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City on offensive over bond report Finance director demands retraction of report on rating; Moody’s stands by its findings, downgrade
By Julie Ann Grimm
The New Mexican
After Moody’s Investor Services downgraded its bond rating for city of Santa Fe by a notch over the weekend, the city finance director on Monday continued to demand that the rating
general obligation bond rating from its third-best rating of “Aa2” to its fourthbest rating of “Aa3.” Bond ratings can affect a local government’s ability to attract investors and its borrowing costs. But city officials have noted that Santa Fe’s general obligation bond ratings from other
agencies are “AA+” by Fitch and “AA” by Standard & Poors. New York-based Moody’s formally announced its rating change Saturday. Prior to that, Moody’s included Santa Fe on an April list of cities identified
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Station relocation
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New lease offers fail to satisfy residents
agency retract what he says is an erroneous report that lumped Santa Fe with recent trouble in Detroit and Chicago A spokesman for Moody’s, however, reiterated Monday that its analysts feel they were justified in placing the city “on review” this spring and in the weekend downgrading of Santa Fe’s
City to develop new south-side transit center after talks to upgrade current mall hub fizzle
Homeowners have until Sept. 1 to accept a property proposal By Tom Sharpe
The New Mexican
The religious group hoping to turn over the LifeWay Glorieta Conference Center to another religious group has modified the options being offered to churches and individuals who have built lodges and houses on lots rented there. Nevertheless, some leaseholders remain unsatisfied. Karen Foster said that like many other leaseholders, she has invested her life savings in her home because she believed the conference center, 18 miles southeast of Santa Fe, would continue to allow her to lease into the future. She knows of nowhere she could buy a home for the $40,000 being offered her. “We have been diligent stewards of God’s blessings to us to live a debt free life,” she wrote. “I for one do not want to start over at this stage of my life with a mortgage. We and our descendants are being forced to donate our homes to an entity that is showing doubtful Christian ethics, and I, for one, do not choose to donate my home to them.” LifeWay Christian Resources of Nashville, Tenn., is aiming to transfer, for a nominal sum, about 2,000 acres and accommodations for more than 2,000 to a nonprofit called Glorieta2.0 whose principals already run another Christian summer camp in Texas. LifeWay would retain
Several people wait to catch a bus Monday at the south-side transit center at Santa Fe Place mall. The city wants to develop a new transit facility on vacant city land on the corner of Camino Entrada and Cerrillos Road after negotiations between city officials and mall owners failed to produce a deal to make upgrades to the current bus hub. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Julie Ann Grimm The New Mexican
I
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Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
S.F. Desert Chorale Touched With Fire, 8 p.m., pre-concert talk 7 p.m., $10-$50, 988-2282, desertchorale.org. 207 Old Santa Fe Trail. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Jimmy Russell places his bike on the front of a bus Monday at the bus stop at Santa Fe Place mall.
Ruth Cleo Brighton, 91, Santa Fe, July 26 Jeannie Ann Lopez, Santa Fe, July 22 Ruth Anne Miller, 60, Santa Fe, July 26
The Washington Post
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Index
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Whistle-blowers cope with life after revealing secrets By Emily Wax
Obituaries
t is looking like the city will build its new south-side bus hub on public land near police headquarters rather than making improvements to the existing bus stop at Santa Fe Place mall. Santa Fe Trails has operated what it calls the “south-side transit center” from the mall parking lot for “many years,” according to Transit Division Director Jon Bulthuis. However, in order to use federal money for upgrades to the passenger waiting area, the city must own the land where the hub is located or hold a long-term lease on the property. Agents for mall owners at Trademark Properties wouldn’t agree to sell the parcel or commit to a long lease,
Bulthuis said. So now the choice for a new transit center is the vacant lot at the corner of Camino Entrada and Cerrillos Road — an option that a citizen advisory group recommended earlier this year. “The city and staff, and I think, our ridership would prefer for things to be a status quo in terms of the location. Bringing people to the mall is a good thing,” Bulthuis said in an interview Monday. “But we just couldn’t get this deal done despite the best efforts of staff. Even some of the councilors have reached out. It’s not the city trying to pull the plug on the mall.” In 2008, the Federal Transit Administration awarded the Transit Division a $588,000 grant to improve the bus stop that is currently just a
WASHINGTON — The former high-ranking National Security Agency analyst now sells iPhones. The top intelligence officer at the CIA lives in a motor home outside Yellowstone National Park and spends his days fly-fishing for trout. The FBI translator fled Washington for the West Coast. This is what life looks like for some after revealing government secrets. Blowing the whistle on wrongdoing, according to those who did it. Jeopardizing national security, according to the government. Heroes. Scofflaws. They’re all people who had to get on with their lives.
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As Edward Snowden eventually will. The former NSA contractor who leaked classified documents on U.S. surveillance programs is now in Russia, with his fate in limbo. The Justice Department announced last week that it won’t seek the death penalty in prosecuting him, but he is still charged with theft and espionage. Say he makes it out of there. What next, beyond the pending charges? What happens to people who make public things that the government wanted to keep secret? A look at the lives of a handful of those who did just that shows that they often wind up far from the stable government jobs they held. They can even wind up in the aisles of a craft store. Peter Van Buren, a veteran foreign service offi-
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cer who blew the whistle on waste and mismanagement of the Iraq reconstruction program, most recently found himself working at a local arts and crafts store and learned a lot about “glitter and the American art of scrapbooking.” “What happens when you are thrown out of the government and blacklisted is that you lose your security clearance and it’s very difficult to find a grown-up job in Washington,” said Van Buren, who lives in Falls Church, Va., and wrote the book We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People. “Then, you have to step down a few levels to find a place where they don’t care enough about your background to even look into why you washed up there.”
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
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CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Australia Britain Canada China Denmark Euro Hong Kong Japan Mexico N. Zealand Russia Singapore So. Africa So. Korea Sweden Switzerlnd Taiwan Thailand
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1.0866 .6511 1.0256 6.1372 5.6198 .7537 7.7571 97.88 12.7379 1.2458 32.8251 1.2663 9.7948 1112.01 6.4740 .9304 29.92 31.16
1.0802 .6501 1.0284 6.1365 5.6164 .7534 7.7571 98.24 12.6680 1.2373 32.8061 1.2639 9.7921 1112.41 6.4680 .9287 29.91 31.13
KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.
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Sherri Mason, right, a chemist with State University of New York at Fredonia, works aboard a research vessel in 2012 on Lake Erie, where scientists discovered masses of floating plastic particles in Lakes Superior, Huron and Erie last year. COURTESY 5GYRES.ORG
Masses of plastic particles found in the Great Lakes By John Flesher
The Associated Press
A
lready ravaged by toxic algae, invasive mussels and industrial pollution, the Great Lakes now confront another potential threat that few had even imagined until recently: untold millions of plastic litter bits, some visible only through a microscope. Scientists who have studied gigantic masses of floating plastic in the world’s oceans are now reporting similar discoveries in the lakes that make up nearly one-fifth of the world’s fresh water. They retrieved the particles from Lakes Superior, Huron and Erie last year. This summer, they’re widening the search to Lakes Michigan and Ontario, skimming the surface with finely meshed netting dragged behind sailing vessels. “If you’re out boating in the Great Lakes, you’re not going to see large islands of plastic,” said Sherri Mason, a chemist with State University of New York at Fredonia and one of the project leaders. “But all these bits of plastic are out there.” Experts say it’s unclear how long “microplastic” pollution has been in the lakes or how it is affecting the environment. Studies are under way to determine whether fish are eating the particles. The newly identified hazard is the latest of many for a Great Lakes fish population that has been hammered by natural enemies like the parasitic sea lamprey, which nearly wiped out lake trout, and man-
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made contamination. Through it all, the fishing industry remains a pillar of the region’s tourist economy. Until the research is completed, it won’t be clear whether the pollution will affect fishing guidelines, the use of certain plastics or cities that discharge treated wastewater into the lakes. Scientists have already made a couple startling finds. The sheer number of plastic specks in some samples hauled from Lake Erie, the shallowest and smallest by volume, were higher than in comparable samples taken in the oceans. Also, while it’s unknown where the ocean plastic came from, microscopic examination of Great Lakes samples has produced a smoking gun: many particles are perfectly round pellets. The scientists suspect they are abrasive “micro beads” used in personal care products such as facial and body washes and toothpaste. They’re so minuscule that they flow through screens at waste treatment plants and wind up in the lakes, said Lorena Rios Mendoza, a chemist with the University of Wisconsin-Superior. At the urging of scientists and advocates, some big companies have agreed to phase them out. During a meeting of the American Chemical Society in April, Rios reported the team had collected up to 1.7 million tiny particles last year in Lake Erie, which acts as something of a “sink” because it receives the outflow from the three lakes to the north — Superior, Michigan and Huron. The Great Lakes are no stranger
to ecological calamity. Zebra and quagga mussels have destabilized food chains, and ravenous Asian carp are poised to invade. Runaway algae blooms that had been stamped out a generation ago have returned. Dozens of harbors and river mouths are fouled with toxic waste. Now, researchers are stepping up efforts to determine how much damage the plastic could do. Mason and Rios are working with the 5 Gyres Institute, a nonprofit group based in Los Angeles that has called attention to sprawling masses of plastic in the oceans. While Mason searches Lake Michigan for more plastic, Rios is poking through fish innards for plastic fragments. In ocean environments, fish and birds are known to feed on microplastics, apparently mistaking them for fish eggs. A more complicated question is whether the particles are soaking up toxins in the water, potentially contaminating fish that eat them — and sending them up the food chain. Everyone agrees the best way to avoid environmental damage from plastics is to keep them out of the water in the first place. Eriksen’s group has urged makers of personal care products to stop using microbeads. For anglers who regularly feast on salmon, perch and other delicacies from the lakes’ depths, the most common reaction to the microplastic scare is a resigned shrug. They’re used to warnings against overindulging on fish because of mercury, PCBs and
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In brief
Crude oil price holding steady NEW YORK — The price of oil was little changed Monday ahead of information later this week on oil supplies, U.S. monetary policy and economic growth. U.S. benchmark crude lost 15 cents per barrel to finish at $104.55 in New York. Brent crude, the benchmark for international crudes, rose 28 cents to end at $107.45 in London. Crude prices have fallen somewhat after they rose quickly in early July to reach nearly $110 per barrel in trading on July 19. Traders are looking for clues Wednesday in an announcement by the Federal Reserve on whether and how long the Fed will scale back its stimulus plan. The Fed has been buying $85 billion of financial assets a month in an attempt to keep longterm borrowing rates low and help shore up the U.S. economic recovery. Traders are also looking to see whether Energy Department will report another draw in oil supplies. Oil supplies remain high compared with the five-year average, so most traders say it is more likely that oil prices will soon fall than that they will rise further. In other trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange: u Wholesale gasoline for September fell 3 cents to finish at $2.98 a gallon. u Heating oil for September rose less than a cent to end at $3.02 a gallon. u Natural gas for September fell 9 cents to finish at $3.47 per 1,000 cubic feet.
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Tuesday, July 30 BEHIND ADOBE WALLS HOUSE AND GARDEN TOUR: Santa Fe Garden Club’s annual guided tour of local private residences; noon-5 p.m. Tour $75, optional pre-tour luncheon $20, call Terry at Westwind Travel, 984-0022 for reservations and information, thesantafegardenclub. org. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: Understanding the language of dreams is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. Reservations are required. Call 982-3214. 145 Washington Ave. GREAT OLD BROADS FOR WILDERNESS: Sangre de Cristo NM Broadband intro meeting. Agenda: hikes, nature walks, monitoring and restoration projects, speakers, activities for 50th anniversary of wilderness, preserving wild places. 500 Market St., No. 100. HISTORICAL DOWNTOWN WALKING TOURS: Led by New Mexico History Museum and Palace of the Governors guides. For information call 505-476-1141. 113 Lincoln Ave. INSTITUTE OF AMERICAN INDIAN ARTS WRITERS FESTIVAL: Free readings by students, faculty, and Native authors, including N. Scott Momaday, 6 p.m. 83 Avan Nu Po Road. SANTA FE PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKSHOPS’ INSTRUCTOR IMAGE PRESENTATION SERIES: Open conversation and slide presentation of works by Rick Allred, Norah Levine, Paul Mobley, and Eddie Soloway, 8:30-10 p.m., no charge. 1101 Camino de Cruz Blanca. SITE SANTA FE MY LIFE IN ART: The talk series continues with Sidney Felsen, Joni
CAIRO — In dark sunglasses and a uniform studded with medals, Egypt’s top general is everywhere, looking down from posters and banners proclaiming him “lion of the nation.” Adoring songs vow “We are behind you.” Barely a month after he removed the elected president, Gen. AbdelFattah el-Sissi is riding a wave of adulation, drawing comparisons between him and modern Egypt’s first charismatic strongman, former President Gamal Abdel-Nasser. State media and pro-military TV channels and newspapers have done everything they can to fuel the fervor. But some warn that the personality cult could pave the way to new authoritarianism after a coup that the army and its supporters insist was aimed at promoting democracy. “I worry about el-Sissi and the possible arrogance of the victor. And I fear him if he decides that the army is stronger than any future president that he will control like a puppet,” wrote Mohammed Fathy, a columnist in the newspaper Al-Watan. “The admiration for him has gone beyond normal levels and is now more like deifying him.” The hype has swelled to the point that some are convinced el-Sissi will take off his uniform and run for president in elections due to take place early next year. A military spokesman denied el-Sissi has any intention to do so. That has done nothing to end the speculation by those for and against the idea.
Activists launch vodka boycott NEW YORK — Russian vodka and the Winter Olympics in Sochi. For now, those are the prime targets as gays in the United States and elsewhere propose boycotts and other tactics to convey their outrage over Russia’s intensifying campaign against gay-rights activism. At many gay bars across North America, owners have joined a campaign to stop selling Russian vodka — notably the popular brand Stolichnaya. Activists also are pressing the International Olympic Committee and NBC, which holds U.S. broadcasting rights for Sochi, to be more aggressive in criticizing new Russian laws. The chief flashpoint is a law signed by President Vladimir Putin last month that bans the “propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations” and imposes hefty fines for providing information about the gay community to minors or holding gay pride rallies. Foreign citizens arrested under the law can be jailed for 15 days and then deported. There also is concern about a longrunning problem of violence against gays in Russia, as well as a new law restricting adoptions of Russian children by people in countries allowing same-sex marriage. The Associated Press
Lotteries Weyl in conversation with Juliet Myers, 6 p.m., $5 and $10, 989-1199. 1050 Old Pecos Trail. MARIJUANA ANONYMOUS: Meeting at 7:15 p.m. on Tuesdays. 1915 Rosina St.
NIGHTLIFE Tuesday, July 30 COWGIRL BBQ: Singer/songwriter Lipbone Redding, 8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Canyon Road Blues Jam with Tiho Dimitrov, Brant Leeper, Mikey Chavez, and Tone Forrest, 8:30 p.m.-midnight, no cover. 808 Canyon Road. LA CASA SENA CANTINA: Best of Broadway, piano and vocals, 6-10 p.m., no cover. 125 E. Palace Ave. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Sierra, country band, 7:30 p.m.-close, no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. SANTA FE BANDSTAND: Local dirt-rock band Tree Motel, 6 p.m.; psycadelic/postrock band Jupiter Spiral, 7:15 p.m.; santafebandstand.org, series continues through Aug. 23. 80 E. San Francisco St. SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL: Shai Wosner: piano recital, music of Schubert and Widmann, noon, tickets available at the SFCMF box office, 982-1890, santafechambermusic.com, or 988-1234. 107 W. Palace Ave. SANTA FE DESERT CHORALE 2013 SUMMER FESTIVAL: Touched With Fire, 8 p.m., pre-concert talk 7 p.m., $10-$50, 988-2282, desertchorale.org. 207 Old Santa Fe Trail. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, jazz and classics, 6-8 p.m.; jazz-fusion pianist Tom McDermott, 8 p.m.-close; call for cover. 427 W. Water St.
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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.
VOLUNTEER ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Five separate resident facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — are operating by St. Elizabeth Shelter. Volunteers are needed to help prepare meals at the emergency shelters and perform other duties. Send an email to volunteer@steshelter.org or call Rosario at 505-982-6611, ext. 108. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. Call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican. com.
NATION & WORLD
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-3
‘Who am I to judge?’ Francis asks Pope talks openly about gay priests, role of women
drawing a clear line between homosexuality and pedophilia. “We know that a part of reactionary clerical thought plays on the confusion between these two completely different categories,” he said. Francis also said he wanted a greater role for women in the church, though he insisted “the door is closed” to ordaining them as priests. In a speech in Rio, Francis described the church in feminine terms, saying it would be “sterile” without women. Funny and candid, Francis’ exchange with the media was exceptional. While Pope John Paul II used to have on-board talks with journalists, he would move about the cabin, chatting with individual reporters so it was hit-or-miss to hear what he said. After Benedict’s maiden foreign voyage, the Vatican insisted that reporters submit questions in advance so the theologian pope could choose three or four he wanted to answer with prepared comments.
By Nicole Winfield The Associated Press
By Matthew Lee
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — With a cast of characters that has presided over numerous failed Middle East peace efforts, the Obama administration launched a fresh bid Monday to pull Israel and the Palestinians into substantive negotiations. Despite words of encouragement, deep skepticism about the prospects for success surrounded the initial discussions, which were opening with a dinner hosted by Secretary of State John Kerry. He named a former U.S. ambassador to Israel to shepherd what all sides believe will be a protracted and difficult process. Former envoy Martin Indyk, who played key roles in the Clinton administration’s multiple, unsuccessful pushes to broker peace deals between Israel and Syria and Israel and the Palestinians, will assume the responsibility of keeping the talks alive for the next nine months. Kerry called Indyk a “seasoned diplomat” and said he “knows what has worked and he knows what hasn’t worked.” Neither Kerry nor the State Department would say what has worked in the past, although the fact that there is no peace deal now would seem to indicate that nothing has worked in resolving the IsraeliPalestinian standoff. President Barack Obama echoed Kerry’s hopeful sentiment in a statement that said Indyk “brings unique experience and insight to this role, which will allow him to contribute immediately as the parties begin down the tough, but necessary, path of negotiations.” The Israeli side will be led by chief negotiator Tzipi Livni, a former foreign minister who was active in the Bush’s administration’s ill-fated Annapolis peace talks with the Palestinians, and Yitzhak Molcho, a veteran adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who was part of the Israeli team involved in Obama’s two previous attempts to broker negotiations. Those two efforts relied heavily on Dennis Ross, a former Indyk colleague and Mideast peace envoy, and veteran negotiator George Mitchell. The Palestinian team will be led by chief negotiator Saeb Erekat and President Mahmoud Abbas’ adviser, Mohammed Shtayyeh, both of whom have been major players in failed negotiations with the Israelis since 1991. Despite the presence of so many people whose past experience does not include success, Kerry and other officials voiced cautious optimism about the resumption of talks which he painstakingly negotiated during six months of shuttle diplomacy that began with Obama’s own trip to Israel in March. “It sounds like we’re lucky to have decades of experience ready to come back to the table and make an effort to push for-
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ward,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. Previous attempts to get talks started have foundered on Israel’s continued construction of Jewish settlements on land claimed by the Palestinians and Palestinian attempts to win international recognition as a sovereign state in the absence of a peace deal. Actual negotiations have died because the two sides have been unable to compromise on the most serious disagreements between them: borders, the status of Jerusalem, refugees and security. With a U.S.-imposed gag order on revealing any details about the substance or framework of the talks, gauging progress will be difficult. But the outlines of any eventual peace deal are fairly well known: a Palestinian state based on the lines that existed before the 1967 war in which Israel seized east Jerusalem and occupied the Palestinian territories, with agreed land swaps and recognition of a secure, Jewish state of Israel. But neither side will publicly commit to those goals, and getting there will require major concessions that will be difficult to sell to the Israeli and Palestinian publics. Ahead of the initial discussions on procedures and guidelines for the meetings, which the U.S. hopes will grow into more substantive talks on the key sticking points, Kerry urged both sides to strive for “reasonable compromises on tough, complicated, emotional and symbolic issues.” He acknowledged that the path ahead would be long and difficult. But he said that Indyk had the respect and confidence of all involved and that his vast experience in Middle East diplomacy could only help. Now Servicing All Makes and Models 2 years or 24,000 mile warranty on Parts & Labor.
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learn a lesson from the pope. “I believe that if politics had one-millionth of the capacity to … listen that the pope does, it would be better able to help people who suffer,” he said. Vendola praised the pope for
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in itself, although for some the encouragement was tempered by Francis’ talk of gay clergy’s “sins.” “Basically, I’m overjoyed at the news,” said Francis DeBernardo, executive director of the U.S.-based New Ways Ministry, a group that promotes justice and reconciliation for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in the wider church community. “For decades now, we’ve had nothing but negative comments about gay and lesbian people coming from the Vatican,” DeBernardo said in a telephone interview from Maryland. The largest U.S. gay rights group, Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement that the pope’s remarks “represent a significant change in tone.” Still, said Chad Griffin, the HRC president, as long as gays “are told in churches big and small that their lives and their families are disordered and sinful because of how they were born — how God made them — then the church is sending a deeply harmful message.” In Italy, the country’s first openly gay governor, Nichi Vendola, urged fellow politicians to
HOW THE CALENDAR CONTEST WORKS 1. Entry fee is $20 per pet, per photo. 2. Pet’s name, photo & owner’s name will appear in The Santa Fe New Mexican during the first voting period, Aug. 18 - Sept.3. 3. Anyone can vote for the pet(s) of their choice during the first voting period in person at The New Mexican, by phone, email or online for a $1 per vote. 4. The Santa Fe New Mexican proudly supports the Santa Fe Animal Shelter, with 100% of all calendar sales, and non-perishable items collected during the voting period donated to the shelter. 5. The 25 pets with the most votes in the first round will advance to finalist round, and receive a professional pet photo session. 6. Anyone can vote in finalist round for the pet(s) of their choice in person at The New Mexican offices, by phone, email or online for $2 per vote Sept. 8 Sept. 18. 7. The 13 top vote getters from the finalist round will be featured in our 2014 calendar, distributed to 22,000 households throughout Santa Fe & Northern New Mexico in the Oct. 12 edition of The Santa Fe New Mexican. Extra copies will be available at the Santa Fe Animal Shelter and the Santa Fe New Mexican offices.
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2014
U.S. launches new Mideast peace bid
Pope Francis answers reporters’ questions aboard the papal flight on its way back from Brazil on Monday. The pope said he wouldn’t judge priests for their sexual orientation in a wide-ranging news conference as he returned from his first foreign trip. LUCA ZENNARO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
2014
Secretary of State John Kerry stands with former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk at the State Department in Washington on Monday as he announces that Indyk will shepherd Mideast peace talks. CHARLES DHARAPAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ABOARD THE PAPAL AIRCRAFT — A remarkably candid Pope Francis struck a conciliatory stance toward gays Monday, saying “who am I to judge” when it comes to the sexual orientation of priests. “We shouldn’t marginalize people for this. They must be integrated into society,” Francis said during an 82-minute exchange with reporters aboard his plane returning from his first papal trip, to celebrate World Youth Day in Brazil. “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?” the pope asked. Francis’ first news conference as pope was wide-ranging and open, touching on everything from the greater role he believes women should have in the Catholic Church to the troubled Vatican Bank. While his predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, responded to only a few pre-selected questions during his papal trips, Francis did not dodge a single query, even thanking the journalist who asked about reports of a “gay lobby” inside the Vatican and allegations that one of his trusted monsignors was involved in a gay tryst. Francis said he investigated the allegations against the clergyman according to canon law and found nothing to back them up. He took journalists to task for reporting on the matter, saying it concerned issues of sin, not crimes like sexually abusing children. And when someone sins and confesses, he said, God not only forgives — he forgets. “We don’t have the right to not forget,” he said. While the comments did not signal a change in Catholic teaching that homosexual acts are “intrinsically disordered,” they indicated a shift in tone under Francis’ young papacy and an emphasis on a church that is more inclusive and merciful rather than critical and disciplinary. Francis’ stance contrasted markedly with that of Benedict, who signed a document in 2005 that said men who had deep-rooted homosexual tendencies should not be priests. Gay leaders were buoyed by Francis’ approach, saying the change in tone was progress
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Station: Grant cash in jeopardy, feds say Continued from Page A-1 few benches in a parking lot median. This spring, the feds warned the city that access to that money was in jeopardy due to slow progress on the project. So, city officials set a deadline of late June for the real estate deal. Bulthuis said that the city has been trying to buy the halfacre sliver of parking lot from Trademark since about 2010 and from the mall’s previous owner before that, but the most recent deadline passed without a contract and the feds are still anxious. If the grant doesn’t happen now, Bulthuis said, it appears the likelihood of getting that amount of money later is slim. Nearly all of the city’s 10 routes make a stop at the mall, which enables passengers to make connections between buses that travel in different directions. The downtown bus station on Sheridan Avenue serves the same function on the north end of the bus line. As development continues on the south and western regions of the city, the southern transit hub will only increase in importance, he said. Bulthuis plans to appear before the City Council on Wednesday to give an update
about the project and seek direction. If officials sign off on the plan, the division would move forward with engineering designs to build the new transit center on the west side of Cerrillos Road just south of the Santa Fe Police Department headquarters. Since the City Council approved a plan in April to spend $230,000 to buy the mall lot for the transit center, that money would now be available for extra costs associated with developing a vacant lot, according to Bulthuis. The city would save money, however, because it will not incur costs for the land acquisition or the parking lot demolition and waste removal. The grant is supposed to cover new benches and shelters as well as appropriate lighting and an electronic interactive kiosk that gives real-time reports on the arrival and departure of buses. Santa Fe Place site manager Beth Riebsclager said early Monday that she hadn’t heard about the city’s plans to move the bus stop or about negotiations with Trademark that had apparently fallen through. Contact Julie Ann Grimm at jgrimm@sfnewmexican.com or 986-3017. Follow her on Twitter @julieanngrimm.
Bond: City says calculations wrong Continued from Page A-1 as “under review” because of what it said was a too-high ratio of pension liability compared to annual operating revenues. That list received national news media attention last week after Detroit filed a bankruptcy petition and Moody’s downgraded its credit rating for Chicago due to uncertainty about pension funds there. What’s wrong with original report and this weekend’s announcement, city of Santa Fe Finance Director Marcos Tapia said, is that Moody’s analysts don’t appear to understand that Santa Fe employees are part of a statewide retirement pool called the Public Employees Retirement Association nor /’do the analysts properly account for untapped taxing authority. “We pay as we go along,” Tapia said Monday. “The city pays contributions to PERA on behalf on an employee and that money sits with PERA. The city can’t go in and take it back. … We have made every contribution that the PERA requires us to make.” Tapia said the city’s contract financial adviser — George Williford of First Southwest Company in Dallas — contacted Moody’s on behalf of the city this spring to question its methodology but didn’t get much feedback. When Santa Fe was mentioned in business coverage in the Rueters wire service and other media outlets again last week, Tapia said he renewed the effort to have the matter clarified. “We are trying to get them to retract the report, but a company like that, they won’t,” Tapia said in an interview Monday. The report issued Saturday, while not as bad as earlier estimates indicated, is still flawed, he said. By issuing the re-rating that takes the city down just one notch on the scale, the company is indirectly admitting its earlier error, Tapia said. According to Tapia, a Moody’s representative told Williford during a recent phone call that Santa Fe landed on its review list based on estimates about revenues, expenses and pension liability. Moody’s didn’t ask for or receive current financial reports from the city or from the Public Employees Retirement Association. It also apparently relied on calculations from only the city’s Santa Fe’s general fund. Santa Fe County, another local government that relies on PERA for retirement, is also on the list. “They guessed, is basically what it comes down to,” Tapia said. “It was very upsetting. The
way they do the calculations is wrong.” David Jacobson, a spokesman for Moody’s, said Saturday’s downgrading is reflective of the city’s large “adjusted net pension liability” relative to its peers. The firm believes the city has only “a modest debt burden,” but notes that recent increases in state requirements for employer pension contributions “could further stress the city, which already has high fixed costs as a percentage of the annual budget.” Although Rueters cited Moody’s in reporting that Santa Fe’s pension liability was six times its revenue, Jacobson said Monday said that the figure does not appear in the earlier Moody’s report. Saturday’s rerating says the city has a pension liability 3.5 times its annual revenue. Tapia said the changing liability numbers are a good example of why the city has questions about the company’s methods. The city had no trouble getting better bond rating from competing credit rating agencies on debt that it issued earlier this month, Tapia noted. Finance officials here assert that the city is far from tapped out. While budget planning has been in an austerity mode for a number of years, Santa Fe has unused taxing authority for both property taxes and gross-receipts taxes on sales of goods and services that could be leveraged against future debt. According to a recent report, the city will have about $48.1 million in general obligation bond debt when it completes the sale of all the bonds currently authorized by voters. The debt ceiling for the state for such bonds is 4 percent of taxable value of property in the city, or about $144 million. In its Saturday report, Moody’s wrote that Santa Fe’s revenue outlook is “stable” and noted that the rating is intended to present “a new approach to analyzing state and local government pensions.” The report also notes that the rate adjustments are not intended to replace reported liability information from the shared PERA plan, but are intended to “improve comparability with other rated entities.” The PERA board of directors is scheduled to meet Wednesday in Red River and expects a representative of Moody’s Dallas office to attend the meeting and answer questions from the board’s own actuaries. Contact Julie Ann Grimm at jgrimm@sfnewmexican.com or 986-3017. Follow her on Twitter @julieanngrimm.
Secrets: No structure to compensate Continued from Page A-1 “Let’s sit in the back,” Thomas Drake says when choosing a booth at Parker’s Classic American Restaurant in downtown Bethesda, Md., during his lunch break from Apple. “I have a lot to say. I was a public servant. That’s a very high honor. It’s supposed to mean something.” Drake was prosecuted under the World War I-era Espionage Act for mishandling national defense information. His alleged crime: voicing concerns to superiors after 9/11 about violations of Americans’ privacy by the nation’s largest intelligence organization (NSA) and later, in frustration, speaking to a reporter about waste and fraud in the NSA intelligence program. (He says he revealed no classified information.) He lost his $155,000-a-year job and pension, even though in 2011 the criminal case against him fell apart. The former top spokesman for the Justice Department, Matthew Miller, later said the case against Drake may have been an “ill-considered choice for prosecution.” Drake, now 56, is tall and lanky and dresses as though he’s ready, at any moment, to go on a gentle hike. He is the type of person who likes consistency. He went to work at Apple the day after the charges against him were dropped, surprising his co-workers who thought he would at least take a day off. In 2010, he got an adjunct professor job at Strayer University but was fired soon after, he says, while he was under government investigation. “I was just blacklisted,” he said, adding that he started his own company but has only had minor work. “People were afraid to deal with a federal government whistle-blower.” Drake long planned to be a career public servant. He enlisted in the Air Force in 1979 and flew on spy planes and once was a CIA analyst and an expert in electronic intelligence missions. On Sept. 11, 2001, he reported for his first day of work as a senior executive at the NSA’s Fort Meade, Md., campus, and shortly thereafter, he voiced “the gravest of concerns” regarding a secret domestic surveillance program that, he says, was launched shortly after the attacks. In 2006, he was reassigned from the NSA to be a professor at the National Defense University, but he was forced to leave in 2007, when his security clearance was suspended. Ironically, he was teaching a class called “The Secret Side of U.S. History.” Now the Apple store employee, who lives in Howard County, Md., is extremely grateful for his hourly wage retail job. He has no choice. He has massive legal debt and a son ready to go to college. Last year, he was working when he spotted an unlikely customer: Attorney General Eric Holder, who came in to
Thomas Drake, left, and Jesselyn Radack, right, at the offices of the Government Accountability Project in Washington ealier this month. Drake, who worked at the National Security Agency, is now an Apple store employee; Radack is director of national security and human rights at GAP, a whistle-blowing advocacy organization. MATT MCCLAIN/THE WASHINGTON POST
check out iPhones. Drake introduced himself and asked: “Do you know why they have come after me? “Yes, I do,” Holder said. “But do you know the rest of the story?,” he asked him. Holder quickly left with his security detail, Drake said. “It’s not every day you get to talk to the chief law enforcement officer of the land about your case,” Drake said, “or at least try.” Sometimes Washington is just the last place you can stand to be. Sibel Edmonds was once described by the American Civil Liberties Union as “the most gagged person in the history of the United States.” And she was a regular on Washington’s protest circuit. She was fired from her work as a translator at the FBI for trying to expose security breaches and cover-ups that she believed presented a danger to U.S. security. Her allegations were supported and confirmed by the Justice Department’s inspector general office and bipartisan congressional investigations, but she was not offered her job back. She also published a memoir, Classified Woman — The Sibel Edmonds Story. Then last summer, Edmonds, 43, decamped with her 5-year-old daughter and husband to Bend, Ore., which is known as the sunny side of the state. The July weather is 77 degrees without humidity, and there are 33 independently owned coffee shops and nine microbreweries. “I am touring every single one. Plus, we don’t even have air conditioning here,” she said. “We open the windows and feel the breeze.” For years before she left, Edmonds found Washington’s atmosphere suffocating. Many of her neighbors in Alexandria, Va., were lobbyists and contractors, who she says stopped talking to her after her name appeared in the newspaper. Luckily, her husband of 21 years is a retail consultant and could live anywhere. She says that most whistleblowers have spouses who work in the same agencies, which typically puts pressure on their marriages. She is still dedicated, she says, to the cause of exposing
injustice and making information free. She spends hours running “Boiling Frog Post: Home of the Irate Minority,” a podcast and website that covers whistleblowing and tries to create broader exposure for revelations. She is also founder and director of the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition. “I think in the current climate, Congress and Washington is a last resort,” she said. “We are going directly to the people and focused on releasing information. And I don’t have to do that from Washington.” “The connection is really bad, it must be the NSA surveillance program,” Richard Barlow says jokingly when speaking to a reporter on his cellphone from his motor home outside Yellowstone National Park. “I’m out here with the grizzly bears,” he says. “But this is where I’m comfortable. I’m a 58-year-old seriously damaged, burned-out intelligence officer.” Barlow says he suffers from chronic post-traumatic stress disorder, which makes it hard for him to deal with stress and sometimes other humans. He finds comfort in his three dogs: Sassy, Prairie and Spirit. His supporters say that shouldn’t be surprising considering what he went through. Barlow started his career as a rising star tasked with organizing efforts to target Pakistan’s clandestine nuclearbuying networks. He won the CIA’s Exceptional Accomplishment Award in 1988 for work that led to arrests, including that of Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan. He testified before Congress under direct orders from his CIA chain of command, but he says he later became the target of criticism from some of those in the CIA, who were supporting the jihadists (including Osama bin Laden) in the first Afghan war against the Soviets. He says he chose to leave the CIA, and in early 1989, he went to work as the first weapons of mass destruction intelligence officer in the administration of President George H.W. Bush. Barlow continued to write assessments of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program for thenSecretary of Defense Dick
Cheney. He concluded that Pakistan already possessed nuclear weapons, had modified its F-16s to deliver these weapons, and continued to violate U.S. laws. The intelligence would have legally precluded a sale of $1.4 billion worth of additional F-16s to Pakistan. But in August 1989, Barlow learned that the Defense Department had asserted that the F-16s were not capable of delivering Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. Barlow said that Congress was being lied to, and he objected internally. Days later, he was fired. “Back then, I was disgustingly patriotic and I thought the government is allowing Pakistan to develop and spread nuclear weapons and I got destroyed for trying to stop it,” he said. He was 35 at the time. His marriage to his 29-year-old wife, who also worked at the CIA, was shattered. After a 1993 probe, the inspector general at the State Department and CIA concluded that Barlow had been fired as a reprisal. The Defense Department maintained that the Pentagon was within its rights to fire Barlow. A 1997 GAO report largely vindicated Barlow, and his security clearances were restored. But, he says, he was unable to get rehired permanently by the government because his record was smeared. He eventually found some work as a consultant, helping to start and run the FBI’s counterproliferation program out of Sandia National Laboratories. Meanwhile, he has been trying for years to collect the $89,500 annual pension and health insurance that he believes he is owed. Much of what he tried to report about Pakistan’s nuclear program is common knowledge today, and several national security bestsellers have included his story, including George Crile III’s 2003 book Charlie Wilson’s War: The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History, which describes Barlow as a “brilliant young analyst who gave devastating testimony.” Today, the consulting work has dried up, he has run out of money and thinks he is about a month from being homeless. “I served my country for 23 years. I could go get a job for $10 at Wal-Mart,” he said. “But that’s not the issue, the issue is where’s my money?” Despite efforts by senators and various legislative committees to get him compensated for his loss, the issue has never been resolved, both for political and bureaucratic reasons. He feels part of the problem is that there’s no structure to compensate whistle-blowers in the intelligence field. He also says that the Obama administration has criminalized whistleblowing on levels he’s never seen before. Today, he spends his days, in the wilderness, fly-fishing and bird hunting with his dogs.
