Santa Fe New Mexican, October 29, 2014

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Royals make ke sta statement in forcing Series Game 7

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Wednesday, October 29, 2014

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Dems in Ohio poised to be booted from all state offices

Udall either breezing to win or in tight race Three polls show wide results for the U.S. Senate race between Tom Udall and challenger Allen Weh. The pair are set to debate. PAGE B-1

Marooned senators discover they can get along

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ACCUSED

KILLED

Tai Chan

Jeremy Martin

Santa Fe County deputy is jailed after fellow deputy was killed early Tuesday in a Las Cruces hotel. The pair had been arguing.

Deputy and father of three kids was shot while trying to flee in the hotel where he was staying with Chan, police say.

Dispute turns deadly for S.F. deputies

Heinrich takes part in documentary tonight By David Bauder The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Jeff Flake and Martin Heinrich were willing to go to great lengths to prove that a Democratic and Republican U.S. senator could work together. Like halfway around the world. The freshman senators traveled to an uninhabited tropical island north of Australia this summer for a week documented by the Martin Discovery Channel Heinrich on a special that will air at 8 p.m. Wednesday for Comcast and Dish Network customers. The result is a lot like Survivor, only without Jeff Probst leading them through challenges. Thank-

Democrats in the battleground state of Ohio appear to be on the verge of being swept from all statewide offices. Republican hopes are high for 2016.

Sheriff’s office shaken by fatal Las Cruces hotel shooting

Please see SENATORS, Page A-4

ON TV WHAT: Rival political senators survive on desert isle WHEN: 8 p.m. today WHERE: Discovery Channel

Lobbyists courting states’ AGs Tactic frequently used to stop investigations By Eric Lipton The New York Times

When the executives who distribute 5-Hour Energy, the popular caffeinated drinks, learned that attorneys general in more than 30 states were investigating allegations of deceptive advertising — a serious financial threat to the company — it moved quickly to shut the investigations down, one state at a time. But success did not come in court or at a negotiating table. Instead, it came at the opulent Loews Santa Monica Beach Hotel in California, with its panoramic ocean views, where more than a dozen state attorneys general had gathered last year for cocktails, dinners and fundraisers organized by the Democratic Attorneys General Association. A lawyer for 5-Hour Energy roamed the event, setting her sights on Attorney General Chris Koster of Missouri, whose office was one of those investigating the company. “My client just received notification that Missouri is on this,” the law-

Please see AGs, Page A-5

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Sheriff Robert Garcia pauses during a news conference Tuesday at his office concerning a Santa Fe County deputy accused of killing a fellow deputy at a hotel in Las Cruces. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

By Uriel J. Garcia and Chris Quintana The New Mexican

I

t’s a mundane assignment, transporting a prisoner to another state. Some deputies consider it a perk, a break from the everyday stress of police work. But for two bright, young Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputies with unblemished records, the assignment turned deadly early Tuesday. The deputies, Tai Chan and Jeremy

Martin, had stopped to spend the night at a Las Cruces hotel, then went for a drink at a pub near the New Mexico State University campus. According to police reports, an argument that started at the pub continued back at the hotel, and shortly after midnight, Chan fired several shots at Martin as he fled the room they were sharing and ran toward the elevator. Martin was struck multiple times in the back

and arms, and was pronounced dead at MountainView Regional Medical Center. Chan, 27, a warrant officer for the sheriff’s office, has been charged with an open count of murder in connection with the episode and is being held at the Doña Ana County jail without bond, the Las Cruces Police Department said. Details about what the officers were arguing about and what

By Laura Wides-Munoz The Associated Press

MIAMI — More than an estimated 8.5 million immigrants living in the U.S. were eligible for citizenship in 2012. Yet fewer than 800,000 took the leap, according to the latest Department of Homeland Security numbers. If statistics hold, nearly 60 percent of the remainder eventually will — a percentage that has been slowly rising.

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Still, there are many holdouts. Immigrants give a variety of explanations as to why, most commonly: u The cost of the process that most of the time takes seven years. It usually costs $680, though fee waivers are available for some, and the cost is often multiplied by several family members; u A lack of English. Immigrants must demonstrate basic knowledge of U.S. history and government and pass an English proficiency language exam, unless they are over 50, and then certain waivers may apply. u The potential loss of benefits from their native land, such as the ability to freely travel and work

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Democrats have received $1.8 million in the past three years from top donors compared to $1.2 million for Republicans. PAGE B-1

City fires airport manager No explanation given; police say Jesson trashed Ruidoso hotel gift shop in September By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican

The city abruptly fired the Santa Fe Municipal Airport manager Tuesday with no explanation. City officials announced the termination of Frances “Francey” Jesson in a news release issued at 12:52 p.m. Jesson, who had run the city airport since April 2013, did not return a message seeking comment, and city officials declined to discuss the firing, saying it was a Frances personnel matter. ‘Francey’ But at 4:07 p.m., Jesson the city released a police report that shows Jesson was kicked out of a hotel in Ruidoso six weeks ago after police said she trashed the hotel’s gift shop while attending a conference on behalf of the city. The report was released in response to a public records request filed by The New Mexican after the city announced Jesson’s firing. The request sought all communications between Jesson and city officials over the last two months. Jesson’s attorney, Steven Farber, blasted the the city’s release of the document saying it acted in “bad faith” by releasing “police incident records that did not lead to any charges or arrest.” “Francey Jesson has been a valuable employee as the airport manager and she attempted to remedy gross mismanagement and financial irregularities that she discovered while working as the airport manager,” Farber said in an email to The New Mexican. Jesson’s relationship with City Hall had been strained dating to the prior administration, when she pointed out that operators of the airport restaurant, a partnership that

Please see CITY, Page A-4

Please see SHOOTING, Page A-4

Some immigrants reject citizenship Language barrier, plans to go home are reasons most frequently given

Top 10 N.M. political donors have given $3M

across Europe. Still others say they simply don’t see the need. Here, some legal permanent residents explain their reticence in their own words to The Associated Press.

Language barrier Nancy Alvarez, 35, came to the United States a decade ago from Havana. She ticks off the list of jobs she’s held since then: nursing assistant, notary, childcare worker, school nutritionist. She has half a dozen diplomas and certificates, but the one she doesn’t have: citi-

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Ralph Alessi’s Baida Quartet Jazz trumpeter, 7:30 p.m., Gig Performance Space, 1808 Second St., $20 at the door.

Obituaries Shirley M. Hooper-Garcia, Oct. 24 Ramon Eloy Sena, 85, Santa Fe

Today Sunny. High 69, low 37. PAGE A-8

Please see REJECT, Page A-5

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BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM

Three sections, 26 pages 165th year, No. 302 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

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U.S. gains, India slides in gender equality rank The Associated Press

By Rachel Zoll The Associated Press

SUPPLY ROCKET HEADED TO SPACE STATION EXPLODES An unmanned Orbital Sciences Corp.’s Antares rocket explodes shortly after takeoff Tuesday at Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va. The unmanned commercial supply rocket was bound for the International Space Station. No injuries were reported following the first catastrophic launch in NASA’s commercial spaceflight effort. The company said everyone at the site had been accounted for, and the damage appeared to be limited to the facilities. Nothing on the lost flight was urgently needed by the six people living on the 260-mile-high space station, officials said. JAY DIEM/EASTERN SHORE NEWS

In brief U.S. consumers show confidence WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer confidence rebounded strongly in October, hitting a sevenyear high as solid job gains raised expectations for economic growth. The Conference Board said Tuesday that its confidence index climbed to 94.5, the strongest reading since October 2007 and the start of the Great Recession a few months later. This month’s gains reversed a revised decline to 89 in September from 93.4 in August. Job gains and falling gasoline prices have helped to improve sentiment, despite muted economic growth in Europe and China that has fueled volatility in financial markets. Consumer confidence has been trending higher from lows during the worst downturn since the 1930s. However, confidence still lags pre-recession highs more than five years into the recovery.

Outlets irked about FBI fake news story SEATTLE — The Associated Press and The Seattle Times are objecting after learning that the FBI created a fake news story and website using their names to catch a bomb threat suspect in 2007. Police in suburban Lacey, near Olympia, sought the FBI’s help as

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Pope Francis says evolution is real Delivering an address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Pope Francis continued his habit of making provocative, seemingly progressive statements. The pontiff appeared to endorse the theory of the Big Bang and told the gathering at the Vatican that there was no contradiction between believing in God as well as the prevailing scientific theories regarding the expansion of our universe.

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repeated bomb threats prompted a week of evacuations and closures at Timberline High School in June 2007. After police interviews of potential suspects came up empty, the agency obtained a warrant from a federal magistrate judge to send a “communication” to a social media account associated with the bomb threats, with the idea of tricking the suspect into revealing his location. The “communication” turned out to be a link to a phony AP story about the bomb threats posted on a fake Seattle Times webpage. The 15-year-old suspect clicked on the link, revealing his computer’s location and Internet address, and helping agents confirm his identity. The boy was arrested. “Every effort we made in this investigation had the goal of preventing a tragic event like what happened at Marysville and Seattle Pacific University,” said Frank Montoya Jr., the FBI’s special agent in charge in Seattle, referring to two local school shootings this year.

“When we read about creation in Genesis, we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so,” Francis said. “He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that he gave to each one so they would reach their fulfillment.” Such thinking is not new for the Catholic Church, which for six decades — since the reforms of Pope Pius XII — has espoused belief in theistic evolution.

FTC: AT&T cut unlimited data WASHINGTON — AT&T is being sued by the government over allegations it misled millions of smartphone customers who were promised unlimited data but had their Internet speeds cut by the company — slowing their ability to open Web pages or watch streaming video. The Federal Trade Commission filed its complaint against AT&T Mobility Inc. on Tuesday, charging that the telecom giant failed to adequately disclose to customers that it would reduce data speeds if they went over a certain amount of data use in a billing cycle. The practice, known as throttling, slowed Web browsing, GPS navigation or streaming videos. According to the complaint filed in federal court in San Francisco, about 3.5 million consumers have been affected. Some customers, the agency said, had data speeds slowed by nearly 90 percent. AT&T denied misleading its customers. New Mexico wire services

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — More than a thousand evangelical pastors and others — gathered for a three-day conference to steel the resolve of Christians who preach that gay relationships are sinful — were asked a simple question: How many live in a state that recognizes same-sex marriage? Hands rose all across the convention hall. “This moral revolution is happening at warp speed,” said the Rev. Albert Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Speakers at the event said they understood they were on the losing end of the culture war on marriage. But they were prepared to be the voice of a moral minority because gay marriage is a “rejection of God’s law,” according to Mohler The conference, titled “The Gospel, Homosexuality and the Future of Marriage,” is taking place not only against the backdrop of expanding gay marriage, but also amid a small but vocal movement of evangelicals who publicly advocate greater acceptance of gays. Southern Baptist leaders said they would be expressing their views rooted in the theological belief that marriage is only between a man and a woman. Each participant was given a bagful of books and pamphlets, with titles such as, Love Into Light: The Gospel, The Homosexual and The Church, and Loving My (LGBT) Neighbor, meant to help pastors articulate their stand against same-sex relationships. Mohler, the most prominent Southern Baptist intellectual, said from the stage that he was wrong years ago when he said same-sex attraction could be changed. The Rev. Russell Moore, director of the Southern Baptist’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, which organized the conference, drew applause when he condemned antigay bullying. Matthew Vines, author of God and the Gay Christian, has drawn more than 800,000 views on YouTube for his lecture challenging the theology that drives evangelical opposition to same-gender relationships. Vines met privately with Mohler, who had written an e-book response to Vines, titled God and the Gay Christian. Both men said the meeting was a cordial discussion of Scripture and they planned to stay in touch. In an interview, Mohler said he expected to see some evangelical churches splitting off to accept gay relationships in years ahead.

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NEW DELHI — Indian women still face some of the world’s worst inequality in access to health care, education and work, despite years of rapid economic growth, according to a survey of 142 nations released Tuesday. The annual Gender Gap Index by the Geneva-based World Economic Forum showed India falling to 114th place, after being ranked 101st out of the 136 countries surveyed last year. That puts India below other fastdeveloping nations including South Africa, ranked at 18, China at 87 and Brazil at 71. Nordic nations led the world in promoting equality of the sexes, as they have for many years, with Iceland, Finland, Norway, Sweden and Denmark occupying the top five spots. The United States climbed three places to rank at 20, thanks to a narrowing wage gap and more women occupying political offices. “Achieving gender equality is obviously necessary for economic reasons. Only those economies who have full access to all their talent will remain competitive and will prosper,” Klaus Schwab, WEF founder and executive chairman, said in a statement. Yemen, Pakistan and Chad remained at the bottom of the index, which ranks countries based on data reported by international organizations in four categories: health and survival, access to education, economic opportunity and political participation. Overall, the report said gender equality is improving worldwide, with 105 countries becoming more equal since the forum launched the index in 2006 and health and education access being the most egalitarian across the globe. “Much of the progress on gender equality over the last 10 years has come from more women entering politics and the workforce,” said the report’s lead author, Saadia Zahidi, who heads the forum’s Gender Parity Program. India ranked a high 15th for female political participation, with some of its most powerful positions in government recently occupied by women. But it was among the bottom 20 in terms of income, literacy, workforce participation and infant survival. Activists in India said that while they’ve noted some progress in boosting the number of Indian girls in primary school, the overall lack of safety was still preventing many from traveling for higher education or taking jobs far from home. Others were simply not getting credit for the work they were doing, such as farming on land that is owned by a man.

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Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 RALPH ALESSI’S BAIDA QUARTET: Gig Performance Space, 1808 Second St. Jazz trumpeter, 7:30 p.m., $20 at the door. 2014 BRAINPOWER & BROWNBAGS LECTURE SERIES: Meem Community Room, Fray Angélico Chavez History Library, 120 Washington Ave. “Fred Harvey, Hotel Castaneda and the Future of the Past in Railroad New Mexico,” by Stephen Fried, noon, no charge, 476-5200. JEFFREY A. LOWDERMILK: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. The author signs copies of Honoring the Doughboys: Following My Grandfather’s World War I Diary, 6 tp 8 p.m. SCHOOL FOR ADVANCED RESEARCH LECTURE: SAR Boardroom, 660 Garcia St., 954-7200. The Changing Roles of Ethnicity and Education as Determinants of Fertility: The Case of Kinshasa, by David Shapiro of Pennsylvania State University, noon to 1 p.m., no charge. THE ROYAL BALLET OF CAMBODIA: The program at the Lensic Performing Arts Center, Stars of the Royal Ballet, features top dancers and musicians from Cambodia. Tickets are $20-$20. Call 988-1234.

Lotteries Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014 “THE CHILDREN’S HOUR”: Warehouse 21, 1614 Paseo de Peralta. New Mexico School for the Arts Theater Department presents Lillian Hellman’s 1931 drama, 7 p.m., $10, discounts available, 989-4423, continues Friday and Saturday. “DEATH AND THE MAIDEN”: 3205 Calle Marie. Teatro Paraguas presents a preview performance of the 1991 play by Ariel Dorfman, 7:30 p.m., $15, discounts available, 424-1601. “QUILTERS” 142 E. DeVargas St. Santa Fe Playhouse presents the 1982 musical by Molly Newman and Barbara Damashek, 7:30 p.m., $20, discounts available, 988-4262. HALLOWEEN CARNIVAL: The Pueblo of Pojoaque Boys & Girls Club will be hosting its annual event from 6 to 9 p.m. at the club, 101 A Lightning Loop in Pojoaque. There will be food, games and a costume contest. Call 455-3659. SFCC HALLOWEEN FESTIVAL: Free trick-or-treating, music, games and face painting. Visitors can bring canned food items to donate to the Campus Cupboard, the Santa Fe Community College’s student food pantry. The festival takes place from 3 to 6 p.m. on campus, 6401 Richards Ave.

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Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Guitarist Joaquin Gallegos, 7 to 9 p.m., no cover. 213 Washington Ave., 983 6756. COWGIRL BBQ: Singer/songwriters Ian McFeron & Alisa Milner, 8 p.m., no cover. 19 S, Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Midweek rock with the John Kurzweg Band, 8 p.m., no cover. 808 Canyon Road. JUNCTION: Karaoke Wednesdays with Michelle, 10 p.m., no cover. 530 S. Guadalupe St., 988-7222. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Savor, 7:30 to 11 p.m., no cover. 100 E San Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Wiley Jim, 7 p.m., call for cover. 330 E. Palace Ave., 986-0000. PALACE RESTAURANT AND SALOON: KBAC Radio’s preand post parties for Ziggy Marley concert, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.; Trash Disco with DJ Oona, 8:30 p.m. to close; call for cover. 142 W. Palace Ave., 428-0690. SKYLIGHT: Reggae/World Beat Party, midnight, call for cover. 139 W. San Francisco St., 982-0775. TINY’S: Electric jam session, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., no cover. 1005 S. St. Francis Drive.

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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035. VANESSIE: Branden James, 6:30 p.m. to close, call for cover. 434 W. San Francisco St., 982-9966. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.


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Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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GOP gleeful over Democrats’ woes in Ohio Dems could lose all statewide offices By Julie Carr Smyth The Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Democrats appear poised to lose every statewide election in battleground Ohio this fall — most of them badly. The prospect is fueling Republican arguments headed into the next presidential election that voter support in a key bellwether state telegraphs national approval for GOP policies. Republicans are counting on solid wins in the run up to their 2016 presidential nominating convention in Cleveland, the bluest city in a politically purple state. Republican incumbents running for re-election for attorney general, secretary of state, treasurer and auditor all appear headed for victory, as does GOP Gov. John Kasich over Democrat Ed FitzGerald. “I want to see them re-elected by a substantial margin, because it would send a strong message across America about the way we want to see our leaders govern,” said New Jersey Gov.

Chris Christie, a man with a substantial stake in Ohio’s political landscape as chairman of the Republican Governors Association and a potential presidential candidate. But two years is an eternity in politics. In the recent past, President Barack Obama won the state twice. So did Democrat Bill Clinton. And Clinton’s wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, leads early presidential polls in the state. Democrats say any losses this year are merely an aberration. “The Democratic Party is in an incredible position, because we are in sync with the American people,” former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland said in an interview with The Associated Press, noting that a majority of Americans now support gay marriage and abortion rights. “If the Republican Party doesn’t get in sync on some of these issues, they will never, ever win another national election.” No Republican has been elected president without carrying Ohio. The last Democrat to win without the state was John F. Kennedy in 1960. Presidential races in Ohio usually are very close, adding to the campaign intensity. So even in nonpresidential voting years, developments like FitzGerald’s

Ohio Democratic gubernatorial candidate Ed FitzGerald was gleeful in June. Then his campaign imploded. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

difficulties carry particular sting. The Cuyahoga County executive’s campaign first weathered the forced replacement of his running mate, only to face reports that police in 2012 found FitzGerald, a former FBI agent, in a parking lot at 4:30 a.m. with a woman who was not his wife and

subsequent revelations that FitzGerald lacked a valid driver’s license for about a decade. University of Dayton assistant communications professor Joe Valenzano likens the implosion of FitzGerald’s campaign to “watching a bad car accident in slow motion.” Ohio Republican Party spokesman Chris Schrimpf says it’s been “the worst campaign in the last 20 years,” and even Ohio Democratic Chairman Chris Redfern told the New York Times he wouldn’t allow the company that vetted FitzGerald “to clean out my bird cage.” Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll, says choosing FitzGerald was “hugely wrong” — but what it says about Democrats’ future prospects is uncertain. Still, he said, Democrats “missed their chance” this year. “Two or three years ago, they thought John Kasich would be easy to beat. His approval numbers were in the mid-30s at one point,” Brown said. “So they tried to get a candidate they thought could win. They turned out to be wrong about that, but that doesn’t mean the party’s gone forever.” Terry Casey, a Republican political consultant in Ohio, agrees. He said it’s

folly to try to translate what Ohio voters do in a statewide race to what will happen in a presidential race two years later. “It’s literally apples and giraffes,” Casey said. “It’s two totally different things, because a presidential year is different.” Casey said he’s seen one or the other party written off in Ohio in the past, only to carry off a landslide in the next election cycle. Schrimpf said that’s part of being “the mother of all swing states.” “I remember after the November 2008 election, when the obituaries were written, the caskets were ordered and the burial plots were dug for the Republican Party, and they came back and won every statewide office in 2010,” Casey said. Valenzano said that doesn’t mean Republicans won’t try to capitalize on their expected Ohio victories in 2014 to make a national impact. “The Republicans would be stupid to run around touting a Kasich landslide as, ‘The Democrats ran a horrible candidate in Ed FitzGerald,’ ” he said. “They’re going to say it’s because of the record of the Republican governor, and that’s exactly what they should do.”

Late ads make liberal use of Obama brand By David Espo The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Republicans rolled out latecampaign attack ads tying Democrats to an unpopular President Barack Obama on Tuesday. One week before Election Day, the television ad wars neared a crescendo in the battle for Senate control. In the area around Louisville, Ky., campaign officials said target voters could expect to see an average of 97 commercials related to the contest in the final week. The region is ground zero in the race between Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes. Republican hopes of capturing the Senate received a boost in Kansas, where the Tea Party Patriots Citizen Fund announced support for embattled Sen. Pat Roberts in his race with independent Greg Orman — after opposing the 78-year-old incumbent in the GOP primary. Republicans must pick up six seats to gain a Senate majority. They appear certain of at least three — in West Virginia, Montana and South Dakota — and there are nine other competitive

races, including six for seats currently in Democratic hands. The party’s congressional committee unveiled ads in 11 races, and gave the president a featured role in most. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said it was advertising on television for 27 seats in the campaign’s final week, 22 that they currently control and five held by Republicans. Some developments Tuesday: u Voting registration: A state judge in Georgia declined to act on a dispute over 56,000 voter-registration applications. The NAACP and other groups accused elections officials of not processing applications quickly enough. u Likely runoff: Both sides geared up for a Dec. 6 runoff in Louisiana, assuming that neither Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu nor Republican Rep. Bill Cassidy, wins outright next week. u Money spent: The Republican campaign committee has booked $2.8 million for television ads in a runoff, and the Democrats $1.8 million. A conservative business coalition, the Charles and David Koch-backed Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce, has booked another $1.8 million.

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School’s out, school’s out. Teacher let the GHOULS out. Don’t miss this week’s frightfully entertaining Generation Next feature:

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Shooting: Sheriff’s department in shock girl. The deputy often changed his profile picture to photos sparked the shooting have memorializing officers shot in not been released. Martin, 29, the line of duty. was a married father of three On Oct. 26, Martin changed young children with a fourth his picture to an image of an on the way. The shooting has American flag with a bright left the sheriff’s department blue, horizontal line. Atop the reeling. photo were the words “Broth“It’s a major shock,” Sheriff erhood of Blue.” According to Robert Garcia said. “You never that group’s Facebook page, want to receive anything like the group raises “awareness that waking you up. Any time for officer safety initiatives, your phone rings at 1 to 1:30 in caring for the families of offithe morning, you know somecers who have been killed in thing has taken place.” the line of duty and assisting “I have grief counselors or law enforcement officers who crisis counselors here now have been disabled in line of meeting with a lot of my perduty incidents.” sonnel, but it’s a grieving law Chan’s family members enforcement agency,” Garcia could not be reached for comsaid. ment about the incident. Investigators said the two Earlier this month, Sheriff men had gone to two restauGarcia commended Chan, rants before arriving at the along with other deputies, pub. There, witnesses say, for returning a stolen safe Chan and Martin “got into a and photos to a family whose heated argument.” After leavhome had been burglarized. ing the pub, Chan and Martin “Thank you for representing arrived at their hotel room the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s around midnight. Office in a professional, courInvestigators gather Tuesday in the parking lot of Hotel Audio recordings of 911 teous and admirable manner,” Encanto de Las Cruces in Las Cruces where authorities say calls, released late Tuesday, a Santa Fe County deputy shot and killed a fellow deputy. the sheriff wrote in the comdescribe a disturbing picture JUAN CARLOS LLORCA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mendation letter, according to of the shooting. Panicked a news release. guests and staff at the Hotel John Day, Chan’s lawyer, accused shooter in a stairwell sheriff’s office employs Encanto told dispatchers said the shooting “is a tragedy 94 sworn officers among its near the roof of the hotel, Las that there was an argument for everybody, including the 120 employees. between two men before shots Cruces police said. He was sheriff’s office and the famiRichard Norris, the general taken into custody without were fired. According to the lies.” Day said Chan is schedmanager at the pub in Las incident. A Glock semiautofour 911 recordings of calls, uled to be arraigned WednesCruces, said “right now, we matic handgun, believed to which were all made by difday afternoon. are not saying anything about be Chan’s duty weapon, was ferent people, callers also said The news of the shooting what happened.” He said Las Martin tried to flee before get- found nearby, according to a also shocked others in the Cruces police have told pub news release. ting shot. employees not to say anything Santa Fe law enforcement A hotel guest who was One man reported that six until officers finish their inves- community. In deference to awakened by the shooting or seven shots were fired. the families of the victim and told The New Mexican he had tigation. The caller said he heard a the accused shooter, many Martin was a diligent heard about six gunshots. woman scream, followed by state and Santa Fe County and “I was awakened by the worker who had never had a man telling someone to call city officials have changed gunshots at just after midanyone lodge complaints 911. The shots came after, the their Facebook profile picnight,” said the guest, Rayburn against him, according to a caller said. tures to an image of a Santa Fe Santa Fe County deputy who A more panicked caller told Thompson, 28, of Knoxville, spoke with The New Mexican County Sheriff’s Office badge an emergency dispatcher that Tenn., in an email. “I don’t know the exact anonymously because he was with a black banner across it. a bloody man was in the hotel “I feel for the sheriff’s count, but I’d guess about six. not authorized to speak about lobby, and that the man had office,” said Matt Martinez, It occurred on the seventh the incident. The deputy said been shot. Martin used to live in Arizona a detective for the Santa Fe “I think he’s dead,” the man floor, and I was immediately Police Department who knew told the dispatcher. “He is just below it on the sixth. I did not and had worked construchear anything leading up to it, tion before he became a law the deputies through their lying there in the lobby.” but I am aware that after the enforcement officer with line of work. “That’s rough. I Another man, who identishooting, the shooter began to Santa Fe County about two would’ve never expected the fied himself as a security news to come out like that this guard, said the wounded man, bang on a number of doors of and a half years ago. Martin and his wife, Sarah, morning, so that was a little of presumably Martin, had come random guests (not me). The police showed up within just a became engaged in October a shock.” from the seventh floor down few minutes of the gun shots. 2002, according to her FaceThe inmate the deputies to the second-floor lobby. There was a second crime book page, and the couple had had been transporting is WilThe security guard said he scene at the elevators in lobby. three children. liam Chapman, 23, who is believed the shooter was still There was a pool of blood on Sarah Martin didn’t return facing felony charges for allegon the seventh floor. the ground there.” messages seeking comment. edly robbing another man of “Somebody shot him,” the Thompson, who was in But she told KOAT-7 that $400. self-described security guard town for work, began tweeting she and Jeremy had meet as Mary Lou Johnson, a cortold the dispatcher. “I guess about the incident at 12:32 a.m. teenagers who were in the his friend shot him or somerections supervisor at the Garcia said at the new consame church group in Arithing, I don’t know.” Arizona State Prison Complex ference that his department zona. KOAT also reported that in Safford, Ariz., said the depuA hotel guest reported that was stunned and saddened by Sarah Martin was pregnant a man who was not wearing ties arrived with Chapman the shooting. He said neither with a fourth child. a police uniform was knockaround 11:30 a.m. Monday. the accused officer nor the About a dozen vehicles ing on seventh-floor doors Martin stayed in the car while victim had any recorded disci- were parked outside the Mar- Chan escorted Chapman into demanding entrance. plinary problems. tin home late Tuesday morn“There’s a male out in the the facility, she said. “They’re both hardworking, ing. Several of those vehicles hallway with a gun pounding Johnson said nothing committed individuals. I’m were Santa Fe County cruison the door saying, ‘Sheriff’s seemed to be amiss. She said lost,” the sheriff said as he held ers. A man carrying several office. Please open the door. she previously had met Chan large stuffed animals got out It’s an emergency,’ ” the caller back tears. and had exchanged departHe said the victim had been of one of the parked cars and told dispatch. “I assume that’s mental patches with him. a deputy for two and a half approached the home. unlikely to be legit, right?” Johnson described him as a years, and the other was on A deputy with the departPolice arrived at the hotel, “very nice officer.” ment told a reporter that the which was at 80 percent occu- the force for three years. KOB-TV reported that a Garcia said there are no family was grieving and asked memorial fund for Martin’s pancy, and found Martin stagpolicies that prohibit deputies that news media respect their family has been set up at gering from the elevator with from going to a bar or drinkprivacy. He also said there multiple wounds to his back the State Employees Credit likely would be no announce- Union. and arms that were “bleeding ing on the return home from transport trips as long as they ments of funeral or memorial profusely,” Las Cruces police Daniel J. Chacón, Phaedra are off-duty, although they services until Wednesday. spokesman Dan Trujillo said. Haywood and Bruce Krasnow, Martin’s Facebook page He said it was not known how do have to abide by a code of all of The New Mexican, conduct. shows several pictures with many times Martin was shot. Maj. Ken Johnson said the three children, two boys and a contributed to this report. Officers later found the

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City: Jesson offered chance to resign, documents show dise off the display shelves in the hotel gift shop and throwing includes politically connected them on the floor.” union boss Jon Hendry, were The clerk said he wanted the months behind in rent and had woman removed from the hotel. been miscalculating their rent The officer encountered Jespayments since 2010. Thenson in a hallway and asked if she Mayor David Coss told Jesson was the one who threw items to go easy on them, Jesson told on the floor in the hotel gift The New Mexican in a Janushop. Jesson accepted blame, ary story. Hendry has long and the report states. close political ties to both Coss “Jesson appeared to be intoxiand his successor, Mayor Javier cated. She was verbally abusive Gonzales. and loud,” the report states. City Manager Brian Snyder Jesson, who was on city gave Jesson the option to resign business in Ruidoso attending in lieu of termination, according a conference, told the officer to a memo provided by Farber. that she had gone to the front But the city announced her ter- desk to report that her iPad mination before Snyder’s 5 p.m. was missing from her room, the Tuesday deadline, Farber said. report states. “This conduct of the City of “Jesson said that no one was Santa Fe was clearly an act of manning the front desk when bad faith and improperly motishe went there, and no one was vated to harm Francey Jesson,” responding to her calls for serFarber, a former city councilor, vice,” the report states. “Jesson said in an email. related that after no one came But city spokesman Matt to the front desk, she got upset Ross offered a different version and decided to start ‘stealing …’ of events. He confirmed that to get their attention.” Snyder gave Jesson the opporWhen the officer told Jestunity to resign but said Jesson son that the hotel wanted her rejected the offer. to leave, police said she went “Therefore, her termination to her room and gathered her was effective immediately,” belongings reluctantly. Ross said. “She was informed of “She was verbally abusive, that in the meeting, and she was saying things like, ‘Shut the hell walked through the termination up!’ ” the report states. procedure by the director of Police checked the room to human resources and escorted look for Jesson’s iPad and other from the building.” belongings she later discovered Farber said Ross was being were missing, but they didn’t misleading. “The City Manfind the items. ager’s letter speaks for itself,” he One of the officers discovered said in a separate email. that the patio door of her hotel “Francey Jesson was in a state room had been left unlocked. of shock when she was handed “Jesson related that she did the letter from City Manager leave the patio door unlocked,” Brian Snyder,” Farber said. “It the report states. “The was only after that encounter suspect(s) may have used this that Francey Jesson had time as their entry and exit point.” to reflect upon that interaction Jesson’s room was on the first and the contents of the letter floor, police said. from the City Manager which “The suspect(s) could have clearly gave her the option to climbed over the wall with little resign up to 5:00 PM today and effort,” the report states. the letter specifically stated Jesson came to Santa Fe with that she could send in a written more than 20 years of airport letter of resignation by email. operations and maintenance The City issued a press release experience. announcing that Francey Jesson In addition to serving as had been terminated at 12:52 PM director of operations and and is attempting to cover up maintenance for the Roanoke its mishandling of this employRegional Airport in Virginia, ment matter by making up facts she previously worked in airand releasing protected inforport management positions at mation.” Aspen/Pitkin County Airport Farber called the police inciin Aspen, Colo., McAllen Miller dent report “confidential and International Airport in McAlprotected.” len, Texas; American Airports “One can only hope that in Corp. in Santa Monica, Calif.; the future the city will be so and in airport operations for speedy and forthcoming in San Francisco International Airresponding to record requests port, and at Sarasota-Bradenton made by citizens and the International Airport. media,” Farber said. The Santa Fe Municipal AirAccording to the police port is home to nearly report, Ruidoso police were dis- 200 general aviation aircraft and patched to The Lodge at Sierra 11 military planes and helicopBlanca just after midnight ters, according to the city’s webSept. 12 following a report of site. The airport also is served trouble with a female guest. by scheduled regional airline When the officer arrived, the flights. Last month, Jesson preofficer found clothing and other dicted the airport would have items “strewn around the floor a record 142,000 passengers in near the front desk,” the report 2014 after dropping to a low of states. 685 passengers in 2008. The front desk clerk told the officer that a female guest later Contact Daniel J. Chacón identified as Jesson was “upset” at 986-3089 or dchacon@ and “started grabbing merchan- sfnewmexican.com.

