria

Fri. | Nov. 15th | 12pm-6pm Sat. | Nov. 16th |10am-2pm SEASONAL FULL/PART POSITIONS INDOOR/OUTDOOR EOE

SANTA FE CARE CENTER ADMISSIONS COORDINATOR

WE are now taking applications for an Admissions Coordinator. Full-time Hourly Position. Primary Duties Include: Conducts tours/ inquires for prospective admissions. Completes required admission paperwork. Develops marketing plan with Marketing Liaison to increase referrals to SFCC. LTC exp. a plus. Outstanding interpersonal skills a must. LPN/SW License a plus but sales experience required. If interested please submit a resume to the Attn. of the Administrator or to come by our facility and fill out an application.

UNIT MANAGER

EXPERIENCED BILINGUAL tax preparer wanted. Must have prior experience and be willing to work Saturdays. Directax 505-473-4700.

1,500 sq.ft. industrial unit with nice office, half bath, overhead door, high ceilings, sky lights, parking, absolutly no automotive. $900 monthly plus utilities. No better deal in town! Call 505-438-8166. SUNNY HOME Tucked Away on Westside. Cozy 2 bedroom, enclosed patio, washer, dryer. Lovely Neighborhood, DishTV. $975 plus utilities. 505-989-3654.

MEDICAL DENTAL

DRIVERS

ACCOUNTING

Opportunity Knocks!

2 BEDROOM 2 BATH, 2 car garage, washer, dryer. Breathtaking mountain view, trails, golf course. Near Cochiti Lake. $900. 505-359-4778, 505-980-2400.

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

Lincare, leading national respiratory company seeks caring service representative. Service patients in their home for oxygen and equipment needs. Warm personalities. Age 21 plus who can lift up to 120 pounds should apply. CDL with DOT a plus or obtainable. Growth opportunities are excellent, drug free workplace. EOE. Apply at 712 West San Mateo, Santa Fe, NM 87505.

A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122

2000 SQUARE foot space with high ceilings & 2 overhead doors. Office, bath. Great for auto repair. $1600 monthly. 505-660-9523

2 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATHS TOWNHOME, RANCHO VIEJO. 1150 sq.ft. 2 car garage. Across from park. $1250 monthly plus utilities. 505-471-7050

986-3000

»jobs«

STORAGE SPACE

4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00

HOUSES UNFURNISHED $1125 MONTHLY. BRIGHT, A T TRACTIVE, REMODELED HOME, Southside. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. No pets. No smoking. First, last, damage. Dave, 505-660-7057.

to place your ad, call

Smith’s is now accepting applications for an EXPERIENCED BAKER. Retail experience preferred. Apply in person at 224 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur or apply online at www.smithsfoodanddrug.com, select store location 426.

MANAGEMENT AUDUBON SEEKS an Executive Director to lead its program in NM. To apply, please visit the Career Center at audubon.org. BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is Hiring Assistant Managers at two Santa Fe Locations! Pay DOE, 35-40 hours per week. Contact Lupe at L F e r n a n d e z Marquez@lotaburger.com to apply. MANAGER FOR day-to-day operations of non-profit homeowner’s associations. HOA management experience or related background desired (real estate, property management, escrow, title experience). Background, drug screens apply. Submit cover letter, resume, salary requirements to hr@hoamco.com with subject "Manager-SF".

2 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.

ATTN: CNA’S

We have a CNA positions available. The hours are as follows: 6a.m. 6:30p.m., and 6p.m. to 6:30a.m. 3 days a week!

Please contact Raye Highland, RN/DON, at 505982-2574, or come fill out a application at: Santa Fe Care Center 635 Harkle Rd Santa Fe, NM

WERE SO DOG GONE GOOD! We Always Get Results!

Call our helpful Ad-Visors Today!

986-3000

MEDICAL DENTAL

DENTAL ASSISTANT

needed for busy dental office in tiny mountain town of Angelfire, NM. Must be positive, multi-tasker. Love of snow is a plus. E m a i l resume with cover letter to Daniela: affdentistry@yahoo.com. HELP NEEDED WITH INSURANCE EXAMS in Santa Fe & surrounding areas. Contract position. Must be proficient in drawing blood and reliable. Call (505)296-9644 Veronica.

ORAL SURGERY based practice seeking to fill the position of an experienced DENTAL ASSISTANT with active NM Board of Dental Healthcare radiology certification and current BLS certification. Qualifications include, but not limited to: team oriented individual, motivated, proactive self-starter, high level computer skills, ability to follow directions and focus with attention to details, exceptional communication skills, positive attitude and highly dependable. Submit resume to: Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Center of Santa Fe, Att: Cheryl, 1645 Galisteo Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Fax: 505-984-0694.

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS FULL TIME HOUSEKEEPER

TO LIVE ON PROPERTY Call, 505-660-6440

SALES MARKETING PREMIER RESALE

Have an eye for detail? Love sorting the good from the bad? Want to help animals? The Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s premier resale store, Look What The Cat Dragged In 2 on West Cordova Road, seeks a part-time Sales Associate. Must have excellent customer service skills, previous cashier experience. Some heavy lifting required.