Lease: $40K offer increased to $100K Continued from Page A-1 140 acres on the other side of Interstate 25, which could be developed in the future. But a sticking point has been what to do with 60 lots in one section, abutting the Santa Fe National Forest, where individuals and churches, mostly from Texas, have built houses and lodges over the past 60 years. Most of those leases are now running year-to-year. Anthony Scott, Glorieta2.0’s director and founder of Camp Eagle near Rocksprings, Texas, says the situation is like buying a house where part the backyard has been leased to a neighbor who has built a tool shed there. Initially, the leaseholders had until Aug. 15 to decide whether to donate their house to Glorieta 2.0 and take an immediate tax break, continue to lease for another 12 years and then donate their house, or accept $40,000 now for their “improvements.”
Last week, the deadline was extended to Sept. 1, and leaseholders were offered several new options: u The $40,000 offer was increased to $100,000 for the larger properties, at $30 per square foot. That means the maximum amount would be for structures of 3,333 square feet or more, and the minimum amount would be for structures of 1,333 square feet or less. u Those who sign new 12-year leases, at $1,800 a year or $150 a month, beginning this Oct. 1 and ending Sept. 30, 2025, would be allowed to end their lease, leave and accept the previously agreed-upon compensation on a pro-rata basis. Someone who leaves after six years, for example, would get half of what is now being offered for the improvements. u Any leaseholder can apply for lifetime residency if they are or have been involved in ministry or community service, such as tutor-
ing, hospital care, homeless shelters and have a permanent address in Glorieta. “I have met with most lessees in person or by phone and verbally we have had over 56 people/organizations commit to either sell, sign the 12 year lease, or take the life time residency,” Scott said in an email Monday. “This obviously leaves a few who have not answered or are not taking any of our options at this time.” Bud McCrady, a 72-year-old retired rancher from Waxahachie, Texas, who has lived permanently on the site with his wife, Linda, for a decade, said Monday that he thinks he qualifies for the third option. His daughter was a missionary in Africa. “Since we are permanent residents there, we can stay basically the rest of our lives,” he said. “But I don’t know if anybody exactly knows how that’s going to work.” Kirk Tompkins, a Little
Rock, Ark., business consultant with a vacation home in Glorieta, recently urged his fellow leaseholders, in a Bible-quote-laced email, to be tolerant and constructive about the situation, despite the “financial stress that [is] causing health problems due to the lack of compassion and fairness from LifeWay, G2.0 and David Weekley [a Houston homebuilder who is Glorieta2.0’s chairman].” Tompkins suggested the leaseholders compose a resolution to be presented to the Southern Baptist Convention next year. “It is my hope that the current proposed sale … will be put on hold, with current leases renewed until a time in the future that Glorieta 2.0, or other entity has the proper financing to acquire” the conference center, he said in an email to The New Mexican. Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 or tsharpe@ sfnewmexican.com.
NATION & WORLD
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Panel backs lung cancer screening
More than 100 children rescued in prostitution sting WASHINGTON — Declaring child prostitution a “persistent threat” in America, the FBI said Monday that authorities had rescued 105 young people and arrested 150 alleged pimps in a three-day sweep in 76 cities. The agency said it had been monitoring Backpage.com and other websites as a prominent online marketplace for sex for sale. Backpage.com said that it was “very, very pleased” by the raids and that if the website were shut down to the advertisements, the ads would be pushed to sites that wouldn’t cooperate with law enforcement. The young people in the roundup, almost all of them girls, ranged in age from 13 to 17. The largest numbers of children rescued in the weekend initiative, Operation Cross Country, were in San Francisco, Detroit, Milwaukee, Denver and New Orleans. The operation was conducted under the FBI’s decadelong Innocence Lost National Initiative. The latest rescues and arrests were the largest such enforcement action to date. “Child prostitution remains a persistent threat to children across the country,” Ron Hosko, assistant director of the bureau’s criminal investigative division, said in a news conference. “We’re trying to put this spotlight on pimps and those who would exploit.” In Operation Cross Country, federal, state and local authorities cooperated in an intelligence effort aimed at identifying pimps and their young victims. The FBI said the campaign has resulted in rescuing 2,700 children since 2003. The investigations and convictions of 1,350 individuals have led to life imprisonment for 10 pimps and the seizure of more than $3.1 million in assets. In their efforts to identify child victims, investigators seek help wherever they can find it — in some cases from adult prostitutes, Hosko said. He said almost all the victims in sweeps like the one over the weekend are girls and that the profiles of the victims cut across racial lines and boundaries of wealth. The Associated Press
cancer, saying PSA blood tests do men more harm than good. There are no good ways to screen for ovarian cancer or other less common types. But lung cancer is the top cancer killer worldwide. Nearly 90 percent of people who get it die from it, usually because it’s found too late for treatment to succeed. About 85 percent of lung cancers in the U.S. are attributable to smoking, and about 37 percent of U.S. adults are current or former smokers. The task force estimates that 10 million Americans would fit the smoking and age criteria for screening. The American Cancer Society used to recommend screening with ordinary chest X-rays but withdrew that advice in 1980 after studies showed they weren’t saving lives. Since then, CT scans have come into wider use, and the society and other groups have endorsed their limited use for screening certain heavy smokers. The scans cost $100 to as
much as $400 and are not usually covered by Medicare or private insurers now. But under the new health care law, cancer screenings recommended by the task force are to be covered with no copays. “It’s generally going to be covered by all health plans” if the advice gets final task force approval, said Susan Pisano of the industry trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans. She said her group may develop a response during the public comment period but has had “high regard” for the task force in the past “because they rely so heavily on the evidence” in crafting their recommendations. The task force considered lung cancer screening in 2004 but said there was too little evidence to weigh risks and benefits. Since then, a major study found that screening the age group covered in the task force’s recommendation could cut the chances of dying from lung cancer by up to 20 percent and
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The Associated Press
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Dr. Steven Birnbaum works with a patient in a CT scanner at Southern New Hampshire Medical Center in Nashua, N.H., in 2010. For the first time, government advisers are recommending screening for lung cancer, saying certain current and former smokers should get annual scans to cut their chances of dying of the disease. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
by the Defense Intelligence Agency, which oversees war zone intelligence missions, according to a U.S. intelligence official. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the secret program. On Sunday, the Star-Times newspaper of New Zealand reported that the New Zealand military conspired with U.S. spy agencies to monitor Stephenson’s communications with sources in Afghanistan. New Zealand officials denied the new allegations. But experts and former intelligence officials said if Stephenson’s phone records were collected, they would have been gathered in a military intelligence sweep that is shared among allies — and has for years monitored most communications in war zones, where there is little expectation of privacy in the hunt for enemy combatants and suspected terrorists.
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For the first time, government advisers are recommending screening for lung cancer, saying certain current and former heavy smokers should get annual scans to cut their chances of dying of the disease. If it becomes final as expected, the advice by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force would clear the way for insurers to cover CT scans, a type of X-ray, for those at greatest risk. That would be people ages 55 through 79 who smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for 30 years or the equivalent, such as two packs a day for 15 years. Whether screening would help younger or lighter smokers isn’t known, so scans are not advised for them. They also aren’t for people who quit at least 15 years ago, or people too sick or frail to undergo cancer treatment. “The evidence shows we can prevent a substantial number of lung cancer deaths by screening” — about 20,000 of the 160,000 that occur each year in the United States, said Dr. Michael LeFevre, a task force leader and family physician at the University of Missouri. Public comments will be taken until Aug. 26, then the panel will give its final advice. Reports on screening were published Monday in Annals of Internal Medicine. The recommendation is a big deal for many reasons. The task force, an independent group of doctors appointed by the government, in recent years has urged less frequent screening for breast and cervical cancers, and no screening for prostate
WASHINGTON — A U.S. official said Monday that the National Security Agency did not monitor phone conversations between a New Zealand journalist and his Afghan sources, and other officials and experts said any surveillance was more likely to have been done under standard military intelligence monitoring of enemy communications in war zones. The Obama administration brushed off new allegations of NSA surveillance overreach, this time focusing on freelance reporter Jon Stephenson, who was in Kabul, Afghanistan, working for American news service McClatchy and other media outlets when his phone records were reportedly seized. In a short statement to The Associated Press, the U.S. government official said NSA did not target Stephenson or collect his phone records. That could signal that surveillance of Stephenson’s calls was run
from any cause by nearly 7 percent. Screening “is absolutely not for everybody,” not even all smokers, LeFevre stressed. That includes President Barack Obama, who said a couple years ago that he had quit smoking. Obama is too young (he will turn 52 in a few days) and too light a smoker (he reportedly smoked less than a pack a day), to be in the high-risk group advised to get screening. The potential benefits of screening may not outweigh its possible harms for people not at high risk of developing lung cancer. A suspicious finding on a scan often leads to biopsies and other medical tests that have costs and complications of their own. The radiation from scans to look for cancer can raise the risk of developing the disease. “These scans uncover things, often things that are not important. But you don’t figure out that for a while,” and only after entering “the medical vortex” of follow-up tests, said Dr. Peter Bach, a cancer screening expert at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. The best way to prevent lung cancer is to quit smoking or never start, and screening doesn’t make smoking safer, doctors stress. “That’s everyone’s public health concern: People will see this as a pass to continue smoking,” Bach said of screening. “I don’t think it’s likely,” because people know how harmful smoking is, he said.
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By Marilynn Marchione
The Associated Press
Intel experts say it’s unlikely U.S. helped New Zealand spy on reporter
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Group recommends annual CT scans for older, heavy smokers
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Man with long record jailed again
LOCAL NEWS
Daniel J. Martinez faces charges of battery, probation violation By Phaedra Haywood
The New Mexican
From left, Peter Olson and Lupe A. Sanchez of the Santa Fe County DWI program inspect a winch on a 1990 GMC Sierra that will be auctioned Aug. 8 at the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
DWI forfeitures for sale
Sheriff’s office to auction seized vehicles next week
if you go
What: Auction of cars forfeited in DWI cases
By David Salazar
When: Aug. 8; gates will open at 8 a.m.; auction begins at 9 a.m.
The New Mexican
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anta Fe County sheriff’s deputies on Monday started up some two dozen vehicles forfeited by owners convicted of drunken driving. Some of them had been sitting around for a while and required a jump-start. Earlier, the deputies cleared out the empty beer cans and liquor bottles that were in the truck beds and on the seats when the drivers were arrested. On Aug. 8, the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office will auction off the vehicles, which it has been collecting for the past four years. They range from foreign sports cars to domestic SUVs, and their conditions vary. The money raised will go to the sheriff’s office and the Santa Fe County DWI Program. “This one’s stripped down for racing — I think it’ll be a good bargain,” Peter Olson, a prevention specialist with the county DWI program, said jokingly as Cpl. Nathan Segura with the sheriff’s DWI-Traffic Division jumpstarted a Saab 9000. The Saab, which had been sitting in the sheriff’s seizure lot for years, was fitted only with a tattered driver’s seat, gearshift, spare tire and forgotten bottle of coolant. When the engine was turned on, the car started smoking. As the cars idled — some with deflated tires, others with minor dents or broken windshields and one with multiple bullet
cArs to be Auctioned u 1982 brown Mercedes 300SD u 1987 gray Toyota 4Runner u 1987 purple Toyota pickup u 1988 gray Honda Prelude u 1989 white Nissan Maxima u 1989 white Toyota pickup u 1990 green Honda Accord
Where: Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office, 35 Camino Justicia; 986-2455 From left, Sanchez and Cpl. Nathan Segura of the sheriff’s DWI-Traffic Division inspect vehicles that are ready for auction.
cars now,” Segura said. The goal, Olson said, is to “make it a bigger challenge to drive drunk. If you lose your car, it’s a big incentive not to do something stupid like drive drunk again.” The forfeiture process is a long one, however. Half of the sheriff’s impound lot is taken up by cars involved in cases still being adjudicated. “It’s a long process to take somebody’s car away,” Olson said. “But it’s worthwhile to do if it keeps somebody from driving drunk.
holes — officers and DWI program coordinators talked about plans to amend the county ordinance to make it easier to seize DWI offenders’ vehicles. Under current law, deputies can seize an offender’s car if he or she is arrested on DWI charges after being convicted of drunken driving twice before. The county DWI program coordinator, Lupe Sanchez, said an amended ordinance, which would allow deputies to seize a repeat offender’s car after just one prior DWI conviction, will be presented to the Board of County Commissioners on Tuesday. “With the changing of the ordinance, I’m sure we’re going to have quite a few
u 1990 gold GMC Sierra u 1990 red Jeep Cherokee u 1992 black Honda Civic u 1993 gold Saab 9000 u 1993 white Honda Civic u 1993 gray Acura sedan u 1993 green Saturn four-door sedan u 1995 green Mazda four-door sedan u 1996 blue Nissan Maxima
Cost: Bidding starts at $250
Contact David Salazar at 986-3062 or dsalazar@sfnewmexican.com.
u 1996 tan Ford Explorer u 1997 red Ford Ranger u 1998 silver Ford Explorer u 1998 green Dodge Neon u 1998 green Ford Escort u 2000 tan Ford Taurus u 2001 maroon Dodge Ram 1500 u 2001 red Chevrolet Blazer u 2004 white Chevrolet Impala
Arizona State president to discuss universities By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
The days of the conventional university are numbered, says Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University. On Wednesday, Crow will explain his vision for a transdisciplinary university model he and staff are working to perfect at ASU, with 60,000 students as the guinea pigs. His talk is one of the free public lectures offered each year by the Santa Fe Institute. In a world where the climate is changing faster than normal, technology is changing even faster and environmental challenges are mounting, universities need to produce graduates with broad skills and nimble minds, Crow said. “A university should be designed in a way that it can be a transformative institution,” he said. “It should
be a place where you can teach someone to be a master learner, capable of learning anything.” ASU has launched a dozen such transdisciplinary colleges within the university since Crow took the helm in 2002. Among the endeavors are the Biodesign Institute and the Global Institute of Sustainability. “We’re creating a university that’s adaptive and high speed and able to move quickly,” he said. Crow’s talk will focus on how a new American University model could help resolve some of the most pressing economic and environmental challenges. “In a relatively brief 150 years, human demands on natural systems have, perhaps irrevocably, brought us to an inflection point — the implications of which we do not yet fully understand,” the lecture description says. “Meeting these new and increasingly complex challenges
if you go What: Free lecture by Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University When: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Where: James A. Little Theater, 1060 Cerrillos Road Note: Seating is limited
will require massive, coordinated efforts linking academia, industry, and governments.” Crow wants a top-notch research facility, but one where research, for example, is aimed at specific societal or environmental problems. Helping people, communities and governments adapt to climate change requires an ability to think systematically and broadly about complex problems. “If we can’t produce people to think at that level, we can’t resolve
the problems,” he said. Crow aims to provide this broad-based, nimble college training to as many students as possible. His goal is graduating worldclass students who come from every kind of family, background and income level, not cherry picking the cream of the crop, he said. In his tenure, ASU has dramatically increased the numbers of minority and low-income students attending the school, especially Native Americans, though retention remains a challenge, he said. Crow is apparently doing something right. ASU was ranked 73rd out of the top 100 universities globally by the Center for World University Rankings this year. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com
Daniel J. Martinez, who has a long criminal record, is in jail again, this time for allegedly battering his exgirlfriend. Martinez, 48, was just 21 when he was accused of raping a woman and killing pharmacist Chester Radecki in 1992. He was acquitted in that case, but has been back in court on numerous charges since then. In 2010, Martinez was initially charged with rape after escaping police custody. He had been arrested Daniel J. on suspicion of drunken driving. Martinez The rape charge was later reduced to attempted kidnapping. But Martinez has picked up enough convictions (mostly drug related) over the years that he has spent a good deal of his life incarcerated, in court or on probation. Martinez was on probation for the attempted kidnapping conviction when he allegedly broke into a home home on Corral Blanco Road near La Cienega where his ex-girlfriend was staying Sunday night, and injured her. According to a Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office report, the regional dispatch center began receiving anonymous 911 calls from residents on Corral Blanco Road at about 10 p.m. Sunday. One caller reported seeing a man climb through the window of a home there and “subsequently hearing a female screaming.” Deputies encountered Martinez in the driveway of the home, according to the report, and he said he was there to retrieve his personal items from the residence. He denied ever entering the home, but said his exgirlfriend scratched him and at one point tripped and hit herself on he wall,” the report said. The ex-girlfriend told officers a different story, one that was corroborated by her 9-year-old daughter, according to the report. It said that when Martinez came to the house to get his things, she refused to let him inside. He then removed the screen from a living room window and climbed inside. Martinez began going through the residence gathering items. “There was a confrontation” near the laundry room, his ex-girlfriend told police, and “he pushed her and she hit the wall with her shoulder.” The woman’s daughter was telling Martinez not to hurt her mom, according to the report. Officers saw a scrape and bruise on the woman’s shoulder, the report said. Because of swelling and decreased mobility in her arm, she was transported by ambulance to the hospital. Sheriff’s office Lt. William Pacheco said Monday he didn’t have an update on her condition. Martinez was booked into the county jail on charges of breaking and entering, aggravated battery on a household member and probation violation. He is currently being held without bond. According to New Mexican archives, Martinez has been on probation since October 2011 as part of a plea agreement he entered to settle the 2010 kidnapping charges against him. Under that agreement, he was scheduled to remain on probation through October 2016 and could face 8½ years in prison if he were to violate that probation. Martinez has been accused of violating his probation twice since then. In March 2012, state District Judge Mary Marlowe-Sommer dismissed probation violation charges against Martinez, which were based on his admitted smoking of a cocaine-laced cigarette, and ordered that he “be continued on probation.” In December 2012, Martinez was accused of attempting to produce a false urine sample during a weekly drug test by trying to fill the sample cup with liquid from a small bottle tied to his genitals. The outcome of that case could not be determined through online records Monday. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@sfnewmexican.com.
Studi issues apology to officers after DWI arrest Actor Wes Studi on Monday issued an apology for his behavior in the early morning hours of Friday, July 26, when he became loudly abusive and vulgar toward Santa Fe police officers who arrested him on a charge of aggravated DWI. Studi, who refused to submit to sobriety testing and has pleaded not guilty, issued a statement through a Seattle public relations firm whose advertised services include “crisis communications” and “reputation management.” “While I cannot comment on the ongoing legal situation,” he said, “I want to apologize to law enforcement officers for my behavior that evening. Though it wasn’t apparent, I have the highest respect for law enforcement. Despite my behavior the officers remained very professional, and I deeply respect and appreciate that.” He added, “I know I’ve hurt family, friends and supporters and I’m deeply sorry.” Police said they arrested Studi about 1 a.m. after he was found with a car with two damaged tires in the middle of Old Pecos Trail near East San Mateo Road. Police released recordings in which the actor and a 51-year-old female passenger admit they had been drinking earlier in the evening and an unsteady Studi admits he had been driving drunk. After he was handcuffed and placed in the back of a patrol car, video recordings captured Studi angrily shouting expletives at officers. The American Indian actor at one point also made a racial remark to an officer, referring to him as “white” and saying that “all your women would rather be with one of us.” The New Mexican
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Martinez makes national headlines N.M. governor featured in ‘People’ magazine, ‘Politico’ By Steve Terrell The New Mexican
People who read People will learn a little bit about New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez’s family life this week. The glossy magazine’s Aug. 5 issue includes a two-page spread about Martinez caring for her older sister, Lettie Martinez, who is developmentally disabled. People is not the only national publication to publish a story about the governor this week. On Monday, Martinez was featured, along with Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, in Politico. The story is about how the two Hispanic, Western governors aren’t facing the same kind of Hispanic backlash over immigration issues as other Republicans. The People story, written by Champ Clark, features four color photos: a head shot of the Martinez sisters; one of the sisters getting a pedicure; one of Gov. Martinez greeting President Barack Obama on a trip to New Mexico last year; and one of the governor and her siblings in 1966 on the day of Susana Martinez’s First Communion.
In brief
Beer garden expansion clears next hurdle A plan to expand alcohol sales at Fort Marcy Ballpark during Pecos League baseball games appears headed to one more committee for review ahead of a City Council vote. The Public Works Committee recommended approval of an ordinance amendment on Monday night, and the matter now heads to the Finance Committee on Aug. 5. A public hearing before the full City Council is tentatively slated for Sept. 11. Councilor Ronald Trujillo and Mayor David Coss introduced the rule change this summer to eliminate a segregated “beer garden” and instead allow alcohol consumption in the entire grandstand when the Santa Fe Fuego play. Regulations that limit the number of drinks to three per patron and halt alcohol sales at the end of the sixth inning would remain in place under the proposed amendment. Additional fencing to enclose the grandstand also would be required under the new plan. Councilor Rebecca Wurzburger said Monday that she will add her name as a co-sponsor of the proposal. The Fuego team is one of eight in the semi-professional Pecos League in New Mexico, Texas and Colorado. Since the league’s season here ended last week, the rules would apply to the season that begins in the spring of 2014.
Tapia wins District 6 Jemez co-op seat John J. Tapia defeated incumbent Kenneth T. Borrego and Leroy Lopez in the threeman race for the District 6 seat on the Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative’s board of trustees. The District 6 race drew lots of attention because the district includes El Rancho, San Ildefonso and Nambé, where proposed rate increases are astronomical. San Ildefonso/El Rancho users could see their monthly bills increase by up to 52.55 percent, while Nambé users are facing a proposed
Lettie Martinez was born with cerebral palsy. She lives with a caretaker in Susana Martinez’s home in Las Cruces. Although most of the story is about Gov. Martinez’s relationship with her sister, it also quotes Republican strategist Ford O’Connell saying, “She can be seen as the future of the GOP. She has the potential to be a candidate who can bring the whole party together.” But, as she’s told New Mexico reporters, Martinez, who faces re-election next year, told People that her sister comes before any national ambition. “Lettie will always be my priority,” she said. The Politico article begins by talking about Republican efforts to make inroads with Hispanics and how the governors of New Mexico and Nevada “thrive” while the GOP is struggling. “Of all the obstacles standing between the Republican Party and the White House, preventing heavily Latino, trendingblue Western states from settling comfortably into the Democratic column is high on the list. [Martinez and Sandoval] are two Republican politicians winning in precisely those kinds of places — and GOP officials who’ve been watching them say
the party would be wise to pay attention,” the article says. The story, by Emily Schultheis, also says Martinez has “tacked to the center” on some major issues. “After she took office, she opted not to cut education funding in the state and was, after Sandoval, one of the first GOP governors to accept the Medicaid expansion [under Obama’s Affordable Care Act]. Both decisions played well with voters. But she’s also built up her GOP credentials by working to turn the state’s deficit into a surplus and leading the successful push to lower state corporate income tax rates.” State legislators might have something to say about the deficit, as they had a pretty big role in crafting the budget in 2011, before Martinez took office. And a couple of state Democrats — Attorney General Gary King and state Sen. Linda Lopez of Albuquerque — might be fuming over Politico’s observation that Martinez has no “serious 2014 reelection challenger in sight.” Both King and Lopez have announced they are running for governor.
35.24 percent increase in their monthly bills. Tapia received 359 votes, while 257 co-op members voted for Lopez. Borrego came in third with 180 votes. The co-op reported 5,199 members were eligible to vote in District 6, which represents Pojoaque, Nambé, El Rancho, San Ildefonso and surrounding areas in Santa Fe County.
dollars. We’re feeling very supported by the community.” Axle is hand-printing original T-shirts commemorating the engine rebuild to help in raising funds. Information on how to donate or purchase a T-shirt can be found online at www.axleart.com. Wellman and Chase-Daniel hope to have the mobile gallery running again in time for their next exhibit, The Gesture Rendered, slated to open Aug. 9.
Man sought in pizza shop robbery Police are looking for man witnesses say robbed Papa Murphy’s Pizza on Zafarano Drive just after 8 p.m. Friday. According to an employee of the business, the man ordered him to open the cash register. When the employee refused, the unknown suspect allegedly lifted his shirt, displaying a black handgun, and told the employee he “didn’t care what happened because he was already facing 20 to life.” The man fled after the employee gave him cash. The suspect has a teardrop tattoo under his left eye and was wearing a black hat, sweatshirt and gym pants and white sneakers, according to police. Video surveillance of the the suspect can be seen on the police department’s Facebook page. Anyone with information about this man is asked to call Santa Fe Police at 428-3710.
Axle seeks assistance from community Axle Contemporary, Santa Fe’s mobile art van, is calling on the public to help raise funds to rebuild its 1968 Camaro engine. The van broke down Thursday outside the Counter Culture Cafe, just a week after the opening of the current exhibit, Traveling Raveling. Axle temporarily relocated the exhibit to Red Dot Gallery, 826 Canyon Road, in a space approximately the size of the van’s interior. “We had collaborated with Red Dot before,” said Matthew ChaseDaniel, who co-owns Axle with Jerry Wellman. “That was super generous of them.” Chase-Daniel and Wellman need $500 more to rebuild the the van’s engine. “In the first 24 hours we raised about $1,200,” Chase-Daniel said. “Now we’re at $2,000
Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@ sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.
City to offer truce with Old Man Gloom At noon Sunday, Mayor Pro Tem Rebecca Wurzburger will formally invite Zozobra to a fiesta party in his honor. In the invitation, which will be extended from the Plaza stage, Old Man Gloom will be offered a “truce” by the people of Santa Fe. This event hasn’t been held since 1941, when then-Mayor Alfredo Ortiz offered up a truce alongside Will Shuster, Zozobra’s creator. According to city spokeswoman Jodi Porter-McGinnis, this is an attempt by the Kiwanis Club of Santa Fe, which hosts the annual burning of Zozobra — held this year on Sept. 5 — to get back to the tradition’s roots. Wurzburger will be acting in Mayor David Coss’ stead, as Sunday is his birthday and he has been invited to a feast day at a nearby pueblo. Tickets to the 81st burning of Zozobra are currently on sale at holdmyticket.com and at various financial institutions around the city.
N.M. tourism on the rise ALBUQUERQUE — Gov. Susana Martinez says New Mexico tourism is on the rise and visitor spending has hit an alltime high of $5.9 billion. Martinez says a record 32 million people visited the state last year, the third straight year New Mexico has seen an increase in visitors. Martinez says spending and jobs in New Mexico also were on the rise, surpassing prerecession levels. The increases come as the tourism industry in general continues a solid recovery nationally. Staff and wire reports
N.M. storms strong, but drought lingers The Associated Press
assuming we get normal or above normal monsoons.” ALBUQUERQUE — For a The good news, Jones says, few hours, the Rio Grande was is that since the traditional grand again. July start of the afternoon and But weather officials say evening rains, much of the that despite the fierce storm state has seen above normal that hit Albuquerque with activity. And that is expected to hurricane-force winds and continue across many areas of pounding rains over the weekNew Mexico through the end end, New Mexico’s drought is of September. far from over. The state has seen some real “It’s making a little dent in doozies this year. Last month, places,” National Weather Ser- a storm dumped more than vice meteorologist Chuck Jones a foot of hail on Santa Rosa, said Monday of the steady stranding some motorists in stream of afternoon storms wintry white drifts that accuacross the state this month. mulated on the streets within “But [the drought] is something about 20 minutes. that developed over several Friday evening, one of the years … and it will take several most dramatic storms to ever years for the state to recover, hit Albuquerque gave some
landlocked desert residents a taste of hurricane-like conditions with wind gusts of 89 mph in some places and rain that felled trees and power lines across the city and floated cars in flooded streets and intersections. More than 1,000 people remained without power Monday, according to PNM. The city estimated its cost of cleanup and emergency services related to the storm would top $1 million. The National Weather Service reports that a record rainfall of 1.36 inches was set in the city on Friday, breaking the old record of 0.85 inches set in 1939. The next morning, the drying-up Rio Grande looked a
bit like its old self, at least temporarily. On Saturday morning, officials reported the river was running at levels not seen since 2010. The rush of waters from storms across Northern New Mexico quickly slowed. For the month of July, Jones said, Albuquerque has officially recorded 2.79 inches so far — 1.25 inches above average. “But to put an asterisk on this, while it may make a dent in the meteorological drought,” Jones said, Albuquerque is still 10 to 12 inches below normal for the last three years. “Normal precipitation for an entire year is 9.44 inches,” he said. “So we are missing a year’s precipitation somewhere in the last three years.”
Police notes
23, of Santa Fe was arrested on a charges of aggravated DWI, driving with a suspended or The Santa Fe Police Depart- revoked license, no headlights, ment is investigating the fol- no proof of insurance and possession of a controlled sublowing reports: stance (heroin) early Monday u A Columbus, Ohio, woman morning. staying at 4295 Cerrillos Road reported that someone stole $540 from her motel room Speed SUVs between Wednesday and Friday. u The Santa Fe Police Departu The stereo was stolen from ment listed the following locaa vehicle parked in the 3000 tions for mobile speed-enforceblock of Cerrillos Road somement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Zia time Sunday. and Vo Tech roads; SUV No. 2 u A man reported hearing a on Galisteo Road between Corogunshot in the 1200 block of nado Lane and Booth Street; Vallecita Drive around 9 p.m. SUV No. 3 on Don Diego Avenue Sunday, and police later discovbetween Cerrillos and Linda ered that an explosive device Vista roads. had been detonated inside a mailbox. Help lines The Santa Fe County SherEsperanza Shelter for iff’s Office is investigating Battered Families hotline: the following reports: 800-473-5220 u Someone stole $13 in change from a home on Kestrel St. Elizabeth Shelter for Court in Edgewood on Sunday. men, women and children: 982-6611 DWI arrest Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 u Sigifredo Chacon-Lucero,
Funeral services and memorials JEANNIE ANN LOPEZ JULY 22, 2013
Jeannie Ann Lopez, a lifelong resident of Santa Fe, New Mexico, passed away peacefully in her sleep on Monday, July 22, 2013. Jeannie was preceded in death by her son, Andrew Trujillo, her mother Lucy Maestas and her father George Lopez, Sr. She is survived by her son, Mario Lopez and his wife Dorina and her Daughter Felicia Lopez Luna and her Husband David, Jeannie is also survived by her grandchildren Isis, Ariana, Andre and Dion; her Sister Christine Brooke and her husband Don and her brothers, Tony Romero, George Lopez Jr, Fred Lopez and his wife Lucy, neice Malaina and her nephews Christian, Levi and Freddie along with numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and other family and friends. Jeannie always had a smile on her face and loved motorcycles. She was a loving mother and grandmother. She will be greatly missed. Services will be held on Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 5:00 pm at Santa Fe Memorial Gardens, 417 Rodeo Road, Santa Fe. Reception to follow.
RUTH CLEO BRIGHTON
Ruth Cleo Brighton, 91, of Santa Fe, died peacefully Friday, July 26, 2013 at Kingston Residence Center. She is survived by her husband of 70 years, Charles E. Brighton, M.D.; four children: David Edwin, Phyllis May, Cynthia Ruth and Paul Charles; along with seven grandchildren and ten great grandchildren. Cleo was born on November 1, 1921 in Quay, Oklahoma. She grew up in Oklahoma City where she attended Central High School and graduated as a member of the National Honor Society. She continued her education and graduated as a Registered Nurse in the fall of 1942. She and Charles were married on the first day of spring, 1943. From 1946 until 1971, the family resided in Tulsa, Oklahoma, then moved to Santa Fe where Cleo continued to raise her family while also working in her husband’s office as nurse and receptionist. She was active in her church and social activities until she and her husband retired in 1987. She was active in St. John’s United Methodist Church’s United Methodist Women, P.E.O., Fifteen Club and other organizations. During the past seven years, she and her husband have resided at Kingston Residence Center. Service will be held on July 30 at 10 a.m. at St. John’s United Methodist Church and internment will follow at Santa Fe Memorial Gardens. Remembrances may be given to St. John’s United Methodist Memorial Fund.