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Senators: Pair hope fellow lawmakers learn from their experience Continued from Page A-1 fully, they’re neither naked nor visibly afraid, like the participants in another survival-based reality show. Flake, an Arizona Republican, and Heinrich, a Democrat from neighboring New Mexico, try to build a fire, find shelter and hunt for food and water. They hope their broader point — that two politicians can oppose each other on policy yet work together to accomplish something — isn’t lost on viewers or their colleagues. The idea began as a joke that quickly became real. The men are already fit, outdoors types, and Flake spent a week alone on another Marshall Islands spot five years ago in what his wife called his midlife crisis. The senators started chatting about hobbies one night on the Senate floor during a long session. “I showed him pictures of fish that I’d speared,” said Flake, 51. “He showed me some that he did, and they were much bigger. So I thought, ‘This guy could be useful.’ ” Once they decided to go, they thought they’d bring some cameras to record the experience and talked to Discovery about whether the network

U.S. Sens. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., left, and Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., attempt to start a fire while on Eru Island as part of Discovery Channel’s Rival Survival reality show set in the Marshall Islands. COURTESY DISCOVERY CHANNEL

would be interested. Yes, but Discovery wanted to send its own production team. “That was the point at which we lost control,” quipped Heinrich, 43. There’s some truth behind that remark. One thing politicians hate to cede is control. They kept the whole

thing secret from all but a few people until after they got back late this summer, and felt the pressure while there. “Neither one of us wanted to be the guy who taps out on Day 3 or can’t hold up his end of the bargain,” Heinrich said. Even without Probst, the two had

a number of challenges. Finding food and fresh water was tough. Heinrich was disgusted by the amount of pollution that had washed ashore on their island, but the found objects undeniably helped sustain them. Laurie Goldberg of The Discovery Channel told The New Mexican Tuesday that the “small stipend” Heinrich received for appearing on the show was donated to a charity called Rivers of Recovery. Both senators paid for their own travel, and the entire endeavor was approved by the Senates Ethics Committee, she said. It was an educational experience for both senators. “I learned that Martin’s fire-starting skills are a lot better at home than on the island,” Flake said. “I learned that Jeff swims a lot faster when there are sharks behind him,” Heinrich said. Their most important accomplishment was building a sense of trust. The men, both former House members elected to the Senate for the first time in 2012, have heard all the old Washington stories of political foes who fought during the day and socialized at night, but they said that’s more difficult today.

Republicans and Democrats have fewer opportunities to get to know each other. Most are commuters, gone when the Senate isn’t in session. Evenings are filled with political fundraisers, and Flake said during sessions, GOP senators often have three lunches scheduled each week with each other. Democrats have two (“Quicker studies,” Heinrich joked). Add in a political atmosphere that doesn’t reward conciliation, and it’s a recipe for gridlock. Following the airing of Rival Survival, the senators said they would send a letter to colleagues urging that they all get together socially at least once a month, if not once a week, to build relationships and help to work with one another. They also wouldn’t mind seeing some colleagues try what they did. “We have a list,” Heinrich said. “There’s a list of people we think will come back working better together, and a list of people we think the Senate would work better without.” Information from New Mexican reporter Steve Terrell was used in this report.


Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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AGs: Energy drink halts inquiry Reject: Harder to return home sentative is a former colleague. Four months after leaving yer, Lori Kalani, told him. office as chief deputy attorney Kalani’s firm, Dickstein Sha- general in Washington state, piro, had courted the attorney Brian T. Moran wrote to his general at dinners and conferreplacement on behalf of a cliences and with thousands of ent, T-Mobile, which was pressdollars in campaign contribuing federal officials to prevent tions. Koster told Kalani that competitors from grabbing too he was unaware of the investimuch of the available wireless gation, and he reached for his spectrum. phone and called his office. By “As promised when we the end of the weekend, he had met the A.G. last week, I am ordered his staff to pull out of attaching a draft letter for Bob the inquiry, a clear victory for to consider circulating to the 5-Hour Energy. other states,” he wrote late last The quick reversal, conyear, referring to the attorney firmed by Koster and Kalani, general, Bob Ferguson. was part of a pattern of sucA short while later, Moran cessful lobbying of Koster wrote again to his replacement, by the law firm on behalf of David Horn. “Dave: Anything clients like Pfizer and AT&T — you can tell me about that letand evidence of a largely hidter?” he said. den dynamic at work in state “Working on it sir,” came the attorneys general offices across answer. “Stay tuned.” By Januthe country. ary, the letter was issued by Attorneys general are now the object of aggressive pursuit the attorney general largely as drafted by the industry lawyers. by lobbyists and lawyers who The exchange was not use campaign contributions, unusual. Emails obtained from personal appeals at lavish corporate-sponsored conferences more than 20 states reveal a and other means to push them level of lobbying by representatives of private interests that to drop investigations, change had been more typical with policies, negotiate favorable settlements or pressure federal lawmakers than with attorneys general. regulators, an investigation by “The current and increasThe New York Times has found. ing level of the lobbying of A robust industry of lobbyattorneys general creates, at the ists and lawyers has blossomed minimum, the appearance of as attorneys general have undue influence, and is therejoined to conduct multistate investigations and pushed into fore unseemly,” said James E. Tierney, a former attorney genareas as diverse as securities eral of Maine, who now runs a fraud and Internet crimes. But unlike the lobbying rules program at Columbia Univercovering other elected officials, sity that studies state attorneys general. “It is undermining the there are few revolving-door credibility of the office of attorrestrictions or disclosure ney general.” requirements governing state Private lawyers also have attorneys general, who serve written drafts of legal filings as “the people’s lawyers” by protecting consumers and indi- that attorneys general have used almost verbatim. In some vidual citizens. cases, they have become an A result is that the routine adjunct to the office by prolobbying and deal-making viding much of the legal work, occur largely out of view. But including bearing the cost of the extent of the cause and effect is laid bare in The Times’ litigation, in exchange for up to 20 percent of any settlereview of more than 6,000 ment. emails obtained through open Money gathered through records laws in more than events like the one in Februtwo dozen states, interviews ary 2013 at the Loews hotel with dozens of participants in cases, and attendance at several is flooding the political campaigns of attorneys general and conferences where corporate representatives had easy access flowing to party organizations that can take unlimited corto attorneys general. porate contributions and then Often, the corporate repre-

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funnel money to individual candidates. The Republican Attorneys General Association alone has pulled in $11.7 million since January. It is a self-perpetuating network that includes a group of former attorneys general called SAGE, or the Society of Attorneys General Emeritus, most of whom are now on retainer to corporate clients. Giant energy producers and service companies like Devon Energy of Oklahoma, the Southern Company of Georgia and TransCanada have retained their own teams of attorney general specialists, including Andrew P. Miller, a former attorney general of Virginia. For some companies, the reward seems apparent, according to the documents obtained by The Times. In Georgia, the attorney general, after receiving a request from a former attorney general who had become a lobbyist, disregarded written advice from the state’s environmental regulators, the emails show. In Utah, the attorney general dismissed a case pending against Bank of America over the objections of his staff after secretly meeting with a former attorney general working as a Bank of America lobbyist. That Bank of America case was cited in July when the two most recent former attorneys general in Utah were charged with granting official favors to donors in exchange for golf getaways, rides on private planes and a luxury houseboat. While the Utah case is extreme, some participants say even the daily lobbying can corrode public trust. “An attorney general is entrusted with the power to decide which lawsuits to file and how to settle them, and they have great discretion in their work,” said Anthony Johnstone, a former assistant attorney general in Montana. “It’s vitally important that people can trust that those judgments are not subject to undue influence because of outside forces. And from what I have seen in recent years, I am concerned and troubled that those forces have intensified.”

celebrations matter SANTA FE PLACE. SHOP FOR WHAT MATTERS.

Continued from Page A-1 zen. Alvarez blames her lack of English skills. “I should have studied English when I first came here,” she says. But in the Miami suburb of Hialeah where she first landed, everyone spoke Spanish. Only a few years later did she notice that even employers doing business primarily in Spanish still wanted an English speaker. By then, she was working all day, coming home to prepare meals for her husband, son and new baby. With only one car and a spouse working nights, she says she would have had to take the bus and find someone to watch her baby. And with cutbacks to county education programs, few classes were offered. “Now I’m too embarrassed,” she says.

European passport “I guess it’s an emotional thing,” said Lena Dyring, as to why she hasn’t sought to become a U.S. citizen. “I’d have to renounce my Norwegian citizenship. “It’s not that I don’t like the U.S. I love it here. It would be almost to renounce my family, my background.” Dyring came to the U.S. in 2005 with her husband, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in Colombia. The two met at a bar in Norway. She still isn’t used to some American customs: the hello hug — or in Miami, the hello kiss — and the “how are you?” greeting. In Norway, people don’t ask that question until halfway into the conversation when they really want to hear an answer, she says. But her decision to opt out is more than an emotional one. The Norwegian Seafarer’s labor union representative acknowledges the practical benefits. “If I wanted to live or work in Europe one day, I could do that without much difficulty. And

my children can have Norwegian citizenship through me.” Although in Norway, individuals must give up their citizenship to become Americans, other European countries allow people to retain dual citizenship. Dyring says she’d like to be able to vote, not so much for president but on local issues.

Mexico. She keeps telling herself one of these days she will take the plunge because she wants to have a say in the laws that affect her.

Never felt welcome

“I thought that American girl was extremely interesting,” Luis Sanz says of falling for his future wife while she studied Spanish his native Madrid. When she Planned to go back in returned home, he decided to Maria Jimenez has been a U.S. visit, never imagining he would stay. More than a decade later in resident for decades and counsels other immigrant women on the U.S., the couple have three children. Sanz works as a webbecoming politically empowsite designer for the University ered. But she rarely talks about of California, Riverside. her own immigration status. “When I came to the U.S., I “I’m too ashamed to tell didn’t speak any English,” he friends I’ve been here so long and haven’t done it,” she says of says. “And with all the process with my papers, I felt very becoming a citizen. mistreated, and I felt like a secJimenez came to the U.S. ondhand person. It really bothfrom the Jalisco, Mexico, town of San Juan de los Lagos in 1986, ered me, so at the beginning I to help her brother and his wife thought: ‘I’ll just stay here, but I don’t know how long.’ ” care for their newborn. That They did move briefly to year Congress passed a massive immigration bill, which allowed Spain, “but I’d become too used millions of those in the country to the United States, to the freeillegally to get their green cards. dom,” he says. “I truly love this country. We Jimenez was among those. know we are not moving back,” “We always thought we Sanz says, adding that he has yet would go home. We never to take the oath of allegiance for thought we were going to a combination of reasons. “I get stay. But the time kept passa little lazy, but I still keep a liting,” she says. “We tried to go tle bit of that pain — and I feel it back several times but couldn’t every day because of my accent find work. And our families depended on us for the money.” — and if people meet me, they still view me as a secondhand Besides, her three U.S.-born citizen.” children didn’t feel at home in

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NATION & WORLD

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Where’s the Ebola czar? Video: Islamic State hostage Low profile questioned ‘reports’ for captors in Syria By Zeina Karam The Associated Press

States, Pentagon take stronger steps than feds advocate By Jim Kuhnhenn The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s commander in the fight against Ebola was expected to operate below the public radar. But did that mean invisible? Ron Klain has barely been seen, and a week before midterm elections, Obama is pressing to dispel critiRon Klain cism that the government can’t manage the Ebola crisis. The White House’s behindthe-scenes coordination of the Ebola response is being severely tested, while the Pentagon and states like New York and New Jersey take public steps that are far firmer than federal guidelines. That’s creating the appearance of a crazy quilt of Ebola measures. “The CDC is behind on this,” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Tuesday. “Governors ultimately have responsibility to protect the public health of people within their borders.” Some public health law experts say the government could have anticipated differences in approaches and acted sooner to establish federal guidelines for states to follow. “What happened is the case showed up in New York and New Jersey, those two governors respond, knee jerk reaction, … then you see the

Amber Vinson, 29, the Dallas nurse who was being treated for Ebola, right, smiles as Emory University Hospital epidemiologist Dr. Bruce Ribner speaks during a press conference Tuesday after Vinson was discharged from the hospital in Atlanta. Vinson was one of two nurses who became infected while caring for an infected Liberian at a Dallas-area hospital. DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

federal government catch up to that a little bit,” said James G. Hodge Jr., a professor of public health law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University. “It would have been more beneficial if CDC’s guidance had come out, gosh, maybe a week or so ago.” White House officials say Klain was brought in for his management skills and ability to coordinate the work of agencies that range from the Pentagon to the Department of Health and Human Services, leaving most of the talking to the public health doctors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health. White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Klain, who has been in the job since Oct. 22, has been dealing with the various agencies of the government to streamline the federal response. He has met virtually daily with Obama including a lengthy Sunday

meeting with the administration’s Ebola team. “The impact of his work is already being felt both here at the White House but across the government,” Earnest said Tuesday. Obama has tried to place his own imprint on the government’s response, making sure photographers captured images of him meeting with the Ebola team and embracing Nina Pham, one of the Dallas nurses who recovered after contracting the disease. On Tuesday he called U.S. workers in West Africa and delivered a statement from the South Lawn before leaving on a campaign trip to Wisconsin. White House officials bristle at the suggestion that the administration has mismanaged the response. They have cited their reliance on science and best health practices for every decision they have made, and health professionals have said the CDC has acted prudently.

BEIRUT — A captive British photojournalist has been used by the Islamic State group to take on the role of a war correspondent in the extremists’ latest propaganda video. In the video, made public on Monday, John Cantlie calmly stands before a camera in what he identifies as the embattled Syrian town of Kobani. He asserts in the video that Islamic State group fighters have pushed deep into the town despite airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition and that they are winning the battle against Kurdish forces. The strange spectacle of a prisoner who has admitted to being afraid for his life being used as a spokesman is the latest of example of ISIS’s attention-getting approach to propagating its message and its threats. The Associated Press could not verify the video as authentic, although some of the images, including footage the Islamic State group says was shot by a drone, appear to be Kobani, a town near the Turkish border. Sporadic gunfire can be heard in the background. At one point in the 5½-minute report, a Turkish flag can be seen flying atop a grain silo; Cantlie is not in the same shot. Cantlie mentions specific news reports and statements by Western officials from as recently as last week. “Without any safe access, there are no journalists here in the city,” Cantlie intones in the video. He wears black clothes and is bearded. ISIS militants launched an offensive on Kobani in midSeptember, capturing dozens of Kurdish villages and enter-

Captive British journalist John Cantlie speaks into a camera in what he identifies as the embattled Syrian town of Kobani. In the video, Cantlie says Islamic State fighters have pushed deeper into the town despite airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition. IMAGE FROM ISLAMIC STATE VIDEO

ing parts of the town. The attack has displaced more than 200,000 people. American officials say the U.S. has conducted dozens of airstrikes against the militants in and around the town, killing hundreds of Islamic State fighters. In contrast to those accounts, Cantlie gave the ISIS’s different slant on the fighting. “Airstrikes did prevent some groups of mujahedeen from using their tanks and heavy armor as they’d have liked, so they’re entering the city and using light weapons instead, going house to house,” Cantlie says in the video, a fly buzzing around his head. “The battle for Kobani is coming to an end,” he continues. “The mujahedeen are just mopping up now, street to street and building to building. … As you can hear, it is very quiet — just occasional gunfire.” The video is entitled “Inside

Ayn Al-Islam,” the name IS uses for Kobani. The Arabic name for the predominantly Kurdish town is Ayn al-Arab. Since September, ISIS has used Cantlie as a public face. “Now, I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking he’s only doing this because he’s a prisoner. He’s got a gun at his head, and he’s being forced to do this. Right?” Cantlie said in the first Islamic State group video featuring him. “Well, it’s true, I am a prisoner. That I cannot deny. But, seeing as I’ve been abandoned by my government and my fate now lies in the hands of the Islamic State, I have nothing to lose.”

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Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

COMMENTARY: JAMELLE BOUIE

Congress likely to remain dysfunctional

W

e’ve known since it entered power that the House Republican majority — or at least a substantial portion of it — is utterly averse to compromise. And — as evidenced by a 2013 survey from the liberalleaning Democracy Corps — we’ve also known that this majority is most responsive to a rigid base of older conservative whites, who fear demographic change and everything it represents. None of this has changed. If, as projected, Republicans win the Senate on Nov. 4, they will do so on the strength of majorities in conservative to moderate states like Iowa, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alaska, Colorado and New Hampshire. And overwhelmingly, they’ll rely on older whites, who vote at higher rates than younger voters and minorities. Republican candidates like Joni Ernst in Iowa and Cory Gardner in Colorado might have moderate effects, but their core support comes from the most conservative parts of their respective electorates. You should keep all of this in mind as you read recent takes on the prospective Republican majority in Politico. First, Jake Sherman previews the plan from House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who wants to unite the House and the Senate with a “muscular” agenda of policy and government reform: “Energy policy will be a priority, in addition to repealing the medical device tax and the independent payment board for Medicare — bills that Democrats have mostly ignored over the past few years. Highway spending will likely come up, McCarthy said, and it could be funded by new drilling on public lands. … “One of his chief goals is to rework the federal bureaucracy. In his travel throughout more than 100 congressional districts, McCarthy says he has sensed a great distrust in the federal government. He says voters are frustrated with Obama’s handling of Ebola, the health care law, the IRS

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

A healthier future celebrates food

R and Secret Service scandals. And that’s why he is setting up a congressional mechanism to whittle away at inefficiencies that plague the government. He likens his plans to the commission that shut down underused military bases.” Likewise, explains EdwardIsaac Dovere in a related piece for Politico, the White House hopes that it can build a productive relationship with a Republican-controlled Congress, given the shape of the 2016 electoral map and the large number of GOP incumbents up for re-election in Democratic-leaning states during a presidential year: “Those senators, goes one thought circulating the West Wing, would be under pressure to move towards the middle and be the bridge to larger deals with a caucus eager to show it can get things done.” I don’t want to dismiss this all out of hand. It’s certainly possible that — come next year — the White House will find itself with a band of friendly Republican senators and a House led by relative pragmatists like McCarthy and Speaker John Boehner. In which case, there’s a chance for real progress on issues where some consensus exists.

But we shouldn’t kid ourselves; assuming Republicans can even craft a positive agenda — a harder task than it looks — it’s still true that a GOP Congress would face tremendous pressure to make good on five years of promises, from the constant pledge to “repeal Obamacare” to investigations of perceived malfeasance like the IRS scandal to a raft of overly partisan bills formerly held up by the Democratic majority in the Senate. Indeed, the last time Republican leaders promised a more constructive Congress was just after the 2012 election, when then-Majority Leader Eric Cantor told Fox News that he thought “there are areas that we have in common and can work toward solutions together.” Later that year, House Republicans shut down the government over Obamacare. Yes, the likely Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, has a record for deal-making and has said he wants to restore a sense of bipartisanship to the institution. But this is both at odds with other statements promising a more divisive agenda — “We’re going to go after them on health care, on financial ser-

vices, on the Environmental Protection Agency, across the board” — and the reality of the GOP base, which still wants confrontation with Democrats, not reconciliation. Add to this the fact that Republican primaries — if they look anything like the 2012 contests — will feature a parade of purity demands and authenticity tests, as candidates try to outdo each other in their commitment to conservative principles. Will the GOP Congress stay above the fray and pass constructive legislation meant to soften the party’s appearance during the fractious primary season? Or will presidential contenders like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz use their platforms to force confrontation and bolster their bona fides with primary voters? If the former, we might get a functional — albeit right-wing — national legislature. If the latter, we should expect two more years of congressional dysfunction, with the Senate as the stage for antics instead of the House. Jamelle Bouie is a Slate staff writer covering politics, policy and race.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Time for a change in Governor’s Office

I

don’t consider Gov. Susana Martinez to be my governor. I have never voted for her. Yet I see where she continues to lead in the polls. I can’t figure this out. We are at or near the bottom of every domestic issue list. We have an education secretary-designate who has yet to be confirmed. Why would we want four more years of this? The real Susana Martinez is the one who calls Diane Denish a derogatory name. The real Susana Martinez is the one who mocks and criticizes our teachers for not working hard enough. I am a former teacher with 22 years of experience, and every year I worked very hard, as did most of my colleagues. The real Susana Martinez is the one who has her special interests outside the state of New Mexico. It’s time for a change!

head in befuddlement. As you say, yes, we as voters find ourselves “between a rock and a hard place.” Both of these candidates are deeply flawed. Our present governor and Republican candidate’s best qualification seems to be her ability to read to third-graders, and her Democratic opponent and current attorney general is seriously charisma challenged. My question to your editorial staff is, why do you feel it necessary to recommend that we vote for one or the other? Yours wouldn’t be the first newspaper to refuse to endorse a gubernatorial candidate because logic says that neither is qualified. Your editorial states “choose, we must.” No, we do not. This time around, it should have been appropriate of you to say as much, and not to endorse either. Michael Canning Santa Fe

Joseph García

Santa Fe

No endorsement As a regular reader of The New Mexican’s editorial page, I’m generally pleased with your common-sense approach to statewide topics. However, your endorsement (“For governor, Martinez,” Our View, Oct. 26) leaves me scratching my

Not better off Don’t believe Gov. Susana Martinez’s campaign spin. She’s behaving like a spoiled child blaming everyone else rather than reporting on her own horribly dismal record. She is bringing New Mexico down the tubes. We are last in education. Our economy is in the dungeon. She has cre-

MALLARD FILLMORE

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

ated no jobs to speak of, and she almost single-handedly killed the film and TV industry. We are last in protecting our children. Her Cabinet secretary said no one was hungry in New Mexico and yet we rank high in numbers of people in hunger and poverty. The safety and welfare of our children have not been her priority. Her staff member made racist slurs against our late Speaker of the House, Ben Luján, and she did absolutely nothing. We are not better off now than we were four years ago! JoAnne Vigil Coppler

Santa Fe

Oppressed by governor The poor working people feel oppressed by you, Gov. Susana Martinez. I also understand how the people from Mexico feel. You have tried to take away their driving privileges, yet you call yourself “a Mexican descendent.” My roots are here and in Pecos, but I know how oppressed people feel. Since you’ve taken office, people are facing losing food stamps and benefits from Medicaid. I know how the Mexican workers feel. Russ Quintana

Santa Fe

eports come and reports go, often to be tossed in a drawer, never to be seen again or put into practice. Planning for Santa Fe’s Food Future: Querencia, a story of food, farming and friends, written by the Santa Fe Food Policy Council, is one report that mustn’t be tossed aside. The plan, just like fresh vegetables from the field, is chock-full of all that is good for you. Key to its success, though, will be follow through from city and county officials, as well as buy-in from citizens. We should all work to make this plan reality, because it focuses both on Santa Fe’s rich agricultural past and ways to build our healthy future. The authors of this blueprint understand that having fresh food in the stores isn’t useful if a mom on the south side without a car can’t make it to buy groceries. There’s recognition of the importance of preserving open spaces so that agriculture can prosper, and emphasis on teaching children about healthy eating and most of all, empowering people to grow their own food at home or in community gardens. This is plan that is comprehensive in its scope, but with lots of specifics to make the broader goals reality. Carrying out the plan will take much hard work (just as the three years spent doing research and writing the plan took hard work). To provide access to grocery stores, the city of Santa Fe might have to rethink its bus routes, perhaps running mini-loops from neighborhoods to stores more frequently and providing places on buses or vans for families to put their groceries. Are mobile grocery stores a possibility, where the food goes to the neighborhood? Incentives so that stores are located closer to where the people live? The possibilities, while not endless, are many. The plan rightly emphasizes agriculture as an economic engine, pointing out that if farmers can put their goods on local tables, they would have a more sustainable income stream, jobs would be created and their neighbors would enjoy fresher food. Agriculture ranks among New Mexico’s top five industries, yet the vast majority of food raised here goes out of state. How much better would it be for the health of the economy and citizens if more food could be consumed locally? The City of Santa Fe, of course, has said it wants urban agriculture. Now it has the opportunity to write policies that will encourage neighborhood gardens to prosper. Santa Fe County can preserve open spaces and continue to support the food plan. Making healthier food available more widely has this bonus: Children will eat better, decreasing obesity and its related conditions. Long-term, the best investment in the health of the community is to help all residents access and eat more nutritious foods. We have many of the pieces in place — Cooking with Kids, to introduce children to making their own healthy dishes; Farm to Table, bringing fresh produce to schools; the Santa Fe Farmers Market, where growers can sell produce and meat; as well as programs that bring food to people, whether through the Santa Fe Food Bank or Food for Santa Fe or various soup kitchens. This plan links the different parts, and with action, will lead to a more secure, healthier food future for all of Santa Fe.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Oct. 29, 1914: Advertisement: PRINCE ALBERT — Real tobacco that works both ways! You just can’t get in wrong with Prince Albert, no matter how you hook it up. Oct. 29, 1964: Santa Fe has a new curfew law today. [The] major change in the laws is the lowering of the age limit of those governed by the law from 18 to 16. City Council approved the new curfew law at its session last night. Under the new law, youngsters up to the age of 16 must be off the streets between the hours of 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. unless accompanied by their parents or guardian or entrusted into the care of some other adult or returning home from a sanctioned activity. Oct. 29, 1989: An outmoded New Mexico Department of Public Safety communications computer is placing the lives of police officers at risk throughout the state and should be replaced, officials said last week. The computer links officers on the street with state and national crime computers that check for outstanding arrest warrants and help identify wanted fugitives. It is taking far too long to get the requested information. The computer was obtained second-hand for about $400,000 by the New Mexico State Police about eight years ago. The software is 12 years old. The hardware is about 15 years old. State officials have requested proposals for replacing the system.

LA CUCARACHA

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Pleasant with plenty of sun

Tonight

Thursday

Clear

69

Pleasant with plenty of sunshine

37

Friday

Saturday

Partly sunny

70/38

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

Sunday

Partly sunny, breezy and mild

Monday

Mostly sunny

Tuesday

Sunny

Partly sunny with a shower in spots

65/45

66/41

59/35

57/31

59/31

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

17%

28%

15%

41%

53%

43%

34%

25%

wind: NW 6-12 mph

wind: N 6-12 mph

wind: SW 6-12 mph

wind: S 6-12 mph

wind: SSW 10-20 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

wind: W 7-14 mph

wind: NNW 7-14 mph

Almanac

New Mexico weather

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Tuesday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 64 /39 Normal high/low ............................ 63 /33 Recor g ............................... 73 n 1952 Recor ow ................................. 12 n 1970 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.52”/8.63” Norma mont /year to ate ... 1.27”/11.97” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 1.07”/9.76”

Air quality index

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

64

64

Tuesda ’s ratin ................................. Good Today’s forecast .................... Not available 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA

64 87

64 56

84

666

412

AccuWeather Flu Index

25

40

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

54

25

25

Area rainfall

40

40 285

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.62”/7.41” Las Vegas 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate ................ 0.31”/11.43” Los Alamos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.82”/8.81” Chama 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate ................ 1.42”/13.29” Taos 24 ours t roug 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Mont /year to ate .................. 0.29”/5.99”

54 60 60

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

70

180

25

70

70

380

380

285

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

70

180

54

10

Water statistics

285

10

The following water statistics of October 23 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.298 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 4.120 City Wells: 1.089 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 6.507 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.441 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 10.2 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.23 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Sun and moon

tate extremes Tue. High 76 .................................... Deming Tue. Low 27 ....................................... Grants

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

Hi/Lo W 74/45 s 70/46 pc 56/28 s 69/48 s 69/48 s 56/30 s 61/30 s 60/32 pc 59/31 s 66/40 s 66/33 s 76/42 s 69/45 pc 66/34 s 66/42 s 69/30 s 70/27 s 66/45 s 75/46 s

Hi/Lo W 76/44 s 71/44 s 60/25 s 73/45 s 74/47 s 61/26 s 68/32 s 69/44 s 62/28 s 72/46 s 66/30 s 77/43 s 70/43 s 66/32 s 73/44 s 69/27 s 70/25 s 73/51 s 76/47 s

Hi/Lo W 77/48 s 71/46 s 62/23 s 76/50 s 78/51 s 64/29 s 66/28 s 66/38 s 64/34 s 71/45 s 68/38 s 79/51 s 70/45 s 68/39 s 74/44 s 71/38 s 71/34 s 77/50 s 78/52 s

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

Hi/Lo 62/28 75/43 60/37 71/42 66/42 60/28 54/28 70/44 65/44 66/34 74/38 73/45 73/47 63/34 74/48 67/37 75/49 63/41 67/33

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

Hi/Lo W 70/36 s 79/54 s 65/40 s 73/42 s 73/47 s 69/32 s 57/25 s 72/40 s 74/43 s 67/43 s 74/43 s 73/45 s 74/45 s 65/25 s 74/49 s 75/43 s 79/50 s 68/39 s 68/29 s

Hi/Lo W 66/33 s 81/59 s 67/40 s 74/44 s 73/45 s 67/32 s 60/28 s 72/42 s 76/47 s 67/42 s 71/40 s 74/52 s 75/46 s 67/26 s 75/50 s 72/41 s 80/54 s 69/40 s 70/38 s

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

Sunrise today ............................... 7:23 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 6:12 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 12:41 p.m. Moonset toda ........................... 11:26 .m. Sunrise Thursda ......................... 7:24 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 6:11 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ....................... 1:28 p.m. Moonset Thursda ............................... none Sunrise Frida ............................... 7:25 a.m. Sunset Friday ................................ 6:10 p.m. Moonrise Friday ............................ 2:12 p.m. Moonset Friday ........................... 12:30 a.m. First

Full

Last

New

Oct 30

Nov 6

Nov 14

Nov 22

The planets Rise 5:55 a.m. 7:29 a.m. 11:57 a.m. 1:15 a.m. 8:47 a.m. 5:09 p.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 5:30 p.m. 6:18 p.m. 9:29 p.m. 2:52 p.m. 7:13 p.m. 5:42 a.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

National cities

Weather for October 29

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

Hi/Lo 32/22 77/59 80/47 56/26 43/35 62/37 60/45 85/62 84/52 68/52 70/66 72/66 77/66 59/29 66/55 25/6 65/30 86/74 86/60 62/61 64/45 78/55 78/59

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Hi/Lo 34/24 70/46 66/42 62/34 53/30 63/44 70/46 84/60 74/46 51/35 58/36 53/40 77/53 70/35 53/35 19/3 67/31 87/75 82/59 55/36 61/44 81/58 85/63

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Hi/Lo 35/22 68/46 59/38 59/36 47/17 69/47 56/42 74/49 66/40 52/36 56/39 51/38 80/55 61/34 52/38 18/8 68/36 86/75 79/55 56/41 66/38 82/60 80/60

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

Hi/Lo 70/67 70/59 86/69 57/54 49/40 87/66 72/53 71/55 87/60 76/49 88/65 77/59 56/51 85/50 68/57 59/33 86/63 74/61 71/55 59/49 46/40 71/45 80/57

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Hi/Lo 63/39 70/46 86/70 50/36 49/36 83/60 69/50 74/47 86/64 69/47 90/63 57/39 64/53 77/47 61/39 65/41 83/63 78/62 77/59 61/50 53/35 67/43 68/48

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Hi/Lo 61/43 70/50 85/68 50/35 52/26 76/54 58/45 76/44 85/64 60/43 92/67 53/37 62/50 63/41 65/41 71/46 84/63 76/63 73/60 60/51 58/24 59/38 63/44

Phil Collins discusses some of the historical items he donated Tuesday to the Alamo, including a Mexican army helmet at right. BOB OWEN/THE SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS

Collins gives Alamo collection to Texas The Associated Press

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — British pop star Phil Collins on Tuesday handed over his vast collection of artifacts related to the Battle of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution to the state of Texas. Collins was in San Antonio to donate what’s considered the world’s largest private collection of Alamo artifacts. It includes a fringed leather pouch and a gun used by Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie’s legendary knife and letters from garrison commander William B. Travis. “There’s things in there that will make your mouth drop,” Collins said. The 1980s pop artist and Genesis singer-drummer has joked that he spent all the money he made from music on artifacts related to the 1836 battle in which 1,500 Mexican troops laid siege to 200 Texans. The collection was given to Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, the state steward of the Alamo who is pushing for a new historical center that would house Collins’ collection. “Texans are deeply indebted to Phil Collins,” Patterson said. “He is giving us back our heritage. Now these Texas trea-

sures need a home where all can see them and study from them and learn about how Texans won our liberty.” Collins, who’s a Grammy and Academy Award winner, donated a collection of more than 200 items for display. Five crates full of artifacts were unloaded from a cargo truck Tuesday. “This completes the journey for me. I’m 64. When I was 5 or 6 years old, this thing began,” Collins said of his fascination with the Alamo. “My 9-year-old son was saying, ‘Why are you going to give it all away, Dad? I thought I was going to have it,’ ” he said with a laugh. Patterson said it will likely take at least five years to raise the millions of dollars needed to design and build a center to house and display the collection. The location of the center will be decided in about two weeks, Patterson said, and will likely charge for admission. The 4.2-acre Alamo grounds are free to the public. “This collection is coming home and it’s going to be very interesting for people to come and see and learn,” Collins said. “And this is what it’s all about.”

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World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

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

Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Warm front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Tue. High: 91 .................... Death Valley, CA Tue. Low: 12 ......................... Big Piney, WY

Weather history

Weather trivia™

On Oct. 29, 1991, a storm dumped a foot of snow in Utah. Another storm dropped 5 inches of rain on Little Rock, Ark. A third storm sank boats along the Massachusetts coast.

