Santa Fe New Mexican, April 26, 2014

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Santa Fe Concert Association changes name, updates image Local News, A-6

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Saturday, April 26, 2014

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Connecticut teen killed at school

Video shows cyclist was westbound

GOP’s big names court gun lovers

Police are investigating whether the suspect stabbed the victim because she refused his prom invite. PAgE A-5

Police say woman fatally struck by train was traveling in a different direction than originally thought. LOCAL NEwS, A-6

Possible presidential hopefuls talk up their pro-gun credentials at the NRA’s annual convention. PAgE A-5

Feds plan to grade teacher training

Gov. stands by Gardner after use of state card Spokesman: Chief of staff had ‘no ill intent,’ repaid more than $5K

By Motoko Rich

The New York Times

The Obama administration announced Friday that it was developing ratings of teacher preparation programs to make them more accountable for their graduates’ classroom performance. Teacher training programs have frequently come under attack as illconceived or mediocre, and teachers themselves have often complained that such programs do not adequately prepare them to handle children with varying needs and abilities. “We have about 1,400 schools of education and hundreds and hundreds of alternative certification paths, and nobody in this country can tell anybody which one is more effective than the other,” Arne Duncan, the education secretary, said at a town-hall meeting at Dunbar High School in Washington on Friday. “Often the vast majority of schools,” he said, “when I talk to teachers, and have very candid conversations, they feel they weren’t well prepared.” By this summer, the administration will propose rules for evaluating all teacher training programs, using metrics that could include the number of graduates placed in schools, as well as pass rates on licensing exams, teacher retention rates and job performance ratings of teachers. A 2013 review of 2,420 teacher preparation programs by the National Council on Teacher Quality, a nonprofit group that advocates tougher standards for teachers, found that less than a quarter provided concrete strategies for managing students in a classroom. Most of them failed to guarantee that teacher candidates would be placed with highly skilled teachers during student-teaching stints. Any proposals by the administration are likely to stir debate, particularly a requirement that training programs release the evaluation data of their graduates’ performance in the classroom. Currently, 43 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have agreed with the Department of Education to develop teacher performance ratings that include student test scores. Some education experts say that such ratings are not reliable and that it would be difficult to grade teacher training programs using standardized test scores. “This is about a policy that seeks to rate institutions on something that we just cannot feasibly link them to in terms of responsibility,” said Bruce D. Baker, a professor of education at Rutgers University.

Please see TEACHER, Page A-5

Today Partly sunny; storms possible. High 71, low 33. PAgE A-12

Obituaries Alfonso “Brother” Baca, 82, April 15 Albert “Al” Carinci, 83, Albuquerque, March 21 Jerilyn Sue Mosso, 60, April 23 Janice L. Weatherford, 63, April 23 PAgE A-10

Index

Calendar A-2

Classifieds B-6

By Steve Terrell

The New Mexican

Ralph Ford-Schmid, an environmental scientist with the New Mexico Environment Department, checks a water and sediment sampler near the then-planned Buckman Direct Diversion project in 2007. Santa Fe City Councilor Joseph Maestas says people in Santa Fe remain highly concerned about the potential for contamination to wash down from Los Alamos into the Rio Grande and then into the Buckman Direct Diversion project that supplies a majority of the city’s drinking water. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

LANL pressed to meet legacy waste deadline Lab has until June 30 for work above ground; significant underground cleanup still needed By Staci Matlock

The New Mexican

Underground radioactive waste and groundwater contamination at Los Alamos National Laboratory — the legacy of decades of nuclear weapons research at the lab — will not be cleaned up by a 2015 deadline, the head of the state Environment Department said Friday. New Mexico Environment Department Secretary Ryan Flynn said the lab must meet a June 30 deadline, as part of an agreement between the state and the federal

government, to remove the last shipments of low-level radioactive waste stored above ground on LANL property. But that still leaves huge and expensive swaths of work to be done, including cleanup of a plume of chromium-contaminated groundwater headed toward San Ildefonso Pueblo and the Rio Grande, Flynn told a gathering of elected officials during a meeting Friday of the Regional Coalition of LANL Communities. The state and the U.S. Department of Energy signed a consent decree in 2005

to remove all the legacy waste by 2015. That deadline will have to be rethought, Flynn said, as the work has been complicated by federal funding shortfalls, and more contamination has been found. “That scope of work cannot change and will not change,” Flynn told the coalition of city councilors and county commissioners from the region. “The contamination caused by legacy operations at the lab needs to be cleaned up — period.” Legacy waste was generated by LANL from its nuclear weapons research programs between the mid-1940s and the 1990s. After 1970, most of it was stored at Technical Area 54, Area G, both above and

Please see LANL, Page A-4

Diggers set to unearth ‘E.T.’ games Hundreds expected at N.M. landfill to search for old Atari cartridges

The office of Gov. Susana Martinez defended her chief of staff Friday after news that he used a state credit card for thousands of dollars in personal spending, saying that although it was “poor practice,” there was clearly “no ill intent involved” because he later reimbursed the payments. Keith Gardner In a direct violation of state policy and procedures, which prohibit the use of state-issued cards for personal purchases, the chief of staff, Keith Gardner, used his card for more than $5,000 in payments for hotels, tires, a cellphone and accessories, a necktie, heartburn medication, car fresheners, a coin display case, a copy of Popular Science magazine and more. Some of his purchases were tax-free because they were charged on his government card. Asked about the purchases, which were first reported by The Albuquerque Journal, a spokesman for the governor, Michael Lonergan, said in an emailed statement, “Keith and the chief financial officer met regularly and reconciled purchases. He made regular reimbursements of any items that needed to be repaid. Those purchases and reimbursements were paid back throughout the last three years. This included some personal items and also items related to a different agency but for government business.” In the future, Lonergan said, “in addition to being more careful about ensuring that there are no personal purchases on the card, there will now also be a new pre-authorization requirement for purchases as well. Keith also was required to pay interest at the level of 18 percent on all purchases reimbursed at any time

Please see CARD, Page A-4

By Juan Carlos Llorca

The Associated Press

Hidden for three decades in a landfill deep in the New Mexico desert lie thousands of Atari cartridges from what is widely believed to be worst video game ever made — or so the urban legend goes. A group of filmmakers hopes to get to the bottom of the mystery Saturday by digging up the concretecovered landfill in search of up to a million discarded copies of E.T. The Extraterrestrial that the game’s maker wanted to hide forever. The game and its contribution to the demise of Atari have been the source of fascination for video game enthusiasts for 30 years, and the search for the cartridges will be featured in an upcoming documentary about the biggest video game company of the early ’80s. “Bottom line, this is just trash. But there is a legend in it, we want to unlock that legend, that mystery,” a spokeswoman for the public relations firm working on behalf of Xbox Entertainment Studios, one of the companies developing the film.

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Crews begin digging at the old Alamogordo landfill Friday, to search for copies of Atari’s E.T. The Extraterrestrial game purportedly buried there in the 1980s. The game is considered among gamers to be one of the worst ever and is believed to have contributed to the demise of Atari. JOHN BEAR/ALAMAGORDO DAILY NEWS

The documentary is expected to be released later this year on Microsoft’s Xbox game consoles. The event is expected to draw hundreds of video game enthusiasts, pop culture fans and self-described geeks to Alamogordo. Whether — and most importantly, why — Atari decided to bury thousands or millions of copies of

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Opinions A-11

the failed game is part of the urban legend and much speculation on Internet blog posts and forums. Kristen Keller, a spokeswoman at Atari, said “nobody here has any idea what that’s about.” The company has no “corporate knowledge” about the Alamogordo burial. Atari

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BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM

Workshops, a public forum and solar-product demonstrations occur between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.; Santa Fe Community College, 6401 Richards Ave., no charge, continues Sunday.

Home: Earth Day at the Railyard Wise Fool New Mexico’s giantpuppet procession opens the activities at 11:30 a.m.; live music, interactive art activities and workshops are held through the day, Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Road, no charge. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

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In brief

N.Y. congressman secretly indicted

By Choe Sang Hun The New York Times

President Barack Obama greets U.S. troops today at Yongsan Army Garrison in Seoul, South Korea. CHARLES DHARAPAK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Obama highlights deep U.S. military ties in Asia By Julie Pace

Rep. Michael Grimm, R-N.Y., has been secretly indicted by a federal grand jury in Brooklyn, N.Y. according to people familiar with the case. The indictment is expected to be unsealed in coming days. A person briefed on the case said Grimm was indicted by a grand jury empaneled in the Eastern District of New York in Brooklyn and that his attorney had been in talks with prosecutors. Grimm’s attorney, William McGinley, confirmed in a phone call Friday that he had been informed of the pending indictment. “We are disappointed by the government’s decision, but hardly surprised,” McGinley said in the statement. “From the beginning, the government has pursued a politically driven vendetta against Congressman Grimm and not an independent search for the truth. Congressman Grimm asserts his innocence of any wrongdoing.”

Stowaway thought mother was dead SAN JOSE, Calif. — The mother of a teenager who stowed away on a flight to Hawaii told Voice of America that her son had recently learned that she was alive after being told by his father she had died. Speaking with VOA from a refugee camp in eastern Ethiopia, mother Ubah Mohamed Abdullahi said she felt bad that her son risked his life and that her dream is to live with her children in the United States. New Mexican wire services

The Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — President Barack Obama today was touting economic and military ties to South Korea, a show of U.S. influence in the region amid China’s growing power and nuclear threats from North Korea. Obama kicked off the second day of his overnight trip to Seoul in a meeting with business leaders aimed at promoting trade between the two nations. The remainder of his day focused on military matters, with a speech to some of the 28,000 American service members stationed here and a rare joint security briefing with South Korea’s president. Obama told more than a dozen corporate executives gathered in a conference room at the Grand Hyatt where he spent the night that the U.S. and South Korea are going to have “one of the key economic relationships of the 21st century.” The executives represented businesses including Hyundai, Samsung, Korean Air, Microsoft, Boeing, Goldman Sachs and others. “As important as the security relationship is and the alliance is between the Republic of Korea and the United States, what is also important is the incredible and growing economic ties that are creating jobs and opportunity in both countries,” Obama said. Obama arrived in South Korea on Friday, the second stop on his four-country swing through Asia. After events in Seoul today, the president will travel to Malaysia,

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where he’ll attend a dinner with the royal family. While in Seoul, Obama paid tribute to victims from last week’s ferry disaster. The vast majority of the 300 dead or missing were students from a single high school near the capital city. The president also has had to attend to the ongoing crisis in Ukraine, as a fragile accord with Russia aimed at stemming tensions appears to have crumbled. Obama spoke by telephone with European leaders to discuss the possibility of deepening economic sanctions on Russia, though it appeared unlikely that new penalties would be imposed Friday. Despite the distractions of other issues, the president’s core mission in Seoul is to underscore the U.S. commitment to the security of South Korea and other allies during a period of uncertainty in the region. While the U.S. has long been the most powerful military influence in the Asia-Pacific region, Pentagon spending is being slashed at the same time China has been boosting its defense budget. Beijing still lags far behind the U.S. in both military funding and technology. But its spending boom is attracting new scrutiny at a time of severe cuts in U.S. defense budgets that have some questioning Washington’s commitments to its Asian allies, including some who have lingering disputes with China. At the same time, the U.S. military is seeking to redirect resources to the Asia-Pacific as it draws down its commitment in Afghanistan, though there is concern that budget

cuts could threaten plans to base 60 percent of U.S. naval assets in the region. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert recently warned that U.S. capabilities to project power “would not stay ahead” of potential adversaries, given the fiscal restraints. The U.S. military continues to have a robust presence in South Korea, in part to serve as a deterrent to the North. Obama on Friday declared the alliance between the U.S. and South Korea “a linchpin of security in Asia.” “Our solidarity is bolstered by the courage of our service members, both Korean and American, who safeguard this nation,” Obama said during a news conference Friday with South Korean President Park Geun-hye. Ahead of his meetings with Park, Obama paid tribute to U.S. soldiers killed in the Korean War. He placed a wreath beside a plaque bearing the names of some of those killed as a bugler played out taps. Obama will speak today at Yongsan Garrison, headquarters for U.S. forces in South Korea. Before his remarks, Obama and Park will have a rare joint leaders briefing with the commander of the U.S-South Korea Combined Forces Command. Both countries are closely watching North Korea, which has threatened to conduct its fourth nuclear test. Obama and Park both warned Friday that the launch could lead to tougher sanctions, with Park also declaring that it could trigger an undesirable nuclear arms race in the region and render further nuclear negotiations pointless.

SEOUL, South Korea — A 24-yearold U.S. tourist who said he was seeking shelter in North Korea has been detained there for more than two weeks and is being held on charges of a “gross violation of its legal order,” the country’s official Korean Central News Agency reported Friday. But the circumstances of the detention may be in dispute. A travel agency in New Jersey says that the man, whom it identified as Matthew Miller, was on its tour to the North and that he was being held “on claims of seeking asylum.” The North Korean announcement was made late Friday, while President Barack Obama was in South Korea on a state visit. The news agency said the American was being held for his “rash behavior” while passing through customs after arriving in North Korea on April 10. According to the report, the American tore his tourist visa, shouting that he had entered the North “after choosing it as a shelter.” The report identified the man as Miller Matthew Todd, possibly rendering his name in Korean fashion with the surname first. A statement on the website of the tour agency, Uri Tours, said the agency was “working closely and continuously with all relevant government and diplomatic entities to resolve this matter in a speedy and favorable manner.” It added, “In order to maintain the confidentiality of Mr. Miller and his family, we are not speaking with the press.” Uri Tours is one of several travel agencies catering to a growing interest in tourism to the police state. The website says Uri Tours is the largest provider of North Korea travel in the United States. North Korea often delays its announcements of detentions, and it is possible that the news was timed to coincide with Obama’s trip. The report came just hours after a summit meeting between Obama and his South Korean counterpart, Park Geun-hye, in Seoul. The two leaders warned of the possibility of imposing more sanctions on the North amid signs that it might be preparing to conduct a fourth nuclear test. The two leaders also agreed to put pressure on North Korea over human rights violations. The North has condemned such pressure from the outside as a plot to undermine its political system. If confirmed by U.S. authorities, the detention of another U.S. tourist could further complicate Washington’s efforts to handle North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.

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Military suicides drop; Reserves rise

WASHINGTON — Suicides among Army National Guard and Reserve members increased last year, even as the number of active-duty troops across the military who took their own lives dropped by more than 15 percent, according to new data. The overall totals provided by the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps give some hope that prevention programs and increased efforts to identify troops at risk may be taking hold after several years of escalating suicide rates. But the increase among Army National Guard and Reserve members raises questions about whether those programs are getting to the citizen soldiers who may not have the same access to support networks and help that their active duty comrades receive. Not only did suicides among Army National Guard and Reserve members increase from 140 in 2012 to 152 last year, but the 2013 total exceeded the number of active-duty soldiers who took their lives, according to the Army. There were 151 active duty soldier suicides last year, compared with 185 in 2012, Army officials said.

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“CINDERELLA CONFIDENTIAL”: Presented by Santa Fe Performing Arts City Different Players, ages 7-12, 2 p.m., Center for Contemporary Art, 1050 Old Pecos Trail. “IN THE HEIGHTS”: Presented by the Santa Fe High School Musical Theater, 7:30 p.m. at the school, 2100 Yucca St. “KATHLEEN FONTAINE: THE MAN, THE MYSTERY”: Onewoman show on transgender identity and the cultural gender divide, 8 p.m., Railyard Performance Center, 1611-B Paseo de Peralta. “KIMBERLY AKIMBO”: For Giving Productions presents Lindsay-Abaire’s dark comedy, 7 p.m., 203 W. Water St. “LEFT TO OUR OWN DEVICES: STAYING CONNECTED IN THE DIGITAL AGE”: Just Say It Theater presents a performance by students of Santa Fe University of Art and Design and New Mexico School for the Arts, 7-9 p.m. at Warehouse 21, 1614 Paseo de Peralta. “SPRING AWAKENING”: A musical based on Frank Wedekind’s once-controversial play, 7 p.m., Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. AVERY MORROW: Author from and signs copies of The

Lotteries Sacred Science of Ancient Japan, 3-4 p.m., Sanbusco Market Center, 500 Montezuma Ave., Suite 101. BALLET NEXT: Classic and contemporary choreography by Mauro Bigonzetti and Brian Reeder, 7:30 p.m., Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St. EARTH DAY AT THE RAILYARD: Wise Fool New Mexico giant-puppet procession 11:30 a.m., live music, interactive art activities, and workshops held through the day, 11:30 a.m.4 p.m. at the Railyard, 740 Cerrillos Road. JOE WEST’S THEATER OF DEATH: Original one-act plays, includes musical guests Busy McCarroll, Anthony Leon and Lori Ottino, 8 p.m. at the Mine Shaft Tavern, 2846 N.M. 14, Madrid. NATIONAL POETRY MONTH: Cut + Paste Society presents 16 poets reading on the theme of wind in a program titled Poetry Storm 3.0, 2 p.m., Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy St. OPERA BREAKFAST LECTURE: Mary Kime’s discussion of Mozart’s Cosi fan Tutte at Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 9:30 a.m. PLAY-A-THON ON THE PLAZA: Presented by the Santa Fe Youth Symphony Association; ensembles include Elementary Strings,

Youth Philharmonia, jazz and mariachi, 2-5:30 p.m., Lincoln Avenue at Plaza Avenue. SAN MIGUEL CHAPEL CONCERT SERIES: Balkan folkmusic quartet Rumelia, with Paul Brown and Paul Wexler, klezmer and Sephardic music, 7:30 p.m., San Miguel Mission, 401 Old Santa Fe Trail. SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET: Local goods sold weekly on Saturday; this week’s live music by balladeer J. Michael Combs, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., 1607 Paseo de Peralta. THE MET AT THE LENSIC: The season continues with a live HD broadcast of Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte, 11 a.m., the Lensic, 211 W. San Francisco St. TRADER WALT’S SOUTHWESTERN & INTERNATIONAL MARKETPLACE: More than 100 vendor booths with antiques, folk and fine art, books, jewelry, and snacks, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., 555 Camino de la Familia. WORLD T’AI CHI QIGONG DAY: The Genoveva Chavez Community Center is participating in World Tai Chi Day with a free event from noon to 3 p.m. Teachers and students will share Tai Chi and Qigong through demonstrations, teaching and discussion; noon-3 p.m., 3221 Rodeo Road. Contact Doug Brown for more information, 438 8242 .

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NIGHTLIFE Saturday, April 26 ANASAZI RESTAURANT & BAR: Guitarist Jesús Bas, 7-10 p.m., 113 Washington Ave. ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESON!: Tierra Sonikete, flamenco/ jazz fusion with guitarist Joaquin Gallegos, trumpeter J.Q. Whitcomb, and vocalist Kina Mendez, 7-10 p.m., 213 Washington Ave.


WORLD

Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Bombers kill 31 at Iraq Russia claiming West plots to control Ukraine campaign rally for Shiites reminder of the sectarian violence that has plagued Iraq more than two years after U.S. troops ended an eight-year BAGHDAD — Suicide bombers killed 31 people Friday presence that often served as a buffer between the nation’s at a sports stadium hosting a campaign rally for thousands of Shiite majority and its Sunni Arab minority. supporters of a militant Shiite Last year, the death toll in the group before parliamentary elections, authorities said — an country climbed to its highest attack that could unleash more levels since the worst of the sectarian bloodshed between sectarian violence. 2006 and 2008. The U.N. says An al-Qaida breakaway 8,868 people were killed in group, the Islamic State of 2013, and more than 1,400 peoIraq and the Levant, claimed ple were killed in the first two responsibility for the attack months of this year alone. at the Industrial Stadium in The rally was organized to eastern Baghdad, which drew introduce the group’s candiabout 10,000 backers of the dates for Wednesday’s vote. Iranian-backed Asaib Ahl alMore than 9,000 candidates Haq group. are taking part and will vie for It said on a militant website 328 seats in parliament. Parts that the bombings were to of the Sunni-dominated Anbar avenge what it called the killprovince won’t take part in the ing of Sunnis and their forced election due the clashes there removal from their homes by between security forces and Shiite militias. The authenticity of the claim al-Qaida-inspired militants. A top intelligence officer and could not be verified. security officials said a senior The attack was a stark By Hamza Hendawi

By Peter Leonard

The Associated Press

The Associated Press

DONETSK, Ukraine — As top Ukrainians spoke of imminent invasion and the West threatened the Kremlin with more sanctions, Moscow said Friday that pro-Russian separatists would not lay down their arms in eastern Ukraine until activists relinquish control over key sites in Kiev. The tough talk came as tensions heightened on the ground, with Russian fighter jets reported crossing into Ukrainian airspace and a team of unarmed foreign military observers detained by proRussian forces in Slovyansk, the heart of the separatist movement in the east. With last week’s Geneva agreement calling on all illegal armed groups to lay down their weapons and hand over occupied cities and facilities in tatters, both sides exchanged threats and warnings Friday. Accusing the West of plotting to control Ukraine, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov declared that pro-Russia insurgents in the country’s east would only disarm and leave the territory they have occupied if the Ukrainian government clears out a protest camp in Kiev’s Independence Square, known as the Maidan, and evicts activists from other occupied facilities. “The West wants — and this is how it all began — to seize control of Ukraine because of their own political ambitions,

Masked pro-Russian militants stand guard Friday at the barricades in Slovyansk, Ukraine. SERGEI GRITS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

not in the interests of the Ukrainian people,” Lavrov said. Pro-Russia insurgents will disarm and vacate buildings “only if Kiev authorities get down to implementing the Geneva accords, clear out that shameful Maidan and liberate the buildings that have been illegally seized,” the Russian foreign minister said. Ukraine’s reaction was swift. “The world has not yet forgotten World War II, but Russia is already keen on starting World War III,” Ukraine’s acting prime minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk told a meeting of his Cabinet. At the United Nations, Ukraine’s deputy foreign minister, Danylo Lubkivsky said he feared an imminent Russian invasion. “We have the information we are in danger,” Lubkivsky told reporters, saying Russian

military maneuvers involving air and ground forces along the Ukraine border were a “very dangerous development.” “We are going to protect our motherland against any invasion,” Lubkivsky said. “We call on the Russians to stop this madness.” The heightened rhetoric came as U.S. officials reported that Russian fighter jets flew into Ukrainian airspace several times over the last 24 hours, in what one called a provocation. It wasn’t clear what the intent was, but the aircraft could have been testing Ukrainian radar or making a show of force, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sunni politician in the southern city of Basra, Abdul-Kareem al-Dussary, was shot and killed Friday night in what appeared to be a revenge attack for the Baghdad bombings. The officer and the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media. The resurgence of sectarian violence is in part a reflection of the 3-year-old conflict in neighboring Syria, where forces loyal to President Bashar Assad are battling mostly Sunni rebels whose ranks are dominated by Islamists or militants from al-Qaida-inspired or linked groups. Assad follows the Alawite faith, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Asaib Ahl al-Haq, like Lebanon’s Shiite Hezbollah, has sent fighters to Syria to join Assad in the civil war. The bombings at the heavily guarded stadium struck about 10 minutes apart, according to two Associated Press reporters at the rally.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

In brief Officials wait to question officer

ALBUQUERQUE — An Albuquerque police official says investigators waited more than 48 hours before they interviewed the officer involved in the troubled department’s latest shooting. Deputy Chief Robert Huntsman tells KOB-TV there were several reasons for the delay in interviewing the officer who killed 19-year-old Mary Hawkes on Monday. Huntsman says the case investigator had to testify in a murder trial the next day, there was a homicide on Tuesday, and the department likes to give officers time to de-stress after a shooting. Police didn’t immediately respond to calls and emails from The Associated Press seeking further comment.

Silver City paper closing its doors SILVER CITY — After nearly 79 years in business, the familyowned Silver City Daily Press says it is publishing its final edition Monday. Publisher Tina Ely made the announcement with a posting on the newspaper’s website. In a phone interview, Ely said it was a decision many years in the making as ad revenues fell and two papers struggled to compete for those dollars. Ely says 17 workers will lose their jobs. Founded in 1896 as the weekly Silver City Independent, the paper was purchased by Col. Clyde Ely in 1934 and converted to the Silver City Daily Press in June 1935. Tina Ely is the thirdgeneration publisher.

N.M. forecasters warn of winds ALBUQUERQUE — Forecasters with the National Weather Service are warning New Mexicans that it could be a windy weekend. They say a strong cold front will be sweeping into the state late Saturday through Sunday, bringing with it potentially damaging winds for much of the area. Snow in the northern mountains and below-normal temperatures are also possible. Forecasters say the strongest winds are expected to develop Saturday afternoon and continue through Sunday. Areas near and east of the central mountain chain, including the central high plains and eastern plains are likely to see the longest duration of strong winds. Gusts of 60 mph or greater will be possible, resulting in blowing dust, especially along the Rio Grande Valley and across the eastern plains.

Man is state’s 1st plague case in ’14 State health officials say a 57-year-old Torrance County man hospitalized in critical condition is the first human case of plague in New Mexico and in the United States this year. New Mexico had four human plague cases in 2013 with one fatality. Plague is a bacterial disease of rodents and is generally transmitted to humans through the bites of infected fleas, but can also be transmitted by direct contact with infected animals, including rodents, wildlife and pets.

Counseling called for in caging case LAS CRUCES — Counseling was part of the sentence given Wednesday for a New Mexico woman who admitted locking her 8-year-old niece with developmental disabilities in a wooden cage, leaving her alone while other family members left to watch a movie. A judge sentenced Cindy Patriarchias, 34, in state District Court in Las Cruces to a sixyear suspended sentence, the Las Cruces Sun-News reported. Judge Fernando Macias sentenced Patriarchias with credit for 116 days of time served. Macias also ordered her to complete a rehabilitation program that provides counseling and other services. Patriarchias pleaded guilty in December to two counts of felony child abuse. The Associated Press

Card: Pre-approval required now Games: Title was a commercial failure

for himself and his wife, who is an administrator for the state during the past three years.” Public Education Department, Asked directly whether who also was traveling to WashGardner had been disciplined ington on business. While Gardfor using the card for personal ner ended up not going, the bill items beyond having to pay was charged to the state card the tax and to have his future because Gardner had used it to purchases pre-approved, secure the room. Martinez spokesman Enrique Reaction from Democrats was Knell said no. not as forgiving as the statement Gardner couldn’t be from the Governors’ Office. reached for comment Friday Senate Majority Leader night. Michael Sanchez, D-Belen, in an Gardner, whose annual sal- opinion piece Friday, referred to ary is $136,350, usually wrote former state Public Regulation reimbursement checks to the Commissioner Jerome Block Jr., state one to three months a Democrat who pleaded guilty following the expenditures, to several felony counts, includhe told the Journal, which ing fraud charges related to his received records on Gardner’s misuse of a state-issued card. credit card use from the state “When a former member Department of Finance and of the state Public Regulation Administration two months Commission was caught makafter it filed a request under ing questionable purchases with the Inspection of Public his state-issued credit card, it Records Act. Gardner told resulted in his pleading guilty to the newspaper that earlier felony charges, as well as servthis month — after being con- ing jail time,” Sanchez wrote. tacted by a reporter — he first “But as things typically play learned that he was required out under the Martinez adminto pay the 18 percent interest istration, Gardner and other on his personal charges. He members of her inner circle subsequently wrote a check avoid getting any meaningful on April 11 to the Department punishment or even a slap on of Finance and Administrathe wrist for their inappropriate tion for $241. behavior.” More than $1,500 of GardWhile Block did serve some ner’s total was for phone bills time in jail before his sentencfrom AT&T, which Gardner ing and some time afterward said were charged to the state for parole violations, he avoided card because he inadvertently prison with a plea deal that responded “yes” when the included resignation from his company asked whether he elected seat on the Public Reguwanted to pay with the same lation Commission. credit card used to buy a In January 2011, when the phone. Republican governor’s adminAnother charge for more istration took office, Gardner than $1,000 was for a hotel signed a cardholder agreement near Washington, D.C. Gardsaying he had been trained in ner said he reserved a room and understood state policy and

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procedures for use of the credit card, including the ban on personal purchases. “I understand that my failure to follow the policies and procedures will result in disciplinary action against me including, but not limited to: suspension, termination of employment, and/ or criminal prosecution,” the agreement states. Sanchez also brought up past controversies involving Gardner. “But again, when Martinez was made aware of the incidents, nothing was done,” Sanchez wrote. Lawrence Rael, one of the five Democrats hoping to win the party’s nomination to run against Martinez in November, issued a statement calling for the state auditor to investigate. Neither State Auditor Hector Balderas nor a spokesman could be reached for comment Friday. Using the state credit card for personal charges “is not a trivial matter,” Rael said. “That the governor’s chief of staff either doesn’t know or doesn’t care that he can’t use public resources for private expenses is beyond comprehension. The governor’s top staff member shouldn’t get a pass when a subordinate would be subject to disciplinary measures, if not outright dismissal. … Gov. Martinez promised ethical government but can’t even discipline her chief of staff on such an obvious misuse of taxpayer funds.” The Associated Press contributed to this report. Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.

LANL: Government shutdown, WIPP closure hamper removal 3,706 cubic meters of transuranic waste, consisting of conbelow ground. taminated lab coats, protective Flynn said it’s time to decide gear, debris and other materials, on new priorities and deadby the end of June. The lab has lines for the remaining work. removed most of the waste He said he hopes the coalition stored above ground at Area G and the public will weigh in to and remains on target, despite help set those priorities. a couple of major unforeseen “I think it would be very events, said LANL Director important to understand what Charles F. McMillan during the priorities of the public the coalition meeting. A partial are, what the communities’ federal government shutdown priorities are and how we [pri- in October due to sequestration oritize] the work to be done,” and then a Feb. 14 radiation leak Flynn said. that shut down the Waste IsolaWhen the consent order tion Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, was signed, Flynn said, no one where the lab’s waste was being knew the full extent of the con- shipped, both caused delays. tamination, especially in the WIPP remains closed, so the lab groundwater. He said a plume is shipping its transuranic waste of chromium-6 spreading in to an alternate site in Texas for groundwater was identified temporary storage. not long after the agreement “I’m incredibly proud of what was signed. our team has accomplished,” Chromium-6 is both a McMillan said. natural element and one There were 120 waste shipproduced in making metal ments left to send out of the alloys. It can cause skin conlab when WIPP closed. The lab ditions and is a suspected had sent 23 of those shipments carcinogen, according to the to the Texas facility by April 21. Environmental Protection McMillan said it would be difAgency. Chromium-6 has been ficult to meet the June deadline found in aquifers beneath lab because 81 of the containers of property at levels above state transuranic waste still at LANL and federal drinking water don’t meet the storage requirestandards. Highly explosive ments at the Andrews, Texas, chemicals also have been facility. The lab and the Departfound in the groundwater. ment of Energy are exploring “Anything that threatens alternatives. groundwater, the state takes Flynn agreed the lab staff very seriously, and we believe and the Department of Energy is one of our highest priorities deserved accolades for staying [for cleanup],” Flynn said. Shifting deadlines for cleanup work isn’t new. A framework developed a couple of years ago outlined individual projects that need to be completed and their deadlines. Some of those deadlines have been extended for as much as two years. Santa Fe City Councilor Joseph Maestas said people in Santa Fe remain highly concerned about the potential for contamination to wash down from Los Alamos into the Rio Grande during storm events and then into the Buckman Direct Diversion project that supplies a majority of the city’s drinking water. He said an updated early warning system is needed, which allows the Buckman diversion to be shut down during floods. Under the consent agreement, the lab had to remove

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Sunday has JOBS

on track with the waste shipments despite the challenges. Cleaning up the waste is going to take a lot of federal money. Last year, the federal money given to the lab for cleanup was $180 million. McMillan said the request for this year is $225 million. Flynn said he thought $255 million a year was reasonable. The way to ask for the money in tight budget years is to convince lawmakers the risks and costs of a slower cleanup outweigh a little more funding, Flynn said.

Continued from Page A-1 has changed hands many times over the years, and Keller said, “We’re just watching like everybody else.” Atari currently manages about 200 classic titles such as Centipede and Asteroids. It was sold to a French company by Hasbro in 2001. A New York Times article from Sept. 28, 1983, says 14 truckloads of discarded game cartridges and computer equipment were dumped on the site. An Atari spokesman quoted in the story said the games came from its plant in El Paso, some 80 miles south of Alamogordo. Local news reports from the time said that the landfill employees were throwing cartridges there and running a bulldozer over them before covering them with dirt and trash. The city of Alamogordo agreed to give the documentarians 250 cartridges or 10 percent of the cartridges found, whichever is greater, according to local media reports. The E.T. game is among the factors blamed for the decline of Atari and the collapse in the U.S. of a multimillion dollar video game industry that didn’t bounce back for several years. Tina Amini, deputy editor at gaming website Kotaku, says the game tanked because “it was practically broken.” A recurring flaw, she said, was that the character of the game, the beloved extraterrestrial, would fall into traps that were almost impossible to escape and would appear constantly and unpredictably. The company produced millions of cartridges, and although sales were not initially bad, the frustrating gameplay prompted an immense amount of returns. “They had produced so many cartridges that were unsold that even if the game was insanely successful I doubt they’d be able to keep up,” Amini says. Joe Lewandowski, who became manager of the 300acre landfill a few months after the cartridge dump and

Atari’s E.T. The Extraterrestrial game. COURTESY IMAGE

has been a consultant for the documentarians, told The Associated Press that they used old photographs and dug exploratory wells to find the actual burial site. A spokeswoman for Xbox said they’ve dug to remove the upper layers of trash in preparation for Saturday’s dig. Lewandowski says he remembers how the cartridge dump was a monstrous fiasco for Atari, at least from the perspective of a small desert town. The company, he says, brought truckloads from El Paso, where at the time scavenging was allowed in the city’s landfills. “Here, they didn’t allow scavenging. It was a small landfill. It had a guard.” The guard, however, was either away or unable to stop scores of teenagers from rummaging through the Atari waste and showing up in town trying to sell the discarded products and equipment from the backs of pickup trucks, Lewandowski, said. “That’s when they decided to pour concrete over.” The incidents following the burial remained as part of Alamogordo’s local folklore, he said. For him, the E.T. game did not stir any other memories than an awful game he once bought for his kid. “I was busy merging two garbage companies together,” he said. “I didn’t have time for that.”

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

Robert J. Kossmann, MD, PC, FACP, FASN

Dr. Robert J. Kossmann wants to thank his patients for the opportunity to participate in their care for the past 20 years, and to announce his leaving the nephrology practice on May 28, 2014. Nephrophiles, LLC, the nephrology practice with Dr. Paul Kovnat, Dr. C. Gentiana Voinescu, Dr. Charnes Chiu, and Dr. Tudor Ocneanu remains open and vigorous in providing uninterrupted nephrology care to all. Individuals choosing to change practices, should contact Dr. Kossmann’s office to make arrangements for the release of their medical records. Tel. (505)216-3466 Toll free (866)-319-4276

Nephrophiles LLC

1650 Hospital Drive Suite 200, Santa Fe New Mexico 87505


NATION & WORLD

Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Prom-date rejection investigated in school killing By Dave Collins and Pat Eaton-Robb Police said the suspect, whose name was not released, was being held Friday afternoon in police HARTFORD, Conn. — A custody at a medical facility and 16-year-old girl was stabbed to could be charged later as an adult. death inside a Connecticut high Imani Langston, who describes school Friday, and police were herself as one of Sanchez’s best investigating whether a boy friends, said students were gathattacked her after she turned down ered in an auditorium when a an invitation to be his prom date. teacher came and told them SanMaren Sanchez was stabbed in chez had been stabbed. a hallway of Jonathan Law High “She basically just explained to School in Milford at about 7:15 a.m. us that Maren Sanchez got stabbed Staff members and paramedics in the throat for saying no about performed life-saving measures on going to prom” with the suspect, the girl, but she was pronounced she said. dead at a hospital, police said. Langston said she saw the susThe 16-year-old boy was charged pect taken out of the school in with murder as a juvenile offender. handcuffs. She said Sanchez and The Associated Press

the boy were friends but had never dated. She said Sanchez had helped to organize the junior prom and was looking forward to attending with her boyfriend. The dance was scheduled for Friday night but was postponed because of the stabbing. In class on Thursday, Sanchez “told me about her prom dress, she told me how she got asked to prom,” Langston said. “We were just laughing, talking about what we were going to do when we got there, how many pictures we were going to take.” Sanchez, a junior, was in the National Honor Society and engaged in school activities, schools Superintendent Elizabeth

Feser said. Students were released early, and officials were offering counseling services. “We are obviously devastated by the loss of one of our students, Maren Sanchez,” Feser said. “She was a 16-year-old junior — vibrant, very, very involved in Jonathan Law High School, an incredible contributor, someone who was loved and respected.” A cousin of Sanchez, Edward Kovac, said the family is devastated. He described her as a “bright light full of hopes and dreams” as he read from a family statement and said more needs to be done to ensure young people are protected from attacks at school.

A 16-year-old girl was stabbed to death Friday at Jonathan Law High School in Milford, Conn., and police are investigating whether the attack stemmed from her turning down a prom invitation. NED GERARD/THE CONNECTICUT POST

Teacher: No extra funds for proposal

Potential presidential hopefuls court NRA By Sara Burnett

The Associated Press

Continued from Page A-1 Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, the country’s secondlargest teachers union, said she supported improvements in teacher training programs. But, she said, the administration should not carry out “a quickfix, test-and-punish, marketbased ranking of programs.” On Friday, Duncan said teacher preparation should become more like medical training. But educators warned that measurements could create the wrong incentives. Linda Darling-Hammond, a professor of education at Stanford University, said that if medical schools, for example, were judged by the patient mortality rates of the doctors they trained, schools would never train doctors to treat the sickest patients. She suggested that rating systems for teacher training programs could be based on surveys of graduates and their employers, as well as pass rates on licensing portfolios. Education leaders said policymakers should have started with changes to teacher preparation programs, rather than focusing on the overhaul of tenure or changes to current teacher performance ratings. “It’s like the public health equivalent of trying to cure people who have a malady versus trying to prevent the malady in the first place,” said Charles Barone, policy director for Democrats for Education Reform, a group that pushes for test-based teacher evaluations and has battled teachers unions. “We’re putting a lot of money in the evaluation of teachers who never had any business getting into the profession anyway,” Barone said, “or we’re remediating and telling them things to do that they should have been told in their teacher prep programs. They were cheated. It’s not fair to anybody.” The administration’s proposals do not include any additional federal money to pay for the proposed rating systems, but about $100 million in existing funding for teacher preparation programs could be linked to their ratings. Two years ago, the administration tried to devise a proposal for rating teacher training programs, but the committee created to develop the rules could not agree and the proposal stalled.

Court weighs police use of cellphone tower data Union and other groups say it’s too easy for law enforcement officials to get cell tower records MIAMI — In the latest chaland argue that they should be lenge over digital age technolprotected by the Fourth Amendogy and privacy rights, a federal ment’s ban on unreasonable appeals court wrestled Friday searches and seizures. with the authority of law enforce“This provides the government to obtain and use records ment with a time machine it from cellphone towers, which has never had before,” ACLU reel in a treasure trove of user attorney Nathan Wessler told information every minute and can link suspects to crime scenes. the three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In Quartavious Davis’ case, “It’s a great wealth of information authorities obtained from cellabout your private life.” phone companies more than Current law allows authori11,000 tower location records spanning 67 days, some of which ties to simply tell a judge the cellphone information is relevant placed his phone near Miamiarea stores hit by a string of rob- to their investigation for a court order. The ACLU wants a higher beries in 2010. Davis, 22, is servlegal standard, with investigaing a 162-year prison sentence. tors required to show probable The American Civil Liberties By Curt Anderson

The Associated Press

cause that a crime was or is being committed and obtain a search warrant. The case follows recent disclosures that U.S. intelligence agencies, including the National Security Agency, routinely scoop up cellphone communications across a broad spectrum of Americans. And cellphone-tower cases have resulted in split verdicts in two other federal appeals courts. It’s likely one will wind up before the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in 2012 that globalpositioning tracking devices attached to suspects’ cars constituted a search subject to Fourth Amendment protections. A judge at Friday’s hearing said he sees similarities between that ruling and the cellphone case.

“Why isn’t that at least as much an invasion of privacy as a GPS driving down the highway?” Circuit Judge David Sentelle, sitting as a guest judge, asked about cellphone data. Assistant U.S. Attorney Roy Altman argued that the cellphone tracking is different because it is not collected in real time and because there is no expectation of privacy, with the records already in the hands of a third party: the cellphone company. People are generally aware their phones can keep track of their movements, Altman said. “You don’t have a reasonable expectation of privacy in that instance,” he said. In Davis’ case, other evidence — including DNA and testimony

from fellow gang members — was used, but prosecutors relied heavily on the cell tower records in closing arguments to the jury. Davis was the only one of six men charged who went to trial, with the others pleading guilty. Judges had no discretion in his sentence because of minimum mandatory requirements, which many defense attorneys decry as unduly harsh punishment. Some of the gang had already been charged and arrested when prosecutors obtained the court order on Feb. 2, 2011, to gain access to Davis’ cellphone tower records. He was added to a new indictment about two weeks later.