RUTH ANNE MULLER
Ruth Anne Muller passed away quietly in Santa Fe, New Mexico on July 26th. Ruth Anne was born January 4, 1953, in Fairfax, VA, and is survived by her son, Reyes; partner, Felicia; brother, Dave; sister, Katherine; and friends from Syracuse, Bellingham, and Santa Fe. Ruth Anne was best known for her enthusiastic laugh and love of marimba, animals, and reading. She approached life with a free spirit and with love. Ruth Anne’s life will be celebrated with a gathering at the Frank S. Ortiz Dog Park in Santa Fe, NM, at 9 a.m. on August 17th. Dogs welcome! In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the American Cancer Society https://donate.cancer.org/in dex
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
LOCAL BUSINESS
A-9
BUSINESS BEAT
Bishop’s Lodge stayed busy for ‘Lone Ranger’ By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican
T
Cristina and Margarita Rodriguez sell produce at the south-side Santa Fe Farmers Market. PHOTOS BY KATHARINE EGLI/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN
It’s no small potatoes
South-side farmers market fills a need for many residents
Potatoes from the Rodriguez S/J farm sit on display at the Tuesday farmers market at Santa Fe Place mall. The south-side market is not nearly as large as its Railyard big brother but, ‘They pretty much cover it all here,’ customer Manuel Tapia said.
By Chris Quintana The New Mexican
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hick storm clouds and blustery winds failed to slow the customer traffic through the south-side Santa Fe Farmers Market. Families arrived at the Santa Fe Place mall parking lot with plastic grocery bags. They then would meander in front of the seven vendors selling cucumbers, peas, onions, squash and other greens from the backs of pickups and large vans. Notably, fruit wasn’t on sale July 23. Most customers spent between 10 and 15 minutes shopping before making a purchase and driving away. And while the market was never packed, it did have a steady flow of two to three customers at a time. Renea Roberts was one of those customers browsing the market on the windy Tuesday. She said she lives along N.M. 14 near Cerrillos and Madrid, and that she was on her way home when she spotted the farmers market sign. “This is as close as we get for a farmers market,” Roberts said. She also said it’s nice to have the market on a workday, so she doesn’t have to make a special trip into town for fresh vegetables on the weekend. Other customers, such as Manuel Tapia, also live on the south side of town. He said he likes getting fresh food close to home, and he’s not bothered by the size of the market. “They pretty much cover it all here,” Tapia said. The Tuesday market runs from 3 to 6 p.m. and will last until late
September. The south-side market started July 2. Paolo Speirn, on-site manager for the Santa Fe Farmers Market, said the farmers market generally has a south-side location, but the site often changes — witness the recent switch to Santa Fe Place from Home Depot. Speirn said he just started managing the south-side market this year and is still learning its nuances. He did say the mall location is calmer. Moreover, the Santa Fe Place location, Sperin said, works great for the market. There’s an abundance of parking spaces in the mall lot, and the nearby bustling intersection of Zafarano Drive and Rodeo Road means plenty of passerby traffic. He also said the south-side location helps balance out the customer base while giving farmers access to a different clientele. And, he said, the mall location is tailored to Spanish speakers and low-income families, though others do frequent the market. Vendor Mayra Martinez, who farms at La Bajada, said that being close to the mall helps business. Martinez said she goes to both the south-side and Railyard markets. Sperin said the market also benefits greatly from the Electronic
Benefit Transfer program and the New Mexico Women, Infant and Children nutrition program, a service provided by the government that gives money to women so they can buy fresh food. Periodically, representatives from WIC will come to the market and hand out food vouchers, a practice that Speirn said makes life easier for customers and increases the likelihood that the WIC money will be spent at the market. That service benefits shoppers and farmers alike. Vendor Ramón Corona, a farmer from Española, said he sells the most produce when WIC representatives are at the market. Note, Speirn said, WIC vouchers can be redeemed anytime at the market, and not just when WIC representatives are on site. The WIC reps will be at the market again Aug. 13 and 20. In 2012, WIC beneficiaries spent $12,460 at the south-side market. That’s about a third of the $36,236 of WIC funds spent at all the Santa Fe Farmers Markets, but Speirn said the south side’s haul is impressive given the market is up only three months out of the year and generally has fewer vendors and visitors. According to 2011 report from WIC, $2.6 million of
WIC funding was spent in Santa Fe County, and about $37.4 million was spent statewide. The Santa Fe Farmers Market Institute, the nonprofit side of the farmers market, also has a program wherein it doubles Electronic Transfer Balance funds. For example, a person can swipe an EBT card for $10 at the market, but then get $20 worth of tokens. And that means benefits for everyone Speirn said. Low-income families get more food, and farmers get more money at the end of the day. All told, the market institute doubled about $20,000 worth of EBT funds in 2012, Speirin said. The doubling program is funded by grants, and the current batch of funding should last through 2013’s peak months, Speirn said. He added that even when the doubling program has run out of money in the past, people still kept spending EBT funds at the market. Speirn said that in extreme circumstances, the market may be canceled due to weather, but potential visitors can get that information at the Santa Fe Farmers Market Facebook page or by calling the Santa Fe Farmers Market’s main office at 983-4098.
he manager and staff of Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa are used to large, exclusive groups who want to work and stay at the 450-acre compound in privacy. Still, the group of writers, editors, photographers and bloggers that Disney Corp. booked for The Lone Ranger media event was different. General Manager Richard Verruni had two earlier visits with Disney executives who came to scout Bishop’s Lodge — as well as two other locations in the West. Though they had committed about two months ahead of time, Disney still had an option to change the dates up to 15 days in advance, which is what happened when it finalized the two media events for mid-June. The result was that the lodge, which books direct as well as uses online and third-party brokers, was completely at capacity with all 91 rooms and 30 villas occupied by movie critics as well as previously reserved guests. So the event took a huge amount of attention to planning and coordination, said Verruni, who still can’t discuss some of the details, as he signed a confidentiality agreement. But he did get approval to say there were a huge amount of special requests — from energy bars and snacks to meals and housekeeping. “There were things that were unusual. A variety of preferences as far as meals, allergies, special requests. So all that requires we sit down with the food and beverage people and our suppliers and make sure we can fill the orders,” he said. And all requests were honored. With housekeeping, the request was that it be handled when patrons had left the rooms. So staff members, who usually start cleaning in the morning, had to make sure to know individual schedules and when rooms would be empty. “That sounds like a simple thing,” said Verruni, but it’s not always so when individual parts of a group are doing different activities. He said the resort is not like an enclosed hotel downtown. The rooms and amenities are spread out and include stables, croquet, badminton, archery, mountain biking, even skeet shooting. The movie Crazy Heart was filmed on location at the resort, and one thing Disney asked for was flexibility in their scheduling of events. One major event was on top of the mesa, the highest point at Bishop’s Lodge. And getting patrons as well as food and drink up there required coordination for food and beverages. “The resort is 450 acres and there are a variety of areas they can work, it’s not so in a box-like hotel downtown. We have to facilitate movement everywhere.” Verruni serves as a director for the Santa Fe Lodgers Association. He added that most groups who book the resort have a set schedule and a predictable manner. They are there for a specific event or conference. With Disney, “It started out that way, but they had frequent changes.” Still Verruni, who has been in the tourism industry since 1975 and joined Bishop’s Lodge in 2008, made it look like just another day of Santa Fe hospitality.
In brief
Super Computer moves Chris Lloyd, owner of Super Computer in the College Plaza shopping center, reports he is moving a few doors down next to Alphagraphics. The new address is 2002 Cerrillos Road, No. 1, while his phone number remains the same.
Foreclosure legal fair set New Mexico residents can attend a foreclosure legal fair from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Aug. 7, in the third-floor conference room at the Second Judicial District Court, 400 Lomas Blvd. NW, Albuquerque. Attorneys will be on hand to provide free consultations on a first-come, firstserved basis. Attendees should bring all related paperwork with them to the clinic. The New Mexican
Finance New Mexico: Getting right permissions critical ber. They use this number to report and pay the state, county and local veryone who starts a business in taxes the business collects on behalf of New Mexico expects to fill out several taxing authorities. lots of forms. Besides the applicaBusinesses also pay income taxes. tion for a Combined Reporting System, A sole proprietor uses her personal or CRS, the business owner might Social Security number to file taxes, but need special permits to handle food or a business organized as a corporation alcohol sales or to operate in specific or a business with employees has to industries. secure a Federal Employer IdentificaBut other permissions are required tion Number, or FEIN, from the Internal for a range of business activities that Revenue Service. Corporations exempt might not be as obvious. And it’s the from gross receipts taxes — those not duty of the business owner to know involved in the sale or lease of tangible what they are. and intangible goods and property — Because most New Mexico busidon’t need a CRS number, but they nesses pay gross receipts, compensatmight need to file a corporate income ing and withholding taxes, they need and franchise tax return and register to register with the Taxation and Reve- with the Corporations bureau at the nue Department to obtain a CRS num- New Mexico Secretary of State’s Office.
For The New Mexican
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Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, brucek@sfnewmexican.com
A business with employees has to register with the state Department of Labor and learn if it’s required to withhold state income taxes from employee paychecks, pay state unemployment taxes and provide workers’ compensation coverage. The state Regulation and Licensing Department requires some businesses — in the child care, food handling, gaming, construction and financial services industries, among others — to obtain special permits and submit to extra scrutiny. To determine if special permits are needed, the business owner should contact the department in person. In addition to a CRS number, oil and gas sector businesses need an Oil and Gas Reporting Identification Number from the Oil and Gas Bureau.
Businesses — including those based in the owner’s home — should register with the municipality or county where they are based. Some New Mexico municipalities simplify that registration by categorizing homebased businesses depending on their neighborhood impact — for example, no impact, low impact and conditional use. Each category has different requirements for the number of employees allowed, hours of operation, noise and percent of floor space the business can use. Registration fees are often less for home-based businesses. If the business has a sign, it has to obey community laws about sign size and placement. Historic districts often restrict the designs and colors allowed on signs. The municipality’s build-
ing or planning department typically issues these permits. Some municipalities require businesses to get a permit for any burglar or fire alarms — usually from the police or fire department. And any significant modification to the business’s building or grounds usually requires a construction permit from the building or planning department. For more information about the rules and regulations that apply to businesses in New Mexico, visit http:// financenewmexico.org/steps-tostarting-a-business/. Finance New Mexico assists individuals and businesses with skills and funding resources for their business or idea. Go to www.FinanceNewMexico.org.
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OPINIONS E-XTRA
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
e-Voices Our Web readers speak out: Couple who ran iconic burger joint prepare for new venture, July 22 I don’t think The Bite has anything to worry “ about. The location is just fine and they’re going into it already a legend! As with any place downtown, parking is always a problem, but I’m sure locals and tourists alike will gladly walk a couple of blocks for one of the 10 best burgers in the country! I’m looking forward to trying out the new menu items as well. One of their burgers with a cold beer? Nirvana!” P.T.
I started visiting Santa Fe in the 1980s and moved “ here 14 years ago. I recall [and have eaten at] numerous restaurants established at Garrett’s Desert Inn, all of whom have failed for one or more reasons. I have never figured out whether it’s the location, the management or some other factor, but it does not seem to be the best place in town for a restaurant. I hope the Eckres can reverse this trend.” J.S.
Never ate at the Bobcat Bite so don’t know what “ that was all about, but this could be good!” A.P.
Hikers report confrontation with horseman on forest trail, July 23 Every time there is an article about a dog getting “ lost or in trouble in the mountains, it’s because it
LOOKING IN: NELSON P. VALDÉS
Cuba, N.M., reaches out to Washington Dear President Barack Obama, I want to send you this letter for two reasons. First, here in Cuba, N.M. — me and my family voted for you. We favor a change we can believe in. We need it! Second, my family and neighbors were happy, impressed and surprised to learn that, despite all the Chicago school closings and the more than 50,000 homeless in New York streets, you thought of us, Cuba residents and American citizens. We were amazed when you said, “Cuba’s future must be freely determined by the Cuban people. Sadly, that has not been the case for decades, and it is not the case today. The people of Cuba deserve the same rights, freedoms and opportunities as anyone else. And so the United States is going to continue supporting the basic rights of the Cuban people.” We could not have said it better. You cannot believe how many times our voting rights have been violated, our ballots lost. We are asked to vote only on where the speed traps in town should be! We want our rights, freedoms and opportunities. We got together with a lot of our friends and decided to send you this formal letter. We want to be considered for the USAID CUBA Program. We understand you have
more than $50 million. We know that there are other towns called Cuba in Alabama, Missouri, New York, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois and Kansas. But we are FIRST to apply. There is money for democracy promotion. We cannot run for elections, cannot afford campaigning. Politicians in New Mexico don’t get paid except when they go to Santa Fe, which is only about eight weeks out of the year; if we did that we would lose our real jobs. Someone said that there is even money for newspapers, Internet connections and the “free flow of information.” Wow, that would be welcomed here. The Albuquerque radio stations seldom say anything about us, and the papers are the same. We cannot afford our own radio station or weekly reader. We are really deserving of your aid. Why? We have sent a lot of our kids to every war you in D.C. have declared. We did so even before we were a state. In 1898, we fought Spain. That is why Cuba the island is called that. You have heard of the Rough Riders? Those were our greatgrandparents. We still have saved the regiment recruitment leaflet: “to be composed exclusively of frontiersmen possessing exclusive qualifications as horsemen and
marksmen.” President William McKinley declared the war with Spain. We named one county after him. Teddy Roosevelt led the Rough Riders; we named another county after him as well. And what do we get in return? Poverty: 49 percent in 2009 (23.5 percent for the state). We need some of that money for some schools and teachers. Our illiteracy is very high, but even when we manage to go to school and graduate from high school, you know how many of our high school graduates are unemployed? Sixty percent, Mr. President! Don’t believe it when you read that the United Nations says that Cubans have a 100 percent literacy rate and that we have more university graduates than any other country. We don’t compete in those things. We are in such bad shape that just a few days ago our fire chief lost his own home to a fire. Maybe with your help, we can escape gambling, welfare, dependency and early death. We are so glad that finally someone in the U.S. government is paying attention to our own real Cuba! Nelson P Valdés is a University of New Mexico emeritus professor of sociology and director of the Cuba-L Direct and of ZunZum Project Inc.
was unleashed. Get a freakin’ clue, people. The guy shouldn’t have threatened to shoot your dog, but at the same time, you never know what your dog is going to come upon that may make it act aggressively or indifferently, or worst of all, scare it and make it run off, never to be seen again.” C.G.M.
“
‘On leash or under voice command.’ She was obeying the law. Her dog came right back. The rude and obnoxious ‘cowboy’ used language and gestures that obviously scared Lorna Dyer and Kay Fitzgerald. He may have been technically right, but his language and threats are unacceptable. If he is incapable of interacting with hikers on this multiuse trail in a respectful way (especially since he was talking to women), perhaps he should lose his grazing rights for this area.” P.T. It’s so sad that literacy doesn’t seem to be the “ strong suit of so many folks here. Please read the law
and understand it before you call dog owners like myself insulting names or blame us for incidents on the trail. This holier-than-thou attitude is what causes problems for everyone on the trail. Understand the laws, rules and regulations of the paths and trails you hike, or stay at home and leave the trails to those of us who truly know the laws. ‘In the national forest, dogs must be on a leash or under voice command.’ Did you folks miss that part? Voice command. The owner speaks, the dog listens. Many of us who hike with our dogs off-leash do so with voice command, and our dogs listen. You’d be hard-pressed to find human children that listen so well. Pete listened and returned once called. Ms. Dyer violated NO law. Those of us with dogs trained well enough to be under voice command break no law when hiking in areas that permit as much. Remember, respect goes both ways. I will happily clear the path for a horse, as will my dogs. However if anyone threatens my dogs, I will go after them in every legal way.” T.P.
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I am an avid hiker, hunter and fisherman. All too often I have observed people with unleashed dogs in the forest. I have seen these dogs harass wild animals, stalk cattle, chase horses and destroy the ecosystem. The taxpayers spend thousands of dollars to maintain dog parks. The forest is not a dog park. It’s about time people have respect for the forest. They need to keep their dogs leashed. It is illegal in this state to harass, harry, drive, rally or pursue wild animals and cattle. Maybe the police should charge Ms. Dyer for violating the law?” A.M.
Thieves swipe couple’s ‘magical’ library, July 27 Someone must have read the sign ‘Free Mini “ Library’, and took it. If they don’t bring it back after seeing this story and realizing they misinterpreted the sign, throw the book at ’em.” P.S.
How sad that something so sweet would be “ taken. What a great idea. As a child I remember the hours I spent at the library. … ” P.J.C.
Most read stories on www.santafenewmexican.com 1. Couple who ran iconic burger joint prepare for new venture 2. Santa Fe Police Department’s nine most wanted 3. Actor Wes Studi booked on aggravated DWI charge 4. SWAT standoff ends with arrest in southeast Santa Fe 5. Hikers report confrontation with horseman on forest trail 6. Thieves swipe couple’s ‘magical’ library 7. LANL offers tour of once-secret underground nuke vault 8. Clerk defends denial of same-sex marriage license 9. AG King won’t defend ban on gay marriage 10. Former coach, foster parent arrested on sex charges
About Looking In Letters to the editor and My Views are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Looking In presents an opportunity for people who read The Santa Fe New Mexican but who live outside its reporting area to comment about things happening in our city and state. Please send such My Views and Letters to letters@sfnew mexican.com.
LOOKING IN: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Prescriptions don’t have to be so pricey
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harmaceuticals are a part of our everyday life in America. Anybody dealing with the health care system today knows that prescription drugs are costly. Even with health insurance bringing costs down, people facing conditions like cancer find themselves fighting an unending financial battle to pay for prescription drugs. While patients are facing a pricey battle, brand-name pharmaceutical companies are fighting their own battle to keep the cost of their drugs high through deals that keep more affordable, generic drugs off the market. The practice is called pay-for-delay, and it’s costing patients billions of dollars annually. The Supreme Court has ruled that the practice may be illegal. Now it’s up to Congress to stand up for Americans and outlaw the practice for good. U.S. Sen. Tom Udall has co-sponsored bill Senate Bill 504 that would address the issue, and he should press his colleagues to pass the muchneeded bill quickly.
Clean water a necessity
No one disagrees that clean water — and a healthy Rio Grande — is fundamentally important. Without a clean Rio Grande, communities supported by farming would suffer, and New Mexicans’ drinking water suffers. That’s why it’s disappointing that the U.S. House just voted to block the restoration of Clean Water Act safeguards that help keep our waterways such as the Rio Grande clean by including a “dirty water” provision in a water-related spending bill that makes sure critical safeguards are excluded. I’m thankful that Congressman Ben Ray Luján rejected polluters’ influence and chose to stand with the Rio Grande by voting down this “dirty water” attack. It’s more important than ever that Sens. Martin Heinrich and Tom Udall continue to hold the line to defend the Rio Grande, so that the Clean Water Act’s goal of making all our waters safe for drinking, swimming Aaron Mancha and fishing may one day become a reality. Albuquerque
Keep food available I am a partner with RESULTS (www. results.org). We attempt to lessen poverty and hunger here and around the world. Problems that result from both are significant. Hungry children cannot learn. Thank you for your recent editorial (Our View, “Food programs need support,” June 14) that dealt with the members of Congress taking the SNAP Challenge. Feeding one person nutritionally and affording fresh fruit and vegetables is impossible. Hopefully, they made the point that cuts to WIC, SNAP and other nutrition programs is not the way to lessen our budget. I live in Stamford, Conn. The cost of living here is quite high. Many must depend upon food pantries, soup kitchens and social service agencies that have access to food banks in one’s area. Monthly, I help serve a free lunch at a neighboring church. The U.S. must greatly increase what we invest in foreign aid nutrition programs, while inspiring other countries to do so. Leslie Weinberg
Stamford, Conn.
of a federally protected endangered species. The party responsible needs to be caught and prosecuted.
Janet Hoben
Burbank, Calif.
I was so upset after reading the article about the illegal killing of the Mexican gray wolf (“Endangered Mexican gray wolf shot, killed,” July 14). It is a sad, shameful time when a species teetering on the brink of extinction has little hope of recovery due to human folly, or worse, human malice. With only about 75 animals living in the wild, this species deserves a fighting chance at recovery. Mothering pups successfully is difficult in captivity, let alone in the wild, and to be killed by something as unnecessary as a gunshot is a true disgrace. Not only was the mother killed, but all her young pups — such a valuable contribution to their bloodline, their species and the ecosystem — are all lost. These animals are protected under the Endangered Species Act. I truly hope a full investigation is launched to find and prosecute the criminal who did this Sanders Moore unthinkable act of violence against a rare director, Environment New Mexico/ and innocent animal. Environment New Mexico Research & Jennifer Selzer Policy Center Toluca Lake, Calif. Albuquerque Thank you for the wonderful editorial, (Another View, “Calling a cease-fire to war A sad act on wolves,” July 13) and the tribute to 832F! I was horrified to read your article I’m 54, and value nature. I’ve seen photos (“Endangered Mexican gray wolf shot, of this majestic wolf 832F, and read articles killed,” July 14). This mother wolf was only telling of her great size and strength. To released into the wild in May and now she, see her would have been spectacular! The and presumably, her pups, are dead. It’s just only relief was that she wasn’t tortured like one more blow against the already inademany others. quate Mexican gray wolf program run by the Time’s running out to stop the delisting U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in conjunction of these loving creatures. The Fish and with the states of Arizona and New Mexico. Wildlife website stops taking comment for I want to know why this information was this topic on Sept. 11, 2013. withheld from the public since last month Even though 84 percent of Americans by both state and federal wildlife officials. believe in the Endangered Species Act, 78 What are they trying to cover up? Is this percent believe wolves would be a great another case of a critically endangered success story if left to recover, and taxpayMexican wolf killed by a government wild- ers spent millions for recovery, the adminlife employee, as happened earlier this year istration is selling out to a small group of ranchers and killers. when a wildlife service employee supposIrene Sette edly mistook one for a coyote? Regardless New Milford, N.J. of who killed this wolf, it was an illegal kill
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
COMMENTARY: MATTHEW YGLESIAS
Summer vacations: Separate and unequal
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ASHINGTON — There are few more cherished nostrums in American life than the importance of equal opportunities. Unfortunately, one of them is the importance of summer vacation. It’s a cheap way of doing something nice for teachers, but summer vacation is a disaster for poor children and their parents, creating massive, avoidable inequities in life outcomes and seriously undereducating the population. The country claims to take schooling seriously, but the school calendar says otherwise. There’s no other public service that we would allow to just vanish for months at a time. To have no Army in February, no buses or subways in March, airports closed down for all of October, or the police vacationing en masse in December would be absurd. Schools, it turns out, matter a lot, too, and having them shut down all summer critically undermines them. The entire issue tends to vanish from public debate because the educated, affluent people who run the debate don’t particularly suffer from it. Summer vacation costs money, but prosperous parents are happy to spend it on their kids. And of course there’s the sentimentality factor. I’ll always treasure tender thoughts of my beloved Camp Winnebago and would one day love to have the experience of picking up my kid from the very same camp I attended when I was young. But these days, Camp Winnebago is charging $11,550 for a full eight-week session. No doubt more affordable options are out there, but the basic reality is that parents’ ability to provide enriching summer activities for their children is going to be sharply constrained by income. Workingclass single moms in urban neighborhoods — exactly the
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Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Bruce Krasnow Interim Editor
OUR VIEW
This time, feed the bears
G kind of parents whose kids tend to have the most problems in school — are put in a nearly impossible situation by summer vacation. The burden on parents is segmented by income, and the impact on children is as well. A 2011 RAND literature review concluded that the average student “loses” about one month’s worth of schooling during a typical summer vacation, with the impact disproportionately concentrated among lowincome students. “While all students lose some ground in mathematics over the summer,” RAND concluded, “lowincome students lose more ground in reading while their higher-income peers may even gain.” Most distressingly, the impact is cumulative. Poor kids tend to start school behind their middle-class peers, and then they fall further behind each and every summer, giving teachers and principals essentially no chance of closing
the gap during the school year. Karl Alexander, Doris Entwisle and Linda Steffel Olson of Johns Hopkins University have research from Baltimore indicating that a majority of the achievement gap between high- and low-socioeconomicstatus students can be attributed to differences in summer learning loss. It’s not clear whether Baltimore’s results apply to the national population, but it’s shocking that impacts of this scale exist anywhere. Even worse, for many poor kids, subsidized school lunches on which they depend for sustenance essentially vanish during the summer months, leaving them both undertaught and underfed. The contrast between America’s rhetorical obsession with the bad educational outcomes of poor children and its blasé attitude toward summer vacation is striking. Conservatives have spent
years pounding the point that a lack of money is not the problem in American public education. While it’s true that there’s much more to quality schools than money, the existence of summer vacation is a huge barrier to equal opportunity, and the barrier to year-round schooling is clearly financial. You’d need to install air conditioners, and you’d have to pay utility bills. You’d need to pay teachers and school staff more. But the gains would be obvious. We could save a bunch of money by letting all the criminals out of jail for the summer months or randomly eliminate seventh grade, but that would be ridiculous. The mere fact that summer vacation is a longstanding tradition doesn’t make it any less ridiculous. School is important. It should happen all year ’round. Yglesias is Slate’s business and economics correspondent.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Spanish Market 2013: Too many obstacles
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or the last 15 years, I have made my way to the Plaza for the art markets every summer. It’s one of the joys of being a local: to see old friends and make new ones while spending a day looking at the arts on the Plaza. This year, for the first time, I didn’t make it to Spanish Market. I had every intention of going and set out early for the Plaza. A combination of traffic and ridiculous parking prices forced me to go home without ever seeing a single booth or friend. I drove around a bit looking for a meter. They were full or red-bagged, leaving me with the only option of paying $20 to park my car, or deal with the stress and jam of Paseo traffic to make another 20-minute lap. The city ruined a special event for me, and I suspect many others. Mary Gallegos
Santa Fe
Pursuit of happiness “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. …” Our history has seen these words of the Declaration of Independence happen. Not without continuing bumps in the road, America’s Constitution provides equal rights to most citizens. I believe, however, that one category of citizen is not well provided for by the Constitution.
I do not see how poverty, hunger and medical deprivation are consistent with liberty and the pursuit of happiness. It is time to determine that the poor have a constitutional right not to be poor. Countries like Australia and much of Europe seem to have gotten this message. Australia’s minimum wage is $15 per hour. Santa Fe needs to enhance its living wage. John Scully
Española
War on business Mayor David Coss and the Santa Fe City Council have declared war on local businesses. Their continual tolerance of lengthy road repairs, reduced parking, a refusal to stop gouging at special events, plus the exorbitant Living Wage is forcing businesses to close and suffer. Summer is tourist season, and the parties responsible have not helped local or downtown businesses an iota: Paseo de Peralta construction should have been completed months ago, long before Spanish Market. Parking is offered at $15 to $25 a visit — that is predatory pricing and facilitated with street closures and reduced meters. The businesses that are still open can’t afford adequate staff to maximize sales. We are driving away tourists who will leave town with tales of our mismanagement, chaos and inhospitality. They will never return. They will tell others not to come. Every citizen in this community
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
suffers with each lost sale, overpriced parking spot, covered meter and every closed business. We need pro-business leadership to save Santa Fe. Pablo Watson
Santa Fe
Healthy elections It is a healthy sign that so many citizens are announcing as candidates in the upcoming elections. When I am asked by a candidate for my support, my first question is: “Will you be taking advantage of public campaign financing?” If the answer is yes, I am favorably impressed and offer to help. If the answer is no, I decline to support a candidate financially. Since the Supreme Court changed America’s political landscape with its Citizens United decision, our best weapon in the battle against money’s influence in politics is that of public campaign financing. Santa Fe’s system allows a candidate to raise $6,000 in “seed money,” and requires the candidate to solicit 200 small contributions to qualify for public financing. After that, the scramble for money stops and the candidate can campaign without being indebted to big donors. This is our greatest hope in electing a mayor and a City Council who respond to constituent needs. Let the candidates know that your support hinges on this issue. Alan “Mac” Watson
enerally speaking, it’s not a bad idea to feed wild animals. They need to live away from humans, depending on their inborn skills to find food and survive in the wild. Trouble is, humans keep moving closer to wild country. In times of scarcity — like now — bears look for food by moseying down the mountain to find human food. That’s happening in Albuquerque, where bears are starving. To survive, the bears are coming down from the Sandia Mountains to forage for food in the foothills. Before humans intruded, the bears could wander all the way to the Rio Grande to find something to eat when food was scarce. That path, of course, is blocked by more than half a million people on the east side of the river that cuts through Albuquerque. It’s hardly safe for humans to let bears wander their way through town to reach the river. As a result, the bears are starving; and the ones who get into town must be removed. Feeding the bears where they live, called diversionary feeding, is a necessary strategy for current circumstances. (It goes without saying, of course, that people should remember to take down bird feeders and keep trash inside so that they don’t inadvertently draw in hungry bears.) New Mexico’s Game and Fish Department does not support diversionary feeding — the thought in wildlife circles is that feeding bears makes them dependent on humans and long term, is bad for their survival. We wouldn’t disagree under normal circumstances. But this drought is not normal, and the late frost further damaged prospects for food in the wild. Feeding the bears to keep them home, in the mountains, will alleviate suffering and keep people safe from bears. As bear lovers point out, it makes little sense to pay ranchers to put out water for wildlife, interfering in the natural process, while keeping it illegal to feed bears. Both strategies are helpful in these dry times. Gov. Susana Martinez, known for her love of animals, should ask Game and Fish to reconsider and start feeding the bears. Both the Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra Club and Sandia Mountain Bearwatch are supporting diversionary feeding. Some 1,300 New Mexicans have sent messages to the governor asking for help for the bears. Supplementing their food will help bears survive, safe in the mountains away from humans and the trouble a hungry bear can get into mixing with people. This time, we should feed the bears.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: July 30, 1913: A.B. Gnagey, of the firm of Gnagey & Ervien sustained several broken bones in his left foot when he ran into the hillside on what is known as Little La Bajada, a piece of road this side of La Bajada. Gnagey was coming this way on his motorcycle when as he started down this hill he attempted to put on the brake. It would not work and he sailed down the hill at ever increasing speed. It was either go over the edge or go into the hill and he took the hill with the result of broken bones. He is able to get around but used two crutches. July 30, 1963: Cottonwood trees being sawed down along the Santa Fe River? Sure enough, according to City Engineer Ormande Earp, who explained that it was to make way for the widening of West Alameda in the city’s paving project. Earp said about a half dozen large cottonwoods had to be moved along the north side to make way for widening West Alameda Street. July 30, 1988: A flaw has been discovered in a container designed to carry tons of nuclear waste through Santa Fe and other U.S. cities that will force a partial redesign. The TRUPACT II container, designed to carry nuclear waste to the Waste Isolation Pilot Project site near Carlsbad, was punctured during tests Thursday at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque. Federal officials consider the damage significant enough to cause concern for public safety.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Bryan Cranston, right, stars as Walter White and Aaron Paul is Jesse Pinkman in the critically acclaimed AMC series Breaking Bad. The show, filmed in Albuquerque, begins Its final season on Aug. 11. COURTESY PHOTO
TELEVISION
‘Breaking Bad’ prepares for final breakup By Greg Braxton
Los Angeles Times
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Today’s talk shows 3:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Actor Rob Lowe; actor Alex O’Loughlin. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Men with violent lovers seek help. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KCHF The 700 Club 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 th Record With Greta Van Susteren 8:30 p.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher Author Reza Aslan; former Rep. Bob Ney (R-Ohio); former Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D-N.Y.). 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan 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 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Kristin Chenoweth performs; actor Josh Gad.
10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Bryan Cranston; Amanda Seyfried; Michael Franti. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Larry David; Naya Rivera; Backstreet Boys perform. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actor Henry Winkler; actress Valerie Azlynn. 12:00 a.m. KASA Dish Nation 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Dan Aykroyd; Paula Patton; Brad Paisley performs; Booker T. Jones performs with The Roots. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Red Eye 1:06 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly
TV
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top picks
6 p.m. on FAM Pretty Little Liars Hanna (Ashley Benson) turns to Mona (Janel Parrish) to save her mother (Laura Leighton) from being convicted. Spencer (Troian Bellisario) visits an old haunt to investigate Wilden’s (Bryce Johnson) ties to another mysterious death. Emily (Shay Mitchell) turns to her old boss (Rumer Willis) for an escape from her stress. Aria (Lucy Hale) seeks Jake’s (Ryan Guzman) help understanding Mike’s (Cody Christian) attitude in the new episode “The Guilty Girl’s Handbook.” 7 p.m. on ABC Extreme Weight Loss In this new episode, Chris works with 327-pound Chantell, who no longer wants to be one of the four out of five African-American women who are overweight or obese. If she makes her 90-day goal, he offers to reward her with a trip to Paris, where she can go on a shopping spree and fulfill her dream of running a marathon. She’s not the only one in line for a reward, however. 7 p.m. on FAM Twisted Danny’s (Avan Jogia) feelings of alienation from the townspeople increase as he becomes the target of a group of masked pranksters. In an effort to fit in, he asks Tyler (Chris Zylka) to help him
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throw a party in return for an interview for the film Tyler is making about his return in the new episode “Docu-Trauma.” 7 p.m. USA Covert Affairs Annie (Piper Perabo, pictured) is back in Colombia trying to figure out whose side Teo Braga (Manolo Cardona) is on in an attempt to thwart a potential terrorist act. Joan (Kari Matchett) begins a series of interviews that could change her career path in the new episode “Into the White.” Christopher Gorham also stars. 8 p.m. on CW Capture Humans are hunters and hunted in this new competitive reality series, which places 12 two-person teams in a fenced-in wilderness area where they must try to stay “alive” while tagging rivals with magnetic devices called talons. Australian outdoorsman Luke Tipple is the host and Game Master, who changes the environment here and there to keep things interesting.