Q: What does the term ceiling mean? The height of the lowest clouds which A: are covering over half of the sky.

Newsmakers Palin hopes to run for office again some day

Sarah Palin

WASHINGTON — Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee, says she hopes to run for office again and is urging GOP leaders to pursue the Party’s agenda. Palin said in an interview with Fox Business Network on Tuesday that Republican leaders “need more guts.” She cited Republican Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah as “good leaders” who have been bold and courageous.

Country star helped shape Chase’s character

Will Chase

NEW YORK — Will Chase’s character on ABC’s Nashville is the quintessential superstar. Tim McGraw is the inspiration for his character, Chase says. “The template that was thrown around to me was always [McGraw], just as far as the enormity of his stardom and star power,” the 44-year-old actor said in a recent interview. Nashville, which airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. MDT, follows the ins and outs of country music. It also stars Connie Britton and Hayden Panettiere. The Associated Press

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

Hi/Lo 50/46 61/57 90/68 91/75 72/57 57/39 54/36 68/39 81/59 79/65 89/75 77/57 57/52 61/58 61/45 77/55 88/66 83/74 74/59 72/62

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Hi/Lo 57/47 65/54 88/65 88/77 69/57 60/48 52/42 64/50 77/57 79/63 89/76 79/53 53/45 54/50 60/41 75/61 86/66 85/77 69/54 71/61

TV

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Hi/Lo 58/52 66/53 85/62 91/78 70/56 63/47 52/40 64/50 74/59 79/64 90/77 80/59 52/44 61/55 61/42 72/60 84/63 85/76 62/52 69/60

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

Hi/Lo 72/61 64/52 72/46 78/52 57/45 48/39 89/61 50/48 45/30 79/67 68/52 75/54 63/32 90/77 61/56 81/55 64/52 57/50 45/36 57/45

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Hi/Lo 77/60 59/55 74/48 74/45 56/38 49/32 89/65 61/49 47/36 84/71 67/48 70/44 64/40 89/79 55/34 74/60 66/54 59/48 49/36 58/41

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Hi/Lo 76/61 65/57 75/47 73/50 48/33 43/28 90/65 65/50 49/40 89/73 68/47 75/43 67/49 89/79 46/31 84/62 66/58 55/47 50/40 57/40

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top picks

7 p.m. on NBC The Mysteries of Laura An art gallery owner’s son’s death takes Laura (Debra Messing) and her police comrades to Koreatown in the new episode “The Mystery of the Art Ace.” Paintings aren’t the only aspect of the investigation, since gambling and karaoke also have places in the probe. The poker game brings Laura back into contact with her long-estranged father — played by guest star, and veteran comedian, Robert Klein. 7 p.m. on ABC The Middle Different definitions of “scary” exist and Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) discover a new one in the new episode “Halloween V.” It involves Brick (Atticus Shaffer), whose decision to invite a girl home worries them. Sue (Eden Sher) tries to arrange a showing of It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown in an actual pumpkin patch. Axl (Charlie McDermott) is trapped in a library after it closes. 8 p.m. on CW The 100 Just because you’re the president doesn’t mean you won’t be questioned, as Dante Wal-

1

2

3

lace (guest star Raymond Barry) learns from Clarke’s (Eliza Taylor) interrogation in the new episode “Inclement Weather.” Kane (Henry Ian Cusick) launches his own probe, seeking answers from a member of The 100. Abby’s (Paige Turco) surgical skills are needed on short notice. 9 p.m. on CBS Stalker Series creator Kevin Williamson’s work on such movies as Scream confirms he’s no stranger to eeriness, and he proves it again as writer of the new, Halloween-themed episode “The Haunting” ... as if this show needed Halloween to be spooky. A supposedly haunted house figures into the plot, as Beth (Maggie Q), Jack (Dylan McDermott, pictured) and their colleagues make their way through a costume party in search of a stalker who may already be dead.

4

The repaired section of the embankment river wall that was damaged by a German bomb dropped during World War II in London is shown, a reminder of how close the city came to flooding during WWII. MATT DUNHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WWII hero saved London from flooding By Jill Lawless The Associated Press

LONDON — Every day, boats full of tourists and commuters float by a pale patch on the wall that lines the River Thames near Britain’s Houses of Parliament. Few notice the concrete mark, or recognize it as evidence of how close London came to drowning during World War II. The patch was left by a secret squad of engineers and laborers who worked night after night during World War II to repair flood defenses hit in German air raids. As bombs fell and fires raged, the teams organized by engineer Thomas Peirson Frank used rubble, sandbags and finally concrete to mend breaches in the Thames wall. “It could have brought London to its knees very, very easily,” said Gustav Milne, director of the Thames Discovery Program, a project that brings together experts and volunteers to explore the archaeology of London’s river. London burned during the war, but it never flooded, due in large measure to Frank and his crews. But their story is little known — obscured first by wartime secrecy, then by gradual forgetting. That began to change when Milne and his team noticed the large con-

crete patch, 30 feet across at its widest, in the 19th-century river wall. The researchers suspected the damage had been done by a Luftwaffe bomb. Deep in the London Metropolitan Archives, the researchers found files revealing the truth that had been hidden from Londoners during the war and later forgotten — the river wall was hit 121 times between 1940 and 1945, 84 of them during the Blitz of September 1940 to May 1941. The number of bomb strikes on the river was suppressed at the time so as not to alarm Londoners or alert Nazi Germany to the city’s vulnerability. Frank was knighted in 1942 for his work — though details of his job were kept under wraps — and later became president of the Institution of Civil Engineers. He died in 1951. Clive Cockerton of the Institution of Civil Engineers said Frank “is very much an unsung hero.” Now, he is finally receiving public recognition. On Wednesday a group of engineers and civic dignitaries will unveil a plaque commemorating Frank’s work near the patch on the wall. Londoners who come across it may pause and reflect on how narrowly the city avoided disaster.


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Cain, Hosmer help Kansas City rout Giants

State’s top 10 political donors have given $3M Six have donated $1.8M to Democrat campaigns, while four gave $1.2M to Republicans since 2011 By Sandra Fish New Mexico In Depth

From 2011 to 2014, tens of millions of dollars flowed through New Mexico’s political system, a notable amount for a poor state with one of the highest rates of poverty and a large percentage of res-

idents who go without health insurance. Perhaps even more noteworthy is that nearly $3 million, or 8 percent, of the money given by individuals came from just 10 people. They’re New Mexico’s power players. You might not be surprised that Santa Fe boasts the greatest number of power players, or that most of the others live in places like Albuquerque, Hobbs, Artesia and Las Cruces. One of the 10 hails from Embudo, a small community north of Española. New Mexico’s power players also are a bipartisan bunch, both Democrats

and Republicans. They are diverse in other ways, too — there are native New Mexicans, as well as individuals who’ve retired here or moved here from elsewhere; there are those with inherited wealth and oil company executives. There is even one organic farmer, the man from Embudo. Another interesting fact: It appears the power players rarely cross party lines. Six of the top 10 have given almost $1.8 million, mostly to Democrats, while the other four have donated nearly $1.2 million, mainly to Republicans.

Reasons for giving Guy Bowers, No. 2 on the list for contributing nearly $500,000 to Republican candidates and causes from 2011 to 2014, only began giving to political causes in recent years, he said. He’s focused on preserving gun rights. “I’m kind of a new kid on the block insofar as making contributions go,” he said. “I feel like most, if not all [of the Republican candidates he backs], are supporting the Second Amendment and

Mark Veteto

President of Me-Tex Oil is No. 7; gave Please see DONORS, Page B-3 $200K to GOP.

Sallie Bingham

Santa Fe writer is No. 9; gave $168K to Dems.

Weh closes the distance from Udall in some polls Varying survey results leave senator race a blowout or a cliffhanger By Milan Simonich The New Mexican

De Vargas Middle School Principal Marc Ducharme gets slimed by apple sauce Tuesday during an interactive production about science. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Goofy science takes the stage STEM meets comedy to produce a show that pairs the laws of motion with Velcro and apple sauce

Heading into their first debate, Democratic U.S. Sen. Tom Udall and his Republican challenger, Allen Weh, are either in a race that will be a blowout or one that has the makings of a cliffhanger. The answer depends on which poll you believe. A survey by Yougov.com for The New York Times and CBS News showed Udall with a 16-point lead, 52 percent to 36 percent. A far different forecast came from Tom Vox Populi Polling of Alexandria, Udall Va. Its poll showed Weh in striking distance, trailing Udall 47 percent to 43 percent. A third poll for the Albuquerque Journal has Weh gaining in the last month but down by 7 points, 50 percent to 43 percent. All three polls were taken during the same period, the third week of October.Udall’s camp played down the Vox Populi poll, saying the group Allen Weh was “notorious” in leaning toward Republicans. Lisa Boothe, a spokeswoman for Vox Populi, said it has ties to the GOP but gathers its

By Robert Nott

Please see POLLS, Page B-3

The New Mexican

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here’s an old military saying that you should never volunteer for anything. But De Vargas Middle School student Johnathan Muñoz did volunteer and soon found himself Velcroed to the wall in a horizontal position about 5 feet above the stage floor, proving one of Sir Issac Newton’s laws of motion — inertia. The stunt, which was greeted with laughter and applause by the school’s students during a Tuesday morning assembly in the gym, was part of the theatrical science show Forces in Motion, presented by Honeywell Hometown Solutions and NASA. Now celebrating its 10th anniversary and close to playing at its 1,000th school, the show features actors John James, Sharmine Tate and Erick Nathan in a musical comedy production designed to spotlight Newton’s three laws of gravity. The actors drew on student and teacher volunteers to take part in some of the goofier activities. Not only was Muñoz stuck to the Velcro Wall for a few minutes, but later, he and student Axel Rascon, clad in Velcro attire, bounced off a springboard and onto the wall to see how high they could stick.

WATCH THE DEBATE u The first debate between U.S. Senate candidates Tom Udall and Allen Weh will be broadcast on public television and public radio at 7 p.m. Thursday. Viewers in Santa Fe can watch the debate on KNME.

Jose Velazquez and Samantha Martinez, both 14, cheer for two of their teachers who performed in padded Sumo wrestling suits.

De Vargas teachers Christian Loredo and Steven Dixon suited up in padded outfits and helmets to engage in some Sumo wrestling as part of Newton’s second law — force equals mass times acceleration, which meant one of them was going to eventually push the other one down. Both teachers took pratfalls as part of the shtick. Then it was time to prove Newton’s third law — in which for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In this

case, school Principal Marc Ducharme was hooked up to a chair flanked by two catapultlike paddles. Students used huge slingshots to launch balls at the paddles, and when paddle was struck, a gooey mass of apple sauce was unleashed and poured down over Ducharme’s face and upper torso. After several misses, the students proved Newton’s theory, and Ducharme got slimed.

Please see GOOFY, Page B-2

Hobbs schools suspend master’s requirement To ease booming student enrollment, district delays degree policy for hiring new teachers The Associated Press

HOBBS — Facing an oil boom that has put a strain on a school district in southeastern New Mexico, officials have eased the district’s requirement that teachers acquire a master’s degree. The Hobbs Municipal School Board voted last week to suspend the master’s requirement policy, the Hobbs News-Sun reported. Under that policy, new teach-

ers must earn a master’s degree within six years of their hiring. Superintendent T.J. Parks said he supported the policy, but that the current status of hiring new teachers was dismal. “We still have openings at Hobbs Municipal Schools, and you see that all across the state of New Mexico for a multitude of reasons, but it is silly to me for us to let go of staff members

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

and they have to have been with us for six years for this to take place,” Parks said. Board member Peggy Appleton said even though a master’s degree is no longer required, teachers still will be encouraged to obtain one. The district will still provide funding for teachers who want to get a degree. Parks said the total enrollment in his district was nearly 10,000 students Sept. 16. That’s 500 more students accounted for than on the same day last year. The jump comes as Lea County

sees booming business for its oil and gas. Lea County officials recently reported that September saw gross-receipts tax revenue of $1.6 million. That tops last year’s September numbers by more than $500,000. Officials say July and August also saw grossreceipts tax revenue higher than last year’s numbers. Gross receipts are defined by the state as the total amount of money businesses receive through selling or leasing of property or goods in New Mexico, or through performance of services.

CYFD sued for alleged abuse by foster parents Couple say adopted son suffered and witnessed sex assault in home By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

A Washington state couple are suing the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department, alleging the agency failed to properly screen a Clovis-area foster couple accused of raping some of the children in their care, including a boy the Washington couple later adopted. The two people accused of abusing the boy are Richard L. Glascoe and his wife, Jodi L. Kirkpatrick (aka Jodi Glascoe), formerly of Clovis. Glascoe, a former Curry County jail guard, was convicted in 2007 of raping three 7-year-old girls and is serving a 25-year prison sentence. Kirkpatrick — who divorced Glascoe around the time he was convicted — was working as a junior high school teacher in Artesia when she was charged with five counts of child rape in 2012. Those charges — some of which are related to Kirkpatrick’s alleged abuse of the Washington couple’s son — are still pending. The Washington couple said in a complaint filed in state District Court last week that their son suffered heinous abuse during three different periods between May 2003 and December 2006 when he spent time

Please see CYFD, Page B-3

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EPA unveils standards for power plants on tribal land By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed emissions standards Tuesday for four power plants on American Indian reservations as part of the Obama administration’s plans to cut down on the gases blamed for global warming. The agency unveiled its plan for states last summer, saying it wants to see fossil-fuel-fired power plants reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 30 percent

from 2005 levels by 2030. EPA officials said they waited until now to include Indian Country because the agency wanted more time to consult with tribes that would be affected by the proposal. Those include tribes in New Mexico, Arizona and Utah. The EPA also released more data Tuesday on emissions rates for 2010 and 2011 to help states, tribes and others formulate ideas and comments on how to better address greenhouse gas emissions before the agency finalizes its plan.

The EPA is calling for about a 7 percent reduction in the emissions rate at the Bonanza plant on Ute lands in northeastern Utah. Janet McCabe, acting assistant administrator for the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, said the agency has already received hundreds of thousands of comments and more are expected as the comment period gets closer to wrapping up Dec. 1. The pub-

Firm to review zoo’s security after death

In brief Navajo president vetoes fluency changes

ALBUQUERQUE — A detective agency has been hired to make recommendations for improving security at the Albuquerque zoo following the killing of a rare Tasmanian devil on loan from Australia. The Albuquerque Journal reports that private agency will make recommendations about internal policies and procedures of the Albuquerque BioPark Zoo, while city police continue their criminal investigation of the killing. The animal named Jasper was found dead in his enclosure Oct. 15, and zoo officials have since said they were adding more guards and surveillance cameras. An examination concluded that Jasper died from a fractured skull and brain trauma. A piece of asphalt was found nearby. The animal was one of four Tasmanian devils loaned to the Albuquerque zoo by Healesville Sanctuary in Australia as part of a breeding program.

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The president of the Navajo Nation dealt a major setback to a candidate for the tribe’s top elected post when he vetoed a bill to let voters decide whether presidential hopefuls are proficient in the Navajo language. Tribal law requires that anyone seeking the presidency speak fluent Navajo and understand the language inextricably tied to the culture. Lawmakers amended that requirement last week on an 11-10 vote, but Navajo President Ben Shelly rejected the legislation Tuesday. The decision was being watched closely by Chris Deschene, who had been disqualified from the race over the fluency requirement. He ceased campaigning following the veto and said he would not explore any other legal options to stay in the race, said Court OKs textbooks his spokeswoman, Stacy Pearson. “It is with tremendous pride in our law for private schools campaign and disappointment with the The state Court of Appeals has president’s veto that the future of my candidacy is uncertain,” Deschene said upheld the constitutionality of a decades-old law that calls for the state in a statement.

Goofy: Show to attract kids to STEM Continued from Page B-1 De Vargas science teacher Roberta Roybal said she found the show “really inspiring.” Of the three actors’ energetic performances, she said, “I wish I could teach science with a mic on while bouncing up and down.” She said she may coordinate with the school’s theater and music teachers to create a similar in-class production later in the school year. Her kids will go for that approach, she said, “because they perform for me all the time.” Actor John James said the goal is to inspire kids to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math — commonly known as STEM. In the past few years, a number of international surveys — including research by the National Science Board, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the Program for International Student Assessment — have ranked American students below average in comparison to their international peers when it comes to proficiency in math and science.

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u A woman who lives on El Rancho Road wired $3,000 Monday to a man who claimed to be a lawyer in California. The self-described lawyer told the woman that her grandson was in jail, but she later found out her son was never in jail. u A burglar broke into Monte del Sol Charter School, 4157 Walking Rain Road, between 8 p.m. Friday and 1 p.m. Monday and stole a Mac desktop computer. u Victor Lucero, 48, of Santo Domingo Pueblo was arrested on charges of criminal tres-

That’s one reason Honeywell and NASA are promoting and presenting the show with an eye toward turning kids on to these subjects and filling job openings in those industries, James said. James said the show is perfect for tech-savvy kids because they like things “right up there in your face. Reading out of a book may not always be good enough. This show reinforces some of those lesson plans with music, hip-hop and comedy. We bring it here to their gym. It’s right in front of them.” Muñoz said live demonstrations like this one make science exciting to learn because “it’s more active.” Plus, he felt like a star. Forces in Motion will be performed again at 10 and 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at Ortiz Middle School on South Meadows Road. Parents and guardians of students attending that school are encouraged to attend the shows. Visit fmalive.honeywell.com for more information about the presentation. pass and resisting arrest at about 9:40 a.m. Monday after employees of Denny’s restaurant, 3004 Cerrillos Road, called police and reported the man wouldn’t leave the restaurant. The Santa Fe County Sheriff Department’s took the following report: u Andres Vigil, 33, of Abiquiú was arrested on charges of driving with a revoked license, not properly displaying license plates and lacking insurance. Vigil was pulled over Monday on U.S. 84/285 in Pojoaque.

Help line Police and fire emergency: 911

lic has until Dec. 19 to comment on the proposal regarding the power plants on tribal land. McCabe said a transparent and public process is “so critical to this program.” Under the proposal unveiled Tuesday, the Navajo Nation

to provide textbooks and other instructional materials to private and religious schools. The court ruled Monday the law doesn’t violate a state constitutional provision barring taxpayer money from being used to support any “sectarian, denominational or private school.” That prohibition, the court said, is to ensure the state controls the public education system and public schools don’t become sectarian. The court said the textbooks are secular, and private schools do not own the instructional material because the state “controls its use and disposition.” The program is for the benefit of students, the court concluded. The ruling upheld a decision by a state District Court judge in Santa Fe.

would have to reduce its emissions rate by at least 6 percent. Two of the power plants on the Navajo Nation — the Navajo Generating Station in Page, Ariz., and the Four Corners Power Plant near Farmington — are among the country’s top emitters of carbon dioxide, releasing 17.8 million short tons and 12.9 million short tons in 2013, respectively. Both have plans to shutter some of the generating units, which will cut down on carbon emissions. Stephen Etsitty, executive director of the Navajo Nation

in connection with the Justice Department’s Election Day Program. Martinez says the Justice Department will act promptly and aggressively to protect the integrity of the election process. Federal law protects against such crimes as intimidating or bribing voters, buying and selling votes, impersonating voters, altering vote tallies and stuffing ballot boxes.

Environmental Protection Agency, said the tribe’s air quality experts are reviewing the federal government’s proposal, but he believes the changes already in the works for the two power plants will put the tribe in a good position to meet EPA’s goals. The EPA is calling for about a 7 percent reduction in the emissions rate at the Bonanza plant on Ute lands in northeastern Utah, while only a slight reduction is proposed for at a gasfired plant on Fort Mojave land in Arizona.

would raise the minimum wage to $9.20 in January 2016 and to $10.10 in January 2017.

Democratic consultant’s child porn trial delayed

ALBUQUERQUE — A Democratic political consultant’s trial on child pornography charges has been postponed until December. The FBI found pornographic images Minimum wage increases of children on Jason Loera’s computer equipment in 2012 while investigatto begin in Las Cruces ing the hijacking of Republican Gov. LAS CRUCES — The Las Cruces Susana Martinez’s campaign email City Council has decided to implement system. the first phase of a minimum-wage Loera’s trial was to start Wednesday, increase in the Southern New Mexico but U.S. District Judge James Browncity, but it may then consider anew ing rescheduled it for Dec. 8 at Loera’s whether to have the next two steps request. take effect. Loera has pleaded not guilty. Prosecutor to head According to the Las Cruces SunFormer Martinez campaign manager News, the council on Monday balked Jamie Estrada pleaded guilty to charges election program at a proposal to exempt small busiof intercepting email and making false nesses from the previously approved ALBUQUERQUE — The U.S. statements to federal agents. ordinance. Attorney’s Office has named a federal Estrada hijacked the governor’s 2010 Instead, the first phase was left intact campaign email account. prosecutor to lead a Justice Departto raise the minimum wage in Las Crument team responsible for handling The FBI has said Estrada commucomplaints of election fraud and voting ces on Jan. 1 to $8.40 per hour. That’s nicated regularly with Loera and that a 90-cent increase from the current rights abuses in New Mexico during stolen emails were sent from a Loerastatewide level. the general election. controlled account to Martinez’s politiMayor Ken Miyagishima says he U.S. Attorney Damon P. Martinez cal opponents. wants the council to then review the says Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan M. Gerson will head the office’s efforts ordinance before subsequent phases The Associated Press

Funeral services and memorials SHIRLEY M. HOOPER-GARCIA November 5, 1935 - October 24, 2014 Shirley Hooper-Garcia passed away on October 24, 2014 at her home in Roswell, NM after lengthy battle with cancer. She will lie in state at LaGrone Funeral Chapel, 900 South Main St., Roswell, NM on Friday October 31st from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. and Saturday, November 1st from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Visitors welcome. Her funeral service will be held on Saturday, November 1st at 4:00 p.m. at Grace Community Church, 935 W. Mescalero, Roswell, NM, with Pastor Sean Lee officiating. An additional visitation and memorial will take place at the State Capitol Rotunda in Santa Fe, NM on November 7, 2014. Visitation will be from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. with the service immediately following. Her ashes will be buried at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. A memorial will also take place at the Lovington, NM cemetery at a later date. Born on November 5, 1935 in Meadow, Texas to Isom F. and Lena C. (Gregory) Collier, Shirley was one of 13 siblings. She is survived by two sisters, Betty Beatty and LaVida Kinnear and husband Wayne, all of Roswell. She was predeceased in death by her parents, husband Edward P. Garcia, brothers Jake and Joe Collier and sisters Lillian Hall, Nona (Tootsie) Vinson, Jackie Church, Ruby Rodgers, Frances (Frankie) Kizziah, Bobbie Lavash, and Maxine Raburn. Shirley and her family moved to Lovington, NM in 1939, where she graduated from high school in 1953. She has lived in Lovington, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Portales and Hobbs. In her early years she worked for private law firms as a legal secretary, then in 1959 she began her career in the New Mexico state government. She was the secretary to the Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives; she also worked as the Assistant Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives and as legal secretary to two judges for the Supreme Court of Appeals. Shirley then went on to serve as New Mexico Secretary of State, and after that as Lea County Clerk. She was Administrator for the Hobbs Office of State Public Defender, then Chief Deputy of the Santa Fe County Clerk’s office. She served on the New Mexico School for the Deaf Board of Regents and was one of the founders of the International Association of the Parents for the Deaf. Shirley took pride in volunteering for many organizations for children with disabilities. She is survived by her sons John Hooper of Santa Fe, NM, Greg Hooper and his children Zachary and Taylor of Chandler, AZ, her step-sons Scott Lucky of Post Falls, Idaho, Anthony Garcia his wife Karen and their children Anthony, Trevor, and Nicholas of Temecula, CA, Ted Garcia of Chula Vista, CA, and Reuben Garcia his wife Andrea and their children, Jessica, Parker, and Joseph of Canyon Country, CA. She also leaves numerous loving cousins, nieces, nephews and a host of friends. The family would like to thank Dr. Tareq Braik, MD and his staff, Gentiva Hospice, Comfort Keepers and other caregivers for their passion and caring for Shirley throughout her illness. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to Grace Community Church at 935 W. Mescalero, Roswell, NM 88201 or the charity of one’s choice. Condolences may be made online at www.lagronefuneralchapels.com Arrangements are under the personal care of LaGrone Funeral Chapel

Ramon Eloy Sena, 85, of Santa Fe, NM passed away peacefully at home surrounded by family. He was a loving husband, father, grandfather, and great grandfather. He served in the Korean War; worked for the Trucking industry until his retirement; loved the outdoors and was an avid hunter; loved camping and fishing, especially being outdoors in his hometown of Galisteo with family and enjoying the family Galisteo Rodeo; was musically inclined and played several instruments to include the banjo and guitar. He was a humorous and a giving man. His accomplishment in life was seeing his children thrive, and spending time with his grandchildren and great grandchildren. Special thanks to Ambercare Hospice and his many family and friends that visited him during his illness. He is preceded in death by his parents, Natividad Sena and Sarah P. Sena, sisters, Socorro Montano and Juanita Montoya, brothers, Antonio Sena, Alfonso Sena, Edward "Eddie" Sena, and Ernesto Sena. He is survived by his wife of 59 years, Sadie Garcia Sena, sons, Albert Sena, Floyd Sena (Louise), daughters, Marabella De Lora (Matt), Patricia Zold (Tom), Donita O. Sena (Tim Gonzales) all of Santa Fe, NM, grandchildren: Christopher R. Sena-Moya, Shaundel Moya, Raymond Floyd Sena, M.J. De Lora, Mark De Lora, John De Lora, Tommy Zold, Lisa Zold, Shannon Lopez, Miranda Martinez (Christopher), great grandchildren: Tiana Rose Gianardi-Martinez, Isaac De Lora, Gabriella Garcia, expected great granddaughter, Mia Gianardi-Martinez, siblings, Inez Montoya, Rudy Sena, Salomon Sena (Pauline), Helen Angel, Leo Sena (Gina), numerous nieces, nephews, great nieces, great nephews, and great great nieces and nephews. A Rosary will be held on Thursday, October 30, 2014 at 7 p.m. at St. Anne’s Catholic Church. A Mass of Christian burial will be held on Friday, October 31, 2014 at 12 p.m. at St. Anne’s Catholic Church. Interment to follow at the Santa Fe National Cemetery at 1:30 p.m. Pallbearers will be: Christopher Sena-Moya, Tommy Zold, M.J. De Lora, Mark De Lora, John De Lora, and Raymond Sena. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

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Donors: Some say individual giving helps offset corporation cash Continued from Page B-1 individual gun rights.” Sallie Bingham of Santa Fe, No. 9 on the list with almost $170,000 given to Democratic candidates and causes, said she gives to candidates based on “their record and what they’re trying to achieve.” She said she is interested in prison reform, treatment of immigrants and women’s issues. “I was raised with the belief … that you have the obligation to support the political system of the country you live in, among other things,” Bingham said. “You also have an obligation to support some form of social justice and to support people who have nothing. I wish more people felt that way.” David Rigsby, the organic farmer from Embudo and No. 8 on the list, replied via email that he was reluctant to discuss his political donations. But, he wrote, “Transparency is something I fight for,” and he noted his distaste for “dark money” attacks in politics. Like Bowers, Rigsby said his inheritance allowed him to donate to political causes. “The imbalances created by ‘Citizens United’ have moved me to try to counter the scream of corporate and ‘one percenter’ money which I think tends to minimize the voices of the ‘real’ people who actually do the work, and make the sacrifices upon which humanness/ humane-ness rides,” Rigsby wrote. Rigsby is referring to the 2010 Citizens United decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, which allowed corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts on elections at the state and federal levels. Other decisions allow such groups to take unlimited donations. Mark Veteto of Hobbs, No. 7 on the list, also raised a concern about big money in politics, even though he’s a generous donor. His political involvement began when he was a young Republican. “When you read about the uber-wealthy billionaires that are creating these PACs, one may be sensitive to the environment and one may be sensitive to the Koch brothers. That concerns me,” he said. “Sometimes in preserving the industry I’m in, not just oil and gas but entrepreneurial industry, it requires us to be engaged. … People like me write checks because we believe in the system.” Like others on the list, Veteto

Getting access

POWER PLAYERS: TOP 10 DONORS, 2011-14 that supported Barack Obama. No. 2: Guy Bowers donated $478,566 to Republican candidates and causes. Bowers is a former law enforcement officer in Ruidoso. He gives mostly to national efforts. Only $11,200 of his money went to New Mexico candidates: $5,200 to Gov. Susana Martinez, $5,000 to the governor’s Susana PAC and $1,000 to former Rep. Heather Wilson’s 2012 Senate race. No. 3: Victor Jury Jr. donated $293,150 to Republican candidates and causes. Jury is president and CEO of Summit Electric Supply in Albuquerque, one of the largest privately held businesses in New Mexico, according to the Albuquerque Business Journal. In 2012, he gave $160,000 to Restore Our Future, the super PAC supporting Mitt Romney, and $80,000 to American Crossroads, a Republican super PAC founded by Karl Rove. No. 4: Elise Schmidt donated $240,100 to Democratic candidates and causes. The Santa Fe resident lists her occupation as artist and investor, and she’s married to

Here’s a brief rundown of New Mexico’s power players — the top 10 individual campaign donors in the state between 2011 and 2014, according to data compiled and analyzed by the Investigative News Network (INN) and New Mexico In Depth. Data were provided by the National Institute for Money in State Politics and the Center for Responsive Politics, as well as the New Mexico Secretary of State’s office. The contributions in this list include donations to political action committees, or PACs, at the federal level and in New Mexico. No. 1: Barrett Toan donated $804,546 to Democratic candidates and causes. Toan is former president and CEO of Express Scripts who retired to Santa Fe. He now serves as chairman of Sigma-Aldrich, a biotech firm. His donations include $100,000 in June with his wife, Polly O’Brien, to the Verde Voters environmental PAC supporting Democratic state House candidates. In 2012, he gave $500,000 to Priorities USA, the super PAC

also gives to traditional charities. And his family operates a foundation that gives annual awards to teachers in the Hobbs area. New Mexico In Depth reached out to the rest of the top donors via phone, email and sometimes both. They did not respond or declined to discuss their political giving. Victor Jury Jr. of Albuquerque, No. 3 on the list, for instance, sent an email saying that he prefers not to discuss private matters such as political donations. Reached by phone, Paul Schmidt of Santa Fe, who is No. 10 on the list, said he and his wife, Elise Schmidt, who’s No. 4, similarly didn’t want to discuss their giving. Robert Chase of Artesia, No. 6, also declined to speak with New Mexico In Depth. Neither Barrett Toan, who ranks No. 1 on the power player list, or Martin Small, No. 5, returned calls from New Mexico in Depth.

Deep-pocketed contributors role Citizens United and other court decisions have stoked a national conversation in recent years over the amount

Paul B. Schmidt, who’s No. 10 on the list. She gave $40,000 to the Obama Victory Fund in 2012. She and her husband each gave $15,200 to the New Mexico Grassroots Victory Fund, a joint fundraiser for Sen. Tom Udall, in 2013. No. 5: Martin Small gave $222,405 to Democratic candidates and causes. The founder of Calculex, a technology company in Las Cruces, Small gave $36,700 to the Democratic Party of New Mexico and $36,000 to the Democratic National Committee Services Corp. No. 6: Robert C. Chase gave $209,176 to Republican candidates and causes. The vice president of Mack Energy Corp. in Artesia gave $70,000 to the Romney Victory committee and $25,000 to Reform New Mexico Now, a state-level PAC, in 2012. He’s donated a total of $10,000 to U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce in the two election cycles covered by this analysis. No. 7: Mark Veteto gave $200,359 to Republican candidates and causes. The founder and president of Hobbs-based

of money flowing through the nation’s political system, including whether such deeppocketed contributors exercise outsize influence. It’s virtually impossible to say. “In a perfect world, it would be great if … finances weren’t such a big factor in terms of who got elected,” said Paul Gessing, president of the Rio Grande Foundation, a freemarket think tank. “It’s obvious that money plays a significant role in politics. The question is, is there anything that can be done to prevent that from happening? I don’t think that’s possible.” It’s often difficult to link campaign donations to specific actions by elected officials, according to Viki Harrison, executive director of Common Cause New Mexico. “The question about influence is a really tricky one,” Harrison said. “Sometimes it is somebody being a good citizen. It’s just this out-of-control spending and how incredibly expensive that all these campaigns are now. That’s really disturbing to me.” In fact, the $3 million from New Mexico’s top 10 power players represents about 8 percent of the total $38 mil-

Me-Tex Oil and Gas gave $50,000 to the Romney Victory committee in 2012, but he’s also donated heavily to New Mexico candidates including Martinez, Pearce and others. No. 8: David Rigsby gave $178,998 to Democratic candidates and causes. The owner of Embudo Valley Organics in Embudo has given $26,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and $25,000 to the Patriot Majority New Mexico PAC. No. 9: Sallie Bingham gave $168,485 to Democratic candidates and causes. A writer who hails from Kentucky but lives in Santa Fe, she has donated $45,000 to Verde Voters and $33,400 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee since 2012. No. 10: Paul Schmidt gave $151,500 to Democratic candidates and causes. A Santa Fe attorney, Schmidt is married to Elise Schmidt. He donated $20,000 to the Democratic Party of New Mexico and has donated $10,400 to Hector Balderas’ campaign for attorney general.

