The Santa Fe New Mexican, June 17, 2013

Page 1

U.S. Open: Justin Rose captures his first major title

Locally owned and independent

Monday, June 17, 2013

Sports, B-1

www.santafenewmexican.com 75¢

Council to consider ammo ban Attorney, gunsmith say city could face lawsuits over controversial rule

zines allowed in the city limits. Councilors Patti Bushee and Ron Trujillo and Mayor David Coss are backing a plan for the city to prohibit possession and sales of magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammunition and other gun accessories that the proposed ordinance calls “high capacity ammunition feeding devices.” A city attorney believes the proposed ordinance might put the local

By Julie Ann Grimm The New Mexican

The Santa Fe City Council is scheduled to weigh a proposal next week that would impose strict regulations on the number of bullets in gun maga-

government at risk of lawsuits, and councilors have heard both encouragement and opposition to the idea from city residents. Even Bushee, who introduced the idea, admits there will be enforcement challenges. For example, the proposal would exempt magazines and other devices that were already “legally possessed” at the time the ordinance goes into effect, but does not delineate how

Many semi-automatic handguns are sold with magazines that hold up to 15 shells. Under a proposed city ordinance, magazines holding more than 10 rounds would be prohibited. Gun owners can order 10-round magazines, but it could take several months to receive the special order.

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Please see AMMo, Page A-4

Worth the wait Santa Fe man returns to family after 10 months across the border on a mission to secure a visa and a path to citizenship

Retired teacher Ted Freedman, shown in April running with Wood Gormley Elementary School students, is hoping to qualify for the Kona Ironman via a video contest. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Retired teacher closer to Kona Triathlete, 64, makes first cut in video contest for spot in Ironman competition By Julie Ann Grimm The New Mexican

T

ed Freedman has it all mapped out in his head. First, he’ll swim 2.4 miles in the waves of the Pacific Ocean off the Kona Pier. Then, he’ll bike 112 miles along the “Queen K” Highway in Hawaii’s 90 percent humidity. Finally, he’ll run a marathon distance of 26.2 miles, including several miles through baking black lava fields. When he crosses the finish line more than 13 hours after he begins the race, an announcer will say, “Ted Freedman, you are an Ironman.” “I want to hear that,” he said in a recent interview, “and I will be carrying all of Santa Fe in my heart across the finish line.” He will be exhausted, he said, but he will be smiling. Freedman retired this year as a physical education teacher at Wood Gormley Elementary school after 17 years at a job in which he served as inspiration to thousands of Santa Fe children. Although he’s already completed one Ironman, he’s now got his sights set on finishing what’s known as the most arduous race on the competitive

Please see KonA, Page A-5

QuesT for KonA Ted Freedman is a finalist in the Kona Inspired Internet video contest, which could earn him a spot in the 2013 Kona Ironman competition. To watch his video, visit www.konated.com to vote from now to June 27. People may vote once each day.

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Currents 2013 The Santa Fe International New Media Festival experimental documentaries Program 1, Video Shorts, six free screenings beginning at 7:30 p.m., El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, 555 Camino de la Familia.

Today Warm and partly cloudy. High 88, low 58. PAge A-12

D

Cities worldwide brace for rising seas

BONN, Germany — From Bangkok to Miami, cities and coastal areas across the globe are already building or planning defenses to protect millions of people

Comics B-12

Education A-9

Rodriguez waits at the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juárez for a physical exam June 11, the last step before the issuance of a visa.

Please see WAIT, Page A-4

The Associated Press

Classifieds B-5

Editor’s note: This article is a follow-up to one that appeared in The New Mexican on Dec. 2, 2012, reporting on the early steps in José Guadalupe Rodriguez Ortiz’s effort to become a legal resident of the United States. At that time, he had returned to his birthplace near Aguascalientes, México, to begin the long wait, which concluded Friday with a visa allowing him to return to Santa Fe.

uring his last days in Mexico, José Guadalupe Rodriguez Ortiz waited in a hotel room next to the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juárez. As the days wore on the temperature climbed to 106 degrees, a record for an early June day in this gritty border city across the Rio Grande from El Paso. Waiting was nothing new for the 30-year-old Santa Fe man, who had been born in Aguascalientes, Mexico, but raised since age 10 in Santa Fe. He had been waiting 10 months for permission to re-enter the U.S. and to return to his wife and two young children. The long wait ended Friday, a little before noon, when Rodriguez walked across the Ysleta International Bridge into El Paso, showed his U.S. visa to Customs and Border Protection agents and met his waiting family at a McDonald’s restaurant just north of the border. “I’m here, I’m here,” were his first words after re-entering the USA. “I can’t believe it.” Rodriguez’s adventure began last Labor Day, when he crossed the border into Mexico, knowing that he might never get the chance to return.

By Karl Ritter

As energy boom sweeps nation’s driest spots, drilling technique sucks up precious water and drives up costs. PAge A-6

Calendar A-2

BY TIMOTHY ROBERTS FOR THE NEW MEXICAN

Editor’s note: This is the second in a two-part series on adapting to climate change. The first story appeared in Sunday’s edition.

Fracking fuels water fight

Index

José Guadalupe Rodriguez Ortiz is shown with his daughter, Yanelie, 4, wife, Nancy Solis-Rodriguez, and son, Youanie, 11, on Friday at a McDonald’s, Rodriguez’s first stop after crossing the border into El Paso. PHOTOS COURTESY TIMOTHY ROBERTS

Opinion A-11

Police notes A-10

Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, rdean@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Sports B-1

and key infrastructure from more powerful storm surges and other effects of global warming. Some are planning cities that will simply adapt to more water. But climate-proofing a city or coastline is expensive, as shown by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s $20 billion plan to build floodwalls, levees and other defenses against rising seas. The most vulnerable places are those

Time Out B-11

El Neuvo A-7

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

with the fewest resources to build such defenses, secure their water supplies or move people to higher ground. How to pay for such measures is a burning issue in U.N. climate talks, which just wrapped up a session in the German city of Bonn. A sampling of cities around the world and what they are doing to prepare for the climatic forces that scientists say are being unleashed by global warming:

Please see seAs, Page A-4

Two sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 168 Publication No. 596-440


A-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

NATION&WORLD In brief

White House weighs no-fly zone in Syria WASHINGTON — The Obama administration, trying to avoid getting drawn deeper into Syria’s civil war, has pointed to the U.S.led invasion of Iraq in 2003 as a symbol of what can go wrong when America’s military wades into Middle East conflicts. But experts say the White House is looking at the wrong Iraq war, especially as the U.S. reluctantly considers a no-fly zone over Syria to stop President Bashar Assad from continuing to use his air power to crush rebel forces or kill civilians. A no-fly zone is a territory over which warring aircraft are not allowed to fly. The U.S. and international allies have enforced them in several military conflicts over the past two decades. When he took office in 2009, President Barack Obama promised to end the U.S. war in Iraq as an example of refocusing on issues that had direct impact on Americans. By the time the U.S military withdrew from Iraq in 2011, almost 4,500 American soldiers and more than 100,000 Iraqis had died. The war toppled Saddam Hussein but also sparked widespread sectarian fighting and tensions that still simmer.

By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press

Putin says he didn’t steal Super Bowl ring LONDON — Russian President Vladimir Putin is denying insinuations that he stole New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s Super Bowl ring that’s on display in the Kremlin, but says he’s ready to buy him another ring as a gift. Putin was reacting Sunday through a spokesman to a New York Post story quoting remarks made by Kraft at an awards gala at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel last Thursday. “I took out the ring and showed it to [Putin]. And he put it on and he goes, ‘I can kill someone with this ring,’ ” Kraft said, as quoted by the Post. “I put my hand out and he put it in his pocket, and three KGB guys got around him and walked out.” The diamond-encrusted Super Bowl ring worth about $25,000 changed hands while Kraft was visiting St. Petersburg, Russia, in 2005 with an American business delegation that met Putin. At the time, Kraft had said he gave the ring to Putin as a gift.

Report: Assaults increase on rangers, park police WASHINGTON — Park rangers, wildlife refuge workers and U.S. Park Police experienced more assaults and threats from visitors last year than in 2011, according to a group that represents federal resource workers. A total of 591 incidents were reported by six land and water agencies in 2012, up 38 percent from the previous year, the group says. More than one-quarter of the incidents involved some sort of violence against the employee or officer, the report by the advocacy group Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility says. More than half of 100 reported incidents against U.S. Park Police involved violence, the report said, including an incident where a suspected drunk driver tried to run over a police officer. The report is set to be released on Monday. The Associated Press obtained a copy in advance. The report is based on figures obtained from the National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management and other agencies.

CROWN GOES TO CONNECTICUT

Miss Connecticut Erin Brady is crowned Miss USA by Nana Meriwether on Sunday in Las Vegas, Nev. Brady of South Glastonbury, Conn., won the beauty pageant at the Planet Hollywood hotel and casino after strutting in a white sparkly gown and answering a question about the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision upholding widespread DNA tests. Asked if she agreed with the decision, Brady said she did. Brady gets the crown and a New York apartment for one year. She is expected to spend her title reign on a nationwide speaking tour and raising awareness of breast and ovarian cancers, the organization’s official cause. JEFF BOTTARI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Series of attacks kill 51 people across Iraq BAGHDAD — A blistering string of apparently coordinated bombings and a shooting across Iraq killed at least 51 and wounded dozens Sunday, spreading fear throughout the county in a wave of violence that is raising the prospect of a return to widespread sectarian killing a decade after a U.S.-led invasion. Violence has spiked sharply in Iraq in recent months, with the death toll rising to levels not seen since 2008. Nearly 2,000 have been killed since the start of April, including more than 180 this month. The surge in bloodshed accompanies rising sectarian tensions within Iraq and growing concerns that its unrest is being fanned by the Syrian civil war raging next door. One of the deadliest attacks came in the evening when a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a cafe packed with young people in

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

Owner

Rob Dean Editor

Al Waldron

Operations Director

986-3010 1-800-873-3372

circulation@sfnewmexican.com

Tamara Hand

Classified line ads

Michael Campbell

Mike Reichard

Technology Director

William A. Simmons

Group Controller

Circulation Director

UNIQUE THIS WEEK

Home delivery

Ginny Sohn

Advertising Director

Tom Cross

Secretary/ Treasurer

986-3000 1-800-873-3362

classad@sfnewmexican.com

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

Obituaries 986-3000

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

Advertising

Printed on recycled paper

995-3852 1-800-873-3362

To reach us

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

the largely Shiite neighborhood of al-Ameen in southeastern Baghdad. The attack killed 11 and wounded 25, according to police. Clothes shop owner Saif Hameed, 24, was watching TV at home when he heard the blast nearby. He saw several of the wounded being loaded into ambulances. “It seems the terrorists are targeting any place they can, no matter what it is,” he said. “The main things for them are to kill as many Iraqis as they can and keep the people living in fear.” Most of Sunday’s car bombs hit Shiitemajority areas and caused most of the casualties. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. There was no claim of responsibility for any of the attacks, but they bore the hallmark of al-Qaida in Iraq, which uses car bombs, suicide bombers and coordinated attacks, most aimed at security forces and members of Iraq’s Shiite majority. The Associated Press

A Boston hospital is starting the world’s first hand transplant program for children, and doctors say it won’t be long until face transplants and other radical operations to improve appearance and quality of life are offered to kids, too. The move shows the growing willingness to do transplants to enhance a patient’s life rather than to save it as donated hearts, livers and other organs have done in the past. More than 70 hands and at least 20 faces have been transplanted in adults, and doctors say it’s clear these operations are safe enough to offer to children in certain cases, too. “We feel that this is justifiable,” Dr. Amir Taghinia said of the pediatric hand program he will lead at Boston Children’s Hospital. “Children will potentially benefit even more from this procedure than adults” because they regrow nerves more quickly and have more problems from prosthetic hands, he said. Only one hand transplant is known to have been done in a child — a baby in Malaysia in 2000. Because the donor was a twin who died at birth, her sister did not need to take drugs to prevent rejection. That’s the main risk in offering children hand transplants — the immune-suppressing drugs carry side effects and may raise the risk of cancer over the long term. However, one independent expert thinks the gains may be worth it in certain cases. “We understand so much more about immune suppression” that it’s less of a risk to put children on it, said Dr. Simon Horslen, medical director of the liver and intestine transplant program at Seattle Children’s Hospital. “This is never going to be done as an emergency procedure, so the families will have plenty of opportunity to weigh the options.” Also, a hand can be removed if rejection occurs, and that would not leave the child worse off than before the transplant, Horslen said. Several types of kids might be candidates — those born without hands, children who lose them in accidents and children with infections that wind up requiring damaged hands to be amputated. Quality of life is a key concern for people missing arms and hands — prosthetics for those limbs are not as advanced as those for feet and legs. In December, doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore did a double-arm transplant for former soldier Brendan Marrocco, who lost all four limbs while serving in Iraq. It was the seventh double-hand or double-arm transplant performed in the U.S. For a child missing two hands, “the quality-of-life issues are a big deal,” said Dr. Douglas Diekema of the Center for Pediatric Bioethics at Seattle Children’s Hospital and a member of the American Board of Pediatrics’ ethics committee. “In terms of how we interact with the social world, it’s mostly our face and our hands,” so a transplant “is a reasonable thing to offer a family,” he said. Boston Children’s Hospital plans to make its first cases healthy children 10 or older who are missing both hands. “Some of them can’t feed themselves, they can’t go to the bathroom, someone needs to assist them with almost every activity,” Taghinia said. The hospital also will consider children missing one hand who already are taking immune-suppressing drugs because of transplanted organs, or those with only one hand that doesn’t work well. The hospital will cover the cost of the operation and care for three months afterward, then ask insurers to pay for immune suppression and follow-up.

ON THE WEb u Boston program: www.bostonchildrens.org/ handtransplant u Support groups: www.helpinghandsgroup.org/ and http://www.amputee-coalition.org/

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

Publisher

Hospital to offer hand transplants for children

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

Newsroom 986-3035

Please recycle

News tips 986-3035

newsroom@sfnewmexican.com Business news: 986-3034 Capitol Bureau: 986-3037 City desk: 986-3035

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

Letters to the editor

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

Online 986-3076

Monday, June 17 MARIE ROMERO CASH AND CHRISTINE BARBER: The New Mexico authors read from their respective novels Treasure Among the Shadows and When The Devil Doesn’t Show: A Mystery, 6 p.m. Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St. PALEO-INDIAN SITES IN NORTH AMERICA: LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION: A Southwest Seminars’ lecture with archaeologist Michael B. Collins, 6 p.m., $12 at the door, 466-2775. 1501 Paseo de Peralta. SANTA FE OPERA BACKSTAGE TOURS: Visit the production areas, costume shop and prop shop, 9 a.m., $10, discounts available, weekdays, through Aug. 13. 301 Opera Drive. AMMA, THE “HUGGING SAINT” FROM INDIA: Visiting Albuquerque on June 17 to 20. Visit www.amma.org for more information. 5151 San Francisco Road NE.

NIGHTLIFE Monday, June 17 COWGIRL BBQ: Cowgirl karaoke with Michele Leidig, 9 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Geeks Who Drink

Trivia Night, 7 p.m., no cover. 808 Canyon Rd. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Albuquerque singer/ songwriter Zenobia, R&B/gospel, 7:30-11 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, jazz and classics, 7 p.m.-close, call for cover. 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 only $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955. 1125 Cerrillos Road.

VOLUNTEER ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Operate five separate residential facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — a twiceweekly daytime Resource Center and monthly Homeless Court. Volunteers are needed to help at two emergency shelters and at the Resource Center. If you are interested in volunteering, contact Rosario at volunteer@steshelter.org or call 505-982-661, ext. 108. 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. 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. 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 and volunteers are needed to maintain the sales floor, sort donations and creating displays to show case our unique and high-quality merchandise. Two store sites are 2570-A Camino Entrada (next to Outback Steakhouse) or 541 West 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 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 homebound 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. For more information, visit www. manymothers.org or call Pat at 983-5984.

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

Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-3

GOP tries to derail immigration reform with ‘Obamacare’ Efforts to block initiative threaten to split emerging bipartisan coalitions

Obama to face diplomatic fallout for actions during trip to Europe

By David Nakamura and Sandhya Somashekhar The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — After spending years unsuccessfully trying to overturn “Obamacare,” Republicans are now attempting to use President Barack Obama’s landmark health care reform law to derail his top second-term initiative — a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s immigration system. Conservatives in both chambers of Congress are insisting on measures that would expand the denial of public health benefits to the nation’s 11 million illegal immigrants beyond limits set in a comprehensive reform bill pending in the Senate. In the House, Republicans are considering proposals that would deny publicly subsidized emergency care to undocumented immigrants and force them to purchase private health insurance plans, without access to federal subsidies, as a requirement for earning permanent legal residency. In the Senate, Marco Rubio, R-Fla., has endorsed an amendment to a comprehensive immigration bill he helped negotiate that would deny health benefits to immigrants for five years after they become legal residents — two years after, they would be eligible to become citizens under the legislation. Some Republicans, eager to capitalize on public uncertainty about the complexities of the Affordable Care Act, also are casting the immigration legislation as a similarly unwieldy law. The immigration bill “reminds me of a more recent piece of legislation: Obamacare,” Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said on the Senate floor last week. “It grants broad new powers to the same executive branch that today is mired in scandal for incompetence and abuse of power. Total cost estimates are in the trillions. And rather than fix our current immigration problems, the bill makes many of them worse.” The insertion of the politics of healthcare reform — one of the most polarizing issues in Washington — into the immigration debate threatens to split open the emerging bipartisan coalitions that are crucial to passing a bill. This month, Rep. Raul Labrador, R-Idaho, blamed a standoff over health care benefits for his decision to drop out of bipartisan talks with seven colleagues who were negotiating a House alternative to the Senate immigration proposal. That has forced House leaders to proceed with a series of smaller-scale proposals next week in lieu of a sweeping agreement. “When I joined the group, I was told that

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., speaks with Ralph Reed, founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, after he addressed the Road to Majority Conference on Thursday in Washington. Rubio has endorsed an amendment to a comprehensive immigration bill he helped negotiate that would deny health benefits to immigrants for five years after they become legal residents. CHARLES DHARAPAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the aliens would have to pay for their own health care,” Labrador told Fox News. “Now that has changed. And I can’t agree to all of the exceptions.” Frustrated Democrats argue that Republicans are picking a fight where one does not exist. In both chambers, Democrats say, they have agreed that illegal immigrants would not be eligible for public benefits — including health care subsidies and Medicaid — as they embark on a path to permanent legal status, which would take at least 10 years under the Senate plan. “We have said since day one … that undocumented people will not have access to subsidies in the Affordable Care Act,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said last month. “Any thought that we want to do something different than that is simply not true. It is a bottom line. No need to even discuss it.” Under current law, illegal immigrants and legal residents of fewer than five years are mostly barred from receiving benefits under Medicaid, the joint state-federal health insurance program for the poor. That restriction does not apply to poor immigrants who show up at hospital emergency rooms, however. While writing the Affordable Care Act, Congress sidestepped the dicey issue of illegal immigration by excluding unlawful immigrants from its provisions. That means that immigrants will not get government subsidies to help them buy private insurance plans, nor can they benefit from the law’s expansion of Medicaid. At the same time, however, they are

exempted from the mandate, taking effect next year, that every person must carry health insurance or face a tax penalty. Some Republicans think it would be unfair to exclude such immigrants from the insurance mandate. One proposal championed by Labrador, according to people familiar with the private House negotiations, would require illegal immigrants to purchase their own insurance, without access to federal health exchanges, as a prerequisite for citizenship. Democrats argue that making the immigrants subject to the mandate could impose an insurmountable burden on them because of potentially hefty premiums that would not be offset by federal subsidies available to others. That burden could also discourage people from coming out of the shadows to apply for legal status, said Priscilla Huang, policy director for the nonpartisan Asian and Pacific Islander American Health Forum. “If we want them to become citizens and fully integrated into their communities and our country, we should really treat them as such,” Huang said. Aides said Labrador simply wanted to include language in the House bill that would ensure that illegal immigrants were responsible for paying for their own care. Other members of the immigration working group resisted out of fear that the language Labrador proposed would have meant that illegal immigrants with unpaid medical bills would not be eligible for permanent legal residency and could be deported, according to Democratic aides.

Turmoil in Turkey continues despite end to park protest Critics have accused him of protesters had set up a tent city an increasingly autocratic way complete with a library, food The Associated Press of governing and of trying to distribution center, infirmary, impose his conservative Muslim children’s activity area and plant ISTANBUL — Riot police views on the lifestyles of the nursery. cordoned off streets, set up entire population in a country Water cannon and tear gas roadblocks and fired tear gas governed by secular laws — forced thousands to flee, and and water cannon to prevent charges he vehemently denies. cleanup crews ripped down the anti-government protesters “They say, ‘Mr. prime ministents and food overnight. from converging on Istanbul’s ter, you are too harsh,’ and some “I did my duty as prime mincentral Taksim Square on Sun[call me] ‘dictator’,” he said ister,” he told his supporters. day, unbowed even as Turkey’s during his speech in his second “Otherwise there would be no prime minister addressed hunpolitical rally in as many days. point in my being in office.” dreds of thousands of support“What kind of a dictator meets About six miles away in the ers a few kilometers away. with people who occupy Gezi center of the city, police fired The contrasting scenes Park as well as the sincere envitear gas, water cannon and pointed to an increasing polarronmentalists?” he questioned, rubber bullets to disperse thouization in Turkish society — one referring to a meeting Thursday sands of protesters trying to which critics say Prime Minisnight with protest representaconverge on Taksim Square. In ter Recep Tayyip Erdogan has some neighborhoods, protesters fueled with the fiery rhetoric he tives. Erdogan defended his deciset up barricades across streets has maintained since they began sion to send police in to end the while youths threw stones at more than two weeks ago. occupation of the park, where police. A police crackdown Saturday evening that ended an 18-day peaceful sit-in at Taksim Square’s Gezi Park sparked daylong unrest on the streets of Istanbul, while police also broke up demonstrations in the capital, Ankara, and the southern Electrical New Construction city of Adana. The protests began in Gezi Remodel Lighting Design Park more than two weeks ago and spread to dozens of cities Building Trust in Santa Fe for 15 years. across the country. 505-989-3564 Erdogan has blamed them on www.Gormanlightning.com a nebulous plot to destabilize his government. Five people, including a policeman, have died and more than 5,000 have been injured, according to a Turkish rights group. Buy one BReaKFaST before Elected to his third term just 11aM and receive 2nd breakfast two years ago with 50 percent of equal or lesser value 50% off of the vote and having steered with purchase of any 2 drinks. his country to healthy economic growth, the protests are unlikely “Breakfast at Joe’s - delightful!” to prove an immediate threat to Erdogan’s government. But they have dented his international image and exposed growing divisions within Turkish society. 471-3800 Never before in his 10-year joesdining.com tenure has Erdogan faced such *Not good with any other offer. Rodeo Rd at Zia Expires: June 23, 2013 an open or broad expression of Open 7 days a week discontent. By Elena Becatoros and Suzan Fraser

SLIGO, Ireland — President Barack Obama this week will visit a European continent deeply worried about its economy, the worsening conflict in Syria and the uncertain direction of American leadership abroad in the fifth year of his administration. As he arrives Monday in Northern Ireland for his first trip to Europe in two years, Obama will be confronting the diplomatic fallout from his actions and inaction on some of the most urgent concerns of his European counterparts. His long delay in more aggressively supporting Syria’s beleaguered opposition forces — a move his administration announced in the form of expanded military aid on the eve of his visit here — has frustrated the leaders of France and Germany. The recent disclosure of the National Security Agency’s telephone and Internet surveillance has angered many European politicians, particu-

larly German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whom he will see on both stops of his three-day visit. And the expansion throughout his term of drone warfare has disillusioned a once-adoring European public — and, to a lesser degree, its more pragmatic political leaders. Reflecting that disappointment, the French newspaper Le Monde headlined a story this month about the NSA’s surveillance programs: “George W. Obama and National Security.” “People in Europe were looking for a political redeemer,” said Jan Techau, the director of the European center of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Those expectations, of course, were greatly exaggerated. Soon it became clear, as it is now, that he is simply an American president with all of the ugly power politics that the position involves.” The Washington Post

GuaranteedLowest Retail Prices!

Sav e up to

$5OO

KINGUFEOENR A QDS JULY 7

of Santa Fe

EN

FINE FURNITURE • FREE LOCAL DELIVERY & SETUP •

MATTRESSES • UPHOLSTERY • PATIO FURNITURE

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

ENTRY DOORS by

MAKE A GOOD FIRST IMPRESSION

Seal bad weather out and energy savings in while increasing your home’s curb appeal.

GORMAN Electrical Services

Save 50%

7:30am - 9:00pm

Joe’s Breakfast Enchilada

$500

Federal Tax Credit May Qualify

SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY CALL FOR DETAILS

E V SA

0 5 $3

VIARY O R P NT ONLITY ERS A QU DOO

HURRY THIS OFFER ENDS SOON

Home Resort Living Inc. Lic. 91738

992-7633


A-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

Ammo: Santa Fe gun store getting word out about proposal Continued from Page A-1 an individual would prove when he or she obtained the device. What the five-term councilor says is important, however, is that the city curb the availability of the devices. “I think it makes a very strong statement at the very least,” Bushee said in an interview. “And at best, it actually limits the sale of these high capacity magazines in our town.” She noted that even though federal laws regulating the devices are no longer in effect, Colorado and California are among the states with laws prohibiting them. “One community after the other at a grass-roots level can make this effort and really make a difference,” Bushee said. “This is just our way of demonstrating concern for these feeding devices that are, generally speaking, used for mass murder.” Bushee — who is campaigning to be elected mayor in the 2014 city election — said she might try to add language to the proposal that would establish “new bureaucracy” for gun owners who already have the devices to get notarized proof that they are permitted to keep them. She expects there will be a contentious debate on the proposal at a public hearing planned June 26. She’s right on that point, says local gunsmith Thomas Iddings. A petition posted at the Outdoorsman sporting goods store in DeVargas Center and on the store’s website is generating attention about the proposed rule. The store will close early the day of the hearing so workers can attend. “I’m telling everybody that walks in the door,” Iddings said this weekend, noting that either councilors don’t understand the detrimental impact of the proposed rules on law-abiding gun owners, “or they just don’t care.” Many guns come standard with a magazine that would be prohibited under the proposal, he said, and the city should get ready for a lawsuit if it adopts the rules. Santa Fe native Billy Elrite said the proposal won’t have any public safety effect, but would discriminate against nearly every gun owner in the city. State laws allow individuals to take safety courses and pay a fee for a concealed-carry permit. The Glock handgun that he carries with the state’s sanction came with a 15-round magazine, and he owns dozens of standard 30-round magazines for a collection of AR-15 rifles he uses for shooting competitions. He doesn’t have a criminal record, but he’s worried that he’ll get harassed by police if the proposal is adopted. It’s not the number of bullets that matters, he said. “Just because you have 10 rounds or 20 rounds or 30 rounds, it makes no difference,” said Elrite, 26. “I don’t care if it’s a 10-round mag or a 20-round mag — with practice, you can change a magazine quicker than most people can dump 30 rounds.” On the other side of the issue, a group called New Mexicans for Gun Safety has been lobbying policymakers since this fall. While their efforts first focused on the New Mexico Legislature, they also turned to the City Council. Santa Fe resident Miranda Viscoli is among those leading the charge for stricter local rules. She wrote in a recent letter to councilors that those making arguments about constitutional rights have adopted a “Let’s sit around and do nothing while people get shot” campaign. Horrified by mass-shooting violence at an elementary school in Connecticut, at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo., at a grocery store in Tuscon, Ariz., and at Fort Hood military base — which together

José Guadalupe Rodriguez Ortiz, center, dishes up a dinner of chicken and tortillas while joking with his wife, Nancy SolisRodriguez, and his brother, Esteban, during a family gathering Saturday. Rodriguez reentered the U.S. at El Paso on Friday after spending 10 months in Mexico, waiting for a visa so that he can begin his path to citizenship and live legally in the country with his wife and children, who are all U.S. citizens.

If you go What: City Council public hearing on proposed rules on ammunition feeding devices When: 7 p.m. June 26 Where: City Hall, 200 Lincoln Ave.

claimed the lives of 90 people — the mother of two, a thirdgeneration Santa Fean, has been an active advocate. “We can either do nothing and continue to allow these high capacity magazines to be on our streets — and they are on our streets — or we can begin the process to eliminate them from our city,” she wrote in a recent message to city councilors. “And God forbid if there is a shooting with one of these high capacity clips, not only would it be tragic in terms of the life lost, but you can bet tourism in this town will take a downward spiral.” Bruce Merchant, a retired physician who moved to Santa Fe from California and who is on the gun-safety group’s steering committee, said he spoke before several legislative committees early this year in favor of expanding background checks at gun shows. That “obviously needed remedy” was very close to being adopted and even had a green light from the governor, but was thwarted by lastminute Senate maneuvering that blocked it, he said. The city proposal is likely to have a “modest effect,” Merchant said, but is important in sending a message that many of the nation’s citizens now believe the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment about the right to bear arms is being interpreted too broadly because of hard lobbying by the weapons industry. It would also be a symbol of security and safety in Santa Fe, Merchant said. “In the vast majority of cases, if someone needs more than 10 rounds for a gun, they intend to be in a war zone or committing a crime,” Merchant said. Merchant favors an approach from Coss that would call for the city to adopt the rules and immediately ask for a state Supreme Court opinion about its legality. Assistant City Attorney Marcos Martinez said in an interview that the city can’t get a court opinion before it formalizes the proposed rules, but could protect itself from the most expensive lawsuits if it seeks a declaratory judgment action right away. Martinez wrote a memo to councilors in January contemplating potential constitutional issues with the proposal. “The ban must comport with both the federal constitutional and New Mexico State Constitutional limitations,” he wrote, noting that the city needs to “show a substantial relationship between the prohibition” and “the objectives of protecting police and controlling crime,” as well as demonstrating that the rule “does not regulate an incident of the right to keep and bear arms.” He based his opinion in part on a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that determined that District of Columbia laws restricting the possession of firearms in one’s home violated the Second Amendment, and concluded by writing that if the city passed the ordinance, and “if a person challenged the city’s attempt to regulate large capacity magazines, the city may be subject to … liability.” Bushee said she’s discussed the idea with other attorneys who have a different opinion, including former city councilor Stephen Farber, who has pushed for what he calls an “assault weapons ban” in the city. “What I really can’t do,” she said, “is nothing. Given that I can’t do anything about background checks except being severely disappointed, by my reading of the Constitution, we can create some limits.”

CIty proposAl on Ammo lImIts Magazines and other devices that would become illegal, as defined in the proposed ordinance: Large capacity ammunition feeding device means a magazine, belt, drum, feed strip or similar device that has a capacity of, or that can be readily restored or converted to accept, more than 10 rounds of ammunition; but does not include an attached tubular device designed to accept, and capable of operating only with, .22-caliber rimfire ammunition. The rules would not apply to devices that residents “otherwise lawfully possessed” before the effective date of the ordinance, but the proposal does not address how residents prove lawful ownership.

PHOTOS COURTESY TIMOTHY ROBERTS

Wait: Rodriguez ready for life without fear Continued from Page A-1 He had entered the U.S. illegally when, as a child, his parents brought him to Santa Fe from Mexico. Rodriguez did not learn that he was undocumented until he was a teenager. On the verge of turning 30, Rodriguez decided he wanted to straighten out his immigration status so he could become a U.S. citizen. He would have been eligible for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, initiated by President Barack Obama in 2012. It prevents the deportation for two years of young undocumented residents who meet certain criteria. Saturday marked the one-year anniversary of Deferred Action, which has not drawn nearly the response that had been expected. The administration said 1.8 million people were eligible, but only about 500,000 people have applied. Santa Fe immigration attorney Victoria Ferrara says many eligible people still don’t know about the program, others don’t trust the authorities and still others don’t have the $465 filing fee. Rodriguez and his wife, Nancy SolisRodriguez, a U.S. citizen who was born in Mexico, decided to take the more difficult approach. It offered a path to citizenship. The Deferred Action plan does not. But that decision meant Rodriguez had to return to Mexico to apply for a visa and for a pardon for his illegal entry into the U.S. as a child. The long wait in Mexico was worth it, Rodriguez said. “Now I can be with my family and not fear that I will be sent back to Mexico,” he said in an interview in El Fogoncito, a restaurant not far from the U.S. Consulate in Juárez, three days before his papers came through. “This will allow me to make a better life for my family. The day I cross the border will be the best day of my life.”

Rodriguez celebrates his return to Santa Fe on Saturday with his mother, Estefana.

Among his plans are to return to work once he gets his Social Security card, finish college with a degree in radiology and, eventually, to buy a house. The process Rodriguez has been through gives him permanent residency for 10 years, says his lawyer, Alison Cimino. In three years, he will be eligible to apply for citizenship, a process that could take as few as four years to complete. There is much talk in Washington about changes in immigration law. In March, requirements changed so that in many circumstances, undocumented residents applying for residency in the U.S. can wait here for their visa application to be processed, although they must still return to their country of origin to make the application. Rodriguez would have been able to return to the U.S. to wait for his papers, had that change taken place sooner. The U.S Senate appears likely to approve a much bigger overhaul of

immigration law that would give undocumented residents the right to apply for legal status and eventually for citizenship. The prospects in the House of Representatives are much less certain, although New Mexico’s 3rd District Rep. Ben Ray Luján, a Democrat, said he is optimistic. “In the House, a strong bipartisan group continues to work on a package that includes a pathway to citizenship,” he said in a statement to The New Mexican. “If House Republican leaders bring a strong, comprehensive plan to the floor for a vote instead of piecemeal Tea Party-backed bills, I am optimistic that we can pass legislation that strengthens our economy and strengthens our families.” The first stop for the Rodriguez family when they arrived in Santa Fe in the late afternoon Friday was the south-side home of Rodriguez’s sister, Lula. His mother, Estefana, was waiting, and soon others of the nine Rodriguez brothers and their families arrived. They included Esteban, who in 2006 took the same path Lupe has taken. “We want to pick up our lives where we left off 10 months ago,” Solis-Rodriguez said. “I want some father-son bonding time,” said Rodriguez’s son Youanie, who turns 12 Wednesday. Outside, children including Rodriguez’s daughter Yanelie, 4, played on a trampoline. Lula opened a window to cool the hot kitchen. A rooster crowed. Rodriguez was overcome with the domestic scene. “I can’t believe it,” he said. “I believe it,” said Estefana, who was cooking chicken and rice for tortillas, “only because I see you.” Contact Timothy Roberts at www.tdroberts.com.

seas: Effort to stay above water is costly Continued from Page A-1 Rotterdam, Netherlands: In a country where two-thirds of the population lives below sea level, the battle against the sea has been a matter of life and death for centuries. The Dutch government devotes roughly 1 percent of its annual budget to its intricate system of dikes, dunes and sea walls. Improvements to cope just with the effects of climate change have been carried out since 2003 — though planning began well before that. The focus in the 20th century was on a spectacular series of sea defenses, including massive steel and concrete barriers that can be quickly moved to protect against storm surges. But current techniques embrace a philosophy of “living with water”: Floods are inevitable, and it’s better to prepare for them than to build ever-higher dikes that may fail catastrophically. Thousands of waterways are being connected so the country can essentially act as one big sponge and absorb sudden influxes of water. Some areas have been designated as flood zones. Houses that can float have been a building sensation. Along the coast, the country has been spouting huge amounts of sand in strategic locations offshore and allowing the natural motion of waves to strengthen defensive dunes. Venice, Italy: Sea level rise is a particular concern for this flood-prone city. It’s in the process of realizing an expensive and oft-delayed system of underwater barriers that would be raised in the event of flooding over 43 inches, higher than the 31-inch level that floods the famed St. Mark’s Square. Venice, a system of islands built into a shallow lagoon, is extremely vulnerable to rising seas because the sea floor is also sinking. The constant flooding puts the city’s considerable architectural treasures at risk. Plans for the new socalled Moses barriers will cost more than 4 billion euros. Bangladesh: A low-lying delta nation of 153 million people, Bangladesh is one

Amphibious homes float on the harbor in the IJburg neighborhood in Amsterdam in March 2012. MARGRIET FABER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

of Asia’s poorest countries, and one that faces extreme risks from rising sea levels. Its capital, Dhaka, is at the top of a list of world cities deemed most vulnerable to climate change, according to a recent survey by risk analysis company Maplecroft. The World Bank says a sea level rise of 5 inches would affect 20 million people living along the country’s 440-mile coast. Many of these people would be homeless. Bangladesh is implementing two major projects worth $470 million that involve growing forests on the coastal belt and building more multistory shelters to house people after cyclones and tidal surges. Developed nations have so far provided $170 million to the fund. Maldives: The Maldives, an upmarket beach paradise for tourists, has also become a symbol of the dangers of climate change. Made up of hundreds of islands in the Indian Ocean, it’s one of the most low-lying nations in the world. Some scientists have said the Maldives could disappear within decades, and former President Mohamed Nasheed even proposed relocating all 350,000 inhabitants to other countries. While other researchers say those fears may have been overblown, the country is taking measures to protect itself. A seawall was built around the capital, Male, after flooding in the 1980s. That wall protected the city from the worst effects of the devastating 2004 tsunami. The country’s climate adaptation plans call for relocating residents from small

vulnerable islands to bigger, better protected ones. It’s also creating new land through land reclamation, expanding existing islands or building new ones, to ease overcrowding. The reclaimed land is being elevated. Cuba: Officials recently finished a study of the effects of climate change on this island’s 3,500 miles of coastline, and their discoveries were so alarming they didn’t immediately share the results with the public to avoid causing panic. Rising sea levels would seriously damage 122 Cuban towns or even wipe them off the map by 2100. Scientists found that miles of beaches would be submerged while freshwater sources would be tainted and croplands rendered infertile. In all, seawater would penetrate up to 1.2 miles inland in low-lying areas, as oceans rose nearly 3 feet. Those frightening calculations have spurred systemic action in Cuba, the largest island in the Caribbean and one that is heavily dependent on beachloving European and Canadian tourists. In recent months, inspectors and demolition crews have begun fanning out across the island with plans to raze thousands of houses, restaurants, hotels and improvised docks in a race to restore much of the coast to something approaching its natural state. In the tourist resort of Varadero, the country faces a dilemma: Tearing down seaside restaurants and hotels threatens millions of dollars in yearly tourism revenue.


A-5

Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Attorney hopes to take bite out of teeth mark evidence N.M. man among dozens wrongly convicted based on dental analysis By Amanda Lee Myers The Associated Press

At least 24 men convicted or charged with murder or rape based on bite marks on the flesh of victims have been exonerated since 2000, many after spending more than a decade in prison. Now a judge’s ruling later this month in New York could help end the practice for good. A small, mostly ungoverned group of dentists carry out bite mark analysis, and their findings are often key evidence in prosecutions, even though there is no scientific proof that teeth can be matched definitively to a bite into human skin. DNA has outstripped the usefulness of bite mark analysis in many cases: The FBI doesn’t use it and the American Dental Association does not recognize it. “Bite mark evidence is the poster child of unreliable forensic science,” said Chris Fabricant, director of strategic litigation at the New York-based Innocence Project, which helps wrongfully convicted inmates win freedom through DNA testing. Supporters of the method, which involves comparing the teeth of possible suspects to bite mark patterns on victims, argue it has helped convict child murderers and other notorious criminals, including serial killer Ted Bundy. They say problems that have arisen are not about the method, but about the qualifications of those testifying, who can earn as much as $5,000 a case. “The problem lies in the analyst or the bias,” said Dr. Frank Wright, a forensic dentist in Cincinnati. “So if the analyst is … not properly trained or introduces bias into their exam, sure, it’s going to be polluted, just like any other scientific investigation. It doesn’t mean bite mark evidence is bad.” The Associated Press

Dr. Frank Wright, a forensic dentist in Cincinnati, displays a cast of a suspect’s teeth used in a bite mark analysis, which he practices on a regular basis. PHOTOS BY AL BEHRMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

An overlay of a bite mark placed on top of a photograph of a bite mark victim to see if the bite is a possible match.

reviewed decades of court records, archives, news reports and filings by the Innocence Project in order to compile the most comprehensive count to date of those exonerated after being convicted or charged based on bite mark evidence. Two dozen forensic scientists and other experts were interviewed, including some who had never before spoken to a reporter about their work. The AP analysis found that at least two dozen men had been exonerated since 2000, mostly as a result of DNA testing. Many had spent years in

prison, including on death row, and one man was behind bars for more than 23 years. The count included at least six men arrested on bite mark evidence who were freed as they awaited trial. One of those was a New Mexico man imprisoned in the 1989 rape and murder of his stepdaughter, who was found with a possible bite mark on her neck and sperm on her body. It was later determined that the stepfather had a medical condition that prevented him from producing sperm. Two court cases this month

are helping to bring the debate over the issue to a head. One involves a 63-year-old California man who is serving a life term for killing his wife, even though the forensic dentist who testified against him has reversed his opinion. In the second, a New York City judge overseeing a murder case is expected to decide whether bite mark analysis can be admitted as evidence, a ruling critics say could kick it out of courtrooms for good. Some other notable cases of faulty bite mark analysis include: u Two men convicted of raping and killing two 3-year-old girls in separate Mississippi crimes in 1992 and 1995. Marks on their bodies were later determined to have come from crawfish and insects. u Ray Krone, the so-called “Snaggletooth Killer,” who was convicted in 1992 and again in 1996 after winning a new trial in the murder of a Phoenix bartender found naked and stabbed in the men’s restroom of the bar where she worked. Krone spent 10 years in prison, three on death row. Raymond Rawson, a Las

Kona: Could be teacher’s last shot at race Continued from Page A-1 triathlon circuit, the Kona Ironman. He recently learned that his entry made the first cut in an Internet video contest aptly titled “Kona Inspired” that could earn him that chance. He joins 45 other hopefuls culled from an original group of 118. This week, he’s asking New Mexicans to take a few minutes to vote for him again. Finalists have been divided into three groups, and the top vote earners from each group win the right to compete. Votes in his group will be tallied between now and June 27. Most of the 1,800 racers at Kona get there by ranking high enough in their age group at one of 32 qualifying competitions during the year before the race. At age 64, Freedman would have to come in first in one of those races to make it to what he calls “the big Kahuna.” He’s earned a number of second- and third-place finishes at the qualifiers, but since he hasn’t

City of Santa Fe

MEETING LIST WEEK OF JUNE 17, 2013 THROUGH JUNE 21, 2013

MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 4:00 PM LEAD TASK FORCE – Santa Fe Community Convention Center, Nambe Room, 201 West Marcy 5:00 PM FINANCE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013 2:30 PM SUSTAINABLE SANTA FE COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 3:00 PM PARKS AND OPEN SPACE ADVISORY COMMISSION – The Barn at Frenchy’s Field, On the Corner of Osage and Agua Fria Streets 4:00 PM PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers 4:30 PM SANTA FE PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD – Main Library, Pick Room, 145 Washington Avenue WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 2013 9:30 AM DIVISION OF SENIOR SERVICES SENIOR ADVISORY BOARD OF DIRECTORS – Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center, 1121 Alto Street 4:00 PM CHARTER REVIEW COMMISSION – Santa Fe Community Convention Center, Milagro/Kearny Room 5:30 PM BICYCLE AND TRAIL ADVISORY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 2013 10:00 AM MAYOR’S COMMITTTEE ON DISABILTY – Genoveva Chavez Community Center, Classroom 1, 3221 Rodeo Road 3:00 PM MARTY SANCHEZ LINKS DE SANTA FE ADVISORY COMMITTEE – Marty Sanchez Links de Santa Fe Administration Building, 205 Caja del Rio Road 4:30 PM ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room 5:15 PM SANTA FE REGIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD – CYFD Offices, 1920 Fifth Street FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 2013 NO MEETINGS SCHEDULED SUBJECT TO CHANGE For more information call the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520

been able to get on the top step at the podium, he entered the video contest. “It’s really crucial now that I get exposure,” he said. “This is more than just about me. It’s about health and fitness and pushing your limits. In a lot of ways, I would be representing the entire state of New Mexico. This is the Super Bowl. It’s the World Series. In the sport of triathlon, it’s the pinnacle.” Freedman is also worried that this could be the last year he is strong enough to compete. “I have scoliosis. I have stenosis. I have protruding discs and I have arthritis,” he says in the contest video, “and so the reality is, qualifying is going to become more difficult for me. I have tried to teach the kids that if you try hard and work hard, that anything can come true. That’s why I want to go to Kona.” Local athlete and coach Matt Demond has competed in the Kona Ironman twice and gave Freedman the idea to make the

90-second video for the contest. Demond has helped Freedman organize an annual fundraiser for the school called the Panther Run, and now the two are working together on a kids triathlon program called Santa Fe Multisport. “I even learned something new the day we were shooting the video, that Ted had lobbied the state Legislature to get funding for elementary school PE teachers throughout the state of New Mexico,” Demond said. “I have worked with Ted over the last seven or eight years, and I’ve seen all these kids that have gone from being kids who couldn’t swim all the way across the pool to being kids who, in some instances, are racing as professional athletes now — and Ted was the person who inspired those kids. There are hundreds of those stories.” Contact Julie Ann Grimm at 986-3017 or jgrimm@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @julieanngrimm.

