Santa Fe New Mexican, July 16, 2014

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Roybal returns to sidelines to coach Española girls Sports, B-4

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Getting teens the message on texting, driving

Simulator shows kids the dangers of getting behind the wheel while textmessaging on a cellphone. PAGE B-1

Company back with water plan

New judge for Aamodt case

Israel: Hamas will pay ‘price’

Proposal would tap water from New Mexico plains to send to cities. PAGE B-1

With husband on City Council, federal judge recuses herself. PAGE B-1

Israeli resumes strikes on Gaza after Hamas rejects Egyptian truce plan. PAGE A-3

Safety report: LANL deficient

SFPS IN-CLASS OBSERVATIONS Of Santa Fe Public Schools’ 800 teachers: Less than 1 percent were rated exemplary. 41 percent were rated as highly effective. 54 percent were rated as effective. 4 percent were rated minimally effective. Less than 1 percent were rated ineffective.

Teachers fare well on in-class evaluation Observations make up 25% of educator’s score By Robert Nott The New Mexican

Santa Fe public school teachers performed well in ratings based on in-classroom observations as part of New Mexico’s new teacher evaluation system. A report presented to the local school board Tuesday night says 41 percent of the district’s 800 teachers were rated as highly effective, 54 percent as effective and 4 percent minimally effective. Less than 1 percent were rated ineffective and less than 1 percent exemplary. However, direct observations by evaluators only account for 25 percent of a teacher’s score. The district is still analyzing aggregate data for the other 75 percent of the evaluation process, which includes measuring three years of student test scores, a student survey and how teachers plan their lessons. Gov. Susana Martinez initiated the system by executive order in an effort to hold teachers accountable and improve the state’s educational

Please see TEACHERS, Page A-5

New Mexico’s population growing older By Barry Massey The Associated Press

New Mexicans over age 65 are the fastest-growing segment of the population so far this decade, according to the Census Bureau. That trend is expected to continue in the coming decades and is partly why New Mexico’s population growth is slowing, said University of New Mexico demographer Jack Baker. The state’s birth rate has been fairly constant, and an aging population means there are more deaths each year, which depresses the overall population growth, according to Baker, a senior research scientist in geospatial and population studies. Those over 65 increased by 12 percent from 2010 to 2013, compared with a national increase of 10 percent, according to Census Bureau estimates released last month. There was no growth among New Mexicans from ages 18 to 64, and the population under 18 declined by

Los Alamos lone NNSA site found ‘inadequate’ on nuke criticality safety By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

Pat Davis of ProgressNow New Mexico encourages drivers to pull over and sign the Reducing Marijuana Penalties petition at a drive-through event Tuesday at 1420 Cerrillos Road. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

7,100 sign on for pot vote Groups need 5,763 verified to force referendum on marijuana penalties The New Mexican

Two groups pushing an initiative to decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana in the city of Santa Fe submitted more than 7,100 petition signatures Tuesday, hoping to get the question on the November general election ballot. ProgressNow New Mexico and Drug Policy Action need at least 5,763 valid signatures from registered voters within city limits to force a vote on their proposal. They turned in 7,126 signatures. “I feel confident that voters want this to happen, but we’re anxious to see what the verification rate really starts to look like from the City Clerk’s Office, and I’m not sure we’re going to know that for a week or so,” said Pat Davis, executive director of ProgressNow,

Pasapick Museum of Contemporary Native Arts

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John E. Alejandro Sr., Santa Fe, July 11 Marilouise (Bunny) Moore, July 10 PAGE B-2

Today Afternoon and evening storms. High 82, low 56.

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Please see LANL, Page A-5

ON OUR WEBSITE u Read the full report at www.santa fenewmexican.com.

Graffiti marks the side of a former Army Reserve Center in Westminster, Md., which was considered for use as a facility to house Central American children who crossed the border into the U.S.

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By Erica Werner

Free event held 5-7 p.m. in conjunction with the temporary site-specific installation (Pull of the Moon) on the Navajo Nation by Ai Weiwei and Bert Benally; including a 3-D digital landscape of the project and a live performance based on sounds captured during the installation, 108 Cathedral Place, nmarts.org.

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statewide issues and races. Although Vigil and Santa Fe County Clerk Geraldine Salazar are planning for November, Secretary of State Dianna Duran’s office has said it “appears unlikely” to add a “lengthy municipal question” to the November ballot. Salazar said recently that officials are waiting to find out whether the groups collected the required number of petition signatures before making any final decisions. The proposed initiative, which mirrors an initiative that the groups also are trying to get on the ballot in the city of Albuquerque, calls for making the penalty for possession of an ounce or less of marijuana and possession of marijuanaassociated paraphernalia a civil infraction punishable by a fine of no more than $25.

House Republicans propose using National Guard on border

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a liberal-leaning group based in Albuquerque. “We’ve turned in everything we could get, which I think is way more than most of us thought or anybody thought we would get to start with,” he said. The groups had planned to keep collecting and submitting signatures during the 10-day verification period, but City Clerk Yolanda Vigil said she wouldn’t accept additional signatures. “Today is the filing date,” Vigil told organizers at City Hall. The signature-gathering effort, which Davis said is the first citizen ballot initiative attempted in Santa Fe, took place over 19 days. While city rules set a 90-day pre-election deadline to submit petition signatures, Vigil imposed Tuesday’s deadline because the groups want to get the question on the Nov. 4 general election ballot along with

By Daniel J. Chacón

Even before a radiation leak in February halted the flow of nuclear waste to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, the federal government had identified deficiencies in Los Alamos National Laboratory’s safeguards against potentially catastrophic nuclear fission accidents, a new report shows. Los Alamos “does not meet expectations” in overall performance of its criticality safety program, states the U.S. Department of Energy’s Fiscal Year 2013 Annual Report on Nuclear Criticality Safety, delivered Monday to the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board. Fission reaction accidents carry a risk of radiation or energy hazards, particularly to workers directly affected by them, but potentially to the public as well. The calendar year 2013 review assessed safety measures throughout the national nuclear defense complex and identified LANL as the lone National Nuclear Security Administration site “with inadequate but improving performance.” “It says Los Alamos is worse, and Los Alamos is worse in a lot of areas,” said Greg Mello, executive

WASHINGTON — House Republicans announced Tuesday they will recommend dispatching the National Guard to South Texas and speeding Central American youths back home as their response to the immigration crisis that’s engulfing the border and testing Washington’s ability to respond. The recommendations, to come from a working group established by House Speaker John Boehner, will set up a clash with leading Democrats who oppose changing U.S. law to eliminate automatic immigration hearings for Central American kids and return them more quickly to Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, where some areas are overrun by brutal gangs. With Democrats and the White House under growing pressure from immigration advocates to hold firm against the GOP approach, a solution for the grow-

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CHRISTIAN ALEXANDERSEN THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES

INSIDE u Border Patrol detains, releases activist journalist. PAGE A-4

ing crisis of tens of thousands of unaccompanied children showing up at the U.S.-Mexico border is looking increasingly elusive with three weeks left before Congress leaves Washington for an annual August recess. “It’s a critical situation, and if we don’t deal with it urgently but well, done right, we’re facing a crisis of just huge proportions,” said Rep.

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Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., who traveled to Honduras and Guatemala over the weekend with members of the House GOP working group, including its leader, Rep. Kay Granger of Texas. “Time is of the essence.” Granger, Diaz-Balart and others said their proposals would include sending the National Guard to help overwhelmed Border Patrol agents, increasing immigration judges, adding assistance to Central American nations and changing a 2008

Please see BORDER, Page A-5

Three sections, 24 pages 165th year, No. 197 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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Research finds friends share genes The Washington Post

By Tom Raum The Associated Press

MOSCOW SUBWAY DERAILS DURING RUSH HOUR Rescue teams work inside a Moscow subway tunnel Tuesday where a rush-hour subway train derailed, killing at least 21 people and injuring as many as 150, emergency officials said. Several cars left the track in the tunnel after a power surge triggered an alarm, which caused the train to stop abruptly. Park Pobedy, where the derailment occurred, is Moscow’s deepest metro station — 275 feet below the surface — which made the rescue particularly difficult. COURTESY RUSSIAN EMERGENCY SITUATION MINISTRY

In brief 89 die in bombing in Afghanistan KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide bomber blew up a car packed with explosives near a busy market and a mosque in eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday, killing at least 89 people in the deadliest insurgent attack on civilians since the 2001 U.S.-led invasion. The blast destroyed numerous mud-brick shops, flipped cars over and stripped trees of their branches, brutally underscoring the country’s instability as U.S. troops prepare to leave by the end of the year and politicians in Kabul struggle for power after a disputed presidential runoff. Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi, the Defense Ministry spokesman, said the bomber detonated his explosives as he drove by the crowded market in a remote town in Urgun district, in the Paktika province bordering Pakistan. Azimi gave the death toll and said more than 40 other people were wounded.

Yellen says Fed to support economy WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said Tuesday that the economic recovery is not yet complete and for that reason the Fed intends to keep providing significant support to boost growth and improve labor market conditions. In delivering the Fed’s semiannual economic report to Congress, Yellen said the Fed’s future actions will depend on how well the economy performs. She says if labor market conditions continue to improve more quickly than anticipated, the Fed could raise its key short-term interest rate sooner

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Calif. water use up despite drought SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Californians increased water consumption this year during the severe drought, despite pleas from the governor to conserve, fallowed farm fields and reservoirs that are quickly draining, according to a report released Tuesday. The new figures surfaced as state water regulators prepared to vote later in the day on fines up to $500 a day for people who waste water. The report says overall consumption jumped 1 percent, even as Gov. Jerry Brown has called for a 20 percent cutback.

Iraqi leaders elect parliament speaker BAGHDAD — Iraqi lawmakers broke two weeks of deadlock Tuesday and elected a moderate Sunni as speaker of parliament, taking the first step toward forming a new government that is widely seen as crucial to confronting militants who have overrun much of the country. Still, it was not clear whether lawmakers had reached a larger deal that would also include an agreement on the most contentious decision — the choice for prime minister. After voting behind closed doors, the legislature tallied the results on a whiteboard wheeled into the hall that showed Sunni lawmaker Salim al-Jubouri winning with 194 votes out of 273 cast in the 328-seat parliament.

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than currently projected. But she said weaker conditions will mean a longer period of low rates. Yellen said if the economy keeps improving, the Fed will keep reducing the bond purchases, with the final move being a $15 billion reduction at the October meeting. She also played down a recent acceleration in inflation.

House passes highway bill WASHINGTON — With an August deadline looming, the House voted Tuesday to temporarily patch over a multibillion-dollar pothole in federal highway and transit programs while ducking the issue of how to put them on a sound financial footing for the long term. The action cobbles together $10.8 billion by using pension tax changes, customs fees and money from a fund to repair leaking underground fuel storage tanks to keep the federal Highway Trust Fund, which pays for transportation programs nationwide, solvent through May 2015. The vote was 367 to 55. A similar bill is pending in the Senate. Without congressional action, the Transportation Department says that by the first week in August the fund will no longer have enough money to cover promised aid to states.

Kerry: ‘Progress’ in Iran nuke talks VIENNA — After three days of intensive talks with his Iranian counterpart, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Tuesday that “tangible progress” had been made in negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program, and that he would return to Washington to consult with President Barack Obama over whether to extend a Sunday deadline for a final agreement. Kerry said “very real gaps” remained, but his tone left little doubt he wanted to extend the talks by weeks or months. As the July 20 deadline approaches, an accord is not yet in hand. The temporary agreement allows for an extension of the talks for up to six months, but some in Obama’s negotiating team have suggested that a shorter extension might be more fruitful. New Mexican wire services

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Agency toughens protections for pregnant workers

By Joel Achenbach

WASHINGTON — Friends often look alike. The tendency of people to forge friendships with people of a similar appearance has been noted since the time of Plato. But now there is research suggesting that we tend to pick friends who are genetically similar to us in ways that go beyond superficial features. Our friends are as similar to us genetically as you’d expect fourth cousins to be, according to the study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. This means that the number of genetic markers shared by two friends is akin to what would be expected if they had the same greatgreat-great-grandparents. “Your friends don’t just resemble you superficially, they resemble you genetically,” said Nicholas Christakis, a physician and social scientist at Yale University and a co-author of the study. The resemblance is slight, just about 1 percent of the genetic markers, but that has huge implications for evolutionary theory, said James Fowler, a professor of medical genetics and political science at the University of California at San Diego. “We can do better than chance at predicting if two people are going to be friends if all we have is their genetic data,” Fowler said. The research suggests that genetic factors are like a subtle breeze in the background, strong enough to be measured statistically in a big data set even if people in their day-to-day lives aren’t consciously aware of it. Fowler acknowledges that there are limitations to the study. The scientists used data from a multi-decade medical research study of 1,932 people in Framingham, Mass., who have been participating in a heartdisease research project that dates to 1948. Almost everyone in the study group is white, and many are of Italian ancestry. “While we’ve found that this is true for this one well-studied group of people, we don’t know if the results can be generalized to other ethnic groups,” Fowler said. “My expectation is that it will, but we don’t know.” This is not a settled science. Research on genetic factors in friendships is still in a preliminary stage. But if the reasoning of Christakis and Fowler is correct, friendship, and hyper-social behavior more generally, is a significant factor in the recent evolution of the human species. which they describe as having accelerated in the past 30,000 years. Robert Seyfarth, a professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved in the new research, said of the study, “This is a very interesting, provocative answer to the question of why is it that humans are so hyper-social in their interactions. Why are they so friendly to strangers? Most animals don’t encounter strangers at all.”

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Wednesday, July 16 MUSIC ON THE HILL 2014: The annual free outdoor music series continues with SuperSax New Mexico; saxophonists include Sam Reid, Dave Anderson, and Aaron Lovato, featuring Bobbie Shew on trumpet, Bert Dalton on piano, Colin Deuble on bass, and Cal Haines on drums, 6-8 p.m. at St. John’s College, 1160 Camino de Cruz Blanca, 984-6000. SANTA FE BANDSTAND: Albert Martinez & Sierra, noon; dance troupe Baile Español, 6-7 p.m.; chanteuse Nacha Mendez, 7:15-8:45 p.m., on the Plaza, no charge. Visit santafebandstand.org for the summer series schedule. MIA KALEF: The author discusses The Secret Life of Babies: How Our Prebirth and Birth Experiences Shape Our World, 6 p.m. Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., call 988-4226. NEW MEXICO LAWYERS FOR THE ARTS: Topic is “Artist as Entrepreneur: The Visual Artist,” a panel discussion with Kate Russell, Jennifer Joseph, Ross Cheney, and Kevin Box, 6 p.m., no charge. Visit www.nmlawyersforthearts. org. Santa Fe Arts Commission Community , Gallery, Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy St.

SANTA FE CLAY WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Slide Lecture series continues with ceramist Julia Galloway, 7 p.m., no charge. 545 Camino de la Familia, call 984-1122. SANTA FE INSTITUTE COMMUNITY LECTURES 2014: Seth Lloyd of MIT discusses “Time Travel: Testing the Grandfather Paradox,” 7:30 p.m., no charge, James A. Little Theater, New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Road, call 984-8800. SCHOOL FOR ADVANCED RESEARCH COLLOQUIUM: “Reconnecting the Past: Network Approaches to Regional Interaction in the Archaeology of the Late Prehistoric Southwest,” a lecture by Barbara J. Mills, University of Arizona, noon-1 p.m., no charge, 660 Garcia St., call 954-7200. SANTA FE OPERA BACKSTAGE TOURS: Behind-thescenes tours at 9 a.m., $10; seniors $8; no charge for ages 22 and under. Santa Fe Opera, 301 Opera Drive, 986-5900.

NIGHTLIFE Wednesday, July 16 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Flamenco guitarist Joaquin Gallegos, 7 p.m., no cover. 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756. COWGIRL BBQ: Marlee Crow,

WASHINGTON — Pregnant women have new protections against on-the-job discrimination. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has updated 30-year-old guidelines to make clear that any form of workplace discrimination or harassment against pregnant workers by employers is a form of sex discrimination and illegal. “Despite much progress, we continue to see a significant number of charges alleging pregnancy discrimination,” EEOC Chairwoman Jacqueline A. Berrien said in a statement. The guidelines prohibit employers from forcing pregnant workers to take leave and acknowledge that “employers may have to provide light duty for pregnant workers.” After childbirth, lactation is now covered as a pregnancy-related medical condition. It’s not just women who will benefit. The guidelines say that when it comes to parental leave, “similarly situated” men and women must be treated on the same terms. The issue has gained increasing attention and has vexed business groups as the Obama administration ratchets up its enforcement of the nation’s anti-discrimination laws. The latest EEOC data shows a 46 percent increase in pregnancyrelated complaints to the EEOC from 1997 to 2011. In its report, the agency cites specific, real-life examples of what it considers illegal discrimination. It used only first names and did not reveal locations, occupations or employers. Among them: u Three months after “Maria” told her supervisor that she was pregnant, she was absent a few days due to an illness unrelated to her pregnancy. When she returned to work, “her supervisor said her body was trying to tell her something,” and she was let go. u Shortly after Teresa informed her supervisor of her pregnancy, “he met with her to discussed alleged performance problems.” Even though Teresa had consistently received outstanding performance reviews during her eight years of employment with the company, she was discharged. u Birah, a woman from Nigeria, claimed that when she was visibly pregnant with her second child, “her supervisors increased her workload and shortened her deadlines so she could not complete assignments, ostracized her, repeatedly excluded her from meetings to which she should have been invited, reprimanded here for failing to show up for work due to snow when others were not reprimanded.

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An article on Page A-1 of the Tuesday, July 15, edition of The Santa Fe New Mexican erroneously stated that Conservation Voters New Mexico hadn’t contributed money to any Republican candidate since 2006. This was based on information from The National Institute on Money in State Politics’ website www.followthemoney.org. However, a spokeswoman for Conservation Voters New Mexico provided a record showing a $500 contribution to a Republican legislator in 2008.

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Mega Millions 2–4–17–36–40 MB 5 Megaplier 2 Top prize: $50 million Americana/indie folk, 8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St., 982-2565. DEL CHARRO SALOON: Mariachi Teotihuacan, with Stephen Montoya, Jaime Martinez,and Daniel Martinez, 7-9 p.m., no cover, Inn of the Governors, 101 West Alameda, 954-0320. DUEL BREWING: Bill Hearne, classic country and honkytonk, 7 p.m., no cover. 1228 Parkway Drive, Unit D, 474- 5301. EL FARO: Guitarist/singer John Kurzweg, 8:30 p.m., no cover, 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Country band Half Broke Horses, 7:30 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St., 982-5511. VANESSIE: Pianist Bob Finnie, 6:30-9:30 p.m., call for cover.

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


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Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Israel: Hamas to pay price for refusing truce First Israeli fatality reported; Gaza toll reaches 197 dead By Karin Laub and Aron Heller The Associated Press

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Israel resumed its heavy bombardment of Gaza on Tuesday and warned that Hamas “would pay the price” after the Islamic militant group rejected an Egyptian truce plan and instead unleashed more rocket barrages at the Jewish state. Late Tuesday, the military urged tens of thousands of residents of northern and eastern Gaza to leave their homes by Wednesday morning, presumable a prelude to air strikes there. Rocket fire killed an Israeli man Tuesday, the first Israeli fatality in eight days of fighting. In Gaza, 197 people were killed and close to 1,500 wounded so far, Palestinian officials said, making it the deadliest IsraelHamas confrontation in just over five years. The Egyptian proposal, initially accepted by Israel, had been the first attempt to end the fighting. It unraveled in less than a day, a sign that it will be harder than before to reach a truce. Hamas does not consider Egypt’s current rulers — who deposed a Hamas-friendly government in Cairo a year ago — to be fair brokers. Violence is bound to escalate in coming days. Hamas believes it has little to lose by continuing to fight, while a truce on unfavorable terms could further weaken its grip on the Gaza Strip, a territory it seized in 2007. Underscoring that position, Gaza militants fired more than

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120 rockets and mortar rounds at Israel on Tuesday, during what Egypt had hoped would be a period of de-escalation. A particularly heavy barrage came around dusk, with more than 40 rockets hitting Israel in just a few minutes, including one that fell on an empty school. TV footage showed children cowering behind a wall in Tel Aviv’s main square as sirens went off. An Israeli man in his 30s was killed near the Gaza border when he was delivering food to soldiers — the first Israeli death. Hamas’ defiance prompted Israeli warnings. In an evening address aired live on TV, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that after Hamas’ rejection of the truce, Israel had “no choice” but to respond more forcefully. “Hamas chose to continue fighting and will pay the price for that decision,” he said. “When there is no cease-fire,

our answer is fire.” After holding its fire for six hours, the Israeli air force resumed its heavy bombardment of Gaza, launching 33 strikes from midafternoon, the military said. In all, Israeli aircraft struck close to 1,700 times since July 8, while Gaza militants fired more than 1,200 rockets at Israel. Netanyahu said Israel would have liked to see a diplomatic solution, but would keep attacking until rocket fire stops and Hamas’ military capabilities are diminished. The Israeli leader said he would “widen and increase” the campaign against Hamas, but it remains unclear if that will include a ground offensive. Israel has warned it might send troops into Gaza and has massed thousands of soldiers on the border. However, entering Gaza would likely drive up casualties on both sides. Israel has hesitated in the past to

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embark on ground operations for fear of getting entangled in the densely populated territory of 1.7 million. Late Tuesday, the Israeli military told residents of the northern town of Beit Lahiya and the Gaza City neighborhoods of Shijaiyah and Zeitoun in automated phone calls to leave their homes by early Wednesday. Sami Wadiya, a resident of one of the areas likely to be targeted, said he would not leave his home. “We know it’s risky, but there are no secure places to go to,” he said. In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Israel has the right to Palestinian Suma Abu Mahsen, 7, stands along with other defend itself, but that “no one children by a damaged wall of a house Tuesday following an overnight Israeli missile strike. LEFTERIS PITARAKIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS wants to see a ground war.”

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Border Patrol releases activist journalist Vargas detained at Texas airport By Julia Preston and Laura Tillman The New York Times

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deported. Vargas insisted that he never intended to be detained when he came to South Texas. But he and his supporters wasted no time turning his arrest into a day of high drama, using it to publicize their cause on social media and at a news conference in front of the Border Patrol station where he was held. “I was released today because I am a low priority and not considered a threat,” Vargas said by telephone shortly after his release. “I would argue that the 11 million undocumented immigrants in this country are not a threat either.” President Barack Obama, seeking to stem the influx across the Rio Grande, has moved to deport recent crossers more quickly. He is also considering executive actions to expand protections from deportation for immigrants, like Vargas, who have lived here for years and pose no security threat. Republicans argue that Obama’s leniency with those immigrants has encouraged the border surge.

ARLINGTON, Va. — Teacher Michael Coughlin sometimes learns about his students’ harrowing trips across the border alone and what they left behind from the essays they write. Other times, they’ll mention a court date or ask for help finding an immigration attorney. Most of these students at H-B Woodlawn Secondary Program are determined, he says, but “they are also very scared because they don’t have certainty for their future here.” Schools are one of the few government institutions where the children and teens coming unaccompanied across the border are guaranteed services, from science instruction to eye exams. While their cases are being processed by immigration authorities, most of these minors are released to family members or sponsors who are told the children must be enrolled in school. Schools and districts in metropolitan areas such as Washington, Houston and Miami have seen an uptick in the number of these students and anticipate more could enroll this fall. “They have their hearts in the right places, but it’s a difficult task,” said Randy Capps, director of research for

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U.S. programs at the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan Washington think tank. The government estimates that 90,000 children, primarily from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, could make the journey alone by this fall, and that as many as 145,000 of them could arrive next year. They often come to join a parent, many times escaping criminal gangs or extreme poverty. In school, they frequently require special resources like English language and mental health services that already are strained because of budget cuts. In Miami, the school board voted to seek federal aid after Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said 300 foreign-born students, many from Honduras and traveling alone, enrolled toward the end of the school year. He said the district has both a “moral and legal requirement” to educate the students, some illiterate in both English and Spanish. The cost is about $1,950 more per student than it gets from the state, he said. “They need to be fed. They need to be clothed. They need to be cared for and then taught,” Carvalho said. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Attorney General

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McALLEN — Jose Antonio Vargas, who has chronicled in minute detail the twists and turns of his life as a Filipino living illegally for years in the U.S., was detained by the Border Patrol on Tuesday and then released with a notice to appear before an immigration judge. The detention of Vargas, probably the most high-profile leader of the immigrant rights movement, posed an awkward dilemma for the Obama administration. The surge of Central Americans crossing the border illegally — saying they are fleeing criminal violence at home — has made all decisions about immigration politically fraught, and administration officials were keenly aware that the backdrop to their decision to release Vargas was a border where thousands of migrants are being held. Vargas was detained at a Border Patrol checkpoint in the airport of McAllen in the Rio Grande Valley before he was to board a flight to Houston. In a terse statement, Department of Homeland Security officials said they had released Vargas because he had no prior immigration or criminal record. They said their focus was on deporting immigrants who posed security threats. It was the first time Vargas, who has been living without papers in the U.S. since 1993, had been arrested by immigra-

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Schools are haven for migrants

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Eric Holder issued guidance in May reminding districts that a 1982 Supreme Court ruling gives all children the right to enroll in school, regardless of immigration status. Kristyn Peck, a refugee programs official with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, fields calls from school administrators seeking a better understanding of the students. “They have multilayered trauma,” Peck said. “They often experience trauma which propelled them and motivated them to leave them in the first place. Then they experience trauma along the journey, and then often the experience at border patrol can be traumatic for them. … These are really special kids with a lot of needs.” Patricia Chiancone, an outreach counselor in the inter-

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Older: From 2012 to ’13, 0.1% population increase for state Continued from Page A-1 2 percent from 2010 to 2013, the agency reported. New Mexico’s total population increased by 1 percent from 2010 to 2013, when it reached not quite 2.1 million. The nation as a whole grew at twice that rate. There was only a 0.1 percent population increase from 2012 to 2013 in New Mexico, the Census Bureau reported, and more people left the state than moved into it during that time. “I think it’s a reflection of what’s happening with the economy because we were really failing to produce job growth,” said Lee Reynis, director of UNM’s Bureau of Business and Economic Research. New Mexico and 13 other states have experienced a net loss of people from migration from 2010 to 2013, according to the Census Bureau. Births and deaths are other components

BY THE NUMBERS

12% population growth of those over 65 increased from 2010 to 2013.

0% growth among New Mexicans ages 18 to 64 from 2010 to 2013.

-2%

growth among those under age 18 from 2010 to 2013. SOURCE: CENSUS BUREAU

of population change. Baker said an aging population and the migration losses are two trends that policymakers should focus on as they try to plan for New Mexico’s future. “Probably we’re going to see really shallow growth over the next 10 years because more people are going to leave. Economic prospects are better elsewhere. If we don’t have jobs that can compete and will get them to

stay, then we’re going to continue to see this,” said Baker. By 2030, Baker said, roughly half of the state’s population will be over 65 and under 18. He describes that as a “double dependency” problem because those age groups demand services such as schools for young people and health care for the elderly. As New Mexico confronts the costs of those services, the state will grapple with a shrinking working age population — a major producer of tax revenue through their jobs and spending. UNM estimates the state’s population will increase about 1.3 percent from 2010 to 2015. But the growth rate is expected to keep sliding and reach about 0.7 percent from 2035 to 2040. “We have a saying, which is ‘demography is destiny,’ and really long-term trends tend to hold unless you really actively do something about it policyrelated,” said Baker.

A-5

Arizona protesters aim to halt immigrant transfer By Astrid Galvan The Associated Press

ORACLE, Ariz. — Protesters carrying “Return to Sender” and “Go home non-Yankees” signs faced off with immigrant rights activists Tuesday in a small Arizona town after a sheriff said a bus filled with Central American children was on its way. The rallies demonstrated the deep divide of the immigration debate as groups on both sides — and in similar numbers — showed up in Oracle to speak out on the issue. It turned heated at times, with shouting matches and a group of mariachi musicians getting shoved before the skirmishes were quelled. At one point, protesters temporarily blocked off a bus on the road before realizing it was just a school bus carrying children from a YMCA. The protests came as the government released new numbers that show how many immigrant families and children have been pouring into the country in recent months. The Border Patrol says 55,420 family members have been caught at the border from October through the end of June, a nearly 500 percent increase from the same period in the previous year. The number includes adults apprehended with their young children, and most of them were caught in the Rio Grande Valley in Texas. In addition, the Border Patrol says 57,525 unaccompanied children have been apprehended through the end of June.

Anger has been spreading in the town of Oracle since Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu warned residents last week that immigrant children from Central America caught crossing the border illegally would be placed at the Sycamore Canyon Academy in Oracle. Protesters were hoping to mirror demonstrations in Murrieta, Calif., when immigrants were taken there recently. “We are not going to tolerate illegals forced upon us,” protester Loren Woods said. Babeu is credited with stirring up the antiimmigrant protesters via social media postings and a press release Monday and by leaking information about the migrants’ arrival to a local activist. He addressed both sides of the protesters, asking them to remain civil, abide by the law and keep the roads cleared. Immigrant rights activists questioned Babeu about why he is stirring up protesters when he should be bringing order as the county’s top lawman. Babeu said he was simply informing the public and was at the site to make sure the protests on both sides were peaceful. The academy put out a news release Monday acknowledging that it had an agreement with the Department of Health and Human Services to take in a “small number” of immigrant children from Central America. It did not specify how many and when they would arrive. No children had arrived as of early evening.