Email resume to:eviechec@sfhumanesocie ty.org. No phone calls please.

The Santa Fe New Mexican is seeking an

A1 editor with excellent news judgment to help anchor its presentation desk at night. Our editors do it all: Write accurate, punchy headlines; spot holes in stories while editing for AP style; design clean, eye-catching pages and graphics; and keep our website up-to-date and looking sharp. We’re seeking candidates with at least two years of experience in editing and design. Email your cover letter, resumé and five best design clips to Presentation Editor Brian Barker at bbarker@sfnewmexican.com.


Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds TRADES STAFF WRITER, PAGE DESIGNER

An award-winning weekly newspaper based in the Rocky Mountains ski town of Angel Fire, N.M., the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle has an immediate opening for a staff writer/page designer who will work 30 hours per week. The person in this position will write stories and take photos for the newspaper and its special sections and help with page layout once a week. The ideal candidate will have a degree or experience in journalism, a strong grasp of AP style and a fervor for both hard and soft news. Experience in page layout is preferred. The pay for this position is $12.82 per hour without medical benefits. Send your résumé, three clips and samples of page design to Managing Editor Jesse Chaney at news@sangrechronicle.com or PO Drawer 209, Angel Fire, NM 87710. Deadline is 5 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2013. EOE.

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

to place your ad, call PETS SUPPLIES

Sell Your Stuff! 986-3000

»animals«

GARAGE SALE SOUTH

AMERICAN ESKIMO miniature. 6 weeks, male $650 firm, female $700 firm. Cash only. Call for appointment, 505-459-9331. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES. $300. Only serious calls. 7 weeks old. 505753-6987, call after 5 p.m.

WHIRLPOOL WASHER. $100. 505-6626396.

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

2002 LEXUS LS 430 LUXURY SEDAN Local Owner, Carfax, Every Service Record, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-keys, New Tires, Loaded, Afford-ably Luxurious, $13,750, Must See! WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

4X4s

2013 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. 2k miles, why buy new! Clean CarFax $35,822. Call 505-2163800.

2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged SUV. 86,695 miles, Rear Seat Entertainment, Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, Roof Rail System, and much more. $29,995. Call 505-474-0888.

2010 MINI Cooper Clubman S. Just 19k miles, turbocharged, super well-equipped, Navigation, leather, panoramic roof, 1 owner clean CarFax $22,731. Call 505-216-3800.

ESTATE SALES ESTATE SALE 416 ESTANTE WAY, LOS ALAMOS SATURDAY 8:00AM 2:00PM. Antique chairs, tables, cabinets, dolls, candle sticks, lamps and baskets. Christmas ornaments, cookware and art. nmbx4@yahoo.com

GET NOTICED!

BUILDING MATERIALS PLYWOOD. G1S. 4’x8’ sheets. Different thicknesses. 505-983-8448

2008 Land Rover LR2 HSE SUV. Bluetooth and Sirius Radio, tires are in excellent condition. 52,704 miles. Very clean interior. No accidents! Well maintained. $18,995. Call 505-474-0888.

IMPORTS

2812 PUEBLO BONITO HUGE MOVING SALE! November 15-17 Friday- Sunday. 8am-? Furniture, household items, christmas decorations, and so much more!

WANTED: Old Van Briggle and other art pottery, old carved NM furniture, NM antiques. 505-424-8584.

FRIDGE. $100. 505-662-

1982 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505471-3911

POMERANIAN PUPPIES: Tiny, quality double coat. $600 to $800. Registered, first shots. POODLES: White male $350, white female $450. Tiny cream male, $450. Docked tails and dew claws removed. Also, Registered, first shots. 505-901-2094.

»garage sale«

DECORATED MULTI-COLOR 1940’s Mexican Plates. $15-$30. 505-4248584.

WHIRLPOOL 6396.

IMPORTS

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

ANTIQUES

DRYER. $100. 505-662-

DOMESTIC

RANCHILLO SINGLE- G R O U P EXPRESSO MACHINE. 110 volt. Plus expresso grinder. $1200 for both. LARANZATO SINGLEGROUP EXPRESSO MACHINE, $1000. 505-8988999

PETS SUPPLIES

WHIRLPOOL 6396.

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

NEVER BEEN USED 48" sandwich prep table, with under counter refrigeration. 3 year compressor warranty. $1,600 OBO. 505-852-0017

»merchandise«

APPLIANCES

986-3000

C-5

ITALIAN WATER DOGS. 4 MONTH OLD PUPPIES, CRATE TRAINED. 25-35 lbs, non-shedding. Free training and daycare. $2,000. Excellent family or active retiree pet. Call Robin, 505-6606666.

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

2007 Land Rover Range Rover Supercharged SUV. Sirius Radio, Tow Hitch, and much more. One owner. 79,895 miles. $28,995. 505-474-0888.

2010 Nissan Titan Crew PRO-4X. Awesome rig, new A/T tires, fiberglass shell, recent trade-in $24,331. Call 505-216-3800 .