Vegas forensic dentist, testified at both trials that bite marks on the bartender could only have come from Krone, evidence that proved critical in convicting him. At his second trial, three top forensic dentists testified for the defense that Krone couldn’t have made the bite mark, but the jury didn’t give their findings much weight and again found him guilty. In 2002, DNA testing matched a different man, and Krone was released. Rawson, like a handful of other forensic dentists implicated in faulty testimony connected to high-profile exonerations, remains on the American Board of Forensic Odontology, the only entity that certifies and oversees bite mark analysts. Now retired, he didn’t return messages left at a number listed for him in Las Vegas. Rawson has never publicly acknowledged making a mistake, nor has he apologized to Krone, who described sitting helplessly in court listening to the dentist identify him as the killer. “You’re dumbfounded,” Krone said in a telephone interview from his home in Newport, Tenn. “There’s one person that knows for sure and that was me. And he’s so pompously, so arrogantly and so confidently stating that, beyond a shadow of doubt, he’s positive it was my teeth. It was so ridiculous.” The history of bite mark analysis began in 1954 with a piece of cheese in small-town Texas. A dentist testified that a bite mark in the cheese, left behind in a grocery store that had been robbed, matched the teeth of a drunken man found with 13 stolen silver dollars. The man was convicted. The first court case involving a bite mark on a person didn’t come until two decades later, in 1974, also in Texas. Two dentists testified that a man’s teeth matched a bite mark on a murder victim. Although the

defense attorney fought the admissibility of the evidence, a court ruled that it should be allowed because it had been used in 1954. Bite mark analysis hit the big time at Bundy’s 1979 Florida trial. On the night Bundy went on a killing spree that left two young women dead and three others seriously wounded, he savagely bit one of the murder victims, Lisa Levy. A Florida forensic dentist, Dr. Richard Souviron, testified at Bundy’s murder trial that his unusual, mangled teeth were a match. Bundy was found guilty and executed. The bite marks were considered the key piece of physical evidence against him. That nationally televised case and dozens more in the 1980s and 1990s made bite mark evidence look like infallible, cutting-edge science, and courtrooms accepted it with little debate. Then came DNA testing. Beginning in the early 2000s, new evidence set free men serving prison time or awaiting the death penalty largely because of bite mark testimony that later proved faulty. At the core of critics’ arguments is that science hasn’t shown it’s possible to match a bite mark to a single person’s teeth or even that human skin can accurately record a bite mark. Fabricant, of the Innocence Project, said what’s most troubling about bite mark evidence is how powerful it can be for jurors. “It’s very inflammatory,” he said. “What could be more grotesque than biting someone amid a murder or a rape hard enough to leave an injury? It’s highly prejudicial, and its probative value is completely unknown.” Fabricant and other defense attorneys are fighting to get bite mark analysis thrown out of courtrooms.

Brian McPartlon Roofing LLC. Ask us about roof maintenance on your house 505-982-6256 • www.mcpartlonroofing.com

2013 subaru impreza 2.0i

149

for $ oNly!

a montH 3 yrs • 30K miles

2013 subaru Forester 2.5x

175

for $ oNly!

a montH 3 yrs • 30K miles

4480 Cerrillos rd. • 505-471-7007 premiersubarusantafe.com

*As low as 0% for up to 63 months on all 2013 Subaru Outbacks with well-qualified credit *$2999.00 due at lease signing plus first payment, fees & taxes with well qualified credit, .20 over mileage fee on all leases. Security deposit required.

The City of Santa Fe Arts Commission Community Gallery presents:

¡Viva Flora!

. 1 $ F F O $1.N00OT

Treasured Plants of New Mexico

chkin n u M . t C 50 er. er custom

VALID

er p Limit 1 off any other offers. with Not valid ires 6/21/13 Exp

June 21 August 23

Opening Reception Friday, June 21, 2013 from 5-7pm 201 W. Marcy (at the intersection of Marcy and Sheridan) Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Friday, 10am to 5pm and Saturday 9:30am to 4pm 505.955.6705

Bringing Art to the Community and the Community to Art

90

a Med. Ice L

tte

9 T S 9 A . F 1 K D A I E L R A B V Y L I DA ! S L A I C E P S H C N U L &

T. F 1085 S

An Exhibit in Partnership with Santa Fe Botanical Garden

3-20 R. • 98 D S I C RAN

$ NOT

omer. er per cust Limit 1 off any other offers. with Not valid ires 6/21/13 Exp

Look in the

TVBook

Saturday Santa Fe New Mexican


A-6

REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

Fracking fuels water fights Drilling drives up water prices, placing burden on nation’s driest hot spots

The Associated Press

By Garance Burke

The Associated Press

PILOT KNIGHT F.P. SALE

Sanbusco Center • 989-4742 www.santafepens.com

Farmer Kent Peppler inspects one of his irrigation ditches June 7 near Greeley, Colo. Peppler says he is fallowing some of his corn fields this year because he can’t afford to irrigate the land, in part because energy companies have driven up the price of water. ED ANDRIESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the water recharged annually into the southern portion of the aquifer, which spans five counties that are home to about 330,000 people, said Ron Green, a scientist with the nonprofit Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas. The Eagle Ford, extending from the Mexican border into East Texas, began to boom in 2011, just as Texas struggled with the worst one-year drought in its history. While conditions have improved, most of the state is still dealing with some level of drought, and many reservoirs and aquifers have not been fully replenished. “The oil industry is doing the big fracks and pumping a substantial amount of water around here,” said Ed Walker, general manager of the Wintergarden Groundwater Conservation District, which manages an aquifer that serves as the main water source for farmers and about 29,000 people in three counties. “When you have a big problem like the drought and you add other smaller problems to it like all the fracking, then it only makes things worse,” Walker said. West Texas cotton farmer Charlie Smith is trying to make the best of the situation. He plans to sell some of the groundwater coursing beneath his fields to drillers, because it isn’t enough to irrigate his lands in Glasscock County. Smith’s fields, like the rest of the county, were declared to be in a drought disaster area this year by the USDA. “I was going to bed every night and praying to the good Lord that we would get just one

rain on the crop,” said Smith, who hopes to earn several thousand dollars for each acre-foot of water he can sell. “I realized we’re not making any money farming, so why not sell the water to the oil companies? Every little bit helps.” The amount of water needed to hydraulically fracture a well varies greatly, depending on how hard it is to extract oil and gas from each geological formation. In Texas, the average well requires up to 6 million gallons of water, while in California each well requires 80,000 to 300,000 gallons, according to estimates by government and trade associations. Depending on state and local water laws, frackers may draw their water for free from underground aquifers or rivers, or may buy and lease supplies belonging to water districts, cities and farmers. Some of the industry’s largest players also are investing in high-tech water recycling systems to frack with gray or brackish water. Halliburton, for instance, recently started marketing a new technology that allows customers to use recycled wastewater, calling it an “investment to further the sustainable development of the oil and gas industry.” The American Petroleum Institute, the principal lobbying group for the industry, said its members are working to become less dependent on fresh water, and instead draw on other sources. “Recycling wastewater helps conserve water use and provide cost-saving opportunities,” said Reid Porter, a spokesman for the group.

INC.

MAINTAIN YOUR ROOF & STUCCO

Over 30 years experience in roof repair

Michael A. Roybal

505-438-6599

www.southwestplasteringcompany.com

SPECIALITY HERB STORE

33 OFF %

Bulk Powdered Superfoods with this coupon.

Practioner Quality Supplements & Bulk Herbs

Now Servicing All Makes and Models 2 years or 24,000 mile warranty on Parts & Labor.

2801 Rodeo Plaza Rodeo Plaza 505.954.1702

471-1121

On Andersen PATIO DOORS

with

FREE KEY LOCK*

OFFERS END SOON 1.800.827.2416 *Valid for new customers only.

Home Resort Living Inc. Lic. 91738

Go Painlessly with THERA-GESIC. ®

Maximum strength analgesic creme for temporary relief from: • Joint and Muscle soreness • Arthritis • Back aches

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

1

IF YOUR HOME GETS UNINVITED GUESTS, TARGET SAFE MAKES SURE THERE’S A WELCOMING COMMITTEE.

2 We’re a LOCAL COMPANY with National Pricing!

992-7633

SOUTHWEST PLASTERING COMPANY,

SAVE $350

QUALITY ENTRY DOORS

Call for in-home consultation

In some states, regulators have stepped in to limit the volume or type of water that energy companies can use during drought conditions. In northwest Louisiana, as the production rush began in the Haynesville Shale in 2009, the state water agency ordered oil and gas companies to stop pulling groundwater from the local aquifer that also supplied homes and businesses, and use surface water instead. That order is still in effect and has helped groundwater levels to recover, said Patrick Courreges, a spokesman for the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources. In Colorado’s Weld County, home to Peppler’s farm and more than 19,000 active oil and gas wells, some officials see selling unneeded portions of their allotments from the Colorado River as a way to shore up city budgets.

SAN FRANCISCO — Most people don’t think twice about the gender printed on their driver’s license. But those “M’’ or “F’’ markers — and the legal and administrative prerequisites for switching them on passports, birth certificates and other forms of identification — are a source of anxiety and, even, discrimination for transgender individuals. Transgender rights activists have spent years persuading state and federal agencies to simplify the process. And Friday, they received their latest victory when the Social Security Administration announced it would no longer require proof of irreversible gender reassignment surgery before it would change the gender of individuals in its records. The move mirrors simi-

lar actions by the U.S. State Department for updating passports and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for changing green cards, work permits and other documents. As a result of lawsuits and lobbying, about half of U.S. states — most recently Illinois, Alaska, Virginia and Idaho — now allow residents to revise the gender designations on their driver’s licenses without first undergoing surgery or getting a judge’s approval. Applicants instead must provide a letter from a health professional stating they have received counseling, hormone therapy or another form of gender-transition treatment. A 2008 survey of 6,450 transgender people found that 40 percent of respondents had been harassed after presenting an ID that conflicted with how they looked.

WINDOW & DOOR REPLACEMENT FROM A COMPANY YOU CAN TRUST

THG-13902

SAN FRANCISCO — The latest domestic energy boom is sweeping through some of the nation’s driest pockets, drawing millions of gallons of water to unlock oil and gas reserves from beneath the Earth’s surface. Hydraulic fracturing, or the drilling technique commonly known as fracking, has been used for decades to blast huge volumes of water, fine sand and chemicals into the ground to crack open valuable shale formations. But now, as energy companies vie to exploit vast reserves west of the Mississippi, fracking’s new frontier is expanding to the same lands where crops have shriveled and waterways have dried up due to severe drought. In Arkansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah and Wyoming, the vast majority of the counties where fracking is occurring also are suffering from drought, according to an Associated Press analysis of industry-compiled fracking data and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s official drought designations. While fracking typically consumes less water than farming or residential uses, the exploration method is increasing competition for the precious resource, driving up the price of water and burdening already depleted aquifers and rivers in certain drought-stricken stretches. Some farmers and city leaders worry that the fracking boom is consuming too much of a scarce resource, while others see the push for production as an opportunity to make money by selling water while furthering the nation’s goal of energy independence. Along Colorado’s Front Range, fourth-generation farmer Kent Peppler said he is fallowing some of his corn fields this year because he can’t afford to irrigate the land for the full growing season, in part because deep-pocketed energy companies have driven up the price of water. “There is a new player for water, which is oil and gas,” said Peppler of Mead, Colo. “And certainly they are in a position to pay a whole lot more than we are.” In a normal year, Peppler said he would pay anywhere from $9 to $100 for an acre-foot of water in auctions held by cities with excess supplies. But these days, energy companies are paying some cities $1,200 to $2,900 per acre-foot. The Denver suburb of Aurora made a $9.5 million, five-year deal last summer to provide the oil company Anadarko 2.4 billion gallons of excess treated sewer water. In South Texas, where drought has forced cotton farmers to scale back, local water officials said drillers are contributing to a drop in the water table in several areas. For example, as much as 15,000 acre-feet of water are drawn each year from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer to frack wells in the southern half of the Eagle Ford Shale, one of the nation’s most profitable oil and gas fields. That’s equal to about half of

Outdated IDs worry transgender people

Professionally Installed systems locally owned & operated, serving the community since 1987.

Be TARGET SAFE! Call 505-438-8128

12

$

9

$

95 30 days

95 30 days

Total access PRINT + DIGITAL

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

Online access DIGITAL ONLY

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

santafenewmexican.com/subscribe QUESTIONS?

We can help!

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


lunes, 17 de junio, 2013 the new Mexican

a-7

EL NUEVO MEXICANO Grampo habla del ‘summer of love’

Crucigrama No. 10563 Horizontales 1. persona que hace poesías. 5. estreno. 10. enfermedad de la piel, caracterizada por la aparición de pústulas pequeñas. 12. observe. 14. baile napolitano de movimiento muy vivo. 18. Forma del pronombre de segunda persona del plural. 19. prefijo que indica antelación. 20. artículo neutro. 21. símbolo del neptunio. 23. (Joaquín, 1879-1949) pianista, compositor y musicógrafo cubano de origen español. 24. observa, mira. 25. interjección “¡tate!”. 26. desluzca, manosee. 27. tercer hijo de adán y eva. 28. terminación de infinitivo. 29. cocer directamente a las brasas. 31. príncipe árabe. 33. echar sal a los manjares. 35. canto fúnebre o lamentación por alguna calamidad o desgracia. 36. diosa egipcia de la fertilidad y la maternidad. 37. en la nomenclatura internacional, ohmio. 39. roturar la tierra con el arado. 40. primer signo del zodíaco. 42. ajiaceite. 44. Que sigue el partido, doctrina u opinión de otro (normalmente peyorativo). 46. el primer hombre según la biblia. 47. harto, muy. 48. cesta para echar la pesca. 49. pasa tocando ligeramente la superficie de algo.

U

na tarde in the summer, Grampo Y como many of us didn’t even know what Caralampio came home con un that smell was, pues naturalmente que we queque that he had bought allá en La thought que that was marijuana.” Fiesta Bakery en La Mariposa. He put the “What was the food like, grampo?” Canucake down allí en la mesa, and Grama Cuca tito asked him. brought some platitos to put “It was un poco diferente, the slices on. Grampo turned to m’hijo,” Grampo Caralampio Canutito and asked him, “Do you said. “I remember que allá over want some queque, m’hijo?” by Cid’s Market había un restau“Naturalmente, grampo,” rantito that used to advertize que Canutito answered him. “I love hacía serve ‘macro-biotic food’. queque.” We didn’t know qué fregãos era “Do you want a gringo piece ‘macro-biotic’ comida pero it of queque or a chicano piece of sounded suspicious enough que queque?” Grampo Caralampio we never went inside to taste it. Larry Torres asked the little boy. It sounded como algo que you “Canutito paused to think. Growing up could only touch con un pair of Él no estaba quite sure of what Spanglish tweezers.” grampo meant. “Uh grampo,” he “When did the Chicanos acá, stammered at last, ¿Qué es la difegrampo?” Canutito prodded him. rencia between un gringo piece of cake y un “Ellos también llegaron en los 60s,” chicano piece of cake?” “Un gringo pedazo de queque is just a tiny Grampo Caralampio replied. “They little sliver, just enough para darte un taste. marched into middle of the Plaza wearing camisetas con Che Guevara on them y Pero un chicano portion de queque is huge; it is about a quarter of the whole cake. It is usando gorritas on their heads. They stood enough to dunk into dos copas de café.” allá cerca del obelisk en la plaza and they “In that case, deme un chicano piece of called themselves los ‘Brown Berets’. They cake, grampo,” Canutito said. told us que we were not Spanish o Mexican As la familia was sitting around la mesa pero from now on we would be called ‘Chide la cocina comiendo queque and bebicanos’.” endo café, Canutito perked up and asked, “And did everyone in Santa Fe believe “Grampo, ¿cómo eran los 60s aquí?” them, grampo?” Canutito asked him. “Uuu, m’hijo,” Grampo Caralampio “No,” he replied. “Since que they had prefaced, “era un tiempo poco scary para come on the heels of the Hippie Movement muchas personas aquí. Many of us no habwe thought que eran Mexicanos jipificados; lábamos in English, and we were told que Hippified Mexicanos. It took us un poco to un grupo of hairy people called los hippies understand what was happening.” were coming. Pues we were afraid de los “Entonces, why was ese verano forty years jipis, and our parents nos hicieron warn de ago called el ‘Summer of Love’ grampo?” ellos. We had been told de no aceptar food Canutito asked the old man. or drink from them porque they it might “Es porque people choose to remember it contain marijuana o LDS.” así. Pero if you want to know how it really “I think you mean LSD, grampo,” Canuwas, ask a los viejitos que estaban aquí pa’ tito corrected him. hacerlo witness. You will find que muchos “In any case,” grampo went on, ignorde ellos will remember it muy diferente a lo ing his remark, “todo used to smell a puro que people are telling us en estos días.” patchouli oil because los jipis would sprinCanutito just looked at grampo and kle it on their dollar bills, and then once it came en contacto with your clothes, la ropa said, “Groovy, far-out y un poco out-ofwould apestar a patchouli oil para siempre. sight … ”

www.angelfreire.com

Solucion Del No. 10563 O

SOLUCION DEL N

nuestro alfabeto. 7. utensilio de bolsillo, generalmente rectangular y de piel, para guardar la documentación, billetes, tarjetas, etc. 8. carbonato de sodio cristalizado. 9. infusión. 11. siglas latinas que poncio pilatos mandó inscribir en la cruz de Jesucristo. 13. de cinco sílabas. 15. suspensión de la respiración. 16. Que se halla en tensión. 17. aterrar, causar terror. 22. atraviesas, cruzas. 24. Funda en que se guardan algunas armas o instrumentos de metal. 30. aligeran, hacen menos pesado. 32. pez teleósteo marino, anacanto, de cuerpo simétrico. 34. Fi, letra griega. 37. secreción líquida de los

Verticales 1. apócope de papá. 2. prefijo “ocho”. 3. pondrás asta a una herramienta. 4. río de españa. 6. decimotercera letra de

10562

riñones. 38. arrancar el pelo o la barba con las manos. 40. Miembros de las aves que les permiten volar. 41. toda la masa encefálica. 43. composición lírica elevada. 45. canal que toma agua de un río.

Tuesday has LOCAL BUSINESS tuesday, January 15, 2013

tuesday, december 11, 2012

BUSINESS BEAT

LOCAL BUSINESS

LOCAL BUSINESS

Home sales in Santa Fe rise 23 percent

HILLSIDE MARKET

The New Mexican

W

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.

LOCAL BUSINESS

Solar professionals from Consolidated Solar Technology are conducting a pair of free informational solar seminars on Saturday, Jan. 26, at Body of Santa Fe, 333 W. Cordova Road. Several aspects of solar integration will be discussed in these informal presentations that will include a question-and-answer session with Patricia Mattioli and Katie Kelly from Consolidated Solar Technologies. The seminars are scheduled for 10:30 a.m. and 12:45 p.m. Space is limited. Those interested in attending are asked to RSVP with Tommy Trujillo at 274-3246 or via email, ttrujillo@gocstsolar.com.

Filing by Jan. 30 Following the January tax law changes made by Congress under

Real Money

uuu

The National Association of the Remodeling industry’s fourth-quarter Remodeling Business Pulse data of current and future remodeling business conditions has experienced significant growth across all indicators, with forecasting in the next three months hitting its all-time highest level. The significantly positive results have a lot to do with homeowner security, remodelers say. “Remodelers are indicating major growth in the future, with many saying that clients are feeling more stable in their financial future and their employment situations; therefore, they are spending more freely on remodeling needs,” says Tom O’Grady, association chairman and a builder in Drexel Hill, Pa. Growth indicators in the last quarter of 2012 are as follows: u Current business conditions up 2.1 percent since last quarter u Number of inquiries up 3.9 percent since last quarter u Requests for bids up 3.7 percent since last quarter u Conversion of bids to jobs up 3.5 percent since last quarter u Value of jobs sold is up 4.3 percent since last quarter Still, according to the data, expectations for 2013 are even brighter. Two-thirds of remodelers forecasted the next three months positively, and the rating jumped 13.1 percent from last quarter. Drivers of this positive outlook continue to be postponement of projects (81 percent reporting) and the improvement of home prices (51 percent reporting). “Now that the election is over, consumer confidence is starting to grow and so has remodelers’ confidence,” O’Grady says. “NARI members are looking forward to having a well-deserved, productive year ahead.”

LOCAL BUSINESS SNOW REMOVAL

At Santa Fe Homebrew Supply, 3-foot-tall plastic containers house both local and international grain for all-grain brewing.

the American Taxpayer Relief Act, the Internal Revenue Service announced that it plans to open the 2013 filing season and begin processing individual income tax returns on Jan. 30. The IRS will begin accepting tax returns on that date after updating forms and completing programming and testing of its processing systems. This will reflect the bulk of the late tax law changes enacted Jan. 2. The announcement means that the vast majority of tax filers — more than 120 million households — should be able to start filing tax returns starting Jan 30. The IRS estimates that remaining households will be able to start filing in late February or into March because of the need for more extensive form and processing systems changes. This group includes people claiming residential energy credits, depreciation of property or general business credits. Most of those in this group file more complex tax returns and typically file closer to the April 15 deadline or obtain an extension.

The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for the Santa Fe County was 4.9 percent in November, unchanged The Santa Fe Professional BusiThe Santa Fe Association of Realfrom Monday October and down 5.7 percent ness Women’s Young Professional tors has announced theLupe awarding of clears snow Cassidy’s Landscaping employee Estralle from the from DeVargas Center parking lot. cLyde MueLLer/the new Mexican in November 2011, according to the state Program is seeking candidates more than $7,500 to support local Department of Workforce Solutions. through Feb. 1, 2013. community services. Over the month, total nonfarm employYoung professional women or The Community Services Comment for the county rose by 200 jobs, men may be self-nominated, nomimittee received 24 requests totaling with the public sector and private sector nated by an organization, employer more than $24,000 in community employment each up 100 jobs. or colleague. Nominees will also be funding needs. In addition, construction and informaeligible to attend a special ProfesSFAR awarded a total of $7,520 tion each gained 100 jobs. sional Development program. to area community service organiIn the government sector, local governCandidates must be between the ment added 100 jobs. ages of 25 and 35; have been employed zations that include the Adventist Over the year Santa Fe’s MSA enployAcademy of Santa Fe, Bienvenidos in business or their professions with ment expanded by 700 jobs and thanks to at least one complete year of full-time Outreach, Boys & Girls Clubs of the growth in the hospitality and tourism Santa Fe, Cancer Institute Foundawork experience in her/his career sector, Santa Fe has recorded consecutive Solscapes owner Zandra Werenko “I try to13take care of contracted concern isn’t on waiting By Chris Quintana tion, Earth Care International, Food area; be outstanding in scholastic months of positive over-the-year job growth. Robert New Mexicanfor Santa Fe, IMPACT Personal businesses,” Southwest’s for the snow, but finding people said she has contracts as well, but work, community service;The be living, Martinez said. “We try to be loyal to that most people aren’t eager to sign available to operate the trucks in working, training or seeking continu- Safety, Las Cumbres Community Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@ ittle precipitation makes a our customers first.” 10- toof12-hour shifts at a moment’s on, especially given the sporadic ing education in Santa Fe County; and Services, Literacy Volunteers sfnewmexican.com. dry season for snow-removal notice. Apodoca added that he also Martinez said that just because weather in the past year. She does support the mission of SFPBW. Santathroughout Fe, Music Education Commitcompanies the it snows doesn’t mean his plows go has men who do hand-shoveling for more plowing on the north side of The individual selected will city, buttee of Santa Fe Symphony, Parent most business ownstate gas prices out. Often, he said, people will just sidewalks and similar areas inaccestown, she said. represent SFPBW at the state conInvolvement Committee, Santa Fe ers rely on alternative services to get sible let the snow melt, and customers by machinery. Werenko offers similar plowing program ference in April. The localthem Symphony, SER Jobs AE for Snow Removalaruns recent gasoline survey by aaawon’t new Mexico throughYouth the winters. generally call until 2 inches or services, and she added that she spewill be 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 26, at AE indicated the averagemore price accumulate. of a gallon of This season, he Progress, Villa Therese Catholic Consider Snow Removal, eight trucks with blades and salt cifically uses a salt that is less abrasive La Posada. For nomination informaunleaded regular in the santa Fe area was Clinic, ThetoFood Youth which shifts employees snowDepot and said, has been dry. graders. A blade costs $6,000 and tion, contact Amanda Lupardus, to plants and animals. It does cost $2.95, although the price is higher at some removal from Shelters. its partner company He added that he doesn’t go door- more, but because it snows infrea salt grader runs $5,000. Most of SFPBW chairwoman, at 455-5333 or stations. the price was $2.86 in albuquerque in construction, Insulite Skylights. to-door seeking out jobs, and instead his business contracts, alupardus@dncu.org.com. “The other business is based onThe New Mexican comes from and $2.99 in Las cruces. quently in Santa Fe, the costs level will let people reach out to him which means businesses around out. construction, so when it snows, the when his services are needed. the city can expect Apodoca’s She said she also supplements the construction stops, and vice versa,” Martinez, though, is used to dry crew to show up at the first signs dry season with seasonal plant care, manager Erik Apodoca said. seasons as Southwest has been in of snow. He said that business has been business for 45 years. He added that such as hand-watering evergreens, The crews work in twos, and and pest control, which also comes decent this year in spite of the he tries to save some funds during usually start by 2 or 3 a.m. across later in the year with dry winters. decreased snowfall. the summer in case of dry winters. the city. Apodoca said he does nonAnd while business has been slow That switch, however, requires Martinez added that his truck has contract labor as well, but call-ins all around, Martinez said the potenmore than just transferring personnel can expect a 30- to 45-minute wait almost fallen down steep embanktial for snowier months remains, from a construction site to a truck. ments while plowing, but that before someone arrives. though the whole season could be Apodoca said that different insurance, doesn’t deter him. Other companies such as Southa dud. pay rates and other clerical concerns west Pavement and Maintenance “It can be dangerous,” he said. “It’s hit-and-miss with this sort of must also be undertaken. “But hell, so can getting out of your and Solscapes have similar wait thing,” he said. bathtub.” times for call-in services. And he added that the biggest

When business runs dry

Companies rely on alternative services to make money

L

COMMENTARY

Crooks target businesses with creative scams Senior vice president, Los Alamos National Bank

Calendar

SBA changes intensify biz lending surge

A different art market

side of his shop. He said his sales, undeniably, are slower at Hillside Market, but the larger commission share he gets for his sales means business about evens out. Hillside faces other challenges, BUSINESS BEAT BUSINESS BEAT too, and the biggest might be location. Off Old Las Vegas Highway, it By John Woosley seems far removed from the heart of Director, New Mexico District Office, U.S. Small Business Santa Fe shopping, though Sjostrand Administration said the drive from downtown Santa erome Garcia completed 23 years of military Fe only takes five to 10 minutes. service, multiple overseas tours and one comStill, she admitted some people bat deployment before retiring in Las Cruces think it’s a long way to drive. just before the economy collapsed in late 2008. “We’re definitely trying to make Garcia and his wife, Michele, proceeded with plans it a destination,” she said. To that to start their own business and launched Southwest end, Sjostrand offers her space to By Bruce Krasnow General Construction in February 2009. nonprofit groups hosting events. The New Mexican SGC is a service disabled veteran-owned small conThe nonprofits get 10 percent of the tracting business that builds and maintains airfields, By Bruce Krasnow sales, and she gets a larger customer he AARP free tax preparaJeweler Kaye Martin of Santa Fe sets upincome her display at Hillside Marrailroads, roads and buildings in New Mexico and the The New Mexican ket. The market’s retail store goods some base. The CSA functions similarly tionboasts will begin Feb.from 1 at both the45 vendors. Southwest. It also builds fences, drills wells, maintains because people have to drive out Santa Fe Community College and grounds and conducts environmental remediation. anta Fe has landed on Travel + Leisur the Pasatiempo Senior Center, according instead of the larger items, which creative outlet. So, she started taking to Hillside Market to pick up their Garcia, a civil engineer, earned his general contracmagazine’s list for “America’s Best tax aide coordinator vegetables. can be harder to hawk.to Peter Doniger,art classes and started for selling some tor’s license before starting the business. He and his Girlfriend Getaways.” AARP in how Santa Fe.of her work, but she said she’s not “They have given us customers, Notably, artists don’t choose wife completed numerous business training programs It joins Austin, Texas; Maui, Hawaii; The hours at SFCC be from 9 a.m. to and we have given them customers,” their artwork’s displayed. Sjostrand afterwill gallery recognition. offered by the Small Business Administration and Charleston, S.C.; Scottsdale, Ariz., and other 5 p.m. Monday Fridays Tisha said. creates the various vignettes in the through “I don’t thinkand my work will ever secured certifications in the 8(a) Business Developcities where BFFs can walk, stroll and spend 9 a.m. to 1 to p.m. Saturday. at the she said. “And store, and that’s fine, according Hillside Market was founded by hang inHours a museum,” ment Program. By 2012, the Garcias had 12 contracts time without the guys. “Girls’ getaways, senior center, 664 Alta Vista St., are 9 a.m. Tucker. In fact, she said she strove to that’s not part of my aspiration. If Tisha, her current partner, Pam Fenwith seven federal agencies and had built a team to while focused on fun and celebration, don’t to 1process p.m. Monday through Friday. remove herself from the as that’s your goal, “We thendo Hillside Marnel, and Tisha’s former husband, handle the growing workload. have to be one big drinking fest like guys’ It is allbe first much as possible. Shenot saidtake sheappointments. didn’t ket may not thecome, place for you.” Kate Sjostrand, who underwent For two consecutive years, the U.S. Small Business trips often are,” writes Terry Ward. first served,” want to be part of a co-op, she just he says. She said she has seen her sales transgender surgery. In fact, all three Administration has helped train thousands of aspiring monitor Of Santa Fe, Ward writes, “InAthis town showing the 16 security camera feeds can be seen as Brian Hunt, a pharmacist at Del Norte Pharmacy, prepares a prewanted a place to sell her art. The gradually scription u u u increase since she started members live together in the same entrepreneurs like the Garcias and put more than that has drawn artists and healers to the for a patient Friday. Luis sánchez saturno/the new Mexican member dynamic allowed her to displaying her goods at Hillside house. And, no, Tisha said, it’s not $30 billion a year into the hands of small-business foot of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains for Happy birthdayMarket, wishes which are in order straddle that line. isn’t the case for all weird. owners. In the fiscal year that ended in September, decades, you can head out on the artisanal Thornburg Developing World Anderson had for the Tucker choreographed dance for artists. Painter Robert “I actually couldn’t imagine doing SBA loan programs posted the second-largest dollar chocolate trail, stopping at Kakawa Chocomutualwork fund,on which turned 3 on 30 years in New York (THDAX) before moving Canyon Road for about volume ever, surpassed only by the previous fiscal this with anyone else,” Tisha said. late House for Mesoamerican chocolate 31. As fund enough to Santa Fe. She knewDec. she and hera result, 14 the years, buthas moved his show space year, which enjoyed loan incentives enabled by the elixirs and at ChocolateSmith, where dark longevity to receive a Morningstar husband didn’t want to live in New to Hillside Marketratafter his landlord Contact Chris Quintana at Small Business Jobs Act of 2010. chocolate is the specialty. You can get paming — and it has been assigned a five-star York forever, but she still wanted a said he could no longer paint outcquintana@sfnewmexican.com. In New Mexico, 316 loans provided $149.6 million in pered at the Ten Thousand Waves Mounhonor, the highest. capital to small businesses through the agency’s 7(a), tain Spa, inspired by traditional Japanese Managed by Lewis Kaufman, the 504 and microloan programs. hot springs resorts; the communal soaking emerging market fund is part of the offerIn the past year, SBA began streamlining and simtub is women only and clothing optional.” ings by the Santa Fe-based Thornburg plifying many loan programs to broaden participation Investment Management, but it’s ceruuu by lenders. Its updated processing systems allow tainly not for everyone: It lost 15 percent 80 percent of loan applications to be processed The annual report from Atlas, the giant in 2011 before roaring back with a 22.7 perago, and additional measures, By Chris Quintana into in 2012, and since then HerSince then, Lovett said that he’s online. These changes and other incentives prompted moving and transportation company, that cent gain in 2012. The New Mexican such as 24-hour security surveilrand said she has several silent installed more outside lighting in 1,300 lenders nationwide to return to SBA lending. tracks who goes and comes from each William Rocco don’t need to upsize your living space, or save the lance, are required. alarms in place that summon “Leverage”Morningstar’s is using borrowed assetsSamuel to raise your By Michael D. Loftin addition to pricey security equipThe results speak for themselves: state shows immigration to New Mexico writes: “This fundhave has crushed thewhat compe- money for retirement or the kids’ college. It’s your harmacies in and around For The New Mexican “We have 16 cameras, and the police. She also purchased own return, since you only to pay back ment such as alarms that go off u The Certified Development Company (504) loan has slowed but that the state still has more tition thus From its inception the city of Santa Fe face it’s not a cheap camera system a stronger front door and addiyou borrow, plus anyfar. interest, while you geton to keep money. It’s up to you. when windows are broken. Roybillion Rogosin plays the piano as students at the Santa Fe C-A-M-P studios prepare for a performance of Les Misérables. C-A-M-P stands for program extended 9,471 loans, supporting $15.1 people coming here than leaving. In 2012, Dec. 16, 2009, through Oct. 1, 2012, it has house is first and foremost a home. already face rising costs either,” she said in an phone tional heavy duty locks to protect OK, there’s that little voice saying wait a minute, Creative all the profits. “It’s the cost of doing busiin small business lending. New Mexico accounted forArts, Music and Performance. photos by erika serrano-perez/the new Mexican there were 746 inbound trips, compared posted 10.4 percent annualized return, It is where you sleep, eat, raise your for prescription drugs and interview Thursday. “But all of the store. I actually paid more than $950 a month on my How does thata work for an individual homeness these days,” Lovett said in a 51 of those loans, totaling $67.4 million. with 646 exits, and there have been more which ranks in the top 3 percent of the children, take shelter from the storm, and falling payouts from Medicare the costs have gone up substanTom Lovett, owner of Nambe mortgage, and over five years it was $57,000 that I buyer? Suppose you buy a house for $200,000 and phone interview Thursday. u SBA revamped its CAPLines program, which inbound trips to New Mexico every year in but they also must diversified emerging-markets category and hopefully grow old and happy. and Medicaid, tially.” Drugs since 2010, said someone Lovett also said that he has pay the mortgage faithfully for five years. Then, out plunked down for the old house, not $20,000. provides working lines of credit to small businesses the past decade. But the largest contend difference is more than 7 percentage points better That was forgotten by buyers, banks and the govwith the threat of robShe said she doesn’t have a spe- had broken into his store Septem- begun to cut back on the amount The voice is easily answered. Of your payment, of the blue, you get a great job offer a few hundred such as manufacturers and government contractors. was in 2004, when the state sawbery 536 more than the group norm.” ernment in the run-ups to the late 1980s and midor fraud. cific person to watch the feeds ber 2011. Along with the loss of one-third on average went directly toward your of narcotic painkillers — such as miles away and decided to sell your home and Loans jumped 400 percent in one year — from inbound trips than exits. Rocco adds, “Other international funds ownership of the house, while the rest was interest 2000s housing bubbles. It was ignored by the Wall Brianna Harrand, manager of all the time, but the archives are medications, he said he and his oxycodone, a prescription narmove. at Thornburg have earned good long108 loans and $118 million in fiscal year 2011 to The top-five inbound states of 2012 Street financial speculators who turned mortgages the Santa Fe branch of Del Norte readily available should an inciwife also had to file mountains of cotic — he keeps in store. This you paid to the bank. If yourterm home gainedusing only the about 2 percent in 532 loans and $410 million in 2012. Here in New Mexwere: results same or similar into investment “vehicles” that took no notice of Pharmacy, said robberies have dent arise. Think of the interest as rent, and think of the paperwork documenting the loss value each year that you owned it, at has the end of five 1. District of Columbia approaches. And Kaufman a sizable the people paying the underlying loans. increased compared with 10 years Please see cost, Page C-4 Please see sBa, Page C-4 Her store was last broken principal as savings. Could you have rented that of narcotics. years it would be worth almost $221,000. Mean2. Oregon and strong support team.” Today, the early signs of a healthy housing marhouse, or even an adequate apartment, for $650 or while, you would have paid about $20,000 in mort3. Nevada ket are returning after the crash. Once again, it is $650 a month? Not likely. uuu 4. North Carolina becoming normal to buy a home with the expecta- gage principal over the period. And could you have found a bank savings When you sell, youof walk away with $41,000Santa — 5. South Carolina Speaking long-term investing, tion that it is a sound investment in the future. account that would turn a little more than $300 a ofis the house minus the amount remaining To see the information, visit www. Money Journal, month put away over five years — $20,000, give or also home to Green House prices are increasing in many parts of the the valueFe FRANCE on the loan. Youfounder only invested $20,000, so youFeigenhave atlasvanlines.com/migration-patterns/ Cliff where and publisher country, and even with only modest appreciation, take — into $41,000? effectively doubled fiveofyears, even pdf/2012_Migration_Patterns.pdf. has your beenmoney namedinone the “Top baum homeowners can find their equity — that share of Sure. If you believe in Santa Claus and the Tooth though the house gained only 10 percent in value. Thought Leaders in Trustworthy Business Fairy, too. a home’s value not beholden to the bank — grows uuu Congratulations. it to the financial Trust Behavior” You’ve for 2013made by the group much faster than their investment in in the house. But leveraged appreciation is not financial makeBy Chris Quintana Ashley Leach, an economist with the big leagues, enjoying “leveraged appreciation” UNEMPLOYMENT SANTA FE Across America , a group that highlights believe. It’s for real. And while, as we all now know, What that means to the homebuyer is the type The New Mexican state Department of Workforce Solutions, on your investment. you did business it safely, while ethical and And trustworthy leaders. home values don’t always go up, they are begin2012 2011 of financial return usually reserved only for hedge has put together an analysis of the top Nov. 4.7% Nov. 5.2% the course ourthat research, buying equity in an of asset was at we the fund managers and private equity firms using other patiently“During ileen Rogosin danced with community of Nechin, just across By Alan Katz ning to rise once again. A penny saved via buying a occupational growth areas by education have met with and spoken to hundreds of home just might turn into two pennies earned. same time a home for you and your family. people’s money to make a lot for themselves. Elvis Presley. Roy Rogosin Bloomberg News the border, has been engaged in a UNEMPLOYMENT LOS ALAMOS level expected in New Mexico between thought leaders, across a variety profesWith that $41,000, you can perhaps put aof down The fat cats would call it “arbitrage,” or playing conducted Johnny Mathis. war of words with the government 2012 2011 now and 2020. disciplines who,home whenfor their efforts paymentsional on a bigger and better your fam- Michael P. Lofton is executive director of PARIS — A court’s rejection the difference between what an asset is worth at Now, the Rogosins are in over his decision. Nov. 3.2% Nov. 2.8% “As students and job seekers assess the Francois Hollande’s are combined, create of President Homewise. one point in time versus what it’s worth at another. ily in your new location,help maybe buy trustworthy a car if you Santa Fe starting an interdisciplinary His plan was described as types of work they are interested they millionaire tax shows organizations,” the group writes. 75 in, percent studio for the arts called Santa Fe “pathetic” by Prime Minister Jeancan begin to match their interests For online readers, the list is here — thewith limits on his ability to tap HOTEL/MOTEL OCCUPANCY RATES C-A-M-P studios. Marc Ayrault. Depardieu, who occupations. There are also times, www.trustacrossamerica.com/offeringshighhowearners, even as the ruling is After careers that took them all 2012 (year to date) 2011 (year to date) gained fame in the United States ever, when a job seeker is not currently thought-leaders-2013.shtml. unlikely to attract investors and over the world, the two said that Nov. 1 61.4% Nov. 1 62.1% playing a cigarette-smoking, wineexpanding his/her educational level, and back to France. Feigenbaum started Green Money Jourexecutives they thought they would settle swilling French bon vivant in the LODGERS TAXES is looking for work. Knowing which occunal in 1992 in Spokane, Wash., and relo“For investors and entrepredown in the City Different. 1990 movie Green Card, replied in 2012 pations provide the greatest employment cated to Santa Fe in 2000. Green Money neurs, it shows that France can’t “But we still have some years left,” a letter published in the Journal du September $608,861 4 percent increase Eileen Rogosin said during an interopportunities for their specific be skillconfiscatory, level Journal has a worldwide readership and that there are Dimanche this month. Depardieu from 2011 positions can help in guiding them to some covers sustainable business and investing. rules that have to be followed,” view at the studio off Wagon Road. wrote that he is leaving “because that may be a best bet for employment,” He also blogs and has a website; visit www says Laurent Dubois, a professor at Starting a school and managing GROSS-RECEIPTS TAXES you consider that success, creativshe writes. greenmoneyjournal.com for more informathe Institute of Political Studies in performing art businesses is nothing ity, talent, anything different, are 2012 2011 For those with less than a high-school tion. Paris. Still, “the government won’t new for the duo. Eileen Rogosin said Nov. $7 million Nov. $7.1 million grounds for sanction.” degree, the job of health care aide will see drop the idea, and the commentary she started a similar children’s proBillionaire Bernard Arnault, chief uuu the most growth as the demandfrom will swell the highest levels of governgram in Maine, where Roy Rogosin executive officer of LVMH Moet French President Francois Hollande appears in a taped address to The Inn of the Five Graces, 150 E. more than 50 percent as baby boomers age. Eileen Rogosin works with students rehearsing for Les Misérables. ment is anti-rich, and that’s a red managed Hennessy Louis Vuitton, filed an wish his nation a happy New Year’s. Hollande wasn’t happy when A recent Weekend Gas Watch from AAA New Mexico two theater houses. De Vargas St., has been named best small The average wage is about $20,000 flag.”a year. Both Rogosins said that starting application for Belgian nationality a court struck down his 75 percent tax on millionaires, one of his indicated the average price of a gallon of unleaded hotel in the United Stated by TripAdvisor, For those with a high-school degree, Thejobs tax, one of Hollande’s camover main campaign promises. the associated press in September. While he promised regular in the Santa Fe area was $3.05 though thedoes seem daunting, but that it a travel website that solicits reader comrelated to heavy machinery andpaign truckpromises, drivhad become a to continue paying taxes in France, price is higher at some stations. The price inhelps to be a little insane. ments. “The stay of a lifetime. You will ers will see 20 percent growth with focalwages point of discontent among ing on how earnings are divided The Constitutional Court ruled “I have always been unemployArnault’s action prompted fierce Albuquerque was $2.98 and in Las Cruces $3.04. never be treated better, or be more thorreaching $39,000. entrepreneurs and other wealth among their members, counter to on Dec. 29 that Hollande’s able,” Roy Rogosin said. “We have santa Fe c-a-M-p studios criticism from Hollande and his oughly spoiled, than you will be at the Inn, For those with more education, the some of whom have quit creators, the rule of equal tax treatment, the supporters. 75 percent band wasn’t acceptable had to start our own things.” 4001 office court drive NEW CONTRACTS one visitor reported. teaching fields will remain a stable source French shores as a result. The rulParis-based court said. because it applied to individuals, 946-0488 That chemistry and humor is The Dec. 29 ruling, which also Owned by the Seret family, the hotel of jobs as well as physical therapy, Nonresidential (year to date) c-a-m-p.net Actor Gerard Depardieu, ingwhere comes as the president seeks to when French income taxes are genapparent in everything the couple lowered maximum tax rates on 2012 $77.6 million 2011 $98.6 million appeals to repeat and regular travelers salaries can reach $70,000 a year, erally based on household revenue. France’s highest-profile tax exile, cutaccording the public deficit to 3 percent does. stock options, a form of retirewho have come to Santa Fe for years and to the analysis. said the ruling changes nothing, Le ment benefit, and bearer bonds, As a result, two households with of gross domestic product next They talk fast, tweak each other’s Residential the Rogosins whenever she gets the are looking for the real destination itself, The report is available at the year DWSfrom a projected 4.5 percent “The goal’s incidental to the protrust someone, but they have triedParisien reported Sunday. Departhe same total income could end ideas or interrupt as need be. Amid 2012 $34.0 million 2011 $13.3 million chance, including Saturday when something distinctive and different, said website, http://164.64.37.28/Portals/0/DM/ cess,” Roy Rogosin said. “We’re not and-true experience.” dieu, who is moving to the Belgian up paying different rates dependthis year. See tax, Page C-4 the banter, the husband and wife she was auditioning for Rosogins’ general manager Sharif Seret. The hotel LMI/lmrnov12.pdf. interested in growing them to be Duran said that she first met the said a studio requires good word also won the best in the Southwest honor production of Les Misérables. She stars.” Rogosins through St. John’s College, of mouth and willing parents, both Contact Bruce Krasnow at by Condé Nast Traveler. Rates in the low was among other applicants, all who And though stardom may not be where the husband serves as the which take a while to build. brucek@sfnewmexican.com. season begin at $340 a night. the couple’s interest, they have men- sang praises of the duo. artist-in-residence. She now works The couple’s credentials, though, Here is the link — www.tripadvisor. Ottersberg also had previously tored many Broadway performers, closely with the couple as a piano will help speed that process. Eileen com/TravelersChoice-Hotels-cSmall. including Book of Mormon stand-by met the Rogosins at Monte Del Sol, teacher. Rogosin started as one of the origiwhere Roy Rogosin still teaches. Stephen Mark Lukas. As far as services provided go, the nal Mouseketeers, danced under Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@ He also taught at the New Mexico Additionally, the couple started a Rogosins cover the gamut of performballet legend George Balanchine in sfnewmexican.com. School for the Arts in its first year. performing arts camp in the Berking arts including voice work, acting the New York Ballet and worked shire Mountains of Massachusetts. Eileen Rogosin said the school classes and dance lessons. Classes alongside Elvis Presley on the 1965 generally cost $55 for a month’s worth That camp has been going strong has about 30 students from Santa Fe, film Harum Scarum. for 27 years, and the Rogosins have of weekly sessions. They also proLos Alamos and even Rio Rancho, Roy Rosogin conducted symphobrought that camp idea to Santa vide adult acting classes and private nies on Broadway and at the Kenwhich she said is a good start given Fe, specifically at the Greer Garson lessons. The building is a work in nedy Center, worked with Johnny the studio has only been open since Wednesday, Jan. 23 Theatre Center at the Santa Fe Uni- October. For the future, they plan to progress, but the wide-open rooms Mathis and Michael Legrand and developing the simple financial skills will allow for plenty of activity, Eileen versity of Art and Design. created soundtracks for many expand the school — then maybe needed to ensure prosperity, plan an effecThe workshops also bring in Rogosin said. movies, including National Lamretire again. tive income-expanding strategy and set would-be students, such as Gabby The two also said multiple times poon’s Vacation. Of course, that list “We really want to build somethe foundation for a stronger client or cusOttersberg, 16, who described camp that they were more interested in is nowhere near comprehensive. tomer base will be taught by Joan sotkin thing that will take care of itself,” as “week of doing everything you the process of learning rather than Regardless, the duo’s work draws of prosperity place. santa Fe chamber of Roy Rogosin said. commerce, 1644 st. Michael’s drive, love.” just putting on a show every few people in, Isabella Duran said. 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m., chamber members Contact Chris Quintana at The New Mexico School for the “I was definitely intrigued by their months, as is the case with some free/nonmembers $10; 670-0401. cquintana@sfnewmexican.com. Arts student has since worked with credentials,” Duran said. “It’s hard to dance studios. The New Mexican