Border: Republicans want to end mandatory hearings Continued from Page A-1

Nora Haskins looks on as Phillip J. Vergamini of Santa Fe signs the Reducing Marijuana Penalties petition at the drive-through signing event Tuesday. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Sign: With required signatures, initiative must go before voters Continued from Page A-1 Currently, possession of an ounce or less of marijuana in Santa Fe is a petty misdemeanor for the first offense, punishable by a fine of not less than $50 or more than $100 and up to 15 days in jail. The proposed ballot initiatives also would make possession of small amounts of marijuana “a lowest law enforcement priority” for police departments in both cities. The groups were turning in petition signatures until the last minute and made a late

push with a “drive-thru petition signing event” on Cerrillos Road during Tuesday’s morning drive time and lunch hour periods that generated about 400 signatures. “We’ve been averaging about 300-plus a day,” said Emily Kaltenbach, state director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which is affiliated with Drug Policy Action. Former Mayor David Coss is among the voters who signed the petition, Kaltenbach said. If the group collected the required number of signatures, the City Council would have to

put the initiative before voters. If it’s not added to the November ballot, the city could hold a special election or wait until the next municipal election in March 2016. The council also has authority to adopt the proposed ordinance outright, but Davis said organizers want voters to decide. “We think it’s important that the citizen process finish itself out,” he said. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @danieljchacon.

LANL: Criticality safety staff at lab at all-time high, report notes in light of what has happened since the assessment was condirector of the Los Alamos ducted last year, Mello said. Study Group, a watchdog orgaIn February, a radiation leak nization that monitors the lab. at the Waste Isolation Pilot Contacted late Tuesday Plant stopped the nation’s afternoon, a LANL spokesprimary underground nuclear man referred questions to the storage site from receiving new NNSA. Phone calls to NNSA shipments of waste generated seeking comment were not during Cold War nuclear weapreturned Tuesday. ons development. The source Of the six sites reviewed in of that leak remains under the report, LANL was one of investigation, but the probe has only two where the criticality focused on a drum containing safety program was inadequately staffed. Despite that finding, the waste that originated at LANL. Investigators are scrutinizing report notes that the criticality the mix contained in that waste safety staff at LANL is at an allstream. It includes nitrate salts, time high, and that the lab is in a neutralizer added by contracthe second year of a long-term tor EnergySolutions with LANL plan to correct the shortage. approval that some chemists The lab instituted a mentorsay made the mix more volatile, ing program with experienced and organic kitty litter, which criticality safety professionals was used instead of the tradiinstructing new hires about hazards, and has relied on sub- tional clay variety and is being viewed as a possible fuel for the contractors to fill some roles. reaction that caused the leak. “Relying on subcontractors “LANL has known weakfor your criticality safety expernesses in providing personnel tise does not define a sound skilled in criticality safety and program,” Mello said. “They operations to serve as advisers need to have their own people to supervisors,” the report says. who are going to be there, and “Weaknesses have also been they can’t just patch in the identified in clarity and commissing expertise.” Some of the report’s findings pleteness of developed controls, were particularly bothersome thoroughness of identification of

Continued from Page A-1

abnormal conditions and validation of criticality safety codes.” Root causes of Los Alamos’ deficiencies identified in the report included unclear documentation and understanding of roles, responsibilities, authority and accountability at the lab. And its management also was assigned some blame in the report. “Management has not yet fully embraced its commitment to criticality safety, selfdiscovery, communication to the worker and continuous improvement,” the report said. In 2013, LANL committed 38 criticality safety infractions, according to the report. Of those, 28 were of the lowest threat level and none were of the highest threat level. Details of the infractions were not included in the report. “In the context of the problems we’ve seen in waste management recently that led to the WIPP shutdown,” Mello said, “what we should conclude is that Los Alamos is not paying close enough attention to nittygritty safety issues.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com.

trafficking victims law that guarantees hearings for Central American youths. The law has the practical result of letting the young people stay in the country for years as their cases move through the badly backlogged immigration courts. At the same time, Republicans are working to significantly pare down President Barack Obama’s $3.7 billion emergency spending request for the border, hoping to act quickly on a smaller spending bill along with the package of policy changes. The recommendations were to be formally released later in the week, but lawmakers discussed their broad outlines Tuesday. In response, Democrats and immigration advocates called for quick action on a “clean” spending bill without controversial policy changes attached. The White House urged speed but did not insist that Congress act only on the spending bill. “There’s already been ample opportunity for Congress to take action, and we want to encourage them to move forward with some sense of urgency,” said White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., declared that: “With this money, we can take care of the problem.” Republicans made clear that was out of the question. “What I will not do is vote for a blank check for the president for something that will not solve the problem,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, who has written a bill along with fellow Texan Rep. Henry Cuellar, a moderate Democrat, to make some of the same changes the House working group is proposing. Granger said the average immigration case takes a 1½ to five years to go through the court process, even as more than 57,000 unaccompanied children have arrived at the border since October. “That’s just not acceptable, so we’ve got to change that,” she said. With Republicans refusing to support a border spending bill without major policy

changes attached, and Democrats refusing to support one with them, any final outcome was unclear with November midterm elections around the corner. Meanwhile, the children keep coming, with 90,000 expected by the end of the fiscal year. They flee violence, but also are drawn by rumors that once here, they can stay. Proposed changes to the 2008 trafficking victims law have emerged as a major point of contention. The House GOP proposal would allow youths from Central America and other countries to be treated the same under the law as Mexican children, who can be turned around quickly by Border Patrol agents unless they’re able to make the case that they have a fear of return and require further screening. Immigration advocates and some Democrats contend that the Border Patrol screenings are cursory and inadequate, and that the young people will be returned to gang violence and worse. “A shotgun proceeding in which people are railroaded through a quick process for kids who have no idea what’s going on is not how America does refugee protection, is not how America treats its kids,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, an advocacy group. Obama administration officials have indicated support for changing the 2008 law, but the White House has not proposed a specific fix amid complaints from advocacy groups, and its position about what it would accept is unclear. Opposition among Democrats to any changes in the law appears to have hardened after earlier signals from Democratic leaders that they could support changes as the price for GOP support for Obama’s emergency spending bill. Reid, who last week left the door open to changing the law, said Tuesday: “My personal belief is that the law that has created some of the controversy now, there’s enough, there’s leeway there that the executive branch of government doesn’t need new legislation.”

Teachers: Just 36 provide feedback on the observations Continued from Page A-1 ranking, which is usually near or at the bottom in national comparisons. But many educators have criticized the new system, particularly its emphasis on using test score data to help measure a teacher’s worth. In feedback solicited by the school district, 36 teachers — less than 5 percent — offered opinions regarding the observations. Responses varied widely, including confusion, criticism, praise and suggestions to improve the process. Some teachers said they could not always differentiate between findings based on formal hourlong observations, made by their school’s principal or a trained educator from another school, and shorter walkthroughs, which generally took a few minutes. Some teachers said that as a result of the mandated observations — three in all of the hourlong variety — administrators are spending too much time in the classrooms and not helping in other ways. But some teachers said they want to see administrators spend even more time in the classroom. Some said the observations are useless, while some found them helpful. At least one suggested that teachers should provide the observations of other teachers. Some did not like the idea of external reviewers — those coming over from other schools who may not know the specific challenges faced in different environments.

Richard Bowman, director of accountability and assessment for the district, told the school board that the remarks suggest that “being evaluated itself was quite stressful and possibly contributes to low morale.” But board President Steven Carrillo said, “I can’t remember any job I held where I wasn’t evaluated often during the course of the year.” He said he was taken aback by the low number of teachers who gave feedback. Bowman, as well as teacher Grace Meyer, who is president of the teacher union NEASanta Fe, said many teachers received their evaluations a few weeks before school ended and, given how busy they were during that time, they probably did not have the time to fill out the anonymous survey. Superintendent Joel Boyd said the district’s evaluation process — which differs slightly from the state’s in that it includes a student survey, does not factor in teacher attendance and gives teachers some say in determining how to measure student growth — is an improvement over how teachers were evaluated two years ago, when he first came on board. At that time, teachers statewide were rated as either meeting competency or not meeting competency. Boyd said evaluations in Santa Fe were often arbitrary, based on personality or done without any classroom observation. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@ sfnewmexican.com.


A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 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

A t-storm in spots this afternoon

Tonight

Thursday

A thunderstorm around this evening

82

Friday

Saturday

A shower or thunder- A couple of showers storm around and a t-storm

56

83/57

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

Sunday

A thunderstorm in spots in the p.m.

Monday

Tuesday

Sunshine mixing with Mostly sunny and some clouds very warm

Partly sunny with a shower in spots

87/58

90/60

92/61

93/62

92/62

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

40%

64%

43%

39%

24%

20%

20%

32%

wind: WNW 7-14 mph

wind: NE 7-14 mph

wind: SSW 6-12 mph

wind: WSW 6-12 mph

wind: WNW 6-12 mph

wind: WNW 6-12 mph

wind: WNW 6-12 mph

wind: NNW 4-8 mph

Almanac

New Mexico weather

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Tuesday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 76°/58° Normal high/low ............................ 89°/57° Record high ............................... 99° in 2009 Record low ................................. 49° in 1950 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.25” Month/year to date .................. 1.31”/3.42” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.66”/5.37” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.12” Month/year to date .................. 1.06”/4.40”

Air quality index

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64

285

64

Farmington 89/60

Española 87/63 Los Alamos 80/57 40

Santa Fe 82/56 Pecos 79/52

25

Albuquerque 88/64

Area rainfall

87

Taos 79/48

84

666

Gallup 86/58

Raton 82/55

64

64

Clayton 84/56

56 412

Pollen index

25

Las Vegas 79/52

25

54

40

40 285

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.22” Month/year to date .................. 1.20”/2.32” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.10” Month/year to date .................. 1.85”/4.20” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.64” Month/year to date .................. 1.44”/3.24” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.29” Month/year to date .................. 1.58”/6.43” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.16” Month/year to date .................. 0.46”/2.37”

The following water statistics of July 12 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 5.197 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 2.330 City Wells: 0.962 Buckman Wells: 2.610 Total water produced by water system: 11.099 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.353 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 19.8 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.55 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

As of 7/11/2014 Chenopod ............................................ 1 Low Plantian ............................................... 1 Low Grasses ................................................ 1 Low Other ................................................... 1 Low Total.............................................................4

25

285

180

Roswell 93/67

Ruidoso 77/58

25

Truth or Consequences 88/69

70

70

70

380

380

By Steven Greenhouse

Hobbs 93/67

285

Alamogordo 92/71

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

70

180

Las Cruces 92/69

Carlsbad 97/73

54

285

10

Sun and moon

State extremes Tue. High 92 ............................. Alamogordo Tue. Low 46 ................................ Eagle Nest

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

Hi/Lo W 92/66 pc 81/62 pc 70/48 pc 88/66 pc 91/69 pc 72/52 t 79/54 t 79/62 c 69/50 pc 82/62 c 81/56 pc 89/66 pc 80/61 pc 89/65 s 83/63 t 85/59 pc 82/57 t 86/64 pc 91/67 pc

Hi/Lo W 92/71 t 88/64 t 72/44 t 93/69 t 97/73 pc 75/48 t 81/53 t 84/56 t 72/53 t 87/61 t 82/59 t 93/69 t 87/63 t 89/60 t 93/66 t 86/58 t 84/53 t 93/67 pc 92/69 t

Hi/Lo W 93/69 t 91/66 t 68/46 t 89/64 c 94/67 c 78/47 t 76/52 t 74/56 pc 73/49 t 76/56 c 85/58 pc 96/69 pc 90/64 t 92/60 pc 85/62 c 88/57 t 87/52 t 88/63 c 95/69 t

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

Hi/Lo 77/56 86/64 72/55 85/67 82/61 80/56 73/47 81/62 90/67 73/55 84/65 84/61 87/65 73/48 88/66 86/63 91/70 78/58 82/61

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

Hi/Lo W 79/52 t 93/72 t 80/57 t 92/65 t 91/64 t 82/55 t 70/46 t 90/63 t 93/67 t 77/58 t 91/61 t 86/66 t 92/67 t 79/48 t 88/69 t 92/64 t 95/72 t 83/59 t 84/58 t

Hi/Lo W 70/53 t 95/71 pc 80/57 t 93/64 t 81/61 c 75/53 t 73/46 t 90/62 t 89/63 c 73/57 t 82/61 t 89/64 pc 93/67 pc 78/45 t 92/68 pc 80/59 pc 96/72 t 83/58 pc 87/57 t

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

Sunrise today ............................... 6:01 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:20 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 11:19 p.m. Moonset today ........................... 10:57 a.m. Sunrise Thursday ......................... 6:01 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 8:19 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ..................... 11:56 p.m. Moonset Thursday ...................... 12:03 p.m. Sunrise Friday ............................... 6:02 a.m. Sunset Friday ................................ 8:19 p.m. Moonrise Friday ................................... none Moonset Friday ............................. 1:06 p.m. Last

New

First

Full

July 18

July 26

Aug 3

Aug 10

The planets Rise 4:34 a.m. 4:04 a.m. 1:28 p.m. 6:30 a.m. 3:09 p.m. 12:09 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:52 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 12:33 a.m. 8:41 p.m. 1:49 a.m. 12:49 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

National cities

Weather for July 16

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Anchorage 69/47 pc 68/56 pc 66/55 pc Atlanta 86/73 c 83/62 pc 84/65 pc Baltimore 88/72 t 83/63 pc 83/63 pc Billings 71/57 r 83/60 pc 90/64 pc Bismarck 76/46 pc 80/54 s 87/60 s Boise 96/70 s 98/68 s 99/66 pc Boston 85/71 c 78/65 t 82/64 s Charleston, SC 93/79 t 85/71 t 89/71 pc Charlotte 94/75 t 85/63 pc 86/66 pc Chicago 70/55 c 72/55 pc 77/60 pc Cincinnati 75/63 s 73/54 pc 76/55 s Cleveland 75/66 pc 70/56 pc 73/55 pc Dallas 94/76 c 89/72 t 81/69 t Denver 81/57 t 74/53 t 79/57 pc Detroit 73/62 pc 72/56 pc 76/57 pc Fairbanks 58/53 c 66/55 sh 71/55 c Flagstaff 75/58 c 80/55 t 84/53 pc Honolulu 88/77 pc 88/75 pc 88/74 pc Houston 89/75 t 93/76 pc 90/76 t Indianapolis 71/56 pc 72/53 pc 75/55 s Kansas City 74/54 pc 75/56 pc 74/59 pc Las Vegas 101/83 t 104/83 t 105/82 pc Los Angeles 82/69 pc 78/64 pc 76/64 pc

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

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 77/67 r 78/59 pc 81/61 s 81/71 pc 79/63 pc 79/65 t 90/71 t 89/77 t 90/76 t 69/55 t 68/56 pc 75/60 pc 72/54 pc 75/58 s 77/63 s 91/75 t 87/72 t 88/76 pc 86/73 t 81/66 t 81/66 pc 83/68 pc 78/63 t 73/62 t 91/73 t 88/74 t 90/74 t 91/74 t 83/65 pc 83/65 pc 103/86 pc 107/84 pc 107/83 s 79/68 pc 72/53 pc 76/55 pc 90/60 pc 89/59 s 83/56 s 94/77 t 86/64 pc 87/65 pc 76/59 pc 77/60 s 79/62 s 98/77 t 89/63 pc 92/70 pc 96/73 t 97/77 pc 97/78 t 72/69 c 74/68 pc 73/68 pc 81/59 c 73/61 pc 71/60 pc 87/57 pc 86/60 s 81/57 s 73/50 pc 77/54 s 79/61 s 87/73 t 82/61 pc 82/59 pc 89/73 t 83/67 pc 85/66 pc

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

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

Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Warm front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Tue. High: 118 .................. Death Valley, CA Tue. Low: 36 ......................... Hettinger, ND ™

Weather history

Weather trivia

Lightning struck a man in Barry’s Landing, Wyo., on July 16, 1978. The lightning traveled from his shoulder to his feet, blasting off his clothes and burning holes in his socks.

is the world record for rainfall Q: What intensity? Unionville, Maryland, on July 4, 1956; A: 1.23 inches fell in one minute.

Newsmakers No hints from Hillary on ‘The Daily Show’

Hillary Rodham Clinton

Jon Stewart

NEW YORK — Hillary Rodham Clinton gave Jon Stewart no hints about whether she will run for president, but acknowledged during Tuesday’s taping of The Daily Show that the speculation surrounding her possible candidacy has become “a cottage industry.” Stewart introduced Clinton by saying, “She’s here solely for one reason: to publicly and definitively declare her candidacy for president of the United States … I think.” That proved not to be true. The two moved on to a series of national and international issues Clinton faced as secretary of state. Stewart also plugged Clinton’s new book, Hard Choices, calling it an “eyewitness view” to her four years as chief U.S. diplomat. But he kept returning to everyone’s main question: the 2016 presidential race, joking, “I think I speak for everybody when I say, no one cares [about the book], they just want to know if you’re running for president.” The memoir is No. 2 on The New York Times’ nonfiction best-seller list. The hardcover is right behind the No. 1 best-seller, Edward Klein’s Blood Feud, which details the alleged animosity between the Clinton and Obama families. The Associated Press

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

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TV

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

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top picks

7 p.m. on PBS My Wild Affair A new series that examines the links between humans and animals begins with “The Elephant Who Found a Mom,” detailing what came out of the tragedy of two deaths. Orphaned elephant daughter Aisha found a defender and protector in Daphne Sheldrick, whose temporary absence to attend her daughter’s wedding left the baby pachyderm devastated. The outcome inspired Sheldrick to rescue other orphaned elephants. 8 p.m. on PBS NOVA Of all the continents on Earth, none preserves a more spectacular story of its origins than Australia. The four-part miniseries “Australia’s First 4 Billion Years” takes viewers on an adventure from the birth of the Earth to the emergence of the world we know today. Host and geologist is Richard Smith. 8 p.m. on CBS Extant In “Extinct,” the second episode of the new science-fiction drama series, the mystery deepens over newly returned astronaut Molly’s (Halle Berry) pregnancy.

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Government tackles on-call employment There’s a push to give steadier shifts to part-timers

Today’s UV index

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Sharlene Santos says she and other workers at a Zara store in New York got two days’ notice of their shifts. The Obama administration is trying to put limits on the increasing use of part-time workers to curb the harshest effects of some scheduling practices. JAMES ESTRIN/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Source:

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Water statistics

Clovis 87/61

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Tuesday’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

9 p.m. on ABC Motive The son (guest star Alexander Calvert) of a critically ill woman ends up on life support in the new episode “Angels With Dirty Faces.” The attacker is her home-care nurse (guest star Paul Campbell), and an emergency call made right after the assault deepens the mystery. Angie and Vega (Kristin Lehman, Louis Ferreira, pictured) learn the woman (guest star Rachel Hayward) and her son had been estranged for some time, making the detectives ponder the true motive. 9 p.m. on NBC Taxi Brooklyn A foster parent’s murder brings out Cat’s (Chyler Leigh) maternal side — and no one is more surprised than her — in the new episode “Precious Cargo.” She takes a shine to one of the slain woman’s young charges, and vice versa.

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The New York Times

As more workers find their lives upended and their paychecks reduced by everchanging, on-call schedules, government officials are trying to put limits on the harshest of those scheduling practices. The actions reflect a growing national movement — fueled by women’s and labor groups — to curb practices that affect millions of families, like assigning just one or two days of work a week or requiring employees to work unpredictable hours that wreak havoc with everyday routines like college and child care. The recent, rapid spread of on-call employment to retail and other sectors has prompted proposals that would require companies to pay employees extra for on-call work and to give two weeks’ notice of a work schedule. Vermont and San Francisco have adopted laws giving workers the right to request flexible or predictable schedules. Scott M. Stringer, the New York City comptroller, is pressing the City Council to take up such legislation. And last month, President Barack Obama ordered federal agencies to give the “right to request” to 2 million federal workers. The new laws and proposals generally require an employer to discuss a new employee’s situation and to consider scheduling requests, but they don’t force companies

to accommodate individual schedules. Many businesses have opposed these measures, arguing that they represent improper government intrusion into private operations. In a climate where many retailers, restaurants and other businesses are still struggling after the recession, economists point to the increased uncertainty faced by employees. About 27.4 million Americans work part time. The number of those parttimers who would prefer to work full time has nearly doubled since 2007, to 7.5 million. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, 47 percent of part-time hourly workers ages 26 to 32 receive a week or less of advance notice for their schedule. In a study of the data, two University of Chicago professors found that employers dictated the work schedules for about half of young adults, without their input. For parttime workers, schedules on average fluctuated from 17 to 28 hours a week. A national campaign — the Fair Workweek Initiative — is pushing for legislation to restrict scheduling practices in places including Milwaukee, New York and Santa Clara, Calif. The effort includes the National Women’s Law Center, the United Food and Commercial Workers union and the Retail Action Project, a New York workers’ group. “Too many workers are working either too many or too few hours in an economy that expects us to be available 24/7,” said Carrie Gleason, director of the Fair Workweek Initiative.

GM avoided giving answers to death queries By Rebecca R. Ruiz and Danielle Ivory The New York Times

The car crash that killed Gene Erickson caught the attention of federal regulators. Why did the Saturn Ion he was traveling in, along a rural Texas road, suddenly swerve into a tree? Why did the air bags fail? General Motors told federal authorities that it could not provide answers. But only a month earlier, a GM engineer had concluded in an internal evaluation that the Ion had most likely lost power, disabling its air bags, according to a subsequent internal investigation commissioned by GM. Now, GM’s response, as well as its replies to queries in other crashes obtained by The New York Times from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, casts doubt on how forthright the automaker was with regulators about a defective ignition switch that GM has linked to at least 13 deaths in the last decade. They provide details for the first time on the issue at the heart of a criminal investigation by the Justice Department: whether GM, in its interaction with safety regulators, obscured a deadly defect that would also injure perhaps hundreds of people. The company repeatedly found a way not to answer the

simple question from regulators of what led to a crash. In at least three cases of fatal crashes, including the accident that killed Erickson, GM said that it had not assessed the cause. In another fatal crash, GM said that attorney-client privilege may have prevented it from answering. And in other cases, the automaker was more blunt, writing, “GM opts not to respond.” The responses are found in documents known as death inquiries, which The Times obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. In those inquiries, regulators ask automakers to explain the circumstances surrounding a crash to help identify potential defects in cars. When asked about GM’s responses to the government’s death inquiries, James Cain, a spokesman, said on Tuesday: “We are confronting our problems openly and directly. We are taking responsibility for what has happened and making significant changes across our company to make sure that it never happens again.” On Thursday, the head of GM’s legal department, Michael P. Millikin, is expected to face intense scrutiny before lawmakers at a Senate hearing. He is scheduled to testify along with, among others, Mary T. Barra, the chief executive, who faced a harsh grilling before the same panel in April.


Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Presbyterian decision not anti-Israel

J

ohn Greenspan’s letter (“A mistake on Israel,” July 7) about Presbyterian divestment in Israel is witty but short on facts. We are not divesting in Israel — we support Israel — but we are divesting in companies that aid in Israel’s illegal actions in Palestinian territory. Caterpillar makes the bulldozers that are specifically designed to tear down houses; Israel is bulldozing Palestinian houses today. Bulldozers have destroyed literally thousands of Palestinian olive trees on Palestinian land, where Israel has no right to be. So we have divested from Caterpillar. Greenspan says that Presbyterians should be ashamed. We are not. We are proud to stand for justice. We pray that Israel might succeed as a homeland for the Jews, but Israel cannot do it by oppressing neighbors.

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

City surveillance a work in progress

V

COMMENTARY: RADLEY BALKO

ideo surveillance appears to be a nasty reality of modern life — to increase safety, catch crooks and otherwise keep an eye on public spaces, cities and governments around the world are spying on citizens. With, of course, the citizens’ knowledge. In Santa Fe, government video surveillance is still in early stages. Most such cameras are on private property, such as hotels or stores, and even in churches that have many visitors. A move by the city of Santa Fe to begin patrolling through video has been underway, to mixed success. But already, city leaders want to expand the $253,000 project, initially designed to cover parking lots, parks and trailheads. Another 104 cameras could be added, including 46 at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center and 18 at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center. The Parks and Open Space Advisory Committee considered changes to the video plan in May. Committee members didn’t object, and it now goes to the council’s Finance Committee on July 28. We hope Finance Committee members ask some tough questions — especially about the cameras originally planned for trailheads. The rash of car burglaries have made it commonplace to return from a hike and find broken windows and stolen belongings. Trailheads need the cameras more than most places, and the city should get the infrastructure in place sooner rather than later. What’s more, cameras in remote areas are more essential than cameras at highly trafficked parks, or even at the Chavez Center, which has security and staff to watch out for trouble. Of course, some high-traffic sites do need surveillance, such as Cathedral Park. Whether it’s fighting, drug deals, pot smoking or vandalism — enough goes on at that park to keep police investigating. In fact, Mayor Javier Gonzales’ efforts to renew downtown will fail unless officials can get a handle on Cathedral Park. We are told that meetings among police, church and nearby business officials have been taking place — no loitering signs will be up soon, and cameras to catch bad and illegal behavior will help underscore the message that the park is a place to enjoy, not inhabit. Security company owner Peso Chavez, a former city councilor, has helped work out the kinks on getting the cameras installed — his business won the contract to place the cameras. Such massive changes, of course, now need the approval of city committees and the council. While we support targeted video cameras, we urge all involved to place only what cameras are essential. After all, cameras aren’t just for bad guys. They capture everyone.

Inside the grammar of police shootings

The past 100 years

The Rev. Richard C. Rowe

Santa Fe

Judging from left In reference to Roger Carasso’s letter (“Judging from the right,” July 6), I wish Democrats and other leftists would quit using women in order to gain political points. The First Amendment, along with the rest of the Bill of Rights, was included by our constitutional fathers because they believed in basic human rights, such as freedom of religion and free speech. After being forced on their knees by the Church of England, they obviously decided nothing was more important than these basic human freedoms. As a woman, I believe that religious principles, such as biblical revulsion to mass infanticide, should outweigh feminist demands that our tax money pay for dirty, squalid, government-run abortion clinics. Why should business owners, such as Hobby Lobby founder David Green, have to check their religious beliefs at the door just because this government is in bed with antiGod, pro-abortion groups?

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We welcome your letters Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Please limit letters to 150 words. Please print or type your name, and give us your address and telephone numbers — home and work — for verification. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.

Lastly, if I were Carasso, I really don’t think I would bandy about concepts such as “treason” or judicial disparity, in this day and age of President Barack Obama’s administration (i.e., six years of scandals, lies and missing emails). Robyn Schmalz

Santa Fe

Right to be wrong As a proud American and a veteran of the U.S. Army, I am really thankful for our First Amendment rights to freedom of speech. I am also aware that the First Amendment allows folks such as Brad Martin (“Con-

ou’re probably familiar with the weaselly way politicians tend to apologize when they’ve been caught red-handed. The most famous example is the line “mistakes were made.” Use of the passive voice in an admission of wrongdoing has become so common that the political consultant William Schneider suggested a few years ago that it be referred to as the “past exonerative” tense. You’ll often see a similar grammatical device when a police officer shoots someone. Communications officers at police agencies are deft at contorting the English language to minimize the culpability of an officer or the agency by not assigning responsibility. Here is how the Los Angeles Police Department described a shooting that did not involve a police officer: “On February 10, 2014, around 6:10 p.m., the victim was in the parking lot in the 13640 block of Burbank Boulevard, to the rear, when he was confronted by the suspect. The suspect produced a semiautomatic handgun and fired numerous times striking the victim in the torso.”

sider impeaching President Obama,” July 5) to watch and absorb all the hooey spewed by Republican Rep. Darrell Issa’s “oversight” committee and regurgitated on “Faux Snooze” channel. I read Brad Martin’s letter three times and believe he didn’t miss a single one of the fake “scandals” being beaten to death by those sources. Well, it is a free country. J. Dan Dougharty

Santa Cruz, N.M.

Drunken driving I find it very odd the editorial (“Curb alcohol abuse with excise taxes,” Our View, July 9) states that raising taxes on

Note the active voice. We have a clear subject, verb and direct object. Contrast that with how the LAPD described this shooting by LAPD officers on May 12: “While still in a position of cover, the officers encountered a male suspect who was armed with a weapon at which time an officer involved shooting occurred.” Last week in Georgia, a deputy in Coffee County shot a 10-year-old boy in the leg. The deputy was participating in a manhunt for a robbery suspect who had shot a police officer. Here’s how a report from the Albany, Ga., station WALB-TV described it: “The situation of how the child was shot remains unclear. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation in Eastman was called to investigate the shooting. Sheriff Wooten said a deputy, who was not named, was approaching the property when a dog ran up to him. The deputy’s gun fired one shot, missing the dog and hitting the child. It was not clear if the gun was accidentally fired by the deputy.” The most plausible scenario is that the deputy tried to shoot the dog and mistakenly shot the kid instead. It’s less plausible but possible that

MALLARD FILLMORE

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

liquor would have an impact on drunken driving. The Legislature raised the excise tax a few years ago and spent more money on treatment, and still our DWI rates are too high. The way to impact DWI is for us to vote and pressure judges, law enforcement and officials to follow up on prosecution paperwork and recording of past offenses. The New Mexican could publish a running scorecard tracking the actions of judges, prosecutors and officials in regards to dismissals and sentences. This would really help the public get rid of officials not truly serious about tough enforcement of our DWI laws. If drunks know they are going to go to jail, and will lose their vehicles, their livelihood and families, rates of DWI would soon plunge — if for no other reason than multiple offenders would be off the streets. We should never allow multiple offenders to be in our midst, endangering us all. Louis Matta

Santa Fe

the deputy didn’t intend to fire at all, in which case he’s still negligent for mishandling his weapon. What isn’t remotely plausible is that the deputy’s gun jumped out of its holster, walked up to the kid and shot the kid in the leg. Physics tells us that the gun could not have fired without some sort of intermediary action on the part of the deputy. Yet the sheriff’s explanation, at least the way the WALB reporter relays it, leaves open just that possibility. All of this wouldn’t be much more troubling than your typical grammatical backside-covering by other public officials if it weren’t for the fact that (a) we’re talking about people getting shot and killed, and (b) in most cases, the police agencies engaging in linguistic gymnastics to publicly deflect responsibility for police shootings will inevitably be in charge of investigating the same officers for the same shootings. Radley Balko blogs about criminal justice, the drug war and civil liberties for The Washington Post. This column was excerpted from washingtonpost.com/news/ the-watch.