TOP 10 RECIPIENTS, 2011-14 Priorities USA Action: $500K Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee: $175.6K Restore Our Future: $160K Verde Voters PAC: $130K Romney Victory: $121K

lion flowing into New Mexico campaigns or out of New Mexico by donors in the state over the 2011-14 period, according to an analysis by Investigative News Network. But Demis Foster, executive director of Conservation Voters New Mexico, said such individual donors help counter large corporate spending allowed by Citizens United. Her group’s Verde Voters PAC is the fourth largest recipient from New Mexico’s power players, receiving $130,000 from three of them toward the PAC’s total thus far of about $626,000, including money from Toan, Bingham and Rigsby. Only about $92,500 of that total amount comes from donors other than individuals. “It’s absolutely essential that we have individuals who are

Obama Victory fund: $99K DNC Services Corp: $98K Democratic Part of N.M.: $97K Republican National Committee: $83.5K American Crossroads: $80K

aligned with our values and care about our land and our air and our water,” Foster said. “There are a lot of super PACs out there that rely on very large corporations.” Verde Voters is focused on helping pro-conservation candidates retain control of the state House of Representatives, Foster said. All of the candidates they’ve endorsed are Democrats, while Advance New Mexico Now is trying to help Republicans take over the body. Currently, 37 Democrats and 33 Republicans hold seats in the New Mexico House. Of Advance’s $628,000 in contributions, about $182,000 came from seven individual donors, none of them on the power players list, while the rest came from corporations or political committees.

The analysis of New Mexico’s power players doesn’t include donations from corporations, unions, nonprofits or PACs to campaigns or to other PACs. Also omitted is Las Vegas, Nev., casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson, who gave $250,000 to the GOP super PAC Reform New Mexico Now in 2012. He hasn’t given to any New Mexico candidate or PAC since then. And donors to nonprofit groups such as Crossroads GPS or the League of Conservation Voters, which often participate in campaigns, don’t have to be disclosed, so such donations can’t be included. Gessing, of the Rio Grande Foundation, said the ability to conceal donations to such “social welfare” nonprofits is essential. “Standing up for something that’s unpopular can have some very negative consequences,” he said. “I am a proponent of anonymity.” But Harrison, of Common Cause, noted that those nonprofits, along with Supreme Court rulings allowing unlimited spending by outside groups and lifting donation limits to PACs, means there’s more money in politics now than ever before. “It’s just a completely different world than it was even six years ago,” she said. “When people have that kind of disposable money to give to campaigns, when they’re talking to candidates, I wonder what their message is to candidates. Those people are talking about something that’s going to represent their interests.” Veteto said he doesn’t believe his money has a direct effect on how public officials make decisions. But he admitted his donations give him access to politicians such as Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. “My largest contribution was to Susana’s first gubernatorial campaign,” Veteto said. “I got to know her on a personal level. I’ve never asked her for any favors. I’m kind of proud of that. “Do I think that affects how she governs? Hell no,” he said. “Do I think she thinks of me when she governs? Hell no.” Sandra Fish, New Mexico In Depth’s data journalist, can be reached at fish@nmindepth.com or on Twitter @fishnette.

Pojoaque Valley High teacher wins honor

Polls: Sam Donaldson to moderate Thursday debate

A Pojoaque Valley High School teacher has been named New Mexico Teacher of the Year. Debra S. Minyard, who teaches Advanced Placement music and band, has won the honor from the state Public Education Department, Pojoaque Superintendent Adan Delgado said. Minyard also advises students who are in the AVID program — Debra S. Advancement Minyard Via Individual Determination — which is aimed at increasing college readiness. “Ms. Minyard has been an essential member of the teaching faculty for 12 years, and has brought imagination, energy and passion to the educators and students with whom she serves,” said Pojoaque High Principal Kathy McClendon. “Her work in the area of music provides an arena for students to thrive, engage both sides of the brain, and bring the learning process full circle.” As New Mexico teacher of the year, Minyard will be honored at a national event in Washington, D.C.

information independently. “Our partners have been in Republican politics, but we approach our polls from a purely data-driven standpoint,” she said in an email. This was Vox Populi’s first survey of a race in New Mexico, she said. Pollster Brent Seaborn said Udall was being dragged down by his own party. “The deteriorating national political environment for Democrats and President

The New Mexican

Wednesday has TASTE

Continued from Page B-1

Obama has put Senate races like New Mexico at risk for Democrats,” he said in a statement. Yougov.com’s polling tells a different story. It has shown Udall holding a consistent lead. He had an 18-point advantage in August and September, and a 16-point lead in the organization’s October poll. Both Weh and Udall this week are campaigning on issues that they think play to their respective strengths. Weh, chief executive officer

of an aviation company and a retired colonel in the Marine Corps Reserve, is continuing his ad campaign tying Udall to President Barack Obama. Weh titled his latest television ad “Failed Policies.” It describes Udall as a reliable supporter of the president and says, “A vote for Udall is a vote for Obama.” This is a continuation of Weh’s message that voters should change their senator to change Washington. Udall’s latest television ad

heading into the debate is on domestic violence, a hot topic this fall because of arrests of players in the National Football League. Udall has tailored the ad to focus on New Mexico cases. A woman who says she was battered by her husband praises Udall’s work on laws against stalking and domestic violence. Weh has pressed for debates with Udall throughout the campaign. He finally will get two this week. Former ABC News White

House Correspondent Sam Donaldson will be the moderator of the taped debate that will air Thursday night on public television. Donaldson, 80, grew up in Southern New Mexico. The second debate is scheduled to air live at noon Friday on Albuquerque television station KOB. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at santafenewmexican.com.

CYFD: Man convicted of rape; ex-wife’s charges pending Continued from Page B-1 in the Glascoe home. He was between the ages of 3 and 6 at the time. The New Mexican isn’t identifying the couple to avoid identifying the child. Among the allegations are that the foster couple had handcuffed the boy, threatened him with a gun, forced him to watch them have sex, sexually and physically assaulted him and forced him to witness their sexual assault of other children of both sexes, including a baby. According to the complaint, the child was removed from the foster home in late 2006, just as Richard Glascoe was being investigated on allegations of child abuse. The mother said Monday that she and her husband had agreed to foster two children who had been in the Glascoe

home — the boy they later adopted and a girl who ran away and was returned to CYFD a month later — but they were expressly told the boy had not been sexually abused. “They assured us it was all against girls,” the adoptive mother said Monday. The couple adopted the boy in 2007, the complaint says, and a few weeks later moved to Davenport, Wash. In the late fall of 2012, the complaint says, the child began “acting out,” displaying concerning behaviors and commenting on things that had happened when he lived in the Glascoe home. In addition to saying he had been forced to watch the foster couple have sex with each other and other children, both male and female, the boy said

a state caseworker had visited the home during one of the abusive events and found the boy crying but had left him in the care of the foster couple, according to the complaint. The mother said her son, now 14, is “far from” OK. “He’s acted out, and we have a safety plan in place,” she said. “He has 24-hour supervision.” She said her son is glad the foster couple have been criminally charged. The parents claim in their lawsuit that the state agency failed to supervise, monitor or inspect the foster couple sufficiently and that the agency knew or should have known about the abuse but failed to reveal it to them before they adopted the child. The mother said Monday

that she wishes she’d known earlier about the abuses her son suffered so she could have gotten him more intensive counseling sooner. “Overall, I wish CYFD would have told us as there were more charges and such throughout the years,” she said, adding that when her son exhibited strange behavior growing up, she and her husband didn’t know what to think and sometimes wondered whether his behavior was just “a boy thing” or if it was related to something he had witnessed Richard Glascoe do to another child. The parents seek an unspecified amount of compensatory, incidental, special, punitive and exemplary damages, as well as legal fees and court costs, from the state agency.

The suit names CYFD Secretary Yolanda Deines, Richard Glascoe, Jodi Kirkpatrick and five unnamed CYFD employees as defendants. According to a Nov. 8, 2012, story in the Clovis News Journal, court records introduced in the case against Kirkpatrick indicate the Glascoe couple had fostered seven children between May 2003 and December 2006. Department spokesman Henry Varela said via email Monday that he could not comment on the case because the agency had not yet been served and because state law prevents the department from disclosing information in child abuse investigations. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@ sfnewmexican.com.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Calif. pot Bill Clinton holds second politics rally for Sen. Mark Udall remain local By Nicholas Riccardi

Former President Bill Clinton, right, joins U.S. Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., Monday in acknowledging the crowd during an appearance in Aurora, Colo.

The Associated Press

The Associated Press

DAVID ZALUBOWSKI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and diversity and expressed disbelief that the state would want to part with Udall or Gov. John Hickenlooper. Udall “looks like an ad for Colorado,” Clinton said of the 64-year-old mountain-climbing Senator. “Every positive stereotype you have is embodied in this one person.” The former Arkansas governor was also unstinting in his praise for Hickenlooper, ticking off the

state’s 4.7 percent unemployment rate and recovery from last year’s floods. “Why is this a race?” Clinton asked of Hickenlooper’s tight battle against former Rep. Bob Beauprez. Political luminaries are pouring into Colorado in the race’s final days. On Wednesday another political dynasty touches down as former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush holds a rally for Gardner and Beauprez.

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SAN FRANCISCO — Medical marijuana dispensaries are outlawed in the Southern California city of Santa Ana, but that hasn’t stopped pot shops from flourishing. Officials estimate there are at least 60 doing business, even though the city has repeatedly gone to court, issued fines, cut off water and power to storefronts, and called in federal drug agents and local police to enforce the ban. This fall, like several other cities and counties in California, Santa Ana is trying a new tactic for regulating pot — the ballot box. Recognizing its losing battle against weed, the Santa Ana City Council is asking voters to consider a measure that would allow pot dispensaries under strict operating rules. The proposal came after medical marijuana activists seeking to end the prohibition on shops qualified a much more liberal initiative for the city ballot. Voters in Alaska and Oregon will decide next week whether their states should follow Washington and Colorado in legalizing recreational use of marijuana. And Californians might see a similar measure on the state ballot in 2016. But for now, the politics of pot remain local in California. At least 13 cities and counties stretching from Oroville to Encinitas have a combined 17 measures on general election ballots next week that seek to sort out where and how marijuana may be grown and sold. “We felt it was important to respond in some way, and the question became, do we respond with a competing initiative that would allow dispensaries but heavily regulate them or do we respond with an initiative that would continue to ban them in a way that wasn’t really working,” said Karen Haluza, interim executive director of the Santa Ana Planning and Building Agency. “The city’s hand was forced at that point.” In Northern California, voters in Butte and Lake counties also face dueling ballot measures. In those rural pot-growing jurisdictions, cultivation, not pot shops, is the issue. Responding to complaints that large-scale medical marijuana farms were fueling crime and harming the environment, lawmakers in both counties passed ordinances banning outdoor growing on small properties and restricting the size of grows on larger ones. Frustrated growers and users are seeking to repeal the laws by ballot referenda and to replace them with more beneficial rules.

Helpi ng to C

By Lisa Leff

LAKEWOOD, Colo. — Former President Bill Clinton on Tuesday reminded Colorado Democrats of the symbolic weight of this year’s elections, saying “everybody looks at you as the state of the future” and urging voters to stick with two embattled Democratic incumbents. In his second rally in 18 hours, Clinton noted that the contests may determine whether Democrats can continue to control the United States Senate. But hovering in the backdrop of the former president’s intense stumping in Colorado is the prospect of his wife’s upcoming presidential campaign, which will inevitably contend in this swing state. The Clinton Global Initiative held its meeting in Denver this summer and Hillary Clinton was just in Colorado a week ago in the second of two stops to boost Sen. Mark Udall. Should Udall, who is narrowly trailing Republican Rep. Cory Gardner in public polls, survive it will be a sign that demographics and a sophisticated get-out-thevote operation can win states like Colorado even when the national political environment favors Republicans. But if Gardner wins, it may offer the GOP a path forward in states they have been unable to gain ground in during the Obama administration. Udall quipped that he hoped Hillary Clinton returns to the state “over the next couple of years.” Bill Clinton did not mention his wife, but spoke about Colorado’s youth

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

B-5

NFL: Cowboys await word on Romo’s latest back injury. Page B-8

PREP GIRLS SOCCER

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Young Lady Hilltoppers improve rapidly By Edmundo Carrillo

Los Alamos girls soccer head coach A.J. Herrera, center, addresses his team during practice Tuesday. The Lady Hilltoppers won 10 straight matches and got the 3-seed in the Class AAAAA State Tournament, despite having only two seniors.

The New Mexican

LOS ALAMOS — After looking at some of the numbers for the Los Alamos girls soccer team, one would imagine that it is full of grizzled veterans. Upon closer inspection, that is hardly the case — which is a good thing. The Lady Hilltoppers go into the Class AAAAA State Tournament on a 10-match win streak in which they outscored opponents 45-4 and did not

EDMUNDO CARRILLO THE NEW MEXICAN

allow more than one goal in a single match during that stretch. In doing so, they swept District 2AAAAA for the third straight year. The feat gave them the 3-seed in the tournament and a first-round bye, meaning their first match will be on Nov. 6 in the quarterfinals at the Albuquerque Public Schools Soccer Complex. What makes this feat more impressive is that the Lady Hilltoppers did it with only two seniors and an eighth-

Please see IMPROVE, Page B-7

WORLD SERIES ROYALS 10, GIANTS 0

Royals force Game 7

Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott celebrates after running for a touchdown during the second half of an Oct. 25 game against Kentucky at Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Ky. DAVID STEPHENSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Miss. State, Florida State top playoff list By Ralph D. Russo and Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press

Kansas City Royals’ Lorenzo Cain hits a RBI double during the third inning of Game 6 of the World Series on Tuesday against the San Francisco Giants in Kansas City, Mo. DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cain, Hosmer help Kansas City rout Giants

TODAY ON TV

By Ronald Blum

ters broke open the game with a seven-run second and battered the San Francisco Giants 10-0 Tuesday night to tie the World Series at three games apiece. “This is what we all prepared for. This is why we play the game,” Royals first baseman Eric Hosmer said. As bouncers rolled by infielders and bloops dropped in front of outfielders, the raucous roar at Kauffman Stadium swelled with every hit in the second and then got louder the rest of the night. Lorenzo Cain looped a two-run single — one of eight Royals to get hits in the seven-run burst

The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. couple hundred fans stood behind the Royals dugout for more than a half-hour after the final out, screaming and waving white rally towels. Bring on Game 7! Yordano Ventura, a 23-year-old rookie pitching with a heavy heart and the initials of late St. Louis outfielder Oscar Taveras on his cap, allowed three hits over seven stifling innings. Kansas City’s bat-

A

6 p.m. on FOX — World Series, Game 7, San Francisco at Kansas City

— and Hosmer chopped a two-run double over shortstop. “Guys stepped up in a big way tonight,” Cain said. Jeremy Guthrie starts Wednesday night for Kansas City and Tim Hudson for San Francisco in a rematch of Game 3, won by Kansas City 3-2. Hudson, 39, will become the oldest Game 7 starter in Series history. “We’re confident,” the Royals’ Billy Butler said. “Jeremy, every time out, gives us a chance to win.” Lurking is Madison Bumgarner, ready to pitch in relief after suffocating the Royals on a total of one run in winning Games 1 and 5. Giants manager Bruce Bochy elected not to start him on two days’ rest.

Please see ROYALS, Page B-7

GRAPEVINE, Texas — The College Football Playoff selection committee has spoken — and it likes the SEC. At least for now. Mississippi State, Florida State, Auburn and Mississippi are the top four teams in the first College Football Playoff rankings. The first of seven Top 25 rankings compiled by a 12-member selection committee was released Tuesday night. The selection committee will ultimately pick the four teams to play in the national semifinals and set the matchups for the other four big New Year’s Day bowls that are part of the playoff rotation. “It was extremely difficult, more difficult than any of us had expected having gone through our mock selections before,” Arkansas athletic director and committee chairman Jeff Long said. “There are 18 one-loss teams in FBS at this point in time, and the difference between many of them is very slim.” Oregon was fifth and Alabama was sixth, giving the Southeastern Conference’s West Division four of the top six teams. There are still four games remaining matching those SEC West rivals, starting with Saturday’s matchup of Auburn and Ole Miss in Oxford, Mississippi. The final rankings will be released Dec. 7, the day after the most of the conference championships are decided. “Everyone on the selection committee recognized that our rankings will change over the next six weeks,”

Please see LIST, Page B-8

NBA

Tony Parker helps Spurs edge Mavs in opener By Raul Dominguez The Associated Press

Tafoya’s Hall honor shows that age is no barrier

L

ife neither begins nor ends at of playing baseball on the weekends 50 for Rodney Tafoya. in the Men’s Senior Baseball League, It merely continues to the whether it’s in Albuquerque or Las next chapter. Vegas, Nev., or even Puerto Rico. He has 306 wins comHow else can you explain bined in that league and what this ageless wonder, a the Men’s Adult Baseball 1982 St. Michael’s graduate, League, as well as another has done on the pitching 94 Tafoya counts from his mound? Well, when it’s high-school and minor your passion, you will do league days over a 34-year what you can to ensure that career. you can do it for as long as you want. That dedication and James love was returned over So, Tafoya generally Barron the weekend, as Tafoya eschews those Saturday Commentary was named to the MSBL night get-togethers at the National Hall of Fame at a local watering hole and ceremony in Tempe, Ariz., the urge to hit a fast-food, one of the few players to earn such a drive-through lane for lunch. He’ll distinction. For Tafoya, it was more get up at 4 a.m. to run 6-8 miles in validation for a man who dreamed of complete darkness so that his legs are strong enough to go eight or nine playing in the big leagues, but an arm injury short-circuited that vision. innings. He does this just for the sheer joy Yet, it didn’t stop him from achiev-

ing other dreams, and his latest honor gave him pause to realize what he has done. “I received an email on my phone,” Tafoya said of his induction. “I read it, and thought, ‘This has to be a joke.’ So I called Steve [Sigler, the league’s founder and president] directly in New York, and [the email] was from him. It was from him and I immediately started bawling. “I was thinking, ‘This 20-year ride, what is this coming to? Does this mean it ends?’ ” Oh, no. Not for Tafoya. All he does it find another to achieve. For most of the past 10 years, he chased the 300-win plateau and reached it in May. He has played parts of the past three seasons in the Pecos League, even starting the inaugural game for the Santa Fe Fuego in 2012. Tafoya pitched for the Alpine Cowboys this past season and retired the one batter

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

he saw for the season — a groundout by Fuego infielder and Pecos League All-Star Nick Billinger, who was batting .461 at the time. Two weeks ago, he won No. 306 for the Seattle A’s in a 50-and-over regional tournament. Now, he is gearing up for another milestone — 400 wins. He’s already set the benchmark for wins in the MSBL, as Sigler told him the next pitcher is barely half way to Tafoya’s total. After that, who knows? All the Tafoya knows is that he’s not in the twilight of his baseball career. Not even close. “There doesn’t need to be a timetable or a number,” Tafoya said. “Age is just a number. If you have a passion about things that are important to you, you can play for as long as you want to play.” It’s on to the next chapter.

SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Tony Parker made a clutch shot in the fourth quarter. Manu Ginobili had a big game, and Spurs 101 Tim Duncan contributed with a Mavericks 100 double-double. San Antonio’s efficient performance on opening night looked awfully familiar. Parker made a go-ahead 3-pointer with 1:07 remaining, and the Spurs began their title defense with a thrilling 101-100 victory over the Dallas Mavericks on Tuesday. Parker finished with 23 points and Ginobili scored 20 for San Antonio, which shot 53 percent from the field. Tim Duncan had 14 points and 13 rebounds for his 14th double-double in a season opener, the most by any player in NBA history, according to Elias Sports. Dirk Nowitzki gave Dallas a 100-98 lead with a fadeaway jumper over Boris Diaw with 1:37 remaining, but

Please see SPURS, Page B-6

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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

BASKETBALL

HOCKEY

MLB PLAYOFFS World Series

NBA Eastern Conference

NHL Eastern Conference

(Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox

San Francisco 3, Kansas City 3 Tuesday, Oct. 28 Kansas City 10, San Francisco 0 Wednesday, Oct. 29 San Francisco (Hudson 9-13) at Kansas City (Guthrie 13-11), 6:07 p.m. Previous Results Gm 1: San Francisco 7, Kansas City 1 Gm 2: Kansas City 7, San Francisco 2 Gm 3: Kansas City 3, San Francisco 2 Gm 4: San Francisco 11, Kansas City 4 Gm 5: San Francisco 5, Kansas City 0

MLB Boxscore Tuesday Royals 10, Giants 0

San Francisco ab r GBlanc cf 4 0 Panik 2b 3 0 Posey c 3 0 Susac c 1 0 Sandovl 3b 3 0 Arias 3b 0 0 Pence rf 4 0 Belt 1b 4 0 Morse dh 4 0 Ishikaw lf 2 0 J.Perez lf 1 0 BCrwfr ss 2 0 MDuffy ss 1 0 Totals

Sharks 3, Avalanche 2, SO

BASEBALL

hbi 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0

Kansas City ab r AEscor ss 5 1 Aoki rf 3 1 JDyson cf 1 0 L.Cain rf 3 1 Hosmer 1b 5 1 BButler dh 4 0 AGordn lf 4 1 S.Perez c 4 1 Mostks 3b 4 2 Infante 2b 4 2

32 0 6 0 Totals

hbi 2 1 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 2 1 1 1 0 2 0 2 2 2 0

37 101510

San Francisco 000 000 000—0 Kansas City 071 010 10x—10 DP—San Francisco 2, Kansas City 1. LOB—San Francisco 10, Kansas City 7. 2B—Pence (3), A.Escobar (3), L.Cain (2), Hosmer (2), B.Butler (1), Moustakas (2), Infante (3). HR—Moustakas (1). IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Peavy L,0-2 1 1-3 6 5 5 1 2 Y.Petit 2-3 3 2 2 0 0 Machi 3 5 2 2 1 2 Strickland 2 1 1 1 1 0 Vogelsong 1 0 0 0 1 1 Kansas City Ventura W,1-0 7 3 0 0 5 4 Frasor 1 2 0 0 0 1 Ti.Collins 1 1 0 0 0 2 WP—Y.Petit. Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, Jeff Nelson; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Jim Reynolds; Left, Ted Barrett; Right, Hunter Wendelstedt. T—3:21. A—40,372 (37,903).

World Series RBI Leaders 40, Mickey Mantle, NY (AL) 39, Yogi Berra, NY (AL) 35, Lou Gehrig, NY (AL) 33, Babe Ruth, Bos-NY (AL) 30, Joe DiMaggio, NY (AL) 29, Bill Skowron, NY (AL)-LA (NL) 26, Duke Snider, Bkn-LA (NL) 24, Hank Bauer, NY (AL) 24, Bill Dickey, NY (AL) 24, Reggie Jackson, Oak-NY (AL) 24, Gil McDougald, NY (AL)

World Series HR Leaders 18, Mickey Mantle, NY (AL) 15, Babe Ruth, Bos-NY (AL) 12, Yogi Berra, NY (AL) 11, Duke Snider, Bkn-LA (NL) 10, Lou Gehrig, NY (AL) 10, Reggie Jackson, Oak-NY (AL) 8, Frank Robinson, Cin-Bal 8, Joe DiMaggio, NY (AL) 8, Bill Skowron, NY (AL)-LA (NL) 7, Goose Goslin, Was-Det 7, Gil McDougald, NY (AL) 7, Hank Bauer, NY (AL) 7, Chase Utley, Phi (NL)

W 0 0 0 0 0 W 0 0 0 0 0 W 0 0 0 0 0

L 0 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 0 1 L 0 0 0 0 0

Pct .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Pct .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Pct .000 .000 .000 .000 .000

GB — — — — — GB — — — — ½ GB — — — — —

94, Whitey Ford, NY (AL) 92, Bob Gibson, StL (NL) 62, Allie Reynolds, NY (AL) 61, Sandy Koufax, LA (NL) 61, Red Ruffing, NY (AL) 59, Chief Bender, Phi (AL) 56, George Earnshaw, Phi (AL) 56, Andy Pettitte, NY (AL) 52, John Smoltz, Atl (NL) 49, Waite Hoyt, NY (AL)-Phi (AL) 49, Roger Clemens, Bos-NY (AL)-Hou (NL) 48, Christy Mathewson, NY (NL)

World Series ERA Leaders ERA 0.29 0.36 0.83 0.87 0.89 0.95 0.99 1.00 1.01 1.06

World Series Champions 2013 — Boston (AL) 4, St. Louis (NL) 2 2012 — San Francisco (NL) 4, Detroit (AL) 0 2011 — St. Louis (NL) 4, Texas (AL) 3 2010 — San Francisco (NL) 4, Texas (AL) 1 2009 — New York (AL) 4, Philadelphia (NL) 2 2008 — Philadelphia (NL) 4, Tampa Bay (AL) 1 2007 — Boston (AL) 4, Colorado (NL) 0 2006 — St. Louis (NL) 4, Detroit (AL) 1 2005 — Chicago (AL) 4, Houston (NL) 0 2004 — Boston (AL) 4, St. Louis (NL) 0 2003 — Florida (NL) 4, New York (AL) 2 2002 — Anaheim (AL) 4, San Francisco (NL) 3 2001 — Arizona (NL) 4, New York (AL) 3

Atlantic GP Montreal 10 Tampa Bay 10 Ottawa 8 Detroit 8 Boston 11 Toronto 9 Florida 7 Buffalo 10 Metro GP N.Y. Islanders 9 Pittsburgh 8 Washington 8 N.Y. Rangers 9 Philadelphia 9 New Jersey 9 Columbus 9 Carolina 8

W 8 6 5 4 5 4 2 2 W 6 5 4 5 4 4 4 0

L 2 3 2 2 6 4 2 8 L 3 2 2 4 3 3 5 6

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

Pts 16 13 11 10 10 9 7 4 Pts 12 11 10 10 10 10 8 2

GFGA 27 26 34 26 22 17 18 17 29 28 25 25 10 16 11 33 GFGA 35 31 33 22 25 19 27 30 29 32 28 33 25 30 15 33

Western Conference

Western Conference

Southwest W L Pct GB San Antonio 1 0 1.000 — New Orleans 1 0 1.000 — Houston 0 0 .000 ½ Memphis 0 0 .000 ½ Dallas 0 1 .000 1 Northwest W L Pct GB Denver 0 0 .000 — Minnesota 0 0 .000 — Oklahoma City 0 0 .000 — Portland 0 0 .000 — Utah 0 0 .000 — Pacific W L Pct GB Golden State 0 0 .000 — L.A. Clippers 0 0 .000 — L.A. Lakers 0 0 .000 — Phoenix 0 0 .000 — Sacramento 0 0 .000 — Tuesday’s Games New Orleans 101, Orlando 84 San Antonio 101, Dallas 100 Houston at L.A. Lakers Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia at Indiana, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Washington at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Atlanta at Toronto, 5:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Memphis, 6 p.m. Chicago at New York, 6 p.m. Detroit at Denver, 7 p.m. Houston at Utah, 7 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Golden State at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Oklahoma City at Portland, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Washington at Orlando, 5 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 6 p.m. New York at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Utah at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.

Central GP W L OL Pts GFGA Nashville 8 5 1 2 12 19 16 Chicago 9 5 3 1 11 22 15 Dallas 9 4 2 3 11 32 33 Minnesota 8 5 3 0 10 27 14 St. Louis 8 4 3 1 9 20 18 Winnipeg 9 4 5 0 8 19 24 Colorado 10 2 4 4 8 22 32 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GFGA Anaheim 10 8 2 0 16 31 19 Los Angeles 9 6 1 2 14 24 15 San Jose 11 6 4 1 13 35 30 Vancouver 9 6 3 0 12 31 27 Calgary 11 5 4 2 12 27 24 Edmonton 9 4 4 1 9 26 32 Arizona 8 3 4 1 7 21 32 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Tuesday’s Games San Jose 3, Colorado 2, SO Montreal 2, Calgary 1, SO Minnesota 4, Boston 3 Winnipeg 4, N.Y. Islanders 3 Philadelphia 3, Los Angeles 2, OT Pittsburgh 8, New Jersey 3 Ottawa 5, Columbus 2 Toronto 4, Buffalo 0 Tampa Bay 7, Arizona 3 Anaheim 1, Chicago 0 St. Louis 4, Dallas 3, OT Vancouver 4, Carolina 1 Monday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 5, Minnesota 4 Edmonton 3, Montreal 0 Wednesday’s Games Detroit at Washington, 5:30 p.m. Nashville at Edmonton, 8 p.m.

NBA Calendar

Los Angeles 1 0 1 0—2 Philadelphia 2 0 0 1—3 First Period—1, Philadelphia, Raffl 5 (Giroux, Voracek), 5:24. 2, Los Angeles, Toffoli 5, 13:08 (sh). 3, Philadelphia, VandeVelde 1 (Voracek, N.Schultz), 19:16. Second Period—None. Third Period—4, Los Angeles, Richards 1 (Doughty, Clifford), 5:01. Overtime—5, Philadelphia, B.Schenn 3, 2:36. Penalties—Quick, LA, misconduct, 2:36. Shots on Goal—Los Angeles 14-10-151—40. Philadelphia 20-7-14-2—43. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 0 of 2; Philadelphia 0 of 2. Goalies—Los Angeles, Quick 5-1-2 (43 shots-40 saves). Philadelphia, Emery 4-0-1 (40-38). A—19,873 (19,541). T—2:35.

Oct. 28 — 2014-15 regular season begins. Jan. 5 — 10-day contracts can be signed. Jan. 10 — Contracts guaranteed for rest of season. Feb. 13-15 — All-Star weekend, New York. Feb. 19 — Trade deadline (1 p.m.) April 15 — Last day of regular season. April 18 — Playoffs begin.

NBA Boxscores Tuesday Pelicans 101, Magic 84

World Series Strikeout Leaders

(Minimum 25 Innings pitched) IP ER Madison Bumgarner, KC 31.0 1 Jack Billingham, Cin 25.1 1 Harry Breechen, StL 32.2 3 Babe Ruth, Bos 31.0 3 Sherry Smith, Bkn 30.1 3 Sandy Koufax, LA (NL) 57.0 6 Mariano Rivera, NNY 36.1 1 Hippo Vaughn, Chi (NL) 27.0 3 Monte Pearson, NY (AL) 35.2 4 C. Mathewson, NY (NL)101.2 12

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

ORLANDO (84) Harris 9-18 6-6 25, O’Quinn 2-8 0-0 4, Vucevic 7-15 1-2 15, Payton 2-8 0-0 4, Fournier 3-11 3-3 11, A.Gordon 5-8 0-0 11, B.Gordon 1-8 3-4 5, Ridnour 0-3 2-2 2, Dedmon 1-2 1-2 3, Green 0-1 0-0 0, Marble 2-2 0-2 4. Totals 32-84 16-21 84. NEW ORLEANS (101) Evans 5-15 2-5 12, Davis 10-22 6-9 26, Asik 7-10 0-3 14, Holiday 4-11 0-0 8, E.Gordon 3-8 1-3 8, Anderson 9-22 1-3 22, Salmons 0-0 0-0 0, Fredette 0-6 2-2 2, Rivers 2-5 3-6 7, Withey 0-1 0-0 0, Babbitt 0-0 0-0 0, Ajinca 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 41-101 15-31 101. Orlando 25 16 23 20—84 New Orleans 24 24 30 23—101 3-Point Goals—Orlando 4-11 (Fournier 2-4, Harris 1-2, A.Gordon 1-2, O’Quinn 0-1, B.Gordon 0-2), New Orleans 4-17 (Anderson 3-6, E.Gordon 1-2, Evans 0-1, Rivers 0-2, Holiday 0-3, Fredette 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Orlando 62 (Vucevic 23), New Orleans 71 (Asik, Davis 17). Assists—Orlando 17 (Payton 7), New Orleans 20 (Evans 6). Total Fouls—Orlando 25, New Orleans 17. A—17,097 (16,867).

Spurs 101, Mavericks 100 DALLAS (100) Parsons 2-10 0-0 5, Nowitzki 7-11 4-4 18, Chandler 4-8 0-0 8, Nelson 3-7 0-0 9, Ellis 11-21 3-4 26, Smith 0-0 0-0 0, Harris 6-12 3-4 17, Wright 2-2 2-2 6, Aminu 0-2 0-0 0, Crowder 2-2 1-1 5, Jefferson 1-3 3-4 6. Totals 38-78 16-19 100. SAN ANTONIO (101) Belinelli 5-8 2-2 15, Duncan 5-10 4-5 14, Bonner 0-2 0-0 0, Parker 9-15 1-2 23, Green 5-9 0-0 13, Ginobili 6-13 6-7 20, Diaw 2-6 0-0 5, Baynes 2-3 0-0 4, Joseph 3-4 0-0 7. Totals 37-70 13-16 101. Dallas 24 29 20 27—100 San Antonio 26 19 31 25—101 3-Point Goals—Dallas 8-21 (Nelson 3-5, Harris 2-5, Ellis 1-2, Jefferson 1-2, Parsons 1-4, Nowitzki 0-1, Aminu 0-2), San Antonio 14-28 (Parker 4-4, Belinelli 3-6, Green 3-6, Ginobili 2-6, Joseph 1-2, Diaw 1-3, Bonner 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Dallas 39 (Chandler 10), San Antonio 40 (Duncan 13). Assists—Dallas 17 (Ellis 6), San Antonio 23 (Diaw, Ginobili 6). Total Fouls—Dallas 20, San Antonio 20. Technicals—Chandler, Nowitzki. A—19,615 (18,797).