1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $16,000 OBO. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862

CALL 986-3000

»cars & trucks«

COMPUTERS 2012 PRIUS H/B One owner, accident free, non smoker Prius One. Only 34k miles, still under warranty. Drive a bargain and save at the pump. Clean title, clear CarFax Grand Opening Sale Price $16995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

95 MITSUBISHI Montero, mechanically sound, second owner, service receipts. $3,200. 505-231-4481.

2006 LEXUS GS 300 AWD. Just in time for winter, AWD sports sedan, recent trade, absolutely pristine, Lexus for less $17,891. Call 505216-3800.

AirPort Extreme 802.11n (5th Generation) sold "as is" in excellent condition. $70. Please call, 505-470-4371 after 6 p.m.

CLASSIC CARS FURNITURE

Jose is an 8 week old pup whose mom was a purebred German Shepherd and dad was a purebred fence jumper.

2011 Toyota 4Runner SR5 4WD. Low miles, well-equipped, 1 owner clean CarFax, $31,771. Call 505216-3800.

2005 FORD Thunderbird 50th Anniversary Edition! Convertible with only 52k miles! $15,500. Mint condition. 505-363-2592

2001 TOYOTA Tundra 4x4 Limited Access Cab. Single owner. New tires. Well maintained with records. Clean interior. All the extras plus shell and bed liner. 187,000 miles. $10,400. 505699-3731

BEAUTIFUL COUCH WITH LOVELY ACCENTS. FROM A SMOKE AND PET FREE HOME. $350. PLEASE CALL, 505-238-5711 TO SCHEDULE A VIEWING. CARVED PINE bench, 34" high, 17" deep, 42" wide. Double - full cotton futon with trifold wooden frame. Call 505-983-8606.

FABULOUS 1960S HI-END LARGE MIDCENTURY MODERN WOOD COFFEE TABLE. 26W, 16H, 64L. SACRIFICE, $60. 505-982-0975 FOUR SHELF Wooden Book case, $60. Excellent condition. 505-690-5865

MISCELLANEOUS

SOMEONE to bring Christmas Trees to Portales, NM to sale. Lot, lights and advertising, furnished free of charge. Call Mark 575-760-5275.

Pax is a tiny jack russell mix with more spunk than your average 3 pound puppy! Both pups and more will be at PetSmart on 10248 Coors Bypass NW in Albuquerque on Saturday, November 16 from 10am-4pm. For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at www.evalleyshelter.org

1963 FORD Thunderbird Hardtop 78K miles, 390 engine, restored, runs great! $14,000, 505-699-8339

REDUCED!

2006 LEXUS GS300 Sleek black beauty, grey leather, navigation, back up camera, Levinson/JBL sound system, 4 new tires, alloys, tint, no accidents, clean CarFax. Grand Opening Sale Price $13,995. 505-9541054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

2001 JAGUAR-XK8 CONVERTIBLE Local Owner, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 77,768 Original Miles, service RecordS, Custom Wheels, Books, X-Keys, Navigation, Soooo Beautiful! $12,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

IMPORTS

Toy Box Too Full?

CAR STORAGE FACILITY

2010 BMW 328Xi. Only 30k miles, AWD, auto, exceptional! $25,817. Call 505-216-3800.

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039

WHITE AKC Labrador Retriever Puppies! Excellent Bloodlines! Visit www.hufflabs.com or call 719-5880934.

DOMESTIC

ROTWEILER PUPPIES for sale. Docked tails, first shots, de-wormed. $300. Please call, 505-490-1315.

TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2002 with 108k miles, clean title. $2900. Please call or text me anytime at 762-359-0324.

2005 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. $4400. BEST COLOR COMBO, BLACK MAGIC OVER BLACK. FACTORY RECARO SEATS, ALL WEATHER FLOOR MATS, BLACK MAGIC EXTERIOR, BLACK & GRAY CLOTH INTERIOR. CALL, 224999-0674

2007 MERCEDES C280 4matic. Only 65k miles!, All wheel drive, loaded, recent trade, clean CarFax, must see $15,471. Call 505-2163800. 2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium. 25,321 miles, AM/FM stereo with CD player, Bluetooth hands-free. $23,771. Call 505-216-3800. 1992 LEXUS SC 400 . 101k miles, garaged, fine condition. $6,000. 1-405323-2569


C-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

»recreational«

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

PICKUP TRUCKS

2010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i Premium. Only 24k miles! AWD, heated seats, moonroof, 1 owner clean CarFax $16,951. Call 505-216-3800.

2010 TOYOTA Prius III. Just 21,000 miles! Package 3 with navigation, 1 owner clean CarFax. $19,761. Call 505-216-3800.

2008 TOYOTA Sienna LE. Just 59k miles, another 1-owner Lexus trade-in! clean CarFax, immaculate condition $15,941. Call 505-2163800.