From the Santa Fe New Mexican: July 16, 1914: Portales — Twenty-five cents a pound is the figure offered by the civic committee of the Portales Women’s Club for flies, with an offer of one dollar for the 10th pound brought in Saturday the 18th by any boy or girl of Portales. The campaign had been taken up with enthusiasm and present prospects are that several tons of flies will be swatted or trapped. July 16, 1964: State officials have entered into the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant controversy, after being informed some land owners had been given a 24-hour eviction notices. District Court Judge James Scarborough issued a temporary restraining order late Wednesday against the officers and directors of Abiquiú Corp., Tierra Amarilla Land Grant. The officers and directors were ordered to appear in court in Santa Fe on Friday to show cause why the restraining order should not be made permanent. On July 6, the Abiquiú Corp. mailed notices of eviction to land owners within the Tierra Amarilla Land Grant, maintaining that the grant was given to Manuel Martínez through terms of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and that the land belonged solely to the heirs of Martínez. July 16, 1989: Judges and law enforcement officials were introduced Friday to a new “home arrest” system to be used by the Santa Fe County Detention Center as a way of reducing the cost of housing nonviolent inmates. The new system, being purchased from BI Inc. of Boulder, Colo., could save the county as much as 80 percent of the cost of housing an inmate. The county will pay $48.75 per day for inmates kept in the jail to Corrections Corporation of America, a private company that operates the jail. Inmates monitored with an electronic device will cost $9.50 per day, and the inmate will pay the cost.

LA CUCARACHA

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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TIME OUT

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Horoscope When this puzzle is done, the seven circled letters, reading clockwise, will spell a phrase relating to the puzzle’s theme.

1 6 10 14 15 16 17 18 20 21 22 23 26 27 28 29 31 38 39 40 41 46 47 48 51

ACROSS Put off ___-American Pen, e.g. Not engaging “Remove,” to a typesetter Oscar-winning Ben Affleck film Not pass [Canada] Lighted tree, maybe Zilch Party with a piñata, say “For sure, dude!” Spoiled ___ holiday Cook’s canful “Wait just ___!” [U.S.A.] “Is this the spot?” Big foot spec Something to play [U.S.S.R.] Go a few rounds Part of a round Part of a science credit One sharing a bunk bed, maybe

52 Athena’s counterpart 55 Fortune 100 company based in Seattle 57 Salsa, e.g. 58 Wildcatter’s investment 59 [Japan] 61 Sing with dulcet tones 63 Like many a beanie 64 Intl. association since 1960 65 Place of learning in France 66 Word after “&” in some store names 67 June 14, e.g. 68 Some protesters in China DOWN 1 “You’re dethpicable” toon 2 English pop singer Goulding 3 Hot chili designation 4 Very long period 5 ’60s atty. gen. whose brother served as president 6 Start of a website manager’s email address, maybe

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, July 16, 2014: This year heralds a new beginning and a new luck cycle for the next 12 years. The first year is the luckiest.

7 All-natural 8 1992 Winter Olympics backdrop 9 C. S. Lewis’s birthplace 10 Memorial Day weekend event 11 Take with force 12 Brightly colored rock 13 Diet food phrase 19 Source of soft feathers 21 Zilch 24 Where odalisques once worked 25 ___ White (Clue character)

26 Founded 30 Club 31 “Not another word!” 32 Crumpets go-with 33 Gets in the vicinity of 34 Place to play cards 35 Place to play cards 36 Pipe shape 37 Get 42 Office printing giant 43 Tlaloc, to the Aztecs 44 Overnight, maybe 45 + or – particle

48 Gaggle : geese :: exaltation : ___ 49 Protein-building acid 50 Yacht club locale 52 Chop up 53 Part of a string quartet 54 “___ of God,” 1985 film 56 Jerry Scott/Jim Borgman teen comic strip 57 1982’s “Ebony and Ivory,” e.g. 60 Place with robes 61 Toon’s place 62 Developer of the U.S.’s first TV test pattern

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

Chess quiz WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Win the queen. Solution: 1. N(4)d2! Qf5 2. g4! (attacks and wins it) [adapted, Pourramezanali-Debashis ’14].

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

Subject: SONG TITLES: FEMALE NAMES The first word of each song title is a

Hocus Focus

woman’s first name. Provide it. (e.g., “___ _ and Johnny.” Answer: Frankie.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. “____, Don’t Take Your Love to Town” Answer________ 2. “____ on My Mind” Answer________ 3. “____ with the Light Brown Hair” Answer________

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You’ll have reason to celebrate today, even if you feel you need to lie low. You will be starting a new luck cycle. Tonight: Out and about. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You might enter a cycle where you enjoy your home life much more. You are likely to make an addition to your home. Tonight: Buy a favorite dessert, and celebrate. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Your ability to communicate and handle an active social life will emerge in the next few months. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Reach out to someone who is a valuable source of information. You could be looking at a positive money situation. Tonight: Join a friend at a new haunt. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Jupiter, the planet of expansion and good luck, moves into your sign today. Tonight: Out and about. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Keep reaching out to several people. You will start noticing the difference in how you feel. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion.

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Adult daughter may have OCD Dear Annie: My wife and I are a little concerned about our 30-year-old daughter, “Amber.” Every day, she spends an hour brushing her teeth and five full minutes washing her hands and then rechecks the same things about five times. Amber says she can’t control it and it’s hard to stop. This has been going on for a little over a year. Is this anything to be concerned about? Is this just the way she is? Any advice would be great. — Concerned Parents Dear Parents: Repetitive behaviors like this are obsessivecompulsive disorders. They are not uncommon. However, OCD behaviors can become worse over time, and it helps to get treatment as soon as possible. You or Amber can contact the International OCD Foundation (ocfoundation. org) for more information and referrals to therapists who specialize in dealing with this problem. We’ll be thinking of you. Dear Annie: My dear motherin-law has suffered with dementia for 10 years. This wonderful, loving woman did not receive the care she could have, and as a result, her quality of life is worse than it needed to be. I have some advice for family members when a loved one receives the dreaded diagnosis of dementia or Alzheimer’s: You need to learn about the illness, and you need to make a plan. Pretending the person is not sick doesn’t help. It makes life harder for them. I never realized how powerful a force denial could be until I witnessed my father-inlaw’s absolute refusal to change anything about their life. Expecting her to keep cooking, leaving her alone, etc., were truly acts of cruelty. Realize that your loved one is not going to get better. He or she may stay the same for a long time, or may steadily get worse, but they are not going to improve. You need to keep them safe and anticipate that they may do things

they have never done before — like wander, take the wrong medicine or let a stranger into the house. If you live out of town, consider the possibility that those who live near your loved one may know more about the day-to-day situation than you do. When you visit and keep Mom company all day and do fun activities with her, yes, she’s going to seem better, but it doesn’t reflect the reality of her normal day when she’s alone for hours at a time. If the locals say Mom needs more care, they may be right. Get help. Join a support group or contact your council on aging. We hired a wonderful dementia coach who helps families figure out what to do. It is possible for the sick person to enjoy the things that they are able to do if they are given support. Consider that the person’s spouse might not be the best caregiver. Observe what is really happening in the household. You may need to hire helpers. In day care, assisted living or other facilities, there is trained staff, always rested and fresh. Try to avoid isolation, for the sick person as well as the caregiver. Don’t turn down offers of help. I called some of my motherin-law’s friends to ask whether they would come over and learned that they had been turned away by my father-in-law. Someday I hope there is a cure for this horrible illness, but until then we have to do the best we can to manage life for those who are dependent on us. — The Inlaw Dear In-law: Thank you for taking the time to write and guide others who are in a similar situation. We hope anyone affected by this dreadful disease will contact the Alzheimer’s Association at alz. org. Their website has a wealth of information for dementia and Alzheimer’s. There is also a 24/7 Helpline at 800-272-3900.

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Your focus will be on work and/or establishing a new project. Trust your judgment right now. Tonight: Honor a friend’s request.

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. “____ in the Sky with Diamonds” Answer________ 5. “____ With the Laughing Face” Answer________ 6. “____ by Starlight” Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. “____ Blue Gown” Answer________ 8. “____, You Is My Woman Now” Answer________ 9. “____ Sweet as Apple Cider” Answer________ ANSWERS:

ANSWERS: 1. Ruby. 2. Georgia. 3. Jeanie. 4. Lucy. 5. Nancy. 6. Stella. 7. Alice. 8. Bess. 9. Ida.

Jumble

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher

Today in history Today is Wednesday, July 16, the 197th day of 2014. There are 168 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On July 16, 1945, the United States exploded its first experimental atomic bomb in the desert of Alamogordo, New Mexico.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Pressure builds. You will have a chance to incorporate your creativity into your community. Tonight: A must appearance. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You could have a special opportunity to open a new door or experience life in a new way. Tonight: Hang close to home. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You’ll need to reach out to someone at a distance. Listen well to the other party. Tonight: Clear out emails before you decide what to do.

Cryptoquip

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You might be concerned about a money matter. You also could be noticing a difference in how others are relating to you. Tonight: Keep to your budget. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH You respond well to whatever comes down the path toward you. Curb a tendency to overeat. Others can’t help but respond to you positively. Tonight: As you like it. Jacqueline Bigar

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


Obituaries B-2 Police notes B-2 Sports B-4 Comics B-8

LOCAL NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Sports,B-4

B

Fuego close to clinching home field advantage in playoffs.

Company tries again to tap N.M. plains’ water $600M project would pipe 17 billion gallons to thirsty cities

By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — A commercial venture that sought to pipe billions of gallons of water from rural Western New Mexico to more populated areas of the drought-stricken state is making

another run at getting approval for the $600 million project. Augustin Plains Ranch filed a new application Monday with the State Engineer’s Office. Its previous application, one of the most contested filings in the agency’s history, was rejected two years ago.

After months of meeting with municipalities, regulators and state lawmakers, project director Michel Jichlinski said Augustin Plains Ranch now has a more specific plan that would address the state’s water needs. “All of our elected officials are pressing for answers and we

believe APR is one of the state’s best options,” Jichlinski said in a statement Tuesday. The plan calls for drilling more than three dozen wells that would be capable of pumping more than 17 billion gallons of water a year for up to three centuries to supplement dwindling supplies in the

Game drives home dangers of texting

Joe Griñe

As a county commissioner, he made headlines as passenger in DWI arrest.

Griñe is latest local Dem to back Martinez

Please see WATER, Page B-2

Judge in Aamodt case is recused Husband’s election to City Council bans her from handling suit By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Former commissioner says GOP governor ‘follows her heart’ By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

Former Santa Fe County commissioner Joe Griñe on Tuesday became the latest Democrat to endorse the re-election of Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. Griñe, who served one term on the commission between 1997 and 2000, is remembered by some Santa Fe residents for a string of controversial incidents that took place beyond the commission chambers. In a statement released by the Martinez campaign, Griñe said, “I am a Democrat. But I support Gov. Susana Martinez because she follows her heart and does what’s right for our families. Whether she was tackling the largest budget deficit in state history or taking on union bosses to pass education reform, Gov. Martinez has never shied away from a fight for our state and has always met challenges head on.” Griñe is a former state police officer whose family owned the now-closed Village Inn Pancake House on Cerrillos Road. He’s the latest in a string of past and present Democratic officials whose endorsements have been touted by Martinez’s campaign. Martinez is running for re-election against Attorney General Gary King. During his time on the commission, Griñe made some headlines he probably didn’t want to see. After he won the Democratic primary in 1996 — but before

Rio Grande Valley. The company would build a 140-mile pipeline to Bernalillo County as well as other infrastructure to capture runoff for recharging the aquifer beneath the San Augustin Plains west of Socorro.

From left, Elena Ortega-Saunders, Monique Larrañaga and Desiree Dominguez, all 13, watch Daine Medina, 20, as he tries out the AT&T texting-and-driving simulator Tuesday at Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Fe. The simulator is part of the national It Can Wait campaign, which aims to save lives by demonstrating to teenagers the real dangers of texting while driving. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Simulator gives teens hands-on lesson about distracted driving By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

GET BEHIND THE WHEEL

M

Please see GRIÑE, Page B-2

onique Larrañaga hit a parked car while texting and driving. Desiree Dominguez crashed her car into a curb after reading a text that said, “Are you ready for tonight?” and responding, “Yeah.” Johnny Martinez’s car was struck by another vehicle while he was texting. He didn’t see the vehicle in time to avoid it. Luckily, the three Santa Fe teenagers, none of them old enough to have a driver’s license, weren’t injured. They had just tried out an AT&T virtual reality simulator Tuesday at the Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Fe. Dozens of teenagers took turns in the driver’s seat of the simulator. As each new driver took the wheel, a cityscape passed by on a big screen, filled with parked and moving cars, stoplights and a speedometer. The screen would alert the driver when he or she had received a text message and would encourage the driver to respond to the message

You can try a version of the texting-and-driving simulator on your computer at www.itcanwait simulator.org/.

READ THE TEXTING BAN Under a new state law that took effect July 1, drivers who text can face fines of $25 for a first offense and $50 for each subsequent offense. Read the ban, co-sponsored by state Sen. Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, at www.nmlegis.gov/lcs/legislation. aspx?chamber=S&legtype=B&legno=%20%20 19&year=14.

while continuing to drive. “I thought it would be easier because I’ve seen people text and drive,” Dominguez said.

Please see TEXTING, Page B-3

The federal district judge handling the Aamodt case, the state’s oldest water-rights litigation, has recused herself because her husband is now a member of the Santa Fe City Council. U.S. District Judge Martha Vázquez, the wife of City Councilor Joseph Maestas, took herself off the Aamodt case Monday, according to a notice filed in U.S. District Court. Vázquez was assigned the case in 2003. Martha The litigation Vázquez was filed by the New Mexico state engineer in 1966 to determine the water rights of four pueblos and thousands of non-Pueblo residents and farmers in the Pojoaque Valley north of Santa Fe. The often contentious case led to near riots in the 1980s. A proposed settlement was finally reached in 2006 between the pueblos, the city and county of Santa Fe, the state and the federal government. Vázquez was presiding over the case at the time the settlement was reached. Vázquez’s husband, Maestas, was elected to the City Council in March. Federal law prohibits a judge from handling a case in which a spouse is an officer of a party to the lawsuit, according to Vázquez’s recusal. Vázquez said in the notice that none of the 65 orders she has issued since January 2014 in the case involved the city of Santa Fe. Some attorneys in the case are disappointed in her recusal. “Judge Vázquez has been on the case a long time and has such an institutional knowledge,” said

Please see AAMODT, Page B-3

Event to showcase healing arts of curanderos Dozens of natural healers to gather for annual fest celebrating Mexican culture By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican

El Rancho de las Golondrinas’ seventh annual ¡Viva México! event this weekend will feature some of Mexico’s well-known curanderos, or folk healers, who will offer

healing ceremonies throughout the twoday celebration of Mexican culture and traditions. A total of 30 Mexican curanderos and 20 New Mexican curanderos will participate in the healing arts fair at the event, scheduled from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Curanderismo, long practiced in indigenous villages of Mexico and other parts of Latin America, is the art of using herbs and other traditional healing methods to

treat various ailments. Curanderos also are found in parts of New Mexico, South Texas, Arizona and California. In fact, The University of New Mexico annually has offered summer classes on curanderismo and recently announced an online course on the subject that will start in August. The online courses are taught by Eliseo “Cheo” Torres, vice president for student affairs. The Mexican Consulate in Albuquerque

Please see HEALING, Page B-3

IF YOU GO

A woman practices a traditional healing technique of curanderismo. Curanderos from Mexico and New Mexico will gather at this weekend’s ¡Viva México! celebration at El Rancho de las Golondrinas. COURTESY PHOTO

What: ¡Viva México! Where: El Rancho de las Golondrinas, 334 Los Pinos Road When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Tickets: $8 for adults, $6 seniors and teens Information: Complete list of scheduled events is available at http:// golondrinas.org.

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For routes/schedule Information: RideTheBlueBus.com or 866.206.0754

Free Bus Service Monday - Friday In the Counties and Communities of Los Alamos, Rio Arriba, Santa Fe and Taos


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LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Water: Residents have protested plan and the New Mexico Constitution require proof of where Ranchers and others in the the water is going and why area are concerned the pump- and that no other water-rights ing would eventually suck the holders be harmed before any aquifer dry. transfers are approved. The state engineer turned “The ranch is simply trydown the company’s previous ing to lay claim to a tremenapplication in April 2012, saydous amount of water, which ing the effects could not be belongs to the public, before reasonably evaluated because it has any need for that water,” the proposal was vague and said Bruce Frederick, an attortoo broad. A few months later, ney with the New Mexico a state district judge ruled the Environmental Law Center, state engineer was justified in which has been fighting the denying the application. effort to pump in the San Rural residents and one of Augustin Plains for years. the state’s largest irrigation With little winter snowpack districts have criticized Augus- and sporadic summer rains, tin Plains Ranch, saying the demand on water resources company’s effort is nothing has intensified as New Mexico more than a modern-day water marks its fourth year of severe grab. They say Western water drought. Runoff and river doctrine that has been in place flows have been dismal. for more than a century is Augustin Plains Ranch consupposed to keep speculators tends capturing runoff and from profiting off the sale of recharging the aquifer would water to thirsty users. boost the sustainability of the While the company has area’s resources. However, the included a letter of support company said more research from the city of Rio Rancho, is needed to determine exactly critics say the proposal identi- how much runoff could be fies only potential places and used for replenishing the aquifer. uses for the water. Water law

Continued from Page B-1

Griñe: Was accused of threat to reporter deputies who were trying to search him. he took office — Griñe was No charges were filed accused of grabbing a teenager against Griñe. by the throat and trying to In November 1999, an Albuknock him off a motorcycle on querque Journal reporter filed a residential street. Griñe said a police report accusing Griñe the teen had tried to run him of cutting him off in traffic and down. No charges were filed in then threatening him in downthe case. town Santa Fe. The reporter In 1998, Santa Fe County followed Griñe’s pickup to the sheriff’s deputies held Griñe county administrative buildin protective custody after ing, where, he said, Griñe stopping a car he was riding threatened him. in. The driver, a 21-year-old Griñe admitted passing a woman, was charged with slow-moving car and said the DWI. Griñe, who admitted to driver gave him “some kind of deputies that he was intoxisign gesture” and yelled at him. cated, said in a written stateBut Griñe said he didn’t recment to The New Mexican ognize the reporter. He denied following the incident, “The making threats. “I didn’t do Santa Fe Sheriff Deputy’s [sic] anything,” Griñe told The exercised unnecessary physiNew Mexican at the time. “He cal force, disrespect, and dem- yelled at me in the parking lot. onstrated lack of professional I left him alone and came in. I training. … didn’t speak one word to him “The [deputy’s] report says I at all, just proceeded to walk resisted arrest,” Griñe wrote. “At into the building.” No charges no time did I resist the arrest. were filed. The reporter was The Deputy’s [sic] tried all in S.U. Mahesh, now a spokestheir power to provoke me and man for the state Taxation and continued their pushing and Revenue Department. shoving, but I did not react.” Griñe was defeated for reBut a dashboard video of the election in the 2000 Demoincident (which then-sheriff cratic primary by Jack Sullivan. Benjie Montaño played for Griñe ran for a Santa Fe City reporters) showed Griñe stag- Council seat in 2002 but lost to gering toward the deputies David Coss. after they told him to stay in the car. The only use of force Contact Steve Terrell at came when a deputy kicked sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Griñe’s feet apart after Griñe Read his political blog at www. did not spread his legs folsantafenewmexican.com/news/ lowing several requests from blogs/politics

Continued from Page B-1

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following report: u Gino Gonzales, 32, of Santa Fe was arrested on a charge of receiving or transporting stolen property after a District Court warrant was served at 10:23 a.m. Monday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following reports: u A burglar stole a purse from a vehicle parked in the 6400 block of Richards Avenue between 9 p.m. Monday and 7 a.m. Tuesday. u Someone broke into a house through a window Monday on Rancho sin Vaca, near the Santa Fe Municipal Airport. Nothing was reported stolen. u A burglar stole various items of jewelry from a house on La Puebla Road in Española on Monday.

DWI arrest u Santos Calles-Alvila, 57, of Santa Fe was arrested on

charges of aggravated DWI, reckless driving and driving without a license. A Santa Fe police officer reported that Calles-Alvila was arrested after he ran a stoplight on Maez Road and Cerrillos Road at about 5:30 p.m. Monday.

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

Lawsuit: DEA paid man with crack By Russell Contreras The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Federal agents paid a struggling addict in crack cocaine for his help with an undercover investigation into a Las Vegas, N.M., drug operation, a new lawsuit claims. According to court papers filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque, Aaron Romero, 38, was approached by DEA agents in 2011 to assist with drug deals in exchange for portions of the drugs obtained by authorities. But Romero’s

participation in “Operation Smack City” reignited a previous crack addiction as he became a victim of recklessness on behalf of DEA agents, causing severe emotional and physical harm, the lawsuit said. “The United States government and the defendants affirmatively and intentionally established a pattern of distribution of crack cocaine to [Romero] in order to utilize his addiction to crack cocaine to further the investigation and to ‘stack drug related charges’ against him,” said the lawsuit, which names five DEA agents.

Romero was later charged with distribution of drugs, but federal prosecutors dropped the charges in January, according to his attorney, Erlinda Ocampo Johnson. The lawsuit says the arrangement was in violation of DEA policy, since the agency did not get prior approval from prosecutors. Elizabeth Martinez, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Albuquerque, said the office declined to comment on the case. “He was targeted because he was a known drug addict,” Johnson said. “He is trying to

get his life back together, but he’s still afraid that the government will try to restart his addiction again.” Johnson said news of the arrangement came out during Romero’s criminal case related to a 2012 indictment. She said Romero was not an informant but worked on behalf of informants and DEA agents. The lawsuit seeks $8.5 million in damages for the loss of “love, familial relationships, and companionship” related to Romero’s ongoing crack addiction. Johnson said Romero is now drug free.

Ex-AGs in Utah charged with corruption By Jack Healy The New York Times

SALT LAKE CITY — Two former Utah attorneys general were arrested Tuesday in a sweeping corruption scandal, accused of trading favors and access to rich businessmen and improperly accepting money, golf getaways and rides on private planes and a luxury houseboat. The two men, John Swallow and his immediate predecessor, Mark Shurtleff, were arrested at their homes south of Salt Lake City and face a combined 23 counts of receiving or soliciting bribes, tampering with evidence, illegally accepting gifts and obstructing justice. Both were released from jail on Tuesday and have repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. The allegations span several years and involve a large cast of businessmen with legal or regulatory troubles. For instance, the charges say that in a 2011 meeting at the state Capitol, Swallow suggested that if he received $120,000 from an indicted businessman named Jeremy Johnson, “there might be more options available to Johnson for resolving that criminal case.” The charges also say Shur-

tleff and Swallow, his chief deputy, spent time in 2009 at the California villa of a businessman whose guilty plea in a securities-fraud case had been arranged by the Utah attorney general’s office. The businessman, who was on probation at the time, paid for lodging, golf, food and massages, according to the charges. For more than a year, the scandal swirling around the Attorney General’s Office has riveted the state’s political establishment, spawning several investigations and raising calls to tighten what critics call Utah’s lax campaign-finance laws. Swallow was elected in 2012 to succeed Shurtleff, who served 12 years in office, but announced his resignation in November, less than a year into his first term. In March, a special legislative committee investigating the allegations concluded that, as attorney general, Swallow had hung “a veritable ‘for sale’ sign on the office door that invited moneyed interests to seek special treatment and favors.” Gov. Gary R. Herbert, a Republican, said Tuesday that the arrests of Swallow and Shurtleff, also Republicans, were a “black eye for our state.” Demo-

crats and election-reform advocates quickly called for tighter state campaign-finance laws, saying the cases highlighted the corrosive effect that unlimited donations and shadowy political nonprofit groups can have on the political system, and on the public’s trust in elected leaders. Matthew J. Burbank, an associate professor of political science at the University of Utah, said the charges was at odds with the state’s preferred reputation for economic growth and reliable government. “Utah doesn’t think of itself in these terms,” he said. “This is not Louisiana. This is not Illinois.” But on Tuesday, news cameras here caught the otherwise familiar images of politicians heading home after their booking. As Swallow left jail, he said, “I absolutely maintain my innocence.” He said he had known for a few weeks that he was likely to be arrested. In early June, investigators served search warrants at his home and Shurtleff’s, increasing speculation that the investigation was nearing its culmination. “This finally gives us the opportunity to start to respond,”

Swallow told reporters. “Now we have our constitutional right to make our case in court. I look forward to that.” n an interview with KSL Newsradio, Shurtleff’s lawyer, Max Wheeler, said his client acknowledged that he had done “a lot of dumb things” but insisted that he had committed no crimes. Wheeler said the charges contained “no new smoking gun,” and he pointed out that Shurtleff had previously spoken with federal investigators, who declined last year to file any federal criminal charges. Local FBI agents, however, have continued to work with Utah investigators. At a news conference to announce the arrests, Sim Gill, the district attorney for Salt Lake County, who is an elected Democrat, criticized the Department of Justice’s actions in the case. “I have actually been very disappointed with what the DOJ did or did not do,” he said. “Really, this case should not be something we’re prosecuting as local prosecutors. It really needed to be somewhere else. But those are not calls I get to make.”

Funeral services and memorials JOHN E. ALEJANDRO, SR. John E. Alejandro, Sr. passed away on July 11, 2014. Preceded in death by his father, Pedro Alejandro, and his mother, Maria Victoria Romero Alejandro, he is survived by his wife of 44 years, Bernadette Alejandro (Baca), son, John Alejandro Jr. (Lisa), daughter, Andrea Iranpour (Kavon), his four grandsons, Wyatt, Dylan, Zane, and Joaquin, as well as his sisters, Eulalia "Lala" Sandoval and Sandra Alejandro-Lugo, brothers Pete Alejandro, Jr. and Joseph Alejandro (Della), and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins, in-laws, and other relatives. Born and raised in Santa Fe, he attended Santa Fe High School, the University of New Mexico and served in the United States Army Reserve. A licensed architect for over 30 years, he designed several residences in Santa Fe. He retired from the State of New Mexico in 2010 where he worked as a state land construction manager for Property Control of the Construction Industries Division, and as a staff architect at the New Mexico Department of Transportation. He was a proud member of The American Institute of Architects (AIA), serving as the president of AIA New Mexico for several years, and as treasurer of the AIA Western Mountain Region Council. Throughout his career he served on numerous boards and committees for the City of Santa Fe and Santa Fe County, and most recently he served on the New Mexico Board of Examiners for Architects. He was avidly involved in local politics and numerous campaigns throughout the years. His friends knew him as "Johnny", a fun-loving, outgoing, loyal fan of the New York Yankees. His passions included playing softball, volleyball, and soccer (he was a proud member of the team Alti Wear in the 1970s, made up almost entirely of international players), going skiing, and listening to the music of the 1960s. He was a devoted husband and father, and encouraged his son and daughter to always try new things, fully supporting them in all of their endeavors. His support, counsel, love, creativity, and friendship will be missed by all of his family, friends, and colleagues. A visitation will be held on Wednesday, July 16, 2014 at 6 p.m. at Rosario Chapel followed by a Rosary at 7 p.m. A Mass of Christian burial will be held on Thursday, July 17, 2014 at 9 a.m. at St. Francis Cathedral Basilica de Assisi with burial to follow at Santa Fe Memorial Gardens. Pallbearers will be: Al Valdez, Jim Borrego, Patricio Larragoite, Lawrence Alejandro, Leonard Baca, Ron Sandoval Honorary Pallbearers will be: John Alejandro Jr., Ed Baca, Jim Baca, Paul Baca, Jorge Lugo, Leroy Sanchez, Pete Alejandro Jr.

