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Charter principal eyes retirement After 12 years as principal, Sandy Davis will retire from Turquoise Trail at the end of the semester. educATIOn, A-9
EDUCATION
andy Davis is smiling with pride as she walks through impact on the the halls of Turquoise teachers and the Trail Charter kids.” Davis stops to about 515 students School, which serves said she and others point out some fourth-grade students images of often write grants as 50 preschoole in grades K-6, as well garner money to costumed as famous rs. for various programs. historical figures are covered with The walls — Abraham Davis says she artistic photos, Langston Hughes, Lincoln, drawings and other and the only one is one of eight siblings Muhammad who became an Ali and Martin tied to the school’s media that are Her parents educator. Luther curriculum. instance — hanging King Jr., for school but did not graduate from high “This school has impressed on one wall such a crein the hallway. ative spirit and obtaining an educationthe importance of These portraits a are accompani upon their kids staff,” she says. wonderful the same. She ed by handwritte all “I have mixed earned essays written feelings about at Emory University her bachelor’s degree by the students n leaving. But it’s about these figures. time. I need a master’s at Georgia in Atlanta and her break.” State University. this Project MINDS Davis said also earned her Davis, 64, is retiring display is “specialist’s” degree She at the end way in which of the semester riculum and the in curarts can be used a after 12 years of learning environment at Robert Nott personalize a history lesson. to Harvard University. serving as the principal of the Charter schools school. The school Learning Curve The state assigned are public was founded schools run by in 1994, making in its new school-gradTurquoise Trail a C a it the district’s ing system this with considerab governance body District-wi oldest charter year. le se, the school. Davis, from the district autonomy who started in 2001, is its fifth Acceleration Zone,school was placed in the that approves principal. them. The state meaning that it right track but can also authorize Davis has worked is on the school. Davis says needs some direction a charter as both as a teacher support to do and principal and better. for is that “families the advantage of a charter and teachers have ally OK with such Davis said she is actuin Charlottesv about 40 years: two years to be there, and ille, Va., 26 years ratings and determinations being assigned there is greater a choice and 12 years in in Atlanta to be involved Santa in the decision-mopportunity that it takes more to schools, but noted she has witnessed Fe. Over the decades, believe the decisions aking. I than a year or both good and a real sense of changes in the two to get bad regarding the school whether should be made way “Educators today public schools operate. by “I actually believe they are valid. learning process someone closest to the are better trained more focused as opposed to are more accountabl charter schools and way up in the bureaucrati on someone tion; there’s more differentiated instrucschools. We could e than other public c chain.” The challenge student,” she said. engagement with the are not proving get shut down if we says, is accessing for many charters, she we she bemoans the But, like many others, adding that many are working,” she says, federal funds that nel into the district, emphasis on test chan“We love to maintain rankings remain public schools with low scores. but don’t always their open high achieveme way to the charter make and need to be Turquoise Trail’s for years. nt school. Turquoise held accountabl Trail Charter School charter is up for has come in a renewal in 2015. operates on a way that often e, but that budget has a negative of about $4.5 million, with through August Davis says she may stay on state viding almost to ensure a smooth all the funding, money pro- tion to her successor, transithough Davis which the school hopes to name by the end of May.
Question: Is it play independe OK to start teaching our 1-year-old ntly? He screams how to in any type of and cries when enclosure if he I put him can’t get “free” arrange the furniture (even when I in a way that area). Is there a method to teach he has a very ample play for at least a little him how to play by himself lowing him aroundbit? It seems I am folthe house all he can’t get into trouble or hurt day so or damage furniture, himself house “baby-proo etc. We have our fed,” but he is ative with the very crethings he likes to get into. Answer: First, you don’t “teach” 1-year-old to play independently. a begin playing They independently, on their own, as soon as they begin moving around. Second, you’ve told me realizing that you’ve (without John told me) that son is already Rosemond playing independen your write, “He is very tly. Living With creative with the You he likes to get things into.” Children You’ve described the way a 1-year-old plays. They get into things. They feel, taste, throw rummage, crumple, and the like. That’s why store-boug tear, are a waste of money for a child ht toys that a team of child developme this age. It doesn’t matter toy “developm nt experts deemed entally appropriate a certain purchase it from ” and that you a catalog or online can Ordinary household — it’s a waste only of money. “stuff” is what seem to intuitively 1-year-olds to distract them realize that store-bought toys want. They from the truly on shelves and interesting stuff are an attempt hidden in drawers that’s sitting part creed seems and cabinets. with,” and “the to be, “If I don’t find it, it’s not Their twoworth worth playing effort the big people of a toy is inversely proportion make to get me al If you feel compelled to play with it.” to the to follow so he doesn’t get into forbidden your son around all day baby-proofed adequately. First, stuff, then you haven’t proofed without gate off rooms gate him into a major rearranging. In other that can’t be words, don’t room; rather, gate Then, go into every room that’s him out of certain rooms. thing that poses not gated and with a common risk to him. Replace every itemremove everyyou remove empty product household item that is safe. Examples boxes (put a surprise containers, pots, in each one) and are kitchen utensils other screaming because and you’re gating him so on. Your son is ing him out and in rather than because gatthe stuff you’re doesn’t interest gating him in him with Every store that in the least. child-proof cabinetsells child-proofing parapherna latches. If there’s lia carries tive to keeping no reasonable certain “bad” alternastuff in a certain by all means use cabinet, then that some kids a child-proof latch (although — future safecracker I have heard them out). I generally s, no prefer, however, doubt — figure places and let to make cabinets toddlers safe The more effective explore and hide in them. you are at independently and longer your child-proofing, the more he will become son will play, and as the smarter mother you will he does so. And the more relaxed a be.
Family best bets
Friday
Boys Town 9:30 a.m. on
TCM
Push to thwart online cheating
Toss those toy let tot explore s, household ‘stu ff’
Turquoise Tra il principal to retire S
Saturday
Hocus Pocus 6:30 a.m. on
FAM Spencer Tracy gives one of his most memorable Amok, amok, amok! Bette Midler, in this fact-based performances Sarah Jessica Parker and Kathy as Father Flanagan,1938 drama Najimy star as a home for troubled founder of a century witches trio of 17thpadre has never boys. The good tally summoned who are accidento the present couldn’t help, met a youth he this ghoulish in but a new resident 1993 with a chip on entering the land comedy. Rehis shoulder bigger than he is threatens Halloween night of the living on to undo all in Salem, Mass., the priest’s work. the threesome gets right to the youngster, He gets through meting out punishment to work belief that there though, with his for their hanging long ago. only good boys are no bad boys, nessa Shaw and Omri Katz, Viunder bad influThora Birch also ences. Mickey star. Rooney also stars.
© 2013 by Vicki Whiting,
Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics
Vol. 29, No. 20
Unscramble the
safety word on
To prevent cheating in Internet-based education, more schools turn to advanced technology. Tech, A-7
each sign. Read the Rules of the Road. Then, use a GREEN crayon to circle the kids below following the safety that are rules. Use a RED crayon to over the ones make an X who following the safetyare not rules.
Standards Link:
WAR AFTEREFFECT
75%
Rate at which veterans are more likely to be involved in a fatal motor vehicle accident than civilians.
76%
Rate at which male veterans, who served in the Iraq or Afghanistan wars, are more likely to die in a vehicle crash.
43%
Rate at which female veterans, who served in the Iraq or Afghanistan wars, are more likely to die in a vehicle crash.
Spelling: Spell
grade level appropriate
words correctly.
Let it
Slow-water ‘pulse’ brings a steady stream of water down Santa Fe River
flow
Deadly car crashes on rise among veterans Experts link increase in fatal vehicle accidents to war driving habits By David Brown
The Washington Post
For men and women who have fought in the country’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, death behind the wheel is becoming another lethal aftereffect of combat. After they leave military service, veterans of the two wars have a 75 percent higher rate of fatal motor vehicle accidents than do civilians. Troops still in uniform have a higher risk of crashing their cars in the months immediately after returning from deployment than in the months immediately before. People who have had multiple tours to combat zones are at highest risk for traffic accidents. The phenomenon has been revealed by multiple pieces of evidence — research as well as observations of soldiers, veterans and counselors. The most common explanation is that soldiers bring back driving
Please see cRASheS, Page A-4
Today Clouds with some sun and a thunderstorm. High 65, low 39. PAge A-12
Obituaries Drucinda Leigh Ewing, April 25 PAge A-10
Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Peter Sarkisian: Video Works 1994-2011 Mixed-media installations, up through Aug. 18, New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave., 476-5072. More events in Calendar, Page A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Index
Calendar A-2
Classifieds B-6
People walk their dogs along the Santa Fe River on Sunday. The Santa Fe River has received a steady stream of water since the city’s water staff began a slow-water ‘pulse’ on Friday afternoon. The pulse will continue until Monday, when staff will re-evaluate water inflow to the city’s upper McClure Reservoir, said Santa Fe River coordinator Brian Drypolcher. PHOTOS BY LUIS SANCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
T
he Santa Fe River will receive a steady trickle over the next few days as the city allows some water to flow through municipal reservoirs and downstream. City water staff planned to start the slow-water “pulse” of 2 cubic feet per second on Friday afternoon. The pulse will continue until Monday, when staff will re-evaluate water inflow to the city’s upper McClure Reservoir, said Santa Fe River coordinator Brian Drypolcher. If the inflow is high enough, water staff will
allow up to 4 cfs down the river for a few days. “We can’t let out flow from the Nichols Reservoir in an amount greater than the inflow to the McClure Reservoir,” Drypolcher said. With luck, the water will flow long enough to reach the river reach between Camino Alire and Frenchy’s Field Park, where hundreds of year-old willows and cottonwoods planted by city contractors and volunteers are awaiting a much needed drink. A city living river ordinance allows for up to 1,000 acre-feet of water a year to bypass the two municipal reservoirs and flow down the river. An acre-foot equals about 325,850 gallons of water. The
ordinance is part of a multiphased effort to revive the river corridor and possibly shore up water levels in the city’s underlying aquifer. This year, due to lower snowpack and little spring precipitation, the city won’t be able to allow more than 320 acre-feet of water to bypass the reservoirs into the river. Drypolcher said water managers decided to wait until after last week’s cold spell to try a water pulse down the river. The cold temperatures kept the snow from melting in the mountain peaks that feed
Please see FLOW, Page A-4
We wouldn’t be human without grandparents Research suggests older generations play vital roles in success, survival of offspring
ABOuT The SeRIeS
T
woman who worked here is an old tirelessly to open Spanish saying, young people’s eyes “Quién sabe de to the wonders ofthe abuelo, sabe de bueno,” natural world. It meaning, “To know was her early lesa grandparent is to sons in biology that know good.” If you laid the foundation visited the reptile room for my later career at the New Mexico Paul Hooper as an evolutionary Museum of Natural Science in a anthropologist — a History and Science Complex World scientist who studies in Albuquerque in the human origins and ’70s or ’80s, you probbehavior within the ably would have met context of the full diversity of life. my own grandmother, Barbara Meyer, a sprightly and spirited Please see hOOPeR, Page A-10
Comics B-12
El Nuevo A-7
Opinions A-11
Police notes A-10
Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, rdean@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com
For his research, Paul Hooper spent time with the Tsimané, a group of forager-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon, studying patterns of growth, longevity and social support in a traditional subsistence setting. COURTESY PHOTO
Sports B-1
Time Out B-11
Tech A-5
Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010
The Santa Fe Institute is a private, nonprofit, independent research and education center founded in 1984, where top researchers from around the world gather to study and understand the theoretical foundations and patterns underlying the complex systems that are most critical to human society — economies, ecosystems, conflict, disease, human social institutions and the global condition. This column is part of a series written by researchers at the Santa Fe Institute and published in The New Mexican.
Two sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 126 Publication No. 596-440
A-2
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
NATION&WORLD
In brief
Death toll tops 600 in Bangladesh building collapse DHAKA, Bangladesh — More than 600 bodies have been recovered from the garment-factory building that collapsed well over a week ago, police said Sunday as the grim recovery work continued in one of the worst industrial accidents ever. Police said Sunday night that the death toll had reached 622. Well over 200 bodies have been recovered since Wednesday, when authorities said only 149 people had been listed as missing. The stench of decomposing bodies remains amid the broken concrete of the eight-story Rana Plaza building, and it is anyone’s guess how many victims remain to be recovered. The April 24 disaster is likely the worst garmentfactory accident ever, and there have been few industrial accidents of any kind with a higher death toll. It surpassed long-ago garment-industry disasters such as New York’s Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire, which killed 146 workers in 1911, and more recent tragedies such as a 2012 fire that killed about 260 people in Pakistan and one in Bangladesh that same year that killed 112. An architect whose firm designed the building said Sunday that it had not been designed to handle heavy industrial equipment, let alone the three floors that were later illegally added.
Bomb suspect’s uncle arrives in Mass. to help with burial
Before the start of class April 4, a girl takes notes from a blackboard painted on a building wall at a free school run under a mass transit bridge in New Delhi, India. India’s Right To Education Act promising free schooling to all children ages 6 to 14 was supposed to take full effect March 31 but millions of children still don’t go to school. PHOTOS BY ALTAF QADRI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Children yearning to learn India’s poor attend school under railway bridge By Ravi Nessman
The Associated Press
NEW DELHI — Their classroom is a flattened patch of dirt and rocks under the elevated rail tracks. Their blackboards are rectangles painted on a chipped concrete wall. Their teacher is a shop owner with no formal training, but a conviction that education is their only hope. For some of these dozens of children of poor migrant workers in India’s capital, this makeshift, open-air school under the rumble of mass transit is the only school they have. Others who attend overcrowded and dismal government schools come here as well — to actually learn. India’s Right To Education Act promising free, compulsory schooling to all children ages 6 to 14 was supposed to take full effect March 31, but millions of children still don’t go to school and many who do are getting only the barest of educations. So every morning, more than 50 children gather under the bridge for two hours of lessons at Rajesh Kumar’s informal school. They sweep the dirt flat and roll out foam mats to sit on, just yards from the bushes were several men had been squatting and defecating minutes earlier. The students, ages 4 to 14, study everything from basic reading and writing to the Pythagorean Theorem. Those who also attend government schools say classrooms there are packed and that teachers, when they show up, just come in, write a problem on the board, and leave. “They teach much better here,” said Raju, 12, the child of flower pickers. He also attends
WORCESTER, Mass. — The uncle of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev arrived in Massachusetts on Sunday to arrange for his burial, saying he understands that “no one wants to associate their names with such evil events.” Ruslan Tsarni, of Montgomery Village, Md., and three of his friends met with the Worcester funeral home director and prepared to wash and shroud Tsarnaev’s body according to Muslim tradition. The 26-year-old died after a gun battle with police on April 19. Funeral director Peter Stefan said he hasn’t been able to find a cemetery in Massachusetts willing to take the body. He said he plans to ask the city of Cambridge, where Tsarnaev lived, to provide a burial plot, and if Cambridge turns him down, he will seek help from state officials. Tsarni told reporters that he is arranging for Tsarnaev’s burial because religion and tradition call for his nephew to be buried. He would like him buried in Massachusetts because he’s lived in the states for the last decade, he said. “I’m dealing with logistics. A dead person must be buried,” he said.
Malaysia’s governing coalition wins 13th straight elections
On a March school day in New Delhi, a girl tries on her new pair of shoes donated by a nonresident.
fifth grade at a government school in a class with 61 other students. There, “they hardly teach anything,” he said. Under the Right to Education Act, passed in 2010, enrollment has increased from 193 million to 199 million, and the government has invested more than $11 billion extra dollars in upgrading the school system. Still, about 3 million children remain out of school, according to the government; Private groups put that number at about 8 million. There also remain at least 700,000 teacher vacancies, and many of those who are employed don’t have the proper training, according to the government.
Despite the new investments, schools appear to be getting worse. According to the 2012 report by the nonprofit education group Pratham, nearly 68 percent of third graders in government schools can’t read at a first-grade level, up 10 percent from two years ago. Math proficiency had similarly plummeted, according to the report, which is based on assessments of about 700,000 children across the country. The government needs to focus not just on hiring new teachers and building new schools but on providing a good education to Indian children, said Rukmini Banerji, a Pratham official.
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia’s longgoverning coalition won national elections Sunday to extend its 56 years of unbroken rule, fending off the strongest opposition it has ever faced but exposing vulnerabilities in the process. The Election Commission reported that Prime Minister Najib Razak’s National Front coalition captured 127 of Malaysia’s 222 parliamentary seats to win a majority Sunday. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s three-party alliance seized 77 seats, and other races were too close to call. It was the National Front’s 13th consecutive victory in general elections since independence from Britain in 1957. It faced its most unified challenge ever from an opposition that hoped to capitalize on allegations of arrogance, abuse of public funds and racial discrimination against the government.
Car bomber kills 7 in Somalia MOGADISHU, Somalia — Seven people were killed Sunday morning when a suicide bomber attempted to ram a car laden with explosives into a military convoy escorting a four-member Qatari delegation. Gen. Garad Nor Abdulle, a senior police official said the members of the Qatari delegation who were being escorted in the interior minister’s convoy were unharmed and safely reached their hotel. Abdulle said the interior minister was not in the convoy. Eighteen people were being treated of wounds from the blast. The Associated Press
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CHILES AND CUISINE IN THE ANCIENT SOUTHWEST: A Southwest Seminars lecture with Paul Minnis, 6 p.m., $12 at the door, 466-2775. Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta.
ANXIETY AND PANIC SEMINAR: For those looking for the latest treatments for the most prevalent problems of our time, along with how to control the basic cause: Worry. Presented by Richard C. Raynard, Ph.D., Clinical psychologist. Friendly discussion and literature. 7 p.m., first Tuesday of the month, 1800 Old Pecos Trail, Suite B. Call 231-8625. SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET ON TUESDAYS: 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Santa Fe Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. KEVIN FEDARKO: The New Mexico author reads from and signs copies of The Emerald Mile, 6 p.m. Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St.
NIGHTLIFE Monday, May 6 LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Blues band Night Train, 7:30-11 p.m., no cover. La Fiesta Lounge, 100 E. San Francisco St.
COWGIRL BBQ Cowgirl karaoke with Michele Leidig, 9 p.m., no cover. Cowgirl BBQ, 319 S. Guadalupe St. VANESSIE: Bob Finnie, pop standards piano and vocals, 7 p.m.-close, no cover. Vanessie, 427 W. Water St. WEEKLY ALL-AGES INFORMAL SWING DANCES: Lesson 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road, dance $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955.
VOLUNTEER COMMUNITY FARM: The Santa Fe Community Farm in the Village of Agua Fría, 1829 San Ysidro Crossing, grows and gives fresh fruits and vegetables to the homeless, needy and less fortunate of Northern New Mexico. Volunteers of any age and ability are needed to help out with this great project. Drop in and spend time in the sunshine and fresh air. The hours are 9 a.m.-4 p.m. daily, except Wednesdays and Sundays. For information, send an email to sfcommunityfarm@gmail.com or visit the website at www. santafecommunityfarm.org. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. If you can give two to three
hours a week to help, call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. PET PROJECT: Do you love “thrifting?” Would you like to help the animals of Northern New Mexico? Combine your passions by joining the Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s resale team. The stores, Look What The Cat Dragged In 1 and 2, benefit the homeless animals. Volunteers are needed to maintain the sales floor, sort donations and create displays to showcase our unique and high-quality merchandise. The store sites are 2570-A Camino Entrada (next to Outback Steakhouse) or 541 W. Cordova Road, (next to Wells Fargo Bank). No experience necessary. For more information, send an email to krodriguez@sfhumansociety.org or agreene@sfhumansociety.org, or call Katherine Rodriguez at 983-4309, ext. 128, or Anne Greene at 474-6300. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. It will make a real difference in the lives of home-bound neighbors. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www. kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. BIENVENIDOS: Volunteers are needed at the tourist information window on the Plaza. Join Bienvenidos, the volunteer
division of the Santa Fe chamber of Commerce. Call Marilyn O’Brien, the membership chairwoman, at 989-1701. MANY MOTHERS: Babies are on the way and you can help by volunteering a few hours a week with Many Mothers, the local nonprofit that strengthens families through supportive services — offering free, in-home, friendly mentoring care to all new parents. Orientation will offer training. For more information, visit www. manymothers.org or call Pat 983-5984 for an interview. SANTA FE WOMEN’S ENSEMBLE: Always in need of ushers for concerts; email info@sfwe.org or call 954-4922. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com.
Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035.
NATION & WORLD
New jobs, energy gains helping lift economy Unemployment rate at a four-year low By Tom Raum
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A stronger-than-expected April rebound in job creation and recent dramatic discoveries of vast U.S. oil and gas reserves are helping to lift the American economy out its long funk. The economic good news is also drawing attention to the importance of private-sector innovation rather than government policy in fostering growth. The Labor Department’s report that payrolls expanded by 165,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate declined to a four-year low of 7.5 percent does not represent explosive job growth by any measure. Yet the report offered a big sigh of relief to President Barack Obama and his Democratic allies in Congress. It also may help blunt Republican criticism of Obama’s policies and make it easier for him to give more attention to other issues on his agenda, including immigration, gun control and global warming. At the same time, it provided the GOP with more support for their call for a smaller government and fewer regulations on business. The recent jobs improvements were mostly driven by private-sector gains independent of action by the president and Congress. Most legislative fiscal stimulus programs, begun in 2008 under President George W. Bush and expanded under Obama, have run their course. The Federal Reserve, however, continues to stimulate the economy by holding down interest rates and effectively printing money to buy government and mortgage-related bonds. In fact, the report showed employer confidence about the economic outlook even in the
face of new federal budget cuts. Economists widely agree that job gains would have been bigger were it not for the automatic across-the-board cuts that are beginning to take an $85 billion bite out of government spending. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said that while the report had “some good news” on the jobs front, it was still important to “focus on growing our economy rather than growing more government.” He said that includes “expanding our energy production.” The energy sector plays a major role in global economic growth and recovery. Recent discoveries have put the United States on track to become the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas in a few years. At the same time, oil imports have fallen to a 17-year low. The energy breakthroughs have come despite Obama’s heavy emphasis on promoting renewable clean-energy sources, such as wind and solar power, for the future. In the months and years ahead, domestic energy production “is going to be a real driver of economic growth,” said economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office and chief economic adviser to Sen. John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign.
These energy gains, while not that big yet, will be reflected in more jobs at drilling and other energy work sites, reduced manufacturing costs and improvements in the nation’s balance of trade, said HoltzEakin, now head of the American Action Forum, a conservative public policy institute. “There’s a lot of things in this jobs report one could like. But it’s also something that leaves you with a long way to go.” It’s hard to appreciate when you’re in the grips of one, but recessions always come to an end. Recoveries always eventually follow, obeying the physics of business cycles. But this recovery has been agonizingly shallow, given that the recession officially ended way back in mid-2009. Even at 7.5 percent, the jobless rate hovers well above pre-recession levels. Even at the improved pace of job creation over the past six months, it will still take until early 2018, five more years, to get back to the more normal unemployment rate of 5 percent or less that prevailed before the recession began in late 2007, said economist Heidi Shierholz of the labor-oriented Economic Policy Institute. “This is one of those reports that is totally context driven. In good times, the 165,000 new jobs would be fine, but nothing to write home about,” she said.
This recovery has been agonizingly shallow, given that the recession officially ended way back in mid-2009. Even at 7.5 percent, the jobless rate hovers well above pre-recession levels.
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Airstrikes on Syria prompt threats By Josef Federman and Karin Laub The Associated Press
BEIRUT — Israel rushed to beef up its rocket defenses on its northern border Sunday to shield against possible retaliation after carrying out two airstrikes in Syria over 48 hours — an unprecedented escalation of Israeli involvement in the Syrian civil war. Syria and its patron Iran hinted at possible retribution, though the rhetoric in official statements appeared relatively muted. Despite new concerns about a regional war, Israeli officials signaled they will keep trying to block what they see as an effort by Iran to send sophisticated weapons to Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia ahead of a possible collapse of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime. Israel has repeatedly threatened to intervene in the Syrian civil war to stop the transfer of what it calls “game-changing” weapons to Hezbollah, a Syrian-backed group that battled Israel to a stalemate during a monthlong war in 2006. Since carrying out a lone airstrike in January that reportedly destroyed a shipment of anti-aircraft missiles headed to Hezbollah, Israel had largely stayed on the sidelines. That
changed over the weekend with a pair of airstrikes, including an attack near a sprawling military complex close to the Syrian capital of Damascus early Sunday that set off a series of powerful explosions. The Israeli government and military refused to comment. But a senior Israeli official said both airstrikes targeted shipments of Fateh-110 missiles bound for Hezbollah. The Iranian-made guided missiles can fly deep into Israel and deliver powerful half-ton bombs with pinpoint accuracy. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a covert military operation. Syria’s government called the attacks a “flagrant violation of international law” that has made the Middle East “more dangerous.” It also claimed the Israeli strikes proved the Jewish state’s
links to rebel groups trying to overthrow Assad’s regime. Syria’s information minister, Omran al-Zoubi, reading a Cabinet statement after an emergency government meeting, said Syria has the right and duty “to defend its people by all available means.” Israeli defense officials believe Assad has little desire to open a new front with Israel when he is preoccupied with the survival of his regime. More than 70,000 people have been killed since the uprising against Assad erupted in March 2011, and Israeli officials believe it is only a matter of time before Assad is toppled. Still, Israel seemed to be taking the Syrian threats seriously. Israel’s military deployed two batteries of its Iron Dome rocket defense system to the north of the country Sunday. Reserve early for our Special
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MEETING LIST WEEK OF MAY 6, 2013 THROUGH MAY 10, 2013
MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013 4:15 PM IMMIGRATION COMMITTEE – Westminster Presbyterian, 841 W. Manhattan 4:45 PM PUBLIC WORKS/CIP & LAND USE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013 4:30 PM SANTA FE PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD SPECIAL MEETING – Main Library, Technical Services Room, 145 Washington Avenue WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 2013 4:00 PM SANTA FE SISTER CITIES COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 5:00 PM CITY COUNCIL – City Council Chambers 5:30 PM HUMAN SERVICES COMMITTEE SPECIAL MEETING – Main Post Office, Community Services Conference Room, Room 326, 120 South Federal 7:00 PM CITY COUNCIL – City Council Chambers THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 4:00 PM CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION – City Council Chambers 4:45 PM MAYOR’S YOUTH ADVISORY BOARD – Monica Roybal Center, 737 Agua Fria FRIDAY, MAY 10, 2013 4:00 PM ARTS COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room
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Bishops Lodge Road Re-Opened and Washington Avenue Closure on May 6 Santa Fe – The New Mexico Department of Transportation continues improvement work on the intersection of Paseo de Peralta and Bishops Lodge Road/Washington Avenue in Santa Fe. Beginning next week, Bishop Lodge Road will be re-opened. There will be a switch in traffic from the south side to the north side on Paseo de Peralta Washington Avenue will be closed between Paseo de Peralta and S. Federal Place. Pedestrians will still have access to Washington Avenue. Motorists can access businesses, the U.S. Postal Office, and Federal Government entities utilizing Grant Avenue and Marcy Street. The Federal Highway Administration, the City of Santa Fe and NMDOT have partnered to fund these improvements. This $1.9 million project is scheduled for completion in the fall of 2013. Motorists are urged to proceed through the work zone with caution and observe traffic control signing and reduced speed limits. Updates about the project will be posted on NMRoads.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
Crashes: Hospitals working to reduce driving anxiety Veterans drive hourlong trips near the medical center that incorporate their “triggers” — underpasses, bridges, construction sites, busy intersections. Their pulse and breathing are monitored. When they feel panic, they pull over and try various selfcalming techniques. “We’ve had a lot more trouble recruiting participants than we expected,” said Steven Woodward, a VA psychologist running the study. “Why? I wish we knew.” Getting permission for the study from scientific review boards wasn’t easy. There haven’t been any disasters so far. Woodward hopes one day to extend it to an even more overlooked group — returning veterans who aren’t yet confident enough to resume driving.
Continued from Page A-1 habits that were lifesaving in war zones but are dangerous on America’s roads. They include racing through intersections, straddling lanes, swerving on bridges and, for some, not wearing seat belts because they hinder a rapid escape. That’s probably not the whole story, however. Post-traumatic stress disorder, suffered by thousands of veterans, increases aggressive driving. Drunken driving and thrill-seeking also are more common after combat, according to a few studies and the testimony of many veterans. If further research supports the observations, motor vehicle crashes will join suicide and interpersonal violence as a fatal, if indirect, consequence of the war on terrorism. Motor vehicle crashes have long been a serious problem in the military armed services. From 1999 through 2012, a period spanning peacetime and the two wars, as many activeduty military personnel died in noncombat motor vehicle crashes both on and off duty (4,423) as were killed in the Iraq war (4,409). “Before suicides became the leading cause of nonbattle injuries, motor vehicle injuries were,” said Bruce Jones, a physician and epidemiologist who heads the Army’s injury prevention program at Aberdeen Proving Ground, in Maryland. War, however, worsens the problem. Men who served in the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan have a 76 percent higher rate of dying in vehicle crashes, and women a 43 percent higher rate, than similar people in the general population, according to an unpublished study by Han Kang, an epidemiologist with the Department of Veterans Affairs. The same phenomenon was seen in Gulf War veterans and took five years to dissipate. Fatal motorcycle crashes in particular spiked during the wars. They accounted for 14 percent of military traffic deaths in 2001, but 38 percent in 2008. The absolute rate of motorcycle deaths also tripled over that period. “A lot of people come home and buy a motorcycle to have that adrenaline rush again,” said Steven Acheson, 27, a former forward observer in the Army and an engineering student in Wisconsin. He spent time at Fort Stewart in Georgia, where the post put vehicles from fatal crashes on display as a form of warning. “There was once six or seven completely mangled motorcycles out in front of the gate,” Acheson recalled. One of the best pieces of evidence that combat raises a person’s risk for car crashes comes from an in-house study by USAA, an insurance company in San Antonio, Texas, that covers thousands of military personnel. The company offers a reduced-price insurance premium if vehicles are stored securely during deployment. Almost all of the company’s active-duty customers opt for it. As a consequence, USAA has before-and-after records for 171,000 deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Troops had more at-fault accidents in the six months after their return from deployment than in the six months before they left. The increase was highest for people in the Army (23 percent) and in the enlisted ranks (22 percent).
Series of attacks kill nine in Iraq BAGHDAD — A series of attacks including a blast near an Internet cafe in a Sunni area of Baghdad killed nine people and wounded dozens on Sunday in and around the Iraqi capital. The attacks came amid heightened sectarian tension following a deadly security crackdown on a camp in northern Iraq run by Sunnis, protesting what they consider to be their second-class treatment by the Shiite-led government. Government investigators say the April 23 incident left 40 people dead, while a spate of follow-up attacks and battles has killed more than 200 more. The Associated Press
Steven Acheson drives his car around Platteville, Wis., on Friday. Acheson, an Iraq War veteran, escaped injury while serving as a driver in Baghdad but says he suffers from panic attacks behind the wheel. After they leave military service, veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan have a 75 percent higher rate of fatal motor vehicle accidents than civilians. ANDY MANIS/THE WASHINGTON POST
Tellingly, there was a “doseresponse relationship” between deployment and risk. Soldiers with three deployments had 36 percent more accidents, compared with 27 percent more in the twice-deployed and 12 percent in people deployed only once. But the problem isn’t just a carryover of habits. One-quarter of the Iraq and Afghanistan veterans enrolled in a 60-day residential treatment program for PTSD in California said they drove after drinking. One-fifth said they used seat belts “less than sometimes,” in part because they get in the way of a rapid escape from a vehicle. “Failure to adapt the unique combat driving behaviors used in the current conflicts cannot be the only explanation for deployment-related risky driving behavior and excess … mortality,” wrote Mark Zamorski, a Canadian military physician, and Amanda Kelley, a civilian U.S. Army psychologist, in a report to NATO on the subject. “All of the likely mechanisms … could be mediated by distress or mental disorders,” they wrote. Todd Nelson was an Army logistician riding in the front seat of a Toyota Land Cruiser in Kabul in August 2007 when a car in an adjoining lane blew up. He lost his right eye, broke both jaws and had burns on 18 percent of his body surface. He’s had 43 operations under general anesthesia. When he was finally well enough to get back on the road, he drove for several months before his wife “made a comment about how aggressive I was being. She said, ‘You’re scaring me,’ ” Nelson, 40, recalled recently. He sped. He hated letting cars get in front of him. He swerved whenever he saw a vehicle with a low-hanging rear end suggesting heavy load. “Hey, I drove much worse than this over there and nothing happened,” he says he told himself. In hindsight, he says, he’s embarrassed at how unaware he was. Of his wife, he says, “It was very patient of her to wait that long to tell me.” Nelson, who works in the recruiting department of USAA,
broke the habit on his own. He timed how long it took him to drive to college each day in San Antonio and proved to himself that going the speed limit added little time to the trip. He made a game of counting the number of cars he would let merge on the way in and the way back. After a month, he said, he was back to driving pretty normally. He now goes out of his way to talk about it to other veterans. “I think we probably suffer with this more than we like to admit.” Steven Acheson, the Wisconsin veteran, agrees. He spent 11 months driving a colonel around the Sadr City district of Baghdad in an up-armored Humvee in 2006. He drove courteously. “It was kind of our colonel’s motto when we were out there — ‘Show people respect,’ ” he said. He escaped injury. But he developed a habit of merciless attention to the road — noticing every curb line repainted or jersey barrier moved — that he’s never really lost. “When I see a vehicle on the side of the road, it puts me on edge,” said Acheson, a senior at the University of Wisconsin at Platteville. “I am constantly scanning. If I see a bag blow across the road a mile up, I say, ‘What is that?’ “ He has occasional — and unaccountable — moments of panic behind the wheel. Three years ago, he went to Long Island, N.Y., to visit an Army friend whose father was dying in hospice. He helped carry the man’s body out of the house. Driving home he was overcome by dread and anxiety. Somewhere in Indiana, in the middle of the day, he stopped, rented a motel room, called his mother and spent a sleepless night. He thinks drinking and driving is a largely unacknowledged part of the caraccident problem. “It’s just everywhere,” he said. “You just survived the war, so what do you mean I can’t drive drunk? If I can drive and shoot out my window, I can drive drunk. It’s that kind of mentality I saw a lot of soldiers taking.” The military is beginning to pay attention to the particular risks facing — and needs of —
Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who resume driving when they get home. The Army gives out a brochure called Post-Combat Driving: The American Road that includes data from a survey that an occupational therapist at the University of Minnesota, Erica Stern, conducted with deployed and nondeployed reservists. (Forty-nine percent of returning soldiers said they were anxious when cars approached quickly; 25 percent said they had driven through intersections in the previous month.) The publication has tips on how to increase selfcontrol; one is to tape a drawing by one’s child to the dashboard. VA has new training materials for clinicians advising them to talk about driving with veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, some of whom are enrolling in the department’s driverrehabilitation programs offered at 40 VA medical centers around the country, which have traditionally been used by people with physical disabilities. The VA hospital in Palo Alto, Calif., is conducting a study aimed at identifying the best techniques for relieving driving anxiety while on the road.
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Continued from Page A-1 into the upper Santa Fe River watershed. The reduced snow melt would have reduced the inflow to the upper McClure Reservoir, Drypolcher said. Last year, a couple of different water pulses kept water flowing past Frenchy’s Field Park well into the summer. The water flows gave the fledgling cottonwood and willow plantings a good start. The Santa Fe Watershed Association has continued the planting efforts with volunteers. Call the association at 820-1696 or visit www. santafewatershed.org for more information.
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Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
TECH
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An honest ‘A-plus’
Star Trek (Namco Bandai/Paramount, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, $59.99) lands somewhere between the events of J.J. Abrams’ 2009 Star Trek reboot and this month’s Star Trek: Into Darkness. NAMCO BANDAI/PARAMOUNT
Phasers fail to stun in lackluster ‘Star Trek’
Schools turn to advanced technology to thwart cheating in Web-based education
By Lou Kesten
The Associated Press
Jennifer Clay, a student in Western Governors University, an Internet-based school, takes a business course test online, under the view of a video camera at her apartment in Los Angeles. One hurdle facing the growth of online education is ensuring honesty and fighting cheating. PHOTOS BY KATIE FALKENBERG/LOS ANGELES TIMES
L
A-5
BY LARRY GORDON LOS ANGELES TIMES
OS ANGELES — While Jennifer Clay was at home taking an online exam for her business law class, a proctor a few hundred miles away was watching her every move. Using a webcam mounted in Clay’s Los Angeles apartment, the monitor in Phoenix tracked how frequently her eyes shifted from the computer screen and listened for the telltale sounds of a possible helper in the room. Her computer browser was locked — remotely — to prevent Internet searches, and her typing pattern was analyzed to make sure she was who she said she was: Did she enter her password with the same rhythm as she had in the past? Or was she slowing down?