Union, offering a superficially plausible reason for the overpayment. When the phony check bounces, the seller is liable for the entire amount. While this scam usually targets individuals, businesses also can fall prey. To protect themselves, businesses should accept only easily verifiable payment methods. Scams directed at businesses often exploit new technology to commit classic crimes. Some crooks use bogus checks they design on a computer and print out at home. Others steal checks from the mail — especially mail left in unlocked mailboxes or even overstuffed curbside mailboxes — and use them to make purchases or get cash before the bank alerts the victim that her account is overdrawn. Some thieves “wash” the checks, removing the intended recipient’s name and substituting their own. Stolen checks also can become templates

Wednesday, Jan. 9 brown bag lunch, santa Fe chamber of commerce, 11:45-1:15 p.m. “ethics in business and Government,” Leon young of Leon young and associates, 1644 st. Michael’s drive. register at www.santafechamber. com or 988-3279. Free for members, $10 for nonmebers. bring your lunch; the chamber will provide beverages.

for new checks bearing the account holder’s account number and information. Even a deposit slip provides enough information for a scammer to use the routing number and account number to divert money from the account holder’s account to an account of his making. When phony checks are used at a business, both the actual account holder and the business are victims. For this reason, many merchants are rejecting checks from people they don’t know and accepting payment only by credit card, debit card or cash. Other common scams involve tampering with merchandise to obtain refunds or to get big-ticket items for small-ticket prices. One ploy is to swap a price tag or bar code from an inexpensive commodity and place it on an expensive one, hoping an inattentive or distracted cashier doesn’t notice the

In brief

Entrepreneurial workshop WESST-Santa Fe will be hosting a New Mexico Angels Women’s entrepreneurial education workshop from 8:30 to 11 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, at the Santa Fe Business Incubator. The workshop will feature speaking on how to ensure a company stands out in the marketplace.

switcheroo. Or the scammer can attempt to attach the big-ticket bar code to something she bought earlier and returned it to the store for a refund. Checkout clerks and returns department employees should be trained to compare bar code data against the item being returned or purchased. Crimes like this can devastate a business, especially a small one with limited resources. To riff off the cautionary adage, “seller beware.” Los Alamos National Bank uses encryption and multiple layers of security to protect customers from banking fraud. For more information about LANB, visit www.lanb.com. Finance New Mexico is a public service initiative to assist individuals and businesses with obtaining skills and funding resources for their business or idea. To learn more, go to www.FinanceNewMexico.org.

Cost is $25. For more information, call 474-6556.

2012 priciest year for gas According to the AAA New Mexico Weekend Gas Watch, 2012 proved to be the year with the most expensive annual New Mexico statewide average on record. The annual average price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline in 2012 was $3.46. The previous annual record was $3.38 in 2011. The New Mexican

G

allery space is at a premium in Santa Fe, but Hillside Market has added grocery and restaurant services to compete in a competitive art market. Located off Old Las Vegas Highway, the market contains three distinct areas: the garden, which also serves as a pickup location for Beneficial Farms, a Community Supported Agriculture collective; the coffee shop; and the retail store, which has approximately 45 vendors. Hillside Market first came to life in June. Back then, it was undeveloped and, according to owner Tisha Sjostrand, didn’t present an appealing sight to potential customers. Since then, it’s slowly filled with the boutique store staples such as paintings, furniture and jewelry, but it also features eclectic show items such as painted vinyl records and cartoon movie stills. Sjostrand’s model requires that vendors pay a monthly fee in addition to 15 percent of their sales. All the goods have a serial number that’s part of one system. Vendors also have enough access to the system so they can track their sales. She said that artists can set their own price. Many artists, such as JoAnne Tucker, focus on creating small, functional art pieces like coasters or postcards that are easier to sell

LOCAL BUSINESS

J

Free tax help at SFCC to start Feb. 1

T

Home should prove a sound investment

P

A

Duo is ‘tried and true’

There’s a limit to tapping the rich

Economic update

Northern New Mexico

Roy, Eileen Rogosin bring years of arts experience to their Santa Fe interdisciplinary studio

E

As far as services provided go, the Rogosins cover the gamut of performing arts, including voice work, acting classes and dance lessons.

Details

Calendar

In brief

Ten Thousand Waves was cited as a reason Santa Fe is on Travel + Leisure magazine’s list for ‘America’s Best Girlfriend Getaways.’ new Mexican FiLe photo

Business people

state gas prices

u The Hotel Group has named Barry Baxter general manager of its doubletree by hilton in santa Fe, 4048 cerrillos road. in this role, baxter is responsible for hotel management and will oversee overall operations, including

a recent gasoline survey by aaa new Mexico indicated the average price of a gallon of unleaded regular in the santa Fe area was $2.94, although the price is higher at some stations. the price was $2.91 in albuquerque and $3.02 in Las cruces.

You turn to us.

ith the rise of the new McDonald’s on a Cerrillos Road portion of the 550-acre Las Soleras property, there is speculation about what else might be coming to the city’s new south side. James Siebert, the planning and design consultant working for property owners John J. Mahoney and Skip Skarsgard, said there soon will be a new fire station on the site, and negotiations are moving forward with Taco Bell. In addition to McDonald’s, a State Employees Credit Union branch and a Murphy gas station and convenience store are now open along Cerrillos Road across from the Wal-Mart Supercenter. Heather Lamboy, the city planner reviewing the project, adds there have been meetings about an 8,800-square-foot commercial center that would host smaller tenants and accommodate a mix of office and commercial space. That would be sited along I-25 next to Fashion Outlets of Santa Fe. Of course, the big question is what Presbyterian Healthcare Services will do with its 40-acre parcel, which sits in the middle of the project. Beckner Road is now finished and extends east to the border of the Presbyterian property, Siebert said. Presbyterian, a nonprofit that writes insurance and provides direct patient care, just opened a new hospital in Rio Rancho, and its corporate energy is focused on making that a success. And Siebert thinks the provider would likely start with an urgent care center, then phase into a hospital, depending on the economics. A spokeswoman for Presbyterian said they are not prepared to discuss their Santa Fe plans at this time. So what would New Mexican readers like to see in the way of a fast-food franchise on the site — something that would be new to Santa Fe? Send me a quick email and I’ll publish the responses. Personally, I’m holding out for a Popeyes. uuu

By Chris Quintana

tuesday, January 22, 2013

Pharmacies pay more to combat threat of theft, fraud

uuu

By Fidel Gutierrez

Tisha Sjostrand, right, co-owner of the Hillside Market on Old Las Vegas Highway, shows Janice Dorfman from Eldorado around the store earlier this month. photos by Luis sánchez saturno/the new Mexican

Please see riKoon, Page C-4

The cost of vigilance

SFAR donations

In an age when many products sell in cyberspace and the buyer and seller never meet, creative crooks are finding new ways to defraud businesses — especially Web-based businesses and individuals selling items through online platforms. One scheme involves counterfeit versions of a time-honored currency — the cashier’s check. Scammers commit cashier’s check fraud using an authentic-looking cashier’s check to buy a product. The seller deposits the check, and her account is charged for the amount when the check bounces back to the bank as a fake. Another version of this scam involves checks written for more than the sales price. The “buyer” typically asks the seller to remit the excess funds via a wire transfer or Western

to worry about, such as having government “knuckleheads” drive straight toward a fiscal cliff, seemed of little concern to the students. After some discussion about the potential benefits of driving over the “cliff”, i.e., forcing ourselves to deal with the mounting problem of their generation’s wages going towards supporting my generation of soon-to-retire

S

— he used to brew in his apartment. But about five years ago, he said, he noticed Santa Fe didn’t have a local brew supply store, so he and a couple of friends financed the store. “We just didn’t know any better,” he said. Part of his success came from an advertising campaign that consumed about 25 percent of his initial budget. From there, people started talking about the shop, which he said kept him in business. His wife also had another child during that five-year period, so he hired some part-time help to keep the doors open during times when he was away. But because the store earnings went to employees, Nordby said, his

Nominees sought

child policy on the price of iPods in the U.S. to the impact of the Olympic Games on the economies of places as diverse as Brazil and Vietnam. It is exciting, I told them, that young people graduating from high school the world over all read the same news at the same time, listen to the same music and follow the same fashion trends, and therein stands an investment opportunity. The risks that adults seem

Best girlfriend getaways? One of them is the City Different

more like a brewery. Three-foot-tall plastic containers house both local and international grain for all-grain brewing, and a couple of freezers hold several varieties of green and earthy-smelling hops, another common ingredient in beer making. Nordby can tell which grain will create a chocolate porter or which hops will make a beer more bitter with an ease that comes from years of familiarity with his craft. But it wasn’t always that way for him. The shop was a gamble, Nordby said, especially given that he didn’t have a lot of brewing experience when he began the venture. Nordby said that he had a passion for the craft, but he did it on a small level

Contact Chris Quintana at cquintana@sfnewmexican.com.

Some of the students were aware of the potential benefits of risk taking, either through entrepreneurial ventures such as franchises or starting their own “one person” retail stands. Very few of them seemed to be aware that the investment field that I work in has ample room for creativity. I did my best to impress upon them a need to be aware of what is going on around us on the entire planet, from the impact of China’s decades-old one-

JoB inDicators

Solar seminars set

Rob Rikoon

though they understood that it was an almost sure way to end up losing money. They thought earning a negative real rate of return, given inflation, was an acceptable way to go mostly because it was the only sure way to go. While they realized it was a bad option, many of these young people were so suspicious of the market-based alternatives that it gave them comfort to know they would only lose a little and not all of it.

gas prices

In brief

J

ust before Christmas, I traveled to one of Santa Fe’s established charter schools to speak to a group of high school seniors who are studying economics and how money works. I asked each of them how they would invest $1,000 in cash, given current circumstances. I was surprised at how many of the students opted to keep their hypothetical long-term investment funds in a bank savings account or CD; even

constrUction

J

ami Nordby doesn’t sell beer — he just sells all the materials a person needs to make it at Santa Fe Homebrew Supply. Nordby stocks wine-making, beercrafting and cheese-curdling materials, though the majority of his business comes from brewers. To that end, he stocks supplies for extract brewing, which he said can be easier but costs more on the ingredients end, and for all-grain-brewing, a more time-intensive process. He said that in the past, beermakers made up 85 percent of his total sales, though he said the recent crop of fruit in the state has sent more winemakers his way. And while he doesn’t have a product he’d call his best-seller, he said he does sell a lot of brewing starter kits and recipe packs that include every ingredient needed for a single batch. To that end, he can also help brewers come up with new recipes or order speciality items. “There are so many directions people can go,” Nordby said at his shop on Thursday. “Imagination is the only limit.” Nordby’s shop is split roughly into two sections: equipment in the storefront and ingredients in the back. In the front, giant glass containers rest on shelves alongside powdered chemicals. Smaller items such as spigots, beer caps and yeast line the smaller shelves. It’s the back of the shop that feels

inventory declined. He is back at work full time now, and Nordby said he’s working on tuesday, January 8, 2013 replenishing his once-expansive stock. In the five years since he started, Nordby said that he’s learned a lot from customers who were experienced brewers, and now he can offer that accumulated knowledge to newbies. John Rowley said he is one of the customers who has benefited from Nordby’s knowledge. “He was a great resource for sure,” Rowley said. “He knows a lot, and he wants to help.” Rowely also is president of the Sangre de Cristo Craft Brewers, a group that Rowley said frequents Homebrew. And though it’s located on the south side of town, Santa Fe Homebrew Supply is still the closet supply store for small brewers in Santa Fe, Rowley said. Before Nordby set up shop in 2007, Santa Fe brewers drove to Albuquerque or farther for supplies. Rowley said that while stores in Albuquerque might have more esoteric supplies, he prefers to avoid the trip and support local business. Rowley also said he recommends Nordby’s store to new brewers. “We got a great thing going here; it’s a really supportive shop,” Rowley said. “I wouldn’t go to Albuquerque unless you absolutely have to. It’s almost too much, and it can be intimidating for a new brewer.”

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. Majority ownership in La Fonda still rests with the four daughters of the late Sam and Ethel Ballen — Lois, Penina, Lenore and Marta Ballen.

economic inDicators

Knowledge about beer-making given and received at Santa Fe Homebrew Supply

By Chris Quintana

The New Mexican

C

You’re your own best investment, students told

uuu

His business is hopping

What follows Mickey D’s on south side? By Bruce Krasnow

By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican

T

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

BUSINESS BEAT

sales, revenue, food and beverage, and property management. baxter brings experience in hotel management, staff development and leadership skills to the hotel Group and the doubletree by hilton — santa Fe. prior to this role, baxter served as assistant general manager of the hilton Garden inn in issaquah, wash. and director of rooms for the arctic club seattle, both properties managed by the hotel Group. he also served as night manager at the hilton suites phoenix in arizona.

u Molina Healthcare, inc. has named Patty Kehoe president of its subsidiary, Molina healthcare of new Mexico, inc. as president, kehoe will be responsible for the operational oversight of the new Mexico health plan as well as the implementation and execution of various strategic initiatives. before taking on this role, she served as vice president of health care services, managing the health care services department, which included utilization review, care management and transition of care.

born and raised in new Mexico, kehoe is a registered nurse with a Master in public health from california college for health sciences and holds a certification in case management. she is active with the Lovelace clinic Foundation health information exchange board, Medically Fragile case Management advisory council, the national association for healthcare Quality, the american association of Managed care nurses and wheels for the world. The New Mexican

Thursday, Jan. 24 patricia chavez, community ourtreach and planning specialis — u.s. department of Labor, will be presenting common pitfalls and insights into the Fair Labor standards act. 9 to 11:30 a.m., chamber of commerce, 1644 st. Michael’s drive. Free but seating is limited. email: julianne. gutierrezor@sfcc.edu or call 428-1343.

state gas prices a recent gasoline survey by aaa new Mexico indicated the average price of a gallon of unleaded regular in the santa Fe area was $2.90, although the price is higher at some stations. the price was $2.86 in albuquerque and $2.99 in Las cruces.

The New York Times just published an interesting series, “United States of Subsidies,” looking at business incentives and their impact on the economy. The newspaper also has an interactive database by state that shows New Mexico spent $123 per capita on corporate incentives or 4 cents per dollar of the state budget, annually. Oil, gas and mining received the largest share, $163 million, while $47 million was allocated to the film industry; another $8 million went to railroads. The figures are annualized for the years 2004-08. The largest amount during this time went to Lions Gate Entertainment with $99 million in film incentives for the four-year period. The largest grant to a Santa Fe firm went to Simtable, $145,600 for job training. Other firms such as Deep Web Technologies, CleanAIR Systems, NASTRA Automotive, Wildflower International, Jackrabbit Systems, Flow Science, Divine Beauty and Galisteo Capital are on the list for smaller amounts, mostly for similar job-training initiatives. Go here to see the data: www. nytimes.com/interactive/2012/12/01/us/ government-incentives.html#NM Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@ sfnewmexican.com.

In brief

‘Life After Work’ Portfolio Asset Management will host an educational workshop called “Life After Work: Incorporating Income Into Lifestyle & Creating a Sustainable Income Stream in Retirement.” The workshop will take place 4 to 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 13, at the Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St. Seating is limited; for reservations, call Kate Stalter at 490-6474.

Business people u Jonathan Wise is the new general manager at Inn of the Alameda. Wise brings more than 25 years of hospitality management expertise to the Santa Fe property.

calendar Wednesday, Dec. 12

6-8 p.m. toro bar & Grill, 1465 rio rancho blvd. se, rio rancho 87124. Join area designers, developers, it folks and others in tech for food, drink and casual conversation with the new Mexico technology council. Visit www.nm techcouncil.org for more info.

Thursday Dec. 13

5:30-8 p.m. the energy, technology, and environment business association will hold its monthly meeting at the doubletree hotel, 4048 cerrillos road, santa Fe with a mixer followed by dinner and a speaker. the speaker for this meeting is John h. bemis, cabinet secretary, new Mexico energy, Minerals and natural resources department. registration for the meeting is $35 for members, $45 for nonmembers. register at www.eteba.org to register. For questions, call chris timm at 323-8355.


A-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

Despite all the promises, TV still isn’t everywhere

TECHNOLOGY

By Ryan Nakashima

The Associated Press

A screenshot of the original NeXT web browser in 1993 is shown. The scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known by its French acronym CERN, are searching for the first Web page created in 1990. CERN

Finding first Web page Nature of how data is shared makes search difficult By Jeffrey Collins

The Associated Press

F

or the European physicists who created the World Wide Web, preserving its history is as elusive as unlocking the mysteries of how the universe began. The scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, known by its French acronym CERN, are searching for the first Web page. It was at CERN that Tim Berners-Lee invented the Web in 1990 as an unsanctioned project, using a NeXT computer that Apple co-founder Steve Jobs designed in the late ’80s during his 12-year exile from the company. Dan Noyes oversees CERN’s website and has taken on the project to uncover the world’s first Web page. He says that no matter how much data they sort through, researchers may never make a clear-cut discovery of the original web page because of the nature of how data is shared. “The concept of the earliest Web page is kind of strange,” Noyes said. “It’s not like a book. A book exists through time. Data gets overwritten and looped around. To some extent, it is futile.” In April, CERN restored a 1992 copy of the first-ever website that Berners-Lee created to arrange CERN-related information. It was the earliest copy CERN could find at the time, and Noyes promised then to keep looking. After National Public Radio did a story on the search, a professor at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill came forward

with a 1991 version. Paul Jones met BernersLee during the British scientist’s visit to the U.S. for a conference in 1991, just a year after Berners-Lee invented the Web. Jones said Berners-Lee shared the page with the professor, who has transferred it from server to server through the years. A version remains on the Internet today at an archive Jones runs, ibiblio. The page Jones received from Berners-Lee is locked in Jones’ NeXT computer, behind a password that has long been forgotten. Forensic computer specialists are trying to extract the information to check time stamps and preserve the original coding used to generate the page. The Web page preserved by Jones is both familiar and quaint. There are no flashy graphics or video clips. Instead, it is a page of text on a white background with 19 hyperlinks. Some of the links, such as ones leading to information about CERN, have been updated and still work. On the other hand, a link to the phone numbers for CERN staffers is dead. Noyes said he’ll keep searching for earlier versions of the page. Noyes said his project still has to sort through plenty of old disks and other data submitted following NPR’s story. He suspects there will be a couple of pages to pop up that were created months before the version Jones has. The Internet itself dates back to 1969, when computer scientists gathered in a lab at the University of California, Los Angeles to exchange data between two bulky computers. In the early days, the Internet had email, message boards known as Usenet and online communities such as The WELL. Berners-Lee was looking for ways to control computers remotely at CERN. His

innovation was to combine the Internet with another concept that dates to the 1960s: hypertext, which is a way of presenting information nonsequentially. Although he never got the project formally approved, his boss suggested he quietly tinker with it anyway. Berners-Lee began writing the software for the Web in October 1990, got his browser working by mid-November and added editing features in December. He made the program available at CERN by Christmas. These days, many people see the Internet and the Web as one and the same, even though the Web is just one of the many functions of the Internet. Personal email tends to be conducted over Web-based systems such as Yahoo and Google’s Gmail. Web-based message boards have replaced the need for Usenet. Friendster, Myspace and later Facebook emerged as go-to places on the Web for hanging out. People now use the Web to find dates, watch television shows, catch up on the news, pay bills and play games. Many more services are still being invented. In less than a quarter century, the Web has turned into an easy way to retrieve data on just about any topic from just about any computer with just the click of a link. It has become the equivalent of millions of libraries at the fingertips of anyone with a Web browser and a network connection. The resources have made it far more difficult for authoritarian regimes to keep information from their citizens. Attempts to reach Berners-Lee through CERN were unsuccessful. That’s part of why Noyes believes it is important to round up the World Wide Web’s history. He said it represents the best of how science and free governments can make the world a better place.

WASHINGTON — TV was supposed to be everywhere by now — watchable anytime, anywhere, on your smartphone or tablet. But four years into the industry’s effort, network executives readily admit: TV isn’t everywhere. The promise of “TV Everywhere” has been a key strategy in the cable and satellite TV industry’s fight to retain customers in the face of challenges from online video providers such as Netflix. With TV Everywhere, customers who pay for packages with hundreds of television channels are supposed to be able to watch them on mobile devices and computers as well for no extra charge. That perk is meant to make pay TV packages seem more worthwhile and keep customers from defecting. Yet many rights deals still haven’t been worked out. More important, audience measurement firms have been slow to count viewing on mobile devices, so advertisers have been reluctant to pay as much for commercials on phones and tablets compared with television sets. “We either don’t get any credit at all, or if we do get credit, it’s at a fraction of what we would have gotten if they first watched it live on the TV,” Ron Lamprecht, NBCUniversal’s executive vice president for digital distribution, said during a panel at The Cable Show, an industry conference this week. This gap in ad revenue has created a kind of chicken-and-egg scenario. Networks and pay TV providers aren’t able to offer as many shows online because they don’t want to spend too much for rights without knowing they can make their money back. So, viewers can’t reliably find their favorite shows online and don’t use the services much. That also makes TV Everywhere seem inferior to online video services such as Netflix, which has a smaller range of fresh content but makes those shows available on multiple devices, whether inside the home or not. The knowledge that their content is available truly everywhere makes the extra monthly fee of $8 a small price to pay. Currently, most network shows that are made available on mobile devices through TV Everywhere are watchable only through a viewer’s own home wireless network — not at a friend’s house, not at a bus stop, not at church. Sometimes, a network’s shows will be available that way only to customers of certain pay TV operators. Adding to the confusion, both pay TV providers and individual networks offer their own apps. The ones from the providers, such as Xfinity from Comcast, offer hundreds of channels, but only in the home. Ones from individual networks allow for viewing elsewhere, but only if the provider has reached a deal with that network. It’s a perplexing situation for networks, much less consumers. “Explain to a consumer why they can get TNT in the home and they can watch a basketball game but they can’t get it out of the home,” said Jeremy Legg, vice president of Time Warner Inc.’s Turner Broadcasting. “We need to satisfy that.” Marcien Jenckes, general manager for Comcast Corp.’s cable TV services, said that all pay TV providers have to increase their mobile offerings for customers to really notice. “Ubiquity is important,” he said. Several TV networks are turning on live TV feeds for out-of-home viewing on phones and tablets, but the offering is still patchy. Last month, The Walt Disney Co. made live TV viewing of ABC-affiliated TV stations available on its Watch ABC app, but only in New York and Philadelphia at first. It has plans to expand that to the six other stations it owns, along with 13 other stations owned by Hearst in the coming months. Live viewing on the app is restricted to those with a pay TV subscription. Disney, which also owns ESPN, already has made live TV viewing available on other apps. Turner’s TBS and TNT are set to host live feeds on mobile devices out of the home starting this summer, Legg said.

MySpace makeover takes social media site back to the future By Chris Talbott

The Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tim and Chris Vanderhook think Myspace had it right — at one point. And they believe they’ve revived and improved that formula for success as the revamped first titan of social media debuts its latest incarnation. The Vanderhooks unveiled the new Myspace.com Wednesday, revealing a site focused on entertainment that combines social networking with streaming music. There are new features aimed at helping musicians, writers and other artists connect with their followers, an app and a radio function. “Today more than ever there’s this need for a creative ecosystem that kind of caters to the creative community and that’s both a social network and the streaming services attached,” Tim Vanderhook said. “For us when we looked at it, we really talked to a lot of artists and … they all said, ‘I use all these various platforms but none of them really do what we need.’ What they really needed, they explained to us, was a home.” The launch comes nearly two years

after the Irvine, Calif.-based Specific Media owners teamed with Justin Timberlake to buy the ailing website for $35 million, a fraction of the $560 million News Corp. paid for it in 2005. The new owners briefed media this week in the run-up to release. Timberlake was not made available, but the company says he provides the strategic vision for the company and was the person behind the idea of focusing on the creative community. The Vanderhooks believe the previous owners made a mistake when they tried to compete with emerging force Facebook. At its peak, they believe Myspace was driven by a sense of discovery and sharing. Bands, for instance, would post songs, tour schedules and blogs for fans to follow. It was more direct than a website and gave users the first true sense of social media’s larger possibilities. “Everyone had a lot of fun on Myspace at one point,” Chris Vanderhook said. “It’s easy to kick it and say, oh, yeah, Myspace sucks now, but everyone had fun on Myspace before. It’s just that they didn’t keep pace with technology and they didn’t keep up with the times.”

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com

The site continues to help those bands (or filmmakers or writers) with analytics that measure fan response and other tools to help them grow. And by focusing on artists initially, they’re gambling fans will soon follow in large numbers. “We think the creative class is about 38 million people in the United States and growing every single day,” Tim Vanderhook said. “And by really servicing that group, we think reaching out to one level past that — all of their fans and the creative consumers that like this type of entertainment — we think are going to be critical to our success.” The deal to purchase Myspace drew plenty of attention — partly for Timberlake’s involvement and partly for what seemed the foolhardy nature of the venture. Even the Vanderhooks admit Myspace was on a downward spiral that should have ended in the site’s demise. But they became infatuated with it in 2008 as they watched it fade and were convinced it could be rescued. The revamped site debuts at a particularly competitive time, however, with Apple launching iRadio this week and other established brands

This image shows a screen shot from the newly designed Myspace.com. Tim and Chris Vanderhook unveiled the site on Wednesday. There are new features aimed at helping artists connect with their followers, as well as an app and a radio function. COURTESY MYSPACE

like Google moving into the streaming field using the subscription model, the radio model or both. The Vanderhooks don’t start from scratch, however. They say the site still has 27 million users in the United States and about twice that worldwide. Those users will be switched to the new site Wednesday and the previous

version will disappear. “Keep playing up the crazy angle so when people actually do decide that we made a good decision, it will serve our ego even bigger,” Chris Vanderhook said with a laugh. “To the average person out there they think you’re totally nuts, but no, I don’t think we’re crazy, to be honest.”

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

EDUCATION Kids feel the beat at SFPS music camp

A

dam Griffo was letting loose with chance to learn more and play an instrua dynamite saxophone rendition ment, while those taking music classes durof the Charlie Parker composition ing the school year can continue playing “Moose the Mooch” as he walked the halls and learning, according to Todd Hansen, of Gonzales Community School who directs the summer program one day last week. School is out, and who teaches music at E.J. but the halls of Gonzales were Martinez Elementary School. Stufar from empty, what with four dents in grades K-12 can take part different summer programs, in the program, which costs $200 including Santa Fe Public in tuition fees. The district supSchools’ Summer Music Camp, plies the instruments. Students in session there. must have at least one year’s experience in band or orchestra “I love Charlie Parker and I class in order to take part in those love bee-bop,” said Griffo, who will be entering the seventh Robert Nott courses in the summer program, but both Hansen’s general-music grade at Gonzales next semesLearning Curve class for elementary-school kids ter. This is his second summer and Jesus Gachupin’s acoustic spent in the music camp, now guitar class are open to students in its fourth year. “There’s a lot who have no music background. of talented people here and a lot of really good instruments,” he said. His favorite Gachupin was leading 10 of his guitar approach to music is “improv,” and yes, he students through a rendition of the tune plans to become a working musician when “Chasing Cars.” “Feel the beat,” he told he grows up. them. “Don’t get ahead of it. It’s not a race.” He teaches at Ortiz Middle School but said Griffo is one of about 70 students takthis four-week intensive program offers ing part in this summer’s four-week camp, more of a “direct, functional approach” held from 8 a.m. to noon every day through that immediately tosses the students into a Thursday, when the students will give a 10 a.m. public concert in the gym at Gonzales. musical sea of learning. Each of the four groups within the summer Student Lucy Robertson, who will go camp — general music class, acoustic guitar into eighth grade at the Academy for Techclass, string orchestra class and band class nology and the Classics next semester, has — will perform for about 20 minutes each. played piano for some time but wanted The camp gives newcomers to music the to take Gachupin’s guitar class at Gon-

zales. “Guitar hurts your fingers more,” she noted. Music, she said, “Helps me get through things. If I feel sad or angry, I play music. It’s a good way to forget about things temporary. I want music to always be part of my life.” In his class, Hansen was leading about 20 elementary-schoolers through the basics of playing the recorder. Each student walked to the front of the class, introduced him- or herself, named their school and the piece they were playing, and set about performing. In general, they all exuded great confidence. Among the more-sure of-themselves was 7-year-old Zoe Kountoupes-Wilson, who said she is a second-grader at Acequia Madre Elementary School. She said she has been playing the violin for somewhere between three and a half and four years — partially because her mother is a violinist. “Without music, it would be pretty boring in the world,” she said. She plans to always play music, but right now she is set on becoming an astronaut. But her friend, El Dorado Community School third-grader Ella Tyroler, said she wanted to grow up to be a musician. All these kids will likely be soaring as they perform the summer-camp music concert on Thursday. It’s open to the public and it’s free, so swing by. And maybe you will hear Griffo wailing some be-bop Charlie Parker tune on his sax.

Family best bets Tuesday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Anchors Aweigh 9:45 p.m. on TCM

The Three Stooges 3:30 p.m. on HBO

The Pirate 6 p.m. on TCM

Gene Kelly’s spirited dance with Jerry the cartoon mouse arguably is the most memorable scene of this 1945 musical classic. Kelly and Frank Sinatra play sailors on leave in Los Angeles in what’s essentially a West Coast version of their similarly themed movie On the Town. Kathryn Grayson and a very young Dean Stockwell co-star, as do later TV staples Pamela Britton (My Favorite Martian) and Leon Ames (Mr. Ed).

Any actors who tackle playing the comedic trio of Moe, Larry and Curly automatically have the originals’ image to work against — and given that, Chris Diamantopoulos, Sean Hayes (Will & Grace) and Will Sasso (MADtv) fare pretty well in the Farrelly brothers’ (There’s Something About Mary) 2012 homage. The fellows meet in an orphanage, then have many misadventures. Jane Lynch, Jennifer Hudson, Sofia Vergara and Larry David also appear.

Honey, I Blew Up the Kid 8:30 a.m. on FAM Wayne (Rick Moranis) just can’t stop inventing and this time, he’s in big trouble. He’s created an enlarging ray gun, which accidentally goes off — zapping his toddler son, Adam (Daniel and Joshua Shalikar). Now Wayne must stop his giant child from destroying the city. Marcia Strassman, Lloyd Bridges and Keri Russell co-star.

Judy Garland and Gene Kelly make a great song-and-dance team in this 1948 musical directed by Vincente Minnelli. Engaged to a wealthy man, Manuela (Garland) dreams of a more exciting romance. Enter Sarafin (Kelly), a traveling singer who poses as an infamous pirate to impress Manuela. Walter Slezak, Gladys Cooper, Reginald Owen and Lester Allen co-star.

© 2013 by VVicki W Whiting, hiting, Editor Jefff Schinkel, Grap Graphics phics VVol. 29, N No. 27

2 2

2

2 1

2

2

Love your kids? Teach them, like, to speak properly

“A

re you trying to tell me something?” I asked my preteen grandson. “Um, uh, yes.” “Then don’t use that word. You know how I feel about it.” “OK.” And the conversation proceeded from there, unimpaired by repeated insertions of “like” into every sentence, as in, “I, um, like, wanted to go to like the soccer game but, like, I wasn’t, like, able to because, like, I had to stay home and, like, do my homework.” I will tolerate repetitious misuses of “like” when I’m talking with a person with whom I have no interest in a relationship (such as a salesperson), but I will not tolerate even one such misuse with my grandchildren. Why? Because I care about my John grandchildren. I want them to have every Rosemond advantage in life, and one such advantage Living With is the correct use of language in speech. Children There is a simple reason why one does not hear physicians, lawyers, ministers, public speakers, politicians, CEOs, small-business owners, corporate-level salespersons, talk-show hosts, or loan officers peppering their speech with the misuse of “like,” and the simple reason is that such peppering sounds immature, ignorant and uneducated. During a recent airplane ride from Phoenix to Charlotte, N.C., I was forced to listen while the young woman directly in back of me told her life story to her seatmate for the entire four-plus hours. Said autobiography featured the word like, misused at least 4,356 times. She, like, did this and then she, like, did that and then, like, this happened and then, like, that happened and then her, like, parents did, like, such-and-so and her, like, friends did, like, such-and-such and like like like like like like like another 4,341 times, all in a voice loud enough for half the plane to hear. By the way, she identified herself as a senior in college. Does she talk that way in class? Do her professors not correct her? The problem is that this mannerism reflects a lack of proper thinking. If one is thinking properly, one speaks properly. Conversely, when one is not speaking properly, one’s brain is not working properly. And be assured, it is possible, as this tale illustrates, for the brain of an intelligent person to not work properly. Every generation develops its rituals and badges of membership. Mine did, for sure, and to fit in I most definitely acquired them. But all I had to do to appear normal to potential employers was cut my hair and stop wearing sunglasses indoors. Looking like Peter Fonda in Easy Rider was not a bad habit I had to struggle to break. I know that the repetitive misuse of like, starting in pre-adolescence, is going to be an extremely bad habit to break because it quickly develops into an involuntary vocal tic. I see that potential in my grandson. I want him to enter adulthood with every possible advantage and as few liabilities as possible. Which is why I won’t tolerate it. Every loving parent, grandparent, and teacher should be so intolerant.

2

1 2

2

19

Do the math to label this volcano diagram.

Volcanoes are a natural event that change the geography of our planet.

Color the Hawaiian flag.

1 2

=1 =2

1

Volcanoes erupt and send 13 plumes of ash and smoke into the atmosphere. The largest eruptions can send ash over 17 miles into the air!

15

awaii became the fiftieth state in the United States on August 21, 1959. To welcome Hawaii into the union, all American flags were changed to add another star. The new state of Hawaii also adopted its own state flag, which

contains colors and designs from both the British flag and the American flag. Each stripe stands for one of the eight major inhabited islands. The stripes alternate in color from the top: white, red, blue, white, red, blue, white, red.

Standards Link: Social Science/History: Understand the symbols of the U.S.

23

16 21

17

Replace the missing words.

OCEAN HAWA IIAN D LAVA ERUPTE Each of the __________ islands was formed by one or more volcanoes that __________ from the ocean floor. Over millions of years, as the _______ cooled and hardened, each volcano grew into a ___________. When the top of the mountain emerged from under the ocean, it became an island.

MOUNTAIN

Clouds of volcanic ash can lower the temperature on earth by about a half degree by reflecting the sun’s radiation!

The Hawaiian name “Mauna Kea” means “White Mountain.”

The word volcano gets its origins from the name of the Roman god of fire. (It’s also a Star Trek species.) Use the code to discover the term.

7

3

2

9= A 6= C 2= L

6

9

5= N 3= U 7= V

5

VOLCANOES ILLOGICAL EVEREST PLUMES CRATER ISLAND FLOOR EARTH MAGMA CLOUD MAUNA VENT MAUI STAR ASH

A-9

Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities. A D R A T S S H A N P N D S M E A R T H L A C I G O L L I S U L L O K N M E R A M S O I U A M O E N E I U R G C O U T U

Throughout the centuries, people have created legends about natural wonders like earthquakes, mountains and volcanoes. Hawaiian legends say that the goddess Pele created the lava that flows from the volcanoes. Pele’s worst enemy is her sister, a sea goddess named Na-maka. Pele has fled from one Hawaiian island to the next, building a new crater on each island – only to have it worn down by waves and rain. According to the legend, Pele began with the northernmost islands and now lives in Kilauea volcano on the newest and most southern island in the chain, the island of Hawaii. Find the following in Pele’s flaming hair: a palm tree, a surfboard, a fish, a shark, a dolphin and a sun.

S P D M T L I N A A O N A S F O E A R M T S E R E V E L C L Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

Helping Hands

Look through the newspaper for examples of natural events like storms, volcanoes, earthquakes, etc. What is the impact? What is being done to help people affected by these events? Standards Link: Research: Students use the newspaper to locate information.

When do vowels make long and short sounds? Choose a vowel. Use the headlines in today’s newspaper to find words with that vowel. Which ones have long sounds? Which have short sounds? Standards Link: Language Arts/Phonemic Awareness: Identify long and short vowel sounds.