NHL Summaries Tuesday Flyers 3, Kings 2, OT

Penguins 8, Devils 3 New Jersey 1 2 0—3 Pittsburgh 1 4 3—8 First Period—1, New Jersey, Zubrus 2 (T.Zajac, Jagr), :09. 2, Pittsburgh, Comeau 2 (Dupuis), 7:17. Second Period—3, New Jersey, Josefson 1 (Gionta), 2:12 (sh). 4, New Jersey, Ruutu 2 (Gionta, Greene), 5:14. 5, Pittsburgh, Malkin 4 (Hornqvist, Letang), 8:56 (pp). 6, Pittsburgh, Hornqvist 5 (Despres), 12:42. 7, Pittsburgh, Adams 1 (Sutter), 17:35. 8, Pittsburgh, Crosby 6 (Kunitz, Despres), 18:49. Third Period—9, Pittsburgh, Dupuis 4 (Downie, Maatta), 5:29 (pp). 10, Pittsburgh, Downie 1 (Comeau, Sutter), 13:47 (pp). 11, Pittsburgh, Crosby 7, 16:40. Shots on Goal—New Jersey 8-5-6—19. Pittsburgh 9-14-10—33. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 0 of 3; Pittsburgh 3 of 7. Goalies—New Jersey, Schneider 4-3-2 (23 shots-18 saves), Clemmensen (0:00 third, 10-7). Pittsburgh, Fleury 5-2-0 (19-16). A—18,650 (18,387). T—2:26.

Jets 4, Islanders 3 Winnipeg 0 3 1—4 N.Y. Islanders 1 2 0—3 First Period—1, N.Y. Islanders, Nelson 6 (Boychuk, Okposo), 1:16 (pp). Second Period—2, Winnipeg, Ladd 3 (Little, Enstrom), 1:14 (pp). 3, Winnipeg, Postma 1, 4:06 (pp). 4, Winnipeg, Trouba 1 (Stuart, Little), 11:42. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares 4 (Nelson, Boychuk), 14:28 (pp). 6, N.Y. Islanders, Grabovski 3 (Visnovsky), 15:52. Third Period—7, Winnipeg, Ladd 4 (Little, Frolik), 3:31. Shots on Goal—Winnipeg 7-12-11—30. N.Y. Islanders 9-5-7—21. Power-play opportunities—Winnipeg 2 of 4; N.Y. Islanders 2 of 5. Goalies—Winnipeg, Pavelec 4-4-0 (21 shots-18 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Halak 3-3-0 (30-26). Referees—Steve Kozari, Kelly Sutherland. Linesmen—Mike Cvik, Scott Driscoll. A—11,508 (16,170). T—2:28.

San Jose 1 0 1 0—3 Colorado 0 1 1 0—2 San Jose won shootout 2-0 First Period—1, San Jose, Burns 4 (Mueller, Thornton), 9:23. Second Period—2, Colorado, Tanguay 4 (Johnson, Hejda), 13:24 (sh). Third Period—3, Colorado, Landeskog 4 (O’Reilly, Hejda), 3:04. 4, San Jose, Couture 5 (Braun, Wingels), 5:03. Overtime—None. Shootout—San Jose 2 (Marleau G, Pavelski G), Colorado 0 (Tanguay NG, Duchene NG). Shots on Goal—San Jose 23-18-82—51. Colorado 8-9-12-4—33. Power-play opportunities—San Jose 0 of 4; Colorado 0 of 3. Goalies—San Jose, Niemi 5-2-0 (33 shots-31 saves). Colorado, Varlamov 1-2-3 (51-49). A—14,552. T—2:54.

Wild 4, Bruins 3 Minnesota 1 0 3—4 Boston 1 2 0—3 First Period—1, Minnesota, Niederreiter 2 (Vanek), 4:51. 2, Boston, Griffith 2 (Krejci, Trotman), 18:23. Second Period—3, Boston, Griffith 3 (Campbell, Lucic), 5:23. 4, Boston, Lucic 2 (Krug, Griffith), 16:59 (pp). Third Period—5, Minnesota, Parise 4 (Granlund, Spurgeon), 4:21. 6, Minnesota, Fontaine 1 (Carter, Cooke), 6:34. 7, Minnesota, Scandella 2 (Zucker, Coyle), 14:07. Shots on Goal—Minnesota 13-1118—42. Boston 10-10-8—28. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 0 of 2; Boston 1 of 2. Goalies—Minnesota, Backstrom 1-1-0 (28 shots-25 saves). Boston, Rask 4-4-0 (42-38). A—17,565. T—2:35.

Senators 5, Blue Jackets 2 Ottawa 1 1 3—5 Columbus 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Columbus, Savard 2 (Anisimov, Wennberg), 5:19 (pp). 2, Ottawa, MacArthur 3 (Karlsson, Ryan), 6:22 (pp). Second Period—3, Ottawa, Smith 2 (Ceci), 1:44. 4, Columbus, Atkinson 4 (Wisniewski, Johansen), 18:57. Third Period—5, Ottawa, Karlsson 3 (Turris), 3:41. 6, Ottawa, Chiasson 3 (MacArthur, Stone), 10:06 (pp). 7, Ottawa, MacArthur 4 (Turris), 11:08. Shots on Goal—Ottawa 5-13-16—34. Columbus 14-15-9—38. Power-play opportunities—Ottawa 2 of 4; Columbus 1 of 6. Goalies—Ottawa, Lehner 3-0-1 (38 shots-36 saves). Columbus, McElhinney 0-1-0 (34-29). A—14,749. T—2:33.

Maple Leafs 4, Sabres 0 Buffalo 0 0 0—0 Toronto 0 1 3—4 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Toronto, Bozak 4 (Kessel, Rielly), 19:10 (pp). Third Period—2, Toronto, Kessel 5 (Santorelli), 4:18. 3, Toronto, van Riemsdyk 4 (Rielly, Bozak), 5:18. 4, Toronto, Gardiner 1 (Winnik, Komarov), 9:17. Shots on Goal—Buffalo 4-4-2—10. Toronto 17-12-8—37. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 0 of 2; Toronto 1 of 6. Goalies—Buffalo, Neuvirth 1-3-0 (37 shots-33 saves). Toronto, Bernier 2-3-1 (10-10). A—18,898. T—2:25.

Lightning 7, Coyotes 3 Arizona 0 2 1—3 Tampa Bay 2 2 3—7 First Period—1, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 2 (Gudas, Johnson), 7:46. 2, Tampa Bay, Filppula 2 (Killorn, Stamkos), 12:18. Second Period—3, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 3 (Johnson, Palat), 3:20. 4, Arizona, Doan 1 (Stone, Vermette), 14:07. 5, Tampa Bay, Boyle 2, 17:32. 6, Arizona, Erat 3 (Hanzal, Gagner), 18:52. Third Period—7, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 4 (Johnson, Brewer), 8:23. 8, Tampa Bay, Boyle 3 (Brown, Stralman), 9:26. 9, Arizona, Crombeen 1 (Vitale, Ekman-Larsson), 12:43. 10, Tampa Bay, Carle 1 (Johnson, Sustr), 18:15 (pp). Shots on Goal—Arizona 3-14-8—25. Tampa Bay 12-16-7—35. Power-play opportunities—Arizona 0 of 0; Tampa Bay 1 of 3. Goalies—Arizona, M.Smith 2-4-0 (33 shots-27 saves), Dubnyk (9:26 third, 2-1). Tampa Bay, Bishop 5-1-1 (25-22). A—17,511 (19,204). T—2:29.

Ducks 1 Blackhawks 0 Anaheim 0 0 1—1 Chicago 0 0 0—0 First Period—None. Second Period—None. Third Period—1, Anaheim, Smith-Pelly 3, 11:32 (sh). Shots on Goal—Anaheim 10-10-5—25. Chicago 9-11-18—38. Power-play opportunities—Anaheim 0 of 1; Chicago 0 of 3. Goalies—Anaheim, Gibson 2-1-0 (38 shots-38 saves). Chicago, Darling 1-1-0 (25-24). A—21,233 (19,717). T—2:25.

Blues 4, Stars 3, OT St. Louis 1 1 1 1—4 Dallas 1 1 1 0—3 First Period—1, Dallas, Oleksiak 1 (Seguin, Ja.Benn), 13:10. 2, St. Louis, Tarasenko 2 (Lehtera, Shattenkirk), 13:45. Second Period—3, Dallas, Seguin 7 (Spezza, Daley), 5:28. 4, St. Louis, Lehtera 2 (Tarasenko, Steen), 6:05. Third Period—5, Dallas, Daley 4 (Goligoski), 3:27 (pp). 6, St. Louis, Tarasenko 3 (Lehtera), 11:37. Overtime—7, St. Louis, Tarasenko 4 (Shattenkirk, Pietrangelo), 1:28 (pp). Shots on Goal—St. Louis 11-5-7-4—27. Dallas 7-10-11-0—28. Power-play opportunities—St. Louis 1 of 5; Dallas 1 of 4. Goalies—St. Louis, Elliott 3-2-1 (28 shots-25 saves). Dallas, Lehtonen 4-0-3 (27-23). A—16,232 (18,532). T—2:41.

College Football Playoff Rankings

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

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

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

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

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

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

National Conference East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 6 2 0 .750 213 167 Philadelphia 5 2 0 .714 203 156 N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 .429 154 169 Washington 3 5 0 .375 171 200 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 3 4 1 .438 167 208 New Orleans 3 4 0 .429 199 188 Atlanta 2 6 0 .250 192 221 Tampa Bay 1 6 0 .143 133 223 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 2 0 .750 162 126 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 222 191 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 180 222 Minnesota 3 5 0 .375 139 173 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 6 1 0 .857 164 139 San Francisco 4 3 0 .571 158 165 Seattle 4 3 0 .571 172 150 St. Louis 2 5 0 .286 136 210 Week 9 Thursday, Oct. 30 New Orleans at Carolina, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 2 Arizona at Dallas, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Washington at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. San Diego at Miami, 1 p.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. Denver at New England, 4:25 p.m. Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 3 Indianapolis at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Tennessee

NFL Calendar Oct. 28 — Trade deadline. Dec. 28 — Regular season ends. Jan. 3-4, 2015 — Wild-card playoffs. Jan. 10-11 — Divisional playoffs.

AP Pro32 Power Rankings The Associated Press Pro32 NFL Power Rankings, as voted by a 12member panel, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 28, total points based on 32 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 32nd-place vote, and previous ranking: W L T Pts Pr 1. Denver (12) 6 1 0 384 1 2. Arizona 6 1 0 368 5 3. New England 6 2 0 360 8 4. Dallas 6 2 0 329 2 5. Philadelphia 5 2 0 326 3 6. Detroit 6 2 0 300 10 7. Indianapolis 5 3 0 294 4 8. San Diego 5 3 0 287 7 9. Green Bay 5 3 0 284 6 10. Seattle 4 3 0 277 12 11. San Francisco 4 3 0 273 11 12. Cincinnati 4 2 1 265 14 13. Pittsburgh 5 3 0 249 17 14. Baltimore 5 3 0 248 9 15. Kansas City 4 3 0 246 13 16. Buffalo 5 3 0 208 16 17. Miami 4 3 0 187 15 18. New Orleans 3 4 0 177 21 19. Houston 4 4 0 160 22 20. Cleveland 4 3 0 157 20 21. Carolina 3 4 1 154 18 22. N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 127 23 23. Chicago 3 5 0 116 19 23. Washington 3 5 0 116 27 25. Minnesota 3 5 0 101 25 26. St. Louis 2 5 0 86 24 27. Atlanta 2 6 0 68 25 28. Tennessee 2 6 0 61 28 29. Jacksonville 1 7 0 44 30 30. N.Y. Jets 1 7 0 41 29 31. Tampa Bay 1 6 0 31 31 32. Oakland 0 7 0 12 32

NCAA FOOTBALL The AP Top 25

Thursday No. 2 Florida St. at Louisville, 5:30 p.m. Saturday No. 1 Mississippi State vs. Arkansas, 5:15 p.m. No. 4 Auburn at No. 7 Mississippi, 5 p.m. No. 5 Oregon vs. Stanford, 5:30 p.m. No. 6 Notre Dame vs. Navy at Landover, Md., 6 p.m. No. 9 Georgia vs. Florida at Jacksonville, Fla., 1:30 p.m. No. 10 TCU at No. 20 West Virginia, 1:30 p.m. No. 11 Kansas State vs. Oklahoma State, 6 p.m. No. 12 Baylor vs. Kansas, 2 p.m. No. 13 Ohio State vs. Illinois, 6 p.m. No. 14 Arizona at No. 25 UCLA, 8:30 p.m. No. 15 Arizona State vs. No. 18 Utah, 9 p.m. No. 17 Nebraska vs. Purdue, 1:30 p.m. No. 19 Oklahoma at Iowa State, 10 a.m. No. 21 East Carolina at Temple, 10 a.m. No. 24 Duke at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m.

Oct. 28, 2014 Record 1. Mississippi St. 7-0 2. Florida St. 7-0 3. Auburn 6-1 4. Mississippi 7-1 5. Oregon 7-1 6. Alabama 7-1 7. TCU 6-1 8. Michigan St. 7-1 9. Kansas St. 6-1 10. Notre Dame 6-1 11. Georgia 6-1 12. Arizona 6-1 13. Baylor 6-1 14. Arizona St. 6-1 15. Nebraska 7-1 16. Ohio St. 6-1 17. Utah 6-1 18. Oklahoma 5-2 19. LSU 7-2 20. West Virginia 6-2 21. Clemson 6-2 22. UCLA 6-2 23. East Carolina 6-1 24. Duke 6-1 25. Louisville 6-2 The College Football Playoff Selection Committee will issue weekly rankings each Tuesday, with the final rankings being announced Sunday, Dec. 7. The playoff semifinals will match the No. 1 seed vs. the No. 4 seed, and No. 2 will face No. 3. The semifinals will be hosted at the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl on Jan. 1, 2015. The championship game will be on Jan. 12, 2015 at Arlington, Texas.

TENNIS ATP WORLD TOUR BNP Paribas Masters Tuesday at Paris Purse: $3.66 million (Masters 1000) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles - Second Round Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Kenny de Schepper, France, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (4). Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 7-6 (3), 1-0, retired. Tommy Robredo, Spain, def. Vasek Pospisil, Canada, 6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (5). Gael Monfils, France, def. Joao Sousa, Portugal, 6-1, 6-4. David Goffin, Belgium, def. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-3. Lucas Pouille, France, def. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, 6-1, 6-4. Second Round Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, 6-3, 6-4. Tomas Berdych (5), Czech Republic, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 6-4, 6-7 (3), 6-2. Kevin Anderson (14), South Africa, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 6-4, 7-6 (8). Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. Gilles Simon (15), France, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4.

WTA TOUR Garanti Koza Tournament of Champions Tuesday at Sofia, Bulgaria; Purse: $750,000; Surface: Hard-Indoor Round Robin Singles Group Serdika Flavia Pennetta (3), Italy, def. Alize Cornet (6), France, 6-1, 6-2. Standings Pennetta, 1-0 (2-0); Ekaterina Makarova, 0-0 (0-0); Garbine Muguruza, 0-0 (0-0); Cornet, 0-1 (0-2). Group Sredets Dominika Cibulkova (2), Slovakia, def. Tsvetana Pironkova (8), Bulgaria, 6-3, 7-6 (6). Carla Suarez Navarro (5), Spain, def. Andrea Petkovic (4), Germany, 6-0, 6-4. Standings Suarez Navarro, 1-0 (2-0); Cibulkova, 1-0 (2-0); Pironkova, 0-1 (0-2); Petkovic, 0-1 (0-2).

ON THIS DATE October 29 1950 — Detroit’s Wally Triplett gains 294 yards in kickoff returns and ends up with 331 total yards as the Lions pound the Los Angeles Rams 65-24 on 41 third-quarter points. 1977 — Russell Erxleben of Texas kicks a 60-yard field goal in a 26-0 rout of Texas Tech for his third field goal of the season over 60 yards, an NCAA record. 1983 — Gil Fenerty rushes for 337 yards on a 18 carries and scores six touchdowns to lead Holy Cross to a 77-28 rout of Columbia. 1984 — Orlando Pizzolato wins the New York Marathon in 2:14:53 and Grete Waitz captures the women’s title in 2:29:30. 1994 — Arnold Mickens rushes for more than 200 yards for the eighth consecutive game, breaking the NCAA Division I-AA single-season rushing record as Butler beats Evansville 49-14. Mickens’ 244 yards gives him a total of 2,111, surpassing the record of 2,016 set by Towson State’s Tony Vinson. 2005 — Saint Liam comes through in the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Belmont Park with a stirring victory in America’s richest race. Taking the lead at the top of the stretch, Saint Liam holds off the challenge of Flower Alley and gives Hall of Fame jockey Jerry Bailey his fifth win in the Classic and 15th victory in the Breeders’ Cup.

Spurs: Receive championship rings Continued from Page B-5 Parker drained a 3-pointer 30 seconds later in front of the Mavericks’ bench off a feed from Diaw. Parker was 4 for 4 from long range, matching a career high for 3s in a game. “It was a great basketball game, you can’t kick off the season with a better game than this for the fans — there’s no way,” Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said. “Unfortunately, the slim margins of winning and losing are all that anybody remembers. If we get one more stop one more basket than we’re all him here singing a different tune. That’s the world we live in the Western Conference.” Monta Ellis scored 26 points for Dallas, and Nowitzki had 18. Devin Harris finished with 17 points.

Chandler Parsons, who signed with the Mavericks in the offseason, missed a 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds remaining. His shot hit the front of the rim. The miss extended San Antonio’s streak to five wins following a championship celebration, but it was the first since capturing its last title in 2007. “It’s special,” Ginobili said. “I think it helps you actually. Sometimes you don’t play that sharp because it’s the first game of the season. You have to move from the success of the previous season to the new beginning. But it all gets your emotions up so you want to get out on the court and do a lot of things, hustle, jump, run and win.” Following a video recap of the 2014 season narrated by actor and Spurs fan Samuel L. Jackson, NBA Com-

missioner Adam Silver presented San Antonio’s staff and players with their championship rings. The inscription inside the ring was “Good to Great,” which was coach Gregg Popovich’s mantra last season. The ring presentation even drew a series of fist pumps from the normally stoic Popovich. PELICANS 101, MAGIC 84 In New Orleans, Anthony Davis had 26 points, 17 rebounds and nine blocks, leading New Orleans to the season-opening win. Ryan Anderson, coming back from surgery on a herniated disk that cost him more than half of last season, scored 22 points. The Pelicans’ new 7-foot center, Omer Asik, had a doubledouble with 14 points and 17 rebounds.

San Antonio Spurs’ Tony Parker, center, shoots over Dallas Mavericks’ Dirk Nowitzki and Monta Ellis during the first half of Tuesday’s opener in San Antonio, Texas. ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


SPORTS

Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-7

PREP ROUNDUP

Waldorf senior trio finishes last regular home match on top The New Mexican

The trio of Keifer Nace, Cecelia Barnard and Alex Chastenet have given plenty to the Santa Fe Waldorf volleyball program. On Tuesday, they received S.F. Waldorf 3 the recognition deserving of graduating seniors. E. Christian 0 The trio played its last home game in its last home match together, which helped the Lady Wolves complete a dominating 25-12, 25-17, 25-6 District 1A win over Evangel Christian at Christian Life Academy. That comes on the heels of a three-game sweep of Mosquero on Monday, in which Waldorf (16-3 overall, 10-1 1A) beat the District 4A runnerup to Class A’s No. 1 team, Elida. It was the way Waldorf head coach Josie Adams, who has coached the seniors since they were freshmen, wanted them to go out. “They were in every rotation, and they were blocking and killing every ball,” Adams said. And setting, in Nace’s case. She had 23 assists, to go along with three aces and five kills. Barnard

had 15 kills and a pair of aces, while Chastenet had five kills, 14 digs and two aces herself. More than that, though, is the leadership they provide the rest of the team. “They were just so amazing and it was really great,” Adams said. “They really give back to the younger player on the team, and they are just amazing women both on the off the court.” While it was the final regular-season home match for Waldorf, it might not be the final home match of the season. The Lady Wolves sit at 10-1 in 1A, tied with Coronado for the district lead. If both teams win out the rest of the season, it will set up a district playoff that likely will be played on Nov. 4. Waldorf has its district finale against Victory Christian, while Coronado plays New Mexico School for the Deaf on Thursday for its final match. ALB. VOLCANO VISTA 3, SANTA FE HIGH 1 It was the best performance in 1AAAAAA play for the Demonettes, but they ran out of gas as Volcano Vista escaped Toby Roybal Memorial

Gymnasium with a 22-25, 25-21, 26-24, 25-16 win. It was the ninth straight loss for the Demonettes, but their head coach, Sam Estrada, feels it’s a match that they can build on as they travel to Albuquerque on Thursday to play Cibola in the district finale. “Our setters had the best night of the season, both of them,” Estrada said of Bella ChristianPadilla and Shania Borrego. “They equally had quality sets, and they were putting the ball where they needed it to be.” Christian-Padilla had 19 assists, while Borrego added 16, most of which were fed to senior Kayla Herrera. She had 23 kills to go with 22 digs, which tied Allyjah Ramirez for the team high, and three aces. Brandee Fulgenzi recorded eight kills for Santa Fe High, which fell to 9-10, 0-7. SANTA FE PREP 3, PECOS 0 Senior night was just as sweet for the Blue Griffins in Prep Gymnasium, as they said goodbye to seven seniors on the 2AAA champions with a 25-13, 25-7, 25-11 district win over the Lady Panthers (8-11, 3-4). Prep (13-6, 7-0) dominated the match from start to finish, as head coach Kiran Bhakta had his

Royals: Home teams have won 23 of last 28 Continued from Page B-5 “This guy is human. I mean, you can’t push him that much,” Bochy said. “He’ll be available if we need him, but to start him, I think that’s asking a lot.” Kansas City can be comfortable in this bit of history: Home teams have won nine straight Game 7s in the Series since Pittsburgh’s victory at Baltimore in 1979, including the Royals’ 11-0 rout of St. Louis in 1985. And the Giants have lost all four of their World Series finales pushed to the limit. “I had a very, very strong feeling that whoever won Game 6 was going to win Game 7,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We have to wait until tomorrow to see if my theory’s correct.” Teams with the home-field advantage have won 23 of the last 28 titles, including five in a row. This Series has followed the exact pattern of the only other all-wild card matchup in 2002, when the Giants

won the opener, fell behind 2-1, took a 3-2 lead and lost the last two games at Anaheim. “I can’t wait to get out there tomorrow and have some fun,” Hudson said. There was a moment of silence before the game in honor of Taveras, the 22-yearold killed in an automobile accident Sunday in the Dominican Republic. Ventura wrote “RIP O.T #18” in silver marker on the left side of his cap and brought a Dominican flag to his postgame interview. “From the minute that I found out about Oscar, I said this game was going to be dedicated to him,” Ventura said through a translator. “I prepared myself mentally and physically for this game, and I’m very proud to be a Dominican, and that’s why I brought the flag.” He escaped his only trouble in the third, when he walked the bases loaded with one out and got Buster Posey to ground a 97 mph fastball into a double play. Ventura

threw fastballs on 81 of 100 pitches, reaching up to 100 mph. Yost was able to rest the hard-throwing back of his bullpen: Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis enter Game 7 with two days off and closer Greg Holland with four. Kansas City out-hit the Giants 15-6 in another blowout in the first Series in which five games were decided by five runs or more. All nine Royals had hits by the third, matching the mark set by Arizona against the Yankees in Game 6 in 2001. Cain drove in three runs and was among six Royals with two hits each. Mike Moustakas homered in the seventh against Hunter Strickland, ending a 36-inning homerless streak in the Series, the longest since 1945. Peavy was charged with five runs and six hits in 1 1-3 innings, leaving with a career Series record of 0-2 with a 9.58 ERA in three starts. His record at Kauffman Stadium is 1-7 with a 7.28 ERA.

Improve: Los Alamos started season 4-6 Continued from Page B-5 grader in goal. The rest of the team falls in between those two groups and comprises the core of a team that has done the improbable. “We have been playing at such a high level and have surpassed a lot of peoples’ expectations because we came in with only two seniors,” firstyear head coach A.J. Herrera said. “We are very excited for the 3-seed because a lot of people didn’t think that we were going to be getting that when they saw us play throughout the year.” It also came as somewhat as a surprise to the Lady Hilltoppers, who started the season 4-6 before going on the streak. “Getting the 3-seed was incredible, especially since we didn’t have the best start to the season,” junior Catie McDonald said. “It was so well-earned, we worked hard for that.” Although they had their critics, the Lady Hilltoppers didn’t have any doubts about how talented they were, even while they were losing. Los Alamos’ first five losses were by one goal each, and there were early signs of a strong finish. “Ever since the start of the

season, we have improved every match, and I think we realized that,” McDonald said. “I think it came down to the realization that we have the ability to go further than a lot of people thought we would.” Los Alamos played some stiff competition in those first 1o matches — Farmington (the fourth seed in AAAAA), No. 1 Albuquerque St. Pius X and Rio Rancho, the top seed in AAAAAA — and it helped the Lady Hilltoppers develop a mental edge that kept them perfect in the second half of the season. “I think playing the more difficult teams in the beginning of the season gave us more confidence to play harder and better with the other teams,” senior defender Cory Carnes said. Helping Los Alamos finish strong was the 33 goals and 22 assists McDonald provided throughout the season. Those numbers are slightly better than the 30 goals and 10 assists she had last year as a sophomore to lead the team in those categories, and the ability to score and find teammates that can score is something she developed since she started playing soccer at 2 years old. “I have such an offensive

mindset that I’m going to go to goal either way, whether it’s passing the ball or going myself,” said McDonald, whose mother is former Los Alamos head boys soccer coach Ann Cernicek. “My life is soccer, so I’ve had a lot of practice, I’ve had a lot of really good coaching, and I know what to do in a lot of situations.” Herrera believes McDonald is the best forward in the state, regardless of classification. He thinks she is so good that he is currently speaking with coaches from the University of Maryland, where he played soccer after a prep career at St. Pius, and the University of Tennessee to see if they believe in her as much as he does. “I know she’s capable of playing at the Division-I level,” Herrera said. “Catie is one of those players that doesn’t come around very often. She has come up big in situations where the team needed her.” But Herrera isn’t just bringing college connections. After spending seven years as the head boys soccer coach at Santa Fe High, Herrera took over the program in March after Jiri Kubicek was at the helm for 22 years. Although Kubicek won two state titles,

Herrera still brings a lot to the table. “Coach Kubicek gave his heart to the program, but Coach A.J. has brought something to the team that we really needed,” McDonald said. “It’s really incredible how much we’ve improved this year because of him.” Herrera puts a bigger emphasis on conditioning than Kubicek did, and the players believe that is what is going to get them past the other teams in this tournament. “He’s definitely pushing us, and that’s good because we definitely needed to be pushed,” Carnes said. “He wants us to be in shape, and being in shape is one of the most important things, I think.” Despite being in charge for just one season, Herrera has the Lady Hilltoppers poised to bring back their first state championship since 2003. Of course, Herrera wants a state title to the list of accomplishments, but he wants it more for a young team that has exceeded all expectations. “I really want it for the girls,” he said. “I think they have proven that they are committed to this team and to each other, and it’s fun to see.”

SOCCER NOTEBOOK

Area teams on fire as they hit the postseason By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

Several area teams are entering the postseason very hot. The Capital boys, seeded third for the Class AAAAA State Tournament, are on a 10-match win streak in which it did not allow any goals. The third-seeded Los Alamos girls are also on a 10-match win streak. The No. 3 Las Vegas Robertson enters the A-AAAA girls tournament having won nine in a row to get a first-round bye for the first time since 2012. The highest-seeded teams from the area — the No. 2 Santa Fe Prep boys and the No. 2 St. Michael’s girls — won seven and 10 straight, respectively, before losing their final

match of the regular season. These five Northern New Mexico schools got top-4 seeds and a first-round bye this year. That is up from four teams that received first-round byes last fall. uuu

The Desert Academy boys soccer team snuck into the A-AAAA tournament as the final seed despite not winning a single District 2A-AAAA match. The Wildcats finished district play 0-5-1, but a 2-0 loss to No. 2 Santa Fe Prep in the final match of the regular season and a 0-0 tie with No. 10 St. Michael’s earlier in the year may have been enough to get them in. “That tie was key,” Desert

Academy head coach Rob Lochner said. The No. 12 Wildcats will travel to Albuquerque on Saturday to play No. 5 Hope Christian at 10 a.m. uuu

The only area schools to get both their boys and girls teams into the tournament are Prep, St. Michael’s, Los Alamos and Taos. Those are the same Northern New Mexico schools that accomplished the feat last year. uuu

The top seeds on both A-AAAA tournaments have remained unchanged since the 2010 season, when it was A-AAA until this season. The Albuquerque Sandia

Prep boys and the Albuquerque Hope Christian girls have been the top seeds in the class since 2011. The Sundevils are in the hunt to get their fifth straight title while the defending champion Lady Huskies, who are undefeated at 19-0-1, are trying to repeat and earn their third title since 2010. No. 8 Monte del Sol will play host to No. 9 Socorro at Santa Fe High on Saturday, instead of the Municipal Recreation Complex, for a chance to play the Sundevils in the quarterfinals at the Albuquerque Public School Soccer Complex on Nov. 6 at 3:15 p.m. The Santa Fe Prep girls soccer team travels to East Mountain on Saturday for a chance to play the Lady Huskies in the quarterfinals.

seniors play almost exclusively for the first two games before going back to a traditional lineup. Only Bianca Gonzales filled in for Courtney Timlin, who is still nursing a sore shoulder. “We wanted it to be a special senior night and a special ‘Dig Pink’ night,” Bhakta said. “I think the girls are realizing that when we have somebody on the ropes, we need to go out and finish them off.” Desiray Anderson led the seniors, as she has all year long, with 13 kills, 10 assists, one ace and one block. Joy Maran added six kills and led the team with five blocks and four aces. Myla Borden had six kills and a bloc, while Timlin added 13 assists. DULCE 3, MONTE DEL SOL 1 The Lady Hawks moved into a third-place tie in 2AAA with a 22-25, 25-20, 25-13, 25-21 win over the Lady Dragons in Dulce. Monte del Sol got 17 digs from Kaylee Maxon, while Ariana Rodriguez had a team-high six kills. Savannah Bustamante had four kills, while Lizabeth Nava had three kills, eight assists and two aces. Monte del Sol is 3-15, 0-7.

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. GOLF 9 p.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, CIMB Classic, first round, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 1 a.m. on TGC — LPGA, Taiwan Championship, first round, in Taipei (delayed tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. on FOX — World Series, game 7, San Francisco at Kansas City NBA 6 p.m. on ESPN — Chicago at New York 8:30 p.m. on ESPN — Oklahoma City at Portland NHL 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Detroit at Washington

LOCAL TV CHANNELS FOX — Ch. 2 (KASA) NBC — Ch. 4 (KOB) ABC — Ch. 7 (KOAT) CBS — Ch. 13 (KRQE) Univision — Ch. 41 (KLUZ) ESPN — Comcast: Ch. 9 (Digital, Ch. 252); DirecTV: Ch. 206; Dish Network: Ch. 140 ESPN2 — Comcast: Ch. 8 (Digital, Ch. 253); DirecTV: Ch. 209; Dish Network: Ch. 144

ESPNU — Comcast: Ch. 261 (Digital, Ch. 815); DirecTV: Ch. 208; Dish Network: Ch. 141 FOX Sports 1 — Comcast: Ch. 38 (Digital, Ch. 255); DirecTV: Ch. 219; Dish Network: Ch. 150 NBC Sports — Comcast: Ch. 27 (Digital, Ch. 837): DirecTV: Ch. 220; Dish Network: Ch. 159 CBS Sports — Comcast: Ch. 274; (Digital, Ch. 838); DirecTV: Ch. 221; Dish Network: Ch. 158 ROOT Sports — Comcast: Ch. 276 (Digital, 814); DirecTV: Ch. 683; Dish Network: Ch. 414

PREP VOLLEYBALL SCORES

Varsity

Junior varsity

C team

Pojoaque Valley def. Taos, 25-17, 25-21, 25-15. Records — Pojoaque 9-9 overall, 4-1 District 2AAA; Taos 4-13, 0-5.

Santa Fe Prep def. Pecos, 25-23, 16-25, 15-13.

Pecos def. Santa Fe Prep, 25-7, 25-13.

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

Today Volleyball — Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 6 p.m. Española Valley at Capital, 6:30 p.m.

Thursday Volleyball — Coronado at N.M. School for Deaf, 5 p.m. Mesa Vista at Questa, 5 p.m. McCurdy at Escalante, 5 p.m. Peñasco at Mora, 5 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory at Monte del Sol (at GCCC), 6 p.m. Desert Academy at Pecos, 6 p.m. Santa Fe High at Albuquerque Cibola, 6:30 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. St. Michael’s at Albuquerque Bosque, 7 p.m. Taos at Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Cross-country — St. Michael’s at District 5AAAA meet in Albuquerque (Bosque host), 3 p.m.