2006 VOLVO-C70 CONVERTIBLE FWD Another One Owner, Local, 36,974 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax,Garage,Non-Smoker, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Convertible Fully Automated, Press Button Convertible Or Hardtop. Soooooo Beautiful, Pristine. $18,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2010 NISSAN Titan Crew Cab PRO4X. 4x4, local trade-in, clean CarFax, immaculate, new tires $22,321. Call 505-216-3800.

WERE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

Sell your car in a hurry!

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

We Always Get Results!

2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C HYBRID FWD Another One Owner, Carfax, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, 14,710 Miles, City 53, Highway 46, Navigation, Factory Warranty. $19,850. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2009 TOYOTA MATRIX WAGON4 AWD Another One Owner, Local, 74,000 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Pristine. $13,250 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

SUVs

Call our helpful Ad-Visors Today!

ATVs

2007 Red Club Car XRT 4x4 UTV with dump bed. $5,000. 505-470-5595.

PICKUP TRUCKS

986-3000

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser 4x4. Only 50k miles, clean CarFax, new tires, just serviced, immaculate! $24,331. Call 505-216-3800.

1987 Galion Road Grader. $10,000. 505470-5595.

Have a product or service to offer?

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

2011 FORD F150 XLT 4X4 CREWCAB Spotless, no accidents, 38k miles, family truck.Satellite radio, bedliner, alloys, running boards, full power. Below Blue Book. Was $29,995. REDUCED TO $25,995. 505954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

2010 T o y o t a 4Runner Trail V6 SUV . 43,338 miles, Remote Engine Start, One owner, No accidents! $29,995. 505-474-0888.

2008 TOYOTA SEQUOIA-4X4 PLATINUM Another One Owner, Local, Carfax, Service Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Navigation, Rear Entertainment, Third Row Seat, Leather, Loaded. Pristine $28,300. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2004 TOYOTA HIGHLANDERSUV 4X4 Another One Owner, Local, 85, 126 Miles, Every Service Record, Carfax, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, Third Row Seat, New Tires, Pristine. $13,950 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

BICYCLES

2011 VOLKSWAGEN-TDI JETTA WAGON MANUAL Another One Owner, Carfax, Garaged Non-Smoker 54,506 Miles, Service Records, 42 Highway 30 City, Loaded, Pristine $20,750. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Sell Your Stuff!

2005 VOLVO XC90. SUV, V-8, Black. AWD. Low mileage, 34,490. Loaded: GPS, sunroof, leather seats, 7passenger. Like new. $16,000. 505881-2711

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

2000 MAZDA B-3000 Extended Cab, V6 Standard, 2WD. $4,000. 505-473-1309

CALL 986-3000

SALE! ECO MOTIVE ELECTRIC BIKES.

(5) Storm 300’s, New. Pedal bike with electric assist. $1000. 505-690-9058

CAMPERS & RVs

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

1977 Prowler 16ft Trailer, Sleeps 6, Excellent Condition. Oldie but Goodie! Great for hunters or families $3,000 OBO. 505-660-4963.

986-3000

any way YOU want it TWO GREAT WAYS TO ENJOY UNLIMITED DIGITAL ACCESS

1

12

$

95

9

$

2

30 days

Total access PRINT + DIGITAL

Get unlimited digital access to santafenewmexican.com and pasatiempomagazine.com on your tablet, smartphone or computer PLUS your choice of print delivery for one low monthly price. Choose from 7-day, weekend or Sunday only. *Automated monthly payments. Must reside within in The New Mexican’s home delivery area.

95 30 days

Online access DIGITAL ONLY

Unlimited digital access to santafenewmexican.com and pasatiempomagazine.com on your tablet, smartphone or computer. Does not include a print subscription.

santafenewmexican.com/subscribe QUESTIONS?

We can help!

Call 505-986-3010 or email circulation@sfnewmexican.com.


Wednesday, November 13, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS BID NO. ’14/21/B Bids will be received by the City of Santa Fe and will be delivered to City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Bldg. "H", Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 until 2:00 P.M. local prevailing time, December 5, 2013. Any bid received after this deadline will not be considered. This bid is for the purpose of procuring: FIRE DEPARTMENT UNIFORMS The bidder’s attention is directed to the fact that all applicable Federal Laws, State Laws, Municipal Ordinances, and the rules and regulations of all authorities having jurisdiction of said item shall apply to the bid throughout, and they will be deemed to be included in the bid document the same as though herein written out in full. The City of Santa Fe is an Equal Opportunity Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color religion, sex, sexual orientation or national origin. The successful bidder will be required to conform to the Equal Opportunity Employment regulations. Bids may be held for sixty (60) days subject to action by the City. The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids in part or in whole. Bid packets are available by visiting the Business link on the City’s website (www.santafenm.gov ) or by contacting Shirley Rodriguez, City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Bldg. "H" Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505, (505) 955-5711. ATTEST: Robert Rodarte, Purchasing Officer Legal #95927 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 13 2013 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF LOS ALAMOS STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF FRED M. MUELLER, D e ceased. No. 00023

D-132-PB-2013-

NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Karl P. Mueller and Peter L. Mueller have been appointed Co-Personal Representatives of this Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims

Continued...

