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S.F. girl found in Calif. Nine-year-old is safe after night alone in the woods. LOCAL NEws, C-1
Bustos lands UNM job Ex-West Las Vegas standout is Lobos’ new video coordinator. sPORTs, D-1
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Capitol’s art expert Roundhouse curator oversees 600 works of art in eclectic statewide collection.
Michigan couple to take over the landmark restaurant south of the city but plan few changes — and the menagerie of fowl will stay. PAGE C-1
NEIGHBORs, C-6
Years of ‘waiting for the VA’ Nationwide reports of widespread problems in the Veterans Affairs health system is nothing new to local vets, who say long delays and poor service are common in N.M.
At the Kit Carson Memorial Cemetery in Taos, adjacent to the newly renamed park, a streak of paint tarnishes the legendary scout’s name on a historic marker. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
Renaming of Taos park revives debate on Kit Carson By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican
TAOS — Sam Jiron grew up believing that Christopher “Kit” Carson was a noble man, a great leader and scout whose place in American history should be revered. Over time, Jiron, now 43, has come to a different belief. “He was a murderer,” Jiron, a Taos Pueblo member, said Thursday while sitting on a shaded patch of grass in a 19-acre park named after the famed frontiersman. It’s a sentiment shared by others, including newly elected town Councilor Fritz Hahn, a white man who was part of a majority vote last week to strip Carson’s name from the park and rename it Red Willow in deference to Native Americans. The Tuesday vote, intended to ease some of the pain that many indigenous people still feel about Carson and other settlers, reignited a bitter debate in New Mexico over the recognition and honor that should be placed on historical figures with complicated pasts. Hahn said he has been flooded with complaints from “angry” constituents since the council renamed the park, where Carson and his third wife, Josefa Jaramillo Carson, are buried side by side. Hahn said he has been encouraging people to attend the next council meeting June 24 to voice their concerns, but he’s not going to change his mind. “Here’s the core issue: When I hear people from the pueblo saying that they don’t like coming into town, they feel diminished, when I hear our Pueblo sisters and brothers talking about not even wanting to go to
Vietnam veteran John Breneiser waited so long for eye care through the Veteran Affairs health system that he eventually gave up and paid thousands of dollars out of his own pocket for surgery.
By Robert Nott Photos by Jane Phillips
W
The New Mexican
hen John Breneiser underwent cataract surgery in 2011 at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Albuquerque, doctors discovered another problem. The retina of his right eye was detached. The disabled Vietnam veteran would need more surgery. Three years later, Breneiser was still waiting.
The pain at times was searing. His vision out of that eye gradually eroded. Yet weekly phone calls to a veterans outpatient clinic to schedule an operation yielded only promises of callbacks that never came. Finally, last week, with still no word from the clinic, Breneiser went to a private doctor and paid thousands of dollars out of his own pocket for the procedure. “I got tired of waiting for the VA and waiting for the VA and waiting for the VA,” the 64-year-old Santa Fe resident said. “It takes forever to get anything done.” His experience is just one of a growing number of stories of agonizingly long delays in care offered by the nation’s veterans hospitals. An audit released last week by the
Department of Veterans Affairs revealed a wide range of problems with the department’s 731 hospitals and outpatient clinics. Among the issues: 57,000 veterans, or 90 percent of all new enrollees, waited more than three months for their first medical appointments. Another 64,000 never saw a doctor at all after being enrolled in the system for a decade, despite repeated requests. And more than three-quarters of all facilities had manipulated data at least once, some creating “dummy” lists to make the wait times look more favorable. In New Mexico, more than 1,000 veterans have waited three or more months for initial medical appointments, and more than 3,000 vets were assigned to
Please see wAITING, Page A-4
Please see HIsTORY, Page A-5
Militant group’s gains in Iraq fulfill founder’s violent vision Years after Zarqawi killed in U.S. strike, organization again on march By Joby Warrick
The Washington Post
Feds struggle to inspect high-risk oil and gas wells By Hope Yen and Thomas Peipert The Associated Press
NEW CASTLE, Colo. — Four in 10 new oil and gas wells near national forests and fragile watersheds, or other areas with high pollution risks, escape federal inspection, unchecked by an agency struggling to keep pace with America’s drilling boom, according to an Associated Press review that shows wide state-by-state disparities in safety checks. Roughly half or more of wells on federal and Indian lands weren’t checked in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming, despite potential harm that has led to efforts in some communities to ban new drilling.
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In New Castle, a tiny Colorado River valley community, homeowners expressed chagrin at the large number of uninspected wells, many on federal land, that dot the steep hillsides and rocky landscape. Like elsewhere in the West, water is a precious commodity in this Colorado town, and some residents worry about the potential health hazards of any leaks from wells and drilling. “Nobody wants to live by an oil rig. We surely didn’t want to,” said Joann
Please see INsPECT, Page A-5 INSIDE: Inspectors racing to keep up with wells in New Mexico. PAGE C-5
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New Mexico Gay Men’s Chorus We’re Married! Now What? 3-5 p.m., James A. Little Theater, New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Road, $20 in advance online at nmgmc.org and at the door, discounts available.
Obituaries Nancy Jean Deane, Santa Fe, June 12 Fidel “Del” Jacques, May 30 Robert F. Kelly, 61, Tucson, Ariz., May 20 Jacobo (Jake)
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D. Martinez Sr., 88, Santa Fe, June 9 Manuelita Romero, 102, June 8 Deborah Roxburgh Scott, 62, Oro Valley, Ariz. PAGE C-2
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Today Sunny, breezy. High 84, low 50.
On the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, a 36-year-old Jordanian who called himself “the Stranger” slipped into the suburbs of Baghdad armed with a few weapons, bags of cash and an audacious plan for starting a war he hoped would unite Sunni Muslims across the Middle East. The tattooed ex-convict and high-school dropout had few followers and scant ties to the local population. Yet, the Stranger — soon to be known widely as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi — quickly rallied thousands of Iraqis and foreign fighters to his cause. He launched spectacular suicide bombings and gruesome executions targeting Americans, Shiites and others he saw as obstacles to his vision for a Sunni caliphate stretching from Syria to the Persian Gulf. Zarqawi was killed in a U.S. airstrike in 2006, but the organization he founded is again on the march. In just a week, his group — formerly known as al-Qaida in Iraq and now called the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS — has seized cities and towns across western and northern Iraq at a pace that might have astonished Zarqawi himself. Already in control of large swaths of eastern Syria, the group’s black-clad warriors appear to have taken a leap toward realizing Zarqawi’s dream of an extremist Sunni enclave across the region.
Please see IRAQ, Page A-8
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Six sections, 76 pages 165th year, No. 166 Publication No. 596-440
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NATION&WORLD Calling back a zombie ship from the graveyard of space Launched in 1978 and abandoned by NASA in 1997, engineers are trying to return the craft to Earth By Kenneth Chan The New York Times
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or 17 years, it has been drifting on a lonely course through space. Launched during the disco era and shuttered by NASA in 1997, the spacecraft is now returning to the civilization that abandoned it. It seemed destined to pass without fanfare, except for a slight chance of slamming into the moon, and then loop aimlessly through the inner solar system. But now, a shoestring group of civilians headquartered in a decommissioned McDonald’s have reached out and made contact with it — a long-distance handshake that was the first step toward snaring it back into Earth’s orbit. The zombie spaceship is coming home. After 36 years in space, the craft, the International Sun-Earth Explorer-3, appears to be in good working order. The main challenge, the engineers say, is figuring out how to command it. No one has the full operating manual anymore, and the fragments are sometimes contradictory. “We call ourselves techno-archaeologists,” said Dennis Wingo, an engineer and entrepreneur who has a track record of extracting miracles from space antiques that NASA has given up on. Wingo’s company, Skycorp, has its offices in the McDonald’s that used to serve the Navy’s Moffett air station, 15 minutes northwest of San Jose, Calif. After the base closed, NASA converted it to a research campus for small technology companies, academia and nonprofits. Wingo took on the project as if it were a stray puppy. “No one else was going to do it,” he said, “and it seemed like the right thing to do.” The race to revive the craft, ISEE-3, began in earnest in April. At the end of May, using the Arecibo Observatory radio telescope in Puerto Rico, the team succeeded in talking to the spacecraft, a moment Wingo described as “way cool.” This made Skycorp the first private organization to command a spacecraft outside Earth orbit, he said. Despite the obstacles, progress has been steady, and Wingo said the team should be ready to fire the engines within weeks. NASA launched ISEE-3 in 1978. The craft orbited the sun between the sun and the Earth, allowing scientists to observe for the first time the high-speed stream of electrons and protons known as the solar wind before it reached Earth. Then ISEE-3 was recruited to a different mission. With a serpentine do-si-do around the moon and Earth, it was aimed at Comet Giacobini-Zinner, passing through the tail in September 1985. NASA used ISEE-3 for a few more observations of interplanetary space before retiring it in 1997. Since then, the craft has been looping around the sun
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The International Sun-Earth Explorer-3 before its launch in 1978 at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Abandoned by NASA in 1997, the satellite appears to be in good working order, and civilian engineers are working to return it to Earth’s orbit. COURTESY OF NASA
on a 355-day orbit. Like a faster race car lapping the rest of the field, ISEE-3 will catch up to and pass Earth in two months. That is exactly what Robert W. Farquhar, the craft’s flight director, intended. Farquhar, known for devising clever ways to move a spacecraft from point A to point B, came up with the intricate orbits that moved ISEE-3 to various locations in the solar wind, and then with the idea of using ISEE-3 to visit GiacobiniZinner. After the successful Giacobini-Zinner flyby, ISEE-3 still had ample fuel, so three rocket burns in 1986 set it on a course to zoom about 30 miles above the moon 28 years later, on Aug. 10, 2014. In 1999, the agency upgraded its Deep Space Network, the system of radio telescopes that communicates with distant space probes. The old transmitters that could talk with ISEE-3 were thrown away. But ISEE-3 was never turned off, so while Earth lost its ability to talk to it, ISEE-3 was still broadcasting, waiting for its next command. In 2008, the Deep Space Network listened briefly at the faraway spot where ISEE-3 was and heard the carrier frequency of the spacecraft’s radio — essentially a dial tone. Two years later, NASA looked into reviving contact for the 2014 flyby but concluded that the scientific payoff would not be worth the effort and money. In February, Leonard N. Garcia, a NASA employee who had set up a Face-
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ANAHEIM, Calif. — President Barack Obama, appearing emboldened after his recent move to cut carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants, on Saturday ridiculed members of Congress who deny climate change or plead scientific ignorance as an alibi for avoiding an inconvenient truth. Speaking in gleefully sarcastic terms to a commencement ceremony at the University of California, Irvine, Obama likened those who deny climate change to people who would have told President John F. Kennedy, at the dawn of the space program, that the moon “was made of cheese.” He saved his most scathing words for lawmakers who say they are not qualified to judge the issue because they are not scientists. These people, the president said, recognize the truth but will not utter it for fear of being “run out of town by a radical fringe that thinks climate science is a liberal plot.”
book page promoting ISEE-3, conceded that it was not going to happen. New transmitters could be built, he wrote, “but it would be at a price no one is willing to spend.” That caught Wingo’s attention. “Not only is it not impossible,” he said, “I think it can work, and I know how to do it.” Wingo and Keith Cowing, the editor of NASA Watch, a sometimes cantankerous website covering news and gossip about the space agency, had previously collaborated on a project that resurrected equipment to read 50-year-old magnetic tapes, extracting high-resolution images taken by NASA lunar orbiters in the 1960s — a task NASA had also regarded as infeasible. Wingo and Cowing decided ISEE-3 was another worthy effort. About 20 others scattered around the country joined the effort, including many members of the original ISEE-3 team.Recent advances in what are called software-designed radios allowed the team to build a new transmitter and install it on the Arecibo telescope within a few weeks. If everything goes as hoped, ISEE-3 will end up in its original location to observe the solar wind, fulfilling Farquhar’s promise to return the spacecraft. Now 81, Farquhar is half-retired but collaborating with the reboot effort, and he is still thinking ahead. He wants to send ISEE-3 out to visit yet another comet. Wingo protests that it would cost too much money. “We’ll go to the comet,” Farquhar said. “Trust me.”
ISLAMABAD — Pakistani military jets pounded militant hideouts in the northwestern tribal region bordering Afghanistan early Sunday, officials said, killing as many as 100 militants in the second strike on the region since a deadly attack on the Karachi airport a week ago. Pakistani Air Force jets targeted eight militant hideouts in the North Waziristan tribal area, two intelligence officials said. Many of the dead were believed to be Uzbeks and other foreign fighters, they said. One of those killed was Abu Abdul Rehman al-Maani, who is believed to have helped orchestrate the airport siege on June 8, said two other officials.
Israel: Terrorists did kidnapping JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Saturday that three teenage students who went missing in the West Bank on Thursday night were “kidnapped by a terrorist organization,” and he said Israel would hold the Palestinian government accountable. Netanyahu, speaking in a televised address, did not blame the Palestinian Authority for the kidnapping of three teens, but said he would hold it “responsible for any attack coming from its territory.” Netanyahu’s comments came as Israeli forces deployed more soldiers and intelligence agents to the West Bank on Saturday in an intensive search for the teens, all students at a religious school known as a yeshiva. One of them, 16-year-old Naftali Frenkel, is a dual Israeli-American citizen. Investigators are working under the theory that Frankel and the other teens, ages 16 and
Bill doubles funds for veterans’ care WASHINGTON —Spending on veterans’ health care could double in three years under the Senate’s solution to the long waits experienced by thousands seeking medical care at VA hospitals and clinics, according to congressional budget experts. Analyzing a bill the Senate passed overwhelmingly last Wednesday, the Congressional Budget Office estimates the measure would add $35 billion over the next three years to the $44 billion the government now spends annually on medical care for veterans. Both the Senate bill and a House version also passed this past week would dramatically expand government-paid health care. They would require the Department of Veterans Affairs to pay private providers to treat qualifying veterans who can’t get prompt appointments at the VA’s nearly 1,000 hospitals and outpatient clinics or who live at least 40 miles from one of them.
School honors hero in shooting SEATTLE — The president of Seattle Pacific University announced at its graduation ceremony that a scholarship has been named for the student who stopped a fatal shooting on campus earlier this month. President Jon Meis Daniel Martin on Saturday told graduates, including Jon Meis, that an engineering scholarship will be given in his honor. Students and their friends and family gave Meis a standing ovation at the ceremony. The private Christian college and police say Meis peppersprayed and tackled the gunman when he stopped to reload a shotgun in a campus building June 5. One person died and two others were injured. Police say that without the actions of Meis and others who held down the gunman, more people likely would have been hurt.
President halts Pa. transit strike PHILADELPHIA — President Barack Obama on Saturday intervened in a commuter rail strike in the nation’s sixthlargest metropolitan area, granting Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett’s request to create a presidential emergency board to mediate the contract dispute between the Southeast Pennsylvania Transportation Authority and its engineers and electricians unions. Obama ordered the establishment of the threemember board.
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Sunday, June 15 AMMA VISITS NORTHERN NEW MEXICO SUMMER 2014: Meet Mata Amritanandamayi, renowned humanitarian and spiritual leader, during two free programs, at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. at the Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino. Pre-registration is required, www.amma.org, www.amritapuri.org, or 982-9801. LIFE DRAWING: Weekly figurative-drawing class with models 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Duel Brewing, 1228 Parkway Drive. NEW MEXICO GAY MEN’S CHORUS: We’re Married! Now What?, 3-5 p.m., James A. Little Theater, New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Road, $20 in advance online at nmgmc.org and at the door, discounts available. SANTA FE CONCERT BAND: Father’s Day performance, 2 p.m., Federal Park, Washington Ave. and Federal Place, no charge. RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. THE SOUND OF MUSIC: Musical Theatre Works Santa Fe presents the musical, 2 p.m.; $17 in advance, $20 at the door, students $12, musicaltheatreworks.net,
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Lotteries Greer Garson Theatre, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. DAD’S DAY AT CHILDREN’S MUSEUM: Admission is free from noon to 5 p.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail, 989-8359. CURATOR TOUR AND TALK: New Mexico Museum of Art education curator Ellen Zieselman discusses the exhibit Southwestern Allure: Art of the Santa Fe Art Colony, 2 p.m., 107 W. Palace Ave., by museum admission, 476-5068. LECTURE: James Heffernan of Dartmouth presents “Leopold Bloom and His Adulterous Molly: Can This Marriage Be Saved?” 3 p.m., New Mexico History Museum auditorium, 113 Lincoln Ave., no charge, presented by Lannan Foundation, lannan.org. POETRY READINGS: Donald Levering, Denise Low, and Susan Gardner read from their works, 2:30 p.m., Santa Fe Community Foundation, 501 Halona St., reception follows.
NIGHTLIFE Sunday, June 15 EL FAROL: Chanteuse Nacha Mendez, 7:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. EVANGELO’S: Tone and Company, R&B/rock-jam band, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., 200 W. San
Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Guitarist Wily Jim, Western swingabilly, 7-10 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. BISHOP’S LODGE RANCH RESORT & SPA: Troubadour Gerry Carthy, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., no cover. 297 Bishops Lodge Road. COWGIRL BBQ: Cowgirl brunch with Zenobia, gospel/ R&B/soul, noon to 3 p.m.; Edith Makes a Paper Chain, folk/pop/ rock, 8 p.m.; no cover. 19 S. Guadalupe St. MINE SHAFT TAVERN: The Barbwires, soulful blues, 3 to 7 p.m., no cover. 2846 N.M. 14 in Madrid; 473-0743. PALACE RESTAURANT AND SALOON: Free Range Ramblers on the back patio, 4 p.m., no cover. 142 W Palace Ave., 428-0690. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Santa Fe Revue, Americana, 1 to 4 p.m., no cover. 1607 Paseo de Peralta. UPPER CRUST PIZZA: Percolator John on mandolin and guitar, 6 p.m., no cover. 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery 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
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Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Ukraine vows to punish rebels who downed plane 49 killed in military transport wreck
“[This] will refocus attention on the fact that Russia does not seem to be doing very much to moderate the insurgency [or] By David McHugh the cross-border resupply of and Marko Dobrnjakovic separatists,” said Timothy Ash, The Associated Press an analyst at Standard Bank PLC. “I would expect the focus NOVOHANNIVKA, Ukraine to return to sanctions next — Ukraine’s new president week.” declared Sunday a day of Ukrainian President Petro mourning and vowed to punish Poroshenko spoke firmly to those responsible after proglum-faced security officials at Russia separatists shot down a televised emergency meeta Ukrainian military transport ing Saturday, scolding the head plane, killing all 49 crew and of the country’s SBU security troops aboard. service for “omissions” in meaIt was a bitter setback for sures to protect military aircraft. the Ukrainian forces — the Poroshenko called for “a deadliest single incident yet in detailed analysis of the reasons” their escalating battle against for the lapse and hinted that an armed insurgency that the personnel changes were immigovernment, backed by the U.S., nent. His office said he vowed insists is supported by Russia. to punish “those responsible for The downing of the plane the tragedy in Luhansk.” drew condemnation and conIn a conversation with French cern from the White House, President Francois Hollande, European leaders and U.N. chief Poroshenko expressed hope Ban Ki-moon. Analysts said it that the European Union would could bring a renewed emphasis decide on further sanctions on increasing sanctions against against Russia if what he called the illegal border crossings and Russia.
A pro-Russian fighter shows a Ukrainian paratrooper’s emblem as the other one carries parts of weapons from the site of a downed Ukrainian aircraft Saturday at the airport near Luhansk, Ukraine. EVGENIY MALOLETKA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
the supply of weapons did not cease. Nine crew and 40 troops were aboard the Il-76 troop transport when it went down early Saturday as it approached the airport at Luhansk, the Ukrainian prosecutor general’s office said. The plane’s tail section and
other pieces of scorched wreckage lay in a field near the village of Novohannivka, 12 miles south of Luhansk. An Associated Press reporter saw a dozen or more armed separatists inspecting the crash site. Defense Ministry spokesman Bohdan Senyk said the rebels used anti-aircraft guns and a
heavy machine gun to down the plane, while the prosecutor general’s office said rebels used an anti-aircraft missile. Luhansk, a city near the border with Russia, is one of two eastern areas where separatists have seized government buildings and declared independence. Ukrainian forces still control the Luhansk airport. In other fighting, five border guards were killed and seven wounded Saturday in the southern port of Mariupol when their column of vehicles was ambushed, the guards service said. The U.S. government reiterated its support for Poroshenko’s government and rejected Russia’s statements that it was not arming the rebels. The U.S. said Russia had sent tanks and rocket launchers to the rebels, making sure the unmarked tanks were of a type not being used by Russian forces. “We condemn the shooting down of the Ukrainian military plane and continue to be deeply concerned about the situation
Amid Taliban threats, Afghans go to polls
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and jobs,” said Marya Nazami, who voted for Ahmadzai. The White House praised Afghan voters for their “courage and resolve” in the second round. “These elections are a significant step forward on Afghanistan’s democratic path,” it said in a statement. “We look forward to working with the next government chosen by the Afghan people.” U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry praised Afghans for “laying the groundwork for the first democratic transition” in their country’s history. “These brave Afghans from all walks of life again defied the threat of violence and went to the ballot box and voted because they want to set the course for a more inclusive, prosperous and stable future,”
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An Afghan woman shows her inked finger after casting her vote Saturday at a polling station in Jalalabad, Afghanistan. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghans braved threats of violence and searing heat Saturday to vote in a presidential runoff that likely will mark the country’s first peaceful transfer of authority, an important step toward democracy as foreign combat troops leave. The new leader will be challenged with trying to improve ties with the West and combatting corruption while facing a powerful Taliban insurgency and declining international aid. Abdullah Abdullah, who emerged as the front-runner with 45 percent of the vote in the first round, faced Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, an ex-World Bank official and finance minister. Neither garnered the majority needed to win outright, but previous candidates and their supporters have since offered endorsements to each, making the final outcome unpredictable. The two men differ more in personality than policy. Both promise to sign a long-delayed security pact with the United States, which President Hamid Karzai has rebuffed. That would allow nearly 10,000 American troops to remain in the country for two more years to conduct counterterrorism operations and continue training and advising the ill-prepared Afghan army and police. And both pledge to fight for peace and against corruption. But their different ethnic backgrounds have highlighted the tribal fault lines in this country of 30 million ravaged by decades of war. “I voted today for my future, because it is still not clear — the country is at war and corruption is everywhere and security is terrible. I want the next president to bring security above all
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round on April 5. That would be a turnout of about 60 percent of Afghanistan’s 12 million eligible voters. Official preliminary results were to be announced July 2, with final results released July 22.
VI
By Amir Shah
Kerry said in a statement. He said it is essential that the process of tallying the votes, adjudicating completes and finalizing the results “be transparent and accountable.” Observer groups said the balloting was relatively smooth, although both candidates and observers said they had evidence of fraud ranging from ballot box stuffing to proxy voting. Several polling stations also opened late or failed to open at all because of security concerns, and many voters complained of ballot shortages. The Taliban intensified attacks ahead of voting and warned people to stay away from the polls, but the Islamic militants failed to disrupt the first round. They stepped up attacks again ahead of this round, including an assassination attempt that narrowly missed Abdullah just over a week ago. Despite a series of rocket barrages and other scattered attacks that Interior Minister Mohammad Umar Daudzai said killed 47 people, including 20 civilians and an election commission worker, the voting was largely peaceful. Daudzai also said 60 militants were killed. Independent Election Commission Chairman Ahmad Yousuf Nouristani, speaking at a joint press conference after polls closed, said initial estimates show that more than 7 million Afghans voted, which would be equivalent to the first
EXP
Election to decide runoff for president
in eastern Ukraine, including by the fact that militant and separatist groups have received heavy weapons from Russia, including tanks, which is a significant escalation,” said White House spokeswoman Laura Lucas Magnuson. Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel jointly called Russian President Vladimir Putin to express their “dismay” over the downing of the plane and said the incident makes clear how urgent a ceasefire is, German spokesman Georg Streiter said. Merkel stressed that, for a cease-fire to last, Russia must better control its border with Ukraine to stem the flow of weapons and fighters and must also exert its influence on proRussia rebels. The Kiev government has accused Russia of permitting three tanks to cross the border this week into Ukraine, where they were used by rebels. Russia denies supplying the separatists and says Russians fighting in Ukraine are volunteers.
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A-4
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
In New Mexico, more than 1,000 veterans have waited three or more months for initial medical appointments, and more than 3,000 vets were assigned to doctors who never saw them at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Albuquerque. A recent VA audit said 21 veterans died while waiting on that list.
Years of ‘waiting for the VA’
From left, Margaret Durr, her husband, Vietnam veteran Ernie Durr, and their friend, Vietnam veteran Manuel Saiz, talk about their health care experiences and the VA at the Santa Fe American Legion post last week. Ernie Durr called the sudden interest in VA problems by elected officials ‘jumping in on a bandwagon.’ PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Continued from Page A-1 doctors who never saw them at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Albuquerque. A recent VA audit said 21 veterans died while waiting on that list. For many veterans, the problem getting so much national attention now is old news. It is even a source of gallows humor in some corners, despite the grim statistics. At the Santa Fe American Legion post on a recent evening, bartender Maxine Sandoval noticed a woman at the bar who had not been served. “How long you been here?” she asked. “Three days,” the woman responded, jokingly. “Sounds like the VA hospital,” Sandoval said. “Are you on the dummy list?”
Surviving war and the health care system Breneiser, who was born and raised in Santa Fe, joined the Navy in 1969 and was aboard the USS Noxubee, a gasoline tanker, when Viet Cong swimmers hit it with a mine as it was anchored off the mouth of the Cua Viet River. The blast blew a hole in the tanker’s hull. The crew kept the ship afloat, and there were no fatalities. Breneiser said he paid no attention to his veterans benefits until a buddy pushed him to see a doctor in 2002. He was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and classified as 100 percent disabled. The classification means his medical needs are covered as long as he goes to a VA hospital, but more often than not the experience has been anything but satisfying. When doctors told him he needed surgery, he said, it took two years to finally get the operation. On several occasions, he said, he has spent as long as eight hours at the veterans hospital in Albuquerque waiting to see a doctor. A couple of times he got in faster by telling a staffer that, on a pain scale of 1 to 10, he was a 12. He never did get the call for his retina surgery, he said. He ended up paying about $4,000 out of his own pocket to have it done by a local doctor. Medicare covered the rest. After his blood pressure medicine ran out in April, he called Santa Fe’s outpatient clinic to get new blood work that was required to renew his prescription. He says he finally got a return call last week and was told he couldn’t get an appointment until July. Breneiser said he is reluctant to go. “The last friend of mine who went down there for help almost got arrested,” he said. That friend is Manuel Saiz, 63, another Vietnam Navy veteran who survived 30 years of work as a police officer unscathed before breaking his back after he fell off a ladder while working at a local hardware store. He says he got frustrated after talking to a VA health center staffer on the phone, who told him they did not
Veterans wait at the Raymond G. Murphy Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Albuquerque on Friday.
Vietnam veteran Ernie Durr said he has twice been diagnosed with skin cancer on his leg, and both times VA doctors in Albuquerque performed timely and successful surgery on him. But he’s had his share of waiting for help, too.
have his name in the VA health care system, even though he says he has been part of it since the early 1970s. So he popped into the Santa Fe outpatient clinic to straighten it out. The woman behind the desk there scanned his veteran’s identification card and told him he’s still not in the system. Saiz’s frustration alarmed the woman. She turned to a co-worker and said, “Call the cops!” He left but came back later. This time, a different staff member scanned Saiz’s identification card and found him in the system. Still, he was asked to fill out more
paperwork for a procedure he’s been getting there for years to relieve pain in his foot. They said they would call him back to set up an appointment — but they never did. He said they told him in July 2013 that they could see him in October. He told them, “If I don’t croak by then … I’ll see you in October.” While the audit states that at least 21 New Mexico veterans died while waiting for service, no one has confirmed a direct correlation between the wait time and the deaths. Bill Armstrong, a spokesman for the New Mexico Veterans Affairs Health Care System, said
John Breneiser, who was born and raised in Santa Fe, joined the Navy in 1969.
via email that the state does not yet have a copy of the waiting list or the names of those who died. He also said the VA would not comment on complaints about the Santa Fe center.
What took so long? New Mexico’s five congressional delegates have all stepped into the fray, pushing for new laws ensuring more timely care and calling for deeper investigations. Last week, both the Senate and the House passed bills making it easier for veterans to access health care with commitments to fund
external care and hire more doctors and nurses, among other measures. “The VA is suffering from a systemic failure that is affecting the health and well-being of our nation’s heroes, and it’s clear we need action to restore transparency and accountability,” Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., said last week after the bipartisan bill passed. Many local veterans welcome the push for reforms. Still, they wonder what took so long. Many say they have been sending complaints to elected officials for years, and nothing was done. Ernie Durr, a Vietnam veteran, called the sudden interest by elected officials “jumping in on a bandwagon … it’s a ‘press’ thing.” Still, the latest revelations have sparked plenty of reflection. When Durr, 67, read that 21 New Mexico veterans had died while waiting for treatment, he teared up. “I would have stepped to the back of the line for them,” he said. On a recent afternoon at the Santa Fe American Legion post, a Vietnam veteran walked across the room in a slow, crooked gate, wincing in pain. “It’s sciatica,” said the man, a former Marine who goes by the name Felipe. He asked that his full name not be used. He said a six-month wait to see a doctor in the VA system here is not unusual. So he was relieved recently, when, during a spike in pain, he visited the outpatient clinic in Santa Fe and found no one waiting in line. But instead of seeing a doctor, he said, he was asked to schedule an appointment and return about six weeks later. Not everyone’s experiences are the same. Some of the veterans The New Mexican interviewed for this story praised the local veterans center for holding Thursday night counseling sessions and said they appreciate the doctors who care for them. Durr, 67, said he has twice been diagnosed with skin cancer on his leg, and both times VA doctors in Albuquerque performed timely and successful surgery on him. “It’s amazing how much care they gave me,” he said. But he’s had his share of waiting for help, too, both in Santa Fe and Albuquerque. His wife, Margaret, is less forgiving. She said she has watched staff members at the Santa Fe outpatient clinic put people on hold and then take a few minutes to go eat a sandwich. The doctors there, she and her husband say, are good. The staffers are not friendly. And you wait a lot, she said. Ernie Durr agrees. “As servicemen, how many years did we wait in line?” he said. “That’s the system. Go on in and stand in line. We paid our dues. We shouldn’t have to stand in line anymore.” Patrick Malone contributed to this story. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
A-5
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
History: Taos councilors defend votes to change park’s name Kit Carson Park because of what he represents, I take note because this is our community and our town,” he said. “And if we are offensive, we need to take note, adapt and change.” Historian and author Marc Simmons, who has studied Carson for 30 years, called the name change a “great travesty” that “tramples on the truth of history.” “I guess I won’t be coming to Taos anymore. You can quote me on that,” Simmons said. “It’s politicizing history,” added Simmons. “It fits into the dialectic today and the lean toward the extreme left, which means dethroning — and Kit Carson is not the only one — anybody who made a splash on the frontier.” The dissidence over historical figures who clashed with the Indians has played out in different ways in New Mexico. In 1998, a vandal or vandals sawed off the right foot of a bronze sculpture of Don Juan de Oñate at a cultural center in Alcalde named after the conquistador. In Santa Fe, statues of other conquistadors, including Don Diego de Vargas, have been defaced and spray-painted with the words murderer and killer. At the Kit Carson Memorial Cemetery in Taos, adjacent to the newly renamed park, a streak of paint tarnishes the legendary scout’s name on a historic marker. “History is messy and fraught with contradictions,” Hampton Sides, author of the 2006 best-seller Blood and Thunder: An Epic of the American West, said in an email. The book provides a sweeping history of Carson and the opening of the West, including an unflinching account of The Long Walk, Carson’s brutal removal of the Navajos from Canyon de Chelly to Bosque Redondo in southeast New Mexico, hundreds of miles from their homeland, where they were held as prisoners of war. “Even our greatest historical figures were deeply flawed,” Sides said. “George Washington, as a young man, fought and killed Native Americans. He, like Jefferson and many other of our founding fathers, owned slaves. Lincoln, probably our greatest president, personally signed the orders approving the Navajo war that Kit Carson reluctantly led.” Sides said he pulled no punches in “depicting the absolute devastation of Carson’s ‘scorched-earth’ campaign. “But one needs to remember that it was indeed a war,” he said. “It was a war that had its genesis in centuries of brutal raiding and kidnapping between the Navajos and the Spanish, a cycle of violence that the U.S. Army was seeking, in its own flawed way, to end.” Town Councilor Jude Cantu, a Hispanic woman who also voted in favor of renaming the park, said she was married to a Native American for 21 years and heard the indigenous people talk about the hurt and humiliation that Carson represents. “Having been fortunate enough to have lived in their world, I know a whole different version,” she said. But, Simmons said, Carson is erro-
During his visit to Taos on Thursday, Edwin Gongra of Texas takes a photograph of the gravesite of Kit Carson and his wife, Josefa, in the recently renamed park. Gongra said it was ‘unfortunate’ that the Taos Town Council voted to change the park’s name to Red Willow. PHOTOS BY CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
Visitors explore the parlor of the Kit Carson Home & Museum in Taos on Thursday. The museum draws about 20,000 visitors annually. ‘We’re not promoting. We’re not demoting. We’re here to keep this part of American history alive,’ said Karen Douglas, right, the museum’s executive director.
neously regarded as an enemy of the Indians. “Kit Carson was one of the good guys,” Simmons said. “If I was young and vigorous, I would start a movement to have Kit and Josefa’s remains exhumed and transferred to a better cemetery,” he said. “I might even get them transferred to the national cemetery in Santa Fe, since he’d be entitled to that since he was a member of the Army.” The conflicting and contradictory narratives of Carson’s life and his relationship with Native Americans play out in Sides’ book. “Carson fought hard against the Navajo, but he loved Taos and was a friend of Taos Pueblo,” Sides said in
his email. “So far as my own research could discover, he was a friend to all the pueblos. Certainly he was no Indian hater. His first wife was Arapaho and though he was illiterate, he was fluent in many Indian tongues.” Later in life, Sides added, Carson “successfully negotiated the creation of a reservation for the Utes and became an eloquent and insightful critic of U.S. Indian policy.” Carson, born Christopher Houston Carson in Kentucky in 1809, lived in an era that was harsh and often cruel. History books have labeled him a trapper, scout, rancher, mountain man, Indian agent and Indian fighter, among other descriptions. While some accounts portray
him as an honorable man who was respected by the Indians and had two Native American wives, Carson is vilified for his role in The Long Walk. In 1864, on orders from Brig. Gen. James Henry Carleton, who conceived the idea of removing the Navajos, U.S. Army troops under the command of Carson rounded up thousands of Navajo men, women and children and forced them to march about 400 miles from their homes in northern Arizona and New Mexico to a reservation at Bosque Redondo in southeastern New Mexico. Scholars estimate that thousands of Navajos, many of whom consider Carson a war criminal, died along the way. His men also scorched thousands of acres of crops, destroying millions of pounds of food. Karen Douglas, executive director of the Kit Carson Home & Museum in Taos, which draws about 20,000 visitors annually, said the museum presents an unbiased history of Carson. A museum pamphlet states that some people consider Carson a hero. Others say he was a rugged frontiersman who understood the ways of Native Americans better than any other Westerner. Still, others view Carson as an Indian hater “whose only interest was in fighting and killing Native Americans,” the pamphlet states. “We’re not promoting. We’re not demoting. We’re here to keep this part of American history alive,” Douglas said. “I think somebody said it the best: the good, the bad and the ugly.” Douglas believes Carson was a “very conflicted” man. “He had to take these orders from his superiors, and yet there’s no doubt that he loved Native Americans, so he had to be very conflicted,” she said. “I think he just must’ve been torn in half. I’m not excusing anything, by the way.
Inspect: Funding down as drilling surges Continued from Page A-1 Jaramillo, 54. About 250 yards up the hill from Jaramillo’s home, on land that was a dormant gravel pit when she bought the house eight years ago, is an active drilling operation that operates every day from 7 a.m. until sometimes 10:30 p.m. Jaramillo said the drilling began about three years ago. Even if the wells were inspected, she questioned whether that would ensure their safety. She said many view the oil and gas industry as selfpolicing and nontransparent. “Who are they going to report to?” she asked. Government data obtained by the AP point to the Bureau of Land Management as so overwhelmed by a boom in a new drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, that it has been unable to keep up with inspections of some of the highest priority wells. That’s an agency designation based on a greater need to protect against possible water contamination and other environmental and safety issues. Factors also include whether the well is near a high-pressure formation or whether the drill operator lacks a clear track record of service. “No one would have predicted the incredible boom of drilling on federal lands, and the number of wells we’ve been asked to process,” said the BLM’s deputy director, Linda Lance. Since fracking reached a height in 2009, about 90 per-
cent of new wells on federal land are drilled by the process, which involves pumping huge volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground. “The current rate of inspections is simply not acceptable to us,” she said. The agency oversees 100,000 oil and gas wells on public lands, 3,486 of which received the high-priority designation. According to BLM records for fiscal years 2009 to 2012, 1,400 of those high-priority wells, spread across 13 states, were not federally inspected. Wyoming had the most, 632, or 45 percent. South Dakota had 1 out of 2 wells uninspected, and Pennsylvania had 1 out of 6. All the higher risk wells were inspected in six states — Alabama, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, Ohio and Texas. Many more wells are located on private lands, where state officials take the lead in ensuring they comply with environmental laws, with mixed results. Nationwide, there were nearly 500,000 producing gas wells in 2012, according to Energy Information Administration data. More than 1,800 new wells were being drilled in March alone. Dennis Willis, a former BLM field officer in Price, Utah, says he routinely provided input on oil leasing and drilling decisions on federal land before his retirement in 2009. He described a situation of chronic underfunding dating to at least the early 2000s, when BLM management made clear that issuing new permits would be a priority over other tasks, according to
a 2002 memorandum from supervisors in Utah to field officers. At the time, fracking was becoming more widely used. “There certainly wasn’t a shortage of spills, leaks, pipeline failures and other problems,” said Willis, who now does consulting work for conservation and other groups. “It’s a disaster waiting to happen,” he said. In interviews, BLM officials acknowledged persistent problems in keeping up with inspections, but said they were not aware of any major safety issues to date arising from the uninspected wells. Lance said BLM field managers are making judgment calls to minimize the risk of potential harm to surrounding communities. The agency also is reviewing whether it needs to slow down the pace of permits to ensure public safety. Officials noted that money provided by Congress for oil and gas operations has declined since 2007. During that period, the number of wells drilled on federal and Indian lands has increased by roughly one-third. “We’re trying to do the best we can with limited resources,” Lance said. If approved by Congress, the BLM’s 2015 budget request of $150 million for oil and gas operations would allow the agency to conduct the bulk of its required inspections over three years, in part by collecting fees from oil and gas companies. Unlike past years, $48 million will be earmarked for inspections. The BLM made similar budget
requests the last several years with little success. The BLM has sought to add inspectors, but that has proved challenging in places such as Utah, where most wells are drilled on federal land. While a petroleum engineer could get a starting salary of $90,000 in the private sector, the BLM typically pays $35,000. This year’s appropriations bill would allow the BLM to increase inspector salaries to around $44,000. The public concern is evident in Colorado, where increased drilling into suburban and rural areas has led community groups to push nearly a dozen oil and gas local control initiatives for the November ballot. Of the wells drilled from 2009 to 2012, the BLM designated more than 400 on federal and Indian lands in Colorado as high priority, the third highest behind Wyoming and North Dakota. More than 160 of Colorado’s uninspected high-priority wells are near New Castle, on the edge of the White River National Forest. Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has been seeking a legislative compromise that could satisfy concerns over health and safety impacts of fracking. Regulators contend that overall, water and air pollution problems from fracking are rare, but environmental groups and some scientists say there hasn’t been enough research on those issues. Jaramillo said residents in the canyon have mixed feelings about fracking. “The people that really like it
It just must’ve been a terrible time in our country’s history.” The Town Council heard Tuesday from four residents, including a pueblo member, who requested the change, saying Carson’s name was a sore spot for Native Americans. The group suggested renaming the park Red Willow. The Taos News reported that the word Taos translates to “place of the red willow” in Tiwa, the pueblo’s native language. The council’s 3-1 vote generated criticism that officials acted too fast. “We possibly could’ve gotten more input from the public, but it wouldn’t have changed my mind,” Cantu said. The agenda item was advertised in the legal section of the local newspaper, Hahn said. While lack of public input is a “valid criticism,” Hahn said, he doesn’t believe the council rushed into a decision. “I have been aware of some of the divide in our community for decades, not over the renaming of the park, just racism in general,” he said. “From my sole perspective, we did it to help heal our community,” Hahn said. “It’s about reconciliation and beginning a discussion about how we treat each other with dignity and respect. There have been great transgressions that we need to address and begin talking about and begin healing from and moving forward.” Ian Chisholm, tribal secretary of Taos Pueblo, said the pueblo also was unaware of the council’s actions to rename the park. Even so, he said, “I think Taos Pueblo supports the renaming of the park due to the negative connotation that the name Kit Carson has amongst the indigenous people of the area. We don’t view this action as erasing the past, but acknowledging and reconciling the history of Taos so that we can move forward in the future and better address issues that are important to the community as a whole.” Sides said he understood the council’s decision, though he disagreed with it. “Kit Carson was brave, loyal, and true to his friends, his life bristled with incident, and he did many heroic deeds,” Sides said in the email. “But he could also be incredibly violent, even by the standards of his time. These contradictions are what make him, to me, so deeply interesting. He was at the nerve center of a lot of controversial history … and town councils don’t like controversy.” A gaggle of children at the park Thursday were divided over whether they preferred the old or new name of the park. In a show of hands, most indicated they preferred the original name. When one of their chaperones asked if they knew why the name had been changed, a brown-eyed girl answered without hesitation. “I heard they wanted to change it because that Kit Carson guy was a killer,” she said. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @danieljchacon.
BLM falling behind The U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which is now responsible for the safety of 100,000 oil and gas wells on federal and Indian lands, is struggling to keep pace with America's drilling boom. Enacted amount of funding in $ millions
Cumulative total of new wells each year since 2007*
$150 million
30 thousand 25
120
20
90
15 60
10
30 0
5 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13
0
’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13
* The number for each year reflects new wells drilled, as well as all new wells since 2007 for which BLM must oversee with addititional inspections or other monitoring each year, on Federal lands and Indian lands. SOURCE: U.S. Department if the Interior
are the people who are getting money out of it,” she said. “The people who don’t are really worried about: ‘Is it going to ruin the water? Is it going to ruin the land? Is it going to ruin the air?’ ” A neighbor, Kory Kipferl, owns a 10-acre property adjacent to federal land dotted with active wells on gravel pads. He said he’s accepted what he called a need for domestic drilling — but he’s concerned about the water table. “Once we start puncturing the water table, that could cause problems, whether you’re drilling for gas, oil, water, whatever,” Kipferl said. The BLM data set is more extensive than what was reviewed recently by the Government Accountability Office and was filtered to remove duplicate well entries that yielded an overcount. In a recent report, auditors said
AP
the BLM needed to do a better job of coordinating with state regulators. In Pennsylvania, for instance, the one well that went uninspected by the BLM had been checked multiple times by the state. Still, it’s not clear how willing states are to take up the federal task. “To say that we’re going to start inspecting federal wells is just above and beyond what we could do,” said John Rogers, associate director of Utah’s Division of Oil, Gas and Mining, pointing to his small staff. He said companies will inspect their own equipment in order to protect their investment, so it’s likely that at least some of Utah’s 200-plus wells that weren’t inspected by BLM are checked by someone. “We’re certainly not going to second-guess people’s inspections,” Rogers said of the BLM.
A-6
NATION
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
Minority gun owners confront stigma, isolation NRA mostly a white, conservative group
Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. of proponents are gaining ground was considering joining the Milwaukee County, Wisconsin among minority groups. The NRA but added that the organi— a speaker at the NRA conscene at the Gun for Hire shoot- zation could do more to reach vention who has encouraged ing range in Woodland Park, out to minorities. “We need By Tanzina Vega his constituents, regardless of N.J., which was celebrating some kind of middle ground to The New York Times their race, to arm themselves for its first anniversary just days let the NRA know that there are protection — said many blacks before the NRA convention, positive, young black males who INDIANAPOLIS — Standing were not aware of their history was decidedly diverse. While use firearms properly,” he said. in a small booth surrounded with guns in America. most of those in attendance The NRA appears to be lisby displays for rifles, pistols, “The reality is self-defense, were white, some black, Latino tening. It has added a diverse holsters and other firearm and the firearm played a key and Asian-American patrons cast to its roster of NRA News accouterments, the Rev. Kenn role in the freeing of the slaves,” also queued up to shoot and commentators, including Gabby Blanchard signed copies of Clarke said. “So what I’ve seen enjoy the hamburgers, hot dogs Franco, a Venezuelan Olympic his book Black Man With a as my role is just to re-engage and handgun-shaped chocoshooter, and Chris Cheng, an Gun: Reloaded. Amid the sea the black community with their lates. Asian-American who worked of thousands of white faces history and let them figure it Ainsley A. Reynolds, 42, an at Google and won the History that descended on this city for out for themselves. But right accountant and NRA member Channel’s Top Shot competition the National Rifle Association now they are being fed a lot of Delyne King examines a replacement grip for a rifle at the who lives in central New Jersey in 2012. convention, Blanchard, an NRA National Rifle Association convention in Indianapolis in April. propaganda.” and is a regular patron at the But perhaps the best known member since 1991, offered his Eric Morris, an African Amer- range, said blacks like him also At a time when gun issues are volatile nationally and sales of the organization’s commentareasoning for why he was one of are increasing, many minority gun owners are trying to balican who runs Black Wolf Hunt- had to fight lingering stereotors is Colion Noir, an African ance the pros and cons of ownership with the NRA’s unyieldthe few black visitors. ing Club, an organization based types about who owns guns. American “urban gun enthusi“We still culturally have a fear ing stances. AJ MAST/THE NEW YORK TIMES in Killeen, Texas, said he got the “Typically, when you say ast” whose online video series, that we’re going to be that lone “deer-in-the-headlights look all ‘black’ and ‘guns,’ you are think- Noir, began May 11. guy out, and you don’t want to the time” when he told people center at the University of Chi- been shot, who know someone ing about gang members and Noir, who has a prolific be the lone guy out,” he said, cago. Their attendance at the who has been killed,” said Marc that he was a hunter. He said carjacking as opposed to lawsocial media presence, did not estimating that 1 in 100 people at NRA convention was minuscule H. Morial, the president and his goal in founding the group abiding citizens like myself,” he respond to repeated requests the convention was black. “The compared with their rate of gun chief executive of the National was to get more blacks and said. for an interview. exposed nail gets hammered.” other members of minorities ownership, let alone their pres- Urban League. Alexander McLucas, 43, who In a profile in the Los Angeles With his blog and podcasts, ence in the population. High-profile killings of young, interested in hunting. “When works at a large communicaTimes, he acknowledged that he Blanchard is an avid proponent have you ever seen a picture of Chuck Gueno Jr., 57, an Afriunarmed black men, like Traytions company, joined Reynolds did not fit the NRA stereotype of gun rights and founder of the can American retired Marine a black father and son or a black von Martin and Jordan Davis, at the range. McLucas said he of “old, fat white guys.” Maryland Tenth Cavalry Gun father and daughter out shootat the convention who likes to have further alienated minoriClub, a national pro-gun orgaing cans?” he asked. shoot competitively, said the ties. The NRA has supported nization for African Americans. NRA had “a stigma of being the so-called Stand Your Ground Nicholas Johnson, a law proAnd he was one of very few fessor at Fordham University good old boys, and people of statutes and laws around the and author of the book Negroes African Americans comfortable color might be a little intimicountry, which offer legal proenough with the NRA to be dated.” tection to people who use force and the Gun: The Black Tradition of Arms, said blacks today hawking wares here. Part of the stigma around in the name of self-defense. were less influenced by the antiAt a time when gun issues guns among African Americans In a Gallup poll in January gun views of many black leadare volatile and firearm sales can be traced to high rates of 2013, 49 percent of nonwhite are steadily increasing, minorgun violence, particularly affect- respondents said they were dis- ers. “We are out of that stage where people look to the black ity gun owners — whether they ing young blacks and those who satisfied with the nation’s gun PRECIOUS METALS political class as their savior,” are black, Asian or Latino — live in poor, urban communities. laws and wanted them to be Johnson said. may find themselves trying to Blacks die from gun violence stricter, compared with 32 perThere are signs that gun balance the practical pros and at more than twice the rate of cent in 2012. cons of gun ownership with the whites, according to data from For Chad Ross, 36, who Coins ~ Currency ~ Gold ~ Jewelry hard-core conservatism and the Centers for Disease Control served in the Marines and runs Santa Fe’s Local Source Since 1997 unyielding stances of the NRA and Prevention. the Facebook page The AfricanNO and some other gun advocates. Organizations like the American Gun Club, Martin’s W 855A Cerrillos (next to Who’s Donuts) SAT OPE Blanchard said it could be a dif- NAACP, the National Urban N death was a prime example of UR 505-989-7680 • M-F 10-5, Sat 11-4 11am DAY ficult balancing act. League and the National Action why “a lot of black people have -4p m www.premierpreciousmetals.com Blacks are less likely than Network have spoken out a bad taste in their mouth about whites to own a gun. In surveys against gun violence affecting the NRA,” he said. “Most blacks from 1973 to 2012, an averAfrican Americans and other thought that Zimmerman had HISPANIC ARTS • FAMILY FUN • GREAT RHYTHMS • SHORT FILMS • LECTURES • FLAMENCO • SUMPTUOUS FOOD age of 27 percent of African minority groups. Compared murdered that boy, and most Americans nationwide said they with the white community, “in NRA types thought George owned a gun, compared with the black community you find Zimmerman was in his rights.” 47 percent of whites, according a greater propensity of people Of course, not all blacks are to data from NORC, a research who know someone who has so conflicted.
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Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
2014 SANTA FE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUSINESS AWARDS RED CARPET GALA
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Best Woman-Owned Business After a long career as a stakeholder in the family business, Robin (McKinney) Martin succeeded her father, Robert McKinney, as owner of the Santa Fe New Mexican in 2001. Since taking ownership of the paper, her investment in people, technology and infrastructure has demonstrated her passion for her business and the Santa Fe community at large. Under Robin’s watch, Santa Fe local news is alive and kicking! Readership of The New Mexican is now at an all time high, with an average daily print circulation of 20,000 and a nation-wide online audience more than 300K strong. Today, Robin is the owner of several media organizations: the Santa Fe New Mexican, the Taos News, the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, and the Raton Comet. Robin believes in giving back. In her “spare time”, she serves on the board of the Associated Press as Treasurer, and is actively involved with the Inland Press Association and PAGE Newspaper Cooperative.