My Great Escape Imagine you are on an island when a volcano erupts. How do you escape? Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions.


A-10

LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

Steady rain helps crews battle Colorado blaze Lara Stern prays with her daughter, Alana, 8, and husband, Samuel, on Sunday during a community worship service at First Baptist Church northeast of Colorado Springs, Colo. The Stern family and at least 10 other families at the church lost their homes to the Black Forest Fire.

By Thomas Peipert The Associated Press

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — With evacuees anxious to return, firefighters worked Sunday to dig up and extinguish hot spots to protect homes spared by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado’s history. The labor-intensive work is necessary because extremely dry grass and trees could quickly ignite if wind stirs up hot spots in the densely wooded Black Forest near Colorado Springs. Firefighters did get some help from the weather as steady rain moved through the area Sunday afternoon. But that weather came with some lightning, which sparked a small grass fire near one home. “Every bit of rain helps the crews mop up. It’s just adding another nail in the coffin,” fire spokesman Brandon Hampton said. Nearly 500 homes have been burned

MARK REIS/THE GAZETTE

by the 22-square-mile fire, which is 65 percent contained. Crews hope to have it fully under control by Thursday. Even though the fire was no longer active enough Sunday to produce a large smoke plume, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said it wasn’t safe for people to return home until roads and downed power lines were repaired.

Additionally, the deaths of two unidentified people trying to flee the fire were still being investigated. Maketa said he was in no rush to have people return to an area that, at least for now, was still being considered a crime scene. “I’m not going to compromise the evidence by allowing people in too soon,” he said.

New Mexico crews focus on mining town KINGSTON — Crews were focusing Sunday on protecting homes in a historic southwest New Mexico mining town from a 35-square mile wildfire that had prompted the evacuation of 26 people from their houses. Fire information officer Kevin Bailey said crews fighting the Silver Fire planned Sunday to strengthen fire protection lines that have already been built around the community of Kingston. The fire hasn’t burned into the community. The distance between the lightning-caused blaze and the closest homes was unknown. Firefighters caught a break over last few days as Friday brought rain and Saturday brought somewhat mild weather conditions. The blaze is 5 percent contained. In Northern New Mexico, crews fighting a fire 14 miles southwest of Cimarron were focused on protecting

How they voted Targeted News Service

WASHINGTON — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.

House votes House vote 1 Margin requirements for derivatives trades: The House has passed the Business Risk Mitigation and Price Stabilization Act (H.R. 634), sponsored by Rep. Michael G. Grimm, R-N.Y. The bill would exempt nonfinancial companies that are end users of over-the-counter derivatives from having to post margin as backing for their uncleared derivatives trades. Grimm said: “If margin requirements were imposed on these nonfinancial end users, it would harm our economy by very simply diverting working capital from productive uses such as reinvestment into the business or job creation.” The vote, on Wednesday, was 411 yeas to 12 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)

amendment sponsored by Rep. Cynthia M. Lummis, R-Wyo., to the National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960). The amendment would require the Defense Department to maintain intercontinental ballistic missile silos on warm status, enabling the military to keep the ICBMs fully functional. Lummis said maintaining warm status for the ICBM silos is needed “so as not to take steps backward that would be costly to reverse at a later date, especially if we encountered unforeseen geopolitical changes” such as nuclear dangers from Iran, North Korea and Russia. An opponent, Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., said the amendment would hurt the military’s ability to cut spending as required by the budget sequester, and the military would have ample nuclear deterrence even without having the silos on warm status. The vote, on Thursday, was 235 yeas to 189 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Grisham, Luján

House vote 6

Military maintenance and technology funding: The House has rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Colo., to the National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960). The amendHouse vote 2 ment would have cut $250 million of funding for the Defense Rapid Innovation Indemnity and swaps regulation: The House has passed the Swap Data Repository Program and instead used the $250 million to increase funding for the military’s and Clearinghouse Indemnification Correcoperations and maintenance programs. tion Act (H.R. 742), sponsored by Rep. Rick Coffman said DRIP duplicated other military Crawford, R-Ark. The bill would repeal a requirement for foreign regulators to indem- technology efforts, and increasing funding for operations and maintenance was necesnify U.S.-based swap data repositories as insurance against expenses the repositories sary to maintain the military’s readiness. An opponent, Rep. Rick Larsen, D-Wash., might incur due to the regulators requesting market data from repositories. Crawford said cutting funding for DRIP would erase “one of the main tools that we have in the said the requirement has thwarted interdefense budget to ensure that small businational coordination for regulating swaps because other countries do not have indem- nesses continue to be part of the defense industrial base.” The vote, on Thursday, was nification laws, and the resulting creation 206 yeas to 220 nays. of many different swap data repositories in Yeas: Pearce individual countries would hamper efforts Nays: Grisham, Luján to monitor and mitigate against systemic risk in global financial markets. The vote, on House vote 7 Wednesday, was 420 yeas to 2 nays. Yeas: Grisham, Luján, Pearce Military operations in afghanistan: The House has passed an amendment sponHouse vote 3 sored by Rep. James P. McGovern, D-Mass., Regulating cross-border swaps trades: to the National Defense Authorization Act The House has passed the Swap Jurisdiction (H.R. 1960). The amendment would require Certainty Act (H.R. 1256), sponsored by Rep. the accelerated transition of combat operations in Afghanistan from the U.S. military Scott Garrett, R-N.J. The bill would require to the Afghanistan government by the end the Securities and Exchange Commission of 2013, the redeployment of U.S. soldiers and Commodity Futures Trading Commisout of Afghanistan by the end of 2014, and sion to work together to develop rules to regulate cross-border swaps trades. Garrett negotiations to address the security of Afghanistan and surrounding countries folsaid the bill would provide for regulatory lowing the withdrawal of U.S. forces from certainty in financial markets by requirthe country. McGovern said “this amending both agencies to have identical rules, thereby preventing the possibility of market ment puts the wind at the president’s back, or holds his feet to the fire, to fulfill the participants taking advantage of differing promises he made to our brave troops, their rules from the two agencies. An opponent, families and the American people” and withRep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., said the bill draw troops from Afghanistan. The vote, on would result in the U.S. relying on weak Thursday, was 305 yeas to 121 nays. foreign regulations for protection against Yeas: Grisham, Luján financial risk, creating the same kind of Nays: Pearce regulatory weakness that led to the 2008 financial crisis. The vote, on Wednesday, House vote 8 was 301 yeas to 124 nays. Yeas: Pearce Rights of suspected enemy combatNays: Grisham, Luján ants: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., House vote 4 to the National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960). The amendment would require Public utilities and risk management: The House has passed the Public Power Risk the government to prove that U.S. citizens Management Act (H.R. 1038), sponsored by apprehended within the U.S. as suspected terrorists are enemy combatants and thereRep. Doug LaMalfa, R-Calif. The bill would fore could be indefinitely detained by the declare that public power utilities are not military. Goodlatte said the amendment required to register as a swap dealer in “should alleviate any of the well-founded order to make energy swaps trades with other utilities. LaMalfa said if the bill passed, concerns of the American people concerning the possibility of indefinite detention public utilities would avoid millions of dolof United States citizens. The presumption lars of costs by maintaining their ability to of innocence until proven guilty will be use swaps trades to limit their exposure to the volatile prices of energy sources used to preserved by adopting this amendment.” An opponent, Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., generate power. The vote, on Wednesday, said the amendment failed to secure the was unanimous with 423 yeas. Constitution’s Article III rights for suspected Yeas: Grisham, Luján, Pearce enemy combatants, and would give the president excessive power to indefinitely House vote 5 detain a U.S. citizen. The vote, on Thursday, was 214 yeas to 211 nays. ICBM missiles: The House has passed an

Yeas: Pearce Nays: Grisham, Luján

House vote 9 Prosecuting suspected enemy combatants: The House has rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., to the National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960). The amendment would have barred the indefinite military detention in the U.S. of suspected enemy combatants, and require the suspects to be tried by either a state court or by a federal court established under Article III of the Constitution. Smith said the amendment would preserve constitutional rights by requiring the Justice Department to bring cases against suspected terrorists rather than allow the president to indefinitely detain suspects whether or not there is evidence that the suspects have committed a crime. An opponent, Rep. Michael T. McCaul, R-Texas, said requiring civilian trials for suspected foreign terrorists would create the danger of being forced to release terrorists because the government cannot successfully prosecute a criminal case against them. The vote, on Thursday, was 200 yeas to 226 nays. Yeas: Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce

Senate votes Senate vote 1 Gigabit Internet in rural areas: The Senate has passed an amendment sponsored by Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt., to the Agriculture Reform, Food, and Jobs Act (S. 954). The amendment would establish an Agriculture Department pilot program for establishing ultra-high-speed Internet service in rural areas. Leahy said: “The next generation gigabit networks will transform everything from the reliability of the electrical grid, to education and health care in rural America. We cannot leave rural America behind in the dust while the rest of the country moves into this next stage of the digital era.” The vote, on June 10, was 48 yeas to 38 nays. Yeas: Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.

Senate vote 2 Farm bill: The Senate has passed the Agriculture Reform, Food, and Jobs Act (S. 954), sponsored by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich. The bill would fund the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and agriculture programs over the next five years while cutting spending on the programs by $24 billion. Stabenow said the bill would promote conservation efforts, help establish a market-based risk management system for farmers to manage their crops and livestock, and eliminate wasteful spending on duplicative programs. An opponent, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., criticized the bill’s $4.5 billion reduction in SNAP funding, lack of funding to compensate fishermen suffering from fisheries disasters and failure to fund climate change adaptation and mitigation projects. The vote, on June 10, was 66 yeas to 27 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall

Senate vote 3 Immigration and border security: The Senate has tabled an amendment sponsored by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, to the Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act (S. 744). The amendment would have barred the government from granting illegal immigrants provisional legal status until the Homeland Security Department has effectively prevented illegal immigration across the U.S. border for six months. Grassley said the amendment would spur the government to secure the border and improve national security. An opponent, Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said the amendment would put off urgently needed immigration reform because fully securing the border will take many years. The vote to table the amendment, on Thursday, was 57 yeas to 43 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall

electric power lines that were within a quarter-mile of the fire and a Boy Scout ranch that was a few miles away from the blaze. The nearly 2-squaremile Whites Peak Fire had prompted about 100 Boy Scouts to relocate to another camping area. Crews were clearing away vegetation around the power lines and used aircraft to drop retardant on the area. The lightningcaused blaze burning on private and state land was 15 percent contained. Two other wildfires in New Mexico were moving toward full containment. The 37-square-mile Thompson Ridge Fire on the Valles Caldera National Preserve was 80 percent contained. The nearly 16-square mile Tres Lagunas Fire north of Pecos was 90 percent contained. At both fires, all evacuations have been called off. The Associated Press

Transformer delivery to close roads this week Canyon Interchange, exit 267. The southbound lanes of I-25 The New Mexico Departbetween these exists will be ment of Transportation, state closed from 11:30 p.m. to police and New Mexico Motor 2 a.m. The I-25 Waldo Canyon Transportation Police will Interchange on-ramp to southwork together to coordinate bound I-25 and crossroad also the transport of a 910,000will be closed during this time. pound transformer for Jemez The trailer will continue Mountains Electric Cooperanorthbound on I-25 onto N.M. tive Inc. 599, U.S. 84/285 and N.M. 502 The transformer will be until 5:30 a.m. Intersections driven on a 20-foot by 20-foot along N.M. 599 and N.M. 502 trailer from Kewa Pueblo to will be temporarily closed to Chili, north of Española, begin- allow the trailer to pass through. ning Tuesday. It will arrive at It will then be removed from its final destination Wednestravel lanes to avoid impacting day. The transport trailer will morning commuters. take up two lanes along the The transport will resume route and will travel at speeds at 9 a.m. on N.M. 502 heading varying from 5 to 30 mph. westbound to N.M. 30, then The transport will begin at northbound into Española. 9 p.m. Tuesday at the New Drivers in the opposite direcMexico Rail Runner’s Kewa tion along N.M. 30 will be Pueblo Station. It will head detoured around the transnorth on N.M. 22, then southformer. Intersections along bound on N.M. 16 en route to this route will be closed as it Interstate 25. Motorists travelpasses through. ing in this direction along N.M. The trailer will continue 22 and N.M. 16 from 9 to 11:30 northbound on U.S. 84/285 p.m. will be affected by this through Española to the Jemez slow-moving vehicle. Motorists Mountains Electric Cooperatraveling in the opposite direc- tive on U.S. 84, approximately tion will be detoured around seven miles north of the U.S. the trailer as it approaches. 285 junction. Intersections At 11:30 p.m., the trailer will along U.S. 84/285 in Española utilize the southbound lanes will be temporarily closed of I-25 at the Cochiti exit, 263, to allow the trailer to pass traveling north to the Waldo through.

The New Mexican

Report: 236 well sites failed inspections ALBUQUERQUE — About 85 percent of 276 oil and gas well sites inspected in southeastern New Mexico over the past six weeks have failed to pass after-the-fact electrical safety inspections. Correction notices were issued to those sites that

received a “failed” grade. None has been ordered to stop operations. The Albuquerque Journal reported that Gov. Susana Martinez’s office had called for the belated inspections after learning that the state Construction Industries Division had parked more than 500 inspection requests in a computer file because there weren’t enough inspectors to do the work. The Associated Press

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u A minor told police late Friday that a passenger in a vehicle that had been following him in the 1400 block of Valentine Way pointed a gun at him before the vehicle, possibly a Mazda or Mitsubishi, sped away. There were reportedly four males in the car, which had tinted windows. u Patrick Villareal, 43, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday, accused of shoplifting from the Home Depot store at 352 Richards Ave. u Paul A. Salazar, 20, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on a Magistrate Court warrant accusing him of failure to pay fines and to appear in court. His arrest followed a traffic stop at Sixth and Hopewell streets. u Diana Zamora, 26, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on a warrant accusing her of failure

to comply with court-ordered conditions. u Someone stole a purse and a hat box from a residence in the 4100 block of South Meadows Road. The hat box and its contents were later recovered. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following report: u A 54-year-old woman at Pojoaque Pueblo was found dead Saturday, apparently of medical problems complicated by alcohol abuse. Paramedics had been unable to resuscitate the woman.

Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for its speedenforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1, at West Alameda Street at Cedar Street; SUV No. 2, at Don Diego Avenue between Cerrillos and Linda Vista roads; SUV No. 3, at Bishops Lodge Road and Valley Drive.


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Open up health care free market L et’s face it, people, Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center is a forprofit operation and is not run by a bunch of caring, altruistic individuals but rather by a corporation run by and for profit. I worked for many years in an emergency room and remember how shocked I was when I accompanied a friend to the Christus ER, only to find that there was actually no triage during sign-in. It was “first-come, first-served.” This is not any way to run an ER. The community needs to reassess its commitment to Christus and look for another provider. Or at least invite Presbyterian Healthcare Services into town for a little free-market, good old American competition. We are the state capital, and we deserve a good hospital.

Privacy still matters Edward Snowden recently revealed that our government, though a National Security Agency program, can and does to some extent monitor our phone conversations and emails. Also, the government has the data capacity to record them. Because of this, it is helpful for us to review the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Robert Dean Editor

Open primaries? Start talking

E The surveillance the government is doing is a clear violation of the Fourth Amendment. A law-enforcement agency must show “probable cause” and have a search warrant before violating our privacy. The power the NSA surveillance program has created has the potential for great abuse. Just because the technology exists for such surveillance and data storage does not mean it should be implemented. The new data collection center in Utah should be

dismantled along with other such data centers. James Keele

Santa Fe

Exemplary service Recently, our family enjoyed dinner at Buffalo Wild Wings. We waited outside for an inside table. A personable young man from the restaurant team approached us every 10 minutes to serve us fresh iced water and make

sure we were doing fine. Once we were seated, the wait staff provided miles of smiles and all the helpfulness one could only possibly imagine. I was told staff went through one week of training under the supervision of their trainer from “Jersey.” He instilled courtesy, kindness and enthusiasm for all. My family will return for good food and beverages, but mostly because of the extraordinary staff. Grace Reinbold

Santa Fe

COMMENTARY: THOMAS A. DIPRETE AND CLAUDIA BUCHMANN

Males must succeed again in education

I

Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001

OUR VIEW

Susan Meyers

Santa Fe

A-11

n the discussion of how to boost the education and skill levels of the American workforce, one central issue is rarely addressed: the gap between male and female achievement. The reality is that the slowdown in U.S. educational gains is predominantly a male affair, and one that drags down the overall competitiveness of our workforce and workers’ ability to land (or create) good jobs. To get more Americans working and set economic growth back on track, we need to understand what’s going on with men in education. Despite rising college costs and the many other challenges facing America’s schools, women have made extraordinary strides in education. They have overtaken men in high school and college completion in the last few decades, earning 58 percent of bachelor’s degrees and 62 percent of postsecondary occupational certificates. Our research has found that if men had the same educational distribution as women, their earnings would be 3.7 percent higher than they are and more men would be employed. Bridging the education gender gap is central to increasing America’s competitiveness in the world economy. The educational shortfall of men has two important components. First, men are less likely to enroll in colleges and universities. Second, even when they do enroll, they are less likely to obtain a degree or certificate. Why? One prime reason is young men’s poorer grades in middle and high school (despite performance similar to women’s on standardized tests). A second factor is that young men are more likely than women to prioritize work

over college when their short-term job opportunities are relatively good or their educational debt is relatively high. The underinvestment in education by adolescent boys and young men stems in part from out-of-date masculine stereotypes. Such things as a strong attachment to school, a feeling of closeness to teachers, an excessive interest in high academic achievement or a fondness for art or music are viewed by many young men as unmasculine. In a recent survey of American 15-yearolds, 73 percent of adolescent girls expected to work in managerial, professional or higher technical jobs, versus only 53 percent of the boys. Boys were much more likely than girls (9 percent as opposed to 2 percent) to expect to make their living as athletes or work in other sports jobs or as musicians. Too many boys expected to be military officers, police officers or firefighters relative to demand, and boys were more likely to respond vaguely or not at all to the question of the job they expected to have at age 30. Overconfidence leads to unrealistic career expectations and poor planning. In the same survey, remarkably few boys expected to be working in the lower-level production or service occupations, even though nearly half of their fathers held such jobs. Unfortunately, boys’ rejection of “bad jobs” did not mean they had made plans to enter skilled occupations that require higher levels of schooling. Relative to women, young men also have unrealistically high expectations of financial success. A pre-recession Gallup poll found that an astonishing 58 percent of 18- to 29-year-old young men thought it was “somewhat” or “very” likely that they would someday be rich.

Many boys seem to think they will be successful — career-wise and financially — without having any idea about how they’ll achieve that success.

MAllARD FillMORE

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

For many boys and young men, the changing world is a conundrum. They want better jobs than their fathers have, but their attitudes toward school and work are misaligned with the opportunities and requirements in today’s labor market. Many boys seem to think they will be successful — career-wise and financially — without having any idea about how they’ll achieve that success. This misalignment is made worse in the U.S. by a lack of clear links between academic courses of study and the skilled, well-paying jobs that actually exist in the labor market. In Germany, the famous dual system of company and school training allows students to understand how their studies will translate into jobs. It provides 350 specific occupational certificates that provide entry into skilled occupations; about 40 percent of young German women and 52 percent of young German men complete training in one of these paths. Other young Germans complete full-time vocational school or get a university degree. The United States, with its high and disproportionately male college dropout rates, compares poorly to the German record. It’s clear we need to encourage adolescent boys to adopt expectations in line with the job market, and to free themselves from anti-academic male stereotypes. If they can be helped to better understand the connection between doing well in school and getting a good job, they might see reasons to work harder in middle and high school. Clearer pathways from courses to credentials and from credentials to careers would further enhance the rates of success for men as well as women and make for a more competitive America. Thomas A. DiPrete is a professor of sociology at Columbia University and former scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation. Claudia Buchmann is a professor of sociology at the Ohio State University. This commentary was written for the Los Angeles Times.

lection reform is one of those important but often neglected topics — people know it matters, but they can’t bring themselves to pay attention. Yet, with a few changes to how New Mexico conducts elections (we can talk about national reforms another time), the state’s election process would be open to more citizens. One key to changing the process is reconsidering how the state’s primaries are conducted. Right now, only registered party members can participate. A registered Democrat can vote only in the Democratic primary; a registered Republican in the Republican primary, and so on. However, some 18 percent, or 230,839 of New Mexicans, do not identify with a political party. As independents, they do not get to vote in the June primaries. What that means on a practical level, since so many candidates for elected office don’t face opposition come November, is that important decisions are made in June, when mostly party loyalists are paying attention. Plus, since the state pays for primaries — not the political parties — a significant number of voters whose taxes pay for the election can’t participate. This Wednesday, Santa Fe County’s Democratic Party jumps into the discussion with the forum: “Should the New Mexico Democratic Party open its primary elections to voters who aren’t registered as Democrats?” The forum will take place at 6 p.m. at the Center for Progress and Justice, 1420 Cerrillos Road, and feature former state Democratic Party chairman Javier Gonzales, State Rep. Brian Egolf and Think New Mexico’s Fred Nathan. (Think New Mexico, a nonprofit think tank, is starting its own discussions on open primaries.) We think the question — beginning with the phrase, “Should the Democratic Party open its primary elections … ” — is one worth discussing. Because tax dollars pay for primaries, we believe — among many good reasons — that our primaries should be more open — and we think a smart political party will find ways to reach out to unaffiliated voters, both in the general and primary elections. That’s just our take, though. What matters is what citizens think, because their pressure could change primary rules. Debating the issue is one place to start, and Wednesday night is a good time to start talking.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: June 17, 1913: The Legislature passed a rigid law governing motor vehicles, which will eventually weed our reckless, worthless and irresponsible drivers of motor power conveyances on our highways. There is too little attention paid by the average citizen to the rights of the owners and to the benefit that the automobile has grown to be to the general welfare. The owner of a machine is assessed for personal taxes, and very few assessments are made on a low basis. The revenues that come to the state through this medium are large. It has been through the efforts of the automobilistas that the country will have, and has already obtained, some splendid highways and streets, that never would have otherwise been built. June 17, 1963: Washington — The Supreme Court ruled 8 to 1 today that use of the Lord’s Prayer and Bible reading in public schools is unconstitutional. It held that the state must be neutral in the relationship between man and God. Four Santa Fe Marines were among those who participated in activities during the visit of President John F. Kennedy to the Marine Corps Recruit Depot at San Diego, Calif., June 6. They are: Cpl. Rogelio G. Duran, son of Mr. and Mrs. Casilda Duran; Joe H. Garcia, son of Mr. and Mrs. Esquipula Garcia; Pvt. James L. Lucero, nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Chavez; and Pvt. Harold P. Banks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Banks. June 17, 1988: In 1981, Jimmy Escudero set out to subdivide his two acres on West Alameda so members of his family could use the land to build houses. What began as a goodwill gesture by Escudero has turned into a seven-year battle between the Escudero family and city officials, who have held up the subdivision until the city decides how much of the land is needed for a proposed street-widening project. Escudero did not live to see his land subdivided. His grandson, Ed Archuleta, now represents his family in its quest to subdivide the land and he says he will sue the city if officials do not soon reach a decision.

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

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


A-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 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

Warm with sun mixing with clouds

Tonight

Becoming clear

88

Tuesday

Wednesday

Partly sunny

58

Friday

Thursday

Sunshine mixing with Plenty of sunshine some clouds

88/54

92/56

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

Partly sunny and breezy

92/57

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

92/58

Humidity (Noon)

Saturday

Sunday

Sunny to partly cloudy

Times of clouds and sun

90/57

91/56

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

19%

44%

32%

6%

7%

14%

21%

27%

wind: S 7-14 mph

wind: ESE 7-14 mph

wind: S 7-14 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

wind: SW 10-20 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

wind: W 4-8 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 90°/59° Normal high/low ............................ 87°/52° Record high ............................... 94° in 2008 Record low ................................. 41° in 1891 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.09”/0.76” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.50”/4.10” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.32”/0.89”

New Mexico weather

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

666

40

The following water statistics of June 13 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 2.647 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 7.880 City Wells: 1.526 Buckman Wells: 2.909 Total water produced by water system: 14.962 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.498 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 33.6 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.16 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

Pecos 84/54

Albuquerque 92/66

87

56

412

Clayton 86/58

Las Vegas 81/53

25

54

40

40

285

Clovis 90/63

54 60

25

285

180

Roswell 97/70

Ruidoso 83/57

25

70

Truth or Consequences 97/68 70

180

Las Cruces 98/71

70

Hobbs 95/69

Carlsbad 98/71

54

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

285

10

Sun and moon

State extremes

Sun. High: 101 .............................. Carlsbad Sun. Low 45 ...................................... Gallup

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 97/63 pc 92/68 pc 78/45 s 95/68 pc 101/67 t 81/46 pc 85/58 s 87/59 pc 77/47 pc 94/64 pc 84/47 s 99/72 s 91/67 pc 91/57 s 95/69 r 88/45 t 87/50 t 93/66 s 100/74 s

Hi/Lo W 98/71 t 92/66 s 76/47 t 97/69 s 98/71 s 80/45 t 82/53 t 86/58 t 78/51 t 90/63 t 87/53 s 99/66 s 91/65 s 91/55 s 92/64 t 87/47 s 88/51 s 95/69 t 98/71 s

Hi/Lo W 96/71 pc 92/64 pc 77/44 pc 97/71 pc 99/69 pc 81/42 t 83/50 pc 83/61 t 79/52 pc 87/64 t 87/52 s 100/68 s 91/63 pc 93/53 s 90/66 pc 87/46 s 86/48 s 96/69 t 100/69 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 89/60 96/66 85/64 94/66 94/67 86/57 79/51 92/68 97/71 82/55 95/68 91/59 96/67 86/52 96/66 96/68 99/74 87/63 84/47

W s t pc pc r pc pc pc pc pc s pc sh s pc pc s t s

Hi/Lo W 81/53 t 98/67 s 85/57 s 94/66 s 91/64 t 82/54 t 76/47 t 92/61 s 97/70 s 83/57 t 91/62 t 93/64 s 95/68 s 84/51 s 97/68 s 91/64 t 99/71 s 87/59 s 87/49 s

Hi/Lo W 82/54 pc 100/67 s 84/56 pc 94/63 pc 88/66 t 83/54 pc 77/46 pc 92/60 pc 97/70 pc 83/63 pc 90/65 pc 94/67 s 98/68 pc 84/46 pc 98/69 s 88/66 t 102/72 s 86/56 pc 87/47 s

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

Weather for June 17

Sunrise today ............................... 5:48 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:22 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 2:13 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 1:14 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 5:48 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 8:23 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 3:17 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 1:49 a.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 8:23 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 4:23 p.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 2:28 a.m. Full

Last

New

First

June 23

June 29

July 8

July 15

The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 73/49 86/67 83/62 77/50 80/50 92/54 77/61 87/65 85/65 86/69 76/69 82/66 95/74 88/58 82/65 86/61 81/42 86/71 96/75 79/66 79/65 99/76 79/62

W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W pc 81/61 s 81/59 s pc 88/71 t 83/68 t t 89/66 pc 84/60 t s 81/56 t 88/58 pc s 75/51 pc 83/58 s s 90/61 pc 90/55 s r 81/64 t 76/59 c pc 88/74 t 91/73 t pc 86/68 t 85/65 t c 84/56 t 72/53 pc t 86/66 t 80/58 sh pc 83/60 pc 71/49 sh pc 94/75 t 89/76 t r 84/55 t 85/56 t pc 84/58 t 74/50 pc pc 89/58 s 88/58 s s 82/44 s 83/47 s s 88/73 s 88/74 s s 94/76 pc 94/76 s c 85/64 t 81/58 sh c 83/63 t 82/62 s s 103/79 s 102/78 s pc 79/61 pc 79/62 pc

Rise 7:36 a.m. 7:22 a.m. 4:50 a.m. 5:56 a.m. 4:07 p.m. 1:51 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 9:58 p.m. 9:54 p.m. 7:15 p.m. 8:26 p.m. 3:09 a.m. 2:21 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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 85/72 t 88/70 t 84/61 t 89/73 pc 89/71 t 88/71 t 90/79 sh 90/79 pc 91/79 pc 84/66 pc 79/51 t 66/49 pc 86/60 pc 78/55 pc 76/58 s 92/78 t 89/74 pc 92/75 s 80/65 c 85/68 pc 82/61 t 92/70 r 87/67 t 86/67 t 89/77 t 91/73 t 92/73 pc 83/64 c 88/68 pc 84/61 t 107/84 s 107/80 s 107/81 s 75/63 t 82/62 pc 77/50 t 72/56 pc 77/56 c 70/53 sh 89/65 pc 90/70 t 83/62 t 87/69 t 86/67 t 84/65 pc 93/59 s 88/60 s 92/64 s 92/74 pc 93/76 pc 94/75 s 72/63 pc 74/64 pc 74/63 pc 68/52 pc 66/54 s 64/52 pc 74/55 pc 74/54 c 69/52 sh 83/51 pc 78/52 pc 80/60 s 82/63 c 87/65 pc 80/54 t 85/69 t 88/71 pc 83/62 t

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: 114 ............... Ocotillo Wells, CA Sun. Low: 26 ............. Bodie State Park, CA

A strong Santa Ana wind loaded with fine dust and pulverized clay roasted Santa Barbara, Calif., on June 17, 1859. Unofficial temperatures reached 133 degrees.

Weather trivia™

On which day of the year is your Q: shadow the shortest?

A: The first day of summer

Weather history

Newsmakers Family tweets indicate Kardashian gives birth

Kim Kardashian

Kanye West

LOS ANGELES — It looks to be a baby girl for Kim Kardashian and her rapper boyfriend Kanye West. Or does it? The couple was keeping silent Sunday in the wake of multiple reports that Kardashian has given birth over the weekend, about a month premature. But Kardashian’s sister, Khloe, appears to have let a rather cryptic cat out of the bag on Twitter. “I can not even begin 2describe the miracle that is now apart of our family. Mommy/baby are healthy &resting. We appreciate all of the love,” she tweeted Sunday. She quickly followed with a second tweet: “More info will come when the time is right! Thank you all for understanding! We love you all dearly! Overwhelmed with love right now.”

‘Man of Steel’ earns $125M

Henry Cavill

Man of Steel leaped over box office expectations in a single weekend. The Warner Bros. superhero film, starring Henry Cavill, earned $113 million in its opening weekend at the box office, according to studio estimates Sunday. This Is the End opened in second place with $20.5 million in its opening weekend. The Associated Press

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

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 63/54 pc 72/59 r 79/63 sh 93/66 s 93/76 s 93/74 s 99/77 s 106/80 s 107/81 s 95/82 r 92/80 sh 93/80 pc 82/68 s 79/68 pc 77/65 t 88/74 c 89/73 r 96/72 pc 70/55 pc 80/63 pc 88/68 s 70/48 pc 67/48 c 67/49 t 54/52 sh 54/41 s 59/39 pc 86/70 pc 93/71 s 96/73 s 91/77 pc 91/75 pc 90/76 sh 102/78 pc 99/77 s 101/79 s 61/50 sh 69/57 c 72/60 pc 61/50 c 63/49 pc 66/48 pc 84/63 pc 89/59 s 89/60 s 79/63 pc 72/59 t 72/60 t 90/72 pc 88/74 t 87/74 t 86/81 t 88/81 t 92/80 pc 76/59 pc 79/63 s 83/65 s 65/60 pc 68/57 pc 68/57 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 73/57 64/54 95/59 77/57 64/55 79/63 88/77 73/52 77/55 81/67 79/63 55/47 79/64 90/82 64/54 62/50 75/70 73/57 79/64 82/59

W pc sh s pc sh pc t pc pc pc s c pc t r s r pc pc pc

Hi/Lo 68/55 68/59 76/49 78/54 71/52 75/51 88/74 85/66 81/62 80/69 87/67 59/34 76/67 90/76 69/55 63/49 83/73 69/53 88/71 91/61

W pc c c t sh c r pc s pc s pc r t pc c c c s s

Hi/Lo 69/56 72/59 71/51 78/52 67/52 70/54 90/79 82/65 90/66 81/70 88/66 59/36 80/63 91/77 68/50 63/50 83/72 68/55 92/72 91/62

W pc sh sh t pc pc t pc s pc s s r t sh s c sh s s

‘Days of Our Lives’ wins best drama BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Days of Our Lives won drama series honors for just the second time in 40 years at the Daytime Emmy Awards on Sunday night. The NBC soap opera, which began airing in 1965, beat out defending champion General Hospital and three-time winner The Bold and the Beautiful. Meanwhile, Doug Davidson of The Young and the Restless and Heather Tom of The Bold and the Beautiful won lead acting honors during the awards. Davidson earned his first career trophy for a role he’s played since 1978. Tom, who previously was on Y&R, repeated her win from last year. Davidson had been nominated seven times in various categories for playing Detective Paul Williams on the CBS soap before winning. “It suddenly occurs to me that the presenters are younger than my tux,” he said. “I would like to thank the viewers. They have been more than fans, they’ve been like family to me. They’ve supported my character in some very difficult times.” Tom plays Katie Logan on B&B. Last year, she became the first person to win Daytime Emmys in the younger, supporting and lead categories. The ladies of The Talk presented outstanding talk show informative, and when Aisha Tyler opened the envelope, she quickly realized it was the wrong one. “Oh, this is interesting,” she said. “This winner is not in this category.” The audience in the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton gasped at the error. “There better be a cocktail waiting on my table,” Tyler said before being handed the correct envelope from the wings. Tyler then announced The Dr. Oz Show as the winner. “I was having heart palpitations, real ones,” Dr. Mehmet Oz said onstage. In another surprise, there was a tie for supporting actor

in a drama series. Scott Clifton of The Bold and the Beautiful and Billy Miller of The Young and the Restless both won. Julie Marie Berman of General Hospital won supporting actress honors. Ben Bailey of Cash Cab picked up his third win as outstanding game show host, beating out five-time winner Alex Trebek of Jeopardy! among others. Cash Cab is no longer in production after eight years of shows that took place in a cab as Bailey plied the streets of New York. “I’ve got some great hood ornaments for the cab I now have in my garage,” he said. The ceremony pitted the only four remaining soaps still airing on the broadcast networks against one that found new life on the Internet. Top-rated The Young and the Restless took on last year’s winner General Hospital, Days of Our Lives, The Bold and the Beautiful and online refugee One Life to Live for best daytime drama honors. The Ellen DeGeneres Show earned its seventh trophy as outstanding talk show entertainment. Good Morning America weather anchor Sam Champion, along with HLN network’s A.J. Hammer and Robin Meade, hosted the show on HLN. The 40th anniversary of the Daytime Emmys was recognized with a past, present and future theme woven throughout the show. Reflecting the current era of dwindling daytime audiences, network budget-cutting and the cancellation of some soaps, the awards show was aired by cable news channel HLN, having lost its longtime home on the broadcast networks last year. The Daytime Emmys moved back to Southern California last year after being in Las Vegas, Nev., for two years, and its ratings, like many of the daytime shows it celebrates, have bounced up and down in recent years. Last year, HLN scored its highest numbers ever for a scheduled non-news broadcast when it aired the awards for the first time.

Today’s talk shows

TV

top picks

1

7 p.m. on NBC The Voice It’s almost over. In the “Live Final Performances” episode, the remaining contestants perform for coaches Adam Levine, Blake Shelton, Usher and Shakira in hopes of being crowned this season’s winner on Tuesday’s finale. Carson Daly hosts. 7 p.m. on A&E The Glades When a male stripper is killed, Longworth’s (Matt Passmore) investigation takes him into the world of Florida’s flesh trade, dude division, and the women who patronize it. Kiele Sanchez, Carlos Gomez and Michelle Hurd also star in the new episode “Magic Longworth.” 7:30 p.m. on FOX The Goodwin Games Jimmy (T.J. Miller) wants to be more involved with his daughter, Piper (Kaitlyn Maher), and starts by introducing her to Henry and Chloe (Scott Foley, Becki Newton). As Piper and Chloe forge a bond, Jimmy tries to convince the girl’s mother, Hannah (Janina Gavankar), that he can be trusted, and Henry offers Hannah’s husband (Chris Diamantopoulos) a business proposition. Melissa Tang also stars in the new episode “The Birds of Granby.”

DAYTIME EMMY AWARDS

The Associated Press

380 285

The cast and crew of Days of Our Lives accept the award for outstanding drama series on Sunday at the 40th annual Daytime Emmy Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif. CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION

By Beth Harris

Source:

70

380

Alamogordo 98/71

As of 6/13/2013 Trees ......................................... 22 Moderate Grass......................................... 12 Moderate Weeds.................................................. 4 Low Other ................................................ Absent Total...........................................................38

Today’s UV index

54 380

Sunday’s rating ................................... Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA

Pollen index

25

60

10

Water statistics

Santa Fe 88/58

25

60

64

Taos 84/51

Española 91/65 Los Alamos 85/57 Gallup 87/47

Raton 82/54

64 84

Area rainfall

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.02”/0.70” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.64”/1.50” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.59”/1.60” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/3.56” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.14”/1.49”

285

64

Farmington 91/55

Air quality index

2

4

3

5

8 p.m. A&E Longmire Walt (Robert Taylor) and the team go in search of stolen cattle, their driver and the thieves who took them. Vic’s (Katee Sackhoff, pictured) frightened reaction to a gift of flowers has Walt wondering what’s up in the new episode “The Road to Hell.” Bailey Chase and Lou Diamond Phillips also star. 9 p.m. on ABC Mistresses The situation at work between Savi and Dom (Alyssa Milano, Jason George) is tense in this new episode. Joss (Jes Macallan) gets an impossible assignment from her new boss (Mike Dopud). Karen (Yunjin Kim) continues to be drawn into the Grey family’s dysfunctional orbit in “Breaking and Entering.” Rochelle Aytes and Erik Stocklin also star.

3:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Entertainer Madonna. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Couples make confessions. 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 Medical mysteries and warning signs; soy. KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show Men accused of molesting their daughters. E! Access Hollywood Live 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 TBS Conan Seth Rogen; Earthquake. 9:30 p.m. KCHF Life Today With James Robison James and Betty Robison. 10:00 p.m. KTEL Al Rojo Vivo CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Hannity MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Seth Rogen; Earthquake. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno

Actor Billy Crystal; Pitbull performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Bill O’Reilly; Greta Gerwig; Quadron performs. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson TV personality Carson Kressley; actress Rachelle Lefevre. 12:00 a.m. KASA Dish Nation E! Chelsea Lately Sean Hayes; Jeff Wild; Dan Maurio; Brad Wollack. FNC The Five 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Radio personality Howard Stern; actress Alyssa Milano. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News


MONDAY, JUNE 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

National scoreboard B-2 Announcements B-3 Classifieds B-5 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

B

Powered: Chris Davis hits his MLB-leading 23rd home run in Baltimore’s win. Page B-4

Older Spurs down Heat to take NBA Finals lead By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

Spurs power forward Tim Duncan, who had 17 points and 12 rebounds, drives against Miami forward Chris Bosh during the first half in Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Sunday night in San Antonio. ERIC GAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLLEGE WORLD SERIES

N.C. State knocks off Tar Heels

SAN ANTONIO — With the old Manu Ginobili back, the Spurs looked like champs again. One more victory and their Big Three, not Miami’s, will be the one that rules the NBA. Ginobili broke out of a slump in a big way with 24 points and 10 assists in his first start of the season, and the Spurs beat the Heat 114-104 on Sunday night to take a 3-2 lead. Tony Parker scored 26 points, Tim Duncan had 17 points and 12 rebounds, and Ginobili had his highest-scoring game of the season as the Spurs became the first team to shoot 60 percent in a finals game in four years.

Danny Green smashed the NBA Finals record for 3-pointers with six more and scored 24 points. Kawhi Leonard finished with 16, but the stage was set when Ginobili trotted out with Duncan, Spurs 114 Parker and the rest of starters in what could Heat 104 have been the last finals home game for a trio that’s meant so much to San Antonio. The AT&T Center crowd roared when Ginobili was the last Spurs player announced and chanted his name in the second half, a familiar sight and sound in San Antonio but not during what had been a miserable series for the former Sixth Man of the Year. “He’s obviously very popular. He’s been

here a long time. He’s helped us have a lot of success over the years,” said Gregg Popovich, Spurs head coach. LeBron James and Dwyane Wade each scored 25 points for the Heat, who host Game 6 on Tuesday. They need a victory to force the first Game 7 in the finals since the Lakers beat the Celtics in 2010. Miami’s Big Three formed a few weeks after that game, with predictions of multiple titles to follow. Now they’re a loss away from going just 1-for-3 in finals to start their partnership, while the Spurs could run their perfect record to 5-for-5. Duncan won his first title in 1999, and Parker and Ginobili were with him for three

Please see finaLs, Page B-3

U.S. OPEN

cominG UP Roses

Rodon pitches complete game for the Wolfpack By Eric Olson

The Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — North Carolina State and North Carolina were playing each other in baseball for the 285th time, but N.C. State 8 never on a stage like this. UNC 1 Carlos Rodon pitched like the star he is, throwing eight shutout innings and holding the Tar Heels to five hits in an 8-1 College World Series victory Sunday. “This is the College World Series, and it doesn’t get any better than this, so why not bring your ‘A’ game?” Rodon said. “Of course, I try to bring my ‘A’ game every time.” Rodon (10-2), who required 108 pitches to record his third complete game of the season, held the No. 1 national seed Tar Heels hitless into the fifth inning. He allowed five hits and struck out eight. It was the sophomore left-hander’s second straight dominating performance against the Tar Heels. The result was more satisfying this time. Three weeks ago he allowed one hit and struck out 14 in 10 innings but got no decision in a 2-1, 18-inning loss in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament. “He was as good as I’ve seen him all year,” Wolfpack catcher Brett Austin said. The Wolfpack’s first CWS appearance since 1968 will continue Tuesday when it plays UCLA. The Tar Heels (57-11), in Omaha for the sixth time in eight years, are one loss from elimination. Carolina hasn’t lost back-to-back games this season. “You have to rely on the leaders on your team to rally, and they’ve been able to do that all year long,” said Mike Fox, UNC head coach. “It’ll be another really good team, and we’ll obviously have to play better. I have confidence in my guys. It’s disappointing. I have no doubt we’ll be ready Tuesday.” While Rodon dominated, ACC pitcher of the year Kent Emanuel struggled yet again and left the game down 5-0 in the third inning. “Just not making the pitches I need to,” Emanuel said. “Basically, it’s simple as that.” Brett Williams, Bryan Adametz and Logan Ratledge had two hits apiece for the Wolfpack (50-14), with Ratledge driving in two runs out of the No. 9 hole. Rodon opened by walking Chaz Frank on four pitches, then retired 14 straight batters before Brian Holberton singled up the middle on a first-pitch fastball with two out in the fifth inning. “You try to be perfect, but you’re not going to say, ‘I’m going to throw a perfect game’ or ‘I’m going to throw a no-hitter.’ It doesn’t work that way,” Rodon said. Rodon got help from a defense that turned double plays after Carolina got runners on base in the seventh and eighth innings. The Tar Heels broke through in the ninth, with Frank singling leading off and Landon Lassiter following with an RBI double.