In the battle against cheating, this is the cutting edge — and a key to bolstering integrity in the booming field of online education. Only with solid safeguards against cheating, experts say, can Internet universities show that their exams and diplomas are valid — that students haven’t just Googled their way to an “A-plus” or gotten the right answers texted to their smartphones. “I think it gives credibility to the entire system, to the institution and to online education in general,” said Clay, 31, who is studying accounting at Western Governors University, a nonprofit institution that enrolls many working adults like her. But defeating the ingenuity of computer-savvy students is a huge challenge that has attracted much investment and attention in the last year. The whole system can be corrupted with something as low-tech as a cheat sheet tucked out of camera sight. “Online courses are under scrutiny to show evidence of integrity in ways that face-to-face courses aren’t,” said Teddi Fishman, director of the International Center for Academic Integrity at Clemson University in South Carolina. William Dornan, chief executive of Phoenix-based Kryterion Inc., which monitors tests for several schools and companies, said technology is up to the task. He contends that his webcam system reduces cheating far below its occurrence in regular lecture halls. “Security is incredibly important,” he said. “If it’s known you can cheat, that completely dilutes the brand.” Some students say no security measures are fail-safe. University of California, Santa Cruz, sophomore John Shokohi took a water issues class last spring that allowed webcam proctoring in his dorm. The 19-year-old environmental studies major said he did not know of specific cheating, but added that online education was a tempting target for desperate students. “Because you are not around other students, you are not so worried about people watching you or getting caught,” he said.
Era of ‘massive open online courses’ Although online classes have existed for more than a decade, the debate over cheating has become sharper in the last year with the emergence of “massive open online courses.” Those MOOCs, as they are known, usually are offered free by such organizations as Coursera and edX in collaboration with colleges, and can enroll thousands of students in one class. Private colleges, public universities and corporations are jumping into the online education field, investing millions of dollars to tap into the vast pool of potential students, while also taking steps to help ensure honesty at a distance. Despite public suspicion about online deception, studies seem to show there is not much difference in the amount of cheating that occurs in virtual and real classrooms. A 2010 study in the Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration found that 32.7 percent of online students self-reported cheating at least once on tests, compared with 32.1 percent of those in on-campus classes. But as online education grows, even small vulnerabilities could become big problems, academics fear. The “size and scale [of MOOC courses] make it a bigger issue,” said Cathy Sandeen, vice president for education attainment and innovation at the American Council on Education. The council announced in February that it considers four MOOC courses from Mountain View, Calif.-based Coursera worthy of college credit when they include webcams and monitoring of typing patterns. “The [security] standard we want to see is something equal to or better than a large lecture class at a university,” Sandeen said.
High-tech eyes gain popularity Aside from the Web cameras, a host of other high-tech methods are becoming increasingly popular. Among them are programs that check students’ identities using obscure biographical information (which of these three telephone numbers was once yours?). Programs can generate unique exams by drawing on a large inventory of questions and can identify possible cheaters by analyzing whether difficult test questions are answered at the same speed as easy ones. As in many campus classes, term papers are scanned against massive Internet data banks for plagiarism. At Salt Lake City-based Western Governors, nearly all 39,000 students have been supplied with Kryterion webcams to monitor tests and scan the room for visitors or cheat sheets. If the proctor senses something suspicious, the test can be inter-
Clay adjusts a video camera while taking an online test at her apartment in Los Angeles. ‘I think it gives credibility to the entire system, to the institution and to online education in general,’ said Clay, 31, who is studying accounting at Western Governors University.
rupted or canceled, according to the school’s provost, David Leasure. A webcam detected the presence of a Los Angeles Times photographer in Clay’s apartment before the student could proceed with the exam, which she passed. StraighterLine, a Baltimore company that offers online courses accepted for credit at some colleges, switched in November from optional test proctoring to mandatory use of webcams. That added $10 to students’ cost per course. “We made the change because we believe that the academic integrity issue is likely to become a big issue across all elements of higher education,” Chief Executive Officer Burck Smith said.
Cheating remains tough to discern Still, discerning cheating is no easy task. At Kryterion, proctors usually watch six to eight test-takers at a time on a split screen, looking at “body language and eye movement or anything that might be aberrant behavior,” said Rebekah Lovaas, a Kryterion operations analyst who worked as a proctor for three years. Something possibly suspicious occurs in about 16 percent of the online tests that Kryterion monitors, according to the company. In most cases, students can’t break the habit of answering a cellphone call, and the sound of another person usually turns out to be a family member with no intention to cheat, Lovaas said. One time, however, she noticed a test-taker had taped what appeared to be notes above the computer monitor; that exam was halted through a computerized process and the incident reported to the school. Proctors do not personally speak to or interact with students and do not learn the outcome of their monitoring. Daniel House of Los Angeles, who is working on a bachelor’s in health informatics at Western Governors, feels confident that the cameras and other deterrents keep testing secure. “I haven’t seen any opportunity for people to get around it,” said House, 51, who switched careers in midlife from music industry jobs to running a hospital’s websites. Other prevention efforts are less high-tech. Some online programs, such as ones affiliated with the University of Maryland and Colorado’s community colleges, avoid high-stakes final exams and instead use frequent, smaller-scale assessments. They also encourage online interaction that helps teachers detect a sudden improvement in their students’ writings or unusual changes in the class chat room postings. EdX, the nonprofit MOOC consortium founded by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology last year, opts for exams at commercial centers with proctors in the room if a student is seeking credit. The University of the People, a Pasadena, Calif.-based online school, relies on volunteer proctors with standing in local communities. Among them are a minister in Brazil, a professor in India and Teresa Lane, manager of a small library in Morristown, Tenn. Lane said she signed up to proctor one young man’s tests because she wants to help untraditional students return to school. “I think online education can definitely work, but everyone has to cooperate and give it a chance,” Lane said.
“Arena,” a 1967 episode of Star Trek, features the original series’ most laughable fight scene, an epic duel between Capt. James T. Kirk and a rubbery lizard-man of the Gorn species. Now Canadian videogame developer Digital Extremes is paying tribute. Star Trek (Namco Bandai/Paramount, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, $59.99) takes that notorious KirkGorn showdown and stretches it out to an eight-hour adventure. The game, alas, doesn’t have any of the low-fi charm of “Arena” — it’s just a flat-out mess. The story lands somewhere between the events of J.J. Abrams’ 2009 Star Trek reboot and this month’s Star Trek Into Darkness. The Vulcans are settling on a new planet with the help of the world-altering Helios device until the Gorn pop through a wormhole and scamper off with the darned thing. It’s up to Kirk, Mr. Spock and the rest of the Enterprise crew to stop the reptilian savages from flipping the switch on Helios that turns it into a galaxy destroyer. Forget about setting your phasers on stun; the object of this Star Trek game is to have Kirk and Spock kill every Gorn that stands between them and Helios. It’s a dispiriting, cynical approach that rejects the core values of Gene Roddenberry’s Federation — particularly, respect and cooperation between wildly different life forms — in favor of a scenario in which it’s OK for the heroes to slaughter hundreds of aliens because they look like lizards. It’s the same formula that’s made Halo and Gears of War into blockbusters, but Star Trek lacks their attention to detail. As in Gears, you’re meant to find cover and then engage, but alien bullets still managed to find me no matter where I was hiding. On the other hand, the enemies are so dumb you may not even need cover; frequently, Gorn warriors just stared my way as I strolled up and unloaded my phaser. Star Trek is built for cooperative play, allowing you and a friend to control Kirk and Spock. If you’re playing solo, be prepared for the awful artificial intelligence that takes over the other character. I played as Spock, and when I wasn’t waiting for Kirk to quit lollygagging, I was watching in horror as he kept wandering aimlessly into Gorn gunfire. There isn’t much gameplay difference between the two officers — both feel equally sluggish, as if the present-day William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy were hired to do their motion capture. The Abrams-era Kirk and Spock, Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto, do show up to deliver solid voiceover performances, though they’re not given much to work with. Kirk’s chatter is a tiresome combination of bluster and sexual innuendo, while Spock gets to constantly explain whatever the player has to do next, but their camaraderie somehow comes through. That’s as close as Star Trek gets to capturing the old magic. At one point, you do get to take the helm of the Enterprise, but that thrill quickly dissipates when the scenario turns into a stationary shooting gallery. It’s an all-too-characteristic moment of this dismal adventure. Instead of exploring strange new worlds, Star Trek settles for rehashing the most exhausted cliches of sci-fi video games. One-half star out of four.
On the Web u www.startrekgame.com
Group: Text messaging on decline among Americans NEW YORK — Americans are saying CUL8TR to text messaging, a wireless industry group says, as Internet-based applications such as Apple’s iMessage are starting to take over from what was once a cash cow for phone companies. CTIA — The Wireless Association said Thursday that Americans sent 2.2 trillion text messages last year, down 5 percent from 2011. That’s still 19 text messages per person per day. Text messages vaulted into the U.S. mainstream in 2007, despite often costing 10 cents each. Costs came down quickly as phone companies started selling monthly “bundles” of texts. Now, many phone companies give text messaging away for free as part of a plan that mainly meters the amount of data used. In countries where phone companies have kept the cost of text messaging high, the use of chat applications that avoid those fees has exploded. Those apps include WhatsApp and allow people to text other users of the same service for free, using the Internet and bypassing the phone companies’ text systems. Informa estimates that the number of messages sent through such services worldwide exceeded those sent by text last year. The Associated Press
A-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
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1.800.256.4646 • VERIZON.COM/OFERTASREDHOT • VZW.COM/TIENDAS Cargo de activación/actualización por cada línea: Hasta $35. INFORMACIÓN IMPORTANTE AL CONSUMIDOR: Sujeto al acuerdo con el cliente, plan de llamadas, formulario de reembolso y aprobación de crédito. Hasta $350 de cargo por cancelación prematura por cada línea. Las ofertas y la cobertura, que varían según el servicio, no están disponibles en todas las áreas; visite vzw.com/espanol. Hasta agotar existencias. Ofertas por tiempo limitado. Puede aplicar un cargo por reposición. La tarjeta de débito con el reembolso tarda hasta 6 semanas y vence en 12 meses. LTE es una marca comercial de ETSI. 4G LTE está disponible en más de 480 mercados en EE.UU. DROID es una marca comercial de Lucasfilm Ltd. y sus compañías relacionadas. Usada con autorización. Google Voice Search es una marca comercial de Google Inc. © 2013 Samsung Telecommunications America, LLC (“Samsung”). Samsung y Galaxy Tab son marcas comerciales de Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. © 2013 Verizon Wireless.
lunes, 6 de mayo, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-7
EL NUEVO MEXICANO Grampo tries to become ‘un lector’
U
na mañanita Grampo Carasordo doesn’t mean que you shouldn’t lampio was sitting en la cocina try,” Canutito encouraged him. “After gazing intently a un libro. Canu- all, you don’t read with your orejas.” tito came in y realizó que “That’s true, m’hijo,” el libro that he was reading Grampo Caralampio agreed, era the family Bible. He saw “Let me practice by reading como grampo’s lips were to you.” moving silently as he read. He opened up la Biblia “Buenos días le dé Dios, al Nuevo Testamento and grampo,” Canutito began. cleared su garganta, procla“¿Qué está haciendo? Didn’t mando: “A reading from the you get enough of church el letter de San Pablo to the Domingo pasão?” Larry Torres Fallopians.” “Of course me acabalé Canutito choked en la Growing up de la church last Sunday,” leche that he had been drinkSpanglish grampo retorted. “Pero I was ing as he hurried to correct thinking de ofrecerme to be a su grampo. “¡Grampo!” he a reader en la iglesia. I realize que it exclaimed, “No es una lectura from the might be hard to do porque a veces I letter of Saint Paul to the Fallopians; it tend to be a little hard of hearing.” is a reading of la carta de San Pablo to “Just because you are un poquito the Philippians ...”
Horizontales 1. Nombre que se da al emperador del Japón. 5. Escribir lo mismo que está escrito o impreso en otra parte. 9. Que tiene o encierra dos flores. 12. Ciudad del norte de Chile. 14. Nos hacemos dignos de premio o castigo. 17. Símbolo del iridio. 19. Juntas o concilios de obispos. 20. Preposición. 21. Término. 23. Cuero empegado propio para contener líquidos (pl.). 24. Doceava parte del año. 25. Elevar por medio de cuerdas. 27. Se manifiesta con palabras habladas o escritas. 28. Manjar de huevas de esturión aderezadas. 30. Percibirán el olor. 32. Antigua ciudad del norte de Mesopotamia. 34. (Percha ...) Mueble de alcoba que sirve de percha para la ropa masculina. 35. Marca, señal. 36. Roture la tierra con el arado. 38. Novena. 39. (Tupac ...) Célebre insurrecto peruano. 41. Transporte en carro. 43. Perro de raza mezclada de dogo y lebrel (pl.). 44. Especie de ostra mayor y más basta que la común. Verticales 1. Liberalidad, esplendidez. 2. Preposición inseparable que indica separación.
“Philippians, o Fallopians, ¿qué es la diferencia?” Grampo shrugged as Grama Cuca came in. He continued. “Alright then let me read de otro chapter. He began: “A reading from a letter of San Pablo to the Genitals ...” This time is was Grama Cuca who couldn’t keep her cafecito down. She shrieked, “¡No, Lampi! It is not a reading de San Pablo to the Genitals, it is a reading from Saint Paul to the Gentiles! Genitals son otras cosas! Those are las cositas que hacen distinguish people as male or female,” she said away from where Canutito could hear her. “¡Ay! How am I ever going to learn to leer en público if you guys keep criticando mi pronunciación?” Grampo Caralampio complained. “Maybe I’ll have an easier time if I read del Antiguo Testamento instead of trying to read
from el New Testament.” He flipped back en la Bible until he got to el Libro del Éxodo. He was mirando la parte dónde Moses and the Israelites had escaped del pharaoh de Egipto. He cleared his throat otra vez and proclaimed, “And Moses hizo lead a los Israelites and he kept them in the dessert for cuarenta años.” “Grampo,” said Canutito, almost too scared to correct him, “Moisés did lead the Israelites pero no los hizo keep in the dessert for forty years; he kept them in the desert for cuarenta años. If he had kept them en el dessert for forty years they would have been all gorditos and they would not have needed to cross over into a land flowing con leche and honey. They would have all died de un heart attack!” “I was just testing you a ver si you
were putting attention,” Grampo faked, pero Canutito was not fooled. “Grampo, ¿por qué no hace become un usher en la iglesia instead? If you do, entonces all you have to do es hacer greet a las personas as they come through the puerta and take up la colecta.” “Now there’s an idea!” Grampo Caralampio exclaimed, suddenly haciéndose perk up. “I could take up the collection and hacerla toss into the air and yell to God ‘whatever you can grab del aigre is for you and whatever falls en el suelo is para mí’ and see how he likes that.” Canutito couldn’t figure out si era worse for grampo to read for God o hacerlo challenge por Su colecta ...
www.angelfreire.com 3. Correspondiente a todos los días. 4. Ofrecer dones y sacrificios a Dios en acción de gracias. 5. Fácil de cocer. 6. Elevamos oración. 7. Río del norte de Italia. 8. Fueron imagen o símbolo de una cosa. 10. Bebida espiritosa. 11. Símbolo del samario. 13. Siglas con que se conocía la policía secreta alemana del nazismo. 15. Símbolo del einstenio. 16. Forma del pronombre de segunda persona del plural. 18. Que forma rizos. 20. Se debilitan.
SOLUCION DEL 10461 SOLUCION DELNo. NO 10461
22. Gaveta. 24. Ave paseriforme domesticable, que imita sonidos y aún la voz humana (pl.). 26. Movimiento del rostro que expresa alegría. 27. El que preside el cabildo después del prelado. 29. (... en Hunze) Ciudad de Países Bajos. 31. En números romanos, 55. 33. Preparar las eras para sembrar. 36. Dueñas, señoras. 37. No acertó. 39. Arbol venezolano de madera imputrescible. 40. Plural de una vocal. 41. Partícula inseparable privativa. 42. Conjunción latina “y”.
SOLUCION DEL 10462 SOLUCION DELNo. NO 10462
Tuesday has LOCAL BUSINESS Tuesday, January 15, 2013
LOCAL BUSINESS
BUSINESS BEAT
Home sales in Santa Fe rise 23 percent By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican
T
he Santa Fe Association of Realtors will announce the details at its media breakfast Jan. 16, but the news is now official: 2012 was the best year for residential home sales since 2007. Alan Ball, an agent with Keller Williams Santa Fe who keeps monthly sales data, reports residential sales hit 1,641 last year — up 23 percent from 2011. But as we’ve reported here all year, that does not mean all is well with the sellers. Due to distressed short sales and foreclosures, the average sales prices dropped 6 percent in 2012 to $421,577. But the year ended with a bang as December saw 150 sales — and the fourth quarter itself saw three strong months in a row, and that despite the fiscal uncertainties coming from Washington, D.C. uuu
When it comes to brewing, Jami Nordby says, ‘There are so many directions people can go. Imagination is the only limit.’ Nordby owns Santa Fe Homebrew Supply. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
His business is hopping
You turn to us.
The restoration project at La Fonda is well under way, and one of the challenges for Jennifer Kimball and her managers is to phase the project so it doesn’t impact visitors. To accomplish that, contractors try to start work at 9 a.m. on the first 100 rooms now under construction. As those rooms come back on line in April or May, the renovation moves to the next 80 rooms with the goal of having all the rooms completely modernized and ungraded by Indian Market weekend. Kimball is also proud that all of the 220 workers will remain employed during the nine-month project and that vacancy rates have not been impacted. Because of the lower supply of rooms, occupancy is close to 100 percent — of course, the $89 a night special La Fonda is offering during the remodeling doesn’t hurt with bargainconscious travelers.
A-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
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newspapers in education
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For more information on having your classroom “spotlighted” OR to sponsor a classroom, please contact Michelle Chavez at 505-428-7620. This classroom’s newspapers are sponsored by...
163 Years of Trust and Reliability in the Santa Fe Community
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
EDUCATION Turquoise Trail principal to retire S andy Davis is smiling with pride as she impact on the teachers and the kids.” walks through the halls of Turquoise Davis stops to point out some images of Trail Charter School, which serves fourth-grade students costumed as famous about 515 students in grades K-6, as well historical figures — Abraham Lincoln, as 50 preschoolers. The walls Langston Hughes, Muhammad are covered with artistic photos, Ali and Martin Luther King Jr., for drawings and other media that are instance — hanging on one wall tied to the school’s curriculum. in the hallway. These portraits “This school has such a creare accompanied by handwritten ative spirit and a wonderful essays written by the students staff,” she says. “I have mixed about these figures. Davis said feelings about leaving. But it’s this Project MINDS display is a time. I need a break.” way in which arts can be used to personalize a history lesson. Davis, 64, is retiring at the end Robert Nott of the semester after 12 years of Charter schools are public Learning Curve serving as the principal of the schools run by a governance body school. The school was founded with considerable autonomy in 1994, making it the district’s from the district that approves oldest charter school. Davis, who started in them. The state can also authorize a charter 2001, is its fifth principal. school. Davis says the advantage of a charter is that “families and teachers have a choice Davis has worked as both as a teacher to be there, and there is greater opportunity and principal for about 40 years: two years to be involved in the decision-making. I in Charlottesville, Va., 26 years in Atlanta believe the decisions regarding the school and 12 years in Santa Fe. Over the decades, should be made by someone closest to the she has witnessed both good and bad learning process as opposed to someone changes in the way public schools operate. way up in the bureaucratic chain.” “Educators today are better trained and more focused on differentiated instrucThe challenge for many charters, she tion; there’s more engagement with the says, is accessing federal funds that chanstudent,” she said. But, like many others, nel into the district, but don’t always make she bemoans the emphasis on test scores. their way to the charter school. Turquoise “We love to maintain high achievement Trail Charter School operates on a budget and need to be held accountable, but that of about $4.5 million, with state money prohas come in a way that often has a negative viding almost all the funding, though Davis
said she and others often write grants to garner money for various programs. Davis says she is one of eight siblings and the only one who became an educator. Her parents did not graduate from high school but impressed the importance of obtaining an education upon their kids all the same. She earned her bachelor’s degree at Emory University in Atlanta and her master’s at Georgia State University. She also earned her “specialist’s” degree in curriculum and the learning environment at Harvard University. The state assigned Turquoise Trail a C in its new school-grading system this year. District-wise, the school was placed in the Acceleration Zone, meaning that it is on the right track but needs some direction and support to do better. Davis said she is actually OK with such ratings and determinations being assigned to schools, but noted that it takes more than a year or two to get a real sense of whether they are valid. “I actually believe charter schools are more accountable than other public schools. We could get shut down if we are not proving we are working,” she says, adding that many public schools with low rankings remain open for years. Turquoise Trail’s charter is up for renewal in 2015. Davis says she may stay on through August to ensure a smooth transition to her successor, which the school hopes to name by the end of May.
Family best bets Friday
Saturday
Boys Town 9:30 a.m. on TCM
Hocus Pocus 6:30 a.m. on FAM
Spencer Tracy gives one of his most memorable performances in this fact-based 1938 drama as Father Flanagan, founder of a home for troubled boys. The good padre has never met a youth he couldn’t help, but a new resident with a chip on his shoulder bigger than he is threatens to undo all the priest’s work. He gets through to the youngster, though, with his belief that there are no bad boys, only good boys under bad influences. Mickey Rooney also stars.
Amok, amok, amok! Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker and Kathy Najimy star as a trio of 17thcentury witches who are accidentally summoned to the present in this ghoulish 1993 comedy. Reentering the land of the living on Halloween night in Salem, Mass., the threesome gets right to work meting out punishment for their hanging long ago. Omri Katz, Vinessa Shaw and Thora Birch also star.
© 2013 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 29, No. 20
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Toss those toys, let tot explore household ‘stuff’ Question: Is it OK to start teaching our 1-year-old how to play independently? He screams and cries when I put him in any type of enclosure if he can’t get “free” (even when I arrange the furniture in a way that he has a very ample play area). Is there a method to teach him how to play by himself for at least a little bit? It seems I am following him around the house all day so he can’t get into trouble or hurt himself or damage furniture, etc. We have our house “baby-proofed,” but he is very creative with the things he likes to get into. Answer: First, you don’t “teach” a 1-year-old to play independently. They begin playing independently, on their own, as soon as they begin moving John around. Second, you’ve told me (without Rosemond realizing that you’ve told me) that your Living With son is already playing independently. You Children write, “He is very creative with the things he likes to get into.” You’ve described the way a 1-year-old plays. They get into things. They rummage, crumple, tear, feel, taste, throw and the like. That’s why store-bought toys are a waste of money for a child this age. It doesn’t matter that a team of child development experts deemed a certain toy “developmentally appropriate” and that you can only purchase it from a catalog or online — it’s a waste of money. Ordinary household “stuff” is what 1-year-olds want. They seem to intuitively realize that store-bought toys are an attempt to distract them from the truly interesting stuff that’s sitting on shelves and hidden in drawers and cabinets. Their twopart creed seems to be, “If I don’t find it, it’s not worth playing with,” and “the worth of a toy is inversely proportional to the effort the big people make to get me to play with it.” If you feel compelled to follow your son around all day so he doesn’t get into forbidden stuff, then you haven’t baby-proofed adequately. First, gate off rooms that can’t be proofed without major rearranging. In other words, don’t gate him into a room; rather, gate him out of certain rooms. Then, go into every room that’s not gated and remove everything that poses risk to him. Replace every item you remove with a common household item that is safe. Examples are empty product boxes (put a surprise in each one) and other containers, pots, kitchen utensils and so on. Your son is screaming because you’re gating him in rather than gating him out and because the stuff you’re gating him in with doesn’t interest him in the least. Every store that sells child-proofing paraphernalia carries child-proof cabinet latches. If there’s no reasonable alternative to keeping certain “bad” stuff in a certain cabinet, then by all means use a child-proof latch (although I have heard that some kids — future safecrackers, no doubt — figure them out). I generally prefer, however, to make cabinets safe places and let toddlers explore and hide in them. The more effective you are at child-proofing, the more independently and longer your son will play, and the smarter he will become as he does so. And the more relaxed a mother you will be.
Unscramble the safety word on each sign.
Read the Rules of the Road. Then, use a GREEN crayon to circle the kids below that are following the safety rules. Use a RED crayon to make an X over the ones who are not following the safety rules.
Standards Link: Spelling: Spell grade level appropriate words correctly.
CHECKING APPROVED TRAFFIC CAREFUL SAFETY HELMET CHARGE RULES ROADS SIGNS NIGHT LIGHT PLANS BIKE CLIP
ANSWERS: 1. clothing; 2. drawstrings, jewelry; 3. facing; 4. helmet, wrist, kneepads; 5. alone; 6. adult; 7. ride
Number each safety rule to go with numbers in the pictures that best illustrate that rule.
Special thanks to our friends at AAA for their help with this page. For more about safety, visit AAA.com/childsafety
Do not wear clothing with ____________ or ______________ that can get caught on playground equipment. Walk or skate _________________traffic, so you can see oncoming traffic. Wear an approved bicycle _____________ if you are riding a bike or scooter or
skating. If you travel on skates or skateboard, also wear _______________ guards and elbow- and ______________ . Don’t walk or skate ____________ . Before you go anywhere, CHECK FIRST with the _________________ in charge. (Check in again if you change your plans.) Never take a ___________with someone without checking with your parents first.
Standards Link: Health; students understand ways to reduce the risk of becoming involved in potentially dangerous situations; students practice safe behaviors during recreational activities.
B E G N I K C E H C D L U F E R A C T L E H E S S A E R H I V E G S A K A L G P O L R F I F I S I P R M A B F G E E N L P E H I H L N T A A P T C T U L W S Y N A A Y R O A D S S S Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
Good Example/Bad Example
The newspaper is full of examples of things that are safe and unsafe. Clip out three examples of things that are either safe or unsafe. Glue each to a piece of paper and write a safety rule that applies.
Select one of the words to complete each safety rule.
Wear light-colored ___________ at night.
Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.
Standards Link: Health; Students recognize safe and unsafe situations or behaviors.
Wheels make different kinds of work easier. Look through the newspaper to find examples of machines that have wheels. How do the wheels make different tasks easier? Standards Link: Physical Science; tools and machines are used to apply pushes and pulls (forces) to make things move.
Imagine that you saw a friend doing something dangerous on a bike. Write down what you would say to them to help them be safe. Standards Link: Health: Know concepts and practices concerning injury prevention and safety.
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
Church members start victims fund after attack The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — Members of a Catholic church where three people were stabbed during Mass a week ago launched an effort on Sunday to raise money for victims hurt in the attack. The start of the campaign came as Sunday services resumed at St. Jude Thaddeus Church. Parishioners were
In brief
‘Curanderismo’ exhibit opens
ALBUQUERQUE — The Maxwell Museum of Anthropology has opened an exhibit on the magical art of curanderismo, or the practice of traditional Mexican folk healing. The Albuquerque museum drew dozens of visitors from around the country Saturday to its Southwest Herbalism & Curanderismo exhibit with curandera Tonita Gonzales. The internationally-known healer performed limpias, or cleansings, for visitors at the opening. Displays featured popular curandero instruments from incense burners used in rituals to cups necessary to cure a spiritual illness. Curanderismo is the art of using traditional healing methods like herbs and plants to treat various ailments. Long practiced in indigenous villages of Mexico and other parts of Latin America, curanderos also could be found in parts of New Mexico, south Texas, Arizona and California.
$32.2M collected in spaceport tax LAS CRUCES — New data shows that of the $32.2 million Dona Aña County residents have paid in a spaceport tax that took effect five years ago, $1 in $4 has been routed to local education. The Las Cruces Sun-News reports that new county data
also collecting cards and well wishes to give to families. “God is working in and through all of life’s circumstances,” a message seeking donations said on the church’s website. “Thank you for your prayers and concern and for answering God’s call.” Police said Lawrence Capener stabbed three people on April 28 as Mass was ending because he thought a
says $8 million in total, or 25 percent of all sales tax revenues, has been sent to the three county school districts. During the 2007 referendum, a main argument touted by tax proponents was that the money would help to train future engineers and technicians who’d be qualified to work at future Spaceport America facilities. The 24,000-student Las Cruces Public Schools, the largest of three school districts in the county, has received the most spaceport tax money.
Free-roaming horses debated PLACITAS — The popular, free-roaming horses of a New Mexico mountain hamlet may have outstripped the ability of the land to support them. The Albuquerque Journal reports that the some residents are complaining that horses of Placitas are tearing up yards and causing public safety risks because of its rising population numbers. Last month, a horse was killed when it was hit by a vehicle on N.M. 165 in Placitas. The horses have long been a divisive issue in Placitas between residents who believe the animals should be allowed to roam freely and those who say providing them with food and water is fostering an unsustainable population increase. Placitas residents estimate the horse population to be around 200. But the horses do not fall within the category of “wild” horses — as defined by a 1971 federal law. The Associated Press
choir leader was a Mason. He has been charged with aggravated battery and was being held on $250,000 bail. Santa Fe Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan reconsecrated the Albuquerque church on Wednesday by sprinkling holy water and spreading incense through the building. The move was part of a Catholic ritual required after a sacrilege has been committed at a church.
St. Jude Thaddeus’ pastor, the Rev. John Daniel, said he believes parishioners have already forgiven Capener and continued to pray for him and his family. “What can you do? This is what we are taught to do,” he said. Capener, 24, told police that he also tagged the Sandoval No. 76 Masonic Lodge in Rio Rancho with spray paint just before the stabbing attack, authori-
ties said. Police later found red and blue spray paint on signs, outside walls and a door. Investigators said he also left the message, “I hope you guess who I am.” Parishioners said they rarely saw Capener attend services but were aware that his mother is active in the church, which is on the city’s Westside.
Farmington mall shooting sparks fears of gang war The Associated Press
FARMINGTON — A recent mall shooting in Farmington has sparked increased policing in neighborhoods amid fears of a new gang war. The Farmington Daily Times reports that aggressive patrols come after the Farmington Police Gang Unit said the shooting at Animas Valley Mall last weekend was gang-related and has caused increased tension among two rival gangs. Brothers Alejandro Ramirez, 22, and Luis Ramirez, 28, have been arrested on suspicion of killing Johnny Benjamin Vialpando, 25. Vialpando was shot and killed on April 27, while he was a passenger in a car parked at the mall. His wife and children and several other people witnessed the shooting. A suspect matching Alejandro Ramirez’s description approached Vialpando and said, “This is for Gary,” just before shooting him 15 times, according to court documents. Police believe that was a reference to Gary Martinez, a 17-year-old who was killed in what police believe was a gangrelated drive-by shooting in October 2008. After the shooting, police questioned Vialpando, but he was never charged with a crime in connection to Martinez’s death. The case remains unsolved.
According to police, more than 600 gang members live in San Juan County, and there are about eight confirmed gangs in the region. Farmington police Cpl. David Karst says the Ramirez brothers are gang members, but declined to discuss the specific gang affiliations. However, police have said the shooting involved people linked to Farmington’s two largest gangs: the South Side Locos and Tortilla Flats. “The recent South Side-Tortilla Flats incident … has caused a lot of conversations and tension between the two gangs,” said Erik Haanes, an officer in the gang unit. It was unclear if the Ramirez brothers had attorneys. According to police, more than 600 gang members live in San Juan County, and there are about eight confirmed gangs in the region. Gangs include people of all ethnicities, Karst said. The South Side Locos are the largest gang in the area and are comprised of many sects. The next largest gang is Tortilla Flats, according to the gang unit. Both gangs have a strong presence in south Farmington. But unlike gangs in certain cities that have strict boundaries separated by something as
obvious as a street, Farmington’s gangs scatter throughout the area and collaborate with members of opposing gangs to commit crimes, Karst said. The gangs commit crimes often to make money and intimidate rivals. In Farmington, the two most common crimes gangs commit are dealing drugs and guns, Karst said. But they also rob, burglarize and steal identities. “They do criminal activity to further the gang. It’s not just a group of criminals banding together to burglarize a house for their own gain,” he said. “Whatever they are doing is an enterprise for a group.” Throughout the country, there are gangs that call themselves South Side Locos and Tortilla Flats, but local neighborhood gang groups take on the attributes of their leaders, said Moises Prospero, an adjunct professor of criminology at New Mexico State University. “Your loyalty comes from your neighborhood,” he said. “They may have a sense of belonging, but they are not soldiers.”
Hooper: Traits include bigger brains, longer childhoods Continued from Page A-1 Thirty years later, the research I’m involved in with my colleagues at the Santa Fe Institute often reminds me of the summers I spent with my grandmother as a child. This research examines how the remarkable level of support provided by parents and grandparents in human families evolved hand-in-hand with other traits that were critical for our success as a species. Those traits include bigger brains, extended childhoods, longer lives and, believe it or not, menopause. Here’s how these seemingly disparate traits are connected through the logic of evolutionary biology. Some 2 million years ago, our ancestors started down a path that made them depend more and more on their brains to make a living: That is, they started devising clever technological and cooperative ways to discover, extract and prepare food, and to protect themselves from danger. Those who used their brains in this way were more successful at producing and keeping their offspring alive, who in turn produced successful offspring, and so on. It was a great evolutionary path because it helped our ancestors survive and thrive in an ever-changing world. There were some huge consequences
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone stole a purse Saturday from a 2002 Mercury parked in Ragle Park, 2600 Zia Road. u An undisclosed amount of cash was stolen late Friday or early Saturday from a vehicle parked in the 1800 block of Pacheco Street. The passenger-
that accompanied these increases in brain power. One of them is that human children needed more time to develop — first to grow their brains, and then to fill them with the knowledge and skills necessary to be clever, competent adults. As a result, human offspring take far longer to raise than those of any other primate, including our closest relatives, the chimpanzees. While the 30 years it took to finally earn my Ph.D. is an extreme example, even the children in huntergatherer societies typically do not become self-sufficient producers until their late teens or 20s. So it’s worth keeping in mind that education in the wild was important long before we dreamed up schools, books and classrooms. Then there is the matter of our impressive longevity, which also stands in contrast to the shorter lives of dogs, cats or chimps. It’s no accident that adults in hunter-gatherer societies frequently live up to 70 years old or older. Living into later adulthood enables us to reap the rewards of a lifetime of experience and learning, and to channel those resources to the next generation. Finally, we’re also learning how menopause came as part and parcel of this human evolutionary package. Shutting down the reproductive system in the fifth decade of life spares parents
side front window was smashed to gain entry, according to police. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Joseph Lopez, 63, of Santa Fe was arrested Sunday on suspicion of driving on a suspended or revoked license and concealing his identity after a traffic stop on Camino La Tierra. u Someone cut the power to a business on San Felipe Road near Airport Road on Sunday,
the high cost of additional reproduction, allowing them to focus instead on supporting those offspring who are already out of the womb. (It’s important to note that menopause is not just a female thing; because the majority of men are monogamous, most males stop reproducing at the same time as their wives.) As part of my own research, I spend time with the Tsimané, a group of forager-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon, studying patterns of growth, longevity and social support in a traditional subsistence setting. Just like us, the Tsimané raise their children with the help of three generations. And that’s the way it works in any human society: The older generations support and teach the younger, and thereby ensure their success and survival. Older folks — parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles — play a critical role in human families, and in human evolution more broadly. From the few other species that have taken steps down this evolutionary road — some birds, whales and smaller primates — we know that big brains, long lifespans, extended childhoods and supportive families tend to come together (some whale mothers even go through menopause). This stands in stark contrast to the road taken by some other highly successful creatures,
entered the building by breaking the front door windon and stole an undisclosed amount of money. The front door, file cabinets and a utility box were damaged, according to deputies.
Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Atalaya Elementary School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m. and on Old Santa
such as cockroaches, which have small brains, short lives, no child rearing and certainly never experience menopause. So, if the human success story involves multiple generations making a long-term investment in relatively few offspring, grandparents matter. When I tell my daughter the same stories that my grandparents told me as a boy, I feel a deep debt of gratitude for their many contributions to my growth and development over the years. The science now suggests we should extend that gratitude to the thousands of generations of parents and grandparents that came before them: We wouldn’t be human without them. Paul Hooper is an evolutionary anthropologist and an Omidyar Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. His research seeks to explain the origin of the core traits that define our species, as well as the emergence of social inequality, political hierarchy and leadership in human societies. With his father Philip Hooper, an endocrinologist at the University of Colorado, Paul has written a series of papers on the evolution of the adaptive stress response in humans and other species. Paul was born in Albuquerque and received his Ph.D. from The University of New Mexico.
Fe Trail between Sun Mountain Drive and Zia Road at other times; SUV No. 2 at Gonzales Community School from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m. and from 2:10 to 2:55 p.m. and on West Alameda Street at Cedar Street at other times. SUV No. 3 on Calle de Sebastian between Old Pecos Trail and Zia Road.