LEGALS

LEGALS

will be forever barred. Claims must be presented to Timothy Vidal, Attorney for the Co-Personal Representatives, Canepa & Vidal, PA, PO Box 8980, Santa Fe, NM 87504, or filed with the First Judicial District Court, 2500 Trinity Dr., Ste. D, Los Alamos, NM 87544.

Page 023, as #1548381. Together with the water wells identified as New Mexico State Engineer files numbered RG 16108 and RG 29658.

Dated: November 13, 2013.

6,

CANEPA & VIDAL, PA By: /s/ Timothy Vidal Timothy Vidal, Esq. PO Box 8980 Santa Fe, NM 87504 (505) 982-9229 Legal #95943 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 6 and 13, 2013. FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO VALLEY NATIONAL BANK, a national banking corporation, Plaintiff, vs. NO. D-101-CV-201301852 COTTONWOOD RV PARK, LLC, ART V. MARTINEZ, JR. AND RAMONA E. MARTINEZ Defendants.

AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE

LEGALS y Albuquerque, 87109 (505) 463-8814 (505) 856-3334

NM

Legal #96071 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 13, 20, 27 The Property is sold and December 4, 2013 subject to rights of redemption; ease- IN THE PROBATE ments, reservations COURT COUNTY OF and restrictions of re- SANTA FE STATE OF cord; domestic well NEW MEXICO and water rights; taxes and governmental NO. 2013-0155 assessments; any liens or encumbran- IN THE MATTER OF ces not foreclosed in THE ESTATE this proceeding; the OF RICHARD L. GRIFvaluation of the prop- FITH, Deceased. erty by the County Assessor as real or personal property; afNOTICE TO fixture of any mobile CREDITORS or manufactured home to the land; de- NOTICE IS HEREBY activation of title to a GIVEN that the undermobile or manufac- signed has been aptured home on the pointed personal repproperty; environ- resentative of this esmental contamina- tate. All persons havtion, if any; and zon- ing claims against ing violations con- this estate are recerning the property, quired to present if any. No representa- their claims within tion is made as to the two months after the validity of the rights date of the first publiof ingress and cation of this Notice egress. Transfer of ti- or the claims will be tle to the highest bid- forever barred. der shall be without Claims must be prewarranty or repre- sented either to the sentation of any kind. personal representaALL PROSPECTIVE tive at Post Office PURCHASERS AT THE Box 4160, Santa Fe, SALE ARE ADVISED TO New Mexico 87502MAKE THEIR OWN EX- 4160, or filed with the AMINATION OF TITLE Santa Fe County ProAND TO CONSULT bate Court. THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. DATED: November 6, 2013 This action is a suit to foreclose the mort- Malie Rich-Griffith gage secured by the Personal Representareal property descri- tive of the bed above. The total Estate of Richard L. amount awarded by Griffith, Deceased the Judgment to Valley National Bank with interest to the CUDDY & MCCARTHY, date of sale, is LLP $2,106,377.38, plus its James S. Rubin costs and attorney P.O. Box 4160 fees through the date Santa Fe, New Mexico of sale of the proper- 87502-4160 ty and any amounts (505) 988-4476 advanced by Valley Attorneys for PersonNational Bank to pro- al Representative tect its interest in the property before sale, Legal #96070 including insurance, Published in The Sanmaintenance, taxes, ta Fe New Mexican on assessments or other November 13 and 20, expenses relating to 2013. the property.

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that pursuant to the Order Granting Default Judgment entered September 25, 2013, the undersigned Special Master will sell at public auction, for cash or certified funds, at the hour of 11:05 a.m on December 5, 2013, on the steps of the Santa Fe District Courthouse, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87501, the real property situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico descri- The proceeds from the judicial sale will bed as follows: be applied first to the payment of the costs The street address of and expenses of the the Real Property is sale; then to the paycommonly known as: ment of the Judgment in favor of Valley Na1318A, 1318B, & 1318C tional Bank, including SOUTH RIVERSIDE additional fees, costs DRIVE, ESPANOLA, NM and expenses as stated in the foregoing 87532. paragraph. Any exThe legal description cess funds shall be of the real property deposited with the subject to the Mort- Clerk of Court. Valley gage (hereinafter re- National Bank may ferred to as the "Sub- apply all or a portion ject Real Property") of its judgment towards the purchase is: price. Otherwise, Parcel A and Parcel B terms of sale shall be or certified and Tract B, as cash shown on plat enti- funds. tled "Boundary Survey Plat for Cotton- Plaintiff’s attorney is wood RV Park, LLC, A. Blair Dunn, 6605 Parcel A and Parcel B Uptown Blvd., Ste. within Comp. 196, P.C. 280, Albuquerque, NM 543 and Tract B with- 87110; telephone 505in Comp. 197, P.C. 544 881-5155. of the Santa Clara Pueblo Grant, in Sec- E L E C T R O N I C A L L Y tion 12, T.20N., R.8E., FILED N.M.P.M .... ", filed in the office of the Melissa Threet, County Clerk, Santa Special Master Fe County, New Mexi- The Real Estate Cenco, on January 6, ter, LLC 2009, in Plat Book 696, 6747 Academy Rd. NE

Continued...