MARILOUISE (BUNNY) MOORE November 2, 1930 - July 10, 2014 Marilouise, who was known to her family and friends as Bunny, was born at Fort Francis E. Warren in Cheyenne, Wyoming to parents Florence and Paul Evans. Bunny lived most of her life in Santa Fe and graduated from Loretto Academy in 1948. That same year she married J.M. (Mackie) Moore, former Santa Fe City Councilman, who preceded her in death in 1995. Bunny was a devoted wife and mother. She was a devout Catholic and belonged to the Saint Francis Cathedral Parish. She enjoyed all types of arts and craft work and was a member of the Santa Fe Embroiders’ Guild for many years. Bunny moved to Albuquerque in 2012. Before long she connected with "friends her own age" and began enjoying stitching sessions with a new embroidery group. During her final days, Bunny completed her last needlework piece for a grandson, a colorful landscape based on a Grand Canyon photo that she had found in a magazine. Bunny took great joy in meeting and holding her two youngest great grandchildren during the month before her passing. She is survived by her three children, Linda Moore and her daughter Memi; Bill and wife Diana Moore and their children, Bryan, Stephanie, and Michael and their families; Karen and husband Barney Russell, and Karen’s sons Clay and Carter Wallis; sister Elaine Gilmartin; brothers-in-law Dick and Jerry Moore and their wives Mary Sue and Marsha; as well as numerous cousins, nieces and nephews scattered far and wide. A Rosary will be held on Friday, July 18, 2014 at 10 a.m. at St. Anne’s Catholic Church followed by a Mass at 11 a.m. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

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LOCAL & REGION

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Cougar-killing case to be shifted to District Court Former state game commissioner still faces charges of illegal hunting By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

The state has dismissed a charge of unlawfully killing a cougar filed against the former chairman of the New Mexico State Game Commission in a Tucumcari Magistrate Court, but

City’s PR contractor for tourism steps down By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican

A man who has been helping keep Santa Fe on the minds of travelers for the past 22 years is headed off on a new adventure. Steve Lewis is leaving his longtime job as a public relations contractor for the Santa Fe convention and visitors bureau. He said Tuesday he will go back to representing individual clients, primarily in the hospitality industry. “I can tell you that I never expected to have a government contract for that long,” Lewis said. “I Steve Lewis started out when Sam Pick was mayor.” Lewis said the time came for him to do something different. “We’ve really upped the PR program and had some very positive results over these last two years,” he said. “But be that as it may, I am just ready to do something else and kind of go back to a simpler way of working rather than more complex government work.” Randy Randall, executive director of the bureau, which has been renamed TOURISM Santa Fe, said the fact that Lewis was in that role for more than two decades speaks volumes about his work. “He’s going to be very hard for us to replace, but we thank him for the great job he’s done,” Randall said. “We know he’s going to have a more relaxing time with a few smaller accounts.” Lewis called his work with the bureau “a real evolutionary process” that started out small but grew to the point where he gave up his other clients to focus just on the city contract. As public relations contractor, Lewis had a wide range of responsibilities, from answering media inquiries and arranging media visits to issuing news releases and writing speeches for mayors. Lewis’ departure comes months after the appointment of Randall to head the bureau and the March election of a new mayor. Lewis, whose contract expired at the end of the fiscal year in June, said he informed the bureau at the end of March that he wouldn’t seek a new contract. “I’m continuing to help them over the next several weeks on a short-term contract to help with the transition,” he said. Lewis said he served on a committee formed to help select his successor. “Hopefully that decision will be made here in the next week or so,” he said.

will refile the charge in state District Court. Tim Rose, the 10th Judicial District Attorney, will pursue the case against Scott P. Bidegain, a rancher who resigned from the State Game Commission in February after he was charged with participating in the illegal killing of a cougar. Four other men also were charged in the incident, which occurred on a portion of Bidegain’s T4 Ranch near Conchas. The men released dogs to pursue a cougar, then treed and killed

it when the hunter with the license, Jason Roselius, wasn’t present, according to charges filed by a New Mexico Department of Game and Fish officer. Roselius, of Oklahoma City, pleaded no contest in April to a charge of unlawful hunting and was placed on six months of probation. A charge against Chad W. Hassell of Childress, Texas, was dismissed. Rose said prosecutors determined Hassell was a bystander and did not participate in keeping the cougar treed or in killing it.

Bidegain, Billy Ivy of Canyon, Texas, and Larry H. Webb of Newkirk, N.M., are all charged as accessories to crime because they were there and actively encouraged the killing, Rose said. Charges of unlawful hunting against them were dismissed in Magistrate Court and will be refiled within a week in District Court in either Quay County or San Miguel County, Rose said. Rose said defense attorneys made it clear that if their clients were found guilty in Magistrate Court, they would

Healing: Fair participants from N.M. and Mexico Continued from Page B-1 has helped promote Las Golondrinas’ ¡Viva México! event for the past few years.. “New Mexicans like it because they see something different,” said Mexican Consul Mauricio Ibarra Ponce de León. “And Mexicans [in the Santa Fe area] like it because it brings their traditions close to them.” Ibarra also said many Mexicans living in New Mexico have told him the event brings back memories of their home country. Amanda Croker, a spokeswoman for Las Golondrinas, said the Spanish colonial living history museum in La Cienega organizes the event because it wants to help showcase Mexican culture. She said New Mexicans have a long shared a history with

Mexico, and it seems appropriate to celebrate that country’s culture in Santa Fe. “¡Viva México! is showing what Mexico is really about,” Ibarra said. “It’s about the culture, the tradition and its people.” For the fifth year, the celebration will feature Cornisa 20, a show of mariachi clowns, as well as La Danza de los Voladores — or Dance of the Flyers — an ancient ceremony in which dancers climb a high pole, attach themselves to ropes, launch themselves from the top of the pole and then descend in a “flying” performance. The ritual has its roots in the pre-Hispanic period and has been performed by various ethnic groups of Mexico and Central America, especially by the Totanac people of the state of Veracruz in

As in previous years, La Danza de los Voladores, or Dance of the Flyers, will be featured at the annual ¡Viva México! celebration at El Rancho de las Golondrinas. COURTESY PHOTO

eastern Mexico. Contact Uriel Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com.

Martinez said the simulator helped convince him that people shouldn’t text and drive “because they can kill other people.” Under a new state law, drivers of any age who text also can be fined. Gov. Susana Martinez signed a law in March that specifically prohibits texting while driving, although a law on distracted driving already had been on the books. The statute took effect July 1. Drivers can be fined $25 for a first offense and $50 for each subsequent offense. The law prohibits teens with learner permits and intermediate driver’s licenses from using cellphones and bans all drivers from texting while driving. The text messages the teens

Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.

In brief Smoke shop goes up in smoke The inside of a Santa Fe smoke shop called Up in Smoke was destroyed by fire Sunday night. A report from the Santa Fe Police Department said arson is suspected in the fire, which was reported at about 10:30 p.m. after a relative of the owner of the business, at 1632 Second St., got a call from an alarm company about unusual activity. Dennis Montoya drove down from Española on Sunday night to his son’s business to find the inside of the shop “completely totaled.” Celina Espinoza, a spokeswoman for the Santa Fe Police Department, said that when firefighters arrived at the scene, they found the shop’s doors open. Police have not identified any suspects, Espinoza said. Montoya said the business had been open for about two months and sold smoking products and accessories.

Reward offered in jar explosion

Aamodt: Judge had heard case for over a decade Continued from Page B-1 Marcos Martinez, the attorney representing the city in the case. “… There is an incredibly steep learning curve with this being one of the longest-running water-rights cases in the U.S.” He thinks Vázquez, given her long history with the case, could have expedited a final resolution faster than a new judge. John Utton, the attorney who has represented Santa Fe County in the case for years, said, “In our pleadings, the settling parties had noted we thought she could continue, but we respect her opinion that she cannot.” U.S. District Judge William P. Johnson has been appointed to take over the Aamodt case, named for the first defendant listed by alphabetical order. He will be hearing nearly 700 objections filed in the case. Utton said he’s “confident the federal court will ensure a smooth transition and any objections to the settlement can be heard in a timely manner.” In authorizing the Aamodt settlement in 2010, Congress required a final decree from the federal court by September 2017 that all conditions have been met, including resolving all water claims in the Pojoaque Valley. People with water rights in the val-

ley who oppose the settlement raised the possible conflict of interest regarding Vázquez in May but didn’t cite the federal statute or name her relationship with Maestas. Martinez credits the judge with researching the statutes on her own and making the decision. “I believe that Judge Vázquez could have remained an impartial judge. But her order of recusal cited a statute, and in looking at the statute, I see she didn’t have much leeway,” Martinez said. “So she did the right thing, unfortunately.” Maestas said he had no idea his position as a city councilor would force his wife to remove herself from the case and feels badly for her. “It’s just unfortunate that this happened,” Maestas said. “I credit my wife with leading this lawsuit to a settlement. When she was assigned this case, it was languishing. She got it back on track.” Maestas said when he began campaigning, he thought all the actions with Aamodt involving the city already had occurred and predated his run for the council. “Quite frankly, I don’t anticipate any other city action regarding Aamodt,” he said. Vázquez has served as a federal judge since 1993. She had a private practice in Santa Fe from 1981 to 1993.

Texting: Campaign spotlights teen deaths Continued from Page B-1

appeal to District Court. He said it was easier to skip magistrate and take the trial straight to District Court. Rose said unlawful hunting cases are pretty routine in his district. “It is not an uncommon crime,” he said. “This just got more attention because Bidegain was chair of the game commission.”

received during the simulations at the Boys & Girls Club were the final messages that had been sent by teenagers who actually died in crashes linked to texting and driving. Some of the teens were pretty adept at handling their virtual vehicles while texting, but most had an accident before they were finished with the simulation. When a driver crashes, sirens wail and lights flash on the simulator’s screen. Information then appears on the screen about teens who were injured or died in crashes caused by texting and driving. One of those teens was Wil, a passenger whose friend had been texting while driving. Wil didn’t urge his friend to stop, said Chris “C.J.” Johnson, who transports the simulator around the country and talks

to young people. “They hit a tree at 100 miles per hour,” Johnson told the teenagers at the club. “He died three times in the ambulance. He’s alive now but severely brain damaged.” He urged the youth, “If you see your parents or friends picking up the phone while they are driving, tell them, ‘It can wait.’ ” The average time it takes to read and respond to a text is five seconds, he said. “At 55 miles per hour, that’s like driving the length of a football field, blind.” Johnson encouraged teens at the Boys & Girls Club to make a pledge to never text and drive. More than 4.7 million people of all ages in 30 states have signed the pledge so far, he said. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety

Administration, more than 70 percent of teenage and young adult drivers say they’ve composed and sent a text message while driving. About 78 percent say they’ve read a text message while driving. The 100 deadliest days on the road for teen drivers is during the summer, between Memorial Day and Labor Day, according to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety. Johnson said an estimated 3,000 teens die each year because of accidents caused by distracted drivers. In 2012 alone, he said, distracted driving led to 200,000 traffic crashes. “The main goal of the It Can Wait campaign is to save lives,” Johnson said. “It is also to make texting and driving as socially unacceptable as drinking and driving.”

The U.S. Forest Service is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for leaving a glass jar near the intersection of N.M. 126 and Forest Road 376 that exploded and injured a wildland firefighter. The firefighter, who was putting up road closure signs in the Jemez Mountains on July 7, moved the jar aside with his foot and the jar exploded. He was not seriously injured and was released from a hospital in Albuquerque later that same day. Federal agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are investigating the incident. Samples from the glass jar have been sent to the national crime laboratory, but results are not expected for a few days. Officials ask that anyone with information about this incident contact the ATF field office in Albuquerque at 505-346-6914.

King donations exceed limit Three contributors to Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gary King’s campaign went over the legal limit, the Secretary of State’s Office told King this week. According to a July 14 letter from the office’s ethics administrator, Billy Velarde, King has until July 24 to “provide a rationale for a contrary conclusion” or to pay the amount that’s over the limit — $10,900 — to the state public election fund. That fund pays for publicly financed campaigns of state Public Regulation Commission candidates and some state judge candidates. King’s campaign manager, Keith Breitbach, said Tuesday that the campaign hadn’t received the letter. “The attorney general [King] is confident that current state law allows political campaigns to accept contributions in order to pay off past campaign debts,” Breitbach said. The contributions in question include two donations of $5,200 apiece from rancher Ed Healy and his wife, Trudy Healy, of Taos. The law says contributors can give a candidate $5,200

for the primary and the same amount for the general election. However, the Healys’ contributions were all made June 25, after the primary. The third contribution in question is $500 from Amelia Carson of Santa Fe, given in June on the same day she gave King $5,200.

Police searching for two children ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico State Police and Las Vegas, N.M., police have issued an Amber Alert for two children. State police say 25-year-old Davina Wilkins allegedly took her two boys without authorization and in violation of a District Court order Tuesday afternoon. They say Wilkins was conducting a supervised visit with her children when she fled the Children, Youth and Families Department facility with them. Police say the missing boys are 6-month-old James Wilkins and 8-year-old Michael Standingbear. They also say Wilkins is known to abuse drugs, specifically methamphetamine. Police say she didn’t have the proper child restraints for the children in her car when she left the CYFD facility.

State police fire shots at woman ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico State Police say two officers fired shots at a woman’s vehicle as she fled from a criminal investigation in northeast Albuquerque. Police say officers were trying to serve an arrest warrant on 27-year-old Kayenta Jackson about 6 a.m. Tuesday. They say she was wanted on suspicion of fraud and forgery and taken into custody. When agents went to Jackson’s home, they say 28-yearold Roxanne Torres fled in a vehicle. Police say two officers fired shots at the vehicle and an investigation is underway to determine why they opened fire. Authorities say Torres crashed her vehicle, allegedly fled in a stolen SUV and drove to a hospital in Grants for treatment of a gunshot wound. Police say Torres later was airlifted to University Hospital in Albuquerque.

Man reports himself for abuse ALBUQUERQUE — An Albuquerque man is facing child abuse charges after deputies say he called authorities on himself to report he hit his two small children. KRQE-TV reports that Johnnie Griego was arrested following his visitation with his 2-year-old and 5-year-old children this weekend. According to a criminal complaint, the 29-year-old Griego dropped the children off with their mother Sunday and both had significant bruising on their faces. The complaint says one child had red finger impressions on his right cheek. The children told deputies their father got angry with them for playing with his shampoo so he “kicked one of them in the heart and strangled him.” The mother also called authorities. Griego was charged with two counts of child abuse. It was not known if he had an attorney. Staff and wire reports


B-4 THE NEW MEXICAN WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014

SPORTS

NBA: Silver says no guarantee Sterling out by season start. Page B-5

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL

Cindy Roybal returns to the court Coach takes over reins of Española Valley girls team By James Barron The New Mexican

She’s baaaaaaack! Cindy Roybal never saw herself as retired. She was simply a basketball coach waiting for the next great opportunity. It came when the head girls basketball coach position opened up at Española Valley in late June, and she grabbed it Tuesday when she was hired to replace Ray Romero, who resigned after one season at the school. The former head coach at Santa Fe Indian School, where she guided the program to consecutive Class AAA state titles in 2010 and 2011, was

not content on smelling the fresh breeze from her cabin and enjoying the outdoor life of the Pecos wilderness. “First of all, I resigned from SFIS, not retired as many were led to believe,” Roybal wrote in an email to The New Mexican. “I have been looking for an opportunity that I can contribute my knowledge, expertise and experience! I was looking for a place that recognizes and appreciates who I am and what I bring to the table. “I was looking for athletes that have the burning desire to work, win and get to the next phase of the illusive dream of state championships, just like my girls did at SFIS.” Española athletic director Eric Vigil said Roybal’s résumé — she has coached at SFIS

Please see ROYBAL, Page B-6

TE gets contract The Saints confirmed a multiyear contract with Jimmy Graham, ending a protracted holdout for the star tight end. PAGE B-7

Pistorius in conflict Santa Fe Indian School girls basketball coach Cindy Roybal works in February 2011 with senior Bridget Lee and the team during practice. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Oscar Pistorius was in an altercation at an upmarket nightclub over the weekend. PAGE B-7

ALL-STAR GAME

PECOS LEAGUE SANTA FE FUEGO 12, RATON OSOS 3

Jeter, Trout lead AL over NL

Fuego rout Osos

By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS — Derek Jeter soaked in the adulation from fans and players during one more night on baseball’s national AL 5 stage, set the tone for the American League NL 3 with a pregame speech and then delivered two final All-Star hits. Mike Trout, perhaps the top candidate to succeed the 40-year-old Yankees captain as the face of the game, seemed ready to assume the role with a tiebreaking triple and later a go-ahead double that earned the 22-year-old MVP honors. On a summer evening filled with reminders of generational change, the AL kept up nearly two decades of dominance by beating the National League 5-3 Tuesday for its 13th win in 17 years. “I think let Mike be Mike. I don’t think people have to necessarily

Please see JETER, Page B-6 Santa Fe Fuego’s Chuck Johnson slides into second base while Raton Osos second baseman Andre Oliver tries to tag him out during Tuesday’s game at Fort Marcy Ballpark. For more photos, go to tinyurl.com/omd3j4l. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Santa Fe club is close to clinching home-field advantage in playoffs By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

T

he number five meant a lot to the Santa Fe Fuego on Tuesday night. That’s how many home runs they hit in a 12-3 rout of Raton in a Pecos League baseball game at Fort Marcy Ballpark. The team already clinched a playoff spot last week, but now its magic number to clinch the Northern Division and guarantee themselves home-field advantage

throughout the playoffs is six. The second-place Trinidad Triggers’ score against the Las Vegas Train Robbers was not reported by press time. “Yeah, we swing it a little bit,” Fuego manager Bill Moore said of the home runs. The Fuego (39-20) weren’t hitting bombs right off the bat though. They had no hits in the first three innings, but they had a 1-0 lead after Raton (22-34) pitcher Derrick Sampel hit Erik Kozel with a pitch with bases loaded to bring in Charles Johnson in the second.

The very first Fuego hit was a solo home run by third baseman Aaron Carmen to lead off the fourth. Shortstop Craig Massey hit a three-run blast five batters later and the Fuego quickly found themselves up 5-0. Santa Fe shrugged off the slow start to finish with 10 hits on the night. “We were hitting the ball hard the first two innings, but we were just hitting it right at people,”

Please see FUEGO, Page B-6

Ex-Lobos show worth in NBA Summer League

L

ast fall, my brother Daniel and first-day lesson by having to guard I gathered around the TV in the best player in the league. He finour parents’ kitchen — a place ished the season with 4.5 points and where we still spend a lot 16 minutes per game, but he of time — to watch former showed signs of his potenUniversity of New Mexico tial with an 18-point perforbasketball player Tony mance against Cleveland Snell play his NBA regularon Nov. 30 and a 20-point season game with the outing against the Denver Chicago Bulls. Nuggets on Feb. 21. But now, the former first-round The Bulls were playing draft pick is really starting the Miami Heat, which to turn heads in the Windy meant the 6-foot-7 Snell Edmundo City. had the task of guarding Carrillo LeBron James in his first The Riverside, Calif. Commentary meaningful professional native scored a game-high game. As you can imagine, 27 points in an NBA SumJames made short work of mer League game against the then-rookie by driving to the bas- the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday ket with ease and essentially looking and followed that up with 23 points unguardable. against Nuggets on Sunday. He is not Snell finished the game with zero facing elite competition in the sumpoints in seven minutes, but I don’t mer league, but he is showing the think he could have asked for a better Bulls and the rest of the league that

he is worthy of being a first-round pick. “Tony’s continuing to get better and improving, so it’s good to see him be rewarded for all the hard work that he’s put in the past months,” Bulls assistant coach and summer-league head coach Aaron Griffin told CSNChicago.com. “He’s just constantly in the gym, constantly in the weight room, trying to get bigger, work on his game, and it’s paying off for him.” Snell isn’t the only former Lobo being praised by Griffin for his hard work. Chicago’s second-round pick in this year’s draft, Cameron Bairstow, scored six points and grabbed six rebounds in Sunday’s game against the Nuggets. His bruising style of play that earned him 20.4 points and 7.4 rebounds per game in his senior season with the Lobos is already starting to translate at the NBA level.

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

“I always say if you just play hard, good things happen, and he’s one of those hard-nosed, tough guys,” Griffin said. “I just see him battling on the boards. Sometimes he’s giving up a couple inches, but I think his toughness and his mental toughness are going to help him stay in the league.” Undrafted free agent and Bulls summer-league invitee Kendall Williams had six points on two 3-pointers in 17 minutes against the Nuggets to round out the ex-Lobos’ performances on Sunday. UNM doesn’t produce the best players, and everyone knows it doesn’t produce the best post-season results, but the Lobos are starting to produce some hard workers. Former head coach Steve Alford and current head coach Craig Neal have instilled a strong work ethic in the players, and it’s starting to show at the next level.

BRITISH OPEN

A new golf course, a new Woods By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

HOYLAKE, England — Tiger Woods was an hour into his practice round Tuesday at the British Open when he stood on the fifth tee with a foreign object in his hand. In golf vernacular, it’s called a driver. Woods smashed it into the wind on the 528-yard hole and didn’t need to watch where it landed to realize it was in the middle of the fairway. Later in the round, he hit another driver off the tee. That’s twice as many than he hit Tiger Woods over 72 holes when he won at Royal Liverpool eight years ago. “This is a different golf course when what we played in ’06,” Woods said. “It was hot, ball was flying. It was very dusty. Now we’re making ball marks on the greens, which we weren’t doing then.” So much has changed in so many areas. Royal Liverpool, green and thick this time around, is still a firm and

Please see WOODS, Page B-7

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


NATIONAL SCOREBOARD All-Star Game MVPs

BASEBALL BASEBALL MLB American League East W L Pct GB Baltimore 52 42 .553 — Toronto 49 47 .510 4 New York 47 47 .500 5 Tampa Bay 44 53 .454 9½ Boston 43 52 .453 9½ Central W L Pct GB Detroit 53 38 .582 — Kansas City 48 46 .511 6½ Cleveland 47 47 .500 7½ Chicago 45 51 .469 10½ Minnesota 44 50 .468 10½ West W L Pct GB Oakland 59 36 .621 — Los Angeles 57 37 .606 1½ Seattle 51 44 .537 8 Houston 40 56 .417 19½ Texas 38 57 .400 21 Tuesday’s Game AL All-Stars 5, NL All-Stars 3 Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled. Thursday’s Games No games scheduled

National League East W L Pct GB Washington 51 42 .548 — Atlanta 52 43 .547 — New York 45 50 .474 7 Miami 44 50 .468 7½ Philadelphia 42 53 .442 10 Central W L Pct GB Milwaukee 53 43 .552 — St. Louis 52 44 .542 1 Cincinnati 51 44 .537 1½ Pittsburgh 49 46 .516 3½ Chicago 40 54 .426 12 West W L Pct GB Los Angeles 54 43 .557 — San Francisco 52 43 .547 1 San Diego 41 54 .432 12 Colorado 40 55 .421 13 Arizona 40 56 .417 13½ Tuesday’s Game AL All-Stars 5, NL All-Stars 3 Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled. Thursday’s Games No games scheduled.

AL All-Stars 5, NL All-Stars 3 NL

AL

ab r AMcCt cf 3 0 Blckmn cf 2 0 Puig rf 3 0 Pence rf 1 0 Tlwtzk ss 3 0 SCastro ss 1 0 Gldsch 1b 3 0 FFrmn 1b 1 0 Stanton dh 3 0 Rizzo dh 1 0 ArRmr 3b 3 1 Frazier 3b 0 0 Utley 2b 1 1 DGordn 2b 1 1 DnMrp 2b 1 0 Lucroy c 2 0 Mesorc c 1 0 MMntr c 1 0 CGomz lf 2 0 JHrrsn lf 2 0 Totals

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

ab r Jeter ss 2 1 AlRmrz ss 2 1 Aybar ss 0 0 Trout lf 3 1 Moss rf 1 0 Cano 2b 2 0 Altuve 2b 0 0 Kinsler 2b 1 0 MiCarr 1b 3 1 JAreu 1b 1 0 Bautist rf 2 0 Cespds lf 2 0 N.Cruz dh 2 0 Seager dh 2 0 A.Jones cf 2 0 ABeltre 3b 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 2 0 Brantly cf 1 0 S.Perez c 1 0 DNorrs c 2 1 KSuzuk c 0 0

35 3 8 3 Totals

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

31 5 7 5

NL 020 100 000—3 AL 300 020 00x—5 E—F.Freeman. LOB—NL 7, AL 4. 2B— Tulowitzki, Ar.Ramirez, Utley, Lucroy 2, Jeter, Trout. 3B—Trout. HR—Mi.Cabrera. SB—A.McCutchen, Al.Ramirez. SF—Altuve. IP H R ER BB SO NL Wainwright 1 3 3 3 0 2 Kershaw 1 0 0 0 0 1 Simon 1 1 0 0 0 1 Greinke 1 0 0 0 0 2 Neshek L 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Clippard 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Fr.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 0 3 Watson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 A.Chapman 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 AL F.Hernandez 1 1 0 0 0 2 Lester 1 3 2 2 0 0 Darvish 1 0 0 0 0 1 Sale 1 1 1 1 0 1 Scherzer W 1 1 0 0 0 2 Kazmir H 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Uehara H 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 G.Holland H 1 0 0 0 0 1 Doolittle H 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Rodney H 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Perkins S 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Sale (Utley). WP—Simon, F.Hernandez. Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Jeff Nelson; Second, Bob Davidson; Third, Scott Barry; Right, Vic Carapazza; Left, Todd Tichenor. T—3:13. A—41,048 (39,021).

All-Star Game Results 2014 — American, 5-3 2013 — American, 3-0 2012 — National, 8-0 2011 — National, 5-1 2010 — National, 3-1 2009 — American, 4-3 2008 — American, 4-3, 15 innings 2007 — American, 5-4 2006 — American, 3-2 2005 — American, 7-5 2004 — American, 9-4 2003 — American, 7-6 2002 — Tied 7-7, 11 innings 2001 — American, 4-1 2000 — American, 6-3 1999 — American, 4-1 1998 — American, 13-8 1997 — American, 3-1 1996 — National, 6-0 1995 — National, 3-2 1994 — National, 8-7, 10 innings 1993 — American, 9-3

2014 — Mike Trout, Los Angeles, AL 2013 — Mariano Rivera, New York, AL 2012 — Melky Cabrera, San Francisco, NL 2011 — Prince Fielder, Milwaukee, NL 2010 — Brian McCann, Atlanta, NL 2009 — Carl Crawford, Tampa Bay, AL 2008 — J.D. Drew, Boston, AL 2007 — Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle, AL 2006 — Michael Young, Texas, AL 2005 — Miguel Tejada, Baltimore, AL 2004 — Alfonso Soriano, Texas, AL 2003 — Garret Anderson, Anaheim, AL 2002 — None 2001 — Cal Ripken Jr., Baltimore, AL 2000 — Derek Jeter, New York, AL 1999 — Pedro Martinez, Boston, AL 1998 — Roberto Alomar, Baltimore, AL 1997 — Sandy Alomar Jr., Cleveland, AL 1996 — Mike Piazza, Los Angeles, NL 1995 — Jeff Conine, Florida, NL 1994 — Fred McGriff, Atlanta, NL 1993 — Kirby Puckett, Minnesota, AL 1992 — Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle, AL 1991 — Cal Ripken Jr., Baltimore, AL 1990 — Julio Franco, Texas, AL

TENNIS TENNIS WTA TOUR BNP Paribas Istanbul Cup Tuesday At Koza World of Sports Istanbul Purse: $250,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles - First Round Roberta Vinci (2), Italy, def. Anna Tatishvili, United States, 6-2, 6-2. Ana Konjuh, Croatia, def. Magdalena Rybarikova (5), Slovakia, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. Kurumi Nara (6), Japan, def. Johanna Konta, Britain, 6-2, 6-0. Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, def. Julia Glushko, Israel, 6-2, 6-4. Shahar Peer, Israel, def. Elizaveta Kulichkova, Russia, 1-6, 6-1, 6-4. Alexandra Dulgheru, Romania, def. Kateryna Kozlova, Ukraine, 3-6, 6-0, 6-3. Karin Knapp, Italy, def. Ipek Soylu, Turkey, 6-2, 6-2. Misaki Doi, Japan, def. Monica Niculescu, Romania, 5-3, retired. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, def. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, 6-4, 7-5. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, def. Jovana Jaksic, Serbia, 6-2, 6-3. Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-4, 6-2. Karolina Pliskova (8), Czech Republic, def. Cagla Buyukakcay, Turkey, 6-4, 3-6, 6-0. Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, def. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, 6-0, 6-0.

Collector Swedish Open Tuesday At Bastad Tennis Stadiun Bastad, Sweden Purse: $250,000 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Anett Kontaveit, Estonia, def. Alize Cornet (1), France, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Laura Siegemund, Germany, def. Yaroslava Shvedova (4), Kazakhstan, 7-5, 6-3. Annika Beck (6), Germany, def. Katarzyna Piter, Poland, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3. Dinah Pfizenmaier, Germany, def. Polona Hercog (8), Slovenia, 7-5, 7-6 (5). Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, def. Teliana Pereira, Brazil, 3-1, retired. Alexandra Panova, Russia, def. Alexandra Cadantu, Romania, 6-2, 7-5. Kaia Kanepi, Estonia, def. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, 6-2, 4-6, 7-5. Richel Hogenkamp, Netherlands, def. Anna Schmiedlova (5), Slovakia, 6-3, 6-1.

ATP WORLD TOUR bet-at-home Open Tuesday At Rothenbaum Sport GmbH Hamburg, Germany Purse: $1.8 million (WT500) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Jerzy Janowicz, Poland, def. Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, 6-0, 7-5. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, def. Peter Gojowczyk, Germany, 6-3, 6-2. Alexander Zverev, Germany, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 6-0, 6-2. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. Julian Reister, Germany, 6-4, 2-1, retired. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-4, 3-6, 6-0. Juan Monaco, Argentina, def. Pere Riba, Spain, 6-3, 6-1. Second Round Tommy Robredo (3), Spain, def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, 6-2, 7-5. Dominic Thiem, Austria, def. Marcel Granollers (8), Spain, 2-6, 6-3, 7-5. Santiago Giraldo (11), Colombia, def. Benoit Paire, France, 7-6 (6), 6-2. David Ferrer (1), Spain, def. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2.