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 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)
How they voted Targeted News Service
WASHINGTON — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week. There were no key votes in the Senate this week.
House votes House vote 1 Flight delays and the FAA: The House passed the Reducing Flight Delays Act (HR 1765), sponsored by Rep. Tom Latham, R-Iowa, to give the transportation secretary flexibility to transfer funds between Federal Aviation Administration accounts to prevent reduced operations and staffing for air-traffic controllers and other employees of the FAA. Latham said the flexibility was needed “to restore reliable and safe service in the commercial air-traffic system by reducing or eliminating employee furlough days” that threaten to cause flight delays by disrupting airline schedules. An opponent, House Minority Whip Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md., said: “While I want to end these delays for passengers in Maryland and across the country, I will oppose this bill because it fails to address the whole impact of the sequester.” The vote, on April 26, was 361 yeas to 41 nays. Yeas: Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M. (1st), Rep. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M. (3rd), Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M. (2nd)
House vote 2 Selling helium reserves: The House passed the Responsible Helium Administration and Stewardship Act (HR 527), sponsored by Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash. The bill would allow for the sale at auction of the government’s 11 billion cubic feet of remaining helium reserves, beginning in October. Hastings said: “If Congress fails to act before October, we will artificially drop the helium supply and cause a global helium shortage that will cost jobs and severely disrupt our economy. Despite what many think, helium is not just used for party balloons. It is essential to our 21st century economy. Without helium we wouldn’t have lifesaving MRI machines, computer chips, fiber optic cables, or other devices used for defense needs.” The vote, on April 26, was 394 yeas to 1 nay. Yeas: Grisham, Luján, Pearce
Funeral services and memorials DRUCINDA LEIGH EWING 10/10/48 - 4/25/13
REST IN PEACE Memorials to Geneva Glen Camp, P.O. BOX 248, Indian Hills, CO 80454
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Make Plaza more welcoming, safer
A
s the weather gets warmer and we approach tourist season, we are becoming overrun by panhandlers in downtown Santa Fe. Hobo Hill is closed, and the panhandling has become more aggressive. On some days, the Plaza reeks of marijuana. We call the police, and if they come at all, the pot smoker gets a slap on the wrist. This is a tourist town. Many people depend on that. If it’s not the homeless on the Plaza, then it is shop owners yelling and shooting at each other. Santa Fe will become a ghost town if someone does not take control of this. The skateboarders disrespect the police while they jump off the stage, almost hitting a tourist. What has happened here?
Sign of the times A recent story (“Signs on bylaw vote go missing,” April 30) on stolen political signs in Eldorado indicated that the signs in question were recycled from my 2012 campaign for the Legislature. Contrary to the message on the stolen signs, I voted for the bylaw changes. I never gave anyone permission to use my campaign signs for any other purpose. I am mildly amused that the gentlemen in the story were so upset that their (read: my) signs were stolen. During the primary and general elections, I had approximately 50 yard signs stolen. Every sign we put out was placed with permission. Clearly, some persons have little respect for legally protected political speech. Stealing the signs is, in fact, a crime. Although the thefts (worth about $200) annoyed me, we were unable to determine who took the signs. Perhaps next time I will have to invest
Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Robert Dean Editor
Battle sounds over oil and gas
M in a GPS tracker. What a sad state of affairs. Dr. Stephen Easley
state representative House District 50
Renewable energy cost PNM Sky Blue, the voluntary renewable energy program, informed me that Public Service Co. of New Mexico was adding 22,000 solar photovoltaic panels to its RE generation, and that my new premium for a 100 kWh block would go from $0.42/ kWh to $1.70/kwh — a 404 percent increase because “it costs more to generate solar energy than wind energy.” The U.S. Department of Energy estimates a PV levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) of approximately $0.10/kWh to $0.18/kWh for utility-scale power generation. Many studies indicate that the LCOE of utility-scale wind power is between $0.06/kWh and $0.10/ kWh. So solar power generation, at the extreme, costs
about three times wind power generation, which would seem to justify some of the 404 percent increase in my premium. However, PNM is adding only about 6.6 megawatts of PV to its current 200 MW of wind power. Can someone tell me why a 3.3 percent increase in RE power generation should cause my premium to go up by 404 percent? Peter A. Borgo
Santa Fe
The best candidates
state chooses to place an R or D next to a candidate’s name, the state is inferring what the political philosophy of the candidate is. This is wrong. The ballot should only present the office, and the names of the candidates seeking that office. One ballot for all voters, top two candidates get on the final ballot, regardless of their affiliations. Both candidates could be from the same political party in some races. So what? Mike Plantz
San Jose
The primary election should not be used to choose who would represent a political party. The parties should choose their representatives much the same way a corporation chooses its CEO or board of directors. The state’s job is to present the candidates and count the votes. The state should not make any inference as to a candidate’s political philosophy. We all carry opinions about the views and philosophies of political parties. When the
It’s in the timing Please, please install timed lights on St. Michaels Drive. With 11 stoplights going across from Old Pecos to Cerrillos and speed limits of 40, 45 and 50, how can this work? At worst, we have to stop 11 times and would never reach those speed limits. Timed lights would solve this and also save our nerves. Cerrillos Road would be another good candidate for timed lights. Peggy Abbott
Santa Fe
COMMENTARY: FRED A. BERNSTEIN
Shelve Eisenhower memorial in D.C.
I
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001
OUR VIEW
Ben Chavez
Pecos
A-11
n 1999, Congress authorized the construction of a memorial to the 34th president, Dwight Eisenhower, and, in 2009, Frank Gehry won a competition to design it. His plan, approved in 2010, calls for turning a 4-acre site at the base of Capitol Hill into a kind of memorial campus, partly enclosed by 80-foot-high woven-metal tapestries depicting scenes from Eisenhower’s life. Plans were moving forward for the memorial — expected to cost at least $140 million — when controversy struck. Eisenhower’s grandchildren denounced the design as insufficiently respectful (at one point comparing the tapestries to the Iron Curtain and the supporting columns to missile silos). Now backers of “traditional” architecture, including the Chicago philanthropist Richard Driehaus, are working up new designs that will include classical elements. One member of Congress has introduced legislation to defund the memorial, at least until a more acceptable design can be developed. The American Institute of Architects denounced that move as “nothing more than an effort to intimidate.” How will it end? The only certain thing is that the process will drag on for years while the cost of the memorial increases. As an architecture critic, I have wavered: While I applaud Gehry’s design, I question the wisdom of building a memorial that offends the Eisenhower family.
But there is a perfect solution to the problem: Don’t build an Eisenhower memorial at all. There have been 44 presidents. No one is suggesting there be 44 — or more — presidential memorials on the Mall. Which presidents deserve the honor? Only those whom historians deem above average? In historical rankings of presidents, Eisenhower generally makes the top 10. But Teddy Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Harry Truman also make that cut (sometimes besting Eisenhower). And nobody, so far as I know, is suggesting Mall memorials to those three presidents. The reasons for favoring Eisenhower have to do with his role as a soldierstatesman; he was, after all, an architect of the U.S. victory in World War II and rightly remembered as a leader of the “greatest generation.” But there is already a huge World War II memorial in a prominent position on the Mall. Eisenhower’s name, along with a quotation — his charge to troops on D-Day — is inscribed into one of its walls. It’s doubtful anyone visits the site without thinking of Ike. Meanwhile, the federal government funds the library at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum in his home town of Abilene, Kan. That complex contains two large, classically inspired buildings, the renovated Eisenhower Boyhood Home and a handsome
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
statue of the president. Still not satisfied? The government also maintains the Eisenhower National Historic Site, his weekend retreat in Gettysburg, Pa. (The 690-acre site incorporates four farms, three of which were used by Eisenhower for his show herd of black Angus cattle.) These monuments already exist, and in places that don’t have the concentration of attractions that Washington has. According to a National Park Service spokesman, the Gettysburg site received 53,000 visitors in 2012, or about 150 a day — numbers that should be increased at least tenfold before we think of building another memorial to Ike. Of course, more people would visit an Ike memorial in Washington than in Abilene or Gettysburg. But there’s a reason presidential libraries and museums are built outside Washington. Cities all over the country deserve attention and tourist dollars, as presidents choosing sites for their libraries have recognized. The Eisenhower Memorial Commission should drop its plans for a memorial in Washington — ending a controversy that is reaching a fever pitch — and focus its attention on the existing Eisenhower sites. Abilene, Gettysburg and, yes, Washington will all come out ahead. Fred A. Bernstein contributes to Architectural Record and other magazines. Distributed as a special to the Washington Post.
ora County is throwing down the gauntlet against the extraction of natural resources. Last week, the Mora County Commission, on a 2-1 vote, passed an ordinance to outlaw the extraction of natural resources, arguing that the county’s groundwater matters more than an industry’s right to make a buck. Chairman John Olivas told The Associated Press that with the state of drought across New Mexico, preserving water is most important. This county ordinance, supporters believe, could be the first in the nation to place an outright ban on oil and gas development. There are moratoriums on development elsewhere, tightening of drilling restrictions or bans on fracking, a type of extracting oil and gas by injecting fluid into the ground. But no half-measures in Mora County — the commission went for the whole enchilada. Of course, there are no actual oil and gas wells in Mora County, so who knows what the ordinance will mean in the future. Evidently, oil and gas companies currently have leased some 100,000 acres in eastern Mora County, but no work has started. The 2-1 vote itself is interesting, given that the no vote came from Commissioner Paula Garcia. She, as those knowledgeable about water know, is executive director of the New Mexico Acequia Association. It’s hard to find anyone who cares more about water, in other words, than Garcia. Her reason for opposing the ordinance is simple — she thinks it overreaches and won’t stand up in court. Mora County, one of the poorest counties in the state, probably can’t afford an involved legal battle against the oil and gas industry. The nonprofit Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, which helped draft the ordinance, plans to defend the county against possible legal challenges. However, Olivas and commission Vice Chairman Alfonso Griego, who also voted for the ordinance, are making an important point with this ordinance. How does a community weigh its best interests? The oil and gas industry — just ask Southern New Mexico — definitely can offer jobs and bring in revenue. Some folks in Mora County, as well as the state and county governments, could profit from oil and gas drilling. What Mora County commissioners are saying, though, is that they would rather protect the land and water, which will remain long after any extractive industry moves along. Anyone who believes such industries will provide jobs forever should just wander around Northern New Mexico, where abandoned mines are plentiful. Taking from the land, as opposed to tending and living with the land, is a short-term proposition. That doesn’t mean that Garcia isn’t right, and that a county ordinance that sets out to overrule state and federal laws won’t fail in court. The majority of the commission is taking a different view — it wants a state Constitutional amendment to set out the rights of communities to determine their futures. The views of the people who live on the land, in this case Mora County, would trump an outside corporation seeking to make money. The gauntlet has been thrown — and we’ll be interested to see how this all turns out.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: May 6, 1913: The first interscholastic track meet was won Saturday afternoon in Albuquerque by the Albuquerque high school from the Santa Fe high school by the score of 55½ points to 48½. The other high schools of the state, which were expected to come in yesterday failed to show up, so that Santa Fe and Albuquerque had the meet all to themselves. May 6, 1963: Taos Pueblo Indians have balked at releasing right-of-way along the eastern approach to the high level bridge over the Rio Grande near Taos. It has been emphasized the Pueblo stand is not over money but instead the highly controversial Taos bypass. The bypass is totally unrelated to the bridge. The bypass was the cause of a heated debate in the late ’50s, and the proposal was dropped at that time. The Indians apparently want the route of the bypass firmly established now, while they are in a bargaining position.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
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
Clouds and sun with a thunderstorm
Tonight
A t-storm in spots this evening
Tuesday
Partly sunny
39
65
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Sunshine mixing with Times of clouds and clouds; breezy sun; pleasant
73/43
68/41
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
68/45
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Saturday
Sunday
A shower or thunder- Mostly cloudy, a storm possible shower in spots
70/45
Humidity (Noon)
A shower in spots
72/46
72/47
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
43%
47%
24%
20%
22%
23%
33%
38%
wind: S 6-12 mph
wind: E 4-8 mph
wind: SW 7-14 mph
wind: W 10-20 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
wind: SE 6-12 mph
wind: SE 7-14 mph
wind: WSW 3-6 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 68°/42° Normal high/low ............................ 72°/40° Record high ............................... 83° in 1947 Record low ................................. 27° in 1959 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.39” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.15”/2.81” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.42”
New Mexico weather
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
40
The following water statistics of May 2 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.761 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 8.820 City Wells: 0.279 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 10.860 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.255 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 34.7 percent of capacity; daily inflow 2.58 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
Santa Fe 65/39 Pecos 61/39
25
Albuquerque 71/49
25
87
56
412
Clayton 64/44
Pollen index
As of 5/2/2013 Trees ......................................... 27 Moderate Grass......................................... 10 Moderate Weeds....................................... 16 Moderate Other ............................................................ Total...........................................................53
25
Las Vegas 59/37
54
40
40
285
Clovis 68/45
54
60 60
Sunday’s rating ............................ Moderate Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 60/33
Española 69/48 Los Alamos 61/40 Gallup 67/39
Raton 61/35
64 84
666
Source:
60
25
285
180
Roswell 79/50
Ruidoso 66/47
25
70
Truth or Consequences 79/53 70
Las Cruces 80/55
70
54
380
Hobbs 73/51
285
Alamogordo 82/54
180
70
380
Carlsbad 81/52
State extremes
State cities City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 81/57 pc 72/50 pc 57/18 pc 75/48 pc 79/46 pc 58/37 pc 64/33 pc 65/33 pc 60/36 pc 67/40 pc 68/48 pc 84/55 s 71/49 pc 74/54 c 72/40 pc 72/46 pc 72/50 pc 73/45 s 82/58 s
Hi/Lo W 82/54 pc 71/49 t 55/30 t 81/52 pc 81/52 pc 57/34 t 60/34 t 64/44 t 59/36 pc 68/45 t 65/40 t 81/50 s 69/48 t 69/42 t 70/46 pc 67/39 t 68/37 t 73/51 t 80/55 s
Hi/Lo W 79/52 s 76/51 pc 63/31 pc 90/62 s 91/64 s 63/37 pc 71/39 pc 83/48 pc 63/35 s 83/52 pc 66/40 pc 81/51 pc 75/50 pc 72/41 pc 84/52 pc 69/39 pc 69/39 pc 86/53 pc 82/56 s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni
Hi/Lo 61/29 83/60 63/44 76/50 68/41 64/31 63/35 73/49 75/46 63/39 70/40 77/55 80/52 64/36 81/60 73/43 83/60 67/43 71/45
W pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc sh s pc pc
Hi/Lo W 59/37 t 80/53 s 61/40 t 73/49 t 69/46 t 61/35 t 54/31 t 69/43 t 79/50 pc 66/47 pc 68/45 t 75/48 s 76/49 t 60/33 t 79/53 pc 68/47 t 82/56 s 64/41 t 66/40 t
Hi/Lo W 69/41 pc 81/51 pc 68/41 pc 78/51 pc 84/52 pc 73/41 pc 62/32 pc 75/46 pc 90/59 s 71/48 s 82/49 pc 76/47 pc 79/51 pc 68/33 pc 80/54 pc 85/52 pc 83/59 s 71/43 pc 68/40 pc
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for May 6
Sunrise today ............................... 6:07 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:55 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 4:04 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 5:04 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:06 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 7:56 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 4:38 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 6:02 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:05 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 7:57 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 5:12 a.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 7:00 p.m. New
First
Full
Last
May 9
May 17
May 24
May 31
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 48/29 67/50 62/45 68/36 64/26 78/45 53/40 73/63 58/51 69/48 56/54 74/56 70/46 59/31 73/53 38/22 63/34 82/69 73/51 59/53 56/45 81/68 67/60
W pc t pc pc pc s s r r pc r pc pc c pc pc pc sh s sh c pc c
Hi/Lo 46/33 62/50 64/54 72/46 71/42 80/53 64/48 75/53 66/53 69/45 65/52 70/52 77/55 65/43 70/48 41/20 60/37 84/68 81/57 71/52 71/52 80/60 70/57
W s t c s s s pc c r s sh pc pc pc s c t pc s c pc pc c
Hi/Lo 50/37 74/53 68/57 75/48 77/49 79/49 68/53 73/54 70/51 71/44 73/52 71/53 84/62 70/42 74/51 44/23 58/34 84/67 87/59 75/53 74/56 76/61 71/54
W s pc r pc t pc pc t t pc sh pc s pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc s c
Set 7:23 p.m. 8:43 p.m. 7:32 p.m. 10:28 p.m. 6:02 a.m. 4:59 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013
National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles
Rise 5:53 a.m. 6:41 a.m. 5:56 a.m. 8:03 a.m. 7:03 p.m. 4:32 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
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 55/53 62/45 83/68 60/43 67/39 66/55 64/46 63/46 79/62 65/46 93/71 74/49 85/49 63/45 62/47 78/48 82/49 65/62 70/56 84/53 51/39 63/41 64/47
W r c pc pc pc pc s c pc pc pc pc s c sh pc s t t s sh pc pc
Hi/Lo 65/55 68/54 84/68 63/44 72/51 75/57 65/52 75/55 80/58 67/54 87/67 72/51 83/52 65/57 73/55 72/52 81/56 70/61 65/53 81/51 70/46 68/53 65/57
W c pc pc s pc pc pc pc s c pc c s sh pc pc s c pc s pc c sh
Hi/Lo 74/55 76/57 84/67 65/42 75/55 78/59 69/55 79/58 81/56 71/57 86/63 72/53 75/50 66/56 76/55 68/49 85/59 69/58 65/51 70/48 72/53 70/57 67/59
W sh pc s s s pc pc pc pc c s pc pc r pc pc s c c s pc c r
World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 97 ........................ Maricopa, AZ Sun. Low: 18 ...................... Angel Fire, NM
On May 6, 1975, near Omaha, Neb., a massive tornado killed three people and injured 133, while causing $150 million in damage.
Weather trivia™
How much does the Earth’s atmoQ: sphere weigh?
A: Approximately 5,600 trillion tons
Weather history
Newsmakers
Hi/Lo 63/43 88/63 77/68 97/84 64/52 81/54 70/48 64/52 68/50 95/68 88/74 84/61 61/45 63/54 66/43 79/61 79/70 79/72 80/62 72/61
W pc s r t s pc pc t s s t pc pc pc pc pc pc pc s c
Hi/Lo 67/51 84/65 90/71 97/80 72/57 94/60 72/52 62/50 70/50 93/67 86/74 84/61 60/47 61/47 63/45 72/61 86/63 83/75 79/60 77/64
W pc s t t s pc pc t s s t s s pc sh t s pc s c
Hi/Lo 74/57 81/63 89/73 97/81 72/59 90/61 75/57 62/46 63/51 94/69 86/74 84/60 64/50 55/46 71/50 73/61 86/63 83/76 79/61 78/63
W pc pc t t pc pc pc r s s pc s pc r pc t s c s pc
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
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 77/57 s 73/57 c 72/57 c 66/45 pc 68/46 s 63/54 c 75/45 s 75/54 c 78/55 c 81/52 s 85/51 pc 82/52 pc 79/54 s 81/52 s 79/54 s 54/48 sh 56/40 c 64/44 s 105/73 pc 107/76 s 107/78 s 68/52 pc 68/48 pc 73/57 pc 63/46 pc 64/52 c 69/52 t 88/72 s 76/67 sh 78/65 pc 72/61 t 68/55 sh 70/52 t 81/43 s 73/45 s 76/48 s 70/43 s 72/46 s 83/50 s 88/81 c 90/76 t 90/79 c 63/45 s 66/52 s 70/45 s 64/55 s 68/54 pc 70/54 pc 70/57 s 76/53 pc 65/47 s 69/52 s 72/53 s 69/51 s 68/55 pc 71/57 r 73/57 t 70/43 pc 68/47 c 71/47 c
Today’s talk shows
Keira Knightley says ‘oui’ to rocker James Righton Keira Knightley
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
PARIS — A French mayor says Oscar-nominated actress Keira Knightley has said “oui” to rocker James Righton in a small wedding ceremony in southern France. Aime Navello said Sunday the couple followed French tradition when he married them at the Mazan town hall on Saturday. Navello read the service in French and the couple responded in French and English. He said about 10 people were present. Righton is keyboard player for the rock group Klaxons. He and Knightley got engaged a year ago.
Mick Jagger
Rolling Stones launch tour with energetic set
Keith Richards
LOS ANGELES — The Rolling Stones must have passed through a time machine before taking the Staples Center stage to kick off their “50 and Counting” anniversary tour. Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts delivered a rousing set Friday night with the kind of youthful energy and musical verve they displayed decades ago. Their faces showed their age, but their performance did not, with a nonstop, twohour set packed with well-worn hits. The Associated Press
3:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Matt Lauer; Max Greenfield; Sophia Grace and Rosie. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show People who have issues with age disparity in relationships. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC The FOX Report With Shepard Smith 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Hannity MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show
8:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 E! E! News FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor HBO Real Time With Bill Maher Journalist Jeremy Scahill; actor Kal Penn; tax-reform advocate Mattie Duppler. TBS Conan Keith Urban; Guillermo Diaz. 10:00 p.m. KTEL Al Rojo Vivo CNN Piers Morgan Live Interviews newsmakers and celebrities. FNC Hannity MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Keith Urban; Guillermo Diaz. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Former professional athlete Magic Johnson; journalist Savannah Guthrie; Fall Out Boy performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actor John Krasinski; actress Kerry Washington; James Blake. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose
From Sin City to Club City The Associated Press
Sun and moon
Sun. High: 84 .................................. Deming Sun. Low 18 ................................ Angel Fire
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
By Hannah Dreier
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
285
10
Revelers dance to the music at the Surrender nightclub in Las Vegas in January. The rise of the Vegas superclub coincides with the decline of the town's gambling supremacy.
As gambling revenue drops, nightclubs reach highest profits
Today’s UV index
54 380
10
Water statistics
285
64
Farmington 69/42
Area rainfall
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.60” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.64” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/0.74” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/3.22” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.29”
Air quality index
KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Actress Edie Falco; Rod Stewart performs. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actress Isla Fisher; actor Jim Rash. 12:00 a.m. KASA Dish Nation E! Chelsea Lately Kat Dennings; Brad Wollack; Annie Lederman; Kurt Braunohler. FNC The Five 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Steve Martin; Jenna Fischer; Steve Martin and Edie Brickell perform. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show Jermaine’s daughter says there is no way he could be the father of a younger woman’s baby. CNN Piers Morgan Live I FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — To step into club XS at the Wynn Las Vegas is to enter the dreamscape of a modern artist with fetishes for gold and bronze and bodies in motion. A golden-plated frieze made from casts of nude women sits atop a shimmering staircase. Waves of electronic dance music grow louder with each downward step toward a pulsating, football field-sized club where lasers cut the air above thousands of dancers. The revelers take their cues from the famous DJs onstage who are known to surf the crowd in inflatable rafts, throw sheet cakes at clubbers’ faces and spray vintage champagne into their mouths. In Sin City, where over-thetop is always the sales pitch, lavish nightclubs featuring a heart-pounding party have become the backbone of a billion-dollar industry that is soaring while gambling revenue slips. “We learned a long time ago that in order to continue to attract people from around the world, we have to provide things that are hard to find anywhere else,” said Jim Murren, CEO of MGM Resorts International, which operates nine Strip hotel-casinos boasting their own dance scenes. “These clubs, if done correctly, are tremendous magnets.” A $100 million temple to revelry, XS is the top-earning nightclub in the country, joining six other Vegas venues in the top 10. Its estimated annual revenue hovers somewhere near $90 million, according to the trade publication Nightclub & Bar. The city now boasts more than 50 such clubs. New additions are coming all the time, including the five-story Hakkasan at the MGM Grand, which debuted last month, and Light at Mandalay Bay, Cirque du Soleil’s first foray into the disco business, open-
TV
top picks
1
7 p.m. on FOX Rihanna 777 Music superstar Rihanna is the subject of this concert documentary that takes a behind-the-scenes look at her globe-trotting tour that hit seven countries in seven days with seven shows to promote her seventh album.
2
8 p.m. on CW 90210 Naomi (AnnaLynne McCord) tries to protect Jordan’s (Robbie Jones, pictured) sister (Keke Palmer) when she gets into trouble. Silver’s (Jessica Stroup) doctor has some test results to share with her. Annie (Shenae Grimes) decides to go to Paris for a book tour to get over Liam (Matt
ing Memorial Day weekend. The rise of the Vegas superclub coincides with the decline of the town’s gambling supremacy. The tiny Chinese enclave of Macau surpassed the desert oasis as the world’s top gambling destination in 2006. Singapore is on track to claim the No. 2 spot. During the heart of the recession, when overall Strip revenues tumbled by 16 percent, nightclubs saw more profit than ever. By 2011, Las Vegas was clubbing all the way to the bank, with Strip beverage departments earning more than $1 billion, and casino tycoons began remaking the Strip into the club capital of the world. With extravagantly paid DJs, larger-than-life venues and billboard ads that stretch beyond the Strip to Hollywood Boulevard and Miami, casinos are trying to pull off a tricky balancing act: keeping the kitschy core that draws older generations while finding a way to make the city hip enough to attract a younger, big-spending set — emphasis on big-spending. Perhaps no place exemplifies the new culture on the glittery Strip better than XS. And for most wannabe Vegas party people, the night at XS starts in line. At XS, clubbers line up in a central hallway near the luxury stores Hermes and Chanel. Women pay $25 and men pay $55 just to get in, but pretty girls who out-dress the dress code are admitted for free. The door charge is mostly there to weed out people who won’t spend on drinks, said nightlife baron Sean Christie, managing parner of another Wynn club, Surrender. When it first opened in 2008, XS was lucky to be filled halfway to its 5,000-person capacity, even when featuring an act such as Tiesto, the world’s highest-paid DJ, according to Forbes, pulling down $250,000 a set and making $22 million a year. Now, the club may see 8,000 people come and go over the course of a night. That’s nearly half of the capacity of Madison Square Garden. Most casinos have also incorporated nightclubs during the day — a way to infuse the dance scene into an otherwise typical summer pool party. Lanter). Adrianna (Jessica Lowndes) performs after Fall Out Boy at a big event that ends in chaos in the new episode “Scandal Royale.” 8 p.m. on LIFE Dear Mom, Love Cher The movie star and music icon salutes her roots in this delightful special that began as a birthday gift from Cher to her still-stunning mother and evolved into a funny and fascinating portrait of a family of women unafraid to blaze their own trail. Cher’s half sister Georganne and sons Chaz Bono and Elijah Blue Allman appear, and the hour also features a new duet performed by the singer and her mom. 9 p.m. on CBS Hawaii Five-0 The body of a girl kidnapped 10 years earlier resurfaces, sending Five-0 on the hunt for her abductors, who have taken another victim. Kono (Grace Park) asks Catherine (Michelle Borth) for a favor that could have negative consequences for her relationship with Adam (Ian Anthony Dale) in the new episode “Ho’ opio” — Hawaiian for “to take captive.” 9 p.m. on NBC Revolution Miles (Billy Burke) remains suspicious of Neville (Giancarlo Esposito), who swears they’re on the same side. Charlie, Jason and Nora (Tracy Spiridakos, JD Pardo, Daniella Alonso) attempt a risky river rescue of Dr. Stephen Camp (Timothy Busfield) to keep Monroe (David Lyons) from getting his hands on anthrax. Militia forces kidnap Rachel and Aaron (Elizabeth Mitchell, Zak Orth) in the new episode “The Love Boat.”
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MONDAY, MAY 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 In brief B-3 Hockey B-3 Baseball B-4 Treasures B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
Shake it off: Penguins come back after early deficit against Islanders. Page B-3
B
PREP BASEBALL AND SOFTBALL
State seedings announced, with Horsemen at No. 6 By Will Webber The New Mexican
The Horsemen got a break, the Bobcats got a boost and the Demonettes got a whole lot of nothing. Selection Sunday — the high school baseball and softball version — came and went minus some of the usual drama associated with a more popular
GOLF
Tour rookie Ernst wins Wells Fargo in playoff
basketball show. What it offered in exchange was the realization that life on the diamond over the next two weeks leans heavily toward the favorites from other parts of the state. Minus the No. 2 seed earned by McCurdy in the Class A baseball bracket, Sunday’s selection process
— which was streamed live over the Internet — was largely a hold-yourbreath kind of experience for many of Northern New Mexico’s programs. Starting in Class AAA baseball, St. Michael’s followed last season’s No. 1 seed by landing the No. 6 spot this time around. That might seem like an insult to some Horsemen fans,
but dropping that far comes with the knowledge that St. Michael’s can avoid top seed Albuquerque Hope Christian until the state championship game in mid-May. Hope swept the Horsemen in three meetings during District 5AAA play. The Huskies were the easy choice for No. 1, followed in order by Lovington,
Silver, Las Vegas Robertson and Sandia Prep. Aside from Lovington, St. Michael’s crossed paths with every team seeded before it. Its combined record in those meetings was 3-5. The Horsemen will host No. 11 Taos in a best-of-three first round series
Please see seeDinGs, Page B-3
NBA PLAYOFFS THUNDER 93, GRIZZLIES 91
thundering through
By David Scott
The Charlotte, N.C., Observer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — On a day that looked like it would belong to one of golf’s biggest stars, a 22-yearold PGA Tour rookie named Derek Ernst walked away with the Wells Fargo Championship winner’s trophy Sunday. Ernst, who was in college at Nevada-Las Vegas a year ago and only made the tournament as an alternate, beat journeyman David Lynn on the first playoff hole to cap a rainy, chilly day that began for the players just after the sun came up at Quail Hollow Club. Winning was the last thing on Ernst’s Derek mind. “Never, really, Ernst at all,” Ernst said of how often that thought occurred to him Sunday. “I just stuck to my game. If I win, great. If I [finish] 10th, great.” The unlikely appearance of Ernst and Lynn in the playoff was even more surprising, given that superstar Phil Mickelson had appeared until the 16th hole to be positioning himself for his first victory at Quail Hollow. Mickelson led for much of the day, but never by more than one stroke. Finally, bogeys at Nos. 16 and 17 doomed him to a third-place finish, 1 over for the day and 7 under for the tournament. “I’m pretty bummed out,” said Mickelson. “I thought this was one I had in control.” Ernst and Lynn were already in the clubhouse, each with an 8-under 280, by the time Mickelson, who was playing in the final group and needed a birdie on No. 18 to be included in the playoff, had finished. Ernst, who started the day two strokes behind Mickelson and Nick Watney, made a 4-foot putt for birdie on the 18th to get to 8 under. Lynn’s chip-in from 68 feet for birdie on No. 16 got him there. Ernst and Lynn were on the putting green when Mickelson missed his putt for birdie on No. 18. They played in the same group, but didn’t know each other before Sunday. “I’d never heard of him,” said Lynn, who led the Masters for a while in April and finished second in last year’s PGA Championship. On the first playoff hole, Lynn’s drive off the 18th tee sailed left and nearly rolled into the creek that lines the fairway. Ernst’s sailed right down the middle. Lynn’s second shot found a bunker on the right side of the green and he got into more trouble when his third shot rolled to the other side of the green. That enabled Ernst to twoputt for his first win as a pro. Ernst was ranked 1,207th in the world when he was driving to Athens, Ga., last Monday to play in a Web.com tournament. He redirected to Charlotte when he received a phone call telling him Mark Wilson had withdrawn from the Wells Fargo and, as the fourth alternate, Ernst had a spot in the field. He played well in Thursday’s first round, tying for the lead with four others. He never strayed far from the lead over the next two days and was two strokes behind Mickelson and Watney entering the final round. Mickelson spent much of Sunday fending off challenges from players such as Watney, one of his playing partners who fell by the wayside with two bogeys on the front nine. Lee Westwood (72) and Ryan Moore (73) also were briefly tied with Mickelson.
Memphis Grizzlies forward Zach Randolph is guarded by Oklahoma City Thunder power forward Serge Ibaka during the first quarter Sunday of Game 1 of the Western Conference Semifinals. SUE OGROCKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Durant, Oklahoma City edge Grizzlies in final seconds of Game 1 By Jeff Latzke
The Associated Press
o
KLAHOMA CITY — Derek Fisher turned a tough situation for the Oklahoma City Thunder into the worst-case scenario for the Grizzlies. With the Thunder down by one in the final minute, Fisher poked the ball away from Memphis’ Mike Conley, springing three-time NBA scoring champion Kevin Durant into the open court with a chance to put Oklahoma City on top. Durant pulled up and connected on a jumper with 11.1 seconds left for the last of his 35 points, lifting the Thunder to a 93-91 victory over the Grizzlies on Sunday in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals. “I just wanted to get up the floor as quick as possible and find a shot,”
said Durant, who finished second in league MVP voting announced Sunday. “That was the only shot I could find and, by the grace of God, it went in.” Game 2 is Tuesday night in Oklahoma City. Thabo Sefolosha kept the Grizzlies from going back ahead, deflecting a pass that Conley was able to corral — but only after diving out of bounds. Reggie Jackson then hit a pair of free throws for a three-point lead, and Quincy Pondexter couldn’t force overtime after getting fouled while attempting a 3-pointer with 1.6 seconds left. Pondexter, a 72 percent career freethrow shooter, missed the first free throw. He made his second attempt before intentionally missing the third, but Durant swatted the rebound
away and Marc Gasol’s attempt at a buzzer-beater was late. “We couldn’t get stops. That’s why we lost,” said Gasol, who had 20 points and 10 rebounds. “We didn’t lose because of free throws.” Kevin Martin scored 25 for Oklahoma City, which trailed for much of the game but was able to avoid repeating its Game 1 loss from when these two teams met in the West semifinals two years ago. The Thunder were able to rally and win that series in seven. Fisher, a five-time NBA champion who only joined the Thunder after asking to be released by Dallas for family reasons earlier in the season, turned this game around with his defense. Conley had gotten past him on a drive to the basket when Fisher
reached in from behind and knocked the ball free. It was just the stop Oklahoma City needed. “He makes plays, whether it’s tipping the ball out and getting a steal or hitting the big shot to start the fourth,” Durant said. “Or just his leadership in the huddles and the locker room is big for us. We need that.” Zach Randolph chipped in 18 points and 10 rebounds for the Grizzlies, and Pondexter and Conley scored 13 apiece. As a team, Memphis went 14 for 24 on free throws. Oklahoma City, which was the league’s top foul shooting team with the third-best mark in NBA history, was 22 of 25. “Obviously, we have to make free throws, especially myself,” said
Please see nBa, Page B-3
James wins MVP, 1 vote shy of unanimously By Tim Reynolds
The Associated Press
MIAMI — LeBron James was at his best this season, and the voters tasked with selecting the NBA’s Most Valuable Player took notice. Every voter except one, that is. The NBA still does not have a unanimous MVP, though no one has come closer than James did this season. The Miami Heat star was presented with the Maurice Podoloff Trophy for the fourth time in his career on Sunday after collecting 120 of the 121 first-place votes, with
Carmelo Anthony of the New York Knicks picking up the lone remaining top choice. “It was probably a writer out of New York that didn’t give me that vote,” James said. “And we know the history between the Heat and the Knicks, so I get it.” A panel of 120 sports writers and broadcasters cast ballots in the NBA MVP voting, with a combined online fan vote also being taken into account. Shaquille O’Neal got every firstplace vote but one in the 1999-2000 season, when one person cast his
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Elizabeth Lauer, ehlauer@sfnewmexican.com
ballot for Allen Iverson — who finished seventh that year. This season, Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder finished second, well ahead of Anthony, who was third and didn’t even appear on nine of the ballots cast. James was the only player listed on all 121 ballots; Durant was omitted from two, according to the results released by the NBA. “I’ll take that vote,” Anthony said, adding that James was a deserving winner. For months, there really had only been two questions about this season’s MVP race: When will James
get the award, and would the results be unanimous? The first of those answers became known Friday, the other on Sunday, and even as he was on the dais to pick up the award the now-four-time MVP quickly started steering all of his attention back to the goal of helping the Heat win a second straight title. Miami hosts Chicago in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Monday night, when NBA Commissioner David Stern will present James with the trophy, largely just for the benefit of giving Heat fans a pregame reason to cheer.