Please see KnocKs, Page B-3

Justin Rose, who carded five birdies and five bogeys for even par in the fourth round, celebrates after winning the U.S. Open on Sunday evening at Merion Golf Club in Ardmore, Pa. JULIO CORTEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Heartbreak. This is tough “ to swallow after coming so

Rose wins his first major; heartache for Mickelson

close. This was my best chance of all of them. … I felt this was as good an opportunity as you could ask for. It really hurts.” Phil Mickelson

By Doug Ferguson

The Associated Press

a

RDMORE, Pa. — A steady hand gave Justin Rose the shiny U.S. Open Trophy. A wild ride gave Phil Mickelson yet another silver medal. Rose captured his first major championship on Sunday with remarkable calm and three pure shots on the punishing closing holes at Merion. A par on the 18th hole gave him an even-par 70, and that was good enough to become the first Englishman in 43 years to win America’s national championship. Rose hit 5-iron to the first cut of rough, pin-high on the 17th for an easy par. He smashed the most important tee shot of his career down the middle

on the final hole, about 15 feet short of the famous Ben Hogan plaque. And his 4-iron rolled near the pin and settled against the collar of the green. “When I came over the hill and saw my ball laying in the fairway, I thought, ‘This is my moment.’ It was me hitting from the middle of the fairway,” Rose said. As usual, someone’s big moment in the U.S. Open came at Mickelson’s expense. Rose was in the scoring area a half-mile from the grandstands behind the 18th green where the fans began to chant, “Let’s go Phil!” as Mickelson paced

off a last-ditch effort to force a playoff. It was a long shot — the 18th hole didn’t yield a single birdie all weekend. From about 40 yards away, Mickelson’s chip for birdie raced by the cup, securing Rose’s victory. Mickelson, already in the U.S. Open record book with five second-place finishes, added another that will hurt as much any of them. Sunday was his 43rd birthday. It was the first time he was equipped with the outright lead going into the last day. His week began with a crosscountry trip home to San Diego to watch his oldest daughter graduate from the eighth grade, returning just three hours before his tee time on Thursday. This was the same daughter born the day after his first runner-up finish in 1999. All the stars were aligned. None of the putts fell in. Mickelson surged back into the lead by holing out from 75 yards in thick rough on the 10th hole

Please see Roses, Page B-3

STANLEY CUP FINALS

Five things learned after thrilling Game 2 By Nancy Armour

The Associated Press

CHICAGO — Five things learned in Boston’s 2-1 overtime win over the Blackhawks in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Saturday night:

All tied up Many believed Boston and Chicago were the two best teams in the NHL this season, both possessing a lethal blend of potent offense and stingy defense. (Pipe down, Pittsburgh fans. The goal-a-palooza that was Sid the Kid and Co. was a sight to behold, but you have to at least fake some defense.) So it is fitting that the Bruins and Blackhawks head to Boston tied at one game each. The first two games haven’t always been pretty — ahem, Brandon Bolllig — but they have been

Jaromir Jagr

fast, entertaining and, most important, evenly matched. Fans are definitely getting their money’s worth, and few can argue that the Kings or Penguins would make for a better matchup.

day after such a short night. Boston is now 5-2 in overtime this postseason while Chicago is 4-2. Oh, and it’s not just the Bruins and Blackhawks logging extra hours. Game 2 was the 26th OT game of the postseason, tied for second most in NHL history. The record of 28 was set in 1993.

Working overtime

The old men

Of course this game went to overtime. After Boston and Chicago needed OT to settle 10 games already in this postseason, including the 1-hour, 52-minute and 14-second marathon that was Game 1, there was no way this one was going to be settled nicely, neatly or in a timely fashion. At least this one didn’t turn into a night-day game, however, with Daniel Paille scoring 13:48 into the first overtime. No doubt there will be extended practices Sun-

Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Jon Lechel, jlechel@sfnewmexican.com

Kids these days are such slackers. Jaromir Jagr has been playing longer than some of the Bruins have been alive. Really. That’s not an exaggeration. Yet, there the old man was, leading Boston with five shots Saturday night, and coming close to ending the game a few times, including banging a puck off the crossbar in overtime. “I wanted to help the team. It was still a tied hockey game,” he said. “To score a goal would

Please see LeaRneD, Page B-3

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

BASKETBALL BasketBall

HOCKEY Hockey

GolF GOLF

TENNIS teNNIs

AUTO RACING aUto

TRANSACTIONS tRaNsactIoNs

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) San Antonio 3, Miami 2 Sunday’s Game San Antonio 114, Miami 104 Thursday, June 6 San Antonio 92, Miami 88 Sunday, June 9 Miami 103, San Antonio 84 Tuesday, June 11 San Antonio 113, Miami 77 Thursday, June 13 Miami 109, San Antonio 93 Tuesday, June 18 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. x-Thursday, June 20 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m.

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago 1, Boston 1 Wednesday, June 12 Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3OT Saturday, June 15 Boston 2, Chicago 1, OT Monday, June 17 Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 19 Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. Saturday, June 22 Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. x-Monday, June 24 Chicago at Boston, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 26 Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. PLAYOFFS / Saturday, Scoring GP David Krejci, Bos 18 Nathan Horton, Bos 18 Milan Lucic, Bos 18 Evgeni Malkin, Pit 15 Kris Letang, Pit 15 Patrick Sharp, Chi 19 Sidney Crosby, Pit 14 Marian Hossa, Chi 19 Patrick Kane, Chi 19 Bryan Bickell, Chi 19 Jeff Carter, LA 18 Slava Voynov, LA 18 Brad Marchand, Bos 18 6 tied with 12 pts. PLAYOFFS / Saturday, Goal Scoring David Krejci, BOS Patrick Sharp, CHI Bryan Bickell, CHI Sidney Crosby, PIT Pascal Dupuis, PIT Nathan Horton, BOS Marian Hossa, CHI Patrice Bergeron, BOS Jeff Carter, LA Patrick Kane, CHI James Neal, PIT Kyle Turris, OTT Slava Voynov, LA Justin Williams, LA Johnny Boychuk, BOS Damien Brunner, DET Logan Couture, SJ Chris Kunitz, PIT Milan Lucic, BOS Patrick Marleau, SJ Andrew Shaw, CHI Daniel Alfredsson, OTT Daniel Cleary, DET Johan Franzen, DET Jarome Iginla, PIT Phil Kessel, TOR Torey Krug, BOS Evgeni Malkin, PIT Brad Marchand, BOS Jean-Gabriel Pagea, OTT Joe Pavelski, SJ Derek Stepan, NYR Henrik Zetterberg, DET Assists David Krejci, BOS Kris Letang, PIT Evgeni Malkin, PIT Nathan Horton, BOS Milan Lucic, BOS Derick Brassard, NYR Zdeno Chara, BOS Patrick Kane, CHI Duncan Keith, CHI Brad Marchand, BOS Paul Martin, PIT Mike Richards, LA Sidney Crosby, PIT Michal Handzus, CHI Marian Hossa, CHI Jarome Iginla, PIT Joe Pavelski, SJ Joe Thornton, SJ Jonathan Toews, CHI Henrik Zetterberg, DET Jeff Carter, LA Jaromir Jagr, BOS Erik Karlsson, OTT Slava Voynov, LA Daniel Alfredsson, OTT Patrice Bergeron, BOS Daniel Cleary, DET Erik Condra, OTT Logan Couture, SJ Pavel Datsyuk, DET Sergei Gonchar, OTT Anze Kopitar, LA Patrick Sharp, CHI Mats Zuccarello, NYR Power Play Goals Logan Couture, SJ Daniel Alfredsson, OTT Johan Franzen, DET Marian Hossa, CHI Torey Krug, BOS Chris Kunitz, PIT Joe Pavelski, SJ Patrice Bergeron, BOS Nick Bonino, ANA Dustin Brown, LA Sidney Crosby, PIT Dan Girardi, NYR Nathan Horton, BOS Jarome Iginla, PIT Kris Letang, PIT James Neal, PIT Short Handed Goals Pascal Dupuis, PIT Justin Abdelkader, DET Daniel Alfredsson, OTT Tyler Bozak, TOR Michael Frolik, CHI Ryan Getzlaf, ANA Dwight King, LA Milan Michalek, OTT Kyle Okposo, NYI Daniel Paille, BOS Alexander Steen, STL Kyle Turris, OTT

Sunday At Autotron Rosmalen Den Bosch, Netherlands Purse: ATP, $624,000 (WT250); WTA, $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men First Round Robin Haase, Netherlands, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 4-6, 6-1, 6-4. Daniel Brands, Germany, def. Jesse Huta Galung, Netherlands, 6-3, 6-2. Women First Round Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 6-1, 6-2. Urszula Radwanska (7), Poland, def. Olga Govortsova, Belarus, 6-2, 6-0. Michaela Krajicek, Netherlands, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 7-5, 6-4. Doubles Men First Round Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, and Benoit Paire, France, def. Roberto Bautista-Agut and Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Sapin, 6-3, 4-6, 14-12. Women First Round Richel Hogenkamp and Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, def. Sandra Klemenschits, Austria, and Romina Oprandi, Switzerland, 6-2, 3-6, 10-4. Sofia Arvidsson and Johanna Larsson, Sweden, def. Estrela Cabeza Candela, Spain, and Alexandra Cadantu, Romania, 7-5, 6-0.

Sunday At Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (19) Greg Biffle, Ford, 200 laps, 127.7 rating, 48 points, $235,260. 2. (21) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 200, 104.3, 42, $173,781. 3. (13) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 200, 111.6, 41, $145,670. 4. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 200, 96.1, 40, $148,803. 5. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 200, 95.6, 39, $142,085. 6. (8) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 200, 113.4, 38, $136,026. 7. (27) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 200, 78.5, 37, $131,943. 8. (1) Carl Edwards, Ford, 200, 104.1, 37, $138,910. 9. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 200, 110.4, 36, $119,593. 10. (18) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 200, 83.1, 34, $100,685. 11. (7) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 200, 83, 0, $108,893. 12. (16) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 200, 91.9, 32, $139,251. 13. (37) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 200, 69.2, 31, $90,910. 14. (4) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 200, 87.2, 30, $124,126. 15. (25) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 200, 73, 0, $89,435. 16. (15) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 200, 75.4, 28, $132,571. 17. (5) Aric Almirola, Ford, 200, 79.6, 27, $124,221. 18. (35) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 200, 67.1, 26, $121,043. 19. (32) A J Allmendinger, Toyota, 200, 58.4, 25, $110,643. 20. (10) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 200, 78.2, 24, $114,474. 21. (24) Casey Mears, Ford, 200, 59.4, 24, $107,818. 22. (26) David Gilliland, Ford, 200, 58.5, 22, $96,993. 23. (23) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 200, 57, 21, $112,199. 24. (40) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 200, 54.3, 21, $84,685. 25. (31) David Ragan, Ford, 200, 45.2, 20, $102,557. 26. (22) Mark Martin, Toyota, 200, 68.6, 18, $91,710. 27. (41) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 200, 47.1, 18, $89,010. 28. (17) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 199, 99.8, 17, $129,796. 29. (34) David Stremme, Toyota, 199, 44.8, 15, $80,660. 30. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 199, 54.6, 14, $101,885. 31. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 199, 39.2, 13, $80,435. 32. (33) David Reutimann, Toyota, 198, 38.1, 12, $80,335. 33. (28) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 196, 72.7, 12, $106,605. 34. (39) Ken Schrader, Ford, 195, 33.3, 10, $80,160. 35. (2) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 193, 59.1, 10, $107,340. 36. (42) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 193, 29.9, 0, $79,940. 37. (12) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, engine, 131, 103.7, 8, $97,884. 38. (3) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, accident, 103, 102.5, 7, $93,590. 39. (29) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, accident, 52, 26.5, 5, $118,026. 40. (38) Josh Wise, Ford, vibration, 51, 30.1, 0, $67,090. 41. (43) Mike Bliss, Toyota, vibration, 50, 35.5, 0, $63,090. 42. (30) Michael McDowell, Ford, vibration, 36, 34.4, 3, $59,090. 43. (20) Bobby Labonte, Chevrolet, accident, 5, 29.9, 1, $63,590. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 139.278 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 52 minutes, 19 seconds. Margin of Victory: 2.989 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 38 laps. Lead Changes: 22 among 13 drivers. Lap Leaders: Ku.Busch 1-21; J.Yeley 22; D.Ragan 23; M.McDowell 24; C.Edwards 25; J.Logano 26-42; J.McMurray 43-63; J.Johnson 64-76; D.Earnhardt Jr. 77; C.Mears 78-79; D.Earnhardt Jr. 80-89; K.Kahne 90-103; J.Johnson 104; D.Earnhardt Jr. 105-127; J.Johnson 128-131; G.Biffle 132; T.Kvapil 133-134; J.Logano 135; C.Edwards 136-150; G.Biffle 151-165; J.Logano 166-168; G.Biffle 169-200. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): G.Biffle, 3 times for 48 laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 3 times for 34 laps; J.Logano, 3 times for 21 laps; J.McMurray, 1 time for 21 laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 21 laps; J.Johnson, 3 times for 18 laps; C.Edwards, 2 times for 16 laps; K.Kahne, 1 time for 14 laps; C.Mears, 1 time for 2 laps; T.Kvapil, 1 time for 2 laps; J.Yeley, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Ragan, 1 time for 1 lap; M.McDowell, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points 1. J.Johnson, 538; 2. C.Edwards, 507; 3. C.Bowyer, 489; 4. K.Harvick, 476; 5. M.Kenseth, 456; 6. Ky.Busch, 452; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 447; 8. G.Biffle, 443; 9. Bra. Keselowski, 430; 10. T.Stewart, 417; 11. P.Menard, 415; 12. K.Kahne, 407. NASCAR Driver Rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.

BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHP Rubby De La Rosa to Pawtucket (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Pedro Beato from Pawtucket. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Sent RHP Chris Perez to Lake County (MWL) for a rehab assignment. Agreed to terms with RHPs Cole Sulser and Ben Heller and OF Thomas Pannone on a minor league contract. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Recalled RHP Josh Lueke from Durham (IL). Placed RHP Alex Cobb on the seven-day DL.

MIAMI (104) James 8-22 7-9 25, Miller 0-1 0-0 0, Bosh 7-11 2-2 16, Chalmers 2-10 1-2 7, Wade 10-22 5-6 25, Cole 0-1 0-0 0, Haslem 0-1 0-0 0, Allen 7-10 3-3 21, Battier 2-6 1-1 7, Anthony 0-0 0-0 0, Jones 1-1 0-0 3, Lewis 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-86 19-23 104. SAN ANTONIO (114) Leonard 6-8 2-2 16, Ginobili 8-14 7-8 24, Duncan 7-10 3-4 17, Parker 10-14 6-8 26, Green 8-15 2-2 24, Diaw 0-1 1-2 1, Neal 1-4 0-0 2, Splitter 2-4 0-0 4, Bonner 0-0 0-0 0, Joseph 0-0 0-0 0, De Colo 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-70 21-26 114. Miami 19 33 23 29—104 San Antonio 32 29 26 27—114 3-Point Goals—Miami 11-23 (Allen 4-4, James 2-4, Chalmers 2-6, Battier 2-6, Jones 1-1, Miller 0-1, Cole 0-1), San Antonio 9-22 (Green 6-10, Leonard 2-4, Ginobili 1-4, Parker 0-1, Diaw 0-1, Neal 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Miami 42 (James, Bosh 6), San Antonio 44 (Duncan 12). Assists—Miami 25 (Wade 10), San Antonio 21 (Ginobili 10). Total Fouls—Miami 24, San Antonio 21. A—18,581 (18,797).

Sunday At Merion Golf Club (East Course) Ardmore, Pa. Purse: $8 million Yardage: 6,996; Par: 70 Final a-amateur Justin Rose, $1,440,00071-69-71-70—281 Jason Day,$696,104 70-74-68-71—283 P Mickelson,$696,104 67-72-70-74—283 Jason Dufner,$291,406 74-71-73-67—285 Ernie Els,$291,406 71-72-73-69—285 Billy Horschel,$291,40672-67-72-74—285 H Mahan,$291,406 72-69-69-75—285 Luke Donald,$210,006 68-72-71-75—286 Steve Stricker,$210,00671-69-70-76—286 H Matsyama, $168,530 71-75-74-67—287 N Colsaerts,$168,530 69-72-74-72—287 G Frdz-Cstno,$168,530 71-72-72-72—287 Rickie Fowler,$168,53070-76-67-74—287 C Schwartzel,$144,444 70-71-69-78—288 L Westwood,$132,453 70-77-69-73—289 John Senden,$132,453 70-71-74-74—289 John Huh,$115,591 71-73-75-71—290 B Snedeker,$115,591 74-74-70-72—290 D Lingmerth,$115,591 74-71-71-74—290 a-Michael Kim 73-70-71-76—290 Martin Laird,$86,579 74-73-76-68—291 David Hearn,$86,579 78-69-73-71—291 P Harrington,$86,579 73-71-75-72—291 Matt Goggin,$86,579 68-74-76-73—291 Bo Van Pelt,$86,579 73-71-72-75—291 Ian Poulter,$86,579 71-71-73-76—291 Henrik Stenson,$86,57974-68-73-76—291 Mike Weir,$60,183 72-76-75-69—292 John Parry,$60,183 76-71-72-73—292 Matt Kuchar,$60,183 74-73-72-73—292 M Orm Mdsen,$60,183 74-74-70-74—292 Kevin Chappell,$47,24672-76-74-71—293 Geoff Ogilvy,$47,246 74-70-77-72—293 Webb Simpson,$47,24671-75-75-72—293 K.J. Choi,$47,246 70-76-75-72—293 Tiger Woods,$47,246 73-70-76-74—293 J Donaldson,$47,246 73-73-73-74—293 Edward Loar,$47,246 73-71-73-76—293 Bubba Watson,$47,246 71-76-70-76—293 Paul Lawrie,$47,246 76-71-69-77—293 Carl Pettersson,$37,32472-75-74-73—294 Scott Langley,$37,324 75-70-75-74—294 Rory McIlroy,$37,324 73-70-75-76—294 Jerry Kelly,$37,324 70-73-75-76—294 Steven Alker,$28,961 73-75-75-72—295 Russell Knox,$28,961 69-75-77-74—295 Sergio Garcia,$28,961 73-73-75-74—295 Bio Kim,$28,961 72-75-73-75—295 Adam Scott,$28,961 72-75-73-75—295 a-Cheng-Tsung Pan 72-72-75-76—295 C Hoffman,$28,961 71-73-72-79—295 Paul Casey,$28,961 73-72-71-79—295 Scott Stallings,$23,446 71-76-76-73—296 M Bettencourt,$23,446 72-71-76-77—296 D Johnson,$22,561 71-77-75-74—297 N Thompson,$21,485 72-76-74-76—298 Josh Teater,$21,485 74-74-74-76—298 G Coetzee,$21,485 71-73-77-77—298 Shawn Stefani,$20,11172-73-85-69—299 Martin Kaymer,$20,11176-72-77-74—299 Marcel Siem,$20,111 73-71-77-78—299 a-Kevin Phelan 71-77-78-74—300 Matt Weibring,$19,406 75-73-76-76—300 a-Michael Weaver 74-74-78-75—301 Peter Hedblom,$18,92670-78-79-75—302 D Howell,$18,926 77-71-77-77—302 K Sutherland,$17,965 73-74-84-72—303 John Peterson,$17,965 73-75-78-77—303 Jim Herman,$17,965 76-72-76-79—303 A Presnell,$17,965 73-75-76-79—303 Rob Karlsson,$17,165 74-72-86-73—305 Simon Khan,$16,844 74-74-82-76—306 Kyle Stanley,$16,523 71-74-85-78—308

NBA Finals Glance

Spurs 114, Heat 104

Leaders

PLAYOFFS / Saturday, Scoring G FG Durant, OKC 11 112 Anthony, NYK 12 126 Harden, HOU 6 45 James, MIA 20 181 Curry, GOL 12 102 Paul, LAC 6 49 Lopez, Bro 7 58 Lawson, DEN 6 48 Parker, SAN 18 148 Williams, Bro 7 45 Green, BOS 6 37 George, IND 19 119 Pierce, BOS 6 39 Parsons, HOU 6 42 Iguodala, DEN 6 38 Randolph, MEM 15 99 Duncan, SAN 18 123 Gasol, MEM 15 93 Jack, GOL 12 78 Howard, LAL 4 26 Hibbert, IND 19 120 Smith, ATL 6 39 Conley, MEM 15 83 Horford, ATL 6 41 Boozer, CHI 12 83 Robinson, CHI 12 71 Barnes, GOL 12 72 West, IND 19 115 Thompson, GOL 12 76 Wade, MIA 19 117 Johnson, Bro 7 43 Hill, IND 18 83 Smith, NYK 11 54 Ellis, MIL 4 24 Felton, NYK 12 72 Martin, OKC 11 49 Gasol, LAL 4 25 A. Miller, DEN 6 29 Jackson, OKC 11 57 Teague, ATL 6 27 Butler, CHI 12 50 Jennings, MIL 4 17 Griffin, LAC 6 29 Ibaka, OKC 11 59 Garnett, BOS 6 30 Bosh, MIA 20 98 Leonard, SAN 18 92 Asik, HOU 6 22 Dunleavy, MIL 4 17 Chandler, DEN 6 27 Wallace, Bro 7 31 Terry, BOS 6 24 Rebounds G Off Garnett, BOS 6 9 Evans, Bro 7 16 Gasol, LAL 4 7 Asik, HOU 6 21 Bogut, GOL 12 39 Howard, LAL 4 10 Randolph, MEM 15 59 Hibbert, IND 19 90 Duncan, SAN 18 42 Noah, CHI 12 52 Boozer, CHI 12 35 Durant, OKC 11 7 Horford, ATL 6 12 Leonard, SAN 18 43 Gasol, MEM 15 25 Ibaka, OKC 11 39 Sanders, MIL 4 11 James, MIA 20 27 Iguodala, DEN 6 9 West, IND 19 41 Stephenson, IND 19 14 Smith, ATL 6 10 Lopez, Bro 7 29 George, IND 19 16 Chandler, NYK 12 40 Ilyasova, MIL 4 10 Bosh, MIA 20 27 Harden, HOU 6 5 Bass, BOS 6 8 Anthony, NYK 12 11

FT 93 77 53 112 35 33 39 28 71 37 38 93 26 9 18 63 64 72 43 16 83 19 71 18 31 31 30 72 5 52 8 63 31 6 16 39 6 21 26 23 45 13 21 19 16 42 24 30 8 9 11 9 Def 73 70 39 46 92 33 91 98 131 63 80 92 41 112 102 53 22 138 39 103 130 35 23 125 48 19 116 35 32 68

Pts 339 346 158 502 281 137 156 128 377 144 122 365 115 109 108 261 310 258 206 68 323 102 255 100 197 195 193 302 182 287 104 263 157 57 169 154 56 84 153 80 160 53 79 141 76 253 227 74 49 72 84 72 Tot 82 86 46 67 131 43 150 188 173 115 115 99 53 155 127 92 33 165 48 144 144 45 52 141 88 29 143 40 40 79

WNBA Eastern Conference W 6 4 4 4 2 1

L 1 1 2 2 5 5

Avg 30.8 28.8 26.3 25.1 23.4 22.8 22.3 21.3 20.9 20.6 20.3 19.2 19.2 18.2 18.0 17.4 17.2 17.2 17.2 17.0 17.0 17.0 17.0 16.7 16.4 16.3 16.1 15.9 15.2 15.1 14.9 14.6 14.3 14.3 14.1 14.0 14.0 14.0 13.9 13.3 13.3 13.3 13.2 12.8 12.7 12.7 12.6 12.3 12.3 12.0 12.0 12.0 Avg 13.7 12.3 11.5 11.2 10.9 10.8 10.0 9.9 9.6 9.6 9.6 9.0 8.8 8.6 8.5 8.4 8.3 8.3 8.0 7.6 7.6 7.5 7.4 7.4 7.3 7.3 7.2 6.7 6.7 6.6

Pct .857 .800 .667 .667 .286 .167

GB — 1 11/2 11/2 4 41/2

W L Pct Minnesota 4 1 .800 Los Angeles 3 2 .600 Phoenix 2 3 .400 Seattle 2 3 .400 San Antonio 2 4 .333 Tulsa 1 6 .143 Sunday’s Games Washington 64, Indiana 60 Atlanta 88, Chicago 74 Phoenix 108, Tulsa 103, OT Seattle 78, Connecticut 66 Saturday’s Games Los Angeles 84, San Antonio 48 Monday’s Games No games scheduled. Tuesday’s Games Washington at Seattle, 8 p.m.

GB — 1 2 2 21/2 4

Atlanta Washington Chicago New York Connecticut Indiana

Western Conference

PGA TOuR u.S. Open

NHL Stanley Cup Finals

Leaders G 9 7 5 4 3 9 7 7 6 8 6 6 4

A PTS 14 23 11 18 11 16 12 16 13 16 6 15 8 15 8 15 9 15 5 13 7 13 7 13 9 13 GP 18 19 19 14 15 18 19 18 18 19 13 10 18 18 18 14 11 15 18 11 19 10 14 14 15 7 11 15 18 10 11 12 14 GP 18 15 15 18 18 12 18 19 18 18 15 15 14 19 19 15 11 11 19 14 18 18 10 18 10 18 14 10 11 14 10 18 19 12 GP 11 10 14 19 11 15 11 18 7 18 14 12 18 15 15 13 GP 15 12 10 5 19 7 18 10 6 18 6 10

G 9 9 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A 14 13 12 11 11 10 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 PP 5 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 SH 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Goalie Leaders

PLAYOFFS / Saturday, Goals Against GPI Kevin Poulin, NYI 2 Corey Crawford, CHI 19 Tuukka Rask, BOS 18 Jonathan Quick, LA 18 Antti Niemi, SJ 11 Brian Elliott, STL 6 Tomas Vokoun, PIT 11 Henrik Lundqvist, NYR12 Braden Holtby, WSH 7 Jimmy Howard, DET 14 Jonas Hiller, ANA 7 Roberto Luongo, VAN 3 James Reimer, TOR 7 Josh Harding, MIN 5 Craig Anderson, OTT 10 Carey Price, MTL 4 Darcy Kuemper, MIN 2 Marc-Andre Fleury, PIT5 Evgeni Nabokov, NYI 6 Cory Schneider, VAN 2

MINS 52 1256 1217 1099 673 378 685 756 433 859 439 140 438 245 578 239 73 290 324 117

GA 1 36 35 34 21 12 23 27 16 35 18 6 21 12 29 13 4 17 24 9

AVG 1.15 1.72 1.73 1.86 1.87 1.90 2.01 2.14 2.22 2.44 2.46 2.57 2.88 2.94 3.01 3.26 3.29 3.52 4.44 4.62

EuROPEAN TOuR Najeti Hotels et Golfs Open

Sunday At Saint-Omer Golf Club Saint-Omer, France Purse: $663,200 Yardage 6,835; Par: 71 Final Thornton won on the first playoff hole Simon Thornton, Irl 74-70-65-70—279 Tjaart Van der Walt, SAf 67-71-71-70—279 Seve Benson, Eng 75-65-70-70—280 Robert Dinwiddie, Eng 72-66-74-70—282 Pelle Edberg, Swe 74-69-69-71—283 Chris Lloyd, Eng 73-68-70-72—283 Jeppe Huldahl, Den 73-67-73-71—284 Agustin Domingo, Esp 74-71-68-71—284 Victor Riu, Fra 68-71-72-73—284 Gary Orr, Sco 73-71-74-67—285 Daniel Gaunt, Aus 70-70-75-70—285 Brooks Koepka, USA 75-70-68-72—285 Jamie Elson, Eng 75-69-68-73—285 Max Glauert, Ger 77-65-69-74—285 Sihwan Kim, Kor 73-71-73-69—286 Daniel Vancsik, Arg 73-67-75-71—286 Scott Henry, Sco 72-69-74-71—286 Francois Calmels, Fra 73-71-71-71—286 Mikael Lundberg, Swe 73-71-71-71—286 Gareth Shaw, NIr 76-69-70-71—286 Baptiste Chapellan, Fra 72-68-69-77—286 Also Daniel Im, USA 73-72-69-77—291

WEB.COM TOuR Air Capital Classic

Sunday At Crestview Country Club Wichita, Kan. Purse: $650,000 Yardage: 6,959; Par: 71 Final Scott Parel, $117,000 69-66-67-64—266 Alex Aragon, $70,200 72-67-65-65—269 Alex Prugh, $44,200 63-71-70-67—271 C Benedetti, $26,867 71-66-67-68—272 F Corpening, $26,867 71-68-65-68—272 S Wheatcroft, $26,867 67-68-68-69—272 Jace Long, $19,581 71-63-72-67—273 Aron Price, $19,581 74-67-64-68—273 Dustin Garza, $19,581 66-71-68-68—273 CThompson, $19,581 69-71-64-69—273 Alex Rocha, $14,300 68-73-68-65—274 R Oppenheim, $14,300 71-69-69-65—274 B La’Cassie, $14,300 68-70-69-67—274 Kevin Tway, $14,300 70-65-70-69—274 Danny Lee, $9,750 69-66-73-67—275 R S. Johnson, $9,750 68-71-70-66—275 Billy Hurley III, $9,750 70-69-69-67—275 Matt Hill, $9,750 68-72-67-68—275 Nathan Tyler, $9,750 67-65-74-69—275 Peter Malnati, $9,750 68-67-70-70—275 Paul Claxton, $9,750 70-71-63-71—275 Woody Austin, $6,500 74-66-68-68—276 Aaron Watkins, $6,500 71-69-70-66—276 Nathan Green, $6,500 68-73-66-69—276 Bhavik Patel, $6,500 68-67-69-72—276 Gavin Coles, $5,330 69-69-69-70—277 Aaron Goldberg, $5,33067-70-70-70—277 Brad Elder, $4,274 71-66-71-70—278 Sung Kang, $4,274 68-68-72-70—278 Si Woo Kim, $4,274 71-66-72-69—278 Alex Cejka, $4,274 67-71-72-68—278 Adam Crawford, $4,27467-71-72-68—278 Wes Short, Jr., $4,274 72-67-67-72—278 Kelly Kraft, $4,274 68-73-70-67—278 Scott Sterling, $4,274 70-70-71-67—278 Reid Edstrom, $3,380 72-69-68-70—279 Andrew Loupe, $3,380 73-67-68-71—279 Will Wilcox, $3,380 69-68-73-69—279 C Carranza, $3,380 71-70-70-68—279 Daniel Chopra, $3,380 71-69-73-66—279

ATP-WTA TOuR Topshelf Open

ATP WORLD TOuR Gerry Weber Open

Sunday At Gerry Weber Stadion Halle, Germany Purse: $1.03 million (WT250) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, def. Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-4. Doubles Championship Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, and Scott Lipsky (3), United States, def. Daniele Bracciali, Italy, and Jonathan Erlich, Israel, 6-2, 7-6 (3).

AEGON Championships

Sunday At The Queen’s Club London Purse: $1.03 million (WT250) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship Andy Murray (1), Britain, def. Marin Cilic (5), Croatia, 5-7, 7-5, 6-3. Doubles Championship Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (4), Brazil, 4-6, 7-5, 10-3.

WTA TOuR AEGON Classic

Sunday At Edgbaston Priory Club Birmingham, England Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Championship Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, def. Donna Vekic, Croatia, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Doubles Quarterfinals Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, and Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, def. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, and Hsieh Su-wei (4), Taiwan, walkover. Semifinals Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Kimiko DateKrumm, Japan, and Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, 7-5, 4-6, 10-6. Championship Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua (3), Australia, def. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, 7-5, 6-4.

SOCCER socceR

NORTH AMERICA Major League Soccer

East W L T Pts GF GA Montreal 8 3 2 26 22 17 New York 7 5 4 25 23 19 Philadelphia 6 5 4 22 22 24 Houston 6 4 4 22 19 14 Kansas City 6 5 4 22 18 13 New England 5 5 5 20 18 13 Columbus 5 5 5 20 18 16 Chicago 3 7 3 12 11 19 Toronto 2 7 5 11 14 20 D.C. United 1 11 3 6 7 26 West W L T Pts GF GA Dallas 8 3 4 28 23 18 Salt Lake 8 5 3 27 24 16 Portland 6 1 8 26 25 16 Seattle 6 4 3 21 19 15 Los Angeles 6 6 2 20 22 18 Colorado 5 5 5 20 16 14 Vancouver 5 5 4 19 22 23 San Jose 4 6 6 18 15 24 Chivas USA 3 8 2 11 13 26 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. Saturday’s Games Portland 1, Dallas 0 Toronto 2, D.C. United 1 Columbus 2, Montreal 0 San Jose 2, Colorado 1 Vancouver 4, New England 3 Wednesday, June 19 Houston at Montreal, 6 p.m. Colorado at Chicago, 6:30 p.m. Chivas USA at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Portland at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.

CYCLING cyclING

uCI WORLDTOuR Tour de Suisse

Sunday At Flumserberg, Switzerland Ninth (Final) Stage A 16.6-mile individual time trial from Bad Ragaz to Flumserberg 1. Rui Costa, Portugal, Movistar, 51 minutes, 56 seconds. 2. Tanel Kangert, Estonia, Astana, 21 seconds behind. 3. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Blanco Pro Cycling, :29. 4. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La Mondiale, :42. 5. Andrey Amador, Costa Rica, Movistar, :43. 6. Thibaut Pinot, France, Francaise des Jeux, :55. 7. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Team Saxo-Tinkoff, 1:00. 8. Simon Spilak, Slovenia, Katusha, 1:05. 9. Janez Brajkovic, Slovenia, Astana, 1:06. 10. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, 1:19. Final Overall Standings 1. Rui Costa, Portugal, Movistar, 31:08:11. 2. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Blanco Pro Cycling, 1:02. 3. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Team Saxo-Tinkoff, 1:10. 4. Thibaut Pinot, France, Francaise des Jeux, 1:26. 5. Mathias Frank, Switzerland, BMC Racing, 1:43.

NASCAR SPRINT CuP Quicken Loans 400

BOXING BoxING

Fight Schedule

June 21 At Moscow, Krzysztof Wlodarczyk vs. Rakhim Chakhkiev, 12, for Wlodarczyk’s WBC cruiserweight title. At the Minneapolis Convention Center (ESPN2) Rances Barthelemy vs. Fahsai Sakkreerin, Thailand, 12, IBF super featherweight title eliminator; Caleb Truax vs. Don George, 10, middleweights. June 22 At Mendoza, Argentina, Juan Carlos Reveco vs. Ulises Lara, 12, for Reveco’s WBA World flyweight title. At Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. (SHO), Paul Malignaggi vs. Adrien Broner, 12, for Malignaggi’s WBA World welterweight title; Johnathon Banks vs. Seth Mitchell, 12, for Banks NABO and WBC international heavyweight titles; Sakio Bika vs. Marco Antonio Periban, 12, for the vacant WBC super middleweight title.

BASEBALL American League

National League

CINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHP Pedro Villarreal to Louisville (IL). Reinstated RHP Johnny Cueto from the 15-day DL. COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned RHP Chris Volstad to Colorado Springs (PCL). Recalled RHP Logan Kensing from Colorado Springs. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Claimed C John Baker off waivers from San Diego and optioned him to Albuquerque (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with OF Marcus Davis, SS Dustin Peterson and RHP Travis Remillard on minor league contracts. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Optioned LHP Xavier Cedeno to Syracuse (IL). Reinstated RHP Stephen Strasburg from the 15-day DL.

American Association

ST. PAUL SAINTS — Released RHP Greg Jensen. WICHITA WINGNUTS — Released OF Tim Rotola.

Atlantic League

LONG ISLAND DUCKS — Placed INF Dan Lyons on the inactive list. Reinstated P Matt Way to the active list.

Can-Am League

NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Signed RHP Brandon Moore. ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Released LHP Kilby Pena.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association

SACRAMENTO KINGS — Named Pete D’Allesandro general manager.

FOOTBALL Canadian Football League

EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Released WRs Ismael Bamba and Dobson Collins, OL Johnny Culbreath, DBs Carry Harris and Otis Merrill, WR Owen Spencer and DL Jorge Wright.

FOOTBALL FootBall

ARENA LEAGuE National Conference

Central Chicago San Antonio Iowa West Arizona Spokane San Jose Utah

W 7 6 6 W 12 9 8 5

L 6 6 7 L 1 4 4 7

T 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0

Pct .538 .500 .462 Pct .923 .692 .667 .417

PF PA 726 701 516 588 636 630 PF PA 872 588 855 693 656 626 615 632

American Conference

South W L T Pct PF PA Jacksonville 8 5 0 .615 686 632 Tampa Bay 7 6 0 .538 738 699 Orlando 4 8 0 .333 616 703 New Orleans 3 9 0 .250 525 702 East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 7 5 0 .583 712 602 Pittsburgh 3 9 0 .250 468 658 Cleveland 2 10 0 .167 535 702 Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 59, Pittsburgh 21 Orlando 62, Cleveland 55 San Antonio 61, Chicago 54 New Orleans 54, Tampa Bay 51 Iowa 73, San Jose 68 Arizona 59, Spokane 42 Utah 62, Jacksonville 55 Friday, June 21 Utah at Spokane, 8 p.m. Saturday, June 22 Iowa at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland at Jacksonville, 5 p.m. Pittsburgh at Orlando, 5 p.m. Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. San Antonio at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Arizona at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.

THISDate DATE oNON tHIs June 17

1954 — Rocky Marciano scores a 15-round unanimous decision over Ezzard Charles at New York to retain the world heavyweight title. 1961 — Gene Littler shoots a 68 in the final round to edge Doug Sanders and Bob Goalby in the U.S. Open. 1962 — Jack Nicklaus beats Arnold Palmer by three strokes in a playoff to win the U.S. Open. 1973 — John Miller shoots a 63 in the final round to win the U.S. Open over John Schlee. 1976 — The 18-team NBA absorbs four of the six remaining ABA teams: the New York Nets, Indiana Pacers, San Antonio Spurs and Denver Nuggets. 1979 — Hale Irwin wins the U.S. Open over Gary Player and Jerry Pate. 1990 — Fifty-year-old Harry Gant becomes the oldest driver to win a NASCAR race as he posts a 2.4-second victory over Rusty Wallace in the Miller 500 at Pocono International Raceway. 1991 — Payne Stewart escapes with a two-stroke victory over Scott Simpson in the highest-scoring U.S. Open playoff in 64 years. 1995 — Claude Lemieux snaps a tie at 3:17 of the third period as the New Jersey Devils open the Stanley Cup finals with a 2-1 victory over the Detroit Red Wings. The victory, the ninth on the road, breaks the NHL playoff record for road wins. 2001 — Retief Goosen misses a 2-foot putt on the 18th green, tying him with Mark Brooks and setting up a playoff for the U.S. Open. 2006 — Rookie David Gilliland becomes the first non-Nextel Cup driver to win a Busch Series race this season, passing J.J. Yeley with 10 laps to go and holding on to take the Meijer 300 at Kentucky Speedway. 2007 — Angel Cabrera holds off Tiger Woods and Jim Furyk by a stroke to capture the U.S. Open. Cabrera shoots a 1-underpar 69 in the final round at brutal Oakmont (Pa.) Country Club. 2007 — Kate Ziegler breaks swimming’s oldest world record, shattering the 1,500meter freestyle mark by 9 1/2 seconds at the TYR Meet of Champions Mission Viejo, Calif. Ziegler wins the 30-lap race in 15:42.54, easily erasing Janet Evans’ 1988 mark of 15:52.10 set in Orlando, Fla. At the time, Evans was the first woman to break 16 minutes. 2008 — The Boston Celtics win their 17th NBA title with a stunning 131-92 blowout over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 6.


SPORTS

Roses: Double bogeys hurt Lefty’s chance Continued from Page B-1 for eagle, another moment that made it seem like surely was his time. The cheer could be heard across the road, through the trees, loud enough that Rose knew exactly what had happened. But on the easiest hole at Merion, Mickelson drilled a wedge over the green on the par-3 13th and made bogey. What hurt Mickelson even more was a wedge from about 121 yards on the 15th hole. It should have given him a good look at birdie, but it came up so short that Mickelson’s best chance was to use one of his five wedges to chip from the front of the green. He hit that one too far, 25 feet by the hole, and the bogey wound up costing him a chance at the major he covets. Mickelson wound up with a bogey on the 18th for a 74 and tied for second with Jason Day, who closed with a 71. “Heartbreak,” Mickelson said. “This is tough to swallow after coming so close. This was my best chance of all of them. I had a golf course I really liked. I felt this was as good an opportunity as you could ask for. It really hurts.” Day appeared to salvage his round by chipping in for bogey on the 11th hole, and he was still in the picture when he made a 12-foot par putt on the 17th to stay one shot behind. But he put his approach into the bunker left of the 18th green, blasted out to about 7 feet and missed the putt. The back nine was a four-way battle that included Hunter Mahan, who played in the last group with Mickelson. He was one shot out of the lead until he threeputted the 15th hole for a double bogey, and then closed with back-to-back bogeys when his hopes were gone. Mahan had a 75 and tied for fourth with Billy Horschel (74), Ernie Els (69) and Jason Dufner, who had a 67 despite making triple bogey on the 15th hole. Rose finished at 1-over 281, eight shots

championships since. They have been the perfect partnership, keeping the Spurs in the hunt virtually every year while teams like the Lakers, Mavericks and Suns have all risen and fallen in the Western Conference during that time. They remained unbeaten in Game 5s, including two previous victories when the series was tied at 2-2. Of the 27 times the finals have been tied at 2-2, the Game 5 winner has won 20 of them. Miami was the most recent loser, falling to Dallas in Game 5 in 2011 before being eliminated at home the next game. San Antonio shot 42 of 70, right at 60 percent. The last team to make 60 percent of its shots in the finals was Orlando, which hit 62.5 in Game 3 against the Lakers in 2009, according to STATS. “They just absolutely outplayed us,” said Erik Spoelstra, Heat head coach. “At times they were just picking one guy out at a time and going at us mano-a-mano.

Emanuel (11-4) was nothing like he was two years ago at the CWS when he threw a four-hit shutout against Texas as a freshman. He failed to make it out of the third inning for the second straight start, and the Tar Heels tied a CWS record by using eight pitchers. The junior left-hander was pulled after he allowed two doubles and two singles to the final five batters he faced. The Houston Astros’ third-round pick now has an 11.40 ERA in five NCAA Tournament appearances, having given up 19 runs in 15 innings. Emanuel had pitched at least into the seventh inning in 14 of his first 15 starts,

have been huge.” Jagr wasn’t the only one doing the senior set proud. Marian Hossa and Patrick Sharp, two of Chicago’s more veteran players, led the Blackhawks with seven shots each, and Sharp had Chicago’s only goal.