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ive months after scoring his second Emmy for playing tortured junkie Jesse Pinkman on AMC’s Breaking Bad, Aaron Paul paraded around a massive soundstage at Albuquerque Studios, carrying another kind of prize on his back. With a playful grin, the pencil-thin Paul was giving his bride-to-be, documentary filmmaker Lauren Parsekian, a piggyback ride as other members of the Breaking Bad cast and crew began preparing a night of shooting that would stretch past midnight. Eventually, the couple approached Bryan Cranston, who stars as Walter White, the cancerstricken chemistry teacher turned lethal criminal mastermind and Pinkman’s partner in crime. Cranston eyed Paul’s passenger: “Well, this makes sense, Aaron,” he joked. “I’ve been carrying you for the past six years!” The banter was illustrative of the loose camaraderie of the company, far from the distractions of Hollywood. Though there was a lot of work ahead, there were no signs of fatigue or pressure. Executive producer Michelle MacLaren, directing the episode, was in good spirits as around 50 actors and technicians moved into position. But on this February evening, it was anything but business as usual at the home base of the show, which has grown in five seasons from a lowprofile cable entry series to one of prime time’s most elite and honored dramas. Production was gradually winding down — the scenes being filmed were for the show’s final episodes, which will start running Aug. 11. The approaching finish line gave the proceedings an extra emotional charge. One scene being rehearsed was a tense confrontation that would be filmed the following week in a remote desert area that was also the site of White’s maiden voyage into meth manufacturing inside a recreational vehicle during the first episode. Just a few minutes after kidding around, Paul and Cranston slipped into Breaking Bad mode for a scene in which Pinkman and White (aka the deadly drug kingpin “Heisenberg”) are talking on the phone. Though the actors weren’t physically facing each other, the explosiveness of their conversation, flavored with words of violence and rage, exposed two characters very much on the brink. The white-hot exchange between the mesmerizing duo is but one guarantee that the series is not going gently into the good night — which will be welcome news to the
devotees who have clung to every brutal twist and turn of White’s hellbent mission to build a drug empire, no matter what the cost to friends and family. Now as the saga of White’s journey from “Mr. Chips to Scarface,” as creator Vince Gilligan puts it, winds down, major questions remain: How large will the final body count be? And will Walter White, who first turned to crime after his cancer diagnosis to provide money for his survivors but then betrayed his family, poisoned innocent children and wreaked havoc throughout New Mexico, be punished for his crimes? Will his cancer, which had been in remission, return? The ultimate outcome has made the end of Breaking Bad perhaps the most anticipated TV finale since the curtain dropped ambiguously in 2007 on The Sopranos. The concept of turning a humble and decent middleclass man into a monster was not genre-based. The cast was primarily below-the-line character actors. Gilligan, a former film student from Farmville, Va., was uncertain whether there was an audience prepared for the darkness of his sinister brainchild. There was initial resistance: FX, which has a reputation for producing edgy material, was among the networks that passed on his pilot script. Breaking Bad received immediate critical acclaim during the first season, which only grew, said Variety’s Brian Lowry, “For a show about meth cookers, Breaking Bad is simply one of TV’s great addictions.” But for Gilligan, the cast and producers at Sony, the end of the journey has been simultaneously exhilarating and wrenching. Cranston, who just scored another lead actor Emmy nomination, said the countdown to the final installments has been “a mixture of dread, anxiety, excitement and thrills. There’s been a lot of tears, rejoicing and lamenting. The full spectrum. The whole thing ends in a very Breaking Bad way. I think fans will embrace it.” Anna Gunn, who plays White’s embittered wife, Skylar, and was also nominated this year for an Emmy, said there were scenes that “were difficult and emotional.” Sitting in a darkened room of the studio, Paul, who was again nominated for his role as Pinkman, seemed the most upset about the approaching end. “My heart starts to race a little when I think about it,” he said. He decided to relive his Breaking Bad experience by watching all the episodes from the pilot. “It’s very hard to let go,” he said.
TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-3 Announcements B-4 Classifieds B-5 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
Sent packing: White Sox ship injured All-Star Jesse Crain to Tampa Bay. Page B-3
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Rendon, Elkettes lead North to All-Star victory Pojoaque Valley graduates wrap up prep career with win in Class AA-AAA North/South volleyball match By Will Webber The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — One last time, one final win. For the four members of the Pojoaque Valley volleyball team who took the floor at Albuquerque High School on Monday night, the annual Class AA-AAA North/South All-Star volleyball match was the final chapter in a long and storied career that
SWIMMING
Phelps a bit vague on future
included each of the last four state championships in Class AAA. And thanks to all-state hitter Erica Rendon, one final win is what they got. The 5-foot-7 Pojoaque graduate was the most dominant player on the floor for much of the match as the North rallied for an 18-25, 25-19, 25-16 win. Nearly every big point, every big turn provided a little something from Rendon. If not, it was a safe bet that
former Elkettes Danielle Harrier, Kyra Gonzales and Mecole Quintana were there in her stead. “It’s a special feeling to be out there one more time with all four us together,” Harrier said. “Maybe 10 years from now we can all remember what we did in high school and be surprised at what we did.” The North led for all but a few minutes of the 90-minute match. With Rendon getting to virtually every free ball in Game 1, the North opened a 12-6 lead before Sandia Preparatory middle blocker Dixie Cooper strained a hamstring and went to the bench.
The South responded with a commanding 19-6 run to end the game and take an early 1-0 lead. “That changed everything,” said North head coach Brian Gurule, the head coach at Santa Fe Indian School. “You take a dominant person off the front like that and it allowed [the South] to turn things around.” Cooper eventually came back and, like Rendon, had a number of booming shots down the stretch as the North won both games going away. Rendon was on the service line with a chance to clinch the match in Game 3. It would have been a fitting end to
her career to nail down that last point, but she was on the floor when the final shot was made. There in the building were members of the Albuquerque La Cueva and Rio Rancho Cleveland volleyball programs, two storied AAAAA schools where Rendon attempted to transfer to prior to her senior year at Pojoaque. Both attempts were rebuffed by the New Mexico Activities Association, forcing her return to Pojoaque for one last season. “No regrets,” she said. “I’m glad I
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FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME
By Paul Newberry The Associated Press
BARCELONA, Spain — When Michael Phelps walked away from swimming after the London Olympics, he was adamant about one thing: His career was over. Now, it sounds like he’s not so sure. While saying he’s never been happier with his life — and certainly doesn’t miss the grind of what it took to become the winningest athlete in Olympic history — Phelps left the door open to change his mind before the 2016 Rio Games. “I don’t know what’s going to happen in the future,” Michael Phelps said Monday. Phelps “I don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow.” In Barcelona for the world swimming championships, Phelps spoke in a series of one-on-one interviews set up by his sponsor, Speedo. When asked by the AP, yes or no, whether he’ll compete at the next Olympics, Phelps coyly said he hasn’t planned that far ahead in his life. That’s a striking change from his comments before and immediately after the London Games, when he insisted his retirement was set in stone and it had always been his goal to quit swimming before he turned 30. Phelps will be 31 at the time of the opening ceremony for the Rio Games. “I don’t know. We’re in 2013,” he said, before adding, “There’s nothing in the works right now.” There’s plenty of time for a comeback. Phelps would likely want to begin training before the end of the year, which would allow him to get into peak condition leading up to the next world championships in 2015, an important stepping stone for the Olympics. Phelps certainly isn’t training at the moment. He jammed the small toe of his right foot on the edge of a sofa while at home in Baltimore, and aggravated the injury when he played in a golf tournament at Lake Tahoe. He’s wearing a boot cast on his foot while in Barcelona to cope with a small stress fracture. After some sightseeing and promotional appearances, Phelps took in a second night of swimming at the Palau Sant Jordi before getting ready to head back to the U.S. on Tuesday. He was accompanied by his new girlfriend, Golf Channel reporter Win McMurry. “I have no plans to do anything,” Phelps said. “I love what I’m doing now. I’m able to travel so much, play golf. I’m on my schedule. I’ve never been able to have that. I’ve never been able to do really whatever I want to do. I go wherever I want to go. I see whatever I want to see. It’s nice waking up at 10, 11, 12 o’clock in the afternoon. I’m pretty lazy besides playing golf. I don’t do much.” He does have some projects away from the pool, including a series of swim schools and a foundation devoted to water safety. He said those are fulfilling projects, but he’s still trying to sort out where he wants to go in his life. “Peter [Carlisle, his agent] asked me where I want to be in one year,
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Defensive tackle Warren Sapp, who played with Tampa Bay for nine seasons and Oakland for four, finished his career with 96½ sacks and seven Pro Bowl selections after being drafted 12th overall in the 1995 NFL Draft. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
To Canton with a smile Fun-loving, mouthy Pro Bowler Sapp heading into Hall of Fame By Fred Goodall
The Associated Press
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AMPA, Fla. — Now headed into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Warren Sapp smiles as he remembers accepting the challenge to turn around one of the worst franchises in pro sports history. The Buccaneers lost 10 or more games for 11 consecutive seasons before selecting a mouthy, fun-loving and sometimes downright irreverent defensive tackle in the opening round of the 1995 NFL Draft. He struggled during a 7-9 rookie season that ended the double-digit losses streak — but hardly lifted the team out of a funk. Enter Tony Dungy with a plan that a young, supremely confident, 23-year-old Sapp found irresistible. “When he walked into the job, it was kind of funny. We were walking through old One Buc Place going to see each other. I was coming through the back door and he was coming from his
office. We met about halfway. We looked at each other and he said: ‘I was looking for you,’ and I said: ‘I was looking for you.’ ” They returned to Dungy’s tiny working quarters, sat down and the coach explained how he planned to install a defensive system that would allow Sapp to flourish the way the 6-foot-2, 300-pound tackle with exceptional quickness and speed for his size did in college at the University of Miami. “I said, ‘Wait. Let’s define that.’ I said, ‘We used to trample the run on our way to the quarterback and build a camp in the backfield that was three yards deep.’ He said, ‘I like that.’ I said, ‘If that’s what you’re asking me to do, then I can do that for you.’ He said, ‘But it’s going to require a lot of work.’ I said, ‘I don’t mind work, I’ve been working since I was 13 years old, so I’ll be right here with you.’ ” At age 40, Sapp still gets excited talking about Dungy replacing his first NFL head coach, Sam Wayche, and setting a lofty goal of chasing down Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers in the old NFC Central. He and linebacker Derrick Brooks, also drafted in the first round in 1995, bought into the plan right away. “Now we had a structure and a path. With Sam,
it was a three-ring circus and you didn’t know if you were part of the lions, tigers, bears, trapeze artists, horses or what. It would depend on his mood that day when he walked in. Once we got a structure and direction, we all were like: ‘Let’s go that way,’ ” Sapp said. “It was a man who walked into this job, steady as a rock every day. And it was the first time in my life I ever had a black man leading me in anything. Me and Brooks looked at it, and were like: ‘Yeah, we have a figure in front of us that everybody tells us is a God-send, there’s no way we won’t play football for this man. There’s no way I wouldn’t take a bullet for him if it didn’t kill me. I have always said that.” Working within Dungy’s version of Cover 2 that Sapp, Brooks, safety John Lynch and cornerback Ronde Barber helped evolve into what’s known today as Tampa 2, the self-described “small-town country boy” from Plymouth, Fla. — outside of Orlando — developed into one of the most dominating defensive tackles in league history. Sapp was a four-time All-Pro selection and made the Pro Bowl the final seven years of a nine-season
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GOLF
Wiebe wins Senior Open Championship The Associated Press
Mark Wiebe celebrates winning the Senior Open Championship on Monday at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England. Wiebe beat Bernhard Langer in five playoff holes. PETER BYRNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Jon Lechel, jlechel@sfnewmexican.com
SOUTHPORT, England — Bernhard Langer gave Mark Wiebe one too many chances at the Senior Open Championship. Wiebe took advantage of Langer’s failure to close out the tournament, beating Langer on the fifth playoff hole Monday at Royal Birkdale for his first senior major title. Wiebe used a superb approach shot from the rough to set up a two-putt for par, while Langer failed to get up and down, seeing his par putt stay out. “I’m speechless,” Wiebe said. “I think it’s always better for both players had there been a birdie to win the playoff instead of a bogey, but right now, I don’t really care. I’m glad it’s over, and I’m honored. Langer led by two shots going into
the final hole of regulation Sunday, only to settle for a double bogey when he struggled to get out of a bunker. The playoff was then halted after two holes because of darkness and resumed Monday, with Langer immediately missing another chance to win when his 12-foot putt wouldn’t drop. “I just was luckier [Monday] and [Sunday] night than Bernie I guess,” Wiebe said. “I also feel like Bernie has won, what, a couple hundred tournaments. He’s won so many, I feel like this was my turn.” Langer, who won the tournament in 2010, was up by three shots entering the fourth round. He looked certain to earn a second Senior Open Championship title when he teed off at the 72nd. But his approach shot landed in a
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BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
FOOTBALL Football NFL PreseasoN
NFL Calendar
Aug. 3 — Pro Football Hall of Fame inductions, Canton, Ohio. Aug. 4 — Hall of Fame Game: Dallas vs. Miami. Aug. 8 — First weekend of preseason games. Aug. 27 — Roster cutdown to 75 players. Aug. 31 — Roster cutdown to 53 players. Aug. 29 — Preseason schedule ends. Sept. 5 — 2013 season begins, Baltimore at Denver. Sept. 8-9 — First weekend of regularseason games.
Central y-Chicago San Antonio Iowa West z-Arizona x-Spokane x-San Jose Utah
W L T 10 8 0 10 8 0 6 12 0 W L T 15 3 0 14 4 0 13 5 0 7 11 0
Pct PF .556 973 .556 782 .333 827 Pct PF .833 1203 .778 1198 .722 1033 .389 896
american Conference
south W L T Pct z-Jacksonville 12 6 0 .667 x-Tampa Bay 7 11 0 .389 x-Orlando 7 11 0 .389 New Orleans 5 13 0 .278 east W L T Pct y-Philadelphia 12 6 0 .667 Cleveland 4 14 0 .222 Pittsburgh 4 14 0 .222 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference Friday’s Games Spokane 61, Pittsburgh 43 saturday’s Games Jacksonville 52, Tampa Bay 44 Orlando 71, New Orleans 42 Arizona 84, Iowa 45 Utah 48, Cleveland 46 San Antonio 42, Philadelphia 28 San Jose 65, Chicago 40 end of regular season
Pa 947 884 913 Pa 866 896 877 988
PF Pa 941 883 959 980 965 1032 833 1069 PF Pa 1052 839 847 1047 726 1014
BASKETBALL basketball WNBa eastern Conference
Pct .706 .688 .500 .471 .389 .250
GB — 1/2 31/2 4 51/2 71/2
W L Pct Minnesota 14 3 .824 Los Angeles 12 6 .667 Phoenix 9 9 .500 Seattle 7 10 .412 San Antonio 6 12 .333 Tulsa 6 14 .300 sunday’s Games No games scheduled. Monday’s Games No games scheduled. Tuesday’s Games No games scheduled. Wednesday’s Game New York at Washington, 5 p.m.
GB — 21/2 51/2 7 81/2 91/2
Chicago Atlanta Washington Indiana New York Connecticut
W 12 11 9 8 7 4
L 5 5 9 9 11 12
Western Conference
TENNIS tennis
golF GOLF
AUTO RACING aUto
TRANSACTIONS tRansaCtions
east W L T Pts GF Ga Kansas City 10 6 6 36 31 21 New York 10 7 5 35 33 27 Montreal 10 5 5 35 32 29 Philadelphia 9 6 7 34 33 30 New England 8 7 6 30 27 19 Houston 8 6 6 30 23 20 Chicago 7 9 4 25 25 30 Columbus 6 10 5 23 24 27 Toronto 3 10 8 17 19 29 D.C. United 2 15 4 10 10 35 West W L T Pts GF Ga Salt Lake 11 7 4 37 36 24 Portland 8 3 10 34 31 20 Colorado 9 7 7 34 28 24 Los Angeles 10 9 3 33 32 27 Vancouver 9 7 5 32 33 29 Dallas 8 5 8 32 27 27 Seattle 8 7 4 28 24 22 San Jose 7 9 6 27 23 33 Chivas USA 4 12 5 17 19 37 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. sunday’s Game Seattle 2, Chivas USA 1 Wednesday, July 31 Roma at MLS All-Stars, 7 p.m. saturday, aug. 3 Montreal at D.C. United, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. New York at Kansas City, 6 p.m. Salt Lake at Colorado, 7 p.m. Columbus at Houston, 7 p.m. Chivas USA at San Jose, 8 p.m. Dallas at Seattle, 8:30 p.m. Vancouver at Portland, 9 p.m. sunday, aug. 4 Toronto at New England, 5:30 p.m.
Monday at Mercedes-Benz sportpark Kitzbuehel Kitzbuehel, austria Purse: $621,000 (WT250) surface: Clay-outdoor singles First round Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, def. Kenny de Schepper, France, 6-4, 6-4. Marcel Granollers (8), Spain, def. Mate Pavic, Croatia, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Albert Montanes (7), Spain, def. Adrian Ungur, Romania, 6-4, 6-2. Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, def. Martin Fischer, Austria, 7-5, 1-6, 6-3. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, def. Antonio Veic, Croatia, 6-1, 6-3. Dominic Thiem, Austria, def. Andrey Kuznetsov, Russia, 6-2, 7-5. doubles First round Lucas Arnold Ker and Juan Monaco, Argentina, def. Carlos Becke and Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, 6-3, 7-5. Daniel Brands, Germany, and Michal Mertinak, Slovakia, lead Julian Knowle, Austria, and Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 6-4, 0-1, susp., rain.
Monday at royal Birkdale southport, england Purse: $2 million Yardage: 7,082; Par: 70 Final a-amateur Wiebe won on fifth playoff hole Mark Wiebe (632), $315,600 70-65-70-66—271 Brnhrd Lnger (422), $210,500 68-67-66-70—271 Corey Pavin (196), $97,813 69-71-69-65—274 Peter Senior (196), $97,813 68-71-69-66—274 David Frost (196), $97,813 68-68-68-70—274 Peter Fowler (132), $66,280 69-68-70-69—276 Sandy Lyle (114), $56,800 70-68-69-70—277 Tom Pernice Jr. (90), $44,870 70-72-70-66—278 Jeff Hart (90), $44,870 69-69-73-67—278 Gene Sauers (76), $37,820 67-70-70-72—279 Steve Elkington, $33,650 72-68-71-69—280 Gary Wolstenholme, $33,650 70-72-68-70—280 Kohki Idoki, $30,320 71-68-73-69—281 Jamie Spence, $27,220 75-69-70-68—282 Russ Cochran, $27,220 71-73-70-68—282 Des Smyth, $27,220 76-69-69-68—282 Tom Kite, $27,220 70-72-71-69—282 Rocco Mediate, $24,040 70-68-75-70—283 Steve Pate, $24,040 70-72-68-73—283 Greg Turner, $22,960 70-69-75-70—284 Barry Lane, $21,040 72-68-74-71—285 Larry Mize, $21,040 71-73-70-71—285 Fred Couples, $21,040 74-72-68-71—285 Steve Jones, $21,040 73-70-70-72—285 Colin Montgomerie, $21,040 72-71-69-73—285 Michael Allen, $17,297 75-70-72-69—286 Katsuyoshi Tomori, $17,297 71-72-73-70—286 Steen Tinning, $17,297 71-74-71-70—286 Tom Lehman, $17,297 72-72-70-72—286 Mark O’Meara, $17,297 74-68-72-72—286 Mark McNulty, $17,297 70-67-76-73—286 Rod Spittle, $17,297 71-72-70-73—286 Brad Faxon, $14,647 74-69-74-70—287 Gary Hallberg, $14,647 69-75-73-70—287 Pedro Linhart, $14,647 73-72-72-70—287 Kirk Hanefeld, $13,230 73-75-70-70—288 Tom Watson, $13,230 73-71-73-71—288 David J. Russell, $13,230 72-73-72-71—288 Bob Tway, $13,230 74-72-69-73—288
Through July 27 1. Kyle Busch, $703,675 2. Sam Hornish Jr., $689,442 3. Austin Dillon, $659,789 4. Elliott Sadler, $621,372 5. Trevor Bayne, $580,672 6. Brian Vickers, $558,847 7. Kyle Larson, $550,843 8. Regan Smith, $549,663 9. Justin Allgaier, $544,160 10. Brian Scott, $523,813 11. Parker Kligerman, $514,587 12. Alex Bowman, $493,097 13. Travis Pastrana, $454,712 14. Nelson Piquet Jr., $454,012 15. Mike Bliss, $446,497 16. Reed Sorenson, $435,332 17. Eric McClure, $433,067 18. Mike Wallace, $421,136 19. Jeremy Clements, $391,317 20. Joe Nemechek, $390,137 21. Brad Keselowski, $343,175 22. Blake Koch, $315,718 23. Joey Logano, $305,420 24. Jeffrey Earnhardt, $287,234 25. Johanna Long, $285,457 26. Dexter Stacey, $271,732 27. Matt Kenseth, $271,420 28. Michael Annett, $270,234 29. Jeff Green, $268,710 30. Landon Cassill, $251,438 31. Hal Martin, $242,099 32. Robert Richardson Jr., $239,686 33. Jamie Dick, $236,219 34. Josh Wise, $228,904 35. Jason White, $224,408 36. Juan Carlos Blum, $210,551 37. Kasey Kahne, $206,135 38. Brad Sweet, $182,625 39. Joey Gase, $174,886 40. Mike Harmon, $164,464 41. Kevin Harvick, $156,295 42. Cole Whitt, $153,218 43. Kevin Swindell, $152,398 44. J.J. Yeley, $131,743 45. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $122,775 46. Harrison Rhodes, $113,531 47. Ty Dillon, $109,735 48. Tony Stewart, $109,220 49. Kurt Busch, $109,052 50. Ken Butler, $96,144
MLB — Suspended Toronto minor league OF Brian Van Kirk (New Hampshire-EL) 50 games after a second violation for a drug of abuse.
NorTh aMeriCa Major League soccer
sunday’s Game Miami vs. Dallas at Canton, 6 p.m. Thursday, aug. 8 Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. Washington at Tennessee, 6 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 6 p.m. St. Louis at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Denver at San Francisco, 7 p.m. Seattle at San Diego, 8 p.m. Friday, aug. 9 N.Y. Jets at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Miami at Jacksonville, 5:30 p.m. New England at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m. Houston at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Kansas City at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Arizona at Green Bay, 6 p.m. Chicago at Carolina, 6 p.m. Dallas at Oakland, 8 p.m.
areNa LeaGue National Conference
SOCCER soCCeR
THISdate DATE onON this July 30
1870 - Monmouth Park opens with a fiveday race meet. 1930 - Uruguay beats Argentina 4-2 for soccer’s first World Cup in Montevideo. 1932 - The 10th modern Olympic Games open in Los Angeles. 1961 - Jerry Barber edges Don January by one stroke in a playoff to win the PGA title. 1968 - Washington’s Ron Hansen pulls off an unassisted triple play, but the Cleveland Indians still win 10-1. 1971 - In the NFL Chicago All Star game, the Baltimore Colts beat the All-Stars 24-17. 1976 - Bruce Jenner sets the world record in the Olympic decathlon with 8,618 points, breaking Nikolai Avilov’s mark by 164 points. 1980 - Houston pitcher J.R. Richard suffers a stroke during a workout at the Astrodome. 1984 - Michael Gross of West Germany sets a world record in the 200-meter freestyle with a time of 1:47.44 at a meet in Munich. 1996 - The American softball team wins the gold medal, beating China 3-1 behind a controversial two-run homer from Dot Richardson in the first Olympic competition in that sport.
BOXING boxing
Fight schedule
aug. 1 At Bangkok, Thailand, Kompayak Porpramuk vs. Koki Eto, 12, for Porpramuk’s interim WBA World flyweight title. aug. 2 At Buffalo Run Casino, Miami, Okla. (ESPN2), Javier Fortuna vs. Luis Franco, 10, featherweights. aug. 3 At Uncasville, Conn. (NBCSN), Curtis Stevens vs. Saul Roman, 10, middleweights; Eddie Chambers vs. Thabisco Mchunu, 10, cruiserweights; Tomasz Adamek vs. Tony Grano, 10, heavyweights; Tomasz Adamek vs. Tony Grano, 10, heavyweights. aug. 9 At Morongo Casino Resort & Spa, Cabazon, Calif. (ESPN2), Rustum Nagaev vs. Jose Hernandez, 10, lightweights; Jose Pedraza vs. Gabriel Tomalyjan, 10 super featherweights. At Fantasy Springs Resort Casino, Indio, Calif. (SHO), Deontay Wilder vs. Sergei Liakhovich, 10, heavyweights; Francisco Vargas vs. Brandon Bennett, 10, lightweights; Jermall Charlo vs. Antwone Smith, 10, junior middleweights. aug. 10 At Panama City, Panama, Anselmo Moreno vs. William Urina, 12, for Moreno’s WBA Super World bantamweight title; Oscar Escandon vs. Nehomar Cermeno, 12, for the interim WBA World junior featherweight title. aug. 12 At Tokyo, Shinsuke Yamanaka, vs. Jose Nieves, 12, for Yamanaka’s WBC bantamweight title; Akira Yaegashi vs. Oscar Blanquet, 12, for Yaegashi’s WBC flyweigh title. aug. 16 At U.S. Cellular Field, Chicago (ESPN), Andrzej Fonfara vs. Gabriel Campillo, 12, for the IBO light heavyweight title; Artur Szpilka vs. Mike Mollo, 10, heavyweights. aug. 17 At Cardiff, Wales (HBO), Nathan Cleverly vs. Sergey Kovalev, 12, for Cleverly’s WBO light heavyweight title. At Revel Resort, Atlantic City, N.J. (HBO), Daniel Geale vs. Darren Barker, 12, for Geale’s IBF middleweight title; Jonathan Romero vs. Kiki Martinez, 12, for Romero’s IBF super bantamweight title. At Cancun, Mexico, Takashi Miura vs. Sergio Thompson, 12, for Miura’s WBC junior lightweight title. aug. 23 At Bangkok, Thailand, Nobuo Nashiro vs. Denkaosan Kaovichit, 12, for the interim WBA World super flyweight title. At Dover (Del.) Downs Hotel & Casino, Amir Mansour vs. Maurice Harris, 12, for the vacant U.S. Boxing Association heavyweight title. At Las Vegas, Argenis Mendez vs. Arash Usmanee, 12, for Mendez’s IBF super featherweight title; Claudio Merrero vs. Jesus Marcelo Andres Cuellar, 12, for the interim WBA World featherweight title. aug. 24 At Donetsk, Ukraine, Stanyslav Kashtanov vs. Jaime Barboza, 12, for the interim WBA World super middleweight title. At StubHub Center, Carson, Calif. (SHO), Abner Mares vs. Jhonny Gonzalez, 12, for Mares’ WBC featherweight title; Victor Terrazas vs. Leo Santa Cruz, 12, for Terrazas’ WBC junior featherweight title. sept. 14 At MGM Grand, Las Vegas (PPV), Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Canelo Alvarez, 12, Mayweather’s WBA Super World and Alvarez’s WBC junior middleweight titles; Danny Garcia, vs. Lucas Matthysse, 12, super lightweights.
aTP WorLd Tour bet-at-home Cup Kitzbuehel
WTa Tour southern California open
Monday at La Costa resort and spa Carlsbad, Calif. Purse: $795,707 (Premier) surface: hard-outdoor singles First round Sam Stosur (5), Australia, def. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 7-5, 6-1. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, def. Flavia Pennetta, Italy, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (6), 6-4. Virginie Razzano, France, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, 6-2, 6-4. doubles First round Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany, and Kveta Peschke (1), Czech Republic, def. Liga Dekmeijere, Latvia, and Olga Savchuk, Ukraine, 6-2, 6-3.
aTP-WTa Tour Citi open a u.s. open series event
Monday at William h.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center Washington Purse: Men, $1.55 million (WT500); Women, $235,000 (intl.) surface: hard-outdoor singles Men First round Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Steve Johnson, United States, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Somdev Devvarman, India, def. Rhyne Williams, United States, 7-5, 6-1. Mardy Fish, United States, def. Matthew Ebden, Australia, 2-6, 6-1, 6-3. Sam Groth, Australia, def. Denis Kudla, United States, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 6-3, 6-4. David Goffin, Belgium, def. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, 6-4, 6-4. Marinko Matosevic, Australia, def. James Blake, United States, 6-2, 7-6 (6). Xavier Malisse, Belgium, def. Rajeev Ram, United States, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, def. Alejandro Falla, Argentina, 1-6, 6-4, 6-4. Tobias Kamke, Germany, def. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Women First round Magdalena Rybarikova (7), Slovakia, def. Christina McHale, United States, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2. Paula Ormaechea, Argentina, def. Beatrice Capra, United States, 6-1, 6-1. Jana Cepelova, Slovakia, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 6-4, 0-6, 6-3. Olga Puchkova, Russia, def. Sloane Stephens (2), United States, 7-5, 6-3. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, def. Jessica Pegula, United States, 6-2, 7-5. doubles Men First round Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowsk, Poland, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, and Dmitry Tursunov, Russia, 6-3, 7-6 (4). Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, and Michael Llodra, France, def. Max Mirnyi, Belarus, and Horia Tecau, Romania, 3-6, 6-3, 15-13. Women First round Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, and Taylor Townsend, United States, def. Jennifer Elie and Lena Litvak, United States, 6-1, 6-0. Alexandra Mueller, United States, and Adriana Perez, Venezuela, def. Alison Riske, United States, and Nicola Slater, Britain, 7-6 (6), 6-3. Maria Fernanda Alvarez Teran, Bolivia, and Keri Wong, United States, def. Anamika Bhargava and Ashley Weinhold, United States, 6-0, 3-6, 10-7.
ChaMPioNs Tour senior British open
LPGa Tour Money Leaders
Through July 21
1. Inbee Park 2. Stacy Lewis 3. I.K. Kim 4. Suzann Pettersen 5. So Yeon Ryu 6. Beatriz Recari 7. Paula Creamer 8. Karrie Webb 9. Angela Stanford 10. Na Yeon Choi 11. Cristie Kerr 12. Catriona Matthew 13. Hee Young Park 14. Lizette Salas 15. Jiyai Shin
Trn 15 17 15 14 15 15 15 13 16 15 13 13 16 16 13
Money $2,134,844 $916,799 $909,957 $860,056 $847,207 $784,023 $628,715 $565,764 $551,300 $511,469 $498,885 $496,291 $493,013 $465,539 $459,605
Trn 16 13 16 16 15 11 16 14 13 15 17 12 15 6 16
Money $430,684 $300,471 $290,474 $274,749 $232,050 $219,794 $216,041 $208,134 $197,836 $173,426 $166,803 $157,304 $155,667 $152,828 $152,248
WeBCoM Tour Money Leaders
Through July 28
1. Michael Putnam 2. Edward Loar 3. Chesson Hadley 4. Ben Martin 5. Will Wilcox 6. Kevin Tway 7. Alex Aragon 8. Mark Anderson 9. Tim Wilkinson 10. Jamie Lovemark 11. Danny Lee 12. Benjamin Alvarado 13. Alex Prugh 14. Brendon Todd 15. Jim Renner
NasCar NaTioNWide Money Leaders
schedule
July 27 — Indiana 250, Indianapolis Aug. 3 — U.S. Cellular 250, Newton, Iowa Aug. 10 — Zippo 200, Watkins Glen, N.Y. Aug. 17 — Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200, Lexington, Ohio Aug. 23 — Food City 250, Bristol, Tenn. Aug. 31 — Great Clips/Grit Chips 300, Hampton, Ga.
NasCar sPriNT CuP Money Leaders
Through July 28 1. Jimmie Johnson, $6,177,084 2. Kyle Busch, $4,150,397 3. Matt Kenseth, $4,043,085 4. Kevin Harvick, $3,886,677 5. Brad Keselowski, $3,835,924 6. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $3,622,748 7. Carl Edwards, $3,597,609 8. Tony Stewart, $3,580,714 9. Ryan Newman, $3,430,048 10. Jeff Gordon, $3,410,123 11. Clint Bowyer, $3,350,158 12. Martin Truex Jr., $3,321,679 13. Joey Logano, $3,260,974 14. Kasey Kahne, $3,243,083 15. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $3,185,243 16. Greg Biffle, $3,095,464 17. Aric Almirola, $3,033,446 18. Kurt Busch, $2,985,698 19. Jamie McMurray, $2,916,113 20. Juan Pablo Montoya, $2,867,634 21. Paul Menard, $2,801,193 22. Marcos Ambrose, $2,800,553 23. David Ragan, $2,649,218 24. Casey Mears, $2,473,167 25. Denny Hamlin, $2,461,574 26. Jeff Burton, $2,376,418 27. David Gilliland, $2,332,577 28. Mark Martin, $2,318,904 29. Travis Kvapil, $2,232,462 30. Bobby Labonte, $2,190,254 31. Danica Patrick, $2,182,705 32. David Reutimann, $2,120,058 33. Dave Blaney, $2,039,930 34. J.J. Yeley, $2,006,778 35. Josh Wise, $1,917,953 36. David Stremme, $1,776,858 37. Joe Nemechek, $1,686,310 38. Michael McDowell, $1,578,456 39. Landon Cassill, $1,526,605 40. A J Allmendinger, $1,153,384 41. Trevor Bayne, $1,042,584 42. Austin Dillon, $1,035,932 43. Regan Smith, $1,019,772 44. Brian Vickers, $954,460 45. Scott Speed, $902,299 46. Timmy Hill, $807,496 47. Mike Bliss, $714,053 48. Terry Labonte, $639,840 49. Michael Waltrip, $606,549 50. Ken Schrader, $483,182
schedule
Through July 28 July 28 — Crown Royal Presents The Samuel Deeds 400 at The Brickyard (Ryan Newman) Aug. 4 — GoBowling.com 400, Long Pond, Pa. Aug. 11 — Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. Aug. 18 — Pure Michigan 400, Brooklyn, Mich. Aug. 24 — Irwin Tools Night Race, Bristol, Tenn.