Friday Football — Española Valley at Capital, 7 p.m. St. Michael’s at Portales, 7 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Taos, 7 p.m. Los Alamos at Bernalillo, 7 p.m. McCurdy at Escalante, 7 p.m. Cross-country — District 2AAAAA meet at Cochiti Middle School, 3 p.m. (Los Alamos, Española Valley, Capital, Bernalillo, Del Norte)

Saturday Football — Santa Fe High at Albuquerque Volcano Vista (at APS Community), 1 p.m. Boys soccer — Class A-AAAA State Tournament (first round): Desert Academy at Abq. Hope Christian (at Sandia Prep), 10 a.m. Socorro at Monte del Sol (at Santa Fe High), 1 p.m. Portales at Taos, 3 p.m. St. Michael’s at Hatch Valley, 4 p.m. Class AAAAA State Tournament (first round): Santa Teresa at Los Alamos, 11 a.m. Girls soccer — Class A-AAAA State Tournament (first round): Santa Fe Preparatory at East Mountain, 1 p.m. Kirtland Central at Taos, noon Volleyball — Escalante at Mesa Vista, 1 p.m. Dulce at Desert Academy (at NMSD), 2 p.m. Santa Fe Waldorf at Victory Christian (at Graceway Christian), 5 p.m. McCurdy at Mora, 5 p.m. Albuquerque Del Norte at Los Alamos, 6 p.m. Bernalillo at Española Valley, 6:30 p.m. Cross-country — West Las Vegas, Taos, Pojoaque Valley, Las Vegas Robertson at District 2AAAA meet in Taos, 9 a.m. Santa Fe High, Volcano Vista, Rio Rancho, Cleveland, Cibola at District 1AAAAAA meet in Albuquerque (Volcano Vista host), 9 a.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Swimming/diving u The Santa Fe High and Capital swimming and diving teams will have an organizational meeting Wednesday at the Genoveva Chavez Community center pool at 4:30 p.m. For more information, call coach Theresa Hamilton at 660-9818.

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

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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


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SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

NFL

Cowboys await word on Romo back injury tured lung. Romo didn’t even come IRVING, Texas — Tony close to a rally Romo’s dramatic return from this time. The his latest back injury doesn’t last drive of mean he is cleared to face the regulation, next opponent. starting at the Coach Jason Garrett said Dallas 3, stalled Tony Romo Tuesday that Dallas was waitafter one first ing on additional testing for an down. The injury he says is unrelated to the game ended in the extra period herniated disk Romo sustained on a four-and-out sequence in Washington last December, when the Cowboys couldn’t when surgery kept him out of a convert second-and-2 on three season-ending loss to Philadelstraight pass plays. phia with a playoff berth on the “He’s been in this kind of situline. ation before and played very Romo hurt his back against well,” Garrett said. “He’s very the Redskins again Monday credible. He’s mentally and night, getting what Garrett physically tough. He seemed called a contusion on a thirdcapable of doing what we asked quarter sack. X-rays were him to do on the sidelines. I negative, and Romo took a pain think we made the right deciinjection before returning for sion. Unfortunately it didn’t the final series of regulation and work for us.” a failed possession in overtime The Cowboys scored on both of a 20-17 loss that snapped Dalpossessions Romo missed, with las’ six-game winning streak. backup Brandon Weeden getAfter saying on his radio ting a boost on his first snap show earlier in the day that he from Murray’s 51-yard run to anticipated Romo being ready set up a field goal. Weeden then to face the Cardinals (6-1), Garled an 80-yard drive capped by rett was more evasive when he a 25-yard touchdown pass to met with reporters. The coach Jason Witten. said Romo “seemed good” Garrett dismissed the notion when they spoke by phone, but of whether he considered stickhe hadn’t seen the quarterback ing with Weeden once owner before Romo went for a CT Jerry Jones delivered the news scan. to him on the sideline that The Cowboys (6-2) were off Tuesday, and Romo has skipped Romo would be able to return. “Tony is our starting quarterthe Wednesday practice every back, so there’s no discussion week during the regular seathere,” Garrett said. “If Tony son as part of his post-surgery was capable of playing and if routine. He had a procedure to Tony was functional and able to remove a cyst from his back in play, Tony was going to go back April 2013 and missed all the in when he was ready to do so.” offseason workouts last year. And Romo didn’t think the “We’ve just got to wait and injury had anything to do with see how he feels, obviously,” a closing sequence that Garrett said. “Because we included his fifth sack and an played late last night, we’ll be more abbreviated anyway, more intentional grounding penalty on third and 1. of a jog through-type mode.” “I think it was their defense Garrett said it was a medion the last series or two that cal decision to allow Romo to affected it more than anything return, but didn’t discount the else,” Romo said. “They had the resolve of a quarterback who led a comeback victory over the right call on a couple times that Redskins while playing with the took away what we wanted.” The question now is whether herniated disk and did the same the Redskins took away Romo thing against the 49ers in 2011 for another game, or longer. with cracked ribs and a punc-

By Schuyler Dixon The Associated Press

Bailey calls it a career after 15 years in NFL By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press

DENVER — Former teammate Brian Dawkins called Champ Bailey “a great conserver of energy,” a rare superstar who was never in a rush to get anywhere “unless it was on a football field.” In that dawdling, you can count retirement. That finally came Tuesday, 60 days after Bailey was released by the New Orleans Saints when a nagging foot injury prevented him from displaying the speed and skills that led to his cornerback-record dozen Pro Bowl berths in Washington and Denver. He had workouts with the Lions and Ravens and interest from other teams but decided to pursue a new chapter, possibly in broadcasting. “Every professional athlete knows and understands that at some point his career will end and it will be time to move on to another phase in life. For me, that time is now,” Bailey said in a statement released by the Broncos, for whom he played from 2004-13. “I have been truly blessed. I have been able to play this NFL game I love for 15 seasons and yet, it seems like only yesterday that my dreams came true when I received the call from Charley Casserly letting me know the Redskins had made me their first pick in the 1999 draft,” Bailey said. The seventh overall pick that year, the University of Georgia star spent five seasons in Washington before the Broncos traded star running back Clinton Portis to the Redskins for the game’s premier shutdown cornerback. Bailey was the most decorated defender in franchise history with eight Pro Bowl berths while with the Broncos. When GM John Elway returned to his beloved franchise, his first order of business was signing Bailey to an extension.

“Champ was the pillar in this organization for a long, long time,” Elway said. “He brought great stability to the Broncos Champ Bailey not only as a player but as a person through his ability and leadership. When I came here in 2011, he was the guy that we were going to build around and we were fortunate to have him for three more years to get this team back on track. He was a big part of that turnaround.” Peyton Manning paid him the ultimate compliment, saying Bailey “had unbelievable cover skills and unbelievable ball skills. He caught the ball like a wide receiver did. Going all the way back to my days playing against him in college, he was truly a great competitor with talent and work ethic. That’s what made Champ such an incredible player.” Bailey took many a young cornerback under his wing, among them Chris Harris Jr., who tweeted, “Blessed to be able to learn and play opposite Champ for 3 years,” and added the hashtags HOF and TBE for the surefire Hall of Famer. Although quarterbacks usually avoided throwing in his direction, Bailey still found a way to get involved and make an impact. He had 52 interceptions, more than any active cornerback. He prided himself on his technique and tackling abilities. In 215 regular season games, Bailey had 983 tackles, three sacks, nine forced fumbles and five fumble recoveries. “The thing about Champ was he had great ability as a shutdown corner while also not being afraid to stick his nose in there and be a part of the run game,” Elway said. “He was a complete corner with tremendous toughness and ability to cover.”

Army coach accepts blame for NCAA violations and win at all costs.” The recruiting excursion Jan. 25 also resulted in the disciplinA contrite Jeff Monken ing of 20 cadets, two officers accepted responsibility on and two coaches. Monken said Tuesday for a football recruitthe trip to a downstate New ing trip that happened a month York mall with 14 prospecafter he was hired as head tive recruits was organized by coach at Army and resulted in staff members there before he minor NCAA violations. arrived as head coach. “Everything that happens in “We didn’t have a supthis program is my responsibil- port staff,” said Monken, who ity. It was wrong,” Monken said. was hired in late December. “I’m disappointed it happened. “In between meetings with I don’t like having my reputaprospects, I was interviewing coaches, just trying to get a protion and my name dirtied. I gram going.” didn’t come to West Point thinking that I’m just going to The Gazette of Colorado change my ideals, my integrity Springs first reported the bus By John Kekis

The Associated Press

trip on Saturday, a week before Army hosts service-academy rival Air Force. West Point officials began investigating it in March, according to an internal review by Lt. Col. Shannon Miller, who was ordered to look into the allegations. Football coaches knew about what happened on the bus trip but did not immediately tell academy leaders or the NCAA, the report said. Academy officials said there was no officer supervision on the trip, which resulted in incidents of misconduct, including underage drinking at a bowling

alley in the mall among members of the team and several recruits. Some cadets said they had seven drinks in 90 minutes. “There were people on the bus that shouldn’t have been on the bus,” Monken said. “They’re 20 years old. They’re going to make mistakes.” According to the Gazette, the report from Lt. Col. Miller also found that two female cheerleaders were on the trip and kissed a football player and a recruit. The report also said Army football recruiters use female cadets to help sell West Point.

List: Final rankings will be released Dec. 7 No. 3 was where the differences started between the playoff rankings and the Long said. “I think that’s important for media poll. us to emphasize. We expect our rankings The AP voters had Alabama at No. 3 and to change over the next six weeks. One Auburn at No. 4. Oregon was fifth, Notre week’s rankings won’t influence the next Dame was sixth and Ole Miss was seventh week’s rankings.” after losing for the first time this season at TCU was seventh, Michigan State was LSU on Saturday. Ole Miss beat Alabama eighth, Kansas State ninth and Notre Dame at home earlier this month. was 10th. This is the first year for the playoff forMississippi State and defending national mat in college football, and the list is the champion Florida State are the only unde- first indication of how the committee is feated teams left among the Big Five conevaluating teams’ playoff potential. ferences. While Ole Miss received a better rank“It’s cool,” Mississippi State quarterback ing than Alabama, head-to-head victories Dak Prescott said. “That’s something you weren’t always the deciding factor for the can never take away from the university or committee. this program. First-ever ranking, first team Arizona, which won at Oregon, is 12th. to be No. 1, so that’s pretty cool for the uni- Baylor, which beat TCU, is 13th. versity.” Long said in both cases the head-to-head The Bulldogs and Seminoles also loser had the better overall resume. Long hold the first two spots in the AP Top 25. said Oregon’s victories against Michigan

Continued from Page B-5

State and UCLA stood out. And Baylor’s lack of quality opposition so far held back the Bears. “They have not had a strong schedule outside of their win against TCU,” Long said. The committee creates small groups of teams, debates their merits and ranks the teams using as many votes as needed to come up with a consensus. Members are given reams of data on each FBS team and each member is allowed to judge those numbers however they determine is best. The committee members gathered Monday at the Gaylord Texan Hotel in Grapevine, Texas, just outside of Dallas, and did most of their work on Day 1. Long said the committee worked for about 10 hours total on the rankings. By the time the rankings were released on ESPN at 5:30 MDT, most of the committee members were already on their way home.

CALENDAR NOVEMBER

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

and speaking confidently in a class of just 15 students. Commit to excellence for your daughter now! Prepare her to enter the high school of her choice. Attend our Open House! Santa Fe Girls’ School, 310 W. Zia Road! Accepting applications for 2015-16. Call 8203188 or visit our blog: blogs.santafegirlsschool.org.

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 5th, 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 SeNOVEMBER curity benefits; and Special rules on divorced spouses and survivor benefits. RSVP is required. Call 505-216-0838 or email Register. 92ND STREET Y- The new season of SantaFe@1APG.com to register. “92nd Street Y” programs on DVD will start at Beit Tikva on Tuesday, November 4th at 3:30 pm and at 6:30 pm. The topic of this weekday NOVEMBER double header will be “The Glass Cage,” with Nicholas Carr and Tim Wu, discussing the consequences of automation and comput- JOHN OF GOD: HEALING MIRAerization. Admission is $12 at the door. For CLES Explore the life of John of God who more information: call 505-820-2991 or email has facilitated the miraculous healings of tens beittikvasantafe.org. of thousands. John of God is a full trance

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2) Legacy planning and generational training to sustain wealth transfer; 3) Economic realities and equity/bond investment choices; 4) Tax code changes and planning strategies; and 5) Insurance protection vehicles. RSVP is required. Call 505-216-0838 or email FinancialHealthWorkshop@gmail.com to register.

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

WE ARE LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS WITH A BUSINESS BACKGROUND. Would you like to use

medium used by spirit Beings of Light to per- your experience to help someone find a job?

THE SANTA FE RAILYARD COM- form physical surgeries without anesthesia; Please consider volunteering with the 50+ MUNITY CORPORATION will have its also mental, emotional and spiritual healings. Employment Connection and help others in monthly Board of Directors’ Meeting on Tuesday, November 4th, 2014 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Southwest Conference Room at Christus St. Vincent’s, 455 St. Michael’s Dr. The public, neighbors, tenants, and all interested persons are encouraged to attend. Agenda will be available 24 hours in advance of the meeting at the office at 332 Read Street (505982-3373) and posted at www.sfrailyardcc. org http://www.sfrailyardcc.org/.

NOVEMBER

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Slide show film, talks, sitting in the healing current. Wear white Saturday afternoon if possible. Friday, November 7, 7PM and Saturday, November 8, 10AM until 4PM at Santa Fe Soul Center, 2905 Rodeo Park Drive E #3. $65 donation pre-registered / $75 at door. Register at www.johnofgodboulder.com/santafe.html.

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

NOVEMBER

SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDEN - is looking for fun & festive musical enter-

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tainment, and small choir groups to perform

FINANCIAL EDUCATION WORK- at GLOW - A Winter Lights Event in the GarSHOP - This Complimentary two-day den. GLOW opens December 4 and runs until

SANTA FE GIRLS’ SCHOOL: workshop is offered by five Santa Fe profes- Jan 3 on selected evenings. Early Bird tickOPEN HOUSE, November 5, 6-8 pm. sionals at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa ets at reduced rates available until November Give your daughter the best middle school experience possible. Imagine her actively engaged in academics, fitness, fine arts and elective classes. Imagine her finding her voice

Fe Trail, on Monday and Tuesday, November 10th and 11th, from 3 to 5:30pm. You will learn about: 1) Trust creation and how to minimize conflict in managing estate matters;

15. Santa, illuminated domes, hot cocoa, live entertainment and more. Fun for the whole family. Call 505-471-9103, www.santafebotanicalgarden.org.

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

NOW INCLUDES FREE CALENDAR LISTING ON EXPLORESANTAFE.COM


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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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New museum exhibit follows 1,000-year history of Jews in Poland. Travel, C-2

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For better butternut, season at the end By J.M. Hirsch The Associated Press

We tend to associate vinaigrettes with salad, but they actually are an easy — and speedy — way to add tons of flavor to all manner of dishes. One of my favorites is roasted vegetables. Too often, we only season roasted veggies before they go into the oven. While this certainly can produce delicious results, it can be limiting. By adding the seasonings before the vegetables are roasted, you effectively rule out any delicate flavors that can’t hold up to a sustained heat for a prolonged period. And that’s where a vinaigrette comes in for this easy roasted butternut squash recipe that’s perfect for Thanksgiving. We start by oiling some cubed butternut squash, then roasting it until lightly browned outside and tender inside. Only once it’s fully cooked do we season it. And for that we use a lightly warmed lemon vinaigrette spiked with toasted cumin and fennel seeds. The result is intensely flavorful and incredibly balanced. And the best part is that it takes almost no extra time or effort than traditional roasting. FENNEL-CUMIN ROASTED BUTTERNUT SQUASH Total time 45 minutes (15 minutes active); makes 8 servings 4 pounds butternut squash Olive oil 2 teaspoons fennel seeds 2 tablespoons cumin seeds 2 tablespoons lemon juice Kosher salt and ground black pepper Heat the oven to 400 degrees. Preparation: Peel and seed the squash, then cut it into 1-inch chunks. Mound the squash on the baking sheet, then drizzle with several tablespoons of olive oil. Toss with your hands to coat evenly, then spread in an even layer. Roast for 15 minutes, then use a spatula to turn the pieces and roast for another 15 minutes, or until evenly browned. During the final 5 minutes of roasting, in a small dry skillet over low heat, toast the fennel and cumin seeds, stirring constantly, until fragrant, about 2 to 3 minutes. Remove the skillet from the heat and stir in 2 tablespoons of olive oil and the lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper. When the squash is done, transfer to a bowl. Drizzle the dressing over it and gently toss to coat. Serve warm. Fennel cumin roasted butternut squash, a dish perfect for Thanksgiving. MATTHEW MEAD ASSOCIATED PRESS

Side Dish What’s on tap in and around Santa Fe KNIFE SKILLS AND PUMPKIN CARVING AT THE SANTA FE CULINARY ACADEMY Hone your knife skills and learn to carve pumpkins with Chef Rocky Durham. Includes dinner. Cost is $45 When: 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 29 Where: Santa Fe Culinary Academy, 112 W. San Francisco St No. 300 More information: www.santafe culinaryacademy.com SFCC HALLOWEEN FESTIVAL AT THE SANTA FE COMMUNITY COLLEGE Candy for the kiddies, with free trick or treating. Plus, bring your canned goods to donate to the Student Food Bank. Free. When: 3-6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 30 More information: www.sfcc.edu HALLOWEEN PARTY AT JUNCTION Tricks and treats for the kids; drinks and treats for the adults. No cover. When: 9 p.m. to close Friday, Oct. 31. Where: Junction, 530 S. Guadalupe St. More information: www.junction santafe.com THE HAUNT AT SKYLIGHT There will be suspension performance artists, there will be Meow Wolf, there will be fake blood. Cost: $12 presale,

At La Boca and Taberna, morcilla — Spanish blood sausage — is usually cooked crispy on the plancha (a flat griddle pan). JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Santa Fe chef James Campbell Caruso serves up a rare treat for the adventurous palate

Sausage that’s not for the squeamish

By Tantri Wija For The New Mexican

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round Halloween, many of us dress up like creatures that subsist entirely on blood. We watch TV shows and movies about people who drink blood (often very attractive people, some of whom sparkle in the sun), buy pints of fake blood to add punch to our costumes, and gleefully watch movies where characters are drowned in it as punishment for being mean to a religious girl at prom. But at the sight of the real stuff, many of us get the vapors, and most of us have never actually eaten it, although it is rich in protein and iron, and has supposedly (some might say mythical) rejuvenative properties. Because blood freaks people out. Blood is a taboo ingredient in both Islam and Judaism, and for many people, their only experience of tasting blood is when they drink their own, sucking it out of a cut finger or badly flossed gums. To people who don’t habitually eat it, like those who order their steak well-done, it may be theoretically disgusting. But blood as food has a long history beyond Vlad Drakula and Countess Bathory. It is a flavorsome addition to many other traditional foods across the globe, serving as a thickener or protein-rich flavor enhancer to dishes like English black pudding, Vietnamese tiet can (duck blood soup), or Finnish verilätty (blood pancakes), to name a few. The Maasai of East Africa drink it right out of the cow. “I like all that stuff,” says James Campbell Caruso, owner/head chef of popular tapas restaurants Taberna and La Boca in downtown Santa Fe. “Sometimes the black pudding in Great Britain is formed in a cup and you eat it hot, with maybe some chopped egg or parsley on top of it. That tends to be a little milder, whereas in Spain it gets a little more seasoned and garlicky.” Morcilla, Spanish blood sausage, is on the menu at both Taberna and La Boca, where it is a feature in several dishes in the restaurants’ everrotating seasonal menus. Rich, fatty and distinctively meaty, the filling has a texture more like

$20 at the door. When: 9 p.m. to close Friday, Oct. 31. Where: 139 W. San Francisco St. More information: www.skylight santafe.com THANKSGIVING FOOD DRIVE AT THE INN AT SANTA FE T’is the start of the season. Bring your donations of Thanksgiving foods to the Inn at Santa Fe and make Christmas come early for somebody. When: Nov. 1-9 Where: Inn at Santa Fe, 8376 Cerrillos Road More information: 474-9500 MARGARITA FESTIVAL AT BUFFALO THUNDER RESORT & CASINO Ring in the Day of the Dead with some salt and limes and gambling. Cost is $20. When: Noon to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 1 More information: www.buffalo thunderresort.com

Out of town MONTICELLO BALSAMICO DINNER AT LOS POBLANOS, ALBUQUERQUE A dinner at magical lavender-infused Los Poblanos featuring a top-shelf, New Mexico-made balsamic vinegar. Cost is $125. When: 6-10 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 1 Where: Los Poblanos, 4803 Rio Grande Blvd. NW More information: www.lospoblanos. com

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

Morcilla, Spanish blood sausage, is on the menu at chef James Campbell Caruso’s Taberna and La Boca, where it is a feature in several dishes in the restaurants’ ever-rotating seasonal menus. CLYDE MUELLER/NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

paté or, well, pudding, than regular sausage, and usually only a hint of that metallic iron flavor we associate with the blood we sometimes taste in our mouths when we, for example, get smacked in the face by a baseball. “Morcilla is basically cooked blood, pork and pork fat, with some onions and garlic and things like that,” explains Caruso, “and then it’s formed into a sausage, usually cooked a little bit more once it’s in the casing, and usually eaten hot or grilled.” The bulk of it is usually a carb, some-

times rice, sometimes potato, sometimes bread. At Caruso’s restaurants, morcilla is usually cooked crispy on the plancha (a flat griddle pan) and then sometimes served with a quail egg, a traditional Spanish tapa. “It’s really good with seafood,” he adds. “We do a shrimp and morcilla sausage tapa … it’s a great combination of flavors with the briny shrimp.” Caruso has prepared blood sausage before for his own personal consumption, using blood from a pig slaughtered by a friend, but he does not make the blood sausage for the restaurants in-house because, he said, the process is complicated by confusing FDA regulations and the resulting scarcity of good fresh blood. “It’s hard to find the blood legally,” he says. “It’s really unclear what you’re allowed to use. It’s not something the FDA has really clear regulations on — I can find it frozen sometimes, but it really tastes better fresh. There’s some things you can process here and some things you can’t. State to state, it’s different.” So Caruso imports his morcilla from Spain, where every part of the animal is traditionally put to use. “The one I use has beef blood and it has some pork in the sausage,” says Caruso. “It doesn’t even have any pork blood. The beef blood tends to congeal a little better and get firmer, and has a little more pronounced kind of mineral irony flavor. The pork is a little less so, a little milder … sweeter, I would say.” The idea of blood sausage produces a gag reaction in many people. Plus, knowing how their sausage is literally made, with producers up to their elbows in blood stuffing red goo into intestine casings, doesn’t help. Sometimes, Caruso says, it’s better if they try it first and find out afterward what it is they enjoyed so much. “We’ve had people order it as if they know what they’re talking about — and then they ask what it is, and they say, oh, gross, I would never have ordered that,” laughs Caruso. “We sell quite a bit of it, so it’s popular. And I think there’s people that really like it, and people that have tried it over the years and really enjoy it and didn’t know they liked it.”

Fresh ways to dress mashed potatoes By Alison Ladman The Associated Press

Truth is, mashed potatoes don’t need a whole lot of love to come out pretty darn amazing. A little butter (OK, a lot of butter), a little cream or milk (OK, a lot of cream or milk), a bit of salt and pepper, and some muscle really are all it takes to convert boring potatoes into one of our favorite comfort foods. And yet, we always feel tempted to tinker, tempted to tart up our taters, as it were, particularly around Thanksgiving. Luckily, potatoes are an easy canvas to work with, playing so well with so many flavors. To help you mix things up a bit this year, we came up with our favorite ways to doctor mashed potatoes. We also offer one bit of advice about making mashed potatoes, no matter how you plan to season them. After you boil and drain them, return them to the pot and set it over low heat for just a minute or so, shaking the pot now and again to prevent sticking. The heat helps dry out the potatoes, and dry potatoes are tastier potatoes (because the water doesn’t

dilute all that delicious fat you’re about to add). Start with 3 pounds of potatoes of your choice, peeled (if desired), then halved and boiled until tender. Drain well, mash, then follow one of the ideas below. Browned butter and sage: Melt 6 tablespoons butter in a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Cook for 5 minutes, then add a handful of fresh sage leaves and cook for 3 to 4 minutes more, or until the sage leaves are crisp and the butter is toasty smelling. Stir into the potatoes and season with salt and black pepper. Loaded baked potato: Stir in 1 cup sour cream, 1 cup crumbled cooked bacon, ⅓ cup chopped fresh chives and 1 cup shredded cheddar or jack cheese. Season with salt and black pepper. Caramelized onion: Slowly cook 3 large sliced yellow onions in 2 tablespoons of butter over medium heat until deep golden brown, about 20 minutes. If the pan begins to darken too much, add a couple tablespoons of water and continue cooking. Stir into the potatoes with ½ cup sour cream, salt and black pepper.

Ranch: Stir in ½ cup buttermilk, 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard, ½ teaspoon each of onion powder, paprika and garlic powder, and 1 tablespoon each of chopped fresh chives, chopped fresh dill and chopped fresh parsley. Season with salt and black pepper. Parmesan-truffle: Stir in ½ cup half-and-half, 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese and an ample amount of black pepper. Season with either salt and a drizzle of truffle oil, or with just truffle salt. Chili-corn: Stir in ½ cup sour cream, 1 cup thawed frozen corn kernels and ¼ cup pickled chopped jalapeños, then season with salt and cayenne pepper. Sausage and fennel: In a large, deep skillet, brown 1 pound of loose Italian sausage with 1 tablespoon of crushed fennel seed and a diced leek (white part only). Stir into the potatoes with ½ cup half-and-half. Adjust seasoning with salt and black pepper. Horseradish: Stir in 3 tablespoons prepared horseradish, more or less to taste, along with ½ cup buttermilk, ½ cup sour cream and salt.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

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For breaking news, blogs, events calendars and more, go to www.santafenewmexican.com

In brief American, US Airways merging mile programs in 2015

e His-

A visitor walks through a gallery at the Warsaw’S POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews depicting a street scene typical of those found between 1919 and 1939. The museum opened its core exhibition Tuesday. PHOTOS BY CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A rich Jewish life revealed Museum exhibit tells story of Jews in Poland, a 1,000-year history long overshadowed by the Holocaust By Vanessa Gera The Associated Press

WARSAW, Poland n the two millennia between ancient Israel and its modern rebirth, Jews never enjoyed as much political autonomy as they did in Poland, a land that centuries later would become intrinsically linked to the Holocaust. The story of this great flourishing of political and cultural life is part of a 1,000-year history told in a visually striking new museum, the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, which opens its long-awaited core exhibition to the public this week amid days of celebrations. The Polish and Israeli presidents will attend, along with Polish Holocaust survivors who helped create this memorial to the lost world of their ancestors. Polin is Hebrew for Poland, and also means “rest here,” a reference to a story Jews told themselves about their arrival in Poland in the Middle Ages: that they found favor from the rulers and were allowed to dwell there in tranquility. The result was centuries of a flourishing Yiddish-speaking civilization that made important contributions to Polish and world culture before being nearly wiped out by Nazi Germany. “The Holocaust has cast a shadow onto this great civilization and the generations of Jews who lived in Eastern Europe before the Second World War, as if those centuries of life were little more than a preface to the Holocaust,” museum director Dariusz Stola said. “But that is absurd. This museum stresses that 1,000 years of Jewish life are not less worthy of remembrance than the six years of the Holocaust.” Poland, in a union formed in the 16th century with Lithuania called the Commonwealth, became one of Europe’s largest and most ethnically diverse territories. Jews benefited from tolerance and a large degree of self-governance granted by the rulers, growing into the world’s largest Jewish community. Today 9 million of the world’s 14 million Jews can trace their ancestry to Poland. Despite their once-significant presence, memory of the Jews all but disappeared from public discourse in Poland in the communist era, leaving postwar generations largely unaware that their country was once a multiethnic land where Jews and other religions lived in relative peace, even avoiding the religious wars that devastated other European lands. Poland’s prewar population of 3.3 million Jews was reduced to 300,000 by Adolf Hitler’s genocide, while communist-era persecution drove most of those survivors away. Today there are fewer than 30,000 Jews in Poland, though the community is again growing. In the postwar decades, “Polish history didn’t speak of Jews. It spoke of cemeteries, of the Holocaust, of the ghettos. … It spoke exclusively of death,” said Piotr Wislicki, who

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The POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland, opened in 2013 for temporary exhibitions and cultural programs. It’s core exhibition tells the 1,000-year history of Jews in Poland, from the Middle Ages until today.

IF YOU GO Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews: 6 Mordechaja Anielewicza St., Warsaw, Poland; http://polin.pl/en/ basic-information. Open Mondays and Wednesday-Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and on Saturdays until 8 p.m., with last entrance for core exhibition 90 minutes before closing. Closed Tuesdays and major holidays. Admission is $9.

heads a Jewish historical association that raised $48 million for the exhibition. “And in the eyes of the world, Poland was just one big cemetery.” The museum is now part of a broader attempt by Poland’s leaders and elite to reclaim that pluralism, an ethos that took root after Poland threw off communism 25 years ago. Built with taxpayer money and private donations, the museum’s liberal message has been welcomed by young Poles, many of whom flock to the dozens of Jewish festivals that take place in Poland each year. Days before the grand opening, the museum opened its doors to people living in the neighborhood, an area once the heart of the Warsaw Ghetto. The neighbors, many of whom have never been in a synagogue and know little about Jewish history, were enthusiastic. “Even though we aren’t Jews, this is also a part of our history and we need to know about it,” said Agnieszka Rudkowska, a 28-year-old preschool teacher who reads the poems of the beloved 20th-century Polish Jewish writer Julian Tuwim to her schoolchildren. “You can sometimes hear negative opinions about Jews in the media, but it is important to know the truth.” Poland’s transformation is also changing perceptions of Poles by outsiders. Shmuel Afek, a social studies teacher at a Jewish high school in New York, said he used to accept what he calls the “standard narrative” about Poland and Jews. “That narrative says that the Nazis were bad but the Poles were worse, that the Holocaust happened in Poland because the Germans realized that the Poles were so antiSemitic they were prepared to collaborate,

and that, as former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir said, ‘Poles imbibe anti-Semitism with their mother’s milk,’ ” said Afek, a teacher for more than 25 years. “This is the kind of thing I grew up with and I didn’t question it.” His views changed radically after he began visiting Poland three years ago, meeting with Poles and becoming acquainted with the museum’s core exhibition ahead of its opening. He now knows that serious Holocaust scholarship has established that Germany carried out the Holocaust at death camps in Poland after occupying the country because that is where most of Europe’s Jews were. And that while some Poles collaborated, some risked — and even lost — their lives helping Jews. The museum carries these stories, along with episodes of persecution. Even the 16th and 17th centuries, sometimes called a golden age, saw Jews tortured and executed on false accusations of desecrating the host, the sacred bread said to become the body of Christ during Communion. One of the most unique aspects of the museum is how the story unfolds solely in the voices of those living through the time, never looking ahead or adding analysis from later eras. For instance, the gallery on the years between the two world wars shows an outburst of Jewish cultural and political creativity along with rising anti-Semitism, without hinting at the Holocaust to come. The idea is for visitors to experience the age as those living through it did. “We try to stay in the moment and not to foreshadow,” said Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, program director of the core exhibition. “It’s very important for us that our visitors not experience this period as a run-up to the Holocaust.” A few weeks ago an elderly Jewish-American couple who had left Poland before the war was brought to tears during a pre-opening visit to the exhibition, Wislicki said. “When I saw them cry I was afraid that the Holocaust gallery had made that impression on them,” Wislicki said. “But they said ‘no, we are happy that we can show our children and grandchildren that even with all the problems like immigration and pogroms, Jews had an interesting and wonderful life, and that there wasn’t only death.’ ”

This museum stresses that 1,000 years of Jewish life are not less worthy of “ remembrance than the six years of the Holocaust.” Dariusz Stola, museum director

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

DALLAS — American Airlines and US Airways will combine their frequent flier programs early next year and, for now, still base free flights on how many miles customers fly. Competitors Delta and United plan to base awards on how much customers spend, which helps travelers who buy expensive first-class and business-class tickets. But executives of American Airlines Group Inc. said Tuesday that they want to deal with the mechanics of folding the US Airways program into American’s AAdvantage before addressing such a major change. The combined program will have about 100 million members. AAdvantage is the granddaddy of airline frequentflier programs and was widely copied for three decades. In recent years, however, the trend has been to reward customers who spend the most money — often business travelers who buy costly, last-minute tickets. Leisure travelers usually lose benefits. Southwest Airlines and JetBlue Airways base awards on spending, and Delta Air Lines and United Airlines will do so beginning next year. The biggest change announced Tuesday will be the way customers get upgrades. Those who fly at least 100,000 miles a year, the top-level elite members, will continue to get unlimited upgrades on domestic flights. But once American and US Airways combine their reservations systems late next year, elites at the lower 25,000- and 50,000-mile levels will have to cash in mileage-based upgrade certificates or pay for upgrades on flights longer than 500 miles. That’s a loss of a free perk for lower-level US Airways elites.