Claro Open Tuesday At Centro de Alto Rendimiento Bogota, Colombia Purse: $727,000 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Alejandro Gonzalez (6), Colombia, def. Evgeny Donskoy, Russia, 7-5, 3-6, 6-4. Thiemo De Bakker, Netherlands, def. Kevin King, United States, 2-6, 7-6 (4), 6-3.

TRANSACTIONS TRANSACTIONS

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SOCCER SOCCER

GOLF GOLF

BASEBALL Major League Baseball

NORTH AMERICA Major League Soccer

PGA TOUR British Open Tee Times

MLB — Named Billy Bean as a consultant who will serve as Ambassador for Inclusion.

East W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 9 5 4 31 26 19 Kansas City 8 5 5 29 25 16 Toronto 7 5 3 24 23 20 New England 7 8 2 23 23 24 New York 5 5 8 23 30 27 Columbus 4 6 8 20 20 23 Philadelphia 4 8 7 19 29 33 Chicago 3 4 10 19 25 27 Houston 5 11 3 18 20 38 Montreal 3 9 5 14 17 29 West W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 12 4 2 38 35 24 Salt Lake 7 4 7 28 27 24 Colorado 7 5 6 27 27 22 Dallas 7 7 5 26 30 29 Vancouver 6 4 7 25 27 25 Los Angeles 6 3 6 24 20 13 Chivas USA 6 7 5 23 20 27 Portland 4 6 9 21 30 32 San Jose 4 8 4 16 16 18 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. Wednesday, July 16 New York at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Kansas City at Columbus, 5:30 p.m. Vancouver at Toronto, 6 p.m. New England at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.

At Royal Liverpool Golf Club Hoylake, England Purse: $9.24 million Yardage: 7,312 yards; Par: 72 (a-amateur) Thursday-Friday 11:25 p.m.-4:26 a.m. — David Howell, England; David Duval, United States; Robert Karlsson, Sweden. 11:36 p.m.-4:37 a.m. — Dawie Van Der Walt, South Africa; Cameron Tringale, United States; Masanori Kobayashi, Japan. 11:47 p.m.-4:48 a.m. — Chris Wood, England; Matt Jones, Australia; Bernd Wiesberger, Austria. 11:58 p.m.-4:59 a.m. — Erik Compton, United States; Kim Hyung-Sung, South Korea; Marc Leishman, Australia. 12:09 a.m.-5:10 a.m. — Koumei Oda, Japan; Ben Martin, United States; Anirban Lahiri, India. 12:20 a.m.-5:21 a.m. — Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Thailand; Brooks Koepka, United States; Edoardo Molinari, Italy. 12:31 a.m.-5:32 a.m. — Branden Grace, South Africa; Freddie Jacobson, Sweden; a-Ashley Chesters, England. 12:42 a.m.-5:43 a.m. — Justin Leonard, United States; Ben Curtis, United States; Paul Lawrie, Scotland. 12:53 a.m.-5:54 a.m. — Francesco Molinari, Italy; Ryan Moore, United States; Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark. 1:04 a.m.-6:05 a.m. — Matteo Manassero, Italy; a-Bradley Neil, Scotland; Mikko Ilonen, Finland. 1:15 a.m.-6:16 a.m. — Thomas Bjorn, Denmark; Patrick Reed, United States; Stewart Cink, United States. 1:26 a.m.-6:27 a.m. — Tom Watson, United States; Jim Furyk, United States; Darren Clarke, Northern Ireland. 1:37 a.m.-6:38 a.m. — Luke Donald, England; Rickie Fowler, United States; Sergio Garcia, Spain. 1:53 a.m.-6:54 a.m. — Harris English, United States; Paul Casey, England; Matt Every, United States. 2:04 a.m.-7:05 a.m. — Tiger Woods, United States; Angel Cabrera, Argentina; Henrik Stenson, Sweden. 2:15 a.m.-7:16 a.m. — Charl Schwartzel, South Africa; Padraig Harrington, Ireland; K.J. Choi, South Korea. 2:26 a.m.-7:27 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Northern Ireland; Hideki Matsuyama, Japan; Jordan Spieth, United States. 2:37 a.m.-7:38 a.m. — Ian Poulter, England; Dustin Johnson, United States; Jimmy Walker, United States. 2:48 a.m.-7:49 a.m. — Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Matt Kuchar, United States; Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa. 2:59 a.m-8 a.m. — Stephen Gallacher, Scotland; Hunter Mahan, United States; Victor Dubuisson, France. 3:10 a.m.-8:11 a.m. — Nick Faldo, England; Todd Hamilton, United States; Mark Calcavecchia, United States. 3:21 a.m.-8:22 a.m. — Ryan Palmer, United States; Brett Rumford, Australia; Tomohiro Kondo, Japan. 3:32 a.m.-8:33 a.m. — John Singleton, England; Peter Uihlein, United States; Marc Warren, Scotland. 3:43 a.m.-8:44 a.m. — Paul McKechnie, Scotland; Kristoffer Broberg, Sweden; Juvic Pagunsan, Philippines. 3:54 a.m.-8:55 a.m. — Rhein Gibson, Australia; Brian Harman, United States; Kim Hyung-Tae, South Korea. 4:05 a.m.-9:06 a.m. — Christopher Hanson, England; Oscar Floren, Sweden; Yoshinobu Tsukada, Japan. 4:26 a.m.-11:25 p.m. — James McLeary, Scotland; Matthew Southgate, England; Hiroshi Iwata, Japan. 4:37 a.m.-11:36 p.m. — Roberto Castro, United States; Victor Riu, France; Tyrrell Hatton, England. 4:48 a.m.-11:47 p.m. — Jang Dongkyu, South Korea, Nick Watney, United States; Shawn Stefani, United States. 4:59 a.m.-11:58 p.m. — D.A. Points, United States; Y.E. Yang, South Korea; Brendan Steele, United States. 5:10 a.m.-12:09 p.m. — Scott Stallings, United States; Pablo Larrazabal, Spain; Bryden Macpherson, Australia. 5:21 a.m.-12:20 p.m. — George Coetzee, South Africa; Charley Hoffman, United States; Michael Hoey, Northern Ireland. 5:32 a.m.-12:31 p.m. — Kevin Streelman, United States; Brendon de Jonge, Zimbabwe; Brendon Todd, United States. 5:43 a.m.-12:42 p.m. — Gary Woodland, United States; Sandy Lyle, Scotland; Kevin Stadler, United States. 5:54 a.m.-12:53 p.m. — Brandt Snedeker, United States; Graham DeLaet, Canada; a-Pan Cheng-Tsung, Taiwan. 6:05 a.m.-1:04 a.m. — Boo Weekley, United States; Danny Willett, England; Ashun Wu, China. 6:16 a.m.-1:15 a.m. — J.B. Holmes, United States; Jonas Blixt, Sweden; Chris Kirk, United States. 6:27 a.m.-1:26 a.m. — Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain; Bill Haas, United States; Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand. 6:38 a.m.-1:37 a.m. — Martin Kaymer, Germany; Jason Day, Australia; Zach Johnson, United States. 6:54 a.m.-1:53 a.m. — Webb Simpson, United States; Jamie Donaldson, Wales; Yusaku Miyazato, Japan.

American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned RHP Zach McAllister to Columbus (IL).

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS — Acquired G/F Thabo Sefolosha and the rights to F Giorgos Printezis and cash considerations from Oklahoma City Thunder for the rights to F Sofoklis Schortsanitis. BOSTON CELTICS — Signed G Avery Bradley to a four-year contract. CHICAGO BULLS — Released F Carlos Boozer. Waived F Lou Amundson, G Ronnie Brewer and G Mike James. DALLAS MAVERICKS — Signed F Dirk Nowitzki and F Chandler Parsons. DETROIT PISTONS — Signed G D.J. Augustin and F Caron Butler. HOUSTON ROCKETS — Acquired F Trevor Ariza, F Alonzo Gee, G Scotty Hopson and a 2015 first-round draft pick from the New Orleans Pelicans, the Pelicans received C Omer Asik, F Omri Casspi and cash considerations and the Washington Wizards receive C Melvin Ely and a trade exception. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed G Beno Udrih to a multiyear contract. MIAMI HEAT — Re-signed G Dwyane Wade. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER — Signed G Sebastian Telfair. PHOENIX SUNS — Waived G Ish Smith. SAN ANTONIO SPURS — Named Etorre Messina assistant coach.

FOOTBALL National Football League INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed G Chad Anderson. Waived DE Gannon Conway. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Agreed to terms with TE Jimmy Graham on a multiyear contract.

HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Signed F Brandon McMillan to a one-year contract and F Jordan Szwarz to a two-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS — Named Tony Granato assistant coach. EDMONTON OILERS — Signed C Andrew Miller to a one-year contract. Agreed to terms with F Tyler Pitlick and F Curtis Hamilton on one-year contracts. FLORIDA PANTHERS — Agreed to terms with D Dylan Olsen on a two-year contract and F Garrett Wilson and C Ryan Martindale on one-year contracts. MINNESOTA WILD — Re-signed LW Jason Zucker to a two-year contract. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed Fs Mike Ribeiro and Derek Roy to one-year contracts. Signed LW Viktor Arvidsson and LW Kevin Fiala to a three-year entry-level contract. NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Agreed to terms C Casey Cizikas has on a twoyear contract and D Calvin de Haan on a three-year contract. WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Signed G Vitek Vanecek and F Jakub Vrana to three-year, entry-level contracts.

COLLEGE NCAA BIG EAST CONFERENCE — Named Stu Jackson senior associate commissioner for men’s basketball. ALABAMA — Announced the retirement of gymnastics coach Sarah Patterson. DELAWARE — Named Christine Motta associate athletic director for student-athlete development and senior woman administrator. EASTERN MICHIGAN — Named Mark Van Ameyde baseball coach. IOWA — Suspended G Peter Jok indefinitely. SAINT ROSE — Named William Aloia, Jr. assistant athletic director for compliance. UMASS — Announced women’s sophomore basketball F Alyssa Lawrence has a transferred from San Diego State. TENNESSEE — Announced the Southeastern Conference has denied a graduate transfer to F Eric McKnight. WEST ALABAMA — Named Rusty Cram women’s basketball coach.

BASKETBALL BASKETBALL WNBA Eastern Conference Atlanta Indiana Connecticut Washington Chicago New York

W 15 10 10 9 8 7

L 5 12 13 13 13 13

Pct .750 .455 .435 .409 .381 .350

GB — 6 6½ 7 7½ 8

Western Conference W L Pct Phoenix 17 3 .850 Minnesota 16 6 .727 San Antonio 11 11 .500 Los Angeles 10 11 .476 Seattle 9 15 .375 Tulsa 7 14 .333 Tuesday’s Games Connecticut 86, Seattle 63 Los Angeles 86, Indiana 78 Phoenix 90, Washington 78 Wednesday’s Games Atlanta at New York, 9 a.m. Tulsa at Minnesota, 11 a.m.

GB — 2 7 7½ 10 10½

CYCLING CYCLING UCI WORLD TOUR Tour de France Standings Rest Day Tuesday (After 10 stages) 1. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana, 42 hours, 33 minutes, 38 seconds. 2. Richie Porte, Australia, Sky, 2:23. 3. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, 2:47. 4. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 3:01. 5. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto Belisol, 3:12. 6. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ.fr, 3:47. 7. Tejay van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, 3:56. 8. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 3:57. 9. Rui Costa, Portugal, LampreMerida, 3:58. 10. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Belkin Pro Cycling, 4:08. 11. Jurgen Van den Broeck, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, 4:18. 12. Jakob Fuglsang, Denmark, Astana, 4:31. 13. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland, Omega Pharma-Quick-Step, 4:39. 14. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky, 5:17. 15. Mikel Nieve, Spain, Sky, 6:03. 16. Pierre Rolland, France, Europcar, 6:47. 17. Christopher Horner, United States, Lampre-Merida, 7:33. 18. Cyril Gautier, France, Europcar, 7:36. 19. Laurens ten Dam, Netherlands, Belkin Pro Cycling, 7:42. 20. Haimar Zubeldia, Spain, Trek Factory Racing, 8:01. Next Stage: Wednesday, 116.4-mile hilly ride from Besancon to Oyannox with four small-to-moderate climbs near the finish.

Tour de France Stages-Winners July 5 — First Stage: Leeds to Harrogate, England, flat (190.5km118.3 miles) (Stage: Marcel Kittel, Germany; Yellow Jersey: Kittel) July 6 — Second Stage: York to Sheffield, England, hilly (201-124.8) (Vincenzo Nibali, Italy; Nibali) July 7 — Third Stage: Cambridge to London, flat (155-96.3) (Kittel; Nibali) July 8 — Fourth Stage: Le TouquetParis-Plage to Lille Metropole, flat (163.5-101.5) (Kittel; Nibali) July 9 — Fifth Stage: Ypres to Arenberg Porte du Hainaut, flat/cobbled roads (152.5-94.7) (Lars Boom, Netherlands; Nibali) July 10 — Sixth Stage: Arras to Reims, flat (194-120.5) (Andre Greipel, Germany; Nibali) July 11 — Seventh Stage: Epernay to Nancy, flat (234.5-145.6) (Matteo Trentin, Italy; Nibali) July 12 — Eighth Stage: Tomblaine to Gerardmer La Mauselaine, medium mountain (161-100) (Blel Kadri, France; Nibali) July 13 — Ninth Stage: Gerardmer to Mulhouse, medium mountain (170105.6) (Tony Martin, Germany; Tony Gallopin, France) July 14 — 10th Stage: Mulhouse to La Planche des Belles Filles, high mountain (161.5-100.3) (Nibali; Nibali) July 15 — Rest Day, Besancon July 16 — 11th Stage: Besancon to Oyonnax, medium mountain (187.5116.4) July 17 — 12th Stage: Bourg-enBresse to Saint-Etienne, medium mountain (185.5-115.2) July 18 — 13th Stage: Saint-Etienne to Chamrousse, high mountain (197.5122.6) July 19 — 14th Stage: Grenoble to Risoul, high mountain (177-110) July 20 — 15th Stage: Tallard to Nimes, flat (222-137.9) July 21 — Rest Day, Carcassonne July 22 — 16th Stage: Carcassonne to Bagneres-de-Luchon, high mountain (237.5-147.5) July 23 — 17th Stage: Saint-Gaudens to Saint-Lary Pla d’Adet, high mountain (124.5-77.3) July 24 — 18th Stage: Pau to Hautacam, high mountain (145.5-90.4) July 25 — 19th Stage: Maubourguet Pays du Val d’Adour to Bergerac, flat (208.5-129.5) July 26 — 20th Stage: Bergerac to Perigueux, individual time trial (54-33.5) July 27 — 21st Stage: Evry to Paris Champs-Elysees, flat (137.5-85.4) Total — 3,660.5km-2,273.3 miles

B-5

7:05 a.m.-2:04 a.m. — Phil Mickelson, United States; Ernie Els, South Africa; Bubba Watson, United States. 7:16 a.m.-2:15 a.m. — Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Spain; Russell Henley, United States; Billy Horschel, United States. 7:27 a.m.-2:26 a.m. — Adam Scott, Australia; Justin Rose, England; Jason Dufner, United States. 7:38 a.m.-2:37 a.m. — Ryo Ishikawa, Japan; Lee Westwood, England; Keegan Bradley, United States. 7:49 a.m.-2:48 a.m. — Kevin Na, United States; Joost Luiten, Netherlands; John Senden, Australia. 8 a.m.-2:59 a.m. — John Daly, United States; Tommy Fleetwood, England; Ross Fisher, England. 8:11 a.m.-3:10 a.m. — Mark Wiebe, United States; Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Spain; a-Paul Dunne, Ireland. 8:22 a.m.-3:21 a.m. — Oliver Fisher, England; Chesson Hadley, United States; Shane Lowry, Ireland. 8:33 a.m.-3:32 a.m. — George McNeill, United States; Richard Sterne, South Africa; Chris Stroud, United States. 8:44 a.m.-3:43 a.m. — Gregory Bourdy, France; Jin Jeong, South Korea; Matthew Baldwin, England. 8:55 a.m.-3:54 a.m. — Justin Walters, South Africa; Rhys Enoch, Wales; Billy Hurley III, United States. 9:06 a.m.-4:05 a.m. — Christopher Rodgers, England; Scott Jamieson, Scotland; An Byeong-Hun, South Korea.

USGA TOUR MEN’S PUBLIC LINKS Tuesday At Sand Creek Station Golf course Newton, Kan. Yardage: 7,365; Par: 71 Second Round Byron Meth, Calif. 67-67—134 Doug Ghim, Ill. 69-65—134 Rico Hoey, Calif. 70-64—134 Zane Thomas, Nev. 66-68—134 Sam Saunders, N.M. 70-66—136 Sam Horsfield, England 68-69—137 Kolton Crawford, Texas 68-70—138 Charlie Danielson, Wis. 68-70—138 Thomas Strandemo, N.D. 73-65—138 Thomas Lim, Ore. 67-73—140 John Oda, Hawaii 69-71—140 Austin Smotherman, Calif. 71-69—140 Zecheng Dou, China 71-69—140 Robert Geibel, Fla. 68-72—140 Colton Staggs, Okla. 71-69—140 Ben Hogenkamp, Ohio 73-67—140 Michael Colgate, Fla. 66-75—141 Garrett Rank, Canada 66-75—141 Kevin Reilly, Fla. 71-70—141 Easton Paxton, Wyo. 71-70—141 Rigel Fernandes, India 68-74—142 David Mills, Ind. 71-71—142 Brysn Dechambeau, Calif. 72-70—142 Gavin Green, Malaysia 73-69—142 Jonathan Woo, Singapore 69-73—142 Issei Tanabe, Japan 71-71—142 Trent Peterson, Minn. 68-74—142 D. Hangyerei Chung, N.M. 70-72—142 Scott Wolfes, Ga. 72-71—143 Brandon Kida, Utah 71-72—143 Nick Eberhardt, S.C. 70-73—143 A. Dombrowski, Mich. 72-71—143 Cody McManus, Ariz. 70-74—144 Nathan Clark, Mich. 72-72—144 Herbie Aikens, Mass. 73-71—144 Eric Kline, Okla. 72-72—144 Chris Korte, Colo. 72-72—144 Michael Gellerman, Kan. 74-71—145 Ryan Tetrault, Calif. 70-75—145 J. De Los Reyes, Calif. 71-74—145 Jon Veneziano, Fla. 73-72—145 Chase Johnson, Ohio 71-74—145 Chelso Barrett, N.H. 72-73—145 Joshua Baskins, Calif. 76-69—145 Steven Delmar, Md. 72-73—145

WOMEN’S PUBLIC LINKS Tuesday At The Home Course Dupont, Wash. Yardage: 6,169; Par: 72 Second Round E. J. Seong, South Korea 70-64—134 Soobin Kim, South Korea 70-68—138 D. Galloway, Rio Rancho, N.M. 70-68—138 G. Then, R. Cucamonga, Calif. 68-70—138 A. Uriell, Carlsbad, Calif. 72-66—138 C. Inglis, Eugene, Ore. 72-66—138 M. Galdiano, Pearl C., Hawaii 72-67—139 Cindy Ha, Demarest, N.J. 67-72—139 Aram Choi, Canada 69-70—139 K. Masuda, Honolulu 71-69—140 Angel Yin, Arcadia, Calif. 74-67—141 T. Kliebphipat, Panorama City 71-70—141 A. Park, Levittown, N.Y. 69-72—141 Eimi Koga, Honolulu 71-70—141 M. Szeryk, Allen, Texas 70-71—141 K. Patrick, W. Uni. Place, Texas70-71—141 S. Blair, South Jordan, Utah 73-69—142 M. Vaughn, Reedsport, Ore. 75-67—142 R. Ree, Redondo Beach, Calif. 75-67—142 M. Neisen, N. Prague, Minn. 73-69—142 J. Yang, South Korea 72-70—142 C. Goldstein, Coral Springs72-70—142 C. Isagawa, Wailuku, Hawaii 70-72—142 K. Quihuis, Tucson, Ariz. 73-70—143 L. Diaz-Yi, Thousand Oaks 72-71—143 K. Preamchuen, Thailand 73-71—144 L. Li, Redwood Shores, Calif. 74-70—144 R. Santos, La Quinta, Calif. 74-70—144 F. (Alice) Jo, Tawain 77-67—144 Ines Lescudier, France 72-72—144 J. Eleey, Quincy, Mass. 71-73—144 S. Youngblood, Durant, Okla. 75-69—144 G. Na, Alameda, Calif. 73-72—145 D. Finkelstein, Chandler, Ariz. 74-71—145 E. Smidinger, Crofton, Md. 73-72—145 Alice Chen, Princeton, N.J. 72-73—145 Leilanie Kim, Canada 73-72—145 D. Chen, Bradenton, Fla. 74-71—145 S. Cho, San Diego, Calif. 74-71—145 A. Keating, Elma, Wash. 74-71—145 S. Schiavone, Bangor, Pa. 73-73—146 W. Zhou, Beaumont, Calif. 75-71—146 K. Schelling, Mesa, Ariz. 74-72—146 B. Lewis, La Mesa, Calif. 70-76—146

NBA

Silver: No guarantee Sterling out by season start By Jon Krawczynski The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Eyebrow-raising testimony, abrupt changes of plans, courtroom delays. If there is one thing NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has learned during the Donald Sterling saga, it’s that there are no guarantees. So when Silver was asked Tuesday if he could say Sterling would not own the Los Angeles Clippers by the time next season comes around, he said he could not. “It’s very difficult to say anything with certainty in a situation like this,” Sterling said after the Board of Governors’ meeting. “I can say with cer-

tainty we are doing everything in our power to move Donald out as an owner in the NBA.” Sterling, who was banned by the NBA for life for making racist remarks, is Adam Silver challenging his wife Shelly’s planned sale of the Clippers for $2 billion to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer in court. A judge recently delayed the next hearing until July 21, and closing arguments are scheduled for July 28. When Ballmer originally reached an agreement with Shelly Sterling to

buy the team, the planned timeline included an approval vote by the board on Tuesday. But the court case has pushed everything back well past the expiration of Ballmer’s offer. The deadline can be extended, and Silver said the league is waiting for the process to play out. “We’re in essence on hold since that sale is being challenged by her husband as to whether she has the right,” Silver said. “If the court finds in her favor, the sale will move forward. If not, we will move forward with our own proceedings.” Before Shelly Sterling agreed to sell the team to Ballmer, the NBA was moving forward with a plan to

terminate Sterling’s ownership of the team. During the trial, Shelly Sterling testified that she discussed with Silver the possibility of his lifetime ban being reduced to help facilitate a sale of the team. “It’s accurate that we had the conversation,” Silver said. “Shelly and I had several conversations over the course of the last few months in which Shelly proposed all kinds of things to me. And frankly it’s never been quite clear if she’s able to speak for Donald.” Silver said he asked for a proposal in writing from Donald Sterling, but never received one. Donald Sterling, who at one point in the proceedings called his wife “a

pig” in the courtroom, contends she has no right under a family trust that owns the Clippers to single-handedly sell the team. Shelly Sterling contends she has the authority and two doctors hired by her testified that her 80-yearold husband has Alzheimer’s disease and is mentally incapable to act as administrator of the trust. Rather than holding a vote for approval of Ballmer as an owner, the advisory/finance committee met with him. “We had an excellent session with him and he talked to us about his passion for NBA basketball and his desire and interest in owning the team,” Silver said.


B-6

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Fuego: Most successful team in club history Continued from Page B-4 Carmen said. “Once we get going, we get going. That’s what I like about this team.” Sampel was taken out after Carmen’s home run, and the Fuego saw three pitchers after that. It was exactly what Moore wanted to see. “If we get in your bullpen, then you’re going to lose the baseball game,” he said. “I feel very cocky saying that and maybe I’m stupid for bragging, but that’s kind of been a motto all summer long.” That motto turned out to be true, as Kozel hit a two-run homer to centerfield in the fifth, and right fielder Brice Cutspec hit solo shots in the sixth and eighth innings en route to Santa Fe’s fifth straight win. The Fuego have scored 66 runs in that span. “I just think we have a good approach at the plate,” Cutspec said. “We swing at the right pitches to put us in a good postion.” Every win puts the Fuego

Santa Fe Fuego’s Aaron Carmen, center, is congratulated by his teammates after he hit a home run in the bottom of the fourth inning during Tuesday’s game against the Raton Osos at Fort Marcy Ballpark. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

in a better position to win the division. As for what Moore thinks about all that, well, he said he knows nothing about it. “I keep being told that we clinched a playoff spot, but I really don’t know,” he said. “As soon as you figure out you’ve accomplished the magic number, it’s like ‘Wow, we don’t have to play anymore.’ We

don’t know, and we don’t care.” The players have been playing baseball long enough to understand Moore’s position that paying attention to things like magic numbers and division titles can be a death sentence to a season in the end. “Looking at stats or worrying about that magic number was a cancer,” Cutspec said.

“It’s going to get you in trouble. You’re going to be thinking about it and you’re going to screw up. We try not to worry about all that hoopla and just come out here and play the game.” Cutspec is so dedicated to not knowing the magic number, that he didn’t even want a New Mexican reporter to tell him what it was. “No dude, don’t even tell me,” he said. Regardless of where Santa Fe falls in the playoffs, this year’s team is the most successful in the club’s short history. It’s not anything necessarily baseball related that is keeping this team in the win column. Rather, all the players say the team’s chemistry is what makes it strong. That chemistry builds a lot of trust in the team, and that leads to victories. “With all the failure in baseball, it still gives you confidence,” Carmen said of the chemistry. “People are picking each other up left and right.”

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. CYCLING 6 a.m. on NBCSN — Tour de France, Stage 11, Besancon to Oyonnax, France GOLF 2 a.m. on ESPN — British Open Championship, first round, in Hoylake, England SOCCER 4:55 p.m. on ESPN2 — MLS, New York at Philadelphia

LOCAL TV CHANNELS FOX — Ch. 2 (KASA) NBC — Ch. 4 (KOB) ABC — Ch. 7 (KOAT) CBS — Ch. 13 (KRQE) Univision — Ch. 41 (KLUZ) ESPN — Comcast: Ch. 9 (Digital, Ch. 252); DirecTV: Ch. 206; Dish Network: Ch. 140 ESPN2 — Comcast: Ch. 8 (Digital, Ch. 253); DirecTV: Ch. 209; Dish Network: Ch. 144 ESPNU — Comcast: Ch. 261 (Digital, Ch. 815);

SANTA FE FUEGO SCHEDULE Team record: (39-20)

Upcoming schedule:

Roybal: Compiled a 220-54 record at SFIS Continued from Page B-4 twice, Pojoaque Valley and New Mexico Highlands University, plus she is a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player of the touring AllAmerican Red Heads girls basketball team — made her a great fit for the program. “Our community is very passionate and she is a very passionate coach,” Vigil said. “We have high expectations and she has high expectations as well.” SFIS compiled a 220-54 mark during two stints under Roybal, including a 111-37 mark during from 2008-2013 that included three straight trips to the AAA title game (2010-2012). She takes over a program that went 22-8 under Romero last season and advanced to the Class AAAA quarterfinals. Roybal marks the fourth head coach in the last three years for the program, after Romero, Oliver Torres and Ron Drake. Despite all of that turnover, Española has won 70 games and a District 2AAAA Tour-

nament title in 2013 during that stretch. Roybal understands the pressure to win within the community, but she feels it’s nothing she hasn’t experienced before in her 37 years as a coach. “You know me by now to realize that I thrive on pressure,” Roybal wrote. “Again, I am not worried. Once I meet with the parents, community members and administrators, and they realize we are all on the same page and want a championship — and I will explain each of our roles in working towards that — we will be fine!” One area Roybal will need to shore up is the roster. Ashlynn Trujillo, the team’s leading scorer last year, will head to Los Alamos to play for her dad and new Lady Hilltoppers head coach Nestor Trujillo. Rumors have swirled that as many as four players also might leave the program. Roybal wrote that her background and reputation can only help her in limiting those defections. “Once the girls know they will have one

of the best coaches in the state (not bragging, just a fact),” Roybal wrote, “willing to be their leader and truly believing that I can take them to the promised land, I dont see them jumping ship. Not if they are a real Lady Sundevil!” Even though Roybal did not coach last year, she was well aware of what the Lady Sundevils possess. She pointed out their win over eventual AAAA champion Santa Fe High — the only AAAA program to beat the Demonettes — demonstrated how close they are to being a championship team. “I thought they were a year or two away,” Roybal said. “I think the three previous coaches did a good job, just fell a little short. But I honestly believe the girls are hungry to prove themselves.” How soon can promise turn into blue trophies? “If not this year, soon afterwards,” Roybal wrote. And the next great opportunity is here for Roybal.