BaseBaLL Major League Baseball
american League
DETROIT TIGERS — Sent LHP Darin Downs to Toledo for a rehab assignment. HOUSTON ASTROS — Traded RHP Jose Veras to Detroit for OF Danry Vasquez and a player to be named. Agreed to terms with RHP Justin Hess on a minor league contract. Recalled RHP Chia-Jen Lo from Corpus Christi (Texas). Selected the contract of RHP Josh Zeid from Oklahoma City (PCL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Traded LHP Scott Downs to Atlanta for RHP Cory Rasmus. Assigned RHP Billy Buckner outright to Salt Lake (PCL). Recalled LHP Nick Maronde from Arkansas (Texas). MINNESOTA TWINS — Reinstated C Joe Mauer from the restricted list. Optioned C Drew Butera to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned 3B David Adams to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Agreed to terms with 3B Brady Steiger on a minor league contract. SEATTLE MARINERS — Activated OF Michael Morse from the 15-day DL. Designated OF Jason Bay for assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Acquired RHP Jesse Crain from the Chicago White Sox for players to be named or cash. Transferred RHP Brandon Gomes to the 60-day DL.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS — Sent RHP Scott Baker to Daytona (FSL) for a rehab assignment. COLORADO ROCKIES — Recalled INF Charlie Culberson from Colorado Springs (PCL). Optioned INF Jordan Pacheco to Colorado Springs. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed C Michael McKenry on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 28. Recalled OF Alex Presley from Indianapolis (IL). SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Designated RHP Yusmeiro Petit for assignment.
american association
AMARILLO SOX — Traded RHP Jeff Lyman to San Angelo (United) for future considerations. EL PASO DIABLOS — Released C Moises Montero. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Released LHP Justin Albert and RHP Connor Graham. LAREDO LEMURS — Released INF Joe Urtuzastegui. Traded RHP Jon Kountis to the Greys (Frontier) for 1B Balbino Fuenmayor. LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Released LHP Matt Bywater. Purchased OF Brian Joynt and RHP Luis Chirinos from El Paso. Traded OF Stephen Douglas to Laredo for a player to be named.
Frontier League
FRONTIER GREYS — Traded 1B Balbino Fuenmayor to Laredo (AA) for RHP Jonathan Kountis. Signed RHP Ryan Berry. ROCKFORD AVIATORS — Signed C Gabe DeMarco. Released OF Will Howard. SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS — Released RHP James Jones. TRAVERSE CITY BEACH BUMS — Released SS Andrew Cohn.
BasKeTBaLL National Basketball association
DALLAS MAVERICKS — Signed G Shane Larkin. HOUSTON ROCKETS — Signed C Marcus Camby. LOS ANGELES LAKERS — Named Kurt Rambis and Johnny Davis assistant coaches. PHILADELPHIA 76ERS — Named Chris Heck chief revenue officer.
FooTBaLL National Football League
BALTIMORE RAVENS — Signed FB Vonta Leach to a two-year contract. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Activated TE/LS Bryce Davis, OT Andre Smith comes from the active/non-football illness list and WR Brandon Tate from the active/pup list. HOUSTON TEXANS — Activated S Orhian Johnson from the active/non-football injury list. TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms on a contract with G Chance Warmack.
hoCKeY National hockey League
NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed D Bryan Rodney to a one-year contract. WINNIPEG JETS — Agreed to terms with D Zach Bogosian on a seven-year contract.
CoLLeGe NCaa
BARTON — Named Benny Benton sports information director. CLEMSON — Named Marvin Gibson and Althea Thomas assistant track coaches and Danielle Hepburn women’s graduate assistant volleyball coach. N.C. STATE — Named Dereck Whittenburg men’s assistant basketball coach. SANTA CLARA — Named Sean Riley assistant baseball coach. SHENANDOAH — Named Melissa Kraft women’s assistant basketball coach. UTICA — Named Aris Bird volleyball coach. WAGNER — Named Kevin Dobes football operations director. WESTERN NEW ENGLAND — Named Dan Gomez interim baseball coach. WISCONSIN-OSHKOSH — Named Cameron Wengrzyn athletics marketing & development specialist.
Busch quickly back on the road after Brickyard 400 The Associated Press
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — With only six races left before NASCAR’s Chase for the Sprint Cup begins, Kurt Busch isn’t about to take a break. Not with one of the coveted 12 spots still within his grasp. Less than 24 hours after a disappointing 14th-place finish at the Brickyard 400 in Indianapolis, Busch was back behind the wheel of his black No. 78 Chevrolet on Monday, blistering through the tricky turns at Watkins Glen International and giving as much feedback
as he could to crew chief Todd Berrier. “I always like to test at tracks I’m not exceptionally good on and polish up on what might be a weak spot,” Busch said. “We chose to come and test here because we’re putting a heavy emphasis and pushing all of our eggs into the basket of trying to get into the Chase. We’re trying to use this as a strength, come here and polish up and be even better. “After Watkins Glen, it’s four to go, and we like our chances.” Busch and his Furniture Row Racing team were among six
cars to make the trek to upstate New York’s Finger Lakes region searching for some sort of edge for the Cup race here Kurt Busch in two weeks. Though he’s been in contention regularly all season, Busch is winless and sits 14th in points. He’s hopeful two days here on the track will translate into something big when the green flag waves for the CheezIt 355 at The Glen on Aug. 11.
“We just haven’t quite delivered on a win,” Busch said Monday. “Even if we had a win right now, what’s happening is everybody’s finding ways to win, so you have a grouping of guys that have that one win. It’s just as easy for us to make it in on overall consistency.” The top-10 drivers in points automatically qualify for the 10-race Chase, and the two drivers between 11th and 20th in points with the most wins earn wild-card spots. Overall points are the deciding factor if more than two drivers have one win each.
As the 26-race preseason winds down, there isn’t much wiggle room in the standings. Only 11 points separate Greg Biffle in eighth from 12th-place Martin Truex Jr. Busch is just 19 points behind Biffle and 13 behind 10th-place Jeff Gordon, who also is winless, while Tony Stewart and Truex each have a victory and hold the wild cards. Busch has been fast all year in practice but hasn’t found the complete package. “It’s ruining us,” he said. “There’s a full package that you have to have in this game, and I see a weak spot for us. Once
tracks rubber in, we don’t seem to have the front grip and the speed that we have in practice. It’s really odd to unload a lot of these weeks and be the fastest in practice and not have that same speed in the race. It’s a little frustrating, but we’re still in the mix.” Getting any edge for the second and final road course race of the season is paramount. After teams complained about negotiating right turns on the other road course, teams will be allowed to hang the rear spoilers more to the left to alleviate the problem at The Glen.
BASEBALL TRADE ROUNDUP
Rays get Crain in trade The Associated Press
BOSTON — The Rays acquired injured reliever Jesse Crain from the White Sox on Monday in an attempt to bolster their bullpen for the stretch run in the tough American League East. The White Sox will receive players to be named or cash for Crain, a 32-year-old righthander who is 2-3 with a 1.15 ERA in 38 appearances. He was placed on the disabled list July 3 with a right shoulder strain. “Jesse has been one of the top relievers in the AmeriJesse Crain can League, not only this season but also throughout his entire tenure with the White Sox,” said Rick Hahn, Chicago general manager. “We cannot say enough about what Jesse has meant to our bullpen, and the positive impact he’s had on our young relievers. We certainly think he has the ability to influence this year’s pennant race very positively for the Rays.” The deal was announced before the Rays faced the division-leading Red Sox in Boston on Monday night. Hahn said Crain’s injury affected the market for him. The team considered waiting until he is healthy, which could be in a few weeks, and trying to get him through waivers. Crain made the All-Star team for the first time this year but did not pitch because he was injured. Crain is 45-30 with a 3.05 ERA in a 10-year career, spending the first seven with Minnesota. He signed with the White Sox as a free agent after the 2010 season. TIGERS-ASTROS Detroit added some help for its shaky bullpen, acquiring reliever Jose Veras from Houston for minor-league outfielder Danry Vasquez and a player to be named. Veras is 0-4 with a 2.93 ERA, and the 32-year-old righthander has struck out 44 in 43 innings with only 14 walks. Tigers general manager Dave Dombrowski says the team is pleased to add an experienced arm to the bullpen. BRAVES-ANGELS Atlanta added a needed left-hander to its bullpen by acquiring Scott Downs from Los Angeles for minor-league righty Cory Rasmus. The Braves have lost lefthanded relievers Jonny Venters and Eric O’Flaherty to seasonending elbow injuries. The 37-year-old Downs joins Luis Avilan as lefties in Atlanta’s bullpen. Downs was 2-3 with a 1.84 ERA in 43 games with the Angels. He is 36-35 with a 3.47 ERA in 12 seasons.
American League
East W L Pct Tampa Bay 63 43 .594 Boston 63 44 .589 Baltimore 58 48 .547 New York 55 50 .524 Toronto 48 57 .457 Central W L Pct Detroit 59 45 .567 Cleveland 57 48 .543 Kansas City 51 51 .500 Minnesota 45 57 .441 Chicago 40 63 .388 West W L Pct Oakland 63 43 .594 Texas 57 49 .538 Seattle 50 55 .476 Los Angeles 48 56 .462 Houston 35 69 .337 Monday’s Games Tampa Bay 2, Boston 1 Cleveland 3, Chicago White Sox 2 Texas 4, L.A. Angels 3 Oakland 9, Toronto 4
GB — 1/2 5 71/2 141/2 GB — 21/2 7 13 181/2 GB — 6 121/2 14 27
WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 8-2 W-1 34-19 29-24 — 5-5 L-1 34-20 29-24 — 5-5 L-2 30-22 28-26 21/2 4-6 W-1 29-25 26-25 91/2 3-7 L-1 28-28 20-29 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 7-3 W-3 32-19 27-26 1/2 6-4 W-5 34-19 23-29 5 8-2 W-6 27-24 24-27 11 6-4 L-1 23-24 22-33 161/2 3-7 L-4 22-28 18-35 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 7-3 W-4 34-16 29-27 1 3-7 W-1 30-24 27-25 71/2 7-3 W-1 29-28 21-27 9 3-7 L-4 27-28 21-28 22 2-8 L-1 18-37 17-32 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 5 Cleveland 6, Texas 0 Toronto 2, Houston 1 Detroit 12, Philadelphia 4 Boston 5, Baltimore 0 Kansas City 4, Chi White Sox 2, 12 innings Oakland 10, L.A. Angels 6 Seattle 6, Minnesota 4
Tuesday’s Games Chicago White Sox (Peavy 8-4) at Cleveland (Kazmir 6-4), 5:05 p.m. Houston (B.Norris 6-9) at Baltimore (W.Chen 5-3), 5:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 5-8) at Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 8-7), 5:08 p.m. Arizona (Kennedy 3-7) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 5-11), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (J.Saunders 9-9) at Boston (Workman 0-1), 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 11-6) at Texas (D.Holland 8-6), 6:05 p.m. Kansas City (E.Santana 6-6) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 4-8), 6:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle 6-7) at Oakland (Straily 6-4), 8:05 p.m.
National League
East W L Pct Atlanta 61 45 .575 Washington 52 54 .491 Philadelphia 49 56 .467 New York 47 56 .456 Miami 40 64 .385 Central W L Pct St. Louis 62 41 .602 Pittsburgh 62 42 .596 Cincinnati 59 48 .551 Chicago 48 56 .462 Milwaukee 44 61 .419 West W L Pct Los Angeles 56 48 .538 Arizona 54 51 .514 Colorado 51 56 .477 San Diego 49 58 .458 San Francisco 46 58 .442 Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 9, St. Louis 2 Atlanta 9, Colorado 8, 10 innings N.Y. Mets 6, Miami 5 Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 0 San Diego 2, Cincinnati 1
GB — 9 111/2 121/2 20 GB — 1/2 5 141/2 19 GB — 21/2 61/2 81/2 10
WCGB L10 Str Home Away W-4 35-15 26-30 — 6-4 61/2 4-6 W-3 31-25 21-29 9 2-8 L-8 26-21 23-35 10 5-5 W-1 21-30 26-26 171/2 5-5 L-1 23-29 17-35 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 5-5 L-4 32-17 30-24 — 6-4 W-1 33-18 29-24 — 4-6 L-4 32-17 27-31 91/2 5-5 L-1 22-27 26-29 14 5-5 W-1 26-29 18-32 WCGB L10 Str Home Away — 9-1 W-3 30-24 26-24 4 4-6 L-2 30-24 24-27 8 5-5 L-1 31-26 20-30 10 7-3 W-3 28-23 21-35 111/2 3-7 L-4 28-27 18-31 Sunday’s Games Detroit 12, Philadelphia 4 Miami 3, Pittsburgh 2 Washington 14, N.Y. Mets 1 Chicago Cubs 2, San Francisco 1 L.A. Dodgers 1, Cincinnati 0, 11 innings Colorado 6, Milwaukee 5 San Diego 1, Arizona 0 Atlanta 5, St. Louis 2
Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee (Gallardo 8-9) at Chicago Cubs (Villanueva 2-7), 12:20 p.m., 1st game St. Louis (Lyons 2-3) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 4-7), 2:05 p.m., 1st game San Francisco (Zito 4-7) at Philadelphia (Lannan 2-4), 5:05 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 6-4) at Atlanta (A.Wood 0-2), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Z.Wheeler 4-1) at Miami (Eovaldi 2-1), 5:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 12-5) at Pittsburgh (Undecided), 5:35 p.m., 2nd game Milwaukee (Undecided) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 0-0), 6:05 p.m., 2nd game Cincinnati (Latos 10-3) at San Diego (Volquez 8-8), 8:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 7-8) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 8-3), 8:10 p.m.
Houston Baltimore
2013 Pitchers Norris (R) Chen (L)
Chicago Cleveland
American League
-250
2013 W-L 6-9 5-3
VS ERA 3.93 2.78
OPP REC 8-13 6-5
W-L IP ERA 0-1 7.0 3.86 No Record
Peavy (R) Kazmir (L)
-140
8-4 6-4
4.28 3.96
8-5 9-9
1-0 7.0 1.29 No Record
Saunders (L) Workman (R)
7:10p -175
9-9 0-1
4.48 4.40
9-12 0-2
No Record 0-0 2.0 13.50
Los Angeles Texas
Wilson (L) Holland (L)
-130
11-6 8-6
3.18 3.06
12-9 13-8
No Record 0-0 12.2 5.68
Kansas City Minnesota
Santana (R) Pelfrey (R)
-130 8:10p
6-6 4-8
3.06 5.15
10-10 7-11
1-0 14.0 0-1 8.1
Toronto Oakland
Buehrle (L) Straily (R)
-145
6-7 6-4
4.50 4.43
12-9 10-6
-115
2013 W-L 8-9 2-7
VS ERA 4.88 4.23
OPP REC 9-13 4-8
W-L 0-1 0-0
IP 4.0 1.0
ERA 6.75 0.00
-125
12-5 4-7
3.98 2.96
14-7 7-11
2-0 12.0 2-0 13.0
3.75 1.38
2-3 0-1
5.51 4.02
2-4 1-2
No Record No Record
Seattle Boston
Milwaukee Chicago
2013 Pitchers Gallardo (R) Vllanueva (R)
St. Louis Pittsburgh
Lynn (R) Burnett (R)
St. Louis Pittsburgh
Lyons (L) Cumpton (R)
TEAM Line
National League TEAM Line
-110
2.57 9.72
No Record No Record
San Francisco Zito (L) Philadelphia Lannan (L)
-130
4-7 2-4
4.92 4.13
9-11 6-4
0-0 7.0 1.29 No Record
Colorado Atlanta
Nicasio (R) Wood (L)
-160
6-4 0-2
4.40 3.42
9-10 0-2
No Record No Record
New York Miami
Wheeler (R) Eovaldi (R)
-115
4-1 2-1
3.72 3.54
5-2 4-3
No Record No Record
Milwaukee Chicago
Thornburg (R) Arrieta (R)
-120
1-0 1-2
2.95 7.23
0-0 3-2
No Record No Record
Cincinnati San Diego
Latos (R) Volquez (R)
-155
10-3 8-8
3.39 5.70
14-7 9-13
No Record No Record
Washington Detroit
2013 Pitchers Strasburg (R) Sanchez (R)
TEAM Line -140
2013 W-L 5-8 8-7
VS ERA 2.85 2.68
OPP REC 7-13 8-9
W-L IP ERA No Record 0-1 6.0 3.00
Arizona Tampa Bay
Kennedy (R) Hernandez (R)
-140
3-7 5-11
5.22 4.92
7-13 7-12
No Record No Record
-175
7-8 8-3
4.39 3.49
9-9 12-4
No Record No Record
New York (AL) Pettitte (L) L.A. Dodgers Greinke (R)
Interleague
KEY: TEAM REC-Team’s record in games started by today’s pitcher. AHWG-Average hits and walks allowed per 9 innings. VS OPP-Pitcher’s record versus this opponent, 2013 statistics. Copyright 2013 World Features Syndicate, Inc.
Cleveland ab r h bi Bourn cf 2 1 0 0 Swshr 1b 3 0 0 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 2 0 ACarer ss 4 1 0 1 Raburn rf 4 0 1 0 CSantn c 3 0 0 1 MrRynl dh1 0 0 0 Giambi ph1 1 1 1 Aviles 3b 2 0 0 0 Stubbs rf 2 0 0 0 Brantly lf 1 0 0 0 Totals 34 2 6 2 Totals 27 3 4 3 Chicago 000 002 000—2 Cleveland 010 001 001—3 No outs when winning run scored. E—Gillaspie (7), Aviles (6), Allen (2). DP— Cleveland 1. LOB—Chicago 6, Cleveland 7. 2B—Rios (22), A.Dunn (10), Viciedo (15), Raburn (13). 3B—Viciedo (3). HR—Giambi (7). SB—Al.Ramirez 2 (23). S—Aviles. SF—C.Santana. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Joh.Danks 6 2 2 1 4 3 Lindstrom 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Veal 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 Troncoso L,1-3 1 1 1 1 0 0 Cleveland McAllister 7 5 2 2 1 2 Allen 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 R.Hill 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 C.Perez W,3-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Joh.Danks pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Veal pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Troncoso pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. WP—Veal. Umpires—Home, James Hoye; First, Bob Davidson; Second, D.J. Reyburn; Third, John Hirschbeck. T—2:42. A—14,868 (42,241).
ab De Aza cf 4 AlRmrz ss 4 Rios rf 4 A.Dunn 1b 4 Konerk dh 4 Gillaspi 3b 4 Viciedo lf 4 Bckhm 2b 3 Phegly c 3
r 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
h 0 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 0
bi 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
Rangers 4, Angels 3
Los Angeles Texas ab r h bi ab r h bi Aybar ss 4 1 0 0 LMartn cf 4 1 1 0 Calhon rf 5 0 1 0 Andrus ss 4 1 1 0 Trout cf 2 1 2 0 Kinsler 2b3 0 1 2 Hamltn lf 4 0 2 2 ABeltre 3b4 0 2 0 Trumo 1b 4 0 0 0 Przyns dh 4 1 1 1 HKndrc 2b 4 0 1 0 N.Cruz rf 3 0 1 0 Callasp 3b 3 0 0 0 DvMrp lf 4 0 0 0 Conger c 4 0 0 0 G.Soto c 4 1 2 1 Shuck dh 4 1 1 1 Morlnd 1b3 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 7 3 Totals 33 4 9 4 Los Angeles 000 030 000—3 Texas 000 001 012—4 Two outs when winning run scored. E—Conger (6). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB— Los Angeles 8, Texas 5. 2B—Trout (30), G.Soto (5). HR—Shuck (1), Pierzynski (11), G.Soto (5). SB—Andrus (23). SF—Kinsler. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Weaver 7 5 1 1 1 6 D.De La Rosa H,10 1 1 1 0 0 0 Frieri L,0-3 BS,3-282-3 3 2 2 0 0 Texas Garza 7 5 3 3 3 6 Cotts 1 2 0 0 1 2 Frasor W,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:04. A—36,282 (48,114).
Rays 2, Red Sox 1
TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON
Tuesday
Chicago
BOxSCORES Indians 3, White Sox 2
Tampa Bay ab DJnngs cf 4 Longori 3b 5 Zobrist 2b 4 WMyrs rf 3 Scott dh 4 YEscor ss 3 Loney 1b 4 JMolin c 2 SRdrgz lf 2 Joyce ph-lf2 Fuld lf 0
h 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 1 0
bi 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
Boston
ab r h bi Ellsury cf 4 0 1 0 Victorn rf 4 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b4 0 0 0 D.Ortiz dh 3 0 1 0 Iglesias pr0 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0 JGoms lf 3 0 0 0 Lvrnwy c 3 0 1 0 Nava pr 0 0 0 0 Sltlmch c 0 0 0 0 Drew ss 3 0 1 0 BSnydr 3b3 1 1 1 Totals 33 2 9 2 Totals 31 1 5 1 Tampa Bay 000 110 000—2 Boston 000 001 000—1 DP—Tampa Bay 1, Boston 3. LOB— Tampa Bay 10, Boston 4. 2B—Longoria (24), S.Rodriguez (8), D.Ortiz (25), Lavarnway (5), Drew (15). HR—B.Snyder (2). SB—W.Myers (5), Ellsbury (39). IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Price W,6-5 7 1-3 2 1 1 0 8 Jo.Peralta H,27 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Rodney S,26-31 1 1 0 0 1 1 Boston Doubront L,7-5 5 8 2 2 3 4 De La Torre 1 1 0 0 2 3 D.Britton 2 0 0 0 0 2 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 De La Torre pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP—by Doubront (Y.Escobar).WP—Rodney. T—3:21 (Rain delay: 0:39).A—37,242 (37,499).
St. Louis
r 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Pirates 9, Cardinals 2
Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b 4 0 1 1 Tabata rf 3 1 0 0 Beltran rf 4 0 1 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 Jay cf 0 0 0 0 Black p 0 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 4 1 2 0 Walker 2b2 2 1 0 Craig 1b 4 0 0 0 McCtch cf5 2 2 1 YMolin c 3 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 1 1 3 RJhnsn c 1 0 1 0 RMartn c 2 1 0 0 Freese 3b 2 0 0 0 GJones 1b3 0 1 0 SRonsn rf 3 0 1 1 GSnchz 1b0 0 0 1 Kozma ss 3 0 0 0 Presley rf 4 1 1 1 Salas p 0 0 0 0 Barmes ss4 1 2 2 MAdms ph 1 0 0 0 Liriano p 3 0 0 0 Westrk p 1 0 0 0 Marte lf 1 0 1 1 T.Cruz ph 1 1 1 0 Descals ss 2 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 7 2 Totals 31 9 9 9 St. Louis 000 001 001—2 Pittsburgh 400 000 50x—9 DP—St. Louis 1, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 7. 2B—G.Jones (22), Barmes 2 (11). 3B—T.Cruz (1). HR—P. Alvarez (27). SF—G.Sanchez. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Westbrook L,7-5 5 4 4 4 3 2 Rzepczynski 1 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 Salas 1 2-3 3 3 3 1 2 Pittsburgh Liriano W,11-4 7 4 1 1 2 8 Watson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Black 1 3 1 1 0 1 HBP—by Westbrook (Walker, Walker, R.Martin), by Black (Freese). T—2:51. A—32,084 (38,362).
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
New York
Mets 6, Marlins 5 Miami
ab r h bi ab r h bi EYong lf 5 1 2 0 Hchvrr ss 5 0 0 0 DnMrp 2b 4 2 2 3 Yelich lf 4 0 0 0 DWrght 3b 5 0 2 1 Stanton rf 3 1 1 0 Byrd rf 5 1 1 1 Morrsn 1b4 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 3 0 1 1 Lucas 3b 3 2 1 1 Lagars cf 4 0 0 0 DSolan 2b3 1 0 0 Recker c 4 1 1 0 Mrsnck cf 3 1 2 0 Quntnll ss 3 1 1 0 Mathis c 3 0 1 2 Hefner p 2 0 0 0 JaTrnr p 3 0 0 0 Ardsm p 0 0 0 0 MDunn p 0 0 0 0 Satin ph 1 0 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 ABrwn ph 1 0 0 0 Dobbs ph 1 0 1 0 Totals 37 6 10 6 Totals 32 5 6 3 New York 003 000 300—6 Miami 000 302 000—5 E—Quintanilla (6). LOB—New York 7, Miami 7. 2B—E.Young (18), D.Wright (22), I.Davis (6), Stanton (16). 3B—Lucas (1). SB—Dan. Murphy (12), Hechavarria (8), Pierre (19). CS—Marisnick (1). IP H R ER BB SO New York Hefner 5 1-3 4 5 3 5 4 Aardsma W,2-0 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Edgin H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hawkins H,11 1 1 0 0 0 0 Parnell S,21-25 1 1 0 0 1 2 Miami Ja.Turner 6 1-3 5 3 3 3 4 M.Dunn 0 2 2 2 0 0 Rms L,3-4 BS,3-31 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 Webb 1 1 0 0 0 0 M.Dunn pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Hefner (D.Solano). WP—A.Ramos. T—3:26. A—19,343 (37,442).
Brewers 5, Cubs 0
Milwaukee Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Weeks 2b 4 0 1 2 DeJess cf 4 0 1 0 Aoki rf 5 0 0 0 Lake lf 4 0 2 0 Segura ss 3 1 0 0 Rizzo 1b 3 0 2 0 Lucroy c 3 1 1 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 1 1 1 StCastr ss4 0 0 0 Gindl lf 3 1 2 0 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0 JFrncs 1b 3 0 0 0 Barney 2b2 0 0 0 Wooten p 0 0 0 0 Castillo c 3 0 0 0 Bianchi 3b 4 1 1 2 Smrdzj p 3 0 0 0 Lohse p 2 0 1 0 Russell p 0 0 0 0 McGnzl p 0 0 0 0 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0 LSchfr ph 0 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 KDavis ph 1 0 0 0 BParkr p 0 0 0 0 Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Borbon ph1 0 0 0 Btncr ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 5 7 5 Totals 32 0 6 0 Milwaukee 000 000 005—5 Chicago 000 000 000—0 E—J.Francisco (13), Barney (4). DP—Milwaukee 2, Chicago 2. LOB—Milwaukee 6, Chicago 9. 2B—Weeks (17), Gindl (6), Bianchi (5), DeJesus (17). CS—Lake (3). S—Gindl. IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Lohse 6 5 0 0 3 6 1 1 0 0 0 1 Mic.Gonzalez Kintzler W,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Wooten 1 0 0 0 1 0 Chicago Samardzija 7 3 0 0 2 7 Russell 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Guerrier 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Strop L,1-1 1-3 3 5 5 1 1 B.Parker 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Samardzija (Lucroy). T—3:05. A—32,848 (41,019).
Braves 9, Rockies 8, 10 innings
Colorado
Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi Fowler cf 5 2 1 0 Heywrd cf5 1 2 1 LeMahi 2b 4 1 2 0 J.Upton rf 4 1 1 0 CGnzlz lf 5 1 5 2 FFrmn 1b 5 1 1 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 0 0 Gattis c 5 1 0 1 Cuddyr rf 4 1 1 2 CJhnsn 3b5 2 2 2 Helton 1b 4 0 1 1 Uggla 2b 4 2 1 2 WRosr c 5 1 3 1 Smmns ss5 0 3 2 Arenad 3b 4 1 2 1 Trdslvc lf 3 1 2 1 JDLRs p 2 0 0 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0 CDckrs ph 1 0 0 0 Walden p 0 0 0 0 Outmn p 0 0 0 0 Beachy p 1 0 0 0 Blckmn ph 1 0 0 0 Constnz lf 1 0 0 Culersn ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 40 8 15 7 Totals 38 9 12 9 Colorado 113 200 001 0—8 Atlanta 006 020 000 1—9 No outs when winning run scored. E—Arenado (7). DP—Atlanta 1. LOB— Colorado 8, Atlanta 7. 2B—Fowler (15), Arenado (17), C.Johnson (23), Uggla (9), Simmons (13), Terdoslavich (3). 3B— Cuddyer (2), Simmons (3). HR—W.Rosario (15), Arenado (8). SB—C.Gonzalez 2 (21). CS—C.Gonzalez (3). S—LeMahieu, Arenado, Beachy, D.Carpenter. SF—Helton. IP H R ER BB SO Colorado J.De La Rosa 5 10 8 5 2 3 Corpas 2 1 0 0 0 4 Outman 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 W.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Belisle 1 0 0 0 0 2 Escalona L,1-4 0 1 1 1 1 0 Atlanta Beachy 3 2-3 8 7 7 1 5 D.Carpenter 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 3 Ayala H,1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Avilan H,17 1 2 0 0 0 0 Walden BS,1-1 2-3 2 1 1 2 1 S.Downs W,1-0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Escalona pitched to 2 batters in the 10th. WP—Beachy, D.Carpenter. T—3:46. A—31,218 (49,586). Toronto
Athletics 9, Blue Jays 4
Oakland ab r h bi ab r h bi Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 Crisp cf 3 1 0 0 MeCarr lf 4 0 0 0 Sogard 2b4 1 0 0 Bautist rf 3 1 1 0 Lowrie ss 5 1 1 1 Encrnc 1b 4 1 1 2 Cespds lf 5 2 3 3 Lind dh 4 1 1 1 Moss 1b 5 2 2 0 ClRsms cf 3 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b4 1 1 0 MIzturs 2b 3 0 0 0 Reddck rf 4 1 1 3 DeRosa ph 1 0 0 0 S.Smth dh 3 0 2 1 Arencii c 3 0 1 0 Vogt c 3 0 1 1 Lawrie 3b 3 1 1 1 Totals 32 4 5 4 Totals 36 9 11 9 Toronto 000 013 000—4 Oakland 401 030 01x—9 E—Reyes (2), Encarnacion (8). LOB—Toronto 3, Oakland 10. 2B—Reddick (15), S.Smith (21). 3B—Cespedes (3). HR—Encarnacion (29), Lind (13), Lawrie (8), Cespedes (16). SF—Reddick.
IP H R ER BB SO Toronto E.Rogers L,3-5 4 1-3 9 8 6 3 3 McGowan 2 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Cecil 1 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 Oakland Griffin W,10-7 7 4 4 4 2 5 Doolittle 1 1 0 0 0 1 Blevins 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Cecil (Sogard). Umpires—Home, Scott Barry; First, Alfonso Marquez; Second, Ted Barrett; Third, Mike DiMuro. T—2:38. A—13,309 (35,067).
Padres 2, Reds 1
Cincinnati ab DRonsn cf 5 CIzturs 2b 5 Votto 1b 4 Bruce rf 3 Frazier 3b 3 Paul lf 1 Heisey lf 1 Mesorc c 4 Cozart ss 3 Leake p 3 Hoover p 0 Hannhn ph 1 Chpmn p 0
San Diego r h bi ab r h bi 1 2 0 EvCarr ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 1 Amarst cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 0 Headly 3b4 0 0 0 0 2 0 Alonso 1b 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Venale rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Denorfi ph1 1 1 2 0 0 0 Kotsay lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 Vincent p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Grgrsn p 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 Forsyth 2b3 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hundly c 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 OSullvn p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Thtchr p 0 0 0 0 Guzmn lf 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 1 7 1 Totals 29 2 5 2 Cincinnati 000 010 000—1 San Diego 000 000 002—2 No outs when winning run scored. E—Cozart (11). DP—San Diego 1. LOB— Cincinnati 10, San Diego 6. 2B—Votto (22), Bruce (31). 3B—D.Robinson (3). HR— Denorfia (9). CS—Ev.Cabrera (10). IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Leake 7 4 0 0 2 5 Hoover H,5 1 0 0 0 0 0 Chpmn L,3-4 BS,4-280 1 2 2 1 0 San Diego O’Sullivan 6 5 1 1 5 1 Thatcher 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Vincent 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Gregerson W,5-5 1 0 0 0 0 2 Chapman pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. Umpires—Home, Brian Knight; First, Mark Carlson; Second, Gerry Davis; Third, John Tumpane. T—2:37. A—24,050 (42,524).
SuNDAY BOxSCORES Rockies 6, Brewers 5
Milwaukee Colorado ab r h bi ab r h bi Weeks 2b 5 0 0 0 Fowler cf 4 1 2 1 Aoki rf 5 1 1 1 CDckrs lf 4 1 2 1 Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 Belisle p 0 0 0 0 CGomz cf 4 2 2 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 Gindl lf 4 1 2 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 2 2 1 YBtncr 3b 4 1 2 2 Cuddyr rf 4 2 2 2 JFrncs 1b 3 0 0 0 Helton 1b 4 0 1 0 Bianchi ss 4 0 2 2 Arenad 3b4 0 2 1 D.Hand p 2 0 0 0 Torreal c 4 0 1 0 LSchfr ph 1 0 0 0 JHerrr 2b 4 0 0 0 McGnzl p 0 0 0 0 Chacin p 2 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 LeMahi ph1 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Blckmn lf 0 0 0 0 KDavis ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 5 10 5 Totals 35 6 12 6 Milwaukee 011 100 020—5 Colorado 100 002 12x—6 E—Brothers (2). DP—Colorado 1. LOB— Milwaukee 6, Colorado 5. 2B—Lucroy (14), C.Gomez (23), Gindl 2 (5), Tulowitzki (18), Cuddyer (22). 3B—Helton (1). HR—Aoki (6), Y.Betancourt (11), Fowler (12), Co.Dickerson (1), Tulowitzki (19), Cuddyer (17). SB—C. Gomez (26). CS—Fowler (5). IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee D.Hand 6 8 3 3 0 2 Mic.Gonzalez 1 1 1 1 0 0 Axfrd L,4-4 BS,5-5 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Badenhop 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado Chacin 7 8 3 3 1 4 Belisle W,5-5 BS,3-31 2 2 2 0 2 Brothers S,7-8 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:42. A—33,237 (50,398).
B-3
Pittsburgh 020 000 000—2 Miami 000 201 00x—3 DP—Miami 1. LOB—Pittsburgh 4, Miami 3. 2B—R.Martin (17), Stanton (15). HR— Stanton (13). SB—R.Martin (9). SF—D. Solano. IP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Cole L, 5-4 7 4 3 3 2 8 Mazzaro 1 0 0 0 0 1 Miami Fernandez W, 7-5 8 5 2 2 0 13 Cishek S, 22-24 1 1 0 0 1 0 T—2:11. A—24,207 (37,442).