Bruno Mars joins Rock in Rio; Vegas venue revealed LAS VEGAS, Nev. — MGM Resorts International and the organizers of Rock in Rio USA announced additions to the music festival’s lineup and offered a glimpse of what to expect when the event comes to Las Vegas, Nev., next year. Bruno Mars and Ed Sheeran will join Taylor Swift, Metallica and No Doubt performing on the main stage during the festival, which takes place May 8-9 and May 15-16. Singer Joss Stone also is slated to perform. Luis Justo, CEO of Rock in Rio, said the festival is intended to be an “immersive” experience. A Ferris wheel and 64-foot-high zip line are also planned for the site. The venue will accommodate 85,000 general admission ticket-holders each day and 4,000 VIPs, organizers said. A pre-sale last month attracted ticketbuyers from 32 countries, Justo said. The 37-acre open-air venue stretching from the corner of Las Vegas and Sahara boulevards next to the Circus Circus Resort is being built by MGM Resorts in concert with Cirque du Soleil and The Yucaipa Cos. investment firm. Tickets are expected to go on sale in January.

Wanted: Flamingos for St. Pete’s oldest attraction ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Sunken Gardens, this city’s oldest tourist attraction, is short of its biggest stars: pink flamingos. The Tampa Bay Times reports that Sunken Gardens is down to George and Lucy, its last two flamingos. Two Sunken Garden volunteers started a nonprofit quest called Flamingos Forever about a year ago to replenish the flock. With $30,000 raised, it’s now about halfway to what’s needed to purchase 20 flamingos. It’s best to acquire flamingos in groups of 20 or more, because they are most likely to mate when they feel the security of living in a large flock. For that reason, most breeders will only sell them in lots of at least 20. Anyone who donates $3,000 buys naming rights of a new bird. The Associated Press

LASTING IMAGES PUFFINS Faith Garfield took this photo of puffins at their cliff-top breeding grounds while on a July trip to Iceland.

Share your travel shot: Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. 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.

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Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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INVESTMENT PROPERTY 104 FAITHWAY: Downtown 7-plex $1,200,000. 1425 PASEO DE PERALTA: Downtown 9-plex $1,350,000. 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY: 8-plex $750,000, 1 3 0 1 - 1 3 0 3 RUFINA LANE: 9-plex, $1,050,000. 1616 BRAE: Triplex $350,000. Lot for Sale: Puesta del Sol, 2.5 Acres, water well, electric near, $185,000. Fo r Details: 505-471-4405. Investors Only, NO Realtors , NO Owner Financing. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

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

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, ALL UTILITIES PAID, $750 MONTHLY . Large kitchen, living room. Hardwood floors. Parking. 1 mile to Plaza; bus service close. No pets. 505-2046160 1 BEDROOM Camino Capitan, in small complex. Kiva fireplace, carpet. Clean, quiet. No Pets. Water & Sewer paid. $670 monthly, $670 Deposit. 505-982-0798.

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

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

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

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Rancho Siringo Road, fireplace, fenced yard. $729 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Rufina Lane, fireplace, washer, dryer hookups, close to Walmart. $729 monthly. 3 BEDROOM, 2-1/2 BATH C O N D O , washer, dryer, fireplace fantastic views. $1525 monthly.

Chamisa Management 505-988-5299

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

exploresantafetcom CONSTRUCTION

CLEANING

GARDENING

directory«

HANDYMAN

LANDSCAPING

SAND & GRAVEL

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

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

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

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

BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

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

FIREWOOD Dry Pinon & Cedar

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

GLORIA’SPROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE -Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed. 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072.

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

505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

CLASSIFIEDS

BEFORE

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

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

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

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

LANDSCAPING

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

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

Have a product or service to offer?

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

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

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

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

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

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

MOVERS

PERSONAL SERVICES

HANDYMAN

Where treasures are found daily

MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

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

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

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

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

PLASTERING

YARD MAINTENANCE

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

FALL CLEANUP! Trash, brush and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-204-3186. 505-316-2936.

PLASTERING RESTORATIONS

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

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

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

986-3000

*With your paid Business and Service Directory advertising program.


C-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

sfnm«classifieds APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

2 BEDROOM, clean, new apartment, washer & dryer, air conditioning, central heat. South Capitol area. $900 plus utilities. $600 security deposit. No pets. 505-986-9603.

LARGE 2 Story Home, 3,600 squ.ft. in Sunlit Hills. $1900 monthly plus utilities. Located on 6 acres. 505470-6297.

2 BEDROOM

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

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

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

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

Call Today!COURT SAN MIGUEL SANAPARTMENTS MIGUEL COURT 2029 CALLE LORCA APARTMENTS ( 12 Mo. Lease, 2029 CALLE LORCA required for special )

505471-8325 505-471-8325 SUNSET VIEWS CHARMING 1 BEDROOM, 700 SQ.FT. $655, DEPOSIT PLUS UTILITIES. LAUNDRY ACCESS. CATS OK. EAST FRONTAGE ROAD. 505-699-3005.

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

2500 SQUARE FEET

to place your ad, call

986-3000 LOST

STORAGE SPACE

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

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

COMMERCIAL SPACE

CONDOSTOWNHOMES 1 BEDROOM. Walk to Trader Joe’s and Railyard. Laundry room. Most utilities included. Available November 18. $775 monthly. Call 505-6600421.

505-660-6440

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

WAREHOUSES

Excellent Employment Opportunity

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

WAREHOUSE OFFICE SPACE ST. MICHAEL’S AREA

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

»announcements«

3 BEDROOM 2 bath. No pets, no smoking in home. $1150.00 plus utilities and deposit. Contact for appointment. 505-670-2625

Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!

LOST

$850 MONTH, 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. 1610-A Jay Street, Santa Fe. Available November 1. Washer, dryer hookups. Free microwave with 1-year lease with optional renewal. Move in: $1500. 1st month rent $850 plus $650 security. Call 505-670-0898 for appointment.

986-3000

Deposit Operations Floater Santa Fe

Responsibilities include a wide range of regular duties and assisting the VP of Deposit Operations in the daily operation of the Wire, ATM/ POS and CIF areas. Responsible for contacting customers that have potential debit card fraud activity; maintaining customer travel alerts; assisting with debit card order processing; assisting with ATM/POS dispute processing; reviewing the system input of CIF records for new accounts; completing a daily review of incoming wire exceptions, etc. Qualifications: At least three years of bank experience. Preferably in deposit operations; Good organizational, analytical, and communication skills; PC experience; data entry; attention to detail; Ability to multi-task and adjust priorities as needed. Must be able to work under pressure to meet daily deadlines; Ability to work with the public in a friendly, courteous and professional manner. Century Bank offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. Please apply online at www.mycenturybank.com. We are an EEO/ AA employer. NEEDED: BOOKKEEPER FOR A SMALL CPA FIRM. Must be well-versed in AR, AP, and GL. Send Resume to: PO Box 5373, Santa Fe, NM 87502

ADMINISTRATIVE CHARMING 5-ROOM COTTAGE. 84 4th of July Canyon Road (13 miles west of Estancia). Private & secure. Section 8 compliant. Hiking trails. Near Manzano Mountains. Call 505-231-3035, 3034.

3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. 1200 sq.ft. East Alameda, pueblo style. Vigas, kiva fireplace. Refrigerator, washer, dryer. Radiant heating. Walking distance to Plaza. No pets, nonsmoking. $1700 monthly. 505-9823907 LARGE HOME 4 BEDROOM 3 BATH. Radiant floor heating, outdoor kitchen. Kiva. 3 acres. Gated community. Near Marty Sanchez golf course. Pets OK. $3450 MONTH. 954-261-5800

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

We always get results! 986-3000

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

EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS

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

Live on beautiful estate.

MISSING!! BLACK CAT, LONG FUR, WHITE SPOT ON TUMMY- 10 YEARS OLD +, MISSING FROM HOPI ROAD NEAR OSAGE (CASA ALEGRA NEIGHBORHOOD) CALL 505-930-1667.

SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT...

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

DOMESTIC JOBS Laundress & Housekeeper

ACCOUNTING

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

3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, Tapia Estates. Beautiful contemporary. Vaulted ceilings. Granite countertops. Stainless appliances. Marble fireplace. Open concept. 2 car garage. Lease. No dogs. $1500 plus deposit. 505-4718413.

»jobs«

MAX, LITTLE SHEPHARD. Lost October 21. Lower Pacheco Canyon, end of County Road 74. Short hair. Tan. White and black markings. Wearing collar with ID tags. 8 months old. Much loved. 505-9863959.

4 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fireplace. Big yard. No smoking, no pets. $1500 monthly. $1200 deposit. 505-577-2910 2 BEDROOM, 1.75 BATH. Near Plaza, DeVargas. Privacy fence, washer, dryer, off-street parking. $1350 monthly includes utilities. Small pets considered. 505-907-3336

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

HOSPITALITY

Immediate openings for Full-time and Part-time:

Certified Activity Directors

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

Experienced Prep Cook

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

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

LOST CELL PHONE, PURPLE, Samsung Intensity3. Sunday, October 5, Los Pinos Road, La Cienega area. IRREPLACEABLE PICTURES. REWARD! THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! 505-9899126.

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

LOST DOG IN Arroyo Hondo, October 17th. Small white & apricot color, male. Crooked tail. Reward for information. 505-690-8607, 505-819-8446.

VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A MIDDLE SCHOOL RESIDENTIALACADEMIC COUNSELOR. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505989-6353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us . Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us .

Full time opening for:

PERSONALS

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

EDUCATION

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

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

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

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

santafenewmexican.com

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

$875 PLUS utilities. Cochiti Lake, 35 minutes to Santa Fe or Albuquerque. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Garage. Pet negotiable. 505-465-2480.

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

GUESTHOUSES

Open Machine Attendant Position for The Santa Fe New Mexican Newly remodeled 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Las Acequias Subdivision. $1200 monthly. Plus utilities. Non-smoker, no pets. 505-438-8142. By appointment. PECOS PALATIAL PALACE. RUSTIC AFRAME HOUSE on 1 1/2 acre, 1250 SQ FT, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, FIREPLACE, ETC, PETS, HORSES OK, MONTHLYYEARLY $957. MEL 505-228-2533.

EAST SIDE Casita, enclosed court yard. 1 bedroom, 3/4 bath, full kitchen. Great views. 650 square feet. WOOD FLOORS. $725 monthly plus. Near Museum Hill and Botanical Garden. References. 505-9830669. 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.

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

OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

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

GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE

Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266

HOUSES FURNISHED

Brenda Shaffer Bshaffer@sfnewmexican.com 1 New Mexican Plaza (off I-25 frontage road) Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No Phone Calls please. EOE

SPANISH STYLE, 2-STORY

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

Submit application or email resume to:

Successful completion of a drug test will be required prior to employment offer.

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

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

No Prior Machine Experience Required. Job duties include loading materials into machines. Must be able to communicate well with coworkers, stand for prolonged periods and able to lift 20 pounds, up to 70 pounds. This is an entry level position with opportunities for advancement. Shift times will vary based on company need.

OFFICE FOR rent. 430 Alta Vista. Utilities included. Offstreet parking. All professional neighbors. 400 sq.ft. $575 monthly plus deposit. 505-455-7688.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

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

Please call (505)983-9646. EAST SIDE one bedroom. 2 kiva fireplaces, private patio, and skylights. 6 month lease. $1,450 monthly. 800-272-5678.

ROOMMATE WANTED

EXECUTIVE HOME for lease, 2700 sq.ft. Exquisitely furnished. Available November 1. $3700 monthly. No pets, non-smoking. 214-384-7216

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

Part-time Receptionist Be a part of getting the news out to the community! Sangre de Cristo Chronicle is recruiting for the ideal candidate to fill a part-time Receptionist position (30 hours a week). General duties include answering the phone, greeting customers, entering advertising information into ATEX software and other data entry, taking subscriptions, and making the deposit, among other duties. Requirements include: high school diploma or equivalent; data entry and money-handling experience with the ability to be detail oriented and have great accuracy are musts! Good communication skills and ability to be confidential are mandatory. Pay is DOE. Submit references and job application or resume by Friday, October 10th to: Ellen Goins, General Manager/Editor Sangre de Cristo Chronicle Centro Plaza #11 Angel Fire, NM 87710


Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds MANAGEMENT

MEDICAL DENTAL

to place your ad, call

»merchandise«

986-3000

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

CLOTHING

C-5

FURNITURE

LEATHER COAT. Black. Quality. Ladies, Medium to Large. Supple leather, great shape. Only $25. 505-4749020.

FULL-TIME PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR

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

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

CALL 986-3000 MEDICAL DENTAL

Home Health Aide Part-time positions with Community Home Health Care and The Hospice Center. Must be graduate of Nurse Aide program or have exper in direct patient care in institutional setting or with home health or hospice agency. Apply on-line at pmsnm.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook. LPN/RN

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

CNA’S

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

UNIT MANAGER

WE HAVE A POSITION OPEN FOR A FULL-TIME UNIT MANAGERS. THE POSITION REQUIRES THAT YOU MUST BE A REGISTERED NURSE. THE DUTIES WILL BE TO HELP THE DON OVERSIGHT & SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT. THIS IS A SALARY POSITION. ANY ONE INTERESTED PLEASE COME BY AND SPEAK TO JUDY WILSON, RN/DON, OR CRAIG SHAFFER, ADMINISTRATOR, 505-982-2574 635 HARKLE Rd, Santa fe, NM 87505

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

RN Temporary, on-call position working with The Hospice Center. Provides services in patients’ places of residence. Apply on-line at pmsnm.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook. MISCELLANEOUS JOBS N A M B É, A 50+ year tabletop, giftware company, is looking for one (1) WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATE fulltime permanent and also for SEASONAL CONTRACT ASSOCIATES for its busy Distribution Dept. in Espanola. Successful applicants have attention to detail, are organized, and have a positive attitude. Excellent communication and numerical skills are a must. Positions are non-clerical, applicants must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Must be able to pass both a background and drug test. Salary DOE. Benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com .

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

GE REFRIGERATOR, 22"Dx30"Wx32"T. Small freezer. Great for dorm or office. $55. 505-474-9020

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

ART

2 BOONES FARM BUCKLES: Strawberry Hill, $25; Apple Wine, $20. 505-4666205

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

Seeking Registered Polysomnographic Technologist;

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

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

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

.FABULOUS INDIAN armoire. Very solid and handpainted with delightful designs inside and out. Eldorado 466-6612 or heywilli@gmail.com. $625 Cash only FICUS TREE, artificial. Beautiful, 8’ tall. Great background for home decorating. Only $30. 505-474-9020

FULL SIZE mattress, box springs and frame. Like new. $200. King Size mattress, box springs. Very good condition. $200. 505-690-9235.

TAOS FURNITURE - Couch, Love Seat and Chair. $500, call 505-988-1213.

WINGBACK CHAIR. Light blue Southwest pattern. Nicely scaled not too big, but still with classic lines. $30. 505-989-9194

Hi, my name is: Neesha This beautiful girl

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

seeks loving forever home! Neesha is 8mo old who is a lively dog and a good hiking buddy. Neesha loves people and does wonderful with other dogs. She lives in a group kennel and it’s all fun and barks. She is hoping to meet soon and get off on the right paw! Maybe you are her perfect person!

FIREWOOD-FUEL FIREWOOD Get yours now! Cedar, Pinon, Russian Olive…Quantity discounts. Full cords available. Call for prices & delivery options. 505-231-3035. OIL PAINTING by Fremont Ellis, Spring on Rio La Plata- ca: 1950s painting size 19"x23" framed 27"x31" price $7,700. 505-699-0657

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

BUILDING MATERIALS 6 CHAIN LINK GATES: (2) are 10’, (3) are 5’, and (1) is 6’. All for $125. 505473-5920

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

CLOTHING BROWN LEATHER VINTAGE COAT. Beautiful! Ladies, large. $24. 505-4749020

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

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

THE TAOS NEWS

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

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

SALES POSITION

TECHNICAL

EDDIE BAUER tan twill couch cover. Excellent condition. $50. (Retail $175) 505-660-6034.

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

SALES ASSOCIATE wanted for SANTA FE ANIMAL SHELTER RESALE STORE on Cordova Road. Excellent customer service skills required. Email resume to: ablalock@sfhumanesociety.org

STAGER, STORE JANITOR and Bilingual (English-Spanish) Salesperson needed! Stager is responsible for keeping the store and premises of building in clean and orderly condition, accurately and efficiently receive inventory, and assist with merchandise tagging. Must be able to lift and/or move up to 100 pounds. Physical ability test required. Salesperson must have a positive attitude and excellent customer service skills. Sales experience preferred. Background check and drug screen required. Call 505-780-8720 for more information. EOE.

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

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

RETAIL

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

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

COLLECTIBLES

APPLIANCES

TELEPHONE HEALTH SURVEY INTERVIEWERS Part-time (20 hours weekly) needed on evenings (4:00-9:00) and weekends (10:00-3:00 Saturdays; 1:006:00 or 4:00-9:00 on Sundays). Job location: New Mexico Department of Health in Santa Fe. High School Diploma/GED, Bilingual a plus. Benefits. Apply online at www.spo.state.nm.us for Eligibility Interviewer Operational (DOH69847+). For guidance and to ensure your on-line application is complete call the Epidemiology & Response Division, Human Resources, 505-8270006.

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

50% Off!! All Office Furniture and File Cabinets. Friday, October 24 thru Friday, October 31 (Closed Sundays) All Donations and Purchases Support Santa Fe Habitat!

3X

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

ACROSS 1 Part of 10/29/14 6 With the bow, to a violist 10 “The Godfather” novelist 14 Its strings are tuned in perfect fifths 15 Gulp (down) 16 Alternative to Windows 17 Geometric products 18 Patron saint of Norway 19 Evening, informally 20 Classic country song with the lyric “I’ve lived my life in vain” 22 Pass the welcome mat 23 Gambler’s method 24 Image handlers, for short 26 “Clueless” actress Donovan 29 Ice cream treat 32 L x XLVIII 35 Support for a weak joint 37 Deforestation remnant 38 __-Locka, Florida 39 Manners expressed in letters 41 Queen Victoria’s realm, e.g.: Abbr. 42 Kibbutz teacher 44 Steady fellow 45 U.K. mil. awards 46 Buzzard’s grippers 48 Big name in appliances 50 Les __-Unis 52 California wine region 56 Newsletter choice 58 Writer/director known for his coming-of-age films 61 Genesis son 62 Golden rule word 63 Showy flowers, for short 64 “Deadliest Catch” narrator Mike 65 Not quite dry 66 Eagle’s hideaway 67 Place for private dining?

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

By Allan E. Parrish

68 First name in mysteries 69 Political essay DOWN 1 Picket line crossers 2 “Bad, Bad” Brown of song 3 A’s and Jays 4 Not on the level 5 Inexpensive lodging 6 Missing reveille, perhaps 7 Chewy candy brand 8 Purse fastener 9 Bids 10 Strong-smelling 11 Deduction on many paychecks 12 Rigatoni alternative 13 Field team 21 Drops 25 Rumple, with “up” 27 “Born From Jets” automaker 28 Sleep __ 30 Arsenal supply 31 “Love & Basketball” actor Omar 32 Media mogul Zuckerman

10/29/14 Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

33 Film-rating org. 34 24/7 information provider 36 Mild cheese 39 Colada fruit 40 Suppress 43 Pop holders 45 Pendant earring, say 47 Children’s hosp. co-founded by Danny Thomas 49 Chewy candy

10/29/14

51 Sub tracker 53 “BUtterfield 8” novelist 54 Physician at the front 55 It’s a good thing 56 Growing concern? 57 Double-reed woodwind 59 Standard Web page code 60 “You wish”


C-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

sfnm«classifieds FURNITURE NEARLY NEW heavy dining table. Three chairs and a bench. Used only by a l’il old lady on Sundays after church. $340. Please call 575-6219267.

OAK CORNER 505-471-1086

PETS SUPPLIES

to place your ad, call

»cars & trucks«

986-3000

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

DOMESTIC

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

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

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

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

ADOPT US

computer desk. $40.

OFF-WHITE-ULTRA SUEDE Sofa,

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

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

FENDI SOFA

PAIR BLACK Cabinets- Sideboard,

BEAUTIFUL AKC YORKIES PUPPIES, 7 weeks. 2 females, 2 males. Parents on premises. 1st shots. Call for more information, 505-757-2328.

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES SET OF 4 20" KMC Wheels (5 lugs) with Bridgestone winter tires, size 275/45/R20. Paid $2400, asking $400 OBO. 505-984-0096

2004 HONDA Accord LX 2.4. 69,000 miles, great car! Right front fender damage. Must sale! Car in Espanola, NM. 520-661-2789.

SET OF 4 Continental All Season tires, size 245/40/R18. Less than 1,200 miles use. Asking $200. 505-984-0096

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

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

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

2009 NISSAN MAXIMA-SFWD A nother One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, X-Keys, Manuals, Every Imaginable Option, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo NISSAN SOPHISTICATED, $14,950.

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

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2013 Lexus RX350 AWD WE WILL BUY YOUR USED CAR REGARDLESS IF YOU BUY A CAR FROM US! COME SEE US TODAY! 505-216-3800

Vintage KNOLL Conference- Dining Table Marble Top, Pair STENDIGWASSILY Chairs, Pair Red-Leather DWRChairsOttomans, LEVENGERCherry modular Bookcase- Cabinets. 505-995-1114. ROBOTIC MASSAGE chair. Tan leather. New condition. Top-of-theline quality. $550 OBO. 505-6604505.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT HOSPITAL BED. All steel. Electrical & Manual. New mattress. $100. 505-4711297, Santa Fe. NEW INVACARE COMPLETE HO M E FILL UNIT. Concentrator, compressor, 2 bottles, regulator, & rack. Retail $3,600. Sell $1000. 505-795-1714, leave message.

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

ATTENTION! MISCELLANEOUS C ONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES. VINYL AND STEEL SIDING, vinyl windows, metal brake and metal coil stock. Ladders and ladder jacks. 2 30’ metal walk boards. 2 shell campers for 8’ pickup bed. 8’ tool cap for pickup. 19’ camper RV trailer. 2 desks with chairs and file cabinets. All in Arroyo Seco. Call 505690-1133 for appointment. Large Book Collection, Dust Jackets, many first editions. All hardcover. Some large cocktail table size. Great condition. Only $2-$7. 505-474-9020 PERGO FLOORING, brand new with lining, enough for 2 bedrooms! KOHLER SINK & FAUCET. Plus garage of more great miscellaneous stuff. 505-471-8356.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BUFFALO DRUM. Rawhide lacing, 8 sides, 13". $70. 505-474-9020.

TOOLS MACHINERY C R A F T S M A N 10" TABLE SAW on casters. 3 hp with 54" table. Excellent condition. $175. 505-263-5610 GRIZZLY 6" WOOD JOINER with mobile base. Excellent Condition. $395. Call 505-466-3534. SCROLL SAW, Rigid brand. 16" arm. Solid metal. No plastic. $125. Fabio, 505-982-3214.

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

»animals«

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

LILETTE, JACK R U S S E L L mix girl. SMALL DOG RESCUE Adoption Event, Teca Tu in Sanbusco. Saturday, 10/25, noon-3 pm. Information 505438-3749 MALTESE AND Maltypoos, Shihtzu/Maltese, Morkie/Shihtzu. Reg, shots and health guar POTTYPAD trained. $500+ PAYMENT PLAN Credit cards/ PAYPAL. 575-9101818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2007 FORD EDGE-SEL-AWD CLASSIC CARS Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

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

View vehicle & Carfax:

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

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

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2007 LEXUS RX350 80k $20,871. 505-216-3800.

2012 RAM 3500 CREW CAB FLATBED, VERY SHARP,BUY OF THE WEEK. T1431 $42,900 CALL 505473-1234.

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

Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS Meet Adoptable Animals

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

HEAVY EQUIPMENT

Saturday, November 1 PetSmart Santa Fe 3561 Zafarano Drive 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

2009 Mercedes-Benz ML550 AWD

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

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

DOMESTIC

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

Sunday, November 2 PetSmart Santa Fe 3561 Zafarano Drive Noon-4 p.m. Visit sfhumanesociety.org T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding, Hypoallergenic. $600-800. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed/FREE delivery. Financing available

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

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

T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding/Hypoallergenic. $600-800. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed/FREE delivery. Financing available YORKIES! FULL Blooded & Yorkiepoos, Morkies, Shorkies. Reg, shots and guaranteed. POTTYPAD trained. $500+ CreditCards/PAYPAL PAYMENT plan 575-910-1818 txt4pics cingard1@hotmail.com

CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily

IMPORTS

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

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

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2008 CHRYSLER-TOWNCOUNTRY TOURING-FWD Another Local Owner, Records, Double Rear Entertainments, 7Passenger, Loaded, Pristine Soooo FAMILY ORIENTED $12,250

2011 Audi A3 TDI DIESEL!!! Over 40mpg, heated leather, immaculate single owner , clean, CarFax $21,471. 505-913-2900

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2011 MINI CountryMan auto, prem pkg, roof, prem sound, super fun. $23,871. Call 505-216-3800.

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

PETS SUPPLIES

»garage sale« 2013 Cadillac Escalade Premium AWD

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

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

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

2007 HYUNDAI SANTA-FE LIMITED-FWD Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, Manuals, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo AFFORTABLE $11,950

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

ESTATE SALES

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

Stephen’s A Consignment Gallery

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

Riser-Roberts Estate Sale Friday, 10/31, 12-4 Saturday, 11/1, 9-2 # 2 Paseo de Caballo Behind the Dinosaurs on Hwy 14. HUGE Amount of Items at Blow Out Pricing! For details go to stephensconsignments.com

TESLA MODEL S 2013, 12,561 miles kept in garage in bad weather, like new. 85K battery. Premium Interior Package (Tan Leather) High Tech Package. High Fidelity Sound Package. Air Suspension . Black ROOF 2001 OLDSMOBILE ALERO For sale by original owner. Fully loaded GLS. 176,000 miles. NADA retail $3,400. Asking $2,750 as is. 505-690-1875.

505-983-4945 2011 NISSAN Juke AWD-SV..auto,VDC, prem sound, XM. real clean. $19,821. Call 505-216-3800. 2009 LEXUS IS250. Looks, drives like new. 53k. Loaded. Navigator, luxury package. Pristine. Garaged. Book $23,500. Asking $21,500 OBO. 505-6999641


Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS

to place your ad, call IMPORTS

IMPORTS

986-3000

SPORTS CARS

REDUCED THIS WEEK ONLY !

2001 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID-FWD

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

Classifieds

Get Results! 2011 TOYOTA Camry LE just 33k miles, local one owner clean CarFax, pristine condition $15,871. Call 505-216-3800.

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

2013 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN-SEL-4MOTION Another One Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Remaining Factory Warranty, 15,790 Miles, Every Available Option, Why Buy New, Pristine, Soooo INTOXICATING BEAUTIFUL $29,450

Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, New Hybrid Battery- Transferable 3 Year Unlimited Mile Warranty, New Tires, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 44MPG, Loaded, Pristine,, Soooo ECONOMICAL $6,950

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

Call

986-3000 to place your ad!

Add a pic and sell it quick!

View vehicle & Carfax:

View vehicle & Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

C-7

505-983-4945 2011 TOYOTA RAV4, 58,000 miles, blutooth, records & manuals. Garaged, excellent condition. $17,200. 505231-4481

It’s that easy!

986-3000 2010 TOYOTA/FJ Cruiser 4WD -auto, green with white top, loaded up and service up to date. Come drive it. $26,711 Call 505-216-3800. 2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Subaru Outback 2.5i Premium only 20k miles, heated seats, AWD, great fuel economy, one owner clean CarFax $22,871 505-9132900

SUVs 2012 BLACK CADILLAC SRX. Excellent condition. 22,000 miles. $29,000 OBO. 505-577-1688.

.

TOYOTA HIGHLANDER Limited 2004 Silver Highlander LTD Lthr AC Roof rack. 87000 miles. 3rd row seat. Rear bumper paint scratches. $11,550. 505982-1038

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

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

2013 VW CC Panorama pwr tilting sunroof, Leatherette seat trim Heated 12-way pwr front sport bucket seats, $25,871. Call 505-216-3800.

CALL 986-3000

www.twitter.com/sfnmsports

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

PICKUP TRUCKS

2009 Subaru Legacy GT Limited AWD another single owner Mercedes trade-in! low miles, turbo, heated leather, moonroof, clean CarFax $17,991 505-913-2900 .

»recreational« 2010 TOYOTA Prius II, •ELECTRONIC THROTTLE control system w/intelligence (ETCS-i) -inc: Eco, EV & power driving modes $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.

flock to the ball. 2007 DODGE-RAM-SLT 1500 QUAD-CAB 4X4 Another Caring Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo DESIRABLE $14,950

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2009 Subaru Legacy GT Limited recent trade-in! low miles, AWD, turbo, heated leather,

View vehicle & Carfax:

2009 Toyota Venza AWD V6 fully loaded, leather, JBL sound, single owner clean CarFax $23,851 . Call 505-216-3800.

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

www.twitter.com/sfnmsports

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

WOMEN’S BICYCLE. Heavy duty tread tires. $50. Fabio, 505-982-3214.

moonroof, awesome single owner clean CarFax $17,991 . 505-913-2900

CAMPERS & RVs AL’S RV CENTER

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

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

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

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

986-3000

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

Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com

LEGALS

2004 GULF STREAM 28’ B-TOURING CRUISER MOTORHOME. 450 Ford engine. 55k miles. Slide-out. Queen bed. Excellent condition. $25,000. 505-4663580

2011 Ford F150 Crew Cab Lariat

2014 Volkswagen Passat SEL Premium TDI rare DIESEL!!! Over 40mpg, every option, heated leather, sunroof, Fender sound, pristine clean CarFax $28,971 . 505-913-2900

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

NEVER USED ROOFTOP CARGO CARRIER for 2012, 2013, or 2014 Subaru Outback. $250. 505-424-4986

.

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

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

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

.

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

2015 SANDPAPER fiberglass fifth wheel. 42 ft, 5 slides, 2 bedrooms, 2 airs, washer, dryer. 4 seasons outside kitchen. Many more options. 505-315-4630 OBO TOYOTA HORIZON 1992. 1992 Toyota V6 Horizon 22 ft. Motorhome for sale, only 34,730 miles. $10,500. OBO Bathroom, shower, stove, shower, nice wooden cabinets, pullout sofa bed, overhead bed, easy to drive. Great condition. 505-466-8627

986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362

email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com

LEGALS

p are available by contacting: Shirley Rodriguez, City of Santa Fe, ADVERTISEMENT Purchasing Office, FOR BIDS 2651 Siringo Road, BID NO. ’15/08/B Bldg. "H" Santa Fe, Bids will be received New Mexico 87505, by the City of Santa (505) 955-5711. Fe and will be delivered to City of Santa ATTEST: Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Robert Rodarte, PurBldg. "H", Santa Fe, chasing Officer New Mexico 87505 until 2:00 P.M. local Published in The Sanprevailing time, No- ta Fe New Mexican on vember 13, 2013. Any October 29, 2014. bid received after this deadline will not be LEGAL # 97646 considered. This bid is for the purpose of PROPOSAL NUMBER procuring: ’14/09/P LEGAL # 97645

Barricade Services

.

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

sfnm«classifieds

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 over 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

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Proposals will be received by the City of Santa Fe and shall be delivered to the City of Santa Fe Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road Building "H" Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 until 2:00 P.M. local prevailing time, November 21, 2014 Any proposal received after this deadline will not be considered. This proposal is for the purpose of procuring professional services for the following:

LEGALS g in 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 proponent will be required to conform to the Equal Opportunity Employment regulations. Proposals may be held for sixty (60) days subject to action by the City. The City reserves the right to reject any of all proposals in part or in whole. Proposal packets are available by contacting: Shirley Rodriguez, City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Building "H" Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87505, (505) 9555711. Robert Rodarte, Purchasing Officer Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 29, 2014.

SANTA FE COMMUNICATIONS,A DVERTISING /SOCIAL LEGAL # 97654 MEDIA CONTRACT NOTICE FOR THE SANTA FE CONVENTION AND The Village of Pecos VISITORS BUREAU Board of Trustees will hold a The proponent’s atRegular Meeting tention is directed to On Monday, the fact that all appliNovember 10 , 2014 cable Federal Laws, 6:30 pm. State Laws, Municipal Village of Pecos Ordinances, and the Conference Room rules and regulations S. Main St. Pecos, of all authorities havNM 87552 ing jurisdiction over said item shall apply to the proposal Please contact the throughout, and they Village Office at 505will be deemed to be 757-6591 one week included in the pro- prior to the meeting if posal document the you would like to be same as though here- placed on the Agenda

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Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 29, 2014.