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Iraq: Syrian conflict revitalizes group Continued from Page A-1 It’s unclear whether the gains of ISIS will last, or whether the Sunni tribesmen who apparently aided the jihadists will submit to living under the group’s harsh brand of Islamic law. Either way, U.S. and Middle East officials say the group’s achievements are both remarkable and alarming, displaying the same mix of audacity, cunning and political skill that made Zarqawi such a fearsome opponent a decade ago. Counterterrorism officials who tried to defeat the group during the Zarqawi era expressed begrudging respect for ability of ISIS to recover from virtual extinction in the years after his death. The current leader, a former Iraqi teacher known as Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, managed to find new purpose in the Syrian conflict and renewed strength in the lawless regions of eastern Syria and western Iraq, where his fighters could train and plan without interference from U.S. and Western military forces. “They get sick, but they never die,” said a senior Middle Eastern intelligence official who has closely tracked the fast-moving developments in Iraq. The official, who insisted that his name and nationality not be revealed in discussing his country’s intelligence assessments, said the astonishing recent gains of ISIS were mostly due to skillfully forged alliances with Sunni tribal leaders, as the group exploited widespread resentment toward the Iraqi government in Baghdad. “They all share the same hatred for the ruling regime,” said the official, citing examples of Iraqi Sunni collusion in the sweep of ISIS through Mosul, Tikrit and other Iraqi cities. “It would not be possible for a group like [ISIS] to control so much territory on its own. They are getting a lot of help from the sons of the tribes.” So far, at least, ISIS has managed to avoid alienating its natural Sunni allies the way Zarqawi famously did. The Jordanian’s indiscriminate and unflinchingly brutal attacks on Iraqi civilians helped give rise to the Sunni backlash known as the Anbar Awakening, in which tribal sheiks withdrew their support from Zarqawi and actively helped U.S. forces find and destroy his operatives. Even veterans of the Awakening seem more willing to give ISIS a chance. Zaydan Aljabri, an Iraqi tribal sheik from Anbar province, said he thinks ISIS has learned from the mistakes of the Zarqawi era and is now truly committed to defending Sunnis against a Baghdad government he sees as corrupt and repressive. “If al-Baghdadi asked for my allegiance, I would give it to him, because what he is doing is what I want,” Aljabri said in an interview. “Right now my priority is liberating the Sunnis, and that’s why he has been fighting for these last six months.” Aljabri said Anbar’s Sunnis believe they can manage ISIS and prevent it from imposing the kind of harsh Islamic law that tarnished the group’s image in parts of Syria it controls. “We are an Islamic country, but we want to be a developed country — to be part of the world,” he said. “Al-Baghdadi will not dare try to impose [sharia] law in Iraq because he knows the tribes will not tolerate it.” In fact, the record of ISIS in Syria offers conflicting signals on how it would seek to administer newly captured cities in Iraq. Al-Baghdadi has repeatedly insisted that his group has learned from its past errors, and his lieutenants in Syria have tried to portray themselves as committed to improving social welfare. The group’s propaganda wing frequently posts videos of ISIS soldiers passing out food and blankets or clearing trash from Syrian streets. But ISIS’s social media sites are also filled with graphic images of Islamists carrying out public executions and amputations on suspected lawbreakers and beheading and mutilating progovernment fighters and even members of rival militia groups. Already in Mosul, ISIS has issued a new charter spelling out the creation of an Islamic state along with harsh new laws. ISIS, meanwhile, has continued its campaign of attacks on Iraqi Shiite civilians, routinely bombing Iraqi markets, bus stops and schools. The group’s embrace of extreme violence has drawn
condemnation from al-Qaida itself. Ayman al-Zawahiri, who assumed command after Osama bin Laden’s death, last year ordered ISIS to disband and leave Syria, and his organization issued a statement in February publicly disavowing ISIS. Zawahiri has embraced a rival Islamist rebel group, the al-Nusra Front, which was created in 2012 by a former deputy of al-Baghdadi. Strikingly, the same divisions over tactics and ideology have been present since the earliest days. Zarqawi used graphic violence as a calling card, embracing brutal tactics that, while repulsive to most people, also made him an icon and hero — a fearless warrior who exacted painful revenge for the decades of humiliations and defeats borne by Muslims. Born as Ahmad Fadeel alKhalayleh in the gritty Jordanian city of Zarqa, the movement’s founder gained a reputation as a brawler and a thug before discovering Islam in his early 20s. When he was 24, he left Jordan in what became the first of two life-changing events: a stint fighting Communist forces in Afghanistan, followed by five years of incarceration in Jordan for his role in a foiled terrorist plot by local jihadis. He returned to Afghanistan after his release from prison, but, distrusted by bin Laden, he established his own training camp in the western Afghan city of Herat, hundreds of miles from bin Laden’s base at Kandahar. In late 2001, when U.S. warplanes began bombing Taliban strongholds throughout Afghanistan, he sought refuge in the rugged mountains of northeastern Iraq, in a Kurdish region regarded as beyond the reach of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. Zarqawi’s Iraqi camp eventually attracted the attention of the George W. Bush administration, which made Zarqawi a central pillar of its effort to link Hussein to al-Qaida. The administration’s allegations of operational ties between Zarqawi and Hussein’s forces proved to be false. But Zarqawi did use his Iraqi sanctuary to prepare for what he believed would be the ultimate confrontation between the Islamists and America. Just six months after the U.S. invasion, he launched a series of spectacular car bombings that became his signature, targeting in quick succession an embassy, a Shiite mosque and the local headquarters of the United Nations. Scores were killed, including Sergio Vieira de Mello, the popular head of the U.N. mission to Iraq. Zarqawi was killed on June 7, 2006, after an intensive intelligence operation tracked him to a safehouse north of Baghdad, where he was meeting with his spiritual adviser. A U.S. warplane dropped a pair of guided bombs on the building, destroying it. His death prompted a rebranding of the group — which became known as the Islamic State of Iraq — but the group slowly weakened under relentless pressure from U.S. intelligence and special forces teams and the rejectionist Anbar Awakening movement. But alBaghdadi, who emerged as the group’s leader in 2010, saw in the Syrian civil war an opportunity to reclaim legitimacy among Sunni Muslims. The group was renamed yet again, as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, and it soon surpassed other Islamist rebel militias in seizing territory and drawing foreign recruits. ISIS moved aggressively into Iraq early this year by seizing control of Fallujah and other towns in the Sunni heartland. Factoring in the additional gains in the past week, the group now controls a swath of land stretching from northern Syria to central Iraq. Some Islamist experts see ISIS as on the cusp of an achievement sought by Zarqawi a decade ago: erasing the Western-imposed boundary lines that divide the Middle East into nation-states. Zarqawi repeatedly boasted that he would undo the SykesPicot accord, signed secretly by Britain and France in 1916 as a basis for carving up the region, said Hassan Abu Hanieh, a Jordanian author and researcher of Islamist movements who knew Zarqawi during his years in Jordan. “These [captured] territories already amount to an Islamic state,” Hanieh said. “In effect, they have canceled Sykes-Picot. The jihadists are there now, whether we like it or not.”
Iraqi Shiites strike back against militants was expected to arrive in the gulf from the Arabian Sea by The Washington Post Saturday night, along with the guided-missile cruiser USS BAGHDAD — A Shiite miliPhilippine Sea and guidedtia seized control of an Iraqi missile destroyer USS Truxtun, town for the first time Saturday, Rear Adm. John Kirby, the blunting the advance toward Pentagon press secretary, said Baghdad of radical Sunni in a statement. The order to fighters in a sign that the widemove the ships “will provide spread mobilization of parathe commander-in-chief addimilitary forces may be starting tional flexibility should military to have an impact. options be required to protect The first overtly sectarian American lives, citizens and battle of the new war unfoldinterests in Iraq,” Kirby said. Iraqi Shiite fighters deploy with their weapons Saturday in ing for control of Iraq came as An Iraqi general told reporters Basra, Iraq’s second-largest city, 340 miles southeast of thousands of heavily armed in Baghdad that the armed forces Baghdad. Thousands of Shiites answered an urgent call to Shiites paraded defiantly have “regained the initiative” in arms Saturday, joining security forces to fight the Islamic through the streets of Baghdad, militants who have captured large swaths of territory north recent days and are now confiresponding to a call to arms dent that Baghdad is secure. As of the capital. NABIL AL-JURANI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS from their most revered cleric. part of the effort to protect the Men young and old piled into baned cleric who waved a pistol mosques, a former airport and capital, soldiers headed into the taxis, trucks, police vehicles from the window of his black, at the homes of prominent Shi- desert to dig a trench, according and minibuses and drove noisarmored sports utility vehicle ite clerics and politicians. Their to footage broadcast on local ily through the streets, honking television stations. as it wound through emptied numbers swelled in response horns and waving an assortment shopping streets. “Wherever Speaking in Tehran, Iranian to the call to jihad issued Friday of weapons, including rocketthey go, we will defeat them,” by Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, President Hassan Rouhani propelled grenades, high-powhe added, referring to ISIS. regarded as the most influential would not confirm or deny ered sniper rifles, Kalashnikov reports that the Quds Force, an Iraqi soldiers and police Shiite cleric in the world. Busassault rifles and handguns. elite unit of Iran’s Revolutionsealed off streets and stood loads of people descended on “Daiish we will never surrender,” guard as the procession of parts of the capital from towns ary Guard Corps, had entered chanted a group of young men Iraq to assist Prime Minister thousands of armed men and cities in the south, and the piled on the back of a pickup passed, a humiliating reminder travelers said more buses were Nouri al-Maliki’s government. truck, using an acronym for the He told reporters that his counof the extent to which the U.S.- on the way. al-Qaida-inspired Islamic State try is prepared to step in to help trained security forces have As President Barack Obama of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), which Iraq but that Iraqi authorities lost stature since the mass considered military options to carried out a stunningly swift had not requested assistance. desertions across the north that meet Iraq’s request for assisseizure of large swaths of north- facilitated the ISIS advance. tance, Defense Secretary Chuck “We are ready to help Iraq ern Iraq last week. Thousands of Shiites flocked Hagel on Saturday ordered a within the framework of interU.S. aircraft carrier into the “We want to show the world for a third straight day to national law, and if the Iraqi govPersian Gulf. that we can protect ourselves,” volunteer to fight, crowding ernment and nation ask us to do recruitment centers set up in The USS George H.W. Bush said Khodr al-Tamimi, a turso, we will consider it,” he said. By Liz Sly and Abigail Hauslohner
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SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
Iraq can’t solve problems with army alone. Page B-2
Martinez team hits where it hurts T
House races are where the action is
T
he Democratic donkey in New Mexico may be feeling a little like Eeyore, judging from the grumbling on the blue end of the political spectrum in the wake of Gary King taking the party primary. Here’s a sample of the comments posted on The New Mexican website accompanying stories of King’s November matchup with Republican Gov. Susana Martinez: “Maybe the TV commercial bombardment from Martinez will lighten up, being that she won’t need to spend even half her millions to beat King.” “I think the state would be better off with anyone else [than Martinez], although I admit I am not crazy about King.” “I am a long-term Rob Democrat, and I will Nikolewski not vote for this selfserving incompetent.” Commentary Ouch. But there’s plenty of time between now and November and, in a state where registered Democrats outnumbered Republicans 49 percent to 35 percent in 2012, King still has a puncher’s chance of delivering a knockout, even if the two-term attorney general doesn’t exactly inspire Beatlemania among party regulars. But while the governor’s race may move to the background, the fight for control of the state House of Representatives figures to take on greater significance. Republicans haven’t held the majority in the House since 1953 — when Dwight Eisenhower swept into the White House with coattails so long they extended all the way to Santa Fe. By the way, I’m making that presumption about Ike’s influence because I’m hard-pressed to find any members of that Roundhouse class who haven’t moved on to the Great Bullring In The Sky. Put it this way: It’s been so long since the GOP had the majority that Rep. Nick Salazar wasn’t even serving in the House then. The Martinez camp would like nothing more than to cap a victory in November by seeing Republicans take control of the House, but it’s an uphill climb. Talking privately last week, a retiring Republican in the House told me the chances of a GOP takeover are “about 25 percent.” Right now, Democrats have a 37-33 lead in the House. A net gain of two for Republicans would mean a 35-35 tie and a net gain of three would get them to the majority. That sounds simple enough, but it’s a lot harder than it looks. First, 21 of those seats are held by Democrats who are running unopposed. Sixteen Republicans are unopposed. That leaves 33 races up for grabs. Of those, 13 are Democratic incumbents, many from safe districts. Two Democrats are running for the first time (Matthew McQueen in District 50 and Mariaelena Johnson in District 53), but they’re looking to succeed Democrats who used to hold those seats (Stephen Easley and Nate Cote, respectively). Plus, Republicans can’t afford to lose any seats they already have. Three House Republicans won very close elections in 2012 (Kelly Fajardo, Paul Pacheco, Terry McMillan) and figure to have tough fights ahead of them this year, too. In addition, Sharon Clahchischilliage won two years ago up in the Four Corners area after Democrat Ray Begaye self-destructed following a scandal over double-billing expenses. Democrats are running a new candidate this year, so the road for Clahchischilliage figures to be tougher. GOP loyalists counter by pointing out the number of Democrats (Emily Kane, Stephanie Garcia Richard and Elizabeth Thomson, for instance) who escaped with close wins in 2012. Republicans are hoping a big Martinez victory can put them over the top. But here’s something to ponder: The elections might be so close that that one party could conceivably win six or seven of those toss-up races. If that happened in the Democrats’ favor, their lead in the House could grow to 40-30 or more. Conversely, if Republicans got all the breaks, they could get the majority with one or two seats to spare. So while the governor’s race may seem a bit dull right now, the Roundhouse race in the House will be intense. And that means plenty of hard-nosed campaigns — with plenty of money getting spent — between now and Nov. 4. You can contact Rob Nikolewski at the website he edits, www.newmexicowatchdog.org.
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
State’s bars should honor vertical IDs
I
t seems that police in New Mexico have been asking bar owners not to serve anyone with vertical identifications. Now someone of legal age cannot be served anywhere. Does no one have the gumption to serve someone on a 21st birthday anymore? The person producing fake vertical IDs has been in jail for years. We had to call seven establishments before one would accept a legal ID. Grow a backbone and trust your servers, Santa Fe. Justin Irwin
Santa Fe
Homeowners’ rights I very much agree with Marcia Kaplan regarding homeowners’ associations (My View, “HOA law is useless,” June 8). It is ironic that we enjoy fundamental rights and legal protection everywhere except in our most intimate environment; one in which we have made the largest investment of time, money and self. It might be that everyone is corrupted by unbridled prerogatives or that certain types of people are prone to becoming tin-pot despots. It is going to take a massive class-action suit to alert these people to the fact that you can only abuse so much. Rod Lievano
Santa Fe
Largest swim lesson Once again Santa Feans will join tens of thousands of children around the globe to become world-record holders in the The World’s Largest Swimming Lesson, an international event to promote water safety and the importance of learning how to swim. Tragically, drowning is a leading cause of unintended, injury-related death of young children. The local sites participating in the largest simultaneous swimming lesson ever conducted on Friday are Bicentennial Pool and Fort Marcy Pool. The halfhour lesson starts at 9 a.m. in Santa Fe but occurs simultaneously at various time zones around the world. Last year, 13 countries participated. Bicentennial Pool was New Mexico’s only site. We expect 25 kids and numerous volunteers at each site for this global event. To enroll your children, register at the Fort Marcy Recreation Complex. All skill levels are invited, but each child must be comfortable enough to enter the pool without coaxing and willing to blow bubbles underwater. Be part of the fun and remember, swim lessons save lives.
Dangerous offenders Is it the remnant of some misguided societal tolerance to drunken driving that allows our courts to continually put repeat offenders back on our roads? By what measure of insanity does a judge decide it’s OK to inflict a chronic DWI criminal upon us? How many times would a drunk be allowed to re-offend if he/she had killed or injured a member of the judge’s family — or of a legislator’s family? Would it be the fourth, sixth or incredibly, the 11th time? A second DWI conviction should result in mandatory confiscation of the offender’s vehicle. A motor vehicle is a 3,000-pound weapon. Would we allow multiple chances to a chronic drunk who, instead of driving while impaired, went downtown and randomly fired a gun? How many times would the judge say, basically, “Please don’t do that again?” It’s time to lock these very dangerous people away from the rest of us. MacKenzie Allen
Santa Fe
Look closely Every day a new article in the press brings to light the high cost of keeping Gov. Susana Martinez, our very own female George Wallace, in office. Her policies and her choices for executive leadership positions have damaged education, public health, child protection, job development, infrastructure development and the environment. Voters, particularly Republican voters statewide and nationally, should take a close, hard look. She is unfit for office at any level. No doubt the fall campaigns will be ugly. In her case, no amount of television ads can obscure her record as one of the worst, most destructive governors we have endured in the modern era. John Kohn
Santa Fe
Wrong candidate Gary King is by far the worst candidate for governor that I have seen in my lifetime. Democrats, Republicans and the media agree on one thing: He was a terrible attorney general. His last name got him the nomination, undeservedly. It won’t get him into the Governor’s Office. We know we’re voting for Gov. Susana Martinez, who takes fighting corruption and helping New Mexico’s families seriously.
Ellen Kemper
Santa Fe
Tom and Carole Bowker
Santa Fe
MY VIEW: WILLIAM C. CARSON
Now a dinosaur, but still wrong
O
h for the good old days, at least for the good old days as we choose to remember them. Dorothy Klopf has converted from a “curmudgeon” on May 4 to “dinosaur” on June 1 (“This dino values high achievers”). Regardless of the title she chooses, her evidence of perceived shortcomings of the Santa Fe Public School system is not accurate, and her contempt for those working hard to make it possible for students to succeed is extraordinary. First, a simple fact. Atalaya Elementary was not a school that superintendents seriously considered closing. There was a plan to close Acequia Madre, which had 170 students in 2013-14, and
combine it with Atalaya — a reasonable idea but not emotionally acceptable to people living near Acequia Madre. The old days of students looking straight ahead while being lorded over by priests and nuns in parochial schools are long gone, and even when they may have existed, were not likely typical of New York Public Schools. It is, of course, ridiculous to think that seeing young people with smartphones is proof that all students have computers — they don’t. Every educator I know would support paying teachers more, and most would favor a longer school year. I suggest Klopf make a rough calculation of the hundreds of millions of dollars
Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
that would cost and urge Gov. Susana Martinez to raise taxes by that amount. Perhaps the most disturbing thing about Klopf is her apparent disdain for SFPS students. She might try to understand that, in 2013-14, 67 percent of them came from backgrounds of poverty and 8 percent of those were homeless. The school district, the community and parents are struggling to overcome the obstacles that many of these students face. There can certainly be other views, but having a local Rush Limbaugh who misinforms and distorts benefits no one. William C. Carson resides in Santa Fe and is the president of Communities In Schools of New Mexico.
he corpse of the 2014 primary is barely cold, but Republican Gov. Susana Martinez and her Democratic challenger Gary King are duking it out with negative television commercials. And to commit the sin of using sports metaphors in political analysis, I do believe any boxing referee would have to give the first round to Susana. I agree with my colleague Milan Simonich’s analysis of a recent King commercial even though King told me Friday he has no regrets. King, Simonich wrote: “probably wishes he had never released a television advertisement saying he would demand equal pay for women doing the same work as men.” I also agree with Steve Terrell something that the Martinez campaign Roundhouse said about the King ad. Roundup In an email announcing the ad response to King’s ad, Martinez campaign spokesman Chris Sanchez wrote, “King is trying to run a Washington, D.C., cookie-cutter attack campaign on issues like equal pay. …” Indeed, throwing in that line about equal pay did seem like a “cookie-cutter” attack. King’s spot started off strong, exploiting some of Martinez’s vulnerabilities — the state’s weak economy, a study showing the state is badly managed and a whistleblower suit against the administration. That’s plenty to chew on — and argue about — right there. King’s ad then said he’d “clean up” Martinez’s “mess” and increase the minimum wage. Raising the wage is a popular idea and a good issue for King to bring up. I guess one could argue this is a “cookie-cutter” issue that’s being used by Dems across the country. (You also could argue that King missed an opportunity to plunge this knife even deeper because the ad didn’t directly mention that Martinez vetoed a minimum-wage increase last year.) So the ad was going fairly well until 22 seconds into the 30-second spot, the unidentified female narrator inserts the unforced error, saying King will “demand women are paid the same as men doing the same work.” That, of course, is not a bad thing, at least not for 99.9 percent of Democrats across the country who probably are using similar lines in their arts. But for King, it was problematic. The Martinez team, which has never been called lazy in the area of opposition research, fired back with a response highlighting the fact that three female lawyers on King’s staff sued him, claiming they were not paid the same as men doing the same work. King won the suit brought by one of the women but settled with the other two. King told me that he suspected Martinez would have brought up these genderdiscrimination suits at some point during the campaign anyway. “I wanted to make people know that I’m solidly for equal pay for women and equal opportunity for women,” he said. King said he thinks most people will understand that settling a federal lawsuit (for a total of a total of $31,500) was a reasonable thing to do. King said the fact that one of the woman lost her case against him makes him the only candidate for whom a judge has ruled did not engage in gender discrimination. Still, had King not included the equal pay line, the Martinez campaign would not have been able to go on the offensive in their answer ad. They might have had to stick with the economy issue, which is what King would have liked. Martinez’s response ad hardly could be called “cookie-cutter.” After all, in that ad she brags about the American Civil Liberties Union praising her signing of an equal-pay bill. Could she be the only Republican running for office in the USA in the last 40 years to include good words from the ACLU in a campaign commercial? Most Republicans in contemporary American society would rather brag about support from the Symbionese Liberation Army before they would tout supportive words from an organization many Republicans still see as a criminal-loving, prayer-in-school-hating, gay-marriageadvocating group of radicals. Of course, most of the Democrats and Independents Martinez is trying to peel off in this election, don’t necessarily agree with that view. Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnew mexican.com. Read his political blog at www.santafenewmexican.com/news/ blogs/politics/
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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oPinions
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
In Taos, a welcome break with the past
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he town of Taos, without much ado, has changed the name of Kit Carson Park. The new name, Red Willow Park, pays tribute to the area’s original inhabitants, the people of Taos Pueblo, whose name means Place of the Red Willow in the tribe’s Tiwa language. Town officials say it’s a gesture of reconciliation. To those angry that the gesture might be seen as too politically correct, we say, calm down. There are plenty of landmarks in the Taos area still named after the famed mountain man (and, many say, not nearly enough named after homegrown heroes). There’s the Carson National Forest, Kit Carson Electric Cooperative and Kit Carson Road. The Kit Carson Museum and Home remains in Taos, a popular visiting spot for people interested in the American West. Carson is still buried in Taos, along with some of his family, in the cemetery on the east side of the park. He has plenty to honor his legacy. Still, the name change is a good one. (We agree the town might have held more public discussion before making the name change; however, residents have been debating Carson’s legacy for decades. It’s not as though the issue hasn’t been discussed plenty.) How people view Carson, of course, depends on their perspectives. Carson’s achievements as a frontiersman are impressive even by today. He left home at 16 to become a trapper and mountain man, forced by his father’s early death to make his way in the world. An explorer, guide and adventurer, Carson also fought in the Battle of Valverde on the Union side. Because of the fur trade, Carson made his home in Taos, marrying into the Jaramillo family. His detractors point to his actions in fighting the Navajo, forcing them to exile in the Bosque Redondo — a miserable, deadly journey remembered today as The Long Walk. To many Indian people, Kit Carson is no hero. Town of Taos Councilor Fritz Hahn said bluntly: “[Kit Carson] was atrocious, an Indian killer … this is about reaching out to our vecinos and righting past wrongs.” Of course, a name change can’t fix everything. But it’s encouraging to see that town of Taos officials understand that one man’s hero is another person’s villain. Carson deserves to be remembered, yes. He was a singular figure of the West. Just because he made Taos his home, though, does not mean that so many public streets or parks have to carry his name. Other individuals, and other people, also deserve honor. A dedication ceremony will celebrate the new name for the park. We hope that, as part of the commemoration, the town will explain the change so that new visitors will understand the history — a plaque with the old name and an explanation for the change, for example, would be useful. It’s important to explain, to educate and to help further understanding that not all Taoseños honor Kit Carson. The people from the Place of the Red Willow have given much to Northern New Mexico — that their neighbors in the town of Taos are recognizing those contributions publicly is a welcome sign of reconciliation and understanding.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican June 15, 1964: Las Vegas, N.M. — A survivor of Teddy Roosevelt’s famed Rough Riders, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that “we were just a mob that went up a hill.” This description of the charge up Kettle Hill at San Juan was offered by Jesse D. Langdon, 84, of East Rockaway, N.Y., chairman of the Association of Roosevelt Rough Riders. Langdon was one of four survivors of the Rough Riders who met here Sunday for a reunion. The others were Frank C. Brito, 86, Las Cruces, N.M.; Charles Hopping, 91, Long Beach, Calif.; and Arthur L. Tuttle, 84, Salinas, Calif. June 15, 1989: Pickups and seat belts do mix. Drinking and driving don’t. Those are the ideas behind traffic laws passed this year by the Legislature to require seat belt use in pickups and forbid open containers in all vehicles. The new laws go into effect Friday. Albuquerque — A state senator told a federal panel Wednesday that letting the U.S. Department of Energy decide if the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant is safe is “like asking the Dillinger gang to guard the bank.” Democratic Sen. Tom Rutherford of Albuquerque said he and many other New Mexicans oppose the WIPP because they don’t trust the U.S. Department of Energy. “The Energy Department now is on the FBI’s 10 most wanted list,” referring to an investigation of alleged contamination cover-up at the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant near Denver.
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COMMENTARY: NUSSAIBAH YOUNIS
The army alone can’t save Iraq CAMBRIDGE, Mass. he Obama administration must help the Iraqi government retake the city of Mosul from Islamists and stem their march toward Baghdad. But military aid will not be enough. For lasting success, the United States must compel Iraq’s divisive leadership to pursue government by reconciliation just as vigorously as it pursues battlefield victory. We have learned the hard way that military counterinsurgencies that do not address political grievances always fail. Unless the Shiite-led Iraqi government adopts radical reforms that address the complaints of Iraq’s Sunni minority, an influx of American weapons will only add fuel to the fire consuming the country. On Tuesday, Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, fell to Islamist militants led by a breakaway group of al-Qaida, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS. That puts ISIS, a leading force in the Syrian civil war, dangerously close to its goal: establishing a militant Islamist ministate straddling the two most violent countries in the Middle East. The United States simply cannot allow this, and the Obama administration is indeed responding by pouring military aid into Iraq. The scope of the militants’ victory shows how desperate the situation is. When ISIS fighters swept into Mosul, a largely Sunni city, they faced virtually no resistance; the armed forces in and around the city shed their uniforms and fled. An estimated 500,000 residents also fled. Having consolidated control over Mosul, the militants then continued south. They captured the Qaiyara air base, the restive towns of Hawija and Salman Beg, and then the city of Tikrit,
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more than halfway to Baghdad itself. The blitz shocked Baghdad and Washington, but Iraqi militant groups had been gaining ground for months. They have held the town of Fallujah for half a year, despite Iraqi Army bombardments. In April, they seized a nearby dam on the Euphrates River and flooded surrounding areas to thwart any counteroffensive. Even so, the fall of Mosul is a gamechanger. The city is a commercial, political and military hub. The extremists have seized American-supplied weaponry, including armored vehicles. Mosul is at the heart of Nineveh Province, which has a 300-mile border with Syria. Across it, militants already exchange arms, money and men with comrades fighting the government of President Bashar Assad. A pipeline from Kirkuk, Iraq, to Ceyhan in Turkey is nearby. A long ISIS occupation could be ruinous for Iraq. Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has called on Parliament to declare a state of emergency, which would greatly expand his powers. They could include imposing a media blackout, restricting movements of citizens, enforcing curfews and devolving sweeping powers to the military. He has called on civilians to join the army and may try to boost the army’s resolve by incorporating violent Shiite groups in his plans. But such a move would only make the military situation worse. Iraq’s Sunnis have long felt sidelined in the Shiite-majority state, and a sense of being attacked by Shiite militants could well lead to a huge surge in Sunni support for ISIS. This crisis comes just two weeks after the results of a parliamentary election were announced, with a new government
yet to be formed. Maliki’s coalition won more seats than any other group, but opposing parties have banded together, trying to oust him. Now the fall of Mosul may derail efforts to form a new government, leaving Maliki unlimited powers to silence political opponents. The United States must use its assistance as leverage to prevent Maliki from becoming, in effect, a dictator. Many young Iraqis who join the Sunni militants already see the government as a sectarian oppressor. The Maliki government has targeted senior Sunni politicians and failed to respond to Sunni demands for reform. Its exclusionary approach has helped enable extremism, and the U.S. must ensure that Maliki does not use the new outbreak of fighting to shore up his authority. Moreover, the U.S. must compel the Iraqi Army to adopt a sensitive, population-centered approach to reversing the militants’ conquests. If the Iraqi Army sends Shiite militant groups or Kurdish forces to the heart of Sunni-dominated Mosul, or if it carpet-bombs the city and arbitrarily arrests or kills groups, it will alienate the hearts and minds essential to winning this battle. Even now, on the brink of a breakup of Iraq, the United States has an opportunity to stem the appalling growth of extremist militancy at the heart of the Arab world — but only if it remembers that wars of counterinsurgency must defuse political grievances. Nussaibah Younis is a research fellow in the international security program at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School. He wrote this for The New York Times.
COMMENTARY: NOAH SMITH
Japan’s Abe: A world leader to watch
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was a Shinzo Abe skeptic. That’s putting it mildly. After all, I was still living in Japan when Abe’s disastrous first term in office put a halt to the reform process begun by Junichiro Koizumi and ushered in a return to the bad old days of prime minister musical chairs that paralyzed Japan in the 1990s. When Abe swept back into power in 2012, I thought he was just going to try to talk down the yen and give a little boost to stocks, increasing his public support just long enough to ram through a revision of Japan’s pacifist constitution. I thought he was going to ignore Japan’s moribund economy and long-festering social problems in order to throw red meat to his right-wing backers. Boy, was I wrong. I was wrong, wrong, wrong. Let me be blunt: Shinzo Abe is the most effective national leader in the world right now. I never thought I’d say this, but he’s an example that the rest of the world should be following. This time around, Abe didn’t ignore the economy. Backed by economic adviser Koichi Hamada and Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, Abe first implemented the biggest monetarist push in world history. He went the opposite direction of Europe, and — unlike the United States — he gave every indication that the shift toward monetarism was permanent. The result: Japan has escaped deflation. The stock market is up, growth is way up and even wages are finally starting to rise. In other words, unlike everyone else in the world, Abe listened to Milton Friedman, and the results are looking good. As the Fed contemplates not whether to taper its quantitative easing but how fast, it might want to look at what’s happening in Japan.
Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
But monetary policy was just the beginning of Hurricane Abe. Japan’s top social problem is the role of women. The sexism of corporate Japan is legendary, and many millions of Japanese women are underemployed and out of the labor force; yet instead of pushing women back to traditional child-rearing roles, this has mainly just lowered the fertility rate to sub-European levels. But since taking office, Abe — whose party is famous for sexist gaffes — has become the most feminist leader I’ve ever seen. He constantly talks about the need to make women more equal in the workplace — no small thing in a country where corporations have a reputation for following the government’s wishes. Abe’s detractors dismiss this as empty talk, but talk is never empty, especially when you say things that no one has said before. And Abe is putting his money where his mouth is, with a raft of measures to improve working women’s access to affordable day care. Already, I can sense a shift. When I lived in Japan 10 years ago, people said that women’s situation would never change, and treated women’s secondclass status as an immutable fact of Japanese culture. Nowadays, when I go back, everyone is talking about women’s changing role, and everyone agrees that Abe is the prime mover. But that’s just the beginning. Abe is moving to cut Japan’s corporate tax rate, which along with the U.S.’s is the world’s highest. The country’s government-run pension fund will probably invest more of its money in risky but high-yielding assets (in an echo of George W. Bush’s failed plan for Social Security). Abe has launched a large number of deregulation efforts, and has pushed — so far unsuccessfully — for Japan to join the Trans-
Pacific Partnership, which would lower trade barriers. He is beginning to curb the powers of Japan’s entrenched bureaucracy. He has even suggested bringing in 200,000 immigrants a year to supplement Japan’s shrinking labor force. On the foreign policy front, Abe has surprised me as well. Yes, he angered China and South Korea by visiting the Yasukuni Shrine (where more than 1,000 war criminals are buried), appointing some rightwing historical revisionists and generally being a nationalist. But recently he has turned his nationalism into something that looks like liberal internationalism, standing up for the various small Asian countries that have been bullied by China’s push into the South China Sea. Instead of being an apologist for old Japanese imperialism, Abe is championing the rule of law and the freedom of the seas. Where Abe really shines is in comparison with previous Japanese leaders. Those of us who watch Japan could be forgiven for thinking that nothing ever changes. At times, Japanese politics seems like the movie Edge of Tomorrow, where everything keeps repeating and the good guys seem to never win. Koizumi was different, but Koizumi seemed like a flash in the pan. Now here is Koizumi’s protégé, continuing and expanding the work his mentor began. The rest of the world should be paying attention. For the first time in 25 years, Japan looks like it could be at the head of the international pack. It’s far from a done deal, of course, but this writer, at least, is a Shinzo Abe convert. Noah Smith is an assistant professor of finance at Stony Brook University and a freelance writer for a number of finance and business publications.
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OPINIONS MY VIEW: JAVIER GONZALES
THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS
Strengthen middle class and strengthen America
Javier Gonzales is the mayor of Santa Fe.
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MY VIEW: SASHA PYLE AND JONI ARENDS
Accident at WIPP reveals serious problems T he Waste Isolation Pilot Plant was never going to solve America’s nuclear waste problem. We have too much waste — too many kinds — for one facility, the longcontroversial WIPP. And even if you believe geologic disposal could work, there aren’t suitable locations to sequester the poisons from the biosphere or future human intrusion. But if WIPP’s real purpose was to create the illusion of a solution — so we could keep on making more weapons and waste — then it did a pretty good job of that, until this year. Public relations efforts have always been a big part of WIPP. Now they are driving official Department of Energy policy again. Remember Energy Department officials saying decades ago WIPP waste consisted of “gloves and booties” — an image calculated to allay fears and distract from, ahem, plutonium? Now they’re ceaselessly invoking organic “kitty litter” for causing February’s explosion that contaminated the facility, exposed 21 workers, and blew a cloud of americium and plutonium up the shaft and out into the world. Why the cute misnomer for industrial absorbents? This is no household hygiene moment or YouTube cat video. This accident wasn’t caused by “kitty litter.” Manipulating us again with cutesy language is another attempt to downplay the dangers WIPP poses to life for the next quarter of a million years. Simultaneously, there’s a desperate attempt to shift the blame elsewhere, anywhere. WIPP consultant Jim Conca got his 15 minutes of fame promoting the term “kitty litter,” claiming WIPP performed perfectly and the disaster was caused by waste packers at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Nonetheless, this accident was absolutely WIPP’s fault — because WIPP management has tirelessly petitioned the New Mexico Environment Department for dozens of modifications to the original operating permit. They haven’t been begging for more stringent regulation. All the requests have been to weaken the terms of the permit, protections we were promised for decades. Notably, persuading the Environment Department that it would be safe to stop doing previously required headspace-gas sampling of the
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ncome opportunity is the single most important issue facing America today. The middle class in America is slowly shrinking. The current rate of income inequality will have a devastating longterm impact, with 45 percent of children in America now living in low-income families. Now is the time to tackle this growing epidemic, so we can ensure economic growth and a quality future for the next generation. In a video promoting her upcoming memoir, Hard Choices, HillJavier ary Clinton Gonzales says that the United States is “strong and well equipped to restore prosperity here at home, to deal with the cancer of inequality” in our country, but that “engaging in ideological and rhetorical battles” won’t solve the problem. I couldn’t agree more. America’s strength comes from the middle class, and by working together to improve their lives, we can make the United States even stronger. Here in New Mexico, the top 1 percent of the population accounted for 72.6 percent of all income growth during a nearly three decade-long period. We currently have the second-highest poverty rate in the country. In New Mexico, as in many other places, income inequality is a cancer. We have seen and felt the effects of income inequality here in Santa Fe, and the story is the same in communities across America. Some 46.5 million Americans are living in poverty, and more than 25 million middle-class families are living paycheck to paycheck. It’s time to act. Here in Santa Fe, we’re using one of the highest living wages in the country to increase opportunity and shared prosperity, and creating jobs by embracing innovation and technology. By working together to lift people out of poverty, we can create our own economic boom and help families who are struggling to put food on the table. In Hard Choices, Hillary writes, “Before we are Republicans or Democrats, liberals or conservatives, or any of the other labels that divide us as often as define us, we are Americans, all with a personal stake in our country.” Washington seems to have forgotten that. The success of our middle class is the ticket to a prosperous future, but too often our leaders put partisan politics above efforts to find real solutions. Hillary said it best: We have the ability to solve this problem, bringing millions out of poverty; we only need to begin working as members of the same team. When I ran for this job, I made a pledge to be a mayor for one Santa Fe. I called upon our city to erase the lines that separate us and to show that, in Santa Fe, we are one family — stronger together. Hillary understands what we’ve learned here in Santa Fe: We must cut through the lines that divide us in order to move toward greater equality, economically and socially. Here in Santa Fe, we have worked to tap into the diversity of our great city, using our many talents and working as a team to build this community from the ground up. But we are Americans first. This is not just about moving Santa Fe forward. It is about moving America forward. I share Hillary Clinton’s optimism. I believe in our future and I know we can reach our brightest days by moving forward together.
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
barrels (aimed at preventing explosions) now looks like it was a very bad idea indeed. The barrels have many organic materials — not just the absorbent currently blamed — mixed with hazardous chemicals and radioactive debris, decaying unpredictably. WIPP waste has always been at risk of exploding, whether on the highway, during handling or after disposal. This was one specter that generated furious controversy among scientists and the public when WIPP was first proposed. Additionally, poor record-keeping at weapons sites during frenzied Cold War bomb-building meant that wastes were inconsistently documented. Waste characterization and sampling were issues of grave concern when WIPP was being debated 25 years ago. Clearly, they are once again. The state permit should never have been so dangerously undercut. Unsurprisingly, Los Alamos shipped easily analyzed wastes to WIPP first, saving “mystery” wastes for later, when regulations were relaxed and safety protocols at WIPP had slipped into routine. The 2004 dismantlement of the Environmental Evaluation Group, WIPP’s only truly independent oversight, and the permit modifications that virtually ended sampling, rendered accidental release inevitable. We’re also hearing a lot of desperate PR about reopening the facility ASAP. Really? First, how about an independent investigation to quantify future exposure workers and neighbors might face? WIPP boosters — including folks who want to get back to work right away — should consider a bigger picture with national, international and essentially permanent consequences. This isn’t about your job. It’s about materials with the power to taint land, air and water — to poison and kill living things — for tens of thousands of years. PR baby-talk can’t alter that deadly serious fact. Call your elected officials today and ask for an independent investigation of the release. Sasha Pyle and Joni Arends are longtime nuclear activists in Northern New Mexico with Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety and the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability, a national coalition. Pyle was a founding member of Nuclear Watch New Mexico and has produced many of its publications.
This accident was absolutely WIPP’s fault — because WIPP management has tirelessly petitioned the New Mexico Environment Department for dozens of modifications to the original operating permit.
MY VIEW: GRAHAM MARK
Proposed changes to cannabis program damaging
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ew Mexico’s Medical Cannabis Program permits people who suffer from certain debilitating medical conditions, and who otherwise qualify, to legally possess and use marijuana (cannabis). These debilitating conditions include cancer, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and post-traumatic stress disorder — a condition that hits veterans especially often. (The Veterans Affairs Department estimates that PTSD afflicts almost 31 percent of Vietnam veterans, 10 percent of Desert Storm veterans, 11 percent of Afghan War veterans and 20 percent of Iraq War veterans.) The Medical Cannabis Program is administered and regulated by the New Mexico Department of Health. That department recently proposed changing the rules governing the program. The proposed changes are extensive. Some are very restrictive. Some are impossible to comply with and will cripple the program, or kill it. The
Health Department plans to implement the new regulations next month. Why is the state making these proposals? The department says the changes will improve and strengthen the program, and some do sound positive. Nevertheless, the proposals as actually written are highly problematic. They must be stopped. Here is an example. The Department of Health proposes to change the rules and fees that apply to licensed growers of medical cannabis. The department says this will increase supply. This certainly sounds good, as the current supply is chronically inadequate. However, the proposed regulations will only make the shortage worse. Department of Health officials say supply will increase because growers will be permitted to keep more productive plants than they can now. Let’s see. Suppose, under the proposed regulations, a grower decides to keep the maximum permitted number of pro-
ductive plants. The grower’s annual license fee will double or triple from its current amount, but the maximum permitted number of productive plants will increase by only about 50 percent. Would a grower choose to double or triple a significant cost of production to increase the productive agent by only a fraction? It seems unlikely. The proposal is poorly conceived, grounded perhaps on an uninformed view of how growers actually work. It is likely to disrupt the current system of production and reduce supply yet further. Here is another example: The Department of Health proposes mandatory testing of all medical cannabis products. On its face this seems highly desirable. Unfortunately, the department proposes tests and protocols that are vastly excessive. They are far beyond what is necessary to assure product safety and quality. They are so demanding and expensive that growers will be unable to comply.
The Department of Health proposes a great many changes in addition to these two. These changes threaten to disrupt or destroy a program that is working well. Thanks to the Medical Cannabis Program, many of our veterans and thousands of other New Mexicans can find some relief from their constant suffering. These people are not helped by other medications. They have nowhere else to turn. The program works well, but the Department of Health could make it better. The current proposals will fail to do that. To improve the program, the Department of Health needs to begin again: Draft an entire set of new proposals that — unlike the current ones — will clearly, directly and unarguably move the program forward. After receiving a doctorate in evolutionary biology and programming computers at Los Alamos for 27 years, Graham Mark is retired and lives in Los Alamos with his wife and dog.
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
COMMENTARY: CARLOS KOTKIN
COMMENTARY: AMANDA MARCOTTE
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Everyone wants devoted dads F
bout a year into our marriage, my wife and I decided we were ready for the adventure of having a child. Despite our best efforts, it wasn’t happening. We didn’t know why. One night as we were watching television, my wife turned to me and said, “I think you’re the problem.” She had no medical background; she was going by a woman’s intuition. To set her mind at ease, I paid a visit to my doctor. It was my first time seeing this doctor. My previous doctor had just retired. I met the new one as she walked into the exam room. She looked to be in her early 30s, with dark hair and bright red lipstick. I explained to her that my wife and I were trying to have a kid, but so far no luck. She said she would refer me to a fertility clinic. In the meantime, she suggested my wife and I have sex three times a week. I asked if she could please put that in writing. A month later, I went alone to the fertility clinic. My wife and I were married in our late 30s — hence, our urgency. As a bachelor, I never imagined marriage would one day lead me to a small room in a medical office that contained a plastic specimen cup, a sink, a chair, a TV and a DVD titled Young and Horny. A sticker on the DVD read: “Property of Fertility Clinic — Please Do Not Remove.” Without the use of visual aids, I started doing what I had been sent there to do. It was difficult to concentrate because I could hear two women on the other side of the door talking about where they should have lunch. Despite the less than optimal surroundings, I managed to complete my task. It then dawned on me that there wasn’t a secret drawer in the room where I could discreetly leave my sample. Instead I had to exit the room, cup in hand, and walk down the hall, passing several employees, until I got to the last desk where a ponytailed woman was working. She smiled and thanked me. I did my best to pretend I hadn’t just masturbated and placed a cup of semen on her desk. Shortly after, I received a call with the results. As it turned out, I was the problem. Or so it seemed. My sperm count came in at 17 million. Seventeen million may be a high balance at Wells Fargo, but at the sperm bank it’s below the poverty line. I assured my distraught wife that most of my swimmers probably stayed on the sidelines that day because they knew it was only an exhibition game. This did little to console her. The next day she brightened after discovering she was pregnant. Which meant she already had been pregnant when I was in that stupid little room with the pornography. If I had waited just one more day, I wouldn’t have had to drive to an office building and humiliate myself. But I was happy. I was going to be a father. We heard the baby’s heartbeat during our first appointment with the obstetrician. I asked the doctor for the baby’s due date. She took out her phone and used an app to calculate it. “Oct. 10,” she announced. From that moment on, Oct. 10 became a date that loomed large. It was like when a hurricane is shown on a weather map getting bigger and bigger. Only in my case, it was my wife’s belly getting bigger and bigger. By the time my wife looked as if she had a basketball under her shirt, the baby was moving a lot. I kept missing it. One night, when the baby was particularly active, my wife placed my hand on her stomach. I waited and waited. Nothing happened. I said, “This is kind of like whale watching.” In retrospect, that was a dumb thing to say. I didn’t know what I was doing. This was a new experience for me — for my wife, too. We had dinner with our friends Ann and Marc, who had three kids and plenty of insight. Marc was upset when he found out I did not have a birth plan. “You have to have a birth plan,” he insisted. “You need to know where to park, whether or not she’s going to get an epidural, if there’s going to be a shaman in the room. …” I hadn’t thought of these things because early on, my
ather’s Day is Sunday, which means that it’s time for pundits and politicians to scold the American public — with special ire reserved for black members of the American public — for our supposed indifference to the wonder and awe of fatherhood. Jessica Lahey has a piece in the Atlantic this week called “The Case for Dedicated Dads,” in which she argues, “Mothers are very important to their children’s development, of course, but research has shown that fathers help kids grow in specific ways.” Dozens of other writers are making the same argument, pegged to Father’s Day, for a variety of local and national media sources. “Being around dads affects children’s biology, which in turn affects their mental states, like happiness, and their success in life,” wrote Mark Oppenheimer in The New York Times earlier this month. Sue Shellenbarger of the Wall Street Journal agrees, arguing, “The way dads tend to interact has long-term benefits for kids, independent of those linked to good mothering.” The Atlantic, in particular, loves reminding people, over and over, that, given a choice between Great Dad or No Dad, Great Dad is by far the better option. There was “Why Dads Matter” on Feb. 23 (not to be confused with the new book Do Fathers Matter? Answer: Yes); “A Key to College Success: Involved Dads” on April 22; and “The Distinct, Positive Impact of a Good Dad” on June 14, 2013. I love a good dad story as much as the next daughter, but I can’t help wonder: Who are these writers arguing against? W. Bradford Wilcox, who single-handedly generates a good half of the “having a good dad is great, don’t let anyone tell you otherwise!” content out there, intones, “Dads certainly seem dispensable in today’s world.” Lahey also argues, “Recently, some authors have claimed that
Becoming a dad: The baby had a plan I turned to my wife and asked if she wanted me to leave the room. She grabbed my hand so hard I was certain she had crushed the bones in it. I took that as a no. wife decided she did not want me in the delivery room. She was determined to face things on her own. There is a small park on the grounds of the hospital. I decided that the day our child was born, I would sit on a bench in the park and maybe have a snack. At some point I would receive a text that read: “Come meet your baby! :-).” I pictured myself sitting in that park on Oct. 10 many times. On Aug. 10, however, my wife woke me up around 10:30 p.m. with a look of concern and uttered, “Something is happening.” Her water had broken. I jumped out of bed and thought, “I need to get a birth plan.” First step in my plan: Put some pants on. We were ready to leave within minutes. There was just one obstacle we needed to get past: my in-laws. They happened to be visiting and were sleeping on an air mattress in the living room. I asked my wife, “What do
you want to do about the people in the other room?” “Just go,” she implored. We rushed out. I didn’t even look at them. When we got to the car, I received a text from my mother-in-law: “Where are you going?” I wasn’t sure if I should tell her the truth and scare her or play it cool and say that everything was fine, we were headed to a rave. I decided I’d let her know what was happening when I knew what was happening. We arrived at the hospital in record time and asked the security guard where people go to have a baby. He told us to make a left, take the elevator to the second floor, make a right and a right and a right — go down the hall, make a right and a left and another right, then ring the doorbell. (His exact words, incredibly.) Somehow, we did that. A nurse examined my wife and explained that the baby wanted to show up early, but they would be able to delay birth for about a month. My wife would have to stay at the hospital until then. A cot was wheeled in for me. It didn’t look nearly as comfortable as my wife’s bed, but I didn’t say anything. We updated the in-laws, advising them to stay at our place. No sense having them come to the hospital and watch us try to sleep. Despite my wife’s being administered medication to delay our child’s arrival, her contractions began an hour later. My cot was hastily wheeled back out and a pit crew of people raced in, including two nurses carrying an empty dessert tray. The on-call doctor took one look at my wife and said to me: “The baby is coming. Do you have any questions?”
I asked if there was anything we could give my wife because she was in so much pain. The doctor explained there wasn’t enough time. I wanted to ask if there was anything they could give me for my pain, since I was supposed to be in the park under a tree. Instead, I turned to my wife and asked if she wanted me to leave the room. She grabbed my hand so hard I was certain she had crushed the bones in it. I took that as a no. There was moaning and breathing and squeezing and pushing. And then there was our baby, smaller than a teddy bear, crying loudly. The doctor said, “Fantastic.” Our baby was put on the dessert tray and taken to the neonatal intensive care unit. It’s a place where professional guardian angels care for premature babies 24 hours a day, keeping them safe and protected and alive. That morning I called my inlaws and told them there had been a change of plans. They were now grandparents. As I awaited their arrival, I saw a group of pregnant women with their husbands taking a tour. They were giddy and chatty, as if on a field trip. I couldn’t help but think, “What a bunch of amateurs.” After five weeks in the hospital, we brought our daughter home, healthy and happy. I was officially a father. And being a father, as I am happily learning, involves a lot more than sitting on a park bench and having a snack. Carlos Kotkin, who lives in Los Angeles, is the author of the dating memoir, Please God Let It Be Herpes: A Heartfelt Quest for Love and Companionship. He wrote this for The New York Times.
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Amanda Marcotte is a Brooklyn-based writer and DoubleX contributor. She also writes regularly for the Daily Beast, AlterNet and USA Today.
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parents don’t really have much of an effect on educational success.” But none of the people Wilcox or Lahey cite are down on the idea of having good, loving fathers around the house. They are simply assuring people who don’t have access to one of those awesome dads that their kids are not doomed to failure. Look, there is no “antifatherhood” movement in this country. Commentators who argue the “pro-fatherhood” side do so by pointing to the positive effects on kids from good dads who love their kids’ mothers and live in the same houses. These pieces often assume that women are rolling in offers for loving, devoted families and opting for single motherhood instead. But most single mothers aren’t in that situation because they are against the nuclear family or because they think fathers are bad for kids. Sometimes a dad is a good dad but not a good husband. Some dads are — gasp! — not good fathers at all and need to go. Preaching about how wonderful it is to have a loving, devoted father in the house is like going to the hospital and asking people if they ever considered not being sick. Instead of repeatedly extolling the virtues of happy marriage and loving fathers, let’s invest in economic stability, education and access to reproductive health care so that Americans can plan when they have children. These are the things people actually need to improve their chances of holding a family together. We know this because people who do have access to these things have more stable marriages. What we don’t need are more lectures about how having a good dad is better than having no dad. Rest assured, everyone already knows that.
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OPINIONS MY VIEW: TERRY ROTHWELL
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
MY VIEW: DEXTER COOLIDGE
Minimum wage W hike will benefit U.S.
PNM’s coal commitment bad for N.M.
I
Repeating the standard line that “the minimum wage was never intended to be a living wage” ignores the fact that in this day, it has become the only source of income for many, including single mothers with children and seniors.
no employment effects of minimum wage increases.” He says that higher minimum wages cause employers to avoid hiring or to reduce staff to compensate. As a former smallbusiness owner, I know from experience that the only thing that influenced hiring in my company was demand. If there were enough people with money to buy my product and services, it would have been stupid not to hire enough workers to fulfill their desire to spend it with me. Repeating the standard line that “the minimum wage was never intended to be a living wage” ignores the fact that in this day, it has become the only source of income for many, including single mothers with children and seniors. Some 68 percent of minimum job holders are over 20 years old. Things have changed, even if the rhetoric hasn’t. Comparing the minimum wage to welfare benefits in cherry-picked states adds nothing to the discussion, and saying that workers should be paid below levels that qualify families for welfare is just proving the point that if they want to get
people off welfare, they should be paid enough to work. The minimum wage has been raised 29 times since the Great Depression in 1929, and there has not been a repeat of that economic disaster since. Free enterprise is not the answer, as free enterprise was the reason wage and labor laws were needed in the first place. If the right could have it their way, there would be no minimum wage and employers could pay as little as they wanted. Foxes and henhouses come to mind. It’s time to bring the minimum up to a level that keeps pace with inflation, roughly $10 per hour. Or, match the increase in productivity by the American workforce, which would bring it to closer to $20. The majority of companies paying minimum wages also are some of the most profitable companies in this country. It is reprehensible that Republicans are working hard to help those companies maintain record profit levels on the backs of underpaid workers while taxpayers subsidize those profits. Terry Rothwell is a retired smallbusiness owner, job creator and taxpayer.
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t’s refreshing to see that John Billingsley did not even try to hide the true feelings and lack of compassion by the Republican Party in his opinion piece (“Minimum-wage hike would hurt N.M. families,” June 8). Though heavy on opinion, it did lack any semblance of honesty. He starts with boilerplate talking points that refer to fear as a motivator for everything economic. It is not fear that pushes progressives to work for a living wage for everyone, it’s a sense of fairness and the feeling that if we can’t all be on a level playing field, at least we should all be in the same stadium. Progressives do not argue that raising the minimum wage makes good economic sense, we point to studies by noted economists and history. It’s not speculation, as he suggests, that an increase in the minimum wage will be beneficial to the worker and, by extension, the state’s economy, it’s fact. A group of 75 economists, including seven Nobel laureates, concluded that the suggested raise in the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per hour would result in an increase in spending by lower-income workers, a more stable workforce and a more productive workforce. He states that raising the minimum wage would result in fewer jobs and slower economic growth. However, a team of economists led by Arindrajit Dube of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst studied employment in neighboring locations with dissimilar minimum wages and determined after a 16-year study that there are “strong earning effects and
hile the public and the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission were enjoying their Christmas and New Year’s holiday in 2013, Public Service Company of New Mexico was busy signing a coal contract that seeks to lock in coal for the next 17 years. While most electric utilities are exiting from coal, PNM has committed to buying coal from 2016 to 2031 for a total cost of $500 million. There has been a dramatic shift in the last few years in the economics of electricity production: electricity from renewable energy is cheaper than from coal. PNM’s commitment to coal will result in greater costs for consumers, more polluted air and a greater risk of global warming. When we turn on our light switch or boot up our computers, 60 percent of our electricity currently comes from coal. The contract recently signed by PNM locks in fixed payments to the Navajo Mine for coal (for its share of the Four Corners Plant) for a total of more than $500 million over many years. This is called a “take-or-pay” contract, which means that PNM would have to pay the mine owners this $500 million even if the
inimum-wage hike would hurt N.M. families,” writes John Billingsley, chairman of the New Mexico Republican Party in the June 8 New Mexican. Since this assertion goes against most of the economic reports I have read on the topic, I was curious to know what proof Mr. Billingsley would present. I read and I read, looking for some proof but finding only Mr. Billingsley’s opinions. Two-thirds of the way through, I spotted the phrase “the Cato Institute” and thought I was finally going to see some proof, maybe even some statistics. But no. Strangely, the section about the Cato Institute is not about the minimum wage but rather about the large amounts of money that welfare recipients in certain states receive. Mr. Billingsley suggests that there is no incentive for people on welfare to seek a minimumwage job: They can earn so much more just sitting at home doing nothing — the old wornout conservative argument that people on welfare don’t actually
want to work. I read the article several times, looking for a coherent connection between Mr. Billingsley’s two ideas: Patricia (1) minimumHopkins wage increases Lattin hurt more than they help, and (2) people on welfare earn so much money that they have no incentive to take a minimum-wage job. The only possible connection I could discern seems to prove the
opposite point of view from that espoused by Mr. Billingsley. One could conclude that, if the minimum wage is increased enough, those free-loading people he has conjured up will be more likely to leave their couches and seek employment. I’m sure he didn’t mean to suggest such a thing, so I remain mystified as to how the Cato report is supposed to prove that a minimum-wage hike would hurt New Mexico families. Patricia Hopkins Lattin, who lives in Santa Fe, is a retired professor of literature with a doctorate in English.
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The fabric of our lives: Cities, slums, neighborhoods, people Wednesday, June 18, 7:30 p.m. James A. Little Theater 1060 Cerrillos Rd., Santa Fe Lectures are free and open to the public. Seating is limited.