Padres 1, Diamondbacks 0
San Diego Arizona ab r h bi ab r h bi EvCarr ss 4 0 0 0 Eaton lf 4 0 0 0 Dnrfi lf 4 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 4 0 0 0 Headly 3b 4 1 1 0 Gldsch 1b4 0 0 0 Quentin lf 4 0 1 1 ErChvz 3b4 0 1 0 Street p 0 0 0 0 MMntr c 3 0 0 0 Guzmn rf 3 0 0 0 Pollock cf 2 0 0 0 Venale cf-rf1 0 1 0 GParra rf 3 0 0 0 Alonso 1b 4 0 1 0 Pnngtn ss 3 0 2 0 Forsyth 2b 4 0 1 0 Corbin p 2 0 0 0 RRiver c 3 0 1 0 Prado ph 1 0 0 0 T.Ross p 3 0 1 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 30 0 3 0 San Diego 100 000 000—1 Arizona 000 000 000—0 LOB—San Diego 6, Arizona 4. 3B—Headley (2), Pennington (1). IP H R ER BB SO San Diego T.Ross W,2-4 8 3 0 0 1 7 Street S,19-20 1 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona Corbin L,12-2 8 6 1 1 0 8 Ziegler 1 1 0 0 0 1 PB—M.Montero.T—2:15.A—24,864 (48,633). St. Louis
Braves 5, Cardinals 2
Atlanta ab r h bi ab r h bi MCrpnt 2b 4 0 0 0 Heywrd cf4 1 2 2 Beltran rf 4 0 2 1 J.Upton rf 3 0 1 0 Hollidy lf 3 0 0 0 FFrmn 1b 4 0 1 0 Craig 1b 4 0 0 0 Gattis lf 4 0 1 0 YMolin c 4 0 2 0 Walden p 0 0 0 0 Freese 3b 4 0 0 0 Kimrel p 0 0 0 0 Jay cf 3 0 1 0 McCnn c 4 0 0 0 Kozma ss 3 1 1 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0 SMiller p 2 1 2 1 CJhnsn 3b4 3 3 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Smmns ss4 1 2 1 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 Medlen p 2 0 0 0 T.Cruz ph 1 0 0 0 Trdslvc ph1 0 1 1 Salas p 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn lf 1 0 1 0 Totals 32 2 8 2 Totals 35 5 12 4 St. Louis 000 020 000—2 Atlanta 011 002 01x—5 E—Beltran (4), Kozma (6). DP—St. Louis 1, Atlanta 3. LOB—St. Louis 4, Atlanta 8. 2B—Kozma (16), S.Miller (1), C.Johnson (22). HR—Heyward (9). IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis S.Miller L,10-7 5 2-3 6 3 2 2 6 Maness 0 2 1 1 0 0 Siegrist 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Rzepczynski 1 1 0 0 0 1 Salas 1 2 1 0 0 1 Atlanta Medlen W,7-10 6 8 2 2 1 4 Avilan H,16 1 0 0 0 0 2 Walden H,11 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kimbrel S,31-34 1 0 0 0 0 0 Maness pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. T—2:58. A—34,478 (49,586).
Tigers 12, Phillies 4
Philadelphia Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi Rollins ss 2 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 4 2 2 0 McDnl ss 1 0 0 0 Kely rf 3 2 1 1 MYong 3b 3 0 1 0 MiCarr 3b 1 0 0 0 Mrtnz 3b 1 0 0 0 Tuiasp lf 1 0 1 2 Utley dh 3 0 0 0 Perez 2b 1 1 1 1 Ruf 1b 4 1 2 1 Fielder dh 5 1 0 1 Frndsn 2b 4 1 2 1 VMrtnz 1b3 1 1 2 Mayrry cf 3 1 1 0 JhPerlt ss 5 1 2 4 L.Nix rf 4 0 1 1 Dirks lf 4 1 1 0 Ruiz c 4 0 1 1 Avila c 5 1 1 0 Susdorf lf 4 1 1 0 RSntg 3b 4 2 3 0 Nationals 14, Mets 1 Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 36121311 New York Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Philadelphia 010 110 010—4 EYong lf 3 1 1 0 Harper lf 4 0 1 2 Detroit 000 038 10x—12 Satin 3b 4 0 0 0 Harstn If 1 0 0 0 E—Susdorf (1), Diekman (2), Ruf (2). DP— DnMrp 2b 4 0 0 0 Rndn 3b 5 1 1 0 Philadelphia 3, Detroit 1. LOB—Philadelphia Edgin p 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn 3b4 1 3 0 5, Detroit 10. 2B—Ruf (6), Frandsen (7), Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzz 2b1 1 1 0 Recker ph 1 0 0 0 AdLRc 1b 5 0 0 0 Susdorf (1), A.Jackson (17), Avila (8). HR— Byrd rf 3 0 2 1 Matths p 0 0 0 0 Jh.Peralta (10). S—Rollins. SF—D.Kelly. IP H R ER BB SO JuTrnr 2b 1 0 0 0 Werth rf 3 3 2 1 Philadelphia I.Davis 1b 4 0 1 0 Stmmn p 0 0 0 0 5 7 3 3 4 1 Buck c 4 0 0 0 Krol p 0 0 0 0 Pettibone Lagars cf 4 0 2 0 Tracy 1b 1 0 0 0 Diekman L,0-1 1-3 1 4 0 1 0 Quntnll ss 4 0 2 0 Dsmnd ss 4 3 4 2 Lu.Garcia 0 1 4 0 2 0 CTorrs p 1 0 0 0 Span cf 4 3 4 3 Bastardo 1 2-3 2 1 1 1 2 Germn p 1 0 0 0 WRams c 4 2 2 5 Papelbon 1 2 0 0 1 1 ABrwn rf 1 0 0 0 Jordan p 2 0 0 0 Detroit Berndn rf 1 0 0 0 Porcello W,8-6 6 7 3 3 2 3 Totals 35 1 8 1 Totals 39141813 1 0 0 0 0 1 New York 000 100 000—1 Smyly 1 2 1 1 0 0 Washington 035 203 01x—14 B.Rondon Coke 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—A.Brown (1), Satin (3). DP—New York Lu.Garcia pitched to 4 batters in the 6th. 1. LOB—New York 11, Washington 4. 2B— Byrd (17), Zimmerman (19), Desmond 2 (27). T—3:16. A—41,326 (41,255). HR—Span (2), W.Ramos (6). S—Jordan. LEADERS IP H R ER BB SO AL Leaders New York BATTING — MiCabrera, Detroit, .360; DOrtiz, C.Torres L,1-2 3 9 8 8 1 2 Germen 2 4 2 2 1 0 Boston, .329; Mauer, Minnesota, .324; Trout, Aardsma 1 3 3 3 0 0 Los Angeles, .321; Loney, Tampa Bay, .321; Edgin 1 0 0 0 0 1 TorHunter, Detroit, .313; ABeltre, Texas, .307. Parnell 1 2 1 0 0 1 RUNS — MiCabrera, Detroit, 78; CDavis, Baltimore, 74; AJones, Baltimore, 73; Trout, Los Washington Jordan W,1-3 6 5 1 1 1 7 Angeles, 69; Bautista, Toronto, 67; DeJennings, Stammen 1 1 0 0 2 1 Tampa Bay, 67; Encarnacion, Toronto, 66. Krol 1 0 0 0 0 1 RBI — MiCabrera, Detroit, 99; CDavis, BaltiMattheus 0 2 0 0 1 0 more, 97; Encarnacion, Toronto, 82; Fielder, Abad 1 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit, 75; AJones, Baltimore, 74; NCruz, Mattheus pitched to 3 batters in the 9th. Texas, 71; Cano, New York, 70. WP—Aardsma, Stammen. PB—Buck, NL Leaders W.Ramos. T—3:17. A—31,467 (41,418). BATTING — CJohnson, Atlanta, .338;
Marlins 3, Pirates 2
Pittsburgh ab SMarte cf 4 Tabata lf 4 Walker 2b 4 JHrrsn pr 0 PAlvrz 3b 4 RMartn c 3 GJones rf 4 GSnchz 1b 3 Barmes ss 3 Cole p 2 McCtch ph 1 Totals 32
r 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
h 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 6
bi 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2
Miami
ab Hchvrr ss 4 Yelich lf 4 Stanton rf 3 Morrsn 1b2 Lucas 3b 3 DSolan 2b2 Mrsnck cf 3 Mathis c 3 Frnndz p 3 Cishek p 0 Totals
r 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
h 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
bi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
27 3 4 3
YMolina, St. Louis, .334; Cuddyer, Colorado, .330; Craig, St. Louis, .325; Votto, Cincinnati, .319; MCarpenter, St. Louis, .318; Segura, Milwaukee, .315. RUNS — MCarpenter, St. Louis, 79; Votto, Cincinnati, 72; Choo, Cincinnati, 71; CGonzalez, Colorado, 71; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 66; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 65; Holliday, St. Louis, 64. RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 85; Phillips, Cincinnati, 81; Craig, St. Louis, 79; Bruce, Cincinnati, 73; DBrown, Philadelphia, 69; CGonzalez, Colorado, 67; PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 65; FFreeman, Atlanta, 65; AdGonzalez, Los Angeles, 65.
ROUNDUP
Simmons’ RBI triple lifts Braves over Rockies in 10th The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Andrelton Simmons drove in Dan Uggla from first base with a triple off Edgmer Escalona in the 10th inning, and Braves 9 the Braves won their fourth straight Rockies 8 game with a 9-8 win over Colorado on Monday. After Uggla led off with a walk, Simmons hit the ball into the gap in leftcenter field that reached the wall. Scott Downs (1-0) earned the win after being acquired in a trade with the Los Angeles Angels earlier in the day and arriving at Turner Field not long before the first pitch. The left-hander allowed one hit and struck out one in 1⅓ innings. PIRATES 9, CARDINALS 2 In Pittsburgh, Francisco Liriano allowed one run over seven dominant innings, Pedro Alvarez hit his NLleading 27th home run, and the Pirates beat St. Louis. Liriano (11-4) struck out eight and walked just two to win his fifth straight start. The Pirates kicked off the key series at PNC Park by sending the Cardinals to their fourth straight loss.
Clint Barmes doubled twice and drove in two runs for Pittsburgh. Andrew McCutchen added two hits and an RBI. Matt Carpenter and Shane Robinson hit RBI singles for St. Louis. PADRES 2, REDS 1 In San Diego, Chris Denorfia hit a two-run, pinch-hit homer off Aroldis Chapman in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the Padres the win. Denorfia drove a 98 mph first-pitch offering from Chapman over the center-field fence 423 feet away to deal the Reds their fourth straight loss. METS 6, MARLINS 5 In Miami, Ike Davis had a go-ahead RBI double in a three-run seventh inning, Daniel Murphy drove in three runs, and New York snapped a fivegame skid against the Marlins. David Aardsma (2-0) pitched an inning in relief of Jeremy Hefner for the win. Bobby Parnell retired Giancarlo Stanton with runners on first and third to end it for his 21st save. Jeff Mathis drove in two runs for Miami. BREWERS 5, CUBS 0 In Chicago, Carlos Gomez broke a scoreless tie in the ninth inning with
PCL: Four Isotopes pitchers stifle Zephyrs Four pitchers combined on a sixhit shutout as Albuquerque took an 8-0 win Monday afternoon against New Orleans in the final game of a four-game series at Isotopes Park. Albuquerque starter Jonathan Sanchez (4-1) went five innings, continuously escaping trouble after giving up three hits and five walks. an RBI single and Jeff Bianchi added a two-run double to lift Milwaukee over the Cubs. The Brewers won for the third time in eight games and ended the Cubs’ winning streak at three games. Brewers reliever Brandon Kintzler (3-0) pitched a scoreless eighth for the victory.
Scott Van Slyke and Rusty Ryal homered for the Isotopes (62-48). Albuquerque took three of the four from the Zephyrs (53-57) and will open an eight-game road swing through Sacramento and Fresno starting Tuesday. The New Mexican
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Giambi, batting for struggling Mark Reynolds, belted a 1-1 pitch from Ramon Troncoso (1-3) high over the wall and into the bushes in center. It was the 436th career homer and ninth career walk-off shot for the slugger. The Indians moved within 2½ games of idle Detroit in the AL Central. The sinking White Sox have lost four straight and 10 of 13.
INDIANS 3, WHITE SOX 2 In Cleveland, pinch-hitter Jason Giambi homered over the center field wall leading off the ninth inning to give the Indians their fifth straight victory.
ATHLETICS 9, BLUE JAyS 4 In Oakland, Calif., Yoenis Cespedes homered and hit a two-run triple, Josh Reddick added a two-run double and had three RBIs in the A’s win.
Edwin Encarnacion hit a two-run homer, while Adam Lind and Brett Lawrie each hit solo shots for Toronto. RAyS 2, RED SOX 1 In Boston, David Price allowed just two hits over 7⅓ innings to beat the Red Sox for the second time in six days as Tampa Bay reclaimed first place in the AL East. Price (6-5) was dominating in the makeup game before it was delayed for 39 minutes because of a brief downpour in the middle of the eighth. Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth for his 26th save. RANGERS 4, ANGELS 3 In Arlington, Texas, Geovany Soto hit a game-ending homer after catcher A.J. Pierzynski went deep to tie the game earlier in the ninth off closer Ernesto Frieri, and the Rangers snapped a four-game skid. Pierzynski led off by pulling a pitch into the right-field seats, his 11th homer this season which snapped a 4-for-27 slump. Nelson Cruz followed with a single off Frieri (0-3) before David Murphy grounded into a double play. Soto then hit a towering flyball to left that easily cleared the wall.
B-4
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Vague: Coughlin and Franklin would be happy if Phelps returned take some time to get there. It’s not something that’s going to take 24 hours five years and 10 years,” Phelps said. and, bang, I’ll be able to shoot par and “I’m still in the process of putting be a scratch golfer. It’s so annoying. It’s everything down on paper.” probably the most humbling thing I’ve While passionate about golf, Phelps ever done, the most humbling sport seems to realize it doesn’t present I’ve ever done, the toughest thing I’ve much of a career path other than play- ever done.” ing in celebrity events. He once talked Phelps’ competitive side showed bravely about not setting any limits on after the U.S. men lost in the 400how far he could go in the sport, even meter freestyle relay Sunday. joking that the only way he would be at The Americans were edged at the the Rio Games was at a golfer. finish by the French, a repeat of last But the game has clearly humbled summer’s Olympics when a team that him since London, despite getting lesincluded Phelps also settled for silver. sons from famed coach Hank Haney as “We should never lose that relay part of a show for the Golf Channel. with the talent we have on the team,” he said. “I’m competitive in everything,” Phelps said. “But golf has a very slow While vague on a possible comelearning curve. For me to be able to back, Phelps was downright candid get where I want to be, it’s going to with this thoughts about the relay —
Continued from Page B-1
perhaps because the head coach of the U.S. men’s team is Bob Bowman, who was Phelps’ longtime coach and remains a good friend and business partner. Phelps made his Natalie feelings known to Coughlin Bowman in a series of blunt texts, suggesting the Americans should have gone with Jimmy Feigen in the leadoff spot and gold medalist Nathan Adrian as the anchor. Instead, Adrian went first and Feigen took over for the finish despite being the least experienced member of the U.S. foursome. He acknowledged paying too much attention to the teams next to him, the Australians and the
Russians, and not noticing the French coming up in an outside lane. “I was so fired up,” Phelps said. “We have enough guys on that team who can swim faster than that, and that was just frustrating for me to watch.” Not frustrating enough to announce his comeback. Not yet anyway. That said, it’s clear just about everyone on the U.S. team would love for Phelps to rejoin them in time for Rio. Though he always had to be treated a bit differently than everyone else because of his fame, he seemed to get along well with his fellow swimmers. He still stays in contact with many of them; in fact, he was hanging out with Allison Schmitt and Conor Dwyer at his home the day he hurt his toe. Phelps has been catching up with
Smile: Sapp won Super Bowl with the Bucs Continued from Page B-1 run with the Buccaneers, who ended a 15-year hiatus from the playoffs in 1997; made it to the NFC Championship in 1999, when Sapp was NFL defensive player of the year; and, won their only Super Bowl title in 2002. Tampa Bay hasn’t won a playoff game since. Sapp played four seasons with the Oakland Raiders before returning in 2007 with 96½ regular-season sacks. “I think you have to remember Warren Sapp for the big games. That’s when he was at his best. Playoff games. Games that you had to have. Games that were on [national] TV,” Dungy said. “He was going to show up and play well. And that’s what you wanted, a guy who was going to be at his best in the big games.” There were times when Sapp’s boisterous, brash style rubbed opposing players, coaches and fans the wrong way — on and off the field. Teammates, however, loved what he brought to the locker room and his commitment to winning. “Warren didn’t want to be second in anything. He brought an attitude and the swagger this franchise needed,” Dungy said. The Glazer family, which owns the Bucs, plan to retire his No. 99 jersey during the club’s annual Ring of Honor ceremony in November. “Warren never gave less than
Eagles will retire McNabb’s No. 5 PHILADELPHIA — Donovan McNabb’s eyes watered when he stood at the podium to give his retirement speech. Famously booed when he was drafted by the Eagles in 1999, McNabb couldn’t hide the tears when he called it quits 14 years later. The six-time Pro Bowl QB was in Philadelphia on Monday to make it official, three his all. His days on the field were headlined by incredible passion, overwhelming talent and, of course, his louder than life personality,” team co-chairman Bryan Glazer said. Sapp joins Lee Roy Selmon, the first-ever draft pick of the expansion Bucs in 1976, as the only Hall of Famers who spent the majority of their careers in Tampa Bay. The Bucs ranked in the top 10 in fewest yards and points allowed for nine straight seasons from 1997-2005. “We took a place where they said careers came to die to a place that’s become a destination,” Sapp said. “We got a No. 1 receiver [Vincent Jackson] who just walked in the door here last year. That was never the case. Nobody was coming here as a free agent. We got Simeon Rice to walk in this place and help us win a championship. There were some
years after he was traded and 21 months after taking his final snap in the NFL. “Special day,” McNabb said. “I’m not one for emotion, but this is pretty tough.” Before McNabb took the stage, team owner Jeffrey Lurie revealed that his No. 5 will be retired Sept. 19. The Associated Press
choice things that went on.” Year in and year out, no team was as consistent defensively as Tampa Bay during Sapp’s heyday. The impact is still felt around the league. “Whenever you think of the Purple People Eaters, you’ve got to go to Minnesota. When you think of Doomsday, you’ve got to go to Dallas. The Steel Curtain, you’ve got to go to Pittsburgh,” Sapp said. “They play Tampa 2 everywhere.” Growing up on an unpaved road, Sapp said he dreamed of one day playing in the NFL but that the Hall of Fame never really entered his mind until he retired. He was elected in his first year of eligibility in February and will be enshrined in Canton on Saturday as a part of a class that also includes Larry Allen, Cris Carter, Curley Culp, Jonathan Ogden, Bill Parcells and
Dave Robinson. “I played the game for the love and respect of the people I played with and against. And if you are picking a team, and you’ve got a defensive tackle position, I’m taking 99. And twice on Sunday,” Sapp said. “That’s all I’ve ever wanted. If you had a defense, and you set a defensive tackle position, if I’m not that one, I’m definitely the other one. If you’re not taking me, I want to see the two you are taking.” Lots of family, friends and former teammates will help him celebrate in Canton, though Sapp will miss one person who will not — the late Hall of Famer Deacon Jones, who died in June. Like Sapp, Jones grew up in a small town on the outskirts of Orlando. The two grew close in recent years. “He invented talking trash and backing it up. He invented coming from a little small town, making it to the Johnny Carson show, movies, all the stuff he did,” Sapp said. “The man was everything you wanted that signified a Hall of Famer. Everything that it was. And they said he was gatekeeper,” Sapp added. “And for me, in the 50th year of the Hall of Fame to be going in and the gatekeeper not be standing there, who else? That’s the only question I have. Who else is going to sit there and talk trash to me?”
All-Star: North wins big; South wins small Continued from Page B-1 had a chance to stay. Moving to another team was too hard, but staying home and winning state again — it turned out good for me.” Rendon will play next season at New Mexico Highlands University while her former Elkette teammates will scatter to attend college and start a new phase in their lives. Harrier said she will attend UNM but walk away from competitive volleyball altogether. “That’s what makes all this even more
fun,” she said. “Just one last time. And, hey, we won!”
Big schools The North swept its way to a 26-24, 25-20 victory in the AAAA-AAAAA match, getting a huge night from hitters Julia Warren and Cassie House. Both are bound for The University of New Mexico next season and Warren, a recent graduate of La Cueva, showed why time and again with booming kill shots from the left side in Game 2. Capital’s Ashley Sorensen was on the
Open: Frost, Senior, Pavin finish in third Continued from Page B-1 greenside bunker, and he needed two strokes just to get out of the sand. Wiebe, meanwhile, shot a 4-under 66 to match the German at 9-under 271. “Obviously, not what I wanted. But the major mistake was again [Sunday], the 72nd hole,” Langer said. “In the playoff anybody can win. It comes down to one good shot or one bad shot. And that’s what happened. Mark is a very deserving champion.” This was the first time in the 27-year history of the Senior British Open the tournament finished on a Monday. Former U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin shared third — three shots back — with David Frost and Peter Senior. It was the third year in a row Pavin tied for third at the tournament. Wiebe’s season has been plagued by a back and arm injury and he hasn’t finished in the top 10 on the U.S. Champions Tour all year. But he said he could swing a club without pain again, which “helped me so
floor in a memorable first set rally as the North scored the final six points to erase a 24-20 deficit. She was present again in Game 2 as the North rattled off six straight points to take an 18-16 lead that led to the win. She had a key block and a kill during the run, often spending time on the front line while Warren was on the left side and House on the right.
Small schools The South got its only win of the night with a 25-16, 25-17 sweep of the North in the A-B match.
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules
much with my attitude.” “Once I realized I could play and it didn’t hurt very much to swing,” Wiebe said. “I was Corey Pavin instantly in a great mood, and I knew I was playing good.”
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 2 p.m. on MLB — St. Louis at Pittsburgh 5 p.m. on MLB — Seattle at Boston or Colorado at Atlanta 8 p.m. on MLB — Cincinnati at San Diego or New York Yankees at Los Angeles Dodgers
PGA TOUR SChEDULE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Aug. 1-4: WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, Firestone CC (South Course),Akron, Ohio Aug. 1-4: Reno-Tahoe Open, Montreaux Golf & CC, Reno, Nev.
LPGA TOUR SChEDULE Aug. 1-4: RICOH Women’s British Open, The Old Course, St Andrews, Scotland Aug. 16-18: The Solheim Cup, Colorado GC, Parker, Colo.
ChAMPIONS TOUR SChEDULE Aug. 2-4: 3M Championship, Twin Cities GC, Blaine, Minn. Aug. 16-18: Dick’s Sporting Goods Open, En-Joie GC, Endicott, N.Y.
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — British Columbia at Toronto
Soccer u Capital High School is seeking a boys assistant coach for the upcoming season. For more information, please call the athletic office at 467-1077. u Registration is open through Aug. 20 for the Northern Soccer Club’s fall season. The club is open to children from ages 4-14, and cost is $75. Matches begin on Sept. 14. Registration can be done online at www.northernsc.org. for more information, call Kristi Hartley-Hunt at 982-0878, ext. 1.
Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
the U.S. team during his quick trip to Barcelona. “It was so good to see him. We miss him so much,” said Missy Franklin, a standout on the women’s squad. “The team’s not the same without him. But we still have an incredible team and he has taught us so much, and I think we’re all excited to carry on his legacy after him.” The most experienced member of the team, Natalie Coughlin, said it was strange to be at a big meet without him. “I haven’t been on a team without Michael in 14 years, so this is pretty crazy,” Coughlin said. “I would love to see Michael back. But I just want to see him be happy. He’s enjoying his life right now and enjoying his time away from the pool and well deserved — very well deserved.”
City of Santa Fe REGULAR MEETING OF THE GOVERNING BODY JULY 31, 2013 CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS AFTERNOON SESSION – 5:00 P.M. 1. CALL TO ORDER 2. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE 3. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG 4. INVOCATION 5. ROLL CALL 6. APPROVAL OF AGENDA 7. APPROVAL OF CONSENT CALENDAR 8. APPROVAL OF MINUTES: Reg. City Council Meeting – July 10, 2013 9. PRESENTATIONS a) Santa Fe Food Policy Council Annual Report. (Sue Perry) (5 minutes) 10. CONSENT CALENDAR a) Bid No. 13/37/B – FY 2013/14 City Wide Water Utility Construction & Repair Agreement Between Owner and Contractor; Sub Surface Contracting. (Mike Gonzales, Mike Moya and Bill Huey) b) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 2 to Professional Services Agreement – City Wide Water Utility Pavement Restoration Services; TLC Plumbing & Utility, Inc. (Bill Huey) c) Request for Approval of Revisions to Utility Billing Administrative Manual – Policy No. 15, OneTime Credit for High Consumption Due to Unknown Cause. (Peter Ortega) d) Request for Approval of Support Services Agreements – Land Use, Building Permits, Code Enforcement, Business License, Police Records, Fire Records and New E-Government Software for Land Use; SunGard Public Sector, Inc. (Caryn Fiorina) e) Request for Approval of Information Technology Licensing and Professional Services Agreement – Enterprise Program Browser for Imaging Documents to Enable Municipal Court to Become Paperless (RFP #13/19/P); Justice Systems, Inc. (Judge Ann Yalman) f) Request for Approval of Grant Award – Operating Assistance Section 5307 for Santa Fe Trails; U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Administration. (David Chapman) g) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 1 to Professional Services Agreement – Task Order Number 112 Runway 2-20 MIRL Replacement and Task Order Number 113 Passenger Facility Charges Application at Santa Fe Municipal Airport; Molzen-Corbin & Associates, Inc. (Francey Jesson) h) Request for Concept Approval of Sale of Real Estate – Containing Approximately 460 Square Feet Within a Portion of Lot 1, Block 92 of the 1912 Kings Official Map Located Within the 600 Block of Old Santa Fe Trail; David K. Giles. (Edward Vigil) i) Request for Approval of Easement – Benefit Santa Fe County for the Purpose of Extending Water Service to the Santa Fe Animal Shelter Facility and Other Properties Lying South and East Thereof, the Real Property Lies Within Portions of Government Lot 1 and the NW/4 SE/4 Section 35 T17N R8E NMPM and Contains 0.93 Acres; Bill Moffett, Project Coordinator. (Edward Vigil) j) Request for Concept Approval of Lease Agreement – Allow for Parking of 5 Motor Vehicles on City Property Known as Archuleta Park Located at 1622 W. Alameda by the Adjoining Property Owners and Their Tenants; Robert Seymour and Jeannine Seymour. (Edward Vigil) k) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. A Resolution Relating to a Request for Approval of Fourth Quarter (Year-End) Budget Adjustments for Fiscal Year 2012/2013 Ending June 30, 2013. (Cal Probasco) l) Pursuant to Resolution No. 2013-33, Request for Approval of Option 3 to Provide Relief from Water Utility Billing for 501(c)(3) Local Non-Profit Organizations that Use Water to Provide Services to the Homeless Population in the City of Santa Fe. (Nick Schiavo) m) Request to Publish Notice of Public Hearing on August 27, 2013: Bill No. 2013-30: An Ordinance Relating to Chapter 21 SFCC 1987 Environmental Services; Establishing a New Article 21-8 SFCC 1987 to Ban the Distribution of Single-Use Plastic Carry-Out Bags and Establish a Fee for Paper Carry Out Grocery Bags to be Imposed by Retail Establishments. (Councilor Wurzburger, Mayor Coss, Councilor Rivera, Councilor Bushee, Councilor Ives, Councilor Calvert and Councilor Dimas) (Fabian Trujillo) n) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Trujillo) A Resolution Supporting the New Mexico Litter Control and Beautification Act of 1985 Which Authorizes the Use of Public Funds in the Form of Grants for the Purpose of Enhancing Local Litter Control and Beautification Programs. (Gilda Montano) 1) Request for Approval of Grant Agreement Between the City of Santa Fe and the State of New Mexico Tourism Department in the Amount of $70,000. o) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Mayor Coss and Councilor Wurzburger) A Resolution Declaring that the City of Santa Fe Desires to Establish a Sister City Relationship with the City of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. (Julie Bystrom) p) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Mayor Coss and Councilor Wurzburger) A Resolution Declaring that the City of Santa Fe Desires to Establish a Sister City Relationship with the City of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. (Julie Bystrom) q) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Mayor Coss, Councilor Dimas, Councilor Wurzburger, Councilor Ives, Councilor Calvert, Councilor Dominguez, Councilor Rivera, Councilor Trujillo and Councilor Bushee) A Resolution Accepting the Recommendations of the Lead Santa Fe Task Force and Directing Staff to Establish and Implement a Three Year Lead/Pre-Booking Diversion Program in Santa Fe, Including Developing an Operations Plan and Explore Funding Mechanisms. (Terrie Rodriguez) 11. Direction Regarding Alternative Action on Southside Transit Center. (Jon Bulthuis) 12. Request for Approval of Bike Purchase - Pass Rebate Program Process. (Jon Bulthuis) 13. Charter Review Commission Report and Recommendations. (Nancy Long, Vice-Chair Charter Review Commission and Zachary Shandler) 14. MATTERS FROM THE CITY MANAGER 15. MATTERS FROM THE CITY ATTORNEY Executive Session 1) In Accordance with the New Mexico Open Meetings Act, §10-15-1(H)(7), NMSA 1978, Discussion Regarding Pending Litigation in Which the City of Santa Fe is a Participant, Qwest Corporation v. City of Santa Fe, Case No. 10-CV-00617 in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico. 2) In Accordance with the New Mexico Open Meetings Act §10-15-1(H)(7), NMSA 1978, and Pursuant to City of Santa Fe Resolution No. 2012-31, Quarterly Discussion of Threatened or Pending Litigation in Which the City of Santa Fe is or May Become a Participant. 16. MATTERS FROM THE CITY CLERK 17. COMMUNICATIONS FROM THE GOVERNING BODY EVENING SESSION – 7:00 P.M. A. CALL TO ORDER B. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE C. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG D. INVOCATION E. ROLL CALL F. PETITIONS FROM THE FLOOR G. APPOINTMENTS • Economic Development Review Sub-Committee • City Business & Quality of Life Committee H. PUBLIC HEARINGS: 1) Request from Café Greco, LLC for the Issuance of a Restaurant Liquor License (Beer and Wine On-Premise Consumption Only) to be Located at Café Greco, 233 Canyon Road, Unit 2. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 2) Case #2013-49. Appeal. O. Michael Duty, Agent for Santa Fe Dining (Roof Top Pizza), Appeals the May 28, 2013 Decision of the Historic Districts Review Board in Case #H-13-036 Denying its Application to Construct a Tube Steel Ramada with a Fabric Cover Over the Third Floor Rear Deck at 60 East San Francisco in the Downtown and Eastside Historic District. (Kelley Brennan) 3) CONSIDERATION OF BILL No. 2013-29: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2013-___: (Councilor Calvert)An Ordinance Relating to the Campaign Code, Article 9-2 SFCC 1987: Amending Section 9-2.3 to Amend the Definition of Contribution and Add the Definitions for “Anonymous Contribution” and “Charity”; Amending Section 9-2.5 to Clarify Whose Identification is Required on Campaign Materials; Amending Section 9-2.9 to Amend the Duties of the Campaign Treasurer and Deputy Treasurer, Including That All Contributions Shall Be Reported and Clarify the Process for Disposition of Tangible Assets; Amending Section 9-2.11 to Amend the Requirements for the Contents of the Campaign Finance Statement; Amending Section 9-2.12 to Exempt Judicial Candidates from Signing Campaign Finance Statements; and Making Such Other Stylistic or Grammatical Changes That Are Necessary; andRelating to the Public Campaign Finance Code, Article 9-3 SFCC 1987: Amending Section 9-3.3 to Amend the Definition of Contribution; Amending Section 9-3.6 to Clarify Requirements for Seed Money Contributions and Unspent Seed Money; Amending Section 9-3.7 to Clarify that Qualifying Contributions Shall Be Placed in a Non-Interest Bearing Account; Amending Section 9-3.8 to Clarify Candidate Application Requirements; Amending Section 9-3.10 to Clarify that Seed Money Shall Be Turned Over to the Municipal Clerk When a Candidate Has Not Been Certified; Amending Section 9-3.11 to Clarify the Required Disposition of Unspent Payments from the Fund and Tangible Assets; Amending Section 9-3.14 to Require that the Date Shall Be Included on All Reports of Expenditures and Clarify that Seed Money and Qualifying Contribution Reports Shall Not Be Signed or Acknowledged by a Candidate for Municipal Judge; and Making Such Other Stylistic or Grammatical Changes That Are Necessary. (Yolanda Y. Vigil and Zachary Shandler) 4) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-____. (Mayor Coss, Councilor Bushee and Councilor Wurzburger) A Resolution Supporting the Protection and Preservation of the La Bajada Mesa Lands and Respectfully Requesting that the President of the United States, by Proclamation, Designate and Establish the La Bajada Mesa National Monument Which is Located in Congresional District 3. (Postponed at June 12, 2013 City Council Meeting) (Withdrawn by Sponsor) I. ADJOURN Pursuant to the Governing Body Procedural Rules, in the event any agenda items have not been addressed, the meeting should be reconvened at 7:00 p.m., the following day and shall be adjourned not later than 12:00 a.m. Agenda items, not considered prior to 11:30 p.m., shall be considered when the meeting is reconvened or tabled for a subsequent meeting. NOTE: New Mexico law requires the following administrative procedures be followed when conducting “quasi-judicial” hearings. In a “quasi-judicial” hearing all witnesses must be sworn in, under oath, prior to testimony and will be subject to reasonable cross-examination. Witnesses have the right to have an attorney present at the hearing. Persons with disabilities in need of accommodations, contact the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520, five (5) days prior to meeting date.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad, call
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1804 San Felipe Circle, House, Guest, 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath. Remodeled. 3,352 SF, on acequia. Private well, 1/3 acre. Irrigated landscaping, garage. $585,500. Open Sunday 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. 505-577-6300
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for activists rally Immigrants,
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February
8, 2011
Local news,
www.santafenew
A-8
50¢
mexican.com
out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann
Grimm
Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street Galisteo on stretch of Police Department’s School early a 25 mph 38 mph on Elementary near E.J. Martinez
The New
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rights at Capitol
Tuesday,
for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore
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3.3 LA TIERRA ACRES. 121 Fin Del Sendero. Shared well. Beautiful neighborhood with restrictions. $32,000 down, $1200 monthly or $160,000. (505)470-5877
5 BEDROOM, 5 BATH.
EXQUISITE SANTA FE HOME 6 ACRES
1 1/2 A C R E SPECTACULAR VIEW. NE Santa Fe (opposite Summit) Paved road. Well permit, all utilities to lot. Brokers welcome. $235,000. 505-984-3144
3 DULCE, ELDORADO, NM 1600 SQUARE FEET 480 SQUARE FOOT INSULATED GARAGE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
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.