INDIANAPOLIS — Several potential Republican presidential candidates courted gun-rights supporters Friday at the National Rifle Association’s annual convention, talking up their pro-gun credentials while imploring the crowd to fight not just for their Second Amendment rights but for other freedoms they say are being threatened. U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, former Pennsylvania U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal addressed the NRA’s annual leadership forum, a kind of political pep rally the organization considers one of its premier events. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and U.S. Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire also recorded brief videos that were played for the crowd of more than 2,000 inside Lucas Oil Stadium, home to the Indianapolis Colts. One after another, the possible 2016 contenders thanked the NRA and its members for flexing their considerable political muscle to help push back recent gun-control efforts, including legislation following the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut that would have required background checks for gun purchases. They said that same activism will be critical heading into elections this fall, in 2016 and beyond. Jindal charged that Vice President Joe Biden and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, both possible Democratic presidential candidates, think the Second Amendment is little more than “a phrase from a speech writer.” “If they had their way they’d simply cut and paste the Constitution and just get rid of the Second Amendment entirely,” said Jindal, who approved several gun rights bills last year, including one that creates stiff penalties for those who knowingly publish the names of gun permit holders. Rubio opposed limiting gun rights after Sandy Hook, but he also saw his NRA grade drop from an A to a B+ amid criticism of his stance on some gun-rights legislation. He said Friday that being able to provide a safe home for one’s family is fundamental to achieving the American dream. And he said that while gun-rights supporters were outraged and saddened by violence such as Sandy Hook, public policy “must be guided by common sense.” “Making it harder for lawabiding Americans to defend themselves has not, does not and will not prevent future tragedies such as these,” Rubio said. Both Santorum and Pence noted their wives share their love of guns. Pence, who approved a measure this year to allow guns in locked vehicles on school property, said when he met his wife, she had a gun and a motorcycle and “it was love at first sight.” Santorum said it’s not just gun rights that are under assault. He called on the NRA’s millions of members to also fight for religious freedom and First Amendment rights. “Just protecting the Second Amendment while all other freedoms falter isn’t a winning strategy,” Santorum said. “We need you to engage.”


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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

Taos group, LOCAL NEWS state tussle over water What’s in a name? purchase Rail Trail

Crossing gates

A fresh identity

Zia Station

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SOURCE: GOOGLE EARTH

Feud spotlights questionable ties between buyers and sellers

By J.R. Logan The Taos News

St. Francis Drive

Police say bicyclist Suzanne LeBeau was struck by the Rail Runner train here, after crossing St. Francis heading west.

PERFORMANCE SANTA FE

Rail Runner track

Zia Road

THE NEW MEXICAN

Train crash video shows bicycle rider westbound Police say slain woman wasn’t directly facing southbound Rail Runner By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

After reviewing surveillance video recorded from a New Mexico Rail Runner Express train, Santa Fe police on Friday said a bicyclist struck by the train at the Zia Road crossing was headed in a different direction from what they originally reported. The Santa Fe Police Department initially told news outlets that Suzanne LeBeau, 60, was riding northbound SatSuzanne LeBeau urday on the Santa Fe Rail Trail, which often runs parallel to the train tracks, before she was hit by the train. That would have meant LeBeau, who friends and family say was an experienced cyclist, was facing the southbound train as she approached Zia Road. But Friday’s statement said the video shows LeBeau riding west across the southbound lanes of St. Francis Drive. “The light controlling St. Francis appears to turn green as LeBeau is near the median in the middle of the intersection,” the statement says. “She makes it safely across as the Rail Runner conductor blows his horn, and she is hit by the southbound train.” This new information means the train might have been in LeBeau’s peripheral vision, but wasn’t directly in front of her. But the new information doesn’t explain how she might have missed the security arms blocking Zia Road or the flashing lights and the ringing bells that accompany the train’s arrival. And the engineer had activated the horn, according to police. Police department spokeswoman Celina Westervelt said it isn’t clear from the video whether LeBeau had spotted the train or had attempted to stop before crossing the railroad tracks. The avid bicyclist, who had worked as a property management consultant, was wearing a helmet, but officers didn’t find evidence that she was wearing headphones, as a witness had reported to an officer at the scene. The statement said, “Investigators continue to review the video and additional pieces of evidence searching for more clues as the case develops.” Westervelt said because the investigation is ongoing, more detailed reports were not available to the public Friday. The New Mexican has put in a request to view the video with the Rio Metro Regional Transit District, the agency in charge of the Rail Runner. Police confirmed that “all lights, crossing arm, horns and other safety equipment for both the Rail Runner and intersection were working properly.” Since the Saturday incident, cycling advocates have said the accident might have been prevented if the New Mexico Department of Transportation had equipped the trail crossing with its own gate or similar safety equipment. A spokeswoman with the Rail Runner said the train was probably traveling at about 30 mph when LeBeau was struck and killed. She said it takes the train between half a mile and a quarter-mile to stop.

Sandra Noe, marketing manager for Performance Santa Fe, sets up a banner at the Lensic Performing Arts Center on Friday. The banners display a new name for the organization, known for decades as the Santa Fe Concert Association. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Santa Fe Concert Association updates its image By Anne Constable

The New Mexican

2014 events

he 77-year-old Santa Fe Concert Association this week adopted a new, modern logo and a new name: Performance Santa Fe. Board President Donna Hankinson said the rebranding was the culmination of a “very thorough and thoughtful” process that began more than a year ago. “The name [Santa Fe Concert Association] has been around for a long time. You don’t want people to forget who you are,” Hankinson acknowledged. “But we felt we needed something newer, fresher, that better represents what we do. We put on performances. That’s what we do.” Artistic director Joe Illick said the idea of changing the name was being raised when he joined the organization six years ago. That it took so long to happen “was me dragging my feet,” he admitted. He said he could see that the name “concert” doesn’t express all that the group does, such as presenting principal dancers from the American Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet, or a production of King Lear from London’s Globe Theater. Moreover, the organization is not an association, a word he said dates back to the 1930s, when Santa Fe participated in the Community Concerts Series, organized by New York Citybased Columbia Management Inc., which brought world-famous artists to small stages around the country. The new name “just suits what we are,” Illick said, and the new logo is “clearer, more concise, not the scrolled swirls that look a little dated.” The group hired Anagram, a design company owned by former Santa Fe Reporter arts critic Zane Fischer, to develop the new branding, logo and materials such as banners, signage and new stationery. “We wanted to convey a vibrant and venerable organization,” Fischer explained, and to differentiate PSF from other arts organizations. But, he conceded, “there is always a period of adjustment for people to get used to a new identity.” Hankinson said a task force comprising board members, the executive director of the organization and a marketing consultant reviewed many designs. “The one we chose was one everybody was excited about,” she said. “We felt it was elegant,

Festival of Song: Four vocal recitals with stars from The Santa Fe Opera; St. John United Methodist Church, 1200 Old Pecos Trail. u 4 p.m. July 31: Alek Shrader, tenor; Daniela Mack, mezzo-soprano; with Joseph Illick u 4 p.m. Aug. 3: Corinne Winters, soprano, with Steven Blier, piano u 4 p.m. Aug. 8: Paul Groves, tenor, with Joseph Illick, piano u 4 p.m. Aug. 10: Brenda Rae, soprano, with In Sun Suh, piano Stars of the American Ballet: 7:30 p.m. Aug. 13 and 14, Lensic Opening Orchestral Concert: 4 p.m. Aug. 31, Lensic Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet: 4 p.m. Oct. 12, Lensic Atrium String Quartet: 7:30 p.m. Oct. 24; St. John’s College, Great Hall Globe Theatre: 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30,Lensic Hall Ensemble: 4 p.m. Nov. 9, United Church of Santa Fe Notes on Music: 4 p.m. Nov. 16, Eldorado Hotel Notes on Music: 7:30 p.m. Dec. 6, United Church of Santa Fe Anonymous 4: 7:30 p.m. Dec, 9, Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis de Assisi Christmas Eve Concert: 5 p.m. Dec. 24, Lensic New Year’s Eve Concert: 5 p.m. Dec. 31, Lensic

T

For more events and to learn more about the performance series, visit performancesantafe.org

forward-moving and fresh. We just liked it.” Early in the process, many expressed concerns about making such a big change. “We all wanted to think this through,” Hankinson said. “But everybody was very much in favor at the end of the day.” Even people associated with the organization for a long time were “very much in favor. They felt it was time.” Hankinson said the rebranding was paid for out of general operating revenues. The group did receive public money from the city’s 1 percent lodgers tax ($18,000 for the year ending June 30) for marketing and promoting the season, which ends with a ballet Saturday, April 26, at the Lensic Center for the Performing Arts. Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@sfnewmexican.com.

TAOS — State water managers are refusing to give money to El Prado Water and Sanitation District to buy water rights because state officials say the district hasn’t justified the $20,000 per acre-foot purchase price. Members of the district counter there is a scarcity of useful water rights in northern Taos County and say the sale is critical to fulfilling its obligations under the Abeyta Water Settlement — an agreement meant to acknowledge Taos Pueblo’s senior rights while protecting non-Indian irrigators and ensuring a supply for domestic water systems. The feud highlights the close connections between some well-heeled water-rights buyers and sellers in the state, as well as the administrative challenges Abeyta parties face in implementing the massive compromise. El Prado Water proposes to buy 17 acre-feet of water rights from Montoso Bison Co. for $340,000. The water rights are currently tied to Top of the World Farm near Costilla and are considered to be part of the Rio Grande main stem. Attorneys for the state have raised doubts about whether the deal was struck at “arm’s length” because El Prado board member John Painter has been employed as a contractor by Montoso and Montoso owner Alfred Keller for more than 20 years. El Prado Water and Montoso jointly sued the state in January, protesting the state’s “unreasonable refusal” to hand over the money for the Montoso purchase and another deal to buy 36 acre-feet of water rights in Arroyo Seco from Weimer Properties for $358,000. As part of the Abeyta Water Rights Settlement, El Prado was promised $2 million to buy water rights. The state Legislature has allocated money for Abeyta water rights purchases. That money is being held by the state. El Prado filed an application with the state engineer in 2011 to transfer the 17 acre-feet of rights to its existing wells and two yet-to-be-drilled wells near the regional airport. The application was protested and remains in limbo until its fate is decided at a public hearing. Many of the underground agricultural water rights associated with large (and in some cases, defunct) farms in Northern Taos County have already been snatched up by the likes of Santa Fe County, Molycorp and even El Prado Water. After the state raised concerns last fall that Keller’s asking price was too high, El Prado Water sought to prove that it was fair considering the apparent lack of options. In December 2013, Paul Saavedra with Santa Fe Engineering Consultants wrote El Prado board member Painter a brief letter on the availability of Rio

Please see wAteR, Page A-10

City plans hearing on Plaza The city is holding a public hearing Monday on Mayor Javier Gonzales’ proposal to close the streets around the Plaza to vehicular traffic. The hearing will be during the City Council’s Public Works Committee meeting, which starts at 5 p.m. at City Hall, 200 Lincoln Ave. City Councilor Peter Ives requested the public hearing last week during the meeting of the City Business and Quality of Life Committee, which endorsed the proposal. “I’m fine with that,” City Councilor Ron Trujillo, chairman of public works, said Friday. “Give the people here in Santa Fe the opportunity to speak on if they’re for closing the Plaza or not closing the Plaza.” The proposal, which also has been endorsed by the council’s Public Safety Committee, calls for closing Lincoln Avenue, San Francisco Street and Old Santa Fe Trail adjoining the Plaza park. The section of Palace Avenue in front of the Palace of the Governors has been closed for several years and would remain closed under the proposal. The New Mexican

Library holds nuggets on Kit Carson, New Mexico

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I was looking for material on Kit mecca for all scholars and writers interested in the Carson, the Santa Fe Trail and New American West Mexico in general. And I was not disappointed. is the famed Huntington The Huntington has Library in San Marino, many early and rare books Calif., 12 miles east of containing references to downtown Los Angeles. It Carson’s career as a mounhouses hundreds of thoutain man, trailblazer and sands of books and several soldier. I also located a million manuscripts. number of original letters The library is not open to and from Kit, written to the general public, and Marc when he was serving as to be admitted one needs Simmons agent for the Utes and Jicato present extensive creTrail Dust rilla Apaches in the 1850s. dentials and letters of referThere has always been ence, as I found on a recent some question over just visit. But once past the door, the red how literate Carson really was. We tape disappears and the place is a know that he received very little researcher’s dream.

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

The Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based educational and research institution established by Henry E. Huntington and located in San Marino, Calif. COURTESY PHOTO

schooling during his boyhood on the Missouri frontier. Indeed, he seems to have learned scarcely more than the fundamentals of reading and writing. While serving as Indian agent, Kit dictated all his correspondence to a

government clerk, placing no more than his signature. “C. Carson,” and the end. The “C” stood for Christopher.

Please see LiBRARY, Page A-10

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Keep the Faith Places of Faith & Service times in Santa Fe ANGLICAN

St. Thomas The Apostle Anglican Church An Anglican Holy Communion service is celebrated every Sunday morning at 11 a.m. by St.Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church. Services are held in the chapel located on the 3rd floor at Christus St.Vincent Regional Medical Center, 455 St. Michaels Drive, Santa Fe. Members of all faiths and traditions are welcome to attend. For information, contact Rev. Lanum, 505-603-0369.

BAPTIST

First Baptist Church of Santa Fe First Baptist Church of Santa Fe, 1605 Old Pecos Trail. Come join us this Sunday! 9:15 a.m- Bible Study for all ages; 10:30 am- Worship Services (interpreted for deaf). Wednesday, 6:15 pm- Bible Study/ Prayer Meeting led by Pastor Lee Herring; Adult Choir Rehearsal; 6:30 pm- “Ignite” for Youth. Childcare available for all services. For more information, please call the church office at 983-9141, 8:30 - 4:00, Monday - Friday, or visit our website www.fbcsantafe.com

WONDERFUL LOCATION! 1519 Fifth street Santa Fe {between Cerrillos and Community Spiritual Leader ! VISIT US AT www.everydaycsl.org for a full calender of events ... OR call 505-954-1438 for more information.

Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, creativity and service. Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s.All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when Live Video Streaming starts at www. santafecsl.org. Music: Sonic Crystals with Renee LeBeau and Rick Bastine. Message:“Is there Life after Death?” by Rev. Dr. Bernardo Monserrat. Information on workshops, classes, concerts, rentals, past lectures videos at www.santafecsl.org - www.facebook.com/SantaFeCSL - 505-983-5022.

CHRISTIAN

The Cowboy Church The Cowboy Church welcomes you! First you don’t have to be a cow-

Rodeo Road Baptist Church Sunday’s Sermon - April 27th – Critique Your Choices – 1 Peter 2:912. Upcoming events: Sunday May 4th – Introduction to Church Life at 9:30 a.m. June 16th to June 20th Vacation Bible School (ages 4 to Grade 6). Celebrate Recovery on each Wednesday at 5:30 p.m 3405 Vereda Baja (One block south of Rodeo Road on Richards; Visit us on the web at; www.rrbcsantafe.com; Call (505) 4739467; Like us on Facebook

BUDDHIST

boy. We are a growing family of believers who cheirsh our great western heritage and the grace based gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. We are about relationships not ritual or religion. Especially our personal relationship with Jesus. If you are looking for a church where you will get a handshake and a hello and can truely be yourself, come join us. Sunday 10:30 a.m.“Doc”Timmons Pastor. 4525 Highway 14. Just north of 599. www.cowboychurchofsantafecounty.com 505-603-4192

The Light at Mission Viejo Sunday Service 10:30; Men’s Prayer Ministry: Monday- Thursday Morning Prayer 6 a.m.; Women’s Ministry: Monthly on 4th Saturday, 9- 11 a.m.; Missions: Palomas, Mexico, monthly, second weekend; Youth:

Prajna Zendo

Amped- 6 p.m. Fridays; Consumed- Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; Singles

Meditation, Koan study, private interviews with two qualified Zen teachers. Retreats, classes, book study, dharma talks and more. Prajna Zendo is committed to its members and all beginners and practitioners who walk through its doors. Based on the lineage of Hakuyu Taizen Maezumi Roshi. Upcoming seven-day retreat: April 27- May 4. Sunday service, zazen and dharma talk starting 9:00am. Tuesday evening zazen at 7pm. Tuesday through Sunday morning zazen at 6am. Call 660-3045 for more information. 5 Camino Potrillo, Lamy, 15 minutes from Santa Fe just off of Hwy 285 next door to Eldorado. www.prajnazendo.org

Thubten Norbu Ling Buddhist Center

Joyful Life, Peaceful Death Thursday evenings 7:00-9:00.Taught by Geshe Thubten Sherab. Although death is inevitable, we usually avoid thinking about it and often lead our lives as though it will never happen.Tibetan Buddhist teachings on the subject of death provide a unique perspective on how to accept death as a part of life. Geshe Sherab will share his heart advice on how to properly prepare for your own death - as well as assist others upon their death - so that death can be experienced with peace of mind, knowing that we have truly lived our lives meaningfully and joyfully.Thubten Norbu Ling 1807 Second Street #35. For more information call 505-660-7056.

CATHOLIC

The Church of Antioch at Santa Fe Guest Speaker: Zen Priest Ray Olson and coordinator of Upaya Prison Outreach, will be sharing about Mindfulness Practices in Prison Ministry. Sunday at 8:45 a.m. in the Loretto Chapel, 207 Old Santa Fe Trail,Santa Fe, NM. Pastor, Most Rev. Daniel Dangaran, D. Min, Assoc. Pastor Rev. Mother Carol Calvert, Resident Priests Mother Jenni and Father Doug Walker invite you to come home to God, who has always loved you! (505) 983-9003 http://coasf.org We are a community of Faith in the Catholic Tradition (non-Roman) offering the Sacraments within a context of personal freedom, loving acceptance, service and mysticism.All are welcome.

Step-By-Step Bible Group Experience the true teachings of the Catholic Church. Giving your youth a starting chance away from the TV and video games.Bring them to a place where they can explore the bible at their own pace. Let them get to know God in a fun and unique atmosphere just a couple feet away. We invite you to join us for Bible Study Every Thursday 6-8pm at St. Anne’s 511 Alicia Street. Everyone is invited. There is a different subject every week. For More information Call Paul 470-4971 or Sixto 470-0913 www.stepbystepbg.net

(30+) meet monthly, 1st & 3rd Tuesday at 6 p.m.; Mid-week Spanish Service, Wednesday at 6 p.m.; Homeless Ministry, monthly 3rd Satur-

In observance of Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, Congregation Beit Tikva will be presenting a special multimedia program, Orpheus in Hell:The Roles and Meanings of Music in the Holocaust by Professor Joseph Moreno.A bagel and lox brunch starting at 10:00 am will be followed by the program at 11:00 am. Admission and brunch are free. Located at 2230 Old Pecos Trail, our synagogue follows Traditional Reform Judaism led by Rabbi Martin Levy and Cantor Michael Linder. Shabbat services are on Friday evenings at 7:30 pm. Torah Study on the Book of Leviticus is on Saturday mornings at 9:15 am. The Wednesday evening class is reading “The Death of Death.” Please visit our website, http://beittikvasantafe.org.

HaMakom HaMakom, the Place for Passionate and Progressive Judaism, is a welcoming Jewish congregation which uses the Conservative siddur and is influenced by Jewish Renewal. Shabbat services, led by Rabbi Malka Drucker, Rabbi Jack Shlachter and Hazzan Cindy Freedman are held every Saturday at 9:45 am. They are preceded by an hour of Jewish Studies from Jewish texts, including Torah and Talmud. HaMakom celebrates and conducts services for all the major Jewish Holidays and conducts a monthly lecture series. HaMakom is housed at St. Bede’s Episcopal Church, 1601 S. St. Francis Drive. For additional information call 992-1905, or visit www.hamakomtheplace.org.

Temple Beth Shalom Temple Beth Shalom is a handicap accessible, welcoming Reform Jewish Congregation with a great religious school and preschool (www.preschool.sftbs.org). Friday services begin at 6:30pm. Saturday mornings, enjoy bagels, lox, and Torah study, at 9:15. Stay for morning services at 10:30. Pray and study with Aaron Wolf at the Monday morning minyan, 8:00-9:00 am in the Upper Sanctuary. On Friday,April 25, Esther Kovari will speak at services about Raoul Wallenberg’s role in saving the Jewish population of Budapest during World War II. TBS’s Yom HaShoah observances will continue on Saturday,April 26, at 7pm. 205 E. Barcelona Road, 982-1376, www.sftbs.org.

2080. www.thelightatmissionviejo.org

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

First Church of Christ Scientist, Santa Fe Our church is designed to support the practice of Christian healing. Services consist of readings from the King James Bible and Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. Sunday service/Sunday School/Child care at 10:00 a.m.”Probation After Death” is the Bible Lesson for April 27th.Wednesday meetings at 12:10 p.m.and 7:30 p.m. Readings are on a timely topic followed by sharing healings attesting to the practical presence of God in our life. The noon meeting is informal. Bring your lunch and friends. Please join us! 323 East

LUTHERAN

Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church

We are a congregation of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. We believe that God’s grace is for everyone. If you are a life-long Lutheran, from another denomination or faith tradition, or searching on your spiritual path,you are equally welcome here. You are welcome no matter your age, ethnic background, church history, political perspective, economic condition, marital status, sexual orientation or gender identity, or education. We are located at 1701 Chamiso Arroyo, telephone: 505-983-9461. Our Sunday worship services are a spoken liturgy at 8:00 am and a sung liturgy at 10:00. The choir meets at 6:00pm Thursday evenings in the sanctuary. All singers are welcome.

Cordova Road. ww.christiansciencesantafe.org

DISCIPLES OF CHRIST

First Christian Church of Santa Fe First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Santa Fe, 645 Webber Street, worships at 10:30 on Sunday mornings. We are an open and affirming congregation with communion open to all who wish to partake. Viento de Gracia (Disciples of Christ) meets in the same

Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS) 209 East Barcelona Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505. Sunday Schedule: 9:30AM Divine Service; 10:45AM Sunday School for kids and Bible study for adults. Continue to celebrate with us the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Immanuel Church is located just west to the New Mexico Children’s Museum which is at the corner of Old Pecos Trail and East Barcelona Road. 983-7568, www.ilc-sfnm.org

building with services in Spanish on Sundays 5 pm and Thursdays at

METHODIST

7 pm. All are welcome. Located two blocks south of the state capital building.We support global hunger relief through Week of Compasion, Christian Ministry through the Disciples of Christ, and local hunger relief through Food for Santa Fe. We can be found on the web at www.santafedisciples.org.

EPISCOPAL

Church of the Holy Faith Episcopal The Church of the Holy Faith, celebrating 150 years of Episcopal worship in Santa Fe, welcomes all people to an ever deepening relation8:30 a.m. Choral (with Children’s Chapel), 11:00 a.m. Choral Eucharist. Adult Forum at 9:50 a.m. Sunday Nursery 8:15-12:15 p.m. Tuesdays at 6:00 p.m.: Taize Eucharist with Prayers for Healing (Nursery 5:30-7:15 p.m.); Wednesday and Thursday: Holy Eucharist at 12:10 p.m. in the Chapel; Youth Group 12:30 p.m. for Pizza and Bible Study first and third Sundays; Children’s Adventures on Tuesdays seasonally.

St. Bede’s Episcopal Church St. Bede’s is a Christ-centered servant community rooted in Holy Scripture, tradition and reason as practiced by the Episcopal Church, located at 1601 S.St.Francis Drive. Sunday services on Sunday April 27,

The Celebration of Santa Fe

The Celebration of Santa Fe, a Sunday Service Different! Now in our 23rd year as an ongoing experience of a heart-centered, non-denominational spiritual community that honors all paths. Our service is truly new and different every week because we create it anew. Lively, creative, synchronistic, music-filled, inspirational, uplifting, that’s us! The speaker for Sunday, April 27 is Deanna Hallmark,“My Own Vagina Monlogue.” Special music by Russell and Natalie Walden. Sunday at 10:30am, NEA-NM Bldg., 2007 Botulph Rd., enter around back. www. facebook.com/thecelebrationsf

Unity

Are you looking for an inclusive spiritual (not religious) commUnity? Please join us Easter Sunday at 10:30am for music, meditation, and celebrate the resurrection of your own Christ Consciousness. Rev. Brendalyn’s message, “Rise Up and Choose Life”, will support you in rising out of lack, limitation and difficulty into a greater experience in living.The service will include a Phoenix Rising meditation. All are welcome and honored. Call 505-989-4433 for information. unitysantafe.org Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way (North side of 599 bypass @ Camino de los Montoyas (2.4 miles from 84/285, 8.4 miles from Airport Road).

ORTHODOX

Holy Trinity Orthodox Church The Eastern Orthodox Church continues to celebrate the beautiful and joyous 40 day Feast of Pascha or Easter! This Sunday we remember St. Thomas and will explore the meaning and purpose of doubt in the life of faith. Our Services include Great Vespers every Saturday at 5:30pm, Matins on Sunday at 8:15am, and the main Sunday service, the Divine Liturgy,at 9:30am.Following Liturgy we have a meal and all are invited. We also have a book study on Wednesdays at 11am, and an Inquirer’s Class each Saturday afternoon at 4pm. Classes are led by Fr. John Bethancourt. 231 E Cordova Road 983-5826 FrJohnB@aol.com.www. holytrinitysantafe.org.

PRESBYTERIAN

Christ Church Santa Fe (PCA) Our Presbyterian church is at Don Gaspar Ave and Cordova Road. Our focus is on the historical truths of Jesus Christ, His Love and Redemptive Grace...and our contemporary response. Sunday services are 8:45 and 10:45 AM (childcare provided). Children and Youth Ministry activities also available. Call us at (505) 982-8817 or visit our website at christchurchsantafe.org for more information.

First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) Celebrating Earth Day with services at 8:30 and 11:00 a.m., led by guest preacher Rev. George Packard, and an Earth Awareness Fair between services.The fair includes information about water, recycling, gardening, food, energy, and sales of homemade soup and fair trade products. Childcare is available. On Wednesdays year-round Morning Prayer at 7:00 a.m. with Contemplative Gatherings at 5:30 p.m. in the evenings.TGIF Concert every Friday at 5:30 p.m. We are located downtown at 208 Grant Ave. More information is available at www. fpcsantefe.org or by phone 982-8544.

Westminster Presbyterian (PCUSA)

Sunday,April 27: Find a warm and welcoming church home at St. John’s. We have two worship celebrations on Sunday morning at 8:30 and 11am. Pastor Greg Kennedy preaches at both services. Sunday Classes for all ages at 9:45 - 10:45am. Children’s message and nursery at both services. St. John’s Bag n’ Hand Food Pantry is asking that we bring 2 lb bags of rice to help them serve our brothers and sisters in Christ. St. John’s is on the web at www.sjumcsantafe. org, on Facebook, and by phone 982-5397.

A Multi-cultural Faith Community, St. Francis Dr. at West Manhattan. 11 AM on April 27,The Second Sunday of Easter, Rev. Elizabeth Graham. Message:“Faith without Smoke and Mirrors. Scripture:Acts 2:14a, 22-32 and John 20: 19-31. Social Hour following Worship. ¡ ALL ARE WELCOME ! Thursday at 5:30 PM – Taizé Services. PEACE, JOY & BLESSINGS UNTOLD for singles and married; seekers and doubters; slackers and workaholics; can’t sing, black and proud; no habla ingles; tourists; bleeding hearts … AND YOU! Contact us at 505-9838939 (Tues-Fri, 9-1) or wpcsantafe@gmail.com

NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Eckankar For people of all beliefs, a community HU chant will be held at 10:00 a.m., on Sunday, May 3, at Santa Fe Soul. The twenty-minute chant includes singing HU, a universal word that opens the heart, followed by a silent contemplation period. Eckankar, Religion of the Light and Sound of God offers ways to explore one’s unique relationship with the Divine through personal inner and outer experience. For information visit Meetup.com (Santa Fe Spiritual Experiences Group), or call 800-876-6704. For an uplifting video on the HU song, see www.miraclesinyourlife.org

2014, at 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. (7:00 p.m. in Spanish). Visit www.stbedesantafe.org or call 982-1133 for more information. St. Bede’s wel-

ativity and service. Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s.All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when Live Video Streaming starts at www. santafecsl.org. Music: Sonic Crystals with Renee LeBeau and Rick Bastine. Message:“Is there Life after Death?” by Rev. Dr. Bernardo Monserrat. Information on workshops, classes, concerts, rentals, past lectures videos at www.santafecsl.org - www.facebook.com/SantaFeCSL - 505-983-5022.

St. John’s United Methodist Church

ship with the Lord Jesus Christ. Sunday Eucharists: 7:30 a.m. (spoken);

CENTER FOR SPRITUAL LIVING

Everyday CSL is a spirited community committed to empowering people to live joy-filled lives.Our Sunday service celebrations speak to living our lives to the fullest with rockin’ upbeat music to open our hearts. Come join our community as we grow together into our best lives. 9:30 am Meditation 10:00 am Service. Join us at our NEW

Congregation Beit Tikva

day; Mid-Week Prayer: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. Information: 505-982-

Call 982 4447. www.holyfaithchurchsf.org.

Everyday Center For Spiritual Living

JEWISH

and St.Michaels}. Come meet Rev.Gayle Dillon ,Founding Minister

comes traditional and nontraditional families. The Episcopal Church

The Santa Fe Center of Light

welcomes you. La Iglesia Episcopal les da la bienvenida.

We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, cre-

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

The United Church of Santa Fe “What Next?” Take the Journey to New Life with United Church! 8:30 Communion and 11:00 Worship Services led by Rev. Talitha Arnold, Rev. Brandon Johnson, Steinway Artist Jacquelyn Helin. Children’s Ministry and Young Adventurers during 11:00 Worship. 9:45 Adult Forum: Report from Navajoland with United Youth and Adults. Children’s Games and Choir also at 9:45. Childcare throughout the morning. Sunday, May 4, at 12:30. United We Run/Walk! 5K/1K Race t benefit St. Elizabeth, Esperanza and Interfaith Shelters. . Love God, Neighbor and Creation! United Church of Santa Fe. 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). 505-988-3295. unitedchurchofsantafe.org. Facebook, too!

Need to add your organization? Contact us at 986-3000 • classad@sfnewmexican.com


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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

© 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 19

Are you an eagle-eyed reader? Circle the seven errors in the article below. Then, rewrite it correctly.

here ar are two ways we get the energy that creates the electricity renewable energy and the we use e everyday. One way is called re non-renewable. other is non n-renewable.

a r child to make u yo h it w rk o W your home that list of things in ty. Divide the ci require electri categories: items into two PTIONAL. O ESSENTIAL and

Throughout the day, the oshun tide rises and falls. A tidal range of about 10 foots is large enough to produce energee.

Oil and coal are non-renewable sources source of energy.

Think about it – when your family a car uses use up the gasoline in its tank, you have ha to get more. Gasoline, made from oil, and coal are burned make energy. Once they are to mak more is needed to make energy. burned they are gone and mo

Renewable Energy

Renewable energy comes from sources that don’t get used up in the process of making energy. The five main sources of renewable energy are: water or hydropower geothermal wind solar long distance biomass (includes power lines wood, methane, ethanol, biodiesel)

reservoir dam

hydroelectric harnesses A hyd droelectrric dam h arnesses the energy moving water. Hydropower is produced by moving the least expe ensive form of renewable energy expensive energy.

How it works:

generator

• A dam is built on a river creating a reservoir.

sluice gate

A dam, or barrage, can be built across an inlet. Sluice gates control the flow of water and allow the tidal basin to phil when the tide comes in and empty when the tide goes owt. Water pushes against turbines from both directions with the incoming and outgoing tides. There are only six tidal power barrages operating in the world but the potential for energy is be developed. Ocean wayves create tremendous energy and ways to capture this kind of energy are a challenge for the scientists and inventors of the future.

• Water in the reservoir collects behind the dam wall. Dam operators control the flow of water with a sluice gate. • When released, the water pushes through a pipe (called a penstock) beneath the water’s surface. penstock

• This turns a turbine that then rotates a generator to produce electricity.

turbine

20

24

4

14

Photo credits: 31: Filnko, 20: U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, 24: Busfahrer, 14: Mikano, 4: Adam Kliczek, 30: NASA.

31

outflow

30 17 + 13 23 - 19 18 + 2 15 + 16 28 - 14 16 + 8

= = = = = =

Aswan High Dam, Egypt Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona Grand Coulee Dam, Washington Three Gorges Dam, China Hoover Dam, Nevada Niagara Hydroelectric Power Station, New York

The refrigerator is one of the biggest electricity-guzzling appliances in your house. Use the code to thaw out the missing parts of the Frigid Fact.

Standards Link: Social Science: Students recognize individual civic responsibility to protect the resources in our environment.

RENEWABLE BIOMASS TURBINE SOURCES SLUICE ENERGY SOLAR POWER LINES WATER BULBS TANK PIPE WIND DAM

Electric Words

Look through the newspaper for 10 or more words that describe electricity and/or what electricity does. Words like “power,” “run,” “on,” “off,” etc. Write a poem or paragraph about electricity with your words. Standards Link: Writing: Students create poems or prose addressing a topic with supporting details.

Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.

Standards Link: Spelling: Spell grade-level words correctly.

Y G R E N E D R E E B U L B S A N E L W E S S A M O I B A B N P L E E R A L O S I I L R E W O P N W B P I K E E I R G A R E N N I N O N W T U A E C I U L S D E T R S O U R C E S R Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

This week’s word:

HARNESS

The verb harness means to gain control of something and use it for a purpose. Solar panels harness the energy of the sun. Try to use the word harness in a sentence today when talking with your friends and family members.

What does “green” mean?

Power Surge

Look through the newspaper for things that need electricity. For each example, make a list of ways people could accomplish the same work without using electricity. ANSWER: You have to pay for electricity.

Standards Link: Physical Science: Elecrical energy can be converted to heat, light and motion.

FAST FACT: Niagara Falls, where hydroelectric operation began in 1895, produces enough energy to light 24 million 100-watt light bulbs all at once!

What does the term “green” mean when used to describe businesses and lifestyles? What do you do that is “green”?


Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Family calendar

FAMILY

Saturday, April 26

Explain first, laugh with kids later Question: Our 4-year-old hams and love to perform and make daughter has a huge problem with people laugh. It sounds to me like being laughed at. She loves to be your daughter is caught betwixt and goofy and do funny things, but as between these two opposing traits, soon as someone, including one as if she can’t make up her mind of us, laughs at her, she becomes whether she wants to be a comeupset. She will say “Don’t laugh!” or dian or not. If you only continue “I don’t want you to laugh at me!” to muddle through these upsets as We explain that we aren’t laughyou’re doing — and you’re actually John ing at her but at the funny things doing fine — this little bump in the Rosemond road she does. We’ve also told her that will smooth itself out within a Living With we laugh because we are happy year or two. There may be, however, Children and having a good time with her. some things you can do to hurry the Is there a different way to explain process along. this to her so that she will understand that we Obviously, trying to explain your laughter aren’t trying to be mean or tease her in any after she’s become upset is not working; thereway? fore, I recommend that you be more proactive. Answer: Maybe. First, however, some I call the approach I’m going to describe “Strikbackground: A child’s social personality is ing While the Iron is Cold.” In other words, forming at this age. As such, it’s not unusual deal with the problem or issue when it’s not for a 3- or 4-year-old to be somewhat “contaking place and hasn’t for a while. flicted” when it comes to personality traits like Sit down with her at a time when the home introversion versus extroversion. Some 4-year- has been calm for a while and this particular olds, for example, are very self-conscious and issue hasn’t happened for a day or more. Tell therefore easily embarrassed when people pay her that you want to talk about her reaction attention to things they’re doing. Others are to people who laugh when she does funny

things. To help her understand that the laughter is not personal, point out times when she has laughed when someone else, even a character on one of her favorite television shows, has done something funny. Then, ask her what she wants you (and other people) to do when she does something funny, as in, “Do you want us to laugh or clap or do you just want us to sit there and not even look at you, like this?” (Make a ludicrously serious face to help make the point.) Try to get across to her that the alternative to laughing is not natural. Point out, for example, that it would be strange if her favorite television character did something funny and no one laughed. By discussing several alternatives to laughing, you will draw her into the problem-solving process. She may begin to see that laughter is what she actually is looking for. My experience is that a conversation of this sort will begin to bring about resolution, although you might have to have several more like it before it finally sets in. Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions at www.parentguru.com.

Drawing the line on school dress codes

E

RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. CINDERELLA CONFIDENTIAL: The Santa Fe Performing Arts Youth Program presents a “no-holds-barred comic exposé of the timeless love story and what it means to find and tell the truth” 2 p.m. at the Armory for the Arts Theater, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; tickets are $8. Call 984-1370.

Monday, April 28 NATURE PLAYTIMES: Toddlers, preschoolers and their caregivers are invited to the Pajarito Environmental Education Center in Los Alamos to explore the natural world from 10 to 11 a.m.. Each Playtime features a craft, story and outside activity; no charge; 3540 Orange St.; call 662-0460.

VANSTON, Ill. — They’re called leggings — popular fashion items that are tight-fitting pants to some, and glorified tights to others.

From left, Kate McClintock, 12, Kate Green, 13, and Lilly Bond, 13, look at their smartphones April 3 at Lilly’s home in Evanston, Ill. The friends are seventh-graders at Haven Middle School in Evanston, which has been at the center of a controversy over its dress code. Parents and students, including these girls, complain that the school’s restrictions on girls’ attire, including leggings, is inconsistent and targets girls with certain body types. MARTHA IRVINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

University in Pennsylvania, the courts tend to throw the cases back to the schools and parents, so they can come up with solutions together. It’s not always easy, since many people have a different notion of what’s appropriate and what’s not — and what’s distracting, and what’s not. At Haven Middle School, there has been a lot of confusion. Just a few weeks ago, the school’s own website said leggings were banned, when apparently they were not, school officials now say. Then there was the matter of yoga pants, which are tight like leggings, but flared at the bottom. Did the fingertip rule also apply to those types of pants, especially when no one could tell the difference if they were tucked into boots, which is also a popular style among teens? The discussions at school meetings have sometimes bordered on silly. But few disagree that there are serious issues at hand here — among them, whether girls are being shamed and unnecessarily embarrassed at a time when they’re already starting to feel more aware of their changing bodies. Clearly frustrated with the debate, Haven Middle School teachers posted this statement on the school’s website to explain the reasoning behind the leggings policy: “We believe, through years of experience and professionalism, that it is essential to our school’s climate that we set a standard of expectation and decorum.” They denied that they acted because leggings distract boys, as

SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. GREAT AMERICAN CLEANUP: Volunteers young and old will help clean up city streets, parks, arroyos and school campuses. Registration is from 7-9 a.m. at 1142 Siler Road. Cleanup is until noon, and then KSFB hosts a picnic to thank hardworking volunteers. CINDERELLA CONFIDENTIAL: The Santa Fe Performing Arts Youth Program presents a “no-holds-barred comic exposé of the timeless love story and what it means to find and tell the truth.” 2 p.m. at the Armory for the Arts Theater, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; tickets are $8. Call 984-1370. SOLAR FIESTA: From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Santa Fe Community College holds renewable energy workshops, adobe building workshop, kids activities and solar oven cooking. EARTH DAY AT THE RAILYARD PARK: From noon to 4 p.m., a event in celebration of Earth Day includes a parade, live music, storytelling, gardening workshops and hands-on demonstrations. HAIRCUTS FOR KIDS: Make the Cut Salon, 1400 Agua Fría St., is donating all fees and tips to the nonprofit Child Help, an organization that works for the prevention and treatment of child abuse. Adult haircuts are $20; child cuts are $10. Additional cash donations and contributions of new toys also will be accepted. BIKE-A-THON: Earth Care and Zona del Sol are holding a 10-mile cross-town bike ride and solar ribbon-cutting. The ride starts at 2:30 p.m. at the the Railyard Park and ends at Zona del Sol’s celebration and solar system ribbon-cutting from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Visit http://www.earthcarenm. org/2014/03/bike-a-thon-for-earth-day-and-to-bring-solarto-the-southside-of-santa-fe/. GUIDED NATURE WALK: Join Steven Hamp in exploring the local geology of Bear Canyon on a nature walk above the Randall Davey Audubon Center & Sanctuary. Find out how the Sangre de Cristo Mountains were formed and how the local features explain early geologic events in New Mexico. This will be an easy to moderate walk of no more than 1.5 miles. RSVP to scary@audubon.org or 983-4609, ext. 27. FAMILY MOVIE MATINEE: Enjoy a family-oriented movie at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; call 955-4863. BALLET NEXT: The Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St., presents an elite dance troupe dedicated to presenting classical ballet as well as contemporary choreography. Call 988-1234.