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
HOCKEY Hockey
NHL PLayoffs first Round
Best of 7; x-if necessary EasTERN CoNfERENCE Pittsburgh 2, N.y. Islanders 1 sunday’s Game Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 4, OT Wednesday, May 1 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 0 friday, May 3 N.Y. Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 3 Tuesday, May 7 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Thursday, May 9 N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. x-saturday, May 11 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, TBD x-sunday, May 12 N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, TBD ottawa 2, Montreal 1 sunday’s Game Ottawa 6, Montreal 1 Thursday, May 2 Ottawa 4, Montreal 2 friday, May 3 Montreal 3, Ottawa 1 Tuesday, May 7 Montreal at Ottawa, 5 p.m. Thursday, May 9 Ottawa at Montreal, 5 p.m. x-saturday, May 11 Montreal at Ottawa, TBD x-sunday, May 12 Ottawa at Montreal, TBD Washington 2, N.y. Rangers 0 Thursday, May 2 Washington 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 saturday, May 4 Washington 1, N.Y. Rangers 0, OT Monday, May 6 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 5:30 p.m. x-friday, May 10 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 5:30 p.m. x-sunday, May 12 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, TBD x-Monday, May 13 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, TBD Boston 1, Toronto 1 Wednesday, May 1 Boston 4, Toronto 1 saturday, May 4 Toronto 4, Boston 2 Monday, May 6 Boston at Toronto, 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Boston at Toronto, 5 p.m. friday, May 10 Toronto at Boston, 5 p.m. x-sunday, May 12 Boston at Toronto, TBD x-Monday, May 13 Toronto at Boston, TBD WEsTERN CoNfERENCE Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 sunday’s Game Minnesota 3, Chicago 2, OT Tuesday, april 30 Chicago 2, Minnesota 1, OT friday, May 3 Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Tuesday, May 7 Chicago at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 9 Minnesota at Chicago, TBD x-saturday, May 11 Chicago at Minnesota, TBD x-sunday, May 12 Minnesota at Chicago, TBD anaheim 2, Detroit 1 Tuesday, april 30 Anaheim 3, Detroit 1 Thursday, May 2 Detroit 5, Anaheim 4, OT saturday, May 4 Anaheim 4, Detroit 0 Monday, May 6 Anaheim at Detroit, 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Detroit at Anaheim, 8 p.m. x-friday, May 10 Anaheim at Detroit, TBD x-sunday, May 12 Detroit at Anaheim, TBD san Jose 2, Vancouver 0 sunday’s Game Vancouver at San Jose Wednesday, May 1 San Jose 3, Vancouver 1 friday, May 3 San Jose 3, Vancouver 2, OT Tuesday, May 7 Vancouver at San Jose, 8 p.m. x-Thursday, May 9 San Jose at Vancouver, 8 p.m. x-saturday, May 11 Vancouver at San Jose, TBD x-Monday, May 13 San Jose at Vancouver, TBD st. Louis 2, Los angeles 1 Tuesday, april 30 St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1, OT Thursday, May 2 St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1 saturday, May 4 Los Angeles 1, St. Louis 0 Monday, May 6 St. Louis at Los Angeles, 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Los Angeles at St. Louis, TBD x-friday, May 10 St. Louis at Los Angeles, TBD x-Monday, May 13 Los Angeles at St. Louis, TBD
suMMaRIEs Wild 3, Blackhawks 2, oT
Chicago 1 0 1 0—2 Minnesota 1 0 1 1—3 first Period—1, Chicago, Oduya 1 (Kane, Hossa), 13:26. 2, Minnesota, Bouchard 1 (Clutterbuck, Brodziak), 18:30. Penalties— Stalberg, Chi (tripping), 10:27. second Period—None. Penalties—Falk, Min (roughing), 2:52; Brodziak, Min (highsticking), 9:01; Toews, Chi (holding), 10:27; Oduya, Chi (high-sticking, roughing), 17:35; Clutterbuck, Min (roughing), 17:35. Third Period—3, Minnesota, Parise 1 (Coyle), 3:09. 4, Chicago, Keith 1 (Kane, Sharp), 17:14. Penalties—None. First overtime—5, Minnesota, Zucker 1 (Cullen, Bouchard), 2:15. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Chicago 9-8-8-2—27. Minnesota 15-14-7-1—37. Power-play opportunities—Chicago 0 of 2; Minnesota 0 of 3. Goalies—Chicago, Crawford 2-1-0 (37 shots-34 saves). Minnesota, Harding 1-2-0 (27-25). a—19,238 (17,954). T—2:56. Referees—Tom Kowal, Brad Watson. Linesmen—Mark Wheler, Steve Miller.
Penguins 5, Islanders 4 (oT)
Pittsburgh 3 1 0 1—5 N.y. Islanders 2 0 2 0—4 first Period—1, N.Y. Islanders, Moulson 2 (Okposo, Visnovsky), 1:43. 2, N.Y. Islanders, Cizikas 1 (Grabner), 5:41. 3, Pittsburgh, Iginla 1 (Letang, Crosby), 13:18 (pp). 4, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 1 (Malkin, Letang), 13:37 (pp). 5, Pittsburgh, Pa.Dupuis 3 (Crosby, Kunitz), 19:00. Penalties—Cooke, Pit (slashing), 2:23; Glass, Pit (roughing), 7:58; Streit, NYI (hooking), 12:21; Hamonic, NYI (tripping), 12:55. second Period—6, Pittsburgh, Murray 1 (Malkin, P.Martin), 17:10. Penalties— Cooke, Pit (roughing), 9:20; Carkner, NYI (interference), 9:20; M.Martin, NYI (holding), 17:51. Third Period—7, N.Y. Islanders, Okposo 2 (Nielsen), 5:31 (sh). 8, N.Y. Islanders, Tavares 1 (Bailey), 10:48. Penalties—Strait, NYI (hooking), 3:50; Iginla, Pit (tripping), 11:19. First overtime—9, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 2 (Crosby, P.Martin), 8:44 (pp). Penalties— Strait, NYI (holding), 8:11. shots on Goal—Pittsburgh 8-8-3-6—25. N.Y. Islanders 13-8-13-2—36. Power-play opportunities—Pittsburgh 3 of 5; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 3. Goalies—Pittsburgh, Fleury 2-1-0 (36 shots-32 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Nabokov 1-2-0 (25-20). a—16,170 (16,234). T—2:55.
senators 6, Canadiens 1
Montreal 1 0 0—1 ottawa 1 1 4—6 first Period—1, Ottawa, Alfredsson 1 (Gonchar, Karlsson), 5:58 (pp). 2, Montreal, Bourque 2 (Plekanec, Gionta), 14:34 (pp). Penalties—Cowen, Ott (roughing), 3:24; Pacioretty, Mon (slashing), 4:07; Gorges, Mon (hooking), 5:39; Condra, Ott (tripping), 11:31; Bourque, Mon (roughing), 12:04; Subban, Mon (roughing), 12:04; Phillips, Ott (roughing), 12:04; Methot, Ott (roughing), 12:04; Neil, Ott (roughing), 14:10; Pageau, Ott (slashing), 16:05. second Period—3, Ottawa, Pageau 1 (Gonchar, Methot), 4:40. Penalties—Subban, Mon (high-sticking), 4:40; Cowen, Ott (slashing), 10:47; Subban, Mon (hooking), 12:35. Third Period—4, Ottawa, Pageau 2 (Neil, Cowen), 1:18. 5, Ottawa, Turris 1 (Alfredsson, Karlsson), 7:00. 6, Ottawa, Silfverberg 2 (Michalek), 7:08 (pp). 7, Ottawa, Pageau 3 (Condra, Alfredsson), 18:02 (pp). Penalties—Bourque, Mon (tripping), 4:23; Gonchar, Ott (tripping), 4:23; Bouillon, Mon, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Armstrong, Mon, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Moen, Mon, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; White, Mon, served by Ryder, minor-major-misconduct (slashing, fighting), 7:04; Tinordi, Mon, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Phillips, Ott, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Neil, Ott, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Kassian, Ott, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Smith, Ott, major-game misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Cowen, Ott, major-misconduct (fighting), 7:04; Gorges, Mon (charging), 8:31; Bourque, Mon (roughing), 8:31; Subban, Mon (instigatorface shield, instigator, fighting), 8:31; Turris, Ott, major (fighting), 8:31; Conacher, Ott (roughing), 8:31; Prust, Mon (roughing), 8:43; Plekanec, Mon (cross-checking), 10:31; Pageau, Ott (cross-checking), 10:31; Conacher, Ott (cross-checking), 12:48; Prust, Mon (elbowing), 16:58; Gallagher, Mon, major (fighting), 16:58; Conacher, Ott, major (fighting), 16:58; Bourque, Mon (slashing, cross-checking), 19:42. shots on Goal—Montreal 12-11-11—34. Ottawa 11-10-9—30. Power-play opportunities—Montreal 1 of 5; Ottawa 3 of 10. Goalies—Montreal, Price 1-2-0 (30 shots24 saves). Ottawa, Anderson 2-1-0 (34-33). a—20,249 (19,153). T—2:49.
LaTE suMMaRIEs Capitals 1, Rangers 0 (oT)
N.y. Rangers 0 0 0 0—0 Washington 0 0 0 1—1 first Period—None. Penalties—Brouwer, Was (interference), 5:19; Dorsett, NYR (highsticking), 15:58; Zuccarello, NYR (roughing), 19:10; Green, Was (roughing), 19:10. second Period—None. Penalties— Dorsett, NYR (diving), 5:28; Ward, Was (interference), 5:28. Third Period—None. Penalties—Brouwer, Was (slashing), 16:16. First overtime—1, Washington, Green 1 (Ribeiro, Ovechkin), 8:00 (pp). Penalties— Oleksy, Was (delay of game), 1:51; McDonagh, NYR (delay of game), 7:09. shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 7-12-50—24. Washington 12-13-5-8—38. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 0 of 3; Washington 1 of 2. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 0-2-0 (38 shots-37 saves). Washington, Holtby 2-0-0 (24-24). a—18,506 (18,506). T—2:58. Referees—Eric Furlatt, Francois St. Laurent. Linesmen—Darren Gibbs, Pierre Racicot.
LEaDERs
PLayoffs / Through May 4 scoring GP G Ryan Getzlaf, Anh 3 2 David Krejci, Bos 2 1 Evgeni Malkin, Pit 2 1 Jarome Iginla, Pit 2 0 Pascal Dupuis, Pit 2 2 Nick Bonino, Anh 3 2 Dan Boyle, SJ 2 1 Damien Brunner, Det 3 1 Saku Koivu, Anh 3 1 Bobby Ryan, Anh 3 1 Teemu Selanne, Anh 3 1 Patrick Kane, Chi 2 0 Milan Lucic, Bos 2 0 Joe Pavelski, SJ 2 0 38 tied with 2 pts. Goal scoring GP Bryan Bickell, CHI 2 Nick Bonino, ANA 3 Johnny Boychuk, BOS 2 Sidney Crosby, PIT 1 Pascal Dupuis, PIT 2 Johan Franzen, DET 3 Michael Frolik, CHI 2 Brendan Gallagher, MTL 2 Ryan Getzlaf, ANA 3 assists GP Jarome Iginla, PIT 2 Patrick Kane, CHI 2 David Krejci, BOS 2 Milan Lucic, BOS 2 Evgeni Malkin, PIT 2 Joe Pavelski, SJ 2 Dan Boyle, SJ 2
Goalie Leaders
a 2 3 3 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3
PLayoffs / saturday, May 4, 2013 Goals against GPI MINs Ga Braden Holtby, WSH 2 128 1 Brian Elliott, STL 3 193 3 Jonathan Quick, LA 3 192 4 Corey Crawford, CHI 2 137 3 Antti Niemi, SJ 2 125 3 Kevin Poulin, NYI 1 38 1 Henrik Lundqvist, NYR 2 126 4 Jonas Hiller, ANA 3 181 6 Marc-Andre Fleury, PIT2 119 4 Craig Anderson, OTT 2 119 5 Carey Price, MTL 2 119 5 Tuukka Rask, BOS 2 118 5 Josh Harding, MIN 2 136 6 Roberto Luongo, VAN 2 124 6 James Reimer, TOR 2 120 6 Jimmy Howard, DET 3 180 10 Evgeni Nabokov, NYI 2 82 7
PTs 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 G 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 a 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 aVG 0.47 0.93 1.25 1.31 1.44 1.58 1.90 1.99 2.02 2.52 2.52 2.54 2.65 2.90 3.00 3.33 5.12
BASKETBALL BasketBall NBa PLayoffs
Best-of-7; x-if necessary
Conference semifinals
EasTERN CoNfERENCE Miami vs. Chicago Monday, May 6 Chicago at Miami, 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Chicago at Miami, 5 p.m. friday, May 10 Miami at Chicago, 6 p.m. Monday, May 13 Miami at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 15 Chicago at Miami, TBA x-friday, May 17 Miami at Chicago, TBA x-sunday, May 19 Chicago at Miami, TBA Indiana 1, New york 0 sunday’s Game Indiana 102, New York 95 Tuesday, May 7 Indiana at New York, 5 p.m. saturday, May 11 New York at Indiana, 6 p.m. Tuesday, May 14 New York at Indiana, TBA x-Thursday, May 16 Indiana at New York, 6 p.m. x-saturday, May 18 New York at Indiana, TBA x-Monday, May 20 Indiana at New York, 6 p.m. WEsTERN CoNfERENCE san antonio vs. Golden state Monday, May 6 Golden State at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 8 Golden St. at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. friday, May 10 San Antonio at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. sunday, May 12 San Antonio at Golden State, 1:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, May 14 Golden State at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 16 San Antonio at Golden State, TBA x-sunday, May 19 Golden State at San Antonio, TBA oklahoma City 1, Memphis 0 sunday’s Game Oklahoma City 93, Memphis 91 Tuesday, May 7 Memphis at Oklahoma City, 7:30 p.m. saturday, May 11 Oklahoma City at Memphis, 3 p.m. Monday, May 13 Oklahoma City at Memphis, 7:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 15 Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA x-friday, May 17 Oklahoma City at Memphis, TBA x-sunday, May 19 Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA
BoxsCoREs Pacers 102, Knicks 95
INDIaNa (102) George 5-14 7-8 19, West 8-15 4-5 20, Hibbert 6-9 2-2 14, Hill 5-17 2-2 14, Stephenson 5-9 1-3 11, T.Hansbrough 3-6 2-2 8, Augustin 5-6 2-4 16, Young 0-0 0-0 0, Mahinmi 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-76 20-26 102. NEW yoRK (95) Anthony 10-28 6-6 27, Shumpert 4-11 2-2 11, Chandler 2-2 0-0 4, Felton 8-12 1-1 18, Prigioni 0-1 0-0 0, Smith 4-15 7-10 17, Martin 5-8 2-4 12, Kidd 0-1 0-0 0, Copeland 2-3 0-0 6, Camby 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-81 18-23 95. Indiana 22 30 29 21—102 New york 27 19 19 30—95 3-Point Goals—Indiana 8-23 (Augustin 4-5, George 2-6, Hill 2-9, West 0-1, Stephenson 0-2), New York 7-19 (Copeland 2-3, Smith 2-6, Felton 1-1, Anthony 1-4, Shumpert 1-4, Kidd 0-1). Fouled Out—George, Chandler. Rebounds—Indiana 54 (Stephenson 13), New York 42 (Anthony 11). Assists— Indiana 21 (Hill 6), New York 15 (Prigioni 6). Total Fouls—Indiana 21, New York 21. A—19,033 (19,763).
Thunder 93, Grizzlies 91
MEMPHIs (91) Prince 4-10 0-2 9, Randolph 7-16 4-5 18, Gasol 8-14 4-7 20, Conley 5-15 2-3 13, Allen 1-5 1-1 3, Dooling 0-2 0-0 0, Arthur 1-3 0-0 2, Bayless 4-7 0-0 10, Pondexter 4-8 2-5 13, Daye 1-2 1-1 3. Totals 35-82 14-24 91. oKLaHoMa CITy (93) Durant 13-26 9-10 35, Ibaka 1-10 3-4 5, Perkins 1-6 0-0 2, Jackson 4-8 4-4 12, Sefolosha 2-5 0-0 4, Martin 8-14 6-7 25, Collison 1-3 0-0 2, Fisher 3-7 0-0 8, Thabeet 0-0 0-0 0, Liggins 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-80 22-25 93. Memphis 16 30 27 18—91 oklahoma City 14 33 17 29—93 3-Point Goals—Memphis 7-19 (Pondexter 3-5, Bayless 2-4, Prince 1-4, Conley 1-5, Dooling 0-1), Oklahoma City 5-15 (Martin 3-5, Fisher 2-3, Liggins 0-1, Perkins 0-1, Sefolosha 0-1, Ibaka 0-1, Jackson 0-1, Durant 0-2). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Memphis 57 (Gasol, Randolph 10), Oklahoma City 50 (Durant 15). Assists—Memphis 13 (Conley, Gasol, Pondexter 3), Oklahoma City 13 (Durant 6). Total Fouls—Memphis 22, Oklahoma City 22. Technicals—Oklahoma City defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls—Collison. A—18,203 (18,203).
LEaDERs
PLayoffs / Through saTuRDay, May 4, 2013 scoring G fG fT Pts avg Durant, OKC 6 64 55 195 32.5 Anthony, NYK 6 61 44 175 29.2 Harden, HOU 6 45 53 158 26.3 James, MIA 4 37 21 98 24.5 Curry, GOL 6 51 21 146 24.3 Paul, LAC 6 49 33 137 22.8 Lopez, Bro 7 58 39 156 22.3 Parker, SAN 4 35 18 89 22.3 Lawson, DEN 6 48 28 128 21.3 Randolph, MEM 6 50 25 125 20.8 Williams, Bro 7 45 37 144 20.6 Green, BOS 6 37 38 122 20.3 Pierce, BOS 6 39 26 115 19.2 6 40 29 113 18.8 Jack, GOL George, IND 6 33 39 112 18.7 Parsons, HOU 6 42 9 109 18.2 Iguodala, DEN 6 38 18 108 18.0 assists G ast avg Curry, GOL 6 56 9.3 Williams, Bro 7 59 8.4 Conley, MEM 6 50 8.3 Lawson, DEN 6 48 8.0 Jack, GOL 6 42 7.0 James, MIA 4 27 6.8 Parker, SAN 4 26 6.5 Paul, LAC 6 38 6.3 Gasol, LAL 4 25 6.3 Durant, OKC 6 36 6.0
TENNIS teNNIs
Golf GOLF
auto AUTO
sunday at Caja Magica Madrid, spain Purse: Men, $5.6 million, (WT1000); Women, $5.3 million (Premier) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Men first Round Fernando Verdasco, Spain, def. David Goffin, Belgium, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Gilles Simon (16), France, def. Julien Benneteau, France, 2-6, 7-5, 6-3. Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, 6-4, 7-6 (3). Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Bernard Tomic, Australia, 6-3, 6-2. Pablo Andujar, Spain, def. Marin Cilic (10), Serbia, 6-7 (6), 6-4, 6-1. Women first Round Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-3, 6-3. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, def. Caroline Wozniacki (10), Denmark, 6-2, 6-4. Angelique Kerber (6), Germany, def. Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Dominika Cibulkova, Slovakia, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-2. Marion Bartoli (14), France, def. Elena Vesnina, Russia, 6-3, 3-0, retired. Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, 7-6 (5), 6-1. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain, def. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, 6-2, 7-5. Kaia Kanepi, Estonia, def. Flavia Pennetta, Italy, 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-2. Agnieszka Radwanska (4), Poland, def. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, 6-2, 6-4. Sorana Cirstea, Romania, def. Ayumi Morita, Japan, 3-0, retired. Petra Kvitova (8), Czech Republic, def. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, 4-6, 7-5, 6-4. Ana Ivanovic (16), Serbia, def. Bethanie Mattek-Sands, United States, 6-7 (10), 6-3, 6-2. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa, def. Jelena Jankovic, Serbia, 6-7 (1), 6-3, 6-3. Madison Keys, United States, def. Li Na (5), China, 6-3, 6-2. Nadia Petrova (11), Russia, def. Camila Giorgi, Italy, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, def. Zheng Jie, China, 6-2, 6-3. Maria Kirilenko (13), Russia, def. Klara Zakopalova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 2-1, retired. Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, def. Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 7-5. Roberta Vinci (12), Italy, def. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 6-1, 1-6, 6-2. Doubles Women first Round Janette Husarova, Slovakia, and Sabine Lisicki, Germany, def. Lisa Raymond, United States, and Laura Robson, Britain, 7-5, 6-1. Liga Dekmeijere, Latvia, and Olga Kalashnikova, Georgia, def. Julia Goerges, Germany, and Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, 7-5, 6-3.
sunday at Quail Hollow Club Charlotte, N.C. Purse: $6.7 million yardage: 7,492; Par: 72 final x-won on first playoff hole x-Drk Ernst (500), $1,206,000 67-71-72-70—280 David Lynn (300), $723,600 71-68-71-70—280 Phil Micklson (190), $455,600 68-67-73-73—281 Rbrt Krlsson (123), $294,800 69-72-69-72—282 Lee Wstwood (123), $294,800 70-68-72-72—282 Ryan Moore (89), $216,913 67-75-68-73—283 Kyle Stanley (89), $216,913 74-68-73-68—283 Kvin Strelman (89), $216,913 68-72-71-72—283 Bo Van Pelt (89), $216,913 74-70-68-71—283 Ross Fisher (64), $148,517 70-71-73-70—284 Chrls Hwell III (64), $148,517 72-72-69-71—284 Rory McIlroy (64), $148,517 67-71-73-73—284 Vaughn Taylor (64), $148,517 70-72-71-71—284 Brian Harman (64), $148,517 70-70-71-73—284 Nick Watney (64), $148,517 67-70-71-76—284 Sergio Garcia (53), $97,150 72-68-72-73—285 D.H. Lee (53), $97,150 72-71-69-73—285 Luke List (53), $97,150 71-75-71-68—285 George McNeill (53), $97,150 69-68-72-76—285 Hnrk Norlander (53), $97,150 74-70-69-72—285 D.A. Points (53), $97,150 71-69-71-74—285 Scott Gardiner (47), $64,320 70-67-76-73—286 John Merrick (47), $64,320 74-71-68-73—286 John Rollins (47), $64,320 69-74-72-71—286 John Senden (47), $64,320 70-73-67-76—286 Jimmy Walker (47), $64,320 71-72-73-70—286 Robert Allenby (42), $47,570 76-70-71-70—287 Brian Davis (42), $47,570 72-74-69-72—287 Rbert Garrigus (42), $47,570 67-72-75-73—287 Lucas Glover (42), $47,570 68-71-73-75—287 Shawn Stefani (42), $47,570 69-73-72-73—287
sunday at Talladega superspeedway Talladega, ala. Lap length: 2.66 miles (start position in parentheses) 1. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 192 laps, 78.2 rating, 47 points, $373,108. 2. (31) David Gilliland, Ford, 192, 81.6, 42, $235,153. 3. (1) Carl Edwards, Ford, 192, 103.5, 42, $207,720. 4. (14) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 192, 86.7, 40, $155,620. 5. (8) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 192, 119, 40, $176,426. 6. (34) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 192, 92.7, 0, $146,048. 7. (2) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 192, 107.4, 38, $155,540. 8. (6) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 192, 132.7, 38, $154,906. 9. (36) Scott Speed, Ford, 192, 68.4, 36, $107,115. 10. (18) Aric Almirola, Ford, 192, 103.3, 35, $146,226. 11. (9) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 192, 61.2, 34, $149,716. 12. (27) David Stremme, Toyota, 192, 83.2, 32, $117,663.
aTP-WTa TouR Mutua Madrid open
Portugal open
sunday at Estadio Nacional oeiras, Portugal Purse: Men, $609,300 (WT250); Women, $220,000 (Intl.) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Men Championship Stanislas Wawrinka (2), Switzerland, def. David Ferrer (1), Spain, 6-1, 6-4. Doubles Men Championship Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, and Scott Lipsky (3), United States, def. Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and Jean-Julien Rojer (1), Netherlands, 6-3, 4-6, 10-7.
aTP WoRLD TouR BMW open
sunday at MTTC Iphitos Munich Purse: $609,300 (WT250) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Championship Tommy Haas (3), Germany, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (4), Germany, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Doubles Championship Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, and Dmitry Tursunov, Russia, def. Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, and Eric Butorac, United States, 6-1, 6-4.
SOCCER socceR
NoRTH aMERICa Major League soccer
East W L T Pts Gf Ga New York 5 4 2 17 16 13 Kansas City 5 3 2 17 14 8 Montreal 5 1 2 17 11 7 Houston 4 2 2 14 12 9 Columbus 3 3 3 12 12 8 Philadelphia 3 3 3 12 12 14 New England 2 3 3 9 4 6 Toronto 1 4 4 7 10 13 Chicago 2 5 1 7 6 14 D.C. United 1 6 1 4 4 13 West W L T Pts Gf Ga Dallas 6 1 2 20 15 9 Portland 3 1 5 14 14 11 Los Angeles 4 1 2 14 12 4 Salt Lake 4 4 2 14 9 9 Colorado 3 4 3 12 8 9 Chivas USA 3 4 2 11 12 15 San Jose 2 3 5 11 10 13 Vancouver 2 4 3 9 9 13 Seattle 1 3 3 6 5 7 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. sunday’s Games Kansas City 4, Chivas USA 0 Houston at Los Angeles saturday’s Games New York 1, Columbus 0 Philadelphia 2, Seattle 2, tie San Jose 2, Montreal 2, tie Colorado 1, Toronto 0 Salt Lake 2, Vancouver 0 Wednesday, May 8 Houston at D.C. United, 5 p.m. Montreal at New York, 5:30 p.m. Salt Lake at New England, 6 p.m. Seattle at Kansas City, 6:30 p.m. Portland at Dallas, 7 p.m. Toronto at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.
PGa TouR Wells fargo Championship
CHaMPIoNs TouR Champions
sunday at The Woodlands CC The Woodlands, Texas Purse: $1.8 million yardage: 7,002; Par 72 final (x-note won on third hole of playoff) x-E.Toledo (270), $270,000 72-71-67—210 M. Goodes (144), $144,000 69-69-72—210 G. Sauers (144), $144,000 70-66-74—210 M. Clcvecchia (96), $96,300 75-69-69—213 L. Roberts (96), $96,300 72-69-72—213 Jay Haas (68), $68,400 73-75-67—215 Barry Lane (68), $68,400 77-67-71—215 John Cook (46), $45,600 73-72-71—216 David Eger (46), $45,600 75-70-71—216 Dan Forsman (46), $45,600 76-71-69—216 Tom Kite (46), $45,600 76-70-70—216 M. O’Meara (46), $45,600 73-71-72—216 Jeff Sluman (46), $45,600 72-76-68—216 Chien Soon Lu, $33,300 75-71-71—217 Hal Sutton, $33,300 71-74-72—217 Michael Allen, $27,900 71-74-73—218 Jay Don Blake, $27,900 75-71-72—218 Bart Bryant, $27,900 75-74-69—218 Steve Elkington, $27,900 73-74-71—218
LPGa TouR Kingsmill Championship
sunday at Kingsmill (River Course) Williamsburg, Va. Purse: $1.3 million yardage: 6,340; Par: 71 final (x-won on second round of playoff) x-Cristie Kerr, $195,000 66-71-66-69-272 S. Pettersen, $118,649 68-69-68-67—272 A. Jutanugarn, $76,32764-71-73-66—274 Ilhee Lee, $76,327 69-69-69-67—274 A. Stanford, $48,720 68-68-70-69—275 Stacy Lewis, $48,720 68-68-69-70—275 Inbee Park, $36,702 68-72-69-67—276 So Yeon Ryu, $32,156 67-71-73-68—279 Gerina Piller, $26,525 72-71-71-66—280 A. Nordqvist, $26,525 70-72-70-68—280 Sandra Gal, $26,525 68-69-73-70—280 P. Creamer, $20,137 69-70-74-68—281 Na Yeon Choi, $20,137 69-73-70-69—281 Amy Yang, $20,137 69-72-71-69—281 C. Hedwall, $20,137 68-73-70-70—281 Katie Burnett, $20,137 68-70-71-72—281 A. Walshe, $16,154 69-70-74-69—282 Chella Choi, $16,154 70-73-68-71—282 Lizette Salas, $16,154 72-71-65-74—282
EuRoPEaN TouR Volvo China open
sunday at Binhai Lakes Golf Club Tianjin, China Purse: $3.24 million yardage: 7,667; Par: 72 final Brett Rumford, Aus 68-67-69-68—272 Mikko Ilonen, Fin 69-63-73-71—276 Victor Dubuisson, Fra 71-72-66-68—277 Rbrt-Jn Drksen, Holland66-70-73-69—278 Ricardo Santos, Por 70-72-68-69—279 Pablo Larrazabal, Esp 71-66-69-73—279 Andreas Harto, Den 72-71-70-67—280
WEB.CoM TouR stadion Classic
sunday at The university of Georgia Golf Course athens, Ga. Purse: $600,000 yardage: 7,253; Par: 71 The final round was canceled by rain final Brendon Todd, $108,000 66-70-69—205 Tim Wilkinson, $64,800 67-69-70—206 Nick Rousey, $40,800 72-69-66—207 Alexandre Rocha, $28,800 68-72-68—208 Woody Austin, $21,900 71-68-70—209 M. Angel Carballo, $21,90072-66-71—209 Michael Putnam, $21,900 67-68-74—209 Ben Martin, $16,200 69-72-69—210
NasCaR sPRINT CuP aaron’s 499
TRANSACTIONS tRaNsactIoNs BasEBaLL american League
CLEVELAND INDIANS — Sent RHP Blake Wood to Akron (EL) for a rehab assignment. Designated OF Ezequiel Carrera for assignment. Recalled LHP Scott Barnes from Columbus (IL). MINNESOTA TWINS — Sent RHP Cole De Vries to Fort Myers (FSL) for a rehab assignment. TEXAS RANGERS — Sent LHP Martin Perez to Frisco (TL) for a rehab assignment.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Sent RHP Kyuji Fujikawa to Iowa (PCL) for a rehab assignment. COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned RHP Tyler Chatwood and INF Ryan Wheeler to Colorado Springs (PCL). Reinstated RHP Jhoulys Chacin and INF Todd Helton from the 15-day DL. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Placed SS Hanley Ramirez on the 15-day DL. Recalled SS Dee Gordon from Albuquerque (PCL). MIAMI MARLINS — Placed OF Austin Kearns on the bereavement list. Assigned INF Nick Green outright to New Orleans (PCL). Recalled C Kyle Skipworth from New Orleans. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Tim Dillard on a minor league contract.
american association
AMARILLO SOX — Signed C Jacob Mendiola. FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Signed OF Nick Akins. SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS — Signed OF Palmer Karr. SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Signed RHP Chris Green.
BasKETBaLL National Basketball association
BROOKLYN NETS — Announced coach P.J. Carlesimo will not return next season.
fooTBaLL National football League
MIAMI DOLPHINS — Signed OT Tyson Clabo and LB David Hinds.
THISDate DATE oNON tHIs May 6
1991 — Sergei Bubka of the Soviet Union breaks his world outdoor pole vault record and Seppo Raty of Finland smashes the world javelin record during the Toto International Super Track and Field Meet in Japan. Bubka clears 19 feet, 11 inches, breaking his outdoor record of 19-101/2. Raty hurls the javelin 301 feet, 9 inches, breaking the world record of 298-6 set. 1994 — Lennox Lewis stops Phil Jackson in the eighth round to retain his WBC heavyweight championship in Atlantic City, N.J. 1996 — The Seattle SuperSonics make a playoff-record 20 3-pointers, including 13 in a row, to beat the Houston Rockets 105-101. 1998 — Rookie Kerry Wood ties the major league record with 20 strikeouts in a nine-inning game, pitching a one-hitter to lead the Chicago Cubs over the Houston Astros 2-0. 2001 — Scott Dixon, a 20-year-old rookie, becomes the youngest winner in major open-wheel racing when he holds off Kenny Brack by 0.366 seconds to capture the CART Lehigh Valley Grand Prix. 2005 — Chicago, with a 94-91 loss to Washington, becomes the ninth NBA team to lose a best-of-seven playoff series after winning the first two games. 2006 — Barbaro storms into the lead at the top of the stretch and wins the Kentucky Derby victory convincingly. Barbaro, ridden by Edgar Prado, wins his sixth consecutive race 61/2 lengths ahead of Bluegrass Cat and is the sixth undefeated winner of the Derby. 2006 — Phoenix is the eighth team in NBA history to win a series after trailing 3-1 with a 121-90 victory over Los Angeles Lakers in Game 7 of its Western Conference openinground series. 2010 — Johan Franzen scores a natural hat trick in a 3:26 span of the first period, scores a fourth goal in the third, and sets a Red Wings playoff record with six points as Detroit stays alive with a 7-1 rout of the San Jose Sharks in Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals. 2011 — James Hylton, at age 76, becomes the oldest driver to make the field in NASCAR’s top three series by qualifying for the Nationwide event at Darlington Raceway. Hylton surpasses his own mark for racing longevity set three years ago when the then-73-year-old started the Nationwide event at Daytona. 2012 — Dustin Brown scores two goals and the eighth-seeded Los Angeles Kings finish an improbable four-game sweep of the St. Louis Blues with a 3-1 victory, advancing to the conference finals. The Kings become the first No. 8 seed in NHL history to eliminate their conference’s top two seeds in the same postseason. After steamroll past top-seeded Vancouver and second-seeded St. Louis with eight wins in nine games.
SPORTS
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Seedings: ‘Soft’ schedule hurt Demonettes Continued from Page B-1 beginning Friday at the Christian Brothers Athletic Complex. All first-round matchups from AAA through AAAAA are best-of-three with all subsequent rounds following a single-elimination format. The Class AA tournament has 16 teams, but its first round — as is Class A’s — is single elimination. Fourth-seeded Robertson will host Shiprock. Other local teams in the AAA pool are No. 12 West Las Vegas (at Sandia Prep), No. 15 Santa Fe Indian School (at Lovington) and No. 16 Pojoaque Valley (at Hope). Pecos got what it hoped for in AA baseball with a first-round home game. Seeded No. 7 after holding off Santa Fe Prep and
Monte del Sol to capture the District 6AA title, the Panthers will host New Mexico Military Institute in the opening round. Prep was given the No. 13 seed and will travel to No. 4 Eunice. Monte del Sol is seeded 15th and must travel to Bayard to face former AAA juggernaut Cobre. The Indians are in their first season as a member of AA. The AAAA baseball tournament features just two teams out of 2AAAA. Runaway champion Los Alamos garnered the No. 8 seed and will host Aztec in a first-round series. Santa Fe High, Capital and Española Valley all, as expected, did not receive at-large bids. Bernalillo did, but as the No. 16 opposite top seed Piedra Vista. Santa Fe High’s softball team would have been happy with
any kind of seed. Instead the Demonettes (14-12) were likely one of the last teams left out of the 16-team field in Class AAAA. It was a bad sign for them when district champion Bernalillo was handed the No. 7 seed despite a solid regular season in which it was the final unbeaten team in the state. The Lady Spartans will host No. 10 Las Cruces Centennial while 2AAAA runner-up Los Alamos, seeded No. 12, heads to No. 5 Los Lunas. Santa Fe High head coach Sig Rivera suggested that his team’s undoing was its perceived soft schedule. The Demonettes did not win a single game against a team that reached the AAAA state tournament. They played only six games in nondistrict play
against AAAA and AAAAA schools, going 2-4 in those contests. In AAA, West Las Vegas and St. Michael’s landed the 5-6 seeds, respectively. The Lady Dons, who finished with the best record in the state at 22-4, will host No. 12 Santa Fe Indian. The Lady Braves’ inclusion in the field meant that all four schools in 5AAA made the playoffs. St. Michael’s (16-10) will remain in Santa Fe to entertain No. 11 Ruidoso later this week. Robertson is No. 9 and will travel to Lovington while No. 15 Pojoaque Valley heads to defending state champion Silver, the No. 2 seed. Pairings for the Class A/AA softball tournament will not be released until next weekend.
B-3
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules Today on TV
Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. MAjOR LEAguE BASEBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN — Atlanta at Cincinnati NBA 5 and 7:30 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, doubleheader, conference semifinals, Chicago at Miami and Golden State at San Antonio. NHL 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, Game 3, Washington at N.Y. Rangers 6 p.m. on CNBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, Game 4, Anaheim at Detroit 8 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, Game 4, St. Louis at Los Angeles SOCCER 12:55 p.m. on ESPN2 — Premier League, Stoke City at Sunderland
BASEBALL
NHL
Penguins shake off poor start to beat Islanders The Associated Press
UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Chris Kunitz scored his second power-play goal of the game 8:34 into overtime, Penguins 5 off a pass Islanders 4 from Sidney Crosby, and the Pittsburgh Penguins shook off an early deficit and a late blown lead to beat the New York Islanders 5-4 on Sunday in Game 3 of the first-round series. The Eastern Conference’s top-seeded team rode severe ups and downs in taking a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven matchup. Pittsburgh trailed 2-0 just 5:41 in but rallied to lead 3-2 before the first period was over. The comeback started with powerplay goals just 19 seconds apart by Jarome Iginla and Kunitz. The Penguins seemed in control in the third period, but New York erased a 4-2 deficit
on goals by Kyle Okposo and John Tavares. Pittsburgh will try to take a commanding 3-1 series lead Tuesday night on Long Island. Crosby, who had three assists in his second game back after missing a month because of a broken jaw, drew the decisive penalty against Brian Strait, who held the Penguins captain as he drove the net 33 seconds before the winning goal. Penguins coach Dan Bylsma used his timeout to rest his power-play unit, and it paid off. Crosby fed Kunitz in the slot for a hard shot that beat goalie Evgeni Nabokov to win it. WILD 3, BLACKHAWKS 2 (OT) In St. Paul, Minn., Jason Zucker scored at 2:15 of overtime to give Minnesota a victory over Chicago, pulling the Wild within 2-1 in the Western Conference quarterfinal series. Zach Parise scored for the Wild early in the third period, but Duncan Keith got one back for the Blackhawks with
In brief
2:46 left in regulation to force the second overtime in three games of this best-of-seven series. Game 4 is here on Tuesday night. Keith’s snap shot glanced off Wild defenseman Marco Scandella and past goalie Josh Harding to make the score 2-2. But after Matt Cullen ferociously chased the puck along the end boards in the opening action of overtime, Zucker swooped in to surprise Johnny Oduya as the Blackhawks defenseman was about to fight for possession with Cullen. Zucker’s bad-angle shot slipped past goalie Corey Crawford. SENATORS 6, CANADIENS 1 In Ottawa, Jean-Gabriel Pageau got his first NHL hat trick to lead Ottawa in a fightfilled victory over Montreal. The teams combined for 236 penalty minutes and nine players were given a game misconduct. The Senators have a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven series and Game 4 is Tuesday night in Ottawa.