Jeter: Has .481 All-Star batting average Continued from Page B-4 appoint someone to a particular position,” Jeter said. “He’s got a bright future ahead of him. I don’t know how much better he can get, but if he consistently does what he’s doing, then he will be here for a long time.” Miguel Cabrera hit a tworun homer to help give the AL champion home-field advantage for the World Series. No matter what else happened, from the start it seemed destined to be another special event for Jeter. He made a diving stop on Andrew McCutchen’s grounder to shortstop leading off the game and received a 63-second standing ovation when he walked to the plate before his opposite-field double to right leading off the bottom half. He was given another rousing cheer before his single to right starting the third and 2½ minutes more applause after AL manager John Farrell sent Alexei Ramirez to shortstop to replace him at the start of the fourth. As Frank Sinatra’s recording of “New York, New York” boomed over the Target Field speakers and his parents watched from the stands, Jeter repeatedly waved to the crowd, exchanged handshakes and hugs with just about every person in the AL dugout and then came back onto the field for a curtain call. “It was a special moment and it was unscripted,” Jeter said. “I was unaware of it.” NL manager Mike Matheny of the Cardinals didn’t want it to stop. “The guys on our side have the utmost respect for him and would like to have been standing out there for a little while longer,” he said. “I think Derek was the one that was uncomfortable with it.” While not as flashy as Mariano Rivera’s All-Star farewell at Citi Field last year, when all the other players left the great reliever alone on the field for

American League shortstop Derek Jeter of the New York Yankees singles during the third inning of the All-Star game Tuesday in Minneapolis. JEFF ROBERSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

an eighth-inning solo bow, Jeter tried not to make a fuss and to deflect the attention. Even during his clubhouse speech. “He just wanted to thank us,” Trout said. “You know, we should be thanking him.” A 14-time All-Star who was MVP of the 2000 game in Atlanta, Jeter announced in February this will be his final season. His hits left him with a .481 All-Star average (13 for 27), just behind Charlie Gehringer’s .500 record (10 for 20) for players with 20 or more at-bats. While the Yankees are .500 at the break and in danger of missing the postseason in consecutive years for the first time in two decades, Jeter and the Angels’ Trout gave a boost to whichever AL team reaches the World Series. The AL improved to 9-3 since the All-Star game started deciding which league gets Series home-field advantage; 23 of the last 28 titles were won by teams scheduled to host four of a possible seven games. Detroit’s Max Scherzer, in line to be the most-prized free agent pitcher after the season, pitched a scoreless fifth for the win, and Glen Perkins got the save in his home ballpark. Target Field, a $545 million,

limestone-encased jewel that opened in 2010, produced an All-Star cycle just eight batters in, with hitters showing off flashy neon-bright spikes and fielders wearing All-Star caps with special designs for the first time. With the late sunset — the sky didn’t darken until the fifth inning, well after 9 o’clock — there was bright sunshine when Jeter was cheered before his first at-bat. He was introduced by a recording of late Yankees public address announcer Bob Sheppard’s deep monotone. St. Louis pitcher Adam Wainwright left his glove on the mound and backed up toward second, clapping along with the crowd of 41,048. “I tried to tell him to pick it up — let’s go,” Jeter said. “But he took a moment and let the fans give me an ovation which I will always remember.” When Jeter finally stepped into the batter’s box, he took a ball and lined a 90 mph cutter down the right-field line for a double. “I was going to give him a couple pipe shots just to — he deserved it,” Wainwright said. “I thought he was going to hit something hard to the right side for a single or an out. I

probably should have pitched him a little bit better.” After those in-game remarks created a stir on the Internet, Wainwright amended himself: “It was mis-said. I hope people realize I’m not intentionally giving up hits out there.” Trout, who finished second to Cabrera in AL MVP voting in each of the last two seasons, became the youngest All-Star MVP, about 3 1-2 months older than Ken Griffey Jr. was in 1992. Playing in his third All-Star game, Trout followed Jeter in the first by tripling off the right-field wall. Cabrera’s homer — just the fourth in the last six All-Star games — made it 3-0, but the NL tied it on consecutive RBI doubles by Chase Utley and Jonathan Lucroy off Jon Lester in the second and Lucroy’s run-scoring double against Chris Sale in the fourth. Trout put the AL ahead for good with an RBI double in the fifth — a bouncer over third base against Pat Neshek, the St. Louis reliever who grew up in the Minneapolis suburbs and started his career with the Twins. Jose Altuve followed with a sacrifice fly off Tyler Clippard. Raised in New Jersey, Trout saw a lot of Jeter and said all week he felt honored to play alongside him. “Growing up I was setting goals to myself that when I get — if I ever get the chance to get — to the big leagues, that’s how I want to play,” Trout said. “And the way he carries himself on and off the field, how he respects the game — always hustling, it doesn’t matter what the score is. If they are down 10 runs, he is always running the ball out. That’s how I want to play.” NOTES u The NL holds a 43-40 advantage, with ties in 1961 and 2002. u Neshek’s brother works on the grounds crew at Target Field.

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

Today’s game — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. Thursday — at Trinidad, 6 p.m.

Friday — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. Saturday — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. Sunday — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. Monday — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. Tuesday — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 23 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketball u A St. Michael’s Horsemen fundamental camp will be held Monday through Thursday in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium. The camp, which runs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., is open to boys and girls in grades 1-9. Cost is $40 for students in grades 1-2 and $75 for students in grades 3-9. For more information, visit www. stmichaelssf.org or call head coach Ron Geyer at 983-7353.

Miscellaneous u Fort Marcy Complex is holding a summer camp for boys and girls ages 8-12 from July 28 to Aug. 1. The camp will focus on various sports (tennis, basketball, volleyball, track and field, swimming, etc.) and runs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday. Cost is $75 per participant and registration can be done at the Fort Marcy Sports Section Office. For more information, call Greg Fernandez at 955-2509 or Phil Montano at 955-2508.

Running u Santa Fe Waldorf will hold its inaugural Wolf Pack Trail Run on Sept. 13 at the school. The event features runs of 10, 5 and 3 kilometers. Entry fee is $25 for adults and $10 per child. All proceeds go toward the athletic department. To register, go to nmsports online.com or santafewaldorf.org/trailrun. For more information, call Greg Smith at 690-2761 or email trailrun@santafewaldorf.org. u The third annual Gonzales Community School Lobos River Run will be Sept. 28 at the school. The event includes a 5-kilometer run and a 1-mile community fun run/walk. Proceeds benefit related PTA-sponsored enrichment activities. To register, email gonzalespta@gmail.com visit to www.gcspta.org.

Soccer u St. Michael’s will hold a camp July 21-24 at Christian Brothers Athletic Complex. Cost is $120 per camper. The camp will be done in two segments. Camp for boys and girls ages 5-10 will be from 9 a.m. to noon, and camp for girls ages 11-17 is from 1 to 4 p.m. For more information, visit www.stmichaelssf.org/activities_&_ athletics/camps/.

Swimming u The Santa Fe Seals are offering a summer special for practices from Mondays through Thursdays at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center. Practice for the novice group is from 3:30 to 5 p.m., and the advanced group goes from 9 to 11 a.m. For more information, call coach Theresa Hamilton at 660-9818.

Volleyball u Fort Marcy Complex is holding a camp Monday through Friday for children ages 8-16. There will be two sessions. The first is for kids ages 8-12 and from 8 a.m. to noon. The second is for the 13-16 age bracket and goes from 1 to 5 p.m. Cost is $45 per participant, and registration can be done at the Fort Marcy Sports Section Office. For more information, call Greg Fernandez at 955-2509 or Phil Montano at 955-2508.

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

Chris Kluwe’s lawyer threatens to sue Minnesota Vikings MINNEAPOLIS — Former Minnesota Vikings punter Chris Kluwe intends to sue the team over allegations of antigay conduct by a coach, his lawyer said Tuesday. Lawyer Clayton Halunen said they’ll seek a copy of the Vikings’ internal investigation and make it public if they can. They accused the Vikings of reneging on a pledge to release the report, which they believe corroborates Kluwe’s claims. The Vikings hired two outside lawyers to examine Kluwe’s claims that special teams coordinator Mike Priefer used slurs and taunts to try to quash Kluwe’s outspoken support for gay marriage. Priefer denied the allegations. Kluwe was cut in May 2013 after eight seasons with the Vikings. Kluwe said keeping the report private won’t help prevent workplace discrimination. The investigation was conducted by former Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice Eric Magnuson and former U.S. Justice Department trial attorney Chris Madel. “I think it’s just important that everyone is able to see what’s there,” he said. “Yeah, it’ll probably hurt. These things always do. But the only way we’re ever going to fix it is if we acknowledge that.” The Vikings issued a statement denying they told Halunen during a meeting Monday that they won’t release the report. The team said both sides will meet again Thursday to discuss “issues relating to the investigation.” Halunen said they’d still like to resolve the dispute out of court. The Associated Press


SPORTS NFL

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Pistorius gets into club argument By Christopher Torchia The Associated Press

New Orleans Saints tight end Jimmy Graham tries to get past Atlanta Falcons free safety Thomas DeCoud during a game against Atlanta last year. The Saints have confirmed a multiyear contract with their star tight end. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

Saints confirm deal with Jimmy Graham By Brett Martel The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — The New Orleans Saints on Tuesday confirmed a multiyear contract with Jimmy Graham, ending a protracted holdout for the star tight end. Graham skipped all of the Saints’ voluntary and mandatory practices and workouts — and challenged the NFL’s franchise tag process through arbitration. The odds of Graham leaving the Saints were slim since the club in late February placed its franchise tag on the player. The NFL Players Association filed a grievance, contending Graham was used as a wide receiver often enough to qualify for the more lucrative receiver tag, worth about $5 million a year more than the $7 million tag for a tight end. A hearing was held in June and earlier this month. Arbitrator Stephen Burbank sided with the NFL, ruling Graham was capable of continuing to perform specific tight end duties while lined up in the slot or within 4 yards of an offensive tackle.

Once the ruling was in place, Graham had a choice of appealing or trying to reach a longterm contract by a July 15 deadline — after which he would have to play next season for his franchise tag number. A favorable ruling from Burbank would have further enhanced negotiating leverage for Graham, who last season led the Saints with 86 catches for 1,215 yards and 16 touchdowns. Graham, a former college basketball player who played one year of football at Miami, was the Saints’ third-round draft choice in 2010. In his second season, Graham caught 99 passes for 1,310 yards. That total stood briefly as a yards receiving record for tight ends. That same day the mark was broken on the final day of that season by New England’s Rob Gronkowski, who finished with 1,327. Graham has led the Saints in catches the past three seasons and led them in yards receiving and touchdowns in two of the last three seasons. For the past three regular seasons, he has 270 catches for 3,507 yards and 36 touchdowns.

Woods: New group winning 1st majors said, ‘Yeah, I finally found a driver and a ball I can hit bouncy test of links golf. But it’s 320 again in the air’ ” Woods nothing as it was in 2006, when said, pausing to let those numthe fairways were so baked ber sink in. “Yeah. In the air. and brown that Woods hit only So the game has changed a lot one driver in four rounds. That since then.” was on the 16th hole of the first There is one change that round, and the ball wound up in most agree is for the better. At the 17th fairway. He still made least Woods is playing. birdie. The sport’s star attraction But it’s not just the golf is playing a major championcourse. ship for the first time this year. Woods is not the same player, The back surgery to relieve an having gone through three operimpinged nerve caused him to ations since — two on his left miss the Masters for the first knee, the most recent surgery time, and then the U.S. Open. March 31 on his back. He used He returned three weeks ago at to win majors at a rate slightly Congressional and missed the better than one per year. Now cut, though Woods was more he has gone six years without, excited that he played pain free. dating to his 14th at Torrey “Tiger Woods has been the Pines in the 2008 U.S. Open. And the biggest change might face of our game for nearly 20 years,” Rory McIlroy said. be the guys who are trying to “So to have him playing, have beat him. him back, is important. It’s Even though Woods is coma good a good opportunity ing off a five-win season, he no for some of the other guys to longer is the strongest, biggest or longest player. Nineteen play- stand up and be counted and win tournaments, either in his ers have won majors since his absence of if he’s coming back last one. and isn’t quite back to 100 per“I think it gets harder every cent form.” year just because the field gets That’s already been happendeeper — more guys with a ing. In a most peculiar season, chance to win. What did we the PGA Tour already has prohave, 16, 17 straight first-time duced 10 winners who were not winners?” Woods said, referamong the top 100 in the world. ring to one stretch when there And only four players in 35 tourwere no repeat champions in naments have been in the top 10. 16 straight majors. “It’s getting Woods acknowledged how harder to win. The margin is so much smaller. It’s only going to different 2006 was in other ways. continue to be the case. Guys His father had just died two are going to get longer. They’re months earlier, and he had going to get faster. Guys who missed the cut in a major for are coming out here are bigger, the first time in the U.S. Open stronger, faster, more athletic.” Woods used to be among the before going to Hoylake. He sobbed on the 18th green on the longest. shoulder of his caddie, Steve He is 38 now, and the latest reminder of how much golf has Williams, whom he since fired, and tearfully embraced his wife, changed was on Sunday while from whom he is now divorced. playing with Gary Woodland, There have been game changes, who gave up baseball and life changes. Nothing is what it basketball to concentrate on once seemed. golf. The ball makes a different sound coming off Woodland’s Woods finds inspiration not club, as it once did for Woods. so much from his last victory at Hoylake, but the last major he “I walked around with Gary won. Woodland on Sunday and he

Continued from Page B-4

JOHANNESBURG — Oscar Pistorius was in an altercation at an upmarket nightclub over the weekend, his family said Tuesday. Pistorius went with a cousin to a trendy Johannesburg nightclub on Saturday, where he was accosted by a man who aggressively questioned him about his murder trial, a family spokeswoman said. The man gave a different version, saying the double-amputee runner was drunk, insulted his friends and the family of President Jacob Zuma poked him in the chest, according to Johannesburg’s Star newspaper. Regardless of who started the argument, the weekend episode focuses fresh attention on the disputed character of Pistorius, a globally recognized athlete who is on trial for murder after he fatally shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp through a closed toilet door on Feb. 14, 2013. Defense lawyers describe Pistorius, currently free on bail, as a vulnerable figure with a disability who pulled the trigger in a tragic case of mistaken identity, but prosecutors portray him as a gun-obsessed hothead who shot Steenkamp after the couple quarreled. The trial is on a break ahead of closing arguments Aug. 7-8, sparing Pistorius the near-daily trip to the Pretoria courthouse, where he has sometimes wept and wailed in apparent distress during testimony. The nightclub argument has put him back on the front pages of South Africa’s press, which has also highlighted a number of quotations about suffering and religious faith that appeared on his Twitter account in the hours that followed. The altercation in the nightspot cannot be a factor in Pistorius’ trial, said a legal ana-

Two Johannesburg newspapers report Tuesday on how Oscar Pistorius, right, who is accused of the murder of his girlfriend, recently visited a nightclub with a cousin and was allegedly accosted by a man, Jared Mortimer, left and center, who aggressively questioned him about his murder trial, his family said Tuesday. DENIS FARRELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

lyst who has closely followed proceedings. “It would not be appropriate to mention it in closing arguments as it would constitute hearsay as no previous witness has entered evidence of it on the trial record,” Kelly Phelps, a senior lecturer in the public law department at the University of Cape Town, wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “If it had occurred earlier in proceedings the gentleman concerned could have been called as a witness or Mr. Pistorius could have been questioned on the reports. Even then it would have very little value. The most important thing the court needs to determine is what Pistorius was thinking and how he was acting on the night in question,” wrote Phelps, referring to the night on which Pistorius killed Steenkamp.

Pistorius had been barred from consuming alcohol under early bail conditions, but the ban was rescinded after the defense appealed. He was seated in a quiet booth in the VIP section of the nightclub before he was approached, said Anneliese Burgess, a spokeswoman for the Pistorius family. “The individual, according to my client, started to aggressively interrogate him on matters relating to the trial. An argument ensued during which my client asked to be left alone,” she said in a statement. “Oscar soon thereafter left the club with his cousin. My client regrets the decision to go to a public space and thereby inviting unwelcome attention.” Leo Pistorius, an uncle of the runner, said in a statement later that it was unwise for his

nephew to go to the club even if he was not the aggressor in the argument, noting Pistorius’ “escalating sense of loneliness and alienation” had contributed to “some of his self-harming behavior.” The man who argued with Pistorius is Jared Mortimer, according to Johannesburg’s Star newspaper and The Juice, a South African celebrity news website, which quoted Mortimer as saying the Paralympic athlete started the confrontation. Pistorius said Mortimer’s friends had betrayed him in the murder trial, The Star quoted Mortimer as saying in an apparent reference to evidence presented in court. The athlete also said he had information that could get those friends into trouble, but he would not use it, according to Mortimer.

community

CALENDAR Featured events in and around Santa Fe

JULY

17 HAMAKOM CONTINUING EDUCATION presents, “Was Rin Tin Tin Jewish? The Uneasy Relation between Jews and Dogs,” a class with Rabbi Malka Drucker. Thursday, July 17, 7PM. Orthodox Jewish communities rarely boast dog owners. There is fear and loathing about dogs as pets in the Hasidic world. In this class we’ll explore the reasons for it, Jewish relationship to the animal world, and historic perspective on the dog in Jewish life. We’d prefer you leave dogs at home; we’ll let you know when we’ll do a blessing for the animals. Suggested donation: $10. St. Bede’s, 1601 St. Francis @ San Mateo. 992.1905. www.hamakomtheplace. org.

JULY

19 CHRIST CHURCH SANTA FE SATURDAY SERVICE. If you’re

Sunday, July 20. Ms. Kalbasi was the 2013 First Place winner in both the NATS-LA competition and Long Beach Mozart Festival Competition. Children’s Ministry (“Praying in the Dirt”) also during 10:00 service. Outdoor 8:30 Communion Service for all ages. Child care all morning. “Caught Unaware” is Rev. Brandon Johnson’s message in both services. United’s Mission? “Love God, Neighbor and Creation!” All welcome! 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). 505-988-3295. unitedchurchofsantafe.org. Facebook, too.

PASSPORT TO EDUCATIONAL

presented by Peter Murphy and offered through Santa Fe Community College. This seminar will take you step-by-step through the important areas of retirement. You will learn how to: Define and Create Your Retirement, Assess the Costs, Evaluate Your Sources of Income, Invest for the Future, Protect Your Health and Wealth, Receive Funds from Your Retirement Plans, and Manage Your Estate Distribution. The two-night course will be held on Tuesday and Thursday, July 22nd and 24th, from 5:30 to 8:30 pm at Santa Fe Community College, 6401 Richards Ave, Santa Fe. There is a $69 cost and registration is required through SFCC at www.sfcc.edu / 505-428-1270.

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RETIREMENT INCOME SEMINAR

20 SANTA FE OPERA APPRENTICES featured at United Church of Santa Fe in 10:00 Sunday Worship all summer! Mezzosoprano Shabnam Kalbasi is soloist this

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RETIREMENT Retreat Center in a magnificent mountain landscape west of Taos, deep in the Tusas WORKSHOP

someone who loves to just hang out at home or sleep in on Sunday mornings, but desires a meaningful spiritual connection, our new Saturday evening Praise and Worship service may fit you well. Held on our Cordova and Don Gaspar Campus in our beautiful new Sagrado Theatre starting at 5pm, we come together in community for a short, informal and friendly worship celebration for the young and the young at heart alike with inspiring JULY music and a provocative message to get you through the week to come. Call 982-8817 for details.

JULY

JULY

MINDFULNESS MEDITATION AT VALLECITOS MOUNTAIN RANCH: A Wilderness Meditation and

JULY

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distribution rules; Invest for stability, income, and growth potential; Utilize financial vehicles that could last a lifetime; Protect your income and assets from the unexpected; and Prepare for a more comfortable and rewarding retirement lifestyle. RSVP is required. Call 505216-0838 or email Register.SantaFe@1APG. com to register.

presented by Peter Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Specialist. This FREE two hour workshop is offered at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Wednesday, July 23rd, from 6-8pm. You will learn how to: Make the most of your retirement income streams; Tap into your retirement accumulations; Understand retirement plan

Mountains. July 30-August 3: Insight Meditation Retreat with Peter Williams and Grove Burnett. September 3-7: Deep Woods Insight Meditation Retreat with Grove Burnett and Erin Treat. September 7-11: Love and Wisdom Retreat with Mary Powell and Peter Williams WWW.VALLECITOS.ORG/EVENTS 505-989-8303 refuge@vallecitos.org.

UPCOMING COUNSELORS, THERAPISTS, SOCIAL WORKERS - Receive CEUs at Upaya Zen Center, August 7-10: “Retreat on Contemplative Practice and Rituals in Service to the Dying”” with Frank Ostaseski and Joan Halifax. August 15-17: “Transforming Suffering: A Five Energies Approach to Service and Social Change” with Fleet Maull. August 22-24: “Engaged Buddhism, Radical Buddhism: Bearing Witness in the Streets, Serving in the Field” with Bernie Glassman. “Social Resilience Model,” August 2931: Level 1, October 24-26: LEVEL 2 with Laurie Leitch and Loree Sutton, self-care for workers dealing with trauma (reduced tuition for repeaters, 2+ from same organization, “Being-with-Dying” graduates). www.upaya. org, 505-986-8518x12, registrar@upaya.org.

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

NOW INCLUDES FREE CALENDAR LISTING ON EXPLORESANTAFE.COM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

TUNDRA

PEANUTS

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

NON SEQUITUR

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

RETAIL

ZITS

PICKLES

LUANN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE ARGYLE SWEATER


Travel C-2 Classifieds C-3

WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

TASTE Cherry tomato sauce fits year-round

Greek culture: In Florida, visitors can get a taste of Greece and sponge diving. Page C-2

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CRAFT BEERS BOOMING GROWTH STATEWIDE

By Melissa Clark The New York Times

Long-simmered tomato sauces are just right in winter, when you’re looking to spend hours next to the stove in the company of a steaming, bubbling pot. But summer demands something brighter and fresher, dishes that feature the season’s ripest produce but do so with minimal cooking time. A burst cherry tomato sauce fills the bill with panache. To make it, sweet cherry tomatoes (or grape, or pear or any other diminutive tomatoes) are halved, then sautéed in oil until their skins burst and wrinkle, their juices condense and their edges brown and caramelize. Halving the tomatoes helps them cook more quickly, and integrates the tomato bits more evenly throughout the pasta so you get some in every bite. Use a mix of red, orange and yellow tomatoes, if you can find them, for the prettiest dish. You could make a perfectly lovely pasta dish with just the tomatoes burst in oil along with some garlic and red pepper flakes. So feel free to stop there. But I like to add browned pancetta for a brawny, salty bite. Then, to smooth out all that intensity, I swirl in a little butter and top the pasta with dollops of milky ricotta. Make sure not to mix the ricotta into the sauce. You want to keep it distinct so you can revel in the contrast of cool and creamy against hot, spicy and salty. As a final touch, I garnish the dish with mint and scallion. But instead of a mere smattering of greenery to make things pretty, I add a salad’s worth: three full cups of mint leaves and almost of cup of scallions. If it seems like a lot, that’s because it is. But all that mint and scallion adds a wonderful freshness to the dish, brightening and lightening its spirit. Make sure to tear (and not cut) the mint leaves so they don’t turn brown. Or use small leaves that can be left whole. If you’re not a mint lover, basil works here, too. PASTA WITH BURST CHERRY TOMATOES Total time: 20 minutes, makes four to six servings Fine sea salt and black pepper, as needed 1 pound fusilli pasta 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, more for drizzling 6 ounces pancetta, preferably thick cut, diced 6 garlic cloves, smashed and peeled Pinch red pepper flakes 1 quart cherry or grape tomatoes, halved 3 tablespoons butter Fresh ricotta cheese, for serving (optional) 3 cups whole mint leaves, torn 4 scallions, preferably red scallions for color, thinly sliced Flaky sea salt, to finish Preparation: Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook until 1 minute shy of al dente. Drain pasta, reserving ½ cup pasta cooking water. Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat for 15 seconds, then add the oil and heat until it thins out and easily coats the pan when swirled. Add pancetta and cook until it starts to render its fat, about 2 minutes. Add garlic, red pepper flakes and a large pinch of salt and pepper and cook until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Add tomatoes and cook until they burst, turn golden at the edges and shrivel up slightly, about 5 to 8 minutes. Add pasta to pan and toss with tomatopancetta mixture; if the mixture looks dry add a little pasta cooking water a few tablespoons at a time. Cook over high heat until the pasta finishes cooking in the sauce. Add the butter and toss until it melts and coats everything. Divide pasta among warmed pasta bowls. Garnish with dollops of ricotta if desired, and top with a generous mound of fresh mint and scallions. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with sea salt and more pepper before serving. Note: If you would like to leave out the pancetta (making the dish vegetarian), toss ⅓ cup grated pecorino in the pasta along with the butter.

A plate of rotini with burst cherry tomatoes, mint and ricotta. ANDREW SCRIVANI/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Brian Lock, owner of Santa Fe Brewing Co., stacks cans in 2010 when it acquired a new canning machine. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTOS

Frontier for breweries By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE hat frosty tide of smooth, golden brown craft beer has finally come in, and it’s helping to quench this drought-stricken state’s thirst for jobs and economic development. Dozens of microbreweries and taprooms have popped up around New Mexico in recent years, the state’s universities and colleges are developing fermentation science programs and other classes aimed at the brewing industry, and local brew masters are bringing home some of the most coveted international accolades for their creations. “When we keep popping up in the news and bringing home medals, people start scratching their heads and saying, ‘What’s that all about?’ They’re curious about what’s going on in New Mexico,” said Chris Goblet, executive director of the New Mexico Brewers Guild. The brewery scene is anything but new in states such as Oregon, Colorado and California, but federal census data shows the industry continues to boom. There are now more than double the breweries nationwide than there were just five years ago, and shipments topped $28 billion in 2012. A late bloomer, New Mexico represents the frontier of beer, Goblet said. The state will never have the population to support the hundreds of breweries and taprooms other states have, but industry experts say there’s more room at New Mexico’s smaller breweries to experiment and create beers that would be hard to replicate elsewhere. Examples range from the gold-medal IPAs at La Cumbre Brewery in Albuquerque to the IPAs and cactus stout offered by Santa Fe Brewing Co., the lager made with house-roasted green chilies at Roosevelt Brewing Co. in Portales and the native-hops-infused brews crafted by the monks at the Christ in the Desert Monastery in Northern New Mexico. New Mexico’s three dozen breweries employ thousands of workers and have an economic impact of some $265 million, according to the

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Brother Augustine Seiker cleans out the barley from the bottom of a brewing tank in 2011 at the Sierra Blanca/Rio Grande Brewery in Moriarty.

national Brewers Association. While New Mexico is nowhere near the top when it comes to state rankings, elected leaders say the potential cannot be ignored given that more than a dozen new breweries are in the planning stages, and some established breweries want to open new taprooms and distribute their products beyond the state’s borders. Just last month, Gov. Susana Martinez and other state officials turned out for a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the expansion of Blue Heron Brewery in Española. The neighborhood used to be dead, said Sen. Richard Martinez, D-Española. “This new brewery comes in. It’s serving food, and it’s packed. It has revitalized part of our town,” he said. It’s the same scenario in Albuquerque, where breweries and taprooms have spurred new commercial and residential interest in industrial areas near downtown and other parts of the city

that are now on the list of hot spots. Sen. Jacob Candelaria, D-Albuquerque, said food trucks are now fixtures along the brewery circuit and other small businesses are opening to fill the need for packaging and distributing. Santa Fe Brewing Co., the state’s oldest brewery, has plans for a $10 million expansion. With distribution throughout Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, Nevada, Kansas and Missouri, Santa Fe Brewing Co. is the state’s only regional brewery. In January, Santa Fe Brewing Co. President Brian Lock told The New Mexican that the company has purchased 3.2 acres off N.M. 14 that will be used to expand its operation. Lock said the business will proceed with caution as it expands, but when construction of the final phase is complete, the brewery will be able to increase capacity annually from 30,000 barrels to some 200,000 barrels.

Rethinking a healthy breakfast: Meal in a muffin By Sara Moulton The Associated Press

When fall rolls around and it’s back to school and work, wouldn’t you love to start your day with something tastier and more substantial than that all-too-typical bowl of cold cereal? It’s just so boring day after day. And that’s apart from the fact that most cereals will fail to tide you over until lunchtime. Here, then, is a meal in a muffin, a delicious and substantial alternative to the usual breakfast fare. The base is a mix of white whole-wheat and all-purpose flours. Don’t fret over the whole wheat. White whole-wheat flour — available at most supermarkets — is made from a variety of wheat that is lighter in color and flavor than a traditional whole wheat, but just as healthy. The flour mix is moistened with eggs (a terrific source of protein), a combo of olive oil and just a little butter, as well as a bit of buttermilk and some Greek yogurt. Next come the veggies. I’ve chosen broccoli and roasted red peppers, but you’re welcome to replace them with carrots or chopped green beans. Your choice, as long

as they add up to 1¾ cups. And by the way, you don’t need to pre-cook the vegetables before adding them to the batter. I’ve amped up the flavor with modest amounts of Canadian bacon and full-fat cheddar cheese. The finished muffins are good to go: tasty and filling without a ton of sugar and fat. Breakfast may never be the same. For that matter, these muffins would be great for lunch, too. BROCCOLI CHEDDAR BREAKFAST MUFFINS Total time: 1 hour (35 minutes active), makes 12 muffins 2 cups white whole-wheat flour 1 cup all-purpose flour 1 tablespoon baking powder ½ teaspoon baking soda ½ teaspoon kosher salt ¼ teaspoon ground black pepper 2 large eggs 1 cup fat-free plain Greek yogurt ¾ cup buttermilk 3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted ¾ cup finely chopped roasted red peppers,

Section editor: Carlos A. López, 986-3099, clopez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Richard Olmsted, rolmsted@sfnewmexican.com

plus ¼ cup of the pepper liquid from the jar 1 cup small raw broccoli florets or chopped thawed frozen broccoli florets ½ cup diced Canadian bacon (about 3 ounces) ¾ cup coarsely grated sharp cheddar cheese (about 3 ounces), divided Preparation: Heat the oven to 425 degrees. Mist a 12-cup muffin pan with cooking spray, or line with cupcake liners. In a large bowl, stir together both flours, the baking powder, baking soda, salt and pepper. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, yogurt, buttermilk, olive oil, butter and pepper juice (if the jar did not have ¼ cup of juice in it, supplement with water). Add the egg mixture to the flour mixture and stir just until combined. Add the peppers, broccoli, bacon and ½ cup of the cheese, stirring well. Scoop the batter (it will be quite thick) into the muffin cups, filling them completely. Sprinkle the remaining cheese over the tops of the muffins. Bake on the oven’s middle shelf until the tops are golden, about 25 minutes. Remove the muffins from the pan and cool on a rack.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

TRAVEL Dive into Greek culture in Florida Sponge harvesting done the old-fashioned way

By Beth J. Harpaz The Associated Press

NEW YORK amily travel falls into three distinct phases. First, there’s the exhausting period of travel with crying babies who need diapers, bottles, strollers, car seats and naps. Then come the golden years, when kids can handle long rides and long walks, when they actually think scavenger hunts are fun, and when they bask in their family’s love and attention. But that’s followed by the teenage years, which can be nearly as challenging as the toddler years — because to a teenager, any place a parent wants to go is by definition uncool. It’s tempting to fantasize about leaving them home (surely they can take care of themselves!), but they might throw wild parties in your absence, so you’ll have to bring them along. Here are five strategies — crowdsourced and from personal experience — to help you survive. It may not be cool for teenagers to travel with their parents, but you can definitely make it more fun.