FSBO HACIENDIA-STYLE HOME
2,300 SQUARE FOOT HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER. REAL ESTATE FEE DISCOUNT. MESSAGE AT 505-466-3182.
WE GET RESULTS!
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
OUT OF TOWN Charming Adobe Home on 8 Acres, in San Jose. Thirty minutes East of Santa Fe. 2 Bedroom, 1 bath in great condition, beautiful views, move-in ready, horses welcome! Owner Financing, Serious Buyers Only. Call Sylvia 505-670-3180
service«directory Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! ACCOUNTING
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
CLEANING CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT
Windows, carpets and offices. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Silvia, 505-920-4138.
Handyman, Landscaping, FREE estimates, Bernie, 505-316-6449.
HERE AT Destiny Payroll Services, LLC we are dedicated to you and all your unique Payroll needs.With over 10 years of hands-on, progressive payroll and regulatory reporting experience, you can count on us to relieve you of having to navigate the ever- changing world of payroll regulations, so you can get back to doing what you do best- running your Business! Call or email us today for a free, no obligation quote. No businessis too small. www .destinypayrollservices.com Info@ destinypayrollservices.com 213-309-2048
CLASSIFIEDS
Where treasures are found daily
CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Save $10 with this ad. 989-5775 Expires 8/31.
CLASSES BEGINNER’S PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6 and up. $35 per hour. From fundamentals to fun! 505-983-4684
CLEANING A+ Cleaning
Tree removal, yard Cleaning, haul trash, Help around your house. Call Daniel, 505-690-0580.
COURIER LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED
5 STAR COURIER EXPRESS
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction, windows. House and Pet sitting. References available, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
CARETAKING
In Home Care:
Exceptional in home care for the home bound due to mental and/ or physical conditions. Four sisters and four daughters work together to provide up to 24 hour service. We have been in business since 2005, providing personal care and companionship. We take great pride in our work and care about our clients. Bonded and licensed. Call Maria Olivas 505-316-3714. www.olivassisters.com
AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493 LAURA & ARTURO CLEANING SERVICES: Offices, apartments, condos, houses, yards. Free phone estimates. Monthly, weekly. 15 Years experience. 303-505-6894, 719-291-0146
$1 PICKUP Plus DELIVERY! VINCE CHUNG
505-946-7223
HANDYMAN
CALL 986-3000 LANDSCAPING
HOMECRAFT PAINTING Small jobs ok & Drywall repairs. Licensed. Jim. 505-350-7887
I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. (505)470-5877
THE HANDY GET-R-DONE GUYS Painting, Furniture Moving, Odd Jobsany kind, Errands, House & Carpet Cleaning, Weeding, Clean-up. MORE! 505-692-5069
PERSONAL SERVICES NYC DOCUMENTARY F IL M M A K E R seeks clients to bring their family history to life with interviews, photos and archival footage. Call 646552-1026!
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. JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583
LANDSCAPE ARTIST From exceptional stonework, pruning, planting, to clean-up, hauling, water wise beauty (drip). Yard Ninja 505-501-1331
HEATING-PLUMBING
PROFESSIONAL, HONEST, REASONABLE Excavating, Paving, Landscaping, Demolition and Concrete work. Licensed, Bonded, Insured References. 505-470-1031
PLUMBING & HEATING SERVICE & REPAIR COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL NEW CONSTRUCTION & REMODEL
ACME MECHANICAL Plumbing & Heating Contractor Owned and Operated Since 1994
Experienced for 35 Years Licensed, Bonded, and Insured NM State contractor lic# 057141
WWW.5STARCOURIEREXPRESS.COM
Phone: 505-670-2012 geneplmr@yahoo.com
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
*Mention this ad and get 15% OFF!
PAINTING
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. PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.
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 ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, including: torchdown, remodeling. Yard cleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster. Experienced. Estimates. 505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.
STORAGE A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.
TREE SERVICE IT’S TIME TO TRIM YOUR TREES!
Improve the health of your trees in one simple visit! For all of your trimming, removal, and planting needs!
DALE’S TREE SERVICE. 473-4129
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
sfnm«classifieds OUT OF TOWN
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED SOUTH CAPITOL DOWNTOWN NEIGHBORHOOD, 1 bedroom, beautiful vigas, skylights, spacious vintage kitchen. Secluded back yard, portal, parking. $775 monthly, utilities included. 505-898-4168
to place your ad, call HOUSES PART FURNISHED
986-3000
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! LIVE IN STUDIOS
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
ELEGANT SANTA FE SUMMIT
4 miles to downtown on Hyde Park Road. All masonry, luxe home. Woodland setting. On-site manager. Guarded Gate. 2 Bedroom, 2 baths, study. $2400 monthly. 505-983-7097
1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET
800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
Hot Springs Landing at Elephant Butte Lake
A getaway retreat on New Mexico’s largest body of water, with miles of trails and sandy beaches. Minutes from Truth or Consequences hot springs. House has spectacular views in three directions from the second story wrap-around sun porch. Two living areas, two bedrooms, one bath, updates throughout, including central heat and air conditioning. On half-acre lot bordered by BLM land. Includes large studio or boathouse, two-car garage. $135,000. MLS#20118360 Stagner & Associates 575-740-1906 or call 505986-8420 in Santa Fe.
PRIME DOWNTOWN LOCATION 2 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors, vigas, small enclosed yard, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, $1800 plus utilities. HUGE 3,200 SQUARE FEET 2-story, 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 living areas. Near Country Club. Fireplace, jacuzzi, walk-in closets, security, patios, appliances, NS. $1,850 monthly, $1,000 deposit. 505-490-3686. Spacious Zen 2 bed, 2 bath great location New carpet, modern appliances Washer, dryer, off street parking $1500 per month plus utilities, 1 year lease First month, plus security deposit Calle Saragosa off St. Francis
Spotless, breathtaking views of the Pecos River Valley. Brand New Treetop House on 1 acre, deluxe 1 bedroom, granite, radiant and private. Non-Smoking. $1,300 for 1,200 squ.ft. 505-310-1829.
$1000 PLUS UTILITIES POJOAQUE 4 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer, dryer,, dining room. Enclosed yard. $1000 damage deposit. 505-455-0875, leave message.
Large, bright 1 bed, 1 bath Beautiful yard, modern appliances Washer, dryer, off street parking $1000 per month plus utilities, 1 year lease First month plus security deposit Calle Saragosa 505-603-0052, 505-670-3072
APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 EAST SIDE PRIVATE EFFICIENCY View, clean, radiant heat. $795 monthly, includes utilities. First, Last deposit. Quiet person, No pets, No smoking. 505-988-1299.
STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. All utilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NO PETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648
$1,300 742 1/2 West Manhatten , 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 fireplaces. Complete tile, wood floors. Custom cabinets with pantry. Stove, Ref, NEW Washer, Dryer, Air Conditioner Call, Text, email Joe 690-2389 ciandrew1@aol.com.
2500 SQUARE FEET 4 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fireplace. Big yard. No smoking, no pets. $1200 monthly. $1000 deposit. 505-577-2910 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH $600 monthly plus utilities. First and Last plus deposit. 505-757-6283
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
2 BEDROOM in La Mesilla 2 baths, office, washroom, washer, dryer, radiant heat, all appliances. Available now, $875 fist, last months rent plus $550 cleaning deposit. 505-753-8333, 505-310-3132 3, 4 bedroom 2 bath; fenced yard. Immediate availability. $1400 monthly plus utilities. $1200 deposit. email smhpage@prodigy.net or call, text Mary at 505-690-8431.
3 BEDROOM, 1.75 BATH. RECENTLY REMODELED. Garage, shed. Landscaped. Fenced backyard. Near Chavez Center. $1225 plus utilities. Lease. Non-smoking. 505-721-9794
Near downtown, Quiet, complete 2 bedroom. Hilltop Views. Washer, Dryer. No pets or smoking. $895 monthly, utilities included. 505-983-7408, 505-310-7408.
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1303 RUFINA LANE, 2 bedroom, 1 full bath, living or dining room, washer, dryer hookups. $765 PLUS utilities. 4304 CALLE ANDREW , 2 bedroom, 2 full bath, full kitchen, Saltillo tile, radiant heat, small back yard, storage shed, washer, dryer and dishwasher. $905 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, tile throughout, full bath and kitchen, $760 with all utilities paid. NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH downtown, quiet neighborhood, short distance to down town. Laundry facility on site. $695 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299.
1 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, fireplace, clean, quiet, on site parking off Camino Capitan. $650. Western Equities, 505-982-4201.
BEAUTIFUL CONDO. Granite counter-tops, rock fireplace, hickory cabinets, Washer, Dryer, fitness center, heated pool, tennis court, security. No Smoking. $925, 505-450-4721.
GUESTHOUSES 1 BEDROOM FURNISHED GUEST HOUSE IN TESUQUE near Shidoni, 5 miles to Plaza. Vigas, Saltillo tile, washer dryer. No pets, Non-smoking. $1,113 includes utilities. 505-982-5292
1 BEDROOM on Jemez Rd. $750 monthly includes utilities. Plus deposit. No smoking. No pets. 505-6901077 or 988-1397.
1 BEDROOM remodeled guesthouse. Full kitchen and laundry, evaporative cooling, off-street parking, central location, safe, quiet. $2000. Available 8/1. 505-577-6300.
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rufina Lane, patio, fireplace, laundry facility on site. Close to Walmart, Taco Bell. $699 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299.
2 BEDROOM Guest House Casita, washer, dryer, saltillo floors. No Pets, No Smoking, $950 plus utilities, $600 deposit. 505-699-7809, 505-490-1672.
2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH. VERY NICE. $725 plus utilities. $500 deposit. Washer, dryer hook-ups. 1311 Rufina Lane . 505-699-3094
EASTSIDE WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936
CHARMING 2 bedroom Casita, $850 plus utilities. Centrally located, near bus stops and parks. 101 1/2 Taos, Call Gertrude, 505-983-4550. NORTH SIDE 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT Clean, Views, Walk to town, $800 monthly, utilities paid. No pets. 505982-0199 or 505-753-3144.
Now Leasing
Affordable, Spacious Studios and 2 Bedrooms at Las Palomas Apartments – Hopewell Street. We’re excited to show you the changes we’ve made! Under New Management. Call 888-482-8216 for details. Se habla español, llame ahora! STUDIO APARTMENT for rent, all utilities and cable TV paid. No Pets. $525 plus $300 cleaning. 505-471-7947, 505310-3439.
3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH, fireplace, WD, yard, garage, no smoking, small pet negotiable. $1295 plus utilities. Lease and Deposit. 505-438-3775
TESUQUE GUEST HOUSE. Patios with views. 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Washer, dryer. Fireplace, carport. Furnished. $2400 includes utiltites. Long or short-term. By appointment only, 505-983-1067.
HOUSES FURNISHED CLOSE TO PLAZA! SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Beautiful patio. Casa Solana. Available August 26th. 9 month lease. $1300. 505-820-7666. EAST SIDE, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 2100 sq.ft. Views, private cul-de-sac. Available September through 5/31/14 (Negotiable). $1,900 plus utilities. 505-310-4360.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH 1,250 squ.ft.. Tile, carpet, single garage, small patio, storage shed. $1,200 monthly, $1,200 security. 505-474-4807. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME IN E L D O R A D O . Approximately 2,000 sq are feet of living space with 2 car garage, attached greenhouse and walled in garden and patio area! A must see house!! $1599 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH IN LAS ACEQUIAS Recently renovated. One car garage, enclosed yard, quiet neighborhood, near park. $1,150 monthly. No pets or smoking. 505-929-4120. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, P R I V A T E , GATED. Washer, dryer, fridge, stove included. Sunroom, car port. $1160 monthly includes water. Available 7/22/13. 505-220-2323 4 BEDROOM 2 1/2 bath, 2 car garage great neighborhood. $ 1 6 0 0 per month, $1000 deposit, will discuss pets. 1 year lease required. Phone 505-577-8674
4 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, well maintained home in Via Caballero. $2,000. Western Equities, 505-982-4201. CASA ALEGRE, 1770 Sq. Ft. 3 Bedroom, 3 bath. Converted garage, wood and tile floors, washer, dryer, dishwasher, Kitchen appliances, sunroom, mudroom, fireplace, front yard, back yard, back patio, wifi. Late August 2013 to June 2014. $1600 monthly plus utilities, security deposit, references required. Call 917640-6352. No smokers please. ADOBE, RENOVATED 2 bedroom, living room, family room, fireplace, washer, dryer, fenced yard. In 15 acres, 6 miles from Downtown . Small dog considered. Non-smoking. $1,050 includes water. 505-316-5840 ELDORADO HOME FOR RENT 3 bed, 2 bath Call Tom with inquiries at (505) 6819082
FIRST MONTH FR EE . $220 monthly. Wooded area, spacious lots. Pinon Mobile Home Park, Pecos, NM. (505)757-6351, (505)249-8480.
MANUFACTURED HOMES
DEVARGAS HEIGHTS 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, large fenced in backyard, washer, dryer $1500 plus utilities.
$625, 2 BEDROOM mobile home parked on quiet, private land off of Agua Fria. Has gas heating, AC, all utilities paid, no pets. 505-473-0278.
GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD 3 bedroom, 1.5 bath, washer, dryer hook-up’s, 1 car garage, large fenced in backyard $1100 plus utilities.
CLASSIFIEDS
OUTSTANDING VIEWS Beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 3/4 baths on 5 acre lot, 3 interior fireplaces, ceiling fans in every room, brick and tile flooring, patio with outdoor fireplace, $3000 plus utilities. OLD SANTA FE CHARM 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fireplace, wood floors, saltillo tile, small fenced in yard $850 plus utilities. CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN Main House - 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer, dryer, additional storage available, $1200 plus utilities, Guest house - 1 bedroom, 1 bath, small yard, $800 plus utilities.
Where treasures are found daily
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
OFFICES 2 OFFICES WITH FULL BATH & KITCHENETTE. Excellent signage & parking. 109 St. Francis Drive, Unit #2. $650 monthly plus utilities. 505-988-1129, 505-6901122.
AMAZING VIEWS 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH Beautifully landscaped, washer, dryer, 2-car, fenced backyard, corner lot, walking paths. Near Community College. $1600 monthly. 505-989-7266 COUNTRY LIVING 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Enclosed yard. 2 fireplaces. Wood burning stove. Classic adobe. Negotiable. Available 8/1/13. 505929-1278 COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. ELDORADO, 2 bedroom, 2 bath plus large office. Beautiful walled gardens and covered portal, washer, dryer, 2 car garage, beautifully maintained. $1,500, WesternSage 505-690-3067.
ELDORADO 3B, 2B, fireplace, wood stove, electric heat, modern kitchen, WD, dining room or office, fenced yard. Good Neighbors, no water bill. Available Now! $1150 monthly. 505-466-1021. ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603
EXECUTIVE HOME for lease, 2700 sq. ft. Exquisitely furnished. Available Nov.1. $3900, month. No pets, no smoking. 214-384-7216. HIGHER CEILING living room has fireplace. Jacuzzi tub master bathroom. $1600 monthly plus utilities, plus security deposit: $1600. Available Aug10. 505-920-4268
HURRY TO see this beautiful newly upgraded 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH home off of Siringo Road, Carport, large backyard with storage shed, wood floors, laundry hookups. $1149 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299
LOS ARROYOS 2 bedroom, 1 bath, Washer, Dryer, Club house, Tennis, Indoor pool, No pets. $875 monthly. Available now. 505-473-1666
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATHROOM EFFICIENCY APARTMENT on Don Diego. Free utilities. $750 monthly plus deposit. 660-4642
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH ON RANCHO SIRINGO ROAD, fenced yard, laundry facility on-site, separate dining room. $725 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299
3 BEDROOM, 1 bath , Carport, AC, storage, patio, $1050 monthly plus deposit. No smoking, no pets. Behind Jackalope. 505-795-3228
LOT FOR RENT
COMPLETELY RENOVATED AND UPGRADED 2 bedroom, 1 bath, wood floors, tile counters, washer, dryer, 1 car garage $1200 plus utilities.
25 MINUTES SOUTH OF SANTA FE 15-20 hours weekly maintenance & animal care required. Email: weekly70051@mypacks.net
2 bedroom, 1 Bath. Guadalupe Railyard District. Wood floors. WD, Private, mature trees, off-street parking. $1350. Non-smoking, No Pets. 505-986-0237
STYLISH STUDIO with Private Patio, 10’ x 10’ kitchen. Large skylight. $650 monthly, plus utilities. 505-660-4975
1 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME IN NAMBE Recently Remodeled, with yard, $500 monthly plus utilities. No Pets. Call 505-455-3052, 505-455-2654 or 505660-0541.
$525 SMALL, PEACEFUL CASITA
SUNNY, CLEAN 1 bedroom, full bath. Water baseboard heat. Utilities paid. No Pets. Non-smoking. Off-street parking. Centralized. $680 monthly. 505-9824908, 505-577-8726.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
COZY STUDIO Full kitchen, small fenced in backyard, fireplaces $550 plus utilities. NEAR RAILYARD 1 BEDROOM plus office, 1 bath, vigas, wood floors, tile, washer, dryer, small fenced yard $1000 plus utilities.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
»rentals«
NORTHSIDE CONDO 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, kiva fireplace, vigas, covered patio, washer dryer, $995 plus utilities.
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906
LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271
NEW PAINT, carpet, kitchen counters. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, with den, fireplace and 2 Car Garage. Large yard. Pet(s) negotiable. $1,300 monthly plus gas and electricity. $1,000 deposit. Call (505) 490-3245. NICE 2 BEDROOM , UTILITES PAID, $1050 MONTHLY Kiva fireplace, private backyard, 1 3/4 bath bus service close. Possible Section 8. No pets. 505-204-6319 SOUTH CAPITOL A D O B E. TOTALLY RENOVATED. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH . Off-street parking. No tobacco, no dogs. $1100 reduced rent. Details: 505-988-8022.
Delightful Destination Office, Gallery, Your Choice 850 sq. feet, $1,900 a month. 211 W. Water Street Holli Henderson 505-988-1815.
STORAGE SPACE A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 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
EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL
Airport Cerrillos Storage U-Haul Cargo Van 505-474-4330
»announcements«
FOUND NEAR CROSS OF THE MARTYRS. House Key, small knife and lighter. 505-988-5648
LOST BLACK MALE CAT, neutered, missing from Rancho Viejo since 7/24. collar and chipped. Very friendly; will answer to name, "Oliver". Call 505-4127273 LOST BEAD Bracelet with butterfly and dragonfly charms. 505-780-1590, 505-986-9018. LOST BORDER Collie Cross. L O S T 7/25-7/26 during the thunder storm, extreme fear of thunder, from highway 14 area of the San Marcos feed store, friendly, no collar but is chipped. She is a sweet dog Please call 505-577-5372
LOST JULY 24th, Queensland Heeler, Male, neutered, black and white. 8 years old. Villa Sonata Are near Governor Miles and Richards. No collar, but has chip. "Mojo" dearly missed please call, 505-795-4367. REWARD!
GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE
Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266
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
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.
RETAIL ON THE PLAZA Discounted rental rates.
Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
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.
SEARCHING FOR GREAT SAVINGS? Check out the coupons in this weeks
TV book
SENA PLAZA Office Space Available Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792.
ROOMMATE WANTED $425 LARGE ROOM. INCLUDES UTILITIES. Share bath & kitchen. Available 7/19. North of Plaza. Month-tomonth. No dogs. Deposit. 505-4705877
ROOMS 1 ROOM available in 3 bedroom home. $400 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-490-3560.
PUBLIC NOTICES LOS ALAMOS VISITING NURSE SERVICE Is seeking interested teams to design and build a hospice facility located in Los Alamos under a design-build contract. The project is estimated at $1.5M to $2.5M. If interested, send a letter to this address by August 5, 2013. LOS ALAMOS VISITING NURSE SERVICE Attn: Kirk Ellard PO Box 692 Los Alamos, NM 87544
Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »jobs«
MEDICAL DENTAL
EDUCATION GED INSTRUCTOR
ACCOUNTING BOOKKEEPER WITH Accounting degree preferred; minimum 4 years experience. Salary DOE. Please send resume and job history to: johanna@saddlemansofsantafe.com. SANTA FE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION seeks a
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE AND OPERATIONS
Professional reporting to the VP of Finance and Operations. Candidate has demonstrated proficiency in technical, communication, Interpersonal, and organizational skills. Strong work-ethic is expected. Required: CPA license, knowledge of Microsoft office products, and at least 5 years’ experience in public accounting, NPOs, private industry, government, or a combination thereof. Competitive compensation and benefits package. See more information at santafecf.org. Send cover letter and resume to c g a r c i a @ s a n t a f e c f . o r g with the subject line: Director of Finance and Operations.
SER Jobs for Progress, Inc. is seeking a part-time, licensed instructor to teach the SER GED program. Must possess a BA from an accredited college or university, a current State Dept. of Education teaching certification, have a Special Education Endorsement and have a minimum of 3 years teaching at the high school or college levels with an emphasis working with at-risk youth. Interested parties should submit a cover letter and resume to Maggie Lujan at 2516 Cerrillos Rd., Santa Fe, NM 87505 or mlujan@serjfp.org; or by fax (505) 473-9664.
A private non-profit organization, is looking for an experienced
Administrative Assistant
who enjoys working in a multiperson, multi-task office environment. This position requires a highly organized selfstarter with excellent communication skills and advanced skills in Microsoft Office. This is a 10month, part-time position, from August 16 through June 15 each year; 25 - 30 hours weekly. For a full job description, please go to www.nmsip.org. Send resume and cover letter to NMSIP, P.O. Box 6004, Santa Fe, NM 87502 or theskyctr@gmail.com attention Ex.Director.
BARBER BEAUTY HAIR SALON (Pojoaque) seeking Hair Stylist, dependable, creative, and positive attitude. Available October. $450 a month or weekly. References Required. 505-690-9107
is now accepting applications for a NM licensed Kindergarten teacher. If interested please contact school office at 505-753-4644.
Teen Center Director The Family YMCA is looking for an experienced, self-motivated professional with strong leadership, management skills, experience with creative program development, and a strong understanding of the developmental needs of teens, to be responsible for the overall development, successful delivery of programs, management, and daily operations of the Los Alamos Teen Center. Full-Time + Benefits, Salary DOE. Job description and application available at www.laymca.org/careers.shtml. Application, resume and cover letter required, submit to HR, The Family YMCA, 1450 Iris St., Los Alamos, NM 87544 or email to careers@laymca.org. EOE
So can you with a classified ad
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DRIVERS FEDEX GROUND IN NEED OF DRIVERS NO CDL NEEDED Must be 21, clean MVR. Be able to pass background and physical. Have current driving experience in work history. 505-699-2542
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
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HOSPITALITY
IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING VACANT JOB POSITION:
• Vice President for Student Services (Closes August 15, 2013 at 5:00 p.m.) FOR JOB DESCRIPTION(S) AND/ OR CLOSING DATES, CONTACT THE HUMAN RESOURCES DEPARTMENT AT (505) 454-2574 OR VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT WWW.LUNA.EDU! APPLICATION PROCESS: A complete application package includes: 1) Completed Application Form (must provide official documentation confirming education), 2) Letter of Interest, and 3) Current Resume. Submit to: Luna Community College, Sandra Rivera, Human Resources Office Manager, 366 Luna Drive, Las Vegas, New Mexico 87701. LCC applications for employment may be obtained online at www.luna.edu, in the Human Resources Department, or by calling 505-454-2574 or 800-5887232, ext. 1061. (EEO/AA/DV/M-F) A pre-employment drug test may be required. Luna Community College is an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer and does not discriminate against any applicant for employment because of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, age, disability, or veteran status. Qualified applicants are encouraged to apply.
RETAIL
RETAIL STORE SALES ASSOCIATE Have an eye for detail? Love sorting the good from the bad? Want to help animals? The Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s premier resale store, Look What The Cat Dragged In 2, 541 W. Cordova Road, seeks a fulltime sales associate. Must have excellent customer service skills, previous cashier experience and be able to lift 25 pound. Email resume to: mflanagan@ sfhumanesociety.org.
ADIRONDACK CHAIRS. Weathered teak. From Wood Classics. Needs minor repairs. Originally $265. Two for $75. 505-989-4114 KING SIZE BRASS HEADBOARD. $85. Alan, 505-690-9235. METAL BED frame, $10. Alan, 505-6909235
OUR Lady of Guadalupe Handcrafted Pillow, leather, brocade and satin. 26’ by 14’ Please call (505) 913-1410, $75.00.
OLD TIME fan $60 call bob 321-8385.
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 week’s auction. 505-913-1319
BUILDING MATERIALS
ORNAMENTAL WROUGHT IRON GATE, 4’x5’. $65. 505-466-2667
OVER STOCK WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
soaker bathtubs, air therapy bathtubs, vanities, bathroom & pedestal sinks, mirrors, vessel sinks, more. 1512 Pacheco Street Suite D-101 Bob 660-6267
Housekeeping Supervisor:
Full time position at El Castillo LifeCare Community in our Health Center. Must have supervisory experience, weekly scheduling a team of 8 with housekeeping & laundry duties, ability to communicate with staff & residents, troubleshooting and must be flexible. Wonderful work environment with great medical and retirement benefits Hours are 8:00 - 4:30, M-F. pleasant working environment. Email resume to hum anresources@ elcnm .com or fax to 505-983-3828.
MEDICAL DENTAL
»merchandise«
OSCAR WILDE, Richard Ellmann. 1st EDITION. Great Condition! $18. 505474-9020.
APPLIANCES is
CENTENNIAL OUTREACH ELIGIBILITY ASSISTANT
to work in Española and Las Vegas. Minimum requirements: High School Diploma or GED. Minimum of two (2) years experience, with at least (1) year experience in the medical terminology and health insurance claims, Medicaid, and Medicare. Spanish speaking preferred. Deadline: Positions opened until filled. Resumes with cover letter to be submitted to EL CENTRO FAMILY HEALTH Box 158 Espanola, NM 87532 or e-mail: hr@ecfh.org NO phone calls or faxes, please. EOE/M/F/D/V/ Drug-free Workplace
Full-time position available for licensed LPN & RN at busy medical office.
FIREWOOD-FUEL
SET of two wooden end tables $35. 505-570-0213
PELLET BUCKET for pellet stove. $20, 505-954-1144.
Trundle Bed, solid wood frame, with 2 box springs and 1 mattress. For kids. Already assembled, good condition, $350, 505-577-4916. TWIN BOX Spring $30. 505-982-4926
FURNITURE
TWIN HEAD board. $80. 505-982-4926
HEAT & COOLING
MEDICAL ASSOCIATES located in Los Alamos, has an opening for a Full-Time RN-LPN and Medical Assistant. Join us, and grow along with our practice. Candidate should have experience in a clinical setting, be computer savvy and enjoy teamwork. Non-Smoking applicants only. Contact Cristal: 505661-8964, or email resume to: job@mannm.com IF you have medical office experience and outstanding customer relations skills, fax cover letter, resume, and four professional references to 505-983-1265.
DOUBLE DOOR cabinet with shelves, 7’9" high x 2.5’ wide, $100. 505-5700213
GET NOTICED!
BOLD YOUR TEXT to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details
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PUSH LAWN mower $80. Call Bob 505321-8385.
MISCELLANEOUS 28" WOK. VERY DEEP. BRAND NEW. $60. CALL 505-469-3355 8X8 WOOD PALLETS for FREE. Come and get it! 1911 St. Michaels Drive. COOKING DISCOS (DISCATAS) 16" TO 24" STARTING AT $30. Call 505469-3355
FREE GIFT Daily… Weekend… Sunday-Only… The choice is yours!
OW N l l Ca
You turn to us.
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.
AGA 4 - oven cooker, jade, standard flue, good condition. $9000 OBO. Certified AGA fitter available to move. 505-474-9752 serious inquiries only.
ART CARVED ST. Francis. $100. 505-9824926 FRAMES, ALL SIZES. Big Collection, Reasonable. $4 - $25. 505-474-9020.
2 days in Los Alamos and 2 days in Santa Fe. Non-smoker from nonsmoking household. No weekends or holidays. Please fax resume to Julie at 505-662-2932 or email to Jrichey@cybermesa.com or call 505-662-4351.
SMALL PINE Table 23 x 23 1/2, $60. 505-982-4926
For a limited time, subscribe to the Santa Fe New Mexican and get this classic comic strip umbrella FREE! *
CHARLIE’S ANTIQUES 811 CERRILLOS TUESDAY- SUNDAY 11-5:30. WORLD COLLECTIBLES of art, jewelry, pottery, military and more! We buy. (505)470-0804
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
BEAUTIFUL MEXICAN FOUNTAINS, INDOOR, OUTDOOR POTTERY AND SCULPTURES. Now $700, regularly $1,500. 505-501-4052 FREE FILL Dirt. You Haul Away. 505231-5357
5 drawer solid wood desk with accessories. $55 OBO. Please call 505471-5783.
ANTIQUES
HEALTH
QUALITY MADE BLUE STAIN Wood Table 60 x 39, $300.
FAN, PATTON High Velocity, three speed, white, adjustable head, portable. 18"wx16"h. As new ($80), sell for $40. 505-989-4114
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
LAWN & GARDEN
LADDER. 6’ aluminum step and platform. 200 wt. $35. 505-989-4114
Housekeeper:
Full time position at El Castillo LifeCare Community in our Health Center. Duties include housekeeping & laundry duties, ability to communicate with staff & residents. Wonderful work environment with great medical and retirement benefits. Hours are 8:00 - 4:30, M-F. pleasant working environment. Email resume to hum anresources@ elcnm .com or fax to 505-983-3828.
EL CENTRO FAMILY looking for
MOBILE GARMENT rack $50. Call bob 321-8385
BEAUTIFUL, TOP of the Line jacuzzi brand with lid. like new, used 1.5 years, asking $4,150 and paid $8,300. 505-466-9666
30 FOOT SPIRIT MOUNTAIN FORTRESS YURT. 9000.00 CALL 505-428-8580
TRADES
EDUCATION
LUNA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
SANTA FE INDIAN HOSPITAL is looking for a full-time Diagnostic Radiologic Technologist for general diagnostic radiology only. Further information can be found on the USAJOBS website www.usajobs.gov. To apply online search for job announcement number: IHS-13-AQ-925086-DH and IHS-13-AQ-897036-ESEP MP. The IHS has preferential hiring for NA AN and is an EOE. Application deadline is 8/30/13. If you have any questions please feel free to contact Lisa Hill, Radiology Supervisor at 505-946-9317.
CLASSIFIEDS
SCHOOL BUS Driver’s needed for Pojoaque School District. Must have CDL with P&S endorsements or CDL permit. We will train. Must pass background check and preemployment drug test. Call Martin Herrera at 505-270-1001
* A Great Team doing Great Things! * An outstanding institution! * Excellent Benefits Package! * Competitive Salaries! * Superb Work Environment!!!
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.
HEAT & COOLING
FURNITURE
COLLECTIBLES
Lineman/ Laborers
WE GET RESULTS!
ART
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
AUCTIONS
CONSTRUCTION
CDL A plus. Must have valid driver license. Insurance & Benefits available. Call 505-753-0044 or email jody.gutierrez@ trawickconstruction.com.
986-3000
RADIOGRAPHIC CERTIFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT
HOLY CROSS CATHOLIC SCHOOL
ADMINISTRATIVE The New Mexico Suicide Intervention Project,
to place your ad, call
B-7
INDIAN MARKET By P.J. Heyliger Stan Lode. Acrylic on Canvas 85" x 49", $1,800. Big, Bold, Beautiful. Call, Gaby 505-983-7728.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
sfnm«classifieds MISCELLANEOUS
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
FREE MOVING BOXES, Call 505-9825404.
EVERLAST QUALITY HEAVYWEIGHT PUNCHING BAG, still in box. $50. 505577-3141
to place your ad, call PETS SUPPLIES
986-3000
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
»garage sale«
GOLF SHORTS like new, 36"x38". $20 for all 10 pairs, 505-954-1144.
PING STEEL Blade I/3 Putter with Golf Pride Ping Gripe. 38" RH. $25. 505-989-4114
LARGE ROCKY MOUNTAIN BULL ELK.
large antler spread six points per side, 46" length, 38" spread, nice for home, office, lodge, conference room, gallery, casino, lounge or other. $2,000. Santa Fe, 520-906-9399.
THERM-A-REST AIR mattress in bag. Perfect condition. 1/2 Price of $90. 505-989-4114
CHAMPIONSHIP LINEAGE, TICA registered. Hypoallergenic Siberian Kittens. $800. Born the end of May, 2013. Sweet, beautiful, and loving. Email: losgatos@cybermesa.com Phone 983-2228, ask for Cherie. Web: casadelosgatos.com
Sell Your Stuff!
VINTAGE BANCROFT Players Special Ralph V SAawyer Tennis Racquet 4 5/8 L. Registered. $50. 505-989-4114
Call and talk to one of our friendly Ad-visors today!
TOOLS MACHINERY
WANTED!