Amezaga, Isotopes beat rival New Orleans
Fuego baseball team opens spring training The Santa Fe Fuego opened spring training Sunday at Fort Marcy Ballpark as the players and coaches gathered for the first time. The team, which finished last in its inaugural season in the independent Pecos League, returns with more than half a dozen players with experience on last year’s roster. The Fuego won’t need to wait long to take the field for the first time. Santa Fe will face Trinidad in an exhibition game Tuesday at noon at Brandt Park on the New Mexico Highlands University campus in Las Vegas. It will be one of three games hosted by NMHU on Tuesday. Raton and Las Vegas, two newcomers to the Pecos League this season, square off at 9 a.m., while Taos and Las Vegas take the field at 3 p.m. Santa Fe closes out its exhibition schedule on Saturday when its faces Taos at 1 p.m. at Pojoaque Valley High School. The Fuego’s regular season opener is set for May 15 in Taos.
Shortstop Alfred Amezaga was a double shy of the cycle, finishing 3-for-4 with a home run and triple in leading the Albuquerque Isotopes (17-13) to a 6-2 win over Pacific Coast League rival New Orleans on Sunday afternoon at Isotopes Park. Starting pitcher Blake Johnson (3-1, 4.94) kept Albuquerque in the game, holding the Zephyrs in check over his six innings. He allowed eight hits with two strikeouts. Relievers Steve Smith, Geison Aguasviva and Peter Moylan combined for three scoreless innings the rest of the way. Elian Herrera (3-for-5) and Tony Gwynn Jr. (2-for-4) helped by rallying from an early deficit. A solo home run by Gwynn tied the game 1-all, then Amezaga’s home run gave the Topes a 3-2 lead in the second inning. The teams wrap up their four-game series Monday with a 12:05 p.m. start.
No. 17 UNM cruises in MWC Championship The nationally ranked University of New Mexico baseball team wrapped up the Mountain West Conference regular season championship on Sunday, two full
The third period started out with the Senators leading 2-1, but after Pageau’s second goal of the night and a Kyle Turris goal at 7:00, emotions overflowed and a line brawl broke out at center ice. Pageau, who was born in Ottawa, scored his second of the game at 1:18 of the third period to give the Senators a 3-1 lead. Turris’ goal, his first of the series, at 7:00 put the game out of reach. On the ensuing faceoff, four different fights broke out. SHARKS 5, CANuCKS 2 In San Jose, Calif., Joe Pavelski and Logan Couture each scored twice to spoil Cory Schneider’s return to the nets for Vancouver and San Jose won its third straight game to open the playoffs, beating the Canucks. Pavelski scored the first two goals and Couture and Patrick Marleau added scores 9 seconds apart to break the game open early in the third period and give the Sharks a 3-0 series lead.
weeks before the start of postseason play. The Lobos (30-17, 20-4) rolled past Air Force 14-7 to complete a three-game sweep at Lobo Field. Coupled with losses by San Diego State and UNLV, New Mexico officially clinched the league title and the top seed in the upcoming conference tournament in Fresno, Calif. The Aztecs and Rebels started the day trailing UNM by six full games, a gap that now stands at seven games with just six remaining. The 17th-ranked Lobos have won 13 of their last 14 games, including 12 straight in MWC play. They have not lost a home game since March 30. They never trailed in Sunday’s game, scoring in each of the first seven innings against five Air Force pitchers. New Mexico had 21 hits, led by a 4-for-6, six-RBI performance by catcher Mitch Garver. He hit two home runs and had a double. Leadoff hitter Chase Harris also went 4-for-6 while three other players had three hits apiece. Josh Walker (8-0) got the win in relief after spelling starter A.J. Carman in the top of the third inning. He allowed seven hits and two earned runs but struck out four. UNM closes out the regular season with a pair of three game series at Fresno State and San Diego State. The New Mexican
Pairings for the state tournament, which begin next week at the site of the higher seed: Class AAAA (best of three series) (16) Bernalillo at (1) Piedra Vista (15) Belen at (2) Goddard (14) Centennial at (3) Farmington (13) Valencia at (4) Santa Teresa (12) Artesia at (5) Los Lunas (11) Miyamura at (6) Abq. Academy (10) Deming at (7) St. Pius (9) Aztec at (8) Los Alamos Class AAA (best of three series) (16) Pojoaque Valley at (1) Hope Christian (15) Santa Fe Indian at (2) Lovington (14) Raton at (3) Silver (13) Shiprock at (4) Robertson (12) West Las Vegas at (5) Sandia Prep (11) Taos at (6) St. Michael’s (10) Socorro at (7) Ruidoso (9) Bloomfield at (8) Portales Class AA (single elimination) (16) Navajo Prep at (1) East Mountain (15) Monte del Sol at (2) Cobre (14) Laguna-Acoma at (2) Mesilla Valley (13) Santa Fe Prep at (4) Eunice (12) Texico at (5) Dexter (11) Estancia at (6) Santa Rosa (10) N.M. Military at (7) Pecos (9) Tucumcari at (8) Loving Class A (single elimination) (8) Floyd at (1) Capitan (7) Logan at (2) McCurdy (6) Jemez Valley at (3) Melrose (5) Magdalena at (4) Questa
SOFTBALL Pairings for the state tournament, which begin next week at the site of the higher seed: Class AAAA (single elimination) (16) Roswell at (1) Piedra Vista (15) Del Norte at (2) Artesia (14) Goddard at (3) Gallup (13) Deming at (4) Aztec (12) Los Alamos at (5) Los Lunas (11) Farmington at (6) Valencia (10) Centennial at (7) Bernalillo (9) Miyamura at (8) St. Pius Class AAA (single elimination) (16) Socorro at (1) Portales (15) Pojoaque Valley at (2) Silver (14) Sandia Prep at (3) Bloomfield (13) Wingate at (4) Hope (12) Santa Fe Indian at (5) West Las Vegas (11) Ruidoso at (6) St. Michael’s (10) Shiprock at (7) Raton (9) Robertson at (8) Lovington
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.
Today Golf — Santa Fe High, Los Alamos, Taos at District 2AAAA Tournament at Santa Ana Golf Course, 10 a.m. Desert Academy, Taos, West Las Vegas, Las Vegas Robertson at District 2A-AAA Tournament at Taos Coountry Club, 10 a.m. Softball — Jemez Valley at Mora (DH), 3/5 p.m. East Mountain at Pecos (DH), 3/5 p.m.
Tuesday Golf — St. Michael’s at District 1A-AAA Tournament at Four Hills Country Club, 11 a.m. Softball — McCurdy at Pecos (DH), 3/5 p.m.
Wednesday Baseball — Class A State Championships: quarterfinals, TBA Class AA State Tournament: first round, TBA. Tennis — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Individual Championships at Jerry Cline Complex in Albuquerque: first round. Girls — Singles: A-AAA/AAAA, 6:30 p.m. Doubles: A-AAA/AAAA 3:30 p.m. Boys — Singles: A-AAA, 6:30 p.m.; AAAA, 7:30 p.m. Doubles: A-AAA/AAAA, 5 p.m.
Thursday
NBA: West scores 20 as Pacers beat Knicks Continued from Page B-1 Pondexter, who was slapped on his right arm by Jackson on his attempt at the tying 3-pointer. “We’ve just got to take this as a learning experience and move on.” The series opener was a competitive new chapter in an increasingly fierce rivalry, but there weren’t any scuffles this time. They had combined for nine technical fouls in three meetings during the regular season, including one confrontation that got Randolph and Kendrick Perkins ejected. After letting a seven-point lead slip away in the first half, Memphis surged back ahead with a 15-4 run early in the third quarter that featured two driving layups and a jumper by Conley. The lead stretched to 70-58 when Conley hit a free
throw following 3-pointers on back-to-back possessions by Pondexter and Tayshaun Prince. The Thunder started to rally before Pondexter’s buzzerbeater from the half-court logo to finish the third quarter bumped the lead up to 73-64. That didn’t stop Oklahoma City’s comeback, though. Fisher opened the final period with a 3-pointer and Martin converted a three-point play and a 3-pointer as the Thunder went on a 9-2 run, prompting Memphis coach Lionel Hollins to call a timeout with the lead down to 75-73 with 10:08 left. “That shot at the buzzer, that’s a great shot on his part. That’s one of those things that it could have really took us back a little,” Thunder coach
Scott Brooks said, “but we still fought through that shot and kept competing when we were down.” After the timeout, the Grizzlies got their lead back up to seven before Durant sandwiched a pair of driving buckets around Fisher’s 3-pointer in a 7-0 burst that tied it at 84 with 3:47 to play. The Grizzlies went back up 90-87 when Serge Ibaka missed one of two free throws and Gasol followed with a hook shot with 1:08 to go. “If you’re up 3 and you’ve got a minute and a half, you’ve got to get a stop,” Gasol said. “We couldn’t get a stop.” PACERS 102, KNICKS 95 In New York, David West scored 20 points, Paul George added 19 and the Indiana Pacers beat the New York Knicks in
Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. D.J. Augustin had 16 points for the Pacers, who built a 16-point lead while Carmelo Anthony was on the bench in foul trouble in the third quarter, and easily held on to spoil the Knicks’ first second-round game since 2000. “I thought guys did a good job just putting them on their heels,” West said. “We were attacking, we were aggressive.” Anthony finished with 27 points and 11 rebounds, but was frustrated by the Pacers’ rugged defense and by the referees. He shot 10 of 28 from the field and was perhaps thrown out of sync having to defend West, a natural power forward, inside. Game 2 is here Tuesday night, and then the series takes a lengthy break before Game 3 on Saturday in Indiana.
Tennis — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Individual Championships at Jerry Cline Complex in Albuquerque: quarterfinals. Girls — Singles: A-AAA, 11 a.m.; AAAA, 9:30 a.m. Doubles, A-AAA/ AAAA 8 a.m. Boys — Singles, A-AAA/AAAA, 11 a.m. Doubles, A-AAA, 8 a.m.; AAAA, 9:30 a.m.
Friday Baseball — Class AAA/AAAA State Championships, first round, best of three, TBA. Softball — Class AAA/AAAA State Championships, first round, TBA. Tennis — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Team Championships, first round, TBA. Track and field — Class A/AA State Championships at Great Friends of UNM Track Complex. Field finals, 9 a.m., track preliminaries, 1 p.m.
Saturday Baseball — Class AAA/AAAA State Championships, first round, best of three, TBA. Softball — Class AAA/AAAA State Championships, first round, TBA. Tennis — Class A-AAA/AAAA State Team Championships, semifinals/finals, TBA. Track and field — Class A/AA State Championships at Great Friends of UNM Track Complex. Finals, 10 a.m.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Zack Ponce, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
B-4
BASEBALL
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Rangers match Red Sox record The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Yu Darvish struck out 14 and Adrian Beltre hit an RBI single with two outs in the ninth inning as the Texas Rangers beat Boston 4-3 Sunday, completing a three-game sweep and matching the Red Sox for the best record in the majors. The Rangers, Red Sox and St. Louis all have 20-11 marks. Beltre lined a hit to rightcenter off Clayton Mortensen (0-2) that sent home Elvis Andrus, who reached on a two-out single and moved up on a wild pitch. Boston then intentionally walked Lance Berkman. TIGERS 9, ASTROS 0 In Houston, Justin Verlander held Houston hitless until the seventh inning and Detroit romped to a four-game sweep. Verlander, who has already pitched two no-hitters in his career, made a bid for another one against the overmatched Astros in their sixth straight loss. Carlos Pena got Houston’s first hit, a single with one out in the seventh. Carlos Corporan followed with a single. Verlander (4-2) struck out nine and left after the seventh. The 2011 AL MVP and Cy Award Young winner has a 1.55 ERA this season. ATHLETICS 5, YANKEES 4 In New York, Josh Donaldson hit Oakland’s third home run of the game, a tiebreaking drive off Boone Logan in the eighth inning that lifted the Athletics over New York. Luke Montz and Yoenis Cespedes homered as Oakland took a 4-1 lead against Andy Pettitte, who struggled for the second straight start, but the Yankees rallied in the sixth against reliever Jerry Blevins. Preston Claiborne followed Pettitte and retired six straight batters in his major league debut. Donaldson homered into the left-field second deck with one out in the eighth against Logan (2-2). ORIOLES 8, ANGELS 4 In Anaheim, Calif., J.J. Hardy and Manny Machado each hit a two-run homer off Jerome Williams in his first start of the season, leading Baltimore over the reeling Los Angeles Angels. Jason Hammel (5-1) allowed four runs and nine hits through six innings. The righthander came in 0-3 with a 7.31 ERA in three previous starts against the Angels. Mike Trout homered for the Angels, whose 11-20 start has matched the worst in franchise history. They have lost seven of nine and are a season-worst nine games behind first-place Texas in the AL West despite the offseason addition of 2010 AL MVP Josh Hamilton. Their only victory in this four-game series came Friday night. TWINS 4, INDIANS 2 In Cleveland, Mike Pelfrey pitched six effective innings, Trevor Plouffe hit a two-run homer and Minnesota stopped Cleveland’s six-game winning streak. Justin Morneau drove in a run with a bases-loaded single in the sixth while Joe Mauer, who was in a 5-for-43 slump, added an RBI double in the seventh for his 1,300th career hit. Pelfrey (3-3) slowed down an Indians lineup that produced 53 runs during the winning streak. The right-hander gave up one run and four hits while striking out seven in his longest outing of the season. BLUE JAYS 10, MARINERS 2 In Toronto, Mark DeRosa hit a three-run homer, Melky Cabrera added a solo shot and Toronto snapped a four-game skid by beating Seattle. Brandon Morrow (1-2) pitched three-hit ball over eight innings for his first win of the year. He struck out eight, matching a season high. ROYALS 6, WHITE SOX 5 (10) In Kansas City, Mo., Alex Gordon hit an RBI single with two outs in the 10th and Kansas City, saved when Billy Butler sent the game into extra innings, rallied past Chicago. Butler’s two-out, two-run double in the ninth tied it for the Royals. Addison Reed blew his first save in 18 opportunities dating to Aug. 25.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL American League
East W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Boston 20 11 .645 — — 6-4 L-3 11-5 New York 18 12 .600 11/2 — 7-3 L-1 12-7 Baltimore 19 13 .594 11/2 — 6-4 W-2 7-5 Tampa Bay 14 16 .467 51/2 4 5-5 W-1 8-4 Toronto 11 21 .344 91/2 8 2-8 W-1 7-12 Central W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Detroit 19 11 .633 — — 9-1 W-4 10-4 Kansas City 17 10 .630 1/2 — 7-3 W-4 10-4 Cleveland 14 14 .500 4 3 6-4 L-1 6-7 Minnesota 13 14 .481 41/2 31/2 4-6 W-1 7-6 Chicago 12 17 .414 61/2 51/2 5-5 L-2 7-7 West W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Texas 20 11 .645 — — 6-4 W-3 11-4 Oakland 18 14 .563 21/2 1 5-5 W-1 9-8 Seattle 15 18 .455 6 41/2 7-3 L-1 9-8 Los Angeles 11 20 .355 9 71/2 3-7 L-2 7-9 Houston 8 24 .250 121/2 11 1-9 L-6 4-12 Saturday’s Games Sunday’s Games Cleveland 7, Minnesota 3 Minnesota 4, Cleveland 2 N.Y. Yankees 4, Oakland 2 Oakland 5, N.Y. Yankees 4 Seattle 8, Toronto 1 Toronto 10, Seattle 2 Kansas City 6, Chicago White Sox 5, 10 innings Baltimore 5, L.A. Angels 4, 10 innings Kansas City 2, Chicago White Sox 0 Texas 4, Boston 3 Detroit 17, Houston 2 Baltimore 8, L.A. Angels 4 Texas 5, Boston 1 Detroit 9, Houston 0 Colorado 9, Tampa Bay 3 Tampa Bay 8, Colorado 3 Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox (Sale 3-2) at Kansas City (Shields 2-2), 12:10 p.m. Oakland (Parker 1-4) at Cleveland (U.Jimenez 1-2), 5:05 p.m. Minnesota (Worley 0-4) at Boston (Buchholz 6-0), 5:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle 1-2) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 1-2), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Tepesch 2-2) at Chicago Cubs (Feldman 2-3), 6:05 p.m. East W L Atlanta 18 12 Washington 17 15 Philadelphia 14 18 New York 12 16 Miami 10 22 Central W L St. Louis 20 11 Cincinnati 18 14 Pittsburgh 17 14 Milwaukee 14 16 Chicago 11 20 West W L San Francisco 19 12 Colorado 18 13 Arizona 16 15 Los Angeles 13 17 San Diego 13 18 Sunday’s Games Atlanta 9, N.Y. Mets 4 Washington 6, Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 10, Milwaukee 1 Cincinnati 7, Chicago Cubs 4 Miami 14, Philadelphia 2 San Diego 5, Arizona 1 Tampa Bay 8, Colorado 3 San Francisco 4, L.A. Dodgers 3
Away 9-6 6-5 12-8 6-12 4-9 Away 9-7 7-6 8-7 6-8 5-10 Away 9-7 9-6 6-10 4-11 4-12
National League
Pct .600 .531 .438 .429 .313 Pct .645 .563 .548 .467 .355 Pct .613 .581 .516 .433 .419
GB — 2 5 5 9 GB — 21/2 3 51/2 9 GB — 1 3 51/2 6
WCGB L10 Str Home Away 3-7 W-1 9-5 9-7 — 1 6-4 W-2 9-7 8-8 4 5-5 L-2 8-10 6-8 4 3-7 L-1 7-8 5-8 8 5-5 W-2 5-11 5-11 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 7-3 W-6 7-5 13-6 — 5-5 W-3 12-4 6-10 1/2 5-5 L-2 9-6 8-8 3 3-7 L-5 9-10 5-6 61/2 4-6 L-4 5-10 6-10 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 6-4 W-6 11-4 8-8 — 4-6 L-1 10-5 8-8 11/2 4-6 L-1 8-8 8-7 4 4-6 L-4 7-8 6-9 41/2 7-3 W-1 7-8 6-10 Saturday’s Games Cincinnati 6, Chicago Cubs 4 St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 6 Washington 5, Pittsburgh 4 Miami 2, Philadelphia 0 N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, ppd., rain Colorado 9, Tampa Bay 3 Arizona 8, San Diego 1 San Francisco 10, L.A. Dodgers 9, 10 innings
Monday’s Games Atlanta (Maholm 3-3) at Cincinnati (Arroyo 2-3), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Tepesch 2-2) at Chicago Cubs (Feldman 2-3), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (Cahill 1-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 0-1), 8:10 p.m. Miami (LeBlanc 0-4) at San Diego (Cashner 1-2), 8:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Lee 2-2) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 3-0), 8:15 p.m. TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON
American League
-130
2013 W-L 3-2 2-2
ERA 3.83 3.00
Team REC 4-2 3-3
Parker (R) Jimenez (R)
-125
1-4 1-2
7.36 7.13
2-4 3-2
2-0 13.0 1-0 6.0
Minnesota Boston
Worley (R) Buchholz (R)
-210
0-4 6-0
7.22 1.01
2-4 6-0
No Record 1-0 12.1 3.65
Toronto Tampa Bay
Buehrle (L) Hllickson (R)
-145
1-2 1-2
6.43 4.71
3-3 2-4
No Record 2-2 24.2 2.19
Atlanta Cincinnati
Pitchers Maholm (L) Arroyo (R)
2012 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 1-0 6.0 1.50 0-0 6.2 1.35
Miami San Diego
LeBlanc (L) Cashner (R)
Arizona Los Angeles
Cahill (R) Capuano (L)
Chicago Kansas City
Pitchers Sale (L) Shields (R)
Oakland Cleveland
Line
National League
Philadelphia Lee (L) San Francisco Bumgarner (L)
Texas Chicago (NL)
3.46 3.00
-120
2013 W-L 3-3 2-3
ERA 3.08 3.95
Team REC 3-3 3-3
-165
0-4 1-2
6.23 4.24
0-6 1-2
0-0 0-1
1-3 0-1
2.84 9.64
2-4 0-1
3-0 31.2 1-2 22.0
2.84 5.73
2-2 3-0
3.46 1.55
2-4 5-1
0-0 10.0 1-0 6.0
0.00 3.00
ERA 3.54 3.34
Team REC 3-2 2-3
Line
-110
-140
Interleague Pitchers Tepesch (R) Feldman (R)
2012 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 3-3 40.1 3.12 0-1 12.1 5.11
Line -120
2013 W-L 2-2 2-3
AL Leaders
BATTING — MiCabrera, Detroit, .385; CSantana, Cleveland, .379; TorHunter, Detroit, .361; LCain, Kansas City, .341; Kinsler, Texas, .333; AJones, Baltimore, .331; Altuve, Houston, .331. RUNS — AJackson, Detroit, 31; MiCabrera, Detroit, 26; McLouth, Baltimore, 25; Crisp, Oakland, 24; AJones, Baltimore, 24; Jennings, Tampa Bay, 23; Machado, Baltimore, 23. RBI — MiCabrera, Detroit, 36; Fielder, Detroit, 32; Napoli, Boston, 31; CDavis, Baltimore, 30; MarReynolds, Cleveland, 26; NCruz, Texas, 23; Donaldson, Oakland, 22; AJones, Baltimore, 22; Trout, Los Angeles, 22. HITS — MiCabrera, Detroit, 47; AJones, Baltimore, 44; Altuve, Houston, 43; TorHunter, Detroit, 43; Machado, Baltimore, 42; Kinsler, Texas, 41; Cano, New York, 40. HOME RUNS — CDavis, Baltimore, 9; Encarnacion, Toronto, 9; Morse, Seattle, 9; MarReynolds, Cleveland, 9; Arencibia, Toronto, 8; Cano, New York, 8; Fielder, Detroit, 8; Trumbo, Los Angeles, 8. PITCHING — Buchholz, Boston, 6-0; MMoore, Tampa Bay, 5-0; Darvish, Texas, 5-1; Hammel, Baltimore, 5-1; 10 tied at 4. SAVES — Rivera, New York, 11; JiJohnson, Baltimore, 11; Reed, Chicago, 10; Nathan, Texas, 8; Wilhelmsen, Seattle, 8; Perkins, Minnesota, 7; GHolland, Kansas City, 7; Janssen, Toronto, 7.
2.2 0.00 1.0 27.00
2012 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA No Record No Record
NL Leaders
BATTING — CGomez, Milwaukee, .368; Tulowitzki, Colorado, .348; CJohnson, Atlanta, .337; Cuddyer, Colorado, .333; Segura, Milwaukee, .333; Sandoval, San Francisco, .331; Choo, Cincinnati, .331. RUNS — CGonzalez, Colorado, 26; Choo, Cincinnati, 25; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 24; Holliday, St. Louis, 24; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 24; Pagan, San Francisco, 24; JUpton, Atlanta, 24. RBI — Buck, New York, 29; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 28; Phillips, Cincinnati, 27; Craig, St. Louis, 25; Cuddyer, Colorado, 24; Sandoval, San Fran, 24; Braun, Milwaukee, 23; Frazier, Cincinnati, 23; DWright, New York, 23. HITS — SMarte, Pittsburgh, 40; Choo, Cincinnati, 39; CGomez, Milwaukee, 39; Sandoval, San Fran, 39; YMolina, St. Louis, 38; Votto, Cincinnati, 38; Cuddyer, Colorado, 37; CGonzalez, Colorado, 37; Segura, Milwaukee, 37. HOME RUNS — JUpton, Atlanta, 12; Buck, New York, 10; Harper, Washington, 9; Beltran, St. Louis, 8; Fowler, Colorado, 8; Rizzo, Chicago, 8; 6 tied at 7. PITCHING — Lynn, St. Louis, 5-0; Zimmermann, Washington, 5-1; Corbin, Arizona, 4-0; Harvey, New York, 4-0; JGarcia, St. Louis, 4-1; Hudson, Atlanta, 4-1; SMiller, St. Louis, 4-2; Wainwright, St. Louis, 4-2. SAVES — Grilli, Pittsburgh, 12; Romo, San Fran, 11; RSoriano, Washington, 10; Kimbrel, Atlanta, 9; Mujica, St. Louis, 8; League, Los Angeles, 8; RBetancourt, Colorado, 8.
Baltimore
BOxSCORES Orioles 8, Angels 4
Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi McLoth lf 4 2 1 0 Aybar ss 5 0 2 0 Machd 3b 4 2 1 2 Trout cf 5 2 2 1 Markks rf 3 0 0 0 Hamltn rf 4 1 1 0 A.Jones cf 4 1 1 1 Trumo 1b 4 0 1 0 C.Davis 1b 4 1 1 1 Callasp 3b5 1 2 1 Wieters c 4 1 1 0 HKndrc 2b5 0 2 1 Hardy ss 4 1 2 2 Conger dh3 0 1 1 Flahrty 2b 4 0 1 2 Iannett c 2 0 0 0 Reimld dh 4 0 0 0 Shuck lf 3 0 0 0 Totals 35 8 8 8 Totals 36 4 11 4 Baltimore 100 220 030—8 Los Angeles 300 100 000—4 E—Aybar (4), D.De La Rosa (1). DP— Baltimore 2. LOB—Baltimore 5, Los Angeles 11. 2B—McLouth (8), A.Jones (13), Aybar (4), Hamilton (3). HR—Machado (5), Hardy (5), Trout (5). SB—McLouth (9), A.Jones (4), Trout (5). CS—Markakis (1). IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore Hammel W,5-1 6 9 4 4 3 5 Matusz H,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Strop H,3 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Patton 2-3 1 0 0 2 0 O’Day S,1-3 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles Williams L,1-1 4 1-3 4 5 5 3 6 Kohn 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 S.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 0 D.De La Rosa 2-3 2 3 3 1 0 Richards 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Brasier 1 0 0 0 1 2 WP—Hammel. Balk—Strop. T—3:34. A—38,047 (45,483). Boston
Rangers 4, Red Sox 3
Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi Ellsury cf 5 0 0 0 Kinsler 2b4 0 1 0 Nava rf-lf 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 5 1 1 0 Pedroia 2b 3 1 1 0 Brkmn dh 3 0 1 0 D.Ortiz dh 3 1 1 2 Beltre 3b 5 1 2 1 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 3 1 1 2 Carp lf 4 0 0 0 Przyns c 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks 3b 0 0 0 0 JeBakr lf 1 0 0 0 D.Ross c 2 1 1 1 DvMrp lf 1 0 1 0 Victorn rf 0 0 0 0 Morlnd 1b4 1 1 1 Drew ss 4 0 1 0 Gentry cf 3 0 1 0 Ciriaco 3b 3 0 1 0 LMartn ph1 0 0 0 Sltlmch c 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 5 3 Totals 34 4 9 4 Boston 210 000 000—3 Texas 001 002 001—4 Two outs when winning run scored. LOB—Boston 7, Texas 10. 2B—Berkman (7). HR—D.Ortiz (4), D.Ross (4), N.Cruz (7), Moreland (4). SB—Pedroia (7), D.Ross (1), Ciriaco (2), Gentry (5). S—Kinsler. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Lester 6 5 3 3 3 7 Uehara 1 1 0 0 1 1 Tazawa 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 A.Miller 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Mortensen L,0-2 2-3 2 1 1 1 2 Texas Darvish 7 4 3 3 2 14 Kirkman 2-3 0 0 0 2 1 Frasor 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan W,1-0 1 1 0 0 1 1 WP—Mortensen. T—3:35. A—46,228 (48,114).
Tigers 9, Astros 0
Detroit
ab r h bi Grssmn cf4 0 1 0 FMrtnz lf 3 0 0 0 Carter lf 1 0 0 0 JCastro c 3 0 0 0 C.Pena 1b3 0 1 0 Corprn dh 4 0 1 0 B.Laird 3b4 0 0 0 Ankiel rf 2 0 0 0 Barns rf 0 0 0 0 RCeden ss3 0 1 0 MGnzlz 2b3 0 0 0 Totals 39 9 13 9 Totals 30 0 4 0 Detroit 250 100 010—9 Houston 000 000 000—0 E—Fielder (1). DP—Detroit 2, Houston 1. LOB—Detroit 8, Houston 6. 2B—R.Santiago (1). HR—Dirks (2), Fielder (8), B.Pena (1), Infante (3). IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Verlander W,4-2 7 2 0 0 2 9 D.Downs 2 2 0 0 0 4 Houston Humber L,0-7 4 8 8 8 3 1 Bedard 3 1-3 2 1 1 2 3 Blackley 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 W.Wright 1 2 0 0 0 0 HBP—by D.Downs (B.Barnes). T—3:14. A—23,228 (42,060). AJcksn cf Dirks lf MiCarr 3b Fielder 1b Tiassp 1b VMrtnz dh D.Kelly rf B.Pena c Infante 2b RSantg ss
Oakland
ab 4 4 4 5 0 5 4 5 5 3
r 1 3 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1
h 0 4 1 3 0 1 0 1 1 2
bi 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 2 1 0
Houston
Athletics 5, Yankees 4
New York ab r h bi Gardnr cf 5 1 2 0 Cano 2b 4 0 2 1 V.Wells lf 5 1 1 0 Hafner dh 2 1 1 0 Frncs dh 0 0 0 0 ISuzuki rf 3 1 2 1 J.Nix ss 4 0 0 0 Overay 1b4 0 1 2 Nunez ss 1 0 0 0 Nelson 3b3 0 0 0 CStwrt c 3 0 0 0 Boesch ph1 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 7 4 Totals 35 4 9 4 Oakland 001 120 010—5 New York 001 003 000—4 E—Cano (1). LOB—Oakland 7, New York 8. 2B—Montz (2), Reddick (6), Gardner (5), I.Suzuki (3). HR—Cespedes (5), Donaldson (3), Montz (1). SB—V.Wells (3). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Straily 5 1-3 4 3 3 3 4 Blevins BS,2-2 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 Doolittle W,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cook H,4 1 2 0 0 0 1 Balfour S,5-5 1 1 0 0 1 2 New York Pettitte 5 4 4 3 4 2 Claiborne 2 0 0 0 0 0 Logan L,2-2 1 3 1 1 0 1 Kelley 1 0 0 0 0 2 Logan pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. HBP—by Pettitte (Lowrie). WP—Balfour. T—3:20. A—38,134 (50,291).
ab Rosales ss 5 DNorrs c 4 Lowrie 2b 2 Cespds cf 4 Dnldsn 3b 3 Freimn 1b 4 Moss pr-1b0 Montz dh 4 S.Smith lf 4 MTaylr rf 3 Reddck rf 1
r 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0
h 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1
bi 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0
Blue Jays 10, Mariners 2
Seattle
Toronto ab r h bi ab r h bi MSndrs cf 3 0 0 0 RDavis lf 5 1 1 0 Seager 3b 3 0 1 1 MeCarr dh4 1 3 2 KMorls dh 3 0 1 0 Bautist rf 2 1 1 1 Morse rf 3 0 0 0 Encrnc 1b4 0 0 1 Bay lf 4 0 0 0 Arencii c 5 2 2 0 Smoak 1b 3 1 0 0 DeRsa 3b 5 3 3 3 Ackley 2b 3 1 0 0 MIzturs 2b4 1 3 1 JMontr c 4 0 1 0 Bonifac cf4 0 0 0 Andino ss 3 0 0 1 Kawsk ss 3 1 2 2 Totals 29 2 3 2 Totals 36101510 Seattle 000 020 000—2 Toronto 120 041 20x—10 DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Seattle 6, Toronto 8. 2B—Seager (11), K.Morales (7), R.Davis (4), DeRosa 2 (4). HR—Me.Cabrera (1), DeRosa (2). SB—Bautista (2), Bonifacio 2 (2), Kawasaki (4). S—Me.Cabrera. SF—Seager, Bautista. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle J.Saunders L,2-4 5 9 7 7 2 0 Noesi 2 6 3 3 1 1 Luetge 1 0 0 0 1 0 Toronto Morrow W,1-2 8 3 2 2 5 8 Delabar 1 0 0 0 0 2 PB—J.Montero, Arencibia. T—2:27. A—22,937 (49,282).
Padres 5, Diamondbacks 1
Arizona
San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi GParra rf 4 0 0 0 EvCarr ss 4 1 1 0 Prado 2b 4 0 0 0 Denorfi lf 2 1 0 0 Gldsch 1b 3 0 1 0 Headly 3b3 1 1 1 MMntr c 3 0 0 0 Quentin lf 4 0 0 0 ErChvz 3b 4 0 0 0 Street p 0 0 0 0 Pollock cf 4 0 0 0 Alonso 1b 2 0 0 1 Kubel lf 4 0 0 0 Gyorko 2b4 1 2 2 Gregrs ss 3 1 2 1 Venale rf 2 1 1 1 Kenndy p 1 0 1 0 JoBakr c 3 0 0 0 MtRynl p 0 0 0 0 Volquez p 2 0 0 0 Pnngtn ph 1 0 0 0 Guzmn ph1 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 4 1 Totals 27 5 5 5 Arizona 001 000 000—1 San Diego 200 003 00x—5 DP—Arizona 1. LOB—Arizona 6, San Diego 4. 2B—Goldschmidt (7), Kennedy (1), Ev.Cabrera (4). HR—Gregorius (3), Gyorko (2), Venable (3). SB—G.Parra (4), Goldschmidt (4). SF—Alonso. IP H R ER BB SO Arizona Kennedy L,1-3 5 2-3 5 5 5 3 5 Mat.Reynolds 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Collmenter 1 0 0 0 0 2 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 1 1 San Diego Volquez W,3-3 6 2-3 4 1 1 3 3 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 2 Street 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Kennedy (Headley). WP—Kennedy. T—2:56. A—29,101 (42,524).