What is a city, and what makes Chicago so different from Los Angeles? Luis Bettencourt peers inside the city, down to the data describing its neighborhoods and its people. He shows how a city is less a place than a fabric, woven from the threads of the individual lives interacting within it – it is, in fact, connections that define a city. He then suggests that, from a perspective of human development, the world’s slums can be thought of not necessarily as problems, but rather as gateways for millions of people transitioning from largely self-sufficient rural lives to highly connected urban lives.
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Publishing Sunday, August 17 More than 80,000 visitors from around the world gather in Santa Fe each August for the largest indian art market in the world — SWAIA Indian Market. Don’t miss your chance to reach this amazing audience that brings more than $100 million in revenue each year to the state and region. Book your ad today in the only official SWAIA guide that features Sunday insertion in the Santa Fe New Mexican, hand-distribution to market attendees at every entrance, and a stand-out presence at hotels and motels throughout Santa Fe.
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Dexter Coolidge resides in Santa Fe and is the former senior vice president of Blue Cross Blue Shield.
June 18 – 21
MY VIEW: PATRICIA HOPKINS LATTIN
Opposition to raising wage doesn’t make sense ‘‘M
2011 to May 2012; PNM was required to pay the mine for costs incurred even though it did not produce any coal. Not only do I request that the PRC reject PNM’s coal contract with the Navajo Mine for the Four Corners plant as a permanent transference of risk from shareholders to bill-payers, I implore the PRC to watch out for a long-term coal supply contract for its San Juan plant. The same kind of contract that PNM just signed with the Navajo Mine would obligate us at San Juan for about $1.5 billion. This is reckless, economically irresponsible and antithetical to our values, especially when there are low-cost wind and solar energy solutions ready to take the place of fossil fuels. It would be against the public interest to commit to any more coal costs when the responsible thing is to transition as quickly as possible to renewable energy. Expensive, shady deals and careless energy decisions should be a thing of the past. We ask the PRC to stop the jacking up of PNM revenues at our expense.
mine delivered zero coal. PNM will ask the PRC to allow “cost recovery” from its customers, us, to guarantee repayment, whether PNM uses the coal or not. So, our electricity rates will include $500 million for coal fuel costs obligated by PNM from the Navajo mine, unless the PRC stops PNM. The ratepayers of New Mexico rely on the PRC to regulate and control the costs of the electric monopolies because PNM gets to pass on its costs to us if those costs are “prudent.” However, PNM didn’t ask the PRC before it signed the expensive, long-term contract for coal from the Navajo Mine. PNM is locking in coal, and, given the economic, environmental and health problems, this doesn’t seem prudent policy. One would think that such a huge financial obligation by PNM (and, maybe, us) could only be made if the PRC determined that it was prudent. By all accounts, the PRC does not even know about it now, five months after the contract has been signed. Two years ago, there was a perfect example of the harmful financial exposure of a “takeor-pay” contract. There was a fire that closed the mine for eight months from September
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
MY VIEW: ELLEN HEATH
‘Black Swan’ is needed to highlight climate change H ow ironic that, in a nation that has fought so passionately for freedom of speech, so many of us have lost the freedom to think — outside an ideological box, I mean. I refer to the issue of climate change. Due to a flood of new data as well as personal experience with weather oddities, many conservatives are conceding that it seems to be afoot. However, accepting a human cause is a bridge too far. To do so seems disloyal to the Republican Party and to its ambitions. This is maddening and even frightening to those who have long had an intellectual interest in climate science, wherever they may have been on the political spectrum when the warning surfaced. Looking back on history, it now seems a tragedy that it was Al Gore who launched the discussion in 2006, unwittingly fixing it as a political issue. But who else would have had the will and the standing to maximize attention? And who could
have forestalled the campaign of disinformation launched by the fossil fuel industries? We have to deal with what is. Even those conservatives who countenance climate change take refuge in economic questions: “How much will addressing it cost, and how much will it benefit us when all is said and done?” Hard to say, of course, in the absence of a crystal ball. Among contrarians, the expectation also is to avoid, in the safety of the grave, any “I told you so” moment. As a result, the stalemate is intractable. We need to be rescued by a “Black Swan.” The concept was developed by Nicholas Taleb, distinguished professor of Risk Engineering at NYU Polytechnic Institute. The Black Swan is an improbable event that changes the course of history. The discovery of penicillin is one example, and 9/11 is another. What we desperately need is a circumstance that grabs the shoulders of the collective, gives us a good hard shake, and forces
us to rethink the way we live on this planet. At this time in the history of the United States, it could not be something attributed to climate change. It would
have to be something that, as in a furious but energizing swipe, clears the meeting table of political clutter. So what could that be? Well, if
we knew, it wouldn’t be a Black Swan. As Taleb explains in his titled book on the subject, we cannot predict such an event based on historical patterns, sci-
entific research, economics, or even “fads” like astrology. We can only wait and see. Taleb was not necessarily thinking about climate change when he wrote his book. His purpose was simply to alert readers to the Black Swan phenomenon and the fact that it recurs. He advises doing three things in the meantime. One is to turn aside from media-created toxicity, another is to pay attention, and the third is simply to be prepared, whatever that means to each of us. With regard to timing, the incoming climate science data suggests that the helpful Black Swan needs to land very soon. And when it does, it would be great if we welcomed it as an opportunity for transformation that would otherwise have eluded us. So the yearning for breakthrough finds a voice: “Bring on the Black Swan. It is time. Nearly past time.” Ellen Heath resides in Santa Fe and writes at www.celeryellen. com.
MY VIEW: DANA UDALL-WEINER
Mayor’s efforts to encourage health, fitness may backfire
I
was pleased to read about Mayor Javier Gonzales’ recent attempts to raise awareness about health and fitness by publicizing his own efforts to shed a few pounds (“Mayor seeks to shed pounds as part of City Hall fitness challenge,” June 8). But, as a psychologist who specializes in treating eating disorders, I’m aware of the downside to such public campaigns. To begin with, diets rarely work; there is ample empirical evidence that most people who lose weight gain it all back, plus some. In addition, such campaigns rely on weight as a proxy for health — an overly simplistic yardstick that distorts the truth that there are unhealthy thin people and healthy overweight people. And finally, when weight loss is emphasized over more holistic goals (like improving a range of health-related variables, as well as subjective well-being) the message is undeniable: Being thin is crucial, more important than anything else. This message — woven throughout our culture and underwritten by a
$20 billion-a-year diet industry — likely plays a role in the development of eating disorders and contributes to the stigma of obesity. Sadly, research shows that this stigma often prevents overweight individuals from seeking medical care — especially bad news for the many marginalized and already underserved individuals in our community. Healthy living is about eating in moderation and avoiding the extremes of overindulgence and restriction; it’s about bigger picture issues like increasing social support and managing stress, too. The mayor would do well to embark on a campaign that provides guidance about nutritious and culturally consistent food choices, one that extols the virtues of fun and social exercise. Though his objective is undoubtedly laudable, such efforts rarely lead to the intended results and can actually backfire. Dana Udall-Weiner is the founder of ED Educate and a psychologist who specializes in eating disorders.
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FREE FATHER’S DAY CONCERT
Sunday, June 15, 2:00 pm. Santa Fe Concert Band, Greg Heltman, Director. Enjoy an outdoor concert on a Sunday afternoon with Dad and the Family! Federal Park, 100 South Federal Place, Santa Fe. Free Admission, Donations Welcome. For more information, please call 471-4865 or visit http://www.santafeconcertband.org.
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game against Ghana on a BIG SCREEN TV. Bring your family, friends and something to sit on and enjoy the community atmosphere watching the game live. For those who’d like to enjoy a meal and a drink while watching the game you can obtain a table on the patio of Second Street Brewery. For more information and to reserve your table go to http://www. northernsc.org/world-cup-watching-parties. html.
ONGOING or UPCOMING
THE PRAYERFUL HARP You are inWATCH USA v GHANA’s WORLD vited to experience the magic of The Prayerful CUP GAME in the Railyard. The nonprofit Harp: A Celtic Harp Adventure, led by Linda Santa Fe Soccer Complex and Northern Soccer club are hosting a World Cup watching party Monday, June 16 at 400 PM in the Railyard. Come and watch the USA’s opening
Larkin, at Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center the week of July 21-27. Whether you wish to relax through your music or would enjoy playing with a group, you will be intro-
duced to basic techniques, sound healing practice and simple ways to create instant beauty on the harp. No music experience necessary. Some rental harps available by reservation. Visit www.GhostRanch.org for more information or call Ghost Ranch at 505685-1000 to register.
WHEN IMAGES SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS Thursday, September
11 to Sunday, September 14. Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center. You don’t have to be an artist to facilitate healing in individuals, institutions and family systems! This interactive workshop weaves the spiritual and creative benefits of expressing feelings through images and symbols when words will not come. For artists and non-artists. Learn a fun process, especially helpful for parents, teachers and child health care professionals. Presenters: Joan Drescher, Jan Gough. Register online www.ghostranch.org or call 505685-1001.
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SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
LOCAL NEWS
Capitol curator: Cynthia Sanchez oversees 600 works of art in eclectic, statewide collection. Neighbors, C-6
C
Santa Fe girl found after night alone in Calif. woods 9-year-old safe after wandering from family campsite, getting lost Staff and wire reports
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. — This is the greatest Father’s Day possible for Santa Fe musician Robby Rothschild. His 9-year-old daughter, Ida,
who wandered away from her parents’ campsite in Northern California on Friday and spent the night alone in the woods, trying to find her way back, was found safe and uninjured on Saturday, according to authorities. Two people on mountain bikes who had joined the intensive search for Ida located the girl in Samuel P. Taylor State Park after hearing her calls for help from a hillside, televi-
sion station KTVU reported. “I’m fine, Mom,” Ida told her tearful mother after they were reunited, according to KTVU. The mother, Brenna Rothschild, told the station that her daughter said she had walked through the night trying to reach her family and didn’t know so many people were looking for her. The girl was found more than 2 miles away from the campsite.
Ida Rothschild, 9, spent a night alone in the woods of Northern California after she became separated from her family and couldn’t find her way back to camp.
Ida was missing for 21 hours, according to Lt. Doug Pittman of the Marin County Sheriff’s Department, who called Ida “feisty.” The park is full of old redwoods, some more than 3 feet in diameter. It is easy to get disoriented, Pittman said. “It doesn’t take long when you walk out into them that you turn around and can’t see,” Pittman said.
Please see GiRL, Page C-4
Fort Union Drive-In, a longtime summer tradition near Las Vegas, reopens for a new season after nearly closing for good
COURTESY PHOTO
German journalist returns to Santa Fe 20 years after attack By Chris Quintana The New Mexican
Still rolling Dillon Encinias, and his girlfriend, Jacklyn Alarcon, watch The Amazing Spider-Man 2 with Encinias’ cousins Jayden Ortega, 5, and Joseph Ortega, 2, at the Fort Union Drive-In on Friday. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
A
light rain fell Friday evening as a 5-year-old Spider-Man poked his masked head out of the sunroof of his grandmother’s car, scoping out the scene at the Fort Union Drive-In near Las Vegas, N.M. A double rainbow brightened to the south. Fading sunlight burnished the prairie to the east. Teenagers and senior citizens wandered over to the concession stand to pick up pizza and popcorn. Families huddled under blankets, laughing and talking, as the night air cooled. Music blared from a few of the 65 vehicles parked in front of the screen. Nathan Burch pulled off his SpiderMan mask. He was a little impatient that the movie about his favorite superhero hadn’t started. He held three Spidey dolls in his hands. “I bring them so they can watch,” he said. It was the drive-in’s opening night for the season, a night that almost didn’t happen.
A loyal following Like many people gathered to enjoy the double feature of The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and The Monuments Men, Nathan’s grandmother, Angel Burch, was delighted and grateful the
Please see attacK, Page C-3
much else to do on a weekend in this town of fewer than 14,000 people. The town’s last indoor theater, the Kiva, closed last fall for the same reason the drive-in almost didn’t reopen: All theaters had to switch from 35 mm film to digital projectors by this year as movie companies stopped using film. The switch isn’t cheap. For months, with the indoor theater
Journalist Hubert Denk, pictured Saturday on the Plaza, is visiting the City Different from Germany for the first time since he was attacked here 20 years ago. On his last visit, Denk was in town working on a story for a German newspaper when three teens assaulted him and shattered his kneecap. Denk returned with a colleague for the weekend to see how the city has changed over time.
Please see DRiVe-in, Page C-3
JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Jake Cordova runs the digital projector for the first time at the Fort Union Drive-In on Friday. Cordova and his family helped save the drive-in theater, one of just two left in the state. Cordova’s grandfather helped pay for the digital projector the drive-in needed to stay open.
drive-in had opened for another year. Angel Burch said she’s been coming to the Fort Union Drive-In every summer since she was a little girl. She brought her children there when they were young and is now happy to share the experience with her grandson. “This is a piece of nostalgia. This is priceless,” she said of the drive-in, one of only two left in New Mexico. Moviegoers young and old carry memories of this place. There isn’t
When German journalist Hubert Denk, 53, was last in Santa Fe, working on a travel story, a trio of male teenagers attacked him in a dark street and smashed his kneecap with a rock. It took Denk a year to regain his full range of motion, and during his recovery, he lost his job with one of Germany’s largest newspapers. “The older I become, the more I feel this problem with the smashed kneecap,” Denk said in an email before his return to the City Different earlier this week. Twenty years later, the writer’s own story drew him back. He wanted to see the spot where he had been attacked. Friday afternoon, Denk and a colleague, photographer Tobias Köhler, searched East Alameda Street for the exact location where Denk had encountered the teens. He said he only remembered a parking lot, a trash can, some trees and a wall taller than he was. A news report of the incident said Denk was attacked outside the Inn at Loretto. It didn’t take him long to find the spot. “I remember this wall,” he said. “I don’t remember the streetlights. It was dark and different. It’s a little bit exciting.” In August 1994, Denk and his editor, a man in his 60s, were traveling Route 66, often called the Main Street of America, from Chicago to Los Angeles to write a travel piece for the German tabloid Bild Zeitung. The journey took Denk through what he
thought were more dangerous cities — he recalled watching a burglar break into cars in St. Louis. Santa Fe, with it’s adobe buildings, narrow streets and dozens of art galleries, seemed safe. The pair checked into the Inn on the Alameda just as Indian Market was wrapping up. Denk, who often ventured out alone on the trip, walked nearly a mile from his hotel to the now-defunct Luna nightclub off Cerrillos Road to drink a beer and watch the Native American band Red Thunder perform. As he trekked back to his hotel along East Alameda Street that night, he spotted three teenagers loitering by a wall and between some trees. It was late, midnight or 1 a.m., and it was dark, he said. A New Mexican report of the incident said the boys, none appearing older than 16, approached Denk and tried to bum some cigarettes. Denk offered a few. The teens seemed unsatisfied and kept questioning Denk, but he didn’t understand what they wanted. He said he tried to explain that he was German. According to the story, one boy asked if he had German money. Denk said he tried to walk away, but the teens were undeterred. He said they were wearing sneakers, so he didn’t hear them as they snuck up behind him. One boy threw him to the ground. As he lay on his back, he said, another teen — a “fat one” who couldn’t keep up with the rest, he joked — grabbed a large rock the
New owners to take over San Marcos Cafe — and its menagerie Michigan couple buy landmark eatery, plan few changes By Dennis J. Carroll For The New Mexican
The days of Buddy the Chicken at the San Marcos Cafe and Feed Store are long gone, and now the landmark restaurant south of the city is entering yet another era, with its pending sale to a Michigan couple. “It’s time for a change, time for retirement,” said Susan
Macdonell, who along with her husband, Tom, bought the business, then just a feed store, in 1984. The restaurant, known as much for the poultry that greet diners outside as for the fowl on the menu inside, was added soon after. The buzz over huevos rancheros, breakfast crepes and giant cinnamon rolls at the cafe Friday morning was a lot about what would happen to the menagerie of peacocks, turkeys, ducks and other fowl that freely roam the grounds of the restaurant, planted along N.M. 14 just north of county roads 44 and 45. (An emu
rescued by the Macdonells from the hills north off Madrid about five years ago and kept penned in the back died a few months ago.) Macdonell, dressed in her usual bright red apron over a faded blue shirt and jeans, tried to assure patrons that as far as she knew, the new owners were planning to keep things pretty much the same, including letting the fowl roam more or less freely on the 5-acre parcel. Meanwhile, Cindy Holloway, who bought the property with her husband, Mark, said nothing to leave patrons and neigh-
bors thinking otherwise. “It is such a charming and such a wonderful place,” Holloway said. “Obviously [the Macdonells] have been in business and successful for 30 years, so Mark and I plan to run it much the same way Tom and Susan have, and we hope to be as successful as they are.” Holloway said she and her husband were married in Santa Fe in November 2012 after visiting here numerous times. “It just felt like home, so we are very excited” to have found such a community-oriented
Please see cafe , Page C-4
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com
Tom and Susan Macdonell, who have owned and operated the San Marcos Cafe and Feed Store on N.M. 14 south of Santa Fe for 30 years, plan to turn over the restaurant to new owners later this summer. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
FUNERAL SERVICES & MEMORIALS
JACOBO (JAKE) D. MARTINEZ SR. Jacobo D. Martinez Sr., (Coach Jake) 88 - Loving husband, father, leader and longtime resident of Santa Fe, died at his home in Santa Fe on Monday, June 9, 2014 after a brief battle with cancer. Born and raised in Grenville, New Mexico, Coach Martinez was an influential educator and coach, and a respected community leader in Santa Fe and throughout northern New Mexico. His major accomplishment was raising a close-knit family with his wife of 63 years and emphasizing a strong faith in God, respect for others, the value of education and hard work to his children throughout their lives. He was a WWII veteran and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal, Soldiers Medal, Meritorious Service, Good Conduct, Asiatic-Pacific Theater, American Theater, and Victory Medal; he later served in the New Mexico State (National) Guard having attained the rank of Brigadier General. As a basketball coach he received numerous accolades including the 1963 Associated Press NM Coach of the Year, 1966 NM Sportswriters Association Coach of the Year, and 1971 U.S. Basketball Writers Association Coach of the Year awards and led the Pecos High School Panthers to their only Boys State Tournament Championship in 1966 and a runner-up finish in 1967. His teams at Pecos and Pojoaque HS captured three combined Northern Rio Grande Tournament Championships. Under his previous guidance, St. Gertrude’s HS (Mora) would surprise many by winning the 1962 Stu Clark Tournament. He was a Senior Counselor at New Mexico Boy’s State for forty years. As a two-term Santa Fe County Commissioner, Jake also served as President of the New Mexico Association of Counties and as an officer with the National Association of Counties. Jake was a recognized leader in the Democratic Party and a member of the D.A.V., Elks Lodge #460, and La Sociedad Colonial Espanola de Santa Fe. He served on the Santa Fe Senior Citizens Board and was a founding board Member of the Marty Sanchez Links de Santa Fe and the Genoveva Chavez Community Advisory Board. He supported Santa Fe youth organizations with his participation including Babe Ruth Baseball, American Legion Baseball and the Boys and Girls Club. In 2006 the Santa Fe County Board of Commissioners dedicated the Jacob D. Martinez Community Housing Site in his honor. Coach Martinez graduated from St. Michael’s High School, earned his Bachelor’s degree from St. Michael’s College, and his Master of Arts degree at St. John’s College as the first Hispanic graduate to earn this degree at the Santa Fe campus. His other honors, commitments, interests and accomplishments in life are simply too numerous to mention. Coach Martinez was preceded in death by his parents, Jose Antonio Martinez and Maria Emilia Mares, his siblings Luz (Aurora), Manuel (Martha), Jose (Teresa), Miguel (Patricia), Ernest (Amenia), Euservia Lucero (Procopio), Helen Feind (Lloyd), as well as brothers Cornelio, Pat and Jerry; baby brothers Abel and Luis. He is survived by his wife Ana Maria (Mary) Martinez; sons: Mario X. Martinez and wife Alice, Jacob D. Martinez, Jr. and wife Michelle, and Gerard J. Martínez and wife Shanna of Santa Fe; daughter: Dr. Maria Martínez Bain and husband Dr. Steve Bain; brothers, Marcelino and wife Bonnie, Ted and wife Marlene; and sister, Antoinette Perea and husband Clarence; sisters-in-law, Carmen Martinez, Graciela Martinez, Ruth Martinez, and Grace Lujan; brothers-in-law, Ray Valencia and Bob Valencia, 14 grandchildren, 4 great grandchildren, 9 Godchildren, numerous nieces, nephews, relatives, friends and "fourth sons". A viewing will be held on Wednesday, June 18, 2014 at 6:30 pm at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Pecos and a Rosary will be prayed at 7 pm. An additional viewing will be held on Thursday, June 19, 2014 at 6:30 pm at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community and a Rosary will be prayed at 7 pm. Roman Catholic Christian Mass will be celebrated on Friday, June 20, 2014 at 9 am at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community. Military Interment will follow at 11:15 am, National Cemetery in Santa Fe. Afterwards, the Martinez family will host a reception at the Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community Parish Hall. In lieu of flowers, gifts may be made in celebration of Jacobo Martinez’ life to support the Ana Maria & Jacobo Martinez Scholarship for mathematics and bilingual educators. Checks may be made to the "NMSU Foundation, Inc.", memo or correspondence should state "Ana Maria & Jacobo Martinez Endowed Scholarship in the College of Education." Gifts may be mailed Attn: R. Peterson, Gift Planning Director, NMSU Foundation, Inc., P.O Box 3590 Las Cruces, NM 88003. Gifts may also be made online at http://fndforms.nmsu.edu/giving.php. BERARDINELLI FAMILY FUNERAL SERVICE 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com MANUELITA ROMERO, 102, peacefully ended her earthly journey on Sunday, June 8, 2014. Born in Rio Chama, NM on October 8, 1911 to Manuel and Adela Herrera, she was preceded in death by her parents; husband Juan J. Romero of sixty-three years, son Esteban, brother Herculano Herrera (Maclovia), and sister Rosa Apodaca. She is survived by her sons Miguel Romero (Irma) of Santa Fe NM, Juan J. Romero (Terri) of Lacey WA, Martin Romero (Marie) of Waunakee WI, daughter-in-law Ellen Romero of Roy UT and brother Manuel Herrera (Maria) of Albuquerque NM. She is also survived by 10 grandchildren, 9 great grandchildren and many nephews and nieces. Manuelita attended school in Espanola NM and graduated from the Spanish-American Normal School in El Rito NM with the class of 1932. She worked many years for Henry and Agnes Kramer at the Kramer Mercantile in San Juan Pueblo, and was also employed at the CR Anthony’s and the New Mexico Department of Revenue before retiring from Pat Hollis Pharmacy. She and her husband loved the outdoors and traveling. They took many cruises to Alaska, the Caribbean and Panama. They traveled in their motor home from Florida to Montana and everywhere in between. They especially loved visiting casinos with Manuel and Maria Herrera. Manuelita was especially fond of and deeply loved her grandchildren and great grandchildren. The family would like to thank Kathy Montoya, Diana Archuleta, Rosalie Tipton and Helen Lucero for the loving care they gave Manuelita and also Dr. William Leeson, Dr. Douglas Tazollie, Fr. Leo Ortiz and the staff of St. Anne Parish, the staff of Kingston Residence and the staff of Ambercare Hospice for their kind and compassionate care. In lieu of flowers donations may be made in memory of Manuelita Romero to St. Anne Parish Building Fund, 511 Alicia St Santa Fe NM or to the Carmelite Monastery, 49 Mt Carmel Rd, Santa Fe NM. A Rosary will be recited Friday, June 20, 2014, at 10 am at St. Anne’s Catholic Church with a Mass of Christian Burial following at 11 am. Burial will be Monday, June 23, 2014 at 9:45 am at Santa Fe National Cemetery.
3 YEAR ANNIVERSARY FRANKIE JOHNSON JR. JANUARY 31, 1986 JUNE 15, 2011
We wander to your graveside and place your flowers with care. No-one knows the heartache as we turn and leave you there. It feels you left us yesterday, the wounds are still so sore. For every minute of every day we miss you more and more! We love you Frankie, Always & Forever Happy Father’s Day! IN LOVING MEMORY OF BRYAN CARL VARELA
Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com NANCY JEAN DEANE Nancy Jean Deane of Santa Fe ended her courageous 4 ½ year fight against cancer on Thursday, June 12, 2014. She is survived by her husband, Bob; their two beloved dogs, Karlotta and Clooney; son, Tony; granddaughter, Emma; daughter in-law, Becki; daughter in law, Marna; sister, Carol Lynn; brother, David and brother, Jeremiah. She is preceded in death by parents Clement and Mary; step mother, Louise; sister, Linda and son John. Nancy and Bob moved to Santa Fe from Maine more than 16 years ago. Nancy most recently taught at Capital High School for 13 years and loved teaching. She enjoyed time with her dogs, live music, reading, traveling and writing. She will be deeply missed by all who had the privilege of knowing her. There is a road, no simple highway Between the dawn and the dark of night And if you go no one may follow That path is for your steps alone Garcia/Hunter In lieu of flowers, to honor the memory of Nancy it is requested that you do something nice for a fellow human being while thinking a pleasant thought for her and that when given the choice, choose to not be an jerk. Arrangements by Direct Funeral Services, 2919 4th. St. NW. ABQ. 505-343-8008
1ST YEAR ANNIVERSARY JUNE 17, 2013 Bryan, as time goes by the pain will ease a little, but your memory, warm smile, huge hugs will never be forgotten. We love and miss you Bryan Kyle Jr., Dad, Mom, Laura, Dale, and families. MEMORIAL Honoring Santa Fean BEN TARVER Playwright, Actor, Director, Writer Monday, 16 June 2014 3:00 pm Santa Fe Memorial Gardens 417 East Rodeo Road Santa Fe Reception following at 382 Calle Colina Santa Fe, NM
FILIA MONTOYA 6 YEAR ANNIVERSARY
Those we love don’t go away Sadly missed along life’s away Quietly remembered everyday Unseen, unheard but always near Still loved, still missed & very dear And in our hearts she’s always there. Life will never be the same mom, it’s so hard to believe it’s been 6 years But you are never far from our thoughts as we can still hear your laugh and feel your presence during our family gatherings.
SCOTT, DEBORAH ROXBURGH Scott, Deborah Roxburgh, passed away at her home in Oro Valley, Arizona at the age of 62. Formerly of Santa Fe, New Mexico and Grand Rapids, Michigan. Debbie is survived by the love of her life, John and friends everywhere. As a proud graduate of Northwestern University Deb lived her whole life with grace and determination. She will be missed and remembered by all who knew her. And she will be especially missed by the lucky few who were the regular recipients of her very special cards. To leave a condolence please visit guestbook at www.VistosoFH.com HERMAN C. GRACE 1/22/1940 ~ 10/8/2012
We all love & miss you very much!! The Montoya family would like to invite all our family and friends to mom’s 6 year anniversary mass. The mass will take place June 16, 2014 at 5:30 p.m. at Saint Anne Church in Santa Fe, NM.
Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican
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FIDEL "DEL" JACQUES Began his journey on this earth on April 24th, 1936 in Gallina, New Mexico the fourth child of Eudoro and Frances Jacques. He was called home in the early morning hours of May 30th, 2014. He spent the first 63 years of his life in New Mexico where he raised two daughters with his first wife. He married the love of his life, Tropa on June 21 st, 1977 in Albuquerque, New Mexico and he became step-dad to a son and daughter. Del and Tropa both retired from jobs in Los Alamos, and moved to Wellston, Oklahoma in 1999 where they built a home and a life together. Del was a natural born cowboy who always had a horse or two or forty. He was a member of the Sheriff’s Posse in Los Alamos , New Mexico and was a life member of the BPOE in Los Alamos where he moved up the chairs and was Exalted Ruler in 19821983, and Elk of the Year in 1993-1994. He continued to be involved with the Elks Lodge in Edmond and never failed to "cowboy up" wherever and whenever he was needed. Del never met a stranger. He made friends everywhere he went. Always charming and charasmatic, he had a wonderful sense of humor and was the most loyal friend anyone could ever need. He will be missed by all who had the good fortune to be his friend. He will be remembered by his family as the very best husband and father, God will allow. Forever a Cowboy and Angel. he was interred Wednesday, June 4th at 10:00 a.m. on the family farm in Wellston, Oklahoma, a place he never wanted to leave. MARCOS WHEELER Marcos Wheeler, 37, passed away on Saturday, June 7, 2014, with his family by his side. Marcos was known as a loving father, son, brother, uncle, and friend. Anyone that knew him, knew that he had a big heart. He is survived by his mother, Joyce (Ray Baros); daughters, Mariah and Trinity, son, Isaiah, his siblings he grew up with, Jose Wheeler (Candi), Sarah Valdez (Kevin), Jason Montoya, other siblings Anthony, Christopher, Sabastian, and Sebrina Wheeler; dear friend Angelica Duran; grandparents, Emily Lujan, Pete and Mary Wheeler; father, Tony Wheeler, as well as numerous nephews, nieces, aunts, and uncles. A funeral service will be held on Monday, June 16, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. in the Sangre de Cristo Chapel of DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory. Burial to follow at the Pojoaque Pueblo Cemetery. In lieu of flowers and donations, they may be made through Zia Credit Union, Del Norte, State Employees Credit Unions are also connected with Zia in his mother’s name, Joyce Wheeler for information regarding the account number please contact DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory for more information. The family of Marcos Wheeler has entrusted the care of their loved one to the DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Española Valley. 505-747-7477 - www.devargasfuneral.com ROBERT F. KELLY Robert F. Kelly, 61, long time resident of Santa Fe, New Mexico; most recently living in Tucson, Arizona passed on May 20th, 2014 in Tucson Arizona with his family by his side. Robert was born March 27, 1953 in Far Rockaway, NY and was one of six children of Mary Simco and Joseph Kelly. He grew up from age 12 onward with his foster parents Walter and Elizabeth Kennedy, who had six children of their own. He spent most of his life after the age of 18 in New Mexico, getting married in Southern California and having two daughters. After returning to New Mexico Robert owned a successful independent food distribution company in Albuquerque and later worked for Nobel Sysco until his departure from their Albuquerque office in 2006. Finding that he still had a great deal of energy and a mind built for business he ventured to Tucson, Arizona to purchase an independent liquor store in 2011. He lived his life always wanting more for his children and worked hard up until he passed to ensure they would be taken care of first and foremost. Robert is survived by his two daughters Jennifer (Kenny Ash) Kelly of Bayfield, CO and Amy (Michael) Holmes of Tucson, AZ; and one beautiful granddaughter (his princess) Kinley Reese Ash also of Bayfield, CO. Services will be held Saturday June 21, 2014 at 2PM in Santa Fe at the Rosario Chapel located at 540 Rosario Blvd, Santa Fe, NM 87501; arrangements are being handled by Rivera Family Funeral Home 417 E Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 9897032. To view information or leave a condolence please visit www. Insert website here http://www.riverafuneralhome.com/
Those we love don’t go away, they walk beside us everyday, unseen, unheard, but always near. Still loved, still missed and very dear to our hearts. God bless you dad; your children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and your wife. JOHNNY J. ANAYA
Your smile has gone forever and your hand we cannot touch we have so many memories Of you, Dad, we loved so much. Happy Father’s Day
TOMAS H. GOMEZ
Happy Father’s Day to a great dad. We miss you every day. The Gomez family
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LOCAL & REGION
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Attack: Teenagers were never caught Continued from Page C-1 size of a “baby’s head” and smashed Denk’s knee, sending him into “great shock and injury.” Denk said he now thinks the teen was aiming for his head because he had pulled his knees toward his face to protect himself. He handed the teens all the money he had, $20, he said, and the teens disappeared. They were never caught. After recovering from the initial shock, Denk was able to get off the ground and hop along on his right leg. Many cars passed him by, but finally a good Samaritan named Rocky in a “big, red and old car” stopped for Denk. Rocky, like Denk, was visiting from out of town, so neither knew the way to the hospital. They drove around awhile, lost, but eventually they discovered what was then St. Vincent Hospital. Denk needed surgery for his injuries, so he had to cut his trip short. At the time, there was fear in Santa Fe that the city’s reputation would be tarnished in Germany after Denk’s newspaper reported on the attack. At the same time, Denk said, people from all across the city, including then-Gov. Bruce King, representatives of the Santa Fe County Chamber of Commerce and members of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation, sent letters of support. One young girl, he said, even sent him $5. In a letter to The New Mexican, Denk responded to his well-wishers, assuring them that Bild Zeitung had not written about him or his attack — though a smaller
paper did — and he praised the residents of Santa Fe. “Never before in my life have I experienced so much charity,” he wrote in the letter. “Isn’t it wonderful? The attackers have stopped haunting my dreams, but the people of Santa Fe have found a place in my heart.” Despite his initial setback after the attack, Denk said, his career as a freelance journalist has flourished. He covers government corruption, as well as lighter stories, such as the appointment of a new archbishop. And he’s still active. Prior to arriving in Santa Fe, he and Köhler, 25, hiked a portion of the Grand Canyon, though Denk said his knee was a bit swollen afterward. On Friday, Köhler snapped photos on East Alameda Street while Denk recalled the incident, saying the street seemed smaller. He stared at the trees, the adobe wall and the parking lot. He crossed the street, just as he did 20 years ago, and looked at the Santa Fe River. He said it seemed like more of a creek. And after 10 or 15 minutes, Denk was ready to leave the site. Half-joking, he said he might have to come back at night and alone, to get the full effect of what he had felt that night. He said he doesn’t believe Santa Fe is all that dangerous anymore. Eventually, he plans to write about his new and old experiences in the City Different. “The more often you tell it,” Denk said. “The more you can put away the trauma.” Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.
The attack against German journalist Hubert Denk was front-page news in August 1994.
In brief
was ordered to pay more than $10 million in damages to Ellis’ family.
ALBUQUERQUE — An Albuquerque police officer who was at the center of one of city’s costliest wrongful death lawsuits is being credited with saving a woman’s life. Police say Officer Brett Lampiris-Tremba helped a stabbing victim outside a motel Thursday. Police spokeswoman Tasia Martinez says the woman had at least nine stab wounds and collapsed in front of LampirisTremba’s vehicle. Martinez says LampirisTremba applied two tourniquets to the victim’s arm and put pressure on other wounds. Emergency responders say the officer kept the woman from bleeding to death. Officers later arrested 33-year-old Freddy Granger, who had fled the scene. In 2010, Lampiris-Tremba fatally shot Kenneth Ellis III, an Iraq War veteran. The city
CARLSBAD — Authorities have identified the two Carlsbad police officers involved in a fatal shooting of a suspect. New Mexico State Police say Sgt. Edward Duarte and Officer David DeSantiago fired shots Monday at 24-year-old Troy Kirkpatrick, who was wounded and later died. Police say Kirkpatrick was in the custody of the Eddy County Detention Center. He allegedly assaulted a detention officer at a doctor’s office and then stole a vehicle. Kirkpatrick was being pursued by police when he crashed the vehicle into a fence in an alleyway. It’s not clear which officer’s gunfire injured Kirkpatrick. Duarte is an eight-year veteran of the department, while DeSantiago has been there for one year.
Moviegoers at the Fort Union Drive-In were treated to a double rainbow Friday. PHOTOS BY UIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Drive-in: Cordova family recognized need Continued from Page C-1 closed and the drive-in not yet open, Las Vegas residents yearning for a big-screen experience had to drive to Santa Fe. The Ulibarri family, four strong plus a friend, sat in the bed of a big Dodge Ram, munching on popcorn, sipping root beer and waiting for the two pizzas they had ordered. “We’re here every weekend,” Abie Ulibarri said. They park in the same spot every time. They’ve been at the drive-in when it has rained and hailed, and when lightning has flashed in the sky. “We were worried it wouldn’t open. We love it here,” said his wife, Ramona Ulibarri, who recalled watching Spanishlanguage movies at the drive-in decades ago. “When it’s a clear night, I like to lay back and look at the stars.” Steve Sanchez remembers falling asleep before the midnight end of a double feature when he was a young man. He and his buddy woke up and realized they were the only car left at the drive-in, and the gate was locked. “Our family called the police. They had to come let us out,” he said. Chris Chavez, 14, sat on a bench outside the concession stand with his buddies Isaiah Sandoval, 15, and Marcus Trujillo, 14. All three said they had worried the drive-in wouldn’t reopen. Sure they ride fourwheelers, play video games and hang out at each other’s houses. But the drive-in is kind of special in a small town with little else. Jake Cordova, 18 and fresh out of Robertson High School, is the drive-in’s new general manager. Cordova grew up going to the drive-in and worked at Fort Union the last couple of years handling security and fixing the old projector. Now, he’ll be running the whole show, from hiring staff to keeping the concession stand stocked. It was touch-and-go to get the drive-in ready for Friday’s reopening. Parts for the new digital projector didn’t arrive until Thursday morning. A vehicle rolled over Thursday afternoon off N.M. 518, and Cordova had to interrupt lastminute preparations to help out the driver as a first responder. At $20 a carload, Fort Union is still a bargain, especially for more than two people in a vehicle. Angel Burch said the cost of tickets and concessions for three at a movie theater in Santa
Five-year-old Nathan Burch of Las Vegas plays with his Spider-Man action figures before Friday’s movie screening.
Fe runs more than $60, and that doesn’t include the gas to drive there. Jeanna Diluccio, who managed Fort Union for almost 20 years — and once called the drive-in “a place of the past, of a simpler time, a sweeter, gentler time” — credits property owner Gilbert Pino with supporting it all these years. She said he could have easily torn it down and sold the land for top dollar. That’s what happened to drive-ins all over the country.
An American original rises, falls Auto products salesman Richard Hollingshead is credited with inventing the drivein. After experimenting with sheets, projectors, radios and cars parked at different angles, Hollingshead opened the first drive-in theater in Camden, N.J., on June 6, 1933. Thousands more sprang up around the country in the years that followed. In the industry’s heyday, New Mexico sported at least 45 drivein movie theaters, according to information gathered by DriveIns.com. The site, managed by brother-sister team Kipp Sherer and Jennifer Sherer Janisch, is a repository of history and photos of more than 5,000 drive-ins, all but a few hundred now closed. Carlsbad’s Fiesta Drive-In is the only other one in New Mexico besides Fort Union. The drive-in was constructed in 1948 and operates three screens yearround, with space for up to 600 vehicles. The Fort Union Drive-In holds half that number of vehicles and has only one screen. It is usually open from May through September. Kipp Sherer and his sister launched the website as an excuse to work on a project together, drive across the coun-
try and document a disappearing part of Americana. Wherever they stopped on road trips to gather information about a drive-in, people would share their memories. The project “kind of got so big it took on a life of its own,” Kipp Sherer said. Drive-ins have advantages indoor theaters still lack. “You can come in your own car. You can move around in the fresh air. You can sit in a lawn chair, lay against pillows, look up at the stars and the screen at the same time,” Cordova said. Drive-ins began dwindling in the 1970s, not for want of customers but due to the value of the land on which they sat, Kipp Sherer said. Most drive-ins were built outside towns. As the towns grew up around them, their land became valuable real estate for Wal-Marts and other commercial ventures. Another factor was lack of interested heirs. Many drive-ins were family-owned, Sherer said. As the parents aged and other work promised better pay, no one in the family wanted to take over management. The need to switch from film to digital projectors is just the latest challenge for drive-ins, he said. Still, he thinks a few will survive. “I think drive-ins will always be around in some form or another.” Cordova hopes Sherer is right, especially since his family is now vested in Fort Union. “This is almost a once-in-a-lifetime experience now that there aren’t so many left,” he said. “We wanted the younger generation to experience what we experienced.”
Saving Fort Union Fort Union reopened because of Cordova’s family.
“I could kiss those guys,” said George Contreras as he leaned against his truck waiting for the movie to start. “They did a good thing. This is one of the luxuries we have here.” Months ago, at the end of the last drive-in season in September, Diluccio and others put out a call for help. They needed to raise tens of thousands of dollars to buy a new digital projector, or the drive-in couldn’t reopen. Diluccio, business owner Tito Chavez, the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce and others tried to raise the funds from the community. But Las Vegas isn’t a rich town. By spring, they simply didn’t have enough money, Diluccio said. Then Cordova stepped in. He asked his grandfather, former Taos County Sheriff Felipe Cordova, to help buy the projector and take over the drive-in. The elder Cordova said he recognized the need. “Las Vegas doesn’t have many other forms of entertainment,” he said. “You often wonder why they discontinue this kind of entertainment that brings the community together.” Felipe Cordova has faith in his grandson’s ability to run this show. “He definitely knows what needs to be done,” he said from his Taos home in May. “He’s fixing the place up. He put together the staff.” Diluccio will continue booking movies for the drive-in. But she said she was ready to step away from management. “Things worked out beautifully,” Diluccio said. “It needed new blood.” The old 35 mm projectors sit under cover in a corner of the projection room next to the new digital one. Gilbert Pino is keeping them, Diluccio said. “They are the original carbon arc projectors. They’re beauties.” Jake Cordova already has some new ideas for the drive-in. He’ll open an extra day every week, Thursday through Sunday. He hopes to keep the theater open through October. As a steady stream of cars pulled into the drive-in under a rising full moon Friday, he looked around, satisfied. The projector had worked. People were coming. It was a good first night. “We did this for the community,” Cordova said. “We didn’t want this to go under.” Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com.
Carlsbad police Officer saves stabbing victim ID’d in shooting
The Associated Press
Las Vegas residents Steve Sanchez, Deborah Sanchez and their grandchildren Michael Sanchez, 5, and Esperanza Sanchez, 7, watch The Amazing Spider-Man 2 from the back of their SUV Friday at the Fort Union Drive-In.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
LOCAL & REGION
N.M. base sees rise in drone training “killed civilians indiscriminately in clear violation of the laws of ALAMOGORDO — Hollowar.” The report also stated other man Air Force Base is devoting drone attacks “may have targeted more time to training pilots in people who were not legitimate the use of drones, according to military objectives or caused disan Albuquerque Journal report. proportionate civilian deaths.” The number of students learn“There are humans in the ing how to operate remotely chain from the start to the finish,” piloted aircraft, or RPAs, at the Powell said. “Any time you have Alamogordo base has multiplied. humans involved, there is always Holloman officials say more opportunity for human error. than 700 people are enrolled in However, we go to great lengths the program this fiscal year. from the very beginning of our That is a significant increase training to minimize that aspect from 136 graduates when the pro- of it.” gram began in 2009. At Holloman, student pilots Lt. Col. Calvin Powell, a trainnever leave the ground for drone ing squadron commander, said training. They study by manning the base still cannot meet the simulated missions, according to demand from the drones while the base. The facility currently maintaining enough air crew. has four MQ-1 Predator drones The use of drones in combat and six MQ-9 Reaper drones. missions continues to draw criti- The Predator is about the size of cism. a Cessna 172 and can haul two Human rights groups say missiles and fly up to 20 hours. U.S.-operated drones led to civil- The Reaper, nicknamed “Wartians getting killed in two attacks hog” for its large size, can carry in Yemen within the last five up to four missiles and two years. In a 2013 report, Human 500-pound, laser-guided bombs. Rights Watch said those attacks It can fly up to 16 hours.
Police notes
The Associated Press
Peacocks roam outside the cafe and feed store on Friday. PHOTOS BY CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
“
Peacocks and movie stars kind of sums up the place.”
ARIZONA
Senator pushes plan to cull canyon’s bison
By Felicia Fonseca The Associated Press
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Arizona Sen. John McCain is pushing an amendment in Congress that would allow anyone who kills bison at the Grand Canyon to keep the meat. Hunting is prohibited at the national park, but land managers are trying to find ways to control hundreds of bison roaming the northern reaches of the Grand Canyon to preserve water resources, vegetation and fragile cliff dwellings. One of the options raised during a public comment period was lethal removal. The National Park Service has the authority to kill animals that harm resources, using park staff or volunteer shooters. But the shooter cannot keep the meat. Instead, it is handed over to wildlife agencies, tribes or charities to distribute. McCain’s amendment — one of two he proposed last week as part of the Sportsmen’s Act — would change that. The bison hunt in the northern part of the Kaibab National Forest is highly coveted, McCain said. Allowing hunters to take the full animal would be a service to the national park, he said. The Arizona Game and Fish Commission voted Friday to support the amendment. Meanwhile, the Sierra Club criticized McCain for interfering in a public process. “I don’t know why anyone would object to the bison meat going to tribal entities or people who are hungry,” said Sandy Bahr, director of the Sierra Club’s Grand Canyon Chapter. “If it was just about the meat, it would be they [hunters] could go buy that.” McCain’s office said the senator’s intent isn’t to open up the Grand Canyon to hunting. His office said Friday that the amendment would allow the Park Service to work with the Arizona Game and Fish Commission to determine who is authorized to aid in lethal removal, and allow those people to take the full carcasses of bison. Martha Hahn, the Grand Canyon’s chief of resource management, said that’s not currently allowed because the bison are considered natural resources that can’t be consumed or taken by a visitor. “The fact is we have regulations,” Hahn said. “You can’t just turn over resources to the public.”
The opportunities for hunters to catch bison in northern Arizona have lessened now that the animals are making their home almost exclusively at the national park. The bison were introduced to the area in the early 1990s as part of a ranching operation to crossbreed them with cattle, creating hybrids known as beefalo or cattalo. The state of Arizona owns and maintains the estimated 350-450 bison outside the Grand Canyon, which can be hunted on U.S. Forest Service land. Officials from the Grand Canyon, Arizona Game and Fish Department and the Forest Service are working on a bison management plan expected to be released in the fall of 2016. More than 150 comments were received during a recent public comment period. Craig McMullen, the Game and Fish’s regional supervisor in Flagstaff, said there would be no shortage of volunteers if the public could participate in the lethal removal of bison. He said bison hunting permits are the most sought-after of the state’s 10 hunted big game species. Lance Crowther, of Timberland Outfitters in Flagstaff, said the attraction is that the bison are wild, free-ranging animals that produce a lot of meat. He said he would welcome public participation in controlling the population. “I would hate to see them send some sort of government shooter in there and deal with it that way,” he said. Bahr suggested McCain’s amendment is aimed more at producing trophies for hunters than aiding the Park Service. “It’s pretty outrageous that Sen. McCain is again trying to do an end run around the National Park Service,” she said. “People work for decades on these issues, and it’s not unlike what he did with air tour noise.” The National Park Service was forced to change its goal for restoring natural quiet at the Grand Canyon after McCain and others pushed a provision in the 2012 federal transportation bill to make half of the park free from commercial air tour noise for at least 75 percent of the day and provide incentives for quiet air technology. The Park Service wanted to make 67 percent of the canyon quiet for three-fourths of the day or longer.
Susan Macdonell, outgoing owner
Susan Macdonell, left, and her husband, Tom, have sold the San Marcos Cafe and Feed Store on N.M. 14 after running it for three decades.
Cafe: Plans to offer dinner menu Continued from Page C-1 business, she said. The Holloways currently live in Grass Lake, Mich., and have operated several restaurant-related businesses, but never an actual dining establishment. They are expected to take over the San Marcos in late July or early August. The San Marcos has not only survived but prospered in an area where so many other restaurants were launched with great hope, only to fade away, sometimes even before the neighbors knew they were there. “We just kept hanging on,” Macdonell said. “It never has been bad, it just kept building over the years, and we have never had a lot of debt. It’s made money ever since we opened the doors — maybe not a lot of money, but enough to keep it going.” She said many of the failed startups, especially over the past few years, might have succeeded if they had served
only dinner, a meal the San Marcos dropped years ago, primarily because three meals a day just got to be too much work for Macdonell, who still does much of the cooking herself. “At first we served breakfast, lunch and dinner. For years, the only meal I didn’t serve was dinner Sunday night,” Macdonell said. She said the Holloways plan to add a dinner menu. “The neighborhood will really love that. They have wanted a place for dinner for a long time.” Macdonell said she tried closing on Mondays and Tuesdays, “but then [author and art collector] Forrest Fenn screamed at me, ‘Where are we going to eat?’ So I opened back up.” Macdonell figures the cafe derives about half its patronage from the tourist trade and the other half from locals. Plus, you can throw in the occasional celebrity. To name but a few: Ed Harris, Ron Howard, the Cohen brothers, Kiefer Sutherland, Randy Travis and the morethan-occasional Sam Shepard
Girl: Lost for 21 hours in seven years, Pittman said. Her parents reported her miss“She kept trying to find her ing after spending 90 minutes way back. How she kept her looking for her. Ida, her parents wits about her, I don’t know. and her brothers had gone to She was a brave little girl.” Muir Beach and then the park. Temperatures were in the Her father had last seen her about low 40s Friday night, and the noon Friday and realized she was full moon might have made the gone about half an hour later. experience less frightening for Robby Rothschild is half the her, Pittman guessed. duo Round Mountain with his More than 100 sheriff’s dep- brother, Char Rothschild. uties, search and rescue workFriends and family members ers from neighboring counties, posted messages of relief and California Conservation Corps love for the family on Facebook. members and volunteers “Hallellujah!!!! Happy ending worked through the night look- to the worst night of your lives! ing for the girl, who was visitSo glad she is fine. Love to you ing the park in Marin County all. happy, happpy Father’s Day with her parents and two Robby,” posted Julia Meeks. younger brothers Friday after“Loads of prayers were noon when she disappeared. answered today,” wrote Alex Another hundred had resumed Morton. the painstaking search early Robby Rothschild writes a Saturday, along with search periodic blog about family life in dogs and an airplane. Flower of a Father. Brenna Rothschild gives her own take in a blog It was the largest search for a missing person in the county called StoryMama.
Continued from Page C-1
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Sen. John McCain is pushing an amendment in Congress that would allow anyone who kills bison at the Grand Canyon to keep the meat. Hunting is prohibited at the national park, but land managers are trying to come up with a way to control a herd of bison roaming the northern reaches of the Grand Canyon. KAIBAB NATIONAL FOREST/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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and Wes Studi. “Peacocks and movie stars kind of sums up the place,” Macdonell said. The Macdonells, who bought a home just down the road from the San Marcos, may take off on a few trips or spend more time at another home they recently bought in southern Colorado. As for Buddy the Chicken, the white Cochin bantam and unofficial maître d’: “He was so tame, he didn’t realize he was a chicken,” Macdonell said. “He would take walks with us and hold court out front.” Buddy also would, on occasion, make his way inside and sit on patrons’ feet “until we’d pick him up and shoo him out.” Buddy, who died in spring 1996, is likely the only chicken to have received an above-the-fold obituary in his hometown newspaper. Buddy was succeeded by another bird, Russell Crow. Though he never rose to Buddy’s stature, Russell left his mark until he disappeared during the New Year’s Eve snowstorm of 2006-07.
The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u Darren Vigil, 20, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on an outstanding Municipal Court warrant for unlawful use of a suspended or revoked license. u A 1994 red Honda Civic with license number 545RJF was stolen Friday from a driveway in the 300 block of Houghton Road. u Unknown suspects broke into a home through the front door in the 800 block of Rio Vista Street on Friday and stole two laptops. u Annastacia Serrano, no address or age provided, allegedly attempted to cash a forged check in the amount of $2,600 at Century Bank, 408 N. Guadalupe St., on Thursday. She left the scene before police arrived, but she left behind her identification card and the forged check. u A purse and a black, snub-nosed Smith and Wesson .38 Special were stolen from a van in the 5600 block of Hyde Park Road on Friday. u Juan C. Villalobos, 18, of Santa Fe, was arrested Friday on a Municipal Court warrant charging failure to appear. u The front porch window of a residence in the 200 block of Spruce Street was pried open Friday, and two coin banks were stolen. u An alarm was tripped at 1300 Arenal Court at 11:16 a.m. Friday. Investigators found the door kicked in and a box with unknown contents missing. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following report: u A DeWalt drill and sabre saw were stolen sometime between Tuesday and Wednesday from a home on County Road 84G. An unknown suspect accessed the house through an unlocked window.
DWI arrests u Michael G. Saiz, 27, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on suspicion of DWI, a first offense. His vehicle was impounded and he was booked into the county jail. u Robert N. Goldstein, 53, of Dallas was arrested Friday night on a charge of aggravated DWI, a first offense, and reckless driving after he crashed. He was booked into the county jail.
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REGION
BLM races to keep up with wells in the West By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — The number of high-priority oil and natural gas wells on federal and tribal land in New Mexico has nearly doubled over the past two years, and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management is racing to keep up with inspections. BLM officials in New Mexico say they have nearly 650 wells that are classified as high priorities due to their production levels, contamination risks, safety records and other reasons. They insist they’re on track to have them all inspected by the end of September, thanks to the creation this year of a special strike team. Similar efforts likely will be needed next year. “There’s no end in sight,” Sheila Mallory, the BLM’s deputy state director for minerals in New Mexico, said of the oil boom that has been driving the need for more inspections in the Carlsbad and Hobbs area. Southeastern New Mexico is now one of the most productive regions of the oil-rich Permian Basin. New teams of BLM technicians are being brought in every two weeks from other parts of the state to deal with 428 highpriority wells in Carlsbad. So far, more than 80 percent of those wells have been inspected. There are 161 high-priority wells in nearby Hobbs and another 55 on federal and tribal land in northwestern New Mexico. Mallory said inspectors are caught up in most areas, except Carlsbad and Hobbs. Nationally, an Associated Press review of government data of drilling inspections for fiscal years 2009 to 2012 shows about 40 percent of the nearly 3,500 new wells near national forests, watersheds or otherwise identified as higher pollution risks were not inspected by the BLM. While roughly half or more of wells on federal and Indian lands in Utah, Colorado and Wyoming went unchecked, nearly twothirds of the wells identified as high priorities on federal land in New Mexico were inspected during the four-year period. Like BLM officials elsewhere in the U.S., Mallory blamed a lack of manpower and budget cuts. Environmentalists say the BLM is ill-equipped to deal with the oil and gas boom in the West. “It’s a bad situation that will only get worse as [President Barack] Obama puts the final screws to coal and looks the other way on gas development,” said John Horning, executive director of Santa Fe-based WildEarth Guardians. BLM officials are hopeful Congress will approve a budget request that would give the agency authority to assess inspection and enforcement fees, as it does with offshore drilling. The request has been made by the Obama administration for the last four years, said agency spokeswoman Donna Hummel. “If we’re having issues with staffing during these boom periods, with more high-risk wells that we need to inspect, it makes sense that we would work with industry in this way to get the funding that we need in order to increase our staffing for inspections,” she said. The New Mexico Oil Conservation Division inspects oil and gas wells on federal, state and private land. “We oversee everything from the drilling process through the plugging of the well after it is no longer in use and the reclamation of the site and anything that goes on with the well during its lifetime,” said Daniel Sanchez, the division’s enforcement and compliance manager. Sanchez said he wasn’t familiar with the BLM designating some wells as high priority. “We really look at each well as being sensitive in terms of groundwater. We are going to protect sources of groundwater,” Sanchez said. Sanchez said his staff tries to inspect every well every other year. “That’s the goal,” he said. “We don’t always make it.” As the oil patch in Southern New Mexico’s Permian Basin booms, the state also is struggling to keep up with inspections. It hasn’t hired any inspectors in that region in two years, in part due to a lack of applicants. “Industry is big and can afford to pay considerably more than the state,” Sanchez said. The New Mexican contributed to this story.