F

By Paul Abercrombie The Washington Post

F

irst we saw a few bubbles. Then so many that the water seemed to boil. Next appeared a bulbous brass helmet, big as a beach ball, trailing a long rubber hose. A human hand clasped the side of the wooden boat. A minute later, the diver had climbed back aboard the St. Nicholas VII. Clad in traditional early 20th-century diving getup, he appeared to have stepped directly from a Jules Verne novel. Unlike fictional underwater adventurers, this one was a real man demonstrating to us tourists the old-fashioned and once highly dangerous work of sponge harvesting. Methods of gathering these profitable porous sea critters may be safer today, but a recent visit to Tarpon Springs revealed that much about this Gulf Coast Florida community remains curiously unchanged. My pal Bill and I spent a day in the seaside town, less than an hour’s drive from my home in Tampa. About a mile away from downtown Tarpon Springs, the overwhelming number of Greek words on signs confirmed that we were headed the right way. By the time we’d reached the sponge docks, I’d lost count of the Greek surnames I’d spotted on buildings and mailboxes. No wonder: Tarpon Springs boasts the highest percentage of Greek Americans in the country. You can find plenty of information about Tarpon Springs in brochures. But the best — and most entertaining — source of local lore we found was George Billiris, a veteran sponge diver whose aquanaut grandfather had immigrated in 1904. In an air-conditioned dockside shack where the 87-yearold runs a sponge auction outfit and diving exhibition boat tours, he told us how an abundance of high-quality sponges along the Sunshine State’s Gulf Coast attracted many Greeks, among the best sponge divers in the Mediterranean. In its heyday, he said, Tarpon Springs was the world capital of the sponge industry, home to several hundred divers working aboard some 180 boats. Hollywood glamorized the romance and danger of sponge diving in movies, but a seaborne midcentury blight all but destroyed the industry. Yet despite various ups and downs over the decades, sponge harvesting continues here. Global demand for natural sponges — regarded as superior to synthetic ones — remains high. Inspired, Bill and I took the half-hour sponge diving boat tour with St. Nicholas Boat Line (693 Dodecanese Blvd., 727-9426425, www.stnicholasboatline.com), followed by lunch at Mykonos (628 Dodecanese Blvd., 727-934-4306), one of the town’s several dozen Greek restaurants. I had the signature grouper Mykonos, roasted fresh fish smothered in tomatoes, onions and crumbled feta cheese, along with a glass of zesty white Greek wine. Bill went with a more traditional papoutsaki, baked eggplant stuffed with meat and topped with béchamel sauce. We ended with a duo of high-octane Greek cof-

Five tips for making trips with teens fun

Find appealing activities

Diver Frank Notte gets ready to go over the side of the St. Nicholas VII on the Anclote River in Tarpon Springs, Fla. Notte gets into his rubber diving suit in the morning and stays in it all day, doing demonstrations of the old-fashioned and once highly dangerous work of sponge harvesting. PHOTOS BY ARTHUR FREDERICK/THE WASHINGTON POST

Anthony ‘Curley’ Spanolios takes recently harvested sponges and trims them with sheepshearing clippers. It’s the way natural sponges have been trimmed and rounded for more than 100 years.

fees, thick as sludge. A few minutes’ drive south on Hope Street, we visited St. Michael Shrine (113 Hope St., 727-937-4942), prayers at which are said to be responsible for a number of miraculous cures. The sole visitors to this pint-size Greek Orthodox Church, we sneaked a look inside a small cavelike room outside where dozens of votive candles burned.

Heading back to town, we decided to take a leisurely route. I lost count of how many houses sported some combination of the sky-blue-and-white colors of the Greek flag, and Hellenic yard statues. On the way home, Bill and I vowed to come back soon. We had to experience the town’s nightlife. And, maybe just as important, finally taste that flaming cheese dish.

LASTING IMAGES CECIS CASTLE IN LATVIA Keith Anderson and his wife, Barbara Lenssen, returned from the Baltic countries where they visited Cecis Castle in Latvia. Visitors can see stone cannon balls and the ruins, which remain from the original construction in 1209 when the castle was once the most important of the Livonian Order.

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

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

Teenage brains crave danger. Parental brains crave security. Fortunately, many activities are both thrilling and basically safe, like zip-lining, whitewater rafting and roller coasters. Teens also like trying new things. Let them try surfing, stand-up paddleboards or snorkeling. No reason mom and dad can’t sit that stuff out, by the way — the kids will surely learn faster than you, and you wouldn’t want to be humiliated. If activities involve spending money, discuss limits ahead of time. And if shopWhitewater rafters ride ping’s on the itinerdown the Sacandaga River ary, don’t forget thrift in Lake Luzerne, N.Y. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO shops as fun, bargain alternatives to malls and brand-name stores. Like the song says, “Is that your grandma’s coat?”

Let them explore Let teens explore on their own as much as possible, whether the setting is a theme park, mall, beach, festival or neighborhood. If everyone has cellphones, it’s easy to keep track of their whereabouts, but you can also plan the old-fashioned way: “See you at 4 p.m. at the fountain (or the car or the hotel room).” Casually add that you’re prone to panic and will call the cops, have their names broadcast over public address systems, or write “WHERE ARE YOU?” in shouty-caps on their Facebook pages if they’re late.

Be flexible about itineraries I like museums, gardens and historic sites. My husband likes 6 a.m. sunrise hikes, preferably up steep mountain trails. Guess what? Our kids sometimes rebel and we sometimes compromise. Being flexible about itineraries and letting kids help plan is critical to family travel happiness. We’ve let a kid stay at the hotel while we’ve gone hiking. I’ve done botanical gardens alone while the others went to a zoo. We’ve even skipped alleged must-sees because the kids didn’t want to do them, and really, what’s the point? It’s vacation, not medicine. There’s also no harm in letting them sleep in or hang out at the pool while you visit an art show or antiques store. Some families plan trips by letting each person pick one place for the group to visit, alternating adult choices with kid picks, and limiting museums to an hour if kids don’t want to be there. Sure, you want to see the Mona Lisa in Paris, but you needn’t spend all day at the Louvre. Another museum strategy: Let teens sit somewhere playing with their phones while you power walk through a gallery or two. Here’s the good news: Now that my kids are older — 16 and 21 — they think art is cool. What’s more awesome than putting a selfie with The Scream on Instagram? And even if you can’t get teens psyched about museums, they might love street art. Many cities have neighborhoods where graffiti — illegal or sanctioned — is a tourist attraction, like Wynwood, Miami, or Bushwick, Brooklyn. Look for walking tours; your guide might even be a cool 20-something who’ll impress the heck out of your kids.

Bring a friend Friends can make trips more fun and give parents time to relax while kids hang with their buddies. But consider a trial-run sleepover at home first to get a realistic preview of your prospective guest’s habits. Can you handle overly picky eaters, screen addicts and kids who either won’t go to sleep or won’t wake up? If you can afford accommodations with a separate room for teens — even if it’s just a pullout sofa in a living room with a TV — that might also make everyone happier. Inviting another family — parents as well as kids — to vacation with you is another option, depending on budgets and logistics.

Give a teen a job Let them drive on a road trip. Put them in charge of taking pictures. And with all their digital know-how, let them navigate when you’re lost.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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

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COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

SANTA FE

ESPANOLA HOME FOR SALE: 809 OLD HOSPITAL ROAD, ESPANOLA. 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 3,500 sq.ft. on .37 acres. THE MAEZ GROUP: 505-469-0546. Keller Williams Realty office: 505-8971100.

INCOME PROPERTY

»rentals«

LOTS & ACREAGE NMDOT PROPERTY FOR SALE ON-SITE "FOR SALE SIGN" 1.38 acres vacant lot Corner Lot, Hwy 14 and Camino Vista Grande Santa Fe, New Mexico Asking price $162,245.00 PLEASE SUBMIT PROPOSALS WITHIN 30 DAYS OF THIS AD

DRASTIC PRICE CUT! VIEWS! 5.8 ACRES!

Custom Gem, 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, 18ft. beamed ceilings, stainless appliances, radiant heat, 3 car garage. $579,900. Fateh Ferrari, 505690-3075 Keller Williams

SANTA FE AUGUST 1 South Capitol Home 3 bedroom plus rental, large yard, saltillo floors, Washer, Dryer, 2 fireplaces, 2600 sq.ft. $535,000 enchantedgiftsnm@yahoo.com.

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

Where treasures are found daily

Remodeled Office with reception, 5-6 private offices near hospital. 1511 sq.ft. Plenty of parking. $295,000. Owner-Broker 505-690-4709

Place an ad Today!

LOCATED ON Old Santa Fe Trail this property could be your beautiful full time home with guest casita, or a business or art gallery with casita living quarters in the private back yard. This property has an attached garage plus off street parking for 4 cars! Hard wood floors are in the main house with great Santa Fe vigas and a newly renovated kitchen with stainless appliances. 3rd Bedroom or Den would be an incredible master suite!!! Open house Sunday, July 13th and July 20th from 11-2. Please call Stacie Kimberley with Keller Williams Realty for property details or to schedule an appointment to see this beautiful property. 505-660-6365

CALL 986-3000

PRICED RIGHT

CONDO

988-5585

LOTS & ACREAGE

DOWNTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport, fireplace, wood floors. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $315,000. Jay, 505-470-0351.

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.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

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.

All utilities ready to build on (horse property). $190,000 (owner financing). Russ, 505-470-3227. 2.5 ACRES at Rabbit Road on Camino Cantando. Water well plus all utilities. Good Views! 505-603-4429 3.3 ACRES with shared well in place. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenance. $165,000. 505-4705877

BEAUTIFUL 2012 MOBILE HOME! 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, laundry room, lots of kitchen cabinets, porch, wood siding. $33,500. Call 505470-7083. MOBILE HOME, 1972. Model Mark V. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 14x70, $1,500. 505316-2555, 505-204-4118.

OUT OF TOWN

50 ACRE TRACT on ROWE MESA with power & phone ready to come in. Beautiful trees & meadows. Surrounded by National Forest. $198,000 ($5,000 down, $600 monthly, ten year balloon). A must see. Call Russ, 505-470-3227.

APARTMENTS FURNISHED 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

2 BEDROOM, $800 1 BEDROOM, $700

Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

12.5 Acre Tract on Avenida de Compadres & Spur Ranch Rd

OLD STORE & RESIDENCE ADOBE, 2 STORY 2,700 sq. ft on 1.048 acres. Ideal for B&B. Cleveland, N.M. 87715. Owner financed $86,000 at 3%. 575-387-2490. Leave message, repeat phone number.

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH Great location near city bus stop. 900 square feet with walk in closet. $750 monthly plus utilities, $500 deposit. Radiant heat, washer, dryer, saltillo tile, carpet, private parking small yard. No smoking, no pets. Call, 505-231-0010. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rufina L a n e , balcony, fireplace, laundry facility on-site. $629 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH- R a n c h o S i r i n g o , Fenced yard, fireplace, Laundry facility on-site. $729 monthly. 1/1 ROSARIO B L V D . Short distance to plaza, new finishes, cozy floor plan, fenced yard. $675 monthly.

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

Si Habla Espanol ASK US ABOUT 1 MONTH FREE!

3 BED, 3 bath, 2 story Condo in Pendaries northern NM. 2-car garage. 45 minutes to Sipapu Ski Area. $120,000 or $750 monthly lease. Virginia, 505-425-9269.

VISTA PRIMERA REMODEL

Premier Lot in Cerros Colorados

Owner will carry, minutes from the Plaza and hiking trails. All utilities, 1 + acre, $170,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001

GREAT INCOME Producer! This complex boasts 23 units, 13 1-bedroom units, 8 2-bedroom units. Asking $1,250,000 Call for details or showing. SANTA FE REALTY ULTD. 505-4678829.

KNOCKOUT PRICE!

For $ 242,000 this 2 story town home in Rancho Viejo is a steal. Over $60,000 of upgrades makes this 3 bedroom, 2 ½ bath, TV area home a super buy. Act fast - it won’t last. BEAUTIFUL & SPACIOUS CASA ALEGRE HOME plus CASITA. PRICE REDUCED below appraisal for quick sale! 2007 Hopi Road. $459,000. Liz, 505-989-1113.

For more information and Bid Instructions contact Angie Lujan at (505)827-5516 or email at angie.lujan@state.nm.us TAOS, 40 acres. Fronts Highway 64 and Montoya Road. Power, Views. 1 mile west of Gorge Bridge. $4,000 per acre. 830-370--8605.

ELDORADO OPEN HOUSE, SUNDAY 1-4, 41 CARRISA ROAD Under market price FSBO. 1820 sq.ft. 1.64 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath. Updated kitchen, beautiful views. $357,000. 505-577-0100

CLASSIFIEDS

Beautiful custom home. 4 bedroom, 3 bath. 2 car garage. Diamond Plaster, High Ceilings, Granite. Santa Fe Realty Ultd 505-467-8829

10 MILES North of Santa Fe on US285. 4.5 Acres, 6,850 sq.ft. Building and more. 3 acre ft. Well with 3 homes possible. Jerry 263-1476.

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

ESPANOLA

5 Acre Lot, 11 Roy Crawford at Old Santa Fe Trail, $195,000. (2) 2.5 acre lots, Senda Artemisia at Old Galisteo, $119-124,000. Rural setting near town. Equity RE. 505-690-8503

We always get results!

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre $175K 1.3 IRRIGATED ACRES with 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, 1400 sq. ft. home and additional outbuildings. Private well and septic. Estate sale. Call 505382-8859 or 505-710-7752.

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

986-3000

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Range, fridge, dishwasher, washer, dryer. Fenced Yard. Pets Negotiable. $850 plus deposit. Lease. Call 505-501-0935. 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH. Near Rodeo and Sawmill Roads. $875 plus utilities. Living room, kiva, high ceiling with vigas and clerestory windows. Private, fenced patio. Parking in front of apartment. No smoking. Require first and $475 deposit. Year lease. Contact: Mike at 505-316-3986.

A ROMERO STREET DUPLEX CONDO.

2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 car parking. Private courtyard. Excellent location behind REI. $1150. 505629-6161.

business & service exploresantafe•com

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

ACCOUNTING

CLEANING

ACCOUNTANT: 20+ years experience. Available for GL accounting & analysis, special projects, interim staff coverage & more. Judy, 575-6407952; almazazz@yahoo.com

HOUSE & OFFICE CLEANING. 18 years experience cleaning Santa Fe’s finest homes and offices. Quality work excellent references. Carmen, 505920-4537.

MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

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!

HANDYMAN

Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062.

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

CONCRETE

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

EXPERIENCED SPECIALIZED IN CONCRETE REPAIR, OVERLAYMENTS, INTERIORS, EXTERIORS. DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, BASKETBALL COURTS. WE USE SPECIAL FLOOR ADHESIVE TREATMENT. $6 PER SQ.FT. LICENSED, BONDED. 505-470-2636

CONSTRUCTION

CLEANING AVAILABLE FOR HOUSEWORK. Many years experience. One time, or, as needed. 505-753-8967, 505-670-8467.

Clean Houses Inside and out. Windows, carpets. $18 per hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449. DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and small office with TLC. Excellent references. 20 years experience. Nancy, 505-9861338.

BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-310-7552.

HAULING OR YARD WORK

PAINTING

YARD WORK, TRASH HAULING, TREE TRIMMING & CUTTING. Free estimates. Reasonable prices. Reliable & Dependable. Call Pat, 505-490-0067 or 505-316-2693.

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

LANDSCAPING AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

directory«

CALDERON’S LANDSCAPING FULL LANDSCAPING SERVICES: Irrigation, Flagstone Patios, Coyote Fencing, Tree Service. Fully Licensed. Free Estimates. Fair Prices. Call 505-216-4051.

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

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

HOMECRAFT PAINTING

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.

GREENCARD LANDSCAPING

Irrigation SystemsNew installations & Repairs. Patios - Brick, Flagstone, Concrete. Retaining Walls- block & Rock. Metal Work- Gates, Railings. Tree Pruning. Landscape designs & Installations. Get it done right the first time! Have a woman do it. 505-310-0045, 505-995-0318 Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock www.greencardlandscaping.com

TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.

TREE AND LANDSCAPING SERVICES. Plants, Flagstone, Rock, Gravel, Coyote Fences, Painting, Tile Work. Beautiful Work for Beautiful Homes! Ernesto, 505-570-0329.

HAULING OR YARD WORK

Victor Yanez Full Landscape Design

HCN, Specialized in Concrete Repair. New Additions plastering, flagstone, fences, rock, boulders, driveway repairs. Licensed Insurance. Free Estimates. Hector, 505-204-2000.

FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898

Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 20% off 4th of July Only! 505-907-2600, 505-289-9398.

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

ROOFING

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

PLASTERING RESTORATIONS

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

STORAGE A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.

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

STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Full Synthetic Systems, Ornamental, Venetian Veneer. Faux Plaster and Paint. Locally owned and operated. Licensed, Bonded, and Insured. 505316-3702

GET NOTICED!

YARD MAINTENANCE HOW ’BOUT A ROSE FOR YOUR GARDEN... to clean-up, maintain, & improve. Just a call away! Rose, 4700162. Free estimates. YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. Any work you need done I can do! Call George 505-316-1599.

YARD MAINTENANCE

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

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

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

ROOMMATE WANTED

DOWNTOWN: 1425 Paseo De P e ra lta , 1 bedroom, 1 full bath and kitchen, free laundry, $765 with all utilities paid. 104 Faithway, Live-in S t u d io , full bath and kitchen, $775 with all utilities paid. 813 Camino de Monterey Ray , live-in studio. Full bath, kitchen. $680 gas, water paid. NO PETS! 471-4405

3 BEDROOM, 2 FULL BATHS, oak floors. Newly refurbished. Convenient to downtown, near Whole Foods. $1500 plus utilities and damage deposit. Pets optional. 505-992-2991; cell 505-660-1622.

FURNISHED LARGE BEDROOM with Private bath. Share large beautiful 3 bedroom in nice area! Includes work-out room. $750 monthly. 505316-1756

STORAGE SPACE

EASTSIDE LARGE 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Large yard. Off-street parking. Hardwood floors. Fireplace. $1100 monthly, utilities paid. No pets. References a must. 505-982-5232

LARGE, SUNNY 2 BEDROOMS AND STUDIOS. Let us show you how relaxing summer can be with pools and AC! Call 888-482-8216 or stop by Las Palomas Apartm e n t s on Hopewell Street for a tour! Pet-friendly. Hablamos Espanol

CHECKFREE THIS OUT!! WASHER$420 / DRYER IN MOVES YOU IN Every Apt. Home A 1, 2 &1 3Bedroom bedroom Apts. Apt. plus $0Available Security Deposit Fordeposit Qualified Applicants No required for & Utilities No deposit required for Utilities, How!! Ask Ask me me how! Call Today!COURT SAN MIGUEL

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

505471-8325 505-471-8325 STUDIO, $675. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Utilities paid, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505-4710839

COMMERCIAL 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

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

Studio Conveniently Located

1 bath, full kitchen with beautiful tile counters, tile flooring, and gas burning stove. $550 plus utilities.

ADOBE 1 BEDROOM on quiet Railyard dead-end street. Recently remodeled. Water paid. Year lease. $925 monthly. 505-2318272 ADOBE UNIT with washer, dryer. 20 minutes from Santa Fe. No Dogs! $650 monthly, first & last. $300 deposit. 505-757-6334

1208 PARKWAY, 2,800 SQ.FT. OVERHEAD DOOR, PARKING, HEATED, COOLED. NEW CARPET. FLEXIBLE OWNER WILLING TO MODIFY. $1,500 MONTHLY. AL, 466-8484. INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 750 SQUARE FEET FOR $600 TO 1500 SQUARE FEET FOR $1050. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, HALF BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166.

»announcements«

ALL UTILITIES PAID! 2 B E D R O O M , $1100 MONTHLY. Fireplace, private backyard, 2 baths, bus service close. 3 BEDROOM, $1350 MONTHLY. Large living room, kitchen. Ample parking. No pets. 505-204-6160 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

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

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

Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

ELDORADO COTTAGE- S T Y L E H O M E . 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Open floorplan. 1 acre on greenbelt. All appliances. Pantry. Garage. $1450 monthly. 505-466-3636

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

WAREHOUSES

FOUND DENTAL WORK, Bridge or Partial Plate. Found 7/2 by El Castillo on the path by the Santa Fe River. 505-8274138. DENTAL WORK, Bridge or Partial Plate. Found 7/2 by El Castillo on the path by the Santa Fe River. 505-8274138. FOUND PUPPY: Blonde short-haired mix, South Captol area on 7/7/14. Call to identify: 505-570-0753.

Old Adobe Office

Located On the North Side of Town, Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fireplaces, private bathroom, ample parking. 1350 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1350 plus utilities and CAM.

CANYON ROAD

Classic adobe shop or gallery in the heart of Santa Fe’s famous Canyon Road. 1600 sq.ft. Vigas, wood & saltillo floors. 2 kiva fireplaces, 5 display rooms with modern track lighting. Call Alex, 505-466-1929.

OFFICE SPACE WITH HIGH VISIBILITY, HIGH EXPOSURE on Cerrillos Road. Retail space. Central location in Kiva Center. 505438-8166

CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 900 sq.ft. Gated community. All appliances included. $950 plus utilities. No pets. Contact Eddie, 505-470-3148. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. Nice and clean. Lower unit across from pool, hot tub, laundry and workout room. Tile in kitchen with Dishwasher. Dining area, patio off living room. $925 a month plus utilities. Utilities approximately $125 for 2 people. 983-7168

GUESTHOUSES EASTSIDE ACEQUIA MADRE CASITA. Fully Furnished. Month-to-month or Yearly. Including TV, internet. Old World Charm. Parking. Vigas, brick floors, patio. Washer, dryer. Just bring your clothes! $1100 monthly. 505-989-4241

LOST

ELDORADO IMMACULATE pet friendly 3 bed, 2 bath home. $1,500 monthly. First, last , and one month security. 505-699-3665.

HISTORIC EASTSIDE NEAR CANYON ROAD

HOUSE FOR rent in tesuque 2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, kitchen ,dinding room, den,living room, family room, sun room and utililty rooms 2548 sq ft. washer,dryer, refrigerator, stove included $1260 sq ft heated garage paved driveway.Available August 1. surrounded by grass and pine trees. nonsmoking, pets negotiable. $1500 plus utilities. first month’s rent plus $1500 damage deposit to move in 505 983 8347 or 505 660 1038

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

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

PUEBLO DE RODEO. 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, 1 car garage. All appliances, kiva fireplace. Big private yard. $1000. 505-670-6818, 505660-7949.

DOWN 1 Inherent rights and wrongs, as of a case 2 Long-legged shore bird 3 Take on, as a challenge 4 Vintage cars

By Robert E. Lee Morris

5 Dadaism founder 6 Rage 7 Greek architectural style 8 Viewpoint 9 “The Colbert Report” stock-intrade 10 Winged stinger 11 Gold, in Guadalajara 12 Polo Grounds hero Mel 13 __ Bo 18 Ship stabilizer 22 “... a borrower __ a lender ...”: “Hamlet” 24 Low-lying land 25 “Me, Myself & __”: Jim Carrey film 26 In the cellar, sportswise 27 ABA member 28 Pot pie veggie 30 Was in front 33 Rite Aid rival 34 Sample 36 Chihuahua cat 37 Ruckuses 38 Like some skillbuilding classes 39 __ admiral

Jacuzzi tub. All appliances included. Mission Viejo, Windmill Ridge. Lovely landscaping. Beautiful tile work throughout house. Open patio with unobstructed view of mountains. $1,650 monthly. 505-424-2226

2 BEDROOM MID-CENTURY SANTA FE CLASSIC On 1 acre, Museum Hill. 2.5 bath, A/C, fireplace, hardwood floors, laundry. 2 car garage, portal to private courtyard. $2625 monthly. 505-6297619

2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. Southside. Views. Yard, fireplace, washer, dryer. 2 car garage. Near shopping. Pets negotiable. Non-smoking. $1200 monthly. 505-473-2102

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.

(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

40 Bed-andbreakfast, e.g. 41 Moonshine container 44 “Consider the job done!” 45 Cleveland NBAer 47 Cabbagelike plant 48 Electric cars named for a physicist

7/16/14

49 Ultimatum words 50 Fork over what’s due 52 Actress Winger 53 Profound fear 56 Clarinet cousin 57 Naval letters 58 Grab a stool 59 “Give me __!”: start of a Hoosier cheer 61 WWII arena 62 Tease

STK#40598

OVER $7,500 OFF MSRP!

SILVER CUFF BRACELET, 7/13. Lost vicintiy of 318 Delgado or 767 Acequia Madre #2 or 644 Canyon Road #12. Great Sentimental Value. 505-995-8880

CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily

Place an ad Today!

July thru September. Non-smoking, no pets. $1100 monthly, utilities included. 505-982-4022

CALL 986-3000

MSRP FURRY’S WOW DISCOUNT REBATES W/ TRADE ASSIST & LOYALTY

$27,405 -$4,005 -$3,500 $

$0 DOWN

FURRY’S INTERNET PRICE 19,900

SIGN & DRIVE ONLY $282 MO.*

505-473-2886 | 2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507 * All final prices are plus applicable tax, title, license and one-time dealer transfer fee. All payments figured with zero down with financing tax, title, license and one-time dealer transfer fee @ 2.99% for 84 months through Del Norte Credit Union - OAC - Requires minimum Fico score to qualify. Stk# 40736 and Stk# 40630 have IVC’s figured into rebates. IVC’c are of limited availability and may not be available at your time of purchase. Rebates include all applicable rebates available, you may not qualify for all rebates... see dealer for full details.

JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and 3x3 block. Use logic and process elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest). ZOCOLO CONDO FOR RENT

Rating: GOLD

Open Floor Plan. Light & Bright, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 2nd floor unit. Two balconies, one car garage. Community amenities include Clubhouse, Pool, Fitness Center. $1500 monthly includes water, sewer, trash. 505-699-7940.

Solution to 7/15/14

LOT FOR RENT © 2014 Janric Enterprises Dist. by creators.com

2300 SQ.FT. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH.

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

2014 GMC TERRAIN

1760 SQ.FT. in ELDORADO three and two. Double car garage, portals, fireplace. Very clean and nice; must see. $1350 monthly. No pets. Russ, 505-470-3227.

7/16/14

REWARD! LOST DOG "SCOOTER". 7/13 in Guadalupe Historic District, Plaza, Sanbusco area. Collar with tags. Please call, 505-986-3880, 817-9941974, 817-994-0507.

TEUQUE GUESTHOUSE. 4 miles to Plaza.

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

ACROSS 1 Place to wipe your boots 4 Vice squad strategies 9 “Darn!” 14 Sister of Zsa Zsa 15 Flynn of film 16 Main artery 17 Green Day’s “American Idiot,” e.g. 19 Govt.-backed bond 20 Secretary of the Interior under FDR 21 Navel type 23 Commuting start? 24 NASCAR winner’s celebration 29 First-class 31 Sales incentive 32 Send to the statehouse 35 “¿Cómo __?” 36 Commonplace, and what the start of 17-, 24-, 51- or 60-Across is 41 Shade of green 42 German steel city 43 __ energy 46 Sleeveless shirt 51 1995 Stephen King novel 54 Prefix with space 55 English Channel port 56 Fashionista Mary-Kate 57 Bolt on a track 60 Spare tire 63 Red Sea peninsula 64 Pi, for one 65 Tempe sch. 66 Prop for a clown 67 Hacienda brick 68 Fall mo.

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

LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by:

2 bedroom plus office, balcony, sunset views. Off-street parking. $1300 monthly. Utilities included! Available now. Chris: 305-753-3269.

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.

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

MISSING WHITE SMALLER PIT-BULL MIX, named "Rosie". Zia & Candelero, 7/8/14. Desperate to bring her home, please call 505-6907333.

986-3000

0.20 OF an acre centrally located in Espanola $400 a month, City Utilities One free month of rent. First, Last, and deposit required. Contact: Audrey Garduno 505-310-9090

FOR RENT MOBILE HOME SPACE in Pecos. Fenced-in yard. $225 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-455-2654, 505660-0541.