Continued...

pets

Santa Fe Animal Shelt 983-4309 ext. 610

make it better.

Santa Fe Animal Shelter.Adopt. Volunteer. Love. 983-4309 ext. 610

986-3000

Continued...

toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

y

y individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the meeting, please contact Wilma Atencio at 3427651 at least one week prior to the meeting or as soon as possible. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. Please contact our office at 342-7600 if a summary or other type of accessible format is needed.

q q ico 87107. Your failure to so respond shall be treated as a default and your consent to the adoption shall not be required. WITNESS the Honorable Reed Sheppard, District Court Judge of the Second Judicial District Court, State of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Bernalillo County, New Mexico.

FRED TRUJILLO, SUPERINTENDENT THE PECOS INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER AND DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE ON THE BASIS OF RACE, NATIONAL ORIGIN, RELIGION, AGE, SEX, MARITAL STATUS, HOMELESSNESS OR DISABILITY IN COMPLIANCE WITH FEDERAL AND STATE LAWS. Legal #95993 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on November 13 and 14, 2013. NOTICE OF MEETING LEGAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Special Closed Meeting of the Governing Board of Santa Fe Community College (SFCC) will be held on Monday, November 18, 2013 at 2:00 p.m. in the President’s Conference Room (108), 6401 Richards Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87508. The Closed Session is to discuss limited personnel matters and real property. No action will be taken.

RICHMOND L. NEELY Attorney for Petitioners P. O. Box 1787 Albuquerque, NM 87103 CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: Stacy A. Archuleta Deputy Tom Romero Chief Executive Offi- Dated: October 21, 2013 cer Legal #95912 Legal #95928 Published in The San- Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on ta Fe New Mexican on November 13, 20, 27 November 13 2013 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF BERNALILLO SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT CHILDREN’S COURT DIVISION No. SA 2013 85

Continued...

THENCE along the Westerly R.O.W. of Ortiz Street, S.38° 26’ 22"W., 155.80 feet to a PK Nail & S & W Washer found; THENCE leaving said R.O.W., N.52° 58’ 32" W., 103.95 feet to a No.4 Rebar found; THENCE N.23° 38’ 48" E., 111.63 feet to a PK Nail & S & W Washer found; THENCE along the Southerly R.O.W. of West Water Street, S.72° 24’ 42" E., 141.70 Feet to said point and place of beginning. INCLUDING ANY AND ALL IMPROVEMENTS, FIXTURES, ATTACHMENTS, AND PERSONAL PROPERTY BELONGING TO DEFENDANT.

BEGINNING at the northeast corner of the tract, marked by a PK Nail & SMITH & WILLIAMSON washer found, from whence the City of Santa Fe Sanitary Sewer Manhole No. W3-2, in the intersection of West Water and Ortiz Street, bears N.66° 56’ 16"E., 31.83 feet;

Continued...

Continued...

MSCI 2007-IQ13 RETAIL 126, LLC, a New Mexico limited OF liability company,

Continued...

LEGALS

THE FOREGOING SALE shall be made to satisfy a Stipulated In Rem Judgment For Foreclosure And Order Of Sale rendered by the abovereferenced Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on September 5, 2013, being an action to foreclose a Mortgage, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Security Agreement, UCC Financing Statements, and all other security interests on the above-described property. Plaintiff’s in rem judgment is $7,013,596.98, which includes the outstanding principal balance, interest, late charges, attorney fees, and costs through that date, plus any remaining attorney fees and costs accruing prior to the date of sale. The judgment bears interest at the rate of 8.75%, with the Court reserving entry of final judgment against Defendant for the amount due after the foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney fees, plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. However, Plaintiff is not entitled to a money judgment against Defendant or the Guarantor described in the Loan Agreement for any amounts awarded herein, including a deficiency judgment for the difference between the amounts realized from the sale of the Property and the total amount of this Judgment, if such amounts realized are not sufficient to pay the amount of this Judgment. Plaintiff and/or its assignee has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the undersigned Special Master. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property, improvements, fixtures, attachments, and personal property of Defendant concerned with herein will be