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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LAS VEGAS, NEV., SHOOTING
Officer remembered as loving family man The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — A Las Vegas police officer killed in an ambush at a pizza shop was remembered Saturday as a Renaissance man, a firstrate police officer and a loving family man. More than 2,400 family members, friends, police officers and others gathered to pay tribute to Alyn Beck, who was gunned down while eating lunch June 8 along with officer Igor Soldo. Investigators say the two officers were killed by an antigovernment couple who went on to kill a bystander before they died in a shootout with police in a Wal-Mart store. Beck, 41, was remembered as a senior patrol officer, active member of the Mormon church and doting father of three who moved to Las Vegas from Wyoming and was close to being promoted to sergeant before he was killed. “He was a great man, officer and an even better family man. Strong as an ox with a mind to match. … [He] helped me through many a tough time,” police Sgt. Jimmy Oaks told mourners.
Daxton Beck, center right, leans his head on his sister Avenlee Beck as they stand over the casket of their father, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Officer Alyn Beck, during a memorial Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. JOHN LOCHER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sheriff Doug Gillespie, still crushed by the deaths of two patrol officers in one day, lamented the senseless murders. “These two criminals took away from all of us what they
can never have,” he said. “On that day, they took two men who represented something good. … Alyn and Igor would have sacrificed their lives for fellow officers as well as anyone in this community.”
West Texas dump site seeks OK to bury depleted uranium
Joseph Beck described his brother as a “Renaissance man, carpenter, architect, master chef, defender of musicals … teacher, keeper of promises,” the Las Vegas Sun reported. He also talked about his
brother’s love of family. “His wife was his greatest friend and cheerleader. He was an attentive and devoted father to his son and daughters,” Joseph Beck said. Elder Terry Wade of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints quoted from a letter written by Beck’s daughter Avenlee, 11, on the night of his death. “I wish I could say goodbye to you,” she wrote. “I’ll always be thinking of you. I’ll see you in heaven. … Don’t worry, I’ll take care of Mommy for you.” Tracy Truman, first counselor of a local Mormon church stake, said as good an officer as Beck was, he was a family man first. “Alyn got it. He realized it wasn’t about Alyn,” Truman said. “He understood no other success could account for failure in the home.” Survivors include Beck’s wife, Nicole, and their 14-year-old son, 11-year-old daughter and 10-month-old daughter. His service with full police honors was held at the Smith Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Las Vegas. Burial will be in Wyoming. He was originally from Green River, Wyo.
TrendManor
By Betsy Blaney
The Associated Press
LUBBOCK, Texas — The company operating Texas’ only radioactive waste dump site is asking state regulators to allow disposal of depleted uranium and triple the capacity of a burial site that accepts waste from dozens of states, including New Mexico. Although Waste Control Specialists says the uranium stored at its West Texas site would have only low-level radioactivity, opponents say the proposal would get the company another step closer to handling more dangerous material that wasn’t part of the original license. The company has already been in talks with county officials about high-level waste disposal. Meanwhile, the Dallasbased business has also asked the state to reduce the money it’s required to have available to fund potential liability at the site — to about $86 million from $136 million. “The public should be paying attention, but they’re not,” said state Rep. Lon Burnam, a Fort Worth Democrat who has taken an active role in monitoring how the state handles radioactive waste. “We have less and less financial assurances and greater threat for more harm.” The depleted uranium, a byproduct of enriched uranium that fuels nuclear power plants, would come from U.S. Department of Energy facilities, said company spokesman Chuck McDonald. Although the uranium would still be classified as low-level, experts say the substance gets more radioactive as time passes and if disposed of improperly could pose health risks such as cancer. To ensure safety, the depleted uranium would have to be disposed of at the greatest depth possible, said Andrea Morrow, a spokeswoman for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. No date has been set for when the state’s three environmental agencies will consider the amendment. City officials in Andrews, about 30 miles east of the site, said they weren’t familiar enough with the proposal to comment. “But we’ll certainly delve into it to get more information,” Andrews city manager Glen Hackler said. “The city consistently says we need to be cautious and take pretty extraordinary care.” McDonald said the company wants to reduce its liability funding because the facility is smaller than the one included in its original application. If the site expands,
of Santa Fe Crews from Waste Control Specialists load a container of low-level radioactive waste from Los Alamos National Laboratory last June into a reinforced 8-inch-thick concrete container at the 90-acre federal dump near Andrews, Texas. The company is asking state regulators to allow disposal of depleted uranium and to expand by more than threefold the capacity in one of its burial areas. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
more financial assurance will be added, he said. He added that the company’s proposal to expand one of its two sites from 2.3 million cubic feet to 9 million cubic feet would likely not ever be utilized. He said the proposal came from concerns about capacity from state legislators and a commission that oversees the low-level waste site. The Andrews County site currently only stores as much as 60,000 cubic feet. Environmental groups have long worried about the local geology and contamination of underground water sources near the site, which can accept low-level waste from compact members Texas and Vermont as well as 36 other states. The site could soon be the resting place for hotter material that’s being stored at Texas’ four commercial nuclear reactors. In March, Texas Gov. Rick Perry asked lawmakers to explore establishing a location in Texas to store the high-level radioactive waste from these reactors. Two months earlier, House Speaker Joe Straus directed lawmakers to examine the economic impact of permitting such a site. McDonald said the company has had conversations with Andrews County officials about high-level waste storage. Officials in Loving County, the nation’s least populous county, have interest in building a storage site there.
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Exhibition will run through July 6
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
NEIGHBORS
Academic achievers: Award winners, grads and honor rolls. Page C-7
YOUR NEIGHBOR CYNTHIA SANCHEZ
Capitol curator oversees 600 works of art in eclectic, statewide collection
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By Steve Terrell The New Mexican
B
esides being the place where the Legislature meets and the governor governs, the New Mexico state Capitol also is one of the best art museums in a city full of museums and art galleries. “I hear that a lot,” said Cynthia Sanchez in a recent interview. “One visitor told me, ‘This isn’t a capitol that has a museum, it’s a museum where they make the laws.’ ” Since the mid-1990s, Sanchez has been the director of the Capitol Art Foundation and curator of the collection that graces the walls and halls of the Roundhouse. “We try to represent all the styles and traditions of New Mexico art here,” she said. Indeed, strolling around the Roundhouse and the Capitol grounds, you’ll find contemporary works and folk art in all sorts of media — paintings, sculptures, metalwork, woodcarvings, photographs, weavings, pottery — created by artists who have lived and worked in New Mexico, representing all the cultures here, from every corner of the state. “There are more than 600 pieces,” Sanchez said. Some of New Mexico’s most famous artists are represented, including R.C. Gorman, Randall Davey, Will Shuster and Allan Houser. Sanchez is a Santa Fe native who graduated from Santa Fe High School in 1979. She attended elementary school at E.J. Martinez and middle school at the long-closed Harrington Junior High, which was just a few blocks from the Capitol. But after graduation, Sanchez left Santa Fe for 17 years to further her education. She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Arizona in Tucson, where she also got a Master of Fine Arts in painting and sculpture and a Master of Art History. She earned her doctorate in cultural history at New York University. She is married to Michael Perraglio, a local real estate agent and owner of a local landscaping business. Returning to Santa Fe, Sanchez got a job at the information desk in the east lobby of the Capitol, helping tourists and other visitors. “Susan Campbell, who had the job before me, asked if I’d be interested,” Sanchez said. She was. It’s a part-time position. But Sanchez loves it. The Capitol Art Foundation is a nonprofit group whose mission is “to collect, preserve, exhibit, interpret and promote appreciation of works of art that reflect the rich and diverse history, cultures and art forms of the people of New Mexico.” The foundation was created under the Legislative Council Service in 1992. Both the House and the Senate previously had passed memorials to establish a nonprofit foundation to help acquire art to exhibit in the state Capitol, Sanchez said. The Roundhouse’s art collection was established using funds from the state’s One Percent for-the Arts program. That money went for 14 works of art and 17 art furniture groupings. Subsequent acquisitions have been purchased with proceeds from the foundation’s fundraising efforts and charitable donations to the foundation. “A majority of the collection was gifted,” Sanchez said. “No tax money is used to acquire the art.” The Capitol collection is separate from the Governor’s Gallery, which displays art in the
Cynthia Sanchez, head of the Capitol Art Foundation, which collects and displays art in and around the Roundhouse, is shown recently in front of an oil on canvas titled San Juan Ascension II by Sam Scott. Scott was Sanchez’s mentor in painting while she attended the University of Arizona in Tucson. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Dressing up the Roundhouse lobby of the governor’s office on the Fourth Floor. One of Sanchez’s duties is giving tours of the Capitol for visitors, usually school groups or art classes. Asked which pieces on display get the most comment from Roundhouse visitors, Sanchez said one is Buffalo by artist Holly Hughes. Located on the third floor overlooking the Rotunda, it’s a big, shaggy buffalo head made completely of recycled materials, including paint brushes for eyebrows and papiermâché horns on which there are newspaper headlines about the animal and the city in New York named Buffalo. Sanchez also cited the large metal sculpture topped with razor wire by Bob Haozous outside of the Capitol facing Old Santa Fe Trail. Called Gate/Negate, it is painted with
the names of hundreds of American Indian tribes that now are extinct. So far, at least, there never has been any controversy over the art in or around the Capitol, but Sanchez said there have been times when she’s had to be careful. For instance, in the walkway between the Capitol and the Capitol annex is a colorful, cartoonish mixed-media sculture called Mental Floss by Las Cruces artist Stephen Hansen of a goofy-looking guy with some kind of twine going into one ear and out the other. “I was careful not to put that in front of any legislator’s office,” she said. “I didn’t want anyone to take offense.”
Mindshare Studios Santa Fe Community College Green Business of the Year: Ravens Ridge Bed and Breakfast City of Santa Fe Family Friendly Business of the Year: Glorieta Creek Mechanical Woman-Owned Business of the Year: Robin Martin, The Santa Fe New Mexican
As the food bank for nine Northern New Mexico counties, The Food Depot provides food to 135 not-for-profit agencies, including emergency food pantries, hot meal programs, homeless shelters, youth programs, senior centers, homes for the mentally disabled and shelters for battered persons. The food bank distributes an average of 400,000 pounds of food and household products each month. Bill Daniels, a pioneer in cable television, established the Daniels Fund to provide grants and scholarships in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.
Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@ sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.
Faces & Places The Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce, the Santa Fe Community College, Santa Fe Professional Business Women and the city of Santa Fe announced the winners of the 2014 Santa Fe Business Awards, presented Thursday at the Chamber’s Red Carpet Business Awards Gala at Center for Contemporary Arts. The following awards were presented: Century Bank Business Excellence Awards: u 1-4 employees: Eldorado Audiology u 5-20 employees: Cisneros Design Inc. u 21-plus employees: Nurses With Heart City of Santa Fe Small Business of the Year:
Smooth travel with your tot calls for some extra planning
uuu The Food Depot has received a $75,000 Daniels Fund grant to support its food rescue and distribution program.
El mitote Those looking for extra work should get to know local casting director Robert Baxter. Earlier this week, he called for 50-plus extras for A&E’s hit show Longmire, and now he’s in need of more for WGN America’s upcoming series, Manhattan, a series that focuses on the creation of the atomic bomb in Los Alamos. According to a casting notice on Projectcasting.com, Baxter is searching for a young cou-
dusty in the trailer. Also disconcerting, film star Olivia Williams of Rushmore and The Sixth Sense pops up often in the trailer, but the show’s IMDB page says she appears in only one Olivia Williams episode. This seems like a bait and switch, uuu similar to the one pulled by the most recent Godzilla flick, in which all the Speaking of Manhattan, the first full trailer trailers seemed to promise tons of Bryan for the filmed-in-New Mexico TV series hit Cranston, of Breaking Bad, but then he dies the Internet this week. From a cursory look, it within the first 30 minutes or so. promises lots of “explosive” personal drama, Manhattan also stars Rachel Brosnahan, but appears light on actual explosions. The of House of Cards fame, Michael Chernus of series is about the development of the atomic Orange is the New Black, Christopher bomb in Los Alamos, which looks rather ple who are age 18 or older but look younger, a “traditional Native American male kid,” and women between 20 and 40. If you’re interested, you better send a photo of yourself along with contact information to robertbaxtercasting@gmail.com.
Section editor: Cynthia Miller, 986-3095, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com
here are few things more unpleasant while traveling than being trapped near a screaming baby or toddler. As a bystander, you can’t tell the parent to quiet the child, and on the flip side, there is not much to be done to soothe a child you don’t know. Recently, while at the airport, we had to endure howls so high my ears rang. The toddler’s good looks were masked by his shrill cries — a vocal range Mariah Carey would envy. I never thought I would say this, but we are that family. Yes, the etiquette consultant has bred a boy with lungs. Even a month ago, he was a sweet, whispering angel with nothing but chuckles and mini manners at restaurants and Bizia Greene on flights. For the past year, fellow Etiquette Rules! diners would approach us to say how well-behaved he was. I have even taken him to an a cappella concert at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. And then he began to walk and sort of talk. The thing about babies and toddlers is that because they can’t speak, they cry out for the things they need or want — happy or sad. Instead of voraciously reading the sign language books I’ve been collecting (who has time to read?), I’ve been trying to appease my teething pterodactyl. My son is the soundtrack to Jurassic Park. This past week, while attending his grandmother’s 80th birthday party and navigating delayed flights at LAX, we tried to be invisible, hoping no one would notice us, when the whole world was doing just the opposite. For those who argue children do not belong in public spaces, some events are simply impossible to miss. This is new territory for me, so I thought I better research some travel tips for toddlers — or rather, the parents — to make travel less bumpy for everyone on board. u We have read the accolades about teaching the little one sign language so that he can communicate with a simple hand sign, for words like milk, diaper, etc. You can learn to understand your baby’s cries with practice, but equipping him with other tools to communicate can help prevent a tantrum while you explore the possible causes of his distress. We took the class, bought the books and failed to make it a priority. I absolutely recommend researching some key signs (not sentences) and using them when your baby is just a few months old. u Pack well. Don’t wait until the last minute when you might overlook activities, batteries or a stuffed animal. You might even pack a backup duplicate just in case the blankie gets left in a taxi. Make the activities last. Dole out one at a time. I’m not in support of tech for toddlers as a first resort, but desperate times call for desperate measures. If putting a movie or game on is the equivalent of a mute button, then by all means press play. u If your budget allows, purchase an airplane seat for your child. Age 2 and under fly free, which is enticing, but once your child can walk and squirm, she doesn’t want to be confined to your lap. It’s hard to do an activity or eat comfortably, making her more likely to become frustrated. Bring your FAA-approved car seat so she has a familiar space to move her arms and legs around and where she is more likely to fall asleep. If you can’t purchase a separate seat, bring the car seat or harness to the gate, as there may be an empty seat you can take advantage of at no extra cost. Alternatively, wear your baby in a carrier during the flight, which keeps her contained and in familiar territory. u Exercise and exhaust your child in the terminal. Research airport play areas. u Set expectations for behavior and describe the environment so there are no surprises. u Avoid sugary snacks and juices, but have a pacifier or something to sip and swallow during takeoff and landing to help clear his ears. Little tots are a fussy, fidgety bunch, which is quite normal behavior. With toddlers in tow, it’s important for parents and fellow passengers to remember that this too shall pass, but being prepared shows respect for the setting and your little screecher. Bizia Greene is an etiquette consultant and owner of the Etiquette School of Santa Fe. Send your comments and conundrums to 988-2070 or hello@etiquettesantafe.com.
share your news u The New Mexican welcomes your submissions for Faces & Places, as well as announcements of celebrations, such as weddings, engagements, anniversaries and births. Please send your announcement, along with a photo (4 inches wide at 220 dpi) to service@sfnewmexican.com.
Denham, known for Argo, and John Benjamin Hickey, known for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. The series is set to premiere on WGN America on July 27. And El Mitotero will pay close attention to the show in the coming months.
Send your celebrity sightings to elmitote@sfnewmexican.com.
on our website u Follow the El Mitote blog at
www.santa fenewmexican. com/news/blogs/neighbors.
Rachel Brosnahan
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexiCan.Com
NEIGHBORS
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
On the Plaza
RAINY RIDE Jean and David Rosow of Santa Fe bike around the Plaza in the rain on Friday. Stormy, windy weather early in the weekend was expected to give way to a clear, sunny Father’s Day on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
CATCHING SOME AIR Erica Montano of Santa Fe plays with her son Kolton, 16 months, on the Plaza on a sunny Thursday afternoon. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO THE NEW MEXICAN
Share your event shots
LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO THE NEW MEXICAN
Holding a gala or a special fundraiser that you would like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to cmiller@sfnewmexican. com. Photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed on Sundays, as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Include a caption identifying people who appear in the photo.
Education standouts Hannah Lois Pollard of Santa Fe graduated from the University of North Carolina, Asheville, in May.
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On May 18, Elora A. Way of Santa Fe received a master’s degree from Clark University in Worchester, Mass.
IMPROMPTU PERFORMANCE Mariachi Buenaventura, an all-women group based in Santa Fe, plays for Plazagoers Wednesday afternoon. The group performs several times a week on the Plaza during the summer. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
won $12,000 for their work, and could win another $25,000 in the finals. Laura Tenorio is the team adviser for these ninth-grade students: Anthony J. Archuleta, James M. Valerio, Andrea G. Chin-Lopez and Julia A. Johnson. uuu
Miguel E. Pantano of Santa Fe has been selected to be among the 1,000 students to attend West Point’s Summer Leaders Experience in June. uuu The program allows students Aubrie Powell of Los Alamos, a graduate of the opportunity to experience Los Alamos High School, has been named to the life at West Point, the U.S. MiliDean’s List for the spring semester 2014 at Baldtary Academy 50 miles north win Wallace University in Berea, Ohio. of New York City. Students live in the cadet barracks, eat in the uuu cadet mess and participate in Santa Fe High School senior Luis Ornelas has Miguel E. virtual reality war simulation, been admitted to Stanford University in Stanand military and physical fitPantano ford, Calif., and has been awarded a full fourness training, and they are able year QuestBridge National College Match schol- to select three of the 15 workshops offered. arship. In addition to early admission, College Pantano also has been selected to attend the Match recipients are guaranteed a full four-year U.S. Naval Academy Summer Seminar Program scholarship from the partner college, covering in Annapolis, Md. Students participate in a six-day tuition, room and board and other expenses. program with workshops on topics from naval Based in Palo Alto, Calif., QuestBridge is a architecture to oceanography. In addition to expenational nonprofit organization that connects riencing life at the academy, students will particiexceptional students from low-income backpate in seamanship and navigation classes and grounds with admission and full scholarships take a cruise aboard a Navy Yard Patrol Craft. to leading colleges. For more information, visit Pantano, a student at Santa Fe High School, is www.questbridge.org. the son of Diane Garcia Piro and John Pantano of Santa Fe. He is the cadet commanding officer uuu for the NJROTC at SFHS and will graduate in The following students from the area were May 2015. named to Fort Lewis College’s Dean’s List uuu for the spring 2014 semester. These students achieved a 3.60 or higher grade-point average: On June 15, Justin A. Tafoya, the son of Glenn Kiara Glover of Santa Fe, whose major is and Cindy Tafoya of Santa Fe, will be receiving sociology/human services. his master’s degree in aerospace engineering, Lauren Watson of Santa Fe, who majors in with an emphasis in structural design, from political science. California Polytechnic State University. Justin is Nolan Bell of Los Alamos, who is studying a 2007 graduate of St. Michael’s High school. sociology/human services. uuu Zachary Tafoya of Taos, whose major is theater. Maximiliano Novoa of Santa Fe graduated Duke Jackson of Taos, whose major is envifrom the University of San Diego on May 25. ronmental studies. Novoa earned a bachelor’s degree in marketing. Fort Lewis College is in Durango, Colo. uuu uuu Cory Serna of Santa Fe has been awarded A team of Taos Middle School students has football and presidential scholarships from developed a system to help stem the growth of Dordt College, Sioux Center, Iowa, as an incomdrug-resistant bacteria, and their work has won ing freshman. them a trip — Monday through Thursday — to uuu Washington, D.C., to compete to be national winners of the U.S. Army-sponsored science Clarence Simmons, a graduate of Chamicompetition, eCYBERMISSION. nade College Preparatory School, received a Drug-resistant bacteria have become immune Bachelor of Arts from The College of Wooster to antibiotics such as ampicillin and amoxicillin, (Ohio) during commencement exercises which have ended up in our water systems. The May 12. A political science major, Simmons is a students developed an innovative yet simple resident of Santa Fe. biofilter that can successfully remove these uuu drugs from drinking water, and they are investigating FDA approval. Andrew Wilder has been named to the The National Science Teachers Association St. Olaf College Dean’s List for the spring 2014 manages eCYBERMISSION, which challenges semester. He is an English major and has mainstudents to identify real-world problems and tained a 3.75 grade-point average. He is a graducreate solutions using science, technology, engi- ate of Santa Fe Secondary School and the son of Richard and Martha Wilder. neering and math. The students have already
NEW GRAD Kristyn Fox of Santa Fe graduated magna cum laude from The University of New Mexico on May 16 with a Bachelor of Arts. She is the daughter of Amber Fox, Kevin Kuhn and Richard Fox (deceased). She is the granddaughter of Melba and Bob Rutledge and Teresa (deceased) and Dick Fox. COURTESY PHOTO
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HONOR ROLLS Santa Fe Preparatory School 3.5 GPA OR ABOVE
Grade 9 Jasmine Alvarado Christopher Bagale Ian Canfield Sage Crosby Liza Doyle Taylor Ellis Jesse Glass Oliver Hillenkamp Emma Koolpe Anna Lippman Sophie Lippman Weston Lustig Sophie Allen Martin Jose Martinez Jordan Mazur Maxwell McCumber
Isabelle Ruesch Annie Schulz Emma Sheppard Lucas Smith Loren Vladem Elizabeth Whiting Sadie Wiese Madison Winston
Grade 10 Harsh Bhundiya Francis Castillo y Mulert Yitong Chen Bianca Gonzales Jessie Hodges Anjali Kanter Kristin Knight Shannon Kossmann Michael Laposata Cybele Mayes-Osterman Donal McKenna Hugh Drake Merians Gavyn Pendleton Alan Rohrbach
Stevie Shukman Rachel Sidebottom Adam Weyhrauch Eric White Siyao Wu
Grade 11 Keenan Amer Grace Barliant Erik Birk Bridget Bohlin Lila Brooks Katharine Broyles Kalila Ceccarelli Emily Davis Eliza Harrison Emily Hayes-Rich Wesley Jansen Peyton Lawrenz Jack Lobe Joy Maran Kate Marchand Kate Martin Molly Montgomery Alexis Mundt Jeremiah O’Mahony Isabelle Pagano Gabriela Romero Nicholas Smith
Maxwell Thurston Katherine Tomes Luc Traugott Zoe Unverferth Juliana Wheaton Elena Wirth Madleine Young
Grade 12 Alexandra Archuleta Konrad Philip Asprodites Amalia Bertram Jeremy Brooks James Buchanan Emily Deissler Jackson Dooling Mary English Lukas Kret Ben Maran Ian McClaugherty Mc Miller Niall Ridgley Sarah Schulz Aaron Stevens Margaret Stone Wyatt Trevathan Erin Tyra
SANTA FE MPO METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION PLAN 2015-2040 UPDATE “OPEN HOUSE” WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18TH 10AM-6PM City Offices at the Railyard 500 Market Street (Above REI)
Stop by between 10 and 6 and discover how your Santa Fe Metropolitan Transportation Plan TRANSFORMS ideas into projects. Tell us what you believe the 2015 update should include. Can’t make the OPEN HOUSE? Take our on-line survey by going to www.santafempo.org
Why is this plan important? * Guides Federal, State and Local transportation funds * Reflects and implements the community’s vision
Contact: Mark Tibbetts mstibbetts@santafenm.gov • 955.6614 “Transportation Planning for Pedestrians, Bicycles, Transit, Rail and Roads.”
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
Collective humor
TIME OUT
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Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, June 15, 2014: This year you are secure and stable when it counts. You will be adventuresome with your ideas and often with your plans as well. You become more accepting of others and different lifestyles. If you are single, you are likely to meet someone very offbeat who intrigues you. Do not make a commitment quickly. If you are attached, your significant other will enjoy your newfound openness. Make it a point to try an experience that you have refused to participate in, despite your sweetie’s requests. Aquarius, though rigid in his or her own way, can open many doors for you. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Take care of an obligation first, and hook up with friends later. Once you join your pals, whether it is just a few individuals or a big group, a good time will be had by all. The plans might be less relevant than the company. Tonight: Where the action is. This Week: Don’t accept a “no” when it comes to an important project.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Meet up with a friend or family member who lives at a distance in the morning. Once the two of you are together, you’ll make spontaneous plans to go off and indulge in a mutually loved activity or hobby. Leave plenty of time for talking. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. This Week: You steal the limelight; others listen. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You’ll love spending time with a special person in your life. Enjoy the morning together over brunch or just a cup of coffee. In the afternoon, impulsiveness could take over. Take off to wherever you want to go, or make impromptu plans with a pal. Tonight: Have a good time. This Week: Break past restrictions. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You and someone else have different ideas as to what would be fun. Go along with this person’s suggestion today. You might not realize it, but know that he or she really cherishes your company. Tonight: Cut the questions. This Week: You want to relate deeply to others Monday and Tuesday.
Last week’s answer
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Complete a project quickly, if possible. Later in the day, join friends or a loved one. You won’t want to be saddled with some kind of domestic chore. Know that you do not need to commit to any plans unless you really want to. Tonight: The party animal within you emerges. This Week: Respond carefully to others. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Your desire for intimacy and fun will continue until a moment of reality hits. At some point in the day, you will need to check up on a friend. Some of you even might need to go to work. Tonight: Think about tomorrow. This Week: Work hard Monday and Tuesday. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You will see the difference in a loved one’s mood from morning to later in the day. This person could be a veritable Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Accept this person as he or she is. You might encounter a friend who puts a smile on your face. Tonight: Be naughty. This Week: Tap into your ingenuity for solutions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You’ll wonder what is happening with a neighbor or relative. You might not get the whole story, but you should remind this person that you care about him or her. Use the afternoon to settle down, catch up on emails
Chess quiz
WHITE WINS THE QUEEN Hint: First, cut off its escape. Solution: 1. Qb8ch! Kg7 2. Rh3 wins it!
New York Times Sunday Crossword
and read a good book. Tonight: Be a little lazy. This Week: You might not be as friendly as usual. Make an effort to cool off. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21) HHHH Look at your budget before you walk out the door. In the long run, this self-discipline will serve you well. Be sensitive to what is happening around you. Hook up with a friend in the afternoon. Tonight: Enjoy living in the moment. Forget tomorrow for now. This Week: Listen and ask questions; you will learn a lot as a result. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Your jovial nature emerges in the morning, even if you disagree with a friend. You might feel guilty about the harshness of your words, and you could end up indulging this person for the remainder of the day. Tonight: Make it your treat. This Week: Handle financial issues Monday or Tuesday. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You appear to be radiant and ready for anything. Others certainly will notice the difference in your mood. You don’t need to give an explanation. Accept all compliments with a sincere “thank you.” Someone is clearly drawn to you. Tonight: Just be yourself. This Week: Beam in what you want. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Use the morning to get together with a loved one. By the afternoon, you might want to retreat. Some of you will need some personal time, while others might have to do some work or research. You do not have to explain — the less said, the better. Tonight: Do your thing. This Week: Lie low until late Tuesday, when you get your game plan together.
Scratch pad
few weeks ago in this space, I observed that the best word for a group of teenage girls is not a “gaggle” but a “giggle.” Immediately, I got an email from readers Nancy and Richard Downing, who added two more of their own: a “slouch” of teenage boys and a “shuffle” of octogenarians. Species-specific collective nouns have been an occasional source of public amusement since the publication of An Exaltation of Larks, a 1968 book about ancient, colorful, little-known collective terms for groups of animals. They were invented by 15th-century fops who sat around amusing themselves with terms like a “murder” of crows, a “parliament” of owls or an Gene “ostentation” of peacocks. Weingarten Modern takeoffs occasionally pop up, The Washington though many are tedious. To date, the Post most creative appeared in a 1993 Washington Post Style Invitational humor contest. (Ex.: A “proliferation” of abortion protesters. A “Congress” of hot-air balloons.) Twenty years is too long. It’s time for more: A CONDESCENSION of literati. A CONFEDERACY of racists. A WHOLE LOT of used-car salesmen. An ABUNDANCE OF RICHES of cliches. A VIRGINITY of comic-book collectors. An INDEX of urologists. A SNOTGOBBLE of toddlers. A SPECULATION of gynecologists. A PANTSLOAD of “creation scientists.” A WHOMSOEVER of grammarians. An ARMADA of Hindu gods. A BROOD of Sartre scholars. A MEANDER of tourists. A GROSS of used Kleenex. A HUMP of dogs. An EXCRUCIATION of webinars. An ENTITLEMENT of millennials. A WHATCHAMACALLIT of senior citizens. A CLIQUE of phishing scammers. A REDUNDANCY of thesauruses. A BODY of starlets. A FACTION of trivia specialists. A TRANSPARENCY of comb-overs. A LILT of IT customer-service specialists. A SANCTIMONIUM of home-school advocates. A JUDICIARY of Talmudic scholars. A CASSEROLE of Iowans. A COLONY of proctologists. An EXPECTORATION of baseball players. A CIRCUMSPECTION of mohels. A DEFENESTRATION of frogs. A HACKERY of humor columnists. Contributing to this list were Caitlin Gibson, Holly Morris, William Koper, Monica Hesse, Rachel Manteuffel, Charles Lane and Robert McCartney.
Scoreboard D-2 Fuego schedule D-3 Weather D-6
SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS
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U.S. Open: Kaymer navigates tough Pinehurst for 5-shot lead. Page D-2
WORLD CUP
WORLD CUP
Santa Fe catches the fever
Balotelli leads Italy to win over England
U.S. vs. Ghana match to be screened at Railyard By James Barron The New Mexican
If it can work in Europe, why not in Santa Fe? That’s what Nic Smith and Jamie Lenfestey think, and they will see if they can capture a bit of World Cup fever in town Monday afternoon. The two collaborated on organizing a public viewing of Monday’s World Cup soccer match between the United States and Ghana in both teams’ opening tilt of the largest soccer event in the world. The event will take place at 4 p.m. in the Railyard Plaza and will serve in part as a fundraiser for the Northern New Mexico Soccer Club, of which Smith is the executive director. Smith, who grew up in Great Britain, knows about the great passion the rest of the world has for soccer, and that manifests itself with large viewing parties, especially when the World Cup is involved. “If you live in Europe and are in some small town, there’s a big-screen TV in the town square somewhere, and all the games are screened,” Smith said. “We don’t have that culture here in the U.S., but what we’ve opted to do is show the first U.S.
By Chris Lehourites The Associated Press
MANAUS, Brazil — The heat and humidity of the jungle made its mark on the first World Cup match to be Italy 2 played in the England 1 Amazon rainforest, and so did Mario Balotelli. With players from both sides slowing as the game wore on, it was the man with the mohawk that headed in the deciding goal early in the second half to give Italy a 2-1 win over England and a decided advantage in Group D. “We won, but now let’s keep
our feet on the ground, otherwise we’re not going anywhere,” said Balotelli, an often volatile and often brilliant striker who was nearly dropped from the starting lineup after struggling for AC Milan this season. Balotelli was left unmarked at the far post in the 50th minute, giving him plenty of space to head a cross from Antonio Candreva past goalkeeper Joe Hart for the winning goal. The match was played in the Amazonian city of Manaus, the most exotic of the 12 World Cup venues for this year’s tournament. According to FIFA, it was 86 degrees Farenheit with humidity at
61 percent for the match. “At times, it felt like having hallucinations due to the heat,” Italy midfielder Claudio Marchisio said. Marchisio gave the four-time champions the lead with a long shot through a crowded area and past a diving Hart in the 35th minute. Daniel Sturridge equalized for England two minutes later, tapping in a cross from Wayne Rooney. In the other Group D match, Costa Rica beat Uruguay 3-1. So both England and Uruguay, who meet Thursday, have plenty of work to do to advance. “We all need time to digest what happened on the field,” England coach Roy Hodgson said.
Italy’s Mario Balotelli, left, celebrates with Italy’s Marco Verratti after Balotelli scored his team’s second goal against England during Saturday’s match in Manaus, Brazil. MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former Lady Don finally lands at UNM Bustos named new video coordinator for the women’s basketball team By Edmundo Carrillo
Please see FeVeR, Page D-3
The New Mexican
V
Chuck Noll,
longtime leader of the Pittsburgh Steelers, was one of the most underrated coaches in the NFL.
Noll won games, not glory
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huck Noll may have been the best football coach ever. Without question, he is the most underrated. Noll, who died Friday night at age 82, is rarely mentioned in conversations about the great coaches in the National Football League. Vince LomMilan bardi, Don Shula, Simonich Bill Walsh and Ringside Seat Bill Belichick get more attention, even though Noll won more Super Bowls than each of them. Noll’s four Super Bowl victories in a six-year stretch made the Pittsburgh Steelers America’s team, regardless of what Dallas fans may argue. To this day, if you attend any of the Pittsburgh team’s road games, you’ll see at least a third of the crowd wearing Steelers jerseys. No team except the Green Bay Packers has a national following that compares to
FIFAWorldCup
Please see Noll, Page D-3
buStoS’ RecoRdS at weSt laS VegaS
2,098 935
points
rebounds
536 331 125
assists
steals games started
Vera Jo Bustos, shown playing for West Las Vegas in 2007, is the all-time leader in points, rebounds, assists, steals and games started at the school. Bustos has been named the new video coordinator for the UNM’s women’s basketball team. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
SatuRday’S gameS
Please see uNm, Page D-3
Ready oR Not
Group C: Columbia 3, Greece 0; Ivory Coast 2, Japan 1 Group D: Costa Rica 3, Uruguay 1; Italy 2, England 1
today’S gameS 9:30 a.m. on ABC — Group E: Switzerland vs. Ecuador
FouNdiNg ‘Futebol’
12:30 p.m. on ABC — Group E: France vs. Honduras
A nation-changing passion for ‘futebol,’ or Brazilian football, was planted by Charles Miller when he came to the country 120 years ago. Page d-5
3:30 p.m. on ESPN — Group F: Argentina vs. BosniaHerzegovina
era Jo Bustos didn’t take the the easy Interstate 25 route from Las Vegas, N.M., to Albuquerque to be a University of New Mexico Lobo. The former West Las Vegas basketball star spent time in Colorado and Greece before being named the new video coordinator for the UNM’s women’s basketball team on Friday. She replaces former Lobo player Jourdan Erskine, who was promoted to director of operations. Before Bustos broke West Las Vegas school records in points (2,098), rebounds (935), assists (536), steals (331) and games started (125), she dreamed of wearing the cherry and silver of UNM. She instead went to Adams State in Alamosa, Colo. — where she also has school records in points, starts and minutes played — after leaving the Lady Dons in 2007. Still, being a part of UNM women’s coach Yvonne Sanchez’s staff is a fulfillment of that childhood dream. “Growing up in New Mexico, I grew up as a Lobo fan,” Bustos said. “It’s a dream as a New Mexican to be a Lobo. I went through the interview process just praying that I would get it. When I did get it, I was ecstatic and overjoyed. It’s always been a dream of mine.” Sanchez has known Bustos since she was in high school and has kept in touch with her over the years. After interviewing Bustos for the job, Sanchez was hoping she wouldn’t let her slip away. “She was pretty much the first one I thought of for this position,” Sanchez said. “If she would have said no, I wouldn’t know what other direction I would have gone in. She’s a New Mexican, and that’s important to me. She just has a passion not only for coaching, but for being at the university.” It is a leap for Bustos, but the path to that position took her all over the world. After graduating from Adams State with degrees in sports psychol-
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
As the French team held its final training session inside, frantic efforts were still being made to complete work at the Estadio Beira-Rio. With less than 24 hours to go before the stadium hosts its first World Cup match, workers were strengthening the perimeter fence, installing sinks in temporary bathrooms and laying turf Saturday. Inside the stadium, work did appear to be complete. The grass
looked lush. Despite the ongoing construction, Porto Alegre spokeswoman Nathalia Ely said there was nothing to worry about. “Everything is ready,” she said. The Associated Press
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SaNtaFeNewmexicaN.com
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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
AUTO RACING auto racing naScar nationwide ollie’s Bargain outlet 250
Saturday at Michigan international Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (5) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 125 laps, 128.7 rating, 0 points, $44,400. 2. (13) Sam Hornish Jr., Toyota, 125, 104, 43, $36,350. 3. (11) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 125, 107.6, 0, $21,050. 4. (1) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 125, 112.9, 0, $24,675. 5. (6) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 125, 96.5, 39, $23,325. 6. (2) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 125, 117.7, 39, $22,850. 7. (8) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 125, 95.3, 37, $20,910. 8. (4) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 125, 124.8, 0, $17,495. 9. (3) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 125, 99.1, 36, $21,025. 10. (10) Chris Buescher, Ford, 125, 96.1, 34, $21,550. 11. (24) Ryan Reed, Ford, 125, 79.9, 33, $20,075. 12. (17) Ross Chastain, Toyota, 125, 80.4, 0, $13,900. 13. (15) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 125, 77.1, 31, $19,650. 14. (26) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 125, 73.8, 30, $19,525. 15. (21) James Buescher, Toyota, 125, 72.9, 29, $20,250. 16. (9) Joey Logano, Ford, 125, 120.3, 0, $13,275. 17. (12) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 124, 82.4, 27, $19,225. 18. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 124, 63.1, 26, $19,175. 19. (18) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 124, 64.7, 25, $19,125. 20. (28) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 124, 60.5, 24, $19,775. 21. (20) J.J. Yeley, Dodge, 124, 64.9, 23, $19,000. 22. (16) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 124, 75.9, 22, $18,945. 23. (27) Jeff Green, Toyota, 124, 52.2, 21, $18,895. 24. (22) Blake Koch, Toyota, 123, 52.4, 20, $18,820. 25. (29) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Chevrolet, 121, 42.1, 19, $19,270. 26. (25) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 121, 48, 0, $18,695. 27. (39) Joey Gase, Chevrolet, engine, 105, 39.3, 17, $18,645. 28. (30) Mike Harmon, Dodge, vibration, 90, 36.4, 16, $18,570. 29. (36) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, rear gear, 88, 43.4, 15, $18,520. 30. (14) Trevor Bayne, Ford, accident, 82, 73.7, 14, $18,770. 31. (7) Dylan Kwasniewski, Chevrolet, accident, 78, 68.5, 13, $18,415. 32. (37) Harrison Rhodes, Dodge, fuel pump, 66, 39.3, 12, $18,355. 33. (23) Jamie Dick, Chevrolet, clutch, 60, 44.4, 11, $18,315. 34. (31) Carl Long, Toyota, electrical, 16, 41.9, 10, $12,295. 35. (35) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, engine, 13, 35.8, 9, $18,266. 36. (34) Tanner Berryhill, Dodge, vibration, 10, 35.8, 8, $17,375. 37. (33) Matt Carter, Chevrolet, brakes, 8, 36.3, 7, $11,355. 38. (40) Tommy Joe Martins, Ford, engine, 5, 34.5, 6, $11,316. 39. (32) Kevin Lepage, Toyota, vibration, 3, 33, 5, $11,190. 40. (38) Tim Schendel, Chevrolet, engine, 0, 31.3, 4, $17,160. race Statistics Average Speed of Winner: 139.557 mph. Time of Race: 1 hour, 47 mins, 29 sec. Margin of Victory: 0.468 seconds. Caution Flags: 4 for 22 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 6 drivers. Lap Leaders: T.Dillon 1; P.Menard 2-7; J.Logano 8; T.Dillon 9-16; K.Larson 17-40; J.Logano 41-42; S.Hornish Jr. 43-45; K.Larson 46-51; C.Elliott 52-56; K.Larson 57-72; P.Menard 73-79; C.Elliott 80; J.Logano 81-120; P.Menard 121-125. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Larson, 3 times for 46 laps; J.Logano, 3 times for 43 laps; P.Menard, 3 times for 18 laps; T.Dillon, 2 times for 9 laps; C.Elliott, 2 times for 6 laps; S.Hornish Jr., 1 time for 3 laps. top 10 in Points 1. R.Smith, 485; 2. E.Sadler, 471; 3. C.Elliott, 465; 4. T.Dillon, 450; 5. T.Bayne, 435; 6. B.Scott, 430; 7. B.Gaughan, 363; 8. C.Buescher, 362; 9. J.Buescher, 361; 10. R.Reed, 333. naScar driver rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
naScar SPrint cuP Quicken Loans 400 Lineup
after Friday qualifying; race Sunday at Michigan international Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2 miles (car number in parentheses) 1. (4) Kevin Harvick, Chev., 204.557. 2. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chev., 203.776. 3. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chev., 203.729. 4. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 203.2. 5. (27) Paul Menard, Chev., 203.04. 6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 202.908. 7. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chev., 202.401. 8. (41) Kurt Busch, Chev., 202.043. 9. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 202.032. 10. (55) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 201.331. 11. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chev., 200.49. 12. (42) Kyle Larson, Chev., 201.117. 13. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chev., 200.876. 14. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 200.842. 15. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 200.831. 16. (78) Martin Truex Jr., Chev., 200.82. 17. (51) Justin Allgaier, Chev., 200.73. 18. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 200.518. 19. (3) Austin Dillon, Chev., 200.457. 20. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 200.128. 21. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 199.967. 22. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 199.534. 23. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 199.518. 24. (31) Ryan Newman, Chev., 199.165. 25. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Chev., 200.837. 26. (14) Tony Stewart, Chev., 200.457. 27. (10) Danica Patrick, Chev., 200.451. 28. (12) Juan Pablo Montoya, Ford, 200.217. 29. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 199.933. 30. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 199.75. 31. (13) Casey Mears, Chev., 199.617. 32. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 198.593. 33. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 198.571. 34. (66) Brett Moffitt, Toyota, 198.347. 35. (44) J.J. Yeley, Chev., 197.9. 36. (33) David Stremme, Chev., 197.666. 37. (7) Michael Annett, Chev., Owner Points. 38. (98) Josh Wise, Chev., Owner Points. 39. (40) Landon Cassill, Chev., Owner Points. 40. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chev., Owner Points. 41. (23) Alex Bowman, Toyota, Owner Points. 42. (26) Cole Whitt, Toyota, Owner Points. 43. (32) Travis Kvapil, Ford, Owner Points. Failed to Qualify 44. (83) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 196.931.
TENNIS tenniS
goLF GOLF
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) San antonio 3, Miami 1 Sunday, June 15 Miami at San Antonio, 6 p.m. x-tuesday, June 17 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. x-Friday, June 20 Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Previous results thursday, June 5 San Antonio 110, Miami 95 Sunday, June 8 Miami 98, San Antonio 96 tuesday, June 10 San Antonio 111, Miami 92 thursday’s June 12 San Antonio 107, Miami 86
Saturday at Pinehurst, n.c.; Purse: tBa ($8 million in 2013); yardage: 7,562; Par: 70; (a-amateur) third round Martin Kaymer 65-65-72—202 Rickie Fowler 70-70-67—207 Erik Compton 72-68-67—207 Henrik Stenson 69-69-70—208 Dustin Johnson 69-69-70—208 Brandt Snedeker 69-68-72—209 Matt Kuchar 69-70-71—210 Brooks Koepka 70-68-72—210 Kevin Na 68-69-73—210 Justin Rose 72-69-70—211 Jordan Spieth 69-70-72—211 Chris Kirk 71-68-72—211 Brendon De Jonge 68-70-73—211 Victor Dubuisson 70-72-70—212 Francesco Molinari 69-71-72—212 Garth Mulroy 71-72-70—213 Jimmy Walker 70-72-71—213 Jason Day 73-68-72—213 Marcel Siem 70-71-72—213 J.B. Holmes 70-71-72—213 Adam Scott 73-67-73—213 Rory McIlroy 71-68-74—213 Shiv Kapur 73-70-71—214 Lucas Bjerregaard 70-72-72—214 Aaron Baddeley 70-71-73—214 Steve Stricker 70-71-73—214 Hideki Matsuyama 69-71-74—214 Ian Poulter 70-70-74—214 Keegan Bradley 69-69-76—214 Ryan Moore 76-68-71—215 Retief Goosen 73-71-71—215 Bill Haas 72-72-71—215 Phil Mickelson 70-73-72—215 Brendon Todd 69-67-79—215 Sergio Garcia 73-71-72—216 Cody Gribble 72-72-72—216 Ernie Els 74-70-72—216 Billy Horschel 75-68-73—216 Webb Simpson 71-72-73—216 Patrick Reed 71-72-73—216 Jim Furyk 73-70-73—216 Nicholas Lindheim 72-73-72—217 Zach Johnson 71-74-72—217 Kenny Perry 74-69-74—217 Graeme McDowell 68-74-75—217 Zac Blair 71-74-73—218 Stewart Cink 72-72-74—218 Scott Langley 72-71-75—218 Gary Woodland 72-71-75—218 Seung-Yul Noh 70-72-76—218 Paul Casey 70-75-74—219 Bo Van Pelt 72-72-75—219 Harris English 69-75-75—219 Danny Willett 70-71-78—219 Billy Hurley III 71-74-75—220 Justin Leonard 75-70-75—220 Clayton Rask 73-71-77—221 Alex Cejka 73-71-77—221 Daniel Berger 72-71-78—221 Fran Quinn 68-74-79—221 a-Matthew Fitzpatrick 71-73-78—222 Louis Oosthuizen 71-73-78—222 Kevin Stadler 77-68-78—223 Boo Weekley 71-73-80—224 Kevin Tway 72-72-81—225 Russell Henley 70-74-82—226 Toru Taniguchi 72-73-88—233
Pga tour u.S. open
nBa PLayoFFS FinaLS
nBa LeaderS
through Saturday Scoring g Durant, OKC 19 James, MIA 19 Harden, HOU 6 Westbrook, OKC19 Aldridge, POR 11 Howard, HOU 6 DeRozan, TOR 7 Griffin, LAC 13 Curry, GOL 7 Lillard, POR 11 George, IND 19 Johnson, Bro 12 Lowry, TOR 7 Ellis, DAL 7 Paul, LAC 13 Walker, CHA 4 Millsap, ATL 7 Parsons, HOU 6 Teague, ATL 7 Beal, WAS 11 Fg Percentage Johnson, TOR Valanciunas, TOR Ibaka, OKC James, MIA Gibson, CHI Howard, HOU Patterson, TOR Johnson, Bro Lee, GOL Duncan, SAN rebounds g Howard, HOU 6 Noah, CHI 5 Jordan, LAC 13 Millsap, ATL 7 Aldridge, POR 11 Gortat, WAS 11 assists Paul, LAC Curry, GOL Westbrook, OKC Conley, MEM Wall, WAS Lillard, POR Walker, CHA Harden, HOU Williams, Bro Vasquez, TOR
Fg Ft PtS 194 132 563 182 121 517 50 45 161 167 145 507 113 60 288 58 40 156 45 71 167 117 71 306 51 37 161 83 59 252 138 101 429 98 36 254 44 43 148 52 27 143 92 41 257 26 14 78 41 45 136 46 11 116 44 38 135 75 39 211 Fg Fga 34 52 31 49 87 147 182 319 32 57 58 106 26 48 98 184 41 77 144 275 oFF deF tot 27 55 82 15 49 64 43 120 163 21 55 76 30 87 117 36 73 109 g aSt 13 134 7 59 19 153 7 55 11 78 11 72 4 24 6 35 12 70 7 36
aVg 29.6 27.2 26.8 26.7 26.2 26.0 23.9 23.5 23.0 22.9 22.6 21.2 21.1 20.4 19.8 19.5 19.4 19.3 19.3 19.2 Pct .654 .633 .592 .571 .561 .547 .542 .533 .532 .524 aVg 13.7 12.8 12.5 10.9 10.6 9.9 aVg 10.3 8.4 8.1 7.9 7.1 6.5 6.0 5.8 5.8 5.1
HOCKEY Hockey
atP worLd tour aegon championships
Saturday at the Queen’s club London Purse: $1.1 million (wt250) Surface: grass-outdoor Singles - Semifinals Grigor Dimitrov (4), Bulgaria, def. Stan Wawrinka (1), Switzerland, 6-2, 6-4. Feliciano Lopez (10), Spain, def. Radek Stepanek (15), Czech Republic, 7-6 (7), 6-4. doubles - Semifinals Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (2), Brazil, def. Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic (3), Serbia, 7-5, 6-3. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers, Australia, def. Julien Benneteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin (7), France, 6-4, 7-6 (4).
wta tour aegon classic
Saturday at edgbaston Priory club Birmingham, england Purse: $710,000 (Premier) Surface: grass-outdoor Singles - Semifinals Ana Ivanovic (1), Serbia, def. Zhang Shuai (9), China, 6-2, 6-2. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, def. Casey Dellacqua (16), Australia, 7-6 (5), 6-1. doubles - Semifinals Raquel Kops-Jones and Abigail Spears (3), United States, def. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Sania Mirza (1), India, 3-6, 6-3, 10-8. Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua (2), Australia, def. Caroline Garcia, France, and Zhang Shuai, China, 6-4, 6-2.
atP worLd tour gerry weber open
BASKETBALL BaSketBaLL
Saturday at gerry weber Stadion Halle, germany Purse: $1.1 million (wt250) Surface: grass-outdoor Singles - Semifinals Alejandro Falla, Colombia, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, 5-7, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Kei Nishikori (4), Japan, 6-3, 7-6 (4). doubles - Semifinal Marco Chiudinelli and Roger Federer, Switzerland, def. Dustin Brown and Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, 7-5, 6-3.
nHL PLayoFFS FinaLS
Los angeles 4, ny rangers 1 Previous results Los Angeles 3, NY Rangers 2, OT Los Angeles 5, NY Rangers 4, 2OT Los Angeles 3, NY Rangers 0 NY Rangers 2, Los Angeles 1 Los Angeles 3, NY Rangers 2, 2OT
nHL Summary Late Friday kings 3, rangers 2, 2ot
n.y. rangers 0 2 0 0 0—2 Los angeles 1 0 1 0 1—3 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Williams 9 (King, Stoll), 6:04. Second Period—2, N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 5 (McDonagh, B.Richards), 15:37 (pp). 3, N.Y. Rangers, Boyle 3 (Hagelin), 19:30 (sh). third Period—4, Los Angeles, Gaborik 14 (Doughty, Carter), 7:56 (pp). First overtime—None. Second overtime—5, Los Angeles, Martinez 5 (Toffoli, Clifford), 14:43. Shots on goal—N.Y. Rangers 6-6-3-105—30. Los Angeles 7-10-12-13-9—51. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 1 of 5; Los Angeles 1 of 4. goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 1311-0 (51 shots-48 saves). Los Angeles, Quick 16-10-0 (30-28). referees—Steve Kozari, Brad Watson. Linesmen—Scott Driscoll, Shane Heyer. a—18,713 (18,118). t—4:04.