RIB ROASTER $60. Call Bob at 505321-8385 SHUTTERS, LOUVRED white. 6 of them 16"x70". $50 for all, 505-954-1144. SIX 5 Gallon polycarbon drinking water bottles, $5 each. 505-982-1010 SIX 5 Gallon water containers, $5 each. Valued at $50. 505-982-1010
3233 CALLE DE MOLINA MOVING SALE
All household items must go! Including dining room set, 50" Samsung TV with stand, 8’ pool table, antique tools, leather couch. Monday through Thursday. Call 505690-8151, 505-577-7972.
$$WANTED JUNK CARS & TRUCKS$$ Wrecked or Not Running, with or without title, or keys. We will haul away for Free. 505-699-4424
Grumpy is a 3 month old snowshoe, siamese kitten who wants to be an internet sensation
2003 CADILLAC CTS, BLACK, 96 k miles, 5-speed manual transmission, 4 door. 3.2 liter, Bose, sunroof, loaded, excellent car. $8,000 firm. 505983-7605.
CLASSIC CARS 1951 CHEVY PU. Great driver. Floor shift, floor starter. Powerful flat 6-cylinder 235, dual carbs. I get thumbs up when ever I drive into town. Can send you a full set of photos. $18,000. (575)776-5105 AGALL14245@AOL.COM
GARAGE SALE ELDORADO
1 RECADO ROAD FRIDAY AUGUST 2 FROM 10 - 2 SATURDAY AUG 3 FROM 9 - 3 Cool, quality stuff. Household, Flexsteel sofa sleeper, antiques, miter saw, collectibles, tile cutter, tools, electronics, various art, decorator items, photo equipment including Cloud Dome & more! Cash only. GO TO 3rd Eldorado entrance, turn right at end of pavement, next left.
WANT TO BUY
O i l and Gas Royalties in New Mexico and Colorado. We have allocated a generous budget for acquisition in the Rocky Mountain Basins for 2013. Venable Royalty, 5910 N. Central Expressway, Dallas, TX 75206. Call, Bill 970-4268034.
AUTOS WANTED
GARAGE SALE SOUTH
986-3000
USED CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT. MUST GO BY END OF MONTH. Chain link fence, concrete stakes, scaffolding, propane water boiler, insulation, gas water heater, flagstone wall cap, tile, table saw, generator, stone gasoline mortar mixer, miscellaneous doors, water softners. 505-819-9311
DOMESTIC
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 8:30 to 12:00 HUGE BLOW-OUT PARTS INVENTORY SALE of 25 Years FOR MANY OLDER BMW & MERCEDES MODELS Advanced sales per appointment Call or come by Mozart’s Garage 2890 Trades West Rd. Santa Fe, 87507 505-471-2272
GOLF SHOES. Foot-Joy Treks System, Men’s 9-1/2. $40. 505-989-4114
OLD VINTAGE Wooden Imperial T. A. Davis Tennis Racket 4 3/8 L. Almost perfect. $40. 505-989-4114
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
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
1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 In Storage for 40 Years! Original and in Excellent Condition. Two door fastback, FE big block 352 4-barrel, cruse-o-matic auto trans. Runs and drives excellent. 505-699-9424. Asking $11,500
SPECIAL!
Sell your car in a hurry!
»animals«
SMALL PINE table, $50, Metal Cross, $30, 60 CD Stereo, $100, Alpine Car Stereo, speakers, $100 505-982-4926.
Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
THE TRUCK SUV Club Steering Wheel Lock -- Red. New $55. Sell for $35. 505-989-4114
»cars & trucks«
VOICEOVER PERFORMERS & STUD E N T S : two teaching tapes with book. New $15 . 505-474-9020.
1967 IMPALA. Two-door. 327 2 speed automatic, new brakes, ball joints, frame bushings, tie rod. $4,500 OBO. Call John, 505-988-3714.
Toy Box Too Full?
OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT
CAR STORAGE FACILITY
FILING CABINET. Beige. 18x22x5’ Tall. Great storage. Lockable. $25. 505690-9235, Alan.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT EUREKA PUP Tent for two. Perfect condition. Includes storage bag. 1/2 Price of $90. 505-989-4114
GOLF HATS, 5 large, Scala Pro. $20, 505-954-1144.
HORSES 3 GREAT TRAIL HORSES for sale. Call 505-984-3006.
PETS SUPPLIES 3 HANDSOME male Chorkie puppies for sale. Call or txt for photos hurry won’t last long! $400. 505-699-9510
2012 FORD FOCUS-SE HATCHBACK FWD One Owner, Carfax, Non-Smoker, 31,000 Miles, Most Options, Factory Warranty, Pristine $14,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
Denoso is 8 weeks old and a cuddle addict.
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
Grumpy, Denoso and 120 more cats and kittens will be at the 6th Annual Santa Fe Kitten Festival 7/27/13 and 7/28/13 at PetSmart in Santa Fe. Adopt a kitten for just $25 and help us save lives. For more information call the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 505-753-8662 or visit their website at www.evalleyshelter.org
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES ENGINE STAND, used once. $80 OBO, 505-490-9095
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039
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Tuesday, July 30, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds 4X4s
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IMPORTS
IMPORTS
SUVs
2012 TOYOTA Camry XLE HYBRID. Over 40 mpg! 9k miles, FULLY LOADED, leather, moonroof, navigation, 1-owner clean CarFax $29,741. Call 505-216-3800
2010 VOLVO XC60 3.2L. Pristine, heated leather, panoramic roof, NICE! $20,931. Call 505-216-3800
2011 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged SUV. Premium Audio System, Anigre Wood. One owner. Showroom Condition. $64,995. Call 505-474-0888.
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
986-3000
B-9
CHECK IT OUT!
2011 JEEP Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon. Rare 5-speed, new tires, hard top, excellent condition, wellmaintained. $32,851. Call 505-2163800
Must Sell! 2004 Nissan 350-Z. $12,500 . Please call 505-629-6652
2000 Subaru Outback. Only 68,647 miles, automatic. Please call Raul at (505)310-1716
PICKUP TRUCKS
»recreational« 1962 MERCEDES Unimog 404 . 23,000 original miles. Completely rebuilt. Gas engine. $24,000 OBO. 9822511 or 670-7862
2003 NISSAN 350Z. 51K MILES; Silvergrey, Sportmatic; Second owner; Looks, Performance, Reliability. $15000. Phone 505-954-1640 or gaultis6@gmail.com
PRICED TO SELL!
2007 HONDA CR-V EX-L AWD, Navigation, Sunroof, Leather, Heated Seats, and much more! 58,427 miles. One owner. $17,995. Call 505474-0888.
2006 Nissan Altima Runs and drives great. 100k miles Sam’s Used Cars 1447 St Michaels Santa Fe, NM 505-820-6595
2010 Toyota RAV4 4x4. Only 30,000 miles, 4-cyl, 1-owner clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,791. 505216-3800
WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad
SPECIAL!
CALL 986-3000
2000 DODGE RAM 1500 pick up all extras excellent condition $4500. 505438-0415 2010 Toyota Corolla LE. Only 12k miles, like new, clean, 1 owner, CarFax. $15,471 Call 505-216-3800
2010 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID FWD One Owner, Carfax, Every Service Record, 15,087 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Manuals Remaining Factory Warranty Pristine $20,495 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 TOYOTA Matrix S AWD. 36k miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, super clean super practical $17,482. Call 505-216-3800
BOATS & MOTORS
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
IMPORTS
1999 AQUA Finn fiberglass day sailer and trailer with spare. Some PFDs. $800. Call 505-690-8436.
FREE ADS 2011 AUDI A3 2.0TDI. DIESEL!!! Low miles, 42 MPG+ , immaculate condition, 1-owner clean CarFax. $25,971 Call 505-216-3800
2010 SUBARU FORESTER, LIMITED One Owner, Carfax, X-Keys, Garaged, 64,000 Miles, NonSmoker, Manuals, Two Remote Starts, Panoramic Roof,, Pristine $18,495.
2007 JAGUAR X-Type 3.0 Sedan AWD. Extremely clean, two owners, no accidents. Warranty available. 91,815 miles. $9,995. Please call 505-474-0888.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2008 TOYOTA Prius Touring. Package 6, leather, navigation, loaded, clean CarFax. $11,921. Call 505216-3800.
2008 Toyota Tacoma 4-cylinder, 29,400 miles, regular cab, color white, 2 WD, 5-speed, immaculate, excellent condition, bed liner, camper shell, AC, radio, CD. $14,000. 505466-1021
Sell your stuff from last year to someone who didn’t get that stuff..
upgrade
Make money and buy this year’s stuff! Even a stick kid gets it.
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
SUVs
(If your item is priced $100 or less the ad is free.)
sfnm«classifieds
986-3000
classad@sfnewmexican.com
CAMPERS & RVs
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
2008 BMW X5 3.0si.Technology Package, Premium Package, Rear Climate, and Cold Weather Package. Showroom Condition. Non-smoker. No accidents! Warranty Available. $26,995. Please call 505-474-0888.
Call Charles 505-690-1977
2011 Acura RDX. All-Wheel Drive, Technology Package, only 13k miles, turbo, clean 1 owner, CarFax $30,871. Call 505-216-3800.
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
2011 LINCOLN MKX AWD 7k miles. Leather seats. Includes the Premium Package. Rear-view camera, voice activated navigation, panoramic vista roof, THX audio system, more. $36995. ORIGINAL MSRP $50630. TOP DOLLAR paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6
2007 Certified Lexus LS 460, V8 4.6L, 380 hp, 8 speed Automatic. Mileage 61,720, gas mileage 25.3 MPG. Navigation system, Backup Camera, Levinson Audio system. Price: $29,900.
2012 VOLKSWAGEN Passat SE TDI. DIESEL!!! leather, moonroof, awesome mpgs! $25,871. Call 505-2163800
2010 SUBARU Legacy 2.5 Premium. Only 19k miles! All-Weather, like new, great fuel mileage, 1-owner clean CarFax $18,831. Call 505-2163800
2007 MAZDA-5 GRAND TOURING MINIVAN Records. Manuals, X-Keys, Carfax, 51,000 Miles, Automatic, 4Cylinder, Great MPG, Third Row Seat, Loaded, Pristine $13,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
21’ Chinook Concourse, 1999. All luxury options, immaculate condition. Ford V10. New tires. 80k miles. $18,500. 505-988-4456
2010 VOLKSWAGEN Jetta Sportwagen TDI - DIESEL!!! low miles and very nice, clean CarFax, regularly maintained $21,891 Call 505-216-3800
2005 AUDI ALL-ROAD WAGON Carfax, Records, Manuals, X-Keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 69,000 Miles, Automatic, Triptonic, Moonroof, Leather, Every Available Option, Pristine $14,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
2010 Subaru Legacy 2.5 Premium. WOW, only 19k miles, like new, 1owner clean CarFax. $18,831. Call 505-216-3800.
2010 MINI Cooper S Clubman. Turbocharged, 34 mpg hwy! great miles, super clean, panoramic roof, heated seats $18,971. Call 505-2163800
2005 SUBARU Legacy Outback. Turbo, 5-Speed. Always garaged. All Services. Extra wheels and snows. 98,800, pampered miles. Immaculate. $10,995 505-473-0469.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
2011 HONDA Pilot Touring. Low miles, 1 owner clean CarFax, fully load with navigation, remote start, & 3 DVDs! $32,871. Call 505-2163800
2004 TOYOTA SEQUOIA LIMITED 4WD. Entertainment System, Wireless headphones, Heated Leather Seats, Sunroof, New Brakes, and recent maintenance. 469-0428
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 PLUSYOUGET THISGREAT OFFERFROM:
1900 Cerrillos Rd. • 983-4201 3931 Cerrillos Rd. • 474-4320
IT’S THAT EASY!
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.
2003 VOLKSWAGEN PASSAT GLS Carfax, Records, 5-Speed Manual, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Sunroof, Heated Seats, Sunroof, Loaded, Great MPG, Pristine $6,295. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE www.santafeautoshowcase.co m Paul 505-983-4945
2011 LEXUS ES350. One owner, only 51k miles, 3.5L V6, FWD, 6-speed automatic. Loaded: Mark Levinson sound system, parking sensors, panoramic moonroof, keyless start, heated and ventilated seats, touch screen navigation, more. Clean CarFax. $29,995. Top dollar paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6
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B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 2013
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
g under the DWRLF, it must meet the criteria described in 40 CFR Part 6.107and 6.505.
NEW MEXICO FINANCE AUTHORITY Categorical Exclusion Determination Statement of Finding Date: July 24, 2013 City of Bloomfield Bloomfield, San Juan County, New Mexico Project Number: DW 3027 The New Mexico Finance Authority (NMFA) has conducted a review of the proposed City of Bloomfield (City) public water system project in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the New Mexico State Environmental Review Process (SERP) for the State Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund (DWRLF). The procedure is based on the implementing regulations for NEPA (40 Code of Federal Regulations [CFR] Parts 6, 25, 35, and 1500) as followed by the Environmental Protection Agency, USDA Rural Utility Service Bulletin 1794A-602 and State regulations 20.7.7 NMAC. NMFA has determined that this project is eligible for a Categorical Exclusion (CE). Accordingly, the project is exempted from further substantive environmental review requirements under 40 CFR Part 6.107(d)(1) and 6.505(b)(1). Following is a description of the proposed action and a statement of how the action meets the criteria for a CE. Project Description and Background: The City has applied for a drinking water loan to rehabilitate two existing water storage tanks that have a combined capacity of 1.5 million gallons. Both tanks were inspected in May 2013, and the inspector recommended that the City perform proactive maintenance to ensure that neither of the tanks would begin to leak. The purpose of the project is to make the necessary repairs to these tanks to avoid the costs associated with potential failure and leakage. The rehabilitation of the two existing water storage tanks would not increase service demand and would not impact the capacity of the system. No additional rightof-way or easements would be needed to complete the project. Project Costs: The City is requesting $900,000 from the DWSRLF for the rehabilitation of two underground water storage tanks. Categorical Exclusion Determination: Categorical Exclusions are identified categories of actions that do not individually, cumulatively over time, or in conjunction with other federal, state, local, or private actions have a significant effect on the quality of the human environment. For a project to be eligible for Categorical Exclusion
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Authority
Copies Available: The documents that support this Categorical Exclusion are availaNMFA has performed ble for public review a review of the appli- at the following locacation materials and tions: has determined that New Mexico the proposed action 1. Authority, fits within the cate- Finance gory of actions de- Attn: Ryan Helton, Sr. scribed by the CE and Program Administrathat no extraordinary tor, 207 Shelby Street, circumstances are in- Santa Fe, New Mexivolved. The proposed co, 87501. City of action fits within a 2. Teresa category of actions Bloomfield, that are solely direct- Brevik, Special Projed toward minor re- ects Manager, 915 habilitation of exist- North First Street, ing facilities, func- Bloomfield, New Mextional replacement of ico, 87413 equipment, or toward Legal #95589 the construction of Published in The Sannew ancillary facili- ta Fe New Mexican on ties adjacent or at- July 30, 31, August 1 tached to existing fa- 2013 cilities. Specifically, the proposed action includes the rehabilitation of two water tanks, which are adjacent to existing facilities on City property. These repairs will not affect the degree of treatment or capacity of the existing facility.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on August 14th Approval: The conclu- 2013 at 9:30am at the sions presented here Extra Space Storage are based on the find- facility located at: ings of an independent review of the ap- 875 W. San Mateo Rd. plication materials, Santa Fe NM 87505 including a CE check- 505-986-1546 list and supporting documentation for The personal goods the proposed action. stored therein by the Based on the inde- following may inpendent review, the clude, but are not limproposed action ited to general housequalifies as a CE and hold, furniture, boxes, no extraordinary cir- clothes, and appliancumstances exist ces. that would prevent the issuance of this AO07-William Larkin, CE Determination. 5200 Territotialo Rd. Therefore, this docu- NW, Albuquerque, NM mentation will serve 87120 as a record stating D05-Yvette Gonzales, that the proposed ac- 901 Lorenzo St., Santa tion may be categori- Fe, 87501 cally excluded from G30-Adam Steinberg, the environmental re- 1851 Paseo de la Conview process be- quistador, Santa Fe, cause the action fits 87505 within an eligible cat- I03-Adam Steinberg, egory. 1851 Paseo de la Conquistador, Santa Fe, The responsible offi- 87505 cial shall revoke a M17-Lucia Rotunno, categorical exclusion PO Box 28471, Santa and shall require a Fe 87592 full environmental review if, subsequent Purchases must be to the granting of an made with cash only exclusion, the re- and paid at the time sponsible official de- of sale. All goods are termines that: (1) the sold as is and must proposed action no be removed at the longer meets the re- time of purchase. Exquirements for a cat- tra Space Storage reegorical exclusion serves the right to due to changes in the bid. Sale is subject to scope of work; or (2) adjournment. serious local or envi- Legal #95510 ronmental issues ex- Published in The Sanist; or (3) federal, ta Fe New Mexican on state, local, or tribal July 23, 30 2013 laws are being or may be violated. The documentation to support this deci- NOTICE OF PUBLIC sion will be on file at SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY the NMFA, and is available for public Notice is hereby givreview upon request. en that the underComments concern- signed will sell, to ing this decision may satisfy lien of the be addressed to: New owner, at public sale Mexico Finance Au- by competitive bidthority, Attn: Ryan ding on August 14 at Helton, Sr. Program 10:00AM at the Extra Administrator, 207 Space Storage facility Shelby Street, Santa located at: Fe, New Mexico, 1522 Pacheco St Santa Fe NM 87505 87501. 505-988-3692 This documentation The personal goods does not exempt the stored therein by the may inapplicant from appli- following cable local, state, or clude, but are not limfederal permitting re- ited to general housequirements that may hold, furniture, boxes, result from the pro- clothes, and appliances. posed action. J3 James Saltz-1346 Pacheco St., Unit E Approved: Santa Fe, NM John Gasparich Interim Chief Execu- Purchases must be made with cash only tive Officer, New Mexico Finance and paid at the time of sale. All goods are
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LEGALS g sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Extra Space Storage reserves the right to bid. Sale is subject to adjournment. Legal #95511 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on July 23, 30 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Case No. 2013-01359
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D-101-CV-
ONEWEST BANK, FSB, Plaintiff, v. JAMES A. FRYE, IF LIVING, IF DECEASED, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, OR LEGATEES OF JAMES A. FRYE, DECEASED, DANITSA L. FRYE, IF LIVING, IF DECEASED, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, OR LEGATEES OF DANITSA L. FRYE, DECEASED, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY AND THROUGH THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JAMES A. FRYE, DECEASED,
986-3000
LEGALS
By: /s/ Robert Lara Electronically Signed Robert Lara 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Telephone: (505) 8489500 Fax: (505) 848-9516 Attorney For Plaintiff NM13-00690_FC01
LEGALS _
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Case No. D - 1 0 1 - C V 2013-01439 WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, v. MANON PETTIT CHARBONNEAU, IF LIVING, IF DECEASED, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, OR LEGATEES OF MANON P E T T I T CHARBONNEAU, DECEASED, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY AND THROUGH THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, THE LOS ARROYOS COMPOUND ASSOCIATION, M I C H A E L CHARBONNEAU AND THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF MANON P E T T I T CHARBONNEAU, IF ANY, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF SUIT
STATE OF New Mexico to the above-named Defendants Manon Pettit Charbonneau, if living, if deceased, Defendant(s). The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, or Legatees NOTICE OF SUIT of Manon Pettit STATE OF New Mexico Charbonneau, deto the above-named ceased. Defendants Danitsa L. Frye, if living, if de- GREETINGS: ceased, The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, or You are hereby notiLegatees of Danitsa L. fied that the aboveFrye, deceased and named Plaintiff has James A. Frye, if liv- filed a civil action ing, if deceased, The against you in the Unknown Heirs, above-entitled Court Devisees, or Legatees and cause, the generof James A. Frye, de- al object thereof beceased. ing to foreclose a GREETINGS: mortgage on properYou are hereby noti- ty located at 153 Calle fied that the above- Ojo Feliz Unit G, Sante named Plaintiff has Fe, NM 87505, Santa filed a civil action Fe County, New Mexiagainst you in the co, said property beabove-entitled Court ing more particularly and cause, the gener- described as: al object thereof be- Unit 171, of the LOS ing to foreclose a A R R O Y O S mortgage on proper- CONDOMINIUMS, as ty located at 2107 shown and deAvenida De Las lineated on the Plat Alturas, Santa Fe, NM thereof filed No87505, Santa Fe Coun- vember 10, 1980, as ty, New Mexico, said Document No. property being more 468,047; as created particularly descri- by the "Declaration bed as: for Los Arroyos Lot 30, Block 2, of Condominium", datReplat of Thomas ed November 3, Heights Subdivision, 1980, and recorded known as Alturas de in Misc. Book 409, Santa Fe, as shown page 365; Amendand delineated on the ment Dated May 5, plat thereof filed May 1994 and recorded 23, 1980, as Document in Misc. Book 1055, No. 458,632, and re- page 408, in the recorded in Plat Book cords of Santa Fe 80, page 11, in the re- County, New Mexicords of Santa Fe co. County, New Mexico. Unless you serve a Unless you serve a pleading or motion in pleading or motion in response to the comresponse to the com- plaint in said cause plaint in said cause on or before 30 days on or before 30 days after the last publicaafter the last publica- tion date, judgment tion date, judgment by default will be enby default will be en- tered against you. tered against you. Respectfully Submit- Respectfully Submitted, ted, THE CASTLE LAW THE CASTLE LAW GROUP, LLC GROUP, LLC By: /s/ Robert Lara electronically filed Robert Lara 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Telephone: (505) 8489500 Fax: (505) 848-9516 Attorney For Plaintiff
Legal#93999 NM13-01206_FC01 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican July 23, 30, August 6, Continued... 2013
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Legal #95341 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on July 30, August 6 and 13, 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY No. 2013-0102
toll free: 800.873.3362 email: legal@sfnewmexican.com LEGALS
Declovina Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, and more particularly described as follows: LOT 4, BLOCK 3, DOMINGO SUBDIVISION NO. 3, AS SHOWN ON THE FILED FOR RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY CLERK OF SANTE FE COUNTY, NEW MEXICO ON SEPTEMBER 12, 1949 IN PLAT BOOK 3, PAGE 445, AS DOCUMENT NO. 94,635.
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF The sale is MARIAN G. BARNES, to begin at 11:30 AM DECEASED. on August 28, 2013, on the front steps of the NOTICE TO First Judicial District CREDITORS Court, City of Santa NOTICE IS HEREBY Fe, County of Santa GIVEN that the under- Fe, State of New Mexsigned has been ap- ico, at which time I pointed personal rep- will sell to the highest resentative of this es- and best bidder for tate. All persons hav- cash in lawful currening claims against cy of the United this estate are re- States of America, quired to present the Property to pay their claims within expenses of sale, and two (2) months after to satisfy the Judggranted the date of the first ment publication of this no- Deutsche Bank Natice, or the claims will tional Trust Compabe forever barred. ny, as Trustee of the Claims must be pre- Morgan Stanley Mortsented either to the gage Loan Trust 2004undersigned personal 11AR (hereinafter reto as representative at the ferred address listed below, "Deutsche Bank"). Deutsche or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Bank was awarded a Fe, County, New Mexi- Judgment on July 7, co, located at the fol- 2013, in the principal lowing address: 102 sum of $215,200.00, Grant Avenue, Santa plus outstanding inFe, New Mexico 87501. terest on the balance through April 12, 2013, in the amount of Dated: July 24, 2013 $10,938.35, plus allowDiana Lynn Gaetz 7100 Primrose Drive able late charges of $24.66, plus tax adNW Albuquerque, NM vances in the amount of $2,175.10, plus haz87120 ard insurance advan(505) 899-2124 ces in the amount of Legal #95587 plus Published in The San- $911.00, in ta Fe New Mexican on BPO/Appraisals amount of July 30, August 6 2013 the $300.00, plus inspections fees in the amount of $295.00, less corporate adTHE STATE OF vance credit balance NEW MEXICO current FC action in COUNTY OF the amount of ($5.00), SANTA FE plus attorney’s fees FIRST JUDICIAL in the amount of DISTRICT $900.00 and attorney’s costs through No. D-101-CV-2012- June 11, 2013 in the 00860 amount of $546.00, with interest on the DEUTSCHE BANK NA- Judgment including TIONAL TRUST COM- late charges, properPANY, ty preservation fees, AS TRUSTEE OF THE escrow advances, atMORGAN STANLEY torney’s fees and MORTGAGE LOAN costs of this suit at TRUST 2004- the rate of 2.75% per 1 1 A R , annum through the date of the sale. The Plaintiff, total amount due under the Judgment, on v s . the date set forth in the Judgment, was $231,285.11. The LIZA C. LUBOFF aka amount of interest LIZA LUBOFF, a mar- from April 12, 2013 to ried woman dealing the date of the sale in her sole and sepa- will be $2,404.73. rate property; NOTICE IS INDYMAC BANK, FURTHER GIVEN that F.S.B., a Federally the real property and Chartered Savings improvements conBank; ABC Corpora- cerned with herein tions I-X, XYZ will be sold subject to Partnerships I-X, John any and all patent Does I-X and Jane reservations, easeDoes I-X, THE UN- ments, all recorded KNOWN HEIRS AND and unrecorded liens DEVISEES OF ANY OF not foreclosed herein, THE ABOVE, IF DE- and all recorded and CEASED, unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Defendants. Deutsche Bank and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, NOTICE OF SALE ON and the purchaser at FORECLOSURE the sale takes the P L E A S E property subject to, TAKE NOTICE that the the valuation of the above-entitled Court, property by the having appointed me County Assessor as or my designee as real or personal propSpecial Master in this erty, affixture of any matter with the pow- mobile or manufacer to sell, has ordered tured home to the me to sell the real land, deactivation of property (the "Prop- title to a mobile or erty") situated in manufactured home Santa Fe County, New on the property, if Mexico, commonly any, environmental known as 1223
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LEGALS
LEGALS
y contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING.
p to satisfy the Judgment granted Wells Fargo Bank, NA. Wells Fargo Bank, NA was awarded a Judgment on May 23, 2013, in the principal sum of $230,815.63, plus outstanding interest on the balance through April 26, 2013, in the amount of $25,454.73, less suspense in the amount of ($599.51), plus tax advances in the amount of $2,712.73, plus hazard insurance advances in the amount of $435.14, plus MIP/PMI in the amount of $2,028.61, plus inspection fees in the amount of $165.00, plus attorney’s fees in the sum of $950.00 and attorney’s costs through May 1, 2013 in the sum of $761.16, with interest on the Judgment including late charges, property preservation fees, escrow advances, attorney’s fees and costs of this suit at the rate of 5.125% per annum through the date of the sale. The total amount due under the Judgment, on the date set forth in the Judgment, was $262,723.49. The amount of interest from April 26, 2013 to the date of the sale will be $4,574.27. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Wells Fargo Bank, NA and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING.
By: Jeffrey Lake, Special Master Southwest Support Group, LLC 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 20 Albuquerque, NM 87102 (505) 767-9444 Legal #95588 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on July 30, August 6, 13, 20 2013
THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. 01024
D-101-CV-2012-
WELLS FARGO BANK, NA, Plaintiff, vs. CONSUELO J. LUGO, a single person; ABC Corporations I-X, XYZ Partnerships I-X, John Does I-X and Jane Does I-X, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF ANY OF THE ABOVE, IF DECEASED, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the aboveentitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the "Property") situated in Santa Fe County, New Mexico, commonly known as 64 Sunset Canyon Lane, Santa Fe, NM 87508, and more particularly described as follows: ALL OF LOT 88 AS SHOWN ON PLAT OF SURVEY ENTITLED "TURQUOISE TRAIL SUBDIVISION SOUTH PHASE", FILED FOR RECORD AS DOCUMENT NUMBER 1428730, APPEARING IN PLAT BOOK 620 AT PAGE 26, RECORDS OF NM-12-497567-JUD SANTA FE COUNTY, By: NEW MEXICO. Jeffrey Lake, Special The sale is Master Support to begin at 11:30 AM Southwest on August 28, 2013, on Group, LLC the front steps of the 20 First Plaza NW, First Judicial District Suite 20 NM Court, City of Santa Albuquerque, Fe, County of Santa 87102 Fe, State of New Mex- (505) 767-9444 ico, at which time I will sell to the highest Legal#95290 and best bidder for Published in the Sancash in lawful curren- ta Fe New Mexican cy of the United July 30, 2013 States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and
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Tuesday, July 30, 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 Tuesday, July 30, 2013: This year you have a very positive outlook that promotes success in your endeavors. Not only will you see your immediate circle expand, but you also will see a long-term wish come to fulfillment. Taurus is equally as stubborn as you. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Be aware of what any agreements you make. Initially, someone might seem very generous, but as time goes on, you’ll see that this person’s offer is not what you thought it was. Tonight: Catch up on news. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You have a strong sense of what works. Do not hesitate to use your charm and skills. Listen to news with an open ear. Tonight: Beam in what you want. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Know when to back away from a volatile situation. You could be taken aback by the strong words you want to say, which is a good reason to distance yourself. Tonight: Do your own thing. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You’ll opt for a new idea or try a new suggestion that seems like a sure-bet winner. Stay in touch with someone you consider a dear friend, but be smart. Tonight: Where your friends are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You clearly need to take the lead in an important matter. Others naturally will follow you, even if you veer off the chosen course. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You’ll want to focus on the long term. You are someone who specializes in details, and you have a tendency to get caught up in the here and now. Tonight: Get into the good times and put on a favorite CD.
Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.
Subject: CHRISTOPHER (e.g., Discoverer of the New World. Answer: Christopher Columbus.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Architect of St. Paul’s Cathedral. Answer________ 2. He portrayed Captain Von Trapp in the film The Sound of Music. Answer________ 3. He played Superman in films. Answer________
5. Author of the 2007 book God Is Not Great. Answer________ 6. English actor known for his role as Count Dracula. Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. English dramatist who greatly influenced Shakespeare. Answer________ 8. Son of the creator of Winniethe-Pooh.
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. He was record producer Bruce Dickinson in Saturday Night Live’s “More Cowbells” sketch. Answer________
Answer________ 9. He created the fictional character Sally Bowles. Answer________
ANSWERS:
1. Christopher Wren. 2. Christopher Plummer. 3. Christopher Reeve. 4. Christopher Walken. 5. Christopher Hitchens. 6. Christopher Lee. 7. Christopher Marlowe. 8. Christopher Robin Milne. 9. Christopher Isherwood.
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
B-11
Woman feels she’s snubbed by parents Dear Annie: My niece is transgender (she’s a boy who wants to be a girl). She needs to take a hormone blocker, and it costs a fortune. Insurance won’t pay for it, so the whole family is chipping in. My brother-in-law doesn’t make much money, and he’s lazy. My parents paid most of their bills when they were first married, and they are giving my niece so much money that we cannot have our annual vacation. My parents will be giving them more money in a few months. Meanwhile, my niece gets everything she wants. My mother recently bought her a $200 outfit for her birthday. I suggested she get something less expensive because she is already paying a fortune for the hormone blocker. My parents now can’t send me to the university of my choice, so I have to opt for community college. I worked like a horse to get straight A’s, but still didn’t qualify for a scholarship big enough to cover the cost of the university. Taking out a loan is out of the question, because my parents won’t co-sign, and the bank won’t give me one without it. I think my sister should sell her jewelry to pay for the drugs, and she and my brother-in-law should downgrade to a smaller home if they need the money. My mother says I’m being selfish. Am I? — Missing Out Dear Missing: This is your parents’ money. They can choose to give more to your sister (and her child), rather than pay for an expensive university education for you. We realize this isn’t fair, but it serves no purpose to build up resentment. You can get a perfectly good education at a community college for a fraction of the cost, and if you still want to attend a four-year university, you can look into transferring in two years, and research scholarships, grants and loans that may be available then. Your parents obviously believe your sister needs this money more than you do, which also means they feel
Sheinwold’s bridge
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You’ll discover the need for more one-on-one conversations, especially with someone who can impact your life. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation, but do not share this information with anyone. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Others continue to dominate. You will have your turn when the time is right. Tonight: Your turn to choose. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You might not look forward to carrying out all the tasks that lie ahead of you, but know that you will do an excellent job. Tonight: Put up your feet. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Your ingenuity once more will save the day and leave everyone smiling and wanting more. You could feel as if you need to make a change of sorts. Tonight: How about some good times? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH There is a chance that you will be in the midst of a different type of energy. You could find someone unusually demanding. Tonight: Settle in at home and relax. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH How you say what you think and the answers you give could be more important than you realize. You need to be gentle when giving your assessment. Tonight: Get together with friends. Jacqueline Bigar
Cryptoquip
Chess quiz
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.
WHITE MATES IN 2 Hint: Key is underpromotion. Solution: 1. exd7ch! (a double check) Kf7 2. d8=N mate! [adapted, Wang-Giri 13].
Today in history Today is Tuesday, July 30, the 211th day of 2013. There are 154 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On July 30, 1863, American automaker Henry Ford was born in Dearborn Township, Mich.
Hocus Focus
you are responsible and motivated and will do OK without their help. Please prove them right. Dear Annie: This is for “Puzzled in Gary, Ind.,” who wondered why her senior age and white hair were attracting unwanted flirtation from lesbians. I, too, have a full head of white hair and just turned 59. I also happen to be a lesbian, so I believe I have the authority to speak to her concern. I don’t believe it’s her white hair that is causing the unwelcome attention. It’s more about posture, physical carriage and style of clothing that projects a certain “gay-dar” (gay radar). She shouldn’t change her hair color over this, but perhaps a more feminine hairstyle and wardrobe would make a difference. But you’re right, Annie. Flirting is not a sign of endangerment. — Pomona, Calif. Dear Pomona: We appreciate the backup. Read on for more: From Florida: As I have aged, I also notice that white men don’t apparently find me sexy or relevant anymore. Thank heavens Hispanic and black men and lesbians still think I’m as cute as a button. I’d forget how to flirt if it weren’t for them. I’m strictly straight and happily married, but still find it a tremendous compliment when someone chats me up a bit. Santa Cruz: Speaking as a whitehaired lesbian with all the “inside” knowledge available, I can only wish the rumors were true. Maybe she could give me some pointers. California: As a straight, older widow, I am confused by this, as well. After I stopped wearing my wedding ring, I began wearing rings on other fingers and learned that this is a “lesbian symbol.” How would I know this? I don’t grill people about their sexuality and don’t enjoy having to explain mine, which invariably requires mentioning the loss of my dear husband. I’m beginning to wonder whether I need to wear a fake wedding ring.
Jumble
B-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, July 30, 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