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

Legal#96060 IN THE MATTER Published in the San- THE ADOPTION ta Fe New Mexican PETITION OF R and T on: November 13, 2013 NOTICE OF ADOPTION PETITION NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING TO: EDWARDO MARQUEZ a/k/a THE NEW MEXICO EDWARDO MARQUEZLOTTERY AUTHORIDIAZ TY YOU ARE HEREBY NOSpecial Board Meet- TIFIED that a Petition ing for Adoption has Wednesday, Novem- been filed by ber 13, 2013 Petitioners in the above-entitled Court Pursuant to the Open and cause on October Meetings Act of New 16, 2013. The Mexico, Section 10- Petitioners are re15-3(B), notice is quired to give hereby given that the Edwardo Marquez New Mexico Lottery a/k/a Edwardo Authority Board of Di- Marquez-Diaz, the rectors will hold a birth father, notice Special Board Meet- that the aboveing on Wednesday, referenced Petition November 13, at 4:00 for Adoption was p.m. The meeting will filed which requests be held at New Mexi- a decree allowing co Lottery Headquar- petitioners to adopt NOTICE ters, located at 4511 Baby Boy Gonzales Osuna Road NE, in Al- a/k/a Baby Boy NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Regu- buquerque, New Mex- Marquez, born SepOne or more tember 21, 2013, in lar Board Meeting of ico. members of the Santa Fe, New Mexithe Board of EducaBoard of Directors co. tion for the Pecos Inmay participate by YOU ARE NOdependent School means of telephonic TIFIED that pursuant District will take to NMSA §35A-5-8 place on Tuesday, No- communication. (1978), the identity of vember 19, 2013. Items included on the the Petitioners shall not be made known The meeting will be- proposed agenda: to the biological birth gin at 6:00 pm in the Executive Closed Sesfather, unless otherPecos Schools Board sion re: Personnel wise agreed upon by Room. CEO and Personnel - the parties. Since CEO. there has not been Agendas are availaany agreement beble at the Administration Office on the day Please note the agen- tween yourself and da is subject to the Petitioners, all inprior to the Board change. A final agen- formation pertaining Meeting. da will be available to to the Petitioners has The meeting may in- the public at least 72 been modified to preclude Budget Adjust- hours prior to the vent disclosure. meeting. Please note PLEASE BE ment Requests. that agenda items FURTHER NOTIFIED pursuant to An Executive Session may be taken out of that sequence at the dis- NMSA §35A-5-27 (A) may take place duryou have ing the agenda to dis- cretion of the Chair. (1978), cuss limited person- All items on agenda twenty (20) days from may result in Board the date of service in nel matters and/or which to respond to pending litigation as action. the Petition if you inper NM Statutes Article 15 Open Meetings The New Mexico Lot- tend to contest the Authority’s adoption with the 10-15-1 Subparagraph tery H (2 & 8). Action item Board of Directors’ Second Judicial Disas a result of execu- meetings are open to trict Court, Children’s tive session if neces- the public and your Court Division, 5100 attendance is wel- 2nd Street, N.W., Alsary. comed. If you are an buquerque, New Mex-

Life is good ...

pets

to place legals, call

C-7

Plaintiff, v. WATER STREET, LLC, d/b/a WATER STREET ILLINOIS, LLC, an Illinois limited liability company, Defendant. Case No. 2013-01735

D-101-CV-

NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on November 15, 2013, at the hour of 1:00 p.m. MT, the undersigned Special Master will, at the west entrance of the Santa Fe County Courthouse in Santa Fe, New Mexico, sell all the right, title and interest of the above-named Defendant in and to the hereinafter described real property, improvements, fixtures, attachments, and personal property to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 132 W. Water Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, and is situate in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as follows: A certain tract of land lying and being situate within the Santa Fe Grant, City of Santa Fe, Santa Fe County, New Mexico and being more particularly described by metes and bound as follows:

LEGALS sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. If personal property of Defendant, its agents, or its representatives, or of any other person or entity separately ordered to vacate and quit possession of the Property remains on the real property after entry of the Order Approving Sale, such personal property is deemed abandoned and the purchaser may dispose of the property in any manner pursuant to applicable law. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the subject property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any building or improvements to the land, deactivation of title to any improvement to the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to Defendant’s onemonth right of redemption. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the real property, improvements, fixtures, attachments, and personal property of Defendant described above for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorney fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a reasonable receiver and Special Master’s fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the in rem judgment due is $7,013,596.98, plus interest to and including date of sale. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. WITNESS MY HAND this 17th day of October, 2013. /s/ Jay G. Harris The Honorable Jay G. Harris, Special Master 1021 5th Street Las Vegas, New Mexico 87701-4333 Tel: (505) 454-0438 6461616_1 Legal#95855 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2013


C-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, November 13, 2013

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

TIME OUT Crossword

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2013: This year you enter a new phase where you start feeling more and more upbeat. You might need to clear out or distance yourself from an overassertive relative or friend. Aries can push your buttons. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You have a lot of oomph as you start your day. Some of you might decide to tell someone off, while others will use the energy to become whirlwinds of effectiveness. Tonight: All smiles! TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HH Know when to pull back and head in a new direction. You could feel off-kilter as you wake up. Tonight: Use your imagination as you vanish. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Keep reaching out to someone who is very important to your life. You could take this person’s nonresponsiveness personally. Tonight: Join a pal for a midweek break. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Assume your natural role as leader. Communication could have a harsh quality to it. Claiming your power could be more important to you in the long run than you realize. Tonight: In the limelight. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Take the high road and you will do just fine. You’ll make the difference because of your attitude, personality and understanding. Trust your instincts. Tonight: Live it up! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Deal with a problem directly, which might involve dealing with an individual directly. Tonight: Make it a cozy duo, even if it is just you hanging out with your best friend.