Stanley cup champions
2014 — Los Angeles Kings def. New York Rangers, 4-1 2013 — Chicago Blackhawks def. Boston Bruins, 4-2 2012 — Los Angeles Kings def. New Jersey Devils, 4-2 2011 — Boston Bruins def. Vancouver Canucks, 4-3 2010 — Chicago Blackhawks def. Philadelphia Flyers, 4-2 2009 — Pittsburgh Penguins def. Detroit Red Wings, 4-3 2008 — Detroit Red Wings def. Pittsburgh Penguins, 4-2
conn Smythe trophy winners
The most valuable players in the Stanley Cup playoffs: 2014—Justin Williams, Los Angeles Kings 2013—Patrick Kane, Chicago Blackhawks 2012—Jonathan Quick, Los Angeles Kings 2011—Tim Thomas, Boston Bruins 2010—Jonathan Toews, Chicago Blackhawks
u.S. oPen tee tiMeS
Sunday - Fourth round 7:32 a.m. — Toru Taniguchi, Japan. 7:43 a.m. — Russell Henley, United States; Kevin Tway, United States. 7:54 a.m. — Boo Weekley, United States; Kevin Stadler, United States. 8:05 a.m. — Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa; a-Matthew Fitzpatrick, England 8:16 a.m. — Fran Quinn, United States; Daniel Berger, United States. 8:27 a.m. — Alex Cejka, Germany; Clayton Rask, United States. 8:38 a.m. — Justin Leonard, United States; Billy Hurley III, United States. 8:49 a.m. — Danny Willett, England; Harris English, United States. 9 a.m. — Bo Van Pelt, United States; Paul Casey, England. 9:11 a.m. — Seung-Yul Noh, South Korea; Gary Woodland, United States. 9:22 a.m. — Scott Langley, United States; Stewart Cink, United States. 9:33 a.m. — Zac Blair, United States; Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland. 9:44 a.m. — Kenny Perry, United States; Zach Johnson, United States. 9:55 a.m. — Nicholas Lindheim, United States; Jim Furyk, United States. 10:06 a.m. — Patrick Reed, United States; Webb Simpson, United States. 10:17 a.m. — Billy Horschel, United States; Ernie Els, South Africa. 10:28 a.m. — Cody Gribble, United States; Sergio Garcia, Spain. 10:39 a.m. — Brendon Todd, United States; Phil Mickelson, United States. 10:50 a.m. — Bill Haas, United States; Retief Goosen, South Africa. 11:01 a.m. — Ryan Moore, United States; Keegan Bradley, United States. 11:12 a.m. — Ian Poulter, England; Hideki Matsuyama, Japan. 11:23 a.m. — Steve Stricker, United States; Aaron Baddeley, Australia. 11:34 a.m. — Lucas Bjerregaard, Denmark; Shiv Kapur, India. 11:45 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Adam Scott, Australia. 11:56 a.m. — J.B. Holmes, United States; Marcel Siem, Germany. 12:07 p.m. — Jason Day, Australia; Jimmy Walker, United States. 12:18 p.m. — Garth Mulroy, South Africa; Francesco Molinari, Italy. 12:29 p.m. — Victor Dubuisson, France; Brendon de Jonge, Zimbabwe. 12:40 p.m. — Chris Kirk, United States; Jordan Spieth, United States. 12:51 p.m. — Justin Rose, England; Kevin Na, United States. 1:02 p.m. — Brooks Koepka, United States; Matt Kuchar, United States. 1:13 p.m. — Brandt Snedeker, United States; Dustin Johnson, United States. 1:24 p.m. — Henrik Stenson, Sweden; Erik Compton, United States. 1:35 p.m. — Rickie Fowler, United States; Martin Kaymer, Germany.
SOCCER Soccer
FiFa 2014 world cup
FirSt round grouP a
w L t gF ga Pts Brazil 1 0 0 3 1 3 Mexico 1 0 0 1 0 3 Cameroon 0 1 0 0 1 0 Croatia 0 1 0 1 3 0 thursday, June 12 Brazil 3, Croatia 1 Friday, June 13 Mexico 1, Cameroon 0 tuesday, June 17 Brazil vs. Mexico, 1 p.m. wednesday, June 18 Croatia vs. Cameroon, 4 p.m. Monday, June 23 Brazil vs. Cameroon, 2 p.m. Croatia vs. Mexico, 2 p.m. grouP B w L t gF ga Pts Netherlands 1 0 0 5 1 3 Chile 1 0 0 3 1 3 Australia 0 1 0 1 3 0 Spain 0 1 0 1 5 0 Friday, June 13 Netherlands 5, Spain 1 Chile 3, Australia 1 wednesday, June 18 Spain vs. Chile, 1 p.m. Netherlands vs. Australia, 10 a.m. Monday, June 23 Spain vs. Australia, 10 a.m. Netherlands vs. Chile, 10 a.m. grouP c w L t gF ga Pts Colombia 1 0 0 3 0 3 Ivory Coast 1 0 0 2 1 3 Japan 0 1 0 1 2 0 Greece 0 1 0 0 3 0 Saturday, June 14 Colombia 3, Greece 0 Ivory Coast 2, Japan 1 thursday, June 19 Colombia vs. Ivory Coast, 10 a.m. Greece vs. Japan, 4 p.m. tuesday, June 24 Colombia vs. Japan, 2 p.m. Greece vs. Ivory Coast, 2 p.m. grouP d w L t gF ga Pts Costa Rica 1 0 0 3 1 3 Italy 1 0 0 2 1 3 England 0 1 0 1 2 0 Uruguay 0 1 0 1 3 0 Saturday, June 14 Costa Rica 3, Uruguay 1 Italy 2, England 1 thursday, June 19 Uruguay vs. England, 1 p.m. Friday, June 20 Costa Rica vs. Italy, 10 a.m. tuesday, June 24 Uruguay vs. Italy, 10 a.m. Costa Rica vs. England, 10 a.m. grouP e w L t gF ga Pts Ecuador 0 0 0 0 0 0 France 0 0 0 0 0 0 Honduras 0 0 0 0 0 0 Switzerland 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sunday, June 15 Switzerland vs. Ecuador, 10 a.m. France vs. Honduras, 1 p.m. Friday, June 20 Switzerland vs. France, 1 p.m. Ecuador vs. Honduras, 4 p.m. wednesday, June 25 Switzerland vs. Honduras, 2 p.m. Ecuador vs. France, 2 p.m. grouP F w L t gF ga Pts 0 0 Argentina 0 0 0 0 Bosnia-Herz. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Iran 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nigeria 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sunday, June 15 Argentina vs. Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6 p.m. Monday, June 16 Iran vs. Nigeria, 1 p.m. Saturday, June 21 Argentina vs. Iran, 10 a.m. Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Nigeria, 10 a.m. wednesday, June 25 Argentina vs. Nigeria, 10 a.m. Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Iran, 10 a.m. grouP g w L t gF ga Pts Germany 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ghana 0 0 0 0 0 0 Portugal 0 0 0 0 0 0 United States 0 0 0 0 0 0 Monday, June 16 Germany vs. Portugal, 10 a.m. Ghana vs. United States, 4 p.m. Saturday, June 21 Germany vs. Ghana, 1 p.m. Sunday, June 22 Portugal vs. United States, 4 p.m. thursday, June 26 Germany vs. United States, 10 a.m. Portugal vs. Ghana, 10 a.m. grouP H w L t gF ga Pts Algeria 0 0 0 0 0 0 Belgium 0 0 0 0 0 0 Russia 0 0 0 0 0 0 South Korea 0 0 0 0 0 0 tuesday, June 17 Belgium vs. Algeria, 10 a.m. Russia vs. South Korea, 4 p.m. Sunday, June 22 Belgium vs. Russia, 10 a.m. Algeria vs. South Korea, 1 p.m. thursday, June 26 Belgium vs. South Korea, 2 p.m. Algeria vs. Russia, 2 p.m.
worLd cuP SuMMarieS colombia 3, greece 0
at Belo Horizonte, Brazil colombia 1 2 —3 greece 0 0 —0 First half—1, Colombia, Pablo Armero 1, 5th minute. Second half—2, Colombia, Teofilo Gutierrez 1, 58th. 3, Colombia, James Rodriguez 1, 90th, injury time.
Shots—Colombia 13, Greece 12. Shots on goal—Colombia 7, Greece 6. yellow cards—Colombia, Carlos Sanchez, 26th. Greece, Sokratis Papastathopoulos, 52nd; Dimitrios Salpingidis, 55th. offsides—Colombia 1, Greece 3. Fouls committed—Colombia 19, Greece 14. Fouls against—Colombia 14, Greece 17. corner kicks—Colombia 4, Greece 4. a—57,174.
costa rica 3, uruguay 1
uruguay 1 0 —1 costa rica 0 3 —3 First half—1, Uruguay, Edinson Cavani 1, 24th minute, penalty kick. Second half—2, Costa Rica, Joel Campbell 1, 54th. 3, Costa Rica, Oscar Duarte 1, 57th. 4, Costa Rica, Marco Urena 1, 84th. Shots—Uruguay 9, Costa Rica 12. Shots on goal—Uruguay 5, Costa Rica 4. yellow cards—Uruguay, Diego Lugano, 50th; Walter Gargano, 56th; Martin Caceres, 81st. red card—Uruguay, Maximiliano Pereira, 90th, injury time. offsides—Uruguay 6, Costa Rica 2. Fouls committed—Uruguay 20, Costa Rica 18. Fouls against—Uruguay 18, Costa Rica 20. corner kicks—Uruguay 5, Costa Rica 6. a—58,679.
italy 2, england 1
england 1 0 —1 italy 1 1 —2 First half—1, Italy, Claudio Marchisio 1, 35th minute. 2, England, Daniel Sturridge 1, 37th. Second half—3, Italy, Mario Balotelli 1, 50th. Shots—England 18, Italy 12. Shots on goal—England 8, Italy 5. yellow card—England, Raheem Sterling, 90th, injury time. offsides—England 0, Italy 7. Fouls committed—England 8, Italy 12. Fouls against—England 11, Italy 8. corner kicks—England 9, Italy 2. a—39, 800.
ivory coast 2 Japan 1
ivory coast 0 2 —2 Japan 1 0 —1 First half—1, Japan, Keisuke Honda 1, 16th minute. Second half—2, Ivory Coast, Wilfried Bony 1, 64th. 3, Ivory Coast, Gervinho 1, 66th. Shots—Ivory Coast 19, Japan 7. Shots on goal—Ivory Coast 9, Japan 4. yellow cards—Ivory Coast, Souleymane Bamba, 54th; Didier Zokora, 58th. Japan, Maya Yoshida, 23rd; Masato Morishige, 64th. offsides—Ivory Coast 3, Japan 1. Fouls committed—Ivory Coast 12, Japan 13. Fouls against—Ivory Coast 13, Japan 11. corner kicks—Ivory Coast 8, Japan 5. referee—Enrique Osses, Chile. Linesmen—Carlos Astroza, Chile; Sergio Roman, Chile. a—N/A
BASEBALL BaSeBaLL
ncaa coLLege worLd SerieS
at td ameritrade Park omaha omaha, neb. double elimination x-if necessary Saturday, June 14 UC Irvine 3, Texas 1 Vanderbilt 5, Louisville 3 Sunday, June 15 Game 3 — Texas Tech (45-19) vs. TCU (47-16), 1 p.m. Game 4 — Virginia (49-14) vs. Mississippi (46-19), 6 p.m. Monday, June 16 Game 5 — Texas (43-20) vs. Louisville (50-16), 1 p.m. Game 6 — UC Irvine (41-23) vs. Vanderbilt (47-19), 6 p.m. tuesday, June 17 Game 7 — Game 3 loser vs. Game 4 loser, 1 p.m. Game 8 — Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 winner, 6 p.m. wednesday, June 18 Game 9 — Game 5 winner vs. Game 6 loser, 6 p.m. thursday, June 19 Game 10 — Game 7 winner vs. Game 8 loser, 6 p.m. Friday, June 20 Game 11 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 1 p.m. Game 12 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 6 p.m. Saturday, June 21 x-Game 13 — Game 6 winner vs. Game 9 winner, 1 p.m. x-Game 14 — Game 8 winner vs. Game 10 winner, 6 p.m. If only one game is necessary, it will start at 6:30 p.m. championship Series (Best-of-3) Monday, June 23: Pairings TBA, 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 24: Pairings TBA, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 25: Pairings TBA, 6 p.m.
U.S. OPEN
Kaymer navigates tough Pinehurst for 5-shot lead By Doug Ferguson
and said, “If you have a way to play it, I’ll follow you.” Kaymer navigated his way PINEHURST, N.C. — A out of trouble just fine. tough Pinehurst No. 2 tried to He escaped with a bogey make a game out of this U.S. by getting up-and-down from Open. Martin Kaymer always 165 yards. He followed with an had an answer. eagle with a 7-iron from 202 Already with one bogey on yards out of more sand and his card, Kaymer’s tee shot weeds. And a birdie on the on No. 4 was so deep into the final hole gave him a 2-over 72 trees that his golf ball settled and a five-shot lead in a U.S. in a sandy patch that had been Open that finally lived up to washed out by rain, stacked up its reputation Saturday. against 6 inches of pine straw. “I kept it very well together,” With nowhere to go and no said Kaymer, who was at relief available, he turned to 8-under 202. USGA President Tom O’Toole Now he has to do it one The Associated Press
more time, with a different cast of challengers behind him. Rickie Fowler, with teen idol status in American golf, birdied the par-3 17th hole and shot 67 to get into the final group of a major for the first time. Even more unlikely was the other player at 3-under 207 — Erik Compton, the two-time heart transplant recipient who considers it a victory just to be playing golf. Compton ran off five birdies and an eagle for a 67. “If I were to win the tournament, it would be obviously something that would be
extremely special, not only for me, but for my family and for those who have been around me, and I think also for the community and those who have been through some tough times,” Compton said. “I might just sail off and never play golf again.” Even so, this tournament is in the hands of a 29-year-old German who kept his cool on a broiling day of some wicked pin positions. Only one player in U.S. Open history has lost a five-shot lead in the final round, and that was Mike Brady in 1919.
Martin Kaymer of Germany tips his cap after finishing the third round of the U.S. Open on Saturday in Pinehurst, N.C. MATT YORK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPORTS
Fever: Event will raise funds for soccer club Continued from Page D-1 game to create that same atmosphere.” Lenfestey, the director of Heath Concerts, saw the potential for that kind of an event when he watched the World Cup in 2010 when the U.S. advanced out of group play. He saw similar viewing parties in other parts of the country as he watched on TV. “I was inspired by the last World Cup,” Lenfestey said. “I had that image of [U.S. player] Landon Donovan’s goal against Algeria, and then they showed groups of people all over the place, like people in Kansas City watching it on a huge, big screen set up at Arrowhead [Stadium]. The World Cup excitement is something people want to be a part of as a group.” Smith and Lenfestey are a part of the Santa Fe Adult Soccer League. That’s how they knew each other and where their partnership started. Smith was looking for some fundrais-
ing ideas for the Northern New Mexico Soccer Club, which serves the youth of New Mexico with an opportunity to play organized soccer in the city. Smith said the money goes to provide scholarships for children whose families cannot afford to pay for member fees and equipment. “One of the missions we have is to make it affordable for everyone to play,” Smith said. “It’s not expensive [to play in the league], but we want to make sure we can get as many kids to play the sport.” Smith approached Second Street Brewery to offer its patio for reserved seating to patrons for the match, who would get either a free pitcher of beer and an appetizer or two of each depending on the size of the group purchasing the seating. He also negotiated arrangements with Rio Chama Steakhouse, Blue Corn Cafe and the Draft Station in which customers who watch World Cup matches at their venues can
Lenfestey said getting the event set up wasn’t hard, but WORLD CUP acquiring the equipment and VIEWING PARTY the means to transmit the socWhat: World Cup soccer, cer match were a bit problemUnited States vs. Ghana atic. “The Railyard was very When: 4 p.m. Monday helpful,” Lenfestey said. “The Where: Railyard Plaza technical side of it was finding a big screen that would work and Cost: Free to the public. Reserved seating at Secgetting a signal to it. It has been ond Street Brewery, with tricky, but we got it worked out.” proceeds going to NorthA 12-by-9-foot LED screen ern New Mexico Soccer was found at Santa Fe Audio Club. Visual, and DirecTV will provide the signal for viewers to watch. The screen will be set up at the Railyard’s water tower, donate 5 percent of their bill to the soccer club by dropping it in facing toward Second Street Brewery. Lenfestey said there one of their boxes. will be no additional seating for Lenfestey, whose company people who come to just watch, helps promote entertainment so they can stand, bring their events in the city, saw a chance own chair or even a blanket to to merge soccer and entertainlie on while they watch. ment on the Railyard Plaza, a “We just hope people will place where he has helped set come and check it out,” Lenup concerts and movie showings. This will be the first of two festey said. “It is a great way for World Cup events, with another Santa Fe to cheer as a community and experience the exciteone planned for the finals on ment of World Cup soccer.” July 13.
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
D-3
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 7 a.m. on FS1 — 24 Hours of Le Mans, finish of race, in Le Mans, France 11 a.m. on TNT — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Quicken Loans 400, in Brooklyn, Mich. 9 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, Thunder Valley Nationals, in Bristol, Tenn. (same-day tape) COLLEGE BASEBALL 1 p.m. on ESPN2 — World Series, game 3, Texas Tech vs. TCU, in Omaha, Neb. 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — World Series, game 4, Mississippi vs. Virginia, in Omaha, Neb. CYCLING 9 p.m. on NBCSN — Criterium du Dauphine, final stage, Megeve to Courchevel, France (same-day tape) GOLF 10 a.m. on NBC — USGA, U.S. Open Championship, final round, in Pinehurst, N.C.
UNM: Some say Bustos could be head coach Continued from Page D-1 ogy and exercise science — as well as a list of accolades and achievements in basketball that is almost too long for publication — Bustos played one season as a professional for the Thessaloniki Apollon Kalamarias in Greece, where she averaged 11.2 points and 4.9 rebounds in 21 games. After that, she returned to the U.S. to think about her future, and she decided to stop playing and pursue a career in coaching. She started at Division II Western State College in Gunnison, Colo., where she was an assistant coach with the women’s basketball team the last two years. It was there that her passion for coaching started to blossom. “Something told me to take the job,” Bustos said. “It’s one of those decisions that you have to make in the spur of the moment. I didn’t think I would ever coach, but I grew to love it.” Although Bustos had never coached before, Mountaineers head coach Van Girard was so impressed with her during the interview that he decided he was going to offer her the position before it was even over. “After a five-minute interview, I gave her the job,” Girard said. “It’s kind of a no-brainer when you have a young lady of that caliber. I started giving her things that I wanted her to do, and she was like, ‘Do I have the job?’ The biggest surprise is that she hadn’t coached before.” With her new UNM position, Bustos has a very impressive list of basketball accomplishments for someone who is going to
Vera Jo Bustos, a 2007 West Las Vegas graduate, was a twotime honorable mention All-American at Adams State College in Alamosa, Colo. Bustos was hired on Friday as the video coordinator for the University of New Mexico women’s basketball program. COURTESY PHOTO
turn 25 on June 24, but that doesn’t surprise the people that know her. “She has the oldest soul for such a young woman as I’ve ever met,” Girard said. “She carries herself at a much older age.
She doesn’t act like a typical 25-year-old.” Since she is so accomplished at a young age, it is natural for people to assume that she will end up as a college head coach. That might happen one day, but
Bustos said she is just going to let things fall into place. “I’m not one to look too far into the future,” Bustos said. “Whatever opportunities come my way, I’ll embrace them. Maybe some day I’ll be a head coach, but I still have a lot to learn. I’m ecstatic to be learning from such a great staff [at UNM].” Girard, on the other hand, said Bustos becoming a college head coach is almost guaranteed. “I think when I retire, I’m going to be her assistant coach,” he said. “She has the traits to be there. I very much do see her as a head coach. I do know that she has that ambition.” Sanchez is also very confident that Bustos will be running a program some day. In fact, that’s the reason she hired her. “I wouldn’t hire anybody that didn’t have coaching aspirations,” Sanchez said. “I want to hire people that want to be coaches, not just people that want jobs. She’ll move up, there’s no question about it. She can be a head coach at any level.” But before Bustos is considered for a head coaching position, she is going to take her time and learn while she breaks down and analyzes film for the Lobos and their opponents. She is in no rush to move on. After all, she has been trying to be a Lobo for a very long time. “I just feel extremely blessed to be in these opportunities,” Bustos said. “When I drive up to The Pit I’m like, ‘I can’t believe I work here.’ It’s amazing to see everything come full-circle.”
Noll: Selected Terry Bradshaw in 1970 draft execution. Foremost, Noll was a teacher. the Steelers. The late “Big Cat” Ernie Ladd Noll is the reason that milplayed for Noll in 1961. Noll was lions turned into Steelers fans. then an assistant coach with the Yet he was overlooked. His San Diego Chargers and Ladd teams of the 1970s were such was, by his own admission, anypowerhouses, it was easy to thing but a student of the game. forget that Noll was the archi“I’m thickheaded,” Ladd told tect who built them, not just the me in 1998. “I had my way of man who coached them. doing things. I used my forearm Roy Gerela, who played at to hit everything in sight, and I New Mexico State University was always getting hurt. and was the Steelers’ kicker “Charlie Noll kept telling me for much of the ’70s, said Noll to put my shoulder into the never got his due, even at at the other guy so I could get more peak of his career. power and be more durable. I “Four Super Bowl champion- wouldn’t listen. Finally, he sugships and I don’t believe he was gested that I try it his way for ever even named coach of the two weeks. If I didn’t get better, year,” Gerela told me in 2011. I could go back to my way. If Mike Ditka was the most “He was right. He made me flamboyant coach with ties to a player. My day has come and the Pittsburgh area, Noll was gone, but right there in Pittsthe most understated. burgh is the best football coach “He went about his business ever — Charlie Noll.” without ever calling attention Noll was both conventional to himself,” Gerela said. “When and daring. He selected quarterit came to commercials or perback Terry Bradshaw of Louisisonal appearances, he always ana Tech first in the entire NFL said, ‘Those are for you guys.’ ” draft in 1970. Bradshaw, fast, Noll did not believe in fiery strong and blessed with a rocket locker-room speeches or raharm, was an obvious choice. rah chatter on the sidelines. He The Steelers, a doormat for four knew that games were won with decades, started to win. Yet Noll talent, preparation and flawless benched Bradshaw in 1974 in
Continued from Page D-1
favor of Joe Gilliam, who had been an 11th-round draft pick from Tennessee State. So radical was the move that Sports Illustrated put Gilliam on its cover with an incendiary headline: “Pittsburgh’s black quarterback.” Race, of course, had nothing to do with Noll’s decision to sit down Bradshaw. Later in the 1974 season, Bradshaw reclaimed the job of starting quarterback. He helped the Steelers win their first Super Bowl that season. Gilliam, tragically, descended into drug addiction, which eventually killed him. Noll was all business, caring nothing about reputation, only performance. He had been willing to start Gilliam for one reason only: Gilliam appeared for a time to be better than Bradshaw. This was an extraordinary decision, considering that Bradshaw was one of the greatest athletes ever to strap on a helmet. Fans in Pittsburgh called Noll “The Emperor,” a title bestowed on him by legendary writer and broadcaster Myron Cope. Everyone in town regarded Noll as the finest judge of talent anywhere. Noll might have won several
more Super Bowls if he had not blown a draft pick in 1983. He passed on a hometown player, Dan Marino, who would have been a franchise quarterback on par with Bradshaw. Instead of Marino, Noll chose a defensive lineman from Texas Tech, Gabe Rivera. Rivera played only six games for the Steelers before crashing his car while intoxicated, a wreck that paralyzed him. Missing on Marino proved that Noll was human. He coached the Steelers from 1969 to 1991. Bill Cowher succeeded him. What advice did Noll give the new coach? None. The team had become Cowher’s. Noll slipped into the background. Never a self-promoter, Noll did not worry about his legacy. He was secure. The Super Bowl trophy is named after Lombardi, but Noll was the coach who raised it most often. Contact Milan Simonich at 9863080 or msimonich@sfnew mexican.com. Follow the Ringside Seat column and blog at www.santafenewmexican.com.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11:30 a.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, Cleveland at Boston or Washington at St. Louis (2 p.m.) 11:30 a.m. on WGN — Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia 6 p.m. on ESPN — L.A. Angels at Atlanta MOTORSPORTS 5:30 a.m. on FS1 — MotoGP World Championship, Grand Prix of Catalunya, in Montmelo, Spain 10 a.m. on FS1 — MotoGP Moto3, Grand Prix of Catalunya, in Montmelo, Spain (same-day tape) 11 a.m. on FS1 — MotoGP Moto2, Grand Prix of Catalunya, in Montmelo, Spain (same-day tape) NBA 6 p.m. on ABC — NBA Finals, game 5, Miami at San Antonio SOCCER 9:30 a.m. on ABC — FIFA, World Cup, Group E, Switzerland vs. Ecuador, in Brasilia, Brazil 12:30 p.m. on ABC — FIFA, World Cup, Group E, France vs. Honduras, in Porto Alegre, Brazil 3:30 p.m. on ESPN — FIFA, World Cup, Group F, Argentina vs. Bosnia-Herzegovina, in Rio de Janeiro WNBA 11 a.m. on ESPN2 — Phoenix at Minnesota
SANTA FE FUEGO SCHEDULE Team record: (18-12)
Upcoming schedule: Today’s game — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. Monday — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. Tuesday — at Raton, 6 p.m. Wednesday — at Raton, 6 p.m. Thursday — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 20 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 21 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 22 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 23 — vs. Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 24 — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. June 25 — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. June 26 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. June 27 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 28 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 29 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 30 — Pecos League All-Star Game (at Fort Marcy), 6 p.m.
July 1 — vs. Taos, 7 p.m. July 2 — at Taos, 6 p.m. July 3 — vs. Taos, 7 p.m. July 4 — at Taos, 6 p.m. July 5 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 6 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 7 — at Raton, 6 p.m. July 8 — at Raton, 6 p.m. July 9 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 10 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 11 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 12 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 13 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 14 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 15 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 16 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 17 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 18 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 19 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Soccer u The Northern New Mexico Soccer Club is helping to promote a screening of the documentary Next Goal Wins, about the American Samoan national team that is trying to remove the stain of a 31-0 loss to Australia in a World Cup qualifying match in 2002. The screening will take place at 6 p.m. Friday at the Jean Cocteau Cinema at 418 Montezuma Ave. Tickets are available through the club’s website at www.northernsc.org/next-goal-wins.html.
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, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
Fuego rout visiting Las Vegas Omar Arsten and Preston Zachrich each had three hits and two runs batted in, leading the Santa Fe Fuego to a 10-1 rout of visiting Las Vegas in Pecos League action Saturday night at Fort Marcy Ballpark. The Fuego (18-12) have alternated wins and losses the entire week but have maintained their three-game lead in the Northern Division. They’ll go for two in a row when they host Raton on Father’s Day. Brice Cutspec and Aaron Carmen each hit home runs while Joseph LaCunga had a pair of doubles for Santa Fe. Every starter had at least one hit. The Fuego led 3-0 after two innings, then surrendered their only run to the Train Robbers in the top of the third. Santa Fe responded with three runs in the fifth and three more in the seventh. Zachrich (4-2) started on the mound and went the distance. Through nine innings he gave up eight hits and walked two while striking out three. He lowered his earned run average to 3.41. Caleb Olsen (0-4) took the loss for Las Vegas (10-18). He pitched into the sixth, getting roughed up for 11 hits and seven earned runs. The New Mexican
D-4
BASEBALL
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Indians defeat Red Sox The Associated Press
BOSTON — Jason Kipnis had three hits and Cleveland rallied for two runs in the seventh inning to snap a fourgame losing streak. Indians 3 Asdrubal Red Sox 2 Cabrera and Michael Brantley each had a pair of hits for the Indians, who had lost eight of their past nine games at Fenway Park. John Axford (2-3) earned the win with one scoreless inning in relief of T.J. House. Cody Allen pitched the ninth for his seventh save. Craig Breslow (2-2) took the loss, allowing two unearned runs and two hits and a walk in two-thirds of an inning. ROYALS 9, WHITE SOX 1 In Chicago, Danny Duffy matched a career high with nine strikeouts and Kansas City extended its winning streak to six games. Duffy (4-5) scattered five hits over seven-plus shutout innings for Kansas City. Mike Moustakas homered among his three hits as the Royals won their second straight in this weekend series. TIGERS 12, TWINS 9 In Detroit, Rookie Eugenio Suarez hit a leadoff homer and a run-scoring double in a sevenrun third inning to lead slumping Detroit to victory. The Tigers led 11-1 after six innings, but their struggling bullpen had trouble finishing off the game. Detroit came into the game having lost 17 of 24 after a fast start to the season, but it was helped by another strong pitching performance. Anibal Sanchez (3-2) was charged with three runs and four hits in 6⅓ innings. Sanchez was in complete control before he walked the leadoff hitter in the seventh and allowed a one-out RBI triple to Eduardo Nunez. Evan Reed then came in, and Nunez scored on a passed ball. ORIOLES 3, BLUE JAYS 2 In Baltimore, Chris Davis homered to back Bud Norris’ effective pitching for Baltimore. Davis hit a two-run shot off knuckleballer R.A. Dickey (6-5) to put Baltimore up 3-1 in the fifth inning. It was the 11th homer of the year for Davis, who led the majors last year with 53. Norris (6-5) gave up one run and seven hits in 6⅔ innings to win his third straight start. The right-hander extended an impressive run by Orioles starters, who have allowed two runs or fewer in 13 of the last 16 games.. ASTROS 7, RAYS 3 In Houston, Matt Dominguez broke out of a slump with two hits that included a three-run double in Houston’s big third inning. Dominguez was 1 for 12 in the first three games of this homestand before singling in the second inning. The Astros led by one when he cleared the bases with his double in a five-run third inning that made it 5-1. Jarred Cosart (6-5) allowed nine hits and three runs in seven innings in his longest outing since May 5. INTERLEAGUE ANGELS 11, BRAVES 6 (13 INNINGS) In Atlanta, Kole Calhoun’s bases-loaded single in the 13th inning drove in the go-ahead run and Los Angeles recovered after blowing a four-run lead in the ninth to beat Atlanta. Mike Trout and Albert Pujols each had three hits, including homers back-to-back homers in the sixth inning, and drove in four runs. Erick Aybar led off the 13th with his fourth hit, an infield single, and moved to second on catcher Gerald Laird’s passed ball. David Hale (2-1) walked pinch-hitter C.J. Wilson and hit Chris Iannetta with a pitch to load the bases. Calhoun’s soft fly ball fell just in front of center fielder B.J. Upton, who attempted a sliding catch. Trout’s two-run double and Pujols’ two-run single pushed the lead to five runs. The teams combined to use 16 pitchers in a game that lasted nearly 5 hours. Fernando Salas (4-0) pitched two scoreless innings.
East
W
American League
L
Pct
GB
Toronto New York Baltimore Boston Tampa Bay
40 35 35 31 26
30 31 32 37 43
.571 .530 .522 .456 .377
— 3 3½ 8 13½
Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Minnesota Chicago
35 35 34 32 33
29 32 35 34 36
.547 .522 .493 .485 .478
— 1½ 3½ 4 4½
Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston
40 37 34 33 32
27 30 33 34 38
.597 .552 .507 .493 .457
— 3 6 7 9½
Central
W
West
W
L
L
Pct
Pct
WCGB
— — ½ 5 10½
L10
4-6 6-4 5-5 4-6 3-7
L-1 W-4 W-1 L-1 L-1
4-6 8-2 5-5 5-5 4-6
W-1 W-6 W-1 L-1 L-3
5-5 7-3 5-5 4-6 7-3
L-1 W-1 L-4 W-2 W-1
GB
WCGB
L10
GB
WCGB
L10
Saturday’s Games Kansas City 9, Chicago White Sox 1 Cleveland 3, Boston 2 Baltimore 3, Toronto 2 Detroit 12, Minnesota 9 Houston 7, Tampa Bay 3 N.Y. Yankees at Oakland Texas at Seattle
— ½ 2½ 3 3½
— — 1½ 2½ 5
Str
Home
Away
20-17 13-16 16-16 17-18 14-20
20-13 22-15 19-16 14-19 12-23
17-16 18-16 21-11 15-17 19-17
18-13 17-16 13-24 17-17 14-19
17-13 20-14 14-19 16-19 17-19
23-14 17-16 20-14 17-15 15-19
Str
Home
Str
Home
Away
Away
Friday’s Games Toronto 4, Baltimore 0 Minnesota 2, Detroit 0 Boston 10, Cleveland 3 Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 2 Tampa Bay 6, Houston 1 N.Y. Yankees 7, Oakland 0 Texas 1, Seattle 0
Monday’s Games L.A. Angels at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m.; Kansas City at Detroit, 5:08 p.m.; Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m.; Minnesota at Boston, 5:10 p.m.; Texas at Oakland, 8:05 p.m.; San Diego at Seattle, 8:10 p.m. East
W
National League
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
GB
WCGB
L10
GB
WCGB
L10
Atlanta Washington Miami New York Philadelphia
35 35 34 30 29
32 32 33 38 37
.522 .522 .507 .441 .439
— — 1 5½ 5½
Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago
41 36 34 32 27
28 32 34 35 39
.594 .529 .500 .478 .409
— 4½ 6½ 8 12½
San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona
43 37 33 29 29
26 33 35 39 42
.623 .529 .485 .426 .408
— 6½ 9½ 13½ 15
Central
West
W
W
L
L
Pct
Pct
½ ½ 1½ 6 6
— — 2 3½ 8
— — 3 7 8½
Str
Home
Str
Home
Str
Home
4-6 6-4 5-5 2-8 5-5
L-1 L-3 L-3 L-1 W-1
6-4 6-4 6-4 5-5 5-5
W-1 W-2 W-4 L-1 L-1
5-5 6-4 5-5 3-7 4-6
L-2 W-2 W-4 W-1 L-4
Away
19-15 19-15 22-13 15-20 16-20
16-17 16-17 12-20 15-18 13-17
20-14 18-14 20-16 17-17 15-14
21-14 18-18 14-18 15-18 12-25
23-14 15-19 19-14 16-19 12-24
20-12 22-14 14-21 13-20 17-18
Away
Away
Friday’s Games Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 2, Philadelphia 1 Philadelphia 7, Chicago Cubs 4 Pittsburgh 8, Miami 6, 13 innings Colorado 5, San Francisco 4 N.Y. Mets 6, San Diego 2 Pittsburgh 8, Miami 6 Atlanta 4, L.A. Angels 3 San Diego 5, N.Y. Mets 0 Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 5 Milwaukee 4, Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 1, Washington 0 L.A. Angels 11, Atlanta 6, 13 innings L.A. Dodgers 4, Arizona 3 St. Louis 4, Washington 1 Colorado 7, San Francisco 4 L.A. Dodgers 6, Arizona 4 Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs at Miami, 5:10 p.m.; Philadelphia at Atlanta, 5:10 p.m.; N.Y. Mets at St. Louis, 6:10 p.m.; Milwaukee at Arizona, 7:40 p.m.; Colorado at L.A. Dodgers, 8:10 p.m.
tOdAy’S PitCHiNG COMPARiSONS
Subject to change. National League tEAM PitCHERS Pittsburgh Worley (R) Miami Alvarez (R)
2014 team LiNE W-L ERA REC 11:10a — — — -150 3-3 2.56 8-5
2014 vs. Opp W-L iP ERA No Record No Record
tEAM PitCHERS San Diego Kennedy (R) New York Matsuzaka (R)
LiNE W-L -125 5-7 11:10a 3-0
ERA 3.63 2.95
REC 6-8 2-1
W-L iP ERA No Record No Record
tEAM PitCHERS Chicago Wood (L) Philadelphia Burnett (R)
LiNE W-L 11:35a 6-5 -135 4-5
ERA 4.95 4.24
REC 7-6 8-6
W-L 0-1 0-1
iP 6.1 5.2
ERA 4.26 6.35
tEAM Cincinnati Milwaukee
PitCHERS Leake (R) Estrada (R)
LiNE W-L 12:10p 3-6 -125 5-3
ERA 3.61 4.56
REC 4-9 7-6
W-L 0-1 0-0
iP 8.0 6.0
ERA 2.25 4.50
tEAM PitCHERS Washington Fister (R) St. Louis Garcia (L)
LiNE W-L 12:15p 5-1 -120 2-0
ERA 2.68 4.26
REC 6-1 2-3
W-L iP ERA No Record No Record
tEAM Colorado San Fran.
LiNE 2:05p -185
W-L 5-5 8-4
ERA 5.70 2.67
REC 7-6 9-5
W-L iP ERA No Record 1-1 20.0 4.05
tEAM PitCHERS Arizona Arroyo (R) Los Angeles Beckett (R)
LiNE 2:10p -150
W-L 6-4 4-3
ERA 4.22 2.35
REC 7-6 5-7
W-L iP ERA No Record 0-0 5.0 0.00
AMERiCAN LEAGUE tEAM PitCHERS Minnesota Nolasco (R) Detroit Porcello (R)
2014 team LiNE W-L ERA REC 11:08a 4-5 5.70 6-7 -155 8-4 4.04 8-4
2014 vs. Opp W-L iP ERA No Record 1-0 5.0 7.20
tEAM Toronto Baltimore
PitCHERS Happ (L) Tillman (R)
LiNE W-L 11:35a 5-3 -125 5-3
ERA 4.37 4.91
REC 5-3 9-5
W-L iP 0-0 2.2 1-1 13.2
ERA 3.37 4.61
tEAM Cleveland Boston
PitCHERS Kluber (R) Workman (R)
LiNE W-L 11:35a 6-4 -110 1-0
ERA 3.35 2.86
REC 8-6 2-2
W-L 0-0 0-0
iP 6.1 5.0
ERA 5.68 5.40
tEAM PitCHERS Kansas City Shields (R) Chicago Rienzo (R)
LiNE W-L -145 7-3 12:10p 4-3
ERA 3.44 5.25
REC 10-4 6-3
W-L 0-1 1-0
iP 7.0 6.0
ERA 1.29 3.00
tEAM PitCHERS Tampa Bay Price (L) Houston Peacock (R)
LiNE W-L -160 4-6 12:10p 2-4
ERA 3.97 4.50
REC 7-7 4-5
W-L iP ERA No Record No Record
tEAM New York Oakland
PitCHERS Nuno (L) Chavez (R)
LiNE 2:05p -165
W-L 1-2 5-4
ERA 4.97 3.04
REC 5-5 9-4
W-L 0-0 1-0
PitCHERS Martinez (R) Iwakuma (R)
LiNE 2:10p -160
W-L 1-3 4-3
ERA 4.63 2.79
REC 4-3 4-4
W-L iP ERA No Record 1-0 8.0 2.25
tEAM Texas Seattle
PitCHERS Nicasio (R) Bumgarner (L)
iP 4.2 6.0
ERA 3.86 6.00
iNtERLEAGUE 2014 team 2014 vs. Opp tEAM PitCHERS LiNE W-L ERA REC W-L iP ERA L.A. Angels Santiago (L) 6:05p 0-6 4.15 1-7 No Record Atlanta Minor (L) -150 2-4 4.31 3-5 No Record KEy TEAM REC-Team’s record in games started by today’s pitcher. AHWG-Average hits and walks allowed per 9 innings. VS OPP-Pitcher’s record versus this opponent, 2014 statistics.
tHiS dAtE iN BASEBALL June 15
1902 — Corsicana defeated Texarkana 51-3 in a Texas League game. Nig Clark of Corsicana took advantage of the small park and hit eight homers. Some telegraph operators, thinking there was a mistake, reported the score as 5-3. 1925 — The Philadelphia Athletics went into the bottom of the eighth inning trailing 15-4 and scored 13 runs to defeat Cleveland 17-15. 1938 — Four days after no-hitting the Boston Braves, Johnny Vander Meer of the Cincinnati Reds pitched his second straight no-hit game, defeating the Dodgers 6-0 in the first night game played in Brooklyn. 1952 — The St. Louis Cardinals, down 11-0 entering the fifth inning, came back for a 14-12 triumph over the New York Giants in the first game of a doubleheader and set a National League record for best comeback. 1963 — San Francisco’s Juan Marichal pitched a no-hitter against the Houston Colts for a 1-0 victory, the first Giants no-hitter since Carl Hubbell’s in 1929. 1976 — The Pittsburgh Pirates and Houston Astros were “rained in” at the Houston Astrodome as 10 inches of rain fell on the city. Only members of both teams were able to make it to the stadium. Umpires, fans and stadium personnel were unable to make it through the water. 1980 — The Cleveland Indians’ Jorge Orta collected six hits, a double and five singles, and scored four times in a 14-5 triumph over the Minnesota Twins. Toby Harrah had seven RBIs. 1992 — Jeff Reardon broke Rollie Fingers’ career saves mark of 341 when he preserved a 1-0 victory for the Boston Red Sox with one scoreless inning against the New York Yankees. 2002 — A double in the fifth inning of Texas’ 4-0 loss to Houston gave Rafael Palmeiro 1,000 career extra-base hits. He became the 25th major leaguer to reach that mark. 2011 — Josh Beckett pitched a one-hitter, allowing only an infield single in the third inning by Reid Brignac, to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 3-0 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays. Beckett struck out six, walked none and retired the last 19 batters.
Saturday tigers 12, twins 9
Minnesota detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi DSantn ss 5 0 2 3 Kinsler 2b 5 1 3 3 Fuld cf 4 0 1 0 TrHntr rf 4 1 2 2 Mauer 1b 5 0 0 0 MiCarr 1b 5 2 2 1 Wlngh lf 1 1 0 0 VMrtnz dh 5 1 3 2 Parmel lf 2 2 1 0 JMrtnz lf 5 1 2 1 KMorls dh 4 1 1 0 AJcksn cf 5 0 1 0 Arcia rf 5 0 0 0 Cstllns 3b 5 1 3 1 Plouffe 3b 0 0 0 1 Avila c 3 2 0 0 Nunez 3b 3 2 2 1 Suarez ss 4 3 3 2 Dozier 2b 1 1 1 2 Fryer c 5 2 3 1 EEscor 3b 3 0 1 0 Totals 38 9 12 8 Totals 41121912 Minnesota 010 000 332—9 detroit 007 121 10x—12 E—Tor.Hunter (3). DP—Minnesota 1. LOB—Minnesota 8, Detroit 10. 2B—Kinsler (20), Tor.Hunter 2 (13), Mi.Cabrera (23), V.Martinez (16), J.Martinez (8), Suarez (1). 3B—Nunez (1), Suarez (1). HR—Dozier (15), V.Martinez (17), Suarez (3). SB—Kinsler (7). Minnesota iP H R ER BB SO Deduno L,2-5 2 2-3 7 7 7 2 3 Swarzak 1 2-3 5 3 3 2 1 Guerrier 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Thielbar 1 3 1 1 0 0 Duensing 1 2 0 0 0 0 detroit iP H R ER BB SO A.Sanchez W,3-26 1-3 4 3 3 2 6 E.Reed 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Coke 1 3 3 3 0 1 Alburquerque 0 2 0 0 1 0 Krol S,1-2 1 1-3 1 2 2 1 2 Alburquerque pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. WP—A.Sanchez. PB—Avila. Umpires—Home, Jim Reynolds; First, Seth Buckminster; Second, Manny Gonzalez; Third, Brian Knight. T—3:48. A—41,498 (41,681).
Royals 9, White Sox 1
Kansas City Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Aoki rf 5 0 1 0 Eaton cf 4 0 1 0 Infante 2b 5 1 2 1 GBckh 2b 3 0 0 0 Hosmer 1b5 1 2 1 JAreu 1b 3 0 0 0 BButler dh 4 2 2 2 Viciedo lf 4 0 1 0 AGordn lf 5 1 2 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 1 0 S.Perez c 5 1 2 0 Konerk dh 4 1 3 1 L.Cain cf 5 1 0 1 Sierra rf 4 0 1 0 Mostks 3b 4 2 3 2 Flowrs c 4 0 0 0 AEscor ss 4 0 2 0 LeGarc 3b 4 0 0 0 Totals 42 9 16 7 Totals 34 1 7 1 Kansas City 000 500 013—9 Chicago 000 000 001—1 E—Moustakas (5), Le.Garcia (3). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Kansas City 7, Chicago 8. 2B—Aoki (11), Hosmer (21), S.Perez (16), A.Escobar (19), Sierra (2). HR—B.Butler (2), Moustakas (6), Konerko (4). Kansas City iP H R ER BB SO Duffy W,4-5 7 5 0 0 1 9 Crow 1 1 0 0 1 1 Mariot 1 1 1 1 0 1 Chicago iP H R ER BB SO Noesi L,2-5 3 2-3 8 5 2 1 4 Guerra 2 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 S.Downs 2 1 1 1 0 3 D.Webb 1 5 3 3 0 1 Duffy pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. WP—Crow. Umpires—Home, Chris Conroy; First, Paul Emmel; Second, Jordan Baker; Third, Gabe Morales. T—3:03. A—24,527.
Rockies 5, Giants 4
Colorado
San Francisco ab r h bi Pagan cf 5 1 2 0 Pence rf 4 2 2 1 Posey c 3 1 2 3 Sandovl 3b 4 0 0 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 0 Morse 1b 4 0 1 0 BCrwfr ss 4 0 0 0 Blanco lf 4 0 2 0 Adrianz 2b 3 0 1 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Arias 3b 1 0 0 0 Vglsng p 1 0 0 0 Colvin ph 1 0 0 0 B.Hicks 2b 1 0 0 0 HSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 12 5 Totals 36 4 10 4 Colorado 021 000 002—5 San Francisco 100 020 100—4 E—Rutledge (3). DP—Colorado 1, San Francisco 1. LOB—Colorado 7, San Francisco 6. 2B—Blackmon (12), Morneau (15), Rutledge (2), McKenry (4), R.Wheeler (1), Posey (6). HR—Barnes (2), Pence (9), Posey (9). S—Bergman. SF—Posey. iP H R ER BB SO Colorado Bergman 6 8 3 3 0 3 Ottavino 1 2 1 1 0 2 Brothers W,3-4 1 0 0 0 0 3 Hawkins S,13-14 1 0 0 0 0 0 San Francisco Vogelsong 5 7 3 3 1 2 Petit 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 3 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 0 Machi H,10 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Romo L,3-3 BS,4-24 1 2 2 2 0 0 Umpires—Home, Chris Segal; First, Mike Muchlinski; Second, Mark Wegner; Third, Mike Winters. T—3:23. A—41,704 (41,915).
ab r Blckmn cf 5 1 Barnes rf 4 1 Dickrsn lf 5 0 Mornea 1b4 1 Rutledg ss 4 0 McKnr c 4 1 RWhelr 3b 3 1 Culersn 3b0 0 LeMahi 2b 4 0 Brgmn p 1 0 Stubbs ph 1 0 Ottavin p 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 Tlwtzk ph 1 0
h bi 3 1 1 2 0 0 2 0 1 1 3 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Astros 7, Rays 3
tampa Bay Houston ab r h bi ab r h bi DJnngs cf 5 0 1 0 Fowler cf 5 1 1 2 Kiermr rf 4 2 2 0 Springr rf 3 1 0 0 Longori 3b 4 1 2 3 Singltn 1b 2 1 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 1 0 JCastro c 2 1 0 1 Zobrist lf 4 0 0 0 MDmn 3b 4 0 2 3 DeJess dh 2 0 1 0 Carter dh 4 0 0 0 SRdrgz dh 1 0 1 0 Presley lf 3 1 0 0 Joyce lf 3 0 1 0 MGnzlz 2b 4 2 3 0 Forsyth 2b 1 0 0 0 Villar ss 4 0 1 0 YEscor ss 4 0 0 0 Hanign c 4 0 1 0 Totals 36 3 10 3 Totals 31 7 7 6 tampa Bay 100 020 000—3 Houston 005 200 00x—7 E—Archer (1). DP—Tampa Bay 1. LOB— Tampa Bay 7, Houston 6. 2B—Kiermaier 2 (7), Loney (16), Fowler (10), M.Dominguez (11), Ma.Gonzalez (4). HR—Longoria (8). CS—Kiermaier (1). iP H R ER BB SO tampa Bay Archer L,3-4 3 3 6 1 3 2 C.Ramos 3 3 1 1 0 4 Oviedo 1 0 0 0 2 0 Yates 1 1 0 0 0 1 Houston Cosart W,6-5 7 9 3 3 1 2 Sipp 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Fields Zeid 1 0 0 0 0 0 Archer pitched to 1 batter in the 4th. HBP—by Archer (Springer). WP— Archer, Oviedo. Umpires—Home, Laz Diaz; First, Marcus Pattillo; Second, Mark Carlson; Third, Jeff Nelson. T—3:39. A—26,264 (42,060).