What if? Hossa’s disallowed goal isn’t the reason the Blackhawks lost Game 2, but it sure is fun to speculate. Shortly after Sharp gave Chicago the lead in the first period, Hossa appeared to double it. But the goal was waved off, with officials saying play should have been stopped because the referee had lost sight of the puck.

SCOREBOARD Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local.

COLLEGE BASEBALL 1 p.m. on ESPN2 — World Series, Game 5: Teams to be determined in Omaha, Neb. 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — World Series, Game 6: Teams to be determined in Omaha, Neb. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis NHL 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Stanley Cup Finals, Game 3: Chicago at Boston SOCCER 12:45 p.m. on ESPN — Confederations Cup, Group B: Tahiti vs. Nigeria in Belo Horizonte, Brazil

SANTA FE FUEGO SCHEDULE Phil Mickelson, who carded a 4 over in the fourth round, blasts out of a bunker on the second hole of Merion Golf Club at the U.S. Open on Sunday afternoon in Ardmore, Pa. MATT SMITH/THE EXPRESS-TIMES

higher than David Graham’s winning score in 1981 when the U.S. Open was last held at Merion. The shortest course for a major championship in nearly a decade held up just fine. It was the third time in the last four years that no one broke par in the toughest test of golf. The last Englishman to win the U.S. Open was Tony Jacklin at Hazeltine in 1970, though Rose added to recent dominance of the Union Jack at the U.S. Open as the third winner in four years. The others were Graeme McDowell (2010) and Rory McIlroy (2011) of Northern Ireland. Walking off the 18th green, he looked through the patchy clouds and point to the sky, a nod to his late father, Ken, who died of leukemia in September 2002.

“I couldn’t help but look up at the heavens and think my old man Ken had something to do with it,” Rose said. The U.S. Open takes him to another level and moves him to No. 3 in the world. “Just for the last few years has been known as one of the best ball-strikers in the game. He showed that today,” said Luke Donald, who played alongside him. “To win a U.S. Open, you have to have the ultimate control of your golf ball. He did that. He hit some really clutch iron shots down the stretch.” Tiger Woods hit out-of-bounds on his second hole and made triple bogey, and closed with a 74 to finish at 13-over 293, his worst score as a pro in the U.S. Open, and matching his worst score in any major.

That’s got to change.” Ray Allen scored 21 points on the night for the Heat as Green shattered his finals 3-point record. The Heat were within one with 3:05 left in the third before Green hit Erik yet another 3-pointer Spoelstra and Ginobili followed with the stretch that turned the game into the fourth straight blowout of the finals. The crafty lefty plays with a flair developed on the courts of Argentina and perfected in Europe before coming to the NBA. He sees angles other players can’t and takes risks few others would, but his style has been the perfect fit alongside Duncan and Parker. He converted a three-point play, tossed in a floater with his left hand as he drifted right, and found Tiago Splitter under the hoop with a pass to make it 85-74. He flipped in another runner with

2.9 seconds to go, sending the Spurs to the fourth with an 87-75 lead as fans chanted “Manu! Manu!” during the break between the third and fourth quarters. Ginobili had been averaging just 7.5 points on 34.5 percent shooting in the series, making only three of his 16 3-point attempts. Popovich made the finals’ second lineup change in two games, after the Heat inserted shooter Mike Miller to start Game 4. Ginobili didn’t make a start this season and certainly hadn’t been playing like someone who belonged with the first five. But in the Spurs’ biggest game of the season, they remained confident he would break out, and they were right. It was the first time he scored 24 or more points since having 34 on June 4, 2012, against Oklahoma City, according to STATS. Green has 25 3s in the series. Allen made 22 3-pointers in six games in 2008 finals for Boston.

and he has logged more career innings (340) than any junior in program history. Fox has been criticized in some quarters for his handling of Emanuel in the NCAA Tournament. He made a 51-pitch relief appearance in regionals two days after throwing 124 pitches in a start. Fox said Emanuel has struggled recently with his off-speed pitches, which he typically can go to on any count. “Hopefully he’s going to get another opportunity out here at some point,” Fox said. “We would not be here without him. There’s no question about that.” N.C. State and the Tar Heels have now split four games this season and could meet again before the week is over.

UCLA 2, LSU 1 In Omaha, Neb., Adam Plutko and two relievers limited the Tigers to five hits, and the Bruins turned both of LSU’s errors into runs in a tense victory. The Bruins (45-17) will play North Carolina State on Tuesday. The fourth-seeded Tigers (57-10) will meet North Carolina in an elimination game. LSU scored its only run on Mason Katz’s fourth-inning homer. The Tigers had defensive breakdowns that allowed the Bruins to tie it in the sixth and take the lead in the eighth. Plutko (9-3) allowed four hits for the win. David Berg earned his 22nd save. Aaron Nola (12-1) gave up five singles in eight innings, and both runs against him were unearned.

Learned: Officials waved off Hossa’s goal Continued from Page B-1

Northern New Mexico

Today on TV

Knocks: N.C. State could play UNC again Continued from Page B-1

B-3

Local results and schedules

Finals: San Antonio shot 60% from field Continued from Page B-1

Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Intermission came, the Bruins woke up, the Blackhawks dozed off and the rest is history. “It would have been nice to get it, but those guys make the call they see on the ice,” Sharp said. “As a team, we’ve Marian been in situations where Hossa we’ve had some bad bounces and were forced to regroup quickly, so it didn’t affect us too much.” Had Chicago gotten that goal, however, who knows if Boston could have overcome a two-goal deficit?

Hello again, Chris Kelly Kelly’s tying goal in the second period

was his first in the postseason since April 12, 2012, against Washington. Big deal, you might say, that was only last year. But the drought had dragged on for 23 games — or nearly the equivalent of the home schedule in this lockoutshortened season. “Just because he doesn’t see himself as a goal-scorer doesn’t mean he has to continue to have a goose egg on his stats,” said Claude Julien, Boston head coach. “Sometimes that stuff, whether you like it or not, will weigh on you. When you get a night like that, it certainly takes a lot of weight off your shoulders and creates some positive thinking and some positive energy moving forward.” The other positive is Boston’s record when Kelly scores in the postseason: a sparkling 10-1, including Saturday night’s victory.

OVERALL RECORD: 12-17 Today: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. June 18: Alpine, 6 p.m. June 19: Alpine, 6 p.m. June 20: White Sands, 6 p.m. June 21: White Sands, 6 p.m. June 22: White Sands, 6 p.m. June 23: White Sands, 6 p.m. June 24: Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 25: Trinidad 6 p.m. June 26: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. June 27: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. June 28: at Raton, 7 p.m. June 29: at Raton, 6 p.m. June 30: Raton, 6 p.m. July 1: Raton, 6 p.m. July 2: at Taos, noon July 3: Taos, 6 p.m. July 4: Taos, 6 p.m. July 5: Taos, 6 p.m. July 6: All-Star Game, 7 p.m.

July 7: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 8: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 9: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 10: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 11: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. July 12: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. July 13: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. July 14: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. July 15: at Raton, 7 p.m. July 16: at Raton, 7 p.m. July 17: Raton, 6 p.m. July 18: Raton, 6 p.m. July 19: Taos, 6 p.m. July 20: Taos, 6 p.m. July 21: at Taos, noon July 22: Taos, 6 p.m. July 23: at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. July 24: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 25: at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. July 26: Las Vegas, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketball u Santa Fe High’s boys program will hold open gym from 5-7 p.m. in Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium through July 2. It is open for all incoming Santa Fe High students from grades 9-12. u St. Michael’s High School will host boys and girls camps this summer in Perez-Shelley Memorial Gymnasium. The camp runs July 15-18. The cost is $75 for players in grades 3-9, and $40 for players in grades 1-2. Registration forms are available at www. stmichaelssf.org at the athletics page, or call 983-7353. u Open gym for the Española Valley girls’ program is Mondays and Wednesdays from 5-7 p.m. at Edward Medina Gymnasium. For more information, call assistant coach Kevin Hauck at 505753-2854 or 505-470-6795. u The Capital boys program will hold its inaugural alumni game in Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gym on June 29. The game pits former Jaguars against the current varsity team. The game will begin at 6:30pm. Cost is $5 for adults and $3 for students. Current Capital students will be granted free admission with a student ID. All proceeds will go to the program. For more information, call coach Jonathan Salazar at 470-0983.

Football u The Santa Fe Young American Football League is holding registration for the upcoming season from 9 a.m. to noon on June 29. All registration sessions will be at the YAFL headquarters. Fee is $105. For more information, call 820-0775. u Santa Fe Indian School is looking for volunteer coaches for the upcoming season. For more information, call coach Jonathan Toya at 699-9870.

Running u The Las Vegas Fiesta Memorial Run is scheduled for July 7, with runs of 5 and 10 kilometers as well as a 5K walk. There will be children’s runs of 1 and a 1/2 mile. Entry fee is $20 for adults before July 1 and $30 afterward. Children’s fee is $5 before July 1 and $10 afterward. For more information, call Joe Whiteman at 454-8221 or go to www.lvfiestarun.com.

Soccer u The 18th annual Mighty Micks Camp is July 22-26 from 9 a.m. to noon at St. Michael’s High School. The camp is open to children ages 5 to 15. Cost is $100, and includes a ball and T-shirt. For more information, call Ed Velie at 466-1633 or email evelie@stmikessf.org for a registration form.

Volleyball u The Santa Fe High Youth camp is June 24-27 in Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium. The camp is open for students form kindergarten through the eighth grade. The 8 a.m.-noon session is open to kids from fourth to eighth grade while those from kindergarten through the third grade will attend a session from 1-4 p.m. There is no fee, but donations are accepted. For more information, call Sam Estrada at 690-6925.

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

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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

NASCAR: Biffle earns Michigan win BROOKLYN, Mich. — Greg Biffle gave Ford a milestone victory — right down the road from company headquarters. Biffle raced to his second straight Sprint Cup win at Michigan International Speedway, easily holding off Kevin Harvick after points leader Jimmie Johnson smacked the wall in the final laps Sunday. It was the 1,000th win for Ford Motor Company across NASCAR’s three national series — Cup, Nationwide and Truck. “What a great moment this is,” said Jamie Allison, director of Ford Racing. “We couldn’t be prouder to have this moment

come here today at Michigan in front of so many of our Ford friends. What a great race and a great day for Ford.” It was Biffle’s first win since he overtook Johnson to win at MIS in August. Johnson’s engine faltered with six laps left in that race. This time, he was about a second behind Biffle with three laps to go — but a tire give way, and he dropped all the way to 28th. Harvick was second, 3 seconds behind Biffle. Martin Truex Jr. was next, followed by Kyle Busch and Tony Stewart. The Associated Press


B-4

BASEBALL

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Orioles get past Boston The Associated Press

BALTIMORE — Chris Davis hit his MLB-leading 23rd home run, Nick Markakis had four hits and Orioles 6 scored three runs, and Red Sox 3 the Orioles beat Jon Lester and the Red Sox 6-3 on Sunday. Manny Machado extended his hitting streak to a careerhigh 14 games and drove in a run for the Orioles. Closer Jim Johnson earned his 25th save. YANKEES 6, ANGELS 5 In Anaheim, Calif., Mariano Rivera struck out Albert Pujols with the bases loaded to end the Angels’ five-run rally in the ninth inning, and New York snapped their five-game losing streak. CC Sabathia (7-5) struck out six and walked three, but tired in the ninth, leaving with two runners on. Lyle Overbay and Jayson Nix also drove in runs during a fiverun third inning for the Yankees. TIGERS 5, TWINS 2 In Minneapolis, Doug Fister held Minnesota hitless until the sixth inning and Torii Hunter connected for his 300th career home run, leading Detroit past the Twins. Fister (6-4) didn’t allow a baserunner until walking Ryan Doumit with two outs in the fourth inning, then lost his nohit bid when Brian Dozier led off the sixth with a homer. Fister allowed two runs and two hits in 7⅔ innings. He struck out seven, walked two and won for the first time in his last six starts. Joaquin Benoit pitched the final 1⅓ innings, earning his fourth save. ROYALS 5, RAYS 3 In St. Petersburg, Fla., Wade Davis stopped his five-game winless streak, Jeff Francoeur homered, and Kansas City beat Tampa Bay. Davis (4-5) gave up two runs and five hits in six innings for his first win since he beat the Los Angeles Angels on May 15. It was the right-hander’s first game against the Rays, who traded him to the Royals during the offseason. ASTROS 5, WHITE SOX 4 In Houston, Jason Castro homered for the second straight game and Matt Dominguez hit a three-run double to help the Astros top Chicago for their fourth straight win. Houston starter Dallas Keuchel (4-3) yielded four hits and two runs in 6⅓ innings for the win. BLUE JAYS 7, RANGERS 2 In Arlington, Texas, ChienMing Wang won for the first time in more than a year, Colby Rasmus homered for a third straight game, and Toronto completed a four-game sweep by beating the Rangers for its fifth straight victory. The Rangers lost their sixth in a row and fell to 1-6 on a season-high, 11-game homestand. Texas has dropped six straight for the first time since April 15-21, 2010. Wang (1-0) allowed seven hits in seven shutout innings to win for the first time since last June 12 with Washington. ATHLETICS 10, MARINERS 2 In Oakland, Calif., Bartolo Colon worked seven strong innings to win his sixth straight decision, Josh Reddick homered and matched a career high with four hits, and the A’s avoided a sweep. Sean Smith and Brandon Moss each homered and drove in two runs for the Athletics, who moved three games ahead of Texas in the AL West. Josh Donaldson also went deep, and Yoenis Cespedes, Coco Crisp and John Jaso drove in runs for Oakland. INTERLEAGUE INDIANS 2, NATIONALS 0 In Cleveland, Corey Kluber pitched eight shutout innings, and the Indians spoiled Stephen Strasburg’s return with a win over Washington. Kluber (5-4) gave up seven hits, struck out eight and didn’t walk a batter. Strasburg (3-6), activated from the DL, held the Indians to one run and one hit in five innings. Making his first start since May 31, the right-hander struck out four, walked four and threw 82 pitches.

American League

East W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Boston 42 29 .592 — — 5-5 L-1 21-14 Baltimore 40 30 .571 11/2 — 6-4 W-1 20-15 New York 38 31 .551 3 — 4-6 W-1 19-13 Tampa Bay 36 33 .522 5 2 4-6 L-1 21-16 Toronto 32 36 .471 81/2 51/2 8-2 W-5 16-17 Central W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Detroit 38 29 .567 — — 7-3 W-1 22-10 Cleveland 34 34 .500 41/2 31/2 4-6 W-1 20-13 Kansas City 33 34 .493 5 4 8-2 W-1 17-16 Minnesota 30 36 .455 71/2 61/2 4-6 L-1 16-17 Chicago 28 38 .424 91/2 81/2 4-6 L-4 16-14 West W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Oakland 42 29 .592 — — 6-4 W-1 22-12 Texas 38 31 .551 3 — 2-8 L-6 19-14 Seattle 31 39 .443 101/2 71/2 5-5 L-1 18-17 Los Angeles 30 39 .435 11 8 4-6 L-1 17-19 Houston 26 44 .371 151/2 121/2 4-6 W-4 13-23 Saturday’s Games Sunday’s Games Boston 5, Baltimore 4 Cleveland 2, Washington 0 Toronto 6, Texas 1 Baltimore 6, Boston 3 Tampa Bay 5, Kansas City 3 Kansas City 5, Tampa Bay 3 Houston 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Houston 5, Chicago White Sox 4 Minnesota 6, Detroit 3 Detroit 5, Minnesota 2 L.A. Angels 6, N.Y. Yankees 2 Toronto 7, Texas 2 Seattle 4, Oakland 0 N.Y. Yankees 6, L.A. Angels 5 Washington 7, Cleveland 6 Oakland 10, Seattle 2 Monday’s Games Kansas City (Shields 2-6) at Cleveland (Carrasco 0-2), 5:05 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-4) at Toronto (Jo.Johnson 0-2), 5:07 p.m. Baltimore (Hammel 7-4) at Detroit (Scherzer 9-0), 5:08 p.m. Oakland (Straily 4-2) at Texas (Tepesch 3-6), 6:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 3-2) at Houston (B.Norris 5-6), 6:10 p.m. Seattle (Harang 3-6) at L.A. Angels (Vargas 5-4), 8:05 p.m. East W L Atlanta 41 28 Washington 34 34 Philadelphia 33 37 New York 25 39 Miami 21 47 Central W L St. Louis 44 25 Cincinnati 42 28 Pittsburgh 41 28 Chicago 28 39 Milwaukee 28 40 West W L Arizona 37 32 Colorado 37 33 San Francisco 35 33 San Diego 35 34 Los Angeles 29 39 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 4, Chicago Cubs 3 Cincinnati 5, Milwaukee 1 Miami 7, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 6, L.A. Dodgers 3 San Diego 4, Arizona 1 Colorado 5, Philadelphia 2 Atlanta 3, San Francisco 0

Away 21-15 20-15 19-18 15-17 16-19 Away 16-19 14-21 16-18 14-19 12-24 Away 20-17 19-17 13-22 13-20 13-21

National League

Pct .594 .500 .471 .391 .309 Pct .638 .600 .594 .418 .412 Pct .536 .529 .515 .507 .426

GB — 61/2 81/2 131/2 191/2 GB — 21/2 3 15 151/2 GB — 1/2 11/2 2 71/2

WCGB L10 Str Home Away 4-6 W-2 23-8 18-20 — 61/2 5-5 L-1 18-13 16-21 81/2 3-7 L-2 16-15 17-22 131/2 3-7 W-1 14-23 11-16 191/2 5-5 W-1 13-23 8-24 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 6-4 L-1 19-12 25-13 — 6-4 W-1 24-12 18-16 — 6-4 W-1 25-13 16-15 12 4-6 L-1 15-21 13-18 121/2 6-4 L-1 16-20 12-20 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 3-7 L-3 17-14 20-18 41/2 5-5 W-2 23-17 14-16 51/2 4-6 L-2 21-11 14-22 6 8-2 W-6 22-14 13-20 111/2 4-6 L-1 19-20 10-19 Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 5, N.Y. Mets 2 L.A. Dodgers 5, Pittsburgh 3, 11 innings Atlanta 6, San Francisco 5 Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 0 Colorado 10, Philadelphia 5 St. Louis 13, Miami 7 San Diego 6, Arizona 4

Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 5-5) at St. Louis (S.Miller 7-4), 5:05 p.m. Washington (Haren 4-8) at Philadelphia (Lannan 0-1), 5:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Gee 5-6) at Atlanta (Hudson 4-6), 5:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 5-2) at Cincinnati (Leake 6-3), 5:10 p.m. Miami (Ja.Turner 1-0) at Arizona (Corbin 9-0), 7:40 p.m. San Diego (Volquez 5-5) at San Francisco (Zito 4-5), 8:15 p.m. TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON 2013 TEAM

American League

Kansas City Cleveland

Pitchers Shields (R) Carrasco (R)

Baltimore Detroit

Arrieta (R) Scherzer (R)

Oakland Texas

Straily (R) Tepesch (R)

Chicago Houston

Quintana (L) Norris (R)

Seattle Los Angeles

Harang (R) Vargas, J (L)

2013 TEAM

W-L 2-6 0-2

ERA 2.79 15.26

REC 6-8 0-2

2013 VS OPP W-L IP ERA No Record No Record

-185

1-1 9-0

6.63 3.19

3-1 10-3

No Record 0-0 8.0 3.38

-110

4-2 3-6

4.45 4.30

8-2 4-8

1-1 11.1 3.18 No Record

3-2 5-6

3.86 3.47

4-9 6-8

No Record No Record

3-6 5-4

5.60 3.74

3-7 7-6

Line -135

-125

-170

National League

0-2 0-1

6.2 16.20 8.0 2.25

-120

W-L 4-8 0-1

ERA 5.70 6.14

REC 4-9 2-1

2013 VS OPP W-L IP ERA 0-0 6.0 4.50 No Record

-190

5-5 7-4

2.65 2.21

6-7 9-4

1-0 6.2 1.35 No Record

Liriano (L) Leake (R)

-125

5-2 6-3

2.36 2.76

5-2 8-5

0-1 6.0 1-0 12.0

1.50 3.75

New York Atlanta

Gee (R) Hudson (R)

-175

5-6 4-6

4.84 4.41

7-6 7-7

0-1 1-0

9.00 3.68

Miami Arizona

Turner (R) Corbin (L)

-220

1-0 9-0

1.80 2.28

2-1 13-0

San Diego Volquez (R) San Francisco Zito (L)

-125

5-5 4-5

5.87 4.79

5-9 7-6

ERA 3.49 5.40

REC 10-4 1-5

Pitchers Haren (R) Lannan (L)

Chicago St. Louis

Wood (L) Miller (R)

Pittsburgh Cincinnati

Washington Philadelphia

2013 TEAM Colorado Toronto

Line

Interleague Pitchers D La Rosa (L) Johnson (R)

Line -135

W-L 7-4 0-2

THIS DATE IN BASEBALL June 17

5.0 7.1

No Record No Record 0-0 6.0 1-0 10.2

3.00 0.84

2013 VS OPP W-L IP ERA No Record No Record

1915 — George “Zip” Zabel of the Chicago Cubs was called into the game against the Brooklyn Dodgers with two outs in the first inning. He won 4-3 in the 19th inning in the longest relief effort in the majors. 1943 — Player-manager Joe Cronin of the Boston Red Sox hit a three-run pinch homer in both games of a doubleheader against the Philadelphia A’s. The Red Sox won the opener 5-4 and lost the second game 8-7. 1960 — Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox connected for his 500th career home run off the Cleveland Indians. Williams, the fourth to accomplish the feat, hit a two-run homer off Wynn Hawkins in a 3-1 win. 1971 — Don Kessinger of the Chicago Cubs went 6-for-6, with five singles and a double, in a 7-6, 10-inning decision over the St. Louis Cardinals at Wrigley Field. 1978 — Ron Guidry of the New York Yankees struck out 18 California Angels to set an American League record for left-handers. Guidry, who struck out 15 in the first six innings, ended with a 4-0 four-hitter. 1993 — Baseball owners voted 26-2 in favor of expanding the playoffs for the first time in 25 years, doubling the teams that qualify to eight starting in 1994. 2003 — Jae Seo, David Weathers and Armando Benitez combined for a one-hitter as the New York Mets beat Florida 5-0. It was the third straight game the Mets were involved in a one-hitter. 2005 — Arizona gave up 10 runs in the third inning of its 13-6 loss to Cleveland. The Diamondbacks, who allowed 10 runs in the sixth inning on June 15 in Chicago, became the first team since the 1969 Mets to allow 10 runs in an inning in consecutive games. The Mets did it on one day — during a doubleheader against Houston.

Boston

BOxSCORES Orioles 6, Red Sox 3

Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Ellsury cf 4 0 2 0 Markks rf 5 3 4 0 Iglesias 2b 4 0 1 0 Machd 3b4 1 2 1 Nava rf-1b 4 0 0 0 Hardy ss 4 0 1 1 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 0 0 A.Jones cf4 1 2 1 JGoms lf 4 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b4 1 2 3 Carp 1b 2 0 1 0 Wieters c 4 0 1 0 Victorn rf 1 1 0 0 Valenci dh4 0 2 0 Sltlmch c 3 1 1 0 Pearce lf 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks 3b 4 1 1 3 Dickrsn lf 0 0 0 0 Drew ss 3 0 0 0 ACasill 2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 6 3 Totals 37 6 14 6 Boston 000 000 300—3 Baltimore 003 020 10x—6 E—Carp (1), Machado (4). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB—Boston 5, Baltimore 8. 2B—Carp (10), Markakis 2 (15), Machado (32), A.Jones 2 (21), C.Davis (22). HR—Middlebrooks (9), C.Davis (23). S—Machado. IP H R ER BB SO Boston Lester L,6-4 5 9 5 5 0 8 Beato 1 0 0 0 0 1 Tazawa 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 A.Miller 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 Baltimore Gonzalez W,5-2 6 1-3 5 3 3 2 2 Matusz H,10 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Tom.Hunter H,8 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Ji.Johnson S,25-29 1 0 0 0 0 0 Umpires—Home, David Rackley; First, Jim Joyce; Second, Cory Blaser; Third, Jeff Nelson. T—3:06. A—41,311 (45,971).

Chicago

Astros 5, White Sox 4 Houston

ab r h bi ab r h bi De Aza cf 5 2 2 2 BBarns cf 3 0 1 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 0 1 Altuve 2b 4 1 1 0 Rios rf 3 0 1 0 JCastro dh4 1 2 2 Konerk dh 4 0 0 0 Corprn c 4 0 0 0 Viciedo lf 4 1 1 0 Carter lf 4 1 2 0 A.Dunn 1b 4 0 1 0 Pareds rf 0 0 0 0 Kppngr 3b 3 0 1 1 C.Pena 1b3 1 0 0 Bckhm 2b 4 1 2 0 Crowe rf-lf2 1 0 0 Flowrs c 2 0 0 0 Dmngz 3b4 0 1 3 Gillaspi ph 0 0 0 0 MGnzlz ss3 0 0 0 Gimenz c 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 4 8 4 Totals 31 5 7 5 Chicago 000 001 102—4 Houston 030 000 20x—5 E—Beckham (2). LOB—Chicago 7, Houston 6. 2B—Carter (6), Dominguez (12). 3B—De Aza (1), Viciedo (1). HR—De Aza (8), J.Castro (10). SB—Altuve (12). CS—C.Pena (3). SF—Al.Ramirez. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago H.Santiago L,2-5 5 1-3 5 3 3 4 8 N.Jones 1 1 1 1 0 1 Thornton 1 1 1 1 0 1 Troncoso 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Houston Keuchel W,4-3 6 1-3 4 2 2 2 4 Cisnero H,3 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 Ambriz H,12 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Blackley H,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Veras S,14-17 1 2 2 2 0 0 WP—N.Jones. Umpires—Home, Jordan Baker; First, Dana DeMuth; Second, Paul Nauert; Third, Doug Eddings. T—3:17. A—25,829 (42,060).

Detroit

Tigers 5, Twins 2

Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi AJcksn cf 5 2 2 2 Thoms cf 4 0 1 1 TrHntr rf 5 1 2 3 Mauer c 4 0 0 0 MiCarr 3b 4 0 1 0 Doumit dh3 0 0 0 Fielder dh 4 0 1 0 Mornea 1b4 0 0 0 VMrtnz 1b 3 0 1 0 Arcia lf 4 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 3 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b3 0 0 0 Dirks lf 4 0 0 0 Parmel rf 3 0 0 0 Infante 2b 4 1 2 0 Dozier 2b 3 2 2 1 Avila c 3 1 2 0 Flormn ss 2 0 0 0 B.Pena pr-c0 0 0 0 Totals 35 5 11 5 Totals 30 2 3 2 Detroit 200 200 001—5 Minnesota 000 001 010—2 DP—Minnesota 3. LOB—Detroit 7, Minnesota 3. 2B—Tor.Hunter (18), Avila (4), Dozier (5). HR—A.Jackson (3), Tor.Hunter (3), Dozier (4). SB—A.Jackson (6). CS—Jh.Peralta (2). IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Fister W,6-4 7 2-3 2 2 2 2 7 Benoit S,4-4 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Walters L,2-2 5 1-3 9 4 4 3 4 Swarzak 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Duensing 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 2 Roenicke 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Duensing (Avila). WP—Roenicke. Umpires—Home, James Hoye; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, John Hirschbeck; Third, Bob Davidson. T—2:42. A—39,317 (39,021).

Royals 5, Rays 3

Kansas City ab AGordn lf 3 Hosmer 1b 5 S.Perez c 5 BButler dh 5 Lough cf 5 Mostks 3b 4 EJhnsn 2b 4 Francr rf 3 AEscor ss 4

Tampa Bay ab r h bi Joyce rf 4 1 1 0 Zobrist 2b5 0 1 0 Scott lf 4 1 1 1 Longori dh2 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 0 0 DJnngs cf4 0 1 1 KJhnsn 3b3 0 1 0 JMolin c 2 0 0 0 Loaton c 2 1 1 1 YEscor ss 4 0 1 0 Totals 38 5 11 5 Totals 34 3 7 3 Kansas City 100 012 010—5 Tampa Bay 200 000 001—3 E—Scott (1). LOB—Kansas City 10, Tampa Bay 8. 2B—B.Butler (14), E.Johnson (2), A.Escobar (10), Zobrist (17), Scott (4). HR— Francoeur (3), Lobaton (4). CS—Moustakas (2). SF—A.Gordon. IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City W.Davis W,4-5 6 5 2 2 2 4 Crow H,12 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Collins H,9 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 K.Herrera H,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 G.Holland S,14-16 1 1 1 1 1 3 r 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 1

h 1 2 0 2 0 1 1 1 3

bi 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1

Tampa Bay Hernandez L,4-7 5 2-3 9 4 4 1 2 McGee 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Lueke 1 0 0 0 1 1 C.Ramos 1 1 1 1 0 1 Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Ro.Hernandez (A.Gordon). WP— McGee, Lueke, C.Ramos. PB—J.Molina. Umpires—Home, Laz Diaz; First, Tim Timmons; Second, Mike Winters; Third, Mark Wegner. T—3:08. A—27,442 (34,078). New York

Yankees 6, Angels 5

Los Angeles ab r h bi Bourjos cf5 0 2 1 Trout lf 3 1 2 0 Pujols dh 4 1 0 0 Trumo rf 4 1 1 1 HKndrc 2b4 0 1 0 Iannett c 2 0 0 0 Shuck ph 0 1 0 0 Aybar ss 4 0 1 1 Callasp 3b4 1 1 2 BHarrs 1b3 0 0 0 Hawpe ph1 0 1 0 Totals 31 6 9 6 Totals 34 5 9 5 New York 005 000 010—6 Los Angeles 000 000 005—5 E—Aybar (7), Iannetta (2). DP—New York 2, Los Angeles 3. LOB—New York 3, Los Angeles 7. 2B—Gardner (16), Cano (15), Overbay (14), J.Nix (5), Trout (21). HR—Hafner (11). SB—Gardner (11), I.Suzuki (9). SF—V.Wells. IP H R ER BB SO New York Sabathia W,7-5 8 5 2 2 3 6 D.Robertson 1-3 1 2 2 1 1 Rivera S,24-25 2-3 3 1 1 1 1 Los Angeles Weaver L,1-3 6 7 5 5 4 6 Williams 3 2 1 1 0 1 Sabathia pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. Umpires—Home, Larry Vanover; First, Brian Gorman; Second, Manny Gonzalez; Third, Tony Randazzo. T—2:58. A—41,204 (45,483). Gardnr cf ISuzuki rf Cano 2b Hafner dh V.Wells lf Overay 1b J.Nix 3b Brignc ss CStwrt c

Seattle

ab 4 2 4 3 3 4 4 4 3

r 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1

h 2 0 1 1 1 1 3 0 0

bi 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 0 0

Athletics 10, Mariners 2

Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi EnChvz cf 4 0 2 2 Crisp cf 4 0 1 1 Frnkln 2b 3 0 1 0 CYoung cf 0 0 0 0 Seager 3b 4 0 1 0 Jaso c 1 1 1 1 KMorls dh 4 0 0 0 Cespds dh5 1 2 1 Ibanez lf 4 0 0 0 Moss 1b 5 1 2 2 Morse 1b 3 1 2 0 Dnldsn 3b5 2 2 1 Triunfl ph 1 0 0 0 S.Smith lf 5 2 2 2 Bay rf 3 1 1 0 Reddck rf 5 2 4 2 Liddi ph 1 0 0 0 Rosales ss4 1 1 0 Zunino c 3 0 1 0 Sogard 2b4 0 2 0 Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 38101710 Seattle 020 000 000—2 Oakland 000 220 42x—10 DP—Seattle 1, Oakland 2. LOB—Seattle 5, Oakland 10. 2B—Cespedes (9), Donaldson (20), S.Smith (16), Sogard (9). 3B—Reddick (1). HR—Moss (12), Donaldson (10), S.Smith (6), Reddick (3). S—Rosales. SF—Jaso. IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Iwakuma L,7-2 5 8 4 4 3 3 Beavan 1 1-3 6 4 4 0 1 Wilhelmsen 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Capps 1 2 2 2 0 1 Oakland Colon W,9-2 7 8 2 2 0 3 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 1 0 Otero 1 0 0 0 0 1 Umpires—Home, Fieldin Culbreth; First, Bill Welke; Second, Quinn Wolcott; Third, Adrian Johnson. T—2:59. A—36,067 (35,067). Toronto

Blue Jays 7, Rangers 2

Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi MeCarr lf 4 0 2 0 Profar 3b 4 0 1 0 Bonifac lf 1 1 0 0 Andrus ss 5 0 1 1 Bautist dh 4 1 1 1 Kinsler 2b4 0 0 1 Thole dh 1 0 0 0 Beltre dh 5 0 1 0 Encrnc 3b 3 1 1 0 Przyns c 4 0 2 0 Kawsk ss 1 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 3 0 0 0 Lind 1b 5 1 3 3 DvMrp lf 3 1 1 0 DRosa 3b 4 0 1 0 McGns 1b4 0 1 0 RDavis rf 4 0 1 0 LMartn cf 3 1 1 0 ClRsms cf 4 2 1 1 Arencii c 4 1 2 2 Izturs ss-2b4 0 0 0 Totals 39 7 12 7 Totals 35 2 8 2 Toronto 020 100 400—7 Texas 000 000 002—2 E—DeRosa (3). DP—Toronto 1. LOB— Toronto 6, Texas 11. 2B—Me.Cabrera (13), Arencibia (12), L.Martin (5). HR—Lind (8), Col.Rasmus (13), Arencibia (14). IP H R ER BB SO Toronto Wang W,1-0 7 7 0 0 2 5 J.Perez 1 2-3 1 2 0 2 2 Wagner S,1-1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Texas D.Holland L,5-4 6 10 4 4 0 6 McClellan 1 2 3 3 1 1 Scheppers 1 0 0 0 0 2 Nathan 1 0 0 0 0 1 D.Holland pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Umpires—Home, Chad Fairchild; First, Jeff Kellogg; Second, Eric Cooper; Third, Paul Schrieber. T—2:54. A—44,052 (48,114).

Padres 4, Diamondbacks 1

Arizona

ab GParra rf 3 Blmqst 2b 4 Gldsch 1b 4 MMntr c 4 C.Ross lf 4 Prado 3b 3 Pollock cf 3 Pnngtn ss 3 Kenndy p 2 Ziegler p 0 Nieves ph 1 DHrndz p 0 0 Totals 31

r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

h 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 0

bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

San Diego ab EvCarr ss 4 Ciriaco ss 0 Amarst cf 3 Headly 3b3 Blanks 1b 4 Kotsay lf 4 Street p 0 Forsyth 2b3 Venale rf 3 Hundly c 3 Richrd p 2 Dnorfi ph-lf

1 8 1 Totals

r 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

h 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0

bi 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

30 4 6 4

Arizona 001 000 000—1 San Diego 001 000 03x—4 E—Pennington (6). DP—San Diego 2. LOB—Arizona 4, San Diego 4. 2B—M. Montero (8), Prado (13), Pennington (8). HR—Blanks (8), Venable (9). SB—Pennington (2). CS—G.Parra (8), Ev.Cabrera (7). S—G.Parra. IP H R ER BB SO Arizona Kennedy 6 4 1 1 1 6 Ziegler 1 0 0 0 0 1 D.Hernandez L,2-4 1 2 3 3 1 0 San Diego Richard W,2-5 8 7 1 1 0 1 Street S,13-14 1 1 0 0 0 0 Kennedy pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Umpires—Home, Dale Scott; First, CB Bucknor; Second, Bill Miller; Third, Todd Tichenor. T—2:26. A—27,943 (42,524). Chicago

Mets 4, Cubs 3

New York ab r h bi Vldspn 2b 4 0 0 0 DnMrp 1b 3 0 0 0 DWrght 3b4 0 1 0 Byrd rf 4 1 1 1 Duda lf 2 1 1 0 Buck c 4 1 2 0 Quntnll ss 3 0 0 0 Niwnhs cf 3 1 1 3 Hefner p 1 0 0 0 JuTrnr ph 1 0 0 0 CTorrs p 0 0 0 0 Satin ph 1 0 0 0 Ardsm p 0 0 0 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 3 7 1 Totals 30 4 6 4 Chicago 100 020 000—3 New York 000 000 004—4 One out when winning run scored. E—S.Castro (10), D.Wright (6), Dan.Murphy (6). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—Chicago 6, New York 6. 2B—D.Wright (11), Duda (12). HR— Byrd (11), Nieuwenhuis (1). S—Quintanilla. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Garza 7 3 0 0 2 5 Russell H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mrml L,2-4 BS,3-5 1-3 3 4 4 1 0 New York Hefner 5 6 3 1 1 5 C.Torres 2 1 0 0 0 1 Aardsma 1 0 0 0 0 1 Parnell W,5-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Garza (Duda). Umpires—Home, Lance Barrett; First, Lance Barksdale; Second, Gary Cederstrom; Third, Vic Carapazza. T—2:51. A—30,256 (41,922).

ab Valuen 3b 4 SCastro ss 4 Schrhlt rf 3 ASorin lf 4 Marml p 0 Rizzo 1b 4 DNavrr c 4 Sweeny cf 4 Barney 2b 4 Garza p 3 Russell p 0 Borbon lf 1

r 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

h 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pirates 6, Dodgers 3

Los Angeles Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi Schmkr 2b 4 0 0 0 Presley rf 4 1 3 1 Punto ss 4 1 1 0 Mercer ss 4 1 2 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 1 1 0 McCtch cf4 1 0 0 Puig rf 4 1 3 0 GJones 1b3 1 2 2 Ethier cf 4 0 2 2 Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Fdrwcz c 2 0 0 1 Grilli p 0 0 0 0 M.Ellis ph 1 0 0 0 Walker 2b2 1 0 0 L.Cruz 3b 3 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 1 1 3 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 Snider rf 3 0 1 0 Belisari p 0 0 0 0 JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0 A.Ellis ph 0 0 0 0 GSnchz 1b1 0 0 0 Cstllns lf 3 0 0 0 McKnr c 4 0 1 0 HRmrz ph 1 0 0 0 Cole p 1 0 0 0 Greink p 2 0 0 0 SMarte lf 2 0 0 0 HrstnJr 3b 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 7 3 Totals 32 6 10 6 Los Angeles 010 101 000—3 Pittsburgh 200 031 00x—6 DP—Pittsburgh 2. LOB—Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Ad.Gonzalez (14), Mercer (7), G.Jones (15). HR—Presley (2), P.Alvarez (15). SB—Puig (1). S—Cole. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Greinke L,3-2 5 8 5 5 2 3 Guerrier 2 2 1 1 0 4 Belisario 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh Cole W,2-0 5 2-3 7 3 3 0 1 Ju.Wilson H,6 1 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 Melancon H,21 1 0 0 0 0 1 Grilli S,25-25 1 0 0 0 1 2 HBP—by Greinke (Walker). WP—Greinke. Umpires—Home, Mike Estabrook; First, Greg Gibson; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt; Third, Alan Porter. T—3:07 (Rain delay: 1:28). A—37,263 (38,362).

Reds 5, Brewers 1

Milwaukee Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h bi Aoki rf 4 0 0 0 DRonsn cf4 0 1 0 Segura ss 4 0 1 0 Cozart ss 4 1 2 0 CGomz cf 4 1 1 1 Votto 1b 4 0 2 0 Lucroy c 4 0 2 0 Phillips 2b4 0 0 1 LSchfr lf 4 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 1 1 1 JFrncs 1b 4 0 0 0 Paul lf 3 1 0 0 Weeks 2b 4 0 1 0 Hanhn 3b 3 1 1 0 YBtncr 3b 3 0 1 0 Hanign c 4 1 1 0 WPerlt p 2 0 1 0 Cueto p 1 0 0 1 McGnzl p 0 0 0 0 Lutz ph 1 0 1 2 Gennett ph 1 0 0 0 Simon p 1 0 0 0 D.Hand p 0 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 33 5 9 5 Milwaukee 100 000 000—1 Cincinnati 012 002 00x—5 E—Weeks (7). LOB—Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 7. 2B—Lucroy (7), D.Robinson (4), Cozart (14), Hannahan (3), Hanigan (3). HR—C. Gomez (12), Bruce (12). S—Cueto. IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee W.Peralta L,4-8 5 1-3 7 5 4 2 2 Mic.Gonzalez 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 D.Hand 1 1 0 0 0 0 Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati Cueto W,4-0 6 5 1 1 0 3 Simon S,1-2 3 2 0 0 0 6 Umpires—Home, Sam Holbrook; First, Andy Fletcher; Second, Rob Drake; Third, Joe West. T—2:54. A—39,088 (42,319).

Rockies 5, Phillies 2

Philadelphia Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 4 1 1 0 Fowler cf 4 0 1 0 Frndsn 2b 4 0 1 0 Rutledg ss3 1 0 0 Rollins ss 4 1 1 1 CGnzlz lf 4 2 2 2 Howard 1b 4 0 2 1 Cuddyr rf 4 1 2 0 DBrwn lf 4 0 1 0 WRosr c 4 1 2 1 Mayrry rf 3 0 0 0 Pachec 1b4 0 0 1 Galvis 3b 3 0 0 0 Arenad 3b3 0 1 1 Quinter c 2 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b3 0 0 0 MYong ph 1 0 0 0 Chacin p 3 0 1 0 Lerud c 0 0 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Hamels p 2 0 0 0 DeFrts p 0 0 0 0 Bastrd p 0 0 0 0 L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 32 5 9 5 Philadelphia 000 000 002—2 Colorado 010 000 22x—5 DP—Philadelphia 1, Colorado 1. LOB— Philadelphia 3, Colorado 6. 2B—Rollins (17), Cuddyer (16), Arenado (12). HR—C.Gonzalez (20), W.Rosario (11). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Hamels L,2-10 7 6 3 3 2 7 De Fratus 0 2 2 2 1 0 Bastardo 1 1 0 0 0 0 Colorado Chacin W,5-3 8 2-3 6 2 2 0 3 Brothers S,3-4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 De Fratus pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. WP—Hamels, De Fratus. Umpires—Home, Marvin Hudson; First, Tim McClelland; Second, Mike Muchlinski; Third, Wally Bell. T—2:18. A—45,186 (50,398).