Reds 7, Cubs 4
Cincinnati Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Choo cf 5 1 2 0 DeJess cf 5 1 2 0 Cozart ss 3 1 0 1 SCastro ss5 1 1 0 Votto 1b 5 1 3 1 Rizzo 1b 4 1 1 1 Phillips 2b 3 1 1 1 ASorin lf 5 1 1 2 CIzturs 2b 1 0 0 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 1 1 Bruce rf 5 1 1 1 DNavrr c 4 0 1 0 Frazier 3b 3 1 2 2 Valuen 3b 1 0 0 0 Paul lf 2 0 0 0 Barney 2b4 0 0 0 LeCure p 0 0 0 0 EJcksn p 1 0 0 0 Hannhn ph 0 0 0 0 Borbn ph 1 0 0 0 Mesorc c 4 0 1 0 Sapplt ph 1 0 0 0 Latos p 2 0 0 0 Loe p 0 0 0 0 Lutz lf 2 1 1 1 Hairstn ph1 0 1 0 Totals 35 7 11 7 Totals 36 4 8 4 Cincinnati 000 310 210—7 Chicago 000 030 100—4 E—Hoover (1), D.Navarro (2). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Cincinnati 7, Chicago 9. 2B—Votto 2 (6), Bruce (9), DeJesus 2 (10), A.Soriano (7). SB—Choo (3), Lutz (1). SF—Cozart, Phillips. IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Latos W,3-0 5 6 3 3 3 6 LeCure H,3 2 1 1 1 0 1 Marshall H,4 1 0 0 0 1 0 Hoover S,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Chicago E.Jackson L,0-5 5 8 4 4 1 5 Marmol 1 0 0 0 0 1 Camp 1 2 2 2 1 0 Loe 1 1 1 1 2 1 Bowden 1 0 0 0 0 0 WP—E.Jackson. T—3:27. A—33,449 (41,019). Miami
Marlins 14, Phillies 2
Philadelphia ab r h bi Galvis ss 4 0 1 1 MYong 3b 4 0 1 0 Utley 2b 3 0 0 0 Frndsn 2b1 0 0 0 Howrd 1b 2 0 0 0 Mayrry 1b2 0 0 0 DYong rf 3 0 0 0 Horst p 0 0 0 0 Rollins ph 1 0 1 0 DBrwn lf 4 0 0 0 Ruiz c 2 1 0 0 Revere cf 1 1 1 0 Valdes p 2 0 0 0 L.Nix rf 1 0 0 0 Totals 40 141313 Totals 30 2 4 1 Miami 504 001 022—14 Philadelphia 000 000 020—2 E—Dobbs (1), A.Ramos (2), Frandsen (2). DP—Miami 1. LOB—Miami 9, Philadelphia 4. 2B—Ozuna 2 (4), Galvis (2). 3B—Hechavarria (3). HR—Ruggiano 2 (6), Hechavarria (2). SB—Pierre (11), Ruggiano (4). IP H R ER BB SO Miami Slowey W,1-2 7 2 0 0 2 7 A.Ramos 1 1 2 1 1 0 Rauch 1 1 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Halladay L,2-4 2 1-3 4 9 9 4 4 Valdes 3 1-3 4 1 1 1 2 Durbin 1 2-3 3 2 1 0 3 Horst 1 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 HBP—by Halladay (Ruggiano, Ruggiano), by Valdes (Valaika), by Horst (Dobbs). T—2:55. A—45,276 (43,651).
ab Pierre lf 5 Valaika 2b 5 Polanc 3b 5 Ruggin cf 3 Ozuna rf 5 Dobbs 1b 3 Olivo c 5 Hchvrr ss 4 Slowey p 4 Diaz ph 1 ARams p 0 Rauch p 0
r 2 1 1 4 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 0
h 3 0 1 2 4 1 0 2 0 0 0 0
bi 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 7 0 0 0 0
Cardinals 10, Brewers 1
St. Louis
Milwaukee ab r h bi Aoki rf 4 0 0 0 Segura ss 4 0 1 0 Braun lf 2 0 2 0 Lalli c 1 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 3 0 0 0 Binchi 2b 1 0 0 0 Weeks 2b 3 0 1 0 Mldnd ph 1 0 0 0 Lucroy 1b 4 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 1 1 0 YBtncr lf 4 0 2 0 Figaro p 1 0 1 1 Gnzlz 3b 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 101110 Totals 33 1 8 1 St. Louis 060 201 010—10 Milwaukee 000 010 000—1 DP—St. Louis 1, Milwaukee 1. LOB—St. Louis 10, Milwaukee 7. 2B—Craig (10), Braun (6), C.Gomez (7). 3B—Craig (1). HR— Holliday (5). SB—S.Robinson (3). S—Estrada. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis J.Garcia W,4-1 8 8 1 1 1 3 Ca.Martinez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee Estrada L,2-2 3 1-3 6 8 8 5 5 Figaro 2 2-3 3 1 1 0 2 Mic.Gonzalez 1 0 0 0 0 2 Axford 1-3 2 1 1 2 0 Kintzler 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Gorzelanny 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Gorzelanny (Jay), by Estrada (Jay), by Figaro (Y.Molina). T—3:12. A—38,620 (41,900).
ab Jay cf 4 SRonsn rf 3 Hollidy lf 3 Craig 1b 5 YMolin c 3 T.Cruz ph 1 Freese 3b 5 Descals 2b3 Kozma ss 5 JGarci p 4 Wgntn 3b 1
r 2 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0
h 2 1 2 2 1 1 0 0 2 0 0
bi 0 1 3 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
Nationals 6, Pirates 2
Washington Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 5 0 1 0 SMarte lf 4 1 1 1 Dsmnd ss 5 0 1 0 Mrcer ss 4 0 1 0 Harper lf 1 0 0 0 McCtch cf4 0 0 0 Berndn lf 4 1 2 0 GSnchz 1b3 1 1 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 2 1 0 RMrtn 3b 3 0 1 1 LaRoch 1b 3 1 1 0 McKnr c 4 0 0 0 TMoore rf 4 1 1 3 Inge rf-2b 4 0 1 0 Espinos 2b 3 1 1 3 JMcDnl ss3 0 0 0 WRams c 4 0 3 0 GJons ph 1 0 0 0 GGnzlz p 2 0 0 0 WRdrg p 2 0 1 0 Lmrdzz ph 1 0 0 0 Snider rf 2 0 0 0 Tracy ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 6 11 6 Totals 34 2 6 2 Washington 010 200 030—6 Pittsburgh 100 001 000—2 E—Zimmerman (5). LOB—Washington 7, Pittsburgh 7. 2B—LaRoche (3), W.Ramos 2 (2), Mercer (1), R.Martin (7), Inge (2). HR—T. Moore (1), Espinosa (3), S.Marte (5). SB— Span (5), Desmond (4). SF—Espinosa. IP H R ER BB SO Washington G.Gonzalez W,3-2 6 5 2 2 2 5 Storen H,5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Clippard 1 0 0 0 0 1 R.Soriano 1 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh W.Rodriguez L,2-2 6 6 3 3 1 7 Contreras 1 1 0 0 0 2 Morris 1 3 3 3 1 0 Mazzaro 1 1 0 0 0 0 Balk—W.Rodriguez. T—3:10. A—24,186 (38,362).
Rays 8, Rockies 3
Tampa Bay Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Jnnngs cf 5 1 2 0 Fowler cf 5 0 0 0 Joyce rf 3 2 0 0 Arenad 3b5 1 2 1 Longori 3b 4 1 0 0 CGnzlz lf 4 0 2 0 Loney 1b 4 3 3 1 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 2 1 KJhnsn lf 4 1 2 2 Cuddyr rf 4 1 3 1 RRorts 2b 4 0 2 2 Helton 1b 4 0 1 0 Loaton c 4 0 1 2 WRosr c 4 0 0 0 SRdrgz ss 3 0 0 0 Rutldg 2b 3 0 0 0 Cobb p 3 0 0 0 Chacin p 2 0 0 0 McGee p 0 0 0 0 EYong ph 1 0 0 0 Scott ph 1 0 1 0 Brignc ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 8 11 7 Totals 37 3 10 3 Tampa Bay 300 003 020—8 Colorado 010 100 100—3 E—R.Roberts (2), S.Rodriguez (1), Rutledge (3). DP—Tampa Bay 1, Colorado 2. LOB— Tampa Bay 4, Colorado 8. 2B—R.Roberts (4). HR—Arenado (3), Tulowitzki (7), Cuddyer (7). SB—C.Gonzalez (5). CS—K.Johnson (3). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Cobb W,4-2 6 2-3 8 3 3 1 6 McGee H,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Jo.Peralta 1 2 0 0 0 1 J.Wright 1 0 0 0 0 3 Colorado Chacin L,3-1 7 8 6 5 3 3 Outman 2 3 2 1 1 2 WP—Chacin. PB—W.Rosario 2. T—3:00. A—39,220 (50,398).
Giants 4, Dodgers 3
Los Angeles San Francisco ab r h bi ab r h bi Crwfrd lf 5 0 1 0 Torres cf 4 0 3 0 Punto 2b 5 0 0 0 Scutro 2b 4 2 2 0 Kemp cf 3 1 1 0 Sndovl 3b 3 1 1 0 Ethier rf 4 0 1 0 Posey 1b 3 1 1 0 A.Ellis c 4 1 2 0 Pence rf 4 0 2 4 Uribe 1b 3 1 1 0 FPegur lf 4 0 0 0 L.Cruz 3b 3 0 0 0 Quiroz c 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl ph 1 0 1 2 BCrwfr ss 3 0 0 0 DGordn ss 3 0 1 1 M.Cain p 3 0 0 0 Ryu p 2 0 0 0 Schmkr ph 1 0 0 0 HrstnJr ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 35 3 8 3 Totals 32 4 9 4 Los Angeles 000 000 030—3 San Francisco 101 020 00x—4 LOB—Los Angeles 9, San Francisco 6. 2B— Kemp (6), Pence 2 (7). SB—C.Crawford (6), D.Gordon (3). CS—Torres (1). IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Ryu L,3-2 6 8 4 4 2 2 Guerrier 1 1 0 0 0 0 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 3 San Francisco M.Cain W,1-2 7 1-3 5 1 1 3 4 J.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Kontos 0 1 2 2 1 0 Affeldt 0 2 0 0 0 0 Machi H,2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Romo S,12-13 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kontos pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Affeldt pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP—M.Cain. T—2:53. A—41,140 (41,915).
Royals 6, White Sox 5, 10 innings
Chicago
Kansas City ab r h bi AGordn lf 6 0 1 2 AEscor ss 5 0 2 1 Butler dh 4 0 1 2 Dyson dh 0 0 0 0 Hosmr 1b 5 0 0 0 L.Cain cf 5 1 3 0 Mstks 3b 5 1 2 0 Francr rf 5 1 1 0 S.Perez c 2 1 0 0 Getz pr 0 1 0 0 MTejad 2b 3 0 2 1 Kottars c 0 1 0 0 Totals 39 5 10 4 Totals 40 6 12 6 Chicago 001 000 400 0—5 Kansas City 000 030 002 1—6 Two outs when winning run scored. E—Keppinger (2), W.Davis (1). DP—Chicago 2, Kansas City 1. LOB—Chicago 7, Kansas City 11. 2B—De Aza (7), Butler (4), Francoeur (6). HR—Rios (7). SB—L.Cain (4). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Quintana 5 6 3 3 2 3 N.Jones 1 1 0 0 0 0 Thornton H,9 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Lindstrom H,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Crain H,8 1 1 0 0 0 1 A.Reed BS,1-11 1 1 2 2 2 0 Omogrosso L,0-1 2-3 2 1 1 2 1 Kansas City W.Davis 6 5 1 1 3 5 Collins BS,1-1 0 3 3 3 0 0 Crow 1 2 1 1 0 1 Hochevar 2 0 0 0 0 1 G.Holland W,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Collins pitched to 3 batters in the 7th. Quintana pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. N.Jones pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. WP—A.Reed, Crow. PB—Gimenez. T—3:36. A—16,462 (37,903).
ab De Aza lf 4 Kppngr 2b 5 Rios rf 4 A.Dunn 1b 5 Konerk dh 5 Gillaspi 3b 4 AlRmrz ss 4 Gimenz c 4 Wise cf 4
r 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2
h 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 3
bi 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Twins 4, Indians 2
Minnesota ab Carroll 2b 4 Mauer c 2 Wlngh lf 3 Mornea dh 4 Parmel 1b 3 Plouffe 3b 2 Arcia rf 4 Hicks cf 4 EEscor ss 4
Cleveland ab r h bi Brantly lf 4 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 ACarer ss 4 1 1 0 Swshr dh 4 0 0 0 MrRynl 1b2 0 0 1 CSantn c 3 1 2 1 Raburn rf 4 0 2 0 Chsnhl 3b3 0 1 0 Aviles ph 1 0 0 0 Stubbs cf 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 4 6 4 Totals 32 2 6 2 Minnesota 020 001 100—4 Cleveland 000 100 001—2 DP—Cleveland 1. LOB—Minnesota 6, Cleveland 6. 2B—Mauer (6), A.Cabrera (7). HR—Plouffe (4), C.Santana (6). SB—A.Cabrera (2). CS—Arcia (1). SF—Mar.Reynolds. IP H R ER BB SO Minnesota Pelfrey W,3-3 6 4 1 1 1 7 Roenicke H,4 1 0 0 0 1 1 Burton H,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Perkins S,7-7 1 2 1 1 0 2 Cleveland Kluber L,2-1 5 2-3 5 3 3 4 5 Allen 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Albers 1 1 1 1 1 1 S.Barnes 2 0 0 0 0 4 HBP—by S.Barnes (Plouffe). PB—C. Santana. T—2:59. A—14,015 (42,241).
New York
r 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
h 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0
bi 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0
Braves 9, Mets 4
Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi RTejad ss 5 0 0 0 Smmns ss5 1 2 0 DnMrp 2b 3 1 0 0 CJhnsn 3b4 1 0 0 DWrght 3b 3 2 2 2 R.Pena 3b0 0 0 0 Duda lf 4 0 1 1 J.Upton lf 3 2 1 1 Buck c 3 0 0 0 FFrmn 1b 5 2 3 3 I.Davis 1b 3 0 1 0 Gattis c 4 1 2 1 Turner 1b 0 0 0 1 Uggla 2b 3 2 1 0 Byrd rf 4 0 1 0 BUpton cf 3 0 1 0 Vldspn cf 4 0 0 0 RJhnsn rf 4 0 2 3 Niese p 2 0 0 0 THudsn p 2 0 0 0 Baxter ph 2 1 1 0 Totals 33 4 6 4 Totals 33 9 12 8 New York 000 200 020—4 Atlanta 005 021 01x—9 DP—New York 1. LOB—New York 6, Atlanta 9. 2B—Baxter (3), Simmons 2 (4), F.Freeman (3), Gattis (7). 3B—Uggla (1). HR—D.Wright (5), F.Freeman (2). S—T.Hudson. SF—Gattis. IP H R ER BB SO New York Niese L,2-3 4 7 7 7 6 3 Familia 2 3 1 1 0 2 Lyon 1 1 0 0 0 1 Carson 0 1 1 1 1 0 Atchison 1 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta T.Hudson W,4-1 7 1-3 5 3 3 1 7 Avilan 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 Gearrin 0 0 0 0 0 0 O’Flaherty H,9 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Varvaro 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gearrin pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Niese pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. Carson pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. HBP—by Gearrin (Buck). WP—Niese 2, Familia, Avilan. T—3:05. A—32,849 (49,586).
THIS DATE IN BASEBALL May 6
1915 — As a pitcher for Boston, Babe Ruth had three hits, including his first major league home run when he connected off Jack Warhop of the New York Yankees at the Polo Grounds. 1982 — Gaylord Perry of the Seattle Mariners became the 15th major league pitcher with 300 victories when he defeated the New York Yankees 7-3 at the Kingdome. 1994 — Anthony Young won as a starter for the first time in more than two years as the Chicago Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 10-1. The win ended Young’s 29-game losing streak as a starter. 1998 — Rookie Kerry Wood tied the major league record with 20 strikeouts in a nineinning game, pitching a one-hitter to lead the Chicago Cubs over the Houston Astros 2-0. The 20-year-old right-hander tied the record set by Boston’s Roger Clemens against Seattle in 1986, and matched by Clemens against Detroit in 1996. Wood broke the NL record of 19 strikeouts in a nine-inning game, held by Steve Carlton, Tom Seaver and David Cone.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Hechavarria leads Marlins past Philadelphia The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Adeiny Hechavarria hit a grand slam and a bases-loaded triple off an ailing Roy Halladay, driving in seven runs for the Miami Marlins in a 14-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies on Sunday. After the game, Halladay said he had a sore right shoulder. He said he will undergo tests this week in Los Angeles and be examined by Dr. Lewis Yocum. Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr. said Halladay (2-4) will likely be put on the disabled list. The two-time Cy Young winner and eight-time All-Star had his worst start since his rookie season. He gave up nine runs on four hits, four walks and two hit batters in 2 1-3 innings. Halladay, who turns 36 this month, has an 8.65 ERA.
Kevin Slowey (1-2) gave up two hits in seven shutout innings for his first win since September 2010. He had been winless in 22 major league appearances, including 15 starts. BRAVES 9, METS 4 In Atlanta, Freddie Freeman homered and drove in three runs, Tim Hudson pitched into the eighth inning and the Braves beat the Mets. Freeman got three hits, including a two-run double off Jonathon Niese (2-3) in a fiverun third. CARDINALS 10, BREWERS 1 In Milwaukee, Jaime Garcia pitched eight innings and Allen Craig drove in four runs to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to the franchise’s first four-game sweep of Milwaukee. Matt Holliday also homered for the Cardinals, who have won six straight.
Garcia (4-1) gave up one run on eight hits in his third straight win. REDS 7, CUBS 4 In Chicago, Joey Votto had three hits, Todd Frazier hit a two-run single and the Cincinnati Reds completed a threegame sweep of the Cubs. Mat Latos (3-0) extended his scoreless streak to 21 innings, tying a career high, but didn’t pitch past the fifth inning for the first time in seven starts this season. He struck out six and walked three. J.J. Hoover earned his second save. NATIONALS 6, PIRATES 2 In Pittsburgh, Tyler Moore hit a three-run homer and Danny Espinosa homered and drove in three runs, leading Gio Gonzalez and the Washington Nationals over Pittsburgh. Nationals star Bryce Harper was ejected in the first inning.
He tried to hold up on a 2-2 pitch from Wandy Rodriguez (2-2) and home plate umpire Bob Davidson pointed to third base ump John Hirschbeck for help. Hirschbeck ruled that Harper had swung. Harper stood outside the batter’s box, stared at Hirschbeck for a few moments and dropped his bat. Hirschbeck then tossed last season’s NL Rookie of the Year. PADRES 5, DIAMONDBACKS 1 In San Diego, rookie Jedd Gyorko hit a two-run homer with two outs in the sixth and Will Venable followed with a solo shot to help carry Edinson Volquez and the San Diego Padres beat Arizona. Volquez (3-3) won his third straight start and the Padres, who took two of three from the Diamondbacks, won for the eighth time in 11 games. The Diamondbacks have lost five of six.
Ian Kennedy (1-3) has not won since opening day. RAYS 8, ROCKIES 3 In Denver, Alex Cobb pitched effectively into the seventh inning, withstanding three solo homers by Colorado and helping the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Rockies. Jose Lobaton, Ryan Roberts and Kelly Johnson each drove in two runs for the Rays. Tampa Bay took two of three and won a series at Coors Field for the first time in four visits. Nolan Arenado hit a two-out homer in the seventh that pulled the Rockies within 6-3, a day after the rookie had a grand slam. GIANTS 4, DODGERS 3 In San Francisco, Hunter Pence doubled twice and drove in four runs, Matt Cain pitched into the eighth inning for his first victory of the season and the Giants beat the Dodgers to complete a series sweep.
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Otra Vez: Trash to Treasures Available materials
Food banks and shelters
Garden supplies
Bienvenidos Outreach: 1511 Fifth St. Call 986-0583. Food pantry is open from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The Food Depot: 1222 Siler Road. Website is www.thefooddepot.org or call 505-471-1633. The depot is open from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Kitchen Angels: 1222 Siler Road. The website is www.KitchenAngels.org or call 471-7780. Intertfaith Community Shelter: 2801 Cerrillos Road. Email to interfaithsheltersf@gmail.com or call 795-7494. St. Elizabeth Shelter: 804 Alarid St. Website is www.steshelter.org. Call 982-6611. Youth Shelters and Family Services: 5686 Agua Fría St. Web site is www.youthshelters.org. Call 983-0586.
Folding wire fencing for vegetable or flower gardens — call 2316863. Horse manure; free tractor loading — call Arrowhead Ranch, 424-8888. Organic horse manure — call Barbara, 471-3870. Horse manure (you haul) — call Barbara, 466-2552.
Appliances
Help lines
GE Profile double oven, 1 convection; GE Spacemaker Microwave XL 1400; Raypak boiler; and 50-gallon water heater from American Water Heater Company —call Nina at 577-3751.
Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 988-1951, 24-hour hotline 800-721-7273 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL, 955-2255 Alcoholics Anonymous: 982-8932
Office equipment HP printer 13X Laser printer cartridge — call 983-4277. Office desks in good condition — 505-466-1525. Three business phones in good condition — Gabe, 466-0999. Letter-sized file folders in varioius colors — call Doug, 438-9299.
Furniture Single box and foam mattress set. Call Joanne at 471-1784.
Miscellaneous Encyclopedia Britannica, 29 volume set, 15th Edition, 1989, plus 1989-90 annuals, index and guide — call Joanne at 471-1784. Artificial Christmas tree, 6 feet, assembles in four sections, stand included — call Helen at 820-0729. Tube feeding sets: 36 sealed packages of Kangaroo Joey, 1000 ml pump sets with feed-only antifree flow valve. Suitable for use with pump or gravity drip — call Nina at 988-1899. Most recent five years of National Geographic magazines in mint condition; great for schools or reading room. Send email to h.wayne.nelson@q.com or call 989-8605. Bailing twine — call Arrowhead Ranch, 424-8888. Nylon (potato/onion) 50-lb. sacks — call Dan at 455-2288, ext. 101.
Wanted materials Garden supplies Poulty manure — call Anna at 660-0756. Compost bin — call Joseph, 986-6172. Large ceramic saucer/dish for potted tree‚ call 603-9125. Gravel, any size — call Yolanda, 982-9273. Garden tools, especially sized for use by children — call George, 466-4988. Containers or barrels for water catchments — call Nancy, 316-1673. JuJuBe cuttings and information — call Nancy, 316-1673.
Appliances Microwave — call Diana at 490-1027. Heating pad for back; electric heaters — call Diane at 231-9921. Working sewing machine — call Patty at 424-0352. Portable washer/dryer — call Dominga, 204-5830. Large freezer — call Joe, 930-2027. Used gas stove — call Virginia, 310-0699. Working washer and dryer — call Annie, 424-9507. Any major appliance — call All Appliance at 471-0481.
Office equipment Lightweight cardboard or poster board — call Caro at 670-6999. Four-drawer wooden file cabinet — call 471-3040. Working laptop — call Denise, 428-8066. Working laptop for retired school teacher — call Bonnie, 417-8556. Working Laptop computer — call 510-847-9001. Late model Apple laptop — call Pat, 920-5429. Office desk, table with four chairs, laptop computer with wireless capabilities — call Guardian Angels, 920-2871.
Furniture Armoire — call Dan at 505-270-4673. TV and converter boxes — call Katrina at 216-2153. Used folding chairs or stackable chairs in usable condition — call TJ at Paynes, 988-9626. Sofa, recliner, chairs and converter box — call Richard at 216-4141. Roll-away bed — call Gloria at 471-0819.
B-5
Small kitchen table — call 438-8418. Bed in good condition or sofa or loveseat — call Martha at 917-6615. Living room furniture, dining table and chairs — call Dominga, 204-5830. Outdoor lawn chair with high back — call Miriam, 699-3655.
Packing materials Packing peanuts in bags; bubble wrap — 127 Romero St. or call Hillary, 992-8701. Packing peanuts — stop by 1424 Paseo de Peralta. Packing peanuts, bubble wrap and boxes — call John, 455-2835. Packing materials — stop by 903 W. Alameda St., or call Glenn at 986-0616.
Construction Large ceramic sewer pipes — callAdam at 989-1388. Disabled woman looking for used material to build deck on her home — call Beatrice at 310-5234. Fencing material (wire or wood) for nonprofit to benefit help people who can’t afford fencing for their pets. — call Jane at 4661525. Coyote fence and gate for garden of retiree — call 603-9125. Wooden spools (2-foot or 3-foot) — call Joe, Cornerstone Books at 473-0306 or 438-2446. A shed to house school and community garden resources, plus lumber, untreated, to build raised garden beds for Earth Care — send email to susan@earthcare.org or call 983-6896. Solar electric hot water panels, pumps and controls. Used or new metal roofing, any thickness. Send email to sean@ic.org or call Sean, 505-660-8835. Earth Care needs a shed to store school and community garden resourses as well as untreated lumber to build raised garden beds. Send email to susan@earthcare.org or call 983-6896. Used or new metal roofing, any thickness — send email to sean@ic.org. or call Sean at 505-660-8835. Stucco, chicken wire and fencing material in small pieces — call Nancy at 316-1673. Culvert — call George, 204-1745. Flagstone pieces, brick or pavers, other creative or colorful building materials. Will pick up. — Call Adam, 989-1388. Used cedar posts, used brick and stone; will work for material — call Daniel, 505-920-6537. Old cedar fencing material, good for buring or small projects, mostly broken pieces — call 310-0777. Mirrored closet or shower doors, fencing — call Lee, 231-7851. Nonprofit restoring a 1870s cemetery and needs electric generator, cement mixer, small tractor and trailer — call Ted, 505-718-5060. Used solar panels‚ send email to Virginia_Garcia @yahoo.com or call Virginia at 316-0699.
School needs Children’s outdoor play equipment, outdoor furniture ; a crib and cots — call Gloria, 913-9478.
Animal needs Bird bath — call Gloria at 471-0819. Hamster cage — call Diana at 231-9921. Washable dog beds for medium-sized dogs and large cat condo/
climbing tree — call Merlyne, 204-4148. Dog crate — call Cari at 983-0708. Crates, fencing, grooming tables and supplies — call Joan-ann at Dog Rescue Program, 983-3739.
Miscellaneous
Twin sized bedding and sheets; converter boxes — call Katrina at 216-2153. Active 74-year-old lady wants a three-wheel bicycle — call Sabra at 471-4733. Clothes for family: Mother wears womens size 8-11; 4-year-old girl wears size 4; newborn infant boy wears size 3-6 months — call Jennifer at 310-1420. Blankets — callDiane at 231-9921. Masks from anywhere — call Katrina at 216-2153 or 699-4097. Mens ties, clean, for retiree nonprofit art project — call 438-7761. Moving to new apartment and need cookware, dishes, small kitchen appliances, bathroom items and other basics — call Richard, 216-4141. Third backseat for a 2002 Yukon XL — call Cecilia, 505-438-8414. Pair of white triple-strapped genuine leather Coaster sandals, Size 7 or larger — call Mather, 505-204-2836. Floor buffer for The Salvation Army — call Viola or Lt. Cisneros at 988-8054. Bean bags or church school — call Cecilia, 439-8418. Blue sapphire Bombay gin bottles for yard project — call Jean, 795-2589. Old license plates for crafts — call Karen at 466-6664. RV needed for nonprofit — send email to Happiiness360.org or call 505-819-3913. Materials to make blankets for shelters — call Irene, 983-4039. Nonprofit looking for scrap paper, standard 8.5 x 11 inch sized. It can be printed on one side or hold-punched, but not crumpled or stapled — call Allayne at 989-5362, ext. 103. Nonprofit in need of a travel trailer or motor home in good condition — call Dee at 505-720-3521. Yarn for crochet and knitting needed for Santa Fe nonprofit — call Fab, 471-0546.
HOw TO GeT An iTeM liSTed Anything listed must be given away — not sold. Listings are free. To list a material, call 955-2215 or send a fax to 955-2118. You also can send information — including your name, address and telephone number — to: Keep Santa Fe Beautiful Trash to Treasures, 1142 Siler Road, Santa Fe, N.M. 87507. You also can send an e-mail to: gjmontano@santafenm. gov. Information is due by Friday afternoon. Please note: The Santa Fe New Mexican publishes the information but does not handle additions, deletions or changes. Information could be outdated as items moved quickly in this listing.
Recyle right
IMAGE COURTESY CITY OF SANTA FE
Volunteer COMMUNITY FARM: The Santa Fe Community Farm in the Village of Agua Fría 1829 San Ysidro Crossing is seeking volunteers of any age and ability. The hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, except Wednesdays and Sundays.For information, send an email to sfcommunity farm@ gmail.com or visit the website at
www.santafecommunityfarm.org. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. Call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. MANY MOTHERS: The local nonprofit that strengthens families
through supportive services. Visit www.manymothers.org. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDEN: For people who love everything to do with gardens, volunteer opportunities are available in the a variety of areas. Call 471-9103 or visit www.santafebotanicalgarden.org. PET PROJECT: Joini the Santa Fe
Animal Shelter’s resale team. The stores, Look What The Cat Dragged In 1 and 2, benefit the homeless animals and volunteers are needed. Two store sites are 2570-A Camino Entrada or 541 West Cordova Road. Send an email to krodriguez@ sfhumansociety.org or agreene@ sfhumansociety.org or or call
Katherine Rodriguez at 983-4309, ext. 128 or Anne Greene at 474-6300. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www.kitchenangels. org or call 471-7780 to learn more.
HOSPICE CENTER: The PMS The Hospice Center, 1400 Chama Ave., is looking for a volunteer to help in office with hospice bereavement program; computer skills desirable. Call Owen at 988-2211. Volunteers are needed to arrange and deliver flowers for Flower Angel program. Call Mary Ann at 988-2211.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
sfnm«classifieds to place an ad, call
986-3000
or email us: classad@sfnewmexican.com visit santafenewmexican.com sfnmclassifieds.com (800) 873-3362
»real estate«
SANTA FE
»rentals«
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME ON 4 ACRES
YOU CAN AFFORD TO BUY!
SANTA FE
NEW CONSTRUCTION 3 bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 car heated finished garage, 2.5 acres, 2380 Square Feet $495,000. TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
3/2 1900 SQ. FT. ADOBE SOLAR, PLUS 1200 SQ. FT. 2/1 APARTMENT. BRICK FLOORS, PLASTERED WALLS. PRIVATE SETTING. 2.89 ACRES. $390,000. 505-470-5877
FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750
Utilities paid. Charming, clean. Wood floors, fireplace, yard. Walk to Railyard & Downtown. No pets. 505-471-0839
5 BEDROOM, 5 BATH.
CHARMING RESTORED ADOBE. 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, PLUS DETACHED CASITA. ON PALACE AVE. LARGE WALLED COURTYARD. VERY PRIVATE. BY OWNER, $699,000. 505310-0309
RIVER RANCH Private River Frontage 1,000 Acres, high Ponderosa Pine Ridges. Well, utilities. Rare opportunity to own this quality ranch. $1,599,000 Great New Mexico Properties 888-883-4842
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY HEART OF ST. MICHAEL’S DIST R IC T . 604 West San Mateo. 27,787 square foot commerical building, 1.67 acres. 122 parking spaces. PRICED TO SELL AT $2 MILLION. OLD SANTA FE REALTY, 505-9839265.
FSBO. 1494 square feet plus 2 car garage. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Master suite, AC, Kiva fireplace all appliances. Many upgrades! Realtors welcome. $249,500. 505-231-8405
1,430 sq ft office, close to hospital, 5 offices, 2 baths, very charming and in great condition. $325,000 or $2,264 monthly.
$9.00 A SQ FT
3,000 to 27,000 sq ft. Quality space just off St. Michaels
$225,000
4 offices, two baths, lots of parking or $1,450 per month.
ELDORADO
5 offices, lounge area, 2 baths, very high quality finish. Call James Wheeler at 505-988-8081 NAI Maestas & Ward
LOTS & ACREAGE
MANUFACTURED HOMES RE FOR SALE
2013, KARSTEN, 3 BED 2 BATH, BRAND NEW, 16X80 IN SANTA FE HACIENDA MHP BY THE NEW WALMART. SPECIAL LOAN PROGRAM ALLOWS GOOD CREDIT, BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT.AND HOME PAYOFF IN 10 YEARS. (2) Available Space #83 and #51. $55,695.00 Call Tim for appt at 505-699-2955
1 BEDROOM close to downtown. Very quiet. No pets, no smoking. $725 monthly plus deposit. 505-982-2941
$199,000. 4 CABINS, 8 ACRES.
HOUSE, GUEST, 4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH. REMODELED. 3352 SF, ON ACEQUIA. PRIVATE WELL, 1/3 ACRE. IRRIGATED LANDSCAPING, GARAGE. $597,500. 505-577-6300
CHAMA RIVER OVERLOOK, 2 HOURS TO SANTA FE. BRAZOS MOUNTAIN REAL ESTATE, Judy: (575)588-9308. MLS#201200754
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
2 ½ Acres on Nancy’s Trail in La Cienega. 2 ½ Acres off St. Rd. 14 well & electricity. 40 Acres on Gold Mine Rd. All owner financed.
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
986-3000
NEWER 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOUSE ON 1.5 ACRES. 25 MILES FROM SANTA FE IN ROWE, NM. On the edge of the Santa Fe National Forest. Large laundry room, all tile and wood floors. Loads of natural light. Wood stove. Excellent insulation. Storage shed. Fenced back yard. Plumbed for gray water use. $164,000. Call Kathy DeLaTorre, Barker Realty, 505-6997835. MLS # 201300863.
ST. MICHAEL’S VILLAGE WEST SHOPPING CENTER
High visibility, great parking, centrally located. 1,283 to 12,125 square feet. Negotiable rent. www.thomasprop.com (505)983-3217
STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648
SUMMER ON THE PLAZA 1 BEDROOM HARDWOOD CARPETED FLOORS. $800 MONTHLY, NO PETS, NON-SMOKING. CONVIENIENT LIVING 2 BLOCKS FROM THE PLAZA. SECURITY PATROLLED. 6+ MONTH LEASE. PARKING AVAILABLE. 505-988-1815 Holli Henderson
POJOAQUE: 3500 square foot, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, garage, front and back yards. Extras. Must see! $1,500 monthly plus utilities, and security deposit. Non-smoking, no pets. Lease. 505-455-3158
SUNNY WITH BEAUTIFUL VIEWS, great for Artists! 2500 SQ ft. $1800 monthly includes utilities, you pay propane. Newly renovated East Side Adobe home. Country setting, huge yard, 4 miles from plaza. 2 bedroom, 1 and 1/4 bath. 2 car garage, or storage-workshop. Fireplace and wood stove. 1 year lease. References. Dog ok. 505-690-7279
LOT FOR RENT MOBILE HOME SPACES AVAILABLE Tesuque Trailer Village 505-989-9133
GUESTHOUSES
HOUSES FURNISHED
OFFICES
LA PUEBLA
1 & 2 bedroom homes in country 20 miles north of Santa Fe. Year lease minimum. No pets; no inside smoking. 505-753-4271. NOW’S THE TIME TO BUY
EAST SIDE one bedroom. 2 kiva fireplaces, private patio, and skylights. 3 or 6 month lease. $1450 monthly. 800-272-5678
Great neighborhood. All utilities included. Walk to Plaza. Private patio. Clean. Off-street parking. Nonsmoking. no pets. Prefer quiet tenant. 505-685-4704
CHARMING 2 bedroom, 1 bath home close to Hospital, parks and high school. Central location allows quick access anywhere in town. $575 plus utilities.
COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. (505)470-4269, (505)455-2948.
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Hardwood floors, security lighting, parking, clean, washer, dryer hook-up. 505471-1270, appointment only.
$800. 1 Bedroom, Hillside Historic District.
CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fenced in backyard with deck, washer/dryer hook up’s, 1 car garage. $1,150 plus utilities.
SECOND FLOOR 1 bedroom 1 bath. All new paint. San Mateo Condos. No pets, non-smokers. $825 monthly. 505-920-3233 or email alsromero@q.com
CHARMING SANTA FE S T Y L E HOME, FURNISHED. Private, Rural. 5 minutes to Plaza. 1 bedroom. Available monthly 6/1-10/1. $1200 monthly. 505-216-8372.
Very clean, quiet, all utilities paid. Security doors, No pets. 505-473-0278
NORTH SIDE CONDO 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, Kiva fireplace, covered patio, washer/dryer, tile counters. $995 plus utilities.
COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. (505)470-4269, (505)455-2948.
Clean & ready to move-in, include washer, dryer, Saltillo tile & carpet. Private parking. No smoking. No pets. 1 year lease.
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, south end of town, near Rodeo and Sawmill Rds. $875, plus utilities. Living room kiva, high ceiling with vigas and clerestory windows. Private, fenced patio. Parking in front of apartement. No smoking. Require 1st and $475 deposit. 1 year lease. Contact J at 505780-0127.
4 BEDROOM, 5 BATHS, 2 OFFICES, FAMILY, DINING, MEDIA ROOMS, TWO STORY 4800 square feet, SUNNY KITCHEN This gorgeous unfurnished home in Nambe with tall trees, mountain views, the tranquility of the country, yet is 20 minutes to Santa Fe and Los Alamos. The house has large windows, portals, four bedrooms, five bathrooms, two offices, living, dining, family/ TV rooms, a large, modern kitchen. Two fireplaces, wood stove, outdoor gas barbecue, two car garage, alarm. Extremely energy efficient with clean deep well water. Large grass backyard, treehouse, garden beds, fruit trees, chicken coop. Grounds maintained by caretaker. Perfect for a family with children. Dogs and most pets welcome. Available immediately one or more years. $2900 monthly. 972-385-1646 www.santafecountryhome.com
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH
CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, Santa Fe Style, lots of light. $1,100, utilities included, plus deposit. 505-9892765
988-5585
FOR LEASE OR SALE IDEAL FOR ANY BUSINESS THAT REQUIRES WAITING, RECEPTION. 5 PRIVATE OFFICES - PLUS 505-992-6123, or 505-690-4498
Beautiful mountain views off of West Alameda. Approx. 950 sq.ft. $1,100 month includes utilities, $700 deposit. Forced air heat.