Pirates 8, Marlins 6
toronto 010 000 010—2 Baltimore 000 120 00x—3 h bi ab r h bi E—J.Francisco (7). DP—Baltimore 2 2 Furcal 2b 5 0 1 0 2. LOB—Toronto 9, Baltimore 7. 2 0 RJhnsn lf 4 0 0 0 2B—Encarnacion (17), Machado (6). 2 3 Stanton rf 3 0 0 0 HR—C.Davis (11). SB—Reyes (15). 1 0 McGeh 3b 4 1 1 0 SF—Hundley. iP H R ER BB SO 0 0 GJones 1b 2 1 1 0 3 0 Morris p 0 0 0 0 toronto 6 2-3 6 3 2 2 4 2 2 Lucas ph 1 0 0 0 Dickey L,6-5 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 Ozuna cf 3 2 2 3 Jenkins 3 0 Realmt c 4 0 1 1 Baltimore 1 1 Hchvrr ss 4 1 2 0 B.Norris W,6-5 6 2-3 7 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 Wolf p 1 0 1 0 O’Day H,8 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Solano ph 1 0 0 0 Matusz 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 JeBakr 1b 2 1 1 2 R.Webb H,10 Z.Britton S,7-8 1 0 0 0 1 1 Totals 40 8 18 8 Totals 34 6 10 6 Pittsburgh 020 330 000—8 Matusz pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Miami 000 200 004—6 HBP—by O’Day (Bautista), by B.Norris (Lawrie). DP—Pittsburgh 3, Miami 2. LOB— Umpires—Home, Mike Estabrook; Pittsburgh 11, Miami 5. 2B—Mercer (10). 3B—Ozuna (1). HR—A.McCutchen First, Hunter Wendelstedt; Second, Jerry Layne; Third, Mike DiMuro. (11), Mercer (4), Ozuna (12), Je.Baker T—3:02. A—33,901 (45,971). (2). S—Morton 2. Pittsburgh iP H R ER BB SO indians 3, Red Sox 2 Morton W,4-7 7 5 2 2 3 6 Cleveland Boston Pimentel 1 2-3 4 4 4 0 2 ab r h bi ab r h bi Grilli S,11-14 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Bourn cf 5 1 1 0 Holt rf 3 0 2 0 Miami iP H R ER BB SO ACarer ss 5 1 2 1 Bogarts 3b 4 1 1 0 Wolf L,1-3 4 9 5 5 2 2 Brantly lf 4 1 2 0 Pedroia 2b 3 1 1 0 Slowey 2 6 3 3 1 0 Kipnis 2b 5 0 3 0 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 1 1 Morris 2 2 0 0 0 3 Chsnhll 3b 3 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 1 0 M.Dunn 1 1 0 0 0 1 Swishr dh 4 0 1 0 JGoms lf 4 0 2 1 HBP—by Morton (R.Johnson), by DvMrp rf 4 0 0 0 Przyns c 4 0 0 0 Slowey (C.Stewart). CSantn 1b 2 0 1 1 JHerrr ss 3 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Tim Timmons; First, YGoms c 4 0 0 0 Nava ph 1 0 0 0 Tim Welke; Second, Todd Tichenor; BrdlyJr cf 4 0 1 0 Third, Clint Fagan. Totals 36 3 10 2 Totals 33 2 9 2 T—3:09. A—21,195 (37,442). Cleveland 001 000 200—3 Boston 100 001 000—2 Phillies 7, Cubs 4 E—Pierzynski (4). DP—Cleveland 3. Chicago Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h bi LOB—Cleveland 13, Boston 7. 2B—A. Lake cf 4 0 0 0 Revere cf 5 0 1 1 Cabrera (17), Swisher (12), C.Santana Ruggin lf 3 1 2 1 Rollins ss 4 1 1 0 (8), Holt (11), Pedroia (21), D.Ortiz Rizzo 1b 4 1 2 0 Utley 2b 4 1 1 1 (10). SB—Brantley (9), Kipnis (8), Holt SCastro ss 3 0 1 0 Howard 1b 3 0 0 0 (4). S—Swisher. iP H R ER BB SO Valuen 2b 4 1 2 2 Byrd rf 3 2 2 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 0 0 DBrwn lf 4 1 1 3 Cleveland 5 1-3 7 2 2 1 3 Olt 3b 4 1 1 1 Ruiz c 4 1 2 1 House 1 0 0 0 1 1 Whitsd c 3 0 1 0 Brignc 3b 4 1 2 0 Axford W,2-3 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 JoBakr ph 1 0 0 0 Buchnn p 1 0 0 0 Crockett H,1 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 EJcksn p 1 0 0 0 RCeden ph 1 0 0 0 Shaw H,10 1 0 0 0 0 2 Coghln ph 1 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0 Allen S,7-8 Sweeny ph1 0 0 0 Mayrry ph 1 0 0 0 Boston 6 7 1 1 2 5 Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 34 7 10 6 Peavy 2-3 2 2 0 1 0 Chicago 011 100 010—4 Breslow L,2-2 1 1 0 0 1 2 Philadelphia 130 030 00x—7 Tazawa 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 E—Lake (5). DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB— A.Miller Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 2 Chicago 5, Philadelphia 6. 2B—Byrd HBP—by Peavy (C.Santana, Brantley). (19), Brignac (4). 3B—Byrd (2). HR— Umpires—Home, Sean Barber; First, Ruggiano (2), Valbuena (4), Olt (10), Utley (5), D.Brown (5). SB—Rollins (11). Chris Guccione; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Tom Hallion. S—E.Jackson. iP H R ER BB SO T—3:24. A—37,181 (37,071). Chicago dodgers 6, diamondbacks 4 E.Jackson L,4-7 4 2-3 8 7 6 2 2 Arizona Los Angeles Villanueva 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 1 ab r h bi ab r h bi Russell 2 0 0 0 1 1 Gregrs ss 4 1 2 0 DGordn 2b 4 1 1 2 Philadelphia GParra rf 4 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 4 0 1 0 Buchanan W,2-3 5 6 3 3 1 5 Gldsch 1b 4 1 1 2 Puig rf 2 1 0 0 Hollands 1 0 0 0 1 0 MMntr c 4 1 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 1 2 0 De Fratus 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hill 2b 4 0 1 0 Kemp lf 4 1 1 1 Diekman 1 3 1 1 0 1 Prado 3b 4 1 3 2 Ethier cf 4 0 0 0 Papelbon S,15-16 1 0 0 0 0 2 DPerlt lf 4 0 0 0 A.Ellis c 2 1 1 0 Umpires—Home, Lance Barksdale; Campn cf 4 0 0 0 Rojas 3b 3 1 1 0 First, Kerwin Danley; Second, Gary Cllmntr p 2 0 0 0 Haren p 2 0 1 3 Cederstrom; Third, Mark Ripperger. Pachec ph 1 0 1 0 Howell p 0 0 0 0 T—3:04. A—31,524 (43,651). Harris p 0 0 0 0 BWilsn p 0 0 0 0 Thtchr p 0 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Cardinals 4, Nationals 1 Owings ph 1 0 0 0 Washington St. Louis 36 4 9 4 Totals 29 6 8 6 ab r h bi ab r h bi Totals 200 100 001—4 Span cf 4 0 0 0 MCrpnt 3b 3 1 1 1 Arizona 002 400 00x—6 Rendon 3b 4 1 1 0 M.Ellis 2b 3 0 1 0 Los Angeles DP—Arizona 1. LOB—Arizona 5, Los Werth rf 4 0 1 1 Hollidy lf 3 0 0 1 LaRoch 1b 3 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Angeles 3. 2B—Gregorius (1), Prado Zmrmn lf 3 0 1 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 (11), Haren (1). HR—Goldschmidt (14), Dsmnd ss 4 0 0 0 Craig rf 4 0 2 1 Prado (3), D.Gordon (2). SB—H.Ramirez Espinos 2b4 0 0 0 YMolin c 4 0 0 0 (9). CS—Puig (6). S—Haren. iP H R ER BB SO Loaton c 2 0 1 0 MAdms 1b 4 1 1 1 Strasrg p 1 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 1 0 Arizona Collmenter L,4-4 6 8 6 6 3 3 Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Bourjos cf 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Storen p 0 0 0 0 SMiller p 2 1 1 0 Harris 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jay ph-lf 1 1 1 0 Thatcher Totals 29 1 4 1 Totals 31 4 8 4 Los Angeles 6 1-3 8 3 3 0 2 Washington 100 000 000—1 Haren W,7-4 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 St. Louis 001 000 30x—4 Howell H,14 B.Wilson H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 DP—St. Louis 2. LOB—Washington 6, 1 1 1 1 0 1 St. Louis 7. 2B—Werth (13), M.Ellis (3), Jansen S,19-21 WP—Howell. Jh.Peralta (17), S.Miller (3). HR—Ma. Umpires—Home, Bill Welke; First, Bob Adams (5). SB—Werth (4). iP H R ER BB SO Davidson; Second, John Tumpane; Third, James Hoye. Washington Strasburg L,6-5 6 2-3 7 3 3 1 5 T—2:39. A—51,422 (56,000). Blevins 0 0 1 1 1 0 Padres 5, Mets 0 Storen 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 San diego New york X.Cedeno 1 0 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi St. Louis Venale rf 5 0 0 0 Tejada ss 4 0 1 0 S.Miller 6 2-3 4 1 1 4 7 ECarer ss 5 1 1 0 DnMrp 2b 4 0 0 0 Choate W,1-2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 3 1 1 0 DWrght 3b 2 0 0 0 Neshek H,8 1 0 0 0 0 0 Headly 3b 3 2 2 2 BAreu rf 3 0 0 0 Rosenthal S,19-22 1 0 0 0 1 1 Alonso 1b 5 0 2 1 Duda 1b 4 0 1 0 Blevins pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Grandl c 3 0 1 0 CYoung lf 4 0 0 0 HBP—by Storen (M.Ellis). WP—StrasMaybin cf 4 1 1 0 Tegrdn c 3 0 0 0 burg. PB—Lobaton. Amarst 2b 3 0 0 0 dnDkkr cf 2 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Rob Drake; First, Alan Hahn p 2 0 1 1 ZWhelr p 1 0 0 0 Porter; Second, Joe West; Third, Marty Medica ph 1 0 0 0 ABrwn ph 1 0 0 0 Foster. T—2:44. A—44,785 (45,399). Denorfi ph 0 0 0 0 Grndrs ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 9 4 Totals 29 0 2 0 Brewers 4, Reds 2 San diego 201 100 010—5 Cincinnati Milwaukee 000 000 000—0 ab r h bi ab r h bi New york BHmltn cf 3 2 2 1 Gennett 2b 4 1 2 0 E—D.Wright (8). DP—New York 2. LOB— San Diego 9, New York 7. 2B—Alonso 2 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0 Braun rf 4 1 1 2 Votto 1b 4 0 1 0 Lucroy c 3 1 0 0 (15). HR—Headley (6). SB—E.Cabrera Phillips 2b 4 0 2 1 CGomz cf 4 1 1 0 (13), Alonso (6). iP H R ER BB SO Bruce rf 3 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 3 0 1 0 Ludwck lf 3 0 1 0 KDavis lf 3 0 0 1 San diego 6 1 0 0 3 7 Berndn ph 1 0 0 0 Overay 1b 2 0 0 0 Hahn W,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 B.Pena c 3 0 1 0 RWeks ph 1 0 1 1 Thayer Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cozart ss 3 0 0 0 WSmith p 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 Latos p 2 0 0 0 Segura ss 3 0 0 0 Street MParr p 0 0 0 0 Gallard p 2 0 0 0 New york 5 6 4 4 3 4 Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 MrRynl 1b 1 0 0 0 Z.Wheeler L,2-7 2 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 7 2 Totals 30 4 6 4 Eveland 2 2 1 1 4 1 Cincinnati 100 000 010—2 Germen Milwaukee 000 000 22x—4 HBP—by Hahn (D.Wright). WP—Hahn, Z.Wheeler. DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—Cincinnati Umpires—Home, Dan Bellino; First, 4, Milwaukee 3. 2B—B.Hamilton (8), Tom Woodring; Second, Scott Barry; Ludwick (8), Gennett 2 (15). HR—B. Hamilton (3), Braun (10). CS—B.Hamil- Third, Mike Everitt. T—3:13. A—0 (41,922). ton (8), Bruce (1). iP H R ER BB SO Angels 11, Braves 6, 13 innings Cincinnati Los Angeles Atlanta Latos 6 2 0 0 0 4 ab r h bi ab r h bi Ondrusek BS,2-2 2-3 1 2 2 1 0 Calhon rf 6 2 2 1 Heywrd rf 7 1 2 2 M.Parra 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Trout cf 6 2 3 4 BUpton cf 6 1 2 2 Hoover L,1-5 1 2 2 2 0 1 Pujols 1b 6 2 3 4 FFrmn 1b 5 0 1 1 Milwaukee JHmltn lf 7 0 1 1 J.Upton lf 7 0 0 0 Gallardo 7 6 1 1 2 8 HKndrc 2b 6 1 1 0 Gattis c 5 1 3 1 W.Smith W,1-0 1 1 1 1 0 2 Aybar ss 6 2 4 1 Uggla pr 0 0 0 0 Fr.Rodriguez S,21 1 0 0 0 0 1 Freese 3b 4 0 1 0 Laird c 1 0 0 0 WP—M.Parra. J.Smith p 0 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b 5 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, Brian O’Nora; First, Frieri p 0 0 0 0 LaStell 2b 4 1 2 0 Doug Eddings; Second, Cory Blaser; Morin p 0 0 0 0 ASmns ss 6 1 1 0 Third, Marvin Hudson. Cron ph 1 0 0 0 Floyd p 2 0 1 0 T—2:55. A—40,507 (41,900). CWilsn ph 0 1 0 0 JSchafr ph 1 0 1 0 Iannett c 4 1 1 0 DCrpnt p 0 0 0 0 Orioles 3, Blue Jays 2 Richrds p 2 0 0 0 Doumit ph 1 1 1 0 toronto Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Ibanez ph 1 0 0 0 Kimrel p 0 0 0 0 Reyes ss 4 0 2 0 Markks rf 3 0 1 0 Jepsen p 0 0 0 0 R.Pena ph 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 MeCarr lf 5 0 0 0 Machd 3b 4 0 2 0 JMcDnl 3b 1 0 0 0 Hale p 50111611 Totals 52 6 15 6 Bautist rf 3 0 1 0 A.Jones cf 4 1 0 0 Totals Lind dh 3 1 1 0 C.Davis 1b 3 1 1 2 Los Angeles 000 102 110 100 5—11 000 000 014 100 0—6 DNavrr dh 1 0 0 0 N.Cruz lf 4 0 1 0 Atlanta Encrnc 1b 4 1 2 0 Lough pr-lf 0 0 0 0 E—Richards (3), B.Upton (5). DP—Los JFrncs 3b 3 0 0 0 Hardy ss 4 0 0 0 Angeles 2, Atlanta 2. LOB—Los Angeles StTllsn 2b 0 0 0 0 DYong dh 4 1 1 0 8, Atlanta 14. 2B—Trout (17), Pujols Lawrie 3b 3 0 2 1 Flahrty 2b 3 0 1 0 (16), F.Freeman (17). 3B—B.Upton (3). Thole c 3 0 0 1 Hundly c 2 0 0 1 HR—Trout (13), Pujols (16), Gattis (15). SB—Trout (7), Aybar (5). S—Jo.McDonGose cf 4 0 1 0 Totals 33 2 9 2 Totals 31 3 7 3 ald, C.Johnson. SF—Pujols. Pittsburgh ab r Polanc rf 5 1 SMarte lf 5 0 AMcCt cf 4 1 GSnchz 1b 3 0 I.Davis ph 1 0 JHrrsn 2b 5 1 Mercer ss 5 2 PAlvrz 3b 5 1 CStwrt c 4 2 Morton p 2 0 Pimntl p 1 0 Grilli p 0 0
Miami
iP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Richards 6 4 0 0 3 10 Jepsen 1 1 0 0 0 1 J.Smith 1 1 1 1 0 2 Frieri 0 5 4 4 0 0 Morin 1 0 0 0 1 1 Bedrosian BS,1-1 1 3 1 1 1 0 Salas W,4-0 2 1 0 0 1 1 Cor.Rasmus 1 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Floyd 6 1-3 7 4 4 0 4 Avilan 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Varvaro 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 J.Walden 1 2 1 0 0 0 D.Carpenter 1 1 0 0 0 2 Kimbrel 1 2 1 1 0 1 Hale L,2-1 2 1-3 3 5 5 2 0 S.Simmons 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Frieri pitched to 5 batters in the 9th. HBP—by Floyd (Iannetta), by Hale (Iannetta). WP—Floyd. PB—Laird. Balk—Bedrosian. Umpires—Home, Brian Gorman; First, Angel Campos; Second, Tony Randazzo; Third, David Rackley. T—4:57. A—48,559 (49,586).
MLB LEAdERS American League
BATTING — VMartinez, Detroit, .329; Rios, Texas, .328; Cano, Seattle, .328; MiCabrera, Detroit, .325; Brantley, Cleveland, .319; Altuve, Houston, .319; Beltre, Texas, .317. RUNS — Dozier, Minnesota, 55; Donaldson, Oakland, 52; Bautista, Toronto, 51; Brantley, Cleveland, 48; Kinsler, Detroit, 44; Trout, Los Angeles, 44; MeCabrera, Toronto, 43; NCruz, Baltimore, 43; Encarnacion, Toronto, 43. RBI — MiCabrera, Detroit, 55; NCruz, Baltimore, 55; Encarnacion, Toronto, 54; Moss, Oakland, 53; JAbreu, Chicago, 51; Donaldson, Oakland, 50; Trout, Los Angeles, 49. HITS — Altuve, Houston, 90; MeCabrera, Toronto, 86; Rios, Texas, 85; Markakis, Baltimore, 84; Brantley, Cleveland, 83; AJones, Baltimore, 82; AlRamirez, Chicago, 82. DOUBLES — MiCabrera, Detroit, 23; Plouffe, Minnesota, 22; Altuve, Houston, 21; Hosmer, Kansas City, 21; Pedroia, Boston, 21; EEscobar, Minnesota, 20; Kinsler, Detroit, 20. TRIPLES — Rios, Texas, 8; Bourn, Cleveland, 5; Trout, Los Angeles, 5; Gardner, New York, 4; 13 tied at 3. HOME RUNS — NCruz, Baltimore, 21; Encarnacion, Toronto, 20; JAbreu, Chicago, 19; Donaldson, Oakland, 17; VMartinez, Detroit, 17; Moss, Oakland, 16; Pujols, Los Angeles, 16. STOLEN BASES — Altuve, Houston, 24; RDavis, Detroit, 18; Ellsbury, New York, 18; AEscobar, Kansas City, 17; Andrus, Texas, 16; Reyes, Toronto, 15; Dozier, Minnesota, 14; Gardner, New York, 14. PITCHING — Tanaka, New York, 10-1; Buehrle, Toronto, 10-3; FHernandez, Seattle, 8-2; Scherzer, Detroit, 8-2; Keuchel, Houston, 8-3; Porcello, Detroit, 8-4; Lackey, Boston, 8-4. ERA — Tanaka, New York, 2.02; Darvish, Texas, 2.11; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.20; Buehrle, Toronto, 2.28; FHernandez, Seattle, 2.29; Keuchel, Houston, 2.38; Richards, Los Angeles, 2.87. STRIKEOUTS — FHernandez, Seattle, 112; Price, Tampa Bay, 111; Scherzer, Detroit, 106; Kluber, Cleveland, 104; Tanaka, New York, 103; Darvish, Texas, 101; Lester, Boston, 99. SAVES — Holland, Kansas City, 19; Rodney, Seattle, 18; Perkins, Minnesota, 17; DavRobertson, New York, 16; Soria, Texas, 14; Uehara, Boston, 14; Nathan, Detroit, 13.
National League
BATTING — Tulowitzki, Colorado, .355; Lucroy, Milwaukee, .333; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, .323; Puig, Los Angeles, .318; CGomez, Milwaukee, .310; Goldschmidt, Arizona, .309; Utley, Philadelphia, .308. RUNS — Tulowitzki, Colorado, 53; Pence, San Francisco, 51; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 50; Stanton, Miami, 48; CGomez, Milwaukee, 45; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 44; Rizzo, Chicago, 44. RBI — Stanton, Miami, 54; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 50; Blackmon, Colorado, 44; Morse, San Francisco, 44; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 43; Desmond, Washington, 42; Morneau, Colorado, 42; Ozuna, Miami, 42. HITS — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 85; DanMurphy, New York, 83; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 82; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 81; Pence, San Francisco, 81; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 78; CGomez, Milwaukee, 78; McGehee, Miami, 78; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 78. DOUBLES — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 27; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 25; Utley, Philadelphia, 24; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 21; Byrd, Philadelphia, 19; CGomez, Milwaukee, 19; Span, Washington, 19. TRIPLES — DGordon, Los Angeles, 6; BCrawford, San Francisco, 5; Yelich, Miami, 5; Pollock, Arizona, 4; Prado, Arizona, 4; Rendon, Washington, 4; ASimmons, Atlanta, 4; SSmith, San Diego, 4; Span, Washington, 4. HOME RUNS — Stanton, Miami, 18; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 17; Gattis, Atlanta, 15; Frazier, Cincinnati, 14; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 14; JUpton, Atlanta, 14; Desmond, Washington, 13; Morse, San Francisco, 13; Reynolds, Milwaukee, 13; Rizzo, Chicago, 13. STOLEN BASES — DGordon, Los Angeles, 36; BHamilton, Cincinnati, 25; Revere, Philadelphia, 18; EYoung, New York, 17; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 16; Bonifacio, Chicago, 13; ECabrera, San Diego, 13; Segura, Milwaukee, 13. PITCHING — Simon, Cincinnati, 9-3; Wainwright, St. Louis, 9-3; Greinke, Los Angeles, 8-3; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 8-4; 7 tied at 7. ERA — Hudson, San Francisco, 1.81; Cueto, Cincinnati, 1.85; Wainwright, St. Louis, 2.15; Beckett, Los Angeles, 2.35; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.41; Cashner, San Diego, 2.47; Niese, New York, 2.54. STRIKEOUTS — Strasburg, Washington, 113; Cueto, Cincinnati, 109; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 95; Greinke, Los Angeles, 92; Kennedy, San Diego, 91; Wainwright, St. Louis, 91; Miley, Arizona, 85. SAVES — FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 21; Romo, San Francisco, 20; Jansen, Los Angeles, 19; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 19; Kimbrel, Atlanta, 19; Street, San Diego, 18; AReed, Arizona, 16.
Baseball Calendar
July 15 — All-Star game, Minneapolis. July 18 — Deadline for amateur draft picks to sign. July 27 — Hall of Fame inductions, Cooperstown, N.Y. July 31 — Last day to trade a player without securing waivers. Aug. 12-14 — Owners’ meetings, Baltimore.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Rockies rally again, shock San Francisco The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Brandon Barnes hit a two-run, inside-the-park home run in the ninth inning and the Colorado Rockies rallied for the second Rockies 5 straight day to stun Giants 4 the San Francisco Giants 5-4 Saturday. Charlie Blackmon singled with two outs off Giants closer Sergio Romo (3-3) before Barnes lined a hit to center field. San Francisco’s Angel Pagan misplayed the ball and it skipped to the fence as Blackmon and Barnes raced around the bases. PHILLIES 7, CUBS 4 In Philadelphia, Jimmy Rollins singled in the fifth to pass Hall of Famer Mike Schmidt as Philadelphia’s hits leader and Domonic Brown capped the inning with a three-run homer. Rollins got hit No. 2,235 off Edwin Jackson, sending a 3-1 pitch into right field to open the fifth. The game was then delayed for an on-field celebration. Chase Utley also homered for Philadelphia, which has won four of five following a dismal 1-8 stretch.
Isotopes fall to New Orleans 8-1 at home Visiting New Orleans smacked four home runs and finished with 10 hits in an 8-1 win over Albuquerque in a Pacific Coast League game Saturday night at Isotopes Park. The Isotopes (31-38) got their lone run on a solo homer by Joc Pederson in the bottom of the third inning, the same frame the Zephyrs (37-32) scored six times to take control of the contest. Justin Bour and Kyle Jensen went back to back in the inning off Albuquerque starting pitcher Zach Lee (5-7). The righthander worked five frames, allowing six earned runs on
BREWERS 4, REDS 2 In Milwaukee, Ryan Braun hit a tworun home run in the eighth inning to lift Milwaukee to victory. With one out in the eighth inning, Scooter Gennett ended up with a double after blooping a ball to center that Billy Hamilton got his glove on but couldn’t hold. Braun then drove the first pitch
seven hits and a walk as his ERA rose to 4.86. Jensen also homered in the top of the sixth to chase Lee from the game. Jake Marisnick went deep two batters later to round out the scoring. Brad Hand (1-0) got the win on the mound for New Orleans. He got through six innings, allowing only four hits with eight strikouts. The teams will continue their fourgame series Sunday night. First pitch is scheduled for 6:05 p.m. The series finale will be at noon Monday. The New Mexican
from reliever J.J. Hoover (1-5) over the right field fence for his 10th homer of the season. CARDINALS 4, NATIONALS 1 In St. Louis, Matt Adams hit the goahead home run for the second straight game, connecting off Stephen Strasburg in St. Louis’ three-run seventh inning.
Adams snapped a 1-all tie with his sixth homer leading off the seventh, driving a 3-1 offering from Strasburg (6-5) over the wall in right-center. On Friday, he homered on his first swing since coming off the 15-day disabled list from a left calf strain, lifting St. Louis to a 1-0 victory. PIRATES 8, MARLINS 6 In Miami, Andrew McCutchen hit a three-run homer and Jody Mercer also went deep for Pittsburgh. Josh Harrison and Chris Stewart had three hits apiece, and the Pirates finished with 18 overall in their sixth consecutive game in double digits. Touted rookie Gregory Polanco had two hits and two RBIs. Marcell Ozuna and Jeff Baker each hit a two-run homer in the ninth for Miami. PADRES 5, METS 0 In New York, Jesse Hahn earned his first big league victory, pitching one-hit ball for six innings and contributing an RBI single to help San Diego end a fivegame losing streak. Hahn and San Diego’s bullpen limited the Mets to two hits: Ruben Tejada’s infield hit leading off the first and Lucas Duda’s bloop single down the left field line in the ninth.
SPORTS
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
WORLD CUP
D-5
WORLD CUP
The man who brought ‘futebol’ to Brazil Costa Rica
stuns fans, Uruguay
By John Leicester
The Associated Press
SãO PAULO — The World Cup unfolding on your screens owes a debt of gratitude to a man with a mighty handlebar mustache. Charles Miller stepped off a boat from England 120 years ago carrying two footballs, a pump to fill them, his football boots and a rulebook. From such unassuming beginnings, a nation-changing passion for futebol, or Brazilian football, was planted. Understandably, the great footballing history Brazil has since written for itself is celebrated and remembered far more than the British-educated pioneer whose Scottish expatriate father married a Brazilian. But Miller isn’t totally forgotten. A square bears his name in São Paulo, which hosted the inaugural game of this World Cup. A hawker selling buttercup-yellow Brazil jerseys from the trunk of his car there didn’t hesitate when asked who Miller was. “The guy who brought football to Brazil,” he responded without interrupting his brisk trade. The largest megacity in the southern hemisphere was a more unassuming place of some 300,000 people, many of them immigrants from Italy, when Miller knew it. Popular sports were cricket, gymnastics, cycling, rowing and a form of squash. English sailors who docked in Rio de Janeiro, pupils schooled by Jesuit priests, and British laborers who came to Brazil for factory and railway work also kicked around balls before Miller returned to São Paulo, his birthplace in 1874, from schooling in England. But Miller is hailed as the forefather of Brazilian football because he is credited for organizing the first proper match using the common set of rules first drawn up in a London tavern in 1863. That game on April 14, 1895, was played between teams formed of railway and gas company workers. Having first shooed oxen off the field, Miller’s São Paulo Railway team beat the Gas Company 4-2. Initially, some Brazilians were stupefied. In his biography of Miller, British author John Mills dug up a letter from a São Paulo journalist recounting to a Rio colleague that “mad as hatters” British sportsmen were getting together on weekends “to kick something around that looked like an oxen’s bladder, which gave them great satisfaction and displeasure when this kind of yellowish bladder got into a rectangle formed by posts.” But it caught like wildfire. Within a decade, Miller was telling friends back in England that São Paulo alone already had at least 60 clubs and crowds of several thousand for games in the city’s first league, which he helped found in 1901. São Paulo’s football museum on Charles Miller
The Associated Press
A young Brazil soccer fan visits the Hall of Origins on Thursday at the Soccer Museum in São Paulo, Brazil. It’s been 120 years since Charles Miller stepped off a boat from England carrying two footballs, an air pump to fill them, his football boots and a set of rules for the game. DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Square has a photo of him sitting with teammates, a heavy leather ball between his crossed legs and a huge mustache hiding his top lip. Museum director Daniela Alfonsi says one of the questions she gets most frequently is why football put down such deep and fruitful roots in Brazil. British empire builders traveled the globe, colonizing places like India, Australia and New Zealand. But none of those countries produced a Pele, won five World Cups or became footballobsessed like Brazil. “I always say that there is no one answer,” Alfonsi said. “It’s one of those miracles,” Mills said in a telephone interview. “Here, he [Miller] just found the perfect place to plant the seed.” Football’s simplicity is a big reason. Rolled up socks or paper can make a ball, anywhere flat can be the field. “You don’t have to use shoes, you don’t have to use the official ball,” Alfonsi noted. It also caught on as popular entertainment, cheaper than the theater. In his history of Brazilian football, author David Goldblatt records that by 1919, the Rio derby of Fluminense against
Flamengo was drawing 18,000 torcidas, the newly coined word for Brazilian fans, with another 5,000 locked outside the stadium without tickets. Football also has long been a social elevator out of poverty for players good enough to command wages. The sport also is a melting pot and shared rallying point for Brazil’s mix of races. Vasco da Gama won the Rio league, played the best football and drew the biggest crowds in 1923 with a team whose four stars were black, Goldblatt notes. Success in soccer helped carve out Brazil’s place in the world and firmed up Brazilians’ confidence in themselves and their nation. “Football was the first battle that the Brazil people entered and won,” said Alfonsi. “We transformed football into another thing, the Brazilian way.” Mills thinks Miller, who died in 1953, would be “filled with wonder” but perhaps also somewhat appalled if he was still alive for this World Cup. “He would marvel at the art and style of the Brazilian players,” he said. “But not at FIFA and the spending of hundreds of millions. He would be flabbergasted at that.”
FORTALEZA, Brazil — Costa Rica came from behind to stun Uruguay 3-1 Saturday at the World Cup, opening the tough Group D with a major upset. Uruguay had to leave Costa Rica 3 star striker Luis Suarez on the bench but went ahead Uruguay 1 when Edinson Cavani scored a penalty in the 24th minute. However, Costa Rica fought back after the break and lone striker Joel Campbell drive in a ball headed down by Celso Borges in the 54th to beat goalkeeper Fernando Muslera. Oscar Duarte dived past the outstretched foot of Uruguay’s Cristian Stuani to head in the winner for the Central Americans, and substitute Marcos Urena added the third with six minutes left, catching out Muslera to slot the ball in from a tight angle. It was Costa Rica’s first World Cup victory since beating China in the group stage in 2002. COLOMBIA 3, GREECE 0 In Belo Horizonte, Brazil, Colombia started its first World Cup campaign in 16 years in dazzling fashion, beating Greece 3-0 to open Group C on Saturday in front of a big, loud proColombian crowd. Left back Pablo Armero opened the scoring in the fifth minute when his deflected shot rolled past Greece goalkeeper Orestis Karnezis. Striker Teofilo Gutierrez poked in Colombia’s second goal from a deflected corner in the 58th and James Rodriguez capped it off with a low shot in stoppage time after a slick backheel flick from Juan Cuadrado. IVORY COAST 2, JAPAN 1 In Recife, Brazil, Didier Drogba came off the bench to inspire Ivory Coast to a 2-1 comeback victory over Japan in a World Cup Group C match on Saturday. Drogba, who had been carrying an injury, came on in the 62nd minute when his team was losing 1-0. The talismanic striker’s arrival immediately lifted the Ivory Coast team and Wilfried Bony and Gervinho scored with headers two minutes apart. Both goals were set up by curling crosses from defender Serge Aurier. Keisuke Honda’s first-half goal had given Japan the lead.
NBA
Role players Leonard, Diaw keep San Antonio rolling in Finals By Tim Reynolds
The Associated Press
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Tony Parker is still thankful for the role players who helped carry San Antonio to its last NBA title in 2007. There was Robert Horry, a seven-time champion and official finals good-luck charm if there ever was one. Michael Finley, who was hitting 3-pointers at a much better rate in those playoffs than he did in the regular season that year. Fabricio Oberto, who probably never had a play called for him but found ways to get things done. The Spurs had a ‘Big 3’ then, the same one that they have now. But three is rarely enough, and that’s been proven once again in these NBA Finals. Kawhi Leonard and Boris Diaw have been exactly what San Antonio needed in this matchup against the Miami Heat and might be the two biggest reasons why the Spurs are one win away from their fifth NBA championship. The Spurs
lead these finals 3-1 and will look to end Miami’s reign in Game 5 at home Sunday night. “If you want to win championships, obviously you need a ‘Big 3,’ ” Parker said. “But you need your role players to play great too. And every time we won championships in the past, the ‘Big 3,’ we played great, but we had great role players. … If you want to go all the way, you need the whole team to play great.” That’s what the Spurs are getting. Parker is leading the Spurs in scoring, Tim Duncan is leading in rebounding, and the Western Conference champions are outscoring Miami by 62 points so far with Manu Ginobili on the floor — so yes, the ‘Big 3’ is doing its part. But when the Spurs took control of the series by winning Games 3 and 4 in Miami, Leonard led the charge by averaging 24.5 points on 68 percent shooting. And Diaw has 23 assists so far in the series, more than anyone else and none probably better than his behind-the-back
offering out of the post that set Tiago Splitter up for a dunk in Game 4. There’s already talk that Leonard could be in line to win MVP of the finals. In an absolutely not-shocking development, he wanted no part of that talk. “It feels the same for me as any game going into it,” Leonard said of the anticipation level for Game 5. “All I’m thinking about is playing. I’m not worried about what if we win or lose, and we just want to go out and play.” Such is the Spurs’ way. The makeup of a player who perfectly fits into the San Antonio system has remained unchanged for the better part of two decades. He values team play over any individual accolade. He never says too much, particularly about himself. He stays in the moment, avoiding the urge to look ahead or behind. Leonard and Diaw meet all those characteristics. “San Antonio is playing great,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “They’re moving the
basketball. They’re exploiting where we’re normally good, so we have to do a better job. Even when we’ve made adjustments, they’ve still been able to stay in a rhythm and a flow.” It’s hard to remember now that Diaw couldn’t get minutes with the 2011-12 Charlotte Bobcats — a team that finished with the worst record in NBA history — in part because then-coach Paul Silas was frustrated with Diaw’s penchant for passing the ball instead of taking shots at times. So the Bobcats waived him late that season. The Spurs picked him up and in Game 4 of these finals, Diaw had more assists (nine) than shots (six). Go figure. “He really has a high basketball IQ ,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of Diaw. “I think he raises the level for everyone. At the defensive end, he’s pretty heady, not the quickest guy in the world, but really smart. Does his work early and understands what’s going on. At the offensive end, he can score inside and out, and he passes
COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
Irvine rides 3-run 8th to win over Texas and swept a super regional at Oklahoma State. OMAHA, Neb. — Taylor The Anteaters advanced to a Sparks hit his nation-leading winner’s game Monday against ninth triple of the season to fuel Louisville. UC Irvine’s three-run eighth Evan Brock (9-6) earned the inning Saturday in the Anteatwin, pitching 21/3 innings of noers’ 3-1 victory over Texas in the hit relief and striking out the opening game of the College side in the ninth. World Series. Texas scored its only run in The Anteaters had been the second inning on a squeeze shut out for seven innings play, and Thornhill hummed before they broke through along in the middle innings after against Texas starter Nathan working out of early trouble. Thornhill (8-3) and reliever The Anteaters stranded runJohn Curtiss. ners in scoring position each of One of the last four teams the first four innings, leaving a selected for the NCAA tournaman at third three times, and ment, UC Irvine (41-23) contin- then had only one man reach ued to amaze during a postseabase until the eighth. son run in which it knocked off Thornhill, a 13th-round draft No. 1 national seed Oregon State pick of the Phillies, allowed only The Associated Press
three runs over 37 innings in six starts before Sparks’ drove a ball into a 35-mph wind that landed on the fringe of the warning track in left center. It was his third hit of the game. Curtiss came on, and Chris Rabago drilled his first pitch up the middle to score Sparks. Jonathan Munoz added an RBI single for a two-run lead. UC Irvine starter Andrew Morales, a second-round pick of the Cardinals, allowed six hits over six innings, giving up Texas’ only run in the second. VANDERBILT 5, LOuISVILLE 3 In Omaha, Neb., Dansby Swanson doubled in two runs, and Adam Ravenelle pitched 2⅓ innings of shutout relief to help Vanderbilt beat Louisville.
The Commodores (46-19) won in a grinding, 3-hour, 40-minute game that saw Louisville (50-16) issue nine walks, its third-most of the season. One of the Cardinals’ two wild pitches produced a Vanderbilt run. Another run, and a big one, came home on a passed ball after the Commodores saw their 4-0 lead shrink to 4-3 in the seventh. It looked like catcher Kyle Gibson was setting up for a pitch-out, but reliever Kyle McGrath pitched to the plate and Gibson let the ball get past him, allowing Vince Conde to score. Carson Fulmer (7-1) worked six innings for the win, and Ravenelle retired seven of the last eight Louisville batters for his first save. Kyle Funkhouser (13-3) took the loss.
San Antonio Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard drives to the basket as Miami Heat forward Chris Andersen, center, and guard Ray Allen, left, defend, during Game 4 of the NBA Finals on Thursday in Miami. AP PHOTO/ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES
the ball really well. He’s a consummate team sort of guy.” Diaw is just the third player to have a game with at least nine rebounds and nine assists during these playoffs, with Oklahoma City stars Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook being the others. For his part, Diaw said he’s never cared about scoring. If the
N
team scores, that’s good enough for him. “It’s just moving the ball, playing with everybody,” Diaw said. “There is nobody really just watching. Everybody’s involved, and everybody gets the ball at some point. So it’s been good.” Good, indeed. One more win, and these Spurs officially become great.
NORTHERN NEW MEXICO COLLEGE FOUNDATION
6TH ANNUAL GOLF TOURNEY FRIDAY JUNE 20 2014 CALL 505 747.2147 REGISTER ONLINE at FOUNDATION. NNMC.EDU
TOWA GOLF
Proceeds from the Annual Golf Tournament help sustain and enhance programs and opportunities for students throughout northern New Mexico.
D-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 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
Sunny; breezy this afternoon
Tonight
Partly cloudy
84
Monday
Tuesday
Mostly sunny and breezy
50
Mostly sunny; breezy Partly sunny and in the p.m. windy
87/54
86/53
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
8%
14%
wind: SW 8-16 mph
wind: W 4-8 mph
Almanac
The following water statistics of June 12 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 5.273 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 6.550 City Wells: 0.002 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 11.823 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.310 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 34.0 percent of capacity; daily inflow 4.20 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
Mostly sunny
86/52
84/54
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
21%
17%
16%
285
64
Farmington 84/51
64
Española 89/61 Los Alamos 78/55 40
Santa Fe 84/50 Pecos 78/49
25
Albuquerque 89/62
25
56
Clayton 85/57
285
54
Clovis 89/62
54
285 380
Roswell 98/68
Ruidoso 82/62
25
Truth or Consequences 94/69 70
Las Cruces 95/72
70
54
380
Hobbs 99/69
285
Alamogordo 96/71
180
70
380
70
Carlsbad 103/72
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.
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes
Sat. High 104 ................................ Carlsbad Sat. Low 36 ................................. Angel Fire
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Hi/Lo W 97/75 s 93/59 s 73/36 s 99/63 s 104/66 s 69/48 s 83/47 s 92/61 s 75/54 s 91/60 pc 81/53 s 96/61 s 92/58 s 86/54 s 93/58 s 84/59 s 84/45 s 99/64 s 96/68 t
Hi/Lo W 96/71 pc 89/62 s 71/36 s 100/71 pc 103/72 pc 73/41 s 81/45 s 85/57 s 74/51 pc 89/62 pc 79/52 s 96/67 pc 89/61 s 84/51 s 93/62 pc 81/49 s 83/45 s 99/69 pc 95/72 pc
Hi/Lo W 94/67 s 90/63 s 71/39 s 96/73 pc 98/73 pc 75/40 s 84/49 s 93/62 pc 75/51 s 92/65 pc 80/54 s 94/64 s 89/62 s 89/54 s 95/67 pc 83/52 s 79/49 s 94/70 t 95/71 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 W 85/49 s 94/64 s 81/57 s 94/62 s 94/61 pc 86/54 s 83/48 s 92/59 pc 100/64 s 82/61 s 93/60 pc 90/55 s 98/61 s 81/46 s 97/71 s 95/62 s 98/70 s 83/56 s 82/56 s
Hi/Lo W 79/51 s 94/67 s 78/55 s 92/59 s 92/64 pc 82/48 s 69/39 s 88/57 s 98/68 pc 82/62 pc 90/59 s 91/64 s 93/62 s 79/42 s 94/69 s 91/64 s 96/70 pc 81/55 s 81/50 s
Hi/Lo W 84/54 s 94/68 s 81/55 s 94/60 s 93/66 pc 88/50 s 70/41 s 91/58 s 96/71 pc 81/60 s 93/62 pc 89/65 s 94/64 s 81/48 s 95/67 s 96/68 pc 95/69 s 84/55 s 82/54 s
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for June 15
23% wind: SSW 4-8 mph
Today’s UV index
54
180
16% wind: W 7-14 mph
Source:
60
25
Sunrise today ............................... 5:48 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:22 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 10:41 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 8:41 a.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 5:48 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 8:22 p.m. Moonrise Monday ....................... 11:24 p.m. Moonset Monday .......................... 9:50 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 5:48 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 8:22 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ............................... none Moonset Tuesday ....................... 10:58 a.m. Last
New
First
Full
June 19
June 27
July 5
July 12
The planets
W sh pc pc c pc pc c pc pc pc pc s pc t s pc s s pc pc pc s s
Hi/Lo 62/52 88/69 84/60 72/51 71/46 76/51 78/60 89/70 88/65 85/65 87/66 80/61 91/75 79/53 79/66 73/50 78/45 88/73 89/76 84/69 84/68 97/76 75/60
W sh pc s pc c pc s t pc t pc s pc s s pc s pc t pc t s pc
Hi/Lo 62/51 89/71 89/67 74/52 81/61 70/45 78/62 90/70 90/67 86/69 89/69 84/68 91/75 88/54 85/68 73/49 76/51 87/73 91/76 87/71 89/71 94/75 73/60
W sh t s t pc s s pc t pc t t pc s t sh s s s t pc s pc
Set 8:38 p.m. 5:35 p.m. 2:07 a.m. 10:19 p.m. 3:54 a.m. 2:48 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 58/47 87/65 75/64 67/50 67/53 70/50 77/58 91/74 86/63 79/52 76/47 69/50 92/75 79/56 76/48 72/52 77/49 87/74 91/71 74/52 81/61 94/75 75/59
Rise 6:26 a.m. 3:53 a.m. 2:31 p.m. 7:59 a.m. 5:16 p.m. 2:10 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
National cities 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
90/59
Humidity (Noon)
Pollen index
40
40
88/54
Humidity (Noon)
As of 6/13/2014 Pine .......................................... 43 Moderate Chenopods........................................... 3 Low Grass.................................................... 2 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................48
25
Las Vegas 79/51
60 60
87
412
Mostly sunny
Saturday’s rating ................................ Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 79/42
84
666
Gallup 81/49
Raton 82/48
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 81/53 pc 89/70 pc 92/72 t 86/62 pc 92/72 pc 91/74 pc 89/73 t 89/77 t 89/78 pc 70/49 pc 77/61 t 79/64 pc 66/58 t 74/62 r 86/70 pc 90/72 pc 88/74 t 88/73 t 74/66 pc 81/65 s 84/68 s 89/68 pc 89/72 t 91/74 pc 88/72 t 92/72 t 92/73 t 76/68 pc 84/63 s 88/70 s 103/83 s 104/80 s 104/79 s 72/52 pc 82/60 s 85/66 t 67/53 pc 66/49 c 63/52 pc 84/67 s 87/63 s 92/70 s 81/56 s 89/72 t 90/74 t 68/50 pc 80/59 s 83/54 s 92/75 pc 93/76 pc 92/76 pc 73/63 s 73/62 pc 70/60 pc 84/56 pc 69/54 pc 66/53 s 64/53 c 63/48 c 62/50 sh 68/58 t 77/58 r 86/69 t 75/65 pc 83/57 s 87/67 s 78/68 pc 85/67 s 91/72 s
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 Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 106 .................. Death Valley, CA Sat. Low: 25 ................. Boca Reservoir, CA
Ben Franklin’s famous experiment on June 15, 1752, in Philadelphia, demonstrated the existence of electricity. Franklin’s kite flying could have got him electrocuted.
Weather trivia™
weather instrument was named Q: What after Dorothy’s dog?
A: Toto. Designed to study tornadoes
Weather history
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 W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 64/58 pc 66/49 c 63/53 c 90/68 s 86/70 pc 86/69 s 102/75 s 108/81 s 109/79 s 91/84 c 87/80 t 92/80 t 86/72 s 76/64 pc 74/65 pc 93/69 pc 93/73 c 89/71 t 66/54 r 71/47 pc 74/55 pc 68/50 t 63/46 c 65/48 c 57/34 s 59/46 pc 60/43 s 90/72 s 97/77 s 100/73 s 89/76 pc 89/77 t 88/75 t 99/73 pc 98/78 pc 96/78 s 66/55 pc 69/54 pc 67/54 pc 66/54 pc 67/48 pc 66/51 pc 77/59 t 72/54 c 75/50 t 79/64 c 72/61 t 71/59 t 91/73 pc 89/71 t 90/71 t 93/83 pc 94/86 c 92/85 c 80/62 s 81/60 s 85/63 s 72/65 pc 71/63 pc 72/62 pc
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich
Hi/Lo 95/68 72/59 93/66 82/56 66/59 68/54 99/80 70/59 64/54 86/68 82/68 57/41 79/64 84/82 59/48 68/52 82/70 58/54 73/59 72/55
W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W s 93/69 s 91/66 s pc 65/51 pc 65/51 pc s 86/52 pc 82/57 s pc 78/52 t 76/55 t c 73/50 s 79/63 s sh 66/47 c 65/46 r pc 103/88 t 107/88 t pc 72/49 pc 73/50 pc pc 68/45 pc 70/46 pc s 79/70 pc 80/70 pc pc 79/64 t 78/63 t pc 66/37 pc 68/40 pc pc 83/62 s 83/64 c t 88/80 t 89/80 c s 71/51 pc 62/46 c r 64/42 sh 66/44 s pc 82/68 s 82/70 pc sh 64/50 c 63/50 pc pc 73/53 c 75/54 c c 74/44 c 76/46 t
Newsmakers
Kelly Clarkson
Girl born to Clarkson
West’s show almost starts on time
NEW YORK — Kelly Clarkson has something to sing about: She’s celebrating the birth of her first child. The Grammy winner announced the arrival of her daughter, named River Rose Blackstock, in a Saturday post on Twitter. She says the baby arrived Thursday, and she and her husband are “on cloud 9.” Her rep confirmed the tweet. The 32-year-old singer, known for hits like “Stronger” and “Since U Been Gone,” married music manager Brandon Blackstock last year.
MANCHESTER, Tenn. — With new wife Kim Kardashian looking on along with 80,000 fans, Kanye West showed up pretty much on time at the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival. West seemed to be in a good mood Friday night at the annual festival just three weeks after his marriage to Kardashian in Florence, Italy. The 37-year-old rapper made no mention of his new wife, but Kardashian was on hand for the show. She watched from the soundboard, about 50 yards from her husband on the main stage. She sang along and occasionally waved her hands with the crowd. The show comes six years after West famously began his first Bonnaroo appearance at 4:30 a.m. following technical delays with his set. West mentioned that appearance, again skewer- Kanye West performs ing Pearl Jam for delaying his start and in silhouette at the Bonnaroo Music and the media he says inaccurately porArts Festival on Fritrayed the reasons for his late start. day in Manchester, At one point, West stopped his set Tenn. WADE PAYNE and repeatedly shouted: “Where the THE ASSOCIATED PRESS press at? Where the press at?” There were many reporters on hand to catch the performance, marking what time he’d show up. West appeared 10 minutes after his listed start time and played a mix of hits.
Queen’s birthday celebrated
Queen Elizabeth II
LONDON — Hundreds of British soldiers in tall bearskin hats and ceremonial dress marched Saturday in London for the “Trooping the Color” parade, an annual display of pomp and pageantry that marks the official birthday of Queen Elizabeth II. The queen, who wore a pastel blue outfit, rode in a vintage horse-drawn carriage with her husband Prince Philip, starting from Buckingham Palace. She then inspected more than 1,000 soldiers at Horse Guards Parade. The queen turned 88 on April 21, her actual birth date, which is usually celebrated in private. The monarch traditionally marks her birthday publicly in June.
Bob Spude of Santa Fe took this photo of the gandy dancer statue, a railroad track worker, in front of the historic Atchison, Kan., depot at the other end of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad.
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
Saturday
Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
New Mexico weather
10
Water statistics
Friday
wind: WSW 10-20 mph wind: WSW 10-20 mph wind: WSW 10-20 mph wind: WSW 7-14 mph
Area rainfall
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.11” Month/year to date .................. 0.11”/1.12” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.36”/2.16” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.15”/1.66” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/4.84” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/1.91”
Thursday
Humidity (Noon)
12%
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 88°/49° Normal high/low ............................ 87°/51° Record high ............................... 95° in 2006 Record low ................................. 40° in 1969 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/2.11” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.42”/4.02” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.63”/3.31”
Wednesday
LASTING IMAGES END OF LINE
The Associated Press
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Private tours no longer just for wealthy travelers Once-in-lifetime trips found with Web, social media By Beth J. Harpaz
The Associated Press
NEW YORK had one night only in Medellin, Colombia. It was Christmas and I was determined to see the city’s famous holiday lights. An online search led me to LandVentureTravel.com, which specializes in private Medellin tours. By email, I booked a guide to meet my family at our hotel and take us to see the lights. I found good reviews for the service on other websites, but felt nervous. What if the guide didn’t show? What if his driving was bad? What if the neighborhoods were scary? But our guide was phenomenal. We not only loved the lights, but we genuinely connected with our guide about everything from the economy to politics. It was my first private tour, and it was a revelation — completely different from group tours with canned scripts and time wasted waiting for others to shop and use bathrooms. Private tours are no longer the exclusive domain of wealthy travelers and highend packages. Websites and social media have made it easy for travelers to book a personal guide. “There is a growing desire for this,” said Jamie Wong, founder of Vayable.com, one of the biggest sites connecting tourists with locals, offering 8,500 experiences in 800 cities. “We’re leaving the doubledecker buses and prefab, packaged tours and entering an era of eclecticism where niche is becoming mainstream.” Prices for personal tours are often but not always lower than group tours, ranging from $15 to hundreds of dollars, depending on location, duration and logistics. Tours4Tips charges nothing for walking tours of Santiago, Chile — participants pay what they wish at the end. Our tour for four in Medellin was $140 — $35 per person, or half the price of a Christmas lights bus tour in New York. Regardless of cost, personal tours are often more meaningful than packaged tours. You not only get a customized itinerary, but you get to meet a local. Robin Samora of Boston paid $100 each for four-hour tours in Budapest and Prague. “We loved that the tour was personalized, with what we liked to do,” she said. “We also had the ability to ask questions about any subject,” including
I
Taken on a private tour in 2011, this image shows a waterfall in Iceland. Private tours are a growing industry, no longer the exclusive domain of wealthy travelers. COURTESY VANESSA GIACOPPO
what it was like to grow up under communism. The hardest part is finding the tour of your dreams. Many travelers simply ask friends or use social media. Others search on blogs, Trip Advisor or Lonely Planet threads. Tours on Vayable and other sites — ToursByLocals, UrbanAdventures, Rent-AGuide, Nomaders — tend to fall into obvious categories such as food, shopping, major attractions, history, art, architecture and outdoor adventures. But Vayable also lets users request a custom itinerary, which local guides bid on. Elisse Goldstein-Clark, who owns the Elkhorn Inn in Eckman, W.Va., “was Googling to find foodie things to do in Rome — there are lots of foodie tours there. But I started reading about trufflehunting with a guide in Le Marche in rural Italy, and we changed our trip so we could go truffle-hunting.” She and her husband spent several hours on a bus getting there, but it ended up being “a foodie once-in-a-lifetime experience.” Jeremy Hanson, a New Yorker who just graduated from law school, often finds guides through local travel agencies in the place he’s visiting. “These types of guides don’t have the infrastructure to man the phone and put up a website,” he explained. In Nicaragua, he found a guide for a volcano hike “essentially just by walking up and down the street and speaking to people in my broken Spanish.” The only downside? Sometimes guides are too devoted. “We had one in Malacca, Malaysia, who wanted to show us every little detail,” he recalled with a laugh. “We tried to say, ‘We have to go to the bathroom, we have to go to eat.’ He said, ‘I’ll give you 15 minutes and then we’ll start the second half.’ ”
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and compliance – MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head
the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and serded approval of the current grant Human and Disability structure. Maintain the review and recommen Administration, in supervisory/ Work oversee and Social experience Education, (5) years of application process in Early Childhood Minimum of five Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme Elementary vices, services position in human administration provided nt and services manageme cal OR – TAOS appropriate clinical will provide direct psychologi Director will assure CLINICAL DIRECT , and training to The Clinical Director Center Clinical Healing Center. leadership, supervision Health, D.O.J. The Butterfly Healing Butterfly clinical Inc.’s settings, Optum of ENIPC, to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have New Must of participatio n. State requires in the organizatio Work. Licensed delivered by the network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed LPCC, or Ph.D. health/subESPANOLA ERQUE AND substance abuse counseling, mental in the State apy, IST – ALBUQU be licensed FAMILY THERAP and family therapy, group, psychother social work. Must , psychology or Will provide individual mgmt, etc. Mstrs in counseling als, case
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TITLE NEWS OTIS PHILLIPS
By Steven Kurutz The New York Times
I
n this age of rapid transformation, the house key has been surprisingly resistant to change. Cars have mostly switched to key fobs. Hotels and office buildings favor the pass card. And yet the little metal keys we carry around — part security device, part domestic totem — aren’t that different from the ones carried by our parents, their parents or their parents, going back to before the Civil War, when Linus Yale Jr. invented the cylinder lock, modifying an ancient Egyptian design. That was before the Internet of Things, an approach to life in which every household fixture, no matter how unsexy or long neglected by designers, can be rewired for digital living. And now, like the thermostat and the slow cooker, the house key and its mate, the frontdoor lock, are going “smart” too. In the last year or so, several electronic door locks from industry bigwigs like Schlage and Kwikset have hit the market, making it possible to unlock your home using a smartphone, tablet or computer. And two new locks created by tech startups, which are forthcoming, promise the hands-free ease of unlocking the door automatically as you approach it. Many experts say that any kind of lock-andkey system provides only good-enough security and is basically a deterrent for the honest. The dishonest often skip the front door altogether and break in through a window or another entry point. The true home fortress is protected by alarms — or gunmen. So the sales pitch for smart locks appears not to be additional security but convenience. No more fishing in your pockets for the keys while holding grocery bags. Or racing home to let the plumber in. Or, if you install the Schlage Touchscreen Deadbolt, paying a hardware store to make duplicate keys. Steve Down, who oversees residential security for Schlage, said the Touchscreen eliminates that whole experience. A pass code is entered, either in person or, if the lock is connected to a home-automation system, from miles away by smartphone, tablet or any other Internet connected device. Pass codes can be given to family members, houseguests and service providers. “You can have 30 pass codes at any one time,” Down said. “I’m guessing that most of us don’t need more than that.” Joshua Mangerson, who lives in Brooklyn, was one homeowner who was finding his key situation inconvenient. “Tedious” is how he described running down from the roof deck two floors above his apartment every time a guest showed up and needed to be buzzed into the building. Mangerson, who owns a company called Wavsys that builds cell service networks, considered installing an intercom on his roof deck, but he was quoted a price of $2,000. And giving every visitor a mechanical key in advance would have been impractical, if not impossible. Instead, he paid a few hundred dollars for KISI, an access-control system that, like the Schlage lock, allows users to control the lock with a smartphone and distribute “e-keys” to visitors. “Whenever my wife and I have a gettogether I say, ‘Here’s your key’ and send one to everybody,” Mangerson said. “Then I deactivate it the next day.” Bernhard Mehl, a co-founder of KISI, said the technology is aimed at urbanites, many of whom have busy work lives, travel frequently and live in apartment buildings, where it isn’t feasible to hide a spare key under a flower pot in the yard. Urbanites have a particular anxiety about losing their house keys, since the front door is often the only way in and neighbors are often strangers. Being asked to keep a friend’s spare set is a sacred duty. (In one episode of Seinfeld, Kramer broke “the covenant of the keys” by making himself too comfortable in Jerry’s apartment, that way losing his key-keeping privileges.) So far, Mehl and his partners have approached commercial and residential landlords, who they hope will install KISI as a control for the building’s exterior doors. Once the main door is KISI-equipped, Mehl said, they can expand to individual units within a building. Mangerson, an early adopter of KISI, said the technology has, in fact, liberated him. Instead of waiting for his building to adopt the technology, he hooked up the small, circular device to the intercom in his apartment, which allows him to control the door buzzer from his smartphone. Now he goes for walks or makes quick runs to the deli without carrying his keys. “I have my phone on me so I buzz myself back in,” he said. “I’m never locked out of my house.”
Electronic door locks, controlled by smartphones, are challenging the venerable key.
Your rights in real estate closings T
BRIAN STAUFFER THE NEW YORK TIMES
231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088
he last step in a transaction is the closing, but before that happens, do you know that you can shop for a settlement agent to prepare everything for the closing, or you can go with a recommendation from your real estate agent? It is your right to ask for a settlement agent, even in a cash transaction. Settlement agents are neutral parties. They cannot advise you on any issues or subjects. They cannot act as Realtors, lenders or attorneys. Just like attorneys, lenders and real estate brokers, settlement agents are required to be licensed in New Mexico. You can ask to see a copy of their individual license as well as the license of the settlement agent or company. In New Mexico, there are individuals who travel around the state closing real estate transactions for lenders. Be sure you are dealing with a licensed lender. There is a new sheriff in town: the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB has already investigated thousands of transactions in this country. It is very consumer-friendly. The CFPB website to file a complaint — see “Submit a Claim” at www.consumerfinance.gov/complaint — is something that the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development never got around to doing. At the actual closing, many things are going on. What does this mean? Everyone comes together at a point in time to transfer the title of the property to the buyer, where a mortgage is given by the buyer to the lender. Costs associated with the purchase of your new property should be provided to you before you actually put a real estate contract on the property. If not, ask why. The lender must provide you within three days a Good Faith Estimate (GFE) with the loan costs to prevent any surprises concerning costs. You should also get a booklet outlining the settlement process. If you don’t get a GFE and booklet, contact your lender and ask why. Timing is essential to prepare all of the ingredients for a successful closing. Settlement agents can be shopped around to find who you prefer to do business with. Because title insurance premiums and discounts are regulated in New Mexico, everyone must charge the same. If you have questions, ask the settlement agent or call the Office of the Superintendent of Insurance (827-4536) with your questions. The settlement agent orders preliminary title work to provide the status of the property for purchase. If title flaws are found, you will be alerted by the settlement agent in the form of a commitment or binder. The settlement agent is required to order payoff amounts from the existing lender. If requested by you, a survey will be ordered. In most cases, if a lender is involved, the lender will require a survey. If there is not a lender involved, you should still consider a survey, especially if metes and bounds and easements (permissible or recorded) are involved.