Marlins 7, Cardinals 2

St. Louis

Miami ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b 3 0 0 0 Pierre lf 5 1 2 2 Jay cf 4 0 1 1 Lucas 1b 5 0 0 0 Beltran rf 4 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 1 1 0 Craig lf 3 1 0 0 Ruggin cf 4 1 2 2 Freese 3b 4 0 1 0 Dietrch 2b4 1 1 0 MAdms 1b 4 0 1 1 Hchvrr ss 4 1 2 1 Descals ss 4 1 2 0 Polanc 3b 4 1 3 2 T.Cruz c 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 1 0 0 YMolin ph 0 0 0 0 Nolasco p 1 0 0 0 Lyons p 1 0 0 0 JBrown ph1 0 0 0 J.Kelly p 0 0 0 0 MDunn p 0 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Qualls p 0 0 0 0 SRonsn ph 0 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Hollidy ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 35 7 11 7 St. Louis 001 000 001—2 Miami 200 220 10x—7 E—Ruggiano (2), Stanton (6). LOB—St. Louis 7, Miami 8. 2B—Stanton (6), Dietrich (4), Polanco (7). SB—Ruggiano (8). SLyons. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Lyons L,2-3 5 1-3 8 6 6 3 6 J.Kelly 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Maness 1 3 1 1 0 0 Siegrist 1 0 0 0 0 0 Miami Nolasco W,4-7 7 3 1 1 1 4 M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 1 1 Qualls 2-3 2 1 1 2 0 Cishek S,9-11 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Lyons (Mathis). WP—Nolasco. T—2:46. A—18,468 (37,442).

Indians 2, Nationals 0

Washington Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi Span cf 4 0 1 0 Bourn cf 3 1 1 0 Rndon 3b 4 0 3 0 Aviles ss 3 0 0 0 Zmrmn dh 4 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 1 1 1 1 AdLRc 1b 4 0 0 0 CSantn dh4 0 1 1 Werth rf 3 0 2 0 Brantly lf 3 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0 MrRynl 1b3 0 0 0 Tracy 3b 2 0 0 0 YGoms c 3 0 1 0 Lmrdz 2b 2 0 1 0 JMcDnl 3b2 0 0 0 JSolano c 3 0 0 0 Stubbs rf 3 0 0 0 Berndn lf 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 0 7 0 Totals 25 2 4 2 Washington 000 000 000—0 Cleveland 000 100 01x—2 E—J.Solano (1), Jo.McDonald (1), Mar. Reynolds (8). DP—Washington 1, Cleveland 3. LOB—Washington 7, Cleveland 5. 2B— Rendon (7), Werth (4), Bourn (9). SB—Kipnis (15), Y.Gomes (1). S—Aviles. SF—Kipnis. IP H R ER BB SO Washington Strasburg L,3-6 5 1 1 1 4 4 Abad 1 1 0 0 0 1 Stammen 2 2 1 1 0 1 Cleveland Kluber W,5-4 8 7 0 0 0 8 Pestano S,1-3 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP—by Kluber (Desmond). T—2:38. A—21,845 (42,241).

Braves 3, Giants 0

San Francisco ab r GBlanc cf 4 0 BCrwfr ss 4 0 Posey c 4 0 Pence rf 4 0 Belt 1b 4 0 AnTrrs lf 3 0 Arias 3b 4 0 Noonan 2b 4 0 Linccm p 1 0 HSnchz ph 1 0 Mijares p 0 0 Dunnng p 0 0

h 0 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0

bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Atlanta

ab r h bi Smmns ss3 1 0 0 Heywrd rf 3 0 0 0 J.Upton lf 3 1 0 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 3 1 BUpton cf 4 0 1 1 McCnn c 2 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b4 0 2 0 R.Pena 2b4 1 1 0 Tehern p 2 0 0 0 JSchafr ph0 0 0 1 Avilan p 0 0 0 0 Walden p 0 0 0 0 Kimrel p 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 0 7 0 Totals 29 3 7 3 San Francisco 000 000 000—0 Atlanta 101 001 00x—3 E—An.Torres (5). DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—San Francisco 8, Atlanta 8. 2B—B. Upton (6), C.Johnson (15). SB—Simmons (3). S—Lincecum, J.Schafer. IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco Lincecum L,4-7 6 6 3 2 5 3 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 1 Dunning 1 1 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Teheran W,5-3 6 7 0 0 1 8 Avilan H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 Walden H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kimbrel S,19-22 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP—Dunning. T—2:54. A—33,681 (49,586).

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Nieuwenhuis helps power Mets past Chicago The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Kirk Nieuwenhuis hit a three-run homer that capped a four-run rally in the bottom of the ninth inning, and the Mets Mets 4 salvaged what had been shaping up as Cubs 3 another sorry afternoon, startling Chicago 4-3 on Sunday. Matt Garza pitched seven scoreless innings, and the Cubs scored twice on a madcap play that featured three bad throws by Mets infielders, giving Chicago a 3-0 lead. But New York came back against Carlos Marmol (2-4) in the ninth, starting with Marlon Byrd’s leadoff home run. Nieuwenhuis connected with one out. REDS 5, BREWERS 1 In Cincinnati, Johnny Cueto pitched six solid innings in his return to the Reds’ rotation, and Jay Bruce homered in the win over Milwaukee. Donald Lutz drove in two runs with a pinch-hit single, and Zack Cozart and Joey Votto each had two hits as Cincinnati rebounded after losing 6-0 on Saturday. Cueto improved to 4-0 in his seventh

PCL: Albuquerque’s bats come alive in win An 18-hit night helped Albuquerque win its fourth straight game with a 12-5 rout of Memphis (35-37) on Sunday at Isotopes Park. Albuquerque (39-32) trailed 3-0 in the second inning, but scored six runs over the next two frames to take a lead it would never relinquish. The top seven hitters in the lineup had at least two hits apiece, including a double and triple in a 3-for-4 start of the season. He allowed five hits and one run with three strikeouts and no walks as the Reds took two of three in the weekend series. MARLINS 7, CARDINALS 2 In Miami, Ricky Nolasco allowed one run and three hits in seven innings to help the Marlins take the rubber game of their three-game series. The NL Central-leading Cardinals lost a series for the first time since April 26-28 against Pittsburgh. The Marlins climbed above .300 at 21-47, still baseball’s worst record. They

effort with three runs batted in from second baseman Justin Sellers. Starting pitcher Red Patterson (4-1) got the win, working into the six inning while striking out four and allowing eight hits. The teams wrap up their fourgame series Monday at Isotopes Park. The New Mexican

scored 19 runs in the series against a team with the lowest ERA in the majors. PIRATES 6, DODGERS 3 In Pittsburgh, rookie Gerrit Cole won again, getting home run help from Pedro Alvarez and pitching the Pirates past Los Angeles. Cole (2-0) allowed three runs on seven hits and no walks in 5⅔ innings. The top pick from the 2011 draft won in his MLB debut last week. Dodgers rookie Yasiel Puig had three hits and raised his batting average to .479 in his first 48 at-bats in the majors.

ROCKIES 5, PHILLIES 2 In Denver, Jhoulys Chacin came within an out of his second career shutout, and Colorado topped Philadelphia. Chacin gave up six hits, struck out three and didn’t walk a batter. His 8⅔ innings marked the longest outing by a Rockies starter this season. Jimmy Rollins hit an RBI double with two outs in the Phillies’ ninth, and Ryan Howard followed with a single to finish Chacin (5-3). PADRES 4, DIAMONDBACKS 1 In San Diego, Kyle Blanks hit a threerun homer with two outs in the bottom of the eighth inning to a snap a tie and lift the Padres to their season-high sixth straight victory. Blanks’ eighth home run of the season made a winner of Clayton Richard (2-5), giving the Padres a three-game sweep. Huston Street came on in the ninth to earn his 13th save. BRAvES 3, GIANTS 0 In Atlanta, Freddie Freeman singled three times and drove in one run, Julio Teheran pitched six scoreless innings, and the Braves beat San Francisco. Braves closer Craig Kimbrel pitched a scoreless ninth to earn his 19th save in 22 chances.


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-5

sfnm«classifieds 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

$775,000: EXTRAORDINARY PECOS RIVER VALLEY RANCH 4,000 sq. ft. house, 20+ Forested Acres. Many Million-Dollar Views. Great Water. Near Santa Fe, Pecos River, Kilmer-Strickling Ranch. Resident Owner: 505-470-0555 Downtown with country feel. Near Old Taos Highway. 2 bedroom 2 bath, study. $375,000 NM Properties and Homes 505-989-8860

1875 SQUARE FEET 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Laundry room, central heat and AC, 2 car garage, RV parking, newly remodeled kitchen. New Hot Tub in casita. Storage building, dog pen, covered concrete patio, pro-panell pitched roof, city water, sewage. Stucco, tract lighting in closets. $195,000. 505-474-4811 3/2 1900 SQ. FT. ADOBE SOLAR, PLUS 1200 SQ. FT. 2/1 APARTMENT. PRIVATE SETTING. 2.89 ACRES. OWNER FINANCE WITH $78,000 DOWN OR $390,000. 505-470-5877

SANTA FE

SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

PASSIVE, SOLAR, PRIVATE SETTING. Five treed acres, just past Pecos. Open concept design, master suite with views. 2 bedroom, 1.5 bathroom. Custom accents, 1,175 square feet, $209,000. Santa fe Properties 505-9824466. James Congdon 505-490-2800.

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

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

5 ACRE LOTS BEHIND ST. JOHNS COLLEGE. HIDDEN VALLEY, GATED ROAD. $25,000 PER ACRE, TERMS. 4 AVAILABLE. 505-231-8302.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

NOT IN ELDORADO Views, 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, 2.5 Acres, 1804 square feet, 2 car garage. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.

THE LOFTS Commercial Condo, ground unit, tile/pergo floors, full bathroom, kitchenette $1000 plus utilities

3+ acres. North side. Utilities, views, paved roads. $79,000. LAST ONE. CALL NOW! OLD SANTA FE REALTY 505-983-9265

HACIENDA STYLE OFFICE SPACE vigas, sky lights, plenty of parking $360 includes utilities. IN THE HEART OF THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT 245 acre approved development up to 575 units. Residential multi family apartments, commercial uses allowed. Next to the IAIA, and Community College. Utilities to lot line. Priced to sell, Old Santa Fe Realty 505-983-9265

Restaurant FOR LEASE. Great Location! 2800 sqft. $2300 monthly. (505)661-3231

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 www.greatnmproperties.com 888-883-4842

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre

Beautiful, Remodeled home on 1.1 acres. New Tile, Carpet, Granite, Countertops in Kitchen and Baths, Kiva Fireplace, New Windows and Doors. New Lighting, New Stucco. Insulated finished two car garage. Walk-in closets, Raised ceilings with vigas in Living room, portals. Views of the Ortiz Mountains.

$319.000 Call Jeff at 505-660-0509 Realtors Welcome

5600 SQUARE FOOT WAREHOUSE with 800 SQUARE FOOT LIVE-IN SPACE. Near National Guard. $2000 rental income. 1 acre. $290,000. 505470-5877

5 BEDROOM, 5 BATH.

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

ARROYO HONDO 13 ACRES

large home with separate Casita, Studio, office. Wonderful horse facilities. Live in old world charm in 21st century luxury. Only 10 minutes from Santa Fe. $1,149,000. MLS#201302223. 505-438-2827 or 505-660-6840

SALE OR LEASE Just North Santa Fe US285 4.5acres 6900sf HighBay building 1575sf Office, Home Jerry, 505-263-1476. 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. SALE BY OWNER $499,000. Appraised by LANB for $518,000. (505)466-3182.

CONDO

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

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE BEAUTIFUL MANUFACTURED Karsten. Numerous upgrades, 68’ x 31’, ideal for moving land. Must Sell. $95,000, paid $143,506. Santa Fe, 505-424-3997.

OUT OF TOWN

NEW CONSTRUCTION LA TIERRA AREA. 3 bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 car heated finished garage, 2.5 acres, 2380 Square Feet. $475,000. TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

SWEET HOME LOVELY GARDENS

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, plus den. 1450 square feet on greenbelts. Gas fireplace. Evaporative cooler, radiant heat. Two portals. Rancho Viejo, Windmill Ridge. $255,000. 505995-0846 VIA CAB 2587 CALLE DELFINO Total remodel, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car, 2 Kiva. Huge lot $290,000. 505920-0146

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

1, 2 BEDROOM CORONADO CONDOS: $600, $700 plus utilities. New paint. New flooring. Cerrillos, Camino Carlos Rey. Pets OK. 505-5019905

OWNER FINANCED CONDO FSBO Beautiful fully furnished 1 bedroom 1 bath, gated community. pool, hottub, exercise room. Close to Plaza and easy access to 285 North. $119,500. 10% down. $878.77 monthly at 5.5% interest for 15 years. 505-473-1622

LOTS & ACREAGE

LAND FOR SALE IN PECOS

2 acre lots and 3 acre parcel. Pinon covered. Great building sites! Possible owner financing. Call (505)490-1347 for more information. OWN A PIECE OF MOUNTAIN PARADISE Inherited 5 lots in Angel Fire Ski area. MUST Sell! $8,500 obo per lot. 505-603-0004

Life is good ...

CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

24/7 Security Quail Run

2 bedroom, 2 bath. Fully furnished. Country club living, gym, golf, spa. Month to month, short and long term available. $1950 monthly. 505-573-4104

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1/1 DOWNTOWN, quiet neighborhood, short distance to down town. Laundry facility on site. $695 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

1/1 GUEST HO USE. Rural living in city limits. Fenced yard nicely landscaped. $700 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

TEN TO Twenty Acre tracks, east of Santa Fe. Owner Financing. Payments as low as $390 a month. Negotiable down. Electricity, water, trees, meadows, views. Mobiles ok. Horses ok. 505-690-9953

EXQUISITE SANTA FE HOME 6 ACRES Beautiful 3 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, 2856 sf, American Clay finishes, granite, 2 fireplaces, 2 car plus RV garage. Silverwater RE, 505-690-3075.

3 DULCE, ELDORADO, NM 1600 SQUARE FEET 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH

STUDIO, 1 MILE FROM P L A Z A . Westside. No Pets. First, Last, Security Deposit, $475 monthly plus utilities. Call, 505-897-9351, leave message.

AGUILAR, COLORADO

15 miles north of Trinidad. 123 acres. Trees, grass, mountain views and electricity. Borders State Trust Land. $123,000: $23K down, $900 month. All or part. Owner finance. (719)250-2776

FINAL LOT SALE

ELDORADO AREA

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

»rentals«

ADOBE, VIGAS, Glass, In-law quarters. 2600 sq.ft. 3 bedroom, 3 bath. FSBO. $350,000 OBO over. 36 miles north of Santa Fe on highway 84. 505927-3373.

Sell Your Stuff!

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

986-3000

2/1 ON RUFINA LANE, patio, fireplace, laundry facility on site. Close to Walmart, Taco Bell. $699 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

BEAUTIFUL CONDO. Granite counter-tops, rock fireplace, hickory cabinets, Washer, Dryer, fitness center, heated pool, tennis court, security. No Smoking. $925, 505-450-4721.

2/2 DOWNTOWN A R E A , small three-plex, private yard, washer dryer hookups, beautiful location. $1000 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

FOR RENT RANCHO VIEJO 2 bedroom plus loft, 2.5 bath townhome with 2 car garage. $1300 monthly. No smokers, no pets. Call 505-984-1414

2 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH. NICE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD.

900 square feet with yard. Off Cerrillos, near St. Michael’s Drive. $795 monthly, not including utilities, No cats or dogs. Joe, 505-470-7466.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath , washer, dryer. $850 monthly includes water. Pet 25 lbs. or smaller with $30 monthly fee. 505-471-0462 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Range, fridge, dishwasher, washer, dryer. Fenced Yard. Pets Negotiable. $850 plus deposit. Lease. Call 505-501-0935. *813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY - 2 AVAILABLE: LIVE-IN STUDIO , tile throughout, $680 gas and water paid. 1 BEDROOM with living room, $750 gas and water paid. BOTH: full bath and kitchen with small backyards. 1301 RUFINA LANE, 2 bedroom, 1 full bath, living, dining room, washer/ dryer hookups, tile throughout. $765 PLUS utilities. DOWNTOWN: *1425 PASEO DE PERALTA, 1 bedroom, full bath & kitchen, tile throughout, $735 all utilities paid. Free laundry room. *104 FAITHWAY, LIVE-IN STUDIO, full bath & kitchen, wooden floors, fireplace, $800 all utilities paid. NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405

ZOCOLA condominium

1 bedroom Custom floors and kitchen. Washer, Dryer. Garage. Pool & Fitness Center, 1 Year lease. $1,425 monthly + deposit. Available 6/15. (505)757-3294

GUESTHOUSES CHARMING, 500 SQUARE FEET, SOUTHEAST HILLS. Washer, dryer, fenced yard with small patio. Pet negotiable. $800 monthly, includes utilities. Call 505699-5708 EASTSIDE WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled 1/2 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936

HOUSES PART FURNISHED HUMMINGBIRD HEAVEN! 25 minutes North East. SPOTLESS! 2 baths, terraces, granite, radiant. Private. Safe. Acre. Non-smoking. No pets. $1400. 505-310-1829

CAMINO CAPITAN 1, 1 in 4-plex, FP, water included. $650 Western Equities, 505-982-4201 RAILYARD NEIGHBORHOOD! Picturesque adobe, walled yard, completely remodeled. 1 bedroom, kiva fireplace, covered porch, pet considered. $675 includes utilities. 505-8984168

HOUSES UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, Carport House For Rent In the Village of Cordova. 40 minute drive from Santa Fe. $550 Rent, $550 Deposit. 505-263-1420 or 505-351-4572. HURRY TO see this beautiful newly upgraded 3/2 home off of Siringo Road, Carport, large back yard with storage shed, wood floors, washer dryer hookups. $1250 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

pets

SUNSET VIEWS: charming 1 bedroom, approximately 700 sq.ft. $655 rent, deposit plus utilities; also washer & dryer access. Cats ok but no dogs. East Frontage Road. For more information, contact 505-699-3005.

pets

Santa Fe Animal Shelt 983-4309 ext. 610

make it better.

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


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED 3 BEDROOM 2 bath 2 car garage, washer and dryer. $975. 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH 1 car garage, laundry hook-ups, tile floors. breathtaking mountain view, trails, golf course. $875 Near Cochiti Lake. 505-359-4778, 505-980-2400. 3 BEDROOM 2 Bathroom Home in gated Vista Primera (Airport and 599)$1300 mo Spacious master bedroom double sinks. Call Brad 6905190.

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646. Mid-century Santa Fe Classic. 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Gallery entry on acre near Museum Hill and Plaza. Open dining/living room, with Sangre views, hardwood floors, central A/C, washer, dryer, security system, 2 car garage and carport, portal over looking private courtyard with mature shade tree. $2500 monthly plus utilities. 505-629-7619.

PUEBLOS DEL SOL SUBDIVISION Pueblo Grande, 3 bedroom 2 bath, 2 story home, 2 car attached garage, magnificent views! Offered at $1700 per month Available Now! Reniassance Group (505)795-1024

OLD SANTA FE CHARM 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fireplace, wood floors, saltillo tile, small fenced in backyard $850 plus utilities. CHARMING 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath House. Near Plaza, Fireplace, Saltillo Floors, Washer, Dryer, Open floor plan, skylights, a lot of closets, private courtyards. Non smokers, FICO required, No garage, $1,695 monthly with year lease. 256 La Marta Drive. 505986-8901, 505-670-0093.ksalzar CHARMING, CENTRALLY LOCATED. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 1 CAR GARAGE. Wood floors, tile baths, kiva, mature landscaping. $1200 monthly . 505-470-2272

TESUQUE ADOBE HOME

For lease or rent! Meticulously remodeled, 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, beautiful European Kitchen, living room, dining room, basement, fireplace, wood floors, security system. Half acre walled compound, large brick patio with portal in the back, convenient 1minute walk to the Tesuque Village market. $2,500 monthly. johnlaurence7@gmail.com

LIVE IN STUDIOS

2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET

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

COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948.

MANUFACTURED HOMES

COUNTRY LIVING NEAR GLORIETA 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage/ studio, 4 acres. $1050 monthly, references required. Available June. 303-9134965

1 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME IN NAMBE Recently Remodeled, with yard, $500 monthly plus utilities. No Pets. Call 505-455-2654, 505-660-0541, or 505455-3052.

CUSTOM HOME, HIGHWAY 14. 2 BEDROOMS. 1290 SQUARE FEET. All appliances, fenced yard. Views. $1200, first, last, deposit. 505-501-4124 http://santafenewmexicorentals.co m/211main4rent.htm

EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS

East Alameda, pueblo-style. 1000 square feet, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Carport. $1500 monthly. Washer/dryer, fridge, kiva, saltillo, yard, radiant heat. Non-smoking, no pets. 505-982-3907 ELDORADO 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage. Southwest style, new carpet & blinds, studio/office, fans, appliances. Available July 1st. $1325 plus utilities, $700 cleaning, $200 pet deposits. Jose 505-385-0665. HISTORIC EASTSIDE NEAR CANYON ROAD 2 bedroom plus office, balcony, sunset views. Off-street parking. $1300 monthly. Utilities included! Available now. Chris: 305-753-3269. LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. A/C. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271 NICE 2 BEDROOM , UTILITES PAID, $1050 MONTHLY Kiva fireplace, private backyard, bus service close. Possible Section 8. No pets. (505)204-6319

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

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

3 Bedroom House off Agua Fria Behind Home Depot. Available Now! Call 505-603-4622 for details.

LOCATED ABOVE FORT MARCY PARK Amazing mountain and city views, 2 bedroom, 2 bath Townhome, wood floors, washer, dryer, 2 car garage $2,150 plus utilities.

OFFICES PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

VERY NICE AND CLEAN HOME. FENCED BACKYARD, DOUBLE CAR GARAGE, FIREPLACE. ALL APPLIANCES. $1,400. 505-310-2421

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

to place your ad, call

PARK YOUR MOBILE HOMES ON ACRE LAND All utilities available, option to buy, Old Santa Fe Trail. 505-299-6679, 505-469-4555. Leave message.

OFFICES DOWNTOWN 239 JOHNSON STREET Santa Fe style, includes large open space ideal for lawyers, realtors, gallery, restaurant, near O’Keeffe Museum. Great parking, skylights, courtyard. Up to 2,039 square feet. Call Carl for details: (505)988-4418.

NEW SHARED OFFICE

$250 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

Private desk, and now offering separate private offices sharing all facilities. Conference room, kitchen, parking, lounge, meeting space, internet, copier, scanner, printer. Month-To-Month. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE space available for rent in town, lots of traffic, at 811 St. Michael’s Drive, Santa Fe: 1813 sq. ft. and 980 sq. ft. suites. All major utilities and snow removal included, plenty of parking. Ph. 505-954-3456

TV book RETAIL SPACE DOWNTOWN GREAT PARKING 239 JOHNSON STREET Santa Fe style, includes large open space ideal for gallery, realtors, lawyers, architects, restaurant, near O’Keeffe Museum. Skylights, courtyard. Up to 2,039 square feet. Call Carl for details: (505)988-4418. FANTASTIC RETAIL SPACE LOCATION ON CERRILLOS ROAD ACROSS FROM RAILYARD. APPROXIMATELY 1900 SQUARE FEET. LOTS OF PARKING. 505470-7458, DAYS ONLY.

RETAIL ON THE PLAZA

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

986-3000

STORAGE SPACE

4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00 WAREHOUSES CENTRALLY LOCATED WAREHOUSE FOR RENT 1,600 sq. ft. warehouse in gated, fenced property on Pacheco Street. 1,600 area includes; 1 bathroom, furnace, and office area with upstairs storage. Walk through and overhead doors. $1,600 per month with $1,600 deposit and one year signed lease. Space is great for many things; work shop, auto shop, dance co, etc. Please call 505-983-8038 or email us at a1sspacheco@gmail.com

INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 720 SQUARE FEET FOR $585 TO 1600 SQUARE FEET FOR $975. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, 1/2 BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166, 505670-8270. WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR SALE OR RENT. RUFINA CIRCLE, 505-992-6123, or 505-690-4498

Have a product or service to offer?

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

WORK STUDIOS

LOST

ADOPTION OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE GIFT OF LIFE CENTER Pregnant, Need Help? Free Ultrasounds, Pregnancy tests, baby items. Referrals. Protecting unborn and supporting expecting mothers. 505-988-1215

FOUND PERRO ENCONTRADO MINIATURA GRAYHOUND PERRO PEQUENO, MAS VIEGO GRIS CON UNA MANCHA DE DIAMANTE BLANCO EN LA PARTE POSTERIOR DEL CUELLO. DULCE DISPOSICION. ENCONTRADO CERCA DEL PARQUE DE LAS ACEQUIAS DEL DOMINGO 9 DE JUNIO CON SIN CUELLO O LA EIQUETA. AHORA EN EL ALBERGUE ANIMAL LLAME 983-4309

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

RED HEELER M IX found; lower left canine tooth missing. Los Lunas area, off Highway 6. Please call 505269-1166. TUSCANY AT St. Francis Apartments. June 10th, 7 a.m. Medium to Large dog. Has collar and no tags. Call to describe. 505-699-8780

LOST BROWN C H IH U A H U A , she is sick. Please call 204-9411 or 316-4489. 2ND STREET. High ceilings, 2000 square feet. Track lighting. Roll-up doors uncover large glass windows, storage room, small backyard. Easy parking. $1200 monthly for the first three months, + utilities + $1700 security deposit. (negotiable). Available now! 505-490-1737

LOST CAT: Recently seen in your area! Sammy needs medicine. Large 19 pound cat. Friendly. Please call if seen. Sandi, 575-202-4076.

DOG FOUND MINATURE GRAYHOUND SMALL, OLDER GRAY DOG WITH WHITE DIAMOND SPOT ON BACK OF NECK. SWEET DISPOSITION. FOUND NEAR LAS ACEQUIAS PARK (OFF OF AIRPORT ROAD) ON SUNDAY, JUNE 9 WITH NO COLLAR OR TAG. NOW AT ANIMAL SHELTER CALL 983-4309

LOST

ST. MICHAEL’S VILLAGE WEST SHOPPING CENTER

ROOMMATE WANTED

»announcements«

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

ST. MICHAEL’S DRIVE OUTSTANDING SPACE FOR RETAIL OR OFFICE. 505-992-6123, OR 505-690-4498

High visibility, great parking, centrally located. 1,283 to 12,125 square feet. Negotiable rent. www.thomasprop.com (505)983-3217

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

LOST CHIUHAHUA. Wednesday June 12th. South capitol area. Needs medication. Substantial reward. 505-9837453 or 505-930-0216. LOST OLDER CAT: Golden eyes, black & brown, short hair. Alejandro Street area on 6/10. 505-983-8232

MISSING SINCE 5/14/2013, Jaconita area. 2 year old Female Tortie named Tessa. Micro-chipped. RETURN. 505-455-3302. MY FATHER Lawrence T. Valdez passed away on May 24th 2013. During that time he left his flat bed trailer with someone who is currently cleaning out their orchard. That person was going to load the trailer with wood for my dad for the winter. The trailer is black with chevy hub caps on the rims, it is a tounge tow 16’. It also has a metal sign screwed on the floor boards towards the rear side of the trailer. I hope that the person that has it returns it I would greatly appreciate it. Please contact Justin Valdez at (505) 929-1426 with any information thank you.

$375 INCLUDES UTILITIES. Small bedroom, shared bath & kitchen. 3 miles to Plaza. Month-to-month. No dogs. Deposit. Available 6/20. 505-470-5877 QUIET AND PEACEFUL. $350 PER MONTH, SHARE UTILITIES. 505-4733880

ROOMS

ROOM FOR RENT $475 plus half utilities. 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. Lease preferred, but not mandatory. Available July 1st 505-238-5711

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! CLASSES

CONSTRUCTION

BEGINNER’S PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $25 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684

LATH & PLASTER INDOOR AND OUTDOOR, Flagstone, Brick and Tile. General Repair. 25 years experience. References. Carlos, 505-501-0853.

CLEANING A+ Cleaning

Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.

ELECTRICAL SEMI-RETIRED ELECTRICIAN PLUS PLUMBING Many years experience in different types of electrical systems, intelligent thought out guaranteed work. Alan Landes 1-800-660-4874.

IRRIGATION PROFESSIONAL IRRIGATION

sprinklers, drip, new installations, and rennovations. Get it done right the first time. Have a woman do it. Lisa, 505-310-0045.

LANDSCAPING

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493 Windows and carpet. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Silvia, 505-920-4138. HANDYMAN, LANDSCAPING, FREE ESTIMATES, BERNIE, 505-316-6449. LAURA & ARTURO CLEANING SERVICES: Offices, apartments, condos, houses, yards. Free phone estimates. Monthly/ weekly. 15 Years experience. 303-505-6894, 719-291-0146

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

IRRIGATION TURN ON...TURN OFF Irrigation Services. $10 off start-up service. License #83736. 505-983-3700

ROOFING

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

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

ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.

Landscaping Plus

505-819-9836

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information. COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING - Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES, 15% OFF ALL SUMMER LONG! 505-907-2600, 505-990-0955.

CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT

MOVERS

- Landscape Design, - Planting, Irrigation, - Clean Up, Pruning, - Flagstone Walkways, - Tree Trimming, - Hauling, etc.

HANDYMAN REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877

LANDSCAPING

GREENCARD LANDSCAPING

Plan Now! New Installations and Restorations. Irrigation, Hardscapes, Concrete, retaining walls, Plantings, Design & intelligent drought solutions. 505-995-0318 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 TRASH HAULING, Landscape clean up, tree cutting, anywhere in the city and surrounding areas. Call Gilbert, 505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ESTIMATES!

MOVERS Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881.

PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING Professional with 30 years experience. License, insured, bonded. Please call for more information 505-670-9867, 505-473-2119. HOMECRAFT PAINTING Small jobs ok & Drywall repairs. Licensed. Jim. 505-350-7887

PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853. STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Faux Plaster, paint to match, synthetic systems. Locally owned. Bonded, Insured, Licensed. 505-316-3702

ROOFING FOAM ROOFING WITH REBATE? ALL TYPES OF REPAIRS. 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Fred Vigil & Sons Roofing. 505-920-0350, 505-920-1496

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

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

EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL

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

DALE’S TREE SERVICE.

Trees pruned, removed, stumps, leaf blowing, fruit trees, evergreens, shrubbery & tree planting. Debris 473-4129 removal, hauling.

THE TREE SURGEON Removes dangerous limbs and trees any size. Average cost $50 per limb, $750 per tree. Insured, 505-514-7999 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds LOST

to place your ad, call MEDICAL DENTAL

DRIVERS

986-3000

»merchandise«

The Quikrete Co. needs an experienced FT Class A CDL end dump operator to work in a local Santa Fe quarry. Full benefit package available incl: 401k, health & dental ins, paid time off & paid holidays. Mandatory Drug Testing. Apply in person in Albuquerque at 2700 Second St SW M-Fri 9am to 4pm or call 505-2426599 (Dave) to make other arrangements. EOE LORETTO LINE TOURS Tour guide wanted. Must have CDL with air brake endorsement. Great pay. Inquiries call: 505-412-1260.

BATHROOM VANITY LIGHTS. 25"Wx8.5"D. Mint. $40. 2 sets for $75. 505-992-2728

ANTIQUES

FILL DIRT $5 per cubic yard, Base Course $8.50 per cubic yard. Delivery Available. 505-316-2999

IS

*MIDDLE SCHOOL DATA MANAGER/ LEVEL III INSTRUCTOR

ABLE TO TEACH COMPUTER LITERACY AND MANAGE SCHOOL DATA

*MIDDLE SCHOOL ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHER and a

*MIDDLE SCHOOL DORM CASE MANAGER

YELLOW AND WHITE FLUFFY MELLOW CAT-GREEN EYES . No collar, lost near Camino del Monte Sol and Camino Santander on Eastside on Friday night the 31st or June 1 early A.M. Name is Donavan and is microchipped. Please call 986-8901 We miss our sweet fellow.

»jobs«

HOSPITALITY

APARTMENT MANAGER 15 unit property in Las Vegas, NM 20 hours per week + 2 bedroom apartment. Property Management experience required. HUD 811 experience preferred. Proficient in Word and Excel and have excellent customer service skills. Send resume and cover letter to: HUMAN RESOURCES PO Box 27459, ABQ, NM 87125 FAX: 505-262-0997

Homewise, a dynamic Santa Fe non-profit, seeks an Accounting Associate to work for the Controller. The Accounting Associate’s primary role is to contribute to the productivity, efficiency and effectiveness of the Accounting Department. Specific duties include processing A/P, A/R using fund accounting; and servicing loans. Homewise is looking for an energetic self-starter, who is solution oriented and able to work independently with little or no supervision. This person must have strong customer service skills; demonstrated strong computer skills; and be highly organized with strict attention to detail. Three years experience in an accounting function is required. A related college degree is preferred. Competitive compensation package. EOE Send resume and cover letter to jcook@homewise.org.

VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A

IS

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER.

A DEGREE IN BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION WITH A MAJOR IN ACCOUNTING OR RELATED AREA PREFERRED. SALARY 80K + BENEFITS, DEPENDING ON EXPERIENCE. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL JUNE 28, 2013. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-9896320 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO :p guard iola@ sfis.k12.nm .us. Website for application: ww w .sfis.k12.nm .us/hum an_reso urces.

ADMINISTRATIVE NM SPORTS & PT: R e c e p t i o n i s t needed full-time. Please come in for application and bring resume, no phone calls please. 2954 Rodeo Park Dr West.

AUTOMOTIVE LEXUS OF SANTA FE Seeks Technician

To join the growing Lexus Family! Ideal applicants possess ASE certification, good work habits and desire to be long-term player. Positive attitude, neat and clean appearance. Compensation $30-$80k DOE. Apply in person with Mark Franklin, 6824 Cerrillos Road.

CONSTRUCTION HIGH-END Residential General Contractor seeking FULL-TIME JOB SUPERINTEN DENT. Must have at least 10 years construction experience. Please mail resume and references to 302 Catron St., Santa Fe, NM 87501. No phone calls or walkins please.

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

VIGAS ALL Sizes, Fencing Material 6 feet high by 300 feet length. MIscellaneous wood for building or fire. Bob 505-470-3610

CLOTHING Antique French Leather Club Chair, 1800’s, gorgeous, yours for $750, cost $5,000. 505-954-4621. ANTIQUE ICE CREAM (505)466-6205

Table,

$85.

CHARLIE’S ANTIQUES 811 CERRILLOS TUESDAY- SUNDAY 11-5:30. WORLD COLLECTIBLES of art, jewelry, pottery, military and more! We buy. (505)470-0804

Santa Fe Symphony

seeks to fill the position of Operations Manager Responsibilities include planning, overseeing and executing all aspects of stage production for an 11+ concert season. Contracts, travel arrangements, budgeting, general office, bookkeeping and special events. Must be able to work independently and multitask. For complete job description and application instructions contact: svenja@santafesymphony.org

MEDICAL DENTAL DENTAL ASSISTANT, Part time, Thursday 7 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. & Friday 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., fax resume to 505988-5809 NEW MEXICO SINUS INSTITUTE is currently recruiting a Mid-level Practitioner in Rio Rancho & Roswell The ideal candidate would have ENT experience or a desire to be trained, be certified, and possess a New Mexico License and DEA. This individual would need to be committed to quality care while treating for patients in a fast-paced environment. Competitive compensation and benefit package with CME, Medical, Dental, Vision, malpractice. Salary 90K w/ performance incentives. To apply, send resume to Steve Harris at sharris.pa@gmail.com

RADIOGRAPHIC CERTIFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT

Position available in a oral surgery based practice. Qualifications include but not limited to: New Mexico Board of Dental Healthcare radiographic certified, dental assisting experience, high level of computer skills, able to focus and follow directions, exceptional communication skills and team oriented. Submit resume: Attention Cheryl, Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Center of Santa Fe, 1645 Galisteo Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Fax: 505-983-3270.

SANTA FE CARE CENTER MDS COORDINATOR We are currently looking for a part time MDS Coordinator. Hours will flexible according to census. Responsibilities: Would be to complete MDS according to State and Federal Regulations. Qualifications: Licensed Nurse, experience in completing MDS. Salary : NEG ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSES Fulltime Asst Director of Nurses The position requires that you must be a REGISTERED NURSE. The duties will be to help the DON Oversight & Systems Management. This is a salary position. NURSING ASSISTANT ATTN: NA’S We Will be offering C.N.A classes on 06/17/2013. Anyone interested in becoming a C.N.A Please come fill out an application by : 06/11/2013. Salary: NEG If you meet the qualifications and are interested please feel free to apply at: Santa Fe Care Center 635 Harkle Rd Santa fe, NM 87505 505-982-2574 Please ask to speak to Mr. Craig Shaffer, Administrator, or Raye Highland, RN/DON

LEVI JEANS, relaxed fit. Size 40, length 32. Great condition. $15. 505954-1144

Mens turtle necks - Geri 505-4380738 PARACHUTE SPORT PANTS, Flannel lined with matching shirt. Eddi Bauer, size large. Olive color. $20. 505954-1144 VERY FLATTERING skirted bathing suit. Worn 3 times. Can send photos. Geri - 505-438-0738

COLLECTIBLES

Has an immediate need for Journeyman technicians. Required: 3-5 years of service HVAC and/or plumbing experience. Insurable driving record. Exceptional communication skills. Strong mechanical aptitude. Consistent work history. Reliable individuals who have a professional appearance, positive outlook, and are self-motivated. Candidates are subject to a preemployment screening. TLC is the industry leader in compensation and benefits. Apply at: TLC Plumbing and Utility, 5000 Edith NE, Albuquerque, NM 87107, or fax resume to: 505-761-9875, Attn: Human Resources. EOE.

Encyclopedias -

505-983-1380

OLD MEXICAN WAGON. Great for display in yard-- $1500. Come and see. Lots for sale on weekend! Call 505 570-0074.

BLENDER, 1962 Retro Osterizer Classic VIII, 8 settings. As new, works great. $45. 505-989-4114

DRYER WHIRLPOOL 220 volts, white, $100. 505-662-6396

ESTATE SALE BROADWAY THEATER DIRECTOR

TOM O’HORGAN OF HAIR/JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR/LENNY THEATER MEMORABILIA, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, STEINWAY PIANO IN MINT CONDITION, ART, ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES 400 12TH STREET CARRIZOZO, NM APPOINTMENT 575-973-2435 JUNE 12-16, JUNE 19-23, JUNE 26-30 11AM TILL 5PM

GE Spacemaker Microwave XL 1400

SECURITY ALARM TECH Accepting applications. Will consider electrical experience, but alarm experience preferred. Send Resume: info@targetsafesecurity.com

IRRIGATION DRIP System - Tim 505501-1325

4 PLASTIC MILK Crates. $12 for all, 505-954-1144 5 GOOD MAN’S Heavy Knit Long Sleeve Shirts. $30 All, 505-954-1144. 60 PAPERBACKS, Political Thrillers, Baldacci, Demille, etc. $15 (All) 505795-9009

SMALL TOASTER OVEN. Hamilton Beach. Barely used. $15. 505-231-9133 Sunshine Legend Propane Grill, with griddle. $100 OBO. 505-231-9133

1966 CHEVY PICK-UP 350/V-8 CASH OR CHECKS ONLY.

BALING TWINE used Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888

EXERCISE EQUIPMENT

DRESS SLACKS, ADJUSTABLE WAIST. Sizes 44x32, 38x34. $10 each. 505-9541144.

SCHWINN AERODYNE Exercise Bike. Hardly used. $300. 505-982-9402.

EVENFLO RECLINING, Thick Padded infant/toddler car seat. Like new! $40. 505-986-9765

FURNITURE

FOLDING MOVIE/SLIDE s c r e e n 54"wide - Geri 505-438-0738

ADIRONDACK CHAIR. Weathered teak. From Wood Classics. Needs minor repairs. Originally $265. Now $75. 505-989-4114 WASHER AND DRYER PEDESTALS FOR FRONT LOADING MACHINES. NEW $458 ASKING $350. 505-470-9820.

ART

ATTRACTIVE GLASS-TOP END TABLE. Metal legs with faux verde marble finish. $40. 505-231-9133 Beautiful dark wood rocking chair with large cushions. Outstanding condition. $95. 505-986-9765

Kuryakyn Tour Trunk Rollbag: $100.00 T-Bag Universal Expandable: $120.00 Roll Bag Studded, adjustable integral back rest: $80.00 All bags "like new", prices firm, cash only. 505-660-9272

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES

QUALIFIED HVAC TECHS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. APPLY AT 7510 MALLARD WAY

HORSE MANURE (you haul any amount) Barbara 466-2552

MISCELLANEOUS

GE Profile Double oven 1 convection

JONATHON WARMDAY ORIGINAL PAINTINGS including "Taos Pueblo". Recently shown at University of NM Harwood Museum in Taos. www.eganfineart.com, lawrence@eganfineart.com

Multiple Trades Needed with Valid Drivers License wanted for National Roofing Santa Fe. Apply in person at 8:00 a.m. weekday mornings at 1418 4th Street, Santa Fe

HORSE MANURE (free tractor loading) Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888

ORGANIC HORSE Manure Barbara 471-3870

MAGIC CHEF GAS STOVE. Good condition, $100 cash. 505-986-0237.

TRADES

COMPOST, TOPSOIL, soil builder, $30 per cubic yard. Free Delivery with 7 or more yards. 505-316-2999

FAN, PATTON High Velocity, three speed, white, adjustable head, portable. 18"wx16"h. As new ($80), sell for $55. 505-989-4114

Nina 577-3751

SECURITY SYSTEMS SALES Involves door to door sales. Great commission. Experience and assertiveness a must. Electrical knowledge an advantage. Send Resume: info@targetsafesecurity.com

Beautiful, well cared for Woodstock Soapstone wood stove, FIREVIEW model. Catalytic combuster two years old. Provides wonderful, longlasting heat. 575-770-5402

LARGE BOUGANVILLA plant and large Aloe plant - Phoebe 505-9885463

Raypak boiler

SALES PROFESSIONAL

AIR CONDITIONER, roll around, 7,500 BTU. $100, 505-662-6396

ELECTRIC RANGE WHIRLPOOL Black, steam cleaning, 3 single burners, 1 dual burner, 1 warming burner. Used 3 years. $400 505-954-1144

50 gal water heater (American Water Heater Company)

to assist customers in improving their sleep experience, in Santa Fe. This professional must have strong interpersonal, communication & presentation skills. Apply online at www.sleepnumber.com

$99. 10,000 BTU Air Conditioner. Cover and remote control. 505-820-0459

LAWN & GARDEN

MIRAGE SPA SALES & TANNING Must be friendly, computer skills a must, some sales experience. Full time. Apply in person 1909 St. Michaels Drive.

At Sleep Number® , we are searching for a

HEAT & COOLING

HOT TUB DIED. HOT TUB COVER like new. 78 inches square. $150. 505-9832137.

APPLIANCES

SALES MARKETING

SOUTHWESTERN QUALITY COUCH, down filled, peach, linen. $100, 505474-7005

4 PERSON hot tub. Needs new motor. Judith 505-474-4742

RETAIL

regular working hours 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Computer capable preferred. Apply in person at Empire Builders at 1802 Cerrillos Road.

SET of two wooden end tables $35. 505-570-0213

3 PERSON hot tub. Needs work. Bob 505-466-1180

GRANDFATHER Clock with record, 8 track player and am, fm radio, $500 obo. Call, 505-692-4022.