813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY , 1 Bedroom, Full Kitchen and 1 Bath, Small Backyard. $755 with gas and water paid. 2700 GALISTEO, 1 Bedroom, Full Kitchen and 1 Bath, Living room, Fireplace, $735 with water paid. 813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY, Live-in Studio, Full Bath & Kitchen. Tile Throughout. Small Backyard. $680 with gas and water paid. 1425 PASEO DE PERALTA, 1 Bedroom, Full Bath & Kitchen, Tile Throughout. $735 all utilities paid. Free Laundry. No Pets in all apartments! 505-471-4405
Come see this great semi-custom home in the gated community in Cieneguilla. 2,000 sqft – 3 bedrooms, 2 big baths – study – 2 car garage – full acre $359,400.
2000 SQUARE FEET. 2 offices, 1 bath. LAS VEGAS HISTORIC RAILROAD DISTRICT. Clean potential art studio. $750 monthly. Jeff, 505-454-0332.
2/1 RANCHO SIRINGO RD. Fireplace, fenced yard, separte dining room, laundry room on-site. $699 monthly plus utilities & deposit. Chamisa Managment Corp. 505-988-5299.
$550 STUDIO APARTMENT
OUT OF TOWN
COMMERCIAL SPACE
1 BEDROOM Coronado Condos. $550 monthly plus utilities, $400 deposit. Clean, fresh paint, new floors. No pets, no smoking. (505)670-9867 or (505)473-2119
Call 505-231-0010.
4 BEDROOM, 3 bath, 3 car garage, near plaza. 2 decks, landscaped, custom amenities throughout. Spectacular views. $3800 monthly. 505-920-4024
Call Carmen to find out how. Carmen Flores 505-699-4252 Se habla español cflores@homewise.org Homewise, Inc. 505-983-9473 www.homewise.org
1 BEDROOM, fully furnished, enclosed patio, $1,250 monthly, includes utilities. Available May 10 through July 23. 1 month minimum. 505-986-0971 leave message.
VIGAS
1 of 5, 5 acre lots behind St. Johns College. Hidden Valley, Gated Road $25k per acre, Terms. 505-231-8302
HOME ON 3.41 acres in exclusive Ridges. 2,319 sq.ft., 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, 1 Fireplace, 2 Car Garage. Attached studio with separate entrance. Horses allowed. Only 1 mile from Eldorado shopping center. Appraised by LANB for $518,000. Sale by owner $499,000. (505)466-3182.
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
1 BEDROOM close to DeVargas Mall and downtown. $685 monthly plus utilities and deposit. Call Lawrence 505-690-4753
Heart of the Historic East Side Walking distance to the Plaza
Overlooking a deep arroyo, home to deer, coyote and many species of birds. The Llano Compound was designed according to "green" principles by a student of Frank Lloyd Wright and built by the group who built Biosphere II. Uniquely Santa Fe llano14santafe.com 575-640-3764
Pacheco Street Condo Sleek, modern flexible living space offers 1 or 2 bedrooms, studio or work space, 1.5 bath, Viking appliances, granite countertops, wood floors, washer & dryer, 2 decks, off street parking. Walk to RailRunner & TJ’s. 5 minutes to Plaza. Ideal location for young professionals. $1250 monthly. Heat, hot water, AC, electric included. 6 month to 1 year lease. No smoking. Pets negotiable. References required. (505)780-0428.
1 BEDROOM apartment $575 per month. $150 deposit. Utilities included. In Santa Fe. Section 8 housing accepted. (505)927-3356. Please leave a message.
Exquisite Adobe Home $540,000 2 bedroom 2 bath Vigas & Beams 2 Kiva fireplaces Mountain views Landscaped Courtyard Brick & Wood floors Radiant heat Total privacy
APARTMENTS FURNISHED CLEAN PRIVATE 1 BEDROOM, $700. 2 BEDROOM, $750. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No pets. 505-471-0839
5600 SQUARE FOOT WAREHOUSE with 800 SQUARE FOOT LIVE-IN SPACE. Near National Guard. $2000 rental income. 1 acre. $290,000. 505470-5877 4600 square feet, 600 square foot 2 car garage. 2 miles north of Plaza. 1105 Old Taos Highway. Needs updating. $510,000. (505)470-5877
Homewise can help you. Monthly payments could be lower than your rent. Santa Fe homes for as low as $150,000. Low down payment. Call Carmen Flores to find out how you can qualify to buy a home through Homewise. Financing and down-payment assistance is available for those who qualify.
HOUSES PART FURNISHED HUMMINGBIRD HEAVEN! 25 minutes from Harry’s Roadhouse. SPOTLESS! 2 baths, terraces, granite, radiant. Private Acre. Non-smoking. No pets. $1400. 505-310-1829
Looking to own your own home? Homewise can help you buy a home in Santa Fe. Homewise is with you every step of the way, helping you improve your credit, finding the right home, and securing affordable fixed-rate mortgage. Your mortgage payment could be lower than your rent. Low interest financing with no mortgage insurance for qualified buyers. Down payment assistance may also be available.
CORNER OFFICE SUITE. Gated, parking, 2 offices, reception, supply room, separate kitchen, 2 blocks from new Courthouse. Call 505-6708895 GREAT DESTINY SPACE WATER STREET OFFICE SPACE/ GALLERY SPACE. $1600 MONTHLY. 505-988-1815 Holli Henderson
GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE
Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266 Call today to find out how. Carmen Flores 505-699-4252 Homewise, Inc. 505-983-9473 www.homewise.org
LOVELY PROFESSIONAL OFFICE $425 monthly. Near Railyard area. Utilities, internet, parking, bath, kitchen, beautiful shared space, cleaning included. 505-988-5960
73
%*
of those surveyed read most or all of their local newspaper.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED 1500 SQUARE FOOT Unfurnished House. Zia- St. Francis Area . 2 bedroom, 1-3/4 bath. 1 car detached garage/office. $1500 monthly. 1st month, Last Month, $700 Deposit required at lease signing. Call 505-6709883 for appointment to view.
$1900 MONTHLY. 2,600 sqft. 4 bedroom, 2 living rooms, large sun room, 2 car garage, enclosed patio, new appliances, quiet neighborhood. Pets ok. Non-smokers preferred. 505-977-2781 or email marticas17@gmail.com 2 BEDROOM ADOBE CASITA, Washer/ dryer, fenced-in. Close to Plaza, park. $800 & $300 cleaning damage. 505-204-0830, 505-988-3458. Available 5/15/13.
3 BEDROOM 2 BATH 2 car garage, washer and dryer. $1000. 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH 1 car garage, laundry hook ups, tile floors. $900. 20 minutes south of Santa Fe 505-359-4778 or 505-980-2400 3 BEDROOM 2 bath home in gated Vista Primera (Airport and 599). Spacious master bedroom double sinks. $1300 monthly. Call Brad 690-5190. ACEQUIA MADRE. EXCLUSIVE EASTSIDE. 2000 square foot, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kiva, Vigas. Living, dining. Washer, dryer. Off-street parking. Non-smoking. No pets. $1500. 505-982-3907
Nearly 40% keep their community newspaper more than a week. (Shelf life). Let YOUR
Let YOUR Local Newspaper Work For You. Local Newspaper Work For You.
*From research compiled by the National Newspaper Association
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
»rentals«
»jobs«
STORAGE SPACE
986-3000
EDUCATION
EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
SCIENCE TEACHER
WANTED TO RENT
ADMINISTRATIVE
OFFICES PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.
2 year lease on horse property with home, barn and 10 or more acres, budget is $3000 per month. William 970-426-8034
WORK STUDIOS RETAIL SPACE 2ND STREET. High ceilings, 2000 square feet. Track lighting. Roll-up doors uncover large glass windows, storage room, small backyard. Easy parking. $1700 monthly + utilities + $1700 security deposit (negotiable). Available now! 505-490-1737
ST. MICHAEL’S DRIVE OUTSTANDING SPACE FOR RETAIL OR OFFICE. 505-992-6123, OR 505-690-4498
ROOMMATE WANTED
»announcements«
$450 INCLUDES UTILITIES. Shared bath. 3 miles north of Plaza. No dogs. Deposit. Month-to-month. 400 square feet. Available 5/2. 505-470-5877
ROOM FOR RENT $500 plus half utilities.
DIRECTOR OF MORTGAGE LENDING
Homewise, a non-profit affordable housing organization, seeks a Director of Mortgage Lending for our Santa Fe office. This position has overall responsibility for implementing our lending strategy including mortgage lending in other states. Candidate must have demonstrated proficiency in strategic, organizational, and operational leadership and be able to identify issues and lead change in all three areas. Applicant must be able to expand and deepen our partnerships with third-party originators and ensure organizational self-sufficiency. Must have ability to align and manage complex work activities into a seamless, efficient process that effectively leverages our resources and personnel to provide stellar value to our customers, while maintaining a productive and satisfying work environment. A college degree and minimum of 5 years in mortgage loan leadership is required. Competitive compensation package. EOE. Send resume and cover letter to jcook@homewise.org.
New, 5 year old house, nicely furnished, kitchen access and house share!
Furnished or Unfurnished Bedroom with Private Bath Washer & Dryer. Safe, quiet, nice neighborhood. Close to Community College.
Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
FOUND CAR & HOUSE KEYS, intersection of Lujan & Rosina Street, 5/2. Call to identify. 505-670-3777. FOUND I-PAD. FOUND W. ALAMEDA & CAMPO. IT WAS RUN OVER! Call to describe: 505-954-1350
Lease preferred, but not mandatory. Available now! 505-238-5711
FOUND MALE CHIHUAHUA. Black with grey muzzle. Approximately 10+ years. Found Governor Mills Road, 5/3/13. Body can be picked up within 2 weeks at Emergency Veterinary Services on Rodeo Park Drive.
ROOMS 1 BEDROOM PRIVATE BATH $450 monthly. Share house with two male adults. Cat okay. Fenced yard. $200 refundable security. 505 660-3170
LOST DIAMOND cross lost at Albertsons at Zia and St. Francis. Great sentimental value. Reward! 505-795-8643
UNFURNISHED ROOM TO RENT NICE HOME, NICE NEIGHBORHOOD, NEAR ST. JOHN’S CURRENTLY TWO PROFESSIONAL WOMEN AND TWO SWEET DOGS LIVE HERE. SHARED BATHROOM WITH SHOWER AND SMALL BATHROOM FOR YOU SHARED COMMON LIVING SPACES AS MUCH PRIVACY OR COMMUNAL LIVING AS YOU CHOOSE $500 PLUS PORTION OF UTILITIES CALL 428-7625 OR TEXT 577-2305
LOST EARRINGS. Large turquoise stone and small lapis stone with gold french wires. Whole foods Cerrillos Road, Bumble Bee’s downtown. REWARD! (505)438-6299
Be Seen & Read Your
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STORAGE SPACE
Submit cover letter and resume to Lenora Portillo, Santa Fe Preparatory School, 1101 Camino de la Cruz Blanca, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505. lportillo@sfprep.org. EOE
FREE ADS SOLD Advertise what you want to sell, $100 or less. The New Mexican will give you the ad for free. It sells, you make money.
is searching for a cheerful, energetic, self-starter to fill a part time weekend receptionist vacancy at our Washington Avenue office. Responsibilities include answering and directing incoming calls; distributing mail and faxes; greeting and directing clients, vendors and visitors; maintaining office supplies; maintaining a professional and clean work environment; scheduling appointments and showings; and assisting with other administrative duties as needed. The work hours are Saturdays and Sundays from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM. Related experience along with excellent PC and communication skills are required. All qualified candidates must apply on line and include their salary requirements at http://www.realogy.com/careers, search for job IRC36426. EOE
sfnm«classifieds 986-3000 classad@sfnewmexican.com HOSPITALITY EL PARASOL Currently seeking Prep Cooks and Line Cooks. Please Apply at 1833 C errillos R oad.
Full Time Dishwasher
Must be able to communicate effectively in English. Apply in person at 250 East Alameda. Monday - Friday 9:00a.m. - 5:00p.m. No Phone calls please
MEDICAL DENTAL
MANAGEMENT
The New Mexico Public Regulation Commission is accepting applications for the position of General Counsel. The position advises the Commission on regulatory matters, including rulemakings and adjudicatory proceedings involving the regulation of electric and gas utilities, telecommunications providers, and motor carriers; represents the Commission in federal and state trial and appellate courts. The position requires extensive knowledge of administrative law practice and procedures and of substantive law in the areas regulated by the Commission; ability to draft clear, concise legal documents; ability to prioritize within a heavy workload environment. Minimum qualifications: JD from an accredited law school; ten years of experience in the practice of law, including at least four years of administrative or regulatory law practice and three years of staff supervision; admission to the New Mexico Bar or commitment to taking and passing Bar Exam within six months of hire. Background in public utilities, telecommunications, transportation, engineering, economics, accounting, litigation, or appellate practice preferred. Salary: $56,000- $90,000 per year (with benefits). Salary based on qualifications and experience. This is a GOVEX "at will" position. The State of NM is an EOE Employer. Apply: Via U.S. mail, submit letter of interest, résumé, writing sample and three references to: Johnny Montoya, Chief of Staff, NMPRC P.O. Box 1269, Santa Fe, NM 875041269. Applications must be postmarked by May 24.
MEDICAL DENTAL
COMFORT KEEPERS
Seeking caring and compassionate caregivers experienced in personal care willing to work in the Santa Fe and Los Alamos area. Please call 505-988-8851 to inquire. FUN AND fast paced dental office looking for a schedule coordinator with a minimum 3 years experience scheduling appointments. Full time available. Fax resumes to 505-995-6202
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
986-3000
PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE Has immediate openings for a:
• LICENSED PHYSICAL THERAPIST • LICENSED OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST We offer competitive salaries. Please contact Carol, 505-982-8581.
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS SEEKING DEPENDABLE GENTLE EXPERIENCED PART-TIME
GROOMER.
Call 505-753-1920 or asah12@windstream.net.
PART TIME LORETTO CHAPEL PART-TIME Seasonal worker. Apply in person. No Phone Calls. See Ben or Mary for Interview. 211 Old Santa Fe Trail PART TIME development and marketing professional for the Santa Fe Girls’ School, a non profit private school for girls grades 6 - 8. Looking for someone who has interest and experience in BOTH development and marketing. Minimum 5 years experience in development. Event management experience a plus. 20 hours a week. Send resume to sandysfgs@outlook.com. No calls please.
RETAIL RETAIL SALES person wanted in Southwest Jewelery and Art. Apply at Sleeping Beauty Jewelers, 204 W. San Francisco Street. SALESPERSON For our Outdoor Courtyard featuring Mexican crafts. Apply at The Rainbow Man, 107 East Palace. 505-982-8706
TRADES HIRING EXPERIENCED service plumber and HVAC Tech. Needs EPA certifiaction. Clean driving record. Drug test required. (505)424-9191
TAILOR / SEAMSTRESS
Pay based on experience. Good communication skills a must! No nights/ evening work. Apply in person: Express Alterations, 1091 St. Francis; or call 505-204-3466 between 10 and 5.
TREE CLIMBER / TRIMMER
CDL A Plus Coates Tree Service, 505-983-6233
You can view your legal ad online at sfnmclassifieds.com CONSTRUCTION
Here
Now available in-column in The Classifieds from
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122
Santa Fe Preparatory School is seeking a highly qualified high school science teacher eager to inspire students and join a dynamic, collaborative faculty. Applicants should have experience with interdisciplinary science curriculum and have demonstrated proficiency in physics and/or chemistry. Beginning August, 2013.
Even a stick kid gets it.
FOUND
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
NEW MEXICO PUBLIC REGULATION COMMISSION GENERAL COUNSEL
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330
B-7
HIGH END residential General Contractor seeking FULL-TIME JOB SUPERINTEN DENT. Must have at least 10 years construction experience. Please send resume and references to 302 Catron St., Santa Fe, NM 87501
EDUCATION
4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00
ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHER
for private all-girls middle school. Preferred candidate experienced, licensed, passionate about teaching critical thinking, exchange of ideas, excellence in oral & written communication, analytical reading & literature. Email resume to: janetsfgs@outlook.com. No phone calls please.
service«directory CALL 986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! CARETAKING OLIVAS SISTERS HOME HEALTH CARE
CLASSES
FLOORING
BEGINNER’S PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $25 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684
RML FLOORING Re-finishing of wood floors. New wood, tile, brick and flagstone flooring installation. Licensed, Bonded. Senior Discount 15%. 505-412-0013
CLEANING
LANDSCAPING
WE PROVIDE : Dr. Visits, assistance with meds, personal attention, cooking and light housekeeping. Thoughtful companionship, 24/7. Licensed and Bonded. Great references upon request. Maria Olivas (505)316-3714
CHIMNEY SWEEPING CASEY’S TOP HAT Celebrating 35 years solving Santa Fe’s unique chimeny problems. Save $15 during the month of May with this ad. Call Casey’s today! 505-989-5775
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493
CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT
Windows and carpet. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Silvia, 505-920-4138. Handyman, FREE estimates, Bernie, 505-316-6449.
Will clean houses and offices. Good references. Reasonable prices. Call Silvia Membreno (505)316-2402
AC JACK, LLC SERVICES. All your home and yard needs. Flowerbeds, trees, & irrigation maintenance available. Email: lealch32@q.com 505-474-6197, 505-913-9272.
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPING JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112
MOVERS
COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING - Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES, 15% OFF ALL SUMMER LONG! 505-907-2600, 505-990-0955.
PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.
Coyote and Wood Fencing Outdoor Landscaping, Painting, Flagstone, Tree Removal, Hauling Trash and Yard Work. Call, 505-570-9054.
HANDYMAN REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877
LANDSCAPING
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599. PROFESSIONAL, HONEST, REASONABLE Excavating, Paving, Landscaping, Demolition and Concrete work. Licensed, Bonded, Insured References. 505-470-1031
PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded. Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119.
PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
TRASH HAULING, Landscape clean up, tree cutting, anywhere in the city and surrounding areas. Call Gilbert, 505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ESTIMATES!
STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Faux Plaster, paint to match, synthetic systems. Locally owned. Bonded, Insured, Licensed. 505-316-3702
MOVERS
STORAGE
Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881.
A VALLY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
sfnm«classifieds »jobs«
APPLIANCES
ORGANIC HORSE Manure Barbara 471-3870
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES
POTTING BENCH. Hand made with storage shelf. $15 505-231-9133
EASEL: PORTABLE WOOD fold-down carry with handle. $75. 505-989-4114 SOFT PASTELS, Rembrandt, New! 45 count. Value $119; sell $85. 505-9894114 SOFT PASTELS, Rembrandt, New! 60 count. Value $159; sell $90. 505-9894114
P/T MACHINE ATTENDANT
*NO PRIOR MACHINE EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
BUILDING MATERIALS Concrete wire mesh, 4 x 4 squares, roll, $85. 505-662-6396
Responsible for loading material, and cleaning, of production equipment. Collecting and stacking down of press, bindery, and inserted papers, Keeps all production equipment supplied with the correct materials to keep machine running at maximum efficiency. Must be able to communicate well with co workers and stand for prolonged periods with repetitive bending and lifting of 20 pounds and the ability to occasionally lift up to 75 pounds. This is an entry level position with opportunities to advance to full time employment with benefits as well as advancing to other positions in the production department. Shifts will vary based on availability, but will most likely be evening/night positions. SUBMIT APPLICATION TO: TIM CRAMER 1 New Mexican Plaza No Phone Calls please. Successful completion of a drug test and physical will be required prior to employment offer.
CLOTHING MBT SHOES. Perfect Great Shape! Size 8.5 womens, 8.5 mens. $25 each. 505-474-9020
COLLECTIBLES Encyclopedia Britannica 29 volume set, 15th Edition, 1989, plus 1989/90 Annuals, Index, & Guide. Joanne (505)471-1784
COMPUTERS DELL LAPTOP. Full size with case and charger. $100. Call Joey 505-819-8622
WANTED
BALING TWINE used Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888
ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.
»garage sale« Natasha is a 3-legged wunderkit! She is very affectionate and loves to be held.
Good quality 6ft artificial Christmas tree. Disassembles into 4 sections including stand. Helen (505)820-0729
Serena A 4 - year-old American Staffordshire terrier mix, absolutely loves playing with tennis balls!
LARGE UMBRELLA, faded green, but good. Wooden structure. $15, 505989-4845 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC M a g a zines most recent 5 years in mint condition great for school or reading room. Email: h.wayne.nelson@q.com or 989-8605 NYLON POTATO or onion 50lb sacks Dan 455-2288 ext. 101
RADIO, REFERENCE 240R by Quadraflex. Tape Player: Reference 412D, Record Player: 620T Quadraflex plays Records. Speakers: 16wide, 29" high: Reference 310L by CBS Audio Products T-53720. Sony HIFI Stereo Video Cassette Recorder, CD Player, TV TrinitronAll for $100. 505-989-7629 Tube feeding sets: 36 sealed packages of Kangaroo Joey, 1000ml pump sets with FeedOnly Anti-Free Flow (AFF) Valve. Suitable for use with pump or gravity drip. Nina (505)988-1889
She is very affectionate and loving, and enjoys a good belly rub. Costanza is a short-legged, fat little guy who loves to smile for the camera.
While she plays hard during tennis time, she knows the importance of proper rest so is pretty mellow in between games.
For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at www.evalleyshelter.org
Come meet the great Serena and other wonderful animals at the
Be Seen & Read Your
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Here
HUGE PARKING LOT SALE New Life Family Fellowship 1612 Pacheco Street May 11th from 7:00 a.m. until 3 p.m. Clothes, Construction Tools, Kitchen Appliances, Arts/Crafts & Much, Much, MORE! Also sell your own stuff!! Rent a space for $20 & suggested donation 10% of profits.
100 Caja del Rio Road, sfhumanesociety.org, 983-4309 ext. 610
Call 982-8950 to reserve your spot Fundraiser for Panama Mission Trip
»finance«
»cars & trucks«
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
CLASSIC CARS
Now available in-column in The Classifieds from
OFFICE DESKS in good condition 505-466-1525
PHOTO EQUIPMENT
Email resume to: ntorrez@ swassetmanagement.com or Fax to: (505) 982-6123, Attention Nick
»merchandise«
ROOFING
FREE STANDING water distiller. Good condition. $75. 505-982-6438
HP Printer 13X LASER PRINTER CARTRIDGE (505)983-4277
Maintenance person for established commercial real estate company. Experienced in HVAC, electrical, plumbing and miscellaneous repairs. Health insurance, Cellular phone. 40 hours per week, on call every other weekend. Background check will be performed.
PETS SUPPLIES
MISCELLANEOUS
3 BUSINESS phones in good shape Gabe 466-0999
WINDOWS 7 Computer 2 DVD Burners 6 USB 225 gig HD 1.5 gig Ram, $99. 505-216-6208
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
SELF PROPELLED lawn mower $125. 505-982-9941
OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT
SANTA FE Apartments is currently accepting applications for a Temporary Maintenance Position. Apply in person at 255 Camino Alire. Santa Fe Apartments is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
986-3000 PETS SUPPLIES
LAWN & GARDEN
STACKABLE Kenmore electric washer dryer. $100. 505-662-6396
CARVING STONE for sale. MARBLE, ONYX, LIMESTONE, and ALABASTER Some tools available as well. Cash or credit card. Call 505-455-3898
TRADES
to place your ad, call
FOR SALE Lamp repair restoration and assembly Business established 20 years. With clientele, convenient location with parking, will train. 505-988-1788.
TEAC DOUBLE Cassette Deck W-450r Analog fans will love this Deck, $40. 505-216-6208
FURNITURE
LANDSCAPING DRIP, SPRINKLER, AND PUMP TROUBLESHOOTING, REPAIR, INSTALL. All problems solved. Call Dave 660-2358.
KODAK MINI Video Camera Small and convenient uses Micro SD card which is nice! $25. 505-216-6208
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
AUTHENTIC WROUGHT Iron Outdoor Chase Lounge, $75 with cushion. 505-690-6041
ANTIQUES 11 FIGURINES, Occupied Japan. Some marked, some not. $100. 505-466-6205
DINING ROOM TABLE, drop-in leaf with pad. $100. 505-473-5480
Table,
$85.
STAIRMASTER FREE CLIMBER4400 PT. Like new. You pick up. $200, 505-4740327
SONY SPEAKERS, Model SS-82600U. Black. $40. Great condition. Call 505231-9133.
ART DECO, nude. Very old. 4” tall. Ivory color- black base. $85. 505-4666205
Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
CHILD’S MILITARY iron figures. 24 pieces plus repairable ones. All for $90. 505-989-4114
COCA-COLA CHANGE tray, 1973. New. (Elaine Coca-Cola). $15. (505)466-6205
LOVELY BLOND table with 4 comfortable chairs. $300. 505-471-4713
COKE TRAY Elaine Coca-Cola change tray. Original. $65. 505-466-6205
LOVE SEAT, off white leather. $75. Margie, 505-986-9260
»animals«
Used single box & foam mattress set. Joanne (505)471-1784
OLD LARGE CEDAR Chest. shape. $100 OBO. 505-310-0264
Good
STAFFORD SMIRE Chamber Pot. Blue. $50. (505)466-6205
APPLIANCES DRYER KENMORE 220 volts, white, $100. 505-662-6396 GE Profile Double oven 1 convection GE Spacemaker Microwave XL 1400 Raypak boiler 50 gal water heater (American Water Heater Company) Nina 577-3751 SAMSUNG WASHER, Energy Star, front load, white, like new. $275. GE dryer, high capacity, $75. Call 505988-1226
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2-person Nordic brand “D’Amour” Hot Tub. Unique, acrylic heart shape, 200 Gal. easy to maintain w/ ozone package, automatic filter, 26 jets + turbo massager. Energy efficient, 120V or 220V. Dimensions 84" x72" x 34" mahogany exterior with lapis interior. Package includes cover and matching steps. Like new, consistently serviced & cleaned. PRICED TO SELL - $1200.00 OBO AVAILABLE FOR VIEWING BY APPOINTMENT 505-699-4405
LAWN & GARDEN HORSE MANURE (free tractor loading) Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888 HORSE MANURE (you haul any amount) Barbara 466-2552 Lots of folding wire fencing for vegetable and/or flower gardens. (505)231-6863
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16 YEAR old Purebred Arabian Bay gelding, beautiful horse, sweet gentle disposition. Western pleasure, trail riding, parade experience, well trained, very smooth to ride. Grandson to Muscat, Aladdinn, Khemosabi. $2,500 obo. 505-681-1578
Blue Heeler Puppies for Sale 6 weeks old. Working dogs 4 females 4 males. For serious inquiries please call Jeff 505-901-1976 DOBERMAN PINSCHERS, Purebred. Black and Tan. 9 weeks, tails docked, first shots. $300. 575-581-4600 MALE TIGER striped cat. Neutered, has shots, indoor, outdoor. FREE! 505-930-1120
Full line of d track shoes as.n accessorie
running hub e
PETS SUPPLIES 1 Shitzu female. 7 weeks old. 1st shots given. White, brown and black. $450. Parents on site. (505)780-0096
REE FNOT UT f HASH DON rchase o
T S A F K A E R B Y L VALID I A D ! S L A I C E P S H C E & LUN R F E E R F Bakin e F
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RELAXATION MEETS
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HAND-PAINTED JAPAN, cotton-ball holder. Top removable. Approximately 100 years old. $75. 505-4666205
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ENAMEL PITCHER & Bowl, white. $45. (505)466-6205 GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE. AUDREY PATON ANTIQUES 401 12th Street in Carrizozo, NM. [Directly behind Wells Fargo Bank] Carrizozo is 2½ hours south of Santa Fe at Hwy 380 & Hwy 54 intersection Over $300,000 of Furniture and Furnishings for sale Sale Prices… UP TO 60 % OFF Listed Prices! Open Wednesdays - Saturdays 10 AM to 5 PM 575-648-2762 or by Appointment 575-648-1172
1.00
f coffee $ 2# oNOT $ 14.99 50 Ct. ny flavor aVALID
Sell your car in a hurry!
CHARLIE’S ANTIQUES 811 CERRILLOS TUESDAY- SUNDAY 11-5:30. WORLD COLLECTIBLES of art, jewelry, pottery, military and more! We buy. (505)470-0804
E. JOY Morris Carousel Horse in prancing pose and restored to original paint. No repairs to animal. Tail is horse hair but not original horse hair. $3,000. Call 505-982-8255.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
TV RADIO STEREO
ANTIQUE ICE CREAM Stool & Chair (needs bottom), $50. (505)466-6205 ANTIQUE ICE CREAM (505)466-6205
FITNESS BENCH NEW! Incline/flat, knee roll. GREAT FOR ABS! $50. 505474-9020
POMERANIAN TEACUP & TOY SIZES. Registered. First shots. Quality double-coats. Chocolate, cream, black, exotic silver merle & chocolate merle. 505-901-2094
BEAUTIFUL BLACK on Black SS 396 138 code 1967 Chevelle. Completely redone with a fresh big block 454 with less than 5000 miles. 4 Speed , new bumpers but have old ones that come with the car. can be seen at Mustang ED’s on Lopez Ln. $31,000 Calls Only 505-310-0381
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Monday, May 6, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »cars & trucks«
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
SPORTS CARS
2002 FORD FOCUS. $1200 4 cylinder, needs fuel pump. 18" rims. Salvage title for more info call 505-501-9584
1999 HONDA Civic. Low miles, clean , 2nd owner. New cd player with MP3 hook up. Very reliable. Tinted windows. $4000 obo. Good trades considerded. Call 505-603-1356
2003 MERCEDES BENZ E320. Loaded power windows, power locks, heated seats, 6 disc changer, power seats, automatic, v6, and much more. Very good condition, luxury and reliable. Just serviced and new tires. 141,000 miles. $8000 obo Please call for more info (505)720-1344
2006 TOYOTA AVALON LIMITED FWD, Carfax, Records, One Owner, Non Smoker, Garaged, New Tires, Loaded $13,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
1998 FIREBIRD Transam. MUST SEE to believe, flawless condition, fast, chip, LS1 eng., Auto, T-TOP, New TIRES!, garaged, fantastic condition! $12,000. 505-469-3355
2000 FORD Taurus. Great car , nice on gas, runs good. Asking $2200 OBO. Cash Only! Please call (505)316-3931. Serious inquiries only please.
2005 KIA SPECTRA 5. Original owner. 120k miles. Good mechanics- needs cosmetics. $4,000 OBO. Priced under book value. 361-446-8114
Sell Your Stuff!
1995 Ford Mustang Gt V8. Runs great, has after market rear lights, nice stereo. High miles but runs great! Good heater & AC, nice tires and rims. New paint job only 2 months old. Must drive! Interior needs seat covers and a little cleaning but fast car! call to see 505-930-1193 $4000
SUVs 2001 VOLVO S40 1.9 Turbo. Only 46k miles! 4 cyl, Automatic, Power locks, Power windows, tilt steering, air conditioning. The interior and upholstery is very clean. This car runs like new , no joke! And it’s good on gas. Does have a salvage title. $4800. If interested please call (505)316-0890
986-3000
1 9 99 NISSAN Sentra with a new clutch. Very clean reliable car. Really good gas milage, clean inside and outside. Clean title, the engine is completly clean, no leaking oil, no check engine light. $3200 O.B.O. Call or txt 505-469-7295
2008 SATURN VUE-XR AWD SUV One-Owner,Clean Carfax, Records, New Tires, Leather, Heated Seats, On-Star ,Most Options, Pristine $13,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
Lexus IS 250. Graphite with grey interior and navigation. Luxury and sporty. Must drive! 21k miles, certified with great interest rates. $28,641. STK#1252P. Call Danielle (505)9468039
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945 2003 LEXUS ES-300 SEDAN FWD One Owner, Clean Carfax ,Records, Manuals 60,484 Miles, Non-Smoker, Garaged, New Tires, Loaded Pristine $13,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
4X4s
2007 Cadillac Escalade. Black exterior with black interior. Chrome 22" tires, rear dvd, navigation. Luxury and style! Low miles $31,761. STK#1734A. Call Danielle (505)9468039 1997 XG6 Jaguar. $3000. V6, 4.0 engine, all power seats and windows , leather, good paint. 125k miles. Salvage title. Trade? For more info call 505-501-9584.
1988 PORSCHE CARRERA TARGA 911 Standard, Clean Carfax, Local Owner, Garaged, 61,548 Original miles, Every Service Record, Pristine $32,000 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
Toy Box Too Full?
GET NOTICED!
BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
CALL 986-3000
PICKUP TRUCKS
2002 CHEVY Trail Blazer $5500. Automatic, 170,000 miles, very clean , V6 motor vortec 4200, CD, A/C, power windows. Runs pretty good. Very nice! 505-501-5473
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
CAR STORAGE FACILITY Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039
CLASSIFIEDS
Place an ad Today!
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2004 NISSAN ALTIMA 3.5 - V6, 96 K miles, Runs GREAT, Heated Leather Seats, Sunroof, New Battery, has some body dings, one Adult owner, 28 MPG, $7000.00 OBO CALL 505-6902604
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
1984 MERCEDES 300D. All service records, runs well, looks great! Owned since 1986. $3900 OBO. 505-820-2958
Where treasures are found daily
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
IMPORTS
1967 IMPALA $3,500 obo, 1997 Cadillac $1,000. 1973 Impala $800. 22" Rims $650. Fishing Boat (16 Foot) $800. 505429-1239
1962 THUNDERBIRD 390. 93,800 original miles. Insured by American Bankers for $39,000. Asking $17,000 OBO. Very clean and all original! (505)6999100
986-3000
DOMESTIC
CLASSIC CARS
1978 CHEVY, 4 door 3/4 ton Truck TOO MUCH to list! This is a complete restored custom truck, with a racing cam and only 2000 miles on engine, loaded with chrome and extras, 23,000.00 in reciepts not including labor, trophy winner, with first place, best of show, engine, class, sound system and more. I can send photos. Call for details make offer. 505-4693355 $23000
to place your ad, call
B-9
1993 CHEVY 3/4 ton, 4x4, extended cab, air, power, cruise, 5 speed, power door locks & windows, removable gooseneck hitch, great tires, clean body, interior, and windows, nice tuned exhaust. $3500 505-469-3355
2006 SCION tc. Blue exterior, manual transmission. 86k miles. STK#13822B. $9,750. Call Danielle (505)946-8039
2002 CHEVY Avalanche. 116,000 miles, black leather interior, 24" rims, new single din multimidia DVD receiver, new window tint, has no oil leaks. Runs like new! NOT 4x4. For more info: Call txt 505-261-9565 if no answer txt or call 505-316-0168 Asking $8500. Might consider trades. Serious buyers only please.
2001 JEEP Charokee Sport. 6 Cylinder, automatic, 147,000 Miles. $4995 Call Manny at 505-570-1952
CALL 986-3000
GET NOTICED!
DOMESTIC CHEVY COBALT Coupe 2006, 5-spd manual, 108,000 miles $5500 call 505920-7492 or Auto Angel on Cerrillos
2008 Ford Explorer 4x4. Black with two- tone grey interior. Only 55k miles. Sporty and power everything! $17,751. STK#1582B Call Danielle (505)946-8039
2011 Mercedes-Benz E350 4Matic Wagon. 33k miles. Black-on-Black with special order black stained wood interior. Panoramic roof, Navigation, satellite radio, back-up camera. Factory warranty, clean Carfax, one owner.. $44995.00 TOP DOLLAR paid for trade-ins Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe Open Monday - Saturday 9-6 505-913-2900
1982 Chrysler Cordoba 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505-471-3911
2004 VOLVO XC 90 T6. 4X4. 68,200 miles Excellent condition. Safe reliable transportation. $11,750 505-9204524
2011 MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 4 Matic. V8, 7-passenger Luxury. Navigation, Satellite Radio, back-up camera, Surround Sound, Power Liftgate, Memory Seats, more! One owner, under 5k miles, factory warranty. $52995. TOP DOLLAR paid for trade-ins Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe Open Monday - Saturday 9-6 505-913-2900
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
CALL 986-3000
1986 SUZUKI samurai 78,000 driven miles, new tires, timing belt and carborator. Very good condition. $5,000. 505-660-0639 1997 CHEVY V8 4x4 $2900 AUTO MATIC NEW motor, new stereo, new radiator, white tool box in good shape. Runs well. Clean clear title. 505-501-5473 1974 CHEVY HEAVY HALF-TON. Great work truck, $1,200. Max, 505699-2311.
2005 SUBARU Legacy Outback XT. 94K miles, new subaru motor, turbo, etc. (2000 miles). AWD, automatic, black, cream interior, leather, tint, moon roof, loaded. $9,900. 505-6609477
CAMPERS & RVs 2012 Dodge Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi. Chrome wheels, bed liner, white with grey interior, club cab. Style and power! 28k miles. $27,991. STK#1255P Call Danielle (505)946-8039
2000 HARLEY-DAVIDSON SPORTSTER 883. Black & Chrome only 18,000 miles. Always garaged. Asking $3700 obo. Excellent condition!! Call 505757-3084
FOR A GOOD HONEST DEAL, PLEASE COME SEE YOUR HOMETOWN FORD, LINCOLN DEALER. NEW AND USED INVENTORY! STEVE BACA 505-316-2970
IMPORTS 1996 NISSAN PATHFINDER XE SERIES, 4X4. $2,250. Max, 505-699-2311.
2010 TOYOTA RAV-4 LIMITED 4X4 One-Owner, 38,000 Miles, Records, Carfax, Manuals, X-Keys, NonSmoker,Garaged,New Tires, Remaining Warranty, Loaded $23,495 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 4MATIC LUXURY SEDAN. Luxurious black-on-black C300, AWD. Special alloy wheels, unique grill, walnut wood trim, memory seats, garage door opener, heated seats, moonroof and more. 36k miles. $25,995. Top dollar paid for trade-ins.
25 OFF
$
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe Open Monday - Saturday 9-6. 505-913-2900
Selling your Car?
1998 FERRARI F355 GTB F1, 13,000 miles, all books, tools, records, maint. up to date, mint condition, $65,000, rllucero@yahoo.com.
Increase the value of your vehicle and SAVE when you place a classified auto ad!
of a “Detail for Resale” Package* at Squeaky Clean Car Wash
*Detail for Resale and classified minimum purchase restrictions apply.
2012 MONTE Carlo, 39 foot travel trailer. 2 slides, all options. Must sell this week! $25,300. Call, 830-534-1357.
MOTORCYCLES
SPORTS CARS
Yellow 2002 Jeep Wrangler XXL. Only 54,000 miles, 6 cyl 4.0, five speed, 4x4, A/C & heat. Outstanding condition & runs GREAT! 4 inch lift, Mud Tires. Call (505)819-9835 $9000.00
»recreational«
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
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986-3000 Squeaky Clean Car Wash
983-4201 or 474-4320
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS ADVERTISEMENT FOR PROPOSAL Cooperative Educational Services, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109, will receive sealed proposals until 1:30 p.m. local time, Friday, June 07, 2013, for RFP 2013 ]022 for E ]rate Consulting Services There will be a Non ]Required Pre ]Proposal Conference held on Thursday, May 16, 2013, at 1:30 p.m. local time at the Cooperative Educational Services offices, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM. To participate in the Pre ]ProposalConference by phone, contact CES f Procurement office by phone at 505 ]344 ]5470. All proposals must be submitted in a sealed envelope marked gSEALED PROPOSAL . RFP 2013 ]022 h on the front of the envelope. A list of qualifications and specifications, instructions to Bidders and RFP forms can be obtained upon request by fax (505 ]344 ]9343), mail, email (bids@ces.org) or by telephone (505 ]344 ]5470) from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday ]Friday, except holidays. Cooperative Educational Services reserves the express right to accept or reject any or all bids.
LEGALS CITY OF SANTA FE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Governing Body of the City of Santa Fe will hold a public hearing at their regular City Council Meeting on Wednesday, May 29, 2013 at 7:00 p.m., in the City Council Chambers at City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue. The purpose of the public hearing will be to consider the following: Bill No. 2013-22: An Ordinance Approving a Lease and Services Agreement Between the City of Santa Fe and the Boys and Girls Clubs for Lease of City-Owned Building and Improvements Located at 730 Alto Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico, for the Boys and Girls Clubs to Use and Occupy the Building and Improvements to Operate After School and Summer Community Services Programs for City Youths Ages Six Through Eighteen and Other Related Purposes. A.Property to be Leased. The City of Santa Fe Shall Lease to the Boys and Girls Clubs of Santa Fe ("the Club"), the Building and Improvements Located at 730 Alto Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico, and More Fully Described Under the Lease and Services Agreement.
B. Market Value of the Leasehold Premises. The Appraised Value of the Building and Improvements is Three Hundred and Twenty Thousand Dollars David Chavez, Execu- ($320,000).
tive Director
C.Payment Terms of the Lease. The Rental Payment for the Leasehold Premises Shall be in an Amount of $32,000 Per Year (10% x $320,000 = $32,000) Which Shall be Payable by the Yearly CITY OF SANTA FE Provision of In-Kind, AfADOPTION OF ter School and Summer ORDINANCE NOS. Services to City Youths 2009-41, 2009-42, Ages Six (6) Through Eighteen (18) by the 2009-43, 2009-44 Club for the City, and and 2009-45 More Fully Described Notice is hereby giv- Under the Lease and en that the Governing Services Agreement.
LEGAL#95201 PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN MAY 6, 13, 2013
Body of the City of Santa Fe held a public hearing at their regular meeting on Wednesday, October 14, 2009 and approved the following:
1) Ordinance No. 2 0 0 9 - 4 1 : An Ordinance Amending Rule 8 of Exhibit A, Chapter 22 SFCC 1987, to Increase the Monthly Sewer Service and Usage Fees by 30.1 Percent Effective January 1, 2010; Thereafter Effective October 1, 2012 the Monthly Sewer Service and Usage Fees Shall be Increased By 4.7 Percent Per Year for Three Years for Residential, MultiFamily and Commercial Customers of the City’s Sewer System; and Amending Rule 12, of Exhibit A to Increase the Mass Based Cost of Providing Air to Remove the Chemical Oxygen Demand ("COD") in Wastewater by 30.1 Percent Effective January 1, 2010; Thereafter Effective October 1, 2012 the Cost Shall be Increased by 4.7 Percent per Year for Three Years. (Effective date - January 1, 2010)
D.The Lessee is The Boys and Girls Clubs of Santa Fe, 730 Alto Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico. E. Purpose of the Lease. The Purpose of the Lease and Services Agreement is for the Club to Use and Occupy the Building and Improvements to Operate After School and Summer Community Services Programs for City Youths Ages Six (6) Through Eighteen (18) and Other Related Purposes. This ordinance shall be effective forty-five days after the date of adoption, unless a referendum is held pursuant to 3-54-1 NMSA 1978. Copies of this proposed ordinance are available in its entirety on the City’s web site http://www.santafenm. gov (click on Legislative Services) or upon request and payment of a reasonable charge, in the City Clerk’s Office, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. All interested citizens are invited to attend this public hearing. Yolanda Y. Vigil, City Clerk Legl #95118 Publ May 6, 2013
2) Ordinance No. 2009-42 : An OrFIRST JUDICIAL dinance Amending DISTRICT COURT Chapter 14 Land De- COUNTY OF SANTA FE velopment Laws and STATE OF NEW Chapter 26 Affordable MEXICO Housing SFCC 1987 Relating To Appeals. No. D-101-PB-201300068 3) Ordinance No. 2009-43 : An Or- IN THE MATTER OF dinance Amending THE ESTATE OF Section 9-2.9 SFCC JOHN DEVITO, DE1987 Specifying What CEASED Campaign Contributions Shall Not be NOTICE TO CREDUsed For; and ITORS Amending Section 92.14 SFCC 1987 Estab- Daniel John Dylan lishing Campaign DeVito has been apContribution Limits. pointed as Personal Representative of the 4) O r d i n a n c e Estate of John DeVito, No. 2009-44 : An Or- deceased. All perdinance Creating a sons having claims New Article 9-3 SFCC against this Estate 1987 for the Purpose are required to presof Establishing a Sys- ent their claims withtem of Voluntary Pub- in two (2) months aflic Financing of Cam- ter the date of first paigns. publication of this Notice or the claims 5) O r d i n a n c e will be forever barNo. 2009-45 : An Or- red. Claims must be dinance Amending presented either to Certain Provisions of the Personal RepreArticle 6-16 SFCC 1987 sentative, in care of Regarding the Ethics Mack E. With, Esq., at and Campaign Re- Jurgens & With, P.A., view Board as it Re- 100 La Salle Circle, lates to the Public Suite A, Santa Fe, Campaign Finance New Mexico 87505, or Code. filed in this proceeding with the First JuCopies of these ordi- dicial District Court in nances are available and for Santa Fe in their entirety on County, New Mexico. the City’s web site DATED: April 1, 2013. http://www.santafen m.gov (click on s/ G o v e r n m e n t / C i t y Daniel John Dylan Clerk/Ordinances) or DeVito upon request and payment of a reason- Submitted By: able charge, in the City Clerk’s Office, JURGENS & WITH, P.A. City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue, from 8:00 By: s / a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Fri- Mack E. With day. 100 La Salle Circle, _________________ Suite A Yolanda Y. Vigil, City Santa Fe, NM 87505 Clerk (505) 984-2020 Attorneys for PersonLEGAL#95202 al Representative PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXIContinued... CAN MAY 6, 2013
LEGALS
to place legals, call LEGALS
p
y y 2013 6:00 P.M. LEGAL#95165 Community Services PUBLISHED IN THE Conference Room, SANTA FE NEW MEXI- 901 West Alameda CAN APRIL 29, MAY 6, 2013 For more information, copies of the agenda, Legal Advertisement or auxiliary aids or services, contact ADVERTISEMENT FOR (505) 992-9857. PROPOSAL LEGAL#95204 Cooperative Educa- PUBLISHED IN THE tional Services, 4216 SANTA FE NEW MEXIBalloon Park Road NE, CAN MAY 6, 2013 Albuquerque, NM 87109, will receive NOTICE OF SANTA FE sealed proposals un- COUNTY MEETING: til 1:30 p.m. local Investment Committee Meeting, Thurstime, 6/7/2013, for: Category 1: Heavy day, May 16, 2013, at Equipment, Parts, Ac- 2:00p.m. in the Legal Room, cessories, Supplies Conference 102 Grant Ave. For and Related Services information, There will be a Non- more Required Pre- copies of the agenda, or auxiliary aids or Proposal Conference contact held on 5/9/2013, at services, 1:30 p.m. local time at (505) 986-6245 the Cooperative Educational Services offi- Legal#95188 ces, 4216 Balloon Park Published in the SanRoad NE, Albuquer- ta Fe New Mexican que, NM. To partici- on: May 6, 2013 pate in the PreProposal Conference Notice of Santa Fe by phone, contact County Meeting CES’ Procurement office by phone at 505- Santa Fe County Development Review 344-5470. All proposals must be Committee submitted in a sealed Thursday, May 16, envelope marked 2013 at 4 p.m. “SEALED PROPOSAL – County Commission RFP 2013-021” on the Chambers, located at front of the envelope. 102 Grant Ave. A list of qualifications and specifications, For more information, instructions to Bid- copies of the agenda, ders and RFP forms or auxiliary aids or can be obtained upon services, (505) 986request by fax (505- contact 344-9343), mail, email 6225. (bids@ces.org) or by telephone (505-344- LEGAL#95197 5470) from 8:30 a.m. PUBLISHED IN THE to 4:30 p.m., Monday- SANTA FE NEW MEXIFriday, except holi- CAN MAY 6, 2013 days. PUBLIC NOTICE Cooperative Educational Services re- Request for Proposals serves the express (RFP) by the right to accept or reLegislative Finance ject any or all bids. Committee /s/ David Chavez, Executive Director The Legislative Finance Committee LEGAL#95162 (LFC) State of New PUBLISHED IN THE Mexico is requesting SANTA FE NEW MEXI- proposals from conCAN APRIL 29, MAY 6, tractors assist in pro2013 viding LFC communications program, inNOTICE OF MEETING cluding public relations, desktop pubThe New Mexico technical County Insurance Au- lishing, thority Workers’ Com- writing, editing servpensation Pool will ices, and staff trainhold a Special Board ing. of Directors’ meeting on Wednesday, May The negotiated con22, 2013, at 11:00 a.m. tract will cover the to approve the 2013- period July 1, 2013 14 budget, excess in- through June 30, 2014 surance coverage and may be renewaand contributions. ble, at the option of The meeting will be the LFC, for three sucheld at NMAC, 613 Old cessive years. Santa Fe Trail, Santa successful Fe, NM. Please con- The tact Cynthia Stephen- proposer will have substantial relevant son at 877-983-2101. experience in the legislative process for LEGAL#95200 PUBLISHED IN THE support services and SANTA FE NEW MEXI- development of materials for the impleCAN MAY 6, 2013 mentation, maintenance, and operation NOTICE OF REQUEST of an LFC communiFOR PROPOSALS NEW MEXICO SCHOOL cations program. FOR THE ARTS A copy of the RFP be obtained New Mexico School may for the Arts, a state- from: wide public charter high school, located http://www.nmlegis. at 275 E. Alameda, gov/lcs/lfc/lfcdefault. Santa Fe, NM has is- aspx sued an RFP (Request for Proposal) for Food The deadline for reService Management ceipt of proposals is for the 2013-2014 2:00 p.m. MDT, May School Year. A copy 15, 2013. of the RFP and inquiries regarding the LEGAL#95195 RFP may be obtained PUBLISHED IN THE by contacting Christi- SANTA FE NEW MEXIna Yamashiro, Busi- CAN MAY 6, 2013 ness Manager, at 505PUBLIC NOTICE 310-4194 or cyamashiro@nmscho olforthearts.org. The Request for Proposals (RFP) by the deadline to submit a Legislative Finance proposal to this reCommittee quest is July 1, 2013 at 10 a.m. There is a mandatory prebid The Legislative FiCommittee meeting at the School nance on June 4, 2013 at 10 (LFC) State of New Mexico is requesting a.m. proposals from contractors to provide LEGAL#95193 technical assistance PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXI- for the operation of CAN MAY 1 THROUGH LFC micro-computer based network sysMAY 20, 2013 tems. NOTICE OF REQUEST The negotiated conFOR PROPOSALS NEW MEXICO SCHOOL tract will cover the period July 1, 2013 FOR THE ARTS through June 30, 2014 New Mexico School and may be renewafor the Arts, a state- ble, at the option of wide public charter the LFC, for three suchigh school, located cessive years. at 275 E. Alameda, successful Santa Fe, NM has is- The sued an RFP (Request proposer will have for Proposal) for Jani- substantial relevant torial Services for the experience in net2013-2014 School Year work systems that to contract for one support remote locayear. A copy of the tion access, and be RFP and inquiries re- prepared to guarangarding the RFP may tee on-site trouble response be obtained by con- shooting tacting Christina time on a 24-hour, 7 basis Yamashiro, Business day-a-week Manager, at 505-310- during peak produc4194 or tion periods. cyamashiro@nmscho olforthearts.org. The A copy of the RFP be obtained deadline to submit a may proposal to this re- from: quest is May 28, 2013 at 12:00p.m. There is http://www.nmlegis. a mandatory prebid gov/lcs/lfc/lfcdefault. meeting at the School aspx on May 21, 2013 at 2 The deadline for rep.m. ceipt of proposals is 2:00 p.m. MDT, May LEGAL#95168 PUBLISHED IN THE 15, 2013. SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN APRIL 30 LEGAL#95194 THROUGH MAY 14, PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXI2013 CAN APRIL 6, 2013 Notice of Santa Fe PUBLIC NOTICE County Meeting County Open Lands, Trails, and Parks Advisory Committee (COLTPAC) Thursday, May 16,
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986-3000
LEGALS
LEGALS
q p als (RFP), are available at the address given below. All proposals must be submitted by the time and date indicated in the RFP. A preproposal conference will also be held at the location, time, and date indicated in the RFP. Information provided herein is subject to change by written amendment of the RFP. TYPE OF SPACE NEEDED: Office Space
q ices each bidder is certifying that its bid complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Invitation for Bid.
MINIMUM USABLE SQUARE FEET REQUIRED: 3,030 LOCATION OF PROPOSED LEASE: Espanola, NM AGENCY NAME: New Mexico Department of Corrections MAILING ADDRESS: New Mexico Department of Corrections 37 State Hwy 14., Santa Fe, NM 87502 AGENCY LEASE REPRESENTATIVE: Teresa Larragoite, Leasing Representative, Teresa.Larragoite@state .nm.us LOCATION: New Mexico Department of Corrections 4337 State Hwy. 14 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 TELEPHONE NO.: (505)827-8999 PROPOSALS WILL BE CONSIDERED FOR BUILDTO-SUIT, AS WELL AS FOR RENOVATED AND REMODELED FACILITIES. Legl #95119 Publ: May 6, 2013
LEGALS
A Pre-Bid Conference will be held on Monday, May 13, 2013 2:00 PM (MDT) at the Santa Fe County Projects, Facilities & Open Space Division, located at 901 W. Alameda, Suite 20-C, Santa Fe. N.M. 87501. Attendance at the pre-bid conference is not mandatory but is strongly encouraged. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYMENT: All qualified bidders will receive consideration of contract(s) without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, physical and mental handicap, serious mental condition, disability, spousal affiliation, sexual orientation or gender identity. Information for obtaining the Invitation for Bid package is available by contacting Pamela Lindstam, Santa Fe County, by telephone at (505) 992-6759 or by email a t plindsta@santafecou ntynm.gov. The Invitation for Bid package will also be available on the Santa Fe County website at http://www.santafec ounty.org/services/cu rrent solicitations.
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
BIDS RECEIVED AFTER THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED ABOVE PROPOSAL NUMBER WILL NOT BE ACCEPT’13/32 /P ED. Proposals will be re- Santa Fe County
ceived by the City of Santa Fe and shall be delivered to the City of Santa Fe Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road Building "H" Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 until 2:00 P.M. local prevailing time Wednesday, May 29,2013. Any proposal received after this deadline will not be considered. This proposal is for the purpose of procuring professional services for the following: Public Utilities Rate Evaluation & Financial Services The proponent’s attention is directed to the fact that all applicable Federal Laws, State Laws, Municipal Ordinances, and the rules and regulations of all authorities having jurisdiction over said item shall apply to the proposal throughout, and they will be deemed to be included in the proposal document the same as though herein written out in full. The City of Santa Fe is an Equal Opportunity Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation or national origin. The successful proponent will be required to conform to the Equal Opportunity Employment regulations. Proposals may be held for sixty (60) days subject to action by the City. The City reserves the right to reject any of all proposals in part or in whole. Proposal packets are available by contacting: Shirley Rodriguez, City of Santa Fe, Purchasing Office, 2651 Siringo Road, Building "H" Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87505, (505) 955-5711. Robert Rodarte, Purchasing Officer PO 12137661 Legl #95120 Publ May 6, 2013
SANTA FE COUNTY INVITATION FOR BIDS Installation of Steel Pipe Fence at Stanley Wellness Center IFB#2013-0283-PW/PL
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL TO LEASE SPACE The State of New Mexico is soliciting proposals to lease space. Copies of the Request for Propos-
The Santa Fe County Public Works Department is requesting bids from qualified, licensed contractors for the installation of approximately 2,800 linear feet of a threerail steel pipe fence system, wire mesh and six (6) twentytwo (22) foot wide swing gates at the Stanley Wellness Center located at 22 West Kinsall Ave., Stanley, N.M. Bids may be held for ninety (90) days subject to all action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all bids in part or in whole. A completed bid package must be submitted in a sealed container indicating the bid title and number along with the bidding firm’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All bids must be received by 2:00 PM (MDT) on Friday, May 24, 2013 at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501. By submitting a bid for the requested serv-
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toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com
Legal#95181 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: May 6, 2013 SANTA FE COUNTY, NEW MEXICO Notice of Adoption of Resolution Notice is hereby given of the title and of a general summary of the subject matter contained in Resolution No. 2013-46, duly adopted and approved by the Board of County Commissioners of Santa Fe County on April 30, 2013. A complete copy of the Resolution is available for public inspection during normal and regular business hours in the office of the County Clerk, at 102 Grant Avenue Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. The title of the Resolution is: SANTA FE COUNTY, NEW MEXICO RESOLUTION NO. 2013-46 A RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE EXECUTION AND DELIVERY OF A WATER PROJECT FUND LOAN/GRANT AGREEMENT BY AND AMONG THE NEW MEXICO WATER TRUST BOARD ("WATER TRUST BOARD") AND THE NEW MEXICO FINANCE AUTHORITY ("FINANCE AUTHORITY", AND COLLECTIVELY WITH THE WATER TRUST BOARD, THE "LENDERS/GRANTORS") AND THE SANTA FE COUNTY (THE "BORROWER/GRANTEE") , IN THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF $135,000, EVIDENCING AN OBLIGATION OF THE BORROWER/GRANTEE TO UTILIZE THE LOAN/GRANT AMOUNT SOLELY FOR THE PURPOSE OF FINANCING THE COSTS THE PROJECT WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION OF A WATERSHED RESTORATION AND MANAGEMENT PROJECT WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE PURCHASE AND INSTALLATION OF GROUNDWATER AND SURFACE WATER MONITORING AND RECORDING EQUIPMENT AT LOCATIONS ALONG LA CIENEGA CREEK, SANTA FE RIVER, ARROYO HONDO, GUICU CREEK AND ALAMO CREEK, AND SOLELY IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED IN THE LOAN/GRANT AGREEMENT; PROVIDING FOR
PAYMENT OF THE LOAN AMOUNT AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEE SOLELY FROM PLEDGED REVENUES; CERTIFYING THAT THE LOAN/GRANT AMOUNT, TOGETHER WITH OTHER FUNDS AVAILABLE TO THE BORROWER/GRANTEE, IS SUFFICIENT TO COMPLETE THE PROJECT; APPROVING THE FORM OF AND OTHER DETAILS CONCERNING THE LOAN/GRANT AGREEMENT; RATIFYING ACTIONS HERETOFORE TAKEN; REPEALING ALL ACTION INCONSISTENT WITH THIS RESOLUTION; AND AUTHORIZING THE TAKING OF OTHER ACTIONS IN CONNECTION WITH THE EXECUTION AND DELIVERY OF THE LOAN/GRANT AGREEMENT. A general summary of the subject matter of the Resolution is contained in its title. This notice constitutes compliance with NMSA 1978, § 6-14-6. Legl #95122 Publ May 6, 2013
LEGALS STATE OF New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs 407 Galisteo Street Suite 264 Santa Fe, NM 87501 (505) 827-3454 -NOTICEAdministrative Services Division Request for Proposal #30-505-13-03936
Title: Request for Proposals for Auditing Services for the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs PURPOSE: The State of New Mexico’s Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA) is requesting proposals from Independent Public Accountants (IPA) to perform the annual audit(s) of DCA’s financial fiscal year ending June 30, 2013. Only offerors that are qualified and in good standing with the Office of the State Auditor shall submit proposals. This audit shall be performed in accordance with the Federally Accepted Governmental Auditing Standards (GAGAS) accepted in the United States of America, Generally Accepted SANTA FE COUNTY, Accounting Principles NEW MEXICO (GAAP), OMB-Circular ANotice of Adoption of 133, and Requirements Resolution for Contracting and Conducting Governmental Notice is hereby given of the title and of a gen- Audits (2.2.2 NMAC). eral summary of the subject matter con- GENERAL tained in Resolution No. INFORMATION: 2013-47, duly adopted RFP ADMINISTRATOR: and approved by the Correspondence should Board of County Com- be directed to: missioners of Santa Fe David Quintana (ProCounty on April 30, 2013. curement Manager) A complete copy of the Department of Cultural Resolution is available Affairs for public inspection Administrative Services during normal and regu- Division lar business hours in the Bataan Memorial Buildoffice of the County ing Clerk, at 102 Grant Ave- 407 Galisteo Street, 2nd nue Santa Fe, New Mexi- Floor, Suite 264 Santa Fe, New Mexico co 87501. 87501 The title of the Resolu- Phone: 505-827-1221 Fax: 505-827-7308 tion is: david.quintana1@state. SANTA FE COUNTY, NEW nm.us MEXICO RESOLUTION NO. 2013-47 Issuance: The Request for ProposA RESOLUTION AUTHOR- als will be issued May 3, 2013. Firms interested in IZING THE EXECUTION AND DELIVERY OF A WA- obtaining a copy may TER PROJECT FUND access and download LOAN/GRANT AGREE- the documents from the MENT BY AND AMONG internet on May 3, 2013 THE NEW MEXICO WA- at the following adTER TRUST BOARD ("WA- dress: TER TRUST BOARD") http://www.newmexico AND THE NEW MEXICO culture.org FINANCE AUTHORITY ("FINANCE AUTHORITY", PROPOSAL DUE DATE AND COLLECTIVELY AND TIME: WITH THE WATER TRUST Proposals must be reBOARD, THE ceived by the Procure"LENDERS/GRANTORS") ment Manager (David AND THE SANTA FE Quintana), or his desigCOUNTY (THE nee, at the address "BORROWER/GRANTEE") specified in the RFP, no , IN THE TOTAL AMOUNT later than 2:00 PM OF $358,000, EVIDENCING Mountain Time on FriAN OBLIGATION OF THE day, May 17, 2013. ProB O R R O W E R / G R A N T E E posals received after TO UTILIZE THE this deadline will not be Proposals LOAN/GRANT AMOUNT accepted. SOLELY FOR THE PUR- must be sealed and be POSE OF FINANCING THE clearly marked DEPARTCOSTS OF THE PROJECT MENT OF CULTURAL AFCONSISTING OF THE DE- FAIRS INDEPENDENT AUSIGN AND CONSTRUC- DITING SERVICES on the TION OF A WATER STOR- outside of the shipping Proposals AGE, CONVEYANCE AND container. DELIVERY PROJECT sent by fax, or other means of electronic WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE EXTENSION OF AN submission (including eEXISTING SANTA FE mail) will not be acceptCOUNTY UTILITY WATER ed. LINE ON PASEO C DE legl #95114 BACA TO SERVE THE Publ May 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 RESIDENTS OF THE 2013 AREA, AND SOLELY IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED Summary of IN THE LOAN/GRANT Authorizing AGREEMENT; PROVIDING Resolution FOR PAYMENT OF THE LOAN AMOUNT AND ADMINISTRATIVE FEE Notice is hereby givSOLELY FROM PLEDGED en of the title and of a REVENUES; CERTIFYING general summary of THAT THE LOAN/GRANT the subject matter AMOUNT, TOGETHER contained in an AuWITH OTHER FUNDS thorizing Resolution, AVAILABLE TO THE duly adopted and apBORROWER/GRANTEE, IS proved by the New SUFFICIENT TO COM- Mexico Finance AuPLETE THE PROJECT; AP- thority (the "Finance PROVING THE FORM OF AND OTHER DETAILS Authority") on April Complete CONCERNING THE 25, 2013. LOAN/GRANT AGREE- copies of the Authorizing Resolution are MENT; RATIFYING ACTIONS HERETOFORE available for public TAKEN; REPEALING ALL inspection during the ACTION INCONSISTENT normal and regular WITH THIS RESOLUTION; business hours of the AND AUTHORIZING THE Finance Authority at TAKING OF OTHER AC- 207 Shelby Street, TIONS IN CONNECTION Santa Fe, New MexiWITH THE EXECUTION co. AND DELIVERY OF THE LOAN/GRANT AGREE- The Title of the MENT. A general summary of Resolution is: the subject matter of the Resolution is con- RESOLUTION tained in its title. This notice constitutes AUTHORIZING THE IScompliance with NMSA SUANCE AND SALE BY THE NEW MEXICO FI1978, § 6-14-6. Legl #95123 NANCE AUTHORITY Publ May 6, 2013 (THE "FINANCE AU-
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LEGALS ( THORITY" or "NMFA") OF THE FINANCE AUTHORITY’S SENIOR LIEN PUBLIC PROJECT REVOLVING FUND REVENUE BONDS, SERIES 2013A (THE "SERIES 2013A BONDS") IN AN AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT TO BE DETERMINED, BUT NOT TO EXCEED $50,000,000 AND WITHIN CERTAIN PARAMETERS FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING FUNDS TO FINANCE PUBLIC PROJECTS WITHIN THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO AND TO PAY COSTS OF ISSUANCE OF THE SERIES 2013A BONDS; PROVIDING FOR A SALE RESOLUTION TO BE SUBSEQUENTLY ADOPTED SPECIFYING DETAILS OF THE SERIES 2013A BONDS, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE DATES, DENOMINATIONS, MATURITIES, REDEMPTION PROVISIONS, INTEREST RATES AND PAYMENT TERMS; AUTHORIZING THE EXECUTION OF AN EIGHTY-FOURTH SUPPLEMENTAL INDENTURE OF TRUST, A BOND PURCHASE AGREEMENT, A CONTINUING DISCLOSURE UNDERTAKING, AND A DISCLOSURE DISSEMINATION AGENT AGREEMENT, IF ADVISABLE, FOR THE SERIES 2013A BONDS; AUTHORIZING THE USE OF A PRELIMINARY OFFICIAL STATEMENT AND OFFICIAL STATEMENT WITH RESPECT TO THE SERIES 2013A BONDS; AND AUTHORIZING THE TAKING OF ALL OTHER ACTIONS NECESSARY TO THE CONSUMMATION OF THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED BY THIS R E S O L U T I O N ; RATIFYING PRIOR ACTIONS CONSISTENT WITH THIS RESOLUTION AND REPEALING PRIOR INCONSISTENT ACTION. A summary of the subject matter of the Authorizing Resolution is contained in its title. This notice constitutes compliance with Sections 614-6 and 6-21-14 NMSA 1978, as amended. Legal#95182 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: May 6, 2013 VILLAGE OF CORRALES REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL NO. 2013-04 VILLAGE ATTORNEY SERVICES The Village of Corrales is requesting competitive sealed proposals for Village Attorney Services. The Request for Proposal is available at the Village Administrative Offices, 4324 Corrales Road, Corrales New Mexico between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm, Monday through Friday or can be downloaded from www.CorralesNM.org/rfp.htm. For questions contact Juan Reyes, Village Clerk, 505-897-0502. Bids will be accepted until 4:00 pm, May 24, 2013. /s/ Juan Reyes, Village Clerk Legal #94840 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on May 6, 2013
To Place a Legal ad 986-3000
Santa Fe County, in cooperation with the New Mexico Department of Transportation, announces a PUBLIC MEETING regarding the Old Santa Fe Trail Bike Lanes and Waterline Project Control #C5111204 Wednesday, May 15, 2013 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM. Desert Academy – Main Atrium, 7300 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM 87505 PURPOSE OF THE MEETING: Santa Fe County, in cooperation with the New Mexico Department of Transportation, is sponsoring this meeting to discuss the proposed improvements of Santa Fe Trail and El Gancho Way, between Old Las Vegas Highway and Mt. Cloud Zen, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Residents, landowners, and all interested parties are encouraged to attend and provide comments, concerns, and suggestions regarding the Project. MEETING OVERVIEW AND AGENDA: County representatives and Project Team members will be sharing information including roadway design, driveway access, corridor amenities, engineering, and modification of the proposed typical section. Project Team members will be accepting comments and questions at the meeting or, if unable to attend, comments can be mailed, faxed, or e-mailed to Steve Morrow, Molzen Corbin, 2701 Miles Road SE, Albuquerque, NM 87106, (505) 242-5700, or smorrow@ molzencorbin.com. If you have any questions regarding this meeting, contact Steve Morrow at Molzen Corbin. Special needs or accommodations for individuals with disabilities will be provided upon request at least 48 hours in advance of the hearing by calling Steve Morrow at (505) 242-5700.
Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican
Legal# 95203. Published on May 6 & 13, 2013.
Monday, May 6, 2013 THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
TIME OUT Horoscope
Crossword
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, May 6, 2013: This year you open up to new concepts. Know that you can’t fight city hall, but you can let go of rigidity and choose to look at other ideas. Aries tests your patience. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH The unexpected happens, and it adds excitement to your week. You might want to try to gain more control. Tonight: Accept what is. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HH Much that is happening around you is vague. You could feel as if someone is whispering in your ear. Tonight: Not to be found. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You have pushed hard to accomplish a lot. It is clear that you can’t take a shortcut and still achieve the same outcome. Tonight: Dinner for two. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You say the right words and charge your inner circle with ideas. Your perception could be off, in that you might see things only from your point of view. Tonight: Kick back. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH You might want to rethink how you react to unexpected events. You’ll be reminded that you have no control over anything but yourself. Tonight: Let your imagination roam. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Look at what is happening behind the scenes with a key associate. This person might choose not to reveal much at first. Tonight: Opt for togetherness.
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: NATIONS IN SONG LYRICS Provide the name of a country to complete the song lyric. (e.g., “_____ in the straw.” Answer: Turkey.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. “South of the border, down ____ way.” Answer________ 2. “The rain in ____ stays mainly in the plain.” Answer________ 3. “If you ever go across the sea to ____.” Answer________
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. “I’d love to get you on a slow boat to ____.” Answer________ 5. “There’ll always be an ____.” Answer________ 6. “We’re off on the road to ____.” Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. “____, where hearts were entertaining June.” Answer________ 8. “What if we went to ____.” Answer________ 9. “In ____ they kiss on Main Street.” Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Mexico. 2. Spain. 3. Ireland. 4. China. 5. England. 6. Morocco. 7. Brazil. 8. Italy. 9. France.
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher
Cryptoquip
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
B-11
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Defer to others, and watch what happens as a result. You might seem incapable of clearing up a personal matter. Tonight: Say “yes” to an offer.
Man’s parenting style is irritating Dear Annie: I’m a 20-year-old woman in love with a 25-year-old divorced man who has a 4-year-old son, “Mikey.” Lately, Mikey’s mother has been letting us have the child more often because she has to go out of state on business. The problem is, this boy is very stubborn. He’s not a bad child. He just doesn’t like to listen. And ,for the most part, he always gets his way — from what he eats to when he goes to sleep. When he doesn’t get his way, he throws a fit. I care deeply for Mikey and don’t agree with this type of upbringing. I wasn’t raised this way, and neither was my boyfriend. I helped raise my younger sister, so I understand discipline. I am not harsh, but I do want Mikey to listen to me. The other day, we took him with us when we shopped for a new TV, and he kept running around the furniture. At one point, I couldn’t find him, and he didn’t come when I called his name. My boyfriend said, “That’s normal. Let him be.” My boyfriend insists we leave him alone because he’s only with us for a short while. But my boyfriend often is at work when Mikey is here, which means I am the one who deals with this behavior. The least he could do is make it easier for me. Am I wrong to feel this way? — Young but Learning Dear Young: You aren’t wrong, but you must remember that it is perfectly normal for 4-year-old boys to run around in a store and not listen. That doesn’t make it appropriate or safe. Your boyfriend refuses to discipline Mikey because he doesn’t see him often. This does a disservice to all of you, especially Mikey. How will he feel secure and know his father loves him if Dad doesn’t care enough to watch his behavior and help him mature? Please ask your boyfriend to
Sheinwold’s bridge
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You could feel out of sorts and unable to get a firm grasp on a situation that is impacting your daily life. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH Your fiery side emerges with a change of plans. You know what you want, but you also might want to let go of a need to be completely in control. Tonight: Choose with passion. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be surprised at what you have to deal with. Did you think you were on cruise control? You certainly find out otherwise. Tonight: Happily head home — you need a break. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Though you’re likely to hit a bump or two along the way, you will skip right over them and continue on your present path. Tonight: Fun and games. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might want to figure out what is necessary for you to make a change. Understand that you are dealing with others and their wishes, as well as your finances. Tonight: Re-evaluate your spending. Jacqueline Bigar
Chess quiz
WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. Qxa3ch! Kxa3 2. Ra1 mate!
Today in history Today is Monday, May 6, the 126th day of 2013. There are 239 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On May 6, 1863, the Civil War Battle of Chancellorsville in Virginia ended with a Confederate victory over Union forces.
Hocus Focus
come with you for parenting classes. You can check online or at your local YMCA. Dear Annie: My husband and I just returned from a luncheon following a funeral. We decided not to eat any of the food, as we were told by another person that the food had been sitting out uncovered for a couple of hours. We felt that the food could be spoiled. Shouldn’t this food have been left in the refrigerator or warming in the oven? Worse, people who arrived at the luncheon before the family were told to wait, which was another hour because the family stayed at the funeral home deciding what to do with the flowers. Is this proper? — Funeral Guest Dear Guest: This was a funeral, not a party. It is appropriate to wait for the family, and they are entitled to linger at the funeral home if need be. But yes, the food should have been refrigerated or kept warm. We assume someone was in charge of setting out the food, and this is the person you could have consulted. If the food was inedible, it would have been a kindness for a few of you to offer to get some fresh supplies. Dear Annie: I’m writing about the letter from “Left-Out Son,” who always did things right while his sister partied and was subsidized by their parents. They earned their money and can spend it as they choose, even if that means frittering it away on his sister. The idea that parents are obligated to leave an inheritance and reward their children is repugnant. His reward was their guidance in teaching him what was right. It sounds as if he is on track to repeat his parents’ success through his own hard work, and that’s his inheritance. — No Entitlement Mentality
Jumble
B-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 6, 2013
THE NEW MEXICAN WILL BE TESTING OUT SOME NEW COMIC STRIPS IN THE COMING MONTHS. PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: EMAIL BBARKER@SFNEWMEXICAN.COM OR CALL 505-986-3058
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
PEANUTS
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
LA CUCARACHA
LUANN TUNDRA
ZITS RETAIL
BALDO STONE SOUP
GET FUZZY KNIGHT LIFE
DILBERT
MUTTS
PICKLES
ROSE IS ROSE
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
PARDON MY PLANET
BABY BLUES
NON SEQUITUR