House key and its mate, the front-door lock, are going ‘smart’
Losing the key
The KEVO by Kwikset, a Bluetoothpowered lock that retains a cylinder for a mechanical key. HANDOUT
In the rush to link every life task to our smartphones, however, it may be wise to pause a moment and ask: Does the mechanical key really need to be replaced? After all, it’s a time-tested tool that requires no instruction manual and isn’t vulnerable to power failures. Beyond its essential function, the key has given us cultural catchphrases (latchkey kid, key party), an all-purpose metaphor (the key to success, the key to happiness) and a fragrance from Justin Bieber. And then there is the key exchange, a relationship benchmark so
freighted with meaning, it has played a role in numerous breakups and rom-coms. The key also features in civic ritual: Without it, what will future mayors present to visiting dignitaries — the iPhone to the city? And yet, it turns out that a lot of people have little or no affection for their keys. Take Don Norman, director of design at the University of California, San Diego, and the author of The Design of Everyday Things. “I’ve never liked the key,” Norman said. “I need a key for my home. I need a key for my office. I need a key for my bicycle. It’s something else I have to carry.” That most keys are more or less identical — small, silver- or brass-colored, a little scuffed — is evidence that people have little attachment to them, Norman added: “When you really like it and it’s part of you, you make it personal. The key, I don’t think is.” While he agreed that exchanging keys is an act invested with emotion, Norman said: “I don’t think the ritual requires the physical key. It is the exchange that is the source of emotion, not the physical key.” Even some professional locksmiths aren’t reluctant to replace the standard lock-and-key. Terry Whin-Yates, the president and chief executive of the Vancouver, British Columbiabased company Mr. Locksmith and an outspoken voice in the industry, said his front door has an electronic lock by Schlage that he hooked up to a home-automation system. “I can unlock my door, I can look at my house and I can turn lights on and off, all from
O P EN SUN DAY 1 2 - 2
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623 CAMINO DE LA LUZ | $699,000 NEW LISTING. Charming, classic Santa Fe adobe-style homewithviewsandrealstudio/guestsuite.#201402765 Bob Cardinale | 505.577.8418
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E
s Director of Athletic
u.edu/jobs n see: www.nmh Athletics. The Director of Athletjob descriptio a Director of For a complete personnel activities application for s. l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education experiNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE ative Balance . Preferred: Administr experience. that it offers. MINIMUM DII Life in the coaching e in those sports coaching experience to be competitiv e: Five (5) years fund raising. Collegiate Sports Science. field. Experienc ated success with al Leadership, or Exercise and Degree in any Demonstr University 3) athletics. Education iate 2) resume; ation, Business, ence in intercolleg a letter of interest; e numbers of 3 in Sports Administr must submit 1) Names/address/phon official Master’s degree PROCEDURE: Candidates transcripts; 5) s interviews and advanced degree with on-campu APPLICATION n; 4) Copies of in conjunction s interview. Employment Applicatio References will be contacted acceptance of the on-campu professional references. should be requested upon transcripts University New Mexico Highlands Human Resources Search Athletic Director Box 9000 87701 Las Vegas, NM jobs@nmhu.edu ns will be accepted: 242 or TDD 505-454-3003. Email applicatio R 505-454-3 or services call IS AN EEO EMPLOYE UNIVERSITY For disabled access HIGHLANDS NEW MEXICO
Otis Phillips has been in the title business since 1978 and has served as an independent title agent, in direct office management and in the underwriter arena in 14 states. Contact him at nmabop1@yahoo. com or 577-3601.
more Home This column runs regularly in Home, Santa Fe Real Estate Guide. Look for Home inside The New Mexican every first Sunday of the month and at www.santafenew mexican.com/life/home.
uide
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14 Ju ne 20
ENO TE SER IN MON ens er gard Contain CAPING LANDS
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851 MAGEE LANE | $762,000 Walk to town. Contemporary home with many architectural and hand-carved wood details. #201305751 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335
853 EAST CAMINO RANCHITOS | $1,275,000 Sophisticated and traditional design elements. 3BR, 3BA. House, casita and garage. #201400815 Roxanne Apple | 505.660.5998
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SANTA FE
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PROPERTIES
LocaLLy owned! InternatIonaLLy accLaImed! ®
open 1:30 to 4:00
santa fe elegance with sweeping views
open 1:00 to 3:30
on the sunrise golf course in las caMpanas
open 11:30 to 2:00
faBulous adoBeworks, inc. Model hoMe
price reduced! updated south capitol hoMe
153 cantera circle - This exceptional home is in a community just blocks from Canyon Road. There are sweeping, unobstructed views mountain and city light views, and the home is loaded with Santa Fe style, high ceilings and doors, and three portals. 3 br, 4 ba, 3,260 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Gonzales to Cantera. Second house on left. There is no sign, and a gate code needed. SantaFeProperties.com/201400804 gavin sayers 505.690.3070 $1,100,000
100 amberwood loop - This one-level home offers great outdoor living with a spacious portal, a viewing rooftop deck, a barbeque center and a walled, landscaped yard, close to the 5th and 6th holes looking to the majestic Sangres. 4 br, 4 ba, 4,250 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 1.59 acres. Directions: 599 to Camino La Tierra to Las Campanas Drive to Pojoaque Ridge to Amberwood. SantaFeProperties.com/201402082 suzy eskridge 505.310.4116 $1,050,000 laurie farber-condon 505.412.9912
132 Mejor lado - Newly completed by Aram Farber! A lit pilaster entry leads to an open-plan, split bedroom design with vigas and a large study, and the home has spectacular sweeping mountain views featuring the Sangre de Cristos, Jemez and Sandia Mountains, and the Cerrillos Hills. 3 br, 2 ba, 2,401 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 6.25 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201305092 sue garfitt 505.577.2007 $559,000 fred raznick 505.577.0143
1022 galisteo street -This updated South Capitol fourbedroom, three-bath adobe/frame home has a new price, and features an 'unreal' guest apartment and an oversized two-car garage. Come find your home on Galisteo Street, and enjoy easy access to all areas of Santa Fe. 2,525 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Cordova To Galisteo north To 1022 Galisteo on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201400868 John herbrand 505.955.1085 $525,000
open 2:15 to 4:00
open 1:00 to 3:00
open 1:00 to 3:00
la pradera Model hoMe
Best views in las lagunitas
6 vista lagunitas - Built on an elevated lot with panoramic views in Las Lagunitas, this home sits perfectly on a quiet 1.88-acre lot in a historic area. 6 br, 4 ba, 3,300 sq.ft., 3-car garage 1.88 acres. Directions: I-25 to Entrada La Cienega to West Frontage Road, go left to entrance for Las Lagunitas, go North to Rito Guicu, turn left and proceed to Vista Lagunitas. SantaFeProperties.com/201401180 John herbrand 505.955.1085 $520,000
on the golf course in quail run
3101 old pecos trail, unit 725 - Privately set back from the seventh fairway of the Quail Run golf course, this desirable ‘Casita C’ end-unit condominium is ready to move into and offers a peaceful location, inviting outdoor living spaces, and an open concept floor plan. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,417 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Old Pecos Trail to Quail Run. SantaFeProperties.com/201402556 richard schoegler 505.577.5112 $510,000
a santa fe classic, newlY priced
108 Jimenez - A Santa Fe classic behind adobe walls, with fantastic renovations and restoration, this home features thick adobe walls, two private patios, saltillo tile and flagstone floors with warm patina. There are three kivas, skylights, vigas and more on this walled property with entry gate and off-street parking. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,300 sq.ft. Directions: West San Francisco to Jimenez. SantaFeProperties.com/201305633 amber haskell 505.470.0923 $430,000
convenient to shopping, schools and i-25
49 caballo viejo, lot 174 - La Pradera Model Home The Sunflower Model, with its 13-foot living room ceiling, is aptly named for its bright sunny and open design with formal dining, gourmet kitchen and kiva fireplace. Come see the new homes in La Pradera, with three builders to choose from. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,856 sq.ft., 3-car garage. SantaFeProperties.com/201304129 Bob lee trujillo 505.470.0002 $369,900
LAND
watch the sunrise over the sangres
tesuque ridge - Offering unparalleled views and several building sites, this spectacular building opportunity is centered in the Tesuque Ridge subdivision. Build your dream home with privacy and luxury. Watch the sunrise over the Sangre de Cristos or have cocktails looking all the way to Colorado! 12.79 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201302905 deborah Bodelson 505.660.4442 $900,000 cary spier 505.690.2856
15 residential lots on colinas del sol
colinas del sol - Here are 15 glorious view lots to choose from, all approximately 12.5-acre parcels, starting at just $132,000. Horses are welcome, and water, electric and telephone service are to the lot line in this private subdivision. Potential attractive owner financing available, so call today and don’t let this opportunity pass you by. SantaFeProperties.com/201400168 sue garfitt 505.577.2007 $132,000 to $255,000 fred raznick 505.577.0143
Build Your hacienda & horse facilities
35 rancho alegre road - On the Turquoise Trail at the base of Lone Butte sits this fenced 12.5-acre rectangular lot with grand views of the Jemez Mountains and the Cerrillos Hills. This lot is an ideal spot for your southwest hacienda, only minutes from Santa Fe with easy I-25 access. Electric and phone lines are in front of the property. SantaFeProperties.com/201401999 suzy eskridge 505.310.4116 $135,000
152-plus acres, two lots with a roBust well
51 ojo de la vaca trail - These spectacular and private 153-plus acres has already been subdivided into two separate and contiguous 76-plus acre parcels. With diverse terrain and 19th century stone ruins, the property offers wonderful open meadows, large specimen pinon trees, ponderosa pines, gorgeous rock outcroppings and deep arroyos. SantaFeProperties.com/201401258 Matthew sargent 505.490.1718 $475,000
a new land listing with views
866 camino francisca - Santa Fe Est #1 - This premium building lot with drop dead gorgeous views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountain range is beautifully-located on 1.3 acres, with a nice building envelope. The lot has paved access, is close to town, underground utilities. Start planning your next Santa Fe home. SantaFeProperties.com/201402694 nancy lewis 505.984.7365 $247,000
las caMpanas golf course view lot
5 calle arbusto, lot no. 23 - This Las Campanas lot overlooks the 17th fairway of the Sunset Golf Course. It has spectacular 360-degree mountain views on a very buildable lot. Community amenities include athletic facilities, club house, golf, pool and tennis. Starting planning your perfect Las Campanas home now. 1.6 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/706056 deborah Bodelson 505.660.4442 $125,000 cary spier 505.690.2856
a pastoral setting in pecos
pecos - Enjoy 80 serene acres in Lower Colonias in Pecos, perfect for an equestrian retreat or compound. There are two large meadows and wonderful views, and the property is located less than an hour’s drive from Santa Fe. Start planning your dream home on this well-treed lot; telephone service is available, check with the local service provider. SantaFeProperties.com/201303869 gary wallace 505.577.0599 $325,000
new Mexico lot‘at its finest’
30 silver saddle road - Come experience your new homesite, and New Mexico living at its best! The property is 12.5 acres, and has a shared well, underground utilities and views, views, views! The septic is in place on this Highway 285 area residential lot, so bring your vision and create your own place in the sun this year. SantaFeProperties.com/201204892 heidi helm 505.984.7317 $210,000
a rare find
115 c old galisteo road - This wonderful horse property is located just minutes to town. A lovely 2.5-plus acre lot with great views of mountains, stunning sunsets, mature juniper and pinon trees, this residential lot features a gently sloping natural building envelope with shared well; please note: the property needs sewer service. 2.53 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201302938 audrey curry 505.670.1333 $110,000
1000 paseo de peralta . 216 washington ave . santa fe, nM 87501 • 505.982.4466 santafeproperties.com . faceBook.com/santafeproperties . luxuryportfolio.com All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act and Equal Opportunities Act. Santa Fe Properties (“SFP”) strives to confirm as reasonably practical all advertising information herein is correct but assumes no legal responsibility for accuracy and should be verified by Purchaser. SFP is not responsible for misinformation provided by its clients, misprints, or typographical errors. Prices herein are subject to change. Square footage amounts and lot sizes are approximates.
glorious land with a lovelY pond
Marker 382, highway 285 - This beautiful acreage has wonderful rock outcroppings and a pond, and offers expansive views. Most of the property is in Taos County, but a small section is in Rio Arriba. Please note that the fencing does not necessarily denote property lines. Call for a showing of this impressive parcel of land. 256 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201304808 gary wallace 505.577.0599 $299,000
lovelY walled lot with great JeMez views
505B Juniper drive - This rare vacant lot with Jemez views is planned to be part of a three-unit condo association. Build your own two- or three-story dream house in a walled setting only blocks from downtown. Plans are included for a two-story, two-bedroom, two-bath home. Create your custom home in the heart of historic Santa Fe. SantaFeProperties.com/201400088 Joan grossman 505.690.9445 $179,000
Beautiful lot with Magical views
91 e san Marcos road - San Marcos Pueblo Ranches - Enjoy spectacular views of Sangres, Jemez, Ortiz and Sandias from nine-plus acres ready for you to build solar, strawbale or whatever kind of construction you want. This is good horse property with really good covenants that protect views and value. 9.71 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201401223 cheryl davis 505.984.7318 $94,000
BE•THINK•BUY
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Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
NEW LISTING
461 anD 465 Camino De LaS animaS $2,995,000 Eastside estate at the end of Camino de Las Animas. The secluded, 1930s compound on 1.8 acres includes a main house, guest house, green houses and garages. A private well irrigates the grounds, gardens and fruit trees. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201402608
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4 Camino viLLenoS $1,995,000 One-of-a-kind Western-style home in Las Campanas with a pitched roof and breathtaking views. This magnificent 4,972 sq. ft. home plus 1,200 sq. ft. guest house was built by renowned Santa Fe designer/builder Roger Hunter. Johnnie Gillespie & Marion Skubi 505.660.8722 #201300162
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3 CaLLe San aCaCia $998,500 Clean modern lines, soaring ceilings, generous private quarters, and a distinctive Southwesterninfluenced style characterize this chic home northwest of town. The home features three inviting bedrooms. Deborah Day 505.954.5501 #201402689
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74 LoDge TRaiL $1,545,000 Gorgeous and immaculate custom home constructed by Tierra Concepts featuring 3 bedroom suites plus an office. Beautifully designed, great finishes, and the views to the west are awe-inspiring. Neil Lyon, CRB, CRS, GRI 505.954.5505 #201400501
N EW LISTING
16 Camino CaRuSo $895,000 Stunning, sophisticated 2,998 sq. ft. home in gated Casas de San Juan, with spectacular Sangre de Cristo Mountain views.With exquisite custom finishes throughout, this is a remarkable offering not to be missed. Shane Cronenweth 505.984.5158 #201402771
2 PLaza veLaSquez $865,000 A wonderful single-level home with panoramic views in prestigious Las Campanas. This home has a beautiful layout and incredible amenities including oversized portales, a full indoor spa, and two master suites.
Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201402777
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22 viSTa heRmoSa $1,000,000 Impeccably maintained Spanish-style hacienda in Vista Redonda with views. Grand 2-story living room with hardwood floors, Hacienda-style courtyard, separate guest wing plus a guest house, private master bedroom wing. Jim DeVille 505.984.5126 #201302642
NEW P RICE
6 via veCino $849,000 In the Tesuque Valley, this dramatic contemporary home, designed with energy efficiency in mind, has spectacular views, sophisticated finishes, grand interiors, and an outdoor entertaining area. Caroline D. Russell, CRS 505.954.5530 #201401538
We are proud to support Conservation International’s efforts to protect tropical forest areas and endangered ocean environments and sustain the fundamental benefits that nature provides. Sotheby’s International Realty donations have already helped to protect over 33,400 acres of forest and 650 square miles of ocean. conservation.org
OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 4
147 gonzaLeS, #22 $820,000 Views of mountains and blue sky can be enjoyed from this classic open-concept home blocks from the Plaza and Canyon Road. The sensible, light-filled floor plan includes three bedrooms and baths. Ashley Margetson 505.984.5186 #201402472 NEW LISTING
7 WiLLa CaTheR $600,000 Sophisticated home with contemporary flair! Features an open living area, split floor plan and a lovely patio. Enjoy 3-plus bedrooms, 3 baths with 2,500 sq. ft. and 2-car garage on 1.5 acres. Built in 2008. Emily Garcia 505.955.7963 #201402613
NEW PRICE
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87 Don FiLomeno $742,000 Gorgeous Spanish-style house at the end of the road in Chupadero bliss. Comes complete with 3 bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms in this serene private setting. Surrounded with cottonwood, oak and pinon trees. Ricky Allen 505.946.2855 #201402690
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206 vaLLe DeL SoL $538,000 NEW LISTING. Fabulous views of city lights and two mountain ranges can be enjoyed from this spacious, light-filled Valle del Sol townhome with three bedrooms, an open-plan living area, and a large enclosed patio. MaryJoy Ford 505.946.4043 #201401910
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316 CaLLe eSTaDo $660,000 Sophisticated and elegant, this fully-upgraded townhome just minutes from the Plaza is an exceptional find. Nestled in the trees; quiet and secluded, this home enjoys a terrific floor plan without stairs. The Santa Fe Team 505.988.2533 #201402289 N EW LISTING
447-1/2 Camino monTe viSTa $415,000 Eastside adobe combines traditional ambiance with gleaming contemporary upgrades to kitchen and second bath. One bedroom plus office/den. Includes a private courtyard and use of a lush common garden. SantaFeRealEstateConsultants505.231.4046#201402360
N EW LISTING
NEW LISTING
19 PiuTe $649,000 Sophisticated spaces for creative endeavors— artists and writers, gardeners and landscape designers, equestrians and intellectuals will be stimulated by this refreshing soft contemporary style. Chris Webster 505.780.9500 #201402607
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1032 hiCkox STReeT $340,000 Beautifully renovated 75-year-old home with new hardwood and tile floors, new thermal windows, a new kitchen, and new baths. Gated and walled for privacy. Two contiguous city lots are available. Beth Stephens 505.946.4042 #201304728
“All Things Real Estate”
12 - 2 pm on 1260-am & 101.5-Fm Streaming on aTReradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. O P E N SUNDAY 1 2 - 2
750-1/2 WeST manhaTTan avenue $339,500 Pied-a-terre in the Railyard District. Charming adobe residence with plentiful light, plaster walls and ceilings, tile and hardwood plank floors, attractive light fixtures, and a viga and coved ceiling in the kitchen. Alan & Anne Vorenberg 505.954.5515 #201302493
608 aveniDa viLLaheRmoSa , #209 $259,000 Move-in ready condo designed by world-famous Ricardo Legoretta. The unit includes 2 decks, high ceilings, an extra large garage, and beautiful built-in cabinetry throughout. Minutes to downtown. #201402546 JillBenjamin-Blankenship&JohnnieGillespie505.954.0729
SanTa Fe BRokeRageS 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc., Equal Housing Opportunity
6648 Camino Rojo $239,000 Four-bedroom, three-bath home with two-car garage. Fenced yard, granite counters, beautiful open floor plan, kiva fireplace, mountain views and located directly across the street from Santa Fe Country Club. Ron Lando-Brown 505.795.6174 #201402740
623 Camino De La Luz $699,000 NEW LISTING. Classic Santa Fe adobe-style home. Bob Cardinale 505.984.5114 #201402765
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
Featured Homes
Listings in the Santa Fe Area.
Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
ed! c u d e r e pric m open 1-3p
Presenting the Crown Jewel of Quail Run! Located on the first fairway with views of the Jemez mountains and sunsets, this single-level home in the coveted Quail Run community offers spacious living, with an open, flowing design of 3200 sq. feet. Each bedroom features a full, private bath, and access to the surrounding portals and courtyard areas. Enjoy summer days in your own private pool and hottub. $1,175,000 MLS# 201205402 Jeff SnodgraSS 505.577.4845 • jeff@snodgrassrealty.com Snodgrass Realty, LLC • 505.577.4845 320 Artist Rd. , Santa Fe, NM SnodgrassRealty.com
Open 1-4 ndO O c O l a c O Z
623 Avenida Colima The very best at Zocalo. Esquina floor plan - 2,428 sq ft, 3 bedrooms plus a loft and 3.5 baths. Each bedroom has its own full bath and walk-in closet. Unit offers ground level living with master suite, living, dining, kitchen, laundry and patio on ground floor. Guest bedrooms, loft and balconies upstairs.Attached two car garage. $584,500
Erik Garcia (505) 699-3288 • erikgarcia02@yahoo.com Garcia Real Estate • (505) 699-3288 82 Calle Agua Clara, Santa Fe, NM
anas Las Camp
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5 CHOCOLATE FLOWER - Sangre and Sandia Mountain Views 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths plus office and media in
gated Las Campanas. Chef’s kitchen with 2 refrigerators, 2 dishwashers, 2 ovens, ice maker and wine cooler. Directions—599, right at Camino la Tierra, left at West Wildflower, left at Sunflower gate into Las Campanas. Dial 0 – 5 – 5 – 5 for access. Through the gate, left at Chocolate Flower.
$1,095,000 MLS# 201401632
Tim Galvin (505) 795-5990 • Tim@GalvinSantaFe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
open 1-4 Deck p o t f o o R
Wing said to look closely at the gutters, particularly the joints between the gutters and the I know that preventive home downspouts and the gap between maintenance is the grown-up the gutters and the fascia board way to save money in the long that runs horizontally behind the term and keep rats out of my gutter. Winter snow and ice can pantry in the short term. All my strain gutters and dislodge the friends from Shangri-La tell me nails that keep everything tightly so. And let’s face it, they’re the in place against the house. only people on the planet who If the gutters or downspouts practice preventive home main- are clogged, have them cleaned tenance. out by someone with adequate But I’ll grant for the sake of insurance, and check them argument that it’s somehow a again for leaks and gaps during wise thing to spend a day lookthe next rain. ing for trouble around the house While you’re circling the — a gorgeous spring day, after a house, be sure you can squeeze long winter’s worth of crummy between the shrubs and the sidweather has beaten my house to ing of your home. “If there’s no scratch. air circulation there, the moisFine. But how exactly would ture stays against the siding and one know what to look for in promotes decay,” Lovering said. the first place, and how long Now step back and see if will it keep me from my couch? trees are closely encroaching on I posed these questions to your house or utility wires. If so, Donald Lovering, an inspector call a professional to have them with 33 years of experience, pruned. If you’re a do-it-yourself and owner of Advantage Home pruner, check with the utility Inspection Inc. in Massachubefore you assume anything setts; Bill Loden, president of about the voltage of the wires in question, and then call a tree the American Society of Home service anyway. Inspectors; and Charlie Wing, author of How Your House Next, examine the chimney. Works: A Visual Guide to Under- It should be topped by a cap, to standing and Maintaining Your keep rain out of the flue. If there Home. are cracks or gaps, have them My advisers said it doesn’t take repaired before next winter, long to conduct a fairly thorough when freezing water can further damage the masonry. Rememinspection. “If you take a few ber that damage later when minutes and look at your house you’re checking the fireplace. and say, ‘That just doesn’t look Next, use your screwdriver to right,’ you have a chance of getpoke at windowsills and other ting it repaired before the probwood trim. If the wood dents lems come,” Lovering said. easily or the paint looks flaked For those who are loath to or cracked, it’s time for wood sacrifice a sunny day for the task, my advisers said it actually repairs or new paint. helps to pick a rainy day. Grab If you find wood rot, Wing an umbrella and a pair of binoc- recommended checking the ulars and watch how your house website of West System Epoxy for articles on how to repair sheds water and where the rain spots where the wood may be settles once it’s off the house. The New York Times
1 Casa Del Oro Court New Price! Eldorado - Mahogany
flooring, travertine kitchen and baths, private master suite with viewing deck. Stainless appliances. Separate den with wood-stove insert. Community amenities. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,575 sq.ft., 1-car garage, 1.49 acres. Directions: Avenida Vista Grande to end of road. Left onto Avenida Casa Del Oro, first left is Casa Del Oro Court, house on culde -sac. $299,000 MLS# 201401760
Sam EScobEdo & Gary WallacE (505) 946-8310 • Gary.Wallace@sfprops.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com
difficult or costly to replace. Start at the bottom. Look for signs of water entry around the edges of the foundation. If you have a crawl space, inch your way in and inspect the insulation, especially around pipes, where even small gaps can cause major problems. Search also for mouse droppings or any other signs of animal intrusion. If you turn off the lights in the daytime, sunlight often points the way toward critter passageways. Upstairs, clear the areas beneath the kitchen sink and look for leaks, mold and other trouble. If you have a fireplace, open the damper and point a digital camera with a flash up the flue and check for soot and creosote. I saw a small amount of soot buildup, but without scraping the flue, it’s difficult to know whether it’s merely a thin layer of soot or a thicker layer of creosote, which is more dangerous. I scraped and found that I’m OK for another year. Likewise, if you haven’t already tested your air-conditioning system, do it immediately. If you have issues, you’ll get much faster repair service before the first heat wave. Those with window air-conditioners should check and straighten any bent cooling fins, Wing said, to improve the appliance’s performance and longevity. After checking bathroom sinks and showers for signs of leaks, head up to the attic with a flashlight. Look for places where the insulation may have been soaked by leaks, or spots of wood with mold, especially if you have bathroom vents that (unwisely) terminate in the attic, or entrance points for moist air from other parts of the house.
Neighborhood. Two houses, same street, different owners. House #1, 3330 sq ft, 4 BR + 3 Bath & House #2, 2775 sq ft, 3 BR + 2.5 bath. Each have guest corrals below stairs. Cul de sac location. E. Alameda to Gonzales Rd left into Las Barrancas,follow signs. SADDLE UP! $949,000 & $799,000 MLS# 201401381
Christina Barnet t (505) 983-7924 CHRISTINA & COMPANY • (505) 983-7924 santa Fe, nM
OPEN 1-3 EriE! d a r a m a C COOkiEs,
Condo 1610, 500 Rodeo Road 3 bedroom End Unit Super Cute Condo with You in mind! Rainbow Vision Spa and Club Amenities, fully fenced Flagstone Patio, Views of Sangres and Jemez Mountains, Gas Fireplace, AirConditioned, Solatube Skylites in kitchen and both bathrooms, parking at your front door! Come by for Cookies and a Condo Dad will delight in! (or Mom)! $149,900 MLS# 201401989
Mary Layne (505) 660-3540 • mary@mary-layne.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com
ABSOLUTE AUCTION
Looking for trouble at home can pay off By Bob Tedeschi
585 & 587 Camino Montebello Las Barrancas
Pecos River Ranch Retreat
1,616+/- Acre New Mexico Opportunity Roughly a Mile of Pecos River Frontage, plus Borders BLM & State Land Includes Land and a total of 70,000+/- square feet Living and Event Space Located 30 minutes from Santa Fe, New Mexico
For more information go to: www.ranchland.com/pecosriver
www.ranchland.com
v
877-207-9700
NORTHERN NEW MEXICO t n e c i if n g ma REAL ESTATE AUCTION B-019 La Sierra Road Mora, New Mexico
JULY 12 • 1PM
SPECTACULAR 3
BEDROOM MOUNTAIN HOME ON 10± ACRES Overlooking the Beautiful Mora Valley and Sangre De Cristo Mountain Range!
3400± Total Sq. Ft. 2400± Main Living Area Plus Garage & Lower Office Areas • 3 Bedroom, 3 Baths, 3 Fireplaces • Custom Oak Cabinets • Hammered Copper Accents throughout the Home • •
Private & Secluded Home Site • 2 Car Garage/ Workshop Area • Studio • Green House • Fruit Trees •
PROPERTY VIEWING DATES: Sat., June 14 & 28, 10a-4p or b or by appointment.
ADJACENT TO NATIONAL FOREST AND MINUTES TO TAOS, SANTA FE AND 3 MAJOR SKI AREAS Just 30 Mi. North of Las Vegas, 45 Mi. South of Taos and 95 Mi. Northwest of Santa Fe
10% Auction Fee
SELLING ABSOLUTE ! 800-223-4157 • www.birdsongauction.com
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Showcase Properties
Specialties in the Santa Fe Area.
Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate HANDCRAFTED FINERY
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708 and 708 B Camino Militar Privately located on two lots at the end of the road, this adobe home and guesthouse were constructed by New Mexico craftsmen and artisans using only high-quality indigenous materials. Highlights include southwesterly views, American Clay wall finishes, six fireplaces, handadzed antique beams, split cedar latillas, portales, stone countertops, custom doors, a water feature, a wine room, a private well, a master suite patio with a hot tub, a private office, and gorgeous landscaping. MLS# 201402069 Offered at $3,450,000 CHRIs WEBsTER 505.780.9500 chris.webster@sothebyshomes.com sotheby’s International Realty 505.988.2533 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
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This Truly FuncTional home should noT Be missed!
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1807 sun mountain This light, bright and airy territorial home is nestled in the foothills of Sun and Moon Mountain and adjacent to Museum Hill just off Old Santa Fe Trail. It is close to Museums, Canyon Road and outdoor trails galore, a most perfect location with a rural feel, yet minutes to town. This home will truly surprise you with its classic territorial design. Originally designed and built by a local architect, Laban Wingert, this home has many options for living. Two of the three bedrooms are interconnected with a small kitchenette and would function beautifully as separate guest quarters and can be completely sequestered from the rest of the home. The master suite is a one-of-a-kind, with a large sitting room or office which open to a tremendous view deck. Here one can see approximately 180 degrees from Sun and Moon Mountain to the Sandia and Ortiz Mountain Ranges.3 br, 3 ba, 3,094 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.49 acre. MLS #201402754 offered at $798,000 linda murphy · 505.984.7361 · linda@lindamurphy.com sanTa Fe properTies · 505.982.4466 · santaFeproperties.com
Key: Battery-controlled system introduces ‘level of uncertainty’ Continued from Page E-1 my iPhone,” Whin-Yates said. Yves Behar, a designer in San Francisco, isn’t a fan of the mechanical key, either, which he sees as cumbersome and easily lost. But the idea of replacing it with a keypad or another device that you have to operate before entering your home isn’t sufficiently “magical,” in his view. August Smart Lock, the accesscontrol product developed by the company of which Behar is a co-founder, is about the size and shape of a hockey puck and uses Bluetooth to communicate directly with your smartphone. The technology works with your existing lock and, for approved users, the lock opens automatically. (The concept is so futuristic that the release date has been delayed several times while kinks are being worked out, although Behar said it should soon be available.) “For me, it was about making the experience invisible,” he said. “You don’t even have to look at your phone.” Going keyless, of course, raises all sorts of practical concerns. How will you unlock your door if your smartphone is lost or stolen? Can you still operate the lock if there’s a power failure or your Wi-Fi goes down? What if your phone’s battery dies? Will door locks be susceptible to hackers? Each smart-lock maker has addressed these questions but not in ways that are always satisfying. August Smart Lock works even without power or Wi-Fi service, Behar said. And if a smartphone is lost or stolen, he added, the user can alert a service that will deactivate the August app. But to do so requires logging in to an
The August Smart Lock, which opens automatically for approved users. HANDOUT
Internet-enabled device. And as with losing a mechanical key, there is still the hassle of tracking down a friend or relative to let you in (or using an oldschool key, which defeats the point of the technology). When Mehl was asked how battery loss affects entry with KISI, he suggested going to a nearby Starbucks to recharge your phone, an inconvenient solution to a problem that doesn’t exist with a mechanical key. Security is another concern. Most, if not all, electronic locks have builtin encryption protection and other safeguards. KISI, for instance, is cloudbased and doesn’t require the user to store personal data like a home address. If someone stole your phone, Mehl said, the KISI app would appear
to the thief as anonymous as a plain metal key found on the street — except that personal information may be found elsewhere on the phone. But as Edward Tenner, a historian and visiting researcher at Rutgers and Princeton who has written extensively about technology and culture, pointed out, the larger trend in criminality has shifted away from acts like burglary toward those of computer-based crime. “In that sense,” Tenner said, “equipping your house with an electronic lock system is running in the wrong direction.” He added: “A totally electronic house door means that you have to be confident that the system is never going to fail. With any battery-controlled system, it introduces a level of uncertainty.”
The KISI door lock, which lets users distribute ‘e-keys’ to visitors. HANDOUT
Tenner believes it is the urban affluent who will embrace electronic locks as a symbol of luxury housing, while others may opt for a hybrid setup: a smartphone-controlled lock with a mechanical key as a backup. “You might be carrying fewer keys,” he said, “but you would keep carrying the keys, in case.” KEVO, the Bluetooth-powered lock introduced last year by Kwikset, retains a cylinder for a mechanical key, said Keith Brandon, the company’s director of residential access solutions. Although users can operate the lock with their smartphones, “it’s comfort-
ing for most consumers to have that mechanical backup,” he said. Whin-Yates, the professional locksmith, does just that. In addition to the Schlage electronic lock on his front door, he installed a second, mechanical Schlage deadbolt for when he is away from home for an extended period. “The key is still the backup,” WhinYates said. It may be disappearing, he added, but it will continue to be in use for a long time to come. “When they dig up our civilization,” he said, “they’re still going to find a bunch of bones and a set of keys.”
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Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/home/
Listings for today.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
Tano Norte
E-6
TAOS
Cam Acote
CIELO COLORADO
Vaq uer o Tr l
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
E-7
to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 SANTA FE
SANTA FE
SANTA FE
1550 SQ.FT. IN ELDORADO
FOR SALE 5.4 ACRE FEET, City of Santa Fe Certified Water Credits, below market. Call Mike, 505-603-2327.
VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY
on 1.45 acres. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Dog run. Kiva fireplace, garage. $309,000. Call Tom: 505-681-9082. So can you with a classified ad
LOTS & ACREAGE
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000 5,600 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE in mostly residential area. 3 rental areas with month-to-month tenants, paying 2100 plus utilities. 1 acre. $295,000. 505-470-5877
2.5 ACRES at Rabbit Road on Camino Cantando. Water well plus all utilities. Good Views! $270,000. 505-6034429 BEAUTIFUL ADOBE Home! Espanola, B Boneyard Rd. 2 Bedroom, 1431 sq.ft, 1 acre. Tons of charm and potential. Lease Option Purchase. 877-500-9517
OWNER FINANCE. CLOSE IN, 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH A/C, Good condition, large fenced lot, all city utilities, new carpet, tile. Large porches front and rear. $110,0000. $10,000 down, pay like rent. 2470 Agua Fria Street. 505-6700051
RANCHO VIEJO
ARCHITECT DESIGNED HOME & GUESTHOUSE Total 3600 sq.ft. 1345 Bishops Lodge Road RE Contract or Lease Option Possible. $936,900 Call Veronica, 505-316-2000 SUNDAY OPEN HOUSE, 1-3 CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $689,000. 505-795-3734
O
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
CONDO
SANTA FE
GREAT VALUE! 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, huge master suite. 1,850 sq.ft. $127,000. SANTA FE REALTY ULTD. 505-467-8829. rights at Capitol
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8, 2011
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A-8
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for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,
l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary last year. near E.J. Martinez the city morning check, and got a a Saturday he the fine by Sovcik paid in early December, fee because Then fora penalty cashed it. would be he owed letter saying late, and his case was his check a collections agency. who were of people later warded to of dozens SUV, paid up and He’s one by the speednotices of default. ticketed erroneous Robbin acknowledged Trafreceived Anthony Santa Fe Police Capt. problems in the he’s corsaid the accounting Program and exact number fic OperationsHe’s not sure the STOP not, but rected them. paid their automated they had who the of people got letters stating calls about tickets and he got many phone he admittedthis year. includfrom issue early of the default notices, resulted A number by Sovcik, mailed to the received or ing the onemade at City Hall the bank but not into Robpayments keeping, were deposited early city that to police for record during the forwarded Others originated Page A-9 bin said. CITATIONS, Please see
CALL 986-3010
Come and see this townhome that’s a steal at $242,000. 3 bedroom 2 ½ bath – tv area with over $60,000 of super extra features like tiled floors – vigas with tongue & grove. Call for an appointment. 988-5585
The New
Open Houses living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators
N
Committee some Resources and Natural the comMonday. also asked in towns The committeeclaims offices help resito better pany to establish the crisis affected by will be seeking compensation natural-gas during the dents who suffered Gas Co. officials for losses Mexico link on the outage. New phone line and running. said a claimswebsite is up and New Mexico company’s than two hours, legislators’ For more answered week’s caused last Gas representatives about whatduring bitterly cold questions Natural from El Pasothe huge service interruption An official weather. that manages gas across company Gas, the pipeline delivering interstate also spoke. a lot more the Southwest, Gas purchased New Mexico Page A-10 CRISIS, Please see State 2011 LEGISLATURE cut for the
OKs budget Panel Office. measures sponsor Auditor’s A-7 GOP newcomers reform. PAGE for ethics
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
Have a product or service to offer?
623 AVENIDA C O L IM A . The very best at Zocalo. Esquina floor plan2438 sq.ft., 3 bedrooms plus loft and 3.5 baths. Each bedroom has its own full bath and walk-in closet. Unit offers ground level living with master suite, living, dining, kitchen, laundry and patio on ground floor. Guest bedrooms, loft and balconies upstairs. $584,500. MLS#201402797 ERIK GARCIA 505-699-3288 erikgarcia02@yahoo.com Garcia Real Estate, 505-699-3288 82 Calle Agua Clara, Santa Fe
3.3 ACRES with shared well in place. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenance. $165,000. 505-470-5877 FSBO ELDORADO 1.83 acre lot. Easy builder, all utilities, gravel driveway. Perfect for solar. Paved access. #1 Garbosa. $89,500. 505471-4841
Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
CALL 986-3000
CONDO DOWTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $315,000. Jay, 505-4700351.
ESPANOLA O pen 6/21 & 6/28 10 a.m. 5 p.m. 1016 Los Arboles Cir., Española Spanish Beauty, Priced to Sell! 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Office 2000 sq.ft. Pueblo Style (2004) $274,900 Visit on Zillow.com! Call Owner 505-747-6891
MODULAR HOMES OK on these 1 acre lots. Located on 599, Just 5 miles from Santa Fe, utilities, shared well, great views. Price starting at $125,000 with owner financing available. Ron Sebesta Realty owner broker 505-577-4008 MLS # 4689.
Pasapick Art lecture
g homes: in freezin cracks’ Families h the ‘We fell throug
in North16,000 people without natural among the were still They are days of Mexico whohomes, despite five expected ern New their snow Constable With more than 20 perand Anne gas for heating Matlock less temperatures. relit freezing a fourth of Taos and had been Mexican Ellen Cavatoday, only Arriba County villages Gas Co. put and his housemate, their fireplacetheir cent of Rio New Mexico and pipefitin front of John Hubbard Near on Monday. plumbers huddled by noon stay warm. plea to to licensed naugh, were trying to on meters. out a message morning away them turn Monday they’ve posted a handwritten do not go ters to help Lucia Sanchez, public-information front gate, saying, “Please Page A-10 Meanwhile, FAMILIES, the gas company,us with no gas.” 75, live in PajaPlease see leave both again and San Ildefonso and Cavanaugh, Hubbard small inholding on a rito Village, west of the Rio Grande. Pueblo just
By Staci The New
at tax agenc
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $219,900.
Lois Mexico, by Skin of New Wells and Cady Under the author of in conjunction Rudnick, Modernism of New Southwestern Under the Skin(1933Wells with the exhibit 5:30 Art of Cady Mexico: The UNM Art Museum, Arts. 1953) at the of Spanish Colonial A-2 p.m., Museum in Calendar, More eventsin Pasatiempo and Fridays
Today
with Mostly cloudy, showers. snow afternoon 8. High 37, low PAGE A-14
y
Obituaries Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Friday, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 offiup for work Santa Fe, not showingfrom top department Sarah Martinez leave for Erlinda Ursula was to e-mails New Mexican. Esquibel Feb. 2 just who according said “Ollie” by The Lucero, 85, Mahesh agency about to return to Oliver Phillip cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one 4 sion in at and who was expected Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were “Trudy” on “essential” that afternoon Gertrude Santa Fe, next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday Lawler, 90, ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees Feb. 3 “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, 28 pages Two sections, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department Terrell No. 38 By Steve The resulting and Revenue 162nd year, No. 596-440 Mexican a day of personal Taxation The New Publication B-7 state employsome state will be docked for Local business for natural employees after “nonessential” B-8 Time Out confuLast week, home to ease demand 986-3010 was some Late paper: sent Sports B-1 983-3303 ees were utility crisis, there A-11 Main office: a Police notes gas amid A-12
sion sparks confu Shutdown workers may up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked
Index
Managing
Calendar
editor: Rob
A-2
Classifieds
Dean, 986-3033,
B-9
Comics B-14
Lotteries A-2
Design and
headlines:
Cynthia
Opinion
m
Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.co
rdean@sfnewmexican.com
NORTH WEST
NORTH EAST
O-14
S-49
1:30p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 17 Plaza Del Corazon - This sunny, authentic adobe home embodies Santa Fe’s most unforgettable style: gracious lines, traditional finishes & a spectacular view of the lake, golf course & sunsets. Furniture package availabl $699,000. MLS 201400480. (2 br, 3 ba, Las Campanas Drive to Clubhouse Drive then left on Plaza Del Corazon. The home is on the left. This is the ’Nambe Casita’) Laurie Farber-Condon 505-412-9912 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
1:30p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 2166 Paseo Iglesias - Custom Trey Jordan home with far reaching views. Home and gardens were designed with a Zen aesthetic, including a view deck, plus a covered outdoor dining area, peaceful gardens and water features. $819,000. MLS 201305164. (Hyde Park Road, right at Hyde Park Estates (La Entrada), right on Paseo Primero, left on Paseo Del Monte, left on Paseo Iglesias, house is on the left.) Jim DeVille 505-690-4815 Sotheby’s International Realty.
O-19
T-44
1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 21 Painted Horse - One of the truly great contemporary homes in all of Las Campanas, this dramatic and refined home features staggering Jemez views through the living room’s 25-foot wall of glass. $1,875,000. MLS 201402296. (Estates V. Second Wildhorse entrance, then take a left on Painted Horse to end of culde-sac.) Paul McDonald 505-780-1008 Sotheby’s International Realty.
1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 851 Magee Lane - Tucked away on a secret downtown street and nestled up in the hills is this extraordinary property renovated by acclaimed designer David Naylor with contemporary feel. An oasis of peace & tranquility. $762,000. MLS 201305751. (North on Bishops Lodge, right on Valley Drive, right on Vallecita, right on Magee) Abigail Davidson 505-570-0335 Sotheby’s International Realty.
P-17
U-41
1:00p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 100 Amberwood Loop - Located on the Sunrise Golf Course in Las Campanas, this one-level home offers great outdoor living with a spacious portal,rooftop view deck, a barbeque center and a walled, landscaped yard. $1,050,000. MLS 201402082. (4 br, 4 ba, 599 to Cam La Tierra to Las Campanas Dr to Pojoaque Ridge to Amberwood.) Suzy Eskridge & Laurie Farber-Condon 505-310-4116 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 206 Valle Del Sol - Fabulous views of city lights and two mountain ranges can be enjoyed from this spacious, light-filled Valle del Sol townhome with three bedrooms, an open-plan living area, and a large enclosed patio. $538,000. MLS 201401910. (Bishops Lodge Road, left on Murales, right on Valle Del Sol, left on first turn after La Marta to #206.) MaryJoy Ford 505577-0177 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Q-22
V-37
12:00p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 15 Rabbitbrush Road - Located on one of only 5 estate lots in La Serena (larger acreage and equestrian), this contemporary masterpiece features broad sweeping views and guarded privacy. Conceived with a daring open floor. $1,595,000. MLS 201400026. (Camino La Tierra to Los Suenos Trail to La Serena Trail to Rabbitbrush.) Doug Kaye/Owner 575-7702797 Sotheby’s International Realty.
1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 108 Jimenez - A Santa Fe classic behind adobe walls, with fantastic renovations and restoration, this home features thick adobe walls, two private patios, saltillo tile and flagstone floors with warm patina. $430,000. MLS 201305633. (2 br, 2 ba, West San Francisco to Jimenez.) Amber Haskell 505-470-0923 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
R-38 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 623 Avenida Colima - The very best at Zocalo. Immaculate Esquina floor plan 2,428 sq ft, 3 bedroom plus loft with 3.5 baths. Two level unit offers ground level living with master suite on first floor.Attached 2 car garage $584,500. NM 599 and exit Ridgetop Rd. Turn South and continue to stop sign (Camino Francisca). Turn Left on Camino Francisca and go down windy downhill road until it dead ends right onto the Zocalo Property. Straight through large entrance wall to Avenida Colima. 623 Avenida Colima on left. Erik Garcia 505-699-3288 Garcia Real Estate.
S-25 1:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 5 Chocolate Flower - Mountain views and a chef’s kitchen are highlights of this threebedroom home conveniently located in Estates II of Las Campanas. The private attached casita includes a kitchenette and full bath. $1,095,000. MLS 201401632. (Hwy 599, right at Camino la Tierra, left at West Wildflower (4way Stop). Left at Sunflower gate into Las Campanas. Call 0-5-5-5 for access. Through gate, left at Chocolate Flower to #5 on the left.) TIm Galvin 505-795-5990 Sotheby’s International Realty.
T-25 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 6 Via Nova - Remarkable contemporary home designed by Robert Zachary, AIA, is perfectly sited to capture Sangre de Cristo and Jemez mountain views. The home defines modern Santa Fe style, with outstanding finishes $775,000. MLS 201402614. (NM599 to Camino La Tierra, Left on W Frontage Rd, Right on Via Tessera, Left on Via Summa, Right on Via Nova) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.
U-21 2:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 22 Camino de Vecinos - This bright 1,912-square-foot Aldea townhome offers an openconcept living space, a charming kitchen, a lovely patio and garden, and three bedrooms, including a master suite with mountain views. $368,000. MLS 201401552. (599 to Frontage Road to Avenida Aldea, left on Botanica, then right on Camino de Vecinos.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.
X-44
SS-27
1:30p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 153 Cantera Circle - Exceptional home in a community just blocks from Canyon Road. Sweeping, unobstructed views mountain and city light views. Loaded with Santa Fe style. High ceilings and doors. Three portals. $1,100,000. MLS 201400804. (3 br, 4 ba, Gonzales to Cantera. Second house on left. No sign. Gate code needed.) Gavin Sayers 505-690-3070 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 6595 S. Richards Avenue - Four bedroom, 2 bath home in Rancho Viejo. Peco floor plan is roomy and versatile. Located next to a park and across street from a greenbelt. 2 car garage. Mature landscaping. $262,000. MLS 201401149. (South on Richards all the way to the end. House on left.) Tai Bixby 505-946-2121 Keller Williams Realty.
W-40
*** CANCELLED *** — 1020 Canyon Road, Unit G - This two-bedroom home of uncommon quality offers hardtroweled plaster walls, reclaimed ceiling beams, highend kitchen and bathroom fixtures, radiant heating, and charming outdoor spaces. $895,000. MLS 201402047. (Paseo de Peralta to Canyon Road) Stan Jones 505-3102426 Sotheby’s International Realty.
W-44
Z-45
1:00p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 585/587 Camino Montebello - Las Barrancas neighborhood. Two houses, same street, different owners. House #1, 3330 sq ft, 4 BR + 3 Bath & House #2, 2775 sq ft, 3 Br + 2.5 bath. Each have guest corrals below stairs. Saddle Up! $949,000. MLS 201401381. (take E Alameda to Gonzales Road. Turn left into Las Barrancas, lst left onto Vista de la Ciudad, lst right onto Camino Montebello, both houses @ mouth of cul de sac) Christina Barnett 505-983-7924 Christina & Company.
12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 623 Camino De La Luz - Charming and classic Santa Fe adobe-style home with foothills and ski valley views. Walking distance to Patrick Smith Park, Canyon Road and Plaza. A wonderful 3-bedroom, 3-bath home. $699,000. MLS 201402765. (Camino Cabra, right on Camino Delora, veer left onto Camino de la Luz to first (narrow) driveway on left.) Bob Cardinale 505577-8418 Sotheby’s International Realty.
W-45 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 147 Gonzales #22 - Views of mountains and blue sky can be enjoyed from this classic open-concept home blocks from the Plaza and Canyon Road. The sensible, light-filled floor plan includes three bedrooms and baths. $820,000. MLS 201402472. (Up Hyde Park Road or Palace to Gonzales; turn in at 147, then first right and second house on left.) Ashley Margetson 505-920-2300 Sotheby’s International Realty.
SOUTH WEST
X-35
3:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 833 Canada Ancha - On a hillside minutes from the Plaza with a view of city lights and mountains, this three-bedroom, 4,000-square-foot home has a soft contemporary feel and a spacious openconcept floor plan. $949,000. MLS 201402235. (Hyde Park Road north from Gonzales, right on Canada del Sur, through gate and left on Canada Ancha.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.
11:30a.m. - 2:00p.m. — 1032 Hickox Street - Beautifully renovated 75-year-old home with new hard wood and tile floors, new thermal windows, a new kitchen, and new baths. Gated and is walled for privacy. Two contiguous city lots are available. $340,000. MLS 201304728. Beth Stephens 505-501-3088 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Y-34
1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1414 Hyde Park Road - The quintessential, historic Santa Fe property: A turn-of-the century double adobe with views in all directions, and 21st century amenities. A magical and unique property. $1,595,000. MLS 201400768. (Hyde Park Road to Dempsey Water Line, cross bridge and stay left. House is on the left heading up.) TaRa Bloom 505-699-6773 Sotheby’s International Realty.
1:00p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 442 Nazario Street - Super energy efficient, light-filled home, rebuilt, expanded & insulated in 2007. Cook’s kitchen, 2 bdrm, 2 bath, privategarden. 15 foot ceilings, fans, kiva FP, diamond plaster, brick floors, loft $359,000. MLS 201402763. (Off Agua Fria Street 1 block west of Camino Alire (the street Payne’s Nursery is on). Stroll along the Santa Fe River Trail, play in Alto Park, shop at La Montanita Coop or walk to Tune-Up for a meal) Tom and Elise Noble 505-982-0596 Noble Real Estate.
V-48
BB-31
2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 930 Paseo De Andres - Only five minutes from downtown in the secure El Cañon subdivision, Los Arboles offers privacy, views, beautiful gardens, an orchard, and an amazing three-bedroom house sited on five acres. $1,295,000. MLS 201402276. Judith Ivey 505-577-5157 Sotheby’s International Realty.
1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1232 Osage - Outstanding Stamm home with all the features one would expect - kiva fireplace, vigas and wood ceilings in most all the rooms, even the kitchen and the bath. Detached one car garage. Very Clean!! $249,000. MLS 201402636. Carson & Carson 505-699-3112 Keller Williams Realty.
X-43 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1 Cerro Gordo - A - A close, pleasant meander to the Plaza, and only one block away from Canyon Road. Couldn’t be more perfect! Built in 2006, the home has all the modern amenities. Price just reduced!! $549,000. MLS 201401470. (Palace Avenue to Cerro Gordo-On the corner of Palace and Cerro Gordo) Rebecca Clay 505-629-6043 Barker Realty LLC. 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 707 East Palace Avenue #19 - New Listing in the La Vereda, close to canyon Rd. Perfect move-in condition is evident in this charming 750 sq. ft. condominium in a beautiful setting high in the treetops with sunset views. $399,000. MLS 201402473. (East Palace Ave to La Vereda Compound to #19 located in the Spanish Colonial building.) Kristina Lindstrom 505-577-9060 Barker Realty LLC.
Y-44
1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 321 W Manhattan AVE - Surprise! Residence in the heart of Downtown Santa Fe! Older home in a surprisingly quiet area between Guadalupe and Sandoval Streets. 3 Bedroom house and sep. casita. Super Location! Potential!! $359,000. MLS 201402066. (Cerrillos RD to Guadalupe ST. Right on Manhattan. Home is on Left.) Bernadette Parnell 505-6295126 Keller Williams Realty.
V-42
V-43
SOUTH EAST
OO-13 12:00p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 7326 Avenida El Nido - Come see what everyone is talking about. Homewise Homes are designed to fit your lifestyle and built to save 45% on utility costs. Energy saving features at a price you can afford. Six floor plans. $194,900. (From Airport Rd, turn onto Paseo del Sol WEST. Turn right onto Jaguar Rd to dead end, then turn right on Avenida El Nido.) Patrice Von Eschen 505-690-1811 Homewise, Inc.
BB-38
2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1214 Galisteo Parkway - Newly Priced and newly updated home on a large corner lot facing the rose garden park. Enjoy the walled backyard and Sangre views. Close to restaurants and shopping. $399,000. MLS 201401932. (3 br, 2 ba, From Cordova Road turn south on Galisteo Parkway.) Joan Grossman 505690-9445 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
CC-49
1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 2300 Wilderness Heights, Santa Fe, NM - View the City lights and the stars above from a prestigious and expansive home perched on a hill in the whispering pines. Ten minutes to shop, dine, or entertainment at our most famous venues. $1,599,000. MLS 201305896. (Old Santa Fe Trail to left on Camino del Monte Sol, right Camino Cruz Blanca to Wilderness Gate; left at Atalaya Hill Rd to Wilderness Heights. Hard left to end of road.) Anna Vanderlaan 505-231-3410 Keller Williams Realty.
NN-42
1:00p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 2258 Camino Iris - Rare view lot, large fenced yard, great portal and just wait until you discover what’s inside. You will be pleased! $414,000. MLS 201402260. (3 br, 2 ba, Left on Calle Espejo off Old Santa Fe Trail. Two blocks to Camino Iris, right to home.) David Woodard 505-920-2000 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
TT-48
1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 7731 Old Santa Fe Trail - Out toward the end of Old Santa Fe Trail overlooking the Village of Canada de Los Alamos on over seven acres is your next country home. Enjoy the spectacular Sangre and National Forest views. $349,000. MLS 201304605. (4 br, 2 ba, Old Santa Fe Trail) Dave Feldt 505-690-5162 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
ELDORADO WEST
H-53 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1 Casa Del Oro Court - Mahogany flooring, travertine kitchen and baths, private master suite with viewing deck. Stainless appliances. Separate den with wood-stove insert. Lovely gardens. Great views. Community amenities. $299,000. MLS 201401760. (2 br, 2 ba, Avenida Vista Grande to the end of the road. Turn left onto Avenida Casa Del Oro, first left is Casa Del Oro Court, house on cul-de -sac.) Sam Escobedo 505-9468310 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
H-59 12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 2 Aula Court - Beautiful passive solar plus a totally remodeled newer addition with clean lines & radiant heat. Main floor flows to flagstone patio & private gardens with fabulous sunset views bordered by greenbelt. $395,000. MLS 201402283. (3 br, 3 ba, Avenida Vista Grande West, Avenida de Compadres South, left on Aula Court.) Sue Garfitt 505-577-2007 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.