C-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGAL # 97420

WITNESS this Honorable MATTHEW J. WILSON, district Judge of the First Judicial Didtrict Court of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe/Rio Arriba/Los Alamos The Department is County, this 26th day accepting proposals of September, 2014. (RFP #15 516 2101 00001) from qualified STEPHEN T. PACHECO lawyers and law CLERK OF THE firms to provide pro- DISTRICT COURT fessional legal services, specifically in BY: DEPUTY CLERK II the role as endangered species coun- Published in The Sansel, in matters per- ta Fe New Mexican on taining to endan- October 15, 22, 29, gered species law. 2014. The Department seeks a lawyer or law LEGAL # 97610 firm with substantial background with En- NOTICE OF PUBLIC dangered Species Act AUCTION SALE OF RE(ESA) issues; Com- AL PROPERTY FOR DEmenting on Federal LINQUENT PROPERTY Rules pertaining to TAXES STATE OF NEW the ESA; and other is- MEXICO TAXATION sues related to candi- AND REVENUE DEdate, threatened, or PARTMENT PROPERTY endangered species. TAX DIVISION (505) The selected 827-0883 Offeror/s would be expected to provide Notice is hereby givspecialized non- en that, pursuant to litigation and litiga- provisions of Section tion expertise and 7-38-65 NMSA 1978, have the requisite the Property Tax Diviability to perform as- sion of the Taxation signments and act as and Revenue DepartDepartment counsel ment will offer for in connection with sale at public auccomplex contractual tion, in SANTA FE and transactional County, beginning at: matters; the ESA; and TIME:9:00 AM related laws and reg- DATE:11/05/2014 LOulations pertaining to CATION: 102 Grant candidate, threat- Ave. Santa Fe, NM the ened or endangered sale to continue until species. To obtain a all the following decopy of this Request scribed real property for Proposal please has been offered for v i s i t sale. 1. All persons inhttp://wildlife.state.n tending to bid upon m.us/ or contact Jo- property are required seph Miano at (505) to register and obtain 476-8086 or a bidder’s number joseph.miano@state. from the auctioneer nm.us. and to provide the auctioneer with their Published in The San- full name, mailing adta Fe New Mexican on dress, telephone September 15-19, 22- number and social 26, 29-30, October 1-3, security number. 6-10, 13-17, 20-24, 27- Deeds will be issued 31, November 3-7, and to registered names 10-14, 2014. only. Conveyances to other parties will be the responsibility of Legal #97502 STATE OF NEW MEXI- the buyer at auction. Persons acting as CO IN THE PROBATE "agents" for other COURT SANTA FE persons will register COUNTY accordingly and must provide documented IN THE MATTER OF proof as being a bona THE ESTATE OF fide agent at time of SERAFIN E. ROYBAL, registration. A trustDECEASED. ee of the board of a community land No. 2014-0131 grant-merced governed pursuant to the NOTICE TO provisions of Chapter CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY 49, Article 1 NMSA GIVEN that the under- 1978 or by statutes signed has been ap- specific to the named grant-merced, pointed personal rep- land resentative of this es- who wishes to registate. All persons hav- ter to bid pursuant to ing claims against the provisions of Secthis estate are re- tion 7-38-67(H) NMSA quired to present 1978, will register actheir claims within cordingly and must two (2) months after provide documented the date of the first proof as being a bona publication of this no- fide Trustee of the tice, or the claims will board at time of regbe forever barred. istration. REGISTRAWILL CLOSE Claims must be pre- TION sented either to the PROMPTLY AT START undersigned personal OF SALE. CONTACT representative at the PROPERTY TAX DIVIOR COUNTY address listed below, SION or filed with the Pro- TREASURER FOR EXLOCATION bate Court of Santa ACT AUCTION Fe, County, New Mexi- WHERE WILL BE CONDUCTED. co, located at the following address: 102 2. The board of trustGrant Avenue, Santa ees of a community land grant-merced Fe, New Mexico. Dated: October governed pursuant to the provisions of 16,2014 Chapter 49, Article 1 John A. Gallegos NMSA 1978 or by stat2092 Camino Lado utes specific to the Santa Fe, NM 87505 named land grant505-471-5964 PUBLISHED in The merced shall be alSanta Fe New Mexi- lowed to match the can on OCTOBER 22, highest bid at a public auction, which 29 2014 shall entitle the board of trustees to LEGAL # 97593 purchase the property for the amount bid FIRST JUDICIAL DIS- if (1) the property is TRICT COURT STATE situated within the OF NEW MEXICO boundaries of that COUNTY OF Santa Fe land grant-merced as shown in the United Mariam Nevarez States patent to the Gonzales grant; (2) the bid covPetitioner/Plaintiff, ers all past taxes, penalties, interest Case No.: D-101-DM- and costs due on the 2013-00681 property; and (3) the land becomes part of Ramiro Tiscareno the common lands of Andrade the land grantRespondent/Defenda merced. The regisnt tered representative of the board of trustNOTICE OF ees, may bid purPENDENCY OF SUIT suant to the provisions of Section 7-38STATE OF NEW MEXI- 67(H) NMSA 1978 only CO TO Ramiro on properties offered Tiscareno Andrade. for sale that are speGREETINGS You are cifically in their land hereby notified that grant-merced.3. The Mariam Nevarez Gon- Successful Buyer and zales, the above- the Department stipn a m e d ulate that at no time Petitioner/Plaintiff, did the Department has filed a civil action take or hold title to against you in the any property which above-entitled Court was subject to the and cause, The gen- delinquent tax aceral object thereof count auction. Sucbeing to establish pa- cessful Buyer states rentage, determine that at no time did custody and time- the Department make sharing and assess any representation to child support. him/her or any third Unless you enter your person about the appearance in this property or any envicause within thirty ronmental condition (30) days of the date or danger on or arisof the last publication ing from the properof this Notice, judg- ty. Successful Buyer ment by default may states that he/she be entered against has bid at the delinyou. quent property tax auction without any Mariam Nevarez Gon- inducement or reprezales sentation by the DePetitioner/Plaintiff partment of any kind. Successful Buyer has 715 Pheasent Ln. researched the condiAddress tion of the property Espanola, NM 87532 and is relying on City/State/Zip his/her own judg(505)920-8988 ment on submitting a Phone Number bid. Release of LiabiliThe New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is accepting proposal for Endangered Species Legal Services

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986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362

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ty: Successful Buyer agrees to release the Department from any and all claims that the Successful Buyer may have, now or in the future, arising from or relating in any way to any environmental contamination, degradation or danger of any kind, whether known or unknown, on any property purchased the above-described real property. This release covers any environmental condition arising at any time and has perpetual duration. Indemnification and Agreement to Defend and Hold Harmless; Successful Buyer agrees to fully indemnify, defend and holdharmless the Department from any claim that Successful Buyer or any third party may have, now or in the future, arising from or relating in any way to any environmental contamination, degradation or danger of any kind, whether known or unknown, on the above-described real property. This indemnification and agreement to defend and hold-harmless covers any environmental condition arising at any time and has perpetual duration. The terms of the sale will be explained prior to the sale and will be provided by the Property Tax Division upon request. Done at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this day of OCTOBER 10, 2014

SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.066 AC Item #11 ID Number 1 841 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $5,600.00 Property Description LOT 66 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.066 AC Item #12 ID Number 1 842 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $8,400.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.077 AC LOT 67 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #13 ID Number 1 843 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $6,200.00 Property Description LOT 68 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.077 AC Item #14 ID Number 1 844 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $5,600.00 Property Description LOT 69 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.055 AC Item #15 ID Number 1 845 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $9,300.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.055 AC LOT 70 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #16 ID Number 1 846 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $10,700.00 Property Description LOT 71 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.055 AC Item #17 ID Number 1 847 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $9,300.00 Property Description LOT 72 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.055 AC Item #18 ID Number 1 848 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF E. VIA PLAZA NUEVA Minimum Bid $9,300.00 Property Description LOT 73 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.118 AC Item #19 ID Number 1 851 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $6,200.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.150 AC LOT 89 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #20 ID Number 1 852 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF NUEVO MILENIO Minimum Bid $6,200.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.087 AC LOT 91 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #21 ID Number 1 984 2010 Assessed Owner CHAPMAN FAMILY PARTNERSHIP Simple Description OFF VIA BOSQUE Minimum Bid $28,000.00 Property Description LOT 19 THE HILLS AT SF ESTATES PH II T17N R 9E S12 .807AC Item #22 ID Number 1 985 2010 Assessed Owner CHAPMAN FAMILY PARTNERSHIP Simple Description OFF TANO ROAD Minimum Bid $13,300.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S12 1.502 AC PH II LOT 35 THE HILLS AT SF ESTATES Item #23 ID Number 1 1028 2010 Assessed Owner CHAPMAN FAMILY PARTNERSHIP Simple Description OFF RODEO LANE Minimum Bid $26,000.00 Property Description T16N R 9E S 8 UNIT B-6 RODEO OFFICE COMPLEX Item #24 ID Number 1 1029 2010 Assessed Owner CHAPMAN FAMILY PARTNERSHIP Simple Description OFF RODEO LANE Minimum Bid

$7,000.00 Property Description UNIT B-8 RODEO OFFICE COMPLEX T16N R 9E S 8 Item #25 ID Number 1 1175 2010 Assessed Owner GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL CORP Simple Description OFF CALLE KRYSHANNA Minimum Bid $4,100.00 Property Description PARK T16N R8E S1 0.107 AC LOT 9 BLK 8 TIERRA REAL MH Item #26 ID Number 1 1316 2010 Assessed Owner FIRST FINANCIAL TRUSTCUSTODIAN Simple Description OFF HIGHWAY 66 EDGEWOOD Minimum Bid $3,500.00 Property Description T10N R 7E S28 1.712 AC LOT 4-C2-A TIERRA LINDA S/D

Item #1 ID Number 1 79 2010 Assessed Owner WATSON, ROBERT & CAROL A Simple Description OFF CALLE ANAYA S Minimum Bid $10,500.00 Property Description LOT 11 BLK 3 PACHECO ADDN T17N R 9E S26 Item #2 ID Number 1 91 2010 Assessed Owner DOUBLE R D INVESTMENTS LLC Simple Description OFF FIFTH ST Minimum Bid $30,000.00 Property Description LOT 1 BLK 10 BISHOP HGTS ADD AKA CAPITAL TOWNSITE ADD Item #3 ID Number 1 339 2010 Assessed Owner GENERAL ELECTRIC CAPITAL CORP Simple Description OFF VUELTA VENTURA Minimum Bid $5,100.00 Property Description PARK S/D PH 1 T16N R8E S 1 LOT 45 BLK 1 TIERRA REAL MH Item #4 ID Number 1 506 2010 Assessed Owner AMETHYST LAND CO INC Simple Description NEAR CEDAR GROVE IN EDGEWOOD Minimum Bid $2,800.00 Property Description T11N R 7E S 9 10 AC NE4-NE4- SE4 Item #5 ID Number 1 788 2010 Assessed Owner LINTON, MARGOT T Simple Description OFF VISTA TESUQUE Minimum Bid $30,000.00 Property Description 6.766 AC LOT 53 LOS CAMINITOS PHASE 2 Item #6 ID Number 1 789 2010 Assessed Owner MORROW FOREST PRODUCTS, INC Simple Description OFF CAMINO AMOR Minimum Bid $25,000.00 Property Description T18N R10E S17 13.107 AC LOT 69 LOS CAMINITOS PHASE 2 Item #7 ID Number 1 837 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $8,300.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.074 AC LOT 62 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #8 ID Number 1 838 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $8,400.00 Property Description T17N R 9E S20.006 AC LOT 63 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A Item #9 ID Number 1 839 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $8,500.00 Property Description LOT 64 ALDEA DE SANTA FE PH1A T17N R 9E S20.066 AC Item #10 ID Number 1 840 2010 Assessed Owner ARROYO VERDE DEVELOPMENT LLC Simple Description OFF AVENIDA ALDEA Minimum Bid $8,500.00 Property Description LOT 65 ALDEA DE

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Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 15, 22 and 29, 2014. LEGAL # 97618 ELDORADO AREA WATER & SANITATION DISTRICT 1 CALIENTE ROAD, SUITE F SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO

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

LEGALS

g this election. Eligibility to vote will be determined as of the date of the election.

q registrados en los distritos electorales del Condado de Santa Fe numerados 63, 65, 69 y 71, comprobantes de inscripción de votantes, y uno de los siguiente serán exigidos: (1) prueba de residencia en el Distrito como una factura de agua potable del Distrito a nombre del votante, un talón de cheque de su nomina con el nombre del votante, una factura de servicios públicos a nombre del votante, u otra prueba de residencia en el Distrito, o (2) prueba del pago del impuesto de propiedades en el Distrito por el votante en los últimos doce (12) meses, o (3) comprobante de que el votante compra propiedad en el Distrito como lo seria un contrato para pagar una propiedad en la cual los impuesto ha sido o cobrados para esta propiedad real en los últimos doce (12) meses, o (4) otro c o m p r o b a n t e aceptable de elegibilidad para votar según lo determine el Secretario del consejo de administración. El Secretario del Condado de Santa Fe no va a cerrar el registro para esta elección. Elegibilidad para votar se determinará a partir de la fecha de la elección. Voto en ausencia: Además de votación el día electoral, el Secretario del consejo de administración debe habilitar el voto de a u s e n t e s . Aplicaciones para boletas de votación en ausencia solamente pueden ser hechas en un formulario disponible del Distrito. Las aplicaciones pueden ser solicitadas por correo de la oficina Distrito de administración, ubicada en 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM 87508 o por teléfono (505) 4662411. Solicitudes para boletas de elección en ausencia también se puede obtener en persona durante las horas hábiles en la oficina Distrito de administración, ubicada en 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM 87508 hasta las 5:00 p.m. el martes, 06 de enero 2015. Solicitudes para boletas de elección de ausente serán aceptadas hasta las 5:00 p.m. el martes, 06 de enero 2015. Boletas de votación para ausentes serán enviadas por correo a partir en 16 de diciembre 2014. Boletas de votación de ausentes, cuando completados, se pueden ser entregadas por correo o por mensajería o pueden ser entregados en persona a la oficina Distrito de administración ubicada en 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM 87508 y debe ser recibida antes de 7:00 p.m. el martes, 13 de enero, 2015. Esta proclamación se hace y publica por orden de Consejo de Directores del Eldorado Zona de Agua y Saneamiento del Distrito en conformidad con su RESOLUCIÓN NO. 1510-01 incorporada el 02 de octubre 2014.

Absentee Voting: In addition to Election Day voting, the District Secretary shall provide for absentee voting. Applications for absentee ballots may be made only on a form available from the District. Applications may be requested by mail from the District’s administrative office located at 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM 87508 or by telephone (505) 466-2411. Applications for absentee ballots may also be obtained in person during regular business hours at the District’s administrative office located at 1 Caliente Road, Suite F Santa Fe, NM 87508 until 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 6, 2015. Absentee ballot applications will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 6, 2015. Absentee ballots will be mailed commencing December 16, 2014. Completed absentee ballots may be delivered by mail or courier or may be delivered in person to the District’s administrative office located at 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM 87508 and must be received no later than 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 13, 2015.

PROCLAMATION OF ELECTION FOR MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Election Date: Tues- This Proclamation is made and published day, January 13, 2015 by order of the Board On Tuesday, January of Directors of the 13, 2015, a regular Eldorado Area Water election of the & Sanitation District Eldorado Area Water pursuant to its RESO& Sanitation District LUTION NO. 15-10-01 ("District") will be adopted held. Election hours October 2, 2014. will be from 7:00 a.m. /s/ Thomas L. to 7:00 p.m. Willmott The purpose of the SECRETARY OF THE election is to elect BOARD three (3) of the five (5) Board members at Published in The Santhe election to fill ta Fe New Mexican on Board positions that October 22, 29 and will expire in 2015. November 5, 2014 Board members for position numbers 1, 2 LEGAL # 97618 and 4 will be elected. Declarations of Can- ELDORADO ZONA DE AGUA Y didacy for any one of the three (3) posi- SANEAMIENTO DEL DISTRITO tions may be submit1 CALIENTE ROAD, ted no later than 5:00 SUITE F p.m. on Monday, DeSANTA FE, NUEVO cember 15, 2014. MÉXICO A consolidated pollDE ing place for Santa Fe PROCLAMACIÓN PARA County precincts 63, ELECCIÓN 65, 69 and 71 and for MIEMBROS DEL DE qualified electors of CONSEJO the District residing ADMINISTRACIÓN elsewhere in New Fecha de elección: Mexico will be locat- martes, 13 de enero ed in the lobby of the 2015 EAWSD Administra- El martes, 13 de enero tive office building at 2015 una elección 1 Caliente Road in regular de Eldorado Zona de Agua y Eldorado. Saneamiento del Only qualified elec- Distrito ("Distrito") se El tors of the Eldorado llevará a cabo. Area Water & Sanita- horario para votación tion District shall be será de 7:00 a.m. eligible to vote in this hasta 7:00 p.m. election. A qualified El propósito de la es para elector is a person elección elegir a tres (3) de los who: cinco (5) miembros consejo de (A) Is registered to del vote in ANY precinct administración. Esta elección elegirá in New Mexico, AND miembros para llenar (B) Fits into at least puestos número 1, 2 y ONE of the following 4 con el consejo de administración que three categories: 1. Resides in the Dis- expirarán el 2015. Declaraciónes de trict; OR 2. Pays or is liable to Candidatura para uno los tres (3) pay any rates, tolls, de disponible or charges set by the puestos deben ser recibidas District; OR 3. Have paid or incur- antes de 5:00 p.m. en 15 de red a tax liability on lunes, property within the diciembre de 2014. District during the Un lugar de votación consolidada para los past 12 months. distritos electorales All voters registered del Condado de Santa to vote in Santa Fe Fe números 63, 65, 69 County precincts y 71 y para los numbered 63, 65, 69, electores calificados and 71 and located del Distrito quienes within the District will viven en otras partes be permitted to vote de Nuevo México se en el in the District’s Janu- ubicará ary 13, 2015 election. vestíbulo de la oficina de For those not regis- administrativa tered in Santa Fe EAWSD en 1 Caliente County precincts Road en Eldorado. numbered 63, 65, 69, Solamente electores de and 71, proof of New calificados Zona de Mexico voter regis- Eldorado tration in addition to Agua y Saneamiento Distrito serán one of the following del will be required: (1) elegibles para votar en esta elección. Un proof of residence within the District in- elector calificado es cluding a District wa- una persona quien: Está registrada ter service bill in (A) votar en name of the pro- para distrito posed voter, a pay CUALQUIER check stub in name electoral de Nuevo of the proposed vot- México, Y Se ajusta al er, a utility bill in (B) name of the pro- menos a UNA de las categorías posed voter, or other tres proof of residence in siguientes: Vive en el the District; or (2) 1. proof of payment of Distrito; O Paga o es real property tax 2. within the District by responsable del pago de cualquier tasa, the proposed voter o cobro within the preceding cuota twelve (12) months; establecidos por el or (3) proof that the Distrito; O Han pagado proposed voter is 3. purchasing real prop- o tiene una deuda de erty within the Dis- tributaria trict under a real es- propiedad dentro del Distrito durante los tate contract where a property tax has últimos 12 meses. todo votante been paid or incurred A on the real property inscrito para votar en distritos in the preceding los del twelve (12) months; electorales or (4) other accepta- Condado de Santa Fe ble proof of eligibility numerados 63, 65, 69 to vote as deter- y 71 y ubicados mined by the District dentro del Distrito se le permitirá votar en Secretary. las elecciones del The Santa Fe County Distrito el 13 de Clerk is not going to enero, 2015. Para los no están close registration for que

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/s/ Thomas L. Willmott SECRETARIO DEL CONSEJO DE ADMINISTRACIÓN Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on October 22, 29 and November 25, 2014 LEGAL # 97623 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO No. 00145

D-101-PB-2014-

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EMILIE B. ORTIZ , DECEASED NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETITION FOR FORMAL ADJUDICATION OF INTESTACY, FOR FORMAL DETERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP, AND FOR FORMAL APPOINTMENT OF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE TO: ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF EMILIE B. ORTIZ , DECEASED; AND, ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS WHO HAVE OR CLAIM ANY INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF EMILIE B.

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py Request for Proposal please visit http://wildlife.state.n m.us/ or contact Joseph Miano at (505) 476-8086 or N O T I C E IS HEREBY joseph.miano@state. GIVEN of the follow- nm.us. ing: Published in The San1.EMILIE B. ORTIZ , ta Fe New Mexican on Deceased died on October 27-31 and September 04, 2011; November 3-7, 10-14, 2 . Deana G. Ortiz 17-21, 24-28, Decemfiled a Petition for ber 1-5, 8-12, 15-19, Formal Adjudication 22-26, 2014 of Intestacy, for Formal Determination of Heirship, and for For- LEGAL # 97641 mal Appointment of Personal Representa- STATE OF NEW MEXItive in the above- CO JUDICIAL DISstyled and numbered 1ST matter on September TRICT COURT Santa Fe COUNTY 08, 2014; and, 3.A hearing on the above-referenced Pe- IN THE MATTER OF tition has been set for THE ESTATE OF December 01, 2014, at Ramon J. Garcia, 1:00 p.m. at the Judge DECEASED Steve Herrera Judicial D-101-PB-2014Complex, Second No. Floor, 225 Montezuma 00140 Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87501 NOTICE TO KNOWN CREDITORS before the Honorable Sarah M. Singleton. NOTICE IS HEREBY Pursuant to Section GIVEN that the under45-1-401 (A) (3), signed has been apN.M.S.A., 1978 (2008 pointed personal repRepl.), notice of the resentative of this estime and place of tate. All persons havhearing on the above- ing claims against referenced Petition is this estate are reto present hereby given to you quired by publication, once their claims within each week, for two two (2) months after the first publication consecutive weeks. of any published noDATED this 15th day tice to creditors or the date of mailing or of October, 2014. other delivery of this Deana G. Ortiz, notice, whichever is Petitioner later, or the claims THE CULLEN LAW will be forever barred. Claims must be FIRM, P.C. Attorneys for Peti- presented either to the undersigned pertioner sonal representative 2006 Botulph Road at the address listed P.O. Box 1575 Santa Fe, New Mexico below, or filed with the 1st Judicial Dis87504 (505) 988-7114 (of- trict Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, fice) (505) 995-8694 (fac- located at the following address: simile) 102 Grand Ave, PO lawfirm@cullen.cc Box 276, Santa Fe NM Published in The San- 87504-0276. ta Fe New Mexican on October 22 and 29, Dated: Oct. 21, 2014 Lorraine P. Garcia 2014. Signature of personal representative LEGAL # 97633 Lorraine P. Garcia Printed name NOTICE 1022 Practillano Dr. Street address Notice is hereby giv- Santa Fe, NM 87505 en that on Thursday City, state and zip October 30, 2014 the code New Mexico State 505-629-9573 Agency for Surplus Telephone number Property will open Store Front Opera- Published in The Santions to the public ta Fe New Mexican on from 9:00am to October 29 and No4:00pm; at 1990 vember 5, 2014. Siringo Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505. Items for sale will in- LEGAL # 97642 clude: Vehicles ranging from NOTICE OF REGULAR $700.00 to $5,000 MEETING Computer equipment ranging from $10 to Notice is hereby giv$300 en that the meeting Office furniture rang- of the Board of Direcing from $5 to $300 tors of the New MexiGrab Bags $45.00 co Finance Authority Items are subject to (NMFA) will convene change. All items are at 9:00 a.m. on Thursused items they are day, November 20, "as-is" "where-is" 2014. The meeting will with no guarantee or be held at the State warrantee. Inspec- Capitol, Room 311, tion of items will be 407 Old Santa Fe Trail, on day of sale. All Santa Fe, New Mexico sales are final no re- 87501. funds or exchanges. Only Cash, The agenda will be debit/credit cards or available at the NMFA Cashiers Checks will office at 207 Shelby be accepted; sorry no Street, Santa Fe, New personal checks. For Mexico and the web questions please call site (www.nmfa.net) our office 476-1949. at least 72 hours prior to the meeting. AnyPublished in The San- one who has questa Fe New Mexican on tions regarding the October 27, 28, and meeting or needs 29, 2014. special accommodations should contact Connie MarquezLEGAL # 97639 Valencia at (505) 9841454. The New Mexico Department of Public documents, inGame and Fish is cluding the agenda accepting and minutes, can be proposals for provided in various Professional Legal accessible formats. Services If you are an individuThe New Mexico De- al with a disability partment of Game who is in need of a amplifier, and Fish (Depart- reader, ment) requests pro- qualified sign lanposals (RFP# 15 516 guage interpreter, or 2101 00004) from any other form of qualified lawyers and auxiliary aid or servlaw firms to provide ice to attend or parprofessional legal ticipate in the hearservices for but not ing or meeting, or if a limited to; Water law; summary or other Environmental law; type of accessible is needed, Construction Law; format Real Estate Law; Real please contact the Property Acquisi- NMFA at 505-984-1454 tions, Disposals (spe- at least one week pricialize in public real or to the meeting or property interests as soon as possible. both state, federal), Mineral Estate, Ease- Published in The Sanments, Leases; Land ta Fe New Mexican on use law, eminent do- October 29, 2014. main and inverse condemnation; Inspection of Public Records Act; and Appellate work, including administrative and civil law for the Department. This request for proposals will result in a multiple source award through which contracts may be awarded to one or more lawyers and or law firms in all of the practice areas listed in the Scope of Work. Each lawyer or law firm’s proposal shall include evidence of its experience and expertise in the relevant/proposed practice areas. Submission of the proposal must be sent to the Department of Game and Fish no later than 3:00 PM December 22, 2014. To obtain a copy of this ORTIZ, DECEASED, OR IN THE MATTER BEING LITIGATED IN THE HEREINAFTER MENTIONED HEARING.

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TIME OUT

Wednesday, October 29, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Horoscope ACROSS 1 Bums around 6 Bellini opera 11 Night light, perhaps 14 Shoptalk 15 Weest of wee hours 16 Mint 17 Film about a Communist invasion? (1996) 19 Enthusiast 20 Casanova 21 Ties down 23 Moroccan headwear 25 Line on a baseball 26 Film about the woman most likely to catch men’s attention? (2001) 33 Computer mode 34 It’s usually between 3 and 5 35 Logic game with matchsticks 36 Battery containing a liquid electrolyte 39 The statue “David” on openair display in Florence, e.g.

42 43 45 46

51

52 53 56 62 63

65 66 67 68 69 70

1 2 3 4

Well-suited Take a gander at Captain and others Film about an elegantly made crossword? (2009) Collaborator with Disney on the film “Destino” Add-on charge First family of Germany, 1969-74 Licit Brit’s washroom Film about a romantic dentist’s daily routine? (2010) Israeli gun “Delphine” author Madame de ___ Fray Lo-___ Absorbent cloth 4 x 400-meter relay, e.g. DOWN Genie’s home Kind of vaccine Site of a famed mausoleum Guileful

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, Oct. 29, 2014: This year many opportunities will present themselves. You are goal-oriented, and you understand how to succeed.

5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 22 24 26 27

Poke holes in “Hold on a sec” ___ lark Geom. shape Confirm Brewery named after a Dutch river Like a bass voice or a hairy chest “___ not!” Dominates, informally Vegetarian’s protein source Son of Noah Élan Beth preceder Actress with the iconic line “What a dump!”

28 Old trade inits. 29 Mime 30 Away’s partner 31 Shaving boo-boos 32 Holiday associated with 44-Downs, in brief 33 Whack 37 Get off the ground? 38 Caustic material 40 Old hand 41 Easygoing 44 See 32-Down 47 Acronym for linked computers 48 Like Jackie Jackson, in the Jackson 5

49 How the swallows returned to San Juan Capistrano 50 Actor Lugosi 53 Memory of a very busy day, maybe 54 Level 55 Lead 57 Instrument for Orpheus 58 King Harald’s father 59 Told, as a yarn 60 Level 61 Shoulder muscle, for short 64 Member of the MTV generation, informally

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

Chess quiz WHITE GETS THE QUEEN Hint: Set up a pin. Solution: 1. Qd5ch! Ke7 2. Rb7! [from BuSasikiran ’14].

Hocus Focus

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

Subject: NO. 1 HIT SONGS Complete the title of the No. 1 hit song. (e.g., Reached No. 1 in 1997: “Candle in the ___.” Answer: Wind.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Reached No. 1 in 1998: “My Heart Will ____.” Answer________ 2. By two different artists, in 1962 and 1971: “Go Away ____.” Answer________ 3. An instrumental by Paul Mauriat: “Love Is ___.” Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Reached No. 1 in 1996: “One Sweet ___.” Answer________ 5. By two different artists, in 1961 and 1975: “Please Mr. ____.” Answer________ 6. An instrumental by Bert Kaempfert: “Wonderland by ____.” Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Debuted in 2012: “Part of ___.” Answer________ 8. By two different artists, in 1966 and 1987: “You Keep Me ____.” Answer________ 9. An instrumental by Mr. Acker Bilk: “Stranger on the _____.” Answer________ ANSWERS:

ANSWERS: 1. Go On. 2. Little Girl. 3. Blue. 4. Day. 5. Postman. 6. Night. 7. Me. 8. Hangin’ On. 9. Shore.

Jumble

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) 2014 Ken Fisher

Today in history Today is Wednesday, Oct. 29, the 302nd day of 2014. There are 63 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On Oct. 29, 1964, thieves made off with the Star of India and other gems from the American Museum of Natural History in New York. (The Star and most of the other gems were recovered; three men were convicted of stealing them.)

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH What starts out as a shakeup might not end as one. Do not get upset; instead, follow your instincts. Tonight: Bounce some ideas off a dear friend. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Though you have the strength to proceed how you want, you would be well-advised to hold off right now. Tonight: Be naughty and nice. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH A partner might insist on controlling a situation. An element of confusion and misinterpretation of messages will distinguish today from other days. Tonight: Opt to be a duo. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Resist getting sucked into a control game, as you are likely to lose. Change your style, but know that it could come as a shock to some people. Tonight: At home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Your focus allows you to be efficient, but it could cut out some enjoyment of the process. Do not minimize your priorities. Tonight: Stay anchored. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Allow your ingenuity to take the lead, especially in the face of a partner’s lack of follow-through. Tonight: Get some extra R and R.

C-9

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Widow is hurt by man’s comments Dear Annie: My husband, an only child, never had a great relationship with his father, “Clyde.” My mother-in-law died six years ago, and my husband passed away three years later. While things are improving for my daughter and me, we are both having a hard time dealing with Clyde, who is in his late 60s. The day my husband died, Clyde said, “I’m still not over my wife, and now this. I can’t even think about him right now.” A few weeks after the funeral, I called Clyde, and during our conversation he told me, “I’m not going to worry about you. You’ll be married within the year.” Again, I let it slide. That spring, I invited him to a family cookout. When we were alone, he said, “You don’t know what grief is. You have no idea what it’s like to lose someone you love.” Annie, I almost got sick. I told him he was lucky to have 30 years with his spouse, because I didn’t even have seven. After that, I limited my time with Clyde. We only see him on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Last Christmas, he came for two family meals. At both occasions, he was rude, obnoxious and spoke down to me in front of everyone. I was in awe at the amount of cursing and his nasty tone of voice. My sister didn’t wait a beat before jumping in and putting him in his place. He gave my college-age daughter $20 as a gift. She was gracious and thanked him, whereupon he turned to me and said, “How do you know she won’t use it for something illegal?” Annie, the holidays are fast approaching, and after last year, I just can’t take it anymore. The problem is, Clyde has no one (he hasn’t spoken to his sister in 30 years). Is it OK not to invite him? And if so, do I need to tell him he’s not invited? — Still Related in the East Dear East: Clyde sounds like a cranky, belligerent pain in the butt. It would be a kindness to include him, but only if you can ignore his comments completely. The only way he knows how to

communicate is to push everyone’s buttons. Do not respond. However, if that is more “charity” than you can handle, you do not need to invite him. Nor do you need to notify him in advance, unless you want to call to say you will include him only if he makes a sincere effort to be polite. Dear Annie: I think you missed an opportunity to lambaste “Frustrated Husband,” who complained that his wife is a lousy housekeeper. He says she still works, and he is retired. I’m retired, and my wife still works. I feel it is my job to keep the house clean. What is this guy doing? Since he’s retired, why isn’t he helping out while his poor wife is still at the office? My wife and I are a team, and I would never even think that she should be doing house chores when she gets home. — B. Dear B.: You sound like a peach. But why do you assume “Frustrated” isn’t doing any household chores? He said he throws out stuff when his wife is at work, and she doesn’t notice or mind, and beyond that, we really don’t know. But we agree that if he isn’t doing any housework and expects his wife to handle it after a full day at her job, it is exceedingly unfair. Dear Annie: “Ready To Empty Nest” said her daughter has a college degree, doesn’t pay rent and won’t clean up after herself. We had a revolving door at our house with kids moving in and out. I told them they had to pay me what they’d pay for rent when they moved out. I saved the money for their emergency fund and then gave it back. They learned to make monthly payments and then had savings when they finally left. — Smart Mom Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You will need to focus on a personal matter. You could see a situation differently from how many of your friends see it. Tonight: Get down to basics. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Be direct in how you handle a relative or neighbor. You can be optimistic and positive while also establishing boundaries. Tonight: Out the door. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You might want to deal with someone differently, especially if you are financially involved with this person. Tonight: Say “yes.” CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH You seem to be changing a lot. For some of you, it might be an internal transformation; for others, it might be a change in your social circle. Tonight: As you like it. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You might want to take some time off from the many responsibilities in your life. Don’t be surprised if you notice a change in your perspective. Tonight: Do something just for you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Whether you’re in a meeting or in a conversation with a friend, you will be able to zero in on what you desire and expect from different situations. Tonight: Be spontaneous. Jacqueline Bigar

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. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


C-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, October 29, 2014

TUNDRA

PEANUTS

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

NON SEQUITUR

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

RETAIL

ZITS

PICKLES

LUANN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE ARGYLE SWEATER


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