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

Subject: TITLES IN TV SYNDI-

GRADUATE LEVEL

CATION

4. Love That Bob

The syndication title is given.

Answer________

Provide the original title. (e.g.,

5. Marshal Dillon

Ponderosa. Answer: Bonanza.)

Answer________ 6. The Best of Groucho Answer________

FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Andy of Mayberry Answer________

PH.D. LEVEL

2. Sergeant Bilko (You’ll Never Get Rich)

7. The Raymond Burr Show Answer________

Answer________

8. Major Adams, Trailmaster

3. Jeff’s Collie (Timmy and

Answer________

Lassie) Answer________

9. The Ted Knight Show Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. The Andy Griffith Show. 2. The Phil Silvers Show. 3. Lassie. 4. The Bob Cummings Show. 5. Gunsmoke. 6. You Bet Your Life. 7. Ironside. 8. Wagon Train. 9. Too Close for Comfort.

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher

Cryptoquip

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

Wife finds passion outside of marriage Dear Annie: I have been married for more than 20 years and have never been sexually attracted to my husband. He is a good provider, but there is no passion, no excitement, nothing. I have tried everything I can think of to make sex better, but he acts as if it’s part of my wifely duties, which makes me sick. I don’t want to break up our home, but I’m in love with a passionate man who just rocks my world. He kisses me, and I forget my name. Our affair has lasted four years. Why can’t I keep them both? — Torn in Tulsa Dear Torn: It seems you’ve been doing exactly that for four years, but obviously, it’s not enough. Please stop living a dual life and figure out what you want. If there are young children, you owe it to them to work on your marriage. Get into joint counseling so your husband can work on his Neanderthal attitude toward women and so you can see whether passion can be ignited. If you believe sex is the most important aspect of a marriage, divorce your husband so you can be with Rocks Your World. But having it both ways isn’t working, and you’ll feel better when you deal with this more honestly. Dear Annie: I was sexually abused by an uncle when I was 12. I am now 35 and expect to see him at an upcoming family reunion. After all these years, I finally wrote him a letter. He will never read it. When he dies, I want to place it in his casket. I hope you will let me share my thoughts: Dear Uncle: I have a few things that I’ve waited a long time to tell you. Now that you are dead, I am finally happy. I am happy you are burning in hell. God has given me justice. While others are mourning your death, I am celebrating. I will never forgive you for what you did. You stole my childhood

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Others seem to keep coming to you with requests. The problem lies in that so many ask so much of you. Tonight: Accept an offer that might have you out on the town. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Pace yourself, and know when enough is enough. Yes, you have a lot of energy, a strong will and much endurance. Tonight: Be lazy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH Your fiery ways push aside any obstacle you might come across. Be diplomatic with a higher-up or parent. In the long run, you will be happier. Tonight: Let go and enjoy the moment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You could decide to maintain a low profile as you sense an issue coming in from out of left field. Tonight: Happy to be home. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH A partner might be difficult at best. Back off, and duck out of the way of this person’s fireworks. Tonight: Have a chat over munchies. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might feel the need to indulge a loved one who lets you know that he or she is not up to snuff. That effort will ease this person’s mood, but do not break your budget. Tonight: Make nice. Jacqueline Bigar

Chess quiz

WHITE WINS A PIECE Hint: Key are a couple of pins. Solution: 1. Bh6! (threatens 2. Qh8ch Ke7 3. Qxg7ch).

Today in history Today is Wednesday, Nov. 13, the 317th day of 2013. There are 48 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Nov. 13, 1982, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, designed by Maya Lin, was dedicated on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

Hocus Focus

from the moment you laid hands on me when I was a 12-year-old child. Your own niece. When I was a child, I used to think you were a great uncle. I trusted you, respected you, looked up to you, loved you the way a niece should. And when you betrayed me, I was shattered, and I never looked at you the same way. I have waited a long time for your death so that I could go to your funeral and watch you being lowered into your grave. You are a total disgrace. You are nothing to me. God never should have created you. You had no purpose in life other than to hurt children. You are pathetic. Now that you are dead, I can finally be at peace knowing that you will never again hurt a child. — Still Suffering Dear Still: Thank you for composing a letter that obviously came from a very wounded place. Please don’t wait until your uncle is dead to warn your other relatives and report him to the authorities. Your courage to speak up could protect other children who come into contact with this predator. And for you and anyone else who has suffered through abuse, please contact RAINN (www.rainn.org) at 800656-HOPE for support, encouragement and help. Dear Annie: You printed a letter from “Humiliated Wife,” who said her husband seems to be overly interested in a classmate from his 50th high school reunion. You said her husband is in his “late 70s.” Your math is seriously off. My 50th high school reunion is this year, and I’m 67. There’s no way he would be older unless he was held back a few years. — I Can Add Dear Add: You are right that we could use a remedial math class. But the advice stands. If the man suddenly ogles every woman and can’t keep his hands off the waitresses, he needs to see his doctor.

Jumble


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.