Sunday, April 27

BY MARTHA IRVINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Younger girls often wear them as pants with little fuss. But as those same girls approach middle school, leggings have become a clothing accessory that’s increasingly controversial — and seemingly, the favorite new target of the school dress code. Some schools have banned leggings outright. Others have set limits. Haven Middle School in Evanston, just north of Chicago, took what turned out to be a contentious stand: If you wear leggings, you need to have a shirt or skirt over them that reaches at least down to your fingertips. In other words, girls need to cover their behinds. It might seem a reasonable enough request at a time when school dress codes — and even school uniforms — are common and often supported by teachers and administrators who frequently complain about students who push the limits of good taste, and the parents who let them (and may even push those limits themselves). But how far is too far? And do schools sometimes go too far in pushing back? Judges have tended to side with schools when safety is a concern. For example, a federal court agreed with a school district in Morgan Hill, Calif., after some high school students were told not to wear American flag T-shirts on the Mexican holiday of Cinco de Mayo in 2010. The worry was that the shirts would incite conflict with the school’s many Hispanic students. When safety isn’t an issue, says Perry Zirkel, a professor of education and law at Lehigh

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Tuesday, April 29

Delaney Clements, 11, left, and Kamryn Renfro, 9, stand together at a hospital in Colorado. Kamryn was suspended from her public charter school in Grand Junction because a shaved head goes against the school’s dress code. AP PHOTO

has been alleged by some parents. “The notion that girls’ clothing affects the way boys learn is not, and never will be, our message,” the statement said. However, parents who’ve attended school meetings, and students who dislike the policy, seem most troubled by an inconsistency in enforcement. They claim that some girls are “dress-coded” more than others, perhaps because they are more physically developed. They say, for example, that they have heard comments like, “If you were smaller, you could wear this and it would be fine.” “I’ve also seen skinny, smaller girls walking around in leggings every week and never, ever getting caught for it,” says Kate Green, a seventh-grader at Haven who concedes that she probably fits that category herself. She’s had warnings, she said, but never more than that, when other girls have had to put their gym shorts over their outfits if they’re in dress code violation. Parents Kevin and Juliet Bond wrote an open letter to the district after their 13-year-old daughter Lilly sensed unfairness and

asked them to address it. “It’s not like these girls are dressing up like street corner gals, right? I mean, it’s sweatshirts and comfy pants,” says Juliet Bond, an author and professor of women’s studies at a Chicago liberal arts college. Members of the advisory board say the dress code policy will be reviewed for the next school year. The key, school board member Suni Kartha said, would be to come up with a clear, consistent policy with as little “judgment” as possible. There are those who argue that the best way to handle the dress code dilemma is to mandate uniforms, such as the blue pants and white shirts worn by Chicago Public Schools students. “It puts everyone on the same playing field when they’re at school,” says Kitty Rotella, principal of St. Mark’s Episcopal School, a private school for preschool through eighth grade in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. But others question the value of any strict codes. “We were always pro dress code. Now I think, ‘Is it really that important?’ ” says Jamie Renfro. She’s the mother of third-grader Kamryn Renfro, who recently gained national attention when she decided to shave her head to support her 11-year-old friend Delaney Clements, who has cancer and lost her hair after chemotherapy. After she shaved her head, 9-year-old Kamryn was suspended from her public charter school in Grand Junction, Colo. — though the school’s board quickly reversed the decision. Now, because of her daughter’s experience, Renfro says she catches herself paying attention at school events to dress code violations — earrings that might be too big, or a boy’s hair that is longer than shoulder length. “But does the length of the kids’ hair necessarily affect them in the classroom?” she asks. “I really doubt it does.”

PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m.; Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; call 955-4860. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Main Library, 145 Washington Ave.; call 955-6783. SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. SANTA FE PUBLIC SCHOOLS MUSIC PERFORMANCE: Middle school and high school orchestras perform at the Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St., at 6:30 p.m.; no cost.

Wednesday, April 30 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; call 955-4863. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; call 955-4863. WEE WEDNESDAY: Enjoy bilingual preschool stories, songs and games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359. SCIENCE CAFE FOR YOUNG THINKERS: Melissa Savage of Four Corners Institute will lead an open student discussion on “Conserving Otters of the World” at the Georgia O’Keeffe Education Annex, 123 Grant Avenue, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Admission is free. Light refreshments will be served. LEARN ABOUT GIRLS SCHOOL: The Santa Fe Girls’ School, a private middle school for girls, is hosting a house party for fifth-grade families who are interested in knowing more about the school from 5:30-6:30 p.m. at a current parent’s home. For more information, please call Janet Graham, director of admissions, at 820-3188.

Thursday, May 1 CHILDREN’S STORY HOUR: Readings from picture books for children up to age 5; 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. at Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St.; no charge, call 988-4226. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; call 955-4863. TRY IT THURSDAYS: Children 16 and under are free on Thursdays after 4 p.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359.

Friday, May 2 GARDEN SPROUTS: Stories and hands-on activities for children ages 3 to 5 with a caregiver from 10 to 11 a.m., sponsored by the Santa Fe Botanical Gardens and Railyard Stewards. Meet in the Railyard Community Room. $5 suggested donation; free to members. Santa Fe Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Road, 316-3596. PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes and crafts for children ages 2 to 5 from 11 to 11:30 a.m. at the Main Library, 145 Washington Ave., 955-6783. CHILDREN’S THEATER PRODUCTION: The Santa Fe Playhouse presents Paja and the Peanut or The Picky Princesses at 7 p.m. The original play, with music by Jeff Tarnoff and JoJo Sena-Tarnoff, was adapted and directed by Rebecca Morgan. PARADE OF PLAYHOUSES: New Mexico Appleseed holds a fundraiser at the Albuquerque BioPark Zoo at 6 p.m. Ten of New Mexico’s hottest architects, builders and designers have come together to create 10 amazing playhouses to be auctioned off to support the fight against poverty in New Mexico. Music, cocktails and playhouse stroll from 6 to 7 p.m., dinner and auction: 7 to 9 p.m. Tickets are $75; purchase your tickets or tables at www.paradeofplayhouses.com. FIRST FRIDAY FORTS: On the first Friday of every month, kids who like building forts (and their parents) are invited to build and play from 3:30 to 5 p.m. at the Pajarito Environmental Education Center in Los Alamos; no charge; 3540 Orange St.; call 662-0460. STORY TIME: Stories and activities for children from 11 to 11:45 a.m. at the Vista Grande Public Library, 14 Avenida Torreon in Eldorado; call 466-7323. PREP MARIACHI: The Youth Symphony at Santa Fe Preparatory School, 1101 Camino de Cruz Blanca, will perform at the school’s Driscoll Auditorium. Call 467-3770.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

Water: Price $20K per acre-foot Continued from Page A-6 Grande water rights in the area. Saavedra concluded the only main stem Rio Grande rights for sale were those owned by Keller. He went on to say since Keller is asking $20,000 an acre-foot, he “is setting the fair market value at this time.” In a market with limited supply, Painter finds himself in the unique position of being linked to both an eager buyer and the only vocal seller. And though the state has raised a red flag about Painter’s role, he sees himself as more of a benevolent matchmaker than an opportunist. For years, Painter has warned that Taos County water rights will go downriver unless someone in the area buys them up. He sees his connection to a big water- rights holder like Keller as a chance for El Prado customers that might not exist otherwise. Keller owns hundreds of acre-feet of water rights in northern Taos County, including the 17 acre-feet at Top of the World and another 695 acre-feet that came from Ute Mountain Farms. As an El Prado board member, Painter says he desperately hopes the district is able to buy the 17 acre-feet to serve its customers. But as Keller’s ranch manager, he said the rights could go to another buyer if the district doesn’t get money from the state. Despite state and local critics’ concerns about kickbacks, Painter swears he sees no financial benefit if El Prado Water uses public funds to buy

water rights from his employer. It’s impossible to confirm or disprove Painter’s assertion. A purchase contract between El Prado and Montoso purports to describe how the deal came to be. The contract states that Painter asked Keller (identified as owner of Montoso Bison Company Inc.) if he was interested in selling 17 acre-feet of water rights he owned at Top of the World Farms. The contract states that Keller “answered in the affirmative” and “conveyed the price he would sell for,” and Painter passed this information on to the El Prado board. The board voted in October 2013 to buy the rights, and according to the contract, Painter abstained. Painter is adamant that he is a “contractor” not an “employee” of Montoso Bison Co., and he says he has no ownership in the company. In corporate records kept by the state, Keller is listed as president of the Montoso Bison Co. Painter is identified as the secretary. Painter isn’t the only link between Montoso/Keller and El Prado. Prominent water rights attorney James Brockman was hired by El Prado to handle its Abeyta Settlement negotiations. Brockman has also done legal work for Keller, including preparing applications for the State Engineer’s Office related to large water rights transfers in northern Taos County. Similarly, Frank Coppler, the attorney who filed the joint complaint against the state, does legal work for the district. Coppler is currently handling

a case for the district brought by a former contractor alleging misuse of public funds. Coppler is also a lobbyist for Keller, according to state records. For years, Keller unsuccessfully pushed a bill at the Legislature that would allow a water rights owner to keep those rights if “circumstances beyond the [owner’s] control” prevent the water from actually being used. State water law is based on the “use it or lose it” principle that requires water rights be put to “beneficial use” or risk being forfeited. The State Engineer’s Office repeatedly raised concerns that the bill would legitimize speculation in water rights by relaxing the requirement that water rights be exercised at a specified location. The bill would have helped Keller hang on to rights he bought from Ute Mountain Farms and moved to the Cerro San Cristobal Ranch on the west side of the Rio Grande Gorge in 1998. Keller repeatedly had to ask the State Engineer’s Office to grant extensions to the beneficial use requirement (at least seven requests between 1999 and 2005, according to the state engineer’s records) because the ranch was unable to produce enough water. Painter said in an interview this week that the ranch is still only using about half of its full water rights. Asked if Keller would be willing to sell some of those rights to the district, Painter said “not at this time.” The Taos News is a sister paper of The Santa Fe New Mexican.

Library: Valuable manuscripts removed from N.M. archives Ritch claimed that his documents, some of which dated back to the Spanish colonial period, One of the Huntington letters not only has the had been collected to prevent their destruction usual signature, but a number of revisions and or dispersal. Maybe so. But a portion of what he corrections of Carson’s writing are legible and acquired and eventually carried out of the terrineat. They show that he could handle a quill pen tory appears to have been lifted from the governwith confidence and was not quite the country ment archives to which he had unlimited access. bumpkin we may have thought. The result was that some of our most fascinatThrough much of the Civil War and the ing and valuable official records are now housed Indian campaigns of the 1860s, Kit commanded in California instead of New Mexico. But at least the First Regiment of New Mexico Volunteers they are well cared for. with the rank of colonel. Most of his many I was particularly intrigued by an account biographies give a general sketch of his military book in the Ritch Collection, dated 1825, that activities. But I discovered something that had came from the Mexican customs house at Santa not been reported before. Fe. When American merchants arrived from In April 1864 and again in July 1865, Kit was Missouri with their loaded wagons, customs the presiding military officer at the court martial officers examined the cargoes and levied tariffs. of soldiers charged with serious offenses. The The records, of course, were kept in Spanish. trials were conducted in Santa Fe. Copies of the This tax accounting provides us a good look proceedings are preserved at the Huntington. at the types of wares imported from the U.S. While the records tell nothing about Carson and sold later in Santa Fe, El Paso and Chihuahimself, they do establish his presence in the hua. Cloth was the most common article, both New Mexican capital for those dates. because it was in demand and because it was Of more personal interest are comments light and easy to carry by wagon over the plains. about Kit made by Jessie Benton Frémont in one A wide assortment of personal items included of the Huntington’s rare books. She described buttons, combs, ribbons, razors, pen knives him, after a meeting, as “a true gentleman and and glass earrings. And we can add a variety of like a knight of King Arthur’s time.” And she hardware and fancy food in tins. I had been told adds, “He had that most lovable combination of that the historical riches of the Huntington were a happy and reasoning patience under trial, with almost beyond reckoning, and that proved true. quick resource and courage equal to all proof.” My experience there left me eager to return one Another useful source at the Huntington is day and pry a few more nuggets of New Mexico the Ritch Collection of New Mexico manuhistory from that peerless collection. scripts. Containing more than 2,000 items, it was assembled by William G. Ritch while he Now in semi-retirement, author Marc Simmons was territorial secretary of New Mexico from wrote a weekly history column for more than 35 years. The New Mexican is publishing reprints 1873 to 1885. He had an abiding interest in local history and was elected the first president of the from among the more than 1,800 columns he produced during his career. New Mexico Historical Society in 1880.

Continued from Page A-6

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u A witness told police that he saw someone throwing rocks at state vehicles in the 1300 block of Siler Road and at the Homewise building, 1301 Siler Road, at 11 p.m. Thursday. A report said the trucks’ windshields were broken, and six windows at Homewise were shattered. A suspect was arrested, the report says, but it doesn’t identify the person or state the charges. u A woman reported that someone stole all the copper waterlines from a plot of property in the 2400 block of Rosina Street between April 1 and

3 p.m. Thursday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Someone broke into a home in the 1300 block of Boylan Lane and stole a PlayStation 3 gaming console, a set of headphones, a computer tablet and a digital camera between 7:50 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Thursday. u Sheriff’s deputies responded to a domestic disturbance at a home in the 3600 block of Luna Y Sol sometime Thursday. A deputy reported that the suspect allegedly grabbed the victim’s arm, pushed her and then broke her vehicle windows. The victim

had visible injuries, according to the report. Deputies were unable to locate the suspect Thursday. u A woman reported that while she was driving, someone tried to force her off the road near Sunlit Drive at about 8 p.m. Thursday. u Jennifer Pribble, 40, of Arroyo Seco was arrested on a charge of battery against a household member and resisting an officer at a home on Boneyard Road sometime Thursday. u Someone broke into a home on Valle Tapia in Pojoaque between April 10 and April 17 and stole assorted tools and electronics.

JANICE L. WEATHERFORD Janice Lynn Weatherford, 63, a May baby, born May 19, 1950 in Russellville AL died April 23, 2014. Daughter of Foss James and the late Mabel Grant Weatherford, she was a graduate of Russellville High School and Birmingham Southern College. Jan became the first woman hired into industrial chemical sales for Diamond Shamrock Chemical Co. She spent her career in global chemical sales working for BASF Corporation for almost 25 years retiring in April 2014. For 22 years Jan and her wife, Barbara Odell, lived in southeastern PA outside of Philadelphia. In the summer of 2012 they retired to Santa Fe NM into a net zero energy home. Jan worked daily, via phone and email from PA, with the builder to design their home. Her goal was to build a sustainable home, 100% solar, complete with universal design and numerous green features where she and Barb could remain through their retirement years. Jan and Barb’s home was truly reflective of their values of sustainable living. Though Jan retired only recently, she had been out on term disability with psoriatic arthritis, a condition that made daily tasks difficult. In May 2013 she was diagnosed with a rare form of ovarian cancer, a stage 3 carcinosarcoma. She underwent treatment in Albuquerque and subsequently at MD Anderson in Houston, but cancer returned in February 2014. Jan knew she had a fight on her hands and she fought bravely, amazing everyone who knew her with her unrelenting courage. Besides her wife, Barbara, she leaves behind her father, Foss James Weatherford in Russellville AL, a brother-in-law George Odell in CT, a supportive and loving family of cousins in AL, a set of ’second parents,’ the Jacksons in Gulf Shore, AL, and many long time friends dating back to childhood. Jan’s family and friends lived throughout the U.S. and Canada, and she loved to chat with them as often as possible. In the brief period she was in Santa Fe, Jan developed strong relationships with her pool and tai chi friends, as well as her neighbors, and those friendships will comfort Barb going forward. She was predeceased by her mother, Mabel Grant Weatherford of Russellville, AL and her mother-in-law, Lucy Randazzo Odell of Wethersfield, CT. Jan had many passions including gardening, both vegetable and flower (harvest from her veggie garden will be donated to The Food Depot this year), reading (she checked the library service in Santa Fe before moving), LGBT civil rights (serving on the Human Rights Campaign Board of Governors from Philadelphia), Democratic politics (local and national), and same sex marriage equality. Jan and Barb were married the first time in MA in 2005, then again on August 23, 2013 in Santa Fe, becoming one of the first same-sex couples to wed here on that historic day. Besides her love for Barb, Jan loved, adored, and cherished her dogs. This was a major factor in why Barb brought Jan home to be on hospice, so she could be surrounded by her ’children’. Jan has always known that she would meet those pets that died before her on Rainbow Bridge where Sugar, Satchel, Casey, Cain, Indigo, Koda, Skye and the rest would run to greet her. There they would play forever in green fields under blue skies. New Mexico Mortuary Service of Albuquerque NM is handling cremation. Dedicated, compassionate and unsurpassed hospice care was provided by PMS Hospice Center of Santa Fe and donations may be made to them in Jan’s memory. Home care assistance was by Olivas Sisters Home Care, a service provided with such understanding and love they became like family in a short time. A memorial gathering will be announced at a later date. ALBERT "AL" CARINCI Age 83, of Albuquerque, NM went to be with the Lord Friday, March 21, 2014. Son to Dionino and Sarafina Carinci, Al was born in Pittsburgh, PA in 1930. He graduated from Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh where he excelled in athletics. In 1949, Al accepted a scholarship to Saint Michaels College in Santa Fe where he studied until entering the United States Army in 1952. After his release from active duty in 1954, Al began work at Public Service Company of New Mexico. After several years working in Santa Fe, he moved to Albuquerque where he was in charge of the Westside customer service office until his retirement in 1986. Al remained active in the community after retirement, volunteering with several local churches and civic groups. He was an avid bowler who competed in several pro-am tournaments and local league play. Al was a lifetime member of American Legion Post 663 in Pittsburgh where his father was Post Commander. He is a past member of the Santa Fe Host Lions Club and Albuquerque North Lions Club. He was also a member of the Knights of Columbus for many years. He is survived by his beloved wife of 27 years, Becky; daughters, Carolyn, Carla and Carmen; sons, Tom, Anthony, Randy and Mike; 16 grandchildren; and 8 great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents and two older brothers, Dominic and Joseph. A graveside service and burial took place Wednesday, March 26, 2014 at 9:45 a.m. at Santa Fe National Cemetery. Please visit our online guestbook for Albert at www.FrenchFunerals.com. FRENCH - Westside 9300 Golf Course Rd NW Albuquerque, NM 87114 505-897-0300 ALFONSO "BROTHER" BACA Alfonso "Brother" Baca of Tucson, AZ passed away peacefully on April 15, 2014 at the age of 82. Originally from Santa Fe, Al is survived by his bride of 62 years, Evelina and their four daughters, Geri, Lucinda, Dene and Quinta. Al is also survived by his sister ToniAnna Padilla, and brothers, Phillip, Marcello and Billy Baca. With nine grandsons and two granddaughters: Flint, Dante, Kore, Andrea, Sean, Dane, Grant, Alana, Dylan, Logan and Tristan, Al kept busy! Throughout his life, he loved travels with Evie, racing cars and dirt bikes, NASCAR, Army National Guard Reunions in Santa Fe, green and red chili and celebrating as his family grew. His three oldest daughters became grandmothers blessing Brother and Evie with 11 great-grandchildren: Sydney, Kaydence, Sierra, Seth, Aydin, Jorie, Conner, Nolan, Maya, Corbin and Rylee. He was a wonderful man, a loving husband, father and grandfather and we have been blessed to be loved by him and love him more forever. Services for Alfonso will be in Santa Fe with a 7:00 p.m. rosary on April 30th at Berardinelli Funeral Services www.berardinellifuneralhome.com. Mass will be on May 1, 2014 at 11:00 a.m. at St. Francis Cathedral http://cbsfa.org/. Military honors will follow at Santa Fe National Cemetery, 501 North Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 at 12:45 p.m.

RIVERA FAMILY MORTUARIES ~SANTA FE ~ ESPAÑOLA ~ TAOS Joy Martin Dill, Santa Fe, April 12, 2014 Lydia Lujan, Santa Fe, April 15, 2014 Cody Montgomery, Roswell, April 19, 2014 Erasmo Palomino, Santa Fe, April 22, 2014 William Kilgore MD., Taos, April 19, 2014 Jerry Lee Koller, Santa Fe, April 18, 2014 Suzanne M. Lebeau, Santa Fe, April 19, 2014 Severa DeAguero, Espanola, April 21, 2014 JERILYN SUE MOSSO 60, passed away peacefully at home on April 23, 2014 after a long battle with cancer. Jerilyn was retired from Los Alamos National Labs and enjoyed working with Kitchen Angels and in her garden. She is survived by her husband, Stewart Mosso, her father, Pete Parsons, and five sisters, Laura Swofford, Marcia Backes, Monica Ferriera, Patti Cloninger, and Dani Luna. Jerilyn was a joyful person who brought wisdom and caring to all. It has been our honor to have served the families of: Mary Louise Kippert, August 2, 1956, April 11, 2014 Serenity Destiny Hope Romero, June 29, 2006 , April 18, 2014 Olivia Delgado De Torres, January 4, 1944, April 18, 2014 John J. Greenwood, September 21, 1957, March 26, 2014 Avery Selser, July 17, 1989, April 17, 2014 Berardinelli Family Funeral Service, 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505, (505) 984-8600, Please sign our guestbook for the family at: berardinellifuneralhome.com

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Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849

Stabilizing Ukraine no easy task D ay by day, week by week, the crisis in Ukraine continues to grow. And as it grows, the stakes for both East and West become greater and greater. If proRussian Ukrainians in eastern Ukraine lose in their quest for greater autonomy, Bill Stewart if not outright Understanding annexaYour World tion by Russia, then Russian President Vladimir Putin will have suffered a major political defeat and an unacceptable loss of face. If, on the other hand, Russia is able to force a restructuring of Ukraine along the lines of a loose federation subject to Russian control, then NATO, and the U.S. in particular, will have lost in the biggest EastWest crisis since the end of the Cold War. In the meantime, both sides deploy and redeploy thousands of troops in the region and rattle their respective sabres. The state of the revolt in eastern Ukraine, if indeed there is a revolt, is difficult to ascertain because of exaggerated claims by both sides. It is clear that a number of public buildings in eastern Ukrainian cities have been commandeered by pro-Russian sympathizers, many of whom might indeed be Russian soldiers in unmarked uniforms. Western journalists on the scene note that while there are indeed public buildings that have been taken over by pro-Russian forces, the cities themselves are unoccupied and seem calm, with people going about their daily business. There also have been assassinations of eastern Ukrainian public officials, with Kiev accusing pro-Russians of the crimes and Moscow pointing

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Northern must find its way

N the finger at ultra-nationalist Ukrainians. Kiev has deployed Ukrainian troops to the east, but their performance so far has been a humiliating defeat for Ukraine. What seems to be happening is a slow rollout of a Russian plan to so thoroughly destabilize eastern Ukraine, with its big, advanced industries, that Russia can say it has no choice except to intervene to protect Russian citizens and Russian-speaking Ukrainians. Russian President Vladimir Putin has even had the consummate gall to say the intervention of the Ukrainian military in eastern Ukraine is a “crime,” especially if Russians are killed. The name “Ukraine” can be translated as “border”or “on the edge.” Historically, it was part of Russia from the days of the czars until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. During that time, it was on Russia’s western border and later that of the Soviet Union, hence the name. Now it is the most important part of Russia’s “near abroad,” those countries that were once part of the Soviet Union but

became independent when the union dissolved. Russia claims it has legitimate interests in these countries, not only because of their proximity but also because of close cultural, economic and historic ties. Moscow has a legitimate point: How would we react to alleged foreign interference in Canada or Mexico? But when does legitimate interest become blatant aggression? We need only remember Putin’s famous words that the greatest catastrophe of the 20th century was the collapse of the Soviet Union. No doubt, in his mind, Ukraine is more Russian than independent, and the reacquisition of former Soviet territory is a legitimate aim. A major point to keep in mind is that none of this would have happened had Ukraine been a reasonably well-governed state. But it wasn’t, and that is why all those thousands of people were out in Kiev’s main square until its president felt obliged to flee the country earlier this year. Ukraine, like post-Soviet Russia, had become a huge kleptocracy,

ripped off by cynical and criminal elements, many of whom became billionaire businessmen, oligarchs running the country for their own interests and ultimately running it into the ground. Those elements were from both eastern and western Ukraine. The armed forces were left to deteriorate to the point where — underfed, badly equipped and badly trained — they put on a miserable performance last week when they were sent east to reclaim the country for Kiev. The reclamation of the country, never mind just the east, begins with the reclamation of the government in Kiev and the rebuilding of the country on a fair and firm footing. Once that begins, Kiev need not fear Moscow. In the meantime, much could happen. U.S. paratroopers have just arrived in Poland. And that’s only a beginning. Bill Stewart writes about current affairs from Santa Fe. He was a correspondent for Time magazine and served in the U.S. Foreign Service.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Barker: A poet we shouldn’t forget

I

read with interest the article regarding Walter Skold’s cross-country journey to resurrect the memories or poets long since gone (“Reviving dead poets,” April 19). Unfortunately, he neglected one of New Mexico’s most prolific and best loved poets, S. Omar Barker, (1894-1985). During his long career as a writer, Barker wrote some 2,000 poems as well as 1,500 short stories and novelettes, which were published in a broad range of publications from the pulp magazines to the Saturday Evening Post and, of course, New Mexico Magazine. His best known poem is “A Cowboy’s Christmas Prayer,” which was recorded by Tennessee Ernie Ford and Jimmy Dean and printed more than 100 times. As he is well-known among Western poets and was referred to as the “Poet Lariat (sic) of New Mexico,” Barker deserves to be recognized in his home state. Georgia Snead

Santa Fe

Supporting Webber The governor’s race is heating up. I am an Alan Webber supporter and congratulate his backbone while the governor and her cronies take cheap shots. After all, Webber hasn’t even won the primary. Your reporter points out that Webber’s charges are well-known and old. That

didn’t stop the governor’s spokesperson from trying to link Webber to Mark Rudd’s radical student days, even though Rudd actually contributed to one of Webber’s Democratic opponents. Rudd’s fame or infamy ended in about 1971. The so-called “thugs” work for the governor every day! Does Martinez see Webber as her real threat? Why didn’t she call out the candidate who actually got the Rudd contribution? I support Webber for his ideas and commitment to New Mexico. Martinez ignores regular New Mexicans while attacking teachers and ordinary workers. Mr. Webber and his family are lucky they don’t have to drive over a toll bridge to get to work. Edward T. Stein

Santa Fe

Plan your care On April 16, Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center participated in National Health Care Decisions Day. Taking the opportunity to reach out to the community, the Ethics Committee, practitioners including nurses, physicians, spiritual care and others, provided information to visitors, patients and hospital employees on Advance Care Planning. Three information sessions were held where individuals learned more detailed information about the process of completing an advance directive. The

MALLARd FiLLMoRe

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

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

response from the staff and community was extremely positive, with more than 200 people receiving information. National Health Care Decisions Day began in 2008 with the goal “to inspire, educate and empower the public and providers about the importance of advance care planning.” In the U.S., only approximately 25 percent of individuals have an advance directive. St. Vincent’s participation in this initiative is one means of increasing knowledge about advance directives in the hope of increasing the numbers of persons who have an advance directive. Caroline Burnett

Santa Fe

orthern New Mexico College’s Board of Regents is meeting today to discuss whether to kill three popular programs in automotive, radiology and construction. The meeting continues one from earlier this week that went on for six hours. Today’s gathering promises to be as contentious. Students and community members are up in arms about eliminating the programs. They should be. While we understand that the college is facing budget crunches, the solution is not to cut programs that students need. As one speaker pointed out, Española is the low-rider capital of the world. Where better to have automotive programs? And such classes lead to good jobs, ones that can’t be outsourced to India or China. Construction and radiology, too, are programs with direct paths to jobs. They should be at the heart of Northern’s offerings, not put on the chopping block. The college, as one of our online commenters said, needs to return to its roots as a community college. Enrollment is declining. The budget has been overspent — next year’s numbers are due to the Department of Higher Education by May 1, thus the focus on the budget and the Saturday meeting. The college is in turmoil. Both the faculty and student senates have voted no confidence in the school’s top officials, citing grievances such as raises for top administrators, overspending, mismanagment of grants and a hostile work environment. The college, so important to the Española Valley’s economic development, needs a course correction. Regents should listen to complaints from faculty and students before making ill-advised cuts. If necessary, state intervention might be advised, so that a college with roots going back before statehood can once again thrive.

ANOTHER VIEW

Stem cells: Good or evil?

C

ontroversies over stem-cell research are so last decade — or so it seemed until last week. For the last few years, the promising field of stem-cell research has focused on a technique that skirts various ethical concerns about the treatment of human embryos and the potential to clone whole human beings. But last week, U.S. and South Korean researchers announced that they went ahead with a different technique, successfully creating stem cells cloned from the normal skin cells of adults. Their work helps to open a new avenue in stem-cell research. But it also could be a step on the way to human reproductive cloning. Some ethical worries are reasonable, but they are not enough reason to hold back this research. The question is whether researchers who aren’t interested in reproductive cloning should be barred from refining the nuclear transfer process lest a rogue scientist decides to try Xeroxing people. We’d say that they should not be restricted if the method may advance the search for bona fide stem-cell therapies. The potential to directly and significantly reduce human suffering is too great to close off every line of research but the one that carries zero controversy. There is, moreover, a clear ethical distinction between cloning a human’s cells in order to redeploy them in medical treatment and growing a genetic copy of a human being. As long as scientists do not cross ethical lines much further from where they are now — lines that Congress could write into federal law — researchers should have the flexibility to go in whichever direction is scientifically useful.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: April 26, 1964: Plans for a big million-dollar Boy Scout reservation in Rio Arriba and Taos counties near Peñasco were closed today. The application for 4,617 acres was filed with the Bureau of Land Management in Santa Fe. Another 880 acres of state land, adjoining the BLM land, also will be sought.

LA CUCARACHA

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAFenewMexiCAn.CoM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 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

Partly sunny, a t-storm in the p.m.

Tonight

Mostly cloudy with a few showers

Monday

Very windy

33

71

Sunday

Tuesday

A shower possible

59/33

Wednesday

Mostly sunny and breezy

58/29

Mostly sunny

58/35

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

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

13%

54%

20%

22%

wind: SW 15-25 mph

wind: W 10-20 mph

33%

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Friday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 73°/37° Normal high/low ............................ 69°/37° Record high ............................... 84° in 2012 Record low ................................. 18° in 1921 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.07”/0.74” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.63”/2.57” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/0.95”

wind: WNW 20-30 mph wind: WNW 15-25 mph wind: WNW 10-20 mph

59/38

Humidity (Noon)

285

64

Farmington 63/36

666

Española 74/39 Los Alamos 63/33 Gallup 57/37

40

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.01”/0.41” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.53”/0.63” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.34”/0.82” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.40”/3.15” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.24”/0.88”

Santa Fe 71/33 Pecos 63/30

25

Albuquerque 75/40

25

285

29% wind: W 7-14 mph

Air quality index

60

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

64 87

56

412

Clayton 79/41

Pollen index

As of 4/25/2014 Trees .................................................. 12 Low Grass........................................... 7 Moderate Other ................................................... 2 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................21

25

Las Vegas 67/36

54

Clovis 82/40

54

60

Source:

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

70

Truth or Consequences 80/51 70

Las Cruces 83/56

10

70

54

380

Carlsbad 92/57

Sun and moon

State extremes

Fri. High 92 ................................... Carlsbad Fri. Low 19 .................................. Angel Fire

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 84/48 pc 80/41 pc 63/19 s 90/46 pc 92/47 pc 62/29 pc 73/28 pc 81/43 pc 63/36 pc 85/48 pc 71/34 pc 85/46 pc 79/40 pc 76/34 pc 87/47 pc 75/28 pc 74/26 pc 90/48 s 85/50 s

Hi/Lo W 85/50 pc 75/40 pc 58/30 pc 89/58 pc 92/57 pc 56/30 t 71/34 pc 79/41 pc 57/34 pc 82/40 pc 57/36 t 79/47 pc 74/39 pc 63/36 t 83/46 pc 57/37 t 63/36 t 89/52 pc 83/56 pc

Hi/Lo W 70/43 s 63/43 t 45/25 t 81/57 s 81/57 s 47/27 t 60/30 t 68/38 pc 52/21 s 71/42 pc 54/36 t 72/47 s 63/42 t 60/39 t 73/42 pc 56/37 t 53/36 t 78/49 s 73/54 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 72/35 83/51 68/45 83/42 87/51 77/32 72/29 81/43 92/45 70/48 82/44 77/41 83/44 70/25 83/51 88/50 86/55 73/43 73/33

W pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc s pc pc pc pc pc pc

Hi/Lo W 67/36 pc 77/50 pc 63/33 t 75/44 pc 83/45 pc 75/32 pc 55/31 pc 73/40 pc 88/52 pc 68/43 pc 79/43 pc 74/46 t 78/51 pc 66/29 pc 80/51 pc 86/47 pc 83/53 pc 66/35 t 57/37 t

Hi/Lo W 58/35 t 73/48 s 54/31 t 68/44 t 73/42 pc 62/33 c 42/21 sh 65/38 t 79/50 s 60/44 s 69/41 pc 66/46 s 72/48 pc 52/25 t 72/51 s 76/40 pc 75/56 s 58/31 t 56/37 t

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

Weather for April 26

Sunrise today ............................... 6:18 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:46 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 4:38 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 5:24 p.m. Sunrise Sunday ............................. 6:17 a.m. Sunset Sunday .............................. 7:47 p.m. Moonrise Sunday .......................... 5:16 a.m. Moonset Sunday ........................... 6:28 p.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 6:16 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 7:48 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 5:54 a.m. Moonset Monday .......................... 7:31 p.m. New

First

Full

Last

Apr 29

May 6

May 14

May 21

The planets

Rise 6:22 a.m. 4:29 a.m. 5:44 p.m. 10:33 a.m. 8:49 p.m. 5:21 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 51/37 79/63 65/38 66/39 70/31 51/44 57/43 86/61 79/53 70/45 66/54 60/49 84/58 76/36 54/45 53/32 63/31 84/74 88/66 67/51 76/42 79/68 71/59

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

Hi/Lo 54/37 81/56 73/42 59/42 60/45 58/40 47/40 81/55 81/51 54/41 75/48 57/37 86/68 76/40 60/37 55/29 42/33 85/72 85/71 75/49 80/63 68/57 68/54

W c s pc sh c c r s s pc pc pc pc pc pc s sn pc c pc c pc pc

Hi/Lo 56/39 84/62 65/44 53/39 55/42 55/35 53/42 86/60 86/56 59/44 76/53 54/38 86/60 53/33 56/38 56/33 53/37 85/71 88/71 71/52 74/54 76/59 72/56

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

Set 7:49 p.m. 4:13 p.m. 5:31 a.m. 1:01 a.m. 7:22 a.m. 5:55 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

The New York Times

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

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 73/62 76/59 87/72 67/41 64/36 86/69 63/44 83/44 88/67 67/43 94/64 64/48 56/44 77/46 77/50 67/47 90/69 66/61 60/53 58/42 73/35 67/36 69/48

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

Hi/Lo 81/55 83/65 89/74 46/36 57/40 83/68 67/47 89/62 88/66 73/46 73/60 64/37 57/44 81/51 79/58 56/39 89/71 67/58 61/50 56/43 67/52 70/43 77/50

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

Hi/Lo 82/59 82/67 87/75 50/40 52/42 81/70 61/45 81/50 90/69 63/42 79/64 62/40 56/42 73/49 78/63 55/37 96/64 66/58 60/48 54/40 61/49 62/40 68/46

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

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) Fri. High: 97 ............................. Dryden, TX Fri. Low: 16 .................... Saranac Lake, NY

The northern mountains of Arizona have a cooler climate than the southern deserts. Still, a 6-inch snowfall in Flagstaff, Ariz., on April 26, 1963, was rare.

Weather trivia™

you open or close windows Q: Should during a tornado? Neither; go to a basement or in an A: interior room on the first floor.

Weather history

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 73/55 81/59 99/70 97/84 73/57 77/56 70/50 66/50 68/55 90/70 89/75 88/60 61/45 57/39 66/50 84/66 88/70 82/75 83/67 77/65

W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W pc 65/50 pc 61/50 sh pc 71/57 r 69/55 sh pc 105/78 s 102/74 pc pc 98/80 s 99/79 s pc 69/56 pc 68/53 pc c 75/55 pc 80/52 s s 70/50 sh 70/50 c sh 63/49 r 65/47 r pc 72/55 pc 73/56 pc s 85/62 s 88/69 s t 89/74 pc 89/73 s pc 84/57 pc 74/56 s s 62/46 s 63/44 s pc 55/46 r 55/46 sh c 67/49 c 52/44 r r 81/60 t 73/61 pc pc 89/67 s 91/69 t c 83/75 c 85/75 c s 74/54 s 77/57 s pc 74/60 pc 75/59 pc

City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 63/46 pc 66/52 c 68/54 pc 54/48 r 62/46 sh 59/45 r 64/45 pc 65/46 c 64/45 pc 75/56 pc 79/57 pc 80/55 t 54/32 pc 46/36 r 52/36 sh 59/28 s 54/35 pc 62/48 c 101/72 pc 103/74 pc 104/74 pc 61/55 sh 56/44 r 58/45 sh 68/46 sh 69/49 pc 70/49 pc 81/70 pc 74/67 sh 73/64 sh 73/48 pc 69/54 c 66/49 r 66/41 pc 68/45 s 70/43 s 77/46 s 76/56 pc 60/53 r 93/77 c 88/79 t 88/79 t 59/25 s 60/39 s 63/43 pc 70/67 r 79/61 pc 70/57 sh 73/55 pc 72/55 s 72/57 s 54/39 pc 54/44 r 53/40 r 64/55 sh 67/52 r 68/51 s 72/45 pc 67/48 c 51/43 r

Newsmakers

Justin Bieber

Bieb’s photos searched

Short off of ‘Scandal’

LOS ANGELES — Surveillance footage from Justin Bieber’s home appears to show the pop star high-fiving friends and celebrating after throwing eggs at a neighbor’s home in January, an investigator’s affidavit released Friday shows. The description of Bieber’s reaction to the incident that authorities say caused thousands of dollars in damage to the neighbor’s home is included in documents filed to support a search warrant. A Los Angeles County sheriff’s detective obtained the warrant for Bieber’s account with the online photo-sharing site Instagram, searching for evidence to match his outfit with the surveillance footage.

LOS ANGELES — Columbus Short won’t be returning to Scandal following his legal troubles. The 31-year-old actor said in a statement released Friday that he is exiting the ABC political thriller after three seasons. “At this time, I must confirm my exit from a show I’ve called home for three years, with what is the most talented ensemble on television today,” Short said. The announcement of Short’s exit comes amid two criminal cases, one accusing him of misdemeanor spousal battery and another accusing him of felony battery that seriously injured a man during an altercation.

Columbus Short

Leto’s Oscar is a ‘mess’

Barker on soap opera

Bob Barker

NEW YORK — The cause is right for Bob Barker, whose love of animals is returning him to TV on Wednesday as a guest star on The Bold and the Beautiful. Appearing as himself, the longtime animal rights activist will be interviewed by Liam Spencer, played by series regular Scott Clifton, for a feature article on control of the pet population. Barker encourages Liam to visit the local animal shelter and see the work that’s being done to save homeless animals.

Jared Leto

Rubik’s cube turns big 4-0 By James Barron

Hobbs 89/52

285

Erno Rubik, the inventor of the Rubik's cube, visits with Anthony Brooks, a speed cuber, on Wednesday in Jersey City, N.J. PHOTOS BY FRED R. CONRAD/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Toy reached height of popularity in 1980

70

380

Alamogordo 85/50

180

Water statistics

Roswell 88/52

Ruidoso 68/43

25

67/40

Humidity (Noon)

29%

40

40

67/37

Humidity (Noon) wind: SSW 8-16 mph

Taos 66/29

84

Mostly sunny

35%

Raton 75/32

64

Friday

wind: SSW 4-8 mph

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

Area rainfall

The following water statistics of April 17 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 4.618 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 2.790 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 7.408 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.175 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 45.9 percent of capacity; daily inflow 2.91 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Times of clouds and sun, a shower

New Mexico weather 64

Thursday

LOS ANGELES — Jared Leto says that while his Oscar has led to new opportunities in Hollywood, he isn’t overly concerned with the trophy itself. The actor-musician took home the gold statuette last month for his supporting role as transgender drug addict Rayon in Dallas Buyers Club. It’s sustained a few scrapes since then after circulating among friends. “I damaged it. But then I came home and saw it had another nick on it. So it looks like someone else had fun with it, too,” Leto said. New Mexican wire services

JERSEY CITY, N.J. — A Rubik’s cube can be twisted and twiddled in 43,252,003,274,489,856,000 different ways, and 43,252,003,274,489,855,999 of them are wrong. Those truths — especially the second, maddeningly frustrating one — have been known since soon after the modish, Mondrianish plastic object was invented in 1974. The cube went on to become the must-have toy of 1980 and 1981. Its popularity faded fast. By 1982, the cube was so last year, doomed to Hula-Hoop faddishness. In 1986, The New York Times said the cube had been “retired to the attic, the garbage heap and, with a bow to its elegance and ingeniousness, to the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art.” Lately it has undergone a resurrection in a world in which engineers and computers can generate helpful algorithms that would-be cube solvers can share with one another. But some things have not changed. The typical Rubik’s cube still has nine squares on six sides, and the same eye-popping colors. And those unfathomable huge numbers in the first paragraph are still quintillions. “Fortythree times 10 to the 19th,” explained Paul Hoffman, the president and chief executive of the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City. Rubik’s cubes have trailed Hoffman for his entire career. On his first job after college, as an editor at Scientific American, he shepherded a March 1981 cover story about Rubik’s “magic cubology” into print. It was written by Douglas R. Hofstadter, the professor known for the Pulitzer Prize-winning best-seller Gödel, Escher, Bach, who said it had taken him “50 hours of work, distributed over several months,” to solve the “unscrambling problem.”

The typical Rubik’s cube still has nine squares on six sides, and the same eyepopping colors.

He mentioned group theory, which has to do with algebraic structures, and something he called “cubitis magikia,” a “highly contagious” condition “accompanied by the itching of the fingertips that can be relieved only by prolonged contact” with a certain multicolored object. Hoffman is capitalizing on the cube with a $5 million exhibition that opens today. It features an 18-karat gold Rubik’s cube said to be worth $2.5 million that pivots and swivels like an ordinary plastic one, and a cube-solving robot that is no match for speed cubers, as competitors who try to beat the clock are known. It took the machine a minute to unscramble a jumbled cube. In that time, Anthony Brooks, a speed cuber with several records, did it three times, once using only one hand. Speed cubers can memorize algorithms to unscramble a jumbled cube in less time than it takes to read a sentence like this one aloud. But Brooks said speed cubing also involved muscle memory and tricks, like breaking in a cube the way baseball players break in a glove with neatsfoot oil. “You can buy lubricants — cube lubes,” he said. “Or regular silicon spray you can find in any hardware.” The cube has made some intriguing cameo appearances. Edward J. Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor who has leaked intelligence secrets, told two journalists he had arranged to meet that they would recognize him outside a restaurant in Hong Kong because he would have a Rubik’s cube in his hand.

TV

1

top picks

10:30 a.m. on NBC English Premier League Soccer As the Premier League season nears its conclusion, Manchester United takes on Norwich City from Old Trafford in Greater Manchester, England. Led by Wayne Rooney, United won a record 20th league title last season but sat midpack in the standings at this writing. Norwich, meanwhile, was looking up at most of the league’s 19 other teams and in danger of being demoted yet again. Danny Welbeck’s winner propelled United over Norwich, 1-0, in December.

2

4:30 p.m. on FOX NASCAR Racing NASCAR’s Sprint Cup season continues with the Toyota Owners 400 from Richmond International Raceway in Virginia. Kevin Harvick lines up his No. 4 Chevrolet as the race’s defending champion, having beaten Clint Bowyer last year by .343 seconds in a green-white-checkered finish for his third win on Richmond’s .75-mile oval and 20th of his career. Harvick went on to place third overall in the 2013 Sprint Cup standings.

3

6 p.m. LIFE Movie: Starving in Suburbia This new drama sheds light on a disturbing development: the “pro-ana” movement, which promotes anorexia as

a lifestyle choice. Laura Slade Wiggins stars as a 17-year-old girl who falls under the spell of a “thinspiration” website and its founder (Izabella Miko,). Callie Thorne (Necessary Roughness), Marcus Giamatti and Sharon Lawrence also star.

4

8 p.m. on CBS ‘NCIS’ The team must reopen a hit-and-run murder case after the prime suspect’s lawyer tells Gibbs (Mark Harmon) that her client has a solid — but confidential — alibi. McGee (Sean Murray) wonders why Tony (Michael Weatherly) is behaving strangely in Alibi. 9 p.m. HBO Movie: Bullet to the Head Filmmaker Walter Hill (48 HRS.) never has held back on straight-ahead action, and the title of this graphicnovel-inspired 2013 tale indicates he hasn’t changed his method. He has an ideal match in star Sylvester Stallone, playing a heavily tattooed hit man who teams with a Washington, D.C., policeman (Sang Kung) to even the score with those responsible for killing allies of both of them. Sarah Shahi, Christian Slater and Jason Momoa also star.

5


SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Markets in review B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

B

Baseball: Ortiz homers as Red Sox rout Blue Jays. Page B-4

Historic day as Northwestern players decide union By Jason Keyser and Michael Tarm The Associated Press

An Al Jazeera cameraman films Northwestern football players Chris Gradone and Zach Oliver, right, as they walk to McGaw Hall where voting is taking place on the student athlete union question Friday in Evanston, Ill. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EVANSTON, Ill. — In a historic vote, Northwestern University football players cast secret ballots Friday on whether to form the nation’s first union for college athletes — a decision that could change the landscape of American amateur sports. “You got to give the people what they want!” one of the players shouted at reporters, who were kept away from the players as they entered a campus building to vote. Some waved, and another showed off some dance moves. The results of the closely watched

vote will not be known for some time. After two rounds of voting on this 19,000-student campus, the ballot boxes were sealed and will remain so for weeks, months, perhaps even years as the university challenges the effort to unionize the team. Still, some of those behind the push were already celebrating, saying that even if a union is voted down, the campaign has the power to change things. “We’re one step closer to a world where college athletes are not stuck with sports-related medical bills, do not lose their scholarships when they are injured, are not subject to unnec-

PREP TRACK AND FIELD RICHARD HARPER MEMORIAL INVITATIONAL

essary brain trauma and are given better opportunities to complete their degree,” said former Northwestern quarterback Kain Colter, who helped lead the effort with the help of the United Steelworkers. The full National Labor Relations Board has agreed to hear the Northwestern’s appeal of a regional director’s March ruling that the players are university employees and thus can unionize. Ballots will remain impounded until that process is finished, and perhaps until after any court fight that might follow a decision.

Please see Union, Page B-4

NBA PLAYOFFS

Going over the top Athletes beat their own goals while qualifying for state meet

The Raptors’ Greivis Vasquez, left, defends the Nets’ Paul Pierce during the second half of Friday’s playoff game in New York. The Nets won 102-98.

By James Barron

FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The New Mexican

Brooklyn Nets take 2-1 lead over Toronto

ALBUQUERQUE or Los Alamos junior Skyler McCall, his mental block in the high jump was 6 feet. It only took him two years to overcome it. He needed only a week to duplicate it. McCall wasn’t as sharp as he was a week ago, when he jumped 6 feet, 2 inches to finish second at Santa Fe High’s Capital City Invitational, but he was consistent. He went 6-0 at the Richard Harper Memorial Invitational on Friday afternoon, which was good enough for second place at the two-day meet. But it felt good to see that he was at a different level in his progression, one which seemed stymied after clearing 6-0 as a freshman. With that number out of the way, McCall wants to fixate on a new figure. “I’m happy with clearing 6-[feet] any day of the week,” McCall said. “I’d like to get to 6-4, and I’ll train as hard as it takes to get there. I had been stuck at 5-10 since I was a freshman, so I had a mental block, sort of. You do what you need to do to get over it, and when you get it, there’s no stopping you.” McCall is a part of a cavalcade of Hilltoppers who are qualified to compete at the Class AAAA State Track and Field Championships for the event. He was one of three jumpers to meet the qualifying mark of 6-0 at the Capital City meet, along with fellow junior Greg Ahlers and senior Simon Bailey. It’s the kind of quality and quantity that has Los Alamos head coach

f

By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

ABOVE: Los Alamos junior Skyler McCall tries to clear the height of 6 feet, 2 inches during the high jump at the Richard Harper Memorial Invitational on Friday. FAR LEFT: Santa Fe High sophomore Akeisha Ayanniyi leaps 18 feet as Los Alamos’ Chelsea Challaocombe looks on in the finals. LEFT: Los Alamos freshman Liam Johnson attempts his final pole vault at 12 feet, 6 inches. PHOTOS BY JAMES BARRON THE NEW MEXICAN

Please see toP, Page B-3

With roster shakeup, Lobos’ future is anyone’s guess

L

ast man out the door, just led the cherry and silver to a please turn off the lights. 27-win season in his first year at With The University of the helm, but it was clear early New Mexico men’s basketball on that this was going to be a roster shrinking by the second, lost year for a number of players. it’s not a stretch to Within the first envision head coach week of the season, Craig Neal tacking a every scholarship “Help Wanted” sign player on the roster outside The Pit’s had seen action in a doors. regular season game, Aside from the nullifying their opporexodus of departtunity to take a reding seniors Kendall shirt season instead of Williams, Cameron Will Webber growing roots at the Bairstow and Chris end of the bench. Commentary Perez, the Lobos have Myles is a glaring also said adios to Alex example of time needKirk, Tim Myles, Nick Banyard lessly wasted. A true freshman and, just this week, Cleveland who clearly could have used a “Pancake” Thomas. year on the shelf getting ready While Kirk’s exit for a shot at for Division I basketball, he got the NBA can be chalked up to a three minutes of garbage time shoulder shrug and a pat on the in a blowout win over Alabama back from Lobo fans, the others A&M in the season opener — speak to the massive chimney and never played again. He was sweep by Neal and his staff. Neal relegated to the scout team in

practice and was nothing more than a cheerleader the rest of the way. It wasn’t much better for freshman Devon Williams, one of the players who is slated to return next season. He saw action in just five games. With their redshirt status lost, both players spun their wheels on the bench, getting about as much playing time as a walkon. All things considered, even that might seem generous since Perez, a fourth-year walk-on, got a token start as UNM’s version of Rudy Ruettiger. Whether Myles, Thomas or maybe even Banyard ever would have become a productive player will never be known since they’ve all been granted their release to transfer to another school. Thomas is the real headscratcher. He said this week that he’s heading elsewhere to explore new options where he can crack

someone’s starting lineup. In case the stats are wrong, he’d done just that with UNM’s backcourt to start this season. Just 11 games into the season he lost that spot to Deshawn Delaney, arguably one of the two players the Lobos will lean on the most next season along with sophomore guard Cullen Neal. One has to wonder what the climate of Lobo basketball is inside The Pit’s walls. Does Craig Neal have some mad scientist scheme no one else knows about? Does he have a Caliparilike recruiting hotline that could lead the Lobos beyond the first round of the NCAA Tournament, something he and his predecessors have historically had so much trouble doing? Only time will tell — and that’s about the only thing that is guaranteed since there aren’t that many warm bodies in Loboland left doing any talking.

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

NEW YORK — Paul Pierce climbed high for the dunk, Kevin Garnett went to the floor for a loose ball, and Brooklyn suddenly looked and sounded like Boston. The Nets brought the two champiNets 102 ons here so it would be like this, not the way it was for their last home playRaptors 98 off game. “This is a totally different team, totally different feeling,” guard Deron Williams said. “I think we’re poised to make a run.” Joe Johnson scored 29 points, Pierce and Garnett brought a charge to their first playoff game in Brooklyn, and the Nets held off the Toronto Raptors 102-98 on Friday night for a 2-1 lead in the first-round series. Johnson made the clinching free throws with 3.1 seconds left after the Nets blew almost all of a 15-point, fourthquarter lead. Williams added 22 points and eight assists for the sixth-seeded Nets, who host Game 4 on Sunday night. Pierce had 18 points, and he and Garnett provided the game’s signature plays late in the second quarter, a

Please see nets, Page B-3

Boston Marathon runners find ‘bandits’ in bibs By Jimmy Golen

The Associated Press

BOSTON — A man in a white tank top with a big red heart on the front. Another wearing all blue. A woman with clothing from a St. Louis running store and one who printed “Lauren” on her shirt. They all had one thing in common, though: Boston Marathon bib No. 14285. Kara Bonneau logged onto the race’s official photo site this week and saw pictures of four other people who ran Monday’s race in copies of the bib she earned — and paid for. She posted those pictures on Instagram and asked for help in identifying the unofficial runners, known as bandits. Now the Boston Athletic Association is investigating and the tight-knit running community is asking whether social media are giving new legs to a tradition that is almost as old as the race itself. With runners bragging about their bibs on Instagram, anyone with a computer can find a bib and print a copy, making banditry even easier at the same time that security threats make it more of a concern. “The BAA does take these matters seriously,” executive director Tom Grilk said Friday while stressing that the bandits went through the same security checkpoints as

Please see BanDits, Page B-3

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

american league

east W l Pct Gb New York 13 10 .565 — Baltimore 11 11 .500 1½ Toronto 11 12 .478 2 Boston 11 13 .458 2½ Tampa Bay 10 13 .435 3 Central W l Pct Gb Detroit 12 8 .600 — Chicago 12 12 .500 2 Kansas City 11 11 .500 2 Minnesota 11 11 .500 2 Cleveland 11 12 .478 2½ West W l Pct Gb Oakland 15 8 .652 — Texas 14 9 .609 1 Los Angeles 11 11 .500 3½ Seattle 9 13 .409 5½ Houston 7 17 .292 8½ Friday’s Games Kansas City 5, Baltimore 0 L.A. Angels 13, N.Y. Yankees 1 Boston 8, Toronto 1 Detroit 10, Minnesota 6 Oakland 12, Houston 5 Chicago White Sox 9, Tampa Bay 6 Seattle 6, Texas 5 Thursday’s Games Cleveland 5, Kansas City 1 Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 4 Minnesota 9, Tampa Bay 7 Baltimore 11, Toronto 4 N.Y. Yankees 14, Boston 5 Oakland 10, Houston 1 saturday’s Games L.A. Angels (H.Santiago 0-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Nuno 0-0), 11:05 a.m. Boston (Buchholz 0-2) at Toronto (Morrow 1-1), 11:07 a.m. Detroit (A.Sanchez 0-2) at Minnesota (P.Hughes 1-1), 12:10 p.m. Cleveland (McAllister 3-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum 1-1), 2:05 p.m. Kansas City (Guthrie 2-1) at Baltimore (W.Chen 3-1), 5:05 p.m. Oakland (Straily 1-1) at Houston (Keuchel 2-1), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (C.Ramos 0-1) at Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 2-0), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Lewis 1-1) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 3-1), 7:10 p.m.

National league

east W l Pct Gb Atlanta 15 7 .682 — New York 13 10 .565 2½ Washington 13 11 .542 3 Philadelphia 11 12 .478 4½ Miami 10 13 .435 5½ Central W l Pct Gb Milwaukee 17 6 .739 — St. Louis 13 11 .542 4½ Cincinnati 11 12 .478 6 Pittsburgh 9 15 .375 8½ Chicago 7 15 .318 9½ West W l Pct Gb Los Angeles 13 10 .565 — San Francisco 13 10 .565 — Colorado 12 11 .522 1 San Diego 11 13 .458 2½ Arizona 8 18 .308 6½ Friday’s Games Washington 11, San Diego 1 N.Y. Mets 4, Miami 3 Atlanta 5, Cincinnati 4 Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 2 St. Louis 1, Pittsburgh 0 Arizona 5, Philadelphia 4 Colorado at L.A. Dodgers San Francisco 5, Cleveland 1 Thursday’s Games Cincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 1 N.Y. Mets 4, St. Louis 1 Arizona 5, Chicago Cubs 2 San Diego 4, Washington 3, 12 innings Philadelphia 7, L.A. Dodgers 3 saturday’s Games San Diego (Cashner 2-2) at Washington (Roark 1-0), 11:05 a.m. Cleveland (McAllister 3-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum 1-1), 2:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 0-3) at St. Louis (Lyons 0-1), 2:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 1-2) at Milwaukee (Estrada 1-1), 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Leake 2-1) at Atlanta (Hale 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Miami (Slowey 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (Mejia 3-0), 5:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 3-2) at Arizona (Arroyo 1-2), 6:10 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 2-0) at L.A. Dodgers (Maholm 0-2), 7:10 p.m.

Mlb boxscores Friday angels 13, Yankees 1

los angeles ab r Shuck lf 5 0 Trout cf 4 0 Boesch ph 1 0 Pujols 1b 4 1 JMcDnl 3b 1 0 Ibanez dh 3 1 Freese ph 1 0 HKndrc 2b 5 3 IStewrt 3b 5 2 Aybar ss 5 4 Conger c 5 1 Cowgill rf 4 1 Totals

hbi 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 2 2 4 3 3 3 1 2

New York

ab r Ellsury cf 3 0 JMrphy ph 2 0 Jeter ss 2 1 KJhnsn ph 1 0 Beltran rf 4 0 ASorin dh 3 0 Teixeir 1b 1 0 ISuzuki cf 1 0 McCnn c 4 0 Gardnr lf 4 0 BRorts 2b 4 0 Solarte 3b 2 0

43 131612 Totals

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

31 1 6 1

brewers 5, Cubs 2

ab r Bonifac 2b 4 0 Valuen 3b 4 0 Rizzo 1b 4 0 SCastro ss 4 1 Schrhlt rf 4 0 Lake lf 3 0 Wrght p 0 0 JoBakr ph 1 0 Sweeny cf 2 1 Castillo c 3 0 Villanv p 1 0 NRmrz p 0 0 Kalish lf 1 0 Totals

hbi 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

Milwaukee ab r CGomz cf 5 2 Gennett 2b4 1 Braun rf 4 1 ArRmr 3b 3 0 Lucroy c 4 0 KDavis lf 4 0 Overay 1b 4 1 Segura ss 3 0 Garza p 3 0 Duke p 0 0 Weeks ph 1 0 FrRdrg p 0 0

31 2 5 2 Totals

Cincinnati ab r BHmltn cf 4 1 SMrshll p 0 0 Heisey lf 1 0 Votto 1b 4 1 Phillips 2b 4 1 Bruce rf 4 0 Frazier 3b 2 0 N.Soto 3b 2 0 Ludwck lf 4 0 Christn p 0 0 Mesorc c 3 1 Hoover p 0 0 Berndn cf 1 0 Cozart ss 3 0 Bailey p 2 0 B.Pena ph 2 0 Totals

hbi 3 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

35 5 12 5

Chicago 001 000 100—2 Milwaukee 201 110 00x—5 E—Castillo (2). LOB—Chicago 4, Milwaukee 9. 2B—Schierholtz (4), C.Gomez (6), Gennett (4). HR—Overbay (1). SB—C.Gomez (4), Gennett (3), Braun (3). S—Villanueva. SF—Ar. Ramirez. Chicago IP H R eR bb sO Villanueva L,1-5 5 11 5 5 1 1 N.Ramirez 1 0 0 0 1 1 W.Wright 2 1 0 0 0 3 Milwaukee IP H R eR bb sO Garza W,1-2 7 4 2 2 1 7 Duke H,3 1 1 0 0 0 3 Fr.Rodriguez S,10-101 0 0 0 0 2 Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Kerwin Danley; Second, Lance Barksdale; Third, Mark Ripperger. T—3:12. A—32,868 (41,900).

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

atlanta

ab r Heywrd rf 4 0 BUpton cf 4 1 Fremn 1b 4 2 J.Upton lf 4 1 Gattis c 4 0 Uggla 2b 4 0 CJhnsn 3b 3 0 Smmns ss 3 1 ESantn p 2 0 Avilan p 0 0 DCrpnt p 0 0 JSchafr ph 0 0 JWaldn p 0 0 Kimrel p 0 0

36 4 11 3 Totals

hbi 1 1 1 0 3 0 1 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

32 5 10 5

Cincinnati 000 002 200—4 atlanta 311 000 00x—5 DP—Cincinnati 2, Atlanta 2. LOB—Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 4. 2B—B.Hamilton (3), Votto (4), Phillips (4), Frazier (5), Simmons (2). HR—J.Upton (6). Cincinnati IP H R eR bb sO Bailey L,1-2 6 9 5 5 0 4 Hoover 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 S.Marshall 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 Christiani 1 0 0 0 0 1 atlanta IP H R eR bb sO E.Santana W,3-0 6 2-3 9 4 4 1 7 Avilan 0 1 0 0 0 0 D.Carpenter H,6 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 J.Walden H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Kimbrel S,7-8 1 1 0 0 1 2 Avilan pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. S.Marshall pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. WP—Bailey, E.Santana. T—2:39. A—31,111 (49,586).

Royals 5, Orioles 0

Kansas City ab r Aoki rf 5 0 Infante 2b 4 1 Hosmer 1b 3 1 BButler dh 5 0 AGordn lf 5 0 S.Perez c 4 0 Mostks 3b 4 0 AEscor ss 3 1 Dyson cf 4 2 Totals

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

baltimore ab r Markks rf 3 0 N.Cruz dh 3 0 C.Davis 1b 2 0 Lmrdzz 2b 2 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 Wieters c 4 0 Hardy ss 3 0 Flahrty 3b 4 0 Schoop 2b 4 0 Lough lf 4 0

37 5 11 5 Totals

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

33 0 7 0

Kansas City 200 000 201—5 baltimore 000 000 000—0 E—Wieters (1). DP—Kansas City 1, Baltimore 1. LOB—Kansas City 9, Baltimore 9. 2B—B.Butler (3). SB—A. Escobar (4). Kansas City IP H R eR bb sO Ventura W,2-1 8 7 0 0 2 8 G.Holland 1 0 0 0 0 2 baltimore IP H R eR bb sO Jimenez L,0-4 6 6 4 4 4 3 McFarland 3 5 1 1 0 2 Jimenez pitched to 3 batters in the 7th. HBP—by Ventura (N.Cruz). WP— Jimenez. T—2:40. A—22,478.

Red sox 8, blue Jays 1

boston

ab r Pedroia 2b 5 0 Victorn rf 6 0 D.Ortiz dh 4 1 Napoli 1b 3 1 JGoms lf 4 0 Bogarts ss 5 1 Przyns c 4 2 Mdlrks 3b 4 1 BrdlyJr cf 4 2 Totals

hbi 2 2 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 3 1 2 2 3 1

Toronto

Reyes ss MeCarr lf Bautist rf Encrnc 1b Navarr c Frncsc dh Lawrie 3b Rasms cf Goins 2b

39 8 16 8 Totals

ab r 4 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 4 0 4 1 3 0 3 0 3 0

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

32 1 6 1

boston 041 002 001—8 Toronto 000 000 100—1 E—Reyes (1). DP—Toronto 2. LOB—Boston 12, Toronto 6. 2B— Victorino (2), Napoli (6), Bogaerts (5), Pierzynski (2), Middlebrooks (2), Bradley Jr. 2 (6), Reyes (2), Bautista (3). 3B—Bradley Jr. (1). HR—D.Ortiz (5), Francisco (1). SB—Bradley Jr. (3). CS—Bautista (1). SF—Pierzynski. boston IP H R eR bb sO Peavy W,1-0 7 5 1 1 2 7 Capuano 1 0 0 0 0 3 A.Miller 1 1 0 0 0 2 Toronto IP H R eR bb sO Buehrle L,4-1 5 1-3 12 7 6 3 0 Wagner 1 1-3 1 0 0 2 1 Redmond 2 1-3 3 1 1 1 2 HBP—by Wagner (Middlebrooks). T—2:57. A—29,411 (49,282). Miami

los angeles 032 030 401—13 New York 000 001 000—1 E—Beltran (2). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Los Angeles 5, New York 9. 2B—H.Kendrick (5), Aybar (3), Conger 2 (3), Beltran (9). HR—Pujols (9), I.Stewart (2), Aybar (1), Cowgill (2). SB—Beltran (1), Gardner (5). SCowgill. SF—A.Soriano. los angeles IP H R eR bb sO C.Wilson W,3-2 6 4 1 1 3 5 Maronde 1 1 0 0 1 1 Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 0 Y.Herrera 1 1 0 0 1 1 New York IP H R eR bb sO Kuroda L,2-2 4 2-3 10 8 6 0 2 Billings 4 4 4 4 1 7 Kelley 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 WP—Kuroda. T—3:30. A—38,358. Chicago

Cardinals 1, Pirates 0

braves 5, Reds 4

BASEBALL baseball

Mets 4, Marlins 3

ab r Yelich lf 4 0 Ozuna cf 4 0 Stanton rf 4 0 McGeh 3b 3 0 Sltlmch c 4 1 GJones 1b 4 1 Dietrch 2b 3 1 Hchvrr ss 4 0 HAlvrz p 1 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 ARams p 0 0 Dobbs ph 1 0 Cishek p 0 0 Totals

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

New York

ab r EYong lf 4 1 Niwnhs ph 1 0 Grndrs rf 5 0 DWrght 3b 4 1 DnMrp 2b 4 0 CYoung cf 4 0 Duda 1b 4 1 dArnad c 3 0 Tejada ss 1 0 Germn p 0 0 BAreu ph 1 0 Wheelr p 1 0 Quntnll ss 2 1

33 3 7 3 Totals

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

34 4 10 4

Miami 000 010 020—3 New York 002 000 002—4 Two outs when winning run scored. E—D.Wright (1). DP—New York 1. LOB—Miami 7, New York 8. 2B— Nieuwenhuis (1), Dan.Murphy (5). HR—Saltalamacchia (3), G.Jones (4). SB—E.Young (11), Dan.Murphy (4), d’Arnaud (1). S—H.Alvarez, d’Arnaud, Wheeler. Miami IP H R eR bb sO H.Alvarez 6 6 2 2 2 4 Da.Jennings 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Ramos H,3 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cishek L,1-1 BS,1 2-3 4 2 2 0 0 New York IP H R eR bb sO Wheeler 6 4 1 1 3 10 Germen BS,1-1 2 2 2 2 0 3 Familia W,1-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 WP—Wheeler 2. T—2:59. A—21,171.

Nationals 11, Padres 1

san Diego ab r ECarer ss 5 0 Denorfi rf 4 0 Alonso 1b 4 0 Gyorko 2b 4 1 Venale cf 2 0 Qcknsh p 0 0 Rivera ph 1 0 Roach p 0 0 Hundly c 4 0 Nady lf 4 0 Amarst 3b 4 0 Erlin p 1 0 Petersn 3b 2 0 Totals

hbi 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

Washington ab r Span cf 5 2 Rendon 3b 5 2 Werth rf 5 1 LaRoch 1b 2 2 TMoore pr 1 0 Dsmnd ss 5 2 Harper lf 2 1 McLoth lf 2 0 Espinos 2b 5 0 Loaton c 5 1 Strasrg p 3 0 Walters ph0 0 Blevins p 0 0 Frndsn ph 1 0

35 1 10 1 Totals

hbi 1 0 4 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 3 2 2 4 1 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

41 111711

san Diego 000 000 010—1 Washington 204 002 21x—11 DP—Washington 2. LOB—San Diego 9, Washington 10. 2B—Rendon (7), LaRoche (4), Desmond (3), Lobaton (5). 3B—Harper (2). SB—Rendon (1). san Diego IP H R eR bb sO Erlin L,1-3 5 1-3 13 8 8 2 3 Quackenbush 1 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 Roach 1 2 1 1 0 0 Washington IP H R eR bb sO Strasburg W,2-2 7 7 0 0 2 11 Blevins 1 3 1 1 0 1 Storen 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Roach (McLouth). Umpires—Home, Jim Joyce; First, Doug Eddings; Second, Marvin Hudson; Third, Cory Blaser. T—3:08. A—25,497 (41,408).

Pittsburgh ab r Tabata lf 4 0 Morris p 0 0 NWalkr 2b 3 0 AMcCt cf 3 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 RMartn c 3 0 CStwrt c 1 0 I.Davis 1b 3 0 Snider rf 2 0 JHrrsn ph 2 0 Barmes ss 2 0 GSnchz ph 1 0 Cole p 1 0 Totals

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

st. louis

ab r MCrpnt 3b 4 1 Jay cf-rf 2 0 Hollidy lf 3 0 MAdms 1b 4 0 YMolin c 4 0 Craig rf 4 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 Wong 2b 4 0 SMiller p 1 0 Neshek p 0 0 Roinsn ph 1 0 Siegrist p 0 0

28 0 4 0 Totals

hbi 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

31 1 8 1

Pittsburgh 000 000 000—0 st. louis 100 000 00x—1 E—P.Alvarez (4). DP—Pittsburgh 1, St. Louis 2. LOB—Pittsburgh 8, St. Louis 10. 2B—A.McCutchen (7), Holliday (6), Jh.Peralta (4). S—Cole. Pittsburgh IP H R eR bb sO Cole L,2-2 7 6 1 1 3 4 Morris 1 2 0 0 0 0 st. louis IP H R eR bb sO S.Miller W,2-2 5 2-3 3 0 0 4 4 Neshek H,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Siegrist H,7 1 0 0 0 0 0 C.Martinez H,6 1 1 0 0 1 2 Rosenthal S,7-7 1 0 0 0 0 3 HBP—by Cole (Jay), by C.Martinez (Marte). WP—C.Martinez. T—3:03. A—43,193 (45,399). Detroit

Tigers 10, Twins 6

ab r Kinsler 2b 5 0 TrHntr rf 5 2 MiCarr 1b 5 0 VMrtnz dh 5 1 AJcksn cf 5 2 Cstllns 3b 5 2 Avila c 2 1 Holady c 2 0 AnRmn ss 3 1 RDavis lf 4 1 Totals

hbi 1 1 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 2 3 1 0 0 0 1 1 3 1

Minnesota ab r Dozier 2b 5 1 Mauer 1b 5 2 Plouffe 3b 4 1 Colaell rf 5 1 Kubel lf 4 1 Pinto dh 4 0 KSuzuk c 1 0 Fuld cf 4 0 Flormn ss 3 0 Hrmnn ph 1 0

41 101510 Totals

hbi 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0

36 6 11 6

Detroit 027 001 000—10 Minnesota 010 004 100—6 E—Kinsler (1), Colabello (1). DP— Detroit 1, Minnesota 1. LOB—Detroit 6, Minnesota 7. 2B—Tor.Hunter 2 (5), A.Jackson (5), An.Romine (1), Plouffe (10), Kubel 2 (6). HR—Castellanos (3), Dozier (7). SB—R.Davis (8). SF—K. Suzuki 2. Detroit IP H R eR bb sO Porcello W,3-1 5 6 4 4 1 4 J.Miller 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Krol 1 0 1 0 0 1 E.Reed 2-3 2 0 0 1 1 Chamberlain H,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan 1 1 0 0 0 1 Minnesota IP H R eR bb sO Correia L,0-3 2 1-3 8 8 7 2 0 Swarzak 3 6 2 2 0 0 Tonkin 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Thielbar 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fien 1 0 0 0 0 0 Porcello pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—3:32. A—27,558 (39,021).

athletics 12, astros 5

Oakland

ab r Crisp cf 5 0 Jaso c 2 0 DNorrs ph 2 1 Lowrie ss 5 0 Dnldsn 3b 4 1 Moss lf 4 1 Callasp dh 3 2 Reddck rf 3 1 Gentry ph 3 1 Barton 1b 5 2 Sogard 2b 2 2 Punto ph 2 1 Totals

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

Houston

ab r Altuve 2b 5 1 Fowler cf 4 0 JCastro c 4 0 Springr rf 4 0 Krauss 1b 3 0 Guzmn ph 2 0 Presley lf 3 1 Hoes ph-lf 1 0 Carter dh 4 1 MGnzlz pr 0 0 MDmn 3b 4 1 Villar ss 3 1

40 121410 Totals

hbi 3 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0

37 5 11 3

Oakland 040 100 007—12 Houston 001 400 000—5 E—Donaldson (6), Peacock (1), Villar (2), Springer (3). DP—Oakland 1, Houston 1. LOB—Oakland 13, Houston 9. 2B—D.Norris (2), Punto (1), Altuve (6), Fowler (4), Carter (6), Villar (6). 3B—Reddick (1). HR—Donaldson (7). SB—Sogard (3). S—Villar. SF—Jaso. Oakland IP H R eR bb sO J.Chavez 5 8 5 4 2 5 Otero 1 1 0 0 0 1 Doolittle 1 1 0 0 0 2 Gregerson W,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 Houston IP H R eR bb sO Peacock 5 5 5 3 6 3 Cisnero 1 1-3 1 0 0 2 2 Valdes 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Qualls 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Fields L,0-2 0 4 5 5 0 0 Bass 1 2 2 2 1 0 Fields pitched to 5 batters in the 9th. HBP—by Abad (J.Castro), by Fields (Moss), by Bass (Moss). WP—J.Chavez. T—4:06. A—17,708 (42,060).

White sox 9, Rays 6

Tampa bay ab r Zobrist 2b 5 0 DJnngs cf 4 0 Joyce lf 0 1 Longori 3b 5 2 Loney 1b 4 0 Myers rf 4 0 DeJess dh 3 1 YEscor ss 4 1 Hanign c 4 1 Totals

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

Chicago

ab r Eaton cf 5 2 Semien 3b 4 1 JAreu 1b 5 2 A.Dunn dh 4 0 JrDnks pr 0 0 Viciedo rf 4 1 AlRmrz ss 4 1 De Aza lf 4 1 Flowrs c 3 0 LeGarc pr 0 1 GBckh 2b 3 0

33 6 10 6 Totals

hbi 1 1 0 0 3 6 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 2 2 0 0 0 0

36 9 12 9

Tampa bay 040 000 002—6 Chicago 101 200 005—9 Two outs when winning run scored. DP—Tampa Bay 2, Chicago 3. LOB— Tampa Bay 11, Chicago 4. 2B—Zobrist (3), De Aza (2), Flowers (2). HR— Longoria (3), J.Abreu 2 (9). SB—Eaton (2). CS—Joyce (2). Tampa bay IP H R eR bb sO Archer 6 9 4 4 0 4 McGee 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jo.Peralta 1 1 0 0 0 1 Balfour L,0-1 2-3 2 5 5 3 0 Chicago IP H R eR bb sO Er.Johnson 1 2-3 4 4 4 4 1 Petricka 2 2-3 3 0 0 3 2 Putnam 2 2-3 2 0 0 2 1 Belisario 1 0 0 0 0 0 Lindstrom W,2-1 1 1 2 2 2 3 Archer pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. WP—Er.Johnson. PB—Flowers. T—4:04. A—17,210 (40,615).

Diamondbacks 5, Phillies 4

Philadelphia ab r Revere cf 5 1 Rollins ss 5 0 Utley 2b 4 0 Howard 1b 4 0 Mayrry pr 1 0 Byrd rf 4 1 DBrwn lf 4 1 Ruiz c 4 1 Asche 3b 3 0 RHrndz p 2 0 GwynJ ph 1 0 Diekmn p 0 0 Nix ph 1 0 Totals

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

arizona

ab r GParra rf 4 1 Prado 3b 4 0 Gldsch 1b 4 1 Monter c 2 1 Hill 2b 4 1 Pollock cf 4 1 Pnngtn ss 4 0 Campn lf 4 0 Cllmntr p 2 0 Kschnc ph 1 0 Thtchr p 0 0 Delgad p 0 0 OPerez p 0 0

38 4 11 3 Totals

hbi 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

33 5 9 5

Philadelphia 000 000 301—4 arizona 000 220 01x—5 E—Pennington (1). DP—Arizona 1. LOB—Philadelphia 9, Arizona 6. 2B— Hill (8). HR—Hill (2), Pollock (2). SB— Revere (7), Rollins (4), G.Parra (2). Philadelphia IP H R eR bb sO R.Hernandez L,1-1 6 7 4 4 2 5 Diekman 2 2 1 1 0 1

arizona IP Collmenter W,1-2 6 Thatcher 1-3 Delgado H,1 2-3 O.Perez H,2 1-3 Ziegler H,2 2-3 A.Reed S,6-7 1 T—3:21. A—28,168 (48,633).

H 4 2 1 1 1 2

R eR bb sO 0 0 0 5 2 2 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 2

Giants 5, Indians 1

Cleveland

ab r Bourn cf 4 1 Swisher 1b4 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 CSantn c 2 0 Brantly lf 4 0 ACarer ss 4 0 Chsnhll 3b 3 0 Aviles ph 1 0 DvMrp rf 4 0 Carrsc p 2 0 ElJhns ph 1 0 Outmn p 0 0 C.Lee p 0 0 Totals

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

san Francisco ab r Pagan cf 4 2 Affeldt p 0 0 J.Lopez p 0 0 Pence rf 4 1 Belt 1b 4 0 Posey c 3 0 Morse lf 2 1 J.Perez lf 0 0 Sandovl 3b3 1 BCrwfr ss 3 0 B.Hicks 2b 3 0 THudsn p 2 0 Blanco ph 1 0

33 1 5 1 Totals

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

29 5 7 5

Cleveland 001 000 000—1 san Francisco 201 100 10x—5 E—Pence (1). LOB—Cleveland 9, San Francisco 2. 3B—Bourn (2), Pence (1), Sandoval (1). HR—Morse (6). SB— Kipnis (4), A.Cabrera (2), Pagan (4). CS—Pence (1). SF—Morse. Cleveland IP H R eR bb sO Carrasco L,0-3 6 5 4 4 1 6 Outman 0 2 1 1 0 0 C.Lee 1 0 0 0 0 2 Atchison 1 0 0 0 0 0 san Francisco T.Hudson W,3-1 7 4 1 1 2 5 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 1 2 J.Lopez 1 0 0 0 1 1 Outman pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. T—2:42. A—41,296 (41,915).

Mariners 6, Rangers 5

Texas

ab r Choice lf 4 0 Andrus ss 3 1 ABeltre 3b 5 0 Fielder 1b 4 1 Rios rf 3 0 DMrph dh 2 0 Morlnd ph 1 0 Arencii c 2 1 Sardins ph 1 1 LMartn cf 3 1 JoWilsn 2b 3 0 Totals

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

seattle

ab r Almont cf 4 1 Blmqst ss 4 1 Cano 2b 4 1 Hart dh 3 0 MSndrs pr 0 1 Romer rf 4 1 Smoak 1b 3 1 Seager 3b 4 0 Gillespi lf 3 0 Ackley ph 1 0 Zunino c 3 0

31 5 8 3 Totals

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

33 6 10 5

Texas 001 101 002—5 seattle 000 020 04x—6 E—A.Beltre (4). DP—Texas 2, Seattle 3. LOB—Texas 7, Seattle 7. 2B—A.Beltre (4), Rios (7), Arencibia (2), Cano (4), Romero (3), Smoak (5). SB—L.Martin (6). CS—Gillespie (1). S—L.Martin. Texas IP H R eR bb sO Ross Jr. 6 6 2 2 0 5 Frasor H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cotts L,1-2 BS,3-3 0 4 4 4 0 0 Ogando 1 0 0 0 0 1 seattle IP H R eR bb sO Elias 5 2-3 5 3 3 3 6 Leone 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Medina W,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rodney S,4-5 1 2 2 2 2 0 Cotts pitched to 5 batters in the 8th. HBP—by Cotts (Hart), by Ross Jr. (Zunino, Smoak, Almonte), by Rodney (Jo.Wilson). WP—Ogando, Elias, Leone. PB—Arencibia. Umpires—Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; First, Mike Estabrook; Second, Gabe Morales; Third, Mike DiMuro. T—2:55. A—31,145 (47,476).

THIs DaTe IN baseball april 26

2005 — Alex Rodriguez hit three home runs and had a career-high 10 RBIs to lead the New York Yankees over the Los Angeles Angels 12-4. Rodriguez homered in his first three at-bats, including his 11th career grand slam in the fourth.

HOCKEY HOCKeY

NHl PlaYOFFs First Round

Best of 7; x-if necessary

easTeRN CONFeReNCe

boston 3, Detroit 1 saturday, april 26 Detroit at Boston, 1 p.m. x-Monday, april 28 Boston at Detroit, TBD Previous Results Detroit 1, Boston 0 Boston 4, Detroit 1 Boston 3, Detroit 0 Boston 3, Detroit 2, OT Montreal 4, Tampa bay 0 Previous Results Montreal 5, Tampa Bay 4, OT Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 1 Montreal 3, Tampa Bay 2 Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 3 Pittsburgh 2, Columbus 2 saturday, april 26 Columbus at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Monday, april 28 Pittsburgh at Columbus, TBD Previous Results Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 3 Columbus 4, Pittsburgh 3, 2OT Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 3 Columbus 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT N.Y. Rangers 2, Philadelphia 2 Friday, april 25 Philadelphia 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 sunday, april 27 Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 10 a.m. Previous Results N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1 Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Rangers 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1

WesTeRN CONFeReNCe

Colorado 2, Minnesota 2 saturday, april 26 Minnesota at Colorado, 7:30 p.m. Monday, april 28 Colorado at Minnesota, TBD Previous Results Colorado 5, Minnesota 4, OT Colorado 4, Minnesota 2 Minnesota 1, Colorado 0, OT Minnesota 2, Colorado 1 Chicago 3, st. louis 2 Friday, april 25 Chicago 3, St. Louis 2, OT sunday, april 27 St. Louis at Chicago, 1 p.m. Previous Results St. Louis 4, Chicago 3, 3OT St. Louis 4, Chicago 3, OT Chicago 2, St. Louis 0 Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, OT anaheim 3, Dallas 2 Friday, april 25 Anaheim 6, Dallas 2 sunday, april 27 Anaheim at Dallas, 6 p.m. Previous Results Anaheim 4, Dallas 3 Anaheim 3, Dallas 2 Dallas 3, Anaheim 0 Dallas 4, Anaheim 2 san Jose 3, los angeles 1 x-saturday, april 26 Los Angeles at San Jose, 8 p.m. x-Monday, april 28 San Jose at Los Angeles, TBD Previous Results San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3 San Jose 7, Los Angeles 2 San Jose 4, Los Angeles 3, OT Los Angeles 6, San Jose 3

NHl suMMaRIes Friday Flyers 2, Rangers 1

N.Y. Rangers 1 0 0—1 Philadelphia 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, D.Moore 1 (Boyle), 4:38. 2, Philadelphia, Read 1 (Akeson, Coburn), 8:55. second Period—3, Philadelphia, Voracek 2 (B.Schenn, Streit), 7:22 (pp). Third Period—None. shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 16-1210—38. Philadelphia 6-11-8—25. Power-play opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 0 of 4; Philadelphia 1 of 2. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 2-2-0 (25 shots-23 saves). Philadelphia, Mason 1-0-0 (38-37). a—20,132 (19,541). T—2:31.

blackhawks 3, blues 2, OT

Chicago 1 1 0 1—3 st. louis 0 1 1 0—2 First Period—1, Chicago, Hossa 1 (Bickell, Hjalmarsson), 16:11. second Period—2, St. Louis, Oshie 1 (Steen, Jackman), 11:04. 3, Chicago, Smith 1 (Brookbank, Kane), 17:10. Third Period—4, St. Louis, Pietrangelo 1 (Schwartz), 1:42. First Overtime—5, Chicago, Toews 2 (Keith), 7:36. shots on Goal—Chicago 9-11-8-2—30. St. Louis 6-13-7-3—29. Power-play opportunities—Chicago 0 of 2; St. Louis 0 of 2. Goalies—Chicago, Crawford 3-2-0 (29 shots-27 saves). St. Louis, Miller 2-3-0 (30-27). a—19,796 (19,150). T—2:55.

late Thursday Kings 6, sharks 3

san Jose 1 1 1—3 los angeles 1 3 2—6 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Gaborik 2 (D.Brown, Voynov), 4:08. 2, San Jose, Sheppard 1 (Hannan, Hertl), 19:52. second Period—3, Los Angeles, Williams 1 (Richards, Muzzin), 3:52 (pp). 4, San Jose, Nieto 2 (Marleau), 8:25. 5, Los Angeles, Williams 2 (Mitchell, Stoll), 16:07. 6, Los Angeles, Toffoli 1 (Martinez, Carter), 19:01. Third Period—7, Los Angeles, Gaborik 3 (Kopitar), :34. 8, San Jose, Pavelski 2 (Marleau, Boyle), 11:36 (pp). 9, Los Angeles, D.Brown 1 (Toffoli), 18:32 (en). shots on Goal—San Jose 17-11-11— 39. Los Angeles 12-13-6—31. Power-play opportunities—San Jose 1 of 4; Los Angeles 1 of 5. Goalies—San Jose, Niemi 3-1-0 (26 shots-21 saves), Stalock (0:34 third, 4-4). Los Angeles, Quick 1-3-0 (39-36). a—18,376 (18,118). T—2:48.

BASKETBALL basKeTball Nba PlaYOFFs First Round

(best-of-7; x-if necessary)

easTeRN CONFeReNCe

atlanta 2, Indiana 1 saturday, april 26 Indiana at Atlanta, 12 p.m. Monday, april 28 Atlanta at Indiana, 6 p.m. Previous Results Atlanta 101, Indiana 93 Indiana 101, Atlanta 85 Atlanta 98, Indiana 85 Miami 2, Charlotte 0 saturday, april 26 Miami at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Monday, april 28 Miami at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Previous Results Miami 99, Charlotte 88 Miami 101, Charlotte 97 brooklyn 2, Toronto 1 Friday, april 25 Brooklyn 102, Toronto 98 sunday, april 27 Toronto at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. Previous Results Brooklyn 94, Toronto 87 Toronto 100, Brooklyn 95 Washington 2, Chicago 1 Friday, april 25 Chicago 100, Washington 97 sunday, april 27 Chicago at Washington, 11 a.m. Previous Results Washington 102, Chicago 93 Washington 101, Chicago 99, OT

WesTeRN CONFeReNCe

san antonio 1, Dallas 1 saturday, april 26 San Antonio at Dallas, 2:30 p.m. Monday, april 28 San Antonio at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Previous Results San Antonio 90, Dallas 85 Dallas 113, San Antonio 92 Memphis 2, Oklahoma City 1 saturday, april 26 Oklahoma City at Memphis, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, april 29 Memphis at Okla. City, 6, 7 or 7:30 p.m. Previous Results Oklahoma City 100, Memphis 86 Memphis 111, Oklahoma City 105, OT Memphis 98, Oklahoma City 95, OT l.a. Clippers 2, Golden state 1 sunday, april 27 L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, april 29 Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. Previous Results Golden State 109, L.A. Clippers 105 L.A. Clippers 138, Golden State 98 L.A. Clippers 98, Golden State 96 Portland 2, Houston 0 Friday, april 25 Houston at Portland sunday, april 27 Houston at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Previous Results Portland 122, Houston 120, OT Portland 112, Houston 105

Nba bOxsCORes Friday Nets 102, Raptors 98

TORONTO (98) Ross 1-4 2-2 5, A.Johnson 3-6 1-2 7, Valanciunas 4-4 2-4 10, Lowry 4-9 6-6 15, DeRozan 8-22 13-15 30, Patterson 6-7 2-4 17, Vasquez 2-6 2-2 7, Fields 0-2 0-0 0, Hansbrough 1-3 1-2 3, Salmons 2-4 0-0 4, Novak 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-67 29-37 98. bROOKlYN (102) J.Johnson 11-17 4-4 29, Pierce 5-9 7-7 18, Garnett 1-3 0-0 2, Williams 7-14 6-9 22, Livingston 1-3 1-2 3, Plumlee 2-4 0-2 4, Anderson 0-0 1-2 1, Teletovic 2-7 0-0 5, Thornton 2-6 2-3 6, Kirilenko 0-1 0-0 0, Blatche 2-3 8-8 12. Totals 33-67 29-37 102. Toronto 23 22 21 32—98 brooklyn 19 30 28 25—102 3-Point Goals—Toronto 7-22 (Patterson 3-4, Ross 1-2, Vasquez 1-3, DeRozan 1-4, Lowry 1-6, Salmons 0-1, A.Johnson 0-2), Brooklyn 7-20 (J.Johnson 3-4, Williams 2-5, Pierce 1-3, Teletovic 1-5, Garnett 0-1, Thornton 0-2). Fouled Out—Lowry, Garnett. Rebounds—Toronto 47 (Valanciunas 10), Brooklyn 39 (Livingston 6). Assists—Toronto 18 (Vasquez 6), Brooklyn 21 (Williams 8). Total Fouls— Toronto 31, Brooklyn 32. Technicals— Vasquez. A—17,732 (17,732).

bulls 100, Wizards 97

CHICaGO (100) Dunleavy 12-19 3-4 35, Boozer 6-12 2-2 14, Noah 2-4 2-6 6, Hinrich 2-4 0-0 4, Butler 3-7 7-8 15, Gibson 5-8 3-6 13, Augustin 4-15 3-4 13, Snell 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 34-71 20-30 100. WasHINGTON (97) Ariza 7-16 0-0 16, Nene 5-15 0-0 10, Gortat 6-12 1-2 13, Wall 7-14 8-12 23, Beal 8-18 6-7 25, Booker 1-3 0-0 2, Webster 2-5 0-0 6, Miller 1-3 0-0 2, Harrington 0-0 0-0 0, Gooden 0-0 0-0 0, Temple 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-86 15-21 97. Chicago 28 20 24 28 —100 Washington 30 21 18 28 —97 3-Point Goals—Chicago 12-24 (Dunleavy 8-10, Butler 2-5, Augustin 2-6, Hinrich 0-1, Snell 0-2), Washington 8-19 (Beal 3-6, Webster 2-5, Ariza 2-6, Wall 1-2). Fouled Out—Noah. Rebounds—Chicago 55 (Noah 9), Washington 47 (Gortat, Ariza 11). Assists—Chicago 24 (Augustin 7), Washington 20 (Wall 7). Total Fouls—Chicago 23, Washington 22. Technicals—Butler, Nene 2. Ejected— Nene. A—23,356 (20,308).

late Thursday Clippers 98, Warriors 96

l.a. ClIPPeRs (98) M.Barnes 0-6 0-0 0, Griffin 15-25 2-9 32, Jordan 5-8 4-9 14, Paul 5-13 3-4 15, Redick 5-11 1-1 14, Ja.Crawford 5-11 0-0 13, Davis 2-2 0-0 4, Collison 3-7 0-0 6, Granger 0-1 0-0 0, Turkoglu 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 40-86 10-23 98. GOlDeN sTaTe (96) Iguodala 4-9 3-7 11, Lee 6-15 0-0 12, O’Neal 3-5 4-4 10, Curry 5-12 3-4 16, Thompson 10-22 4-4 26, D.Green 5-11 2-3 13, H.Barnes 2-8 0-0 4, Blake 0-1 0-0 0, Jo.Crawford 1-4 0-0 2, Speights 1-2 0-2 2, Armstrong 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-89 16-24 96. l.a. Clippers 24 22 29 23—98 Golden state 21 22 21 32—96 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 8-28 (Ja. Crawford 3-6, Redick 3-6, Paul 2-7, Granger 0-1, Griffin 0-1, Turkoglu 0-2, Collison 0-2, M.Barnes 0-3), Golden State 6-31 (Curry 3-8, Thompson 2-11, D.Green 1-5, Iguodala 0-1, Blake 0-1, Jo.Crawford 0-1, H.Barnes 0-4). Fouled Out—D.Green. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 59 (Jordan 22), Golden State 60 (D.Green 11). Assists—L.A. Clippers 25 (Paul 10), Golden State 26 (Curry 15). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 20, Golden State 18. Technicals—Paul, L.A. Clippers defensive three second, Golden State defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls—M.Barnes, D.Green. A—19,596.

TENNIS TeNNIs

aTP WORlD TOuR barcelona Open banc sabadell

Friday at barcelona, spain; Purse: $2.94 million (WT500); surface: ClayOutdoor singles - Quarterfinals Ernests Gulbis (9), Latvia, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, 6-1, 6-4. Kei Nishikori (4), Japan, def. Marin Cilic (12), Croatia, 6-1, 6-3. Nicolas Almagro (6), Spain, def. Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, 2-6, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (10), Germany, 6-4, 6-3.

bRD Nastase Tiriac Trophy

Friday at bucharest, Romania; Purse: $670,500 (WT250); surface: ClayOutdoor singles - Quarterfinals Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. Gilles Simon (4), France, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Robin Haase, Netherlands, def. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, 3-6, 6-1, 6-3. Gael Monfils (3), France, def. PaulHenri Mathieu, France, 3-6, 7-6 (8), 6-2. Grigor Dimitrov (1), Bulgaria, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-4.

WTa TOuR Tour Porsche Grand Prix

Friday at stuttgart, Germany; Purse: $710,000 (Premier); surface: Clay-Indoor singles - Quarterfinals Maria Sharapova (6), Russia, def. Agnieszka Radwanska (1), Poland, 6-4, 6-3. Sara Errani (8), Italy, def. Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, 6-3, 6-7 (6), 3-0, retired. Ana Ivanovic (9), Serbia, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. Jelena Jankovic (5), Serbia, def. Alisa Kleybanova, Russia, 6-4, 6-3.

Tour Grand Prix saR la Princesse lalla Meryem

Friday at Marrakech, Morocco; Purse: $250,000 (Intl.); surface: Clay-Outdoor singles - Quarterfinals Garbine Muguruza (5), Spain, def. Shahar Peer, Israel, 6-3, 6-1. Romina Oprandi, Switzerland, def. Yvonne Meusburger (3), Austria, 6-4, 6-4. Daniela Hantuchova (1), Slovakia, def. Peng Shuai (6), China, walkover. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain, def. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5).

GOlF GOLF

PGa TOuR Zurich Classic

Friday at avondale, la. Purse: $6.8 million Yardage: 7,425; Par: 72 second Round Ben Martin Andrew Svoboda Seung-Yul Noh Robert Streb Erik Compton Peter Hanson Charley Hoffman Jeff Overton Keegan Bradley J.B. Holmes Will Wilcox Michael Thompson Bo Van Pelt Graham DeLaet David Duval Retief Goosen Tommy Gainey J.J. Henry Chad Collins Mark Anderson Kevin Kisner Morgan Hoffmann Daniel Summerhays Justin Rose Kyle Stanley Alex Prugh Robert Allenby Kevin Chappell Bud Cauley Bronson La’Cassie Brooks Koepka Paul Casey Stuart Appleby D.H. Lee John Rollins Danny Lee Sang-Moon Bae Brendan Steele Briny Baird

62-67—129 64-68—132 65-68—133 67-66—133 66-68—134 65-69—134 68-67—135 67-68—135 69-66—135 71-65—136 68-68—136 66-71—137 74-63—137 69-68—137 68-69—137 72-65—137 71-66—137 68-69—137 66-71—137 72-65—137 69-68—137 70-68—138 72-66—138 71-67—138 71-67—138 70-68—138 71-68—139 72-67—139 71-68—139 70-69—139 71-68—139 71-68—139 67-72—139 68-71—139 74-66—140 71-69—140 68-72—140 73-67—140 71-69—140


sPOrTs

Nets: Chicago Bulls overpower Wizards Continued from Page B-1 reminder that the Nets brought the veterans here as much for their bravado as their basketball. But all that experience almost didn’t matter after the Nets made a series of mistakes down the stretch. DeMar DeRozan scored 30 points for the Raptors, who have lost 13 straight road playoff games. Patrick Patterson added 17 points but missed two free throws with a chance to tie for Toronto, whose last postseason victory was May 6, 2001, in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals at Philadelphia. “I missed. First big free throws I’ve ever missed in my life like that,” Patterson said. “Unfortunately, it [stinks] but all I can do is look forward to the next opportunity.” Kyle Lowry fouled out with 15 points, forcing the Raptors to try to complete the comeback without their point guard. And they almost did. “This team tried to throw haymakers at us and go at us, and we did a good job of battling back and staying in the game,” Raptors coach Dwane Casey said. Toronto charged back and was in position to tie when Patterson went to the line with 19 seconds left. But he missed both and Pierce knocked down two to make it 100-96, and Johnson then made two with 3.1 seconds to go after Amir Johnson’s follow shot as Brooklyn held on. “It feels good to win, but at the same time you know you can be a lot better,” Pierce said. “‘I’m looking for down the road, I’m looking for when it’s like that Game 6 or 7, if we’re ever in that situation with this team, it’s going to come to those little things and we can’t afford those small mistakes.” The Raptors beat the Nets in their first trip here this season, one of only four home losses for Brooklyn in 27 home games

Saturday, April 26, 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. aTHlETiCs 10:30 a.m. on NBCSN — Penn Relays, in Philadelphia 1 p.m. on NBCSN — Drake Relays, in Des Moines, Iowa auTO raCiNG 4 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, qualifying for SpringNationals, in Baytown, Texas (same-day tape) 5 p.m. on FOX — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Toyota Owners 400, in Richmond, Va. 10:30 p.m. on NBCSN — IndyCar, qualifying for Grand Prix of Alabama, in Birmingham, Ala. (delayed tape) BOXiNG 3 p.m. on ESPN — Champion Wladimir Klitschko (61/3-0) vs. Alex Leapai (30-4-3), for WBA/IBF/WBO heavyweight title, in Oberhausen, Germany COllEGE BasEBall Noon on ESPN — Alabama at South Carolina 6 p.m. on ESPNU — Hawaii at Cal St.-Fullerton

Toronto Raptors’ Landry Fields, above, falls over Brooklyn Nets’ Shaun Livingston as he chases a ball out of bounds during the second half of Friday’s playoff game in New York. FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

since Jan. 1. Toronto had a franchise-record 22 home victories during the regular season, and Casey hoped his team could handle its first road playoff test. But the Nets’ experience was evident for the first three quarters, especially once Pierce and Garnett made their impression on the game. The Nets’ last playoff game here was a disappointment, a Game 7 loss to Chicago in the first round last year in which they came out with surprisingly little fire in a do-or-die game. They traded for Pierce and Garnett on draft night, and on Friday they brought to Brooklyn the playoff passion they showed for so many years together in Boston. Toronto led 23-19 after one and held a small lead until late in the second. Joe Johnson’s

Larry Baca keeping high hopes for what might come in three weeks at the state meet. “They’re all right there,” Baca said. “We need to have meets that will allow five guys [to score points]. They work hard and they work on their drills every day, and they usually do what I tell them to do.” Nobody needs to tell Santa Fe High sophomore Akeisha Ayanniyi about her mental block. She knows that process all too well, since it took her two months to finally post the long jump distance she performed regularly in practice. That breakthrough came last year at the Harper meet. She returned a year later in a much different, and much better, place. Her jump of 18-2¼ in the long jump has Ayanniyi thinking of a new number – 18-2½. That’s the Class AAAA state record, and Ayanniyi came a whisker shy of matching it as she won the long jump by almost a foot over Los Alamos’ Chelsea Challacombe, who was second at 17-3¼. It was a far cry from where she was a year ago, when Ayanniyi languished in the 15-foot range at meets while jumping a foot longer during practices. When she ripped off a 16-10 in Albuquerque last April, the weight of the world melted away. She broke 17 feet at the state meet. Then it was on to 18 feet at the Marilyn Sepulveda Meet of Champions in Albu-

2 p.m. on FSN — Kansas at Baylor GOlF

free throws tied it, Pierce knocked then a pair, and then he left Tyler Hansbrough standing still near the foul line, driving for a dunk that made it 45-41. The dunk got the fans on their feet, but Garnett’s intensity really got them in a frenzy. He dove on the floor for a ball that had been kicked, wrestling it away from Amir Johnson, and when he got up, held the ball high and screamed toward the fans behind the basket, then pulled out the part of his jersey that read “BROOKLYN” toward them. Pierce later had a three-point play and a 3-pointer in the Nets’ big finish to the third, his jumper with 2.7 seconds left making it 77-66. That felt like a huge lead in a series where neither team led by more than five

points after three quarters in their four regular-season games and first two in the playoffs. Bulls 100, Wizards 97 In Washington, Mike Dunleavy scored 35 points, one shy of his career-high, Jimmy Butler hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with 24 seconds remaining, and Chicago hung on for a win over the Wizards, trimming the deficit to 2-1 in their Eastern Conference first round series. Dunleavy went 12 for 19 from the field, including a careerhigh eight 3-pointers on 10 attempts, for the Bulls, who are attempting to become only the fourth NBA team to win a seven-game series after losing the first two at home. Game 4 is Sunday in Washington. Bradley Beal scored 13 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter for the Wizards.

Top: State championship three weeks away Continued from Page B-1

COllEGE sOFTBall

querque on April 14. The one thing that can make her dream a reality is consistency, and she hammered that home with her performance. She jumped at least 18 feet twice, and her worst jump was her last one, a 17-3¾ that still would have won the meet. “Some meets, I’ll jump 15’s and I’m not happy,” Ayanniyi said. “So when I can consistently jump 17 feet, I know that it wasn’t just luck of the draw or just that meet. It’s knowing that hard work does pay off.” Ayanniyi’s presence wasn’t just limited to the jumps. She was a part of a 400 relay team that set a Harper meet record as well as a school record with a time of 47.6 seconds in the preliminaries, which was more than a second better than Albuquerque Cibola. The time also coincided with the first time the “A” team ran together since the Chandler (Ariz.) Rotary Invitational in March. Lead runner Tiffany Garcia missed two weeks after that meet with a sore Achilles tendon and Samantha Woodman sat out most of last week’s Capital City invite with a hamstring injury. Even with Ryann Tanuz in place of Woodman last week, the relay team set the best time in AAAA with a 48.94 — until this week. The healthy foursome back, which includes Shantal Roybal and Ayanniyi, it ran 2.7 seconds faster than it did a month ago, and posted a time that would be a

state record in any classification. But the only way the Demonettes can stake their claim to history is to do at the state meet. “For us to drop another second is amazing,” Ayanniyi said. “We wouldn’t be here if we didn’t have all four of us together. Being a team and being able to bond gives us that extra push to get that time [Friday].” As Santa Fe High drops its number, Liam Johnson raises the bar on his. The Los Alamos freshman took up pole vaulting only this spring, but it’s hard to tell. The first time he vaulted competitively, he cleared 8 feet in March. Five weeks later, he vaulted 12-0 to take second place in the event and qualify for state. Johnson was close to clearing 12-6, but his hip grazed the bar on his final try. “I’m proud [of clearing 12-0], and I’m still trying to work my way up to the school record,” Johnson said. The path to that mark goes through teammate Seth Drop, who also cleared 12-0 at the Harper but finished fifth based on the number of misses. His height of 12-6 is second in the state, and he felt his performance at the Harper was his best from a technical standpoint. He, too, fell victim of a wandering hip that caught the bar on his final attempt. “I’ve times where I’ve hit it much harder and it stayed,” Drop said. “I was hoping to get lucky.” Sometimes, luck is all you need to vault barriers.

4:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, China Open, third round, in Shenzhen, China (same-day tape) 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, third round, in New Orleans 1 p.m. on CBS — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, third round, in New Orleans 4:30 p.m. on TGC — LPGA, Swinging Skirts Classic, third round, in Daly City, Calif. MaJOr lEaGuE BasEBall 11 a.m. on FS1 — L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees 2 p.m. on FS1 — Pittsburgh at St. Louis 5 p.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, Cincinnati at Atlanta or Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox 5 p.m. on WGN — Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee NBa Noon on TNT — Playoffs, first round, game 4, Indiana at Atlanta 2:30 p.m. on TNT — Playoffs, first round, game 3, San Antonio at Dallas 5 p.m. on ESPN — Playoffs, first round, game 3, Miami at Charlotte 7:30 p.m. on ESPN — Playoffs, first round, game 4, Oklahoma City at Memphis NHl 1 p.m. on NBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Detroit at Boston 5 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Columbus at Pittsburgh 7:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Minnesota at Colorado 8 p.m. on CNBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Los Angeles at San Jose (if necessary) sOCCEr 5:40 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Everton at Southampton 7:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Hull City at Fulham 10:30 a.m. on NBC — Premier League, Norwich City at Manchester United

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

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

PREP SCHEDULE This week’s list of varsity high school sporting events. For additions or changes, email us at sports@sfnewmexican.com:

Today Baseball — Mora at Santa Fe Preparatory, DH, 10 a.m. (at Fort Marcy) Española Valley at Los Alamos, DH, 11 a.m. Santa Fe Indian School at St. Michael’s, DH, 11 a.m. Pojoaque Valley at Taos, DH, 11 a.m. Raton at West Las Vegas, DH, 11 a.m. Pecos at East Mountain, DH, noon Softball — Española Valley at Los Alamos, DH, 11 a.m. Santa Fe Indian School at St. Michael’s, DH, 11 a.m. Pojoaque Valley at Taos, DH, 11 a.m. Raton at West Las Vegas, DH, 11 a.m. McCurdy at Mora, DH, 11 a.m. Tennis — Grants at Santa Fe High, 11 a.m. (at Capital) Track & Field — Northern Rio Grande Meet, 9 a.m., hosted by Mesa Vista (McCurdy, Peñasco, Mora, Questa, Pecos, Mesa Vista) Richard Harper Memorial, 9 a.m., hosted by Abq. Academy (Capital, Los Alamos, St. Michael’s, Santa Fe High) Taos Tiger Relays, 9 a.m., hosted by Taos (Española Valley, Pojoaque Valley, Taos) Mark Shumate Invitational, 9 a.m., hosted by Abq. Menaul (West Las Vegas, Santa Fe Preparatory, Academy for Technology and the Classics)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Bandits: Tradition dates back decades Continued from Page B-1 the official runners. “The adjudication committee will decide what action will be taken,” he said, “with full consideration to the impact of cheating on those who have worked so hard to qualify and those who give so much of themselves to raise money for our outstanding local charities.” There is a long and even proud tradition of bandits in the Boston Marathon, with Roberta Gibb running unofficially in 1966 to shatter the ban keeping women from the race. But while adding a few hundred unofficial runners in the race’s infancy might have been a minor inconvenience,

the growth of the event — and the security needs after last year’s bombings — have made banditry a bigger problem. With the official field expanded to 36,000 this year to include the thousands stopped along the course when the bombs went off at the finish line and thousands more who wanted to run in support, BAA and public safety officials told bandits to stay away. “Fluids, medical care, and traffic safety, are provided based on the number of official entrants,” organizers said on their website. “Any addition to this by way of unofficial participants, adversely affects our ability to ensure a safe race for everyone.” But there’s another problem

with bandits, and it’s the one that makes serious runners chafe like cotton shorts on a cold day: Because Boston requires most runners to meet a qualifying standard, showing up on race day is only part of the feat. To those who qualified, bib bandits are a sort of modernday Rosie Ruiz taking a shortcut to the finish line. “There’s two parts of that marathon: There’s qualifying to get there, and then there’s running it. Anyone can go the 26.2 miles,” said Michael Sullivan, who found another man wearing his bib No. 10055 in the race photos. “Anybody who has strived to run it, or strived to get there, or is a runner who understands how difficult it

really is.” Those outed for running with false bibs say they didn’t mean any offense. After Boston TV station WCVB ran a story on Chelsa Crowley’s banditry — she ran with her Twitter handle on her shirt — her husband, FourSquare founder Dennis Crowley, posted an apology on the station’s web site. “Yes, using a duplicate number to get Chelsa into the starting corral with me was wrong,” he wrote, explaining that they were separated near the finish line last year because of the explosions. “Our intent was never to ‘steal’ anything from anyone — our intent was to finish the Boston Marathon together as we tried to do last year.”

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

NEW MEXiCaN sPOrTs

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com

Rain postpones Isotopes game The Albuquerque Isotopes’ Pacific Coast league road game with the Fresno Grizzlies on Friday night was postponed due to rain. The two teams will play a doubleheader Saturday starting at 6:05 p.m to make up for the lost game. The Isotopes will finish up a four-game series with the Grizzlies on Sunday and will return to Albuquerque on Monday for the start of the 12-game homestand, where they will play a four-game series with Salt Lake, Fresno and Sacramento. The New Mexican


B-4

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

AMERICAN LEAGUE

NHL PLAYOFFS

Ortiz homers as Red Sox rout Blue Jays Toews lifts Blackhawks

TORONTO — David Ortiz homered, Jake Peavy pitched seven strong innings and the Boston Red Red Sox 8 Sox beat the Toronto Blue Jays 1 Blue Jays 8-1 on Friday night. Will Middlebrooks returned from the disabled list with two hits and two RBIs as Boston bounced back from an errorfilled loss to the Yankees on Thursday. The Red Sox held a pregame meeting after making five errors in their 14-5 home defeat against New York. “No one is proud of the way things unfolded [Thursday] night,” manager John Farrell said. “That was an ugly game.” The Red Sox set season highs with 16 hits and eight extra-base hits as they roughed up lefthander Mark Buehrle (4-1), who was trying to become the first Blue Jays pitcher to start a season with five straight wins. ANGELS 13, YANKEES 1 In New York, Albert Pujols hit one of Los Angeles’ four home runs, C.J. Wilson kept the Yankees in check again, and the Angels roughed up road weary New York. Pujols hit homer No. 501 and Ian Stewart had a two-run shot off Hiroki Kuroda (2-2) for the majors’ top slugging squad. Erick Aybar connected for a three-run drive and Colin Cowgill went deep against Bruce Billings, one of the pitchers called up when Michael Pineda was suspended for 10 games after being caught with pine tar on his neck Wednesday night. Wilson (3-2) gave up a run and four hits in six innings, the seventh time in eight starts he’s held New York to two or fewer

past Blues in overtime

Detroit to a victory over Minnesota. Rick Porcello (3-1) gave up four runs and six hits with four strikeouts in five innings for the Tigers, who broke the game open with seven runs in the third. Rajai Davis had three hits to raise his average to .354. Kevin Correia (0-3) gave up eight runs — seven earned — and eight hits in 2⅓ innings for Minnesota. It was his shortest outing since going just two innings last Aug. 5 against the Royals.

The Associated Press

FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS

AThLETIcS 12, ASTROS 5 In Houston, Daric Barton and Josh Donaldson had two RBIs apiece in a seven-run ninth inning to help Oakland to a win over the Astros. The game was tied at 5 when Josh Fields (0-2) plunked Brandon Moss before back-to-back singles by Alberto Callaspo and Craig Gentry loaded the bases. Barton’s sharply hit grounder bounced off Jose Altuve’s glove and into right field to send two home. Rookie George Springer’s error on that play allowed a third run to score, sending the few fans left filing to the exits.

looked to be in obvious discomfort as he walked toward the dugout following a third-inning flyout. Davis led the majors with 53 home runs and 138 RBIs last season. Ventura (2-1) had a careerROYALS 5, ORIOLES 0 high eight strikeouts and walked In Baltimore, Yordano Ventura two in his seventh major league scattered seven hits over eight start. Greg Holland worked a innings as Kansas City cruised to perfect ninth to finish off the a victory over Baltimore, which Royals’ second shutout of the played the latter part of the season. game without injured slugger TIGERS 10, TWINS 6 Chris Davis. In Minneapolis, Nick CastellaDavis left in the fifth inning nos homered and drove in three with a left oblique strain. The runs, and Torii Hunter had two severity of the injury was not doubles and two RBIs to lead immediately known, but Davis

WhITE SOx 9, RAYS 6 In Chicago, Jose Abreu hit a game-winning grand slam with two outs in the ninth inning for his second home run of the night, rallying the White Sox past Tampa Bay. Evan Longoria’s two-run homer in the top of the ninth put Tampa Bay ahead 6-4, but the White Sox weren’t done. Abreu’s drive off closer Grant Balfour (0-1) won it after Chicago pitchers combined for 11 walks. Balfour gave up a one-out double to Alejandro De Aza, then walked Tyler Flowers and pinchhitter Paul Konerko. As Konerko trotted to first, Balfour and Konerko exchanged words.

Red Sox starting pitcher Jake Peavy works against the Blue Jays during the first inning of Friday’s game in Toronto.

earned runs. The Angels’ 35 homers is a club record for March and April and leads the majors. Pujols has a majors-leading nine home runs.

By R.B. Fallstrom

The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Jonathan Toews caught the St. Louis Blues’ defense napping after the Chicago Blackhawks got a lucky carom. Just like that, the puck was in the net and Blackhawks 3 the defendBlues 2 ing Stanley Cup champions were in command of the first-round series. “I wasn’t even sure where their D-men were,” Toews said after scoring at 7:36 of overtime to give the Blackhawks a 3-2 victory Friday night and a 3-2 series lead. “Just got going as fast as I could. Take advantage of a chance.” Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford stopped a shot by David Backes, defenseman Duncan Keith cleared the puck and the rebound deflected off Andrew Shaw’s shin pad all the way to the Chicago captain alone at center ice off a change. Toews sped in with two defensemen in futile pursuit and threw a few fakes at goalie Ryan Miller before slipping a backhander into the net. “I was just saying to some of the guys in the other room, I’m trying to get the puck out of the zone and all of a sudden it lands on his stick,” Keith said. “Couldn’t believe it. So, I was pretty happy seeing that.” St. Louis defenseman Roman Polak saw Toews coming off the bench but reasoned that the Blues had control, so he left the ice about the same time Backes was shooting. Replacement Jay Bouwmeester never had a chance and Toews also got behind Jordan Leopold. “It was a lucky bounce or something,” Polak said. “It was just a lucky bounce.” Marian Hossa and Ben Smith also scored for the Blackhawks, who have won three in a row and can wrap up the first-round series at home Sunday. Four of the first five games in the series have gone to overtime. “I think we got lucky on that winning goal, but I don’t think that at the end of the day we win because of luck,” Keith said. “I think both teams have a lot of fire and grit and a lot of determination, and it’s a fine line between winning and losing. “Like I’ve said a few times, we’re going to need our best game of the year our next game.” T.J. Oshie and Alex Pietrangelo scored for the Blues.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Granderson caps 9th-inning rally; Mets sting Miami

NEW YORK — Slumping Curtis Granderson grounded an RBI single to cap an improbable two-run rally with two outs in the ninth inning, sendMets 4 ing the New York Mets past the Miami Marlins Marlins 3 4-3 Friday night. After Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Garrett Jones hit back-to-back home runs in the eighth that put the Marlins ahead 3-2, the Mets stung Marlins closer Steve Cishek. Cishek (1-1) had converted a team-record 33 straight save chances — the longest active streak in the majors — before Lucas Duda led off the ninth with a single and moved up on a sacrifice. Left fielder Christian Yelich then made a nice running catch on pinch-hitter Bobby Abreu’s liner for the second out. Omar Quintanilla followed with a single down the line and Yelich slipped on the dirt as he got ready to throw home, letting Duda score standing up. NATIONALS 11, PADRES 1 In Washington, Bryce Harper drove in a career-high four runs before leaving the game, and Stephen Strasburg pitched seven scoreless innings as the Nationals defeated the Padres. Harper drove in a run with an infield single in the first and had a bases-loaded triple in the third. Following his headfirst dive into third base on the triple, Harper flexed his

left wrist. He was later replaced in left field by Nate McLouth to start the fifth inning. No announcement was made regarding whether or not Harper was injured. Anthony Rendon had a career-high four hits for Washington. BRAVES 5, REDS 4 In Atlanta, Justin Upton hit a three-run homer to continue another strong April, Ervin Santana earned his third win and the Braves held off Cincinnati. Craig Kimbrel gave up a leadoff single to Roger Bernadina and walked Zack Cozart to open the ninth. Kimbrel struck out Brayan Pena and Chris Heisey before earning his seventh save on Joey Votto’s groundout. First baseman Freddie Freeman made a long stretch for Chris Johnson’s throw from third base on Heisey’s groundball. Reds manager Bryan Price challenged first base umpire Vic Carapazza’s ruling that Freeman’s foot remained on the bag. The call was confirmed, ending the game. cARDINALS 1, PIRATES 0 In St. Louis, Shelby Miller finally solved Pittsburgh, pitching 5⅔ scoreless innings to lead the Cardinals to a win over the Pirates. Miller (2-2) entered the game with an 0-5 record and a 5.93 ERA against the Pirates. He allowed just three hits and four walks while striking out four. Pat Neshek, Kevin Siegrist, Carlos Martinez and Kevin Rosenthal followed Miller and preserved the shutout. Rosenthal struck out the side in the ninth for his seventh save in seven chances.

BREWERS 5, cUBS 2 In Milwaukee, Matt Garza pitched seven strong innings, and Lyle Overbay hit his first homer with the Brewers as Milwaukee defeated Chicago. Carlos Gomez and Ryan Braun each had three hits and a stolen base for the Brewers, who have a Major League best 17-6 record. Garza (1-2), who pitched part of last season with the Chicago, retired the Cubs in order in four of the first six innings. He gave up two runs and four hits while striking out seven and walking one. Francisco Rodriguez pitched a scoreless inning to pick up his 10th save in 10 chances. INTERLEAGUE GIANTS 5, INDIANS 1 In San Francisco, Michael Morse homered to back another stellar outing by Tim Hudson, and the Giants beat Cleveland. Hunter Pence had two hits and two RBIs while Brandon Crawford also knocked in a run to help the Giants win in their first interleague game of the season after going just 6-14 against the American League in 2013. Hudson (3-1) scattered four hits over seven innings and struck out five. He walked two, ending an impressive streak of 30 consecutive innings without one. Michael Bourn tripled and scored Cleveland’s only run. Jason Kipnis and Nick Swisher added two hits apiece for the Indians, who lost for just the second time in six games.

Union: Results not announced adding that parents got emails from university officials urging Supporters say a union would them to press their children to help athletes obtain better vote no. compensation, medical care for “It seems like things are kind injuries and other benefits. One of leaning toward ‘no,’ ” he said day before the vote, the NCAA of the overall vote. “I think a lot endorsed a plan that would give of them have been successfully big schools like Northwestern talked out of voting ‘yes.’ ” much more autonomy to address Last month’s decision by such issues for its athletes. NLRB’s regional director sent None of the players particishockwaves through college pating in the voting stopped to sports, prompting criticism talk with reporters, but the excitement of some was evident from the NCAA, Northwestern and athletic departments as they waved or thrust their nationwide. While the ruling arms into the air in view of would apply only to private TV news cameras. Sophomore universities — they are subject Michael Odom, 20, said he quit to federal labor law while public the team a couple months ago because the demands of playing schools are under state law — many saw the decision as a first football were detracting from step toward the end of the tradihis studies for a journalism tional “student-athlete” era. degree. Though he wasn’t eliSeventy-six scholarship footgible to vote, he called a union ball players were eligible to cast “long overdue” and had heard from his former teammates they ballots. The rules under which felt pressured to vote against it. the ballots were impounded don’t even allow them to be “I don’t know if intimidacounted, so it was not known tion is the word I’d use. I think how many actually voted. that’s a little strong. I know a Colter had hoped to be an lot of my teammates have been official voting observer for the influenced by former players College Athletes Players Associas well as coaches and officials ation, which would represent the at the university,” Odom said,

Continued from Page B-1

players at the bargaining table if the pro-union side prevails. He left after attorneys for Northwestern objected, said union attorney John Adam, leaving the union without a representative during the first session. Ramogi Huma, president of CAPA, said just having the vote take place was a victory. “The NCAA cannot vacate this moment in history and its implications for the future,” he said. Donald Remy, chief legal officer for the NCAA, said the organization remained steadfast that college athletes are not employees. “Whatever concerns or issues one may have with college athletics, turning student-athletes into employees and changing the relationship between students and their universities is certainly not the answer,” he said. “For nearly three years, NCAA member schools have worked on specific proposals designed to enhance the student-athlete experience and support their success in the classroom, on the field and in life.”

By La Mesa RV of Albuquerque

The Associated Press

“What’s pouting going to do?” St. Louis forward Alexander Steen said. “You just get back on the horse. It’s a game. You have to win four. They have three, we have two. Off to Chicago we go. See you there.” All three of the Blues’ home games went to overtime and St. Louis won the first two. Before Toews scored, the top offensive threats in the series had been neutralized in Game 5. Patrick Kane and Toews combined for one assist in regulation and the Blues’ Vladimir Tarasenko, who entered with an NHL-leading four goals in the playoffs, was held to two shots. The first four goals came from players scoring for the first time in the series. Pietrangelo entered averaging more than 31 minutes in the series, most on either team, but has been a reluctant shooter with five shots in the first four games. His second career playoff goal came on a 2-on-1 break with Jaden Schwartz with the teams at 4-on-4 to tie it at 2 early in the third. Backes returned for the Blues while Blackhawks defenseman Brent Seabrook finished a three-game suspension from the illegal hit that knocked the St. Louis captain woozy in Game 2. But the Blues didn’t make the most of that emotional lift early, getting their first scoring chance at about the 12-minute mark, totaling one shot on two early power plays and trailing 1-0 after the first. The Blackhawks started the scoring for the third straight game, capitalizing when Polak got caught pinching at the blue line. Bryan Bickell led a 2-on-1 break and Hossa tapped his own rebound into a wide open net at 16:11 of the first period. FLYERS 2, RANGERS 1 In Philadelphia, Steve Mason stopped 37 shots in his first start of the series, Matt Read and Jakub Voracek scored and the Flyers evened the firstround matchup with a win over New York. Ray Emery started the first three games for Mason, who was out with an upper-body injury. Mason played the final 7:15 in a 4-1 loss Tuesday night. Mason was just getting warmed up. He played perhaps his best game of the season, shutting down a Rangers team that pressured him with shots all game. He was a wall in the final tense minutes when the Rangers pulled goalie Henrik Lundqvist for the extra attacker.

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NYSE

The week week in review The

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last %Chg S&P500ETF 3638926186.29 -.10 BkofAm 3319401 15.95 -.20 AMD 2473384 4.05 +.36 iShEMkts 2282535 40.82 -1.19 iShR2K 1912635111.61 -1.31

Name Vol (00) Last %Chg Facebook 4356075 57.71 -1.23 SiriusXM 2675532 3.12 -.03 Zynga 2455931 4.08 -.21 MicronT 1876585 25.26+1.35 PwShs QQQ 1853331 86.19 -.01

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Chg %Chg DrxRsaBear20.42 +4.91 +31.7 Allergan 168.15 +34.23 +25.6 DirGMnBull21.12 +4.22 +25.0 HugotnR 9.61 +1.70 +21.5 Centene 66.50 +10.84 +19.5

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name Last Castlight n 14.06 DxRssaBull 11.75 DirGMBear 21.36 NimbleSt n 28.41 StdRegis rs 7.66 Advanced Declined New Highs New Lows Total issues Unchanged Volume

Chg %Chg -5.79 -29.2 -4.19 -26.3 -6.17 -22.4 -7.50 -20.9 -1.74 -18.5

DIARY

1,722 1,493 308 43 3,261 46

14,979,519,348

Dow Jones industrials

Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg A-B-C

ABB Ltd 26.00 +.10 ACE Ltd 101.59 +.65 ADT Corp 29.27 -.95 AES Corp 14.44 +.18 AFLAC 61.84 -1.21 AGCO 56.94 +.31 AK Steel 6.87 -.05 AOL 42.02 -2.14 AT&T Inc 34.49 -1.55 Aarons 28.67 -.74 AbbottLab 38.03 -.90 AbbVie 49.14 +.59 AberFitc 36.62 +1.00 AbdGChina 9.92 -.13 Accenture 78.43 -.47 Actavis 198.07 +.68 AMD 4.05 +.36 Aegon 8.92 +.10 Aeropostl 4.76 +.28 Aetna 71.25 +3.48 Agilent 54.39 -.26 Agnico g 29.05 +.66 AirProd 117.12 -.82 AlaskaAir 93.43 +.49 AlcatelLuc 3.90 +.05 Alcoa 13.33 -.23 Alere 34.72 -1.03 AllegTch 40.48 -.76 Allergan 168.15 +34.23 Allete 51.49 +.12 AlliData 236.12 -8.94 AllisonTrn 29.95 -1.04 Allstate 56.11 +.34 Allstat pfE 25.81 +.41 AllyFin n 24.39 +.51 AlphaNRs 4.20 -.20 AlpAlerMLP17.96 -.11 Altria 39.11 +.66 Ambev n 7.67 -.10 Ameren 41.52 +.53 AMovilL 19.73 +.19 AmAxle 17.69 -.51 AEagleOut 11.25 +.26 AEP 53.38 +1.65 AmExp 87.03 +.81 AHm4Rnt n 15.94 -.06 AmIntlGrp 51.61 +.79 AmTower 83.08 +.43 Ameriprise103.53 -2.50 AmeriBrgn 62.83 -1.85 Amphenol 94.71 +.59 Anadarko 99.50 +.54 AnglogldA 18.39 +.93 Annaly 11.55 +.30 AnteroRs n 62.72 -.64 Anworth 5.48 +.08 Aon plc 84.95 +2.81 Apache 87.28 +2.17 AptInv 30.43 +.80 ApolloGM 28.23 -.08 ArcelorMit 16.15 -.13 ArchCoal 4.41 -.60 ArchDan 44.42 -.62 ArmourRsd 4.16 +.01 ArmstrWld 53.05 -.61 AspenIns 45.40 +.95 AssuredG 23.64 -.25 AstraZen 68.66 +5.17 AthlonEn n 41.36 -.64 AtlPwr g 3.26 +.17 AtlasEngy 40.86 -2.15 AtlasPpln 31.44 -.75 AtlasRes 20.27 -.98 ATMOS 51.27 +1.37 AuRico g 4.18 +.11 AutoNatn 52.69 -2.30 AvalonBay 135.33 +1.69 AveryD 48.62 -2.06 Avnet 42.73 -3.40 Avon 14.84 +.33 Axiall 46.94 -.98 BB&T Cp 37.33 -.60 BHP BillLt 70.75 -.40 BP PLC 49.72 +.84 BP Pru 85.19 +.34 BRF SA 21.78 -.23 BabckWil 33.82 +.09 BakrHu 69.68 +1.35 BallCorp 55.95 -.29 BcoBrad pf 14.89 -.03 BcoSantSA 9.72 -.10 BcoSBrasil 5.73 +.02 BkofAm 15.95 -.20

-2.1 -1.9 -27.7 -.5 -7.4 -3.8 -16.2 -9.9 -1.9 -2.5 -.8 -6.9 +11.3 -2.6 -4.6 +17.9 +4.7 -5.9 -47.6 +3.9 -4.9 +10.1 +4.8 +27.3 -11.4 +25.4 -4.1 +13.6 +51.4 +3.2 -10.2 +8.5 +2.9 +4.1 +1.7 -41.2 +1.0 +1.9 +4.4 +14.8 -15.6 -13.5 -21.9 +14.2 -4.1 -1.6 +1.1 +4.1 -10.0 -10.6 +6.2 +25.4 +56.9 +15.8 -1.1 +30.2 +1.3 +1.6 +17.4 -10.7 -9.5 -.9 +2.4 +3.7 -7.9 +9.9 +.2 +15.6 +36.7 -6.3 -12.8 -10.3 -1.0 +12.9 +14.2 +6.0 +14.5 -3.1 -3.1 -13.8 -1.1 ... +3.7 +2.3 +7.0 +4.4 -1.1 +26.1 +8.3 +18.8 +7.2 +6.1 +2.4

15,000

O

Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg A-B-C

N

52-Week High Low

16,631.63 7,774.58 551.83 11,334.65 4,371.71 1,897.28 1,398.91 20,257.19 1,212.82 5,893.58

1,013 1,727 159 90 2,804 64

9,332,036,586

AMAG Ph 17.93 +.05 -26.2 AMC Net 67.92 -.88 -.3 ASML Hld 81.68 +.74 -12.8 Aastrom rs 3.99 +.47 +23.5 Abraxas 5.19 +.04 +59.2 AcaciaTc 16.44 -.62 +13.1 AcadiaHlt 41.29 -.10 -12.8 AcadiaPh 19.32 -.13 -22.7 Accelern n 32.50 -5.91 -17.9 Accuray 8.70 -.31 ... AcelRx 10.34 -.34 -8.6 Achillion 2.73 -.10 -17.7 ActivePwr 3.01 -.03 -10.4 ActivsBliz 19.46 -.23 +9.1 Acxiom 29.23 -2.24 -21.0 AdobeSy 61.61 -2.43 +2.9 Adtran 23.06 +.56 -14.6 Aegerion 44.47 +1.04 -37.3 Affymetrix 7.30 +.10 -14.8 AgiosPh n 41.02 +.35 +71.3 AirMethod 54.04 +2.66 -7.2 AkamaiT 52.03 -2.28 +10.3 Akorn 23.91 +1.10 -2.9 Alexion 153.19 +3.39 +15.3 AlignTech 50.00 -3.40 -12.5 Alkermes 44.65 +.53 +9.8 AlliFibOp s 18.36 +1.04 +22.0 AllscriptH 15.60 -1.01 +.9 AlnylamP 49.34 -4.52 -23.3 AlteraCp lf 33.09 -1.37 +1.8 Amazon 303.83 -21.08 -23.8 AmbacFn n 29.91 +1.09 +21.8 Ambarella 26.34 -.90 -22.3 Amdocs 45.42 -1.10 +10.1 AmAirl n 36.00 +.60 +42.6 ACapAgy 22.77 +.89 +18.0 AmCapLtd 14.64 -.02 -6.4 ARCapH n 10.39 +.09 -1.5 ARltCapPr 13.01 -.28 +1.2 ARCP pfF 23.62 +.20 +10.9 Amgen 111.41 -4.05 -2.3 AmkorTch 7.16 +.14 +16.8 AnalogDev 51.42 -1.43 +1.0 AngiesList 11.76 -.59 -22.4 Ansys 76.64 +.83 -12.1 AntaresP 2.86 -.21 -36.0 ApolloEdu 27.84 -.08 +1.9 ApolloInv 8.02 -.13 -5.4 Apple Inc 571.94 +47.00 +1.9 ApldMatl 18.62 -.37 +5.3 AMCC 10.26 +1.20 -23.3 Approach 19.63 +.12 +1.7 ArenaPhm 5.96 -.22 +1.9 AresCap 17.27 +.03 -2.8 AriadP 7.09 -.11 +4.0 ArmHld 47.71 -2.03 -12.8 Arotech 3.37 -1.16 -3.4 ArrayBio 3.86 +.07 -23.0 Arris 25.76 -.74 +5.8 ArrowRsh 12.20 -.57 +12.4 ArthroCre 48.53 -.08 +20.6 ArubaNet 19.70 -1.29 +10.1 AscenaRtl 16.98 +.19 -19.8 AspenTech 39.06 -1.27 -6.6 AsscdBanc 17.49 +.10 +.5 athenahlth127.81 -17.77 -5.0 Athersys 2.73 -.01 +9.2 Atmel 7.96 -.01 +1.6 AutoNavi 20.64 -.01 +44.8 Autodesk 47.00 -1.49 -6.6 AutoData 75.66 -.65 -6.4 Auxilium 26.88 +.91 +29.7 AvagoTch 62.34 +1.45 +17.9 AvanirPhm 3.30 -.16 -1.8 AvisBudg 53.18 +.66 +31.6 BBCN Bcp 15.58 -.69 -6.1 B/E Aero 85.72 +.50 -1.5 BGC Ptrs 7.06 -.01 +16.7 BJsRest 29.06 -.70 -6.4 Baidu 162.91 +7.11 -8.4 BallardPw 4.17 +.39 +175.2 BncpBnk 15.92 -2.65 -11.1 BebeStrs 5.20 -1.24 -2.3 BedBath 62.48 -1.22 -22.2

BioDlvry lf 8.41 +.99 +42.8 Biocryst 8.01 -.33 +5.4 BioFuelEn 8.66 +.95 +406.4 BiogenIdc 285.81 -4.73 +2.2 BioMarin 57.09 -3.80 -18.8 BioScrip 7.14 -.07 -3.5 BlkRKelso 9.16 -.03 -1.8 BlackBerry 7.28 +.13 -2.2 BlkhwkNet 23.81 -1.11 -5.7 BlkhkN B n 23.27 -1.29 -2.6 BloominBr 21.51 -1.06 -10.4 Blucora 18.52 -.66 -36.5 BluebBio n 19.44 -.36 -7.3 BobEvans 46.80 +3.34 -7.5 BostPrv 12.55 -.22 -.6 BoulderBr 15.90 -1.59 +.3 BreitBurn 20.34 +.07 ... Brightcove 7.96 -.54 -43.7 Broadcom 29.76 -.34 +.4 BrcdeCm 9.25 -.47 +4.3 BrukerCp 21.22 +.07 +7.3 BldrFstSrc 8.00 -.69 +12.2 CA Inc 29.95 -.46 -11.0 CBOE 52.44 +.24 +.9 CDW Cp n 27.84 -.60 +19.2 CH Robins 56.28 -.46 -3.5 CME Grp 70.39 +1.09 -10.3 CTC Media 8.60 -1.24 -38.1 Cadence 14.85 -.01 +5.9 Caesars 17.75 -.26 -17.6 CalAmp 18.62 -5.94 -33.4 Callidus 9.41 -1.12 -31.5 CdnSolar 30.15 +3.69 +1.1 CapFedFn 12.15 -.31 +.3 CpstnTurb 2.19 +.04 +69.8 Cardtronic 32.98 -4.23 -24.1 CareerEd 7.11 -.21 +24.7 CarlyleGp 34.64 +1.19 -2.8 Carrizo 53.12 -1.06 +18.7 CarrolsRst 6.82 +.21 +3.2 CatalystPh 2.00 -.06 +2.6 Catamaran 38.95 -.14 -17.9 Cavium 41.55 -.64 +20.4 Cbeyond 9.82 +2.74 +42.5 Celgene 142.06 +.55 -15.9 CellThera 3.03 -.04 +58.6 CelldexTh 14.04 -.20 -42.0 CEurMed 2.57 -.11 -33.1 CentAl 13.75 -.33 +31.5 Cepheid 42.02 -5.91 -10.0 Cerner s 49.51 -4.49 -11.2 CerusCp 4.33 -.17 -32.9 CharterCm130.01+12.18 -4.9 ChkPoint 65.75 -1.21 +1.9 Cheesecake45.25 -1.72 -6.3 ChelseaTh 5.04 +.31 +13.6 ChXDPlas 7.29 +.86 +38.6 ChiCache 15.06 -1.14 +69.0 CinnFin 48.00 -.77 -8.3 Cintas 57.55 -.08 -3.4 Cirrus 21.63 +2.58 +5.9 Cisco 23.00 -.21 +3.3 CitrixSys 59.42 +3.42 -6.1 CleanDsl 2.57 ... +71.3 CleanEngy 8.93 -.25 -30.7 CliftonBcp 11.55 -.14 -11.6 ClovisOnc 51.50 -3.35 -14.6 CoStar 159.34 -6.26 -13.7 CogentC 34.75 +.05 -14.0 Cognex s 34.63 +1.52 -9.3 CognizTc s 48.73 -.82 -3.5 Comcast 50.97 +1.87 -1.9 Comc spcl 50.33 +1.79 +.9 CommScp n24.65 -.16 +30.2 CmcBMO 43.21 -1.07 -3.8 CommVlt 47.56 -17.52 -36.5 Compuwre 10.34 +.18 -7.8 ConatusP n 6.16 +.12 -4.5 ConcurTch 85.99 -6.86 -16.7 Conns 44.86 +1.35 -43.0 ConstantC 24.57 -1.52 -20.9 Conversant 24.47 -.83 +4.7 Corcept 3.84 +.01 +19.6 CorOnDem 35.84 -3.47 -32.8 Costco 115.01 +1.51 -3.4 CowenGp 4.19 +.17 +7.2 Cray Inc 32.79 -.69 +19.4

CmwREIT 25.65 CmtyHlt 39.92 CompSci 58.25 ComstkRs 26.58 ConAgra 31.00 ConchoRes128.70 ConocoPhil 74.40 ConsolEngy42.90 ConEd 57.74 ConstellA 79.04 ContlRes 131.68 CooperTire 25.76 Corning 20.74 Cosan Ltd 12.54 CousPrp 11.51 CovantaH 18.53 Covidien 69.38 CSVInvNG 2.95 CrwnCstle 72.78 CrownHold 47.51 Cummins 147.18 Cytec 95.20

-.13 +4.24 -2.83 +.18 -.34 -4.50 -.37 +1.09 +1.24 -1.74 -3.63 +.86 -.30 -.11 -.14 +.85 -.48 +.13 -1.14 +.92 +.90 -2.55

+10.0 +1.7 +4.2 +45.3 -8.0 +19.2 +5.3 +12.8 +4.5 +12.3 +17.0 +7.2 +16.4 -8.6 +11.7 +4.4 +1.9 -66.6 -.9 +6.6 +4.4 +2.2

DCT Indl 7.86 DDR Corp 16.92 DR Horton 22.49 DSW Inc s 33.41 DTE 78.38 DanaHldg 21.23 Danaher 73.05 Darden 49.92 Darling 20.11 DeVryEd 45.99 DeanFds rs 15.58 Deere 93.14 DelphiAuto 66.48 DeltaAir 36.07 DenburyR 17.06 DeutschBk 43.20 DevonE 70.40 DiaOffs 53.50 DiamRk 11.92 DicksSptg 52.71 Diebold 38.96 DigitalRlt 52.62 Dillards 96.86 DirSPBr rs 30.82 DxGldBll rs 38.06 DrxFnBear 20.65 DrxSCBear 17.33 DirGMnBull 21.12 DxRssaBull 11.75 DrxEMBull 25.62 DrxFnBull 87.72 DirDGdBr s 22.64 DrxSCBull 68.18 DrxSPBull 65.00 Discover 55.53 Disney 78.23 DollarGen 56.33 DomRescs 72.33 Dover 84.90 DowChm 48.50 DrPepSnap 53.58 DresserR 61.21 DuPont 66.66 DukeEngy 74.00 DukeRlty 17.25 Dynegy 27.43 E-CDang 11.39 E-House 9.74 EMC Cp 25.47 EOG Res s 99.04 EP Engy n 19.36 EPL O&G 38.68 EQT Corp 105.25 EastChem 84.36 Eaton 73.95 EVTxMGlo 10.07 Ecolab 105.23 EdisonInt 56.93 EducRlty 10.26 EdwLfSci 80.50 ElPasoPpl 32.92 EldorGld g 5.94 Embraer 34.16 Emeritus 29.70 EmersonEl 68.44 Emulex 7.27 EnCana g 22.63 EndvSilv g 4.48 Energizer 98.70 EngyTEq s 46.85 ENSCO 51.66 Entergy 71.84 EntPrPt 71.66

-.05 -.05 +.99 -.49 +1.76 -1.55 +.20 +1.45 -.72 +6.09 +.06 -.26 -.72 +2.31 -.18 -1.09 -.30 +5.10 -.13 +.85 -.61 -.85 +6.87 -.01 +4.00 +.15 +.50 +4.22 -4.19 -2.33 -.86 -2.92 -2.51 -.10 -1.33 -1.76 +.90 +1.66 -.56 -.22 +1.04 +1.46 -.32 +1.43 -.01 +1.74 -1.11 -.70 -1.15 -3.41 +1.06 -.10 +.53 -4.22 +.13 -.01 -2.56 +.55 +.16 -.79 -.24 +.15 -.65 -.20 ... -.11 -.76 +.34 +.31 -1.51 +1.68 +.58 -1.29

+10.2 +10.1 +.8 -21.8 +18.1 +8.2 -5.4 -8.2 -3.7 +29.5 -9.4 +2.0 +10.6 +31.3 +3.8 -10.4 +13.8 -6.0 +3.2 -9.3 +18.0 +7.1 -.4 -7.2 +38.9 -4.0 +2.1 +35.4 -62.1 -10.7 -2.9 -48.6 -11.9 +1.9 -.8 +2.4 -6.6 +11.8 +6.0 +9.2 +10.0 +2.6 +2.6 +7.2 +14.7 +27.5 +19.3 -35.4 +1.3 +18.0 +7.1 +35.7 +17.2 +4.5 -2.9 +.7 +.9 +23.0 +16.3 +22.4 -8.6 +4.4 +6.2 +37.3 -2.5 +1.5 +25.4 +23.4 -8.8 +14.6 -9.7 +13.5 +8.1

D-E-F

CSVelIVST 31.51 CSVxSht rs 6.56 Cree Inc 47.94 Criteo SA n 28.94 Crocs 15.04 Ctrip.com 45.48 CubistPh 62.74 CumMed 6.64 Curis 2.15 CypSemi 9.61 CytRx 3.02 Cytokinet rs 4.59

-.10 +.06 -8.60 -8.83 +.53 -6.38 -1.21 +.03 -.14 -.30 -.21 -4.93

-8.3 -12.5 -23.3 -15.4 -5.5 -8.3 -8.9 -14.1 -23.8 -8.5 -51.8 -29.4

DFC Glbl 9.34 Datalink 13.08 Dealertrk 44.69 DeckrsOut 83.16 Dndreon 2.55 Dentsply 44.34 Depomed 13.47 DexCom 33.38 DiambkEn 71.44 DirecTV 76.01 DiscComA 76.61 DiscComC 71.54 DishNetw h 57.98 DollarTree 51.36 DonlleyRR 17.31 DotHillSys 4.01 DrmWksA 26.86 DryShips 3.11 Dunkin 46.51 DyaxCp 6.56 E-Trade 22.40 eBay 53.72 EagleBulk 3.20 EaglRkEn 4.38 EarthLink 3.43 EstWstBcp 35.15 8x8 Inc 9.94 ElectArts 28.21 EFII 37.12 ElizArden 35.68 Endo Intl 60.64 Endocyte 17.94 Endologix 11.89 EngyXXI 23.26 Entegris 11.27 EntropCom 3.90 Equinix 180.20 Ericsson 12.04 ExOne 31.48 ExactSci h 12.63 Exelixis 3.26 Expedia 69.41 ExpdIntl 40.05 ExpScripts 71.04 ExtrmNet 5.56 F5 Netwks 103.52 FLIR Sys 35.05 FX Ener 4.54 Facebook 57.71 FairchldS 12.57 Fastenal 49.11 FifthStFin 9.45 FifthThird 20.75 FinclEngin 44.19 Finisar 27.57 FinLine 26.49 FireEye n 41.18 FMidBc 16.54 FstNiagara 9.04 FstSolar 68.63 FstMerit 19.13 Fiserv s 55.89 FiveBelow 38.73 Flextrn 9.32 Fortinet 22.05 Fossil Grp 106.99 FosterWhl 33.74 Francesca 16.04 FreshMkt 36.09 FrontierCm 5.74 FuelCellE 2.34 FultonFncl 12.40

-.08 +.13 +.24 +6.30 -.10 -.85 +.60 -3.20 -1.90 +.37 -1.22 -1.21 -1.49 +.27 -.45 -.01 -.51 -.05 -1.63 -.17 +1.36 -1.25 -.29 -.43 -.07 -.83 -.77 +.64 -2.54 +7.63 +3.38 -.21 -.54 -.28 -.47 -.03 +1.23 -.87 +2.03 -.21 -.03 -3.05 +.04 -1.25 -.11 -4.88 -.65 -.21 -1.23 -.33 -.76 +.06 -.20 -3.82 -.28 +.32 -5.93 +.20 -.14 +1.31 -.99 -1.69 +.46 -.10 +.41 -2.43 +.17 -.06 +1.73 -.15 -.11 +.09

-18.4 +20.0 -7.1 -1.5 -14.7 -8.5 +27.3 -5.7 +35.1 +10.1 -15.3 -14.7 +.1 -9.0 -14.6 +19.0 -24.3 -33.8 -3.5 -12.9 +14.1 -2.1 -30.3 -26.4 -32.3 +.5 -2.1 +23.0 -4.2 +.6 -10.1 +68.0 -31.8 -14.0 -2.8 -17.0 +1.5 -1.6 -47.9 +7.5 -46.8 -.4 -9.5 +1.1 -20.3 +13.9 +16.4 +24.0 +5.6 -5.8 +3.4 +2.2 -1.3 -36.4 +15.3 -6.0 -5.6 -5.6 -14.9 +25.6 -13.9 -5.4 -10.3 +19.9 +15.3 -10.8 +2.2 -12.8 -10.9 +23.4 +66.0 -5.2

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GT AdvTc

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16.09

TUES

WED

THUR

FRI

D

J

F

M

Name

14,457.60 5,952.18 462.66 8,814.76 3,198.74 1,548.19 1,109.81 16,308.50 899.92 4,438.89

-.08 +84.6

Last

Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000 Lipper Growth Index

Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … %YTD Chg: Percentage loss or gain for the year to date. No change indicated by … How to use: The numbers can be helpful in following stocks but as with all financial data are only one of many factors to judge a company by. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.

A

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

16,361.46 7,586.14 551.66 10,505.01 4,075.56 1,863.40 1,347.22 19,763.25 1,123.03 5,511.06

Wk %Chg

-47.08 -48.28 +8.66 -27.82 -19.96 -1.45 -4.20 -68.91 -14.87 -53.07

YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg

-.29 -.63 +1.59 -.26 -.49 -.08 -.31 -.35 -1.31 -.95

-1.30 +2.51 +12.45 +1.01 -2.42 +.81 +.35 +.29 -3.49 -1.42

+11.21 +24.04 +3.69 +14.56 +24.28 +17.77 +18.05 +18.37 +20.08 +22.50

Stock footnotes: Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.

YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

EnzoBio 4.27 Equifax 68.89 EqtyRsd 58.66 EsteeLdr 72.20 ExcoRes 5.92 Exelis 18.48 Exelon 36.26 Express 14.28 ExterranH 43.84 ExxonMbl 100.41 FMC Tech 56.80 FNBCp PA 12.45 FS Invest n 10.20 FamilyDlr 58.31 FedExCp 134.21 FedSignl 15.08 Ferrellgs 24.25 FibriaCelu 9.92 FidlNFin 31.53 FidNatInfo 51.80 58.com n 41.31 FstAFin n 27.02 FstHorizon 11.46 FstInRT 18.56 FMajSilv g 9.59 FirstEngy 34.65 Flowserv s 72.87 Fluor 75.73 FootLockr 45.84 FordM 15.78 ForestCA 18.70 ForestLab 89.84 ForestOil 1.87 Fortress 7.19 FBHmSec 40.34 FrankRes s 52.77 FMCG 34.01 Freescale 22.30 FDelMnt 26.50 Fusion-io 8.60

-.02 +.28 +1.16 +.05 -.32 -.30 +.20 -.36 +.04 -.01 +2.00 -.42 -.01 +1.47 -1.34 -.31 -.09 -.70 +.24 -.88 -1.72 +1.10 +.22 -.55 +.35 +1.04 -6.17 -2.14 +.60 -.22 +.01 +.26 -.06 -.22 -.10 -.93 +1.00 -2.10 -.05 -.81

+46.2 -.3 +13.1 -4.1 +11.5 -3.0 +32.4 -23.5 +28.2 -.8 +8.8 -1.3 -.5 -10.3 -6.6 +2.9 +5.7 -15.1 -2.8 -3.5 +7.7 -4.2 -1.6 +6.4 -2.1 +5.1 -7.6 -5.7 +10.6 +2.3 -2.1 +49.7 -48.2 -16.0 -11.7 -8.6 -9.8 +38.9 -6.4 -3.5

GATX 65.57 GNC 44.41 Gafisa SA 3.28 Gallaghr 44.48 GameStop 39.37 Gannett 27.32 Gap 38.78 GasLog 27.00 GnCable 25.44 GenDynam109.01 GenElec 26.60 GenGrPrp 22.68 GenMills 52.29 GenMotors 33.72 GenuPrt 85.63 Genworth 17.34 Gerdau 6.05 Gigamon n 17.05 GlaxoSKln 55.76 GlimchRt 10.03 GlobPay 65.72 GolLinhas 5.81 GoldFLtd 4.32 Goldcrp g 24.86 GoldmanS 158.24 GoodrPet 25.76 vjGrace 93.06 GrafTech 11.12 GraphPkg 10.45 GtPlainEn 27.17 GpFnSnMx 11.27 GpTelevisa 32.11 GugSPEW 72.58 Guidewire 38.90 HCA Hldg 53.44 HCP Inc 40.76 HDFC Bk 39.68 HSBC 50.85 HalconRes 5.43 Hallibrtn 62.86 Hanesbrds 78.94 HarleyD 71.65 Harman 109.00 HarmonyG 3.34 HartfdFn 34.98 HatterasF 19.68 HawaiiEl 24.84 HltCrREIT 62.18 HlthcreTr 11.58 HealthNet 33.66 HeclaM 3.08 HelixEn 23.97 HelmPayne107.00 Herbalife 57.83 Hersha 5.71

-1.70 -.52 -.07 -.69 -2.10 +.45 +.20 -1.04 -.64 -.05 +.04 -.13 +.20 -.26 -1.69 +.46 -.09 +1.34 +3.25 ... -2.17 +.22 +.38 +1.26 +.80 +1.40 -6.94 -.12 +.49 +.53 -.43 -.95 -.11 -4.08 +4.43 +.23 -1.09 -1.31 +.09 +1.96 +2.41 +5.01 +3.39 +.27 +.31 +.06 +.23 +.24 +.01 +2.16 +.01 +1.34 -3.84 +2.73 -.08

+25.7 -24.0 +4.8 -5.2 -20.1 -7.6 -.8 +58.0 -13.5 +14.1 -5.1 +13.0 +4.8 -17.5 +2.9 +11.7 -22.8 -39.3 +4.4 +7.2 +1.1 +27.1 +35.0 +14.7 -10.7 +51.4 -5.9 -1.0 +8.9 +12.1 -17.4 +6.1 +1.9 -20.7 +12.0 +12.2 +15.2 -7.8 +40.7 +23.9 +12.3 +3.5 +33.2 +32.0 -3.5 +20.4 -4.7 +16.1 +17.7 +13.4 ... +3.4 +27.3 -26.5 +2.5

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Wk Chg

HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW

Here are the 944 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and 670 most active stocks worth more than $2 on the Nasdaq National Market. Stocks in bold are worth at least $5 and changed 10 percent or more in price during the past week. If you want your stocks to always be listed, call Bob Quick at 986-3011. Tables show name, price and net change, and the year-to-date percent change in price.

MARKET SUMMARY

NASDAQ National Market NASDAQ Name

MON

15,500

Name Last Chg %Chg Cytokinet rs 4.59 -4.93 -51.8 CommVlt 47.56 -17.52 -26.9 ParametS 9.28 -3.36 -26.6 PlugPowr h 5.37 -1.95 -26.6 Arotech 3.37 -1.16 -25.6

BkNYMel 33.60 +.01 -3.8 Barclay 16.79 +.13 -7.4 B iPVix rs 41.83 +.12 -1.7 Bard 136.24 -3.04 +1.7 BarnesNob 16.49 +.12 +10.3 BarrickG 17.89 -.09 +1.5 BasicEnSv 26.03 -2.11 +65.0 Baxter 72.32 -.49 +4.0 Beam Inc 83.45 +.18 +22.6 BerkHa A190686.00+47.00 +7.2 BerkH B 127.26 +.08 +7.3 BestBuy 24.38 -.10 -38.9 BigLots 39.47 +.75 +22.2 BBarrett 24.11 -.37 -10.0 BioMedR 20.58 +.14 +13.6 BitautoH 34.54 +.16 +8.1 Blackstone 31.02 +.03 -1.5 BlockHR 27.63 -.57 -4.9 BdwlkPpl 16.16 +.44 -36.7 Boeing 128.66 +.74 -5.7 BorgWrn s 61.64 -.95 +10.2 BostonSci 13.38 -.27 +11.3 BoydGm 11.69 ... +3.8 Brandyw 14.64 +.03 +5.0 Brinker 49.14 -1.42 +6.0 Brinks 25.10 -.48 -26.5 BrMySq 50.50 +1.04 -5.0 Brookdale 31.75 +.01 +16.8 BrwnBrn 29.59 -.52 -5.7 BrownShoe 23.79 -.90 -15.5 Brunswick 41.05 -2.11 -10.9 Buenavent 12.74 +.01 +13.5 BurgerKng 26.35 +.67 +15.3 C&J Engy 29.94 -.31 +29.6 CBL Asc 17.74 +.03 -1.2 CBRE Grp 26.08 -.88 -.8 CBS B 58.05 -2.59 -8.9 CIT Grp 46.37 -.05 -11.0 CMS Eng 30.39 +.61 +13.5 CNO Fincl 17.37 +.02 -1.8 CSX 28.03 -.12 -2.6 CVS Care 73.24 -.50 +2.3 CYS Invest 8.59 -.13 +15.9 Cabelas 64.22 -.38 -3.7 CblvsnNY 16.44 +.32 -8.3 CabotOG s 38.18 +3.26 -1.5 CallGolf 8.64 -.83 +2.5 Calpine 22.36 +.99 +14.6 Cameco g 22.34 -.46 +7.6 Cameron 64.60 +1.02 +8.5 CdnNR gs 57.75 +1.04 +1.3 CdnNRs gs 40.45 -.19 +19.5 CP Rwy g 155.20 +7.02 +2.6 CapOne 73.34 -1.55 -4.3 CardnlHlth 67.20 -.93 +.6 CareFusion 38.16 -.34 -4.2 CarMax 42.98 -1.46 -8.6 Carnival 38.06 +.74 -5.3 Castlight n 14.06 -5.79 -64.7 Caterpillar104.69 +1.86 +15.3 Celanese 59.28 +1.71 +7.2 Cemex 12.39 +.04 +8.9 Cemig pf s 7.15 -.09 +20.0 CenovusE 29.47 +.23 +2.9 Centene 66.50 +10.84 +12.8 CenterPnt 24.86 +.25 +7.2 CenElBras 3.43 -.01 +32.4 CntryLink 34.76 +.33 +9.1 ChambSt n 7.74 +.04 +1.2 Checkpnt 12.50 +.09 -20.7 Chemtura 22.38 -.78 -19.8 ChesEng 28.80 +.63 +6.1 Chevron 123.99 +.31 -.7 ChicB&I 79.91 -6.59 -3.9 Chicos 15.90 +.11 -15.6 Chimera 3.11 ... +.3 ChiMYWnd 2.51 ... +2.4 ChinaMble 44.77 -2.13 -14.4 Chubb 90.03 -.78 -6.8 CienaCorp 20.65 +.77 -13.7 Cigna 78.95 +3.31 -9.8 Cimarex 119.44 -1.58 +13.8 CinciBell 3.33 -.17 -6.5 Citigroup 47.75 -.47 -8.4 CleanHarb 60.90 +5.58 +1.6 CliffsNRs 18.00 -.65 -31.3 Clorox 90.03 -.10 -2.9 CloudPeak 20.88 +.13 +16.0 Coach 49.82 +.34 -11.2 CobaltIEn 18.07 -.09 +9.8 CocaCola 41.01 +.29 -.7 CocaCE 45.75 +.56 +3.7 Coeur 8.61 +.10 -20.6 Colfax 70.73 -1.10 +11.1 ColgPalm s 66.24 -.70 +1.6 Comerica 47.93 -.53 +.8

-140.19

16,000

New York Stock Exchange NEW Name

0.00

16,500

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined New Highs New Lows Total issues Unchanged Volume

-12.72

17,000

Last Chg %Chg 36.70 +12.30 +50.4 6.78 +2.13 +45.8 11.17 +3.20 +40.2 9.82 +2.74 +38.7 9.53 +2.57 +36.9

DIARY

65.12

Close: 16,361.46 1-week change: -47.08 (-0.3%)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name SareptaTh IntriCon VascoDta Cbeyond EvokePh n

40.71

Hershey 96.36 -4.25 Hertz 27.82 -.25 Hess 87.43 +.16 HewlettP 31.58 -.35 Hexcel 41.48 -2.49 Hill-Rom 36.97 +.31 Hilton n 21.33 -.44 HollyFront 51.86 +1.06 HomeDp 79.38 +2.29 Honda 33.03 -1.14 HonwllIntl 92.65 -.45 HospPT 29.35 -.09 HostHotls 20.90 -.08 HovnanE 4.42 -.04 HugotnR 9.61 +1.70 Humana 109.18 +4.44 Huntsmn 24.49 -.43 IAMGld g 3.54 +.10 ICICI Bk 42.94 -1.58 ING 13.62 -.34 ION Geoph 4.39 -.24 iShGold 12.62 +.06 iSAstla 26.47 +.02 iShBrazil 46.71 -.79 iShEMU 42.29 -.09 iShGerm 30.93 -.09 iSh HK 20.37 -.61 iShItaly 17.72 -.08 iShJapan 11.02 -.16 iSh SKor 62.38 -1.31 iSMalasia 15.61 -.19 iShMexico 63.08 -1.77 iShSing 13.37 -.18 iShSpain 41.32 +.13 iSTaiwn 14.41 -.50 iSh UK 21.08 +.18 iShSilver 18.94 +.06 iShChinaLC 34.70 -1.12 iSCorSP500187.45 -.09 iShEMkts 40.82 -1.19 iShiBoxIG 117.94 +.48 iSEafeSC 51.69 -.11 iSSP500Val 87.09 -.07 iSh20 yrT 111.33 +1.28 iS Eafe 67.40 -.13 iShiBxHYB 94.24 +.12 iShMtgRE 12.40 +.15 iSR1KVal 96.45 +.09 iSR1KGr 85.57 -.17 iSR2KVal 98.24 -.84 iSR2KGr 128.42 -1.99 iShR2K 111.61 -1.31 iShChina 44.06 -1.37 iShUSPfd 39.24 +.14 iShREst 69.01 +.30 iShHmCnst 23.36 -.17 ITC Hold s 37.49 +.19 ITW 84.47 +.26 Imax Corp 25.98 -1.98 Infoblox 19.59 -.27 Infosys 52.50 -.38 IngerRd 58.77 +.95 IngrmM 26.93 -3.48 IntegrysE 61.41 +.04 IntcntlExG 202.45 +4.18 IBM 189.63 -.38 IntlGame 12.46 -1.43 IntPap 45.63 +.17 Interpublic 17.20 +.27 InvenSense 20.70 -.80 Invesco 34.88 -.34 InvMtgCap 16.60 +.02 IronMtn 27.61 +.51 ItauUnibH 16.38 +.62

J-K-L

JPMorgCh 55.70 JPMCh pfB 25.60 Jabil 17.64 JacobsEng 62.10 JanusCap 12.02 Jarden 55.83 JinkoSolar 29.52 JohnJn 99.79 JohnsnCtl 44.49 JoyGlbl 60.39 JnprNtwk 24.48 KB Home 16.15 KBR Inc 25.40 KKR 23.71 KKR Fn 12.06 KC Southn 99.27 KapStone s 25.95 KateSpade 33.66 Kellogg 66.71 KeyEngy 9.81 Keycorp 13.54

-.9 -2.8 +5.3 +12.9 -7.2 -10.6 -4.1 +4.4 -3.6 -20.1 +1.4 +8.6 +7.5 -33.2 +28.1 +5.8 -.4 +6.3 +15.5 -2.8 +33.0 +8.0 +8.6 +4.5 +2.2 -2.6 -1.1 +13.7 -9.2 -3.5 -1.3 -7.2 +1.5 +7.1 -.1 +1.0 +1.2 -9.6 +1.0 -2.3 +3.3 +1.4 +1.9 +9.3 +.5 +1.5 +7.6 +2.4 -.4 -1.3 -5.2 -3.3 -8.6 +6.5 +9.4 -5.9 +17.4 +.5 -11.9 -40.7 -7.2 -4.6 +14.8 +12.9 -10.0 +1.1 -31.4 -6.9 -2.8 -.4 -4.2 +13.1 -9.0 +20.8

+.48 -4.1 -.04 +2.9 +.04 +1.1 -1.63 -1.4 +.42 -2.8 -.12 -9.0 +2.40 +.8 +.83 +9.0 -2.34 -13.3 -1.16 +3.2 -.69 +8.5 -.22 -11.7 -.92 -20.4 +.65 -2.6 +.32 -1.1 -1.87 -19.8 +.13 -7.1 +.48 +5.0 +.37 +9.2 +.06 +24.2 -.02 +.9

KilroyR 58.73 KimbClk 109.24 Kimco 22.54 KindME 76.54 KindMorg 33.00 KindrM wt 1.85 KingDEn n 18.52 Kinross g 4.18 KnightTr 23.84 KodiakO g 12.81 Kohls 54.68 KoreaEqt 8.29 KosmosEn 10.92 Kroger 45.15 L Brands 53.84 LaredoPet 28.66 LVSands 77.00 LatAmDisc 13.11 LeapFrog 6.81 LeggPlat 31.97 LejuHldg n 10.56 LennarA 38.61 Lennox 83.99 LeucNatl 25.71 Level3 36.63 LexRltyTr 10.61 Lexmark 41.61 LifeTFit 47.17 LifeLock 15.88 LillyEli 58.50 LincNat 47.51 LinkedIn 158.17 LionsGt g 25.66 LiveNatn 20.93 LloydBkg 5.06 LockhdM 161.09 Loews 44.14 Lorillard 54.12 LaPac 15.59 Lowes 46.38 LyonBas A 91.05

... -3.30 +.09 -.95 -.77 -.10 +.71 +.11 -.59 -.86 +.42 -.05 -.08 +.87 -.12 -.50 +.54 -.19 -.13 -.98 -1.30 +.43 -5.30 -.37 -1.86 -.29 -4.37 -2.65 -.11 -1.93 -.56 -17.25 -1.03 +.35 +.04 +.84 +.19 -.40 +.34 -.24 -.09

+17.0 +4.6 +14.1 -5.1 -8.3 -54.4 -2.5 -4.6 +30.0 +14.3 -3.6 -.4 -2.3 +14.2 -13.0 +3.5 -2.4 +.4 -14.2 +3.3 -11.0 -2.4 -1.3 -9.3 +10.4 +3.9 +17.1 +.4 -3.2 +14.7 -8.0 -27.1 -19.0 +5.9 -4.9 +8.4 -8.5 +6.8 -15.8 -6.4 +13.4

MBIA 11.92 MDC 27.46 MDU Res 35.75 MFA Fncl 7.95 MGIC Inv 8.38 MGM Rsts 23.66 MRC Glbl 28.99 Macerich 63.92 MackCali 20.41 Macys 57.57 MagHRes 8.18 Mallinck n 66.99 Manitowoc 30.77 ManpwrGp 79.89 Manulife g 18.54 MarathnO 36.08 MarathPet 90.73 MVJrGld rs 37.44 MktVGold 24.46 MV OilSvc 52.28 MV Semi 44.41 MktVRus 21.74 MktV Agri 54.17 MarshM 48.62 Masco 20.78 MasterCd s 70.66 MatadorRs 28.02 McDrmInt 6.98 McDnlds 100.73 McGrwH 75.05 McKesson 167.85 McEwenM 2.49 MeadJohn 87.10 MedProp 13.26 MedleyCap 13.12 Medtrnic 58.21 Merck 57.24 Meritage 38.26 Meritor 11.78 MetLife 51.09 MKors 89.88 MillenMda 6.14 MitsuUFJ 5.33 MobileTele 16.17 Molycorp 4.80 Monsanto 109.67 MonstrWw 6.52 Moodys 79.13 MorgStan 30.58 Mosaic 49.42 MotrlaSolu 62.50 MuellerWat 9.37 MurphO 63.73 NCR Corp 33.75

-.05 +.05 +.67 +.06 +.06 -.30 +.98 -1.66 +.13 +.74 -.40 +6.71 -.25 +2.79 -.23 -.65 +.82 +2.78 +.89 +1.18 -.69 -2.25 -.11 +.35 -1.28 -3.47 +1.25 +.11 +.48 -1.62 -3.13 +.23 +2.65 -.08 -.16 -.34 +.77 -4.15 +.09 -.11 -.05 -.30 -.23 -.93 +.03 -3.28 -.43 +.28 -.18 +.70 -.65 -.09 -.21 -.17

-.2 -14.8 +17.0 +12.6 -.7 +.6 -10.1 +8.5 -3.6 +7.8 +11.9 +28.2 +31.9 -7.0 -6.0 +2.2 -1.1 +20.6 +15.8 +8.8 +4.7 -24.7 -.6 +.5 -8.7 -15.4 +50.3 -23.8 +3.8 -4.0 +4.0 +27.0 +4.0 +8.5 -5.3 +1.4 +14.4 -20.3 +12.9 -5.2 +10.7 -15.5 -20.2 -25.2 -14.6 -5.9 -8.6 +.8 -2.5 +4.5 -7.4 ... -1.8 -.9

M-N-0

NQ Mobile 13.23 NRG Egy 33.16 Nabors 24.73 NBGrce rs 4.03 NOilVarco 83.47 NatRetPrp 34.42 Navistar 36.65 NetSuite 77.03 NeuStar 27.58 NewOriEd 25.98 NewResd n 6.15 NY CmtyB 15.85 NY REIT n 10.61 NY Times 16.34 Newcastle 4.45 NewellRub 30.09 NewfldExp 31.75 NewmtM 26.45 NewpkRes 12.24 NextEraEn 97.67 NiSource 36.07 NielsenH 45.99 NikeB 72.70 NobleCorp 31.49 NobleEn s 72.79 NokiaCp 7.27 NordicAm 8.51 Nordstrm 61.48 NorflkSo 94.03 NoestUt 46.97 NorthropG118.99 NStarRlt 16.03 Novartis 84.47 NuSkin 87.74 Nucor 51.11 OasisPet 46.09 OcciPet 96.37 Oceaneerg 73.73 OcwenFn 37.22 OfficeDpt 4.15 Oi SA 1.11 OldRepub 16.64 Olin 27.75 OmegaHlt 35.38 Omncre 58.65 Omnicom 67.91 ONEOK 62.69 OpkoHlth 8.05 Oracle 39.45 OwensCorn 41.04 OwensIll 31.90

+.33 +.95 -.08 -.45 +1.10 +.27 +2.65 -5.62 -1.68 -.53 -.21 -.40 -.01 -.27 -.13 +.20 -1.51 +2.91 +.25 +1.08 +.15 +1.16 -1.33 +1.13 -1.63 -.07 -.16 +.64 -2.24 +1.04 -3.01 +.91 -.20 +1.32 -1.03 -1.23 -.23 -.07 -1.79 +.10 -.07 +.11 -.80 +1.00 +.83 -3.25 +1.66 -.09 -.63 -.80 -1.79

-10.0 +15.5 +45.6 -28.0 +5.0 +13.5 -4.0 -25.2 -44.7 -17.5 -7.9 -5.9 -1.3 +3.0 -7.9 -7.2 +28.9 +14.9 -.4 +14.1 +9.7 +.2 -7.6 -16.0 +6.9 -10.4 -12.3 -.5 +1.3 +10.8 +3.8 +19.2 +5.1 -36.5 -4.3 -1.9 +1.3 -6.5 -32.9 -21.6 -30.2 -3.6 -3.8 +18.7 -2.8 -8.7 +15.2 -4.6 +3.1 +.8 -10.8

PBF Engy 28.92 PG&E Cp 45.50 PNC 83.87 PPG 192.98 PPL Corp 33.55 PPL pfcld 54.39 PackAmer 66.39 PaloAltNet 66.16 Pandora 23.51 ParkDrl 6.50 PeabdyE 18.00 Pengrth g 6.29 PennVa 16.87 PennWst g 8.92 Penney 7.98 PennaRE 16.71 Pentair 73.83 PepcoHold 21.85 PepsiCo 85.25 PerkElm 43.01 Perrigo 146.70 PetrbrsA 14.27 Petrobras 13.50 PetRes 28.91 Pfizer 30.75 PhilipMor 84.11 Phillips66 82.59 Pier 1 17.68 PinnclEnt 22.04 PinWst 56.97 PioNtrl 192.03 PitnyBw 24.83 PlainsAAP 56.24 PlatfmSp n 19.75 Polaris 134.37 PortglTel 4.04 Potash 35.72 PwshDB 26.57 PS SrLoan 24.65 PS SP LwV 34.16 Praxair 129.36 PrecDrill 12.56 PrinFncl 46.29 ProLogis 40.73

+.62 +.63 +.10 -6.48 +.41 +.94 -.77 -3.80 -3.51 -.02 +1.29 -.07 -.08 -.44 +.48 -.87 -5.47 +.51 -.30 -1.26 +4.71 -.37 -.51 +.18 +.50 +.96 +2.31 -.10 -.04 +1.03 -11.28 -.53 -.85 -.23 -1.02 -.22 +.82 -.07 -.01 +.04 -2.50 -.16 +1.09 -.56

-8.1 +13.0 +8.1 +1.8 +11.5 +2.9 +4.9 +15.1 -11.6 -20.0 -7.8 +1.5 +78.9 +6.7 -12.8 -12.0 -4.9 +14.2 +2.8 +4.3 -4.4 -2.9 -2.0 +5.6 +.4 -3.5 +7.1 -23.4 -15.2 +7.7 +4.3 +6.6 +8.6 +32.6 -7.7 -6.5 +8.4 +3.5 -.9 +3.0 -.5 +34.0 -6.1 +10.2

P-Q-R

ProShtQQQ 18.30 ProShtS&P 24.72 ProUltQQQ 95.71 ProUltSP 104.30 ProShtR2K 17.18 PUltSP500 s98.17 PUVixST rs 58.36 PrUShCrde 28.15 ProctGam 81.41 ProgsvCp 23.79 ProUShSP 28.45 PUShQQQ rs60.03 ProUShL20 64.37 PUSR2K rs 49.38 PUShSPX rs56.29 Prudentl 80.68 PSEG 40.24 PulteGrp 18.44 QEP Res 31.18 Qihoo360 89.29 QuantaSvc 35.20 QstDiag 55.88 Questar 23.63 QksilvRes 3.07 Quiksilvr 6.39 RPC 22.17 Rackspace 28.95 RadianGrp 13.89 RadioShk 1.47 RangeRs 91.73 RJamesFn 49.75 Rayonier 45.79 Raytheon 94.90 Realogy 41.85 RltyInco 42.89 RedHat 48.37 RegalEnt 18.95 RegionsFn 10.15 ReneSola 2.97 Renren 3.29 RepubSvc 34.40 ResMed 47.83 ResrceCap 5.47 RetailProp 14.19 ReynAmer 55.10 RioTinto 55.06 RiteAid 6.99 RobtHalf 43.12 Rowan 31.29 RylCarb 51.36 RoyDShllB 80.58 RoyDShllA 75.46 RuckusW 10.32 Ryder 81.98 Ryland 37.95

+.01 ... -.06 -.06 +.20 -.18 +.20 +1.32 +.29 -.17 +.01 -.04 -1.54 +1.02 -.02 -.24 +.81 -.27 -1.14 -4.56 -1.44 -3.60 +.13 +.02 -.10 +1.13 -2.54 -.02 +.06 -1.18 -.46 +1.23 -5.23 -.17 +1.00 -2.18 +.13 -.07 +.04 -.10 -.07 +.39 +.02 +.02 +.20 -.20 -.17 +.94 +.91 +.02 -.18 -.24 -.08 +1.89 -.27

SAP AG 77.88 SCANA 53.19 SM Energy 78.52 SpdrDJIA 163.35 SpdrGold 125.43 SpdrEuro50 42.79 SP Mid 245.16 S&P500ETF186.29 SpdrBiot 124.37 SpdrHome 31.01 SpdrS&PBk 32.20 SpdrShTHiY30.94 SpdrLehHY 41.27 SpdrS&P RB38.78 SpdrRetl 82.27 SpdrOGEx 76.52 SpdrMetM 41.76 SABESP s 9.52 SabnR 50.97 Safeway 33.93 StJude 61.97 Salesforce 52.80 SallyBty 27.13 SanchezEn 30.12 SandRdge 6.66 Schlmbrg 101.75 Schwab 26.85 ScorpioTk 8.85 Scotts 60.44 SeadrillLtd 34.77 SealAir 32.52 SempraEn 98.66 SenHous 23.45 ServiceCp 19.11 ServcNow 47.23 SibanyeG 10.19 SiderurNac 3.97 SilvWhtn g 22.47 SilvrcpM g 2.21 SimonProp170.56

-1.89 -10.6 +.50 +13.3 +1.57 -5.5 -.40 -1.3 +.68 +8.0 -.12 +1.4 -.58 +.4 -.10 +.9 -1.02 -4.5 -.42 -6.9 -.58 -2.9 +.05 +.3 +.05 +1.8 -1.07 -4.5 +.34 -6.6 -.34 +11.7 -.26 -.8 +.18 -16.0 +.16 +.8 -.19 +16.4 -.52 ... -3.30 -4.3 +.64 -10.3 +.05 +22.9 -.09 +9.7 +1.84 +12.9 -.19 +3.3 -.11 -24.9 +.81 -2.9 +2.02 -15.4 +.25 -4.5 +1.53 +9.9 +.91 +5.5 +.25 +5.4 -6.03 -15.7 +.29 +111.9 -.25 -36.0 +.60 +11.3 +.26 -3.5 +.70 +12.1

S-T-U

+.2 -2.0 -3.9 +1.7 +1.8 +1.9 -13.0 -10.9 ... -12.8 -4.1 +.1 -18.7 +2.6 -6.6 -12.5 +25.6 -9.5 +1.7 +8.8 +11.5 +4.4 +2.8 ... -27.1 +24.2 -26.0 -1.6 -43.5 +8.8 -4.7 +8.8 +4.6 -15.4 +14.9 -13.7 -2.6 +2.6 -13.9 +7.9 +3.6 +1.6 -7.8 +11.6 +10.2 -2.4 +38.1 +2.7 -11.5 +8.3 +7.3 +5.9 -27.3 +11.1 -12.6

NATIONAL MARKET

GW Phm n 62.12 +15.92 +49.5 GalenaBio 2.29 +.49 -53.8 Gam&Lsr n 36.08 -1.44 -6.2 Garmin 54.24 -1.93 +17.4 Gentex 29.56 +.22 -10.0 Gentherm 36.56 +.71 +36.4 GileadSci 73.90 +3.90 -1.6 GblEagEnt 12.22 -.96 -17.8 GluMobile 4.07 -.03 +4.9 Gogo n 18.25 +.28 -26.5 GolLNGLtd 43.65 -2.80 +20.3 Goodyear 27.44 +.44 +15.1 Google A 523.10 -20.24 -6.7 Google C n516.18 -19.92 -7.6 GreenPlns 28.81 -.14 +48.7 GrifolsSA 40.14 +1.97 +11.1 Groupon 7.19 -.22 -38.9 GrpoFin 13.30 +.29 +27.3 GulfportE 71.79 -3.32 +13.7 HD Supp n 25.93 +.38 +8.0 HMS Hldgs 16.15 -.45 -28.9 HainCel 84.49 -2.34 -6.9 Halozyme 7.21 -.36 -51.9 HanwhaSol 2.72 +.08 -1.8 Harmonic 7.17 +.45 -2.8 Hasbro 54.72 +.11 -.5 HawHold 14.61 +1.50 +51.7 HlthStrm 21.02 -3.27 -35.6 Healthwys 18.16 +1.40 +18.3 HrtlndEx 22.09 -.49 +12.6 HercOffsh 4.51 +.10 -30.8 HighpwrInt 4.88 +.15 +90.6 HimaxTch 8.59 -.53 -41.6 Hollysys 22.38 -.10 +18.2 Hologic 20.27 -.52 -9.3 HmeLnSvc 22.28 +.13 -3.0 HomeAway 33.32 -2.83 -18.5 HorizPhm 13.91 +.54 +82.5 HubGroup 44.50 +1.64 +11.6 HudsCity 9.92 +.02 +5.2 HuntJB 75.48 -.33 -2.4 HuntBncsh 9.17 -.05 -5.0 IAC Inter 65.72 -2.95 -4.3 IdexxLabs 123.75 +5.81 +16.3 IPG Photon 67.95 -6.78 -12.4 iRobot 34.13 -3.87 -1.8 iShAsiaexJ 59.44 -1.43 -1.4 iSh ACWI 58.09 -.20 +.8 iShNsdqBio223.96 +1.80 -1.4 Icon PLC 42.69 -.95 +5.6 IconixBr 38.87 +1.31 -2.1 IdenixPh 5.13 -.33 -14.2 IderaPhm 2.98 +.21 -35.6 Illumina 139.71 +4.26 +26.3 ImunoGn 12.39 -1.60 -15.5 Imunmd 3.96 ... -13.9 ImpaxLabs 26.59 +2.67 +5.8 Incyte 45.41 +.87 -10.3 Infinera 8.87 +.25 -9.3 InfinityPh 9.34 -.81 -32.4 Informat 37.57 -.20 -9.5 Insmed 13.38 -.03 -21.3 Insulet 40.17 -3.35 +8.3 IntgDv 11.73 +.27 +15.2 Intel 26.26 -.78 +1.2 IntrCloud n 4.37 -1.06 -76.2 InteractB 23.71 -.24 -2.6 InterceptP260.15 +20.05 +281.0 Interface 18.32 -.67 -16.6 InterMune 29.67 +1.38 +101.4 Intersil 12.03 -.16 +4.9 Intuit 75.34 +1.31 -1.3 IntSurg 366.37 -45.62 -4.6 InvBncp 26.39 +.10 +3.2 IridiumCm 6.79 -.30 +8.6 IronwdPh 10.68 +.23 -8.0 Isis 32.74 -1.27 -17.8 Itron 39.96 +4.21 -3.5 Ivanhoe rsh .52 -.05 -16.1

J-K-L

JA Solar 10.63 +.48 +15.9 JDS Uniph 13.11 -.32 +1.0 JkksPac 8.82 -.16 +31.3 JazzPhrm 134.92 -1.24 +6.6 JetBlue 7.92 -.70 -7.3 KEYW Hld 13.39 -.53 -.4 KLA Tnc 62.91 -3.20 -2.4

KandiTech 12.15 KeryxBio 13.85 KeurigGM 93.27 KnightT 13.33 KraftFGp 56.66 Kulicke 12.88 LCA Vis 5.34 LKQ Corp 26.65 LPL Fincl 46.79 LSI Corp 11.13 LTX-Cred 9.46 LamResrch 56.37 LamarAdv 50.66 Landstar 63.20 Lattice 8.73 LibGlobA s 40.00 LibGlobC s 38.70 LibtMda A 126.80 LibtyIntA 29.24 LibVentA s 56.43 LifePtH 56.87 LightPath 1.48 LincElec 64.87 LinearTch 44.64 LinnEngy 28.56 LinnCo 27.26 Liquidity 17.16 LiveDeal s 4.36 Logitech 13.66 lululemn gs 45.50

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M-N-0

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B-5

Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

NwstBcsh 14.44 NwstBioth 5.80 NorwCruis 30.97 Novadaq g 16.45 Novavax 3.89 NuanceCm 16.30 NutriSyst 13.97 Nvidia 18.73 NxStageMd 11.47 OReillyAu 147.68 OceanPw h 2.84 OceanRig 17.21 Oclaro 3.23 OdysMar 2.05 OldDomFrt 59.27 OldNBcp 13.96 OmniVisn 18.97 OnSmcnd 9.45 Oncothyr 2.82 OpenTxt s 49.04 OpenTable 66.41 OraSure 6.32 Orexigen 5.59 Outerwall 67.29 Oxigene 3.05

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P-Q-R

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V-W-X-Y-Z

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STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name RepubAir RetailOpp RetailNot n Revance n RexEnergy RigelPh RiverbedT RocketF n RosettaR RossStrs Rovi Corp RoyGld

8.32 15.70 30.40 34.33 20.86 3.13 19.50 31.04 48.25 67.77 22.09 66.05

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S-T-U

SBA Com 89.93 -1.24 SEI Inv 31.98 +.54 SFX Ent n 6.80 -.07 SLM Cp 25.82 -.11 SLM Cp wi 9.10 -.41 SPS Cmce 48.40 -4.63 SVB FnGp 107.21 -7.08 SabreCp n 16.65 +.15 SalixPhm 110.31 +9.25 SanDisk 84.35 +1.36 SangBio 13.62 -.37 Sanmina 21.03 +3.47 SareptaTh 36.70 +12.30 SciGames 11.68 +.22 SeagateT 52.72 -2.85 SearsHldgs 41.81 +3.48 SeattGen 37.45 -1.39 SelCmfrt 18.46 +.71 Semtech 24.25 -.33 Senomyx 8.65 -.40 Sequenom 2.60 +.01 SvcSource 6.22 -.72 ShandaGm 6.62 ... Shire 162.45 +15.09 ShoreTel 8.10 +.06 Shutterfly 39.69 -2.42 SierraWr 21.67 +.13 SigmaAld 94.99 +.92 SignatBk 116.12 -8.78 Slcnware 6.91 -.05 SilvStd g 9.97 +.37 Sina 48.15 -8.40 Sinclair 27.52 -.03 SiriusXM 3.12 -.03 Sky-mobi 7.15 +.06 SkywksSol 41.46 +5.38 SmithWes 14.03 -.17 SodaStrm 43.31 +3.32 Sohu.cm 58.00 -3.75 SolarCity 55.40 -1.32 Solazyme 11.13 -.08 SonicCorp 20.04 -.57 Sonus 3.07 -.06 Spectranet 22.02 -2.21 SpectPh 6.77 +.03 SpiritAir 58.65 +2.62 Splunk 55.60 -10.24 Sprouts n 32.91 -1.02 Staples 12.29 +.26 Starbucks 71.45 +1.30 Starz A 31.66 ... StlDynam 18.38 +.38 Stericycle 113.96 +2.81 Stratasys 99.38 -.83 SunesisPh 5.10 -.06 SunPower 34.18 +7.65 SuperMicro 20.47 +2.67 Supernus 7.68 -.58 SusqBnc 10.70 -.35 Symantec 20.28 -.43 Synaptics 63.77 +1.61 Synchron 29.87 -2.18 SynrgyPh 4.77 +.43 Synopsys 37.31 -.21 SyntaPhm 4.06 +.09 tw telecom 30.64 +.51 TakeTwo 20.36 -.15 Tarena n 8.91 +2.17 TASER 17.71 -.17 TearLab 4.35 -.28 Tekmira g 13.89 +.84 TeslaMot 199.85 +1.73 TxCapBsh 55.78 -8.07 TexInst 46.34 +.51

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Theravnce 26.26 Thoratec 32.23 ThrshdPhm 4.00 TibcoSft 19.35 TiVo Inc 11.83 TractSup s 65.68 TrimbleN 38.47 TripAdvis 77.39 TriQuint 13.47 Trustmk 22.85 21stCFoxA 32.64 21stCFoxB 31.78 21Vianet 24.57 UTiWrldwd 9.89 Ubiquiti 37.99 UltaSalon 88.11 UltraClean 11.58 Ultratech 26.35 Umpqua 17.01 Unilife 3.17 UtdTherap 90.87 UnwiredP 2.14 UrbanOut 35.79

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V-W-X-Y-Z

VCA Ant 31.07 VandaPhm 13.04 VanSTCpB 80.13 VascoDta 11.17 Verisign 47.15 Verisk 57.81 VertexEn 8.14 VertxPh 64.19 ViacomB 83.44 VimpelCm 8.19 Vivus 5.19 Vodafone 36.67 Volcano 18.14 Vringo 3.76 WarrenRs 5.15 WebMD 44.73 Weibo n 19.21 Wendys Co 8.28 WernerEnt 25.49 WDigital 87.77 WstptInn g 12.94 WholeFd s 50.65 Windstrm 8.85 WisdomTr 10.97 Woodward 44.10 WrightM 27.49 Wynn 201.49 XOMA 3.96 XenoPort 4.13 Xilinx 47.80 Xoom 22.30 YRC Wwde 21.21 YY Inc 63.21 Yahoo 34.48 Yandex 24.00 Yongye n 6.97 YouOnDm 3.17 ZebraT 67.70 ZeltiqAes 18.75 ZhoneTech 2.89 Zillow 92.77 ZionBcp 29.00 Ziopharm 3.35 Zix Corp 3.44 Zogenix 2.71 Zulily n 42.08 Zynga 4.08

-26.3 -11.9 -14.3 -13.9 -9.8 -15.3 +10.9 -6.6 +61.5 -14.9 -7.2 -8.2 +4.5 -43.7 -17.3 -8.7 +15.5 -9.1 -11.1 -28.0 -19.6 +55.1 -3.5

+.14 -.9 -.54 +5.1 +.06 +.4 +3.20 +44.5 -3.51 -21.1 +.21 -12.0 +.81 +143.0 +.02 -13.6 -.61 -4.5 -.81 -36.7 -.17 -42.8 +.68 -8.3 -1.19 -17.0 +.01 +27.0 -.02 +64.0 -.26 +13.2 -1.03 -5.1 -.23 -5.0 -.15 +3.3 -3.28 +4.6 -.55 -34.0 +2.52 -12.4 +.03 +10.9 -1.02 -38.1 +2.41 -3.3 -.93 -10.5 -6.51 +3.7 -.25 -41.2 -.07 -28.2 -4.38 +4.1 +3.49 -18.5 +1.62 +22.1 -3.97 +25.7 -1.90 -14.7 -5.95 -44.4 +.01 +8.9 -.29 +40.3 +4.18 +25.2 +.85 -.8 -.93 -45.9 -2.98 +13.5 -1.22 -3.2 -.02 -22.8 -.45 -24.6 ... -21.2 -6.29 +1.6 -.21 +7.4

Div

PE

Amrep . Apple Inc 13.16 CubeSmart .52 Exelis .41 Hastings . ITT Corp .44 Intel .90 JohnsnCtl .88 PNM Res .74 StateStr 1.04 ThermoFis .60 WholeFd s .48 Xylem .51

... 14 70 12 ... 8 14 16 21 14 29 34 29

Wk Chg

Last

YTD %Chg

5.47 -.41 571.94 +47.00 18.21 -.17 18.48 -.30 2.95 +.01 42.56 -1.20 26.26 -.78 44.49 -2.34 28.03 +.81 63.79 -1.74 114.29 -5.01 50.65 +2.52 35.41 +.11

-21.9 +1.9 +14.2 -3.0 +51.3 -2.0 +1.2 -13.3 +16.2 -13.1 +2.6 -12.4 +2.3

CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Australia Britain Canada China Denmark Euro Hong Kong Japan Mexico N. Zealand Russia Singapore So. Africa So. Korea Sweden Switzerlnd Taiwan Thailand

Last Prev. .9269 .9258 1.6800 1.6798 .9058 .9069 .1599 .1600 .1853 .1853 1.3837 1.3825 .1290 .1290 .009790 .009774 .076122 .076375 .8577 .8571 .0277 .0279 .7958 .7948 .0938 .0941 .000960 .000962 .1518 .1520 1.1352 1.1338 .0330 .0330 .03099 .03090

Last 1.0789 .5952 1.1040 6.2538 5.3953 .7227 7.7534 102.14 13.1368 1.1660 36.0566 1.2567 10.6584 1041.15 6.5876 .8809 30.32 32.27

Prev. 1.0801 .5953 1.1027 6.2489 5.3975 .7233 7.7532 102.32 13.0933 1.1668 35.7825 1.2583 10.6287 1040.00 6.5786 .8820 30.29 32.36

KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.

Last 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

Week ago

3.25 0.75 .00-.25

3.25 0.75 .00-.25

0.01 0.05 1.73 2.66 3.44

0.04 0.06 1.73 2.73 3.52

METALS

Prev. Last day Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.8348 0.8325 Copper, Cathode full plate 3.0530 3.0140 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1301.25 1291.50 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 19.695 19.665 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2147.50 2141.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 811.45 802.55 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1422.80 1408.10


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

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

sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 »real estate«

LOTS & ACREAGE

SANTA FE

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on R u fin a Lane , balcony, fire place, laundry facility on site. $629 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Mann Street, front end of a duplex, near K-Mart. $750 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rancho Siringo Road, Fenced yard, separate dining room, laundry facility on site. $729 monthly.

HOUSE 3, 2 & Guesthouse 2, 1. Beautifully remodeled, 1 car garage. $265,000. Must see! Utilities separated. santafepropertyforsale.com, 505577-1626.

SANTA FE

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

OUT OF TOWN NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME FOR SALE!

BEAUTIFUL ADOBE HOME! Espanola, B Boneyard Road. 2 bedroom, 1431 sq.ft., 1 acre. Tons of charm and detail. Lease Option Purchase. Won’t Last Long! 877-500-9517

Sits on one acre of land next to the Rio Grand. 505-995-0318 DETAILS: www.northernnewmexicohome.com

PRICE REDUCTION! SPECTACULAR VIEWS! Custom, 2856 sq.ft. Gem, 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath, granite, 18ft. ceilings, radiant heat, 3 car garage, 5.8 acres. Call now! SilverWater RE 505-690-3075.

»rentals«

VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 2 BEDROOM 1.5 BATH, 900 square feet, great, safe neighborhood. Small yard, no pets. $795 plus utilities. 505-470-0727. ART DECO Adobe Duplex, 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Vigas. Off-street parking. Enclosed yard. No Tobacco. No Dogs. $925-$975. 505-988-8022. INCREDIBLE SANGRE VIEWS! $945. ZIA VISTAS LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, large walk-in closets. Fireplace. Exceptional layout. Gated. Much more. 505-316-0986.

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

TURQUOISE

2 BEDROOM, 1.75 BATH. Near Plaza and DeVargas. Privacy fence, washer, dryer, off-street parking. $1350 monthly includes utilities. Small pets considered. 505-301-4949

TRAIL HOMES Don’t throw your money away on rent! 2 and 3 bedroom townhomes with attached garage and appliances! Qualifying buyers move in for $500 down

CALL 428-0554

1 bedroom, 1 bath. Fireplace, upgraded unit with granite countertops. End-unit. Low foot traffic. $109,000.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800

GUESTHOUSES

3 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH. Polished brick floors, kiva fireplace, wood beamed ceilings, garage, rural setting in town. $1095 monthly.

GET NOTICED!

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

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

FARMS & RANCHES SAN JOSE- Farm for Sale. 35 minutes to Santa Fe on Pecos River. Beautiful remodeled cottage and studio. Price reduced $199,000. 575-421-7000

FUR N ISH ED STUDIO, $675. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839

ELDORADO

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

LOTS & ACREAGE FSBO 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME OFF OLD LAS VEGAS HIGHWAY. 2.7 acres. Below appraisal, $298,000. Lease option. www.twotrails.teppics.com . 505-699-8727

2 acres of irrigated land and 2.5 acres of irrigated land in Anton Chico. Please call 575-799-0890 for more information.

DELIGHT YOURSELF AT LAS PALOMAS APARTMENTS! Our bright, spacious studios will impress you and our new management team is ready to treat you right. Call for a tour today! 888482-8216 Hablamos Espanol!

FSBO STAMM. 1232 Osage Avenue. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 1,263 sq.ft. $232,900. Open House 4/27, 1-4 p.m. 505-9300119.

SAN MIEGEL on Pecos River irrigation 1.76 acre for home site, trailer or campoing. Utilities available. $38,000 OBO. 575-421-7000

STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Ready to move-in! No Pets. $600 monthly, all utilities paid. CALL 505920-2648.

ELDORADO New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603 East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2738.

Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

Old Adobe Office Located On the North Side of Town

Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fire places, private bathroom, ample parking 1300 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1320. plus water and CAM or combined with the adjoining unit; total of 2100 square for $2100. Plus water and CAM

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603

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

this live- work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities

3 BEDROOM 2 BATH in Las Acequias. Recently renovated. One car garage, enclosed yard, quiet neighborhood. $1,050 to $1,150 monthly. No pets or smoking. 505-929-4120 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH. Kachina Loop, Gated community. Cooler, radiant, fireplace. 2-car garage. washer, dryer, new carpet. Shed. $1,325. 505-4243735

COMMERCIAL SPACE

Gated Community. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $219,900.

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath home in Nava Ade Subdivision. 1,250 sq.ft., garage. washer, dryer, small fenced yard. $1,300 monthly. 505-471-7050

TurquoiseTrailHomes.com 83 Carson Valley Way

CALL 986-3000

DOS SANTOS

3 BEDROOM 2.5 BATH. backyard borders Country Club Golf Course, AC, Garage. 6434 Paseo Del Sol. $1450 a month plus utilities. Available May 1st. Marty 505469-2573

Chic European Decor, 1 Bedroom with Den, Guesthouse. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Pets on Approval. Quiet Neighborhood near Harry’s Roadhouse. $1,550 month. 505-699-6161

Add a pic and sell it quick! Using

EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936.

Larger Type

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

LARGE, CLEAN one bed room furnished guest house, $1,400 monthly includes utilities. 2 acres in SF Community College District. 505-901-7415.

SERENE 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH townhouse, scenic Cochiti Lake. Rent $875 monthly includes water, you pay electric & gas. Pet OK. Call Steve 505465-0016

TESUQUE CASITA. 1 bedroom, 1 bath FURNISHED in gated estate. Pets okay. References needed. All utilities. $900. jsfsilver@aol.com

will help your ad get noticed

986-3000 Call Classifieds For Details Today!

986-3000

business & service exploresantafe•com ANIMALS

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

CLEANING

Dog Training Obedience, Problem Solving. 30 Years Experience. In Your Home Convenience. Guaranteed Results. 505-713-2113 CARETAKING EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER, in-home care, medication assistance, personal care, light housekeeping, shopping. Excellent References. 505-3105790.

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

HANDYMAN

Clean Houses

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

986-3000

HOUSEKEEPER: GREEN & ME T IC ULOUS. English. Licensed and insured. Windows, move-in, move-out. Excellent references. Adriana, 505-5015856.

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062.

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

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.

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

PLASTERING

I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.

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

THE YARD NINJA! PRUNING TREES OR SHRUBSDONE CORRECTLY! STONEWORK- PATIOS, PLANTERS, WALLS. HAUL. INSTALL DRIP. CREATE BEAUTY! DANNY, 505-501-1331.

PAINTING

BE READY, PLAN NOW * Irrigation: New installs, rennovations, brick, flagstone, planting, design. Take a look. We do it all. 505-3 1 0 - 0 0 4 5 . www.greencardlandscaping .com

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

COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING

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

Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 15% off! 505-9072600, 505-990-0955.

CONSTRUCTION LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084

LANDSCAPING

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

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared! So can you with a classified ad

LANDSCAPING

In and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.

Sell Your Stuff!

directory«

EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE !! Rock walls, patios, fireplaces, etc. Over 30 years experience. Call for estimate. HENRY THE STONE MASON, 505-490-0317.

ROOFING ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Gravel Driveway. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182. ALL TYPES of roofing and constuction with 15 years of experience. WE ARE THE BEST! Free Estimates. Josue Garcia, 505-490-1601.

TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 473-4129

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

HOMECRAFT PAINTING

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

MAC’S OLD MILL RESTORATIONS. Specialize in all painting and decorating needs since 1984. Call James McFeely at 505-204-1022.

YARD MAINTENANCE HOW ’BOUT A ROSE FOR YOUR GARDEN... to clean-up, maintain, & improve. Just a call away! Rose, 4700162. Free estimates.

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 26, 2014 Saturday, April 26, 2014

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED

»announcements«

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com Lovely TOWNHOME

2 bedrooms and 1 bath, granite counter tops, washer, dryer, kiva fireplace, vigas, tile, carpet flooring, conveniently located. $850 plus utilities.

Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities

Cozy Condo

1 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, radiant heat, washer, dryer, large balcony. $775. Plus utilities

FOUND FOUND KEYS, Canyon Road Park, on 4/23. Call to identify: 505-699-8609 PLAID BACKPACK found Plaza Verde. CD player, sling, CDs. ID colors of backpack or name a CD to claim. 505424-8060

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

Beautiful Views

Cabin style home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood stove, carpet and tile flooring, washer, dryer, lovely deck. Country living just 15 minutes from town. $1050. Plus utilities. RECENTLY REMODELED. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Hardwood & tile floors. Laundry hook-ups. Fenced yard. No pets. Lease. References. $825. 505-412-0197

PUBLIC NOTICES

THE LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA SOCIETY (LLS) has joined forces with PALLIATIVE CARE OF SANTA FE (PCS) to offer a BLOOD CANCER SUPPORT GROUP. The group meets the 2nd & 4th Tues from 2:00-3:30pm and is facilitated by Eileen Joyce, Grief Recovery Specialist and Director of Outreach for PCS. For location or more information, contact Eileen at 505428-0670. PCS is a nonprofit community-based volunteer organization providing free at-home services for people with life-threatening illnesses. More information at palliativecaresantafe.org. LLS is dedicated to funding blood cancer research and providing education and patient services. Join us for our Light The Night Walk Oct 26th at The Pit-UNM. Register as an individual walker, create or join a family & friends team or corporate team at www.lightthenight.org/nm. Contact LLS at 505-872-0141.

LIVE IN STUDIOS 2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET. 800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-6997280.

FRONTING ON 2ND STREET 2160 sq.ft on 2nd Street.

»jobs« when you buy a

2014 Pet Calendar for $5! 100% of sales donated to SFAS.

986-3000 LOST

Iphone 5C

REWARD!

No questions asked. 505-660-1772.

Live- Work. Studio. Gallery, or Office. High ceilings, 2-story. Handicap bath. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280. GREAT LOCATION, walk to Trader Joes. Big Studio, plenty of parking, laundry room. $795 monthly, utilities included. 602-481-2979.

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.

OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

LOST CAT: Tan and white Siamese mix, black collar. Lives in Casa Solana, missing since 4/23. Call 9829385.

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!

Please call (505)983-9646. RETAIL OR OFFICE 2 Great Locations

992-6123 or 690-4498

ROOMMATE WANTED HOUSEMATE WANTED. Female preferred. Newer Home, 2 Bedrooms, 1 private bath., kitchen. $600 monthly. Southside, near St. Vincent Hospital. 505-239-1269.

STORAGE SPACE 10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com

WAREHOUSES

WORK STUDIOS

DETACHED ADOBE 12’ x 24’ workspace. In-town quiet residential setting. Cold water sink, toilet, 2 private parking spaces. $450 monthly, year lease. 505-982-0596.

Responsibilities include assisting the Credit Department Manager with all reporting and administrative duties as they relate to lending, appraisals, construction project inspectors, environmental inspectors and any other assistance as requested. Candidate will provide back up in collection efforts by contacting delinquent accounts to request payment on past due loans. Requirements: College education and two years of banking or equivalent experience; excellent verbal and written communication skills; an intermediate level of skill in Microsoft Excel and Word. Century Bank offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. Please apply online at www.centurynetbank.com. We are an EEO, AA employer. Veterans are encouraged to apply. FULL-TIME, EXPERIENCED IN ACCOUNTING, DATA ENTRY, INVOICING, PAYROLL. Must Have references, English-Spanish a plus. Please call 505-988-9876.

4/26/14

By Brad Wilber

Friday’s Puzzle Solved

61 Head-turner DOWN 1 One of DC Comics’ Teen Titans 2 No longer fazed by 3 Willy-nilly 4 Family address 5 Fred Astaire, for one 6 State in a “State Fair” song title 7 You must keep it up throughout 32-Across 8 Moldavia, once: Abbr. 9 Speedy exhortation 10 Enlist 11 Takes in or lets out 12 Not robust, vocally 15 Short-lived English king of 1483 21 Saffron-yielding blooms 23 Blood test initials 26 Monopolized the conversation 28 Salzburg pronoun 31 NATO member since 1982

(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

33 Jane Austen’s “most disagreeable man in the world” 34 You might subscribe to it via PayPal 35 Many a fed. holiday 36 Canyon formers 37 Jazz greats, maybe 38 Suffer financially

4/26/14

41 Bit of schoolyard backtalk 42 One getting strokes, in a good way 43 Can’t tolerate 44 Uninspiring 45 Olive enthusiast 46 Moguls 47 Farmyard chorus 54 Ocean delicacy 55 Chill

LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by:

OPEN HOUSE EVENT

Accountant II

Submit resumes via mail to Chief Administrative Officer, 207 Shelby St., Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 or via e-mail to dcdebaca@nmfa.net. Closing date: April 25, 2014

LOST WHITE AND GRAY CAT with dark gray stripes. Missing since 4/2/14. Please call 719-510-3367.

PUBLIC NOTICES 90% SUCCESS RATE GRANT-WRITER. Research based grant applications in social, education, economic and environmental development. marianna_king@adams.edu. 719852-2698.

Sell Your Stuff!

2014 GMC TERRAIN SLE-1 ULTRA LOW-MILEAGE LEASE FOR WELL-QUALIFIED LESSEES

199 24

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

$

PER MONTH

986-3000

4

MONTHS

Please help us help those coping with rare, chronic, genetic diseases. New donors can receive $100.00 this week! Ask about our Specialty Programs! Must be 18 years or older, have valid ID along with proof of SS#, and local residency. Walk-ins Welcome! New donors will receive a 10.00 Bonus on their second donation with this ad.

Biotest Plasma Center 2860 Cerrillos Road, Ste B1 Santa Fe, NM 87507. 505-424-6250

PLEASE TO inform that Santa Fe County, New Mexico resident Bruce Kevin Horton 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 thisinstrument, the Ordination of the Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton 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 Number 2013/013. Let it be known that from this day of November 17, 2013 and henceforth the Official Title Bestowed shall read: Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton. This title and ordination was bestowed to Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton 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

$

3,419

due at signing after all offers

NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. TAX, TITLE, LICENSE, DEALER FEES EXTRA. MILEAGE CHARGE OF $.25/MILE OVER 20,000 MILES. AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS ONLY.

YOU’RE INVITED TO STEP UP TO PROFESSIONAL GRADE • OUR MOST ADVANCED LINEUP EVER

ADMINISTRATIVE

• 2 YEARS/24,000 MILES OF SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE5 ON EVERY 2014 MODEL • ONLINE APPOINTMENT SCHEDULING

SANTA FE PLAYHOUSE is seeking a MANAGING DIRECTOR to oversee day-to-day operations of the theatre. Information and resume submission: www.playhouse@santafeplayhouse. org

• 5-YEAR/100,00-MILE6 ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE & COURTESY TRANSPORTATION

FIND YOURS AT

Example based on national average vehicle selling price. Each dealer sets its own price. Your payments may vary. Payments are for a 2014 GMC Terrain SLE-1 with an MSRP of $27,390. 24 monthly payments total $4,776. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at lease signing plus $350. Lessor must approve lease. Take delivery by 4/30/14. Mileage charge of $.25/mile over 20,000 miles. Lessee pays for excess wear and tear charges. Payments may be higher in some states. Not available with some other offers. Residency restrictions apply. 5Covers only scheduled oil changes with filter, single axle or four wheel tire rotations and 27-point inspections, according to your new vehicle’s recommended maintenance schedule for up to two years or 24,000 miles, whichever comes first. Does not include air filters. Maximum of 4 service events. See participating dealer for other restrictions and complete details. 6Whatever comes first. See dealer for details. ©2014 General Motors. All rights reserved. GMC® Sierra® Acadia® Terrain® 4

• STATE OF THE ART DEALERSHIPS

Changing Futures, One Person At A Time Become a Plasma Donor Today

Book your appointment online at: www.biotestplasma.com NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!

1208 PARKWAY, 2,800 SQ.FT. OVERHEAD DOOR, PARKING, HEATED, COOLED. NEW CARPET. FLEXIBLE OWNER WILLING TO MODIFY. RENTS NEGOTIABLE. AL, 466-8484.

Excellent Employment Opportunity Credit Department Specialist

986-3000 Edited by RichCall Norris and Joycebusiness Lewis our small experts today!

ACROSS 1 Sedona and others 5 Wok bottom coats 9 Closed, for the most part 13 Digging 14 Image on Maine’s state flag 16 Function 17 “Yer __ tootin’!” 18 Bestow 19 Liturgy 20 18th/19th-century Neapolitan guerrilla __ Diavolo 21 Cameroon neighbor 22 Complained 24 Hall of Fame quarterback Dawson 25 “Something Wicked This Way Comes” novelist 27 Does some 32Across, perhaps 29 Cap extensions 30 Unlikely to come unglued 31 Golfer’s challenge 32 Reason for a loan 39 Word with check or date 40 1969 Tony nominee for Best Musical 41 Mideast rubber 45 Acorn-bearer with shallow roots 46 Deep-fried American Chinese dumpling dish 48 Astoria-to-Salem dir. 49 Gentle blow 50 Remove 51 Give-go link 52 “I Got You Babe” record label 53 Heavy lifter 55 Memorable anticipator of 39Across 56 Surf phenomenon 57 Having more yellow than usual 58 Crucifix inscription 59 People who are tight 60 Further

The New Mexico Finance Authority is seeking applications for an:

Lovely, Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $475 monthly. 505-690-5092

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

ACCOUNTING

3 1/2 year old netuered male Dog. Black Lab, Pit mix. White paws and spot on chest. Freckled face. 505-9468778. Bright turquoise case. Left at Ft. Marcy open grass area. 6pm, 5/24/14 Please return.

B-7

Los Angeles Times Daily Puzzle HaveCrossword a product or service to offer?

to place your ad, call

Lovely Town Home

This lovely town home features a loft with attached deck, wood burning fireplace, carpet, tile floors one bedroom and one bathroom. Includes washer, dryer hookups, small fenced back yard. Available May 1st. $850. Plus utilities.

THE NEW MEXICAN

505-473-2886 2721 Cerrillos Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87507


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

sfnm«classifieds ADMINISTRATIVE

EDUCATION

to place your ad, call MEDICAL DENTAL

986-3000

»merchandise«

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. Office Clerk, computer literate, phone & math skills, clean driving record. Fax resume to 505-983-0643 attention: HR.

GALLERIES EXPERIENCED SALES ASSOCIATE for luxury art jewelry gallery. Must be sophisticated, energetic, and organized. See classified ad @ santafenewmexican.com

HOSPITALITY THE ELDORADO Supermarket Deli is looking for experienced, reliable, dependable Kitchen and Counter Help. Ask for Guy or Corey, 505-466-2602.

MANAGEMENT

Senior ServiceS AdminiStrAtive ProgrAm mAnAger Primary Purpose: Under direction of the Community Service Director, the Senior Services Administrative Program Manager oversees Santa Fe County’s senior centers. Salary: $27.0817/hr - $40.6226/hr For a complete job description go to santafecounty.org or Contact 992-9880 Position closes: TBA

ASSISTANT MANAGER FOR APARTMENT COMMUNITY. Computer knowledge- experience a MUST! Sharp dresser with an outgoing personality. Prior hospitality or sales experience a plus. $15 hour. Send resume with cover letter: mgarner@leslieinvestments.com

CFO to act as Bureau Chief for Budget and Finance, providing oversight of agency budget and all accounting activities. Apply through www.spo.state.nm.us/state_employ ment.aspx

PREOWNED SALES MANAGER

COMPUTERS IT

an independent elementary school in Santa Fe, seeks candidates for a

Full-time Technology Instructor/IT Director and a Full-Time Early Childhood Associate Teacher (3 year olds) position beginning August 2014. The school’s curriculum is a balance between progressive and traditional with a focus on student inquiry and the needs of the individual learner. Classroom culture is infused with Responsive Classroom practices with emphasis on social emotional learning. Rio Grande School serves students from three years old to sixth grade, with class sizes ranging from 15-20 students, and a total school population of 160. Please review the full position description at www.riograndeschool.org . Competitive salaries offered, and all full-time employees receive a retirement plan with matching contributions, medical insurance, life insurance, and both short and long term disability insurance. Interested individuals should email a cover letter, resume, and 35 references to Interim Head of School, Patrick Brown, at patrick_brown@riograndeschool.o rg. Rio Grande School does not discriminate on the basis of age, sex, race, color, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and national or ethnic origin in its hiring practices. The New Mexico Finance Authority is seeking applications for an:

IT Systems Specialist

Interested persons should submit resumes via mail to Chief Administrative Officer, 207 Shelby St., Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 or via e-mail to dcdebaca@nmfa.net. Closing date: April 25, 2014.

CONSTRUCTION WANTED: FOAM ROOFER. MUST have experience, MUST pass a drug test.Starting immediately. Call 505-2988686, come in to fill out application 9905 Bell Ave SE, Albuquerque.

DRIVERS Drivers Needed to drive Executive. Excellent salary plus commission. Cash Daily. 310-281-1159, 817-595-6936. MOTHER’S DAY Delivery Drivers Needed, apply in person at Rodeo Plaza Flowers, 2801 RODEO ROAD, SUITE A2.

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.

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?

SWAIA SANTA FE INDIAN MARKET

is now hiring for the following positions:

Indian Market Zone Manager

5/5 - 8/24, Assist the Indian Market Manager in overseeing the various Indian Market Zones. Organizational skills and some supervisory experience preferred. Computer skills a plus. Must be extremely dependable, friendly, willing to follow direction and physically capable of working long hours and manual physical labor (heavy lifting 50+). Zero tolerance for alcohol or drug abuse. Proof of valid Driver’s License and current vehicle Insurance required. Please mail resume with references to Paula Rivera, Indian Market Manager, P.O. Box 969, Santa Fe, NM, 87504. EOE Closing deadline: April 29, 2014. No Phone Calls Please.

MEDICAL DENTAL

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

Physical Therapist

LOS ALAMOS VISITING NURSE S E R V I C E is currently interviewing for full or part time or per diem Physical Therapists. Home Care experience preferred but we are willing to train the right candidate. You must have a P.T. license to apply for position. We have an excellent benefit package which includes a retirement plan, health and dental coverage, wellness program, continuing education as well as vacation, sick leave and 11 paid holidays.

MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment. 505-795-7222

ANTLER BUYER COMING SOON! Top Grades and Prices! Call for information 435-340-0334.

ART

»animals«

AMERICAN COUNTRY COLLECTION down-blend sofa and Kilim wingback chair. Both excellent condition and have nail-head trim. $1,000 each. Smoke-free. 505-473-2656 ANTIQUE MAHOGANY DINING TABLE. 60" round, pedestal. 3 leaves. $1500. ANTIQUE WALNUT BOOKCASE, 8’ long, 6 shelves. $750. 505-988-5678

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

BEAUTIFULLY FRAMED Shonto Begay original painting $2250.00 "Don’t Follow Me" 505-471-4316 or colavs19@comcast.net Indian Market Blue Ribbon Navajo Artist and Museum Collected $5000.00 retail, Must Sell.

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

COW HAY for sale. 70 bales- $10 per bale. 505-610-0994

HORSES

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES Business Opportunity

Would you like to deliver newspapers as an independent contractor for the Santa Fe New Mexican? Operate your own business with potential profits of $1,000 a month. This route is available in the Espanola/Abiquiu area Call 505-986-3010 to make an appointment. LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED GROUNDS KEEPER. Must have knowledge of irrigation system, operation of landscaping equipment. Must apply in person or bring resume. Valdez & Associates, 2235 Henry Lynch Rd.

MASSAGE THERAPIST

Responsible for providing all types of massage and body treatments offered at the Sandia Resort and Casino Spa. All treatments must be done in an efficient, courteous, and professional manner. Provide massage and body treatments to guests using professional accepted techniques. PUEBLO OF SANDIA OFFERS A COMPREHENSIVE BENEFITS PACKAGE TO INCLUDE MEDICAL, DENTAL, VISION AND 401 K PLUS A GENEROUS PTO PLAN AND APPROVED HOLIDAYS. Apply online www.sandiacasino.com

ATTN: KACHINA MAKERS. COLORFUL small feathers for sale. $20 for a quart jar full. 505-473-4241

Upholstered Church Pews in Good Condition (8) 14 ft. to 18 ft. long. Price Negotiable. Call: 505-4731114.

INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINES- Juki Serger and Consew straight sewer, almost new. Must see, make offer. 505-470-5759, 505-757-2381.

AUCTIONS Santa Fe County DWI Seizure Vehicle Auction Saturday, April 26th, 9:30am Santa Fe County DWI Seizure Yard 35 Camino Justicia * Santa Fe Viewing & Inspection: Friday, 4/25, 9:00am - 4:00pm Terms: CASH, CASHIERS CHECK ONLY! For More Information: Bentley’s 800-841-4087 Ext 103 bentleysauction.com

HANDMADE SPANISH Colonial Style red oak with carved rosettes: Large desk, Credenza, Bookcase, 2 chairs. $9,750. Call 505-982-0778 for appointment.

BUILDING MATERIALS

TWO SOLID oak pews from St. Catherine Indian School, kneelers inlcuded, $500 each. (505)466-8581

BUILDING M A T E R I A L S Gre en House, Flea Market kits, Landscaping, Fencing, Vehicles, Trailer. Contact Michael at 505-310-2866, 505310-9382 or Jackalope 505-4718539.

KIDS STUFF

REMODELING SALE. 3 shelf TV stand, $100. Kitchen island, $500. Indian Rug, $450. Turkish Runner Rug, $400. 432-634-3334 REMODELING SALE. Dining room table with 8 Windsor chairs, $1050. Large executive desk, $1,300. Antique Buddhist Temple bench, $1,430. Wood sculpture, $600. 432-634-3334

STEARNS-FOSTER QUEEN MATTRESS. Luxury Plush Euro Pillow Top. 18 months old: perfect condition. ASKING $600. New: $1079. 505-989-3916.

at

NOW HIRING for all positions at Smith’s grocery store in Los Alamos, NM. Apply online at SmithsFoodandDrug.com , click on the Careers link at bottom of home page select store #497. Apply in person: 535 Central Ave, Los Alamos, NM 87544.

PART TIME

RECYLCLED ASPHALT (millings). $18 per cubic yard. Free deliver with 11 yard purchase. 505-316-2999

PART-TIME ARCHIVE COORDINATOR The Santa Fe New Mexican is looking for a part-time archive coordinator to oversee our print and digital archives. The selected candidate will also review requests to re-use editorial content and will supervise an archive assistant. Attention to detail is a must. Experience in TownNews, MerlinOne and NewsEdit platforms is helpful. Pay rate is dependent upon experience. Position is 20 to 24 hours a week with flexible scheduling. The New Mexican offers holiday pay and paid vacation (prorated for a part-time schedule), and eligibility to participate in our 401k plan, in addition to free gym passes. Apply with cover letter and resume by 5 p.m. on Friday, May 2, 2014, to: Ray Rivera Editor The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy St. Santa Fe, NM 87501 or e-mail rrivera@sfnewmexican.com You may also pick up a job application from 202 East Marcy Street or 1 New Mexican Plaza (off I-25 frontage road) or complete an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No phone calls, please. Equal Opportunity Employer PROFESSIONAL FLORAL DESIGNER needed for busy retail flower shop; part-time must work Saturdays. Experienced only. Box # 5004 c/o The New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe, NM 87504. Blindbox02@gmail.com

TECHNICAL Maintenance Technician

La Posada de Santa Fe Resort & Spa, soon to be a Starwood Luxury Collection property, is seeking experienced Maintenance Techs for our Engineering Department. HVAC and hotel experience preferred. Please e-mail lbaca@ lpdsf.com or stop by the HR office to apply. EOE

Five "name-brand" pairs of shoes for sale.

BREEDING SERVICE Triple Registered, gaited, homozygous tobiano stallion. Live spotted foal guaranteed. $350-$300. TBeckmon@SkiesRBlue.com www.SkiesRBlue.com 505-470-6345 HORSE BOARDING. OFF HWY 599. LARGE TURN OUT, CORRAL, BARN, AND ROUND PEN. TRAILER STORAGE INCLUDED. MILES TO RIDE. $275 MONTHLY INCLUDING FEED. 505-6992955

PETS SUPPLIES ADORABLE, HEALTHLY multigeneration labradoodle puppies. Born 3/5/14. White- cream and chocolate. First shots. Parents on premises. $500. Located in Roswell. 575317-1237.

SOLID BIRCH WOOD CRIB with Sealy mattress. Converts to youth bed. Never used. $200 firm. 505-820-3127 TODDLER BED with mattress, and bedding, almost new. $50. 505-9869765, if no answer leave message.

CLOTHING DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down baseball jersey. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205

EDUCATION Desert Academy

WANT TO BUY

WASHER, DRYER, Refrigerator, $500 for all. 505-470-8861.

Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

Don’t forget to ask about our sign on bonus!

A 6 -12, co-educational, independent, International Baccalaureate World School seeks a full time Middle School Science Teacher for the 20142015 school year. Please send resume and cover letter to lgildes@desertacademy.org .

TENT, NORTHFACE VE25. Mount Everest Expedition Tent. Never setup. Golden Yellow, Geodesic Dome, extras $500. 505-983-7057.

ANTIQUES

REMODELING SALE: Iron pot-hanger, $150. Microwave vent-a-hood, $30. 432-634-3334

If you would like to work with our team please fax your resume and/or call for an interview appointment. Los Alamos VNS 6622525 (fax 662-7390) ask for Beverly or Sarah.

The NM Department of Health Family Planning Program is looking for a Full-time nurse and a full-time nurse practitioner to join a hardworking state employee team to reduce teen, unintended pregnancies in NM. Please contact Dr. Wanicha Burapa (505) 476-8870 or wanicha.burapa@state.nm.us for details.

SPECIALIZED MOUNTAIN BIKE. Full suspension, 8 years old. $450 OBO. 505-490-2494

Electric Stainless Steel counter top 5 burner, 36" wide. $95. 505-986-9765, if no answer leave a message.

Hospice Registered Nurse-PRN, Santa Fe. Must possess a current license to practice in the state of New Mexico as a Registered Nurse. Contact: Mary Feidt at mfeidt@ambercare.com

LOWE BACKPACK. Alpine model. Brand new, never used. $125. 505490-2494

Thule Parkway bike rack. Holds 2 bikes. Heavy-duty. $100, 505-2319133.

APPLIANCES

CFO for NM State Agency (CFB #6306)

AUTOMOTIVE

FAMILY OWNED GM STORE, IMMEDIATE OPENING. RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: BUYING INVENTORY, DESKING DEALS, APPRAISALS, ASSISTING IN MANAGEMENT OF SALES FORCE, TRAINING SALESPEOPLE TO INCREASE STORE SALES, MANAGING PREOWNED MECHANICAL AND COSMETIC RECONDITIONING PROCESS, AND BACKUP FINANCE. SEND RESUME TO : henryvalencia@henryvalencia.net NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. SERIOUS INQUIREIS ONLY. INDIVIDUAL MUST BE ABLE TO PASS BACKGROUND CHECK, AND DRUG SCREENING. BENEFITS PACKAGE AVAILABLE. EOM..

FURNITURE PHYSICAL THERAPIST Works 30 hours per week with Community Home Health, the only non-profit home care program in Santa Fe.

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

FIREWOOD-FUEL SEASONED FIREWOOD: PONDEROSA $80 PER LOAD. Pinion or Cedar $120 per load. CALL: 508444-0087. Delivery free!

VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A HEAD GIRLS’ BASKETBALL COACH, HEAD GIRLS’ SOCCER COACH AND A HEAD BASEBALL COACH. 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 9896353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

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

LAWN & GARDEN

AKC AKITAS FOR SALE. $600. White, black, black and white, brindle. 8 weeks old, first shots. 505-315-7736 or 505-490-3523.

TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999

AKC CAVALIER King Charles Pups. 3 males available May 2nd. Asking $1,200. butteboyzmom@yahoo.com or call 575-740-2401 for more information.

$80-$100 shoes (new) for $20 a pair (barely used). Black "Offroad Yucatan Ecco" sandals-size 7.5; Black "Earth Vegan" tie up shoessize 8B; Black "White Mountain" open-toed with strap heels-size 8M; "Sketchers Shape-ups" black tie up shoes and brown Mary Jane style shoes-both size 8. Call 505-577-2046.

GENERAL, ALL-TERRAIN Bicycle, 18speed. Lock, cable, rear carrier, raincover, two spare tires. $50. 505982-6438.

COLLECTIBLES

GREAT BIKE Trailer, Yak, single wheel. Waterproof cargo bag, perfect for touring. Like, new. $250. 505983-7057.

LOOKING TO BUY US Stamp Collections. 1847-1920. Call 603-727-8315.

HEALTH MARK INVERSION TABLE from Guyim. For hanging upside down. Like new condition. $125. 505231-9133

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

AKC DOBERMANS. Excellent bloodlines, tempermants. Tails, Dewclaws, shots. Puppies Raised with love, 9 weeks. Jozette 719-5882328. Check online ad pics.

santafenewmexican.com

PART-TIME ARCHIVE COORDINATOR The Santa Fe New Mexican is looking for a part-time archive coordinator to oversee our print and digital archives. The selected candidate will also review requests to re-use editorial content and will supervise an archive assistant. Attention to detail is a must. Experience in TownNews, MerlinOne and NewsEdit platforms is helpful. Pay rate is dependent upon experience. Position is 20 to 24 hours a week with flexible scheduling. The New Mexican offers holiday pay and paid vacation (prorated for a parttime schedule), and eligibility to participate in our 401k plan, in addition to free gym membership. Apply with cover letter and resume by 5 p.m. on Friday, May 2, 2014, to: Ray Rivera Editor The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy St. Santa Fe, NM 87501 or e-mail rrivera@sfnewmexican.com. You may also pick up a job application from 202 East Marcy Street or 1 New Mexican Plaza (off I-25 frontage road) or complete an online job application at http://sfnm. co/1eUKCcD. No phone calls, please. The Santa Fe New Mexican is an Equal Opportunity Employer 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303


Saturday, April 26, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES BEAUTIFUL F1 GoldenDoodles M & F availablel 5/6 many colors including ULTRA-RARE F1 phantom black & gold. Serious Inquiries only. Email at goldendoodles@happyheartpuppy.c om See www.happyheartpuppy.com for more information. DOG CAGE. STAINLESS STEEL 43"Lx24"Wx44"H. $75. 505-929-0235, 929-7230.

GARAGE SALE NORTH SPRING BLOW OUT SALE

All books, glassware and selected items 50% off at:

Look What the Cat Dragged In 2

, 541 W. Cordova Road, 780-8975, Friday-Sunday. Adoptions 11-4 Saturday. All proceeds benefit the Santa Fe Animal Shelter .

GARAGE SALE SOUTH Academy for Technology & the Classics COMMUNITY YARD SALE Saturday, 4/26, 9A - 3P EXCEPTIONAL JAPANESE KOI, 3 years. Brilliant mono colored, ogon, matsuba, kinginrin, hajiro. 4/26 and 4/27, 11-4 p.m. Galisteo, 505-466-1975.

ESTATE SALES

986-3000

DOMESTIC

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

2005 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER. Asking $7,200 OBO. New Kenwood stereo, headrest TVs. 124,031 miles. Runs good. 4WD. Paul, 505-204-4704.

Once In A Lifetime! Stephen’s A Consignment Gallery The Ann Lawrence Collection, NEXT Saturday, May 3rd. Watch for details Go to: www.stephensconsignments.com

Stephen’s A Consignment Gallery Frank and Friends are hosting the Young Estate Sale. This weekend April 26th 2014 9am-2pm. 2214 Camino Rancho Siringo. Native American, Antiques, Kachinas, Textiles, Collectable Pottery, Antique Oak Barristers’ book cases and so much more. view pictures: www.stephensconsignments.com

2008 BUICK ENCLAVE WITH ALL THE GOODIES, VERY SHARP RIDE, $18,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.

2002 Ford Taurus 4-door Wagon SE Standard. $3,000. Call 505-4732886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2010 Dodge Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab, 6.3 Ft Box SLT. $26,000. Call 505-473-2886.

COUNTRY CLUB GARDENS ANNUAL MULTI-FAMILY COMMUNITY YARD SALE

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

THE SMITH ESTATE 401 Calle de Anza, Santa Fe 4/25- 4/26, 9 am - 3 pm. Beautiful furniture, household items, vintage jewelry, art & craft supplies, books & records. For more information & pictures: www.everythingestates.com

»cars & trucks«

2000 Ford Windstar Wagon 4-door SE. $3,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2008 CADILLAC DTS. $12,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

SATURDAY APRIL 26, 2014 8:00 A.M. TO 12:00 P.M.

2005 DODGE Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab, 6.3ft box SLT. $15,000. Call 505-473-2886.

Tools, Toys, baby clothes and accessories, books and small furniture items. Clothing in all sizes from infant to adults in good clean condition. Items for every room in your home, including small appliances, linen, computers, videos, and outdoor gear. Stop by and check out all the great deals! PUG PUPPIES FOR SALE. Fawn. 1 girl, 3 boys. 8 weeks. Vaccinated. Healthy, Playful. Well socialized for dogs, children. $850. 505-795-6420

Conveniently set up in and around our spacious clubhouse located at the center of the Park with plenty of convenient parking. Look for our sign at the entrance.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES 2000 GMC JIMMY 4WD -- $3000 Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

COUNTRY CLUB GARDENS MANUFACTURED HOME COMMUNITY 6151 AIRPORT ROAD 1 1/2 miles west of Santa Fe Place on Airport Road SATURDAY 4/26 & Sunday 4/27 8 a.m to 4 p.m. 2705 Via Cabalerio Del Sur Kitchenware, TV, furniture, clothing, linenes and much more. SHIH TZU PUPPIES, 9 weeks old Rare Red. Registered, First Shots. Asking $475. 505-469-9211 or 505-469-0118.

GARAGE SALE WEST

»finance«

BIG NEIGHBORHOOD YARD SALE- 7 FAMILIES! 8-1 SATURDAY 4/26. FERGUSON LANE, west of Frenchy’s Field off Agua Fria. Craft & jewelry supplies, power tools, sports equipment, housewares, furniture, baby & kid’s clothes and items, TV, treadmill, electronics, office equipment, designer purses, books.

2006 CHEVROLET HHR. A RARE TREASURE. $8,488. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234. PARTS FOR 1998 CHEVY SILVERADO. Looking for extended cab window parts, scissor jack, and tool to drop the spare tire down. Please call 602-8211585.

WE LOAN on Commercial Real Estate, Income Property, Offices, Retail, Multi-Family, Motels, Storage, Land, Farms, Easy Qualify. PMIFUNDING.COM . 505-275-2244

»garage sale«

GARAGE SALE ELDORADO HUGE GARAGE SALE AT GLORIETA CAMPS, located at 11 State Road 50. Many large & small kitchen & household items, desks, chairs, and dressers. Open 1:00-5:00pm on Thursday (5/1), 9:00-5:00pm on Friday (5/2), and 8:00-12:00pm on Saturday (5/3). ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT THE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM. IN CANONCITO, Exit 294 off I-25 North. Men & women’s clothing, mobile home axles, fireplace, laminated beams, and household items. SATURDAY, 8-2 P.M. AT 955 OLD LAS VEGAS HWY.

MOVING /EVERYTHING GOES! Furniture, Dishes, Bedding, Lamps, Rugs, Stereo, Clothes. Plus 2008 Mercury Mariner, 62k miles with leather seats and moon roof. Saturday only 8-2. 64 Camerado Loop, Eldorado. Second left off Azul.

GARAGE SALE NORTH

CLASSIC CARS

2101 FOOTHILLS ROAD HUGE MULTIFAMILY GARAGE SALE! Furniture, tools, sports equipment, collectibles, DVD’s, artwork, luggage, and much more. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, April 25th, 26th and 27th 9:00am to 3:00pm daily. No early birds, please.

GOODMAN HEATER, A/C, RADIANT HEATER, TUBS, SINKS, DISPLAY CASE, 65" TV, GOBS OF FURNITURE. From Artist hit a right on High Summit, wait at South Summit Ridge gate, call 505-660-5561. All day Saturday & Sunday.

DON’T MISS SANTA FE PREP’S ANNUAL RUMMAGE SALE!

Saturday, April 26, 8 a.m. - 1 p.m. We have it all! Designer clothing boutique, sporting goods, electronics, art, furniture, toys, books and more!

Santa Fe Prep Gym 1101 Camino Cruz Blanca ESTATE SALES 24 CAMINO del Sol...Don’t miss this! Priced to sell. 8-2, Saturday ONLY, April 26. Furniture. Harley stuff. Tools for many trades. Kids literacy. House, kitchen. Office. Art tapes. Clothes. Books. Cowboy boots. Skates. TMTL. Pass Harry’s Roadhouse on OLVH. Green arrows. CASH.

DON’T MISS THIS SALE!

*Fund Raiser* Family and Friends Yard Sale April 26 & 27, 2014 818 Columbia Street Time: 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. NO EARLY BIRDS

ITEMS FOR SALE : Cookie Jars, Picture Frames, Children’s Furniture, Barbeque Grill, Books, Kitchen items, Roosters and lots of Almost New Clothes and shoes (all sizes) and lots more!!! Baked Goods will also be sold!

F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $14,900. 505-470-2536

4X4s

2007 Chrysler 300-Series 4 door Sedan 300 Touring RWD. $14,000. Call now to view: 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com GEM OF A BUG. 1971, VW Beetle. New rear shocks, recent valve adjustment and tune-up, new rear main seal and clutch, warranty on transmission, good tires and brakes. 153,000 miles. $6,995. Contact RJ 505-506-8133.

2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 . Extended Cab Standard Box 2-Wheel Drive LT. $19,000. 505-473-2886.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

1997 JEEP CJ-5, 4X4 runs good, rebuilt engine, V8, high rise and headers $3,800. Please call 505-660-1674

DOMESTIC

2011 Ford F-150 4WD SuperCrew 51/2 Ft Box XLT. $33,000. 505-4732886.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2005 CHRYSLER Touring, great condition throughout. Low mileage. V6, 28mpg. Power everything, Automatic, alloy wheels. Excellent riding car. $4,950. 505-699-6161

2005 CHEVY-1500 CREWCAB 4X4

Another local Owner, Records, Manuals, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo PRACTICAL $17,250

CALLING CONTRACTORS !! 55 CALLE SAN MARTIN. SCOUT’S LAST GARAGE SALE EVER! Come one, come all for your last chance to buy winter and summer designer clothes in size 6 and 8 ..some never worn! Buy the cutest shoes and boots you have ever seen in sz. 6, 6.5, 8, plus men’s unworn sneakers, shirts, etc. Buy antiques, jewelry, home goods, Christmas decorations, garden tools, glassware, dinnerware and just plain good stuff. Buy a fab Sam Baer table and desk ..not cheap, but wonderful. DON’T MISS THIS ONE MY LAST. MEAN IT! Saturday, April 26 and Sunday, April 27. 9:00am 2:00pm. Can’t wait to see you! Scout Gay

GMC AUTO Form 1991 1991 3/4 ton GMC Auto Form conversion van. Immaculate condition, full power, low miles. Must see to appreciate. Has tow package. $3,000 OBO. Call Tony at 505-660-8989.

2010 TOYOTA TACOMA front bumper. Good condition. $100. 505-471-8817.

FOUR FRIENDS GARAGE SALE! Jewelry, jewelery tools, rolling mill, art & supplies, designer clothes, linens, bedding, antique chest, bikes, books, & more. Everything Must Go! 2251 VIA MANZANA, OFF WEST ALAMEDA. Saturday Only 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.

FINANCIAL LOANS

4X4s

74 A Van Nu Po Road - Rancho Viejo (across from IAIA). Come sell your treasures - booths $20. Proceeds go towards the Science Lab. Questions? Call 490-0391. CHURCH RUMMAGE SALE. SATURDAY 4/26 8 AM- 2 PM. LUTHERAN CHURCH OF THE SERVANT, 2481 Legacy Court. Off Rodeo near Sam’s Club.

POMERANIAN puppies. Quality double coats, registered and UTD shots. Beautiful tiny Chihuahua female, chocolate, first shots, $450. 505-9012094 or 505-753-0000.

to place your ad, call

B-9

Western collector- House FULL! Furniture, Household, Vintage Native American and Mexican Silver Jewelry, Art (original Curtis print), Metal Sculpture, Saltillos, Navajo Weavings, Mexican and Pueblo Pottery, Books, Vintage Cowboy and Mexican Clothing, Boots, Hats, Purses, Belts, Buckles, and MORE! See estatesales.net Must sell! FridaySunday 9-5. 3362 Avenida De San Marcos. Cash Only! ESTATE SALE 2. April 26, 9:00-1:00 5614 B Hwy. 41 Galisteo. We pulled out more great things for you to enjoy! LOTS of beautiful kitchen and household items. Books. Russell Wright dishes. Fine Art and Collectibles. Walnut Surfboard table. Antique music cabinet. Large wool rugs. High-end designer modern furniture. The best stuff you’ll find anywhere at an estate- yard sale!

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

santafeautoshowcase.com 2008 Hummer H2 SUT - REALLY! ONLY 38k miles, totally loaded with leather, NAV and chrome brush guard, clean CarFax, this one’s HOT $44,897. 505-216-3800.

2011 Dodge Avenger 4-door Sedan Heat. $12,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.

505-983-4945

2003 Ford SuperDuty F-350 DRW 4WD Crew Cab 6-3/4 FT BOX LARIAT. 505-473-2886. $16,000.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

QUICK. SAFE. EASY. CHEAP! Auto Classifieds 2 weeks in print and online for only

25!

$

*

sfnm«classifieds

Place your ad today on sfnmclassifieds.com or contact us: classad@sfnewmexican.com or 505-986-3000. * Prices for 2 weeks starting at $25.


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, April 26, 2014

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

4X4s

4X4s

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

2013 GMC Sierra 1500 Crew Cab Short Box 4-Wheel Drive SLE. $34,000. Call now! 505-473-2886.

2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Yup, another 1 owner from Lexus! NEW tires, NEW brakes, clean CarFax, low miles, the search is over! $18,611. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Infiniti M37x AWD - Just traded! Gorgeous and loaded, good miles, navigation & technology packages, local one owner, clean CarFax $32,897. Call 505-216-3800.

2008 Mercedes ML350 - another Lexus trade! AWD, good miles, well-maintained, truly excellent condition, Luxury for less at $20,997. Call 505-216-3800.

2004 TAURUS SES Flex Fuel. V-6, Auto, Loaded, Leather, Detailed, Serviced. Carfax. 106,375 miles. $4,800 Great condition! 505 927-7364

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2012 SRT-8 DODGE CHALLENGER. FASTEST CAR IN SANTA FE, SAVE THOUSANDS $36,999 SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.

IMPORTS

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

SPORTS CARS

SUVs 2012 TOYOTA COROLLA. DON’T PAY MORE. LOW, LOW MILES. $13,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.

2011 AUDI A3 TDI - DIESEL, 40+mpg, one owner, clean CarFax, this is your chance $22,341. Call 505-2163800.

1987 JAGUAR XJ6 - WOW! only 48k miles! a TRUE classic, try to find a nicer one, accident free, amazing condition, drives great $10,931. Call 505-216-3800.

2006 MERCEDES-E350 WAGON AWD

Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 7 Passenger, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo RARE, $21,450

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2010 Chrysler Town & Country 4 door Wagon Touring, $12,000. Call now to test drive: 505-473-2886 www.furrysbuickgmc.com

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2013 GMC Sierra 1500 Extended Cab Standard Box 2-Wheel Drive Work Truck. $19,000. Call now, 505-473-2886. 2010 BMW 335Xi - Another Lexus trade! Low miles, AWD, completely loaded with Navigation, still under warranty! clean CarFax $26,717. Call 505-216-3800.

2004 Volkswagen Passat Wagon 4-door Wagon GLS Auto Wagon. $8,000. Call www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2009 KIA SPECTRA. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2008 GMC Envoy 2WD 4 door SLE1 Call $11,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2008 MINI Cooper Clubman. ANOTHER Lexus trade! low miles, clean CarFax, well-equipped, immaculate! $13,871.Call 505-2163800

2006 HONDA Element LX 4WD - recent local trade, freshly serviced, nice condition, clean CarFax, priced to go $9,471. Call 505-2163800.

1993 VOLVO GLT 850. FWD. Clean. $1500 cash. 505-490-3686, or 505-4709262. 2010 BMW 535Xi AWD. Recent trade-in, factory CERTIFIED with warranty & maintenance until 3/2016, fully loaded, clean CarFax $21,927. Call 505-216-3800.

2007 Lexus ES350 - fresh Lexus trade! good miles, heated & cooled leather seats, excellent condition, truly affordable & reliable luxury $15,981. Call 505-216-3800

2004 MINI COOPER-S MANUAL

Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo CUTE, $10,650.

2001 JEEP CHEROKEESPORT 4X4

Another One Owner, Local, Every Record, Manuals, X-Keys,NonSmoker, Garaged, Loaded Pristine. Soooo CLASSIC! $9,250.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2009 BMW 335Ci xDrive. WOW! Merely 43k miles, just 1 owner, Premium & Cold Weather Packages, clean CarFax $24,841. Call 505-216-3800.

2007 LEXUS GX470 4WD - capable and luxurious, new tires & brakes, well maintained, NAV & rear DVD, beautiful condition, clean CarFax, the RIGHT one! $22,831. Call 505-216-3800.

2004 VW CONVERTIBLE. Manual control. Excellent condition. Top like new. Recent tune-up. Tires excellent condition. $5,200 (below Blue Book). 505-466-3580

2007 TOYOTA FJ CRUZIER. VERY CLEAN WELL KEPT VEHICLE. ONLY $16,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.

PICKUP TRUCKS

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2004 LEXUS RX-330 AWD

Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, Manuals, X-keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo BEAUTIFUL $14,950

2007 BMW X5 3.0SI with options. One Owner. New tires, Looks new., drives new. 80,000 miles. Sale Price $16,500. 505-995-6245

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2014 Pet Calendar for $5!

View vehicle, CarFax:

100% of sales donated to SFAS.

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 2006 LEXUS SC430 - UNREAL! Merely 35k miles, still smells new, collector quality & condition, new tires, all services complete, pristine & just absolutely PERFECT, don’t miss it $32,871. Call 505216-3800.

when you buy a

2004 Saab 9-5 4-door Sedan Arc. $7,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

986-3000 »recreational«

2012 Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab. 6.3 Ft Box Laramie. $33,000. Call 505-473-2886. 2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L - another 1owner Lexus trade-in, AWD, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $19,897. 505-2163800. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2002 Lexus SC430- ready for the season! Hardtop convertible, only 75k miles, well-maintained, fun AND elegant, don’t miss this one for $18,721. Call 505-216-3800.

2008 RAM 2500 HEAVY DUTY 4X4. 5.7 Hemi, Auto, Tow Package, Great Tires, Serviced, Detailed. $11,000 Good condition! 505-927-7364

2012 TOYOTA Tundra DCab Rock Warrio - 4WD, single owner clean CarFax, just 30k miles, looks impressive, new tires, immaculate $29,897. Call 505-216-3800.

2008 SMART fortwo Cabriolet. Spring is here! Fun & practical, well-equipped, red interior, pristine condition, clean CarFax, $8,541. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 Toyota Tundra 4WD Truck CrewMax Short Bed 4.6L (Natl) $33,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

ATVs ELECTRIC WINCH and receiver for snow plow,743 miles,82 hrs. excellent condition. $4,500 firm. List price $5,300 Call 505-757-2323 or 505-2313823

CAMPERS & RVs 2010 Honda Odyssey EX. $17,000. Call 505-473-288. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2005 HONDA CIVIC. Perfect condition. 13,500 low low miles. Dark grey. Four door. Automatic. $8,000 OBO. Call 949-338-3850 2009 TOYOTA Matrix, Standard transmission. 75,000 miles, excellent condition. Asking $12,500, OBO. Call for questions, 505-982-2286. 2005 Toyota Camry XLE, 134,095 miles, good condition, red & gray, automatic, 4 door. $4,500, Call 505-3363950.

2009 MERCEDES GL450 - AWD, perfectly maintained, fully loaded w/ navigation, DVDs, third row, clean CarFax in prisine condition, BELOW WHOLESALE @ $26,797. Call 505-216-3800.

2010 SUBARU Impreza 2.5i Premium - AWD, heated seats, low miles, new battery, new belts, new tires, recently serviced, one owner, NICE $15,921. CALL 505216-3800.

2010 Toyota Tacoma 4WD Double Cab Short Bed V6 Manual. $27,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2011 FLAGSTAFF TENT CAMPER (POPUP). Excellent conditon. Crank-up lift system. Refrigerator, heater, sleeps 6. $3,400. 575-770-7300 (in Santa Fe). 1999 FOREST RIVER CAMPER. 21’, duel axles, self-contained. Excellent condition. $6,500 OBO. 505-660-4079 2008 SILVERBACK CEDAR C R E E K . Model #30LSTS. 3 Slides, excellent condition, A/C, power awning, auto front jacks, non-smoker. Call Debbie or Paul 505-771-3623 in Bernalillo.

MOTORCYCLES 08 BUDDY 150 Scooter, 765 miles recorded, Like New, $2,700 OBO. New battery and spark plug. Includes travel trunk and rack. Josh, 505-9139686.


TIME OUT

ACROSS 1 Passed in a blur, say 7 Develops gradually 15 Smoking 16 Change-making 17 Where to look for self-growth 18 Obsolescent storage device 19 Historic first name in W.W. II 20 Locale of three presidential libraries 21 Fried 22 One often behind bars 24 Ditch 25 Doesn’t carry on 26 Oxygen’s lack 27 Rescuer of Princess Peach 28 Near: Fr. 29 Churchyard gravedigger 30 Signs of things to come 34 Truckloads 35 Hard to grasp 36 Remains after the aging process

37 Opposite of 28-Down 38 Santa’s reindeer, e.g. 39 Some sharp words 43 Lou’s “La Bamba” co-star 44 Concord concoction 46 Many a “Meet the Press” guest, informally 47 Swindler’s moola 48 Hiked 49 She had a singleseason stint on “The View” 51 Many a worker at Union Pacific headquarters 52 Like Enterprise vehicles 53 Fired up? 54 Best, as friends 55 One of Leakey’s “Trimates” DOWN 1 Decorated band along a wall 2 “Reality leaves a lot to the imagination” speaker

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, April 26, 2014: This year you have a very active dream life, and your imagination often takes off on wild flights of fancy. You will need to demonstrate self-discipline in order to stay present at work and/or in other important situations.

3 He directed Bela Lugosi in “Bride of the Monster” 4 High rollers, in casino lingo 5 Cheap, shoddy merchandise 6 Financial statement abbr. 7 Outdoor wedding settings 8 Alchemist’s offering 9 Green party V.I.P.? 10 Three Stooges creator Healy and others 11 Concourse abbr. 12 Personalize for

13 14 20 23 24 27

28 29

30

31 32

Picture Troopers’ toppers Almanac info Large pack Get set to take off What an 18Across’s capacity is measured in, briefly Opposite of 37-Across Message sometimes written below “F” Regular embarkation location Series starter Left

33 “___ se habla español” 34 Did an entrechat 36 Flier 38 Voice lesson subjects 39 Protection for flowers in bud 40 Socially dominant sorts 41 Dirty rat 42 Biggest city on the smallest continent 44 Diving bird 45 Mammoth 47 Cookout irritant 50 ___ root (math quantity) 51 Bungler

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 WINS A PIECE Hint: Just take it. Solution: 1. Qxg6! hxg6 2. Ra1! (threatens Rh1 mate!) [Molnar-Scherbakoff ’62].

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: SCIENCE (e.g., What does gerontology deal with? Answer: Aging.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. How many sides are there on an octagon? Answer________ 2. Term for a female peacock. Answer________ 3. What is the only fruit that grows its seeds on the outside? Answer________ 4. Term for animals with a backbone. Answer________ 5. Term for a hill with sharply sloping sides and a flat top. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 6. What number is 1 followed by a hundred zeroes? Answer________ 7. Term for the generation of electricity from water. Answer________ 8. Which planet has two moons named Phobos and Deimos? Answer________ 9. What color is the Twitter bird? Answer________ 10. What will return in 2061? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 11. Which planets have a smaller diameter than Earth? Answer________ 12. Which fish has a prehensile tail? Answer________ 13. What facial features flank your glabella? Answer________ 14. The term “lumbar” relates to the lower part of your ___. Answer________ 15. What is the new name for Research in Motion? Answer________ ANSWERS: ANSWERS: 1. Eight. 2. Peahen. 3. Strawberry. 4. Vertebrates. 5. Butte or mesa. 6. Googol. 7. Hydroelectric (power). 8. Mars. 9. Blue. 10. Halley’s comet. 11. Mercury, Venus, Mars. 12. Seahorse. 13. The eyebrows. 14. Back. 15. BlackBerry.

Jumble

Saturday, April 26, 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 Saturday, April 26, the 116th day of 2014. There are 249 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On April 26, 1564, William Shakespeare was baptized at Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-upon-Avon, England.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Appreciate the weekend, and make it an enjoyable time for you as well as others. Be willing to share the adventure. Tonight: Surround yourself with good music and friends. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH The best intentions can fall to the wayside when you decide to change your plans. Indulge yourself. Tonight: Play it easy, but enjoy the moment. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You might want to question some basic tenets presented by a boss or higher-up. Tonight: Follow the music. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Keep seeking out answers until you are satisfied with a situation surrounding an older loved one. Reach out to a friend or loved one. Tonight: Paint the town red. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH A loved one will want to take charge and handle the plans. You could be surprised at how a personal matter resolves itself. Tonight: Go along with someone else’s plans. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You could discover how important a close friend is to you. Not only does the caring flow, but this person also makes your life easier. Tonight: A close encounter.

B-11

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Readers comment on sexless couple Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Saddened,” whose wife has cut off sex. I want to knock some sense into people like you. Life has different stages. We’ve done the sex thing. Why should women look for help? Where are the medications that reduce libido in males? Why doesn’t he get counseling and learn to enjoy life without sex? A complete absence of desire can be liberating. There is so much more room in the brain for other things. — J.P. Dear J.P.: We received hundreds of letters in response to “Saddened” and were dismayed at the number of women who, like you, essentially said, “I’m not interested in sex, and if my husband doesn’t like it, too bad.” Several women assumed our comment about “medical treatment” meant we advocated hormone replacement therapy. We don’t advocate any particular treatment, only that talking to one’s doctor about what’s available can help. And several women objected to the phrase “knock some sense into,” saying it advocates violence against women. This was an unfortunate phrase, and we apologize. We will remove it from our vocabulary. Our point is that marriages are partnerships. One partner should not be making a unilateral decision that negatively affects the other partner without first discussing it and trying to reach a mutually agreeable decision. AARP (aarp.org) offers some wonderful information and help under the Home and Family tab, in the section marked Sex and Intimacy. Here’s more: From Florida: It annoys me when you tell women to consider their partner’s needs and talk to a doctor. I suspect if intercourse were painful for men, they wouldn’t be concerned about their partner’s needs. Hormone therapy has serious side effects. I tried prescription vaginal creams and had terrible headaches. My sister recommended Replens for dryness, and I’ve had fabulous results. It contains no hormones and is sold over the counter. Texas: I have struggled with

painful intercourse for years. Doctors offered my husband Viagra after his prostate cancer treatment, and he said, “My wife wouldn’t want it.” There are other ways to satisfy the needs of your spouse. California: Intimacy to me is having a conversation, going for a walk, being there in sickness and in health. But my husband has chosen to be intimate with his smartphone, surfing the Internet for porn. Chicago: After a great deal of research, my wife began receiving treatment with bio-identical hormones. Not only is our physical relationship back on track, but she feels better and has more energy in all parts of her life. Ohio: Maybe “Saddened” should be bolder. When my husband asks whether I’m interested in sex, I always say no. Then he gives me a back rub. Fifteen minutes later, one thing leads to another, with him doing all the work. In the morning, he tells me what a great lover I am. Deep down, I am glad that he still finds me desirable. Texas: My husband was 20 years older. After his first heart attack, the meds made sex impossible. I cried every day for three years. Then I started menopause and found that cuddling and hugging brought us closer than ever. I am now 53 and widowed and have rediscovered sex. I am currently seeing a man whose wife is going through menopause. She has agreed to an open marriage. I wish everyone would be so open. It could ease a lot of suffering. Florida: Women who cut off sex should have the courage to say: “I have decided that I no longer want a sex life. It is not important enough to seek medical or emotional aid. I also realize that this decision means your sex life is no longer any of my business. I hope you will share my abstinence, but will not concern myself with how you satisfy your needs. I’m hoping our love will keep our emotional ties strong. I ask only that you don’t embarrass me. I love you. I just don’t want you anymore.”

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Others could be so domineering that you might want to run away. You have not been in the best of moods. Be direct. Tonight: Choose for you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Start working on a project that you have been putting off for some time. Try to avoid conflict, and don’t escalate irritation. Tonight: Relax — you can choose to stay home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Stay centered, and remain sure about what you want from a domestic matter. You have a