E-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds APARTMENTS FURNISHED
LOTS & ACREAGE Thirty Day Discount
for buyers of 640 acres in the Buckman Road, La Tierra area, bordering BLM. Price dropped over $500,000 to $1,425,000. Principals only call Mike Baker, Only 505-6901051. Sotheby’s International 505-955-7993. TWO 1.5 acre in town lots. Community water, natural gas and electricity on street. New Mexico Properties Homes 989-8860
COMMERCIAL SPACE
2 BEDROOM, $800 1 BEDROOM, $700
Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
.75 and 1.10 acres directly off the Arroyo Chamisa Trail. $85,000 each, utilities. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.
YOU RECOGNIZE THE BEST AND CAN AFFORD IT.
OPEN CONCEPT apartment, all bills paid including electric, gas, water, trash and satellite TV; like new appliances including stove, refrigerator, microwave and washer/dryer. Enclosed back yard, gated w/automatic gate. Outside yard maintenance included. Housekeeping services for $12/hour at your request. $50 extra per month October through March for pellets provided for you. Pets OK. First, last and security deposit. Will work with you on deposit in first six months of rental. Call 505-901-2268 or 505-467-9376 for more information.
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rufina Lane, balcony, fire place, laundry facility on site. $629 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Mann Street, front end of a duplex, near K-Mart. $699 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH free standing casita on Tesuque Drive with off-street parking and yard. $595 monthly.
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. FURNISHED. 1000 Square Feet. Yard, washer. Private, quiet. North end. Walk to Plaza. $1100 includes utilities, DSL, cable. 505-670-1306
MANUFACTURED HOMES RE
WASHER$420 / DRYER IN
CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 Very nice 2012, at Atocha Mobile Home park. 3 bedroom, 2 bathrooms, Ready to move in. $34,700, OBO. 505470-7083, 505-471-8166.
OUT OF TOWN NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME FOR SALE! Sits on one acre of land next to the Rio Grand. 505-995-0318 DETAILS: www.northernnewmexicohome.com
»rentals«
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
Located On the North Side of Town, Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fireplaces, private bathroom, ample parking. 1300 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1320 plus water and CAM or combined with the adjoining unit; total of 2100 square for $2100. Plus water and CAM
FOR LEASE- Classic adobe building in the heart of historic Canyon Road. Suitable for gallery or shop. Call Alex, 505-466-1929.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES SERENE 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Cochiti Lake townhouse, 900 sq.ft, big garage, mountain view. $875 plus gas, electric. Water included. 505-4650016.
TOWNHOUSE 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH.
CHECKFREE THIS OUT!! MOVES YOU IN Every Apt. Home
GUESTHOUSES
A 1, 2 &1 3Bedroom bedroom Apts. Apt. plus $0Available Security Deposit Fordeposit Qualified Applicants No required for & Utilities No deposit required for Utilities, How!! Ask Ask me me how! Call Today!COURT SAN MIGUEL
SANAPARTMENTS MIGUEL COURT 2029 CALLE LORCA APARTMENTS ( 12 Mo. Lease, 2029 CALLE LORCA required for special )
1 BEDROOM Casita, privacy, South Richards, Governor Miles. First, Last Rent, $300 Deposit, partly furnished. No Pets, non-smoking. References. 505-490-2851.
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. ONE BEDROOM, 1000 sq.ft. Guest house in scenic Rancho Alegre. Privacy, washing machine, propane, wood burning stove. $850 monthly. 505-438-0631.
986-3000
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
505471-8325 505-471-8325
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH in Pueblos del Sol subdivision. 2 car garage, fenced yard. Great neighborhood. $1300 monthly plus utilities. 505-577-7643 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH HOUSE for rent in Pecos, NM. Peaceful area. Wood stove. $700 monthly. Available immediately. Call: 505-617-5430, 617-0698 or 425-7967 evenings.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. $1,200 plus utilities. Open Floor Plan, brick Floors, sunny, passive solar, fenced, wood stove, 2 car garage, pets OK. Lone Butte Area, Steve 505-470-3238.
208 1/2 WEST San Francisco. 2200 sq.ft. Across from Burro Ally, Lensic Theater. Call Holli @ 9881815 RAILYARD AREA, CORNER GUADALUPE & MONTEZUMA. 1 BLOCK FROM NEW COUNTY COURTHOUSE. 1400 SQ.FT. PLUMBED FOR HAIR SALON, OFFICE, RETAIL, STUDIO SPACE. Good lighting. Limited off-street parking. NMREB Owner, (505)9831116.
PRIVATE, QUIET, 1,300 sq.ft. Guesthouse on 1.5 acres. Plaza 8 minutes, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, skylights, 2 patios, hiking, gardening, Wifi. $2,100 month plus. 505-992-0412
HOUSES UNFURNISHED PASEO BARRANCA, 3 bedroom, 4 bath, 3425 sq.ft., 2 car garage. $2500. Western Equities, 505-982-4201.
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
1200, 1300 squ.ft. 800 downstairs, 400-500 upstairs living area. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
LOT FOR RENT BEAUTIFUL 2-STORY HOME 2200 SQUARE FEET 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, 2 car garage, spacious loft. Tile, carpet, washer, dryer hook-ups. Available July 1. $1,400 monthly plus utilities. 505-5101031 CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $2895. Year lease. 505-7953734
LONG TERM RV SPACE FOR RENT in Santa Fe West Mobile Home Park. $295 deposit, $295 monthly plus utilities. Holds up to 40 foot RV. Call Tony at 505-471-2411.
MANUFACTURED HOMES Country Living on private property, 12 miles north of Santa Fe. 1-2 persons, no Pets, non-smoking, references. $850. 505-982-1584, 505-670-9433.
OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
$850 monthly, first & last month required. $300 damage deposit. 505577-0643, 505-577-5471.
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $275 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH plus additional office and large family room with fire place. 2 separate garages for plenty of storage, extra large lot, out of traffic near Siringo Road. $1199 monthly.
FOR LEASE OR SALE: OFFICE COMPLEX 4 Units, Various Sizes. 505-992-6123
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
CHARMING SANTA FE S T Y L E HOME, FURNISHED. Private, Rural. 5 minutes to Plaza. 1 bedroom. Available monthly starting 6/30. $1200 monthly plus utilities. 505216-8372
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities
Conveniently Located
2 bedrooms, 1 bath 800 sq.ft., on site laundry, $650 plus utilities.
Studio Apartment
HOUSES FURNISHED
LIVE IN STUDIOS
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH MOBILE HOME FOR RENT.
1 bath, full kitchen, carpet, fireplace, small yard. Rent plus utilities $500. TESUQUE ONE BEDROOM FURNISHED GUESTHOUSE near Shidoni. Vigas, saltillo tile, washer, dryer. No pets, non-smoking. $1095 including utilities. 505-982-5292
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Beautiful & Sunny! Tiled floors, countertops, washer, dryer. Southside near National Guard, $1,100 includes utilities. $1,100 deposit. 505-470-0162
2 story, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, gas fireplace, pergo & tile flooring, new kitchen appliances, washer, dryer hook-up, A/C, 2 car garage, fenced backyard. 1548 sq.ft. $1600 plus utilities.
SPEND THE summer relaxing in your new home at Las Palomas Apartments! Our pools, playgrounds, and BBQs are ready for you to enjoy. Call 888-482-8216 or stop by 2001 Hopewell today for a tour! Hablamos Espanol.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Beautiful & Sunny! Tiled floors, countertops, washer, dryer. Southside near National Guard, $1,100 includes utilities. $1,100 deposit. 505-470-0162
Newly Remodeled
COMMERCIAL SPACE
1 BEDROOM, FULLY FURNISHED CLEAN ADOBE CASITA. Fireplace, saltillo floors, private patio. Walk to Plaza. Non-smoking, no pets. $775, utilities paid. 505-988-9203.
Old Adobe Office
2-story. Vaulted ceiling plus loft. Kitchen with dining area. Gas stove. Central A/C & heat. Washer, Dryer. Single garage plus storage. Convenient to shopping, and Plaza. $1300 plus utilities. 505-501-1903
STUDIO, $675. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Utilities paid, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505-4710839
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
This live-work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities
CANYON ROAD
Santa Fe’s best estate site. 542 acres, 18 minutes from town, 360 degree views, bordering BLM, 6 minutes from Las Campanas. Call Mike Baker only! 505-690-1051. $6,750,000. Also tracts from 160 to 640 acres. SantaFeLandEmpire.com. Sotheby’s International Realty 505-955-7993
FOR SALE 14x56 2 bed, 1 bath 1983 Champion. Must be moved. $3,500 OBO.
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
APARTMENTS PART FURNISHED
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
TWO LARGE LOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF TOWN
to place your ad, call
Close to Downtown- Railyard
1 bedroom, 1 bath with small office, wood/tile floors, vigas, washer, dryer, sq.ft. 1179. $975 plus utilities. Private enclosed yard, 1 car only driveway.
East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,450 plus utilities. 505-982-2738. EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS, EAST ALAMEDA. Walk to Plaza. Pueblo-style. Washer, dryer. Kiva, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1500 sq.ft. Garage. Nonsmoking, no pets. $1800 monthly. 505-982-3907
ELDORADO 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME Radiant heat, cooler, 2 car garage. $1500 monthly, first, last, deposit $1000.00. NO PETS. Terry or Sheila 505471-4624 ELDORADO CHARMER with modern features. Open concept in kitchen, dining and living. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2250 sq.ft. $2100 monthly with deposit. 505-501-3225
ELDORADO Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, High-end contemporary home: Super Energy efficient. Southern views on 2 acres, near 285 entrance. 505-660-5603
ESPANOLA- EL LLANO AREA Recently built one bedroom apartment. Quiet neighborhood, full kitchen, large bedroom, A/C. Laundry hook-ups. Utilities included. $725. 505692-5616
ROOMMATE WANTED Roommate Wanted in a 3 bedroom, 2 bath House. $500 monthly, split utilities. Colores Del Sol Area. 505-470-7641. STORAGE SPACE 10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com
WAREHOUSES INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 750 SQUARE FEET FOR $600 TO 1500 SQUARE FEET FOR $1050. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, HALF BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166.
WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! Using
Studio Conveniently Located
We always Larger get results!
1 bath, full kitchen with beautiful tile counters, tile flooring, and gas burning stove. $550 plus utilities.
Type
Avenida De Las Americas
South Central Santa Fe. Two bedroom, 2.5 bath condominium. Off-street parking. Safe, quiet. Small backyard. Washer, dryer, Kiva. References required. $950 monthly. 505-603-1893
SMALL OFFICE IN BIG SPACE, Railyard, beautiful shared suite, ideal for media professionals. Conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $475 monthly. 505-690-5092
SOUTH OF CAPITOL NEIGHBORH O O D , 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Large backyard, washer, dryer. NO PETS, Non-smoking. $1,950, First, Last, Deposit. 208-870-5002.
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CLEANING
DUTCH LADY, reliable, educated, looking for live-in job with elderly person, 6 days, 6 nights. 505-877-5585
HOUSE & PET SITTING. Reasonable, Mature, Responsible. Live in Sol y Lomas area. Former Owner of Grooming store in NYC. 505-982-6392
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
GERALD’S JANITORIAL. Commerical- Residential.
Light yard care. 20 years experience, Renee Johnson, Chez Renee. 20 years experience: Alice & Bill Jennison, T e c o l a t e . Licensed. Gerald Swartz, 505-288-8180.
CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS
Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-310-7552.
HANDYMAN
GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE 505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072.
CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared!
MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE
Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062.
CONCRETE
CLEANING A+ Cleaning Service Homes, Office, Move-ins- Move-outs Window cleaning. Also, House and Pet sitting. Dependable, Experienced. $18 hourly. Julia, 505204-1677.
Clean Houses In and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile, Roofing. Greg, Nina, 920-0493.
So can you with a classified ad
CALL 986-3000
LANDSCAPING
STORAGE
FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898
I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.
HEALTH & FITNESS
PAINTING
SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER! 4 Sessions- 4 Weeks- $99! Santa Fe Spa gym or Fort Marcy gym. santafepersonaltrainer.com. 505-5778777 Ceon.
A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLE PRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RELIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-9821207
G & G Self Storage. Near I-25 and 599 bypass. 5x10, $45. 10x10, $70. Boat, trailer, RV spaces available. 505-424-7121
COOLER START-UPS, $45. PLUMBING SERVICE & NEW. HEATER & COOLER CHANGE-OUTS. Free estimates. Lic #31702. 505-316-0559
LANDSCAPING
ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.
HOMECRAFT PAINTING
TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 473-4129
YARD MAINTENANCE
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
HOW ’BOUT A ROSE FOR YOUR GARDEN... to clean-up, maintain, & improve. Just a call away! Rose, 4700162. Free estimates.
PLASTERING
IF YOU NEED A HELPING HAND CALL ANYTIME. YARD WORK, INTERIOR PAINTING, HAUL TRASH. SEAL COATING DRIVEWAY. 505-603-4840, 575-421-2538.
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877
REPAIR SERVICE
YARD MAINTENANCE
EXPERIENCED SPECIALIZED IN CONCRETE REPAIR, OVERLAYMENTS, INTERIORS, EXTERIORS. DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, BASKETBALL COURTS. WE USE SPECIAL FLOOR ADHESIVE TREATMENT. $7-10 PER SQ.FT. LICENSED, BONDED. 505-470-2636
WE GET RESULTS!
HAULING OR YARD WORK
HEATING-PLUMBING
Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed.
directory«
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.
GREENCARD LANDSCAPING Irrigation- New, Repairs Rock Work, Retaining Walls Total Landscape Design & Installs 505-310-0045, 505-995-0318 Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock www.greencardlandscaping.com
AL’S RV Center. Need someone to work on your RV? Call Al, over 42 years of experience. 505-203-6313, 505-577-1938.
ROOFING
Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.
Berry Clean - 505-501-3395
ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & PLASTERING SPECIALIST with 15 years of experience. For assistance, call Josue at 505-490-1601.
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986-3000
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Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »jobs«
ADMINISTRATIVE
to place your ad, call CONSTRUCTION
HOSPITALITY
ROOFERS & LABORERS WANTED.
LINE COOKS A.M. and P.M. Some experience required. Apply in person at TUNE-UP CAFE, 1115 Hickox St. between 2 p.m.- 5 p m. Ask for Jesùs.
Apply in person- 6:45 AM 39 Bisbee Court Unit 7 Brian McPartlon Roofing, LLC.
ADMINISTRATIVE SPECIALIST
Reports to CEO and responsible for a variety of duties, including Board meeting minutes. Require 5 years prior administrative experience, preferably in a health care, business or non-profit setting and high-level competency with Microsoft suite software. Send cover letter and resume to mpopp@lfmctr.org, by fax (505) 982-8440, or mail to La Familia Medical Center, 1035 Alto Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501, Attention: Human Resources
ACCOUNTING
DRIVERS DRIVER FULL-TIME, MONDAY- FRIDAY 8-5. Hourly and commission. Apply at: The Water Man, 2902 Rufina Street. Clean driving record a must. CDL not required.
EDUCATION Full-time Early Childhood Teacher needed for our Child Development Center, a four-star preschool program. Must have 45-hour course or higher. See job description and application at fpcsantafe.org/employment/.
Accountant
Position closes: June 19, 2014
CLASSIFIEDS
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
Controller, Full-time, AP, AR, General Ledger, Reconciliations, Financials, HR, Payroll. Must have a degree and 5 years experience or equivalent. QuickBooks and Excel a must. Please submit Cover Letter, Resume and References to employment@peyotebird.com
GRANTS ACCOUNTANT Full-time
Research and analyze accounting data, process financial transactions, generate funding invoices and prepare reports. Perform broad scope of professional accounting activities. Require B.A. in Accounting. Send resume to La Familia Medical Center, Human Resources, P.O. Box 5395, Santa Fe, NM 87502, or email to mpopp@lfmctr.org.
Full-time position working with families of Head Start students. Bilingual English and Spanish preferred. Excellent benefits. Apply on line at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook.
TEACHER ASSISTANT TEACHER I
Interim Business Office Manager
SFCC has an immediate opening for an experienced NSG Home Business Office Manager. Duties are as follows: To ensure the implementation of the day-to-day office functions Resp’s include maintain accurate census, records . Collect accounts receivables, Assist Corporate Personnel in balancing accounts. Attend daily benefits mgt. meetings, etc. Please Fax resume Administrator 505-988-1942, COME BY THE FACILITY AT: Harkle Rd, Santa Fe NM 87505 FILL OUT AN APPLICATION. EOE/AA/VETS
to OR 635 TO
LEGAL SECRETARY, CLERK, Part-time, (8 hours per week, 4 on Tuesday, 4 on Wednesday) To keep law papers organized for recently Retired Lawyer, Law Professor. Office, home in Casa Solana. Hourly rate negotiable. Send Resume, References to 221 Sereno Drive, SF, 87501.
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Excellent benefits. Apply on-line at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE- M- F- D- V- AA. Follow us on Facebook. VACANCY NOTICE
SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ATHLETIC TRAINER, GIFTED & TALENTED PROGRAM TEACHER, SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHER, MIDDLE SCHOOL MATH TEACHER, HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCE TEACHER, HIGH SCHOOL LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHER, MIDDLE SCHOOL HEALTH TEACHER (.5), DORM COUNSELOR, SCHOOL NURSE, RECREATION PREVENTION SPECIALIST. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL FILLED. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-9896353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: PGUARDIOLA@SFIS.K12.NM.US. WEBSITE FOR APPLICATION: WWW.SFIS.K12.NM.US.
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS NAMBÉ
Now Hiring Full-Time Cooks, Food Service Workers & Food Service Supervisors!
Consulting Pharmacist
A’viands Food & Services Management is currently hiring for FT Cooks, Food Service Workers and Food Service Supervisors to work in the food service operation at New Mexico Highlands University located in Las Vegas, NM. Interested applicants are encouraged to complete an online application at www.Passion4Foodservice.com or by calling 1-855-436-6373 (Hiring Code: 101)
Full-Time Position. Provides supervision of pharmacy operations and supportive services at assigned facilities throughout service area.
Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action/ Minorities/ Women/ Individual with Disabilities/ Protected Veteran Employer.
Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS, Toll free hotline 1-866-661-5491, EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA. Follow us on Facebook.
MANAGEMENT GREATER ALBUQUERQUE HOUSING PARTNERSHIP- EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR POSITION. Complete job description at www.abqgahp.org/executivesearch. Apply before June 30, 2014 by 5:00 pm.
MEDICAL DENTAL
Make your Move!
There’s never been a better time to join CHRISTUS St. Vincent Regional Medical Center in Santa Fe! Our continuing growth has created the following exciting career opportunities for experienced professionals:
CLINICAL ASSESSMENT COORDINATOR, BEHAVIORAL HEALTH
Diabetes Educator, FT & PRN Diabetes Program Coordinator
11-bed adult psychiatric unit in Santa Fe. Responsibilities include: assessments of psych patients, clinical interventions, and working with referral sources. Requires a master’s degree, preferably in social work, psychology or related field, or a BSN. Minimum two years experience working in behavioral health. Resume to: Jean Buttell, jean.buttell@horizonhealth.com; Fax: 1-505-913-6021. EOE
Sprouts Farmers Market
is Now Hiring for all Locations in New Mexico!
11 bed Adult inpatient psychiatric unit in Santa Fe, NM. Requires BSN (MSN preferred), and at least 3 years acute care inpatient psychiatric management experience in a hospital. National company with opportunity for growth. Resume to: Terry Good, Horizon Health, te rry .g o o d @ h o riz o n h e a lth .c o m ; Fax: 1-804-684-5663. EOE
We will be hiring for all positions: (Full-Time, Part-Time, Experienced and Entry-Level Opportunities)
Store Manager Assistant Store Manager 3rd Store Manager 4th Store Manager Cashiers & Baggers Grocery Department Bakery Department Bulk Department Meat Department Produce Department Dairy Department Deli Department Vitamin Department Front End Positions Apply Online! www.sprouts.com/careers
TREE EXPERTS
Join our 5-Star Health Grades top rated team and be part of a community-based, non-profit hospital that puts people first. View job specifications and apply online at www.stvin.org or call 505913-5730 for more information. To learn more about CHRISTUS St. Vincent Regional Medical Center please visit us at https://www.youtube.com/user/c hristusstvincent . EOE, M/ F/ D/ V.
NURSE MANAGER BEHAVIORAL HEALTH
FULL-TIME RN wanted for busy outpatient clinic, 5 days per week. No weekends or nights. Send resume: Box # 5006 c/o The New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe, NM 87504. blindbox3@sfnewmexican.com
A 50+ year tabletopgiftware company, is looking for WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATES for its busy Distribution Department 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.
Assists in the development, implementation, monitoring or measurement, and drug use evaluation criteria.
Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 Full-time year round positions with Head Start (children 3 to 5) or Early Head Start (children birth to 3). See website for job requirements.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! MEDICAL DENTAL
Sell your car in a hurry!
FAMILY SERVICES ASSISTANT
Primary Purpose: Performs, accounting and budgetary functions in support of an accounting system. Salary $19.1663 hourly - $28.7495 hourly. For a complete job description go to santafecountynm.gov or Contact 992-9880.
986-3000
E-9
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
Looking for self-motivated, dependable hard working tree trimmers, to prune, trim, shape, and remove ornamental trees and shrubs. Must be willing to follow safety procedures. Wages DOE Coates Tree Service 505-983-8019. Application online at www.coatestree.com submit to jobs@coatestree.com
RETAIL PART-TIME RETAIL ASSOCIATE needed days, weekends. Learn and tell story of our luxury fiber clothing. Six months retail experience preferred. Email: hr@peruvianconnection.com
SALES MARKETING
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS NEW VISTAS Early Intervention Specialist - bilingual candidates highly preferred. Please refer to www.newvistas.org for details. EOE
MATTRESS FIRM New Mexico is looking for a full time salesperson to join our #1 nationally ranked sales team. Please bring your Resume to 3517 Zafarano Drive, Suite E.
www.sfnmclassifieds.com
Head Cross Country Coach Men & Women
Northern New Mexico College is accepting applications for Head Cross Country Coach Men & Women. The head coach is responsible for the organization and management of a competitive NAIA cross country program in a manner consistent with the philosophy and objectives of the College, the Athletic Department, and the Association of Independent Institutions. The professional responsibilities are to oversee the organization, administration and recruitment of all phases of the Northern New Mexico College Cross Country program for both Men and Women. This will include planning, organizing and conduction practices; developing training schedules with the Athletic Director; developing and implementing a comprehensive recruiting program; oversight of scheduling and team travel arrangements; budgeting and financial aid management; implementation of programs to ensure academic and program integrity, retention and graduation of student-athletes; ensuring student-athlete welfare; developing and maintaining positive staff and community relations and participating in public relations and fundraising events for the college. This position reports directly to the Athletic Director. Required qualifications include a Bachelor’s degree; Master’s degree is preferred. Previous coaching experience and/or competitive experience in athletics at the collegiate level is required as well as a valid driver’s license and knowledge of NAIA rules & regulations. Candidates must possess the energy and ability to motivate recruits and student-athletes and have excellent organizational, computer and communication skills. A favorable background check is required. Northern New Mexico College is located in the Rocky Mountains of Northern New Mexico. It is located in the picturesque town of Espanola, NM, approximately 20 miles north of Santa Fe. Applicants must submit a letter of interest, transcripts, resume and names of three personal references electronically to: nicole.fresquez@nnmc.edu. Review of applications will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. Start date July 1, 2014. Northern New Mexico College is an Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer.
Chief Executive Officer
The Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Foundation located in Española, NM seeks a CEO to serve as catalyst and leader for education-related programs in Northern New Mexico. LANL Foundation has assets of $70 million, an annual budget of $6 million and 16 full-time, four part-time and four contract employees. The CEO maintains key relationships with Los Alamos National Security, LLC (LANS); Department of Energy (DOE); Congressional and New Mexico state legislative delegations and regional and national foundations to ensure the Foundation’s long-term success. Preferred candidate will have at least seven years fundraising experience in a foundation setting, five years in management and familiarity with Northern New Mexico. LANL Foundation, in its 17th year, focuses on systemic public/private investment strategies and investing in learning and human potential. See lanlfoundation.org for complete job description. EOE Application deadline: July 15. Email resume & vision for LANL Foundation to ceosearch@lanlfoundation.org or mail to LANL Foundation 1112 Plaza del Norte, Española, NM 87532. No phone calls please.
santafenewmexican.com
Become a team member with your local and independently owned newspaper!
Career Opportunities Available Submit job application or resume at: Human Resources - The Santa Fe New Mexican - 202 East Marcy Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501-2021 Or by email to: gbudenholzer@sfnewmexican.com You may access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD or pick up an application at above address or 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 Frontage Road. EOE 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303
E-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! PETS SUPPLIES
»animals«
TRADES
BUILDING MATERIALS
HEAT & COOLING
HVAC INSTALLERS FOR IMMEDIATE HIRE. EPA Certification required. We drug test. Apply in person at 2818 Industrial Road, 9- 3 pm MondayFriday.
BUILDING MATERIALS Gr e e n House kits, Flea Market kits, Landscaping & Fence materials. Vehicles, 5th-wheel Trailer. Contact Michael, 505-310-9382, OR 505-310-2866.
REFRIGERATED AIR COOLER. 10000 BTU, window model for medium size room. Like new. $150 OBO. 505-3163382, 505-316-3113.
PURE BREED English bulldog puppies for sale, all registered, AKC, shots, brindle markings, 8 weeks old. All puppies cost $450 each, call or text 575-322-8017.
LIKE NEW HOT TUB. Seats 4. Make me an offer! Carol, 505-471-0007.
Add a pic and sell it quick!
Snowmaker
We are seeking 10 experienced snowmakers to work temporarily from 10/1/14 to 3/31/15 in Red River, NM. Duties include: adjust air and water pressure to produce snow, move hose and monitor snowmaking nozzles, operate overthe-snow vehicles to move equipment and snow (no license required). Must have one full month experience as a snowmaker and be at least 18 years old. Pay is $9.35 hourly, 40 hours a week, 12 a.m. to 8 a.m. Wednesday-Sunday. Overtime and on-the-job training not available. To apply send resume to: Seasonal Labor Solutions Ltd, 490 Alder Creek Ct., Reno, NV 89511.
»announcements«
CLOTHING DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down baseball jersey. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205
WEDDING DRESS, Size 2. Ivory with Lace overlay, Corset back. 3 veils and under garments. $2,500, OBO. 505-577-2563, 505-577-9513.
COLLECTIBLES COLLECTOR PLATES, inherited from my Dad. Some very good ones. $30 plus value. Motivated, will sell for $510 each. 505-471-0007
LAWN & GARDEN
2 SOLID Wood Bunk Beds, 42"x81", $200 each. Wood Dining table, 32"x58", $25. 505-629-2690. 6 Dining chairs (set), tropical wood with carving. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.
MAGNI-SIGHT VIDEO Magnifier (CCTV) for the visually impaired. 19" Color auto focus with line markings. Fairly NEW. $1000 OBO. 505-288-8180 Professional Microdermabrasion (EXCELLEDERM) Machine $2,500, Silhouette facial, steaming, upright machine $2,500, Towel Caddy, $50, Parrafin Dip, $50. Excellent condition, firm offer, contact email only knoll2kat@aol.com.
FOUND WALLET at Smith’s on Pacheco Street. Call to verify. 505473-5560
LOST
Come to the Habitat ReStore to see our great variety of dining room sets. Gently used furniture, appliances and building supplies.
KIKI IS a small cat, 2 years old, with calico-tabby mixed fur. Her fur is short but thick and soft. She has been missing since the night of Wednesday, May 28th. She has a microchip but might not have her collar. If you see her, please call us at 920-3444. We miss her very much. Thank you, Cris, Tracy, and Rosemary.
Larger Type
986-3000 BREEDING SERVICE Triple Registered, gaited, homozygous tobiano stallion. Live spotted foal guaranteed. $350-$300. TBeckmon@SkiesRBlue.com www.SkiesRBlue.com 505-470-6345
Call Classifieds For Details Today!
986-3000
2 CASA DEL ORO PLACE
END OF AVENIDA VISTA GRANDE
6’ DIning Table. Tropical Wood, with carving along apron, very beautiful. Matching chairs available. $500. 505231-9133.
FOUND LARGE GRAY and WHITE LUNCH COOLER near Galisteo and St. Michaels. Call to identify what’s inside. 505-982-8765.
GARAGE SALE ELDORADO
will help your ad get noticed
TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
FOUND
Using
HORSES
FREE ROCK From Mountain Excavation. All sizes! Load by hand or your own loader! Red River, NM 575-7702307.
FURNITURE
»garage sale«
MISCELLANEOUS 5 HOT Water Solar Panels, 210 gallon tanks, electric hookup for non sunny days. Working well! $2,500 all together. 505-983-6947. BACK ISSUES OF MOTHER EARTH NEWS. .50 CENTS EACH. CALL 505231-9133.
PONY EXPRESS Trail Ride at Fort Stanton during Fort Stanton LIVE! July 10- 13. All meals included. Camping with your horse. Two rides daily, one gaited ride, one at a slower pace. Join in all of the Fort Stanton LIVE! events. For more information and registration look us up at www.lincolncountysheriffsposse.co m or contact Janet Aldrich 575-9374627.
LIVESTOCK TINY WHITE FLUFFY MALTESE. Papers, shots, health guarantee, potty pad trained. Non-Shedding, HypoAllergenic, $800- 1,000. $100 will hold. Great payment plan. I accept PayPalDebit-Credit Cards. Text for pictures. 575-910-1818. cingard1@hotmail.com.
PETS SUPPLIES 15" KOI FISH. Orange, black & white. Two big for my pond. $500 OBO. 505470-2018
SATURDAY - SUNDAY. 9 A.M. - 3 P.M.
QUALITY PUPPIES. POMERANIANS, CHIHUAHUAS, POODLES, MORKIES, SHORKIE, YORKIE-POOS, RAT TERRIER-YORKIE, COCK-A-POO-CHIS. $250- 1,000. 575-910-1818. Text for pictures. cingard1@hotmail.com. Registered, shots, health guarantee, potty pad trained. Great payment plan. PayPal-Debit-Credit cards. Hypo-Allergenic, Non-Shedding. RARE SHIHTZUS 2 BUFF CHAMPAGNE colored twins and 1 white with redorange markings. Show coat. Papers, shots, Health Guarantee, Potty pad trained. Paypal-Credit-Debit card. Non-Shedding, Hypo-Allergenic. $650. $100 will hold. 575-910-1818 . cingard@yahoo.com Text for pictures. TEA CUP AND TOY Yorkie pups. Papers, Shots, Health Guarantee. Potty pad trained. Great payment plan. PayPal, Debit-Credit cards. Nonshedding, Hypo-allergenic. $100 Deposit will hold. $1,000- 1,800. 575-9101818. Text for pictures: cingard@hotmail.com
Tools, flat panel monitors, kitchenware, furniture, more. Second entrance to Eldorado. Avenida Vista Grande to very end. At stop sign drive forward.
LA CASA FINA CONSIGNMENT
7000 Sq.Ft. Fine Furniture & Antiques, 821 W. San Mateo Road, Santa Fe. OPEN DAILY. LOTS OF ITEMS ON SALE. ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENT! Down sizing? Moving? We can help turn your items into cash! Call NOW, 505-983-0042.
Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter
YORKIE PUPPIES: Male $750; Females, $800. Registered. First shots. Ready 6/14.
CAFE DOORS, Walnut. With all hardware. $20. 505-986-1199
when you buy a
KING BEDSPREAD with skirt. Pale green. Luxury. Just cleaned. $35. 505986-1199
LOST 6/10: Large male shepherd-mix. "FOREST". Very friendly. La Barbaria Road & Old Santa Fe Trail area. Blue collar. 505-665-9871
BORN 5/14/2014. Available 7/9/2014. Will have six weeks shots, vet check and AKC papers. $600. Call 505-4697530, 505-469-0055. Taking deposits. CUSTOM-MADE SECTIONAL. 4 pieces including ottoman. White fabric. 84" on side. Very clean. Very lightly used. Excellent condition. Removable arm covers. $850. CASH ONLY. Call 843-817-6846 for more information. ERNEST THOMPSON Trastero. Valued at over of $10,000. Yours for $4,000. Reasonable offers considered. 505699-2885 (Voice or Text)
LOST BOXER, Female, brown with some white. Lost in Los Alamos on Cabra Loop Trail on May 31st. 505220-4432. LOST KEYS, JUNE 4TH. Toyota, 2 USPS, others. SANTA FE SKI AREA PARKING LOT TO NAMBE LAKE. 505662-1697
PERSONALS
HAND-PAINTED CABINET. Beautiful exotic floral decoration. Drawer, two shelves. Brand new. 24"x32"x14". $390 OBO. (518)763-2401 KING BED FRAME, head & foot. Black tubular iron. Modern. $40. 505-9861199
LARGE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER. Space for tv, stereo, and storage. Smokey glass doors. $100 OBO. 505231-9133.
ANTIQUES $4,250 (OBO) Cash Only. 1880-1890s antique upright PIANO made by "J. Bauer Co. Chicago S/N 27583". Buyer is responsible for loading and transporation 1000 lbs. (505) 8042459 MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment: 505-699-9222.
BUILDING MATERIALS RECYLCLED ASPHALT (millings). $18 per cubic yard. Free deliver with 11 yard purchase. 505-316-2999
986-3000
Monumental Petrified Wood The Flea at the Downs Saturdays and Sundays Through September 8 am to 3 pm www.santafeflea.com walt@sfflea.com 505-280-9261 SEWING MACHINE. SINGER FEATHERWEIGHT, TABLE MODEL. 1930S. All accessories, with case. Good condition. Price reduced! $300 OBO. 505-4666205 WESTON MANDOLINE V e ge ta b l e Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-466-6205
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
SCHOOLS - CAMPS
»merchandise«
100% of sales donated to SFAS. POODLE PUPPIES: White Males, $400; Cream Female, $450. 505-901-2094, 505-753-0000.
WHITE CAMPER Shell, 59"x77" long, great for small trucks. $200, 505-6909235.
SEEKING IRANIAN Native Speaker for specific language lessons, ASAP. 505-466-3747.
OPEN YOUR heart and your home. Host an international student or become a Local Coordinator! CIEE is seeking host families and Local Coordinators for the 2014-2015 school year. Globalize your community and promote cross-cultural understanding while changing a young person’s life. Host Families welcome a student into their home for 5 or 10 months as one of their own. Local Coordinators work with students, schools, and families and qualify to earn placement supervision fees, bonuses and all-inclusive travel. To learn more, contact Lindsey Holloway 866-219-3433 lholloway@ciee.org or visit us at www.ciee.org/highschool. ST. MICHAEL’S Soccer Camp. July 2124. Cost $120.00. Boys and Girls ages 5-10 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Girls ages 11-17 1 p.m.-4 p.m. www.stmichaelssf.org /activities_ _athletics/camps/
2014 Pet Calendar for $5!
MOREWOOD & YAGER BEAUTIFUL cabinet & entertainment center. Very solid wood. Nice southwestern design. Excellent condition. $950. 505989-4409
ANTIQUE PUMP ORGAN, came to New Mexico on a wagon train! Make me an offer. Carol, 505-471-0007.
DRUM SET, 5-PIECE with seat. $400 negotiable. 505-231-9809 GUNTER VON AUT full-size CELLO. Hard case, bow, and stand. $3300. extras! 505-474-6267
WILL NOT FIT IN OUR DOWNSIZED DIGS. THIS SOLID OAK TRESTLE DINING TABLE SEATS EIGHT FOR ELEGANT DINNING. YOU MAY ADOPT THIS PIECE FOR $4,000. GARY AT 505699-2885 (VOICE OR TEXT). WONDERFULLY COMFORTABLE LIVING ROOM SWIVEL CHAIR. S a g e green, sueded microfiber, tufted surround. Half year use. 31"x28"x27". $340 OBO. (518)763-2401.
STEINWAY MUSIC Room Grand ModelB. This magnificent 6’11" piano is often referred to as "the perfect piano." Excellent condition. $39,500. 505-467-8647
HEAT & COOLING
TV RADIO STEREO
LG MODEL AC, LWHD1500ER, 15,000 BTU, 115v, used only two summers. $250, OBO. 505-670-2210.
AIWA WX220 CASSETTE DUBBING DECK. BARELY USED, $75 OR MAKE OFFER. CALL 505-231-9133.
CLERICAL ASSISTANT PATIENT REGISTRATION CHECK-OUT SPECIALIST Santa Fe Clinic
OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN Santa Fe Surgery Center Casual/prn
Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions open at our Santa Fe Clinic and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com. Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.
At Verizon, our technology allows machines to communicate vital information to one another, making businesses and individuals more informed, agile and adaptive. That’s the kind of work we do. And you can be a part of it. Opportunities Currently Exist in Santa Fe, NM for:
PART TIME AND FULL TIME RETAIL SALES REPRESENTATIVES Enjoy benefits worthy of the name Total Rewards including: • Medical, dental and vision from day one • Award-winning training • Generous tuition assistance program Visit verizon.com/jobs to apply today.
• Company matching 401(k) • Paid vacation and holidays
Verizon is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer M/F/Disability/Vet.
Sunday, June 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »cars & trucks«
CLASSIC CARS
to place your ad, call
986-3000
E-11
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
DOMESTIC
4X4s
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
2011 Ford Fiesta SE recent tradein, single owner clean CarFax, low miles, auto, great MPG! immaculate $12,971. Call 505-216-3800.
2008 HONDA RIDGELINE 4WD $14000. Call Today! 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2010 ACURA MDX merely 22k miles! immaculate, AWD, 3rd row, loaded, single owner clean CarFax $30,741. CALL 505-2163800.
2012 FIAT 500 Sport merely 15k miles. One owner. Clean CarFax. Fun and immaculate. $14,371. Call 505-216-3800.
1990 HONDA Prelude SI. Car speaks for itself. 25,000 on new engine 40,000 on clutch. Original condition. Call or text 505-699-1604 for information. $3,800.00
Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
2010 FORD FOCUS - $8000. Call 5 0 5 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . www.furrysbuickgmc.com
CLASSIFIEDS
2006 SILVERADO 1500 4WD EXTRA CAB$9,000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2009 ACURA TSX Tech ONLY 14k miles, loaded with NAV and leather, pristine, one owner clean CarFax $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.
2013 HONDA Accord Sport just 12k miles, single owner, clean CarFax. Why buy new? $22,671. CALL 505-216-3800.
2008 INFINITI M35, great tires, new brakes, just serviced, fully loaded with navigation, heated, cooled leather, and Bose stereo, clean CarFax, luxury for less! $18,721. Call 505-216-3800.
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
DOMESTIC
CALL 986-3000
2008 GMC ENVOY SLE - $11,000. Call Today! 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2004 BUICK REGAL LS, LOW MILES LIKE NEW! $8,000. 505-321-3920 www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2011 Audi A3 TDI- DIESEL, 40+ mpg, one owner, clean CarFax, this is your chance! $22,341. Call 505-2163800.
2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L - another 1owner Lexus trade-in, AWD, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $19,897. 505-2163800.
2003 JAGUAR S-TYPE 3.O - $6000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2007 TOYOTA FJ-CRUISER 4WD
Local Owner, Records, Manuals, XKeys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo Desirable $15,650
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 1992 BUICK REGAL. Automatic, great transportation. Low miles. $1250. 505-577-4209
View vehicle, Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945 2011 BMW 328XI - ONLY 20k MILES - $29000 - 2 at THIS PRICE. 5053 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . WWW.FURRYSBUICKGMC.COM.
2009 PONTIAC G6. $9,000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2011 HONDA Odyssey Touring Elite- recent Lexus trade-in! Low miles, single owner, every option, mini-van LUXURY, the one to own! Clean CarFax $32,871. Call 505-216-3800.
1987 JAGUAR XJ6. WOW! Only 48k miles! A TRUE classic, try to find a nicer one, accident free, amazing condition, drives great. $10,931. Call 505-216-3800.
2010 HONDA Accord Crosstour EXL. ONLY 31k miles! AWD, leather, moonroof, super nice, single owner clean CarFax $20,931. Call 505216-3800.
2009 KIA SPECTRA - NICE CAR. LOW MILES. $8,000. Please Call for Information. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
So can you with a classified ad 2004 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE$7,000. Call Today! 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
2012 TOYOTA CAMRY. 34K MILES, TOP NOTCH! $21,288. CALL 505473-1234.
2012 DODGE CHALLENGER SRT-8. ONLY 15K MILES, ALL THE RIGHT STUFF! ROYAL RUNNER. $34,999. CALL 505-473-1234.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2005 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED-4x4
Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Manuals, Non-Smoker, 80,698 Miles, Moonroof, Leather, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo DESIRABLE, $13,950. VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: SANTAFEAUTOSHOWCASE.COM PAUL 505-983-4945
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
4X4s
2012 DODGE CHARGER HEMI R/T $28,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
2014 Chevrolet Traverse LTZ AWD. ANOTHER LEXUS TRADE! 2k miles, SAVE $10,000 over new, leather, NAV, DVD $38,721. Call 505-2163800.
2002 ELDORADO CADILLAC SLR CONVERTABLE. 31,000 miles. New Tires. Super Clean. Leather Interior. Power windows, seats, locks. $15,000 OBO 505-310-3652 .
2005 FORD F350 CREW 4WD LARIAT. $16000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2011 Ford Fiesta SE recent tradein, single owner clean CarFax, low miles, auto, great MPG! immaculate $12,971. Call 505-216-3800. 2007 HONDA RIDGELINE RT. Steelblue metalic. Excellent condition. 120k highway miles. $10,750. photo Harry, 505-718-8719.
2011 BMW-X3 AWD
ANOTHER ONE O w n e r , L o c a l Records, Manuals, X-Keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Factory Warranty, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo LUXURIOUS $37,450.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945 2010 HONDA ODYSSEY EX- $19000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
IMPORTS VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE 2007. Very clean, blue convertible, leather seats, AC, CD. Drives great! Less than 47,000 miles. $11,000. 505-438-6040
HONDA CIVIC LX Coupe 2007. White with tan interior, good condition. All service records. 89,960 miles. $8,600. Call 505-820-7785.
2013 Lexus CT200h- Receive over 40 mpg, recent local trade-in, low miles. All one owner, clean CarFax with original MSRP ranging from $33k-$37k, 4 to choose from, starting at $27,931. Call 505-216-3800.
E-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, June 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS
IMPORTS
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2003 NISSAN XTERRA 4WD - $7000. Call Today!! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
VALCO V-HULL 1983 with 1983 9.9hp Evinrude gas motor. Includes Sigma 25 electric, canopy and trailer. $1800. 505-690-7461. WANT A car to make heads turn and take notice, as you drive by in the lap of luxury? Well, look no further than this terrific 2013 Toyota Camry. This Camry will allow you to dominate the road with style, and get superb gas mileage while you’re at it.
2011 Lexus GS350 AWD. Recent single owner trade, Lexus CERTIFIED 3 year warranty, LOADED, and absolutely pristine! $34,921. Call 505-216-3800.
IF you demand the best things in life, this outstanding 2014 GMC Yukon is the one-owner SUV for you. Don’t get stuck in the mud holes of life. 4WD power delivery means you get traction whenever you need it.
2012 DODGE CHALLENGER, 20K MILES. THIS CAR IS PERFECT, HEADS THE PARADE! $19,888. CALL 505-473-1234.
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2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, ANOTHER Lexus trade! AWD, Sunroof, Just 14k miles, Single owner, Clean CarFax. Why buy new? Buy Preowned for $22,981. 505-216-3800.
2011 LEXUS GX460 AMAZING 12k miles! barely driven, loaded, Factory Certified 3year warranty, one owner, clean CarFax $46,721. Call 505-216-3800.
rights at Capitol
for activists rally Immigrants,
Locally owned
and independent
Tuesday,
February
8, 2011
Local news,
www.santafenew
A-8
SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN
50¢
mexican.com
for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,
l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary last year. near E.J. Martinez the city morning check, and got a a Saturday he the fine by Sovcik paid in early December, fee because Then fora penalty cashed it. would be he owed letter saying late, and his case was his check a collections agency. who were of people later warded to of dozens SUV, paid up and He’s one by the speednotices of default. ticketed erroneous Robbin acknowledged Trafreceived Anthony Santa Fe Police Capt. problems in the he’s corsaid the accounting Program and exact number fic OperationsHe’s not sure the STOP not, but rected them. paid their automated they had who the of people got letters stating calls about tickets and he got many phone he admittedthis year. includfrom issue early of the default notices, resulted A number by Sovcik, mailed to the received or ing the onemade at City Hall the bank but not into Robpayments keeping, were deposited early city that to police for record during the forwarded Others originated Page A-9 bin said. CITATIONS, Please see
The New
living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators
N
Committee some Resources and Natural the comMonday. also asked in towns The committeeclaims offices help resito better pany to establish the crisis affected by will be seeking compensation natural-gas during the dents who suffered Gas Co. officials for losses Mexico link on the outage. New phone line and running. said a claimswebsite is up and New Mexico company’s than two hours, legislators’ For more answered week’s caused last Gas representatives about whatduring bitterly cold questions Natural from El Pasothe huge service interruption An official weather. that manages gas across company Gas, the pipeline delivering interstate also spoke. a lot more the Southwest, Gas purchased New Mexico Page A-10 CRISIS, Please see State 2011 LEGISLATURE cut for the
OKs budget ◆ Panel Office. measures sponsor Auditor’s A-7 ◆ GOP newcomers reform. PAGE for ethics
CALL 986-3010
Art lecture
in North16,000 people without natural among the were still They are days of Mexico whohomes, despite five expected ern New their snow Constable With more than 20 perand Anne gas for heating Matlock less temperatures. relit freezing a fourth of Taos and had been Mexican Ellen Cavatoday, only Arriba County villages Gas Co. put and his housemate, their fireplacetheir cent of Rio New Mexico and pipefitin front of John Hubbard Near on Monday. plumbers huddled by noon stay warm. plea to to licensed naugh, were trying to on meters. out a message morning away them turn Monday they’ve posted a handwritten do not go ters to help Lucia Sanchez, public-information front gate, saying, “Please Page A-10 Meanwhile, FAMILIES, the gas company,us with no gas.” 75, live in PajaPlease see leave both again and San Ildefonso and Cavanaugh, Hubbard small inholding on a rito Village, west of the Rio Grande. Pueblo just
By Staci The New
Lois Mexico, by Skin of New Wells and Cady Under the author of in conjunction Rudnick, Modernism of New Southwestern Under the Skin(1933Wells with the exhibit 5:30 Art of Cady Mexico: The UNM Art Museum, Arts. 1953) at the of Spanish Colonial A-2 p.m., Museum in Calendar, More eventsin Pasatiempo and Fridays
Today
with Mostly cloudy, showers. snow afternoon 8. High 37, low PAGE A-14
agency
Obituaries Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Friday, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 offiup for work Santa Fe, not showingfrom top department Sarah Martinez leave for Erlinda Ursula was to e-mails New Mexican. Esquibel Feb. 2 just who according said “Ollie” by The Lucero, 85, Mahesh agency about to return to Oliver Phillip cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one 4 sion in at and who was expected Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were “Trudy” on “essential” that afternoon Gertrude Santa Fe, next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday Lawler, 90, ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees Feb. 3 “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, 28 pages Two sections, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department Terrell No. 38 By Steve The resulting and Revenue 162nd year, No. 596-440 Mexican a day of personal Taxation The New Publication B-7 state employsome state will be docked for Local business for natural employees after “nonessential” B-8 Time Out confuLast week, home to ease demand 986-3010 was some Late paper: sent Sports B-1 983-3303 ees were utility crisis, there A-11 Main office: a Police notes gas amid A-12
up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked
Index Managing
Calendar editor: Rob
A-2
Classifieds
Dean, 986-3033,
B-9
Comics B-14
Lotteries A-2
Design and
headlines:
Opinion
Cynthia Miller,
2001 PORSCHE 911 CARRERA 4 CABRIOLET. Silver-Black with black top, 6 speed manual, 18" turbo alloy wheels, Porsche Communication Management with 6-CD changer and navigation, hard top, 48,000 miles. $31,000 OBO. 505-690-2497
Pasapick
g homes: in freezin cracks’ Families h the ‘We fell throug
sion at tax sparks confu Shutdown workers may
CAMPERS & RVs
m
cmiller@sfnewmexican.co
rdean@sfnewmexican.com
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 SUBARU IMPREZA 2.5-GT PREMIUM
SUVs
THIS 2012 4Runner is for Toyota nuts who are aching for a fantastic, lowmileage SUV. Take some of the worry out of buying an used vehicle with this one-owner gem.
2004 FLEETWOOD TOY HAULER. 26’, Sleeps 6, Generator, Gas tanks, A/C, Propane grill, Air compressor, TV, fridge, Shower, Bathtub. 505-471-2399
Another One Owner, Local, Records, Factory Warranty, 10,129 Miles, Soooo PRISTINE, $23,450
View vehicle, CarFax:
2010 LEXUS HS250h former Lexus of SF loaner vehicle, Factory Certified 3year warranty, hybrid 35+ mpg, loaded, clean CarFax $25,341. Call 505-216-3800.
2010 SUBARU Impreza 2.5i Premium- AWD, heated seats, low miles, new battery, new belts, new tires, recently serviced, one owner, NICE! $15,921. CALL 505216-3800.
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
PAMPERED ALFA SeeYa 2002, 36’, 2 slides. Too many features for ad! See online ad or call for viewing. $44,500. 505-690-8100
2014 CHRYSLER 200. ONLY 500 MILES! FULL WARRANTY, FULL POWER, SAVE THOUSANDS! $16,999 . CALL 505-473-1234.
MOTORCYCLES
PICKUP TRUCKS TOYOTA RAV4 4WD, 4-cylinder, automatic, silver, 70k miles, 2L gasoline engine, no rust, no mechanical or electrical issues. $3,700. Phone 786520-5649, call or text.
2010 LEXUS RX 350 AWD, loaded, Factory Certified 3year warranty, new tires, new brakes, freshly serviced, Immaculate! $31,897. CALL 505-216-3800.
2012 Toyota Corolla LE Just 22k miles! Single owner, Clean CarFax. This one’ll be gone quick, don’t miss it! $16,851 Call 505-216-3800.
HARLEY DAVIDSON Heritage Softail Classic 2003 Stage II big bore, SE.403 cams, SE EFI race tuner kit, loaded to the max - major chrome. Purchased new ABQ + options - $30k+. Always garaged. Adult owned. Appx 18k miles. Amazing bike. Only $16,500 FOB Santa Fe. 972-989-8556 or email 2craig@airmail.net
TRUCKS & TRAILERS
2005 GMC CANYON EXTRA CABGAS SAVER - $9000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com .
2010 CHRYSLER Town & Country LOADED! $14,000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
6X10 SINGLE AXLE TRAILER. 2990GVW. New condition. $1,650. FORD RANGER or MAZDA Fiberglass camper shell. 6’ Bed. $650. 505-4667045
Honda 750 Shadow Areo 2007, Excellent Condition. Never wrecked or laid down. Only 8,900 miles. 55 MPG. Must sell due to health condition. Asking $4,800. 505-235-0364
2010 TOYOTA-FJ CRUISER 2006 Lexus SC430. UNREAL! Merely 35k miles, still smells new, collector quality and condition, new tires, all services complete, pristine and just absolutely PERFECT, don’t miss it. $32,871. Call 505-2163800.
Another One Owner, Local, Records. Factory Warranty, 13,617 Miles, Loaded, Pristine. Soooo TOYOTA DEPENDABLE $28,950
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
BICYCLES
2007 HONDA RIDGELINE RT. Steelblue metalic. Excellent condition. 120k highway miles. $10,500. Call Harry for email Photos: 505-718-8719.
505-983-4945 SELL YOUR PROPERTY!
2011 SUBARU OUTBACK AWD, 29 K MILES. FIVE STAR RATING ! $22,999 CALL 505-473-1234.
2011 FORD Explorer. ANOTHER Lexus trade! only 39k miles, AWD, 3rd row, clean CarFax $25,971. Call 505-216-3800.
with a classified ad. Get Results!
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FACTORY BUILT 20in. Electric Kona Ute Bicycle, like new, specs available at Kona World. $800. 505-470-3647.
SPORTS CARS BOATS & MOTORS
2002 LEXUS SC430. Ready for the season! Hardtop convertable, only 75k miles, well maintained, fun AND elegant, don’t miss this one for $18,721. Call 505-216-3800. 2006 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE $11000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
12’ SEARS GameFisher Boat with Trailer. Electric motor, battery and includes battery charger. $900. 505438-8195.
QUICK. SAFE. EASY. CHEAP!
LOOKING for an amazing value on a superb 2012 Mini Cooper S Countryman? Well, this is IT! This Cooper S Countryman will save you money by keeping you on the road and out of the mechanic’s garage. 2000 TOYOTA 4-Runner recent trade-in, just serviced, well maintained, super tight, runs and drives AWESOME! $7,991. Call 505216-3800.
2006 NISSAN ALTIMA - $6000. Call today. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2007 CORVETTE 3LT Z51. Copper Orange. 21,300 Miles. Stunning Car! Always Garaged Covered, 2nd Owner, CarFax. Excellent Upgrades. Asking $32,900. 505-660-1537
2011 TOYOTA RAV4 AWD. Low miles, new tires and brakes, clean CarFax, AND rare 3rd row! don’t miss it $17,987 $34,921. Call 505216-3800.
2004 VW PASSAT WAGON 4MOTION - $8000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
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