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SWAIA stunned by chief’s departure
Victims of GM recall Majority of those killed as a result of General Motors’ delayed recall of its compact cars were young. PAGe A-2
COO posts resignation letter on Facebook but stays mum on decision to leave organization
Crash suit settled Victim’s son says dirt pile obstructed views, causing fatal accident in 2009. PAGe A-8
By Uriel J. Garcia
The New Mexican
Driver alleges force
John Torres-Nez’s resignation as chief operating officer of the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts,
Cab driver says officer tackled her during traffic stop. PAGe A-8
the group that organizes the annual Santa Fe Indian Market, caught many by surprise. Torres-Nez, who has been associated with SWAIA since John Torres-Nez 2007 and was its COO since October 2012, posted an open letter Monday afternoon on his Facebook profile saying that he has “chosen to leave an
Problems persist for N.M. exchange at enrollment deadline
Rep. Jeff to stay on ballot for primary
organization” he loves. “Due to the position, despite my objections, in which this organization has been placed, it is my fiduciary duty to resign my position as Chief Operating Officer,” the letter says. Torres-Nez said he couldn’t comment further on his decision and that he has been “advised not to [talk] at this point.” “I have [a] much longer version of that letter I’ve been prepping,” he said via Facebook. “But it’s getting
Surge in last-minute insurance sign-ups causes health site to crash; state’s target appears out of reach
Case challenging House Democrat’s nominating petitions tossed by judge By Milan Simonich
The New York Times
Renada Lucero, left, a financial counselor at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center, helps Renso Sandoval, and his wife, Monica Niess, sign up for health insurance under the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange on Saturday. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Patrick Malone
The New Mexican
T
he federal gateway to health insurance stumbled out of the starting gate in October and limped across the finish line Monday. On the last day to enroll in an insurance plan without facing a tax penalty and waiting until 2015 for coverage, healthcare.gov, the federal online marketplace that New Mexico relies on to enroll individuals in insurance, crashed for six hours Monday morning and went down again in the afternoon apparently because of the high volume of traffic. It was unpleasant déjà vu for administrators of the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange, who have blamed maladies in the federal website’s roll-out last fall for the state’s sluggish enrollment figures. As healthcare.gov wobbled through the fall, the New Mexico exchange holstered its marketing campaign until the site became more reliable. Because of that lost time and the resulting lag in enrollment here, the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange board favors keeping enrollment open throughout the year. That would require federal approval, and New Mexico exchange board member Aaron Ezekiel of the
Please see BALLOT, Page A-7
People wait in line outside Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center to sign up for health insurance on Saturday.
Office of the Superintendent of Insurance said Monday that constant conversations about an extended enrollment period are taking place between state and federal agencies. “We are making the case to the feds that we think New Mexico should have an extended open enrollment because we lost 75 days at the front end of our
Please see eXCHANGe, Page A-7
U.N. panel ties hunger problems to global warming The Associated Press
YOKOHAMA, Japan — Global warming makes feeding the world harder and more expensive, a United Nations scientific panel said. A warmer world will push food prices higher, trigger “hotspots of hunger” among the world’s poorest people, and put the crunch on Western delights like fine wine and robust
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Officials urge calm after APD protests take turn By Fernanda Santos
State Rep. Sandra Jeff withstood a challenge to her re-election candidacy Monday when a judge in Gallup dismissed the case on technical grounds. Conservation Voters New Mexico, which financed the lawsuit to remove Jeff from the ballot because it claims she filed insufficient nominating petitions, promptly announced that it would appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court. Meantime, a judge Sandra Jeff in Santa Fe disqualified legislative candidate Algin Mendez for failing to file enough valid signatures on his nominating petitions. Mendez, a Democrat from Española, said he would decide soon whether to appeal the ruling by District Judge Raymond Ortiz. Mendez’s ouster leaves state Rep. Carl Trujillo, D-Nambé, as the only candidate in House District 46 in Santa Fe County. Jeff, a Democrat who lists her address as Crownpoint, needed 78 signatures to make the ballot. She filed 91, but Conservation Voters alleges that more than half of them are invalid. In the lawsuit it is bankrolling, the organization says Jeff obtained signatures from Republicans and independents, people who do not live in her district, and even a dead man. The quality of Jeff’s nominating petitions was not considered by state District Judge Louis DePauli. Instead, he decided that the secretary of state did not notify Jeff of the ballot chal-
By Seth Borenstein
Please see SWAIA, Page A-7
Demonstrations prompt police chief to announce reforms for department
The New Mexican
Report: Climate change hurting food production
a look-over by my attorney before I send it to The New Mexican.” The news saddened many associated with SWAIA. “He’s a terrific man,” said a former SWAIA staffer. “He really understands the artists and the native perspective. He knows how to work with everyone.” A longtime board member who declined to discuss the resignation confirmed, “He was well liked by all of us.”
coffee, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded in a 32-volume report issued Monday. “We’re facing the specter of reduced yields in some of the key crops that feed humanity,” panel chairman Rajendra Pachauri said in press conference releasing the report. Even though heat and carbon dioxide are often considered good for plants, the overall effect of various aspects of man-made warming is that it will reduce food production compared to a world without global warming, the report said. The last time the panel reported
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on the effects of warming in 2007, it said it was too early to tell whether climate change would increase or decrease food production, and many skeptics talked of a greening world. But in the past several years the scientific literature has been overwhelming in showing that climate change hurts food production, said Chris Field of the Carnegie Institution of Science and lead author of the climate report. But this doesn’t mean in 50 years there will be less food grown. Thanks to the “green revolution” of improved agricultural techniques, crop pro-
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duction is growing about 10 percent per decade and climate change is likely to reduce yields by 1 percent a decade, so crop production will still go up, but not as fast, said David Lobell of Stanford University, one of the authors of the report’s chapter on food problems. Still, it is as if an anchor is weighing down the improvements to agriculture, Pachauri and Field said. Some places have seen crop yield increases drop from 2 percent a year to 1 percent or even plateau. And
ALBUQUERQUE — After demonstrations over a string of fatal shootings by the police became so heated over the weekend that officers in riot gear lobbed tear gas at an unruly crowd, Gov. Susana Martinez and Albuquerque city officials urged calm Monday and reassured a jittery public that investigations of the shootings were underway. “Albuquerque is going through a tough time, and they’ll figure it out through the investigation,” Martinez said at a news conference, referring to the killing last month of James Boyd, 38, a homeless man. “We want that to be thorough,” she said. “We want confidence in the investigation, but I just don’t want to see anyone harmed.” The city’s new police chief, Gorden Eden, commended officers for showing restraint, and said he is about to unveil reforms that include changes to the embattled department’s recruiting process. Hundreds have taken to the streets in protest here in recent days over the shootings of Boyd and other people who most likely had mental illnesses, episodes that have weakened the public’s confidence in the Albuquerque Police Department and
Please see PROTeSTS, Page A-7
Obituaries John Buchen, 89, Los Alamos, March 28 Antonio Elizardo Gonzales, 76, Santa Fe, March 28 Leo Ray Lovato, March 25 PAGe A-9
Today Mostly sunny. High 66, low 33. PAGe A-12
Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Guru of Chai Jacob Rajan’s one-man portrayal of modern India, 7:30 p.m., the Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St., $15-$35, 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org.
Please see HUNGeR, Page A-7
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BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
Three sections, 28 pages 165th year, No. 91 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
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MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000
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Senate delays cuts to Medicare doctors
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.9251 1.6645 .9046 .1610 .1842 1.3751 .1289 .009729 .076441 .8659 .0280 .7945 .0944 .000937 .1538 1.1276 .0328 .03078
1.0784 .5998 1.1047 6.2169 5.4192 .7259 7.7566 103.22 13.0536 1.1531 35.1351 1.2581 10.5284 1062.28 6.4714 .8840 30.44 32.43
1.0810 .6008 1.1055 6.2122 5.4295 .7272 7.7584 102.79 13.0820 1.1549 35.7731 1.2587 10.5886 1067.21 6.5015 .8868 30.47 32.49
KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.
Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds
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Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.7753 0.7631 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.0239 2.9849 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1291.75 1294.75 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 19.815 19.770 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2058.00 2043.50 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 777.50 774.10 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1418.50 1404.70
Undated family photos show Amber Marie Rose, left, Natasha Weigel and Amy Rademaker. All three were killed in deadly car crashes involving GM’s Cobalt during 2005-2006. The complaint tally for the top-selling small cars in the 2005-07 model years was: Corolla, 228; Cobalt, 164; Honda Civic, 60; Ford Focus, 25; and the Mazda 3, 19. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GM RECALL
Victims were young drivers By Tom Krisher
The Associated Press
DETROIT s the deaths are tallied from General Motors’ delayed recall of compact cars, one thing is becoming clear: Of those killed, the majority were young. In a way, this isn’t surprising. Low-priced cars like the Chevrolet Cobalt and Saturn Ion were marketed to young, first-time buyers and parents shopping for their kids. But price may not be the only reason for the disproportionate number of youthful deaths. The faulty ignition switches behind the recall can shut off the engine while the car is in motion. When that happens, powerassisted steering and power brakes are lost, and the air bags won’t inflate in a crash. In such a situation, inexperienced drivers are more likely to panic and be overwhelmed by the extra effort needed to control the car, safety experts say. GM has linked 13 deaths to the problem. Others have a higher total, with the majority of victims under age 25. Many also were women, who safety experts say are less likely to have the upper body strength to wrestle a stalled car safely to the side of the road. “With an entry-level car where you have a newly licensed driver, the freak-out will win the day,” said Robert Hilliard, a Texas personal injury lawyer who is suing GM in several cases. GM has admitted knowing for at least a decade that the switches were defective. Yet it didn’t start recalling 2.6 million Cobalts, Ions and other small cars worldwide until February. CEO Mary Barra has said GM’s safety processes were lacking, and she has bought in an outside attorney to review them. Through media reports and contacts on a Facebook page, Laura Christian, birth mother of Amber Marie Rose, who was killed in a 2005 Maryland wreck in which a Cobalt air bag didn’t inflate, has
A
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found crashes that claimed 29 lives. Of those, 15 were under age 25, and 18 were women. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, drivers ages 16 to 24 were involved in 23 percent of the 35,306 fatal crashes in the U.S. in 2012. Relatives of many who died will attend congressional hearings on the matter Tuesday and Wednesday, and many will wear T-Shirts with Amber’s picture. Barra will appear as a witness and again issue a public apology, according to her prepared testimony. Unlike drivers from previous generations, young people don’t know what it’s like to drive without power steering, safety experts say. Data suggest parents buy the small cars for their kids. For instance, 68 percent of people who now own Cobalts are 35 to 64 years old, according to the Edmunds.com automotive website. Many of those buyers were at an age when they had teenage children, said Karl Brauer, senior analyst at Kelley Blue Book. Plus, many parents had the car title put in their names to reduce insurance costs, he said. Edmunds also said most buyers had household incomes under $100,000. That made the Cobalt appealing, because in most years it sold for a little over $15,000, or $1,000 to $3,500 less than the two top-selling small cars, the Toyota Corolla and Honda Civic, according to Edmunds. Parents also complained to GM and the government about the cars on behalf of their children. In a June 2005 letter to Chevrolet customer service, later forwarded to federal safety regulators, a New Jersey mother said a 2005 Cobalt stalled three times while being driven by her daughter. She said the problem was obvious: “The problem is the ignition turn switch is poorly installed. Even with the slightest touch, the car will shut off while in motion.” Besides being affordable, the GM cars had four- or five-star ratings in most government crash test categories. GM’s marketing of the Ion and
Cobalt clearly was aimed at young people. Ion ads from the time posted on YouTube showed the car taking young passengers away from high school or childhood. Kelly Bard’s parents helped her buy a shiny black 2004 Ion when she was 16 and growing up in Wausau, Wis. “At the time, it really had high safety ratings,” she recalled. “It had good gas mileage, and it was what we could afford.” The Ion soon began stalling for no reason. Each time, the car became difficult to steer and the key had slipped out of the “run” position. “It went from being able to steer with two fingers to using all of my ability to pull off and keep away from the intersection and get out of oncoming traffic,” said Bard, now 26. Even after repeated trips to the dealership’s service department, the Ion kept stalling. Bard had a near-miss on a freeway entrance ramp, where a driver behind her was able to steer around the Ion. He made an obscene gesture as he passed, she remembered. Another trip to the dealer. Another supposed fix. Then, as she was making a left turn a safe distance in front of an oncoming bus, the engine stalled again, she said. “I thought I was going to get T-boned by the bus. I refused to drive the car again until I felt like it was safe,” she said. The dealer replaced the starter and alternator. At the same time, Bard stopped using a lanyard as her keychain. She got rid of the Ion and bought a Honda as soon as she graduated from college and got a job. GM has said the ignition can switch off if people have long, heavy keychains, sometimes if their knees brush against the keys. Bard’s lanyard had two keys and the remote control for the car’s doors. In 2005, GM notified dealers that the cars could stall because of the ignition switches. But GM didn’t recall the cars, theorizing that even in a stall, people could still steer and brake without the power systems.
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Yellen: Fed to improve employment CHICAGO — Janet Yellen, the Federal Reserve chairwoman, devoted more than an hour last week talking by telephone with three Chicago area residents struggling to find jobs. On Monday, she made their stories the centerpiece of the first public speech in her new job, delivering a strong statement about her concern over unemployment, her conviction that the Fed has the power to help, and her determination to do so. The speech offered a rebuttal to economists, including some Fed officials, who see evidence that the central bank is approaching the limits of its ability to improve labor market conditions. Yellen said that even now, almost five years after the official end of the Great Recession, it remains harder for Americans to find jobs than in the midst of a typical downturn. For those who are working, wages are rising more slowly than usual. The core of Yellen’s speech was devoted to a central issue confronting Fed officials as they seek to calibrate their efforts to stimulate the economy. Employment dropped sharply during the recession and has barely recovered. But Yellen defended the use of monetary stimulus, citing the “slack” in the economy or the portion of unemployment that can be fixed by stronger growth.
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Tuesday, April 1 BIENVENIDOS: At 11:45 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel, 100 Sandoval St., Bienvenidos, the volunteer division of the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce, will hold its monthly luncheon meeting. the topic for discussion will be the issues for the annual training in late April for the new members for the Plaza booth as well as resource information that will be made available for the booth. Call 989-1701 for more information. CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: At 6 p.m. on the first Tuesday of the month in the parish hall of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 1301 Osage Ave., the group welcomes all cancer survivors. The group offers speakers, discussions, information and prayer. Those who plan to attend are asked to call 983-5034, ext. O. ROSE SOCIETY: At 6:30 p.m. at the Kingston Residence of Santa Fe, 2400 Legacy Court, the Santa Fe Rose Society will meet. Katherine O’Brien will discuss “History of Roses.” For more information, call 988-4614.
NIGHTLIFE Tuesday, April 1 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Argentine Tango Milonga, 7:30 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Acoustic folk-rock singersongwriter Carter Sampson, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: JD Santo, soulful singer/songwriter from Philadelphia, 6-8 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCES: Weekly on Tuesdays, dance 8 p.m., lessons 7 p.m., 7-10 p.m., 1125 Cerrillos Road.
WASHINGTON — With just hours to spare, Congress stepped in to prevent doctors who treat Medicare patients from being hit with a 24 percent cut in their payments from the government. The Senate’s 64-35 vote sends a measure to delay the cuts for a year to President Barack Obama, who’s expected to quickly sign it. The $21 billion measure would stave off a 24 percent cut in Medicare reimbursements to doctors for a year and extend dozens of other expiring health care provisions such as higher payment rates for rural hospitals. The legislation is paid for by cuts to health care providers, but fully half of the cuts won’t kick in for 10 years. It’s the seventeenth temporary “patch” to a broken payment formula that dates to 1997.
Ebola death toll rises to 78 in Guinea GENEVA — Two cases of Ebola were confirmed in Liberia as the death toll from Guinea’s outbreak climbed to 78, prompting Guinean President Alpha Conde to call for calm. One of the confirmed cases in Liberia has died, while a second person who died with a suspected Ebola infection tested negative for the virus, the World Health Organization said in a statement. Both of the confirmed cases in Liberia were exposed to Ebola in Guinea, Gregory Hartl, a WHO spokesman, said on Twitter Monday. The outbreak is the worst in seven years, and the first in Guinea, which has 122 suspected and confirmed cases. The government has asked people not to eat monkeys, chimpanzees and bats and to avoid travel in the affected areas, while Senegal closed its border with Guinea. Guinea is taking steps to “fight this epidemic effectively,” Conde said. The Economic Community of West African States expressed “deep concern” over the outbreak and asked for international help in combating the “serious threat.”
Japan told to halt Antarctic whaling PARIS — The United Nations’ highest court Monday ordered Japan to halt its annual whaling hunt in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica, saying that its present program was not being carried out for scientific purposes, as Japan has claimed. In a 12-4 judgment, the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, found that Japan was in breach of its international obligations by catching and killing minke whales and issuing permits for hunting humpback and fin whales within the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary, established by the International Whaling Commission. New Mexican wire services
Lotteries LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Cathy Faber’s Swingin’ Country Band, 7:30-11 p.m., 100 E. San Francisco St. VADYM KHOLODEKO: At 7:30 p.m. at St. Francis Auditorium, 107 W. Palace Ave. the 2013 Van Cliburn Piano Competition winner performs. ZIA DINER: Weekly Santa Fe bluegrass jam, 6-8 p.m., 326 S. Guadalupe St.
VOLUNTEER DOG WALKERS WANTED: The Santa Fe animal shelter needs volunteer dog walkers for all shifts, but especially the Coffee & Canines morning shift from 7 to 9 a.m. For more information, send email to krodriguez@sfhumanesociety.org or call Katherine at 983-4309, ext. 128. NMCTR: The New Mexico Center for Therapeutic Riding needs volunteers to spend time around horses and special needs children. Call Ashley at 471-2000. FOOD FOR SANTA FE: Volunteers are needed to pack and distribute bags of groceries from 6 to 8 a.m. on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Visit ww.foodforsantafe. org or call 471-1187 or 603-6600. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. Call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. KITCHEN ANGELS: Drivers are needed to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www.kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Volunteers are needed to support the Cancer Resource Center at the Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center. Training is for the various shifts that are worked during
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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. business hours Monday through Friday. Call Geraldine Esquivel with the American Cancer Society at 463-0308. MANY MOTHERS: The local nonprofit that strengthens families through supportive services — offering free, in-home, friendly mentoring care to all new parents. Orientation will offer training. For more information, visit www. manymothers.org or call Pat 983-5984 for an interview. SANTA FE WOMEN’S ENSEMBLE: Always in need of ushers for concerts; email info@sfwe.org or call 954-4922.
uuu For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican. com.
NATION & WORLD
Senate report: Torture didn’t lead to bin Laden By Bradley Klapper
speak publicly about the confiThe Associated Press dential document. The most high-profile WASHINGTON — A Senate detainee linked to the bin investigation concludes water- Laden investigation was Khaboarding and other harsh inter- lid Sheikh Mohammed, the rogation methods provided accused 9/11 mastermind who no key evidence in the hunt was waterboarded 183 times. for Osama bin Laden, accordMohammed, intelligence offiing to congressional aides and cials have noted, confirmed outside experts familiar with a after his 2003 capture that he still-secret, 6,200-page report. knew an important al-Qaida The finding could deepen the courier with the nom de worst rift in years between guerre Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti. lawmakers and the CIA. The Senate report concludes The CIA disputes the consuch information wasn’t clusion and already is locked critical, according to the aides. with the Senate intelligence Mohammed only discussed committee in an acrimonious al-Kuwaiti months after being fight amid dueling charges waterboarded, while he was of snooping and competing under standard interrogation, criminal referrals to the Justice they said. And Mohammed Department. The public may neither acknowledged alsoon get the chance to decide, Kuwaiti’s significance nor prowith the congressional panel vided interrogators with the planning to vote Thursday courier’s real name. to demand a summary of its The debate over how invesreview be declassified. tigators put the pieces together From the moment of bin is significant because years Laden’s death almost three later, the courier led U.S. intelyears ago, former Bush ligence to the sleepy Pakistani administration figures and military town of Abbottabad. top CIA officials have cited There, in May 2011, Navy the evidence trail leading to SEALs killed bin Laden in a the al-Qaida mastermind’s secret mission. walled Pakistani compound as The Senate report rejected vindication of the “enhanced former CIA Director Michael interrogation techniques” they Hayden’s claim that evidence authorized after the Sept. 11, on the couriers began with 2001, attacks. interrogations at black sites But Democratic and some and Attorney General Michael Republican senators have Mukasey’s declaration that called that account misleading, intelligence leading to bin saying simulated drownings Laden began with Mohammed. known as waterboarding, sleep The facts, they said, show deprivation and other such that the CIA learned of the practices were cruel and inefcourier, his true name and fective. location “through means unreThe intelligence committee’s lated to the CIA detention and report, congressional aides interrogation program.” They and outside experts said, backs have cited a “wide variety of up that case after examining intelligence sources and meththe treatment of several highods.” level terror detainees and the Terror suspects who were information they provided waterboarded “provided no on bin Laden. The aides and new information about the people briefed on the report courier” and offered no indicademanded anonymity because tion of where bin Laden was they weren’t authorized to hiding, the senators said.
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More mudslide victims found Washington state seeks new aid By Lisa Baumann and Manuel Valdes The Associated Press
DARRINGTON, Wash. — Estimated financial losses from the deadly Washington mudslide that has killed at least 24 people have reached $10 million, Gov. Jay Inslee said Monday in a letter asking the federal government for a major disaster declaration. In seeking additional federal help following one of the deadliest landslides in U.S. history, Inslee said about 30 families need assistance with housing, along with personal and household goods. The estimated losses include nearly $7 million in structures and more than $3 million in their contents, Inslee’s letter said. The Snohomish County medical examiner’s office said Monday afternoon that it has received a total of 24 victims, and 17 of those have been positively identified. Previously, the official death toll was 21, with 15 victims identified. Authorities have said more than two dozen people remain missing following the March 22 slide that destroyed a rural mountainside community northeast of Seattle.
A weary searcher bows his head as he walks out of the west side of the mudslide site in Arlington, Wash., on Sunday. RICK WILKING/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Inslee also is seeking federal help with funeral expenses for up to 48 people, and mental health care programs for survivors, volunteers, community members and first responders. Monday’s request asks for access to disaster housing, disaster grants, disaster-related unemployment insurance, and crisis counseling programs for those in Snohomish County and for the Stillaguamish, SaukSuiattle and Tulalip Indian tribes.
Steve Harris, a division supervisor for the search effort, said Monday that search teams
have been learning more about the force of the slide, helping them better locate victims in a debris field that is 70 feet deep in places. “There’s a tremendous amount of force and energy behind this,” Harris said of the slide. Harris said search dogs are the primary tool for finding victims, and searchers are finding human remains four to six times per day. Sometimes crews only find partial remains, which makes the identification process harder. Meanwhile, members of the Seattle Seahawks football team and Seattle Sounders soccer team were scheduled to visit with community members Monday evening.
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NATION & WORLD
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Study: Weight-loss surgery curbs ‘diabesity’ By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — New research is boosting hopes that weight-loss surgery can put some patients’ diabetes into remission for years and perhaps in some cases, for good. Doctors on Monday gave longer results from a landmark study showing that stomachreducing operations are better than medications for treating “diabesity,” the deadly duo of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. Millions of Americans have this and can’t make enough insulin or use what they do make to process food. Many experts were skeptical that the benefits seen after a year would last. Now, three-year results show an even greater advantage for surgery. Blood-sugar levels were nor-
Russia says battalion pulled back from border of Ukraine
mal in 38 percent and 25 percent of two groups given surgery, but in only 5 percent of those treated with medications. The results are “quite remarkable” and could revolutionize care, said one independent expert, Dr. Robert Siegel, a cardiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. “No one dreamed, at least I didn’t,” that obesity surgery could have such broad effects long before it caused patients to lose weight, he said. Some patients were able to stop using insulin a few days after surgery. At three years, “more than 90 percent of the surgical patients required no insulin,” and nearly half had needed it at the start of the study, said its leader, Dr. Philip Schauer of the Cleveland Clinic. In contrast, insulin use rose in the medication group, from 52 percent at the start to 55 percent at three years.
TONY DEJAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The results were reported Monday at an American College of Cardiology conference in Washington. They also were published online by the New England Journal of Medicine. Doctors are reluctant to call surgery a possible cure because they can’t guarantee diabetes won’t come back. But some patients, like
people can drop enough pounds to make a difference. Bariatric surgery is mostly a last resort for very obese people who have failed to lose weight. It costs $15,000 to $25,000, and Medicare covers it for very obese people with diabetes. Gastric bypass is the most common type: Through “keyhole” surgery, doctors reduce the stomach to a small pouch and reconnect it to the small intestine. Another type is sleeve gastrectomy, in which the size of the stomach is reduced less drastically. Schauer’s study tested these two operations versus medication alone in 150 mildly obese people with severe diabetes. Their A1c levels — a key bloodsugar measure — were over 9 on average at the start. A healthy A1c is 6 or below and the study aimed for that, even though the American Diabetes Association sets an easier target of 7.
After three years, researchers had follow-up on 91 percent of the original 150 patients. The medication group’s A1c averaged 8.4; the surgery groups were at 6.7 and 7, with gastric bypass being a little better. The surgery groups also shed more pounds — 25 percent and 21 percent of their body weight versus 4 percent for the medication group. Some cholesterol and other heart risk factors also improved in the surgery groups, and they required fewer medicines for these than at the start. Doctors don’t know how surgery produces these benefits, but food makes the gut produce hormones to spur insulin, and trimming away part of it affects many hormones and metabolism. An obesity surgery equipment firm sponsored the study, and some of the researchers are paid consultants. The federal government also gave grant support.
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By Laura Mills and Vladimir Isachenkov
The Associated Press
SIMFEROPOL, Crimea — Russia said Monday it was pulling a battalion of several hundred troops away from the Ukrainian border but kept tens of thousands in place, prompting a worried response from the Kiev government about what the U.S. warned was still a “tremendous buildup.” Russia moved quickly to strengthen its economic hold on Crimea, with Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev arriving in the newly annexed peninsula with promises of funds for improved power supplies, water lines, education and pensions for the elderly. Russia’s takeover of the strategic Black Sea region, its troop buildup near Ukraine’s border and its attempts to compel constitutional changes in Ukraine have markedly raised tensions with the West and prompted fears that Moscow intends to invade other areas of its neighbor. However, Russian President Vladimir Putin told German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a phone call Monday that some troops were being withdrawn from the Ukraine border, Merkel’s office said. The withdrawal involved a battalion of about 500 troops, Russian news reports said. The U.S. reacted cautiously to the Russian troop movement, with Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel saying that “tens of thousands” of Russian forces still remained along the Ukrainian border, a situation he called “a tremendous buildup.” The new government in Ukraine said the action only increased its uneasiness about Russia’s intentions. “We have information that Russia is carrying out incomprehensible maneuvers on the border with Ukraine,” Ukrainian Foreign Ministry spokesman Yevgen Perebyinis said. “Troops in some places are moving backward, some of them are moving forward. Which is why, obviously, we are worried by these movements of armed forces. We have no clear explanation from the Russian side about the aim of these movements.” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry also discussed Ukraine by phone Monday, a day after holding talks in Paris, the Russian foreign ministry said. A senior U.S. official said Lavrov had promised Kerry that a division of Russian troops would be pulled back; a division generally consists of thousands of troops. “Now there have been reports of possible drawdowns of Russian military forces from the border. We haven’t seen that yet, but if they turn out to be accurate, that would be a good thing,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said. Concerns of a possible invasion of eastern Ukraine — home to many ethnic Russians — were stoked by the large numbers of troops Russia had along the Ukrainian border for what Moscow said were military exercises.
Before having weight-loss surgery, Heather Britton of Bay Village, Ohio, was taking drugs for diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. She takes none now.
Heather Britton, have passed the five-year mark when some experts consider cure or prolonged remission a possibility. Before the study, she was taking drugs for diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol; she takes none now. “It’s a miracle,” said Britton, a 55-year-old computer programmer from suburban Cleveland. “It saved my life. I have no doubt that I would have had serious complications from my diabetes” because the disease killed her mother and grandmothers at a young age, she said. About 26 million Americans have diabetes, and two-thirds of them are overweight or obese. Diabetes is a leading cause of heart disease, strokes, kidney failure, eye trouble and other problems. It’s treated with various drugs and insulin, and doctors urge weight loss and exercise, but few
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pring in Santa Fe means the beginning of many things, allergy season being the most notorious. But the warmer weather and lengthening daylight hours mean there are more opportunities to get outside and enjoy the tremendous terrain and spectacular vistas that come with a bike ride anywhere in the City Different. Luckily, SpinDoc of Santa Fe is a full-service bicycle shop that can help new or experienced converts to the world of cycling get the best from their equipment, accessories and training in a one-stop shop. Kirk and Chandler Rhinehart, owners of SpinDoc, are life-long endurance athletes, participating in events like Ironman triathlons, mountain bike racing, open water swimming and cross-country road bike tours. “We started SpinDoc to share the bike love and the lifelong joy of cycling,” said Kirk. “It’s good to talk up the environmental benefits of commuting by bike and using a bike as a primary fitness source, but in the end, it’s all about having fun on two wheels.” A big commitment to getting more women on bikes and enjoying the benefits of cycling is a centerpiece of Kirk and Chandler’s goals for the shop. “(Women) are an underserved part of the cycling world, but we’ve partnered with brands and groups in an effort to get women out and show them firsthand the joys of cycling,” said Kurt. SpinDoc carries the mountain bikes of Juliana, designed by one of mountain biking’s most successful
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riders of all time, Julie Furtado. “Juliana’s line is really the gold standard for bikes designed and fitted for women,” said Kirk. “We’re proud to carry their bikes, and excited to get women out on trails to enjoy mountain biking.” Both Kirk and Chandler cannot overemphasize the benefits of a good bike fit. “It’s natural for a first time rider or a cyclist returning to the sport after a long layoff to want a high-zoot carbon fiber road bike, but frequently it’s not the right bike for their riding goals and level of fitness,” explained Kurt. “Our goal is to get a customer a bike that fits their needs, a bike that is the right size and
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adjusted to fit a customer and, frankly, a bike that they love and want to ride all the time.” Kirk notes that as a customer, it’s important to sit down with Kirk or any member of SpinDoc’s staff and discuss their goals in purchasing a new bike. “Are they looking for fitness and rides on paved bike trails? Are they taking on the challenge of the Santa Fe Century for the first time? Do they want to try mountain biking and are already experienced cyclists? These are important questions to ask, because the right bike for each application is very different,” said Kirk SpinDoc is also home to an indoor cycling room with classes in Santa Fe. “Let’s face it: As wonderful as Santa Fe is in terms of climate and weather, there are times when it’s not a good idea to be outside riding in subfreezing temperatures,” said Kirk. A warm place inside to spin and establish basic fitness during the colder months with likeminded cyclists on professional-grade stationary bikes allows SpinDoc clients the benefits of building fitness without getting locked into a stagnant routine. “With trained and certified instructors, our classes are open to every skill level and are offered several times a week, with competitive class package deals,” said Kirk. “With big cycling-oriented events like the International Mountain Bike Association’s international conference a few years ago, and this year with the inaugural Outside Magazine Bike and Brew weekend in May, Santa Fe
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NATION & WORLD
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-5
Secret Service scandal thrusts spotlight on director Netherlands incident poses new test for first female chief of agency By David Nakamura
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — It should have been a triumphant occasion for Secret Service Director Julia Pierson as she flew aboard Air Force One to the Netherlands for an international summit last week. President Barack Obama had named her the first female boss in the agency’s 148-year-old history, and now, three days before her first anniversary on the job, Pierson was accompanying him on a weeklong tour of Europe and Saudi Arabia. But her high-flying moment was short-lived, with the week soon consumed by an unfolding scandal involving three of her agents. As Obama opened a series of international
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meetings, Pierson, 54, moved into crisis mode, calling lawmakers back in Washington to deliver the news: Three members of the president’s protective detail had been dismissed from the trip after one passed out drunk in a hallway of Obama’s
hotel. “She said this kind of behavior would not be tolerated,” Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del., said of his phone conversation with Pierson. “And she said the president was very disappointed with the behavior.” For an agency still trying to restore its reputation two years after a highly publicized sex scandal, the incident in the Netherlands brought fresh embarrassment and renewed public scrutiny. Some in Congress have cited the spectacle as further evidence that the Secret Service has failed to eliminate
a frat-boy culture marked by lax discipline and little accountability. The events of the past week have thrust Pierson, whose appointment by Obama in March was aimed at setting a new tone, into the spotlight after a year in which she sought to quietly implement reforms and restore morale in the 6,500-person agency. By the end of the week, Carper had invited Pierson, who had remained on the presidential trip, to Capitol Hill to meet with the members of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. The informal briefing will take place Tuesday afternoon, his office said. “I told my sons it’s OK to make mistakes if they learn from those,” said Carper, the chairman of the committee. “The rank and file and the leadership of the Secret Service has to learn from theirs.” The face-to-face with lawmakers will present a new test for Pierson, who spent three decades in the Secret Service before replacing longtime Direc-
tor Mark Sullivan, for whom she had served as chief of staff for five years. Sullivan retired last year — 10 months after a prostitution scandal involving a dozen Secret Service personnel on a presidential trip to Cartagena, Colombia. His departure left behind lingering questions about whether his agency had too often looked the other way over misbehavior and failed to enforce personal conduct rules. “Julia’s reputation within the Service is extraordinary,” Obama said after she was sworn in at the White House last spring. “Obviously, she’s breaking the mold in terms of directors.” Pierson, who has not spoken publicly about the events in the Netherlands, declined to comment for this report. She remains an opaque figure to the public. Her appointment did not require Senate confirmation, and she has not delivered any public speeches and has not testified before Congress. She dropped out of a scheduled appearance in Dallas in November to
mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, citing a work conflict, organizers said. Pierson joined the Secret Service in 1983 in the Miami field office, and her career got off to an inauspicious start: Her first paycheck was swiped by thieves who had stolen her ATM card and password. The early setback notwithstanding, she worked her way up through the operations, human resources and budget offices to become chief of staff, a position in which she oversaw the agency’s information technology modernization effort. Those who have met her say Pierson, who earned money in high school as a costumed character at Disney World in Orlando, comes off as charming and gracious. Olivier Knox, a reporter for Yahoo News, described her as “funny and affable” and said she remained patient during the filming of several takes of a brief welcome message on a recent video tour of a Secret Service museum in Washington.
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Secretary of state to visit Israel for Middle East talks Kerry to address Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, resolve prisoner dispute By Michael R. Gordon and Jodi Rudoren The New York Times
PARIS — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry flew to Tel Aviv on Monday to try to resolve a dispute over the release of Palestinian prisoners and keep the Middle East peace talks that Kerry started last summer on John Kerry track. It is the second time in a week that Kerry has interrupted European travel to rush to the region to confer on the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, which had been on the brink of breaking down. Kerry, who was in Paris to discuss Ukraine with his Russian counterpart, spoke by telephone Monday morning with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority. His envoy to the talks, Martin Indyk, has been holding marathon meetings with negotiators in Jerusalem and the West Bank for more than a week in an effort to resuscitate the stalemated talks and extend them. “I think it’d be inappropriate to get into any kind of judgments about what may or may not occur or happen because it’s really a question between the Palestinians and the Israelis, and what Prime Minister Netanyahu is prepared to do,” Kerry said before leaving Paris, according to Israeli news media reports. “He is working diligently, I know,” Kerry said of the Israeli leader. “I just literally talked to him 15 minutes ago. And he’s working at it.” Kerry plans to meet with Netanyahu on Monday night. After that, he will go to Ramallah to meet with Abbas. The U.S. team has been trying to resolve a standoff between Israel and the Palestinians over the promised release of a fourth batch of long-serving Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Israel agreed at the start of the talks to free a total of 104 such prisoners, in four rounds, in exchange for a promise that the Palestinians would not pursue membership in the International Criminal Court or 60-some other international agencies during the duration of the nine-month talks. But as the deadline on the nine-month negotiations approached without progress, Israel refused to release the fourth group unless the Palestinians agreed to extend the talks. Palestinians, in turn, said they would not consider an extension until the prisoners were released.
A-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
NATION & WORLD MALAYSIA FLIGHT 370
Ocean trash impedes search By Nick Perry
The Associated Press
A South Korean marine LVT-7 landing craft sails to shore through a smoke screen during the U.S.-South Korea joint landing exercises called Ssangyong, part of the Foal Eagle military exercises, on Monday in Pohang, South Korea. AHN YOUNG-JOON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
North, South Korea fire shells across sea border Military drills sparked incident; no one injured in exchange
With guns from both sides rumbling, residents of the five South Korean border islands, including hundreds of children, hurried into bomb shelters. South Korea suspended ferry By Choe Sang-Hun services to the islands and The New York Times ordered fishing boats operating near the border waters to SEOUL, South Korea — return to port. North Korea and South Korea “This is a premeditated fired hundreds of artillery provocation to test our will to shells across their disputed defend the maritime border, western sea border Monday, and if the North provokes again escalating military tensions a day after the North threatened using our response today as an to conduct more nuclear tests. excuse, we will act decisively,” Kim said. “We have increased South Korean officials said our vigilance along the western the shells from both sides frontier islands and boosted fell harmlessly into waters weapons’ readiness there.” from which naval and fishing Artillery exchanges in boats had stayed clear. But the the disputed waters are not exchange of fire marked the most serious episode along the unprecedented, but rising military tensions there indicated western sea border since an that after months of relative artillery duel there in 2010. calm, hostilities between the Earlier Monday, North two Koreas have begun ratchKorea had told the South that it would conduct live-fire mili- eting up again. They raised tary drills in seven zones along fears that the often-repeated cycle of peace overtures folthe maritime border, which lowed by military provocations hugs the southern coast was resuming on the Korean of North Korea. Then its Peninsula. artillery pieces and multiple“Pyongyang prefers to strike rocket launchers rolled out of when it sees Washington as shoreline tunnels and fired weak or distracted, beset by 500 shells and projectiles bigger problems,” said Lee between 12:15 and 3:30 p.m. Sung-yoon, a North Korea About 100 of them flew expert at the Fletcher School across the disputed sea of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts border and fell into South Korean-controlled waters near University, referring to the North’s capital. Baengnyeong Island, said Kim President Barack Obama “is Min-seok, the spokesman for seen as wavering on Russia and the South Korean Ministry Syria,” he said. “It would be a of National Defense. Baengnyeong, a South Korean marine good time to raise the stakes once more with a nuclear garrison, lies only 10 miles or long-range missile test, as from the southwestern tip of Pyongyang has intimated in North Korea. recent days.” In retaliation, South Korean Citing the joint military exermarines fired K-9 self-procises Washington and Seoul pelled artillery pieces, pounding North Korean waters north started in late February as a of the disputed sea border with justification, North Korea has test-fired a series of rockets 300 shells, Kim said.
and short- and midrange ballistic missiles in recent weeks. The tests prompted the U.N. Security Council to warn last week of new action against the country, which is already under heavy sanctions. On Sunday, Pyongyang threatened “a new form of nuclear test” and warned that its military would conduct drills aimed at improving its ability to attack mid- and long-range targets with “more diversified nuclear deterrence” and “with a variety of striking power.” The two parties in the Korean War never agreed on a western sea border when the three-year conflict ended in a cease-fire in 1953. South Korea tries to defend the so-called northern limit line, which was unilaterally declared by the United Nations. North Korea does not recognize it, claiming another demarcation line farther south. On Monday, an editorial in the Rodong Sinmun, the official organ of the ruling Workers’ Party in North Korea, urged the country not to succumb to “American nuclear blackmail” but to continue strengthening its nuclear arsenal. The daily published the editorial to mark the first anniversary of a 2013 party meeting in which North Korea adopted the “simultaneous” development of nuclear weapons and the economy as the country’s top policy goal. There was no sign of an imminent nuclear test from North Korea, but the South Korean military was operating an emergency response system to promptly handle North Korean provocations, the South Korean defense ministry said. North Korea has conducted three underground nuclear tests since 2006.
U.S., Israel discuss releasing spy yet on Pollard, said one official, who asked not to be identified The New York Times because the person was discussing private deliberations. WASHINGTON — The A decision to release Pollard Obama administration is would be in the context of a discussing the release of an broader agreement to extend American convicted of spying the talks between the Israelis for Israel more than a quarter of and Palestinians, officials said, a century ago as it struggles to and would require President avert a collapse in peace talks Barack Obama’s approval. between Israel and the PalestinBut time and politics have ians, U.S. officials said Monday. coalesced to make his release The Israeli government has more plausible this time. Intellong sought the release of the ligence officials are no longer spy, Jonathan J. Pollard, a former likely to object as fiercely to Navy intelligence analyst, who freeing Pollard, who is 59, said is serving a life sentence in a to be ailing, and eligible for North Carolina prison for pass- parole in November 2015. And ing classified documents to his his release could provide the Israeli handlers. But the U.S. Obama administration with a has steadfastly refused, in part way to coax additional concesbecause of the vehement oppo- sions from Israel as it pursues sition of the nation’s intelligence a broader peace accord, which agencies. Kerry and Obama have made a Now, however, freeing Polcenterpiece of their diplomacy. lard is again on the table, as Some analysts questioned Secretary of State John Kerry the wisdom of giving up one of arrived in Jerusalem on Monday the few leverage points the U.S. for urgent talks to try to resolve has when it is not clear it would a dispute over Israel’s release gain more than an extension in of Palestinian prisoners. That the talks, much less a full-blown dispute is the latest roadblock agreement. to high-stakes peace talks that Prime Minister Benjamin began last summer but appear Netanyahu of Israel has pushed to have made little progress and for Pollard’s release for many now face an April 29 deadline. years. Granting it now would be No decision has been made a political gift that could give him By Michael R. Gordon and Mark Landler
the cover to make tougher decisions in pursuit of a peace agreement later on. The closest Netanyahu came to winning Pollard’s release was in 1998, at a summit meeting with President Bill Clinton in Wye Mills, Md. Clinton seriously considered it until the CIA director at time, George J. Tenet, threatened to resign in protest. Clinton ultimately declined and still got the two sides to sign a modest agreement. A spokesman for the CIA declined Monday to comment on the case. Shawn Turner, the spokesman for the director of national intelligence, James R. Clapper, suggested that Clapper did not plan to insert himself into the Pollard debate. Raising Pollard’s case carries extra resonance because this round of talks is in danger of breaking down over whether Israel will release a fourth and final batch of Palestinian prisoners. The president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, has said that unless Israel releases the prisoners as promised, he will not consider any extension past the April target date for negotiating the outlines of a comprehensive treaty.
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Sometimes the object spotted in the water is a snarled fishing line. Or a buoy. Or something that might once have been the lid to an ice box. Not once — not yet at least — has it been a clue. Anticipation has repeatedly turned into frustration in the search for signs of Flight 370 as objects spotted from planes in a new search area west of Australia have turned out to be garbage. It’s a time-wasting distraction for air and sea crews searching for debris from the Malaysia Airlines flight that vanished March 8. It also points to wider problems in the world’s oceans. “The ocean is like a plastic soup, bulked up with the croutons of these larger items,” said Los Angeles captain Charles Moore, an environmental advocate credited with bringing attention to an ocean gyre between Hawaii and California known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, which by some accounts is about the size of Texas. The world’s oceans have four more of these flotsam-collecting vortexes, Moore said, and the searchers, in an area about 1,150 miles west of Perth, have stumbled onto the eastern edge of a gyre in the Indian Ocean. “It’s like a toilet bowl that swirls but doesn’t flush,” said Moore. The garbage patches are nothing like a typical city dump. In fact, most of the trash can’t even be seen: It’s composed of tiny bits of plastic bobbing just below the surface. The larger items also tend to be plastic and are often fishing-related, Moore said. Though, he added, he has come across light bulbs, a toilet seat, and, bobbing off the California coast, a refrigerator, complete with defrosted orange juice. Seattle oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer has been studying the phenomena of ocean debris for years. He said there are smaller collections of garbage within the gyres. “If you go into a house, you’ll find dust bunnies,” he said. “The ocean has a mass of dust bunnies, each moving about 10 miles a day.” Ebbesmeyer said he’s fascinated by what happens to the trash that spews from the hundreds of shipping containers lost overboard from cargo ships each year. He said there’s one that keeps belching out Lego pieces onto the beaches of Cornwall, England. Another spilled 2,000 computer monitors. Another released thousands of pairs of Nike sneakers. Sometimes, he said, the containers themselves can become hazards as they float around for months, buoyed by plastic objects inside or the air trapped behind watertight doors. Trash also gets into the ocean after being washed down rivers or swept up in tsunamis, Ebbesmeyer said. Scientists are particularly worried about small
An object floats in the southern Indian Ocean in this picture taken from a Royal New Zealand Air Force P-3K2 Orion aircraft searching for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 on Saturday. JASON REED/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
and seemingly ubiquitous pieces of plastic that can be from shopping bags, plastic water bottles, or other household items. Waves break the items up into smaller pieces. Denise Hardesty, a research scientist for Australian science agency CSIRO, said the studies she’s been involved with conservatively estimate there are between 5,000 and 7,000 small pieces of plastic per square kilometer in the waters around Australia. She said two-thirds of the seabirds she’s performed necropsies upon have ingested at least some plastic, and one particular bird had swallowed 175 pieces. Another bird, she said, had swallowed an entire glow stick longer than a finger. Such sticks are used by fishermen to attract fish underwater. “It takes 400 or 500 years for lots of types of plastics to completely break down,” Hardesty said. “It just goes into smaller and smaller bits. You even find plastics in plankton — that’s how small it gets.” Hardesty said while she finds plenty of plastic in the ocean, she doesn’t typically spot many larger objects. She said she does find trash like cans, bottles and candy wrappers floating near urban centers, but most of it tends to get washed ashore. American sailor James Burwick said he’s twice crossed the Indian Ocean from Africa to Australia. He said the sea was too wild to see much trash, but he did feel bumps against the bottom of his boat, and an old fishing net once got caught around his vessel. Wing Cmdr. Andy Scott of New Zealand’s defense force said the crew in a P-3 Orion scouring the ocean for Flight 370 on Saturday spotted about 70 objects in four hours. Three were deemed worthy of further investigation, he said, but none turned out to be from the missing plane. One was probably a fishing line, he said, another was the suspected ice box lid, and a third was some unidentified brown and orange material.
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Publishes Saturday, April 5, 2014
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Exchange: N.M. pushing for extension Continued from Page A-1 marketing campaign,” Ezekiel said. “It would have been irresponsible to put that marketing out then. Because of the problems with the federal website, we lost 21/2 months at the beginning, so we didn’t get a sixmonth enrollment period.” If an extension is granted, Ezekiel said he expects it could come quickly. “If we’re going to continue on for a period of time, I think the resolution has to come this week,” he said. Between breakdowns, visits to the federal website surged to 1.2 million by midday Monday. If the dash to enroll held true in New Mexico, and Ezekiel said he trusts it did, the state may have inched closer to its enrollment goals, but the targets the state set appear to be out of reach. A record 9,700 new visitors clicked on the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange website, www.bewellnm.com, during the 24-hour period that ended at 5 p.m. Monday. Initially, the state expected up to 80,000 people to enroll in taxpayer-subsidized plans through the exchange in 2014. Problems with the federal website forced New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange board to relax its enrollment expectations to between 40,000 and 50,000. But as of mid-March, the exchange had enrolled about 18,700, Ezekiel told the board at its most recent meeting. Final enrollment numbers for New Mexico for the first phase of the federal health care overhaul are expected to be released in about two weeks. New Mexico expects to end its reliance on the federal website and offer individual plans on its health insurance exchange beginning in the fall. Since January, the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange has hosted more than 200 outreach events, some casting wide nets and others targeting narrow populations, such as college students and people whose native languages are Spanish or Vietnamese. More than 50 people lined up at an enrollment event Saturday at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center in Santa Fe, where each application took
about an hour to process. In line were a cross section of people looking to dive into the insurance pool. Some hoped to qualify for Medicaid under the state’s expanded criteria. Others sought more comprehensive plans than the catastrophic insurance they previously carried, or wanted to be insured for the first time in their lives. “My only insurance has been to go to church,” said 35-yearold Jerome Perea of Santa Fe, explaining that the insurance offered by his employer is too expensive and he hoped to find an affordable alternative on the exchange. More than 100,000 residents of New Mexico have enrolled in its expanded Medicaid program since it took effect in October as part of the federal health care overhaul. Tax penalties for failing to be insured by the deadline of midnight Monday are $95 per adult and $47.50 per child in a household and up to a maximum of $285 for a family, or 1 percent of household income, whichever is higher, which will be assessed with tax filings in 2015. Penalties are scheduled to increase in subsequent years. Some groups will get a reprieve from the deadline and its penalties. They include members of federally recognized Native American tribes, members of certain religious sects and people facing cancellation of policies who can’t afford an alternative plan. People who experience lifechanging events, such as marriage, birth of a child or if an employer begins offering insurance coverage, also are eligible to enroll beyond the deadline. Those who have begun the process of enrolling but did not complete it by the deadline can call the federal insurance marketplace at 800-318-2596 by April 15 and request an extension of up to 60 days. Between noon Friday and 5 p.m. Monday, 8,000 people registered on the New Mexico exchange to get in line for this type of extension. New Mexican reporter Steve Terrell contributed to this report. Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.
SWAIA: Torres-Nez succeeded Bernstein Continued from Page A-1 Torres-Nez shared managerial duties with Charlene Porsild, who was hired last summer as chief development officer. Torres-Nez succeeded Bruce Bernstein, who had the title of executive director since 2007. SWAIA’s board decided not to renew Bernstein’s contract after the 2012 Indian Market, the annual exhibition and sale of native art, which draws thousands of people to Santa Fe every summer. Tailinh Agoyo, director of public relations, marketing and programing for the organization, said that she couldn’t comment on the resignation. “I can tell you that under his leadership, attendance and revenue were increased [and] partnerships were stronger, ” Agoyo said. “He was very dedicated to SWAIA and the artists. It’s a big change to see him go.” Torres-Nez had recently spoken out against Gov. Susana Martinez’s line-item vetoes of some cultural affairs programming money in the $6.2 billion budget passed by the Legislature this year. Among the items Martinez vetoed was $25,000 for Santa Fe Indian Market, which was allocated for advertising. “I would be surprised if any of the cultural event organizations feel like they are getting any support from this governor,” Torres-Nez told The New Mexican on March 20. “Her veto is consistent with a national agenda in the Republican Party. A splash of color does not make a group diverse, honoring true diverse opinions makes it diverse,” he added. Torres-Nez (Diné) is from Huerfano, a Navajo community
in northwestern New Mexico. He holds a doctorate in ethnic studies and master’s degrees in anthropology and biological sciences from the University of California, Riverside. Prior to joining SWAIA, TorresNez was the curator for the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture, project director with the Navajo Nation Archaeology Department and environmental project manager/NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act) coordinator for the U.S. Air Force. “I have grown great relationships with the city at all levels and Indian Market has run better because of that,” TorresNez’s letter says. “I am very proud of my work here and I am very saddened that my tenure must come to an end.” The Santa Fe Indian Market draws more than 1,100 Native artists from the U.S. and Canada, according to the organization’s website. Held for the 92nd time last August, it attracts 150,000 visitors to Santa Fe from all over the world, the website says. When Torres-Nez’s appointment was announced in October 2012, board member Stephen Wall noted, “You don’t bring a rank amateur into Indian Market. And John has been doing this for a number of years. He brings tremendous experience and knowledge, and his temperament. He gets things done in a way that doesn’t cause people any distress.” Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @ujohnnyg.
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High court puts N.M. photography case on hold The New Mexican
For the second week in a row, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to either grant or deny review in a free speech case involving a New Mexico photography business that refused to photograph the commitment ceremony of a lesbian couple. The case was one of many distributed for the conference of the justices on March 21 and Saturday. There was no mention of it on the orders
list released Monday, in which dozens of cases were denied certiorari, or review by the high court. “The fact that there was no order means they did something,” said Jordan Lorence of the Washington, D.C.-based Alliance Defending Freedom, a nonprofit representing Elane Photography of Albuquerque. “Normally everything is ‘deadlisted.’ And that hasn’t happened.” Although no one but the
justices know what goes on in the conference, Lorence said he believes the case “has the attention of at least one justice.” The fact that it was “reconferenced” from March 21 to Saturday, he said, “meant someone is interested.” There are a number of possible scenarios. For example, there may be three justices in favor of review and they are seeking to persuade a fourth to join them, the minimum needed to “grant cert,”
Lorence suggested. Or the justices could be considering a procedural flaw. However, there is always the possibility that the justices voted to deny review and one is in the process of writing a dissent. If the case is set for Friday conference, that would be an indication that Elane Photography v. Willock is still on the “discuss list.” The answer to that question should be known in the next 24-48 hours, Lorence said.
Hunger: Food prices likely to increase Continued from Page A-1 places like India, where 800 million people rely on rainfall not irrigation, the green revolution never improved crops much, Pachauri said. Although changes in rainfall hurt, mostly the problem will be too much heat, Lobell said. “No place is immune,” he said. Food prices are likely to go up somewhere in a wide range of 3 percent to 84 percent by 2050 just because of climate change, the report said.
“In a world where a billion people are already going hungry, this makes it harder for more people to feed their families,” said Tim Gore of Oxfam International, who wasn’t part of this study. While some crops may do slightly better, staples like wheat and corn will be hurt, the Nobel Prize-winning panel of scientists said. The report specifically mentions warming squeezing out crops in some of the richer coffee-growing areas in Central and South America, apple orchards in eastern Washington
and cherry orchards in California. And where you get your wine may be changing. Both quantity and quality of wine can be hurt in much of Europe, the United States and Australia, but Portugal and British Columbia in Canada may become better places for wine, the report said. It’s not just crops on land. A warmer and more acidic ocean is changing where fish live, making them harder to catch, and making it harder to feed people who rely on fish, Pachauri said.
Ballot: Jeff at odds with party this year Continued from Page A-1 lenge in timely fashion, a member of the judge’s staff said in a phone interview. Calls seeking comment from Jeff and the secretary of state’s election supervisor were not returned Monday evening. Jeff faces two challengers in the Democratic primary election in House District 5, which includes parts of McKinley and San Juan counties. Her opponents are Charles Long and Doreen W. Johnson. Long ran against Jeff in the Democratic primary two years ago. The late House Speaker Ben Luján, no fan of Jeff’s, donated $1,500 to Long’s unsuccessful campaign. Jeff this year was at odds with her party on two high-profile initiatives. She opposed the Democrats’ budget bill in the House and later walked out of the chamber so she would not have to vote on a bill to raise the statewide minimum wage. Vice President Joe Biden had called Jeff to ask her to back an increase in the minimum wage. She initially denied speaking with Biden, but admitted a day later that they had talked.
The bill for a higher minimum wage failed. Jeff’s vote, as it turned out, would not have changed the outcome. In the Santa Fe case, Mendez was knocked off the ballot Monday after a five-hour hearing. Ruling from the bench, Judge Ortiz invalidated 100 of the 183 signatures that Mendez submitted. Mendez needed 104 signatures to make the ballot. The judge threw out signatures for many reasons. Some who signed Mendez’s petitions did not live in his district. Others were not registered Democrats. The names of still others did not match addresses listed on nominating petitions. A 33-year-old who has participated in amateur cage fights, Mendez said he found that trying to break into politics was tougher than mixed martial arts. Mendez made news earlier this year while working on the security detail at the state Capitol. State Rep. Debbie Rodella obtained a restraining order against him, saying she felt intimidated by Mendez and did not want him near her. He said he quit the Capitol security force because a court fight would have lasted longer than the 30-day legislative session.
Rodella’s husband, Tommy Rodella, is sheriff of Rio Arriba County and Mendez once was employed by Rodella’s agency. Mendez resigned from the sheriff’s office while under investigation by Tommy Rodella. Rep. Rodella said Mendez gave her mean looks early in the legislative session. Mendez is a former Marine and who served in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. He said he did nothing against Rep. Rodella. The lawsuit challenging Mendez’s nominating petitions was brought by a supporter of Rep. Trujillo. Trujillo himself was involved in the case. He obtained voter lists from the Santa Fe County clerk that then were compared to the petition signatures. Mendez, following his lawyer’s advice, said he wanted to take a little time to consider whether he will appeal his removal from the ballot to the state Supreme Court. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at santafenewmexican.com.
Protests: 23 civilians fatally shot since ’10 Continued from Page A-1 underlined the challenges faced by police officers when dealing with people with mental illness. Since 2010, 23 civilians have been fatally shot by the police and 14 others have been wounded, a series of events that has prompted a broad federal investigation into the department’s use of force. The victims have been of various backgrounds. The first, Kenneth Ellis III, 25, was an Iraq war veteran struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder, shot while holding a gun to his head in January 2010 at a gas station parking lot, where he had been pulled over by the police over suspicions of driving a stolen vehicle. One of the most recent, Boyd, was killed after pulling out a pair of knives during a lengthy argument with the police over his illegal camping on a mountainside. A video of Boyd’s shooting, captured by an officer’s helmet camera and released by the Albuquerque police, fueled the latest protests, most dramatically a march Sunday that devolved from a peaceful demonstration into fiery street confrontations after protesters blocked Interstate 25. Officers in riot gear released tear gas at people gathered by The University of New Mexico campus, some of whom wore the stylized face mask that has become the symbol of the computer hacking collective Anonymous. The collective claimed responsibility for a cyberattack that disabled the Albuquerque police website Sunday night. In an interview Monday, Mayor Richard Berry said, “I
Members of the Albuquerque Police Department Mounted Unit reinforce a police line during a protest in Albuquerque on Sunday. After demonstrations over a string of fatal shootings by the police got so heated over the weekend that officers in riot gear lobbed tear gas at an unruly crowd, officials urged calm on Monday and reassuring the public that investigations were under way. MARK HOLM/THE NEW YORK TIMES
saw the department act with professionalism and restraint throughout the day.” The shootings — an unusually high number for a department serving a city the size of Albuquerque — have raised questions about whether inadequate training may have played a role, Patsy Romero, president of the National Alliance on Mental Illness in New Mexico, said in an interview. The killings also highlight the increasing use by the police of military-style weapons to fight street crime, which some experts have argued are fundamentally changing the nature of urban police work. In Boyd’s shooting, on March 16, officers tossed a flash grenade, discharged a stun gun and fired six shots from an assault rifle at him, apparently as he turned away. In a news conference Monday, police Chief Eden, who
took over the post in February, said he continued to have faith in his officers but announced that the department was nonetheless reviewing how it recruited and trained them. One of the officers who fired at Boyd, Keith Sandy, left his last job as a state trooper under a cloud, having been accused of working a second job while on the clock. Eden said a “new recruiting philosophy” will be announced by early next week. An independent review of the department’s shootings nearly two years ago cited issues with officers being unable to de-escalate situations. It called for better screening to find candidates with problem-solving skills. Eden described the demonstration Sunday as a peaceful protest that turned into “lawless acts by a very angry mob.”
Officers used tear gas twice that night — outside The University of New Mexico campus and near the interstate — seeking to disperse the crowd after they spotted a man brandishing an AK-47, Eden said. Several times, he defended his officers’ response, saying they showed “remarkable restraint” and adding, “They were spit on, rocks were thrown.” There was only one minor injury, an officer who hurt his knee, Eden said. Four protesters were arrested during the 12-hour demonstration. The FBI’s review of Boyd’s shooting is the first known criminal investigation of the Albuquerque Police Department by federal authorities, but it follows a civil use-of-force inquiry initiated by the Justice Department in 2012. State Attorney General Gary King also is investigating Boyd’s shooting, as well as the fatal shooting of Alfred Redwine, whom the police shot after he opened fire on them outside a housing complex last week. “They shoot first and ask questions later,” Christian St. John, 42, a salesman at a furniture store, said as he walked along the southeastern edge of downtown, echoing an overwhelming sentiment in this city, which is that the police are not to be trusted. The city dispatched workers Monday morning to clean up graffiti sprayed during the protest, including on the walls of a police substation on the university campus. As they did so, cracked eggs glistened in the midmorning sun by the substation’s door. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
LOCAL NEWS Cab driver alleges excessive police force at traffic stop Bourgeois says she was tackled, given black eye after being pulled over for stopping in buffer zone By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican
D
awn Bourgeois knows there is an element of danger to her job. As a female cab driver who works late-night weekend shifts, often transporting people who are intoxicated, she sometimes wonders if she’ll pick up a “sketchy” fare who might try to harm her. In the early hours of Sunday morning, Bourgeois, 40, was hurt while on duty. But, she said, it was a police officer, not a fare, who tackled her to the ground, twisting her arm behind her back and shoving her face into the cement, giving her a black eye in the process. Bourgeois said she was heading toward the Plaza on Cerrillos Road at about 12:30 a.m. when she was pulled over at the intersection of Cerrillos Road and Saint Francis Drive for having stopped at the light in a stop box — a railroad crossing buffer zone usually marked with a double XX and a sign that tells motorists not to stop there. Bourgeois said the officer asked for her license, insurance and registration. She gave him her license before searching in the glove box for the other documents. When she couldn’t immediately couldn’t find them, she called the dispatcher at Capital City Cab to ask him where they were. “He put me on hold,” Bourgeois said. “And the officer started threatening to tow the car and was demanding that I give him the keys. So I gave him the keys and he went to his car.” Then, Bourgeois said, she got out of her car, “hopefully to talk to him, and when I got out of the car, he charged toward me and tackled me. He ran toward me, and I ended up on the ground. I had my face pretty much planted into the cement, and he had my wrist in such a manner that I felt like he was going to break my wrist.” Bourgeois said she still held her phone with the dispatcher on the line when the officer came at her, and she started screaming, hoping dispatcher would come back on the line and hear her, “so he could help.” “I was terrified,” she said. “Then I was handcuffed, and I couldn’t breathe. Either there was too much weight on me or I was having a panic attack, and I was telling them [the other officers who had arrived on scene], ‘I can’t breathe. I can’t breathe.’ And then I was lifted up and I was put into the [police] car, and I told them, I said, ‘That police officer attacked me! He attacked me!’ I was screaming, ‘That was really traumatizing!’ ” Bourgeois, who has a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology, has worked in various aspects of the service industry most of her
Capital City Cab driver Dawn Bourgeois collects the money owed to her at the Santa Fe County jail after she was stopped and arrested early Sunday morning. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
life and has been a cab driver for the past five years. She considers herself “very levelheaded and reasonable.” She said she was cooperating with the officer, but his response was “entirely too excessive.” Santa Fe police Officer Jose Gutierrez, though, tells a slightly different story in his written report. According to him, Bourgeois “appeared to be angry because she was being pulled over,” and after being advised about the reason for the stop, said, “There was no train, and it wasn’t a big deal.” When he first asked for her keys, the officer wrote, Bourgeois refused, then “pulled them of the ignition in an angry manner.” After ordering the cab driver to stay in her car, Gutierrez said in his report, he headed back to his own vehicle when he saw her get out her car, closing her door in “an angry manner” and saying something he couldn’t make out. He says he told her that if she didn’t follow his directions, he would detain her. “Ms. Bourgeois was still on the phone when I approached her and reached for her right arm. Ms. Bourgeois pulled away in a very aggressive manner and resisted my attempts to restrain her. I was able to get leverage on Bourgeois says she was roughed up by a Ms. Bourgeois’ right arm and I conducted an police officer early Sunday morning at the end of her shift after being pulled over for arm bar take down.” stopping in the box that buffers the rail-
Please see cAB, Page A-9 road tracks.
Settlement reached in 2009 fatal crash on Old Pecos Trail Victim’s sons say dirt pile obstructed views, caused accident By Daniel J. Chacón
The New Mexican
A lawsuit alleging that a large pile of dirt from a construction project obstructed motorists’ views on Old Pecos Trail and caused a crash that killed a 76-year-old Santa Fe woman in 2009 has been settled for $400,000. The lawsuit, filed by Andrew and Michael Wilkes two years after the death of their mother, Dorian Wilkes, named Blueline Construction Inc., the state of New Mexico, the city of Santa Fe and the county of Santa Fe as defendants. Under the settlement, Blueline paid $300,000, the city paid $60,000, and the state Department of Transportation paid $40,000. A judge approved the county’s request for a dismissal, county spokeswoman Kristine Mihelcic said Monday. The settlement, reached in November after mediation, was discussed by Santa Fe city officials in a closed legal session last week and obtained by The New Mexican under an open-
records request. As part of the settlement, Blueline also had to write Andrew and Michael Wilkes a letter of condolence signed by Brian McClintock and Bryan Ruggles, principals of the construction company. Neither McClintock nor Ruggles returned a call seeking comment. According to the lawsuit, Blueline was doing a utility construction project along the east side of Old Pecos Trail and had excavated soil and created a large pile of dirt abutting the road near the Quail Run housing development. The pile of dirt obstructed motorists’ views of northbound traffic on Old Pecos Trail approaching from their left, the lawsuit states. On Sept. 18, 2009, Dorian Wilkes attempted to drive out of the housing development by turning left onto southbound Old Pecos Trail. “As Ms. Wilkes attempted to make her left turn and was crossing the northbound lanes of Old Pecos Trail, her vehicle was struck on the driver’s side by another motorist traveling north on Old Pecos,” the lawsuit states. “Ms. Wilkes died from her injuries in the collision.” The lawsuit claimed Blue-
line was negligent for creating “an unreasonably dangerous condition” and failing to warn motorists about it, among other claims. The lawsuit also claimed that the city of Santa Fe and the state of New Mexico had a “maintenance responsibility” that included making sure there were no “unsafe obstructions to the view of motorists traveling in that area.” The two government agencies “negligently maintained the intersection by allowing an unsafe visual obstruction to exist there, of which it knew or should have known,” the lawsuit states. Dorian Wilkes, who was born in Massachusetts, moved to Santa Fe from Branford, Conn., where she spent her career as an educator, according to an obituary. Dorian Wilkes “was a devoted community member” who was past president of the Santa Fe Women’s Health Services and a member of Renesan, Creativity for Peace and the Council on International Relations. “Dorian was an inveterate traveler, an avid follower of the news, fiercely liberal in her outlook, a feminist, and forever a student of film and international affairs,” the obituary states.
Trustees vote to oust electric co-op leaders Chairman, manager call 3 board members’ acts a ‘hostile takeover’ By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
Three trustees of the Mora-San Miguel Electric Cooperative board, which serves a portion of Santa Fe County, voted to fire the utility’s manager and to remove the board president. Board chairman Diego Quintana and Mora-San Miguel Electric Cooperative manager Alex C. Romero called the actions on Thursday illegal and “a hostile takeover.” The utility serves close to 11,000 customers spread across three counties, including about 1,000 in eastern Santa Fe County. It is one of 16 rural electric cooperatives in New Mexico, which provides power to small communities around the state. Rural electric cooperatives are owned by their member customers. Quintana and trustee James Ortiz say their fellow board members Robert M. Quintana, Dan Romero and Virginia Mondragon voted to remove Alex Romero from his position as chief executive officer and general manager. The board’s attorney Nancy R. Long wasn’t at the meeting, according to the trustees. Romero earned $120,000 a year, according to his employment contract. Robert Quintana said he needed to consult with Long before responding to questions. Dan Romero and Mondragon did not respond to messages requesting comment. Diego Quintana (no relation to Robert Quintana) and Ortiz voted against firing the manager. They said a vote to remove the manager wasn’t on the agenda and would have required a two-thirds vote, or four trustees, under the by-laws to be valid. “Diego and I think he’s done a helluva a good job,” Ortiz said. “We made TIER. He’s trying to save money. They don’t seem to agree.” The Timed Income Expense Ratio is a financial rating given to electric cooperatives by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Utility Services, which makes loans to rural cooperatives. Diego Quintana from Pecos and Ortiz of Villanueva said the other trustees ignored them and told Alex Romero he had to leave immediately. “They told me they were firing me for cause but didn’t tell me the cause,” Romero said. Under his contract, Romero is supposed to be given 15 days written notice if he is going to be terminated with cause and 30 days to appeal his firing. The board is supposed to provide the reason he is being fired. If he is terminated with no cause, the board would have to pay him at least $30,000 under the contract. Romero, an electrical engineer, was chief operating officer of Kit Carson Electric Cooperative before joining Mora-San Miguel Electric in 2011. He was recruited to the position by Robert Quintana, who was then president of the cooperative’s board of trustees. Ortiz said one of the board members who voted to oust Romero as manager told him Romero had to leave the electric cooperative vehicle he is authorized to use and find his own way to get home, even though he didn’t have another vehicle at the office. After the board fired Romero, they tried to remove Diego Quintana as president. Quintana and Ortiz said they couldn’t do that without a two-thirds vote according to the by-laws. “It got pretty nasty. It was like a screaming match,” Ortiz said. “It was like a complete power shift.” Diego Quintana and Ortiz left the meeting. Ortiz, Diego Quintana and Alex Romero said they think there are two main issues driving dissension.
Please see co-oP, Page A-9
Professor named director of School for Advanced Research well known as it should be,” Brown said. “There may have been a time when people The School for Advanced Research hired were happy with that — the Michael Brown, a professor of anthropology need for quiet and tranquiland Latin American studies at Williams Colity for scholarship —but lege in Williamstown, Mass., as its new direcnow we’re in a time when tor. you have to be heard in the Brown first visited the school and Santa Fe world, and we want to make Michael as a resident scholar in the late 1980s while the importance of our work Brown working on a book about a failed Indian uprisheard in the Santa Fe coming in Peru in the 1960s. munity.” The school, founded in 1907 in Santa Fe as He said he wants to work with staff to the School of American Archaeology, supexpand opportunities for locals to explore the ports the study and communication of human campus and take part in lecture series and cultures around the world with a focus on the field trips. He also wants to expand the resianthropology and archeology of the American dent scholar program and work on fundraisSouthwest. Former president James Brooks ing efforts for the school. resigned last June, and David Stuart, an author Brown said the Indiana Jones image of a and professor of anthropology and archaeolscientific explorer studying dusty reference ogy at The University of New Mexico, has books for data and also living dangerously served as interim president. Brown will take along remote jungle riverbanks is somewhat over in mid-June. true. He still recalls working in the Peruvian Glen Davidson, chairman of the board of Amazon, living in a palm-sided house with directors of the school, said by phone Monday native peoples and eating “whatever was that the school had 36 qualified applicants for being served because I didn’t have a choice.” the presidency but chose Brown because “he Devouring monkeys, poly-wogs and large is not just a top-notch scholar, but someone rodents was one thing, he said, “But eating live with administrative experience and expertise grubs — big grubs that were two inches long in fundraising.” with crunchy heads and often still wiggling — The school operates on an annual budget of well, I did draw the cultural line at that.” about $3.4 million, Davidson said. Brown has a Brown’s new book, Upriver: The Turbulent five year contract at $210,000 per year. Life and Times of an Amazonian People, will Though the school is known nationally and be published by Harvard University Press this internationally for its research and publicaautumn. His wife, Sylvia, is a professional architions, both Davidson and Brown acknowlvist, and they have one child, Emily, who is 14. edged that many Santa Feans may not be aware of its work. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@ “We worry about the fact that it is not as sfnewmexican.com.
By Robert Nott The New Mexican
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
LOCAL & REGION
In brief
4 more workers exposed at plant
CARLSBAD — The Department of Energy says tests show four more workers were contaminated with low levels of radiation during a leak at federal government’s underground nuclear waste dump. Officials also said Monday that they’re planning to get a crew underground Tuesday for the first time since the Valentine’s Day accident at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in southeastern New Mexico. The DOE says a total of 21 workers received low doses of radiation, all well below levels deemed unsafe. On Tuesday, the DOE said it
plans to send a team of team of eight experts into the halfmile deep mine to begin setting up bases from which they can start investigating what caused the leak.
Governor expects major wildfires ALBUQUERQUE — Gov. Susana Martinez warned New Mexicans on Monday that the state is entering what could be another season of destructive wildfires. “Historic drought conditions heighten the risk of what already has the potential to be another active and dangerous wildfire season,” the governor said. Martinez made the remarks as she and officials from various agencies gathered at the Rio Grande Nature Center
State Park to kick off Wildfire Awareness Week. So far this year, nearly 100 fires have burned close to 6,000 acres of state and private land, officials said. The 2013 fire season was brief but very active. Wildfires burned more than 190,000 acres on public and private lands and forced the evacuation of hundreds of residents. The fiscal year 2015 state budget that Governor Martinez recently signed includes several initiatives to better prepare for wildfire season, including funding to make permanent a program that hires and trains military veterans as wildland firefighters and nearly $10 million in funding for projects such as watershed restoration and protection and forest thinning near urban areas. The Associated Press
Cab: Incident is being reviewed told not to is “not a crime,” she said, “but it can make an officer Gutierrez reported that he very apprehensive.” and Bourgeois both ended up Westervelt said “disobeyon the ground, where she con- ing lawful commands” can tinued to struggle and “yell for also be considered hinderhelp,” refusing to put her hands ing an investigation. “In this behind her back despite his case,” Westervelt wrote, “the repeated requests. Backup offi- individual disobeyed multiple cers helped Gutierrez cuff her, commands, including many to according to his report. return to the vehicle. … This “When Ms. Bourgeois puts both the officer’s and indiwas taken down, she struck vidual’s safety at risk.” her head on the asphalt,” GutiIf someone does need to errez wrote in his report, so get out of their car, to get she was taken to Christus something from the trunk for St. Vincent Regional Medical example, “simply asking is Center, where her injuries were the best policy,” according to checked before she was booked Westervelt. “Officers are likely at the county jail. to comply with the request. Santa Fe Police DepartRespect from both parties, ment spokeswoman Celina police and driver will go a long Westervelt said via email Mon- way.” day that the incident was being Bourgeois said she’s sadreviewed. dened and disturbed by the “We do so to ensure our offi- incident. cers used the utmost respect “I’m a cab driver, for crying and diligence when impleout loud, being pulled over on a menting techniques from the main highway,” she said. “How lowest level use of force to the are they treating others who highest,” Westervelt wrote. “It’s aren’t on duty working? … To a way to monitor ourselves.” have this happen from an offiWestervelt said motorcer that is supposed to protect ists are asked to stay in their and serve, it’s like, wait a secvehicles during traffic stops “as ond, what is going on? You’re courtesy to the officer and the supposed to be protecting us.” individual” and to ensure that Bourgeois’ boss, Capital City motorists aren’t hit by traffic. Cab owner Matt Knowles, said Exiting one’s vehicle after being Monday that when he went to
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pick up his impounded taxi, he found the insurance and registration cards in the glove box. Bourgeois probably just didn’t see them because she was “flustered,” he said. Knowles said his drivers are directed to follow all traffic rules, but he thinks the officer could have handled the situation differently. “Obviously, police officers have the right to pull over and ticket a driver for any observed infraction, however minor,” Knowles said via email Monday. “But if police officers are truly protectors of peace in our community, then I believe that they should be skilled at deescalating situations. When a traffic stop for ‘improper standing’ results in a woman being physically thrown to the pavement, given a black eye and hauled off to jail, then I can’t help but wonder if the officer involved didn’t miss some opportunities to de-escalate that particular situation.” Westervelt said she wasn’t aware of any prior complaints of brutality having been lodged against Gutierrez — whom she said is a transfer from the Mora County Sheriff’s Office — but said she didn’t know for sure without doing more research.
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u A battery and a car radio were stolen from a vehicle parked in the 6600 block of Jaguar Drive between 1 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. Monday. u About $10 in change was stolen from a home in the 400 block of Aggie Road between 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Saturday. u City officers arrested Cameron Damschroeder, 22, of Santa Fe on charges of distribution of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia in the 3300 block of Cerrillos Road at about 8:45 Sunday. He was also wanted on a failure to pay fines warrant. u A Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center employee reported that she responded to someone who broke into the Cancer Center, 490 W. Zia Road, between 10 a.m. Friday and 9 a.m. Saturday. Some money was stolen. u City officers arrested a juvenile male Sunday in the 4500 block of Camino Verde on charges of false imprisonment and battery and assault against a household member. He was taken to the juvenile detention center. u A man reported Saturday that someone used his name during a traffic stop in December 2013. u Someone broke into the Scher Center For Well Being, 1602 Fourth St., between Thursday night and Friday morning. An officer wrote that the suspect left items at the scene, which the officer said would be sent to the state’s crime lab. u Someone stole cash from Yarn and Coffee, 1836 Cerrillos Road, between Wednesday
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Co-op: Emergency meeting held East Pecos, San Jose, Tecolote, Romeroville and other villages. Ortiz said the other three Long’s opinion is opposite one trustees didn’t like a suggestion given to the board a year ago by by he and Quintana to send another attorney, Lorna M. Wigfewer board members to confer- gins, who said Romero could ences and save the cooperative run for a third consecutive term. thousands of dollars in reimLong told the trustees that Wigbursements for travel and hotel gins’ opinion was incomplete rooms. He said, for example, and includes language in the the upcoming state meeting rural cooperative’s by-laws “that will be held at Buffalo Thunder simply is not there.” in Pojoaque. He said trustees Ortiz said he’s hoping for a could drive home each day peaceful resolution to the probinstead of renting hotel rooms lems, which distract from the for three nights and charging it cooperative’s business. to the cooperative. “I would like for hopefully an In addition, trustee Dan injunction to be put in place and Romero wants to run for restop this nonsense that’s going election to a third term in June. on,” Ortiz said. “These guys can’t Long, the cooperative’s attorney, just fire the manager because they sent the board a memo in March don’t like him or for no reason.” saying the current by-laws limit The trustees called an emertrustees to two consecutive gency meeting at 4:30 p.m. terms. They must wait three Monday in Mora to select years before running again. an interim manager. Diego Romero represents District 4, Quintana and Ortiz said they which includes Rowe, part of wouldn’t attend because they
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“intoxicated and causing a disturbance.” The deputy wrote that Rocha continued to yell despite receiving orders for him to stop and go home, so he was arrested.
DWI arrests u County deputies arrested Matias Martinez, 29, of Alcalde on charges of aggravated drunken-driving, possession of drug paraphernalia and heroin after he was seen swerving on N.M. 599 sometime Sunday. Martinez refused a breath test, but a deputy wrote that the man did fail sobriety tests. Martinez was also wanted on a failure to appear warrant. u County deputies arrested Juan Carlos Garcia-Lopez, 28, of Los Lunas sometime Saturday on charges of aggravated drunken driving, lack of a license and negligent use of a firearm after a deputy reported seeing the man driving in a “reckless manner” on U.S. 84/285 near Tesuque. A breath test revealed that Garcia-Lopez had a breath alcohol content level of .16 and .15. The legal limit is .08.
Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use as the city renegotiates its contract with Redflex Traffic Systems.
Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166
still believe the vote to remove the manager was illegal. Audits in 2010 and 2011 found several problems with how the cooperative was managing its financial accounting. Most of those were being addressed by the end of 2011. But an audit for 2012 is not yet on the cooperative’s website. In addition, minutes of meetings held in January and February are not yet on the cooperative’s website. Mora-San Miguel also has been sued by a Pecos Canyon property owner who claims the cooperative is responsible for a downed power line that sparked the Tres Lagunas fire in 2013. Contact Staci Matlock at 505-986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @StaciMatlock. Disclosure: Matlock is a member of the Mora-San Miguel Electric Cooperative.
Funeral services and memorials JOHN BUCHEN John Buchen, 89, a resident of Los Alamos, passed away at home on Friday, March 28, 2014. John was born in Denver, CO on June 5, 1924 to Frank and Rose Guadanola Buchen. He was preceded in death by his son, Jerry Buchen; granddaughter, Sarah Buchen and sisters, Margaret and Annabelle. Mr. Buchen is survived by Barbara, his loving wife of 67 years; his children, Terry (Jim) Hoffman, Katy (Frank) Fuchs, Tony Buchen, Tina Buchen; daughter-in-law, Lynne Buchen; 5 grandchildren and 4 great-grandchildren. He served in the Navy at Wright Field and taught radar at Navy Pier. He received his degree in electrical engineering at Colorado University and was elected to Eta Kappa Nu. He worked for GE in Marblehead, Mass before coming to Los Alamos National Lab in 1949. He participated in Operation Ivy at Eniwetok Atoll in 1952. He then worked mostly at CMB7 and E division. After retirement in 1983 he consulted for NEST. He was named a Los Alamos Living Treasure in 2006. He lived his life with gratitude and always offered his time and talents to better his community. Among some of his volunteer activities were his children’s schools, East Park Pool, Jemez House, Sombrillo, and the Senior Condo. He also was active in the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church. He sang in the choir for 30 years, was chairman of the first Parish Council, and was a Eucharistic Minister. He enjoyed camping, travel, photography, everything electronic, and working with stained glass (He made several panels at IHM). A rosary will be recited on Thursday, April 3, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in Los Alamos with a memorial Mass to be celebrated immediately after at 11:00 a.m. Donations may be made to the Christian Concern Committee at IHM or to the Los Alamos Visiting Nurses. The family of John Buchen has entrusted their loved one to DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Española Valley. 505-662-2400 - www.devargasfuneral.com
LEO RAY LOVATO
and Thursday. u A business owner reported Saturday that someone broke into her shop, Env Pet Spa and Grooming, 228 St. Francis Drive B, and stole cash. u Police responded Sunday to a victim in the 1200 block of Lujan Street who lost $2,300 in a wire scam sometime Friday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Robert Romero, 30, of Santa Fe was arrested on a charge of battery and assault against a household member sometime Saturday near Caballo Viejo. The arresting deputy wrote that Romero spit on the victim and threatened to cut off the woman’s head while “making a hand motion.” The 30-year-old was located nearby and arrested the same day. u County deputies arrested Joseph Gauthier, 73, of Tesuque on a charge of assault against a peace officer sometime Sunday after deputies responded to a civil dispute on a home on Tesuque Village Road sometime Sunday. A deputy wrote that the 73-year-old became angry when deputies arrived and that he raised his hands in an “aggressive manner.” u A woman reported that someone broke into her home Sunday at the San Tierra Apartments, 3991 Camino Juliana, and stole her TV while she was there. A deputy wrote that the TV was found nearby and that they were able to identify a suspect and draft a warrant. u Christopher Rocha, 40, of Española was arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct sometime Sunday in the 18000 block of U.S. 84/285. Neighbors, a deputy wrote, had called in to complain that Rocha was
JULY 5, 1969 - MARCH 25, 2014 Leo passed away peacefully on March 25, 2014, surrounded by his family. He is preceded in death by his brothers, Jerry and Don Lovato. Leo was born and raised in Santa Fe and went to Santa Fe High. He was a proud father and grandpa who loved his girls more than anything. Leo was passionate about his rock n roll and was an avid bicyclist. He had a heart of gold and always showed unconditional love for his family and friends. Leo is survived by his daughters, Devonne Lovato-Roybal (Antonio) and Loryn Lovato; granddaughter, Rosalie Lopez; parents, Joe and Priscilla Lovato; siblings, Andy (Anhara), Joseph (Patricia), Patrick (LouAnn), Ted (Clarissa), Anna (David), Larry (Michelle), Carlos (Jennifer), Lisa (Andrew); nephews, Todd, Niko, Everette, Jerome, Dominic, Joe, Jared, Andrew, Steven, Gabriel, and Christopher; nieces, Juniper, Jessica, Cassandra, Arianna, Miranda, Savannah, Juliana, Analise, and Breeana; great-nieces, Serena, Santana, and Marialys. Services will be held on Wednesday, April 2, 2014 at San Isidro Church Center; Rosary is at 10 am and Burial Mass to follow after. ANTONIO ELIZARDO GONZALES "HOPPER" Antonio Elizardo "Hopper" Gonzales, 76, of Santa Fe peacefully passed away on Friday, March 28, 2014. He is survived by Isabel Gonzales, sons: Daniel Gonzales, Tommy (Marie) Gonzales, daughters: Lorraine (Chiefy) Gonzales, Sandra Gonzales, sister: Gloria Encinias, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and many nephews and nieces. He took pride in being his own man. He had a Trucking Business and was a Master Welder. He was a loving and caring person to many people. A visitation will be held on Tuesday, April 1, 2014 from 4-6 PM at Rivera Family Funeral Home Chapel. A Rosary will follow at 7 PM at Santa Maria de La Paz Catholic Church. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Wednesday, April 2, 2014 at 10:30 AM with burial to follow at Los Ojitos Frios Cemetery in Las Vegas, New Mexico. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations, 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505. Phone: (505) 989-7032. Fax: (505) 820-0435. santafefuneraloption.com
RICHARD GORMAN
The family of Richard Gorman would like to thank everyone for the many expressions of kindness, support and love shown to us during this period of bereavement. It has been a comforting blessing to each of us. The outpouring of love and respect for Richard expressed at the rosary and mass will always be cherished. We would especially like to thank Father Tri for his daily prayers and blessings; the New Mexico Cancer Center, especially Dr. Kathryn Chan who always had kind and uplifting words for Richard; PMS Hospice, especially Rachel Whitney, who watched over Richard with great comfort and patience and St. Anne’s Parish for the use of their facility. With warm gratitude, Shea Gorman Felecia, Chris & Ryan Virginia Gorman and family
PATRICIO VIGIL
HAPPY 21ST BIRTHDAY
Patricio, I love you I miss you I need your voice Because there is NO NOISE! Someday we will be together again. Thank you to all my family & friends for being there for me. I could not have made it without all of you. Love, your dad Mark Vigil
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OPINIONS E-XTRA
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
e-Voices Our Web readers speak out: Bag ban now enforced, but most shoppers won’t see fee for paper, March 26 People will start shopping in Albuquerque or “ Española instead of here where this ban exists. The
paper takes a lot more room and will take more room at the dump site. Also, the plastic bags had handy handles for easy carry of your goods. Try carrying a couple of these paper bags to your car filled with your goods. The new mayor should work on this situation with a better solution. Biodegradable plastic is the way to go.” C.O.
Better make sure the dispensers for dog waste “ bags in the parks are stocked, as we’ll no longer have grocery bags for picking up after our dogs.” T.J. Governor: Enforcing public records law unconstitutional, March 27 The media consider her a serious prospect for the “ GOP vice presidential nomination. This sort of thing
LOOKING IN: HANS KALIN MOEN
Prevention key to stopping child abuse
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hild abuse is a phrase that invokes sadness, disgust and anger in so many people. We are so often bombarded by stories of children killed or permanently injured by a parent or loved one. The emotional response that follows is immediate and strong and may even bring us to tears. Then life keeps going, our daily commitments push the thoughts of this tragedy away into the back of our minds. I am asking each and every one of you to think about this further. Something that has the power to cause such a response in us is something that should not be ignored. I am a parent and a medical student, nearing the completion of my degree. I have discovered in myself a passion for pediatrics. I have pursued this goal with great joy in knowing that I will be providing health care for children. Yet there has been a looming fear in the back of
my mind: “How will I handle seeing the victims of child abuse?” Because, as with many of you, I have overwhelming emotions when I hear about children struck by the hands they look to for love and life. During my pediatric rotation, this question was answered. I saw the worst outcomes of child abuse. The sadness, anger and disgust I felt was transformed into an intense drive, desperate to end the suffering of the innocent. I began learning as much as I possibly could about child abuse and child abuse prevention. What I have come to discover in my quest is that for every child abuse case, there were numerous occasions for intervention. There are certain populations at higher risk of becoming abusers, and there are ways to avert this travesty. New Mexico spends the vast majority of the child welfare budget on dealing with
the aftermath and only a fraction of a percent on prevention. Meanwhile, there is a body of evidence that supports the effectiveness of in-hospital parenting education, in-home visits and parenting classes for preventing child abuse from occurring. It seems obvious to me that as a state, we need to do more in preventing these awful stories of child injury, neglect and death at the hands of caregivers. However, this is not enough. As friends, neighbors, sisters, brothers, cousins, fathers, mothers, grandparents — as fellow New Mexicans, we can curb this societal ill. We can offer our support to parents. We can show that it is all right to ask for help by being there to give it. Children are our future, so let us be the village that raises them. Hans Kalin Moen writes from Albuquerque.
can only hurt her. She must have a lot to hide, and if she gets the nomination, the media and the Democrats will find it.” F.S.
Yet another heinous attempt by the Republican “ Party to subvert the democratic process guaranteed
by the U.S. Constitution. Since George W. Bush, we have seen a slow but steady erosion of civil rights, most obviously apparent in the use of legal manipulations to delay enforcement of law. Even if she is overruled by the courts, she will delay resolution until the argument becomes moot.” C.W.R.
Did [Martinez] not run on open government and “ cuts in spending and no waste? Did she not inform
us of her wish to be proactive and reach across the aisle to solve problems mutual to all New Mexicans in a workmanlike fashion? Every governor in the U.S. travels and spends taxpayer money for travels. They all justify and illuminate to their constituency, what and why and when and how much money is spent in these travels as they are elected officials with a duty to do so. Even if she was not mandated by law to do this, why would she just not illustrate to us further how fiscally conservative she truly is, and wise and frugal, when it comes to spending our money, voluntarily, because it is the right thing to do? Could it be she might have something to hide? What other conclusion can constituents draw? She is doing the same thing she accused the last administration of doing. Some things just do not change — in this case, in Texas-sponsored, New Mexican government.” M.P.
If Gov. [Susana] Martinez is willing to claim that “ the Inspection of Public Records Act is unconstitu-
tional over a battle with The Associated Press regarding simple travel records, we then must ask ourselves, what else is Gov. Martinez willing to hide from the public? This should serve as a red flag to all taxpayers. For a politician to campaign on government transparency, fiscal responsibility and government accountability then completely ignore this message while serving in office is an absolute disgrace. Thank you, Gov. Martinez, for showing the New Mexico taxpayers that all you can do is talk. You have not lived up to the flagship message of your campaign, and I hope that the New Mexico taxpayers pay careful attention to your disgraceful actions when they cast their votes in November.” D.M. Our view: The 6 percent raise — overkill at City Hall, March 29
The assumption behind this informative edito“ rial is based on some vague idea of ‘justification’
for selected employee pay raises. That’s a quaint concept that has nothing to do with how jobs or their pay rates are awarded in Northern New Mexico. This region is still very much a traditional kinship-based society in which family or other close personal connections continue to trump other factors such as job descriptions, performance, credentials, education and competence. As products of that environment, Javier Gonzales and his fellow travelers on the City Council are acting consistent with their views about how the world is supposed to work. Just wait until you see what certain selected employees are being paid at the end of Gonzales’ term.” J.S.
New mayor, same B.S. Shame on you, council. “ Disgusting read for a Sunday breakfast. … Will council members be adult enough to inform the public how they voted and why?” M.O.
Most read stories on www.santafenewmexican.com 1. Today’s New Mexican, March 27, 2014 2. Police: Woman shot boyfriend from behind 3. Smartphone app helps alcoholics stay sober 4. Deputies: Young woman held in boyfriend’s shooting death 5. Governor: Enforcing public records law unconstitutional 6. Police have lead in 1952 missing person case 7. Del Norte Credit Union: Fraud scheme may affect 700 cardholders 8. Experts say strongly worded police curriculum is risky with cadets 9. Capital High seniors suspended for cheating 10. Today’s New Mexican, March 29, 2014
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.
Big-bellied ‘pocho’ can’t get any respect Dear Mexican: I’m a Dear Big-Bellied Pocho: second-generation Orange Just a quick refresher for County, Calif.-raised pocho. people who ain’t from la naraBoth sides of my family have nja: A wab is a term specific been civil rights activists since to Orange County and is what the 1940s. My mother’s family assimilated Mexicans and took part in the landmark case gabachos call recently arrived Mendez, et al. v. Westminster, Mexicans (before other Chiet al. in 1946. My father was a canos dismiss my homeland Chicano activist in again as a fountain of anti-Mexican hate — the 1960s and 1970s. all Chicano commuFrom the time I was nities across los Estaa child, I had met dos Unidos have their various figures like own unique terms, as Reies López Tijerina, we discussed in this César Chávez, Bert columna a couple of Corona and Emigdio years back). While Vasquez. In 1975, my I understand your dad took me and Gustavo pain, you’re going my older brother Arellano to have to deal with to a demonstration ¡Ask a Mexican! the realidad that against la migra Mexicans are always where we marched going to hate on other to the federal buildMexicans for one reason or ings in Santa Ana. As an adult, another. Pochos will hate other after graduating with a bachpochos for being too successelor’s and master’s degrees, ful or not Mexican enough; I have improved my Spanish with classes, books, magazines, pochos will hate wabs for not being successful enough or too television, films and travel to Mexican; wabs will hate pochos countries de habla española. for definitely not being MexiDespite my efforts to acculcan enough; and wabs will hate turate myself in Spanish, I am wabs for being too successful often met with the macho or not being Mexican enough. attitude of wabs and pochos Pochos get the brunt of it apparently because I do not because they’re the most gabadress or act like them. At 6 feet cho, the one group all Mexicans tall and 250 pounds, I’m not can agree to hate. But truth is, being dissed for appearing to be a wimp. I have gone to gaba- Mexicans hate Mexicans more than gabachos hate Mexicans. cho businesses where the wab Watch and read César or pocho cashier has provided Chávez: Two big projects on courteous service to Anglos César Chávez are out right and Asians with a smile, refernow, each equally worthy of ring to them as “sir” and sayyour support. César Chávez, a ing, “Thank you.” While being film starring Michael Peña as served, I’m treated like a the legendary labor leader, is a second-class citizen. I have good intro into why his life and been nearly run off sidewalks by wab pedestrians while walk- accomplishments are important for everyone to know. But the ing with my 2-year-old son. A rest of the story is in Miriam favorite of some wabs is to ask Pawel’s The Crusades of César me to speak in English after I Chávez: A Biography, which have said something in Spanish finds Chávez not as the saint clearly and grammatically corthat keepers of his flame want rect. I now live in Los Angeles, him remembered as but as an where for some reason I get all-too-human man — one of much more respect from African Americans than other Lati- the few thorough biographies to nos. Is there a seemingly logical not come off as hagiography. reason for this disrespect from Ask the Mexican at themexican wabs and pochos alike? @askamexican.net. Follow him El Pocho Panzón
on Twitter @gustavoarellano.
LOOKING IN: RICHARD ‘BUGMAN’ FAGERLUND
Pesticide control needs oversight
I
am writing this to alert Gov. Susana Martinez to pesticide issues. One is about how we in New Mexico issue pesticide licenses and then do not provide pest management professionals with the proper classes to get their continuing education units. We have multiple categories of pest control licenses these professionals need to do pest control. Categories for structural pests, wood destroying pests, lawn and ornamental pests, forest pests, rodents, weeds and a number of others. Pest control professionals are required to get four continuing education units a year in any category to be automatically re-certified in every category, with the exception of termites. This is patently ridiculous. I have a forest pest designation and haven’t done any forest pest control work in 30 years, but I am still licensed to do so. I haven’t been to a herbicide class in 25 years, but I am still qualified for using herbicides even though I go to roach classes. It doesn’t make sense for a professional to go to a four-hour class in one category and automatically be “qualified” in all categories. Potential customers cannot be assured that professionals are qualified in what they are doing. If the state is going to require four continuing education units for a license, the state should require them in every category to assure the pest person is qualified. This is what I propose, which makes far more sense. Why not simply issue a pesticide license, which would let a pest management professional do work in any area of pest control. One license for all categories, and then let them get their continuing education units every year based on the pesticide label and Material Safety Data Sheet. People who violate the label requirements could have their licenses revoked. I also would like to see pesticide notification mandatory. Many people have health problems with being exposed to pesticides. Whenever a public building is going to be treated with pesticides, the public should be made aware of it so they can avoid the building for a short period of time. Pesticide notification is required in a number of states and should be in New Mexico. The governor could mandate such requirements by executive order. Pest companies should put a notice on the front door of any establishment where they plan to use pesticides 24 hours prior to the application. Copies of the label and the Material Safety Data Sheet of the pesticide to be used should be available to anyone who wants them. Pesticides should never be used in schools, day-care centers, old-age homes, nursing homes, hospitals and medical facilities at any time. There are no pests in New Mexico that require the use of toxic pesticides to control. Children and people with compromised immune systems should never be exposed to them. A final note. Why don’t you take the Pesticide Division out of the New Mexico Department of Agriculture and put it in the Environment Department, which is better suited to handle pesticide pollution and will offer much better control. The Pesticides Division director, Bonnie Rabe, is someone I have known for 23 years. She is very good. Her division is just overwhelmed with rules and regulations and not enough people. Let’s make New Mexico and every state in the union a good place to avoid unnecessary pesticides and unqualified pest control companies. Richard “Bugman” Fagerlund lives in Algodones.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Privacy doesn’t exist, even for governor
S
o Gov. Susana Martinez, who serves at the will of the public, thinks her travel records should be protected from our oversight under the Fourth and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution? Welcome to our world, governor, where every phone call, every email, every Web search, every aspect of our daily lives is collected and stored and shared in secret by the National Security Agency without a warrant or our express permission. If there is nothing suspicious, or possibly even illegal, in those public records, then why withhold them from the public? It does look like Martinez is hiding something, perhaps not the best course of action when election day is coming, and retaining her seat is less than assured according to the polls. Patricia Victour
Española
Why does Gov. Susana Martinez refuse to turn over public records relating to her travel and work schedule, and expenses of police officers who travel with her? What does she have to hide? And who is paying the lawyers to defend her in all these lawsuits? Well, maybe, just maybe, Gov. Martinez thinks she is the CEO of AT&T or Wal-Mart and not the state of New Mexico. If there is no public accountability here, she might just be going on a vacation to a fancy spa or buying jewelry at Tiffany’s, all on the public dollar. Or maybe she
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Open government? Not in New Mexico
T just wants to show and act tough like her fellow Republican, Gov. Chris Cristie of New Jersey. All this should not even be a problem to an honest public official who is proud to show the world an open and transparent administration. Herman I. Morris
Santa Fe
Proper appreciation Sometimes we hesitate and find it difficult to express appreciation. I wish to express my appreciation to the people who serve Santa Fe, as represented by the service I received from Jennifer Martinez of City Hall and
We welcome your letters Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. To give all readers a chance to speak out, we limit letter submissions per individual to once a month. Please limit letters to 150 words. Please print or type your name, and give us your address and telephone numbers — home and work — for verification. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.
Felipe Trujillo, grading supervisor of streets. Their prompt action, concern and follow up is something they and the people that serve the needs of Santa Fe can take pleasure in
knowing that they help others even though we may not always express proper appreciation. Manny Marczak
Santa Fe
COMMENTARY: STEIN RINGEN
Dysfunctional government: End of democracy?
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ehind dysfunctional government, is democracy itself in decay? It took only 250 years for democracy to disintegrate in ancient Athens. A wholly new form of government was invented there in which the people ruled themselves. That constitution proved marvelously effective. Athens grew in wealth and capacity, fought off the Persian challenge, established itself as the leading power in the known world and produced treasures of architecture, philosophy and art that bedazzle to this day. But when privilege, corruption and mismanagement took hold, the lights went out. It would be 2,000 years before democracy was reinvented in the U.S. Constitution, now as representative democracy. Again, government by popular consent proved ingenious. The United States grew into the world’s leading power — economically, culturally and militarily. In Europe, democracies overtook authoritarian monarchies and fascist and communist dictatorships. In recent decades, democracy’s spread has made the remaining autocracies a minority. The second democratic experiment is approaching 250 years. It has been as successful as the first. But the lesson from Athens is that success does not breed success. Democracy is not the default. It is a form of government that must be created with determination and that will disintegrate unless nurtured. In the United States and Britain, democracy is disintegrating when it should be nurtured by leadership. If the lights go out in the model democracies, they will not stay on elsewhere. It’s not enough for governments to simply be democratic; they must deliver or decay. In Britain, government is increasingly ineffectual. The constitutional scholar Anthony King has described it as declining from “order” to “mess” in less than 30 years. During 10 years of New Labor rule, that proposition was
tested and confirmed. In 1997, a new government was voted in with a mandate and determination to turn the tide on Thatcherite inequality. It was given all the parliamentary power a democratic government could dream of and benefited from 10 years of steady economic growth. But a strong government was defeated by a weak system of governance. It delivered nothing of what it intended and left Britain more unequal than where the previous regime had left off. The next government, a center-right coalition, has proved itself equally unable. It was supposed to repair damage from the economic crisis but has responded with inaction on the causes of crisis, in a monopolistic financial-services sector, and with a brand of austerity that protects the privileged at the expense of the poor. Again, what has transpired is inability rather than ill will. Both these governments came up against concentrations of economic power that have become politically unmanageable. Meanwhile, the health of the U.S. system is even worse than it looks. The three branches of government are designed to deliver through checks and balances. But balance has become gridlock, and the United States is not getting the governance it needs. Here, the link between inequality and inability is on sharp display. Power has been sucked out of the constitutional system and usurped by actors such as PACs, think tanks, media and lobbying organizations. In the age of mega-expensive politics, candidates depend on sponsors to fund permanent campaigns. When money is allowed to transgress from markets, where it belongs, to politics, where it has no business, those who control it gain power to decide who the successful candidates will be — those they wish to fund — and what they can decide once they are in office. Rich supporters get two swings at influencing politics, one as voters and one as donors. Others have
MAllArd FillMore
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
only the vote, a power that diminishes as political inflation deflates its value. It is a misunderstanding to think that candidates chase money. It is money that chases candidates. In Athens, democracy disintegrated when the rich grew super-rich, refused to play by the rules and undermined the established system of government. That is the point that the United States and Britain have reached. Nearly a century ago, when capitalist democracy was in a crisis not unlike the present one, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis warned: “We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.” Democracy weathered that storm for two reasons: It is not inequality as such that destroys democracy but the more recent combination of inequality and transgression. Furthermore, democracy was then able to learn from crisis. The New Deal tempered economic freefor-all, primarily through the 1933 Banking Act, and gave the smallfolk new social securities. The lesson from Athens is that success breeds complacency. People, notably those in privilege, stopped caring, and democracy was neglected. Six years after the global economic crisis, the signs from the model democracies are that those in privilege are unable to care and that our systems are unable to learn. The crisis started in out-of-control financial services industries in the United States and Britain, but control has not been reasserted. Economic inequality has followed through to political inequality, and democratic government is bereft of power and capacity. Brandeis was not wrong; he was ahead of his time. Stein Ringen is an emeritus professor at Oxford University and the author of Nation of Devils: Democratic Leadership and the Problem of Obedience. This was first published in The Washington Post.
he promise that Susana Martinez would run the most transparent administration in state history is officially broken — the governor is claiming that court enforcement of the state Inspection of Public Records Act violates the U.S. Constitution. That’s right, it is unconstitutional for a state court to force the governor and state agencies to turn over records demanded under state public records statutes. A court can’t order people to follow the law is essentially her argument. According to Martinez and her lawyers, the public records law is pre-empted by the Supremacy Clause (among other constitutional provisions) in the U.S. Constitution, meaning that The Associated Press needs a warrant to obtain the records it wants (while we disagree, it would be worthwhile to see the AP obtain that warrant). The AP is suing to obtain public records related to Martinez’s travels and work schedule, cellphone calls and expenses of her security team. The news organization claims that by denying records, Martinez and state agencies are violating state law. (Last year, in Washington state, the Supreme Court there allowed the governor to claim “executive privilege” in withholding documents because of the inherent separation of powers. Perhaps that is a precursor to less enforcement of open records.) In New Mexico, the issue is whether the public has the right to know what the governor they have hired is doing. The AP wants copies of Martinez’s work calendars, including items about travel for political and personal matters. To get them, it has sued the Department of Finance and Administration. Another suit, against the departments of Public Safety, and Finance and Administration, is for expense reports and receipts filed by Martinez’s security details. A portion of the request is to see time sheets and other documents. Specifically, the AP wants to see overtime pay records for the months leading up to the 2012 election, when Martinez was campaigning for Gov. Mitt Romney in his race against President Barack Obama. It seems only fair for taxpayers to know whether they are paying security costs for politics or the state’s business. (As reporter Steve Terrell pointed out in a recent Roundhouse Roundup column, Martinez could do what former Gov. Bill Richardson did when he was running for president in 2008. That’s simply to reimburse the state for security costs from political appearances.) By releasing only aggregate tallies of expenses and overtimes costs, the state under this administration essentially hides how much citizens are paying for security on political trips. The Martinez administration is offering a far-fetched response to a fairly routine request for records. By going so far afield, the first question anyone is going to have is this: “Just what is the governor hiding?” Eventually, citizens will find out. All the stalling in the world can’t change that under New Mexico law, citizens have the right to inspect public records. Public officials must turn those documents over.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: April 1, 1914: The murder of Mrs. Adolfo Padilla on College Street in the First Ward Saturday afternoon for which crime Adolfo Padilla was murdered by a mob last night recalls an appalling list of homicides in that part of the city in the past 12 or 15 years. Fifteen years ago, Clemente Gutierrez was stoned to death at the acequia this side of the F.C. Wilson residence. Ignacio Garcia killed his wife on College Street near the J.D. Sena residence, by stabbing her. Juan Garcia killed his brother on College Street with a pistol, the two being drunk at the time. Marcelino Vigil was stripped, stabbed and beaten to death with stones in an arroyo near College Street. At least one child of Francisco Urioste died under suspicious circumstances and a number of others alleged to have been murdered by him. April 1, 1964: The Glorieta Post Office has prospects of its own building in the near future. The old railway station there is to be remodeled into a U.S. Post Office. In the meantime, Acting Postmaster Salmon Gonzales owns the stock of the Glorieta Mercantile Co. which is housed presently in a building owned by Mrs. R.E. Robinson who also owns the store fixtures. The newsworthy story of the impending change referred to Gonzales as owner of the Glorieta Mercantile Co. April 1, 1989: An unexpected $1 million outlay for dirt for the city landfill could increase garbage collection fees by 50 percent, a city councilor predicts. The health, safety and welfare of Santa Fe residents could be in jeopardy and the city will be in violation of federal and state environmental regulations if the dirt is not purchased, said city Field Operations director Porfirio Perez in a memo to the Finance Committee dated March 29.
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BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAFenewMexicAn.coM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
The weather
For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/
7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today
Mostly sunny and windy
Tonight
Wednesday
Mainly clear
Thursday
Times of clouds and sun
Friday
Partly sunny, breezy and cooler
Saturday
Mostly sunny
Sunday
Monday
A shower or thunder- Cloudy with a shower Sunny to partly storm possible possible cloudy
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
66
33
61/31
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
16%
29%
24%
33%
29%
25%
26%
22%
wind: SW 15-25 mph
wind: W 7-14 mph
wind: WSW 10-20 mph
wind: W 12-25 mph
wind: WSW 6-12 mph
wind: WNW 7-14 mph
wind: NW 10-20 mph
wind: NNW 7-14 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Monday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 60°/27° Normal high/low ............................ 62°/30° Record high ............................... 78° in 2012 Record low ................................. 10° in 1924 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.56”/0.67” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.81”/1.94” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.64”/0.73”
The following water statistics of March 28 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 0.000 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 6.780 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 3.780 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.131 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 60.5 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.74 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation
58/33
64
285
64
Farmington 62/32
64
Española 71/42 Los Alamos 60/34 40
Santa Fe 66/33 Pecos 61/33
25
Albuquerque 72/43
412
Clayton 73/38
Pollen index
As of 3/28/2014 Cottonwood ....................................... 10 Low Other trees .......................................... 4 Low Ephedra ............................................... 1 Low Other ................................................... 3 Low Total...........................................................18
25
Las Vegas 65/36
25
54
40
40
285
Clovis 77/46
54
60 60
87
56
285 380 180
Roswell 87/52
Ruidoso 65/45
25
70
Truth or Consequences 76/41 70
180
Las Cruces 76/45
70
380
Hobbs 85/52
285
Alamogordo 78/51
Carlsbad 90/56
54
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes
Mon. High: 85 ............................... Carlsbad Mon. Low 16 ..................................... Gallup
State cities City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 77/46 s 65/42 pc 49/28 s 82/46 s 85/53 pc 45/21 s 61/35 s 71/44 s 56/30 s 73/45 s 58/25 s 76/41 s 64/41 pc 58/31 s 76/48 s 61/16 s 61/19 s 81/46 s 76/46 s
Hi/Lo W 78/51 s 72/43 s 53/29 s 87/53 pc 90/56 s 49/28 c 65/34 s 73/38 pc 56/30 pc 77/46 pc 61/33 s 77/40 pc 71/42 s 62/32 s 80/46 s 61/30 s 64/38 s 85/52 pc 76/45 pc
Hi/Lo W 74/50 s 65/39 pc 50/26 pc 83/59 s 86/59 s 47/27 sh 62/29 pc 70/35 pc 54/24 s 76/43 pc 56/29 sh 75/41 pc 64/38 pc 56/32 sh 78/43 pc 53/27 sh 58/32 pc 84/47 s 73/46 s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni
Hi/Lo 60/34 75/39 56/33 68/41 75/49 63/42 64/28 66/41 83/43 63/41 71/43 68/41 76/44 55/25 76/45 76/50 78/54 59/36 60/20
W s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s
Hi/Lo W 65/36 s 77/51 s 60/34 s 73/42 s 80/47 pc 66/31 s 48/29 s 70/40 s 87/52 pc 65/45 pc 76/46 s 69/42 s 76/47 s 59/29 s 76/41 pc 81/45 pc 79/49 pc 64/36 s 61/30 s
Hi/Lo W 62/31 pc 73/39 pc 56/29 pc 70/40 pc 79/43 pc 63/29 pc 47/24 pc 66/32 pc 82/48 s 61/38 pc 74/38 pc 65/35 pc 73/41 pc 55/28 pc 73/41 s 78/41 pc 77/49 s 59/30 pc 53/27 pc
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for April 1
Sunrise today ............................... 6:51 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:26 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 8:01 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 9:48 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:50 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 7:27 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 8:43 a.m. Moonset Wednesday .................. 10:48 p.m. Sunrise Thursday ......................... 6:48 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 7:27 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ....................... 9:27 a.m. Moonset Thursday ...................... 11:44 p.m. First
Full
Last
New
Apr 7
Apr 15
Apr 22
Apr 29
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 40/18 79/42 65/37 31/22 25/14 56/37 42/34 79/39 75/35 68/37 66/31 59/25 81/57 56/38 58/30 36/3 55/22 84/71 78/50 67/35 80/58 73/51 68/54
W s pc pc sn sn c sn s s pc pc s pc pc pc pc s pc pc pc pc pc s
Hi/Lo 36/24 78/53 64/42 39/23 26/3 54/38 48/34 81/54 79/48 51/34 70/47 61/37 77/67 58/26 56/36 32/2 48/25 84/73 77/66 63/44 53/42 65/53 66/53
W pc s pc sf pc c s s s pc pc sh sh pc pc s s pc sh pc pc s r
Hi/Lo 37/24 80/59 68/48 44/24 34/21 58/37 53/38 83/58 81/55 41/34 63/51 48/34 80/68 52/24 48/31 29/-2 43/25 84/72 81/69 57/46 56/42 62/49 66/52
W pc pc pc sh c sh pc s s r sh c pc c c s sh pc sh sh t pc t
Rise 6:07 a.m. 4:47 a.m. 8:05 p.m. 12:02 p.m. 10:35 p.m. 6:56 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 5:38 p.m. 3:42 p.m. 7:36 a.m. 2:32 a.m. 9:05 a.m. 7:26 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles
L
70
380
Yesterday Today Tomorrow
City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC
Hi/Lo 72/35 77/43 80/61 58/34 58/44 74/47 56/36 86/58 77/51 60/38 85/55 62/26 60/37 69/43 69/48 55/36 86/60 67/56 57/49 60/36 71/47 55/37 67/43
W pc c c c r s sn pc c pc s pc c s r pc pc pc r c i pc pc
Hi/Lo 74/54 76/61 82/68 49/30 37/23 76/66 58/42 70/60 82/57 60/42 76/57 69/40 56/42 72/47 65/51 52/32 85/69 64/55 57/46 58/40 37/20 59/38 64/48
W pc s s pc pc pc s c s s s pc sh s s r sh r t c c s pc
Hi/Lo 72/59 74/65 82/70 38/29 44/30 77/68 60/46 82/61 82/59 63/45 72/54 57/44 60/41 82/53 67/52 52/34 87/69 63/55 58/46 60/41 45/28 61/42 71/52
W c c s r c c pc t s pc pc sh pc pc t c pc sh pc pc c c pc
World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Mon. High: 95 .......................... Dryden, TX Mon. Low: 5 .............................. Stanley, ID
The snowiest April ever in New York and New England began on April 1, 1874. Up to 60 inches of snow accumulated in parts of New Hampshire and Vermont.
Weather trivia™
is the record low temperature Q: What for the lower 48 states in April? at Eagle Nest, N.M., on April A: -36(F) 5, 1945.
Weather history
Newsmakers Actress Sara Gilbert and musician Linda Perry wed
Sara Gilbert
Linda Perry
Shirley Jones
LOS ANGELES — Sara Gilbert and Linda Perry are married. Gilbert is best known for her starring role on the long-running sitcom Roseanne. She is also a creator and co-host of the CBS show The Talk. Fellow hosts Julie Chen and Aisha Tyler said Monday that they attended the oceanfront wedding. They say it was “beautiful” and “magical.” Perry is a singer, songwriter, producer and former front woman of the rock band 4 Non Blondes. The 39-year-old Gilbert and 48-yearold Perry have been engaged since April 2013.
Shirley Jones postpones 80th birthday skydive LOS ANGELES — Actress Shirley Jones is celebrating her 80th birthday on the ground, instead of skydiving as she had planned. A spokesman for the Partridge Family actress said Monday that Jones agreed to postpone the jump after her sons and grandchildren asked her to reconsider. Jones announced last week that she planned to celebrate her birthday by jumping from a plane for the first time. The Associated Press
City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima
Hi/Lo 68/50 66/46 64/45 97/82 61/54 68/53 61/39 68/41 72/48 75/57 88/73 81/55 54/34 54/43 66/43 81/61 82/51 78/70 61/43 81/65
W s pc s pc pc c s pc s s pc s pc pc pc pc pc t s s
Hi/Lo 63/47 70/51 69/52 97/82 63/54 74/48 61/42 70/45 73/63 78/54 91/73 81/61 48/37 55/47 66/44 76/59 86/59 77/70 71/48 83/67
TV 1
W pc s pc t pc pc pc pc pc s pc s pc pc pc pc s t s pc
Hi/Lo 67/50 74/51 60/47 98/82 65/56 71/44 62/41 65/48 75/64 74/55 89/72 79/55 49/32 54/46 70/45 76/60 87/61 77/73 61/45 82/66
W c s r t c pc pc sh pc pc pc s c r pc pc s t pc c
3
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 59/54 63/52 59/45 78/52 43/28 37/30 88/61 64/45 61/41 86/75 64/41 70/46 68/39 91/81 43/34 76/64 69/55 52/36 68/39 68/37
W r s c pc pc sn pc pc pc pc s pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc
Hi/Lo 57/50 66/48 67/48 79/54 41/36 34/21 93/63 69/48 61/43 84/73 65/43 81/50 72/49 91/79 41/26 82/64 61/50 53/40 66/48 69/44
W r pc r s pc sf pc sh c t pc s pc t c pc c pc c pc
Hi/Lo 61/52 68/52 54/41 78/56 46/28 36/23 93/65 71/52 66/44 82/71 64/50 79/52 70/46 91/77 45/30 84/66 63/50 54/41 68/48 71/42
W sh pc r pc pc sf pc c pc t pc s pc t s pc r pc s s
ivr, the social network for drunk people, had all the trimmings of an ascendant tech startup. A slick promotional video featuring two Eisenbergian CEOs. A hip website littered with buzzwords and trademarks. Press releases. Stickers. Posters. T-shirts. An auspicious, grassroots buzz that began in Reddit’s technology forums and bubbled into the mainstream press. Livr’s only problem? It was all fake — an elaborate hoax engineered by Brandon Schmittling and Brandon Bloch, two Brooklyn creatives with a lot of free time and little patience for what they call the “absurdity” of modern Internet culture. After dreaming up an idea for a start-up so ridiculous no one would believe it, Bloch and Schmittling set out to entice people to buy in. They bought a domain name, designed a website, enlisted actors to play Livr’s earnest cofounders; they “leaked” a fake news release on Reddit, promising an improbable “online party at all times,” a social network limited only by the user’s blood alcohol concentration. On the Internet, after all, every day is April Fools’ Day. In the past week alone, online hoaxers convinced wide swaths of the online world that a deranged man dressed as a clown wandered unchecked around Staten Island; that Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte casually biked to his meeting with Obama; that R&B singer Trey Songz was gay; and that searchers finally found Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 … about 15 times over. There’s no denying the reality-bending, eyebrowarching absurdity of these times, where “reality TV” denotes one of television’s more fictionalized outputs and the news swims in headlines too crazy to be true. Exactly who is doing the blurring, though, is up for debate. Although it’s easy, and perhaps comfortable, to blame the deceivers, the reality is far more complicated. The Web incentivizes page views, no
matter how they’re racked up. And so hoaxes are hatched not only by lone pranksters but also by Web-savvy marketers and public relations firms eager for attention. They’re often propagated by journalists hungry for clicks and starved for time. Then they’re swallowed whole by an audience drowning in so much information — such a cacophony of demands on their eyeballs and attention — that only the truly crazy stuff stands out. “Americans are just bombarded with information,” moaned Allen Peterson, the executive director of Wine to Water, a tiny water charity behind the “Miracle Machine” hoax of a few weeks ago, which promoted a newfangled gadget that claimed to turn water into wine. “I mean, to get their attention on something like the water crisis?” Wine to Water’s hoax was perhaps the most forgivable ruse in recent memory. A fiveperson nonprofit organization based in Boone, N.C., Wine to Water funds clean-water projects in Haiti, Ethiopia and six other countries. It pays for the projects through donations and sales of its branded wine. But not all hoaxsters share Peterson’s altruism. A number of websites that propagate fake stories — including Mediamass, or the dubious News-hound.org — profit from display ads when their frauds go viral. Others redirect to phishing sites that attempt to draw out the gullible clicker’s email address and personal information. But condemnation is futile. The Web, after all, is an organism spun to divert and distract attention. Might as well condemn the entire multibilliondollar industry of display ads, or the fresh-faced 21-year-olds graduating and disappearing into an industry where their worth is judged by the clicks they generate. Better yet, blame the very foundations of human nature, which wants to trust. To believe. As Plato wrote 2,300 years ago, before even the Bible told a story about turning water into wine, “everything that deceives may be said to enchant.”
Today’s talk shows
top picks
7 p.m. on CW The Originals Locked in the sanatorium where she worked in 1919, Rebekah (Claire Holt) learns that a vengeful witch named Genevieve (Elyse Levesque) is after her in “Long Way Back From Hell.” Elijah (Daniel Gillies) realizes one of his decisions has put Rebekah and Klaus (Joseph Morgan) in danger and seeks help from Marcel and Hayley (Charles Michael Davis, Phoebe Tonkin). Marcel has some information that could help, but revealing it could be deadly. 7 p.m. on FAM Twisted Some shocking developments hit Kyle (Sam Robards) as he continues the murder investigation. The triangle involving Jo, Danny and Charlie (Maddie Hasson, Avan Jogia, Jack Falahee) comes to a head. Tess and Karen (Kimberly Quinn, Denise Richards) learn more of Vikram’s (T.J. Ramini) secrets in the season finale, “A Tale of Two Confessions.” 8 p.m. on TBS Cougar Town Jules (Courteney Cox, pictured) and the gang are unhappy with Tom’s (Robert Clendenin) choice of a site for their next vacation: home. Jules fakes being healthier than she is at her annual physical and gets a surprise. Bobby (Brian Van Holt) inadvertently signs
2
City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich
Every day is April Fools’ Day on the Internet The Washington Post
Today’s UV index
54
The “Miracle Machine,” as advertised, turns water into wine. It’s a hoax — to promote a nonprofit’s clean-water projects. But other pranks have made every day April Fools’ Day on the Internet. COURTESY PHOTO
By Caitlin Dewey
Source:
60
25
69/34
Monday’s rating .................................. Good Today’s forecast .......................... Moderate 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 59/29
84
666
Gallup 61/30
Raton 66/31
62/34
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
10
Water statistics
56/32
New Mexico weather
Area rainfall
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/0.40” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.01”/0.10” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.43”/0.48” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 1.26”/2.75” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.44”/0.64”
51/27
up himself and Grayson (Josh Hopkins) for a break-dancing competition in the new episode “We Stand a Chance.” 8:30 p.m. onNBC Growing Up Fisher Brady Bunch fans, remember when Greg insisted he was just holding those cigarettes for a friend? In this new episode, Mel (J.K. Simmons) finds marijuana in Katie’s (Ava Deluca-Verley) bag, but it isn’t hers — really! It belongs to Joyce (Jenna Elfman). Henry (Eli Baker) fears he’ll go blind like his dad when he turns 12, and there’s one thing he wants to see first in “Drug/Bust.” 9 p.m. on PBS The Story of the Jews With Simon Schama The five-part series concludes with The Return, in which Schama discusses how the Holocaust and the creation of Israel have shaped modern Jewish identity — and how Israel has shaped world events. Contributors include writer David Grossman, photographer Micha Bar-Am.
4 5
3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Jennifer Love Hewitt; Cheryl Hines; Beck performs. KRQE Dr. Phil KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 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. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360
FNC The O’Reilly Factor 6:30 p.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher Former President Jimmy Carter; actor Josh Gad; comic W. Kamau Bell; former Rep. Rick Lazio (R-N.Y.). 7:00 p.m. MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan From the Majestic Theater in Dalls; actor Seth Rogen; musical guest Phillip Phillips. 9:30 p.m. KCHF Life Today With James Robison James and Betty Robison. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show TBS The Pete Holmes Show Actor Jason Mantzoukas; New Orleans Pelicans forward Anthony Davis.
10:30 p.m. TBS Conan From the Majestic Theater in Dalls; actor Seth Rogen; musical guest Phillip Phillips. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Samuel L. Jackson; Minnie Driver; Pitbull performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actress Kristin Chenoweth; comic Amy Schumer. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live David Duchovny; Danai Gurira; Pete Davidson. FNC Hannity 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actor Jim Parsons. 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Seth Meyers TV host Nick Cannon; Brett Eldredge performs. 1:07 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-4, B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Pojoaque Valley head coach resigns By Will Webber The New Mexican
The bar was set a long time ago. One has met the challenge and subsequently raised it further. Everyone else has tried without success to meet the lofty standards. Last Friday, one of New Mexico’s most successful head coaches threw in the towel of that pursuit, choosing to resign his post as head coach of the girls basketball program at Pojoaque Valley. Ron Drake, who has had previous stints with Santa Fe High, St. Michael’s and Española Valley in a celebrated career that has spanned a quarter cen-
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Slammed: Phillies open with victory vs. Rangers. Page B-5
tury, back to his days at a private school in New Jersey, announced he was stepping down from his post with the Elkettes. Pojoaque athletic director Matt Martinez confirmed the news Monday morning. A former coach of the Elkettes who led the team to prominence Ron Drake in the 1990s with three straight trips to the Class AAA state finals, Martinez said he understands as well as anyone that the expectations are higher at his school than almost anywhere else.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
“I think there is some truth to that because we’ve tasted that success with one championship when I was coaching and then two when we had Lanse,” he said referring to Pojoaque’s 1998 title under Martinez and the back-to-back championships won by former head coach Lanse Carter in 2008 and 2009. “There is a lot of pressure with high expectations around here.” Martinez said. “That’s something that comes with this job and a coach has to be prepared for it. I wouldn’t have it any other way.” Drake was 29-29 in two seasons with the Elkettes, leading them to the AAA quarterfinals in 2013 and
Please see coacH, Page B-3
Creighton’s Doug McDermott shoots against St. John’s Orlando Sanchez during the first half of a Feb. 9 game in New York. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
BASEBALL OPENING DAY
coming out swinging MLB back with replays, metal detectors, comebacks, grand slams
McDermott leads AP All-America team roster Lobo Cameron Bairstow named to 3rd team By Jim O’Connell
The Associated Press
Doug McDermott spent his senior season passing a lot of big names on the career scoring list. He is now among some very select company. The senior forward from Creighton was a unanimous choice for The Associated Press All-America team on Monday. He is the first three-time choice in 29 years and the 11th player overall. New Mexico’s Cameron Bairstow was named to the third team, as was New Mexico State’s Daniel Mullings and Mountain West Conference player of the year Xavier Thames of San Diego State. A 6-foot-9 senior out of Australia, Bairstow led the Lobos in scoring this past season, averaging more than 20 points a game while leading UNM to the MWC tournament championship and a third straight berth in the NCAA Tournament.
Please see team, Page B-3
A giant American flag is unfurled before a game between the New York Mets and Washington Nationals on opening day Monday at Citi Field in New York. JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
inside
By Ronald Blum
The Associated Press
J
immy Rollins began the season with a slam, Neil Walker with a walkoff homer and the Washington Nationals with a thrilling ninthinning comeback. After a frigid winter of blizzards for much of the U.S., baseball came storming back Monday when 26 major league teams opened their seasons and seemed to make the outdoors feel a little warmer. Washington’s Matt Williams and Detroit’s Brad Ausmus won in their big league debuts as managers.
walkthrough metal detectors. “Everybody’s safety is important and if Major u Monday game box scores, summaries. Page B-4 League Baseball and the Chicago White Sox are u American League and National League roundups. trying to protect their fans that are loyal to them, Page B-5 I’m fine with that,” said Paula Green of Paris, Ill. On the field, there were four video reviews in They weren’t the only inaugurals. the day games. In the two decisions overturned There was an innovative replay system for by umpires in the New York control room, Ryan umpires, and at some ballparks new metal detecBraun of the Milwaukee Brewers and Emilio Bonitors at fan entrances as teams installed the devices facio of the Chicago Cubs were called out at first a year before Major League Baseball’s industrywide base after initially being ruled safe. In the two rulrequirement. ings confirmed, Washington’s Danny Espinosa and At U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, there were long Please see mLB, Page B-5 lines as spectators were screened by hand held or
WOMEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT
Notre Dame beats Baylor to get to Final Four By Doug Feinberg
The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Notre Dame’s quest for perfection will continue at the Final Four. Jewell Loyd Notre Dame 88 scored 30 points and unbeaten Baylor 69 Notre Dame advanced to the Final Four for a fourth straight season with an 88-69 win over Baylor on Monday night. Natalie Achonwa added 19 points and 15 rebounds for the Irish (36-0), who will face either Louisville or Maryland in the national semifinals on Sunday night in Nashville. Notre Dame became the sixth school to reach the Final Four in four straight seasons, joining UConn, LSU, Stanford, Louisiana Tech and Tennessee.
The loss ended the brilliant career of Baylor guard Odyssey Sims, who finished this season with 1,054 points — eight short of Jackie Stiles’ NCAA record for a single season. Sims scored 33 points for Baylor (32-5), but had little help on offense. The win extended Notre Dame’s home winning streak to 28 games. Baylor was the last team to beat the Irish in South Bend — doing so on Dec. 5, 2012 — but that team had 6-foot-8 star Brittney Griner. The loss ended another superb season for Baylor. The Bears advanced to the regional final for the fourth time in five seasons, a year after they — with Griner — were eliminated in the regional semifinals by Louisville in one of the biggest upsets in women’s basketball history. The Irish took control in the first
half with senior Kayla McBride on the bench with early foul trouble. Trailing 21-17 midway through the first half, Loyd and Achonwa got the Irish going. Achonwa, who had a double-double in the first half, started a 14-0 run with a layup. Loyd then scored the next eight points, including a highlight reel three-point play that made it 24-21 and whipped up the sellout home crowd, which included former Irish star Skylar Diggins. By the time Sims hit a pullup in the lane with 5:32 left the Lady Bears trailed 31-24. The Irish led 44-32 at the half as Loyd finished with 21 points in the first 20 minutes. Sims rallied the Lady Bears scoring the first nine points of the second half to cut the deficit to 46-41. After a Notre Dame basket Baylor was called
Please see ncaa, Page B-3
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
Notre Dame guard Jewell Loyd, right, drives on Baylor’s Khadijiah Cave in the Women’s NCAA Tournament regional final Monday at the Purcell Pavilion in South Bend, Ind. PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Contrast the name of the game at Final Four By John Marshall
The Associated Press
Florida coach Billy Donovan has his hands full preparing for Shabazz Napier and Connecticut in the Final Four, yet couldn’t help but look across at the other side of the bracket. Kentucky, with its waves of athletic freshmen against defensive and deliberate Wisconsin, yeah, that’s going to be interesting to watch — even for a coach with more pressing things on his mind. “It should be a great game,” Donovan said during a conference call with the Final Four coaches Monday. “Two, I think in a lot of ways, contrasting styles.” Contrast. This year’s Final Four is full of it. Kentucky has relied almost entirely on freshmen (again), while Florida followed a road paved by seniors. The Gators’ middle is muscular, anchored by lane bully Patric Young. Wisconsin’s Frank Kaminsky is a 7-footer who is just as comfortable on the 3-point line as he is on the low block. The Badgers’ shot clock is more like an hour glass, offensive spacing and precision cutting setting up the perfect shot. The athletic Wildcats barge their way past opponents, getting out on the break or flying in for rebound slams. Even the coaches have divergent paths: Donovan and Kentucky’s John Calipari are Final Four regulars, UConn’s Kevin Ollie and Wisconsin’s Bo Ryan have crashed the party for the first time.
Please see contRast, Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Heat 93, raptors 83
BASKETBALL basketball
Nba eastern Conference
atlantic x-Toronto Brooklyn New York Boston Philadelphia southeast y-Miami Washington Charlotte Atlanta Orlando Central y-Indiana x-Chicago Cleveland Detroit Milwaukee
W 42 39 32 23 16 W 51 38 36 32 21 W 52 42 30 27 14
l 32 33 43 51 58 l 22 36 38 41 53 l 23 32 45 47 60
Pct .568 .542 .427 .311 .216 Pct .699 .514 .486 .438 .284 Pct .693 .568 .400 .365 .189
Western Conference
Gb — 2 101/2 19 26 Gb — 131/2 151/2 19 301/2 Gb — 91/2 22 241/2 371/2
southwest W l Pct Gb x-San Antonio 58 16 .784 — Houston 49 23 .681 8 Dallas 44 30 .595 14 Memphis 44 30 .595 14 New Orleans 32 42 .432 26 Northwest W l Pct Gb x-Oklahoma City 54 19 .740 — Portland 48 27 .640 7 Minnesota 36 37 .493 18 Denver 32 42 .432 221/2 Utah 23 52 .307 32 Pacific W l Pct Gb x-L.A. Clippers 53 22 .707 — Golden State 45 28 .616 7 Phoenix 44 30 .595 81/2 Sacramento 26 48 .351 261/2 L.A. Lakers 25 48 .342 27 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Monday’s Games San Antonio 103, Indiana 77 Charlotte 100, Washington 94 Miami 93, Toronto 83 Detroit 116, Milwaukee 111 Atlanta 103, Philadelphia 95 Chicago 94, Boston 80 L.A. Clippers 114, Minnesota 104 Sacramento 102, New Orleans 97 Memphis 94, Denver 92 New York 92, Utah 83 late sunday Oklahoma City 116, Utah 96 Cleveland 90, Indiana 76 New York 89, Golden State 84 Portland 105, Memphis 98 L.A. Lakers 115, Phoenix 99 tuesday’s Games Houston at Brooklyn, 6 p.m. Golden State at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Portland at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Cleveland at Orlando, 5 p.m. Detroit at Indiana, 5 p.m. Boston at Washington, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Brooklyn at New York, 5 p.m. Houston at Toronto, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. Memphis at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Golden State at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. New Orleans at Denver, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Phoenix, 8 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Nba CaleNdar
April 16 — Last day of regular season. April 19 — Playoffs begin. May 20 — Draft lottery. June 5 — NBA Finals begin.
Monday Hawks 103, 76ers 95
PHIladelPHIa (95) Thompson 2-3 0-1 5, Young 7-10 4-4 23, Sims 3-8 2-3 8, Carter-Williams 7-14 2-2 16, Anderson 8-16 0-0 19, Wroten 3-8 0-0 6, Varnado 2-3 1-7 5, E.Williams 3-8 3-3 10, Ware 0-5 0-0 0, Davies 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 36-77 12-20 95. atlaNta (103) Carroll 4-9 0-0 9, Millsap 9-15 9-13 28, Antic 1-8 0-0 2, Teague 4-11 3-3 12, Korver 3-10 4-5 11, L.Williams 7-12 6-6 22, Brand 2-5 0-0 4, Scott 2-6 2-3 6, Schroder 2-5 0-0 4, Muscala 1-2 0-0 2, Mack 1-1 0-0 3. Totals 36-84 24-30 103. Philadelphia 31 22 20 22—95 atlanta 18 25 32 28—103 3-Point Goals—Philadelphia 11-30 (Young 5-6, Anderson 3-9, Thompson 1-1, Davies 1-2, E.Williams 1-3, CarterWilliams 0-2, Wroten 0-3, Ware 0-4), Atlanta 7-31 (L.Williams 2-7, Mack 1-1, Millsap 1-2, Teague 1-3, Carroll 1-5, Korver 1-6, Scott 0-2, Antic 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Philadelphia 47 (Carter-Williams, Varnado 9), Atlanta 56 (Millsap 17). Assists— Philadelphia 25 (Carter-Williams 9), Atlanta 25 (Teague, L.Williams 5). Total Fouls—Philadelphia 27, Atlanta 17. Technicals—Philadelphia Bench. A—11,096.
spurs 103, Pacers 77
saN aNtONIO (103) Leonard 5-9 1-2 13, Duncan 3-10 3-4 9, Splitter 2-5 5-6 9, Parker 10-18 2-2 22, Green 2-5 0-0 5, Diaw 5-8 2-2 14, Ginobili 2-6 2-2 6, Mills 3-5 2-2 10, Belinelli 2-7 2-2 7, Daye 0-2 0-0 0, Ayres 2-2 2-3 6, Joseph 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 37-80 21-25 103. INdIaNa (77) George 5-13 5-8 16, West 2-6 3-4 7, Hibbert 5-13 5-6 15, G.Hill 3-6 0-0 7, Stephenson 6-13 0-0 15, Turner 0-2 0-0 0, Scola 1-6 0-0 2, Mahinmi 1-1 0-0 2, Sloan 1-6 2-2 4, Butler 2-3 2-2 7, Allen 0-0 2-2 2, Copeland 0-0 0-0 0, S.Hill 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-69 19-24 77. san antonio 25 23 21 34 103 Indiana 15 20 24 18 —77 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 8-17 (Mills 2-2, Diaw 2-4, Leonard 2-4, Belinelli 1-3, Green 1-3, Ginobili 0-1), Indiana 6-14 (Stephenson 3-5, G.Hill 1-1, Butler 1-2, George 1-4, Sloan 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 49 (Leonard 11), Indiana 46 (West 8). Assists—San Antonio 18 (Duncan, Diaw, Parker 4), Indiana 14 (George 5). Total Fouls—San Antonio 19, Indiana 22. A—18,165.
bobcats 100, Wizards 94
WasHINGtON (94) Ariza 4-9 0-0 11, Booker 2-5 0-0 4, Gortat 3-7 0-0 6, Wall 4-16 2-3 10, Beal 8-12 2-3 20, Gooden 5-12 2-2 12, Webster 5-7 2-2 14, Harrington 4-5 1-3 11, Miller 2-5 0-0 4, Seraphin 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 38-79 9-13 94. CHarlOtte (100) Kidd-Gilchrist 0-5 3-4 3, McRoberts 1-2 0-0 2, Jefferson 8-19 3-3 19, Walker 6-22 9-10 21, Henderson 3-7 3-4 9, Zeller 4-4 7-8 15, Biyombo 2-2 0-0 4, Neal 3-6 2-2 9, Ridnour 0-2 0-0 0, Douglas-Roberts 7-9 2-3 18. Totals 34-78 29-34 100. Washington 20 40 20 14—94 Charlotte 25 19 26 30—100 3-Point Goals—Washington 9-17 (Ariza 3-5, Beal 2-3, Webster 2-3, Harrington 2-3, Wall 0-1, Gooden 0-2), Charlotte 3-21 (Douglas-Roberts 2-3, Neal 1-4, McRoberts 0-1, Henderson 0-1, Ridnour 0-2, Walker 0-10). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 41 (Gortat 11), Charlotte 53 (Jefferson 11). Assists—Washington 26 (Miller 9), Charlotte 17 (Walker 10). Total Fouls—Washington 21, Charlotte 15. A—14,894.
Grizzlies 94, Nuggets 92
tOrONtO (83) Ross 1-6 0-0 2, Johnson 2-3 0-2 4, Valanciunas 7-9 0-0 14, Lowry 4-11 2-3 11, DeRozan 8-14 0-1 16, Patterson 1-4 0-0 2, Novak 4-6 1-1 13, Salmons 1-3 0-0 2, Vasquez 6-11 2-3 17, Hayes 0-0 0-0 0, De Colo 1-3 0-0 2, Fields 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-70 5-10 83. MIaMI (93) James 11-20 9-11 32, Haslem 1-3 0-0 2, Bosh 8-16 2-3 18, Chalmers 4-8 1-1 12, Douglas 2-4 0-0 5, Lewis 1-4 0-0 2, Cole 0-1 1-2 1, Jones 2-5 2-2 8, Andersen 5-5 3-3 13. Totals 34-66 18-22 93. toronto 23 28 14 18—83 Miami 24 30 20 19—93 3-Point Goals—Toronto 8-26 (Novak 4-6, Vasquez 3-5, Lowry 1-5, Patterson 0-1, Salmons 0-1, DeRozan 0-2, De Colo 0-2, Ross 0-4), Miami 7-25 (Chalmers 3-5, Jones 2-4, Douglas 1-3, James 1-6, Cole 0-1, Lewis 0-2, Bosh 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Toronto 37 (Valanciunas 10), Miami 39 (James, Andersen 7). Assists—Toronto 17 (DeRozan 7), Miami 19 (James 8). Total Fouls—Toronto 25, Miami 14. Technicals—Toronto defensive three second, Lewis. A—19,831.
MeMPHIs (94) Prince 0-4 1-2 1, Z.Randolph 8-15 4-8 20, Gasol 6-19 1-3 13, Conley 9-15 0-0 19, Lee 6-12 4-6 19, Calathes 4-7 0-0 9, Davis 1-1 1-1 3, M.Miller 1-2 0-0 2, Koufos 2-7 2-3 6, Allen 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 38-85 13-23 94. deNVer (92) Q.Miller 1-2 0-0 3, Faried 6-14 5-9 17, Mozgov 9-15 5-7 23, Lawson 3-9 2-4 8, Foye 6-13 0-0 13, Arthur 2-5 0-0 5, Fournier 2-3 0-0 5, Brooks 4-8 0-0 10, Vesely 3-4 2-4 8. Totals 36-73 14-24 92. Memphis 25 22 28 19—94 denver 16 29 23 24—92 3-Point Goals—Memphis 5-9 (Lee 3-5, Calathes 1-1, Conley 1-2, M.Miller 0-1), Denver 6-20 (Brooks 2-4, Q.Miller 1-1, Fournier 1-1, Arthur 1-3, Foye 1-8, Mozgov 0-1, Lawson 0-2). Fouled Out—Vesely. Rebounds—Memphis 51 (Z.Randolph 11), Denver 53 (Mozgov 10). Assists—Memphis 17 (Z.Randolph, Lee, Calathes 3), Denver 20 (Lawson, Brooks 6). Total Fouls— Memphis 19, Denver 23. Technicals— Brooks, Denver defensive three second. A—14,570.
MIlWaUkee (111) Middleton 6-16 0-0 14, Adrien 7-13 2-2 16, Pachulia 6-13 0-0 12, Knight 7-21 11-14 25, Sessions 5-10 9-11 20, Antetokounmpo 4-6 4-5 14, Henson 3-8 1-2 7, Udoh 1-1 1-2 3. Totals 39-88 28-36 111. detrOIt (116) Smith 11-19 2-3 26, Monroe 12-21 4-6 28, Drummond 5-9 0-0 10, Jennings 7-17 1-3 20, Singler 5-10 2-2 14, Stuckey 2-5 0-1 4, Jerebko 0-4 0-0 0, Caldwell-Pope 1-4 0-0 2, Bynum 3-6 6-6 12, Villanueva 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 46-97 15-21 116. Milwaukee 30 31 21 29—111 detroit 34 18 29 35—116 3-Point Goals—Milwaukee 5-17 (Antetokounmpo 2-2, Middleton 2-7, Sessions 1-4, Knight 0-4), Detroit 9-23 (Jennings 5-9, Smith 2-4, Singler 2-5, Caldwell-Pope 0-1, Bynum 0-1, Jerebko 0-1, Villanueva 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 57 (Pachulia 13), Detroit 57 (Drummond 16). Assists—Milwaukee 28 (Sessions 11), Detroit 28 (Jennings 13). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 20, Detroit 26. Technicals—Pachulia, Drummond, Detroit Coach Loyer. Flagrant Fouls— Stuckey. A—13,062.
Final Four at at&t stadium arlington, texas National semifinals saturday, april 5 UConn (30-8) vs. Florida (36-2), 4:09 p.m. Kentucky (28-10) vs. Wisconsin (30-7), 6:49 p.m. National Championship Monday, april 7 Semifinal winners, 7:10 p.m.
Pistons 116, bucks 111
Clippers 114, timberwolves 104
l.a. ClIPPers (114) Barnes 7-14 2-2 19, Dudley 6-10 2-2 16, Jordan 4-6 3-8 11, Paul 6-16 8-8 22, Collison 9-17 8-8 28, Turkoglu 2-5 0-0 6, Green 3-9 0-0 6, Bullock 1-5 0-0 3, Hollins 0-0 1-2 1, Davis 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 38-82 26-32 114. MINNesOta (104) Brewer 4-8 0-0 9, Love 8-21 2-3 20, Pekovic 0-3 0-0 0, Rubio 1-6 0-0 3, Martin 4-14 2-2 12, Dieng 4-4 6-6 14, Barea 2-10 0-0 4, Cunningham 4-8 0-0 8, Budinger 5-8 1-1 12, Hummel 4-8 0-0 11, Muhammad 5-6 1-2 11. Totals 41-96 12-14 104. l.a. Clippers 26 28 34 26—114 Minnesota 22 29 15 38—104 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 12-30 (Barnes 3-9, Turkoglu 2-2, Collison 2-3, Dudley 2-3, Paul 2-5, Bullock 1-4, Green 0-4), Minnesota 10-26 (Hummel 3-4, Martin 2-5, Love 2-8, Rubio 1-2, Brewer 1-3, Budinger 1-3, Barea 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 58 (Jordan 24), Minnesota 49 (Love 13). Assists—L.A. Clippers 23 (Paul 9), Minnesota 30 (Barea 8). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 18, Minnesota 23. A—12,172.
bulls 94, Celtics 80
bOstON (80) Green 4-13 0-0 9, Bass 7-10 4-4 18, Humphries 5-7 1-2 11, Bayless 6-14 2-2 18, Bradley 0-5 1-1 1, Sullinger 1-6 0-0 2, Johnson 1-7 3-4 5, Pressey 4-8 0-2 9, Olynyk 3-6 0-0 7, Babb 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-77 11-15 80. CHICaGO (94) Dunleavy 7-12 5-5 22, Boozer 7-12 2-2 16, Noah 9-19 1-1 19, Hinrich 0-6 1-2 1, Butler 8-13 2-2 18, Augustin 1-9 2-2 4, Gibson 6-9 2-2 14, Snell 0-0 0-0 0, Mohammed 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-80 15-16 94. boston 24 26 20 10—80 Chicago 25 23 23 23—94 3-Point Goals—Boston 7-25 (Bayless 4-9, Olynyk 1-2, Pressey 1-3, Green 1-3, Babb 0-1, Bradley 0-1, Sullinger 0-3, Johnson 0-3), Chicago 3-16 (Dunleavy 3-6, Noah 0-1, Butler 0-3, Augustin 0-3, Hinrich 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Boston 45 (Bass 9), Chicago 48 (Noah, Gibson 11). Assists—Boston 17 (Bayless 5), Chicago 28 (Augustin 11). Total Fouls—Boston 15, Chicago 16. Technicals—Boston defensive three second, Chicago defensive three second. A—21,494.
kings 102, Pelicans 97
saCraMeNtO (102) Gay 7-18 7-8 22, R.Evans 1-1 1-2 3, Cousins 13-18 9-12 35, McCallum 9-19 3-5 22, McLemore 5-11 3-4 14, Outlaw 1-6 0-0 2, Williams 1-2 0-0 2, Cunningham 1-3 0-0 2, Thompson 0-2 0-0 0, Acy 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-80 23-31 102. NeW OrleaNs (97) Aminu 1-1 2-2 4, Davis 5-13 12-14 22, Stiemsma 1-1 2-3 4, Roberts 4-12 0-0 9, T.Evans 7-15 1-2 15, Miller 3-4 0-0 6, Ajinca 0-3 0-0 0, Rivers 2-5 2-4 6, Morrow 9-13 1-1 23, Withey 4-4 0-0 8, Babbitt 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 36-73 20-26 97. sacramento 29 24 27 22 —102 New Orleans 22 33 21 21 —97 3-Point Goals—Sacramento 3-11 (McCallum 1-2, Gay 1-3, McLemore 1-4, Outlaw 0-2), New Orleans 5-14 (Morrow 4-6, Roberts 1-4, Davis 0-1, T.Evans 0-1, Babbitt 0-2). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Sacramento 58 (Cousins 14), New Orleans 35 (Davis 8). Assists—Sacramento 20 (McCallum 10), New Orleans 22 (Rivers 9). Total Fouls—Sacramento 19, New Orleans 26. Technicals—Acy, Rivers. Flagrant Fouls—R.Evans. Ejected—R. Evans. A—15,548.
knicks 92, Jazz 83
NeW YOrk (92) Smith 5-14 0-0 13, Anthony 11-19 8-8 34, Chandler 6-7 3-8 15, Felton 5-8 1-2 12, Shumpert 1-5 0-0 2, Hardaway Jr. 3-9 3-4 10, Prigioni 0-3 0-0 0, Aldrich 2-4 2-2 6, Tyler 0-1 0-0 0, Brown 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-70 17-24 92. UtaH (83) Jefferson 5-9 0-0 11, Williams 2-5 0-0 5, Favors 6-14 1-3 13, Burke 2-8 0-0 5, Hayward 5-14 5-8 18, Kanter 5-11 2-2 12, Burks 7-12 1-2 17, Garrett 0-8 0-0 0, Clark 0-3 0-0 0, Gobert 1-1 0-0 2, Evans 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-85 9-15 83. New York 21 27 31 13—92 Utah 27 22 20 14—83 3-Point Goals—New York 9-29 (Anthony 4-7, Smith 3-10, Felton 1-4, Hardaway Jr. 1-5, Prigioni 0-1, Shumpert 0-2), Utah 8-24 (Hayward 3-8, Burks 2-2, Williams 1-2, Burke 1-2, Jefferson 1-3, Clark 0-2, Garrett 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—New York 47 (Chandler 9), Utah 55 (Favors 13). Assists—New York 18 (Felton 6), Utah 15 (Burks 4). Total Fouls—New York 18, Utah 23. A—18,653.
NCaa basketball Men’s tournament
Women’s tournament
lINCOlN regional regional Championship Monday, March 31 UConn 69, Texas A&M 54 NOtre daMe regional regional Championship Monday, March 31 Notre Dame 88, Baylor 69 staNFOrd regional regional Championship tuesday, april 1 Stanford (32-3) vs. North Carolina (27-9), 7 p.m. lOUIsVIlle regional regional Championship tuesday, april 1: Maryland (27-6) vs. Louisville (33-4), 5 p.m. Final Four at Nashville, tenn. National semifinals sunday, april 6 UConn vs. Stanford regional champion, 4:30 or 6:30 p.m. Notre Dame vs. Louisville regional champion, 4:30 or 6:30 p.m. National Championship tuesday, april 8 Semifinal winners, 6:30 p.m.
National Invitation tournament
semifinals at Madison square Garden New York tuesday, april 1 Clemson (23-13) vs. SMU (26-9), 5 p.m. Minnesota (23-13) vs. Florida State (22-13), 7:30 p.m. Championship thursday, april 3 Semifinal winners, 5 p.m.
2013-14 aP all-aMerICa teaMs
statistics through March 16 First team Doug McDermott, Creighton, 6-8, 225, senior, Ames, Iowa, 26.9 ppg, 7.0 rpg, 52.5 fg pct, 45.4 3-pt fg pct, 86.6 ft pct (65 first-team votes, 325 total points). Jabari Parker, Duke, 6-8, 235, freshman, Chicago, 19.3 ppg, 8.8 rpg (55, 303). Russ Smith, Louisville, 6-0, 165, senior, Brooklyn, N.Y., 18.3 ppg, 3.4 rpg, 4.7 apg, 40.5 3-pt fg pct, 2.1 steals (54, 298). Shabazz Napier, Connecticut, 6-1, 180, senior, Roxbury, Mass., 17.4 ppg, 5.9 rpg, 4.9 apg, 85.9 ft pct, 1.7 steals (37, 254). Sean Kilpatrick, Cincinnati, 6-4, 210, senior, Yonkers, N.Y., 20.7 ppg, 4.4 rpg, 2.6 apg, 84.7 ft pct (37, 243). second team Nick Johnson, Arizona, 6-3, 200, junior, Gilbert, Ariz., 16.2 ppg, 4.0 rpg, 2.8 apg, (30, 228). Andrew Wiggins, Kansas, 6-8, 200, freshman, Vaughan, Ontario, 17.4 ppg, 6.0 rpg (14, 199). Nik Stauskas, Michigan, 6-6, 205, sophomore, Mississauga, Ontario, 17.5 ppg, 3.1 rpg, 3.3 apg, 44.9 3-pt fg pct, 82.0 ft pct, (5, 128). Melvin Ejim, Iowa State, 6-6, 220, senior, Toronto, 18.1 ppg, 8.5 rpg, 1.8 apg, 50.6 fg pct, (8, 127). T.J. Warren, N.C. State, 6-8, 215, sophomore, Durham, N.C., 24.8 ppg, 7.1 rpg, 52.5 fg pct, 35.2 minutes, 1.8 steals, (7, 110). third team Cleanthony Early, Wichita State, 6-8, 219, senior, Middletown, N.Y., 15.8 ppg, 5.9 rpg, 2.0 apg, 84.4 ft pct (3, 104). Kyle Anderson, UCLA, 6-9, 230, sophomore, Fairview, N.J., 14.9 ppg, 8.8 rpg, 6.6 apg, 48.1 3pt fg pct, 1.8 steals (84). Julius Randle, Kentucky, 6-9, 250, freshman, Dallas, 15.0 ppg, 10.5 rpg, 50.2 fg pct (81). C.J. Fair, Syracuse, 6-8, 215, senior, Baltimore, 16.7 ppg, 6.2 rpg (3, 65). Scottie Wilbekin, Florida, 6-2, 176, senior, Gainesville, Fla., 13.0 ppg, 2.6 rpg, 3.8 apg, 40.0 3-pt fg pct, 1.7 steals (3, 59). Honorable Mention (in alphabetical order) Karvel Anderson, Robert Morris; Cameron Ayers, Bucknell; Cameron Bairstow, New Mexico; Billy Baron, Canisius; Jerrelle Benimon, Towson; Taylor Braun, North Dakota State; De’Mon Brooks, Davidson; John Brown, High Point; Bryce Cotton, Providence; Joel Embiid, Kansas. Tyler Ennis, Syracuse; Aaron Gordon, Arizona; Langston Hall, Mercer; Gary Harris, Michigan State; Tyler Haws, BYU; R.J. Hunter, Georgia State; Jordair Jett, Saint Louis; Shawn Jones, Middle Tennessee; DeAndre Kane, Iowa State (1 first-team vote); J.J. Mann, Belmont. Javon McCrea, Buffalo; Daniel Mullings, New Mexico State; Aaric Murray, Texas Southern; Marcus Paige, North Carolina; Jacob Parker, Stephen F. Austin; Lamar Patterson, Pittsburgh; Adreian Payne, Michigan State (1); Casey Prather, Florida; Wesley Saunders, Harvard; Marcus Smart, Oklahoma State (1). Juwan Staten, West Virginia; Keifer Sykes, Green Bay; Xavier Thames, San Diego State; Fred VanVleet, Wichita State (1); Jameel Warney, Stony Brook; Davion Weber, Weber State; Alan Williams, UC Santa Barbara; Pendarvis Williams, Norfolk State; Patric Young, Florida.
Wild 3, kings 2
HOCKEY HOCkeY
NHl eastern Conference
atlantic GP W y-Boston 75 52 Montreal 76 43 Tampa Bay 75 41 Detroit 75 35 Toronto 76 36 Ottawa 75 32 Florida 76 27 Buffalo 74 20 Metro GP W x-Pittsburgh75 48 N.Y. Rangers76 42 Philadelphia74 39 Columbus 74 38 Washington75 34 New Jersey 75 32 Carolina 75 32 N.Y. Isles 74 29
l 17 26 25 26 32 29 41 45 l 22 30 27 30 28 28 32 35
Ol Pts 6 110 7 93 9 91 14 84 8 80 14 78 8 62 9 49 Ol Pts 5 101 4 88 8 86 6 82 13 81 15 79 11 75 10 68
GF 241 199 223 202 220 218 182 142 GF 232 205 213 208 217 184 187 206
Western Conference
Ga 158 189 201 213 239 250 250 222 Ga 185 183 210 200 226 195 210 247
Central GP W l Ol Pts GF Ga x-St. Louis 74 50 17 7 107 240 168 x-Colorado 74 47 21 6 100 227 202 x-Chicago 76 42 19 15 99 248 200 Minnesota 76 39 26 11 89 189 191 Dallas 74 36 27 11 83 214 212 Nashville 76 33 32 11 77 190 229 Winnipeg 76 33 33 10 76 212 225 Pacific GP W l Ol Pts GF Ga x-Anaheim 75 49 18 8 106 244 191 x-San Jose 76 47 20 9 103 232 184 Los Angeles76 44 26 6 94 191 162 Phoenix 75 36 27 12 84 206 212 Vancouver 76 34 31 11 79 184 206 Calgary 75 31 37 7 69 192 223 Edmonton 75 26 40 9 61 184 249 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division Monday’s Games Ottawa 2, Carolina 1, SO New Jersey 6, Florida 3 Anaheim 5, Winnipeg 4, OT Minnesota 3, Los Angeles 2 sunday’s Games Boston 4, Philadelphia 3, SO Nashville 4, Washington 3, SO Ottawa 6, Calgary 3 Detroit 3, Tampa Bay 2 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 1 N.Y. Rangers 5, Edmonton 0 tuesday’s Games New Jersey at Buffalo, 5 p.m. Calgary at Toronto, 5 p.m. Florida at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Dallas at Washington, 5 p.m. Colorado at Columbus, 5 p.m. Montreal at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at St. Louis, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Vancouver, 8 p.m. Winnipeg at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Edmonton at San Jose, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Islanders at Ottawa, 5 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 6 p.m. Edmonton at Anaheim, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.
NHl sUMMarIes Monday devils 6, Panthers 3
Florida 1 2 0—3 New Jersey 3 1 2—6 First Period—1, New Jersey, T.Zajac 14 (Jagr, Fayne), :12. 2, New Jersey, Jagr 24 (Clowe), 9:24. 3, New Jersey, T.Zajac 15 (Clowe, Gelinas), 11:33 (pp). 4, Florida, Kulikov 8 (Bjugstad), 17:22 (sh). Penalties—Hayes, Fla (hooking), 10:08; Jovanovski, Fla, double minor (roughing), 15:46. second Period—5, Florida, Boyes 20 (Bjugstad), :50. 6, New Jersey, Clowe 7 (T.Zajac, Jagr), 3:05. 7, Florida, Pirri 10 (Olsen, Trocheck), 6:35. Penalties—Fayne, NJ (holding), 3:27; Elias, NJ (roughing), 4:34; Gelinas, NJ (holding), 11:18; Larsson, NJ (highsticking), 19:57. third Period—8, New Jersey, Josefson 1 (Carter), 4:02 (sh). 9, New Jersey, T.Zajac 16 (Ruutu, Jagr), 9:37. Penalties—Zubrus, NJ (holding stick), 2:57; Robak, Fla (tripping), 6:02. shots on Goal—Florida 4-13-5—22. New Jersey 18-7-7—32. Power-play opportunities—Florida 0 of 5; New Jersey 1 of 4. Goalies—Florida, Ellis 5-10-0 (32 shots-26 saves). New Jersey, Brodeur 18-14-5 (9-6), Schneider (6:35 second, 13-13). referees—Brad Meier, Ian Walsh. linesmen—Michel Cormier, Brian Mach. a—15,209. t—2:23.
senators 2, Hurricanes 1, sO
Carolina 1 0 0 0—1 Ottawa 1 0 0 0—2 Ottawa won shootout 1-0 First Period—1, Ottawa, Zibanejad 14 (Wiercioch, Hemsky), 1:41. 2, Carolina, Skinner 30, 4:03. Penalties—Ward, Car, served by Liles (delay of game), 4:32. second Period—None. Penalties—Pageau, Ott (interference), 11:53; Gryba, Ott (boarding), 18:10. third Period—None. Penalties—Turris, Ott (goaltender interference), 4:20; Bowman, Car (hooking), 14:00. Overtime—None. Penalties—Gerbe, Car (roughing), 2:49; Gryba, Ott (roughing), 2:49. shootout—Carolina 0 (Nash NG, Skinner NG, Lindholm NG), Ottawa 1 (Zibanejad NG, Hemsky G, Turris NG). shots on Goal—Carolina 9-6-12-4—31. Ottawa 9-10-9-1—29. Power-play opportunities—Carolina 0 of 3; Ottawa 0 of 2. Goalies—Carolina, Ward 9-11-6 (29 shots-28 saves). Ottawa, Anderson 23-14-8 (31-30). referees—Rob Martell, Kevin Pollock. linesmen—S. Cherrey, Don Henderson. a—16,732. t—2:44.
ducks 5, Jets 4, Ot
Winnipeg 2 2 0 0—4 anaheim 0 1 3 1—5 First Period—1, Winnipeg, Trouba 9 (Frolik, Little), 8:48. 2, Winnipeg, Halischuk 5 (Kane, O’Dell), 13:39. Penalties—Perry, Ana (hooking), 19:54. second Period—3, Winnipeg, Wheeler 27 (Byfuglien, Pavelec), :33 (pp). 4, Winnipeg, Tangradi 3 (Redmond, Peluso), 10:54. 5, Anaheim, Bonino 20 (Silfverberg, Maroon), 17:44. Penalties—Sbisa, Ana (hooking), 3:26. third Period—6, Anaheim, Getzlaf 31 (Maroon, Perreault), 3:06 (pp). 7, Anaheim, Lindholm 6 (Winnik, Koivu), 4:16. 8, Anaheim, Perry 39 (Getzlaf, Palmieri), 19:37. Penalties—Peluso, Wpg (interference), 2:17; Little, Wpg (slashing), 4:47; Perreault, Ana (slashing), 4:47; Robidas, Ana (interference), 13:11. Overtime—9, Anaheim, Robidas 5 (Cogliano, Sbisa), :16. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Winnipeg 19-12-60—37. Anaheim 4-7-24-1—36. Power-play opportunities—Winnipeg 1 of 3; Anaheim 1 of 1. Goalies—Winnipeg, Pavelec 20-25-7 (36 shots-31 saves). Anaheim, Andersen 18-5-0 (37-33). a—17,174 (17,174). t—2:35.
Minnesota 0 1 2—3 los angeles 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Martinez 11 (Kopitar, Williams), 6:30. Penalties—Cooke, Min (interference), 15:06. second Period—2, Minnesota, Parise 28 (Granlund, Koivu), 3:37 (pp). 3, Los Angeles, Williams 19 (Gaborik, Mitchell), 11:49. Penalties—Pearson, LA (hooking), 3:01; Moulson, Min, served by Fontaine, double minor (roughing), 12:07; Muzzin, LA (roughing), 12:07. third Period—4, Minnesota, Moulson 22 (Pominville, Haula), 3:54. 5, Minnesota, Koivu 10 (Coyle, Parise), 4:56. Penalties—None. shots on Goal—Minnesota 8-4-8—20. Los Angeles 8-7-5—20. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 1 of 1; Los Angeles 0 of 2. Goalies—Minnesota, Bryzgalov 9-8-7 (20 shots-18 saves). Los Angeles, Quick 26-16-2 (20-17). a—18,118 (18,118). t—2:23. referees—Brad Watson, Mike Leggo. linesmen—Darren Gibbs, Anthony Sericolo.
AUTO RACING aUtO raCING
NasCar sPrINt CUP Points leaders
through March 30 1. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 227. 2. Matt Kenseth, 218. 3. Carl Edwards, 217. 4. Jeff Gordon, 216. 5. Jimmie Johnson, 209. 6. Kyle Busch, 189. 7. Brad Keselowski, 188. 8. Joey Logano, 187. 9. Austin Dillon, 179. 10. Ryan Newman, 174. 11. Paul Menard, 168. 12. Denny Hamlin, 165. 13. Brian Vickers, 165. 14. Marcos Ambrose, 162. 15. Tony Stewart, 154. 16. A J Allmendinger, 152. 17. Clint Bowyer, 150. 18. Greg Biffle, 149. 19. Kyle Larson, 148. 20. Kurt Busch, 146. 21. Casey Mears, 146. 22. Kasey Kahne, 145. 23. Jamie McMurray, 140. 24. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 136. 25. Kevin Harvick, 135. 26. Aric Almirola, 132. 27. Justin Allgaier, 109. 28. Martin Truex Jr., 105. 29. Danica Patrick, 104. 30. Reed Sorenson, 101. 31. Michael Annett, 88. 32. Cole Whitt, 86. 33. David Gilliland, 85. 34. David Ragan, 85. 35. Alex Bowman, 73. 36. Josh Wise, 59. 37. Ryan Truex, 47. 38. Travis Kvapil, 45. 39. Parker Kligerman, 36. 40. Bobby Labonte, 29.
Money leaders
through March 30 1. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $2,310,748 2. Brad Keselowski, $1,973,196 3. Denny Hamlin, $1,769,320 4. Jeff Gordon, $1,514,044 5. Jimmie Johnson, $1,443,694 6. Matt Kenseth, $1,348,912 7. Kyle Busch, $1,322,659 8. Paul Menard, $1,268,337 9. Joey Logano, $1,202,184 10. Kevin Harvick, $1,172,316 11. Austin Dillon, $1,128,719 12. Carl Edwards, $1,124,248 13. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $1,114,143 14. Greg Biffle, $1,061,183 15. Tony Stewart, $1,056,736 16. Jamie McMurray, $1,039,417 17. Marcos Ambrose, $1,022,233 18. Kyle Larson, $1,020,483 19. Brian Vickers, $999,163 20. Clint Bowyer, $959,859 21. Aric Almirola, $958,394 22. Casey Mears, $948,790 23. Kurt Busch, $938,963 24. Ryan Newman, $918,093 25. Kasey Kahne, $891,693 26. Martin Truex Jr., $889,791 27. A J Allmendinger, $883,503 28. Justin Allgaier, $866,438 29. David Gilliland, $846,895 30. David Ragan, $825,633 31. Danica Patrick, $813,118 32. Michael Annett, $795,944 33. Reed Sorenson, $790,429 34. Alex Bowman, $754,031 35. Cole Whitt, $730,918 36. Parker Kligerman, $669,363 37. Josh Wise, $648,682 38. Landon Cassill, $595,063 39. Brian Scott, $499,175 40. Ryan Truex, $429,893
NasCar NatIONWIde Money leaders
through March 22 1. Kyle Busch, $298,960 2. Kyle Larson, $262,309 3. Regan Smith, $233,908 4. Brad Keselowski, $230,780 5. Trevor Bayne, $194,568 6. Elliott Sadler, $188,414 7. Chase Elliott, $175,863 8. Ty Dillon, $173,388 9. Brendan Gaughan, $162,173 10. Dylan Kwasniewski, $161,848 11. Brian Scott, $159,313 12. Ryan Sieg, $154,873 13. James Buescher, $153,033 14. Matt Kenseth, $151,345 15. Mike Bliss, $150,748 16. Ryan Reed, $149,338 17. Dakoda Armstrong, $148,628 18. Landon Cassill, $147,441 19. Eric McClure, $145,011 20. Jamie Dick, $143,477 21. Jeffrey Earnhardt, $143,398 22. Jeremy Clements, $142,613 23. Joey Gase, $141,963 24. Kevin Harvick, $134,400 25. Mike Wallace, $131,806
Points leaders
through March 22 1. Regan Smith, 185. 2. Trevor Bayne, 185. 3. Ty Dillon, 179. 4. Chase Elliott, 177. 5. Elliott Sadler, 174. 6. Brendan Gaughan, 160. 7. Brian Scott, 160. 8. Dylan Kwasniewski, 149. 9. James Buescher, 145. 10. Mike Bliss, 125. 11. Chris Buescher, 122. 12. Ryan Reed, 117. 13. Mike Wallace, 115. 14. Landon Cassill, 114. 15. Dakoda Armstrong, 112. 16. Jeremy Clements, 84. 17. Eric McClure, 83. 18. Jamie Dick, 76. 19. Jeffrey Earnhardt, 75. 20. Joey Gase, 73. 21. Blake Koch, 60. 22. Derrike Cope, 58. 23. Tanner Berryhill, 56. 24. David Starr, 39. 25. Daryl Harr, 39.
TENNIS teNNIs
Wta tOUr abierto Monterrey
Monday at sierra Madre tennis Club Monterrey, Mexico Purse: $500,000 (Intl.) surface: Hard-Outdoor singles First round Nicole Gibbs, United States, def. Andrea Hlavackova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4. Jovana Jaksic, Serbia, def. Karin Knapp (7), Italy, 6-3, 6-4. Allie Kiick, United States, def. Tadeja Majeric, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-3. Kristina Mladenovic, France, def. Johanna Konta, Britain, 6-4, 6-2. Karolina Pliskova, Czech Republic, def. Shahar Peer, Israel, 6-3, 6-3. Timea Babos, Hungary, def. Ximena Hermoso, Mexico, 6-1, 6-2. Kimiko Date-Krumm, Japan, def. Flavia Pennetta (1), Italy, 7-5, 6-2. doubles First round Nicole Melichar, United States, and Jade Windley, Britain, def. Victoria Rodriguez and Marcela Zacarias, Mexico, 6-2, 5-7, 10-8.
Wta tOUr Family Circle Cup
Monday at the Family Circle tennis Center Charleston, s.C. Purse: $710,000 (Premier) surface: Green Clay-Outdoor singles First round Lauren Davis, United States, def. Dinah Pfizenmaier, Germany, 6-1, 6-4. Lucie Safarova (9), Czech Republic, def. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, 6-2, 6-3. Chanelle Scheepers, South Africa, def. Alison Riske, United States, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. Teliana Pereira, Brazil, def. Patricia Mayr-Achleitner, Austria, 6-1, 7-6 (5). Madison Keys (15), United States, def. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 7-6 (0), 7-6 (3). Virginie Razzano, France, def. Julia Goerges, Germany, 6-0, 5-7, 6-2. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, def. Zheng Saisai, China, 6-2, 3-6, 7-5. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, def. Maria Kirilenko (10), Russia, 6-1, 7-5. Petra Cetkovska, Czech Republic, def. Varvara Lepchenko, United States, 6-1, 2-6, 6-0. Ajla Tomljanovic, Croatia, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 6-7 (4), 6-1, 7-5. Kiki Bertens, Belgium, def. Paula Ormaechea, Argentina, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, def. Christina McHale, United States, 6-3, 7-5. Jana Cepelova, Slovakia, def. Melanie Oudin, United States, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, def. Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia, 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 (5). Grace Min, United States, def. Michelle Larcher de Brito, Portugal, 6-3, 1-6, 6-3.
TRANSACTIONS traNsaCtIONs baseball american league
BOSTON RED SOX — Placed OF Shane Victorino on the 15-day DL, retroactive to March 30. Recalled OF Jackie Bradley Jr. from Pawtucket (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with C Yan Gomes on a six-year contract. Agreed to terms with C George Kottaras and RHP Mark Lowe on minor league contracts and assigned them to Columbus (IL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Agreed to terms with OF Vladimir Guerrero on a one-day contract in order to retire from the team. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed LHP Brian Duensing on paternity leave. Recalled RHP Michael Tonkin from Rochester (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to terms with RHP Joe Blanton on a minor league contract and assigned him to Sacramento (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Placed SS Jose Reyes on the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of INF Jonathan Diaz from Buffalo (IL).
National league
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Announced the retirement of C Henry Blanco and added him to their coaching staff. NEW YORK METS — Agreed to terms with OF Bobby Abreu on a minor league contract.
basketball National basketball association
NBA — Suspended Philadelphia F Arnett Moultrie five games for violating the NBA/NBPA Anti-Drug Program. CHARLOTTE BOBCATS — Signed F D.J. White to a second 10-day contract. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS — Signed G-F Scotty Hopson for the remainder of the season.
Women’s National basketball association
CONNECTICUT SUN — Traded F Sandrine Gruda to Los Angeles for a 2014 first-round draft pick and a 2015 second-round draft pick.
FOOtball National Football league
HOUSTON TEXANS — Released S Danieal Manning. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Resigned C Ryan Wendell. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed CB Zack Bowman. Re-signed DT Mike Patterson. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed CB Carlos Rogers to a one-year contract. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Agreed to terms with S Ryan Clark.
HOCkeY National Hockey league
BUFFALO SABRES — Signed coach Ted Nolan to a three-year contract extension. DALLAS STARS — Recalled D Patrik Nemeth from Texas (AHL). EDMONTON OILERS — Agreed to terms with C Mark Arcobello on a one-year contract extension. Reassigned G Laurent Brossoit to Bakersfield (ECHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Reassigned F Mark Van Guilder to Milwaukee (AHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Recalled D Adam Larsson from Albany (AHL) under emergency conditions. NEW YORK RANGERS — Agreed to terms with F Chris McCarthy. OTTAWA SENATORS — Recalled F Jean-Gabriel Pageau from Binghamton (AHL) on an emergency basis.
COlleGe NCaa
CALIFORNIA — Announced the retirement of men’s basketball coach Mike Montgomery.
sporTs
Team: First Duke first-teamer since 2010-11 Continued from Page B-1 McDermott, who led the nation in scoring at 26.9 points a game, joins Oscar Robertson, Lew Alcindor, Pete Maravich and Bill Walton among others. The last threetime All-Americas were Patrick Ewing of Georgetown and Wayman Tisdale of Oklahoma from 1982-85. “Never in my wildest dreams did I imagine being with names of that caliber,” McDermott said. “Truly an honor to be an All-American three straight years. It’s hard to wrap my mind around being in the company of those guys.” McDermott was one of four seniors on this year’s team, which included freshman Jabari Parker of Duke. The other seniors all came from the first-year American Athletic Conference: Russ Smith of Louisville, Shabazz Napier of Connecticut and Sean Kilpatrick of Cincinnati. It’s the first time one conference had three players picked since the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2001-02 with Duke’s Shane Battier and Jason Williams and North Carolina’s Joseph Forte. McDermott received 65 first-team votes and 325 points from the same national media panel that selects the weekly Top 25. Parker drew 55 first-team votes and was second with 303 points. Smith had 54 firstteam votes and 298 points, 44 more than Napier, who got 37 first-team votes. Kilpatrick was a first-team pick 37 times
and had 243 points. The voting was done on Selection Sunday. McDermott led Creighton to a successful first season in the Big East but the Bluejays lost by 30 points to Baylor in the third round of the NCAA Cameron Tournament. Bairstow “You can’t take away from what we did this year. We made some noise in the first year of the Big East, and we beat some great teams and got a three seed for the first time in school history,” he said. “All that is very special, something we’ll never forget.” The 6-foot-8 McDermott averaged 7.0 rebounds and shot 52.5 percent from the field and 45.4 percent from 3-point range. McDermott considered leaving for the NBA after last season. “I’ve been blessed to coach him 33 more times this year than I thought I was going to,” Greg McDermott, his father and coach, said before the NCAA Tournament. “This year has been so much fun. It’s been such a privilege as a father to be able to sit on the sideline and watch your son do what Doug’s done over the course of this season. Arguably he had more expectations on him than any player in the country, and he was able to answer every critic in the world with his play and our team’s play.”
Parker was one of the heralded freshmen this season, and he was the one who crashed the seniors’ All-America party. The 6-foot-8 native of Chicago averaged 19.3 points and 8.8 rebounds, taking over the scoring load for the Blue Devils down the stretch of the season. He is the first Duke first-teamer since Nolan Smith in 2010-11 and the first freshman since Anthony Davis of Kentucky two years ago. “Being named AP All-American is as high an honor as you can get because it covers the whole country,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “Jabari had a great year and for him to be recognized like that is quite an accomplishment for him and our program.” Smith brought the term “Russdiculous” into the national spotlight as he followed his national championship season with Louisville by averaging 18.3 points, 3.4 rebounds, 4.7 assists and 2.1 steals while shooting 40.5 percent from 3-point range. There was a lot of speculation that Smith was going to leave after his junior season. “It’s a lot of things in the back of your mind, as far as, will you get hurt, is it the right decision, will you get drafted, will you make money?” Smith said. “But at the end of the day, it was important for me to get my education and get my degree and finish out my senior year out on a good note.”
Contrast: Gators the most seasoned team Continued from Page B-1 The 66-year-old Ryan is finally in the Final Four after so many near-misses but has at least seen a version of the big stage before after taking Wisconsin-Platteville to four national championships before moving on to Madison. Ollie has never been this far; he’s only been a head coach for two seasons and the Huskies weren’t eligible for the NCAA Tournament a year ago. He does have plenty of experience, though, playing for 11 teams during 13 NBA seasons before ending up in Storrs. “I always prided myself as being a coach on the court,” Ollie said. “I didn’t really pride myself to looking over at the coach for the play. I wanted to be the extension of the coach so he didn’t have to call the play. I knew exactly what he wanted on the court every minute of the game.” The contrast in big men runs the spectrum in this year’s Final Four. Florida’s Young is built like a 6-foot-9 bodybuilder, using his
strength to bull opponents out of the lane and get to the rim. Kentucky’s Julius Randle is of a similar barge-past-them mold, though with more of a face-up game, and UConn go-to big man DeAndre Daniels can shoot, slash and soar. On the far end of the bigman spectrum is Kaminsky. A lanky 7-footer, he uses his length to score around the basket, but also has good shooting touch from the arc and an ability to find gaps in the opposing team’s perimeter defense. “Kaminsky for them is a unique player just in the fact that with his size, he can step away from the basket and shoot threes, he obviously can post up and score around the basket,” Donovan said. The range in experience couldn’t be any wider between SEC rivals Kentucky and Florida. The Gators are the most seasoned team left in the bracket, led by seniors Young, Scottie Wilbekin, Casey Prather and Will Yeguete. Those four alone had played nearly 400 combined games before Kentucky’s
freshmen had played one on the college level. But the start-em-young mindset is nothing new in Lexington. Calipari already perfected the ring-and-done, earning a national championship in 2012 behind Anthony Davis and his talented freshmen cohorts. After some shaky stretches during the regular season, Coach Cal has guided another group of young Cats — seven freshmen in the top eight of the rotation — into the Final Four. “Every one of these kids averaged 25 [points], were McDonald’s All-Americans in some form or fashion,” Calipari said. “All of a sudden you’re asked to do way less. That’s really hard.” Now, about that matchup of Badgers and Wildcats in North Texas on Saturday. Kentucky’s Wildcats are thoroughbreds, athletic players who seem to rotate in like it’s a hockey game. Offensively, they fly in for dunks, drop in 3s, relentlessly pound the glass. Defensively, they play with a swarm men-
tality, the guards hounding opponents into mistakes, the long-armed big men soaring in to send shots into the stands. Wisconsin … is … more … deliberate. The Badgers work their offense like a precision craftsman, screening and cutting and spacing themselves perfectly to get the best possible shot, whether it’s in the lane or beyond the arc, where just about everyone on the roster can hit from. Defense has been a priority at Wisconsin since Ryan first arrived in Madison and little has changed in the 12 years since — other than the frustration level of teams trying to score against the Badgers. “We are who we are right now, we’re not changing,” Ryan said. “They’re who they are right now. Whatever people want to say about styles and all that, I leave that up to them. I’ve never gotten caught up in that kind of a conversation.” With so many contrasts — styles, players, coaches — there’s plenty to talk about.
Coach: AD wants experienced replacement Continued from Page B-1 to the first round this past season. He dealt with deteriorating health and a daily commute that took him from his home in the east foothills area of the Sandia Mountains. The strains of the job and his private life made his resignation no surprise to Martinez. “He’d been here for two years and I knew what he was dealing with, so I wasn’t surprised at all,” Martinez said. Drake did not return multiple phone messages seeking comment Monday. He burst onto the scene when he took over Santa Fe High’s program in the mid1990s. He led the Demonettes to the AAAA championship game in 1997. Ironically, that year also saw Martinez’s Elkettes lose their first and only game of the season in that very same tournament when they fell to Moriarty in the AAA finals. That loss was one of just three Pojoaque suffered in a three-year span with Martinez
at the helm. “When you have that kind of success, when you reach the semifinals or the championship game like that a few times — I think people come to expect that from your team every year,” Martinez said. “When Lanse won his first [championship] I told him he can only get worse if he doesn’t win it again.” Martinez said he hopes to have a new coach in place by April 21. He said he’d already received an application Monday morning from a coach living outside the state. He said he wants someone with at least two years’ varsity experience and one who could take a job as a teacher at the school. “What we would prefer is a coach who has the experience with running a program and creating a structure for it from the seventh grade all the way through 12th,” Martinez said. “It’s not just a team. It’s every level of Pojoaque basketball that we’re talking about. It’s a lot of work and
the pressure, it’s there. But that’s what we’re looking for.” PREP SOFTBALL CapiTal 19, alBuquerque HigHland 12 Capital’s softball team had 17 hits in a 19-12 nondistrict win at home against visiting Albuquerque Highland on Monday afternoon. Alexis Gallegos (3-5) was the winning pitcher, working all seven innings. She had five strikeouts, walked four and allowed 12 hits. The Lady Jaguars trailed 6-0 after the top of the first inning but scored 13 combined runs in the second and third innings to seize control. They added five more in the last of the sixth to put the game away. Jamie Page finished 2-for-2 with a double and three runs batted in. Jessica Sandoval was 4-4 with a double and three RBI. Mikalia Maes and Brianna Brooks each went 3-for-4 while Yagami Antonio-Romero was 2-4 with pair of RBI. Capital returns to action with a doubleheader Tuesday against St. Michael’s.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. MaJor league BaseBall 5 p.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, N.Y. Yankees at Houston or Toronto at Tampa Bay 8 p.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, Cleveland at Oakland or Seattle at L.A. Angels Men’s College BasKeTBall 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — NIT, semifinal, Clemson vs. SMU, in New York 7 p.m. on ESPN2 — NIT, semifinal, Minnesota vs. Florida St., in New York nBa 6 p.m. on TNT — Houston at Brooklyn 8:30 p.m. on TNT — Portland at L.A. Lakers nHl 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Philadelphia at St. Louis soCCer 12:30 p.m. on FS1 — UEFA Champions League, quarterfinal, first leg, Bayern Munich at Manchester United WoMen’s College BasKeTBall 5 p.m. on ESPN — NCAA Tournament, regional final, Maryland at Louisville 7 p.m. on ESPN — NCAA Tournament, regional final, North Carolina at Stanford
PREP SCHEDULE This week’s list of varsity high school sporting events. For additions or changes, email us at sports@sfnewmexican.com.
Today Baseball — Pecos at Santa Fe Indian School, DH, 3 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Capital at West Las Vegas, 4 p.m. Santa Rosa at Monte del Sol, DH, 4 p.m. (at Fort Marcy Ballpark) McCurdy at Peñasco, 4 p.m. Softball — Pojoaque Valley at Las Vegas Robertson, 4 p.m. Raton at Taos, 4 p.m. Pecos at Jemez Valley, 4 p.m. Tennis — Las Vegas Robertson (boys) at Abq. Bosque School, 3 p.m. Abq. Bosque School (girls) at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Taos at Santa Fe High, 3:30 p.m. Española Valley at Capital, 4 p.m.
Wednesday Baseball — Española Valley at Santa Fe High, 4 p.m. Bernalillo at Los Alamos, 4 p.m. Softball — St. Michael’s at Capital, DH, 3 p.m. Española Valley at Santa Fe High, 4 p.m. Bernalillo at Los Alamos, 4 p.m. McCurdy at Taos, 4 p.m. East Mountain at Mora, 5 p.m.
Thursday Baseball — Grants at Pojoaque Valley, DH, 3 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at St. Michael’s, 3 p.m. Santa Fe High at Abq. Academy, 4 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Pecos at Lion Invitational in Santa Rosa, first round (pairings TBA) Softball — Grants at Pojoaque Valley, DH, 3 p.m. Aztec at Española Valley, DH, 3:30 p.m. Los Lunas at Santa Fe High, 4 p.m. Abq. Academy at Los Alamos, 4 p.m.
Friday Baseball — Questa at Magdalena, DH, 3 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Pecos at Lion Invitational in Santa Rosa, first round (pairings TBA) Softball — Pecos at Eunice, DH, 3 p.m. McCurdy at St. Michael’s, 4 p.m. Ruidoso at West Las Vegas, DH, 4 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Kirtland Central Invitational, second round (pairings TBA) Tennis — Capital Invitational, all day (Capital, Santa Fe High, Santa Fe Prepartory, Piedra Vista, Roswell) Track & Field — Cholla Classic at Santa Fe High, 3 p.m. (Santa Fe Preparatory) Santa Fe Indian School Invitational, 3 p.m. (Las Vegas Robertson, SFIS, West Las Vegas)
saturday Baseball — Santa Fe High at Los Alamos, DH, 11 a.m. Española Valley at Capital, DH, 11 a.m. Taos at St. Michael’s, 11 a.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Wingate, DH, 11 a.m. West Las Vegas at Las Vegas Robertson, DH, 11 a.m. Pojoaque Valley at Raton, DH, 11 a.m. Mora at Peñasco, 1 p.m. Santa Fe Preparatory, Pecos at Lion Invitational in Santa Rosa, final round (pairings TBA) Softball — Pecos vs. Jal (at Eunice H.S.), DH, 9 a.m. Santa Fe High at Los Alamos, DH, 11 a.m. Española Valley at Capital, DH, 11 a.m. Pojoaque Valley at Raton, DH, 11 a.m. West Las Vegas at Las Vegas Robertson, DH, 11 a.m. Tucumcari at Mora, DH, 11 a.m. Taos at St. Michael’s, 1 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Kirtland Central Invitational, final two rounds (pairings TBA) Tennis — Española Valley/Capital Invitational at Capital, 8 a.m. (Santa Fe High, Capital, Española Valley, Los Alamos) Track & Field — Cholla Classic at Santa Fe High, 8 a.m. (Santa Fe Preparatory) Santa Fe Indian School Invitational, 8 a.m. (Las Vegas Robertson, SFIS, West Las Vegas) Rio Rancho Jamboree at Rio Rancho High School, 9 a.m. (Santa Fe High, Capital, Los Alamos) Miyamura Invitational in Gallup, 9 a.m. (St. Michael’s) Mike Castillo Invitational in Silver City, 9 a.m. (Taos) Questa Invitational, 9 a.m. (Questa, Mora, Peñasco) Fort Sumner Invitational, 9 a.m. (Pecos)
neW MexiCan sporTs
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
nCaa: UConn women remain undefeated Continued from Page B-1 for back-to-back offensive fouls — the eighth and ninth called in the game — and coach Kim Mulkey had seen enough, letting the officials know her displeasure. That earned her a technical foul. The teams traded baskets over the next few minutes and Baylor closed to within 65-60 before Notre Dame took over scoring 16 of the next 20 points, including eight from the free throw line. The Irish were 30 for 33 from the foul line in the game. The Irish had a scary
moment when Achonwa went down holding her left knee after getting fouled with just under five minutes left. After a few moments she got up with help and pointed to her teammates telling them to get it done before heading to the locker room. They followed their senior leaders advice coming away with the victory. And Achonwa joined her team for the celebration, wearing sweats. The win was Notre Dame’s first against Baylor, which had won the previous four meetings — including a victory in the 2012 national championship
game that completed a 40-0 season for the Lady Bears. Now Notre Dame is two wins away from becoming the eighth team to go through the season unbeaten. uConn 69, Texas a&M 54 In Lincoln, Neb., Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis continued her splendid run through the NCAA Tournament with 17 points, and Connecticut advanced to the women’s Final Four for the seventh straight year with a victory against Texas A&M. The defending national champion Huskies (38-0) won their 44th straight game and will be going for their record ninth national championship in Nash-
ville. Their semifinal opponent Sunday will be either Stanford or North Carolina. Stefanie Dolson, who made her 150th career start to tie the NCAA record, had 14 points and 10 rebounds and blocked a career-high eight shots. Bria Hartley had 14 points, Breanna Stewart added 13 and Moriah Jefferson 11. Courtney Walker led Texas A&M (27-9) with 14 points. Courtney Williams had 13 and Jordan Jones 12. After the Aggies got within three points early in the second half, UConn outscored the Aggies 27-12 to build its lead to 18 points.
2-year contract extension for UNM basketball coach Neal ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico has given men’s basketball coach Craig Neal a two-year contract extension after he led the Lobos to the NCAA Tournament in his first season. The deal was announced Monday by the school’s Vice President for Athletics Paul Krebs, who didn’t disclose any financial terms. Neal’s original contract was for five years and ran through the 2017-18 season. It now will run through 2019-20. After six seasons as the associate head coach, Neal led New Mexico to a 27-7 record this season, including a 15-3 mark in the Mountain West. Neal’s 27 wins is tied for the 12th-most in NCAA history for first-year head coaches. He became the first coach in Lobos basketball history to get his team to the NCAA Tournament in his initial season. The Associated Press
B-4
BASEBALL
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
East
W
Baltimore Tampa Bay New York Boston Toronto
0 0 0 1 1
1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000
1 1 0 0 0
0 0 0 1 1
1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1
.000 .000 .000 .000 .000
W
West
W
Houston Los Angeles Oakland Seattle Texas
Pct
1 1 0 0 0
central
Chicago Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Minnesota
American League
L
L
L
GB
— — ½ 1 1
WcGB
— — ½ 1 1
L10
1-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-1
W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1
1-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-1
W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1
L-1
Pct
GB
WcGB
L10
Pct
GB
WcGB
L10
— — ½ 1 1
— — — — ½
Monday’s Games Detroit 4, Kansas City 3 Philadelphia 14, Texas 10 Baltimore 2, Boston 1 Chicago White Sox 5, Minnesota 3 Tampa Bay 9, Toronto 2 Cleveland at Oakland Seattle at L.A. Angels
— — ½ 1 1 ½ ½ ½ ½ 1
Str
Home
1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
Away
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1
Str
Home
Away
Str
Home
Away
1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1
0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 0-0) at Houston (Feldman 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Toronto (Hutchison 0-0) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Burnett 0-0) at Texas (M.Perez 0-0), 6:05 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 0-0) at Oakland (Kazmir 0-0), 8:05 p.m. Seattle (Ramirez 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Wilson 0-0), 8:05 p.m. East
W
central
W
Miami Philadelphia Washington Atlanta New York Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati West
San Diego San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado Arizona
L
Pct
GB
WcGB
L10
Pct
GB
WcGB
L10
1 1 1 0 0
0 0 0 1 1
1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000
1 1 1 0 0
0 0 0 1 1
1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000
1 1 2 0 0
0 0 1 1 3
1.000 1.000 .667 .000 .000
W
L
L
Pct
— — — 1 1
— — — 1 1
GB
— — — 1 2
Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 1, Chicago Cubs 0, 10 innings Washington 9, N.Y. Mets 7, 10 innings Milwaukee 2, Atlanta 0 St. Louis 1, Cincinnati 0 Miami 10, Colorado 1 San Francisco 9, Arizona 8
— — — 1 1
— — — 1 1
WcGB
— — — 1 2
Str
Home
Away
Str
Home
Away
1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1
W-1 W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1
1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1
W-1 W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1
1-0 1-0 2-1 0-1 0-3
W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1 L-3
L10
1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-1
Str
Home
1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-3
0-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-1 0-0
Away
0-0 1-0 2-1 0-1 0-0
Sunday’s Game San Diego 3, L.A. Dodgers 1
National League Line -150
Pitchers Colorado Anderson (L) Miami Eovaldi (R) Last 3 Starts W-L Anderson — Eovaldi —
Line
Pitchers Atlanta Wood (L) Milwaukee Lohse (R) Last 3 Starts W-L Wood — Lohse —
Line
Pitchers San Francisco Cain (R) Arizona Miley (L) Last 3 Starts W-L Cain — Miley —
Line -110
IP — —
-110 IP — —
-110 IP — —
IP — —
2013 W-L ERA 15-4 2.63 7-10 4.91 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA 1-4 6.04 4-6 3.39 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA 3-3 3.13 11-10 3.35 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA 8-10 4.00 10-10 3.55 ERA AHWG — — — —
Team REc 22-6 13-18
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 2-0 25.0 1.44 0-2 17.2 6.62
Team REc 1-4 9-9
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA No Record 0-0 6.0 0.00
2013 W-L ERA 14-13 4.78 12-12 3.86 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA — — 11-3 2.76 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA 11-5 3.85 10-9 4.04 ERA AHWG — — — — 2013 W-L ERA 5-3 4.98 17-7 3.39 ERA AHWG — — — —
Team REc 17-15 15-15
American League
Pitchers New York Sabathia (L) Houston Feldman (R) Last 3 Starts W-L Sabathia — Feldman —
Line -160
Pitchers Toronto Hutchison (R) Tampa Bay Cobb (R) Last 3 Starts W-L Hutchison — Cobb —
Line
Pitchers Cleveland Kluber (R) Oakland Kazmir (L) Last 3 Starts W-L Kluber — Kazmir —
Line
Pitchers Seattle Ramirez (R) Los Angeles Wilson (L) Last 3 Starts W-L Ramirez — Wilson —
Line
IP — —
-145 IP — —
-130 IP — —
-170 IP — —
Team REc 6-5 17-15
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 0-0 2.1 0.00 1-0 9.0 0.00
Team REc 11-19 17-16
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 1-1 30.1 3.56 0-1 17.2 3.06
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA No Record 0-1 14.2 2.45
Team REc — 14-8
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA No Record 1-0 6.1 1.42
Team REc 15-9 15-14
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA No Record No Record
Team REc 6-7 19-14
2013 vs. Opp. W-L IP ERA 0-1 12.2 1.42 3-1 28.2 2.20
Interleague
2013 Team 2013 vs. Opp. Pitchers Line W-L ERA REc W-L IP ERA Phily Burnett (R) 10-11 3.30 14-16 1-0 6.1 7.11 Texas Perez (L) -130 10-6 3.62 12-8 No Record Last 3 Starts W-L IP ERA AHWG Burnett — — — — Perez — — — — 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 2014 World Features Syndicate, Inc.
THIS DATE IN BASEBALL April 1
1931 — Pitcher Virne Mitchell, 17, signed with the Chattanooga club of Tennessee, becoming the first woman to play for an otherwise all-male baseball team. 1972 — The first collective player’s strike in major league history began at 12:01 a.m. The strike lasted 12 days and canceled 86 games. 1996 — Umpire John McSherry, 51, who planned to see doctors the next day about an irregular heart beat, collapsed seven pitches into Cincinnati’s opener and died at a hospital about an hour later.
AL Leaders
BATTING — SPerez, Kansas City, 1.000; Joyce, Tampa Bay, 1.000; Myers, Tampa Bay, .600; Rios, Texas, .600; 15 tied at .500. RUNS — Beltre, Texas, 3; Rios, Texas, 3; Arencibia, Texas, 2; Cruz, Baltimore, 2; De Aza, Chicago, 2; Hicks, Minnesota, 2; Jennings, Tampa Bay, 2; Myers, Tampa Bay, 2; Zobrist, Tampa Bay, 2. RBI — De Aza, Chicago, 3; Joyce, Tampa Bay, 3; Rios, Texas, 3; Suzuki, Minnesota, 3; Wilson, Texas, 3; Gonzalez, Detroit, 2; Kratz, Toronto, 2; Martin, Texas, 2; Myers, Tampa Bay, 2. HITS — SPerez, Kansas City, 4; Myers, Tampa Bay, 3; Rios, Texas, 3; 20 tied at 2. DOUBLES — SPerez, Kansas City, 2; 15 tied at 1. TRIPLES — Gonzalez, Detroit, 1; Jackson, Detroit, 1. HOME RUNS — De Aza, Chicago, 2; Cruz, Baltimore, 1; Kratz, Toronto, 1; Martinez, Detroit, 1; Rios, Texas, 1; Sizemore, Boston, 1. STOLEN BASES — Loney, Tampa Bay, 1. PITCHING — Nathan, Detroit, 1-0; Price, Tampa Bay, 1-0; Sale, Chicago, 1-0; Britton, Baltimore, 1-0; Davis, Kansas City, 0-1; Figueroa, Texas, 0-1; Nolasco, Minnesota, 0-1; Lester, Boston, 0-1; Dickey, Toronto, 0-1.
NL Leaders
BATTING — Bonifacio, Chicago, .800; Asche, Philadelphia, .750; Frazier, Cincinnati, .667; Wright, New York, .600; 7 tied at .500. RUNS — Asche, Philadelphia, 4; Desmond, Washington, 3; Gonzalez, Los Angeles, 3; Gordon, Los Angeles, 3; LaRoche, Washington, 3; Lagares, New York, 3; Ruiz, Philadelphia, 3. RBI — Rendon, Washington, 4; Rollins, Philadelphia, 4; Trumbo, Arizona, 4; Brown, New York, 3; Revere, Philadelphia, 3; 11 tied at 2. HITS — Bonifacio, Chicago, 4; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 4; Uribe, Los Angeles, 4; Asche, Philadelphia, 3; Gordon, Los Angeles, 3; Puig, Los Angeles, 3; Revere, Philadelphia, 3; Utley, Philadelphia, 3; Wright, New York, 3. DOUBLES — 16 tied at 1. TRIPLE. HOME RUNS — 13 tied at 1. STOLEN BASES — Bonifacio, Chicago, 1; Braun, Milwaukee, 1; Brown, Philadelphia, 1; Frazier, Cincinnati, 1; Gonzalez, Los Angeles, 1; Grandal, San Diego, 1; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 1; Revere, Philadelphia, 1. PITCHING — Lee, Philadelphia, 1-0; Barrett, Washington, 1-0; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1-0; Gallardo, Milwaukee, 1-0; Wainwright, St. Louis, 1-0; Thayer, San Diego, 1-0; Ryu, Los Angeles, 1-0; Morris, Pittsburgh, 1-0.
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
4 5 0 0 5 3 2 4 4 3 5 2 0 0 0 1 38
0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 9
1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 9
2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 9
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 6
0 2 0 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 10
.250 .200 — — .200 .000 .500 .250 .250 .333 .400 .000 — — — .000
0 4 1 1 0 1 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 3 18 4—9 2—7
.000 .500 .600 .000 .250 — — — .000 — .000 .000 .250 .000 .000
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
E.Young 2b-lf 4 0 Lagares cf 4 3 D.Wright 3b 5 2 Granderson rf 5 0 A.Brown lf 4 1 Parnell p 0 0 Familia p 0 0 Recker c 0 0 I.Davis 1b 2 0 Valverde p 0 0 Quintanilla 2b 1 0 d’Arnaud c 3 1 Tejada ss 4 0 Gee p 1 0 Duda 1b 2 0 Totals 35 7 Washington 020 000 New York 310 000
0 1 2 1 3 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 7 201 010
Pirates 1, cubs 0, 10 innings
chicago
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Bonifacio cf-2b 5 Lake lf 4 Villanueva p 0 S.Castro ss 3 Rizzo 1b 4 Olt 3b 3 b-Valbuena 3b 0 Castillo c 2 Schierholtz rf 4 Barney 2b 2 c-Sweeney ph-cf1 Samardzija p 3 Strop p 0 Grimm p 0 Russell p 0 d-Kalish ph-lf 1 Totals 32 Pittsburgh
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
0 2 0 0 3 2 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 11
.800 .250 — .000 .000 .000 — .000 .250 .000 .000 .000 — — — .000
1 0 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 6 0—0 1—1
.333 .000 .333 .000 .250 .250 .667 .000 .000 — — .000 — —
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Marte lf 3 0 Snider rf 3 0 McCutchen cf 3 0 P.Alvarez 3b 4 0 R.Martin c 4 0 N.Walker 2b 4 1 Ishikawa 1b 3 0 Mercer ss 3 0 Liriano p 2 0 Watson p 0 0 Melancon p 0 0 a-J.Harrison ph 1 0 Grilli p 0 0 Morris p 0 0 Totals 30 1 chicago 000 000 Pittsburgh 000 000
1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 000 000
6 0 6 1
No outs when winning run scored. a-struck out for Melancon in the 8th. b-walked for Olt in the 9th. c-fouled out a-was announced for Strasburg in the for Barney in the 9th. d-grounded out for 7th. b-walked for Frandsen in the 7th. Russell in the 10th. c-walked for Clippard in the 9th. LOB—Washington 6, New York 3. 2B—Span E—Ishikawa (1). LOB—Chicago 8, Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Bonifacio (1), Marte (1). (1), Rendon (1). HR—LaRoche (1), off Gee; Rendon (1), off Lannan; A.Brown (1), HR—N.Walker (1), off Villanueva. RBIs—N. Walker (1). SB—Bonifacio (1). S—Lake, off Strasburg; Lagares (1), off Clippard; Castillo. D.Wright (1), off Blevins. RBIs—Span 2 Runners left in scoring position— (2), Desmond (1), LaRoche 2 (2), Rendon Chicago 6 (Rizzo 2, S.Castro, Bonifacio, 4 (4), E.Young (1), Lagares (1), D.Wright 2 Castillo, Sweeney); Pittsburgh 2 (Liriano, (2), A.Brown 3 (3). S—Gee. SF—Desmond, P.Alvarez). RISP—Chicago 0 for 11; PittsE.Young. burgh 0 for 3. Runners left in scoring position—WashRunners moved up—S.Castro, Mercer. ington 4 (Zimmerman 4); New York 2 GIDP—Samardzija, P.Alvarez, N.Walker. (Lagares, d’Arnaud). RISP—Washington 3 for 6; New York 1 for 4. DP—Chicago 3 (Barney, S.Castro, Rizzo), Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA (Bonifacio, Rizzo), (S.Castro, Rizzo); Strasburg 6 5 4 4 2 10 102 6.00 Pittsburgh 1 (Liriano, P.Alvarez, N.Walker). Storen 1 0 0 0 0 2 11 0.00 chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Clippard Barrett W, 1-0 Blevins
New York
Tuesday’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 0-0) at San Diego (Kennedy 0-0), 4:40 p.m. Colorado (Anderson 0-0) at Miami (Eovaldi 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Atlanta (Wood 0-0) at Milwaukee (Lohse 0-0), 6:10 p.m. San Francisco (Cain 0-0) at Arizona (Miley 0-1), 7:40 p.m.
Pitchers Los Angeles Greinke (R) San Diego Kennedy (R) Last 3 Starts W-L Greinke — Kennedy —
Washington
Span cf Zimmerman 3b Barrett p Blevins p Werth rf W.Ramos c Lobaton c Harper lf Desmond ss LaRoche 1b Rendon 2b-3b Strasburg p a-Frandsen ph b-McLouth ph Storen p c-Espinosa 2b Totals New York
Sunday’s Games No games scheduled.
National League
BOxScORES Nationals 9, Mets 7, 10 innings,
1 1 1
1 0 1
1 0 2
1 0 2
0 0 1
9 0 7 0
1 14 9.00 2 11 0.00 3 25 18.00
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Gee 6 2-3 4 4 4 2 5 100 5.40 C.Torres 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 Rice BS, 1-1 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 Valverde 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 16 0.00 Parnell BS, 1-1 1 2 1 1 1 1 25 9.00 Familia L, 0-1 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 22 27.00 Lannan 1-3 1 2 2 1 0 8 54.00 C.Torres pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Rice pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Inherited runners-scored—C.Torres 2-0, Rice 3-1, Valverde 3-0, Lannan 1-1. PB— d’Arnaud. T—3:16. A—39,833 (38,362). Kansas city
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Detroit
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
5 4 4 4 3 4 4 4 3 35
Kinsler 2b 4 Tor.Hunter rf 4 Mi.Cabrera 1b 3 V.Martinez dh 4 A.Jackson cf 4 Avila c 2 1-Ty.Collins pr 0 Castellanos 3b 4 Al.Gonzalez ss 4 R.Davis lf 3 Totals 32 Kansas city 000 Detroit 010
0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 3
0 0 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 7
0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 4 8 300 000
0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 3
0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3
2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
.000 .000 .250 .250 .000 1.000 .000 .250 .000
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 4 000—3 201—4
.000 .000 .333 .250 .250 .500 — .500 .500 .000 7 8
Pittsburgh
0 2
One out when winning run scored. 1-ran for Avila in the 9th. E—Tor.Hunter (1), Al.Gonzalez (1). LOB— Kansas City 8, Detroit 6. 2B—Hosmer (1), S.Perez 2 (2), Mi.Cabrera (1). 3B—A. Jackson (1), Al.Gonzalez (1). HR—V. Martinez (1), off Shields. RBIs—Infante (1), S.Perez (1), L.Cain (1), V.Martinez (1), Al.Gonzalez 2 (2). Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 6 (B.Butler, A.Escobar 2, Hosmer 2, L.Cain); Detroit 2 (Avila, R.Davis). RISP— Kansas City 1 for 9; Detroit 2 for 7. Runners moved up—Moustakas 2, L.Cain, V.Martinez. GIDP—A.Gordon. DP—Detroit 1 (Verlander, Al.Gonzalez, Mi.Cabrera). Kansas city IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
5 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 1
2 0 1 0 0
3 89 1 14 1 10 1 7 0 8
0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 -
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Liriano 6 4 0 0 3 10 104 0.00 Watson 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 0.00 Melancon 1 1 0 0 0 0 10 0.00 Grilli 1 0 0 0 1 0 17 0.00 Morris W, 1-0 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 0.00 Villanueva pitched to 1 batter in the 10th.
Inherited runners-scored—Russell 1-0. Toronto
Tigers 4, Royals 3
Aoki rf Infante 2b Hosmer 1b B.Butler dh A.Gordon lf S.Perez c Moustakas 3b L.Cain cf A.Escobar ss Totals
Samardzija 7 Strop 1 Grimm 1-3 Russell 2-3 Villanueva L, 0-10
Rays 9, Blue Jays 2
Reyes ss Goins ss Me.Cabrera lf Bautista rf Encarnacion 1b Navarro dh Lawrie 3b Rasmus cf Izturis 2b Thole c a-Kratz ph-c Totals Tampa Bay
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
1 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 33
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2
0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 2 1 1 7
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
0 1 1 1 3 0 2 1 0 0 0 9
.000 .000 .250 .250 .000 .250 .000 .000 .667 .500 1.000
0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 0 2 2 0 0 3 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 2 0 1 1 1 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 9 11 7 8 6 000 020—2 020 03x—9
.000 — .600 .000 .500 .333 .500 1.000 .000 .250
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
DeJesus lf 3 1-Guyer pr-lf 0 Myers rf 5 Zobrist 2b 2 Longoria 3b 4 Loney 1b 3 De.Jennings cf 4 Joyce dh 2 J.Molina c 5 Y.Escobar ss 4 Totals 32 Toronto 000 Tampa Bay 121
7 2 11 0
a-homered for Thole in the 8th. 1-ran for DeJesus in the 8th. E—Bautista (1), Jeffress (1). LOB— Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 11. 2B—Myers (1), De.Jennings (1), Joyce (1). HR—Kratz (1), off Price. RBIs—Kratz 2 (2), Myers 2 (2), Longoria (1), Loney (1), Joyce 3 (3). SB— Loney (1). SF—Loney, Joyce. Runners left in scoring position—Toronto 2 (Goins, Lawrie); Tampa Bay 7 (Zobrist, J.Molina 5, Longoria). RISP—Toronto 0 for 5; Tampa Bay 4 for 16. Runners moved up—Navarro, DeJesus, Loney. GIDP—Thole. DP—Tampa Bay 1 (Longoria, Zobrist, Loney). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Marlins 10, Rockies 1
colorado
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Miami
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Blackmon cf 4 Cuddyer rf 4 C.Gonzalez lf 4 Tulowitzki ss 4 Morneau 1b 4 Rosario c 3 Arenado 3b 3 LeMahieu 2b 3 J.De La Rosa p 2 W.Lopez p 0 b-Barnes ph 1 Bettis p 0 Totals 32
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 2 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
1 1 1 2 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 10
.000 .500 .500 .000 .250 .333 .000 .000 .000 — .000 —
Yelich lf 5 2 2 1 0 3 .400 Je.Baker 2b 3 1 0 1 0 0 .000 Stanton rf 5 2 2 2 0 1 .400 McGehee 3b 4 0 2 4 1 1 .500 G.Jones 1b 4 0 0 0 1 3 .000 Saltalamacchia c4 0 1 0 0 2 .250 Ozuna cf 4 3 3 1 0 1 .750 Hechavarria ss 4 2 3 1 0 0 .750 Fernandez p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Dobbs ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.000 A.Ramos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Hand p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Totals 35 10 14 10 2 11 colorado 000 001 000—1 6 0 Miami 001 051 03x—10 14 0
a-singled for Fernandez in the 6th. bfouled out for W.Lopez in the 8th. LOB—Colorado 5, Miami 7. 2B—Yelich (1), Stanton (1), McGehee 2 (2), Ozuna (1). HR—C.Gonzalez (1), off Fernandez; Ozuna (1), off J.De La Rosa. RBIs—C.Gonzalez (1), Yelich (1), Je.Baker (1), Stanton 2 (2), McGehee 4 (4), Ozuna (1), Hechavarria (1). S—Fernandez, Hand. SF—Je.Baker. Runners left in scoring position— Colorado 2 (Morneau, Arenado); Miami 4 (Saltalamacchia 2, Stanton, G.Jones). RISP—Colorado 0 for 3; Miami 8 for 15. GIDP—Arenado. DP—Miami 1 (McGehee, Je.Baker, G.Jones). colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.D L Rosa L, 0-1 4 1-3 4 W.Lopez 2 2-3 6 Bettis 1 4
5 2 3
5 2 3
2 0 0
6 87 10.38 4 44 6.75 1 24 27.00
Fernandez W, 1-06 5 A.Ramos 1 0 Hand 2 1
1 0 0
1 0 0
0 1 0
9 94 0 17 1 17
Miami
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
1.50 0.00 0.00
Inherited runners-scored—W.Lopez 3-3. HBP—by J.De La Rosa (Je.Baker). Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Hunter Wendelstedt; Second, Mike DiMuro; Third, Mike Estabrook. T—2:58. A—37,116.
White Sox 5, Twins 3
Minnesota
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Dozier 2b 4 K.Suzuki c 4 Mauer 1b 4 Willingham lf 4 Colabello dh 4 Plouffe 3b 4 Arcia rf 3 A.Hicks cf 3 Florimon ss 1 a-E.Escobar ss 1 Totals 32
2 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 0 1 10
.000 .500 .000 .000 .500 .250 .000 .667 .000 .000
Eaton cf 4 1 2 0 0 0 Semien 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 Gillaspie 3b 3 1 1 0 1 1 Abreu 1b 4 1 2 1 0 0 A.Dunn dh 2 0 0 1 1 1 A.Garcia rf 4 0 2 0 0 1 De Aza lf 4 2 2 3 0 0 Al.Ramirez ss 3 0 2 0 0 0 Flowers c 3 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 31 5 11 5 2 6 Minnesota 002 000 010—3 chicago 022 001 00x—5
.500 .000 .333 .500 .000 .500 .500 .667 .000
chicago
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 3
0 2 0 0 2 1 0 2 0 0 7
0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
7 0 11 0
a-struck out for Florimon in the 8th. LOB—Minnesota 4, Chicago 5. 2B— Colabello (1), Plouffe (1), A.Hicks (1), Gillaspie (1), Abreu (1). HR—De Aza 2 (2), off Nolasco 2. RBIs—K.Suzuki 3 (3), Abreu (1), A.Dunn (1), De Aza 3 (3). S—Florimon. SF—A.Dunn. Runners left in scoring position— Minnesota 2 (Arcia 2); Chicago 2 (De Aza, A.Dunn). RISP—Minnesota 2 for 8; Chicago 2 for 5. GIDP—Plouffe, Semien, A.Garcia. DP—Minnesota 2 (Plouffe, Dozier, Mauer), (Florimon, Dozier, Mauer); Chicago 1 (Al. Ramirez, Semien, Abreu). Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nolasco L, 0-1 6 10 Swarzak 1 0 Fien 2-3 1 Thielbar 1-3 0
5 0 0 0
5 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
4 93 2 24 0 11 0 2
7.50 0.00 0.00 0.00
Sale W, 1-0 7 1-3 Belisario H, 1 1-3 Veal H, 1 1-3 Lindstrom S, 1-1 1
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
8 108 1 8 0 5 1 12
3.68 0.00 0.00 0.00
chicago
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 5 1 0 1
Boston Baltimore
000 100 000—1 010 000 10x—2
9 6
0 0
1-ran for Napoli in the 8th. LOB—Boston 12, Baltimore 3. 2B—Napoli (1), Bogaerts (1). HR—Sizemore (1), off Tillman; N.Cruz (1), off Lester. RBIs— Sizemore (1), N.Cruz (1). Runners left in scoring position—Boston 6 (Middlebrooks 2, Carp 2, Pierzynski, Bradley Jr.). RISP—Boston 0 for 10; Baltimore 0 for 1. Runners moved up—Carp, Pierzynski 2. GIDP—Hardy, D.Young. DP—Boston 2 (Pedroia, Napoli, Bogaerts), (Middlebrooks, Pedroia, Napoli). Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lester L, 0-1 Tazawa
6 0
2 0
2 0
1 0
8 104 1 13
2.57 0.00
Tillman 5 7 Britton W, 1-0 2 1 Meek H, 1 2-3 0 Matusz H, 1 1-3 0 T.Hunter S, 1-1 1 1
1 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0
1 0 2 0 0
4 0 1 0 1
1.80 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Baltimore
7 1
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 104 21 19 3 22
Inherited runners-scored—Matusz 2-0. HBP—by Tom.Hunter (Middlebrooks). Umpires—Home, Dana DeMuth; First, Ron Kulpa; Second, Ed Hickox; Third, Lance Barrett. T—2:53. A—46,685 (45,971).
Giants 9, Diamondbacks 8
San Francisco
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Arizona
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Pagan cf 5 Belt 1b 5 Sandoval 3b 5 Posey c 5 Pence rf 4 Morse lf 3 J.Lopez p 0 Machi p 0 Romo p 0 B.Crawford ss 4 Arias 2b 3 J.Perez lf 1 Bumgarner p 0 a-Blanco ph 1 Petit p 0 b-Adrianza ph-2b2 Totals 38
1 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 9
2 3 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 12
2 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 9
0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
1 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
.400 .600 .200 .400 .000 .333 — — — .500 .000 .000 — .000 — .500
Pollock cf 6 Hill 2b 4 Goldschmidt 1b 5 Prado 3b 5 Trumbo lf 5 Montero c 4 Owings ss 5 G.Parra rf 3 McCarthy p 3 O.Perez p 0 Ziegler p 0 c-Pennington ph 1 Collmenter p 0 A.Reed p 0 d-E.Chavez ph 1 Totals 42 San Francisco 001 Arizona 000
0 0 0 0 4 0 2 2 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 2 3 2 0 1 2 3 1 1 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 16 8 3 9 011 402—9 421 001—8
.000 .300 .429 .154 .357 .385 .444 .273 .000 — — 1.000 — — .000
Bumgarner 4 Petit 2 J.Lopez 1-3 Machi W, 1-0 1 2-3 Romo S, 1-1 1
4 3 0 0 1
12 2 16 1
a-grounded out for Bumgarner in the 5th. b-doubled for Petit in the 7th. c-singled for Ziegler in the 7th. d-struck out for A.Reed in the 9th. E—Sandoval (1), Belt (1), G.Parra (1). LOB—San Francisco 5, Arizona 11. 2B—Pagan (1), B.Crawford (1), Adrianza (1), Hill (1), Goldschmidt (2), Prado (1). HR—Belt (1), off McCarthy; Posey (1), off A.Reed; Montero (1), off Romo. RBIs—Pagan 2 (2), Belt (1), Sandoval (1), Posey 2 (2), Pence (1), Blanco (1), Adrianza (1), Hill 2 (2), Trumbo 2 (6), Montero (1), G.Parra 3 (3). SB—Goldschmidt (1). CS—Pennington (1). S—Bumgarner, G.Parra. Runners left in scoring position—San Francisco 4 (Belt, Pagan, Morse 2); Arizona 8 (McCarthy, Prado, Goldschmidt, Hill 2, Owings, Trumbo, Pollock). RISP— San Francisco 5 for 10; Arizona 6 for 19. Runners moved up—Blanco. GIDP— Owings. DP—San Francisco 2 (B.Crawford, Arias, Belt), (Posey, Posey, Adrianza). San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Arizona
6 6 1 1 2
0 3 0 0 1
2 1 0 0 0
3 2 0 3 1
78 0.00 47 13.50 8 0.00 18 0.00 16 9.00
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
McCarthy 6 2-3 6 5 5 1 4 94 6.75 O.Perez 0 3 2 2 0 0 5 54.00 Ziegler BS, 1-1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 11 0.00 Collmenter 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 4.50 A.Reed L, 0-1 1 2 2 2 0 1 21 9.00 O.Perez pitched to 3 batters in the 7th.
Inherited runners-scored—Machi 1-0, O.Perez 1-1, Ziegler 2-1. WP—Machi. Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, Eric Cooper; Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Pat Hoberg. T—3:25. A—48,541 (48,633).
2014 Baseball Millionaires, List
NEW YORK — The 2014 salaries for the 486 major league baseball players on opening day rosters and disabled lists earning $1 million or more. Figures were obtained by The Associated Dickey L, 0-1 5 5 6 6 6 4 88 10.80 Press from management and player Rogers 2 3 0 0 1 2 31 0.00 sources and include salaries and proJeffress 1 3 3 3 1 0 35 27.00 Brewers 2, Braves 0 rated shares of signing bonuses and IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Shields 6 1-3 5 3 3 1 3 106 4.26 Tampa Bay AB R H BI BBSO Avg. other guaranteed income. For some Crow BS, 1-1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 12 0.00 Price W, 1-0 7 1-3 6 2 2 1 6 102 2.45 Atlanta players, parts of salaries deferred 3 0 1 0 1 1 .333 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 10 0.00 Heyward rf W.Davis L, 0-1 1 1-3 1 1 1 2 0 33 6.75 Jo.Peralta without interest are discounted to 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 1 1 0 0 0 2 17 0.00 B.Upton cf G.Holland 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 - B.Gomes reflect present-day values. Freeman 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA HBP—by Jeffress (DeJesus, Joyce). WP— Player, club Salary C.Johnson 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Verlander 6 6 3 2 3 2 105 3.00 Dickey. E.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 0 10 0.00 Umpires—Home, Brian Gorman; First, Bill 1, Zack Greinke, LAD $28,000,000 J.Upton lf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .333 Alburquerque 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 0.00 Welke; Second, Jim Wolf; Third, David 2, Ryan Howard, Phi 25,000,000 Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Nathan W, 1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 0.00 Rackley. (tie) Cliff Lee, Phi 25,000,000 Gattis c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 G.Holland pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. 4, CC Sabathia, NYY 24,285,714 Simmons ss 3 0 2 0 0 0 .667 T—3:04. A—31,042 (31,042). Inherited runners-scored—Crow 2-2, 5, Robinson Cano, Sea 24,000,000 Teheran p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 G.Holland 2-1. WP—Crow. cardinals 1, Reds 0 (tie) Prince Fielder, Tex 24,000,000 a-J.Schafer ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 St. Louis AB R H BI BBSO Avg. T—3:01. A—45,068 (41,681). 7, Felix Hernandez, Sea 23,557,143 Thomas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — M.Carpenter 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .000 8, Cole Hamels, Phi 23,500,000 Totals 31 0 5 0 2 7 Phillies 14, Rangers 10 Wong 2b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .333 9, Mark Teixeira, NYY 23,125,000 Milwaukee AB R H BI BBSO Avg. Philadelphia AB R H BI BBSO Avg. Holliday lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 10, Joe Mauer, Min 23,000,000 C.Gomez cf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .250 Revere cf 6 2 3 3 0 1 .500 Craig rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 (tie) Albert Pujols, LAA 23,000,000 Segura ss 3 1 0 0 1 0 .000 Rollins ss 6 1 1 4 0 1 .167 Y.Molina c 4 1 2 1 0 1 .500 12, Masahiro Tanaka, NYY 22,000,000 Braun rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .250 Utley 2b 6 0 3 1 0 0 .500 Ma.Adams 1b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .500 13, Miguel Cabrera, Det 21,943,027 Ar.Ramirez 3b 3 0 2 2 0 0 .667 Howard 1b 5 1 2 0 1 3 .400 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 14, Adrian Gonzalez, LAD 21,857,143 Lucroy c 3 0 2 0 0 0 .667 Byrd rf 6 1 2 1 0 1 .333 Rosenthal p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 15, Matt Kemp, LAD 21,250,000 K.Davis lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 D.Brown dh 5 1 1 0 0 1 .200 Bourjos cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 16, Jacoby Ellsbury, NYY 21,142,857 Overbay 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ruiz c 3 3 1 0 2 0 .333 Wainwright p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 17, Carl Crawford, LAD 21,107,143 Gennett 2b 3 0 2 0 0 0 .667 Asche 3b 4 4 3 2 1 0 .750 b-Robinson ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 18, Matt Cain, SF 20,833,333 Gallardo p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gwynn Jr. lf 1 1 0 0 1 1 .000 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 19, Jayson Werth, Was 20,571,429 b-Weeks ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Mayberry ph-lf2 0 1 2 1 0 .500 Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 20, Justin Verlander, Det 20,100,000 Totals 28 2 8 2 1 3 Totals 44 14 17 13 6 8 C.Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — Atlanta 000 000 000—0 5 1 21, Adam Wainwright, StL 19,500,000 Texas AB R H BI BBSO Avg. Kozma ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 19,329,646 Milwaukee 000 200 00x—2 8 0 22, David Wright, NYM Choo lf 4 0 0 0 1 1 .000 Totals 32 1 5 1 2 9 23, Mark Buehrle, Tor 19,000,000 a-grounded out for Teheran in the 7th. Andrus ss 5 0 1 0 0 0 .200 cincinnati AB R H BI BBSO Avg. b-grounded into a double play for Kintzler (tie) Clayton Kershaw, LAD 19,000,000 Fielder 1b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .200 B.Hamilton cf 4 0 0 0 0 4 .000 in the 7th. (tie) Alfonso Soriano, NYY 19,000,000 A.Beltre 3b 4 3 2 0 1 0 .500 Phillips 2b 2 0 1 0 2 1 .500 17,400,000 E—J.Upton (1). LOB—Atlanta 7, Milwaukee 26, Josh Hamilton, LAA Rios rf 5 3 3 3 0 0 .600 Votto 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 4. 2B—C.Johnson (1), Ar.Ramirez (1). 27, Josh Beckett, LAD 17,000,000 Moreland dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Bruce rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .000 RBIs—Ar.Ramirez 2 (2). SB—Braun (1), (tie) Adrian Beltre, Tex 17,000,000 b-Choice ph-dh 2 0 1 0 0 0 .500 Ludwick lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Lucroy (1). S—Teheran, Gallardo. (tie) Tim Lincecum, SF 17,000,000 Arencibia c 4 2 1 0 1 1 .250 Frazier 3b 3 0 2 0 1 1 .667 (tie) Brian McCann, NYY 17,000,000 Runners left in scoring position—Atlanta L.Martin cf 4 1 2 2 1 0 .500 Cozart ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 4 (C.Johnson, Teheran, B.Upton, Uggla); 31, C.J. Wilson, LAA 16,500,000 Jo.Wilson 2b 3 0 2 3 0 0 .667 B.Pena c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .000 Milwaukee 3 (Overbay, Segura, K.Davis). 32, Matt Holliday, StL 16,252,360 c-Adduci ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 1.000 Cueto p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 RISP—Atlanta 0 for 6; Milwaukee 1 for 9. 33, Jered Weaver, LAA 16,200,000 Do.Murphy 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 — a-Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Runners moved up—B.Upton, J.Upton. 34, Jake Peavy, Bos 16,157,271 Totals 40 10 14 9 4 4 M.Parra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — GIDP—Weeks. 35, Ian Kinsler, Det 16,000,000 Philadelphia 060 124 010—14 17 0 Ondrusek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 — (tie) Hiroki Kuroda, NYY 16,000,000 DP—Atlanta 2 (Freeman, Simmons), (UgTexas 043 010 200—10 14 1 c-Bernadina ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 (tie) Mike Napoli, Bos 16,000,000 gla, Simmons, Freeman). a-doubled for Gwynn Jr. in the 5th. cTotals 31 0 3 0 5 12 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA (tie) Hanley Ramirez, LAD 16,000,000 singled for Jo.Wilson in the 7th. St. Louis 000 000 100—1 5 3 Teheran L, 0-1 6 7 2 2 1 2 84 3.00 (tie) Jose Reyes, Tor 16,000,000 E—Andrus (1). LOB—Philadelphia 9, Texas cincinnati 000 000 000—0 3 0 Thomas 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 7 0.00 (tie) Troy Tulowitzki, Col 16,000,000 7. 2B—Utley (1), Asche (1), Mayberry (1), a-flied out for Cueto in the 7th. b-lined out Schlosser 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 14 0.00 41, John Lackey, Bos 15,950,000 A.Beltre (1), Arencibia (1), Jo.Wilson (1). for Wainwright in the 8th. c-popped out Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 42, Anibal Sanchez, Det 15,800,000 HR—Rollins (1), off Scheppers; Byrd (1), for Ondrusek in the 9th. Gallardo W, 1-0 6 4 0 0 2 4 92 0.00 43, John Danks, WSox 15,750,000 off Figueroa; Asche (1), off Tolleson; Rios Kintzler H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 0.00 44, Max Scherzer, Det E—Bourjos (1), Wong (1), Ma.Adams (1). 15,525,000 (1), off Lee. RBIs—Revere 3 (3), Rollins W.Smith H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 18 0.00 LOB—St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 9. 2B—Ma. 4 (4), Utley (1), Byrd (1), Asche 2 (2), 45, Andre Ethier, LAD 15,500,000 Fr.Rdrgz S, 1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 20 0.00 Adams (1). HR—Y.Molina (1), off Cueto. Mayberry 2 (2), Rios 3 (3), L.Martin 2 (2), (tie) David Ortiz, Bos 15,500,000 Inherited runners-scored—Schlosser 1-0. RBIs—Y.Molina (1). SB—Frazier (1). Jo.Wilson 3 (3), Adduci (1). SB—Revere (tie) Jhonny Peralta, StL 15,500,000 Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis (1), D.Brown (1). Orioles 2, Red Sox 1 48, Nick Markakis, Bal 15,350,000 Boston AB R H BI BBSO Avg. Runners left in scoring position—Philadel- 2 (Wainwright, Holliday); Cincinnati 3 49, Yadier Molina, StL 15,200,000 (Cueto, Cozart, Frazier). RISP—St. Louis 0 Nava rf-lf 5 0 0 0 0 0 .000 phia 6 (Asche, Byrd 2, Rollins 3); Texas 4 (tie) Hunter Pence, SF 15,200,000 (Andrus 3, A.Beltre). RISP—Philadelphia 7 for 4; Cincinnati 0 for 7. Pedroia 2b 5 0 2 0 0 0 .400 51, Aramis Ramirez, Mil 15,137,803 GIDP—Votto. for 17; Texas 7 for 14. D.Ortiz dh 5 0 1 0 0 1 .200 52, Carlos Beltran, NYY 15,000,000 DP—St. Louis 1 (Y.Molina, Jh.Peralta, Napoli 1b 2 0 1 0 2 1 .500 Runners moved up—D.Brown, Choo. (tie) Adam Dunn, WSox 15,000,000 Ma.Adams). GIDP—Arencibia. 1-Bradley Jr. rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 (tie) Nick Swisher, Cle 15,000,000 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Carp lf-1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 DP—Philadelphia 1 (Rollins, Utley, (tie) Chase Utley, Phi 15,000,000 Wnwright W, 1-07 3 0 0 4 9 105 0.00 Sizemore cf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .500 Howard). 56, A.J. Burnett, Phi 14,707,756 Neshek 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 - Bogaerts ss 3 0 1 0 1 0 .333 57, Justin Upton, Atl 14,458,333 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Siegrist H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 10 0.00 Pierzynski c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Lee W, 1-0 5 11 8 8 1 1 101 14.40 58, B.J. Upton, Atl 14,050,000 C.Martinez H, 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 0.00 Diekman 1 1 2 2 1 2 23 18.00 Middlebrooks 3b3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 59, Jose Bautista, Tor 14,000,000 Rosenthal S, 1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 0.00 Rosenberg 2-3 2 0 0 1 0 12 0.00 Totals 36 1 9 1 3 6 (tie) Shin-Soo Choo, Tex 14,000,000 cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bastardo H, 1 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 24 0.00 AB R H BI BBSO Avg. (tie) Torii Hunter, Det 14,000,000 Cueto L, 0-1 7 3 1 1 1 8 97 1.29 Baltimore Papelbon 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 0.00 Markakis rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .000 (tie) David Price, Tam 14,000,000 M.Parra 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 14 0.00 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 (tie) Ryan Zimmerman, Was14,000,000 Ondrusek 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 17 0.00 Hardy ss Scheppers 4 8 7 7 3 2 93 15.75 A.Jones cf 3 0 2 0 0 0 .667 Neshek pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. 64, Michael Bourn, Cle 13,500,000 Figueroa L, 0-11 2-3 4 4 4 1 1 28 21.60 Inherited runners-scored—Siegrist 1-0, C.Davis 1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .000 (tie) Alex Rios, Tex 13,500,000 Ogando 1 1-3 3 2 2 2 3 38 13.50 N.Cruz lf 2 2 1 1 1 0 .500 (tie) James Shields, KC 13,500,000 Tolleson 1 1 1 1 0 1 19 9.00 C.Martinez 2-0, Ondrusek 2-0. IBB—off Wieters c 3 0 1 0 0 2 .333 67, Dan Uggla, Atl 13,146,942 Rosin 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 0.00 Wainwright (B.Pena). WP—Wainwright. Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, D.Young dh 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 68, Adam Jones, Bal 13,123,520 Diekman pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 69, Curtis Granderson, NYM13,000,000 Inherited runners-scored—Rosenberg 2-2, Kerwin Danley; Second, Lance Barksdale; Flaherty 3b Third, Mark Ripperger. Schoop 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .333 (tie) Edwin Jackson, Cubs 13,000,000 Bastardo 2-0, Ogando 1-1. WP—SchepT—2:56. A—43,134 (42,319). Totals 28 2 6 1 1 9 pers. T—3:36. A—49,031 (48,114). (tie) Jon Lester, Bos 13,000,000 Inherited runners-scored—Thielbar 1-0, Belisario 1-1, Veal 1-0. WP—Nolasco. Umpires—Home, Dale Scott; First, Dan Iassogna; Second, CB Bucknor; Third, Hal Gibson. T—2:35. A—37,422 (40,615).
BASEBALL
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
MLB: Cruz debuted with Orioles
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Phillies open with victory vs. Rangers
Continued from Page B-1
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — Jimmy Rollins had a grand slam during his memorable opening day for the Philadelphia Phillies, who needed a lot of runs to get usually reliable ace Cliff Lee a victory in his return to Phillies 14 Texas. Rollins hit his Rangers 10 200th career homer and pinch-hitter John Mayberry Jr. had a tiebreaking two-run double that put the Phillies ahead for good in a wild 14-10 victory over the Rangers on Monday. Rollins matched Cal Ripken’s major league record by starting his 14th consecutive opener at shortstop for the same franchise. He also became the 19th player in major league history with at least 400 doubles, 100 triples and 200 homers. “J-Roll, with the big pop early, just really set the tone and got things going,” Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. “I think it was contagious after that.” The Phillies had 17 hits and their most runs in a season opener since 1900. It was more than enough to make up for a rough outing for Lee (1-0), who was unable to protect a 6-0 lead after Rollins homered in the second inning. Rollins, whose wife is expecting their second child, flew to Texas on Sunday, a day after the rest of the team did. “I didn’t want to come here and then have to fly to Philadelphia,” Rollins said. “The baby has let me go out and play ball for a few more days.” Marlon Byrd and Cody Asche also homered for the Phillies, who beat the Boston Beaneaters 19-17 in their 1900 opener. Converted Rangers reliever Tanner Scheppers gave up seven runs over four innings. But the game was tied when Scheppers threw his last pitch. Mayberry, a first-round draft pick by the Rangers in 2005 who never played for the big league club and was traded three years later, got his tiebreaking hit in the fifth against Pedro Figueroa (0-1) for a 9-7 lead.
B-5
Philadelphia Phillies’ Jimmy Rollins hits a grand slam home run against the Texas Rangers during the second inning of an opening day game Monday at Globe Life Park in Arlington, Texas. KIM JOHNSON FLODIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lee matched his career high by allowing eight runs and struck out only one, but the left-hander made it through five innings in another lessthan-stellar opener for him in the Rangers’ home ballpark. “I don’t like being on the pitching side of that, but fortunately we outscored them and got the win, the main thing,” said Lee, who had a solid spring. “Jimmy hitting that grand slam busted it open. And we kept adding it on and we needed it, as it turned out.” Lee got a nice ovation before pitching in Texas for the first time since starting for the Rangers in Game 5 of the 2010 World Series. The lefty also made a season-opening start here for Cleveland in 2009, when the thenreigning AL Cy Young Award winner allowed seven runs over five innings in a 9-1 loss. With starters Yu Darvish, Matt Harrison and Derek Holland on the disabled list, Scheppers became the first pitcher since Fernando Valenzuela for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1981 to make his first career start on opening day. Scheppers, who had 76 relief appearances last season, struck out two and walked three. “I was extremely disappointed. You bear down there. My pitches were around the zone,” Scheppers said. “I was just trying to be too fine with everything, trying to hit corners. Unfortunately, I put the guys in a big hole.” Texas went ahead 7-6 on Alex Rios’
three-run homer in the third, but Philly Brad Ausmus a win in his first game got even in the fourth on Chase Utley’s since replacing Jim Leyland as the Tigers’ manager. RBI single, the first of his three hits. Joe Nathan (1-0) pitched a scoreless ORIOLES 2, RED SOX 1 ninth in his first appearance for the In Baltimore, Nelson Cruz celebrated Tigers. Wade Davis (0-1) allowed a oneout walk to Alex Avila and a single to his Baltimore debut by hitting a tieNick Castellanos in the ninth. breaking homer in the seventh off Jon Holland — who had 47 saves in 50 Lester (0-1), sending World Series chances last year — couldn’t escape champion Boston to an opening loss. the jam as the Royals lost their sixth Signed as a free agent in February, Cruz hit 27 homers last year with Texas straight opener. during a season marred by a 50-game RAYS 9, BLUE JAYS 2 suspension stemming from an invesDavid Price (1-0) allowed two runs tigation of performance-enhancing and six hits over 7⅓ innings to beat drugs. R.A. Dickey in a matchup of 2012 Cy After missing two seasons recoverYoung Award winners. ing from knee surgery, Boston center Matt Joyce drove in three runs for the fielder Grady Sizemore marked his Rays with a sacrifice fly and two-run return from a 922-day absence with double off Dickey (0-1), who yielded six a second-inning single for his first hit two-out runs in five innings. since September 2011. The three-time Toronto’s Jose Reyes left the lineup All-Star for Cleveland later hit his first after his first at-bat because of a tight home run since July 15, 2011, also at left hamstring and was put on the disCamden Yards. abled list. Zach Britton (1-0) pitched two WHITE SOX 5, TWINS 3 scoreless innings, and Tommy Hunter In Chicago, Alejandro De Aza hit two worked the ninth for his first save. homers, and Jose Abreu had two hits in TIGERS 4, ROYALS 3 his major league debut. In Detroit, Alex Gonzalez drove in the Chicago’s Paul Konerko got a loud winning run in his Tigers debut, lining ovation before what was likely his a single to left off Greg Holland in the final opener, although he wasn’t in the ninth. lineup. The White Sox are coming off a 63-99 season, their poorest record Acquired by Detroit in late March since 1970. following an injury to shortstop Jose Chris Sale (1-0) allowed three runs Iglesias, Gonzalez made a costly error and five hits in 7⅓ innings with eight in Kansas City’s three-run fourth but strikeouts to beat Ricky Nolasco (0-1), made up for that with a tying triple in the seventh. He then singled with men who gave up five runs and 10 hits in six innings in his Twins debut. on first and third in the ninth, giving
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Brewers beat Braves in Braun’s 1st game back The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Ryan Braun stepped into the batter’s box, admittedly a bit anxious. The sellout crowd at Miller Park quickly put him at ease, showering him with a standing ovation. First day back on the job after a drug suspension was already a day to remember Brewers 2 for the Brewers slugger. Then he added another unique footnote Braves 0 to his career. Braun went 1 for 4 and stole a base that helped set up a two-run inning, and later was ruled out in the first call overturned under baseball’s expanded replay system as Milwaukee beat the Atlanta Braves 2-0 on Monday in a season opener. The former MVP was returning from suspension for the final 65 games last year in the Biogenesis doping scandal. Played his first game as a right fielder, too. What a way to start the season. “It was special. It was an emotional moment for me,” Braun said. Braun said the ovation affected him. He flied out to left. “Swung at some pitches that I typically don’t swing at, but it’s something that I’m very thankful for and very appreciative,” Braun said. Among the 45,691 people in attendance was Commissioner Bud Selig. Two years ago, Braun became the first MLB player to get a suspension for performance-enhancing drugs overturned. Originally banned for 50 games, he filed a grievance and won. “Fans are fans. That’s the way it’s supposed to be. He’s their hometown player and it was a wonderful reaction. I wish everybody well,” Selig said. Later, Braun had his infield single to lead off the sixth overturned to out after the call was challenged by Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez under Major League Baseball’s new replay format. The review took 58 seconds. “I had a pretty good idea that I was out,” Braun said, drawing laughs. “For all of us, we just hope they get it right, and they did get it right.” Yovani Gallardo (1-0) tossed six shutout innings for the win. He allowed just four hits in becoming the first pitcher in franchise history to make five straight opening day starts. CARDINALS 1, REDS 0 In Cincinnati, Yadier Molina’s homer broke a seventh-inning tie, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a victory over the Reds. Adam Wainwright (1-0) used his refined sinker to finally get the best of the Reds, who have hit him like no other team. Wainwright allowed three hits in seven innings, fanning nine. St. Louis escaped a threat in the eighth. Trevor Rosenthal retired all three batters in the ninth, finishing a three-hitter for the defending National League
The Brewers’ Ryan Braun gets a standing ovation in the first inning of an opening day game against the Braves on Monday in Milwaukee. JEFFREY PHELPS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
champions. Bryan Price lost his managing debut with Cincinnati, which opened the season with eight players on the disabled list, its most since 2007. Johnny Cueto (0-1) allowed three hits in seven innings. PIRATES 1, CUBS 0 (10 INNINGS) In Pittsburgh, Neil Walker homered off Carlos Villanueva leading off the 10th inning, and the Pirates benefited from an overturned to call to beat the Cubs 1-0 on opening day. Reliever Bryan Morris (1-0) won with the help of an overturned pickoff call in the top of the 10th under Major League Baseball’s new replay system. Starter Francisco Liriano and four relievers combined for 11 strikeouts. Emilio Bonifacio went 4 for 5 for Chicago, but the Cubs were 0 for 11 with runners in scoring position and wasted a fine start by Jeff Samardzija, who scattered five hits over seven innings.
securing a win for Matt Williams in his first game as a major league manager. Stephen Strasburg struck out 10 over six innings in his third straight opening-day start. Juan Lagares and Andrew Brown both homered for New York after they were surprise additions to the lineup. Aaron Barrett (1-0) struck out two in a perfect inning to win his major league debut. Jeurys Familia (0-1) took the loss, hurt by catcher Travis d’Arnaud’s passed ball.
MARLINS 10, ROCkIES 1 In Miami, Jose Fernandez looked just as good as he did last year in the season opener, and the Marlins’ batting order looked much improved. Fernandez struck out nine and allowed one run in six innings Monday, and Marlins newcomer Casey McGehee drove in four runs with two doubles to help Miami beat the Colorado Rockies 10-1. The sellout crowd of 37,116 was the largest yet at NATIONALS 9, METS 7 (10 INNINGS) Marlins Park, which opened two years ago. In New York, Anthony Rendon hit a three-run The 21-year-old Fernandez earned the victory while homer in the 10th inning and drove in a career-high becoming the youngest NL opening-day starter since four runs, twice rallying the Nationals against the Dwight Gooden in 1986, according to STATS. And Mets’ suspect bullpen for an opening-day victory. Denard Span hit a tying double with two outs in the he picked up where he left off last season, when he went 12-6 and was voted NL Rookie of the Year. ninth off closer Bobby Parnell, and Ian Desmond put The right-hander’s strikeout total matched Josh the Nationals in front for the first time with a sacriBeckett’s team record for an opener. Fernandez threw fice fly in the 10th. Rendon connected two batters later against former Washington pitcher John Lannan, 73 strikes and only 21 balls to 23 batters.
the Cubs’ Jeff Samardzija both were called out. Braun received a standing ovation at Miller Park in his return from a 65-game, season-ending suspension he accepted for violations of baseball’s drug agreement and labor contract. “Fans are fans. That’s the way it’s supposed to be. He’s their hometown player and it was a wonderful reaction. I wish everybody well,” said baseball Commissioner Bud Selig, the former Brewers owner who was on hand to watch his hometown team. Nelson Cruz, who completed his 50-game suspension in time to return for Texas’ season finale last fall, celebrated his Baltimore debut with a tiebreaking home run off Jon Lester in the seventh inning in the Orioles’ 2-1 win over World Series champion Boston. Fans chanted “Cruuuuuze!” every time his name was announced. “It was really neat, it was special,” he said. “I made the right call to come and be part of this organization, be part of this town.” Rollins hit his 200th career homer in Philadelphia’s 14-10 interleague win at Texas as the Phillies had 17 hits and scored their most runs in an opener since 1900. Rollins, whose wife is expecting their second child, flew to Texas on Sunday, a day after the rest of the team. “I didn’t want to come here and then have to fly to Philadelphia,” Rollins said. “The baby has let me go out and play ball for a few more days.” Rollins connected off Tanner Scheppers, the first pitcher since Fernando Valenzuela of the 1981 Los Angeles Dodgers to make his first big league start on opening day. At Pittsburgh, Walker homered off Carlos Villanueva leading off the 10th inning to give the Pirates a 1-0, 10-inning win over the perennially hapless Chicago Cubs. He becomes the first Pittsburgh player to hit a game-ending home on opening day since Bob Bailey against San Francisco’s Juan Marichal in a 1-0, 10-inning victory in 1965. “This one feels pretty special,” said Walker, who last year helped the Pirates finish with a winning record for the first time since 1992. “This is a special day for this team, this organization. We’ve come a long way.” Washington rallied for a 9-7 win at the New York Mets. Denard Span hit a tying double with two outs in the ninth off closer Bobby Parnell, and Ian Desmond put the Nationals in front for the first time with a sacrifice fly in the 10th and Anthony Rendon followed with a three-run homer. “I have a stomach ache right now,” Williams said. “I’ll probably sleep good tonight.” Detroit beat visiting Kansas City 4-3 when Alex Gonzalez finished his Tigers debut with a winning RBI single in the ninth against Greg Holland. Kansas City lost its sixth straight opener but Salvador Perez’s run-scoring double in the fourth ended a 22-inning scoreless streak for the Royals in openers. St. Louis won 1-0 at Cincinnati behind Yadier Molina’s seventhinning homer off Johnny Cueto, the Reds’ first shutout loss on opening day since 1953. Bryan Price lost his managing debut with Cincinnati. Coming off a 63-99 season, their poorest record since 1970, the Chicago White Sox beat Minnesota 5-3. Tampa Bay beat Toronto 9-2 behind ace David Price, who wasn’t sure he’d remain with the Rays during a winter of trade rumors. Blue Jays shortstop Jose Reyes left the lineup after his first at-bat because of a tight left hamstring and was put on the disabled list. Reyes injured his left ankle in Toronto’s 10th game last year and was sidelined until June 26. Jose Fernandez struck out nine and allowed one run in six innings for the Miami Marlins in a 10-1 rout of visiting Colorado. The 21-year-old became the youngest NL openingday starter since Dwight Gooden in 1986, according to STATS.
Hank, the unofficial mascot of the Milwaukee Brewers, plays with a bat on the field Monday before the opening day game between the Brewers and the Braves at Miller Park in Milwaukee. JEFFREY PHELPS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
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»rentals«
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COMMERCIAL SPACE
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GUESTHOUSES
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APARTMENTS FURNISHED
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Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
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HOUSES UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath adobe duplex. Washer, dryer. No pets. Clean, carport. Owner, Broker, $750 deposit, $750 plus utilities. 505-469-5063 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. Tile, wooden ceiling, beams. Private. 2 miles from Plaza. Non-smoking, no pets. $1100 includes water. 505-204-2265
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COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
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WAREHOUSES
GARDNERS DELIGHT
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2 BEDROOM $870, plus utilities. Hardwood floors, washer, dryer hookup, patio, carport, quiet, private fenced yard. Pet negotiable. 505-4711270, appointment.
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INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 750 SQUARE FEET FOR $600 TO 1500 SQUARE FEET FOR $1050. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, HALF BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166, 505-670-8270.
MAYBERRY PARK. 2356 FOX ROAD, UNIT 700. 1,800 sq.ft. Warehouse with front office. Off Siler Road by Home Depot. $1,150 monthly. 505-982-1255. WAREHOUSE WORK SPACE. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. 2000 sq.ft. Workshop, art studio, light manuafacturing. Siler Road area. $1400 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505670-1733.
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2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET. 800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-6997280.
FRONTING ON 2ND STREET 2160 sq.ft on 2nd Street.
Live- Work. Studio. Gallery, or Office. High ceilings, 2-story. Handicap bath. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906.
FOUND 2 KEYS found outside Smith’s on Pacheco on 3/27. Please call 505-6998780 with description and your phone number.
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CARETAKING
CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS
Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-310-7552.
HAULING OR YARD WORK
LANDSCAPING
PLASTERING
FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898
COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING
Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 15% off! 505-9072600, 505-990-0955.
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
FIREWOOD
Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework, Coyote Fencing, Irrigation, sodding. 15% discount, Free Estimates! 505-629-2871 or 505204-4510.
CLEANING A+ Cleaning
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction. House and Pet sitting. Senior care. References available, $18 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.
Clean Houses In and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449. ELIZABETH BECERRIL General Cleaning for your home. Low prices. Free estimates. References available. So can you with a classified ad 505-204-0676
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load.
505-983-2872, 505-470-4117 YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 Years Experience, Residential & Offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655
CONCRETE EXPERIENCED SPECIALIZED IN CONCRETE REPAIR, OVERLAYMENTS, INTERIORS, EXTERIORS. DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, BASKETBALL COURTS. WE USE SPECIAL FLOOR ADHESIVE TREATMENT. $9-11 PER SQ.FT. LICENSED, BONDED. 505-470-2636
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877
CONSTRUCTION LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
986-3000
MOVERS
HANDYMAN I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
Sell Your Stuff!
E.R. Landscaping
Dry Pinon & Cedar
MATURE, ABLEBODIED, DEPENDABLE couple seeks long term position, with housing. Extremely Mindful of what is under our care. 505-455-9336, 505-501-5836.
directory«
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
BE READY, PLAN NOW *Drought solutions *Irrigation: New installs and rennovations *Design and installations All phases of landscapes. "I DO IT ALL!" 505-995-0318 or 505-3 10-0045 . Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock. JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
A a r d v a r k DISCOUNT M O V E R S Most moving services; old-fashioned respect and care since 1976. Jo h n , 505-473-4881.
ROOFING ALL TYPES OF ROOFING. Free estimates with 15 years experience. Call Josue Garcia, 505-490-1601.
PAINTING
TREES
A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLE PRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RELIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-9821207
DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 473-4129
YARD MAINTENANCE
ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119. HOMECRAFT PAINTING - INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505350-7887.
YARD MAINTENANCE
Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.
Berry Clean - 505-501-3395
Look for these businesses on exploresantafe•com Call us today for your free Business Cards!*
986-3000
*With your paid Business and Service Directory advertising program.
FOR RELEASE APRIL 1, 2014 Tuesday, April 1, 2014
sfnm«classifieds LOST
ADMINISTRATIVE
BEADED KEY fob. Nissan key. Dropped in front of Santa Fe post office or inside. Please call me. Helen 505-6296075.
People Center Services is seeking an office manager. 30 hours. Must have good writing and computer skills. Bilingual a plus. Fax: 505-820-6771. No phone calls please.
PUBLIC NOTICES
MEDICAL DENTAL
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
Public Notice
Please to inform that Santa Fe County, New Mexico resident Angelique M. Hart was ordained as Priest in the Holy Catholic Church of the East in Brazil; Vicariate of the Nevis and Ecuador: Sacred Medical Order of The Church of Hope Ordination of the Priest in the name of the Father and the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. To all the Faithful in Christ, Peace, Health and Divine Grace. By the Grace of God, we inform that in accordance to the canonical laws that governs our Ecclesiastical Community (Ecclesiastical Sovereign Principality) and in accordance with the traditions and laws of the Ancient and Holy Church of Christ, we certify through this instrument, the Ordination of the Reverend Mother Angelique Marie Hart according to the Ancient Rites of the Catholic Church of the East in Brazil. We sign and confirm with our hand and seal with our arms Decree of the Ordination No. 2013/047 Let it be known that from this day of November 17, 2013 and hence forth the Official Title Bestowed shall read: Reverend Mother Angelique M. Hart. This title and ordination was bestowed to Reverend Mother Angelique M. Hart by Dr. of Medicine Charles McWilliams; Vicar Bishop and Grand Master and Mar Bacillus Adao Pereira, Metropolitan Archbishop of the Holy Catholic Church of the East in Brazil. November 17, 2013
»jobs«
Transit Operator Dispatch Supervisor 2014-188
The Transit Operations Dispatch Supervisor monitors, supervises, adjusts and coordinates bus service transportation to ensure the delivery of safe, efficient and on time service to the community; and is responsible to dispatch on a regular rotating basis in the dispatch office as part of supervisory duties. The City of Santa Fe offers competitive compensation and a generous benefit package including excellent retirement program, medical, dental, life insurance, paid holidays, generous vacation and sick leave. For detailed information on this position or to obtain an application, visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. Position closes 4/15/14.
Tribal Administrator
Lead & manage daily operations of the tribal government. Administer public service programs, projects & commercial enterprise. Lead strategic planning & policy development. Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration and related field + 5 years experience. Submit resume to: Pueblo de San Ildefonso Human Resources endewa@sanipueblo.org (505) 455-4155
CONSTRUCTION ELECTRICAL APPRENTICE, 3-4 year experience a plus. Must have valid NM driver’s license. Full-time position Santa Fe area. Pay DOE. Art, 505690-3233.
DRIVERS
PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE IS SEEKING A DIRECTOR OF NURSING. MUST HAVE EXPERIENCE IN HOME HEALTH, OASIS AND CODING. EXCELLENT SALARY AND BENEFITS. PLEASE FAX RESUME 505-9820788 OR CALL BRIAN, 505-982-8581 FOR DETAILS. HELP NEEDED WITH INSURANCE EXAMS in Santa Fe. Contract position. Must be proficient in drawing blood and reliable. 505-296-9644, Veronica.
LPN/ RN
WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON @505-982-2574 OR COME BY THE FACILITY TO FILL OUT AN APPLICATION. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVALIABLE
ATTN: CNA’S
WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVALIABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, or CRAIG SHAFFER, ADMINISTRATOR, 505-982-2574. OR COME BY THE FACILITY AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION.
DIRECTOR OF NURSES (SANTA FE CARE CENTER)
Responsible for effective overall management of the Nursing Department and coordination with other disciplines to provide quality care to all patients & residents. This position is significant in facility leadership If interested in the position. Please come see Craig Shaffer Admin, or stop by our facility, and fill out a application. 635 Harkle RD Santa Fe NM 87505 MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF NORTHERN NEW MEXICO seeks Full-Time Billing Specialist in Los Alamos, experience in Health Insurance, Accounts Receivable. Non-smoker. Contact Cristal at job@mannm.com . MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF NORTHE R N NM seeks a Full-time Medical Records Team Leader in Los Alamos. Medical Records experience required. Non-smoker. Contact Cristal at www.job@mannm.com.
TRANSPORT DRIVER WANTED
ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING MANAGER
Qualifications: Degree in Finance and/or Accounting; Minimum 3-5 years experience in Accounting; Minimum 2 - 5 years of supervisory experience. EXPERT WITH accounting systems and excel spreadsheet work; Ability to multi-task and work at a fast pace. Apply online, http://www.akalsecurity.com
Professional Home Health Care Full Charge Bookkeeper Home Health Care Agency has an immediate opening. Responsible for Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, Collection of claims from Insurance providers, timely tax deposits and all tax reports, monthly accrual statements, cash management including bank reconciliations. E-Mail: brian.conway@phhc-nm.com or fax resume: 505-989-3672
ADMINISTRATIVE
Must have 3 years experience, CDL driver’s license and clean driving record. Must be familiar with loading and hauling heavy construction equipment.
*Good pay *Health insurance *401K *Salray DOE(EOE) *Drug testing Office: 505-821-1034, Fax: 505821-1537. Email: frontdesk@ sparlingconstructi o n .n e t . 8900 Washington NE, Albuquerque, NM
EDUCATION VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOLS IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A HEALTH TEACHER , A M U S I C T E A C H E R AND A HEAD SOCCER CO ACH . IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505989-6353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.
HOSPITALITY Administrative Services Coordinator Full-time supporting Provider Recruitment and Compliance. Requires exper and computer skills. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE, M, F, D, V, AA Follow us on Facebook.
DOMINO’S PIZZA HIRING ALL POSITIONS. Part-time, evenings, w e e k e n d s . Must be 18 for all positions & have own car with insurance to drive. Apply at 3530 Zafarano.
***Job Fair*** at The Club at Las Campanas Hiring for the 2014 Season Apply at: 437 Las Campanas Drive Santa Fe, New Mexico Saturday, April 5, 2014 9 am to 4 pm IN HOME CARE LIVE-IN CARETAKER TO CARE for Female Patient with Alzheimer’s. Experience desirable but not necessary. Please call, 505-988-1397 for appointment, interview.
CHILDREN’S SERVICES MANAGER Responsible for overall operations of programs serving young children (0-5 years) and their families in Santa Fe County. See PMS website for specific position requirements. Excellent benefits. Apply on-line at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE, M, F, D, V, AA Follow us on Facebook. LOCAL ASSOCIATION s eek in g Workers’ Compensation administrative assistant. Successful candidate: five years administrative experience; excellent multitasking & time management skills; excellent written & verbal communication abilities. Must have current computer experience; be team player; able to support & work well with staff, vendors & customers. Growth potential. Hiring immediately. Resume & references to cstephenson@nmcounties.org by 4/14.
MANAGEMENT BLAKE’S LOTABURGER seeking District Manager & General Managers in the Santa Fe Area! Competitive Salary & Benefits. Email Résumé to cheyns@lotaburger.com .
MANAGER SANTA FE GALLERY . Pay DOE + Revenue Sharing + Full Benefits; Management Experience; In NM 3+ years; Merchandising & display skills; Resume: info@MamasMinerals.com .
MEDICAL DENTAL
C H E C K - O U T APPOINTMENT SECRETARY. Responsible for checking out all patients and collection of payment, among other duties. Email resume to: santaanaskincare@gmail.com
B-7
HaveCrossword a product or service to offer? Los Angeles Times Daily Puzzle
to place your ad, call
LOST 3/21/14 gold pendant necklace, fist shaped. Don Diego or Cowgirl. Reward greater than value! 505-4700727. LOST OLD IPhone with many family pictures. Reward $50.00. Call 505-6997644.
THE NEW MEXICAN
NURSING POSITIONS: Full Time RN & LPN positions open in our clinical areas. All shifts available. Experience in geriatric nursing and/or dementia care preferred. Great medical and retirement benefits, pleasant working environment. Email your resume to: humanresources@elcnm.com or fax to 505-983-3828.
PCM IS hiring a dependable RN-Case Manager for in-home care in the Santa Fe, NM area. $32 per hour. Apply at: www.procasemanagement.com or call 866-902-7187 Ext. 350. EOE.
Sequoyah Adolescent Treatment Center
a NM DOH FACILITY , is seeking applicants for LICENSED SOCIAL WORKER, LICENSED CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, LICENSED REGISTERED NURSES, AND PSYCHIATRIC TECHNICIANS to work with adolescent males from 1317 years old in a residential setting. To apply for these positions please visit http://www.spo.state.nm.us, for additional information please contact Kathy Lucero, HR Director, at 222-0312. The State of New Mexico is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS FULL-TIME HOUSEKEEPER’S ASSISTANT 505-660-6440 PART TIME LAW PROFESSOR working on major malpractice case in CA. Needs PARTTIME BRIEFING ATTORNEY, good grades, to brief CA Law. Send resume to: 221 Sereno Dr, Santa Fe, 87501.
986-3000 ourand small experts today! Edited by RichCall Norris Joycebusiness Lewis
ACROSS 1 Bart’s mom 6 Pooch in whodunits 10 Super-fast fliers, briefly 14 Multiple choice options 15 Tater 16 Poi base 17 City on Spain’s Southwestern coast 18 School semester 19 Some Neruda poems 20 Collegian’s specialty 23 Take home the trophy 24 ’70s-’80s TV role for Robin Williams 25 Bawl out 28 Make illegal 29 “Love __ Madly”: Doors hit 30 Actor Wallach 31 “I __ sorry” 34 TV athletic award 37 Surgical beam 39 Retire 42 Practical joke 43 Prince William’s alma mater 44 Chooses, with “for” 45 Escape 46 Sound system part 48 Lid for a lad 50 Rio Grande city 52 City north of Pittsburgh 54 Tank or tee 57 Kitchen appliance 60 Turn over 62 Reagan secretary of state 63 Megastars 64 In excess of 65 Footwear insert 66 Former midsize Pontiac named for a native Mexican 67 Cancún cash 68 Tiff 69 Skeptical
4/1/14
By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke
DOWN 1 Colorful parrot 2 Counters with beads 3 Flying ’50s film monster 4 Graph paper design 5 Itchy skin inflammation 6 Up and about 7 Bit of dust 8 Gang land 9 Look up to 10 Casual vodka order 11 Prepares for the cattle drive 12 Three, in Turin 13 Distress letters 21 “Water Lilies” painter Claude 22 Ranks below marquises 26 Fully attentive 27 Loses energy 28 Timely benefit 29 Source of a shot 31 Orchard tree 32 Work on a wall 33 Cattle drive concerns 35 Ladder lead-in
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
36 Greenhouse container 38 Physics particle 40 Decree in imperial Russia 41 Practical joke 47 Coffeehouse orders 49 Old reception aid 51 Last Olds made 52 Writer Jong 53 “Correctomundo!”
4/1/14
54 Govt. security 55 One with an unsettling look 56 Irritating 58 One may be on a woodpile 59 Wood-shaping tool 60 Badge bearer 61 One who succumbed to a serpent
LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by: 2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507
505-473-2886
www.FurrysBuickGMC.com • 2 YR / 24000 MI SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE • 4YR / 50000 MI. BUMPER TO BUMPER WARRANTY • 6YR / 70000 MI. ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE
BRANDNEW! 2014 BUICK VERANO
$24640 M.S.R.P. -$3187 FURRY’S ONE PRICE DISCOUNT -$1500 AVAILABLE GM REBATES
$19,953 FURRY’S PRICE
WOW! THAT’S OVER $4600 IN TOTAL DISCOUNTS!
Or take 0.9% for 60 full months!
DISCLAIMER: Stk# 40690 - Price plus applicable tax, title and one time dealer transfer fee. 0.9% available in lieu of $500 GM rebate - $17.06 per $1000 financed for 60 months on approved credit through ALLY Financial. Not all buyers will qualify, see dealer for details and alternate options available. GM rebates - $500 C/S Cash, $500 Conquest, $500 Select Cash...not all buyers will qualify, see dealer for details.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
sfnm«classifieds RETAIL FAIRCHILD & CO FINE JEWELRY
seeking Sales Associate . Minimum 4 years experience in high-end retail Color gemstones & diamonds. Friday-Monday. Bring resume to 110 W. San Francisco Street. Hourly DOE, plus commission, parking, vacation, health insurance.
TRADES EXPERIENCED GARMENT SCREENPRINTER in Santa Fe for Automatic and Manual production printing; Full Time, Benefits, send information and resume to jobapp.applyhere@gmail.com
»merchandise«
EXERCISE EQUIPMENT
to place your ad, call
986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
PETS SUPPLIES
CLASSIC CARS
DOMESTIC
4X4s
CUDDLES, A 2-year-old boy with a medium-length black coat, enjoys relaxing in your lap and playing with toys. He enjoys other felines.
1970 FORD F-100. $2,000. Please call 505-920-4078 and schedule a test drive!
2011 FORD Fiesta 5 door HB SES. WOW! Only 35,567 miles! $13,999. Schedule a test drive today!
2008 CHEVROLET EQUINOX 4WD LTZ. $13,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
ROM 4-minute Cross Trainer . Excellent Condition. Bought 2012 for $15,175, yours for $5,000 OBO. All accessories with setup & workout binder, floor mat & cover included. Call 505-438-2964. Call or Text 505-690-5424.
FIREWOOD-FUEL SEASONED FIREWOOD . P ONDEROSA $80.00 PER LOAD. Pinion or Cedar $120.00 per load. tel# 508-444-0087 delivery free
FOOD FRUIT
FURNITURE
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
EGGS FOR sale. Chicken, turkey, and duck eggs. Mixed eggs $5 dozen, all chicken $4 dozen. Call Ana at 505983-4825.
LOTUS, a 1-year-old female mastiff, is a playful girl who can’t wait to go home with a family who has lots of time to spend with her and plenty of love to give. The shelter’s adoption hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, Visit www.sfhumanesociety.org or call 983-4309, ext. 610.
ANTIQUES
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
DOMESTIC
MUST SELL! Broyhill livingroom set. Loveseat and 2 chairs. Downsizing and must get out of garage. Good condition. $300. 505-6703625.
2008 Hummer H2 SUT - REALLY! ONLY 38k miles, totally loaded with leather, NAV and chrome brush guard, clean CarFax, this one’s HOT $46,731. 505-216-3800.
2005 DODGE Dakota 4WD Quad Cab SLT. 93,514 miles. New front brakes. Extra clean condition. $13,999 schedule a test drive today!
Solid Oak China Cabinet in Perfect Condition. Includes all Glass Panels and Shelves. $200. 505-577-5936. TWIN BED for sale. Matress, box spring and frame. Perfect condition. $150. Please call 505-670-8138.
WASHSTAND & BASIN . Washstand is in perfect condition, only missing pitcher. $100. SUNDAYFUN225@YAHOO.COM
VINTAGE FOUR Poster bed frame Full size, $70. 505-660-6034
Hi, my name’s Riley. I’m a 2 year old neutered male American Staffordshire Terrier who’s known to be a very sweet and gentle soul. I love to relax and put my head on my human’s leg or lap ’cause I just love to cuddle and play!
2008 CADILLAC DTS. NICE! $12,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078. 2009 PONTIAC G6. 45,230 miles. Low miles at this price? it just doesn’t get any better! $13,394. Call us today!
APPLIANCES 25 CU.FT. Kenmore refrigerator, white, french doors, bottom freezer, excellent condition, $750. O’Keefe & Merritt gas range. $100. Call 505-9898574.
ART
www.furrysbuickgmc.com WOOD TOP & base. Granite & Wood surface. Drawer, knife block, towel bar, speed rack & many more features - 35.5"H X 24"W X 46"L. 505-4661563.
SUNDANCE MAJESTA 880 LUXURY SPA. Excellent condition. 35 jets. Seats 5. $3,900. 505-466-3802, 6704170.
MISCELLANEOUS ALLAN HOUSER "Navajo Lovers" Sculpture. Collectible. Call to discuss. 505-515-5474 FRANK HOWELL "Circle of Life", $13,000. "Reunion", $11,000. Both custom leather frames. TILL GOODIN, EDWARD CURTIS, photos. 831-8019363
I BUY ANTLERS & SKULLS, 831-8019363.
Hi, I’m Maple, a 2 year old spayed female American Staffordshire Terrier who’s very intelligent, gentle and easy to train! I’m a super CALM couch potato who likes to go on walks or easy hikes with my friends! If you’re interested in adopting Riley or Maple contact Mare Israel at 505-316-2089 or email at gimmeahome505@gmail.com or you can visit the website at Petabulls.com .
»finance«
2009 PONTIAC G6. $9,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
ELECTRIC PIANO, ADAGIO KDP-18 (CANADA), FULL KEYBOARD, PORTABLE, CASE, STOOL. LIKE NEW. $475 OBO. 505-438-0008
GOLDEN EAGE Compund Bow with case. $250. Please call 505-983-7057.
TOOLS MACHINERY
BUILDING MATERIALS
DEWALT DW788 20" Heavy Duty Variable Speed Scroll Saw with Stand and Light. 99.9% New. In Pojoaque. 505-577-5200
SELL IT FOR $100 OR LESS AND PAY $10. Larger Using
ALL NEW PORTABLE 8x12 METAL BUILDING. $1,700 DELIVERED! For more information please call 505-603-4644.
Typeeasy! It’s that
»cars & trucks«
PETS SUPPLIES
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
COLLECTIBLES LOOKING TO BUY US Stamp Collections. 1847-1920. Call 603-727-8315.
2003 FORD F350, Dually. Lariat FX4, Diesel, 4 door, leather interior, excellent condition. $13,000, OBO. 575-7581923, 575-770-0554.
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES 1984 VOLKSWAGON RABBIT Diesel. Good condition. DOESN’T RUN! Good project or parts car. $400 AS IS. 505466-3073
CLASSIC CARS
1957 CHEVY PICK-UP. Big window, Napco 4x4. 350 engine with 2100 miles. Many new parts. $33,000. Mike, 505-690-4849 Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
AIREDALE PUPPIES AKC. 10 weeks old. Big Healthy Pups. Shots, dewormed. $700 each. Belen, NM. 505-944-5323. BEAUTIFUL QUALITY PUPPIES Registered, shots, health gurantee, POTTY PAD trained. Great PAYMENT PLAN. Most non-shedding Hypo-allergenic. PAYPAL, Debit. Credit cards. POMERANIANS, MALTYPOOS, MINI DACHSHUNDS, CHIHUAHUAS, SHIHTZUS, POODLES, DESIGNER MALTESE AND OTHERS. All tiny. $2501000. 575-910-1818 txt4pics cingard1@yahoo.com
2004 SAAB 9-5. $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505321-3920.
So can you with a classified ad
1989 CHEVY Celebrity EuroSport. 28 Multi Port F1 Engine. Great Condition, 60,300 miles. New water pump. $2,500 OBO. 505-501-3108.
GreenSheen Recycled Paint Now in Stock! 1 and 5 gallons
2009 DODGE AVENGER. 100,841 miles. Don’t let the miles fool you! What a price for an ’09! $9,155. Call today!
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Call Classifieds For Details Today!
»animals«
2005 FORD F-150 4WD SuperCab. 163,186 miles. FX-4! New front brake pads and rotors. $8,599. Schedule a test drive today!
OWN A COMPUTER? Put it to work for you. Make an EXTRA $500 - $1,000 part time, or $5,000 - $8,000 full time. VISIT TODAY!!!
WANTED! 2 or 4 245/45R/17 tires. Cash. Please call 949-632-3736.
986-3000
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BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
will help your ad get noticed
986-3000
Used Furniture and Building Supplies 505-473-1114
1989 CHEVY CAVALIER CONVERTIBLE. Has new Convertible top, runs good! asking $3,000, obo. Also, 1994 CHEVY S10 BLAZER has lots of new engine parts, $3,000 obo. 505-901-2268
Great
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
MAGNIFICENT STONE Cliff Fragua sculpture, 30"high, rare 2003, $3,500, must sell, Santa Fe, retail $10,500. 505-471-4316, colavs19@comcast.net
2014 CHEVROLET CRUZE 2 LT. 16,791 miles. Just one owner, who treated this vehicle like a member of the family. $16,989.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
ROVER TRAVELERS BANJO. tone. $250. 505-983-7057
F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $14,900. 505-470-2536
santafenewmexican.com
CLASSIFIED SALES CONSULTANT The Santa Fe New Mexican is looking to hire a motivated and enthusiastic individual with a passion for sales to fill an opening in the Classified Advertising Sales Department. Must have ability to multitask, provide excellent customer service, be proficient in basic computer and phone skills and work in a fast paced team environment. The Classified Sales Consultant position offers great benefits, and hourly wage plus commission based on a team sales structure.
Please email resume, cover letter and references to: Amy Fleeson, Classified Advertising Manager at afleeson@sfnewmexican.com Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No phone calls please. Application deadline: 4/16/14
The New Mexican is an equal opportunity employer Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303
Tuesday, April 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds 4X4s
4X4s
2004 GMC YUKON DENALI AWD. $10,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
2010 SUBARU IMPREZA AWD. $15,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
to place your ad, call IMPORTS
2005 Acura MDX AWD
Sweet MDX loaded with leather, navigation, new tires, in excellent condition. No accidents, CarFax, warranty $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
986-3000
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
2012 Infiniti M37x AWD - Just traded! Gorgeous and loaded, good miles, navigation & technology packages, local one owner, clean CarFax $33,752. Call 505-216-3800.
2006 MERCEDES-BENZ C-Class C350 Sport Sedan. $9,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
2011 SUBARU Outback. Another LEXUS trade-in, local vehicle, new brakes, battery, freshly serviced, clean CarFax $16,981. Call 505216-3800.
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WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! Using
We always Larger get results!
1987 JAGUAR XJ6 - WOW! only 48k miles! a TRUE classic, try to find a nicer one, accident free, amazing condition, drives great $12,991 Call 505-216-3800.
Type
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LEGALS
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LEGALS
LEGALS
Legal # 96645 IN THE PROBATE COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO NO. 2014-0039 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JEANNE ANN LINGENFELTER, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the personal representative at Post Office Box 4160, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502-4160, or filed with the Santa Fe County Probate Court. DATED: March 20, 2014 /s/
Richard D. Padberg Personal Representative of the Estate of Jeanne Ann Lingenfelter, Deceased CUDDY & MCCARTHY, LLP James S. Rubin P.O. Box 4160 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502-4160 (505) 988-4476 Attorneys for Personal Representative Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 25, April 1 2014
meeting in the County Manager’s Office, the City Clerk’s Office, and on the Agency’s website at www.sfswma.org. The meeting may constitute a quorum of the Board of County Commissioners; however, no County business will be discussed. Anyone who has questions regarding the meeting or requiring special accommodations should contact Rosalie Cardenas at (505) 424-1850, extension 150. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 1 2014
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of this Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or their claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative at P.O. Box 1575, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87504, or filed with the First Judicial District Court, Judge Steve Herrera Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Ave., P.O. Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 87504.
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 (505) 988-7114 (office) (505) 995-8694 (facsimile) lawfirm@cullen.cc
Legal #96650 NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING
Notice is hereby giv- Legal#96685 FIRST JUDICIAL en that the regular DISTRICT COURT meeting of the Joint COUNTY OF Powers Board of the SANTA FE Santa Fe Solid Waste STATE OF Management Agency NEW MEXICO will convene on Thursday, April 17, D-101-PB-20142014, at 3:30 p.m. The No. meeting will be held 00032 at Santa Fe City Hall, IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF City Councilors’ ConGILBERT J. ference Room, 1st SINGLETON, Floor, 200 Lincoln DECEASED Avenue, Santa Fe, NM. Agendas will be NOTICE TO available at least 72 CREDITORS hours before the
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RFP for Raton MainStreet, Inc. Proposals received after 12:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 30, 2014 will not be considered and will be returned unopened. Information should be sent to: Raton MainStreet, Inc. Attn: Raton MainStreet Director 131 N. 2nd Street Raton, NM 87740 Scope of Planning Services to be Performed The following tasks are identified as the Scope of Work that the planning consultant team will be requested to perform in preparing an amendment to the Downtown Master Plan. Since Raton MainStreet and the City of Raton adopted a Master Plan in 2009, New Mexico MainStreet now requires a MRA to be adopted with the Master Plan. The update to Raton’s Downtown Master Plan will include the incorporation of elements of the Arts and Cultural District Cultural Plan (2011) for Raton’s Arts and Cultural District. A. Updated Market Analysis 1. Overview of updated demographics of city and regional markets including skill base, education and disposable income based on 2010 Census data; B. Updated Downtown Vision and Master Plan The process of updating the Downtown Master Plan will involve dynamic community participation and will result in the following outcomes: 1. The preparation or update of a Metropolitan Redevelopment Area (MRA) Plan as per NM Redevelopment Code statutes. 2. An update to the Downtown Master Plan for the area that: a. Allocates new and future land uses and revitalization projects in the downtown based on the MainStreet 4 Point Approach®. A sustainable downtown is more than “green water and cultural resources, reduces greenhouse gas emissions, promotes economic development and vitality, and celebrates the cultures and traditions of the community. b. Prepares a Designation report for a Metropolitan Redevelopment Area that meets the criteria as per the NM
DATED: 2014.
March 25,
Shelly Singleton, Personal Representative THE CULLEN LAW FIRM, P.C. Attorneys for the Personal Representative 2006 Botulph Road P.O. Box 1575
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2008 CHRYSLER TOWN AND COUNTRY WITH DVD. $14,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
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email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS red.
CATRON, CATRON, POTTOW & GLASSMAN, P.A. Attorneys for Personal Representative Published in the San- P. O. Box 788 ta Fe New Mexican Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-0788 April 1, 8 2014 (505) 982-1947 By Michael T. Pottow Legal#96686 FIRST JUDICIAL Published in the SanDISTRICT COURT ta Fe New Mexican COUNTY OF April 1, 8, 2014 SANTA FE STATE OF Legal #96753 NEW MEXICO FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Case No. D-0101-PBCOUNTY OF 2014-00034 SANTA FE IN THE MATTER OF Case No.: D-101-DM2013-00793 THE ESTATE OF MARTINEZ, TOVA M. CALLOWAY TANAYA Petitioner/Plantiff, Deceased. vs. TAMARA MARTINEZ & NOTICE TO JOSEPH PADILLA CREDITORS NOTICE OF PENDENCY SUIT Notice is hereby given that Julia D. Catron STATE OF NEW MEXIhas been appointed CO TO Tamara MartiPersonal Representa- nez & Joseph Padilla, tive of the estate of GREETINGSS: You are the above named de- hereby notified that cedent. Creditors of Tanaya Martinez, the the estate must pres- a b o v e - n a m e d ent their claims with- P e t itio n e r / P la n t if f , in two months after has filed a civil action the date of the first against you in the publication of this no- above entitled Court tice or be forever bar- and cause, The gen-
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1969 24 foot Avion Travel Trailer.. Good Condition. Recently Renovated. Needs some modifications. $6,000. SO! For a cash closing before April 2, 2014 will reduce $1,000! Call Noel 505913-0190.
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Redevelopment Code statutes and has been approved by a City resolution c. Determines vacant, underutilized and / or available land and buildings within the plan area that could be redeveloped and recommends adaptive reuses of existing buildings or new development on vacant land d. Identifies priority catalytic projects that will stimulate revitalization efforts and attract private sector reinvestment to the downtown, and integrates cultural economic priorities from the Raton Arts and Cultural District Cultural Plan into the Master Plan. Projects should include those which increase the town’s job creation, community economic development, livability, walkability, place-making, and serve to support and enhance its authentic and unique sense of place. C. Updated Implementation Strategies/Priorities A prioritized and phased Implementation Plan will be developed, integrating priority catalytic projects indentified in the Raton Arts and Cultural District Cultural plan, identifying any additional catalytic projects specific to the MainStreet District, and including strategies that the MainStreet and Arts and Cultural District organization and the City can follow for the successful implementation of the Plan and the long term sustainability of the downtown. Priority catalytic projects will range from small projects that can be implemented through partnerships with the City and the community’s MainStreet and/or Arts and Cultural District organization using local volunteers and staff, to larger projects that may require Capital Outlay, federal funding from the Economic Development Administration (EDA), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), or Housing and Urban Development (HUD), including Community Development Block Grants (CDBG); or other Legislative and/or foundation funding. Project priorities will be determined through a communitybased prioritization process, in addition to those identified in the municipally adopted Raton Arts and Cultural District Cultural Plan. The updated Implementation Plan will include an evaluation of priority catalytic projects (and/or phases of projects) that have been completed since the adoption of the original Downtown Master Plan and a revised set of priority catalytic projects yet to be completed. D. Updated Funding Sources The consultant will identify and update funding sources to implement the plan including, but not limited to, a Business Incentive District (BID), Tax Increment Financing (TIF), Tax Increment Development District (TIDD), and Local Economic Development Act (LEDA). Each priority catalytic project Legal #96757, Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 1, 2014
LEGALS g eral objection thereof b e i n g Domestic/Kinship Gaurdianship. Unless you enter your appearance in this cause within thirth (30) days of the date of the last publication of this Notice, judgment by default may be entered against you. Tanaya Martinez PO Box 166 Santa Cruz, NM 87567 505-692-7342 Witness this Honorable Matthew J. Wilson, District Judge of the First Judicial District Court of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe, this 21st day of March 2014. STEPHEN T. PACHECO CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 1, 8, 15 2014 Legal #96754 AMENDED Notice of Santa Fe DWI Planning Council Meeting
LEGALS B Conference Room For more information, copies of the agenda, or for auxiliary aids or services, contact (505) 986-6200 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 1 2014 Legal #96755 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE CITY OF SANTA FE ex rel. SANTA FE POLICE DEPARTMENT, Petitioner, v s . No. D-101-CV-2012-03181 ONE (1) 1985 GREY CHEVROLET PICKUP V.I.N. 1GCCS14B0F8132680 NEW MEXICO LICENSE NO. 828 HMG,
Respondent, DWI Planning Council Thursday, April 16 at and 9:00am 2052 Galisteo Street, Suite FELICE GARDUNO, PE-
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LEGALS TER VALDEZ, and DAVEY CORDOVA, Claimants. NOTICE TO PETER VALDEZ and DAVEY CORDOVA: The above-captioned action has been filed to seek forfeiture of the above-described motor vehicle. If no response is filed, default judgment may be entered in favor of the Petitioner. The name, address and telephone number of Petitioner’s attorney are: R. Alfred Walker Assistant City Attorney City of Santa Fe 200 Lincoln Avenue P.O. Box 909 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-0909 Telephone: (505) 9556967 Facsimile: (505) 9556748 Email: awalker@ci.santafe.nm.us Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 1, 8, 15 2014
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identified in the Plan Update will have a corresponding funding source to implement the project. The narrative will be based on an evaluation of the municipality’s financial capacity and the best financial tool(s) to accomplish priority projects within the Downtown Master Plan. The contractor shall make an assessment of the district and determination and findings required for the City to adopt a MRA with the Downtown Master Plan. E. Community Participation Process The consultant will prepare the update to the Downtown Master Plan through an intensive community process that will include, at a minimum, the following steps: 1. Organize and conduct regular meetings with a Steering Committee regarding the Master Plan. 2. Conduct and facilitate a two-day public design workshop that utilizes a dynamic planning process (e.g. a charette) to solicit and record the communities input regarding revitalization projects and programs to be included as outcomes of the Plan. Use this opportunity to solicit volunteers who may want to be involved in the local MainStreet and Arts and Cultural District organization or on a task force to implement the Plan’s projects. 3. Prepare a draft Downtown Master Plan / MRA Plan Update, and present that plan Update to the Steering Committee and participants from the public workshop. Provide an opportunity for review of the draft Plan Update to NM MainStreet, NM HPD, and NMDOT staff prior to any official action. 4. Present the Updated Downtown Master Plan/MRA Plan to the Steering Committee, participants from the public workshop, and City officials. 5. Revise the final Plan Update as required by NM MainStreet, other state and local agencies, and the City after their review. The final Downtown Master Plan/MRA Plan Update will be adopted by the City Council as per the State’s Redevelopment Code statute. 6. Deliver final color hardcopy Plans: two (2) to NM MainStreet, one (1) to City of Raton and one (1) each to Raton MainStreet and Raton Arts and Cultural District. Additionally, submit all digital text and mapping files in MS Word and ESRI Arc View formats to these parties. Budget and Timeline The funding necessary to complete this scope of work by a planning consultant is estimated to be $45,000. The timeframe for completion of the planning process is estimated to be approximately nine months once hired. Final payment will be made upon municipal adoption of the Master Plan/ MRA.
TIME OUT
ACROSS hang in N.Y.C.
system, for short 44 Wheel connector
poetically
45 Tortilla chip dip 47 EMIR
bird
re-election
informally
opponent
15 Paper quantity
52 Pirate’s quaff
16 Madrid tidbit
53 Makeshift shelters
17 John known as the
55 What this puzzle’s
“Teflon Don”
capitalized clues
18 Big do
are, both by
19 Med. student
definition and pun 60 Jupiter, to the
20 EPEE
Greeks
23 Discourteous
61 Relative of a
26 Asian-American
bassoon
basketball
62 N.B.A. Hall-of-
sensation Jeremy
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, April 1, 2014: This year you are very willful. In fact, you will try to rule your world with an iron fist. Your efforts will succeed most of the time, but remember to be reasonable and recognize your limits.
51 Barack’s
13 Sarcasm,
course
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
connecting
5 Sun and moon, 9 Sacred Egyptian
Horoscope
43 Computer-
1 Where Matisses
Famer Thomas 66 Actress Hathaway
27 “Let’s ___!”
67 Guns, as an engine
28 ETUI
68 Burn a bit
34 Foot-pound?
69 Reels’ counterparts
36 Remote button
70 Putin put-down?
37 Driver’s license
71 Once more
datum 38 Tomato and lettuce pickers’ org. 39 ERNE 42 Energy
DOWN 1 Abbr. on Chinese menus 2 Lennon’s love
3 Gymnast’s
22 Runs, as a color
surface 4 Highbrow theater screening 5 Seer
46 Overused plot
23 Bond girl Andress
device in
24 Relatively near
soaps
25 Be a goof 29 Many a Persian
6 New mortgage
48 Hearty kisses 49 Firstborn
Gulf war
50 Riddle-me-___
deal, informally
correspondent
54 Yard sale caveat
7 Place for an owl
30 It makes MADD
8 What can take
55 Peter the Great or
mad
your breath
31 Photocopier
away in L.A.?
Ivan the Terrible 56 Clinton attorney
setting: Abbr.
9 Bold alternative 10 Fountain treat with cherries on top
general Janet
32 Takes care of
57 Threadbare
33 Yanks living
58 Follow orders
abroad, e.g.
59 Wander about
11 Apple tablet
35 Sacred songs
63 Holiday ___
12 Fill to excess
40 Computer file
64 Grow long in
14 Chicken ___
extension
21 Diarist Anaïs
41 Pie ___ mode
the tooth 65 Chop
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes. com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscroptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
Chess quiz WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. Qg6ch! Nxg6 2. hxg6 checkmate! [GolubovicSeparovic ’93].
Hocus Focus
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: APRIL (e.g., A day for practical jokes. Answer: April Fools’ Day.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. They bring the flowers that bloom in May. Answer________ 2. Singer named Avril, after the French word for the month of April. Answer________ 3. Pat Boone sang that it was “for the very young.” Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Singer with a two-month name, known for the song “Chick Habit.” Answer________ 5. Title of a romance novel by Georgette Heyer. Answer________ 6. Her most popular solo recording was “I’m in Love Again.” Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. A Canadian rock band. Answer________ 8. Thoroughbred voted a Champion both in France and the U.S. in 1982. Answer________ 9. Title of a novel by Howard Fast. Answer________ ANSWERS:
ANSWERS: 1. April showers. 2. Avril Lavigne. 3. “April Love.” 4. April March. 5. April Lady. 6. April Stevens. 7. April Wine. 8. April Run. 9. April Morning..
Jumble
Tuesday, Apil 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher
Today in history Today is Tuesday, April 1, the 91st day of 2014. There are 274 days left in the year. This is April Fool’s Day. Today’s highlight in history: On April 1, 1789, the U.S. House of Representatives held its first full meeting in New York; Frederick Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania was elected the first House speaker.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You have much more to offer than you realize. Your ability to know when to reverse direction will guide you. Tonight: Where you want to be. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You might feel as if the tide finally has turned. A meeting will provide a lot of insight into a certain choice, direction or change. Tonight: Anything you want. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Your ability to listen more than talk does not get tested frequently. At this point, you will need to exercise this skill. Tonight: A serious talk over dinner. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Keep an eye on your longterm goals when making key decisions. You could be taken aback by a situation that seems like it will be difficult to handle. Tonight: Go where your friends are. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Do not get stuck on details, or you could lose your momentum. Think before you leap into action. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might want to approach a situation differently. A partner or associate appears to have a better grasp of details. Tonight: Be with a favorite person.
B-11
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Patient worries dentist isn’t clean
Dear Annie: As a registered nurse and a patient who has had many dental procedures, I cringe every time I get into a dentist’s chair. The reason is the overhead light — the one that the hygienist or dentist can adjust and lower. The hygienists and dentists wear gloves, but the gloves protect them, not the patient. They put their gloved hands in patients’ mouths and then reach up and adjust the light as needed, time after time. Their gloved hands transfer bacteria from a patient’s saliva (and sometimes blood) to the light fixture. Then the next patient gets in the chair, and the procedure is repeated. I don’t see how they can avoid transferring harmful bacteria and viruses from one patient to another unless they clean the light fixture off between every patient. I hope I’m wrong, but I have never seen or heard of this being done. I learned sterile procedure in nursing school. If they teach sterile procedure to hygienists and dentists, they don’t seem to be using it in my dentist’s office. — Nervous Patient Dear Nervous: Relax. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, working with the American Dental Association, has developed recommendations that say all surfaces, including the dental chair, dental light, instrument tray, drawer handles and countertops, should be cleaned and decontaminated. Some offices may cover this equipment with protective covers, which are replaced after each patient. Non-disposable items like dental instruments are cleaned and sterilized between patients, while disposable dental instruments and needles are tossed along with disposable wear, such as gloves. It’s quite likely that your dentist is doing all of these things before you enter the room, and therefore, you don’t see it. If you have questions about infection control, talk
to your dentist or check ADA.org. Dear Annie: A year ago, my husband’s grown daughter announced that she would be getting married this summer. Despite heated conversations, she decided to marry in her current city, saying that having her friends in attendance is more important than having her family there. Her father has always tried to stay involved in her life (to the extent her mother would allow). So you can imagine his shock when he was told that she decided to have her stepfather walk her down the aisle for her big day. This has caused a huge rift in the family, and my husband feels the only way to save face is not to attend. Eager to avoid the expense of traveling and as a show of support, his extended family also decided not to attend. I fear that this may cause a permanent end to the father/daughter relationship. Is there any way for this to be resolved? — Evil Stepmother Dear Stepmom: Did Mom pressure her daughter to have the stepfather walk her down the aisle? If so, the young woman may have felt obligated to comply, and Mom may be giddy at the thought that her ex-husband won’t be there. It’s also possible that the stepfather helped raise the girl and she wants to honor him. We understand how much this hurts your husband, but we hope he can put aside his pride and be supportive of his daughter on her big day. He should talk directly to her and explain his hurt feelings. We hope she reconsiders. Dear Annie: This is in response to “Uncomfortable,” the daughter-in-law who feels awkward calling her mother-inlaw “Mom.” I have a wonderful daughter-in-law who calls me “Mil” or Millie. And when I text or phone, I call her Dil. Those are our own personal nicknames, and they work for us. — MIL
Sheinwold’s bridge
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You could be exhausted by what is happening. You might not feel as if you have the ability to change a difficult scenario. Tonight: Get together with a friend. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You could feel challenged once more by a close associate or loved one. Not everyone looks at a situation as you do. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHH You might want to switch gears and do something different. Whenever this need for change hits, you won’t be able to resist it. Tonight: Do not push too hard. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Staying close to home and/or handling personal priorities will feel like the most comfortable option. Others seem to be more than willing to pitch in. Tonight: Happy at home.
Cryptoquip
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH You are full of energy, and you’re willing to do whatever feels right. Stay true to yourself. Tonight: Hang out with your friends. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Look at your costs before you jump in and say “yes” to an invitation; otherwise, you could live to regret it. Tonight: All smiles. Jacqueline Bigar
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
B-12
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER
Business Advocate C-2 Bankruptcies C-4
LOCAL BUSINESS
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Business Advocate: A monthly update from the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce. Page C-2
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Good, bad news of personal finance: It’s not complicated
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et me start with the bad risk-free rate of return — news. those are all minutiae that Personal finance is bog down some individual really not very complicated. investors. Trust me, it’s not important that someone Why is that bad news? saving for retirement underWell, maybe it’s not for you. stand those concepts. They But for me, who’s expected are distractions from the to come up with an erudite basics of saving and staying column that informs and educates, it means there’s not Kate Stalter out of debt. Your Finances a whole lot to say. Other topics that distract investors include the global I should probably back up crisis du jour. This week, it’s and explain. the Japanese stock market (really?), Finance can be presented as someChina’s economy and the utterances thing insanely complicated, that only of new Fed chief Janet Yellen. people with advanced degrees and elite credentials can comprehend. The These topics are harder to dismiss Black-Scholes formula, Sortino ratio, because our instincts tell us that we
Revised numbers show state’s job struggles in 2013
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ith spending cuts, known as sequestration, combined with the federal government shutdown in October, there is no doubt that 2013 was not a good year for job growth in New Mexico. But the revised January 2014 employment numbers published by the Department of Workforce Solutions show just how bad it was. Every year the state revises its employment numbers — a process known as benchmarking — which syncs the household surveys taken by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics with the actual unemployment insurance claims filed by businesses and government agencies. The revised numbers show that New Mexico lost 3,700 jobs in 12 months ending January 2014. The new numbers also show that New Mexico was not only last among the 50 states and the District of Columbia in employment growth during the 12 months, but the only state to show a contracBruce tion. Additionally: Krasnow u There was a decline of 3,200 Business Matters jobs in the government sector during the period, with 1,700 of those in local and state government, while federal employment dropped 1,400 jobs, or 4.6 percent. u Nonfarm employment in the Albuquerque metro area contracted 1.1 percent during the time, with a loss of 4,100 jobs. u Nonfarm employment in Santa Fe during the 12 months did grow, but by a modest 300 jobs. Employment in the government sector was unchanged during the time, but retail and professional services saw employment declines. An economist with the department said the benchmarking was more volatile this time because of the new unemployment insurance tax and claims system information system that impacted unemployment data in the last quarter for 2012 and the first part of 2013. The state also said the revisions were especially steep because some adjustments go back to 2012 due to other types of reporting lags. The loss of government jobs continued in February, according to a report issued last week, with a net loss of 2,300 jobs since February 2013. Two positives in the February report — the financial industry added 1,800 jobs — the largest gain in 22 months — and mining continued its expansion, growing by 1,400 over the previous 12 months. uuu
Santa Fe County added 967 people from July, 1, 2012, to July 1, 2013, according to new estimates by the U.S. Census Bureau, making it the sixth-fastest growing county in the state. That is not saying a whole lot, since growth in New Mexico has slowed considerably in recent years and during the most recent 12 month saw a net increase of just 1,747 people, bringing the overall population to 2,085,287. During that time, 21 of the 33 counties lost population. Thanks to the oil and gas boom, Lea and Eddy counties were the fastest growing in New Mexico, increasing 2.9 percent and 1.9 percent, respectively, and adding almost 3,000 residents combined. Sandoval County was third and McKinley County fourth in growth. uuu
Fans of New Mexico breakfast burritos should be rallying their expertise as the New Mexico Tourism Department is putting together the “New Mexico True Breakfast Burrito Byway,” which will identify the best of the burritos, as selected by the regulars who eat them. Nominations are now open for the limited spots available on the Burrito Byway. All nominations must come from the official online form at newmexico.org/ burrito. The nomination period runs until 11:45 p.m. April 13, and then the public will decide among 50 nominees starting April 21. Nominations are open to New Mexico-based restaurants with a business license, in good standing with local and state health departments, and with a bricks-and-mortar location, according to the Tourism Department. The burrito must include at least egg, tortilla and New Mexico chile, and must be on the regular menu. Nominate as many qualifying restaurants as you would like at newmexico.org/burrito. And no, businesses that are closed, such as Santa Fe’s Over Easy Cafe (best breakfast burrito ever!), cannot be nominated in memoriam. Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com.
need to stay “informed,” that world events affect our personal economy. Perhaps. But our own decisions about saving and spending have a greater effect. In addition, the media hype events as having the potential to destroy world economies, when, in reality, they’re not nearly so devastating. Remember the panic over Greece? It began in May 2010, and we heard over and over how the “contagion” would spread throughout the world. Greece represents 0.15 percent of world population and has never been a large area of financial exposure for industrialized nations. In hindsight, we know that the
financial media blew it on the call for Greece-instigated mass panic. But don’t worry about the TV reporters. They’ve moved on to new things to scare you. They won’t ever apologize for causing you to mess up your portfolio because of what they said. It reminds me of the old Lily Tomlin joke: “We don’t care, we don’t have to. We’re the phone company.” Substitute “financial media” and you have today’s version of that phrase. The news of the day really has little or no bearing on your long-term financial objectives. If you invest in a globally balanced diversified portfolio, you won’t be at the mercy of a crisis in some obscure region.
Smartphone
secrets, revealed
Even worse, you don’t want your portfolio to suffer because of the TV talking heads. But rather than being informed by the news, most investors just become anxious. Some make really bad mistakes. One fellow I met was panicked by the “fiscal cliff” scare at the end of 2012. He sold a huge chunk of his investments and sat in cash through 2013, while the U.S. stock market rallied 32 percent. So much for expert predictions of a market crash. Our firm calculated that his opportunity cost totaled $115,000. At the beginning of this article, I
Please see finance, Page C-4
For those who struggle to use multifaceted devices, Verizon offers free classes
Dominique Batten teaches a smartphone class for Carol Neelley, right, and Barbara Campbell at the Verizon store on Zafarano Drive last month. The Verizon store holds free classes for iPhone users on Mondays and Wednesdays, and for Android users on Tuesdays. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Dennis J. Carroll
For The New Mexican
N
ew iPhone or Android smartphone users, often overwhelmed by their devices’ multitude of features and eye-popping technology, are finding at least some help in classes offered at the Santa Fe Verizon store on Zafarano Drive. It can be downright aggravating, for example, to be trying to text grandma or checking one’s email and suddenly find yourself tagging a Facebook friend, or getting voice instructions in French that seem to have something to do with locating the nearest Jiffy Lube. Store manager William Escajeda
said the purpose of the Verizon classes, which have been offered in some form for about two years as the phones got more complicated, “is to give users a better experience with their devices” and was prompted by a flood of endless questions to Verizon salespeople. He said 20 to 25 people will attend the classes in a given week, many of them in their upper 50s or older, but not all. “We get a wide range of ages and people,” Escajeda said. One need not have bought their phone at Verizon to enroll in the classes. The lessons, taught by the same Verizon employees who sell the
In brief
Verizon hiring for hundreds of positions Verizon Wireless is seeking to hire 225 new employees for retail and customer service positions in Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Candidates can start the application process online at www.vzwcareers.com. Verizon also is participating in several career fair events around the state in the coming weeks. The positions offer competitive salaries and benefits, including health care coverage that begins on the first day of employment and participation in the company’s 401(k) program with a dollar-for-dollar match of up to 6 percent of an employee’s salary contribution. Verizon, which employs more than 1,300 in New Mexico, also offers tuition reimbursement, adoption assistance and bonuses. The retail positions will be based in Verizon Wireless stores in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, and include both full-time and
Please see secRets, Page C-4
Neelley uses her smartphone at the Verizon store on Zafarano Drive last month during a smartphone class.
part-time opportunities. Full-time customer service positions will be based in the company’s Albuquerque call center. Interested candidates may apply online by visiting the Verizon Wireless website at www.vzwcareers. com.
BizMIX initiative seeks startup entrepreneurs The best start-up ideas in Santa Fe and the most committed entrepreneurs are being sought by BizMIX, an economic development initiative spearheaded by the city of Santa Fe. BizMIX helps startup entrepreneurs unlock the secrets of enduring business success with mentoring and networking as well as grant money. For more information and applications, go to http://mixsantafe.com/bizmix/.
Three music education nonprofits get donations Paper Tiger, a Santa-Fe based printing and mailing company, has announce its second-
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, bkrasnow@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
quarter donations to nonprofit music education organizations in Northern New Mexico. The company believes that arts education for young people is vital to a healthy, thriving community. Students who study music have better math and reading skills — vital to succeeding in today’s world. That’s why the company launched a program to support 12 worthy organizations. Paper Tiger will donate $1,000 each month to the music education program of one local nonprofit group. The list of programs has already been compiled, and Paper Tiger releases the names of the organizations quarterly. The nonprofits that will each receive a $1,000 donation during the second quarter are: u Santa Fe Opera Young Voices Program u Santa Fe High Choir Boosters u Santa Fe Youth Symphony Association During the first quarter of 2014, Paper Tiger made donations to Santa Fe Talent Education Suzuki Music Center, New Mexico School for the Arts and ProMusica CHAMPS! (Chamber Music for Students). The New Mexican
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
SANTA FE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
advocate
BUSINESS
RIBBON CUTTING
Tourism Day
The Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce and the Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau present: 2nd Annual Celebrate Tourism Day - a partnership designed to highlight businesses and organizations that help bring visitors to our community and deliver an authentic Santa Fe experience. This day also recognizes the huge economic impact that tourism provides to the citizens of Santa Fe. • The event creates and shares the excitement of First Mortgage Company agents Gary Gurule, Robert Morris, Troy Santa Fe’s vital Travel and Tourism sector, which Lepisto & Sandra Claymore celebrate their new location with a employs more than 7,000 people, represents $620 ribbon cutting at 1048 Paseo de Peralta. million in economic output, making it one of New Mexico’s largest industries. • Celebrate Santa Fe Tourism Expo will be held on Thursday, May 1, 2014 in the Santa Fe Convention bizMIX wants the best start-up ideas in Santa Fe and Center from 10 am to 5pm. Local businesses will be the most committed entrepreneurs. We’re looking showcasing their attractions, activities, and services for the brightest business ideas coupled with the to fellow stakeholders in the industry as well as the superstar talent to move a company forward. community at large. • The event will be followed by a very special After The journey is a once in a lifetime chance to have a Hours mixer for all participants at La Fonda from blast while building a business, making incredible 5-7:30pm! Hosted by PNM and La Fonda. connections with both peers and mentors, learning • We invite Santa Fe travel and tourism-related (and practicing) to do a great pitch, competing for businesses to participate and engage in the more than $30,000 in cash and prizes, all while being celebration, as well as encourage their employees closely followed by video cameras for primetime to attend the Expo and learn more about what reality TV. Santa Fe has to offer. bizMIX helps start-ups unlock the secrets of enduring • Santa Fe businesses will be donating numerous business success. It’s a great ride, if you’ve got what it prizes to be raffled off to attendees, and restaurants takes. will be showcasing their offerings. • Register today for your booth space! It’s a quick application. So take a chance on a santafechamber.com/events glamorous, entrepreneurial future, you can http:// mixsantafe.com/bizmix (Just kidding about the reality TV….we’re targeting that for 2016 )!
It’s bizMIX Time!
Santa Fe Chamber Business Expo & Job Fair, 4/10 at DeVargas Center
2014 Business Expo & Job Fair on April 10th from 10am-4pm, provides opportunity for business exposure and networking with over 90 businesses and 1000 attendees. There will be entertainment such as, dance, fitness demonstrations, fashion show, “ Ask an Expert” booth and more. The event allows businesses who are looking to hire to meet face-to-face with people who are searching for employment as well as exposure. Booth space is limited but still available. Please call Bridget Dixson to reserve your booth today, 505.988.3279.
NEW MEMBERS
Santa Fe SCORE is Introducing a New Series of Free Business Education and Training Programs for the 2014 Spring Season Workshops; interactive support and information in and on specific areas of business: • Optimize Your Website with Hope Kiah – Saturday, April 19 • Effective Use of Social Media with Kathy Walsh – Saturday, May 3 Seminars; startups, entrepreneurs, thinking about a new business, not yet into planning or operation: • Growing a Sustainable Nonprofit with Judy Nix/Mike Mendez – Thursday, April 17 • Financing Programs for Business Success with City of Santa Fe – Tuesday, April 22 • Business Plans/Money Mgt with Rob Wilson/Bob Lantis – Thursday, April 24 • Successful Crowdfunding with Marcia Kaplan – Tuesday, April 29 • Effectively Marketing Your Business with Jim Berry – Thursday, May 1 • Equity Funding with City of Santa Fe – Thursday, May 8 The series is sponsored by the City of Santa Fe Economic Development Division and hosted by the Santa Fe Business Incubator. There is no charge to attend. TO REGISTER 505-424-1140 Opt 1 or scoreseminars@ hotmail.com
Russel J. McMillian, Owner, Eldorado Self Storage and F&M Self Storage
Where You Need to Be
Russell McMillian, owner of Eldorado Self Storage and F & M Self Storage, came to New Mexico Educators FCU for financing and found the Business Services team exceeded his expectations. “In less than two weeks, I was approved for a large commercial loan and I opened two checking & savings accounts,” said Russell. “In my opinion, New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union is where you need to be!” For more information about Business Services at New Mexico Educators Federal Credit Union and to join “The Power of WE” visit nmefcu.org/ business or call 505-467-6018.
1710 St. Michaels Drive 505-467-6000 • 800-347-2838 • nmefcu.org
Federally insured by NCUA | Equal Opportunity Lender
Thanks to all our new members who joined last month! Advance Green Cleaning Cleaning & Sanitizing Denette Brown (505) 471-6243 15 Lewis Lane
Mirage Spas & Tanning Tanning Salon Scott A Ortega (505) 989-3277 1909 St. Michael’s Drive
Advanced Concrete Design Concrete Countertops/Stained Floor Kristie Thomas (505) 438-0706 15 Lewis Lane
New Mexico Community Foundation Nonprofit Organizations Terry Mulert (505) 820-6860 502 W. Cordova Rd., Suite 1
Carroll Strategies Public Relations Tom Carroll (505) 699-4616 5 Jornada Loop
New Mexico Highlands University Santa Fe Center Education Thomasinia Ortiz-Gallegos (505) 424-9185 6401 Richards Ave. Room 302
Cruise Planners La Bonanza Travel Travel Lawrence Archuleta (505) 757-3035 9 Driftwood Lane Hotel St. Francis Hotels Ms. Helga Byndas (505)983-5700 210 Don Gaspar Ave. LegalShield, Zia Cross - Independent Associate Legal Services Zia Cross (505) 989-1832 Lithia Chrysler Jeep Dodge of Santa Fe Auto Dealers Hanno Blais (505) 473-1234 4470 Cerrillos Road
Quezada Jacobs Family Agency Allstate, Ned Jacobs Insurance (505) 474-4033 1547 South St. Francis Drive, Ste. A The Laughing Turtle Art: Materials/Supplies/Training Scott A Ortega (505) 989-3277 1911 St. Michael’s Drive
Business Tool: Business Networking Business is about people - which makes networking essential. Today, networking means meeting people in-person and online. Here are some benefits of business networking: • Before going to any business meeting, you can take a quick look on FaceBook or LinkedIn to find out a bit about the person you will be meeting. • You can expand your network of referrals and acquaintances which will lead to more sales leads
The Turtle Express Shipping & Packaging Scott A Ortega (505) 989-3277 1911 St. Michael’s Drive
• You can regularly connect with your customers keeping you at the “top of their mind”.
Xerox Corporation Document Imaging Mr. Richard Martinez (505) 231-8597 58 Via Punto Nuevo
• People are visiting online networking sites more than any other place on the Internet. It is no longer sufficient for a business to just have a website; they must be visible on social media sites.
Don’t miss your chance to recognize the Santa Fe businesses you love! Nominate your favorite local business for the 2014 Business Awards. Register at santafechamber.com Deadline for nominations is 5pm on May, 16th. The 2014 Business Awards will take place on June 12th at the Center for Contemporary Arts.
• At the same time: meeting people face to face is always the best. Consider joining chambers of commerce, trade associations, or other organizations. For more business tools visit www.santafechamber.com
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
SANTA FE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
BUSINESS MATTERS There are finally signs that the local economy is improving and employers are starting to hire once again. Whether you’re an employer or employee in the public or private sector, it’s always worth being reminded of the importance of customer service to your business or department. Every single business benefits from service excellence and reminding your team of the importance of good service can pay off in revenues. • Empower your staff. • Be where your customers are. • Ask questions. • Be human. • Be personal. • Be honest. • Listen. • Strive for knowledge. • Be fast and accurate. • Advocate for the customer. I’d like to invite all Santa Feans to join us for our annual Business Expo and Job Fair at
DeVargas Center on April 10. This event truly supports the Chamber’s mission to Grow the Local Economy by connecting businesspeople with the resources, people and networks that they need to succeed. Whether you have an existing business or a start-up, the Expo will help you grow your business and meet with all kinds of people who are committed to job creation in the local area.
What Chamber events/gatherings, workshops, or opportunities are most valuable to your business?
Ribbon Cuttings are fascinating & valuable to my business. I have the opportunity to get to know the Owner & their Vision behind their Company. It is exciting to walk through their business’s location and fun to meet their staff or team to help me learn more about their products or services. It is when I meet the owner, listen to their journey of success, KAREN BOMM sacrifice and passion, the connection is made to set aBeansTalkSocial up business or refer each other confidently.
Also, it’s time to nominate your own or a favorite local business for a business award. Each year the Chamber presents awards to the best businesses in town. Go to santafechamber.com and take a few minutes to fill out the form for the Small Business of the Year, Business Excellence Awards, Green Business of the Year, Family Friendly Business of the Year and, for the first time this year, the Businesswoman of the Year. Each business nominated will be recognized at the Red OwEN Carpet Awards Gala at CCA on June 12th. PERillO Chief Adventure Tickets are available now. Officer Simon Brackley President and CEO Santa Fe Mountain Adventures llC
Leadership Santa Fe Leadership Santa Fe connects people and addresses community issues. Our purpose is to meet Santa Fe’s need for community leaders. We do this through our annual Adult Civics and Leadership Program, our Adult Graduate Program, which will be project based, and our new Youth Leadership
Program starting this fall in conjunction with the Santa Fe Community College. Thirty 9th, 10th, and 11th graders will earn up to two college credits and learn about community issues and their own roles as leaders. Contact info@leadershipsantafe.org for more details.
MEMBERSHIP RENEWALS
Thank you to our members who renewed in March We appreciate your support!
New Mexico Sports & Fitness Center, llC Pantry Restaurant Pranzo italian grill Premier Motorcars of Santa Fe Premier Precious Metals Prull Custom Builders Rancho Viejo Properties Rocky Mountain Business Systems RoofCare llC Santa Fe Car wash Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival Santa Fe gallery Association Santa Fe Habitat for Humanity Santa Fe Sports and images, llC Santa Fe walkabouts Santa Fe workforce Connection SF Brown, inc. Spanish Colonial Arts Society & Museum of Spanish Colonial Art SVHsupport Synergia Ranch, Center for innov. & Retreats T.C. Schwab Financial Planning, llC Tecolote Cafe The Housing Trust Utley insurance Agency, inc. white & luff Financial, inc.
SANTA FE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
BU
a
S S E SIN
e t a c o v d
Chamber Calendar Member Perspectives I n t e r n a t i o n a l Tr i p s Ribbon Cuttings New Members Business Matters TO ADVERTISE CALL MIKE FLORES 995-3840 mflores@sfnewmexican.com
A special paid supplement to the Santa Fe New Mexican Business Section April 2014
MEMBER PERSPECTIVES
MALP YOU?
Absolute Entertainment Action glass & Mirror, inc. Aspen Santa Fe Ballet AV Systems inc. Bank of Albuquerque Beck Total Office interiors Biotest Blue Chip insurance Agency, inc. Bonifacio Montano, inc Casas de Santa Fe Country Boarding Kennels. inc. Creative Home Buyers, inc. David Richard gallery Delta Dental of New Mexico Denman & Associates, inc. Dr. william Parker Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado Santa Fe Hampton inn Historic walks of Santa Fe Holiday inn Express - Santa Fe Jewel Mark l.E. Meyer Company la Familia Medical Center lovelace Rehabilitation Marshall Rose & Associates May Center for learning New Mexico Center for Therapeutic Riding New Mexico Municipal league New Mexico School for the Arts
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advocate
BUSINESS
Business Office: 505.988.3279 Resource Office: 505.983.7317 Fax: 505.984.2205 E-mail: info@santafechamber.com
THE NEW MEXICAN
AllEgRA A. PACHECO COO Pecos Propane
APRIL 2014
CHAMBER CALENDAR Friday, April 4th – 8:30am Business Over Breakfast – Frogurt @Plaza Café Southside – 3466 Zafarano Dr. Wednesday, April 9th – 11:45am Brown Bag Lunch – Ideas to Help Increase Your Social Security Thursday, April 10th – 10:30am Business Expo & Job Fair – DeVargas Center – 564 N Guadalupe St. Tuesday, April 15th – 5:30pm Travel Peru Orientation – Chamber Office Wednesday, April 16th – 8:15am Member Orientation – Chamber Office Tuesday, April 22nd – 4:30pm Ribbon Cutting – Zia Trust- 613 Old Santa Fe Trail Monday, April 28nd – 9:30am Bienvenidos Training – The Chamber Office (contact Marilyn O’Brien at 989-1701 or obriensf@msn.com) Thursday, May 1st – 5:30 pm Business After Hours – La Fonda sponsored by PNM and La Fonda, 100 E San Francisco St.
KATHy l. JAHNER
Santa Fe Professional Business women
As a leader in destination management for our area, Santa Fe Mountain Adventures has partnered with most of the top resorts and hospitality businesses in Santa Fe. The Chamber provides valuable forums such as the Chamber Tourism Committee meetings and the Business After Hours gatherings for us to network with our current and prospective business partners. The Chamber Business Matters Radio Show has also given us an opportunity to better inform the community about our unique and creative team building adventures as well as our fun family activities. I have had the pleasure of attending several Santa Fe Chamber events and I have to say that there was not one in which I did not find value. These events are well organized, well publicized, welcoming, and definitely a benefit for any business owner looking to expand their network. The Legislative Reception was well attended and a great way to interact with other area businesses, organizations and key decision makers. One of the best opportunities that joining the Chamber has given me is the ability to meet and interact with some other remarkable business owners in the area. Our organization, SFPBW, receives valuable visibility by being included in this Member Perspective and by co-sponsoring Chamber events such as the Employer of the Year, Legislative Reception, Business Expo, and forums for candidates seeking elective office. Our visibility is increased by attending Business Over Breakfast where each attendee gets to introduce themselves and their company/organization to 60 plus attendees; networking at Business After Hours with over 100 attendees; being included in the Chamber’s published and on-line directory with a 50word description and being able to announce events/ programs in E-News at a reasonable cost. The Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce Presents:
DUBAI: 8 DAYS MAY 15, 2014
$3099.00 per person based on double occupancy. Includes: air from Albuquerque, hotels, tours, some meals
PERU: 6 NIGHTS AUG. 23, 2014
Orientation: April 15, 5:30 pm, Chamber Office $3499.00 per person based on double occupancy. Includes: air from Albuquerque, hotels, tours, some meals
For more information and to register contact
Valerie Alarid or Bridget Dixson at 505 988-3279 or valerie@santafechamber.com or bridget@santafechamber.com
Benefit of the Month
NETWORKING
Monthly Business After Hours, Business Over Breakfast and Lunch with a Punch events allow you to get to know your neighboring businesses and build your network.
Mark your calendar: LANB presents Banking on Birdies Golf Tournament August 18, 2014
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LOCAL BUSINESS
THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Small businesses get lift from national labs The New Mexican
Ten New Mexico small businesses participating in projects using the technical expertise and assistance of Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories are being recognized Thursday at the 13th annual Innovation Celebration at Balloon Fiesta Park in Albuquerque. The celebration is part of Technology Venture Corporation’s Innovation Summit. The New Mexico Small Business Assistance program (www.nmsba program.org) was created by the New Mexico Legislature in 2000. Los Alamos National Laboratory joined the program in 2007. Last year, 354 small businesses in 29 counties received assistance through the NMSBA program. The businesses and individuals to be recognized are:
McFarland Instrumentation Services — McFarland Instrumentation services designs and fabricates electronic instrumentation for analytical procedures and data analysis. Owner Malcolm Fowler wanted to validate the precision of his equipment; the NMSBA reached out to Los Alamos’ Deb Summa, who assembled a team that conducted tests of various materials using a unique high-resolution mass spectrometer, then monitored and evaluated measurements. As a result, McFarland Instrumentation was able to certify their methods and subsequently secured $40,000 in contracts with a Chicago company. Data Center Transitions — Bill Watts of Data Center Transitions designed MASS Lift, a novel lifting device that moves large computer server cabinets. However, the lift’s motor threatened to interfere with
the sensitive electronics stored in the cabinet. With NMSBA assistance, Watts worked with Jeff Dabling and colleagues at Sandia national labs to redesign the lift’s power system. The redesigned system allowed Watts to reduce costs by 20 percent, keep production in Albuquerque and sell additional units to Microsoft. Real Green Building Systems Leveraged Project — Doug Lenberg of Real Green Building Systems, and other construction and real estate companies offering environmentally friendly home designs, sought unbiased analysis of their innovative features relative to industry baseline data. Through the NMBSA, Los Alamos’ Steve Booth and Andy McCown demonstrated that green technology systems offer a payback in less than 10 years and provide economic benefits to homeowners and municipalities. Their study has
attracted investors and increased business among participating companies. Retriever Technology — Andy Bartlett of Retriever Technology, which provides imaging software and hardware for scientific and industrial companies, received assistance from Bill O’Rourke of Sandia labs converting data from old seismograms into usable digitized formats. Because of this assistance, Retriever Technology secured a $1 million Small Business Innovative Research Phase II award. Skyndex Leveraged Project — Jeff Collins’ company, Welltec, manufactures the Skyndex skin fold caliper, which measures body fat percentage. Collins’ and four other companies requested assistance from Sandia labs’ robotics experts for analysis, modeling and mechanical testing. Thanks to Sandia’s product redesign, the projected benefit to the companies are
Calendar
FINANCE NEW MEXICO
Incubator and tenant company succeeding together
Visitor Day for networking group BNI Phoenix Rising is holding a Visitor Day from 8 to 10 a.m. April 9 at The Lodge at Santa Fe, 750 North St. Francis Drive. Business Networking International is the world’s largest networking organization, helping members get more business through wordof-mouth referrals. Each chapter allows only one member per professional category; taking a seat in the chapter equates to locking out your competition. Attendance costs $15 and includes breakfast. To find out more about open categories or to RSVP, call chapter President Ann Hollier at 978270-3282.
Convention center bookings Upcoming bookings at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center with expected attendance: April 23, Spiritual Directors International, 600 May 1, Celebrate Santa Fe Tourism, 300 May 8, Mayor’s Senior Volunteer Recognition, 400 May 14, Bike, Walk, Live Santa Fe, 400 May 23-25, Native Treasures Indian Arts Festival, 4,500 May 26-31, Wilderness Travel and Medicine, 500
March bankruptcies Chapter 7 u 14-10621 JG — Kevin D. Shoemaker, Santa Fe. Liabilities and assets not available. u 14-10686 JG — Ginger Bowe Sullivan, Santa Fe. Liabilities and assets not available. u 14-10718 TG — Luanna Lujan, Santa Fe. Liabilities $21,185; assets $5,700. u 14-10726 JG — Donna Moniz, Santa Fe. Liabilities $285,326; assets $300,347. u 14-10770 TG — Ernesto Morales and Michelle Morales, Santa Fe. Liabilities $44,478; assets $27,119.68. u 14-10826 TG — Marco A. Mercado, Santa Fe. Liabilities $46,769.17; assets $61,225. u 14-10875 JG — Angela Marie Ortega, Santa Fe. Liabilities $117,812.94; assets $9,960. u 14-10885 JG — Joel Y. Mazire and Liza E. Mazire, Santa Fe. Liabilities $524,120; assets $278,123. u 14-10904 JB — Jennifer Suzanne Cryer, Santa Fe. Liabilities $136,724.52; assets $138,955. u 14-10914 JG — Yvette Michelle Anaya, Santa Fe. Liabilities $80,821; assets $26,547. u 14-10919 TG — Veronica Sanchez, Santa Fe. Liabilities $55,249; assets $13,500.
Chapter 13 u 14-10792 TS — Sergio V. Garcia, Santa Fe. Liabilities $629,691; assets $201,654.33. The New Mexican
an estimated $3 million in increased revenues as well as new markets for the Skyndex skin fold caliper. SportsXast — Molly Cernicek used NMSBA assistance to identify computer vision algorithms that can be integrated with the SportsXast smartphone app for automatic player tagging and highlighting of sporting events. Los Alamos’ Steven Brumby advised SportsXast of affordable, accessible emerging computer vision tools. Through the NMSBA/Los Alamos assistance, SportsXast has since hired a computer vision developer to integrate computer vision tools into its smartphone app. Four other companies that received assistance from other New Mexico research partners on contract with the NMSBA also will be recognized. They are Customizabooks, Enchanted Woodworks, Sigma Labs Inc. and Solaro Energy.
For The New Mexican
Dominique Batten works with Barbara Campbell during a free smartphone class at the Verizon store on Zafarano Drive last month. The Verizon store holds free classes on iPhones on Mondays and Wednesdays, and Androids on Tuesdays. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Secrets: Get more comfortable with device by customizing it Continued from Page C-1 phones, are held from 3 to 4 p.m. each Monday and Wednesday for iPhone users and 3 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays for those with Androids at the store in the Best Buy shopping center at 3545 Zafarano Drive. The instructors don’t pretend to cover all facets of the devices (no one has that much time), instead giving students comprehensive take-home handouts then focusing on a few often-used features and addressing the issues of those taking a particular class. “I’m on the steep side of the learning curve,” said Verizon student Barbara Campbell, who was recently given a Samsung Galaxy 3 Note phone for her 68th birthday by her son. “I’ve been playing with it but can’t make things happen.” In particular, “I can take photos, but I don’t know how to email them … and I can make phone calls, but I don’t know how to get messages.” Campbell said she wanted to become more comfortable with her phone before heading out on a hiking trip to the Himalayas, where help will be considerably less available. She said she picked the Galaxy 3 Note device because of its ability to accomplish a multitude of tasks. “I don’t want to take a lot of stuff with me.” Now it’s just a matter of being able to master those tasks. On this particular Tuesday, Dominque Batten was conducting the class on foldout chairs in the back corner of the store as wandering shoppers contemplated the vagaries of nearly undecipherable pricing plans and comparing the advantages of one device over another. Batten began the class by telling Campbell and
Carol Neelley, the only other student this day, “If you can figure out one smartphone, you can pretty much use any smartphone.” After explaining what all the buttons and holes on the sides of the phone were for, Batten explained the importance of customizing the device according to how you want to use it. “The more you customize it, the more comfortable you will be, and the more you will use it.” In addition to using the camera, a main subject was accessing and moving app icons from one screen to another, “You want to put something that you would enjoy or something you want to get to right away on the front of your page,” Batten said. But whatever it is you are trying to do — whether it’s emailing your cousin, watching football games or researching your various medical problems on the Internet — the best way to learn, if not the only way, is to “mess around and play with it,” Batten said. “If you move something around and then you can’t find it, just remember it’s there somewhere. It’s kind of a scavenger or Easter egg hunt just to find it.” Both Campbell and Neelley said they benefited from Batten’s instructions. “It was very useful,” said Neelley, who like Campbell recently acquired a Galaxy 3 Note device. “It’s helped me feel more comfortable navigating among the screens. And before I wasn’t sure how to send multiple text messages.” Campbell said there were still a lot of things she needed to know before she heads off to the Himalayas with her Android. “I learned some new things, but I will be back [for another class], because I know I can still screw up … but I know it’s a matter of practicing with it.” Contact Dennis Carroll at carroll.news@gmail.com.
Finance: Six tenets to follow Continued from Page C-1 said I would start with the bad news. I actually have a little more bad news, and it’s this: Financial education doesn’t matter, either. That might be a shocker, but it’s true. Everybody talks about wanting more financial literacy. What does that even mean? Understanding expense ratios of mutual funds? The beta of stocks? Or the dreaded Black-Scholes formula that I mentioned above? There have been some academic studies recently showing that financial literary classes have a negligible effect. Often, the subject matter is abstract, so people forget what they’ve learned because they don’t need it immediately. Waiting to become more knowledgeable is a form of procrastination. If you can keep claiming you don’t know anything about money, you’ve excused yourself from taking any responsibility for your own financial decisions. So I’ve given you enough bad news. I’ll wrap up with some good news — and it’s actually the same
bad news I shared in the second paragraph! Personal finance is really not very complicated. Those of you who are NPR fans may remember Tess Vigeland, who hosted the Marketplace show for many years. In a talk last year at the World Domination Summit (yes, that’s a real event) in Portland, Ore., she outlined the six tenets of personal finance. u Don’t spend more than you earn. u Contribute to your 401(k) at least to the match. u Don’t carry a balance on your credit card. u Save for retirement before you save for the kids’ college. u Don’t listen to the clowns on CNBC. u And mamas, don’t let your babies grow up to be cowboys … unless they can find a good health plan. If you begin with just those basics, you will be off to a very good start. Kate Stalter is a financial planner with New Mexicobased Portfolio Wealth Advisors. She is also a columnist for TheStreet.com, Forbes and Morningstar. You can reach her at 884-3445 or at kate@portfoliollc.com.
When Allan Sindelar joined the Santa Fe Business Incubator in 1998, both his company — Positive Energy Solar — and the incubator were in their infancy. Sindelar had previously made his living as a freelance carpenter and had several years’ experience designing and installing solar electrical systems. He had no background in starting and running a business. The incubator, meanwhile, had just opened in a 10,000-square-foot building with barely enough room for eight or nine tenant businesses. Its founder, Marie Longserre, aimed to make it an environment that nurtured entrepreneurial impulses and connected startup owners with essential resources and training. As the incubator’s second tenant, Sindelar’s success and that of the incubator evolved in tandem. Positive Energy, which graduated from the incubator in 2005, reported revenues of nearly $10 million last year and expects to double that this year. The award-winning company has 55 employees in three statewide offices. In that same time, the incubator has tripled its square footage and helped launch more than 140 businesses, said Longserre, its president and chief executive officer. “We have grown physically, in our reach, our offerings and our affiliations.” Because the incubator funneled much information and resources his way from multiple sources, Sindelar can’t identify every organization that contributed to his success. But some stand out in his memory. From Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Technology Commercialization Office in 2001, he received assistance securing a patent for an invention he hoped to commercialize. A class in lean manufacturing from New Mexico Manufacturing Extension Partnership helped him understand how he could produce that invention most efficiently. While “we never developed and marketed the product on a large scale,” Sindelar said, his company is turning to the partnership again for training in value stream mapping in hopes of cutting service costs by 20 percent. In 2004, Sindelar approached the renewable energy program director at San Juan College in Farmington with an offer to sell part of the company and instead found two people with valuable management experience who wanted to buy in as partners. Ten years into that partnership, Positive Energy is now a Certified B Corporation — a status that signifies its willingness to hold itself to high standards of social and environmental responsibility, accountability and transparency. The incubator also fostered intangible kinds of support, including emotional encouragement in 1999 when Sindelar was ready to quit after his wife was diagnosed with a serious illness. “Allan worked very hard, always held to his personal principles in his business and customer service and sought advice readily,” Longserre said. “He had a vision that he saw through, rode through the ups and downs of any startup and many other challenges life threw his way with candor and grace, and came up with what I consider the single best name for a small business in the alternative energy sector. I learned as much from watching him as he learned from anything we may have taught him.” For more information about the Santa Fe Business Incubator, call 424-1140 or visit www.sfbi. net. Finance New Mexico is a public service initiative to assist individuals and businesses with obtaining skills and funding resources for their business or idea. To learn more, go to www. FinanceNewMexico.org.