MANUFACTURED HOMES 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, fenced yard, storage shed, 15 minutes North of Santa Fe. On private road. $800 monthly. 505-455-7750.

OFFICES 500 SQUARE FOOT OFFICE STUDIO. Gated area, with security system. Available immediately. Water included. Contact Eddie, 505-4703148.

7/16/14


Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds »jobs«

EDUCATION

to place your ad, call

986-3000

BUILDING MATERIALS

TICKETS

CHAIN LENGTH FENCING. 6’ Rolls & 10" Rolls. $100. 505-660-4505

JULY 23, Santa Fe Opera. Impresario Rossignol, seats V103 V104. 2 @ $168 each. 505-662-7163.

C-5

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

PETS SUPPLIES

BEAUTIFUL GIRL FAWN PUG PUPPY. 5 months. Fully Vaccinated, Vet checked. Trained. Sweet, healthy, fun & smart! $850. 505-795-6420

RANCH RAISED BEAUTIFUL PUREBRED AUSTRAILIAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES, 3 MALES. BORN 6/4/14. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TO MEET THEM AND PARENTS- NOW TAKING DEPOSITS. NOT REGISTERED. $250. 505-689-1360

CLOTHING TOOLS MACHINERY BIG COLLECTION OF GIRLS CLOTHING, size Medium, $20 for set. 505-9541144

ACCOUNTING REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (INDEPENDENT AUDITOR): Proposals are being accepted for an Independent Auditor to conduct financial and compliance audits of a private health foundation. E m a i l admin@conalma.org or phone 505-438-0776 x 1 for RFP guidelines. Deadline: August 21, 2014.

COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS of NM seeks full-time S I T E COORDINATORS to work in public schools to identify school-wide and individual student needs and to link schools, families and students with community services. Bilingual required. Experience with K-8 a plus, strong interpersonal and organization skills essential. MSW preferred. Cover letter, resume and 3 references to aslatopolsky@cisnm.org

ADMINISTRATIVE SANTA FE law firm seeks an Executive Assistant who is an exceptional individual with top level skills and is proficient in QuickBooks, Excel and Word. Retirement plan, health insurance, paid vacation and sick leave. Salary and bonuses are commensurate with experience. Please email resume to santafelaw56@gmail.com .

Year round and summers off positions available in Head Start (children 3 to 5) or Early Head Start (children birth to 3). See website for specific job requirements.

MEN’S LEATHER Belts, different shades of brown. Sizes 40-42. $5 each. 505-954-1144

GERMAN LANGUAGE BOOKS and LP ALBUMS. $1 each (about 100). 505983-3546

A-1 FIREWOOD INC. Seasoned Cedar, Pinon, Juniper; 1 cord, $260 2 cords, $250 3 cords $245 4 or more $240 Cedar, Pinon, Oak; $400 Oak and Hickory; $475 Each Delivered 505-242-8181 All CC accepted.

FURNITURE

MEDICAL BILLING SPECIALIST

BARBER BEAUTY NOW HIRING Full-time, part-time, Licensed Cosmetologist. Apply in person at The Cuttery, 1590 St. Michael’s Drive.

COMPUTERS IT VACANCY NOTICE

SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR AN IT OFFICE MANAGER. MUST HAVE AN ASSOCIATES DEGREE OR HIGHER OR 5 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN RELATED FIELD. SALARY 30K AND UP PLUS BENEFITS, DEPENDING ON EXPERIENCE. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF RESUME, AND TWO INTEREST, REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL FILLED. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-989-5305 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

CONSTRUCTION

EXTREME SUMMER PUPPY SALE!!!! $250 plus. T-CUP & TOY pups ON SALE! Some HALF price. If you have checked with me before, try again. EVERYTHING ON SALE. Make Offer. 575-910-1818 or txt4more pics. Hypoallergenic, non-shed. Registered, shots, guarantee, POTTY PAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN. MC-VisaDisc-AmEx accepted. Debit-CreditPAYPAL. YORKIES, YORKIE-POOS, CHIHUAHUAS, POMERANIANS, SHIHTZUS, MORKIES, WIREHAIR RAT TERRIERS, WHITE LONGHAIRED FLUFFY CHIHUAHUAS, and POODLES. All Quality Puppies.

Benefits eligible. Apply online 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.

when you buy a

GOOD GRASS H A Y , Barn stored in Penasco. $8.00 each. You load. Call 505-690-1850 or 575-587-0119.

2014 Pet Calendar for $5!

HORSE TRAILER EQUIPMENT CUSTOM SADDLE. All-around adult by Buc Bradford. Matching saddle bags and breast collar, complete. Good condition. $250. 505-660-4505

50% Off - All Desks - Sale Ends July 23, 2014. Open Monday thru Saturday 9 to 5. All donations and sales benefit Santa Fe Habitat!

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

HOME VISITOR

TEACHER II

Local medical billing group is looking for a reliable, detail oriented person for full-time billing position. Must possess excellent computer, 10-key ability, impeccable phone skills, & working knowledge of insurance carriers. Great benefits, pay. DOE. Fax resume: 505-983-1580.

»animals«

FIREWOOD-FUEL

TEACHER I

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.

2 TOOL BOXES with TOOLS. One for $175, other for $50. Call 505-670-2385

COLLECTIBLES

TEACHER ASSISTANT

FAMILY SERVICES ASSISTANT Full-time position working with families of Early Head Start students. Bilingual English and Spanish preferred.

10" RYOBI BT3000 TABLE Saw. $75. 10" RYOBI PLANER, $50. 505-310-0733

MULTI-HORSE FEEDER. HOLDS 1 bale. 5’ round tray. $150. 2 STOCK TANKS, small $50, large $175. 505-699-2619

NEW BARCLAYS COLLAR, cure for wind sucking, as seen in Quarter Horse Journal, sell $80. (cost $157). 505-699-2619

NON-REGISTERED GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES. 5 Males 2 Females. $300-$400. Black & Tan, Panda. Call 505-490-1748 10 am - 6 pm.

100% of sales donated to SFAS.

986-3000

PRESENTING: Fritatta is a 1 year old, Female, Tortie, Domestic

HOSPITALITY Upcoming New Brazilian Steakhouse Looking for servers, food runners. Restaurant experienced required. Dependable & Serious. Full-time. Apply in person: OMIRA GRILL, 1005 S St. Francis Drive, Suite 105. Email resume: info@omiragrill.com

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS NATURAL MEDICINE COMPANY looking for entry level part-time person to do PRODUCT SET-UP. Computer skills required. Please fax resume, 505-473-0336.

TREE EXPERTS

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 WANTED EXPERIENCED and reliable men or women to provide Public Relations Security for a gated community. Guard Card Required. Top wages and friendly working environment. Excellent opportunity. 505-316-6223, between 8 and 5 pm Monday-Friday.

HORSES CUSTOM-MADE SECTIONAL. 4 pieces including ottoman. White fabric with light pattern in fabric. 84" on side. Very clean. Lightly used. Excellent condition. Removable arm covers. $850---CASH ONLY. Call David at 843817-6846 for more information.

MINIATURE HORSES for sale. Foals, Mares, Gelding, and Stallion. Wagon and two chariots. Call evenings 505or 438-2063 mini@dawghouseranch.com

HUNTER GREEN COUCH, Fabric. Great condition. $200. COFFEE TABLE, $70. COUCH & CHAIR SET, Tan ultrasuede, perfect condition. $450. 505-577-6731

PETS SUPPLIES

QUEEN SIZE BED, includes box springs, mattress, frame. $150. CHERRY WOOD DRESSER, $150. Matching 2 NIGHT STANDS, $40 each. 505-577-6731

AIREDALE PUPPIES AKC. Big Healthy Pups. Tails, First Shots, dewormed. See us on Facebook at Bar C Airedales. $700 each. Belen, NM. 505944-5323.

KIDS STUFF

YORKI PUPPIES. Black & Gold. 2 female ($500 each), 1 male ($400). Born 5/16. 505-610-2922

Medium Hair cat. She does play well with most other cats but is not the biggest fan of dogs.

Contact information for Santa Fe Human Society adoptions is 983-4309 ext. 606 or visit sfhumanesociety.org.

TRAMPOLINE, USED. Asking $150. 505204-2921.

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT CHAIR LIFT for difficulty climbing stairs. Easy to operate, safe, comfortable. $800. Virginia, 505-4259269.

Get your headlines on the go!

TRADES PART-TIME MECHANIC FOR DRY CLEANER.

Preferably experienced with dry cleaning machine, pressers, boiler. Apply Park Ave Cleaners, 505-4382524.

»merchandise«

VICTORY 9 THREE WHEEL SCOOTER LIKE NEW - Never used. Good for indoors and outdoors. Easy to drive. Retail Value $2200. Selling for only $900.00 CALL - DIANE 984-2336 or 920-9522

MISCELLANEOUS Commercial Construction Superintendent.

Sarcon Construction needs an experienced Commercial Construction Superintendent. Salary and benefits commensurate with experience. EOE. Resumes accepted via email only: pbrill@sarcon.net

EDUCATION

ANTIQUES MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment: 505-699-9222.

Be part of the team at the new Pojoaque Valley Early Head Start Center located at the Pojoaque Middle School! Position requirements listed on website. TEACHER I Full and part-time positons Excellent benefits. Apply online 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. THE MAY Center for learning seeks experienced teachers for the following part-time positions. Special education experience desirable. Willingness to train in multi-sensory methodology required . Science Upper Elementary Send resume and cover letter to: pattymaycenter@gmail.com TEACHER ASSISTANT, Preschool, Full-Time, Call 505-982-6888 or email preschool@sftbs.org .

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

APPLIANCES

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

CARPET, HARD-FLOOR CLEANER: For upholstery, bare floors, Bissell ProHeat ClearView 1699. $85 (Retail $189). Used once! Call 505-690-5726. bissell.com/ProductDetail.aspx?id =2761

FREE HAMMOND electric organ. Great Condition. 505-603-3821.

KENMORE WASHER. Good condition., works good. $125. 505-204-1746

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

ART ART SALE: Tony Abeyta, David Vedoe, Jim Wagner, Edith Lambert’s Paul Johnson, Ernest Thompson trastero, Kokopelli desk & mirror set. MsHuguette@aol.com or 505-660-3143. EARL BISS (1947-1988) (Crow Nation) Lithograph "Along the Rainbow TrailState 1" signed, titled, numbered 34/50. $2,500 retail. Make offer. 505474-4827 EMERGENCY- HELP! Cliff Fragua marble sculpture. Valued by the Artist at $10,000. Emergency- must sell fast! $2,500. This is an amazing sculpture. 505-471-4316, colavs19@comcast.net

MUST SELL - NEED FOOD AND MEDICINE! Shonto Begay original. $1500. colavs19@comcast.net or 505-4714316 Please!!

PIANO STEINWAY, Baby Grand, Model M Ebony. Excellent condition. $19,000, 505-881-2711.

ENDING OUR HIKING DAYS- Are yours beginning? BOOTS: Men’s size 13. Women’s size 8, $10 each. 505-4712082 ENDING OUR HIKING DAYS- Are yours beginning? CAMPING STOVES- 2 burner Coleman, $15. MINI-STOVES, $5 each. 505-471-2082 ENDING OUR HIKING DAYS- Are yours beginning? COOKING GEAR: pots, pans, spatulas, dishes, etc. $20 takes all. 505-471-2082 ENDING OUR HIKING DAYS- Are yours beginning? HIKING BACKPACKS. Big, medium and dog size, $15 each. 505471-2082 ENDING OUR HIKING DAYS- Are yours beginning? PROPANE LANTERN, $10. Fishing poles (2), $5 each. 505-4712082 THULE BIKE RACKS, $75. Additional accessories available. Fits Subaru nicely. Bill, 505-466-2976.

Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/


C-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

sfnm«classifieds »garage sale«

GARAGE SALE NORTH

to place your ad, call

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

986-3000

DOMESTIC

DOMESTIC

4X4s

CALLING ALL MECHANICS: 1 9 9 0 BUICK RIVERA ; 80k original; power everything; recent oil change, and new alternator; rear brakes need replacing; interior: normal wear; exterior: minor dents and paint loss. $800, firm. 505-946-7414.

2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, ANOTHER Lexus trade! AWD, Sunroof, Just 14k miles, Single owner, Clean CarFax. Why buy new? Buy Pre-owned for $22,981. 505-216-3800.

2012 RAM MEGA CAB, 4X4 LARMIE. LOW, LOW MILES! ONE OWNER. $48,995. CALL 505-4731234.

IMPORTS

4X4s

2007 TOYOTA FJ-CRUISER 4WD

Local Owner, Records, Manuals, XKeys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo Desirable $15,650

2009 ACURA TSX Tech ONLY 14k miles, loaded with NAV and leather, pristine, one owner clean CarFax $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.

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

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2013 CHEVY CRUZE, GREAT VALUE, LOW MILES.VACATION READY! $16,488. CALL 505-473-1234.

Treasure, Junk, & Everything in-between!

2011 Volvo S40 T5 WOW only 14k miles! turbo fuel efficient luxury single owner clean CarFax absolutely immaculate $21,751. Call 505-2163800.

1519 Pacheco, AAA Self-Storage, Unit #151. Saturday 7/19, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

»cars & trucks«

1995 CROWN VICTORIA. 119,000 miles. White. Second owner. Like new condition, mechanically sound. Great car! No regrets! $3,000. 505690-9235

2013 TOYOTA RAV4 LE 4x4. Low miles, single owner clean CarFax. LIKE NEW FOR LESS! $22,831. Call 505-216-3800.

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

2011 AUDI Q5 quattro 3.2L Premium Plus merely 25k miles, fully loaded, local single owner clean CarFax rare opportunity $34,891 Call 505-2163800.

4X4s

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

2008 ACURA TL Type S recent local trade, Tech package w/ navigation, perfectly maintained, excellent condition $18,651. 505-216-3800.

CLASSIC CARS

2012 TOYOTA Prius V just 15k miles! Package 5 w/ EVERY option over $38k original MSRP, don’t miss this AMAZING value $25,431. Call 505-216-3800.

Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

FORD MUSTANG 1968 Convertible, 302 V8, Automatic, PS. Estate sale, Price Reduced $24,500 OBO. Call Mike, 505-672-3844 for photos & information. TOYOTA CAMRY LE 2006. Without problems, 107K miles. Gray exterior and interior. $4200. You can call me anytime at 515-809-2497.

2004 AUDI-A6S QUATTRO AWD

Another Local Owner, All Services Done, non-Smoker, Garaged, Manuals, X-Tires, Pristine, Soooo WELL KEPT $9,950

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

santafeautoshowcase.com

VIEW VEHICLE & Carfax: santafeautoshowcase.com 505-983-4945

2014 FORD Fiesta ST. Just 5k miles! Turbo with factory performance tuning. Fun, economical, and fast. Single adult owner, clean CarFax. $21,871. Call 505-216-3800.

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

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.

2004 CHEVY SILVERADO 4X4 1500 Crewcab. 5.3 V-8 Auto, package, Pushguard, Toolbox, bars. $12,500. Good condition 927-7364

Z-71 Tow Step 505-

2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Merely 25k miles! Off lease, single owner clean CarFax. Absolutely pristine! $19,471. Call 505-216-3800.

FORD F150 XLT 2007, 4x4 crewcab, 88,500 miles, V8. $15,990 OBO. 505920-8896

505-983-4945

1998 BMW M325 CONVERTIBLE. Runs good. $2000. 1994 JEEP CHEROKEE LAREDO. 4-door. $4,000. 505-603-5593 or 505-982-1255.

HEAVY EQUIPMENT 1994 GMC 1-Ton Gasoline Truck. Excellent condition. OBO 505-988-5872

Dump $7,500

2011 CORVETTE COUPE. LS3 Engine, 3LT package. 2939 miles. Fully loaded. Factory warranty. Silver with black interior. $38,500. Call for more information. 505-927-1610

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Wednesday, July 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS

IMPORTS

to place your ad, call IMPORTS

986-3000

PICKUP TRUCKS

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

SUVs

1996 BAYLINER Open Bow 19 ft 130 HP Mercruiser with jackets, skis and extras. $4,500. Call Sam 505-490-2334.

2012 FIAT 500 Sport merely 15k miles. One owner. Clean CarFax. Fun and immaculate. $14,371. Call 505-2163800.

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

2011 TOYOTA Camry LE just 33k miles, local one owner clean CarFax, pristine condition $15,871. $10,931. Call 505-216-3800.

2007 DODGE DAKOTA, V8, POWER SEATS. ONLY 52,000 MILES! AWESOME SHELL. $ 15,995. CALL 505473-1234.

2006 HYUNDAI Santa Fe, 43K miles, leather, heated seats, remote start, slate blue. Very clean 1 owner. $10,500. 505-820-1092

2006 MARIAH SX18 BOAT. 3.0 liter Mercury motor. 18’ length. With trailer. Excellent condition. $10,500. Call 505-927-4946.

CAMPERS & RVs AL’S RV CENTER MURANO 2004 114k miles. White pearl and Tan. Good engine $4200. Call 614-233-1570. No rust at all, no accidents. 2011 HONDA ACCORD, ALL THE GOODS! LEATHER, NAV. LUXURY AND FUN! $20,899. Call 505-4731234.

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

2000 TOYOTA 4-Runner recent tradein, just serviced, well maintained, super tight, runs and drives AWESOME! $7,991. Call 505-216-3800.

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

TRUCKS & TRAILERS 2004 FORD F150 X L T , with 80k miles and 4x4. New battery, excellent condition, $13,900. 505-4243932

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

2001 FORD F350 Dually, V-10, Auto. Fiberglass Utility Bed, Generator, Compressor. Good tires. Fleet Maintained. $6,500. Great condition. 505 927-7364

CALL 986-3000

2012 HYUNDAI Veloster. Low miles, panoramic roof, automatic, well equipped, clean CarFax. HOT! $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.

MOTORCYCLES

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

VANS & BUSES FORD VAN

2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505216-3800.

2009 Lexus ES350 local trade-in, wellmaintained, clean CarFax loaded navigation rare boutique color luxury for less $20,932. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 NISSAN Rogue SV AWD. Merely 26,000 miles! EVERY OPTION, leather, NAV, moonroof. Single owner, clean CarFax. $19,871. CALL 505-216-3800.

HYPERLITE 21R 2008 LIKE NEW (LESS THAN 2000 MILES) 24’ X 8’ TRAVEL TRAILER WITH SLIDE OUT. QUEEN BED WITH SOFA, DOUBLE BED; GAS STOVE, OVEN, MICROWAVE, FRIDGE, FREEZER. FULL BATH WITH SHOWER. A/C, IN-FLOOR HEAT, MUSIC, TV SYSTEM. TOWING PACKAGE, ELECTRIC BRAKES. INCLUDES DISHWARE AND CAMP ACCESSORIES. $15,800 OBO. 505-466-3669

1974 VW THING. Good condition. Restorable, or as is. Cute convertible! Perfect for summer, runs well! $9,000. 505-983-5615

1994 TOYOTA PICK-UP. 5-speed. 4cylinder. New tires, shocks, struts, vbelt. Detachable stereo CD with remote. New speakers. Trailer hitch. Bedliner. Tinted windows. Immaculate interior. 171,000 miles. $7,800. 718-986-1804. Call or text for pictures.

2011 Ford E-350 XLT - Color white. Passenger Van - holds up to 12 passengers Serves as Cargo Style Van also, with removable seats. In excellent condition, only 40,000 miles Call 920-7570 Price $17,900.

DUCATI MONSTER 900ie 2002 Red, new Wagner-Lewis clutch ($1700), Penske shock, new tires, recently tuned, 15,000 miles, $3800, MC license to ride, 505-667-7929, 865-8043961, 2006BMWK1200R@gmail.com

»recreational«

SPORTS CARS

2006 SUBARU LEGACY. 61k miles. 5speed. Excellent condition. Sunroof. New tires. Navy blue. $7,500 OBO. 505-363-0718

MERCEDES-BENZ 300E 1993 SEDAN. Black with blonde leather interior. Automatic. Many upgrades. Great condition. Two sets of tires $4500 OBO, 505-471-2272, 505-699-0150.

Another One Owner, Local, Records, Factory Warranty, 10,129 Miles, Soooo PRISTINE, $ 19,450 2013 TOYOTA Avalon XLE Touring WOW just 3k miles, orig MSRP over $36k, loaded w/ navigation, clean CarFax $29,831. CALL 505-216-3800.

VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT Wagon 2007 Mechanicals, body and interior excellent. 2.0 Turbo, auto transmission. Dark blue body, black leather interior. 82,000 miles. Sunroof is inoperable and selling price reflects this. $6,200. Call Steve, 505-983-3242.

2013 VOLKSWAGEN GTI. Like new condition - just 7,000 miles. Carbon Steel, Laguna wheels, 4-door, manual. Always garaged. $21,000. 505466-9248.

2008 TOYOTA PRIUS. 89,000 miles. Family car since new. Beautiful condition. Dark grey exterior, light grey interior. $11,500. 505-982-4894

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

Legal #97318

LEGAL # 97320

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NOTICE SALE

LOT SIX (6), TRACT THREE (3), ACRE ESTATES SUBDIVISION, AS SHOWN ON PLAT FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK, SANTA FE Case No. D-101-CV- COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, ON DECEMBER 28, 2014-00954 1954 IN PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE 135, AS DOCUDLJ MORTGAGE MENT NO. 203.684. CAPITAL, INC., Plaintiff, v. JOSE VALERIO, JULIA VALERIO, MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AND DEL NORTE CREDIT UNION, Defendants. NOTICE OF SUIT STATE OF NEW MEXICO to the abovenamed Defendants Jose Valerio and Julia Valerio. GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that the abovenamed Plaintiff has filed a civil action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof being to foreclose a mortgage on property located at 510 Jemez Road, Santa Fe, NM 87507, Santa Fe County, New Mexico, said property being more particularly described as:

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Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the complaint in said cause on or before 30 days after the last publication date, judgment by default will be entered against you. THE CASTLE LAW GROUP, LLC By: /s/ Michael J. Anaya - electronically signed Michael J. Anaya 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Telephone: (505) 8489500 Fax: (505) 848-9516 Attorney For Plaintiff NM13-03901_FC01 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on July 2, 9 and 16, 2014.

You can view your legal ad online at sfnmclassifieds.com

OF

July 30, 2014 at 10AM La Guardia Self Storage 1439 Avenida de las Americas Santa Fe NM 87057 Self-Storage Lien Act Sect.48-11-1 to 48-11-9 NMSA 1978

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SUVs

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

EV GLOBAL ELECTRIC BIKES (Lee Iacocca’s Bike Company)- Vintage bikes reconditioned with new batteries, tires, etc. Great for cruising around Santa Fe. $995-$1195. 505-8200222 GTLS2, In great shape, like new. 24 speed, all original parts. $250, OBO. 505-660-2506.

PICKUP TRUCKS 82’ TOYOTA Flatbed Hauler, Racks, 4 cylinder. 94’ F150 302, 8ft. $2,000, negotiable. 505-310-1517.

2006 CHEVY TAHOE LT Z71. 4WD, offroad package. 5.3 V-8. One owner, one driver. Always maintained. Clean. $14,500. 505-995-9625

986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS

All bids for the Series 2014B Bonds must be submitted electronically via PARITY pursuant to the Official Notice of Bond Sale from 7:30 a.m. until 8:00 a.m. prevailing Mountain Time, on Thursday, July 24, 2014. No telephone, telefax, telegraph or personal delivery bids will be accepted.

Unit #’s 406 & 408 William Easley 104 W Alicante Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 Series 2014B Household furniture, The boxes, bike, saddle, Bonds will be dated as of the date of debooks livery and will mature on June 1 in the years Unit # 373 2015 through 2035. Elias Maria Argiro The Series 2014B 219 A Delgado St Bonds will be regisSanta Fe, NM 87501 Boxes, wicker, tree tered in book-entry stand, pictures, form through DTC. shoes, bags and plasThe Series 2014B tic tubs Bonds will be sold in one block on an "all Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on or none" basis, and at a price not less than July 16 and 23, 2014. one hundred percent (100%) and not more LEGAL # 97324 than one hundred and eight percent SUMMARY NOTICE OF (108%) of the princiBOND SALE pal amount of the Series 2014B Bonds. New Mexico Finance No serial bond maturAuthority ity may bear a price $57,115,000* of less than ninetySenior Lien Public seven percent (97%). Project Revolving Interest rates bid Fund Revenue Bonds must be in a multiple Series 2014B of one-eighth (1/8) of one percent (1%) or Bids will be received one-twentieth (1/20) by the New Mexico Fi- of one percent (1%). nance Authority (the A zero interest rate "Authority") through may not be specified, PARITY on and the rate of inter-

Continued...

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, 48,500 miles. $29,500 OBO. 505-690-2497

View vehicle & CarFax:

July 24, 2014 PUBLIC

YOUR MORNING FIX.

BICYCLES

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 SUBARU IMPREZA 2.5-GT PREMIUM

Continued...

LEGALS est on any Series 2014B Bond may not exceed the rate of interest on any other Series 2014B Bond by more than five percent (5.0%) per annum. The highest interest rate bid may not exceed six percent (6%) per annum. The winning bid will be selected on the basis of the true interest cost to the Finance Authority. The approving opinion of Sherman & Howard L.L.C. Bond Counsel to the Finance Authority will be furnished to the successful bidder without cost upon delivery of the Series 2014B Bonds. The Preliminary Official Statement and the Official Notice of Bond Sale may be obtained from the offices of the New Mexico Finance Authority, 207 Shelby, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, (505) 984-1454, or from the Finance Authority’s Financial Advisor, Western Financial Group, LLC at (503) 636-0265 or pierce@westernfinan cialgroup.com. Copies of the Preliminary Official Statement and the Official Notice of Bond Sale may be obtained in electronic form at www.Munios.com or w w w . I dealprospectus.com and on the Finance

Continued...

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

SANTAFENEWMEXICAN .COM/NEWSLETTERS

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

LEGALS

Authority’s website nue, Suite 206 at www.nmfa.net/. Santa Fe, NM 87508 Bids may also be sent * Preliminary, subject electronically by folto change. lowing the bid packet instructions. Published in The San- Bids will be accepted ta Fe New Mexican on by said office until July 16, 2014. the following: Monday, July 28, 2014 - 12:00pm (Noon MDT) LEGAL # 97325 Failure to comply with the instructions, SANTA FE terms, conditions and COMMUNITY specifications of the COLLEGE IFB may result in your INVITATION FOR BID bid being deemed unIFB # 14/15-44 responsive. Title: Biomass Fuel The New Mexico ProMaterial curement Code govIssue Date: erns sealed bid proWednesday, July 16, posal procurements. 2014 Santa Fe Community Published in the SanCollege (SFCC) will ta Fe New Mexican on receive Sealed Bids July 16, 2014 for the purchase of Biomass Fuel (wood LEGAL # 97387 c h i p s ) for campus biofuel operations. SF STATE OF NEW MEXICC seeks interested CO and qualified vendors COUNTY OF SANTA FE capable of providing items and/or services FIRST JUDICIAL DISoutlined in the IFB. TRICT COURT Bid packet specifications for this IFB may Lawrence J. Quintana be obtained on the Plaintiff, SFCC web site at www.sfcc.edu/busine v. ss_services_and_pur chasing/rfps or at the NO. D-0101-CV-2014SFCC’s Purchasing Of- 01112 fice by contacting Patricia Burks at 505- John Lovato, et. al. and 428-1858. Sealed bids should The Unknown Heirs of be addressed to: Santa Fe Community Rita L. Martinez College, Business Services and Pur- Defendants. chasing Office 6401 Richards AveNOTICE OF

Continued...

Continued...

LEGALS PENDENCY OF ACTION To: The Unknown heirs of the following named deceased persons: Rita L. Martinez. You are hereby notified that the abovenamed Plaintiff has field a civil action against you in the above-entitled court and cause, the general object thereof being to reform the deed to certain real property known as 312 ½ Camino Alire Santa Fe, New Mexico and further described as Tract "C" - Beginning at a point for the Southeast corner, which is a point that bears S. 38° 28’W. a distance of 14.53 feet from the center of sanitary sewer Manhole #A6B-1; thence from the said point of beginning S. 54° 01’ W. a distance of 127.00 feet to a point for the Southwest corner; thence N. 59 ° 03’ W., a distance of 39.60 feet to a point for the Northwest corner; thence N. 39°degrees 55’ E. a distance of 146.85 feet to a point for the Northeast corner; thence S. 36° 03’ E. a distance of 72.20 feet to the point and place of beginning.

LEGALS y Rita L. Martinez to Patricia Sedillo (the Martinez to Sedillo Deed) dated August 9, 1979 and recorded in the records of the Santa Fe County Clerk in Book 385, Page 913914. And further being and intended to be that certain real estate described in a warranty deed from Patricia M. Sedillo Mendez to Connie Theresa Quintana and Lawrence J. Quintana dated September 18, 1996 and recorded in the records of the Santa Fe County Clerk in Book 1306, Page 253 on September 18, 1996. Unless you enter your appearance in this cause within thirty (30) days of the date of the first publication of this notice, judgment by default will be entered against you. The first date of publication is July 16, 2014. Respectfully ted,

Submit-

GRAESER & McQUEEN, LLC Christopher L. Graeser PO Box 220 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 (505) 982-9074 chris@chrisgraeser.c om

Being and intended to be that certain real Published in The Sanestate described in a ta Fe New Mexican on warranty deed from July 16, 30 and 23, 2014.

Continued...


C-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, July 16, 2014

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