RECEPTIONIST

MULTI TASKING, RELIABLE CASHIER WANTED

LIVING ROOM sofa and pillows for sale. 6 years old, excellent condition, would keep but moved into a home with a small living room. $500 OBO. Call 474-5210.

Holmes Standing, Oscilating Floor Fan. Works Great! $20, 505-231-9133.

PART TIME

Medical terminology helpful. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 8:45-12:45 or 11:30-4:30. Bring resume to: 1424 Luisa, Ste 1, Santa Fe, NM 87505.

DANISH TEAK DESK Solid and elegant design. 82" long, 38" wide, 3 1/2" thick, 27 1/2" high, 3 drawers. Excellent Condition, Single Owner. Viewable this week, Downtown Santa Fe Office. $3,600 505-670-8779

SCRAP METALS, nuts, and botls. Stephanie 505-989-8634

TLC PLUMBING, HEATING, & COOLING

MANAGEMENT

ACCOUNTING ASSOCIATE

R.L. LEEDER COMPANY Now Hiring: CDL Class A Drivers with Tanker Endorsement, Heavy Equipment Operators, Estimators, Job Superintendent. Five Years’ Experience Required Contact Tom Steen 5029 Agua Fria St. Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-473-1360

IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505-989-6353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

Seeking open minded Sous Chef. Must have passion for food and want to learn and grow with the restaurant. 505-930-1444.

ACCOUNTING

FURNITURE

LADDER. 6’ aluminum step and platform. 200 wt. $45. 505-989-4114

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

VACANCY NOTICE

REWARD! SEEN in JACONA 6/7. Minature Pincher, Lost Monday, May 6, 2013, at the Nambe Falls Gas Station. Babe’s collar is red with little bone designs and dog tags. She has a nick on one of her ears. Please call 505-470-5702.

BUILDING MATERIALS

Staffing Coordinator

Join our growing, dynamic management team making a difference in non-medical homecare for seniors in Santa Fe, NM. This problem-solving position would require the candidate to be an organized and outgoing person who would coordinate the staffing/service scheduling required for our clients and CAREGivers. Please submit your resume and cover letter to Chico Marquez at chico.marquez@ homeinstead.com.

EDUCATION

SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR:

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

5 GALLON can of Thompson Water Seal, cedar stain. 505-992-2959

DRIVER-- END DUMP OPERATOR

NO QUESTIONS ASKED Please return to SF Animal Shelter 505 501 3440

B-7

KUULAIRE EVAPORATIVE COOLERS. KA40 (cools 150 sq.ft.) $85. KA50 (cools 350 sq.ft.) $160. Call 466-2128 before 8 p.m.

CLEAR PLASTIC box-like picture frames, (12) 3 1/2 x 5, (10) 5x7, (4) 4x6, (3) 8x10. inezthomas@msn.com or 505-989-1859

AUCTIONS

Bookcase, solid, new, 67h x 33w x 14d. Your for $350, cost $800. 505-9544621.

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

RAYE RILEY Auctions, 4375 Center Place, Santa Fe. Auction every Friday night. Viewing at 5:00p.m. Auction at 7:00p.m. We accept consignments for every weeks auction. 505-9131319

ETHAN ALLEN A R M O I R E in antiqued green, great as media center or dresser with room to hang clothes, $350); Beautiful china hutch in honey pine made by Santa Fe’s Dooling Woodworks, $3500 (original cost over $8000). Call 505-490-0081.

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

BUILDING MATERIALS

DOUBLE DOOR cabinet with shelves, 7’9" high x 2.5’ wide, $100. 505-5700213

18 BUCKETS of Sto, Adobe Brown. 505-690-4894.

QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS, BOX SPRING, FRAME. Great condition. $75. 505-6909235

THE GODFATHER! Collector’s Edition. 7-piece VHS. Perfect condition. $27. 505-474-9020 BEN HUR. Best Picture 1959, Academy Award. VHS. $12. 505-474-9020


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

sfnm«classifieds MISCELLANEOUS

PETS SUPPLIES 3 ADORABLE Male Persian kittens, born April 12th. Kittens have had first shots. Call 505-717-9336. $350.00 Firm.

to place your ad, call TRAINING

986-3000

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

CLASSIC CARS

DOMESTIC

DOMESTIC

1967 IMPALA $3,500 obo, 1997 Cadillac $1,000. 1973 Impala $800. 1941 Buick. 1959 Bel Aire. Fishing Boat 16’ $800. 505-429-1239

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

2012 FORD FOCUS-SE HATCHBACK FWD One Owner, Carfax, Garaged, NonSmoker, 31,000 Miles, Most Options, Factory Warranty, Pristine $14,995

PET INFORMATION flyers and pamphlets - Geri 438-0738

»finance« LARGE ROCKY MOUNTAIN BULL ELK.

Six points per side plus spikes. Beautiful for home, office, restaurant, saloon, casino, conference room. Excellent condition. $3,000. Santa Fe, 520-906-9399.

CLASSIFIEDS

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

Where treasures are found daily

ADORABLE MINIATURE POODLES. Purebred. Males & Females. Shots. Ready to Go to Loving Homes! From $400-$500. Adorable colors! 505-5015433 mramirez120477@gmail.com

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY FOR SALE Lamp repair restoration and assembly. Business established 20 years. With clientele, convenient location with parking, will train. 505-988-1788.

VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

Toy Box Too Full?

CAR STORAGE FACILITY SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!

GET NOTICED!

MULE DEER WILDLIFE MOUNT , large 4 points each side. Good condition. Nice for office, home, saloon, restaurant. Santa Fe, asking $500. 520-906-9399

CALYPSO IS an adult male black lab. He is just the best boy. He is housebroken and walks very nicely on a leash. He is good with other dogs and loves going to the dog park. In a home with another dog he could be possessive of the owner and might be best as an only dog. He chases cats, so no cats. He has been temperament tested as a Cuddle Bug: affectionate, loving, and calm. He has all his shots, is neutered, and heartworm free. He is cratetrained.

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

CALL 986-3000

»cars & trucks«

CALL 986-3000

2002 Pontiac Grand AM. $2600. Everything is in working condition. 3.4L V6 engine. It has POWER! Runs nice and smooth. 127,xxx miles but still has a lot more to go. Power windows, power lights, power steering, moon roof, it has pretty much everything. CLEAN TITLE! If interested call or text me at 505-310-8368

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 DOMESTIC 1989 FORD BRONCO II, 4x4. 168k original miles. Excellent running condition. Needs exterior work. $4000. 505470-7740, for appointment.

2005 FORD Focus ZX4 SES Automatic, 84,000mi, super clean, just serviced. Alloy wheels, tinted power windows, rear spoiler. $8,000 505-469-5339.

2002 FORD MUSTANG. ONLY 14,000 MILES! ONE OWNER, 5 SPEED 6 CIL. ENGINE. PERFECT CONDITION. $8,000. 505-474-7646 or 505-310-9007.

Please call 505-660-1648 or the shelter at 505-662-8179 or visit our websites at: www.petfinder.com/ shelters/NM07.html

NYLON POTATO or onion 50lb sacks Dan 455-2288 ext. 101

And our Friends of the shelter website: www.lafos.org

CLASSIC CARS

Ornamental bird cage far east style carving. aproximately 11" x 15" x 25". $25, 505-231-9133

PLANT STAND or Stool, wood, metal. 14" x 16", round. $10, 505-954-11444. RUBBER MADE Type Boxes. 1 large tote bin, 1 medium box with lids. $15, 505-954-1144.

CHIHUAHUAS & POMERANIANS . Very affordable, playful, loving. 505-570-0705 or 505-920-2319

RUSSEL WRIGHT Platters. Brown and Pink Glazes. $25 each. 505-795-9009

JACK RUSSELL PUPPIES . Registered. 1 male, 3 females. Will travel. Call or text 505-814-9755. Email: nm.love@outlook.com

Silk Tree 6’ Realistic Ficus. $75, 505471-3105. VINTAGE VICTORIAN Celluloid Photo Album. $25 505-795-9009 WOODEN PALLETS - Scott 505-4769692

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 5 PIECE drum set. Symbols, hardware, fair condition. $99. 505-6922055 GUITARS, 1982 DY79 A l a v a r e z Y a iri handmade, $3000. Laurie Williams handmade TUI, $5000. Epiphone ET550 classic, damaged, $150. 505-490-1175 or 505-470-6828 HAMILTON UPRIGHT Piano, Mahogany, excellent condition, 8 years old, $1600, obo, 505-988-3788.

OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT 3 BUSINESS phones in good shape Gabe 466-0999 4 DRAWER file cabinet, black, letter size, Los Alamos, $65. 505-662-6396 HP Printer 13X LASER PRINTER CARTRIDGE (505)983-4277 OFFICE DESKS in good condition 505-466-1525 TYPEWRITER AND a Xerox tabletob copy machine - 505-983-1380 USED 3 ring binders in good condition, 30 to 40, inezthomas@msn.com or 505-989-1859

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

PUG PUPPIES, first shots. Males: 2 brown, 2 black. Females: 2 Black, $200. 505-577-1980 or 505-913-0764.

PUREBRED GERMAN Shepherd, CKC Registered. Six weeks old. First shots. $250-300. Sire & Dame on site. 505-681-3244

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

FREE GIFT For a limited time, subscribe to the Santa Fe New Mexican and get this classic comic strip umbrella FREE! *

Daily… Weekend… Sunday-Only… The choice is yours!

You turn to us.

Call NOW

986-3010

*This offer is good only for new subscribers who have not subscribed within the last 30 days and live within The New Mexican’s home delivery area.

www.twitter.com/sfnmsports

EUREKA TENT for two, includes mattresses and large North Face Back Pack. All for $100. 505-989-4114

GOLF BAG & CLUBS. Men’s righthanded. $30. 505-954-1144

TV RADIO STEREO Sony 20 inch television, $30. 36 inch Toshiba, $40 with converter box. 505438-0465

»animals«

HORSES LOOKING FOR Tennesee Walkers and Missouri Foxtrotters. Green broke ok. 5 to 15 years old, will consider other gaited horses. Call Broken Saddle Riding Company, 505-424-7774.

flock to the ball.

www.twitter.com/sfnmsports


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

B-9

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

4X4s

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2007 Jeep Liberty Limited 4WD. Super low miles (54k), fully loaded, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax $13,511. Call 505-216-3800

2011 BMW 328Xi AWD - only 14k miles! navigation, premium & convience packages, warranty until 11/2015 $30,331. Call 505-316-3800

2011 LEXUS CT200h - over 40 mpg! 1owner, clean carfax, 8 year hybrid warranty, well-equipped $26,891. Lexus of Santa Fe, 505-216-3800.

2011 NISSAN Juke S AWD. Only 6k miles, 1 owner, clean CarFax, like new! $20,471. Call 505-216-3800

2010 SUBARU FORESTER, LIMITED One Owner, Carfax, X-Keys, Garaged, 64,000 Miles, Non-Smoker, Manuals, Two Remote Starts, Panoramic Roof, Loaded, Pristine $18,495.

2004 TOYOTA Corolla S. Great condition! $4500. Great car, one owner. 5 speed manual transmission. Gets 3638 miles per gallon highway. Everything works fine. Has very minor cosmetic scratches. Tinted windows, power doors, windows, and locks. Good tires and brakes. Air conditioning, AM/FM, CD player. Safe car and super dependible with killer gas mileage that runs trouble free. 188,000 miles. Call Steve to see it in Santa Fe at 505-780-0431.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport. $4400. 4.0 engine, 4-wheel drive, automatic, Power windows, mirrors, door locks, CD Player Runs Great Call or text: 505-570-1952.

2008 BMW 328i COUPE-2-DOOR One-Owner, Local, 53,689 miles, G a r a g e d , All Service R e c o r d s , Automatic Carfax, XKeys, Manuals, Loaded, Pristine $20,495 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2002 MAZDA MIATA Special Edition. Low miles 36k, many appearance & performance upgrades (photos available). $12,500 OBO, Chris (505)501-2499, tribalart@q.com

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

1976 JEEP CJ 4X4 - $5200. AUTOMATIC V8 MOTOR 350, NEW CARBURETOR, A/C, NEW RIMS AND TIRES, CD, VERY CLEAN, RUNS VERY WELL. 505-5019615

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

2011 VOLKSWAGEN CC Sport. Only 16k miles, turbo, great fuel economy, 1 owner clean CarFax, well equipped. $21,491. Call 505-216-3800

RECUCED! 2005 SUBARU Legacy Outback. Turbo, 5-Speed. 98,700, mostly highway. All Services. Extra wheels and snows. Exceptionally Fine Condition. $11,500. 505-473-0469

2010 ACURA MDX ADVANCE One Owner, Every Record, 44,000 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Third Row Seat, Navigation, Loaded, Factory Warranty, Pristine $32,995. PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

WHAT YOU see is what you get! 1990 TOYOTA 4RUNNER. Runs great. $2850. 2000 SUBARU FORESTER AWD. Freshly serviced. Must see. $4495. Ask for Lee 505-316-2230.

2008 BMW 335XI COUPE . Ultra clean, AWD, 37k miles. Leather, Sport package, parking sensors, sunroof, CD, Dinan exhaust system, AFE intake, Breyton wheels, new Goodyear tires, lowering kit, clear bra, more. Clean CarFax. $28995. Top dollar paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6

VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2011 MERCEDES-BENZ C300 4MATIC LUXURY SEDAN. AWD. Impeccable condition. 4 new tires, special alloy wheels, rear sunshade, heated seats, Sirius satellite radio, navigation, power seats, moonroof, bluetooth, more. Factory warranty, clean Carfax. $27995.00 TOP DOLLAR paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6

2002 SUBARU Wagon Legacy AWD. Air conditioning is ice cold. 5 speed standard transmission, Power windows and doors. Great condition, All Maintenance Records. 220k miles. Tires 75% life left. One Owner. $3850.00 OBO. Call 505 920 9768

2012 TOYOTA Camry LE - ONLY 5k miles! Truly like new, 1 owner clean CarFax, this one won’t last! $19,782 Call 505-216-3800

IMPORTS 2011 Honda CRV EX-L NAVI - Every option including navigation! low miles, clean 1 owner CarFax, gorgeous! $24,972. Call 505-216-3800 2008 MERCEDES-BENZ CLK350. Extra clean, 43k mikes. Moonroof, CD, cruise, keyless go, power windows, locks, seats. Alloy wheels. Clean CarFax, freshly serviced. $19495. Top dollar paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6

A CLASSIC! Completely restored. Almost new everything! Local mechanic with expertise can verify. $15,000 call (505) 570-0074

RELIABLE LOW Mileage BMW 325i. $2650. Well kept, automatic, A/C, 4 wheel disc brakes, original paint, clean title, engine great, tranny smoothshift, 124k miles. NADA is booked at 6000 high. Autotrader does not have any this low priced, Call 505-310-0885.

2011 Audi A3 2.0 TDI - DIESEL!!! Absolutely pristine, low miles, clean 1owner CarFax, new tires $25,861. Call 505-216-3800.

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.

PICKUP TRUCKS

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

2006 HONDA HYBRID CIVIC, 62,000 miles, GPS, very good condition. Serious inquiries only. Family owned. $8,500, steve.chastain@hotmail.com

2010 VOLKSWAGEN Jetta Sportwagen TDI - DIESEL!!! low miles and very nice, clean CarFax, regularly maintained $21,891 Call 505-216-3800

2010 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID FWD One Owner, Local, Service Records, Carfax, 38,109 Miles, Garaged, NonSmoker, Remaining Factory Warranty, Pristine $19,495. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2011 MINI Cooper Countryman S AWD - only 17k miles! Free Maintenance till 09/2017, Cold Weather & Panoramic Roof, 1 owner $27,431. Call 505216-3800 SMART Convertible 2008 Mercedes built, 21k, 1 Owner, Garaged. Leather, heated seats, tinted windows, AC, Premium Sound, Impeccable $11,395. 505-699-0918

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.

MUST SELL!

2008 KIA Optima with only 87,000 miles. I am asking $8,500 obo, book on this car is still $9,800. Please serious inquires only! Please feel free to call with questions or for any additional questions (505)901-7855 or (505)927-7242

BMW 528IT 1999 classic wagon. 133k. Green, automatic, leather, premium package, 6 disc cd, Michelins, looks and runs great. 505-986-9630

2011 MINI Cooper S - only 19k miles! 6-speed, turbo, clean 1-owner CarFax, free maintenance until 2017! $21,471. Call 505-216-3800

2011 SUBARU Impreza Outback Sport Hatch - rare 5-spd, low miles, navigation, moonroof, super nice! $18,671

2010 Toyota RAV4 4x4 - ONLY 16k miles! immaculate, 1-owner clean CarFax, 4 cyl and 4WD $19,821 Call 505-216-3800.

1984 CHEVROLET 2-ton, 16 foot flatbed. 2WD, 454 manual transmission (4-speed). 56,000 original miles. $1,850 OBO! Call Andrew, (505)231-4586. Sat through Wed after 5 p.m. and Thurs and Fri any time.

2003 MERCEDES-BENZ CLK55 AMG 362 hp, 0-60 in 4.9 seconds, only 66K miles, $14,500 OBO, 505-699-8339

WANT TO SELL YOUR CAR FAST & GET TOP DOLLAR? Our AUTO PACKAGE includes: an ad in The Santa Fe New Mexican, Thrifty Nickel and online at sfnmclassifieds.com

PLUS YOU GET THIS GREAT OFFER FROM:

1900 Cerrillos Rd. • 983-4201 3931 Cerrillos Rd. • 474-4320

25 OFF 3 OFF

$

O R

A Detail for Resale*

$

Any Car Wash

IT’S THAT 986-3000 EASY! classad@sfnewmexican.com

*Detail for Resale and classified minimum purchase restrictions apply.


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 2013

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

PICKUP TRUCKS

SPORTS CARS

SUVs

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

2008 TOYOTA TUNDRA DOUBLE-CAB-SR-5 Carfax, Records, Xkeys, Manuals, 44,167 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker TRD-Package, Every Available Option, Factory Warranty, $25,995 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

2002 CHEVY Trail Blazer $4500. Automatic, 170,000 miles, very clean , V6 motor vortec 4200, CD, A/C, power windows. Runs pretty good. Very nice! 505-501-5473

VERY COOL Classic 65 Ford F-100 long-bed pickup truck with spacious Six-Pac Camper. Truck runs well. Powerful 352 Cu.In. V8 engine with manual transmission. Includes camper jacks. $3,900 for both. Must go together. Call 505-670-2474.

VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2007 TOYOTA Tacoma Double Cab 4WD SR5 - Clean 1 owner CarFax, recently serviced, good miles, excellent condition $21,381. Call 505-2163800.

2004 TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5 ACCESS CAB, 4 WD, V8, 109,600 Miles, Bed Liner, Bed Cover, Tow Package, New Tires in 2012, $11,600.00 505-690-5548

1995 FORD Econoline E150 conversion van. $3800. 167,000 mostly highway miles, 5.8 motor nice and strong. Power locks, power windows, cruise control, front and rear a/c and heater, nice limo lights, rear bench seat turns into a bed, all new rear brakes and wheel cylinders as well as new drums, also has tow package. All around nice vehicle. If interested call 505-690-9034.

MST at the Cooperative Educational Services offices, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM. To participate in the Pre ]Proposal Conference 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 ]023 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., MondayFriday, except holidays.

for activists rally Immigrants,

Locally owned

and independent

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

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

A-8

50¢

mexican.com www.santafenew

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

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

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations who paid people Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann

Grimm

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

The New

LEGALS

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

Case No. D-0101-PB2013-00107

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ROBERT LESSARD, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that Yuliya Lessard has been appointed Personal Representative of the estate of the above named decedent. Creditors of the estate must present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this notice or be forever barred. CATRON, CATRON, POTTOW & GLASSMAN, P.A. Attorneys for Personal Representative P. O. Box 788 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-0788 (505) 982-1947 Fletcher R. Catron LEGAL #95284 PUBLISHED in The Santa Fe New Mexican on June 17, 24 2013

Continued...

TV book

2010 NISSAN Rogue SL AWD - only 18k miles, leather, moonroof, loaded and pristine $21,381. Call 505-2163800

CALL 986-3010

LEGALS

Legal #95312 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on June 10 and 17, 2013 Members of the public are invited to provide comment on hearings for the issuance of/or transfers of liquor licenses as outlined below. All hearings will be conducted at the NM Alcohol & Gaming Division Offices on the date specified in the Toney Anaya Bldg., 2550 Cerrillos Road, 2nd Floor, Santa Fe, NM. The Hearing Officer for this Application is Rose L. Garcia who can be contacted at 505-476-4552 or rosel.garcia@state.n m.us Application #A852924 for Transfer of Ownership of Liquor License No. 0951 on June 26, 2013 at 11:00 am. G&J Brooks Enterprises, Inc. located at #7-C Avenida Vista Grande, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Legal#95507 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: June 17, 2013 MEMBERS OF the public are invited to provide comment on hearings for the issuance of or transfers of liquor licenses as outlined below. All hearings will be conducted at the NM Alcohol & Gaming Division Office on the date specified in the Toney Anaya Bldg., 2550 Cerrillos Road, 2nd Floor, Santa Fe, NM. The Hearing Officer for this Application is Rose L. Garcia who can be contacted at 505476-4552 or rosel.garcia@state.nm.u s

to place legals, call LEGALS

g , Fe, NM 87507. Proposals are due on or before 9:00 a.m., June 21, 2013 at the Business Office of Monte del Sol Charter School. To obtain further information, contact the Business Office at 505-982-5225.

AGE, 1935 ASPEN DRIVE, SANTA FE, NM 87505 IN SATISFACTION OF LIEN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE NEW MEXCO SELF STORAGE ACT.

LEGAL#93896 PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN JUNE 13, 14, 17, 2013 MONTE DEL Sol Charter School will be receiving sealed proposals for providing part-time Custodial Services for the 2013-2014 school year. Specifications are available at the Monte del Sol Business Office at 4157 Walking Rain Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87507. Proposals are due on or before 9:00 a.m., June 21, 2013 at the Business Office of Monte del Sol Charter School. To obtain further information, contact the Business Office at 505-982-5225. LEGAL#93897 PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN JUNE 13, 14, 17, 2013

New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange RFP for Professional Legal Services The New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange (NMHIX); is seeking proposals for Professional Legal Services from qualified vendors to provide legal services to NMHIX and The New Mexico Health Insurance Alliance (NMHIA). The selected Offeror will be responsible interpretation of federal and state statutes and appropriate representation in administrative and judicial proceedings regarding the NMHIX program and its operations. Qualified bidders must have extensive experience in Health Insurance, Managed Care and PPACA. A license to practice law in New Mexico is required. Legal malpractice insurance is required and must be demonstrated through written documentation. The deadline for proposal submission is June 18, 2013. The electronic version of this RFP is available for download from NMHIA website at http://www.nmhia.co m/nmhix/rfps.php Refer to website for RFP updates. THE SANTA FE NEW MEXI-

Legal #95326 Published in The Santa CAN JUNE 14, 17, 2013 Fe New Mexican on June NOTICE OF PUBLIC 17, 2013

Continued...

FREE ADS

SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY SHALL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION AT 12:00 PM OR AFTER ON THE 26TH DAY OF JUNE, 2013 AT ST. MICHAELS SELF STOR-

Continued...

Advertise what you want to sell, $100 or less. The New Mexican will give you the ad for free.

2012 42FT FIBERGLASS FIFTHWHEEL. 4 SLIDES, 2 BEDROOM, 2 AIRS, WASHER, DRYER, DISHWASHER, ANWING, 4 SEASONS. LIKE NEW, USED ONCE. 38,900 505-385-3944.

NEWMARE COUNTRY AIR 1994 Motor Home, runs on Gasoline. In very good condition. Garage kept. $17,000, 505-660-5649.

986-3000

LEGALS

Application No. A-855998 for the issuance of a Restaurant Liquor License on June 27, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. Pineda, LLC located at 7 Caliente Road, #AA, Santa Fe, LEGAL#93903 New Mexico. PUBLISHED IN

MONTE DEL Sol Charter School will be receiving sealed proposals for providing Maintenance Services for the 20132014 school year. Specifications are available at the Monte del Sol Business Office at 4157 Walking Rain Rd., Santa

2009 STAR YAMAHA 250cc. ONLY 400 miles on this garage stored beauty. Includes carry rack, 2 helmets, new coat, black padded vest. $2500 firm. Call gary at (505)570-0074.

SOLD

Check out the coupons in this weeks

Sealed bids must be All interested citizens delivered to: are invited to attend Los Alamos Public this public hearing. School District _________________ Attn: June Gladney, Purchasing Manager Yolanda Y. Vigil 2075 Trinity Drive City Clerk Los Alamos, NM 87544 LEGAL#93906 663-2222 or PUBLISHED IN THE (505) SANTA FE NEW MEXI- (505) 663-2238 CAN JUNE 17, 24, 2013 The Los Alamos FIRST JUDICIAL School Board reDISTRICT COURT serves the right to reCOUNTY OF SANTA FE ject any and all bids STATE OF NEW MEXICO and/or cancel this ITB in its entirety.

Cooperative Educational Services reserves the express right to accept or re- INVITATION TO BID BID NO: 14-B-01 ject any or all bids. Los Alamos Public Schools /s/ David Chavez, Administration BuildExecutive Director ing Parking Lot/Landscaping Site LEGAL#93887 Work PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXIThe Los Alamos CAN JUNE 10, 17, 2013 School Board is requesting competitive CITY OF SANTA FE sealed bids for the Los Alamos Public NOTICE OF PUBLIC Schools’ AdministraHEARING tion Building Parking Notice is hereby giv- Lot and Landscaping en that the Governing Site Work. Body of the City of Santa Fe will hold a Project bid/contract public hearing on documents may be Wednesday, June 26, obtained from the 2013 at its regular location(s) listed in City Council Meeting, the complete Invita7:00 p.m. session, at tion to Bid (ITB) and City Hall Council may be picked up at Chambers, 200 Lin- A l b u q u e r q u e Reprographics (ARI) coln Avenue. 4716 McLeod NE, AlThe purpose of this buquerque, NM 87109 (505) 884-0862 with a hearing is to discuss a request from Mur- $50.00 refundable dephy Oil USA, Inc. for a posit made out to Or e-mail Transfer of Owner- LAPS. ship and Location of j.gladney@laschools. Dispenser License net for locations. #0649 with package sales from 838, LLC, A Mandatory Pre-Bid dba The House of Conference will be Booze, 838 Agua Fria held on Tuesday, June Street, Santa Fe, to 18, 2013, at 9 am at Murphy Oil USA, Inc, Suite V, 2075 Trinity dba Murphy Express Drive, Los Alamos, #8609, 5301 Las NM 87544. Soleras Drive, Santa Bids will be received Fe. no later than July 2, 2013, 10:00 am.

Continued...

31’ Class A Damon Motor home, Chevy 454 V-8 engine. Own your home -- Comfortable Queen rear bedroom, full shower with bubble sky light, kitchen galley, hide-abed couch, easy chair, driver and passenger captain chairs. Tons of basement storage underneath. Sleeps six. Only 52,000 original miles. Easy to drive, clean, same owner since 1997. Located in Santa Fe. 520-906-9399.

SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS?

sfnm«classifieds

There will be a Non Required Pre Proposal Conference held on Wednesday, June 19, 2013, at 1:30 p.m.

HARLEY DAVIDSON VRod 2007. Gorgeous! 1100 CC VSRC. 2,400 miles. New battery, battery tender, passenger backrest, luggage rack. $11,500 or best. 505-424-8831.

1995 Damon Class A Motor Home $11,900

SUVs

Cooperative Educational Services, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109, will receive sealed proposals until 1:30 p.m. local time, Friday, July 12, 2013, for Category 1: Medium and Heavy Duty Trucks

MOTORCYCLES

2001 Lincoln Navigator. V8, 185,000 miles. Clean interior, heating, A/C, electric windows. $5000. 505-690-9879

2010 CHEVROLET Tahoe LTZ 4WD, white with black leather interior, warranty, 22k miles, 1 owner, $19,000, J73GREENE@YAHOO.COM

CAMPERS & RVs

1977 DODGE MOTOR Home, 22’ New wood floor & fabrics. Generator, stove, refrigerator. 57,500 miles, engine runs great. $3,950. 505-216-7557

CAMPERS & RVs

2001 JEEP Charokee Sport. 6 Cylinder, automatic, 147,000 Miles. $4995 Call Manny at 505-570-1952

2003 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE. $3700. Automatic, standard, 3.0 motor. 130,000 miles, CD and A/C. 505-501-5473 Runs good!

ADVERTISEMENT FOR PROPOSAL

»recreational«

VANS & BUSES

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

LEGALS

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

UNIT#E24 Arviso, Cheryl 3948 Paseo Del Sol Santa Fe, NM 87507 Contents: Boxes, chair, motors UNIT#F18 Baca, Maria D. 11 W. Gutierrez Unit 3830 Santa Fe, NM 87506 Contents: Sofa, loveseat, boxes, dresser

LEGALS j 7 (b) of the Indian Se lf- D e te r m in a tio n and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450 e (b)) and Section 2 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968. In addition, the successful proposer must comply and ensure contractors compliance with HUD 24 C.F.R. part 85 Certificates; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) procurement regulations; NPHA Procurement Policy; and all other applicable laws, rules and regulations. The selection of the successful proposer will be based on evaluation criteria that will be made available upon request.

UNIT#G15 Major, Marilyn 4613 University #248 Coral Springs, FL 33067 Contents: Dresser, table, bench Firms or individuals wishing to submit LEGAL#93889 proposals may rePUBLISHED IN THE quest a complete Bid SANTA FE NEW MEXI- Packet from NPHA by CAN JUNE 10, 17, 2013 calling Jorge Ramirez, N P H A NOTICE OF PUBLIC Production/Contracts SALE Manager, at 505-4557973 ext. 206. All proNOTICE IS HEREBY posals, along with a GIVEN THAT THE FOL- bid bond in the LOWING PROPERTY amount of 5% of the SHALL BE SOLD AT proposed cost of the PUBLIC AUCTION ON project, must be reWEDNESDAY THE ceived at NPHA, Attn: 26TH OF JUNE 2013 Scott Beckman, ExecAFTER 12:30 PM AT utive Director, 5 West SANTA FE SELF STOR- Gutierrez, Suite 10, AGE, 1501 THIRD and Santa Fe, New STREET, SANTA FE, Mexico 87506 no later NM, 87505 TEL. 505- than 12:00 p.m., July 983-6600 IN SATISFAC- 5, 2013. Proposals TION OF LEIN IN AC- shall be submitted in CORDANCE WITH THE duplicate in a sealed NEW MEXICO SELF envelope clearly STORAGE ACT. marked "Proposal for Picuris RehabilitaJOANN BARTON tion." Proposals not 26-B PASEO NOPAL received by this time SANTA FE, NM 87507 and date may be reUNIT#848 jected by NPHA. CONTENTS: BOXED NPHA reserves that LCD 32" TV AND RE- right to reject any CEIVER, TENT FAN, and all proposals and MISC CAMPING GEAR, to waive any and all BOOM BOX, VARIOUS deficiencies. PLASTIC STORAGE CONTAINERS, CERAM- LEGAL#93907 IC HEATER, FIRST AID PUBLISHED IN THE KIT, CLOTHES, OTHER SANTA FE NEW MEXIHOUSEHOLD GOODS. CAN JUNE 17, 19, 2013 LEGAL#93890 PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN JUNE 10, 17, 2013

SANTA FE CIVIC HOUSING AUTHORITY REQUEST FOR Proposals

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

The work to be performed under the proposal is on a project subject to section

The Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority is requesting proposals for Construction and remodel of multiple housing units and associated infrastructure at three different jurisdictions and multiple tracks of land located in Santa Fe, Espanola, and Bernalillo, all in New Mexico. The Authority will build approximately 59 individual units, plus a community building at the Bernalillo Site and will remodel approximately 365 units including restructure of common areas which will include building walls and landscaping. These projects are in three different

Continued...

Continued...

The Northern Pueblos Housing Authority (NPHA) is requesting proposals from qualified general contractors to renovate 1 housing unit at Pueblo of Picuris. The scope of work includes rehabilitation in conformity with specified Scope of Work (available for review) developed by NPHA. "Time Is Of The Essence" in completion of the work under this Request For Proposals.

It sells, you make money. Even a stick kid gets it.

sfnm«classifieds 986-3000 classad@sfnewmexican.com

toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com LEGALS

holder of record who returns a complete set of Bidding Documents in good condition within 15 days The New Mexico Cul- after opening of Bids. tural Properties Review Committee will Contract Documents review the Clovis may be examined at Railroad and Com- the following locamercial Historic Dis- tions: trict and Old Lordsburg High Issuing Office School nominations Agua Fria CWSA for consideration of 2432 Camino De Los listing to the State Lopez Register of Cultural Santa Fe, New Mexico Properties at a public 87507 meeting on June 21, (505) 490-2128 2013 at 1:00 p.m. in the Old Senate Cham- Engineer Design bers, Bataan Memori- Sullivan al Building, 407 Group, Incorporated 227 E. Palace Avenue, Galisteo St., Santa Fe, NM. The full agenda P.O. Box 283 is available on the Santa Fe, New Mexico Historic Preservation 87504 0283 Division’s website at: (505)982 4481 www.nmhistoricpres ervation.org, or call Construction Reporter (505) 827-6320. 1609 Second Street, NW Albuquerque, Legal#95504 Published in the San- New Mexico 87102 ta Fe New Mexican (505)243 9793 on: June 17, 2013 Builders News & Plan Room AGUA FRIA 3435 Princeton Drive, COMMUNITY WATER NE Albuquerque, New SYSTEM Mexico 87107 ASSOCIATION (505)884 1752

LEGALS

locations with three different project manuals and scope of work differs at each location. Therefore, while not mandatory, you are highly encouraged to attend the pre-proposal conference which will be held on July 2, 2013 starting at 9:00 AM at the Administrative office of the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority, 664 Alta Vista Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505. All Proposals received will be evaluated based on criteria as outlined within the Request for Proposals. Total costs are estimated at 20 million and all proposals must be accompanied by a negotiable bid guarantee of 5% of the amount of the bid. Request for Proposal Packets will be available starting on June 17th and may be obtained by Rudy Gallegos, Deputy Director (505) 699-7764 or via email, r u d y g @ s f c h a . c o m . INVITATION TO BID You must have a ReWATER SYSTEM quest for Proposal IMPROVEMENTS Packet to properly (PHASE II) submit and meet all the requirements for Separate sealed bids, this process. subject to the condiEd Romero, Executive tions set forth in the Contract Documents, Director will be received by the Agua Fria ComLEGAL#93905 munity Water System PUBLISHED IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXI- Association, P.O. Box CAN JUNE 17, 18, 24, 4966, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502, until 2013 2:00 PM, Tuesday, July 9, 2013, for WATER SYSTEM IMPROVESANTA FE COMMUNITY COL- MENTS (PHASE II). The bids will be LEGE REQUEST FOR PRO- opened publicly and read aloud at the POSALS #12/13-33 Nancy Rodriquez Santa Fe Community Community Center loCollege (SFCC) seeks cated at 1 Prairie Dog Sealed Responses for Loop near the interits Request For Pro- section of Co. Rd. 62 posals for Auditing and the Santa Fe ByServices in order to pass (599). All bids select a vendor to must be identified on perform those serv- the outside of the ices for the College. sealed envelope by SFCC seeks respons- project title, name es from interested and address of Bidand qualified vendors der, and New Mexico license capable of providing contractor’s such services as out- number. Any bid reafter the lined in the RFP to en- ceived able the SFCC to se- above stated closing lect the best qualified time will be returned unopened. auditor.

F. W. Dodge 1615 University Blvd., NE Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102 (505)243 2817 Each bid shall be accompanied by a Bid Bond in the amount of not less than five (5) percent of the total amount bid. No Bidder may withdraw his bid within sixty (60) days after the date of opening. The successful Bidder will be required to furnish a Performance Bond and a Payment Bond to the extent of one hundred (100) percent of the amount bid. Time of substantial completion shall be 120 calendar days. A pre-bid conference will be held at 2:00 p.m., Thursday, June 27, 2013 in the Nancy Rodriquez Community Center located at 1 Prairie Dog Loop near the intersection of Co. Rd. 62 and the Santa Fe Bypass (599). All items must be bid. Partial bids will be rejected. The Agua Fria CWSA reserves the right to accept any bid and to reject any or all bids, to waive any technicalities or informalities, and to reject bids which, in its opinion, are unbalanced.

The general scope of work to be performed includes installing approximately 3,900 feet of 6" and 8" PVC water main, 9 fire hydrants, 29 service connections, 4,545 square yards of road Sealed Responses repair, and a new should be addressed well. Funding for this projto, Santa Fe Communect is provided in part ity College, Purchas- Copies of the Con- by the NMFA Water ing Office, 6401 Ri- tract Documents are Trust Board chards Avenue, Santa on file at the loca- (Loan/Grant No. 238Fe, NM 87508 and will tions indicated below, WTB). be accepted by said and are available to office until the fol- Bidders only from AGUA FRIA CWSA Construction Reportlowing: er, 1609 Second Roman Romero, TIME: 12:00 p.m. Street, NW, Albuquer- President que, New Mexico MDT 87102. A deposit of Legal#95505 DATE: July 1, 2013 $75.00 is required for Published in the SanLegal #95546 Published in The San- each set of Contract ta Fe New Mexican ta Fe New Mexican on Documents. The de- on: June 17, 2013 posit will be refunded June 17 2013 to each document RFP packets may be obtained at the SFCC’s Purchasing Office (contact Bob McWilliams at 505428-1630) and online a t www.sfcc.edu/rfps.


Monday, June 17, 2013 THE 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, June 17, 2013: This year you are strong-willed, and once more you reap the benefits of that quality. You will resist power plays and say “no” to distractions that cause you to lose focus of your greater desires. Libra knows how to get your interest. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You’ll defer to others with unusual ease. There is a volatile quality to the people around you, and you might not want to deal with them. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You will jump through hoops in order to get what you want. Someone might become very stubborn. Tonight: Go as late as you need to. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You might become snappy or sarcastic with a loved one. A money agreement might be bothering you more than you realize. Tonight: Make sure you do something physical. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HH You might feel the emotional temperature rising around you and opt to keep your head down. Whether it will work with a controlling spouse, loved one or boss is hard to tell. Tonight: A vanishing act. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Everyone loves sharing news with you, as you offer insight that helps them move forward. Realize what is happening behind the scenes with a co-worker. Tonight: Follow a friend’s lead. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Be aware of how much you have to offer, as far as your talent and creativity are concerned. Your assets go way beyond finances. Tonight: Your treat.

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.

5. Blunderbuss

Subject: WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH IT?

Answer________

What would you do with the

6. Dory

given item? (e.g., Pestle. Answer: Grind or mash a substance.)

Answer________

FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Awl Answer________

PH.D. LEVEL

2. Missive

7. Wimble

Answer________

Answer________

3. Balaclava Answer________

8. Baklava Answer________

GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Buckboard Answer________

9. Kefir Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Make holes (in wood or leather). 2. Read it. 3. Wear it. 4. Drive it (ride in it). 5. Shoot it. 6. Row it (sail it). 7. Bore holes. 8. Eat it. 9. Drink it.

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 Sometimes you don’t know how to respond to a friend’s unpredictability. Right now, you can incorporate this person’s energy with ease. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off.

Wife fears husband is having an affair Dear Annie: I have been married to the love of my life for several years. Our children are all grown and out of the nest. I recently learned that over the past few months my husband has had numerous telephone conversations with a female acquaintance. I know this woman, too, although not very well. I travel for work several times a month, and that’s when most of these conversations took place. My husband says they are “just friends,” that she’s young and looks to him for advice. Annie, she’s younger than I am, but not so young that she still needs advice from someone old enough to be her father. Do you think this could be a case of “where there’s smoke there’s fire”? What should I do? — Country Gal Dear Gal: There may not be fire, but only because you stomped it out. Your husband is not being forthcoming when he says they are “just friends.” The fact that most of these calls took place when you were out of town indicates he was hiding them, which means he is not so innocent in his intentions. Nothing may have happened, but he didn’t discourage her attentions or make their contact transparent to you. Tell him the “friendship” is over, or it’s time to see a marriage counselor. Or an attorney. Dear Annie: In raising our children, we always stressed proper etiquette and thought they knew how to behave. However, we recently had lunch with one of our adult sons in a restaurant. He continued to talk with food in his mouth, placing his other hand about two inches away from his face. After witnessing this a couple of times, I asked him to please not do that as it is not only rude, but, between the food and his hand, we couldn’t understand a word he was saying. He replied that it is rude if

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HH It seems as if you are withholding some information and loving every moment of it. A partner might attempt to coerce this secret out of you. Tonight: Dinner for two. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Fortunately you are goal-oriented, which allows you to stay focused while key friends and loved ones are intent on creating uproar. Tonight: Happiest where people are. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Keep conversations moving, especially with higher-ups. Avoid getting stuck on your differences. Tonight: Realize that you come across as a very strong individual. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Listen to your sixth sense. Note that any negativity you feel might come off much stronger than you think. Tonight: Head in the direction that your imagination takes you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might want to let go and try enjoying yourself. Consider working from home or taking the day off. Keep your eyes wide open. Tonight: Say “yes” to an offer. Jacqueline Bigar

Chess quiz

WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. f4ch! Kh5 2. Qh8 mate.

Today in history Today is Monday, June 17, the 168th day of 2013. There are 197 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On June 17, 1963, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Abington (Pa.) School District v. Schempp, struck down, 8-1, rules requiring the recitation of the Lord’s Prayer or reading of Biblical verses in public schools.

Hocus Focus

one doesn’t place their hand in front of their mouth while chewing. What happened to the rule “never talk with your mouth full”? — Dismayed Parents Dear Parents: We are going to assume your son witnessed someone doing this and decided it was appropriate. It is not. One should chew with one’s mouth closed. One should swallow food before opening one’s mouth to speak. If you can do both of those things, there is no reason to put your hand over your mouth and prevent people from seeing your lips and hearing your voice clearly. You have our permission to send this to your misinformed child. Dear Annie: Please pass this along to “Trying To Be a Stepdad,” whose wife doesn’t back him up when he refuses to buy the kids expensive things. My ex-wife was exactly the same. Anytime I would try to teach our two sons that you can’t have everything you ask for, I would be disregarded. I served in the Navy, and the kids knew if I said “no,” the next time my ship went out to sea, their mother would get them whatever they wanted. The kids never had to work, save or wait for anything. Two years after I retired, my wife left me for half of my pension, and I inherited $50,000 in credit card debt. I am still paying it off eight years later. I tried to be a good provider, but my ex could spend it quicker than I could reload the ATM. My oldest son and I don’t communicate because I don’t bail him out every time he needs money. My younger son and I have a good relationship because he now understands why I am this way. If “Trying” and his wife can’t stand united, especially on big-ticket items, he will be the one picking up the tab for a long time. — Been There, Retired

Jumble


B-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 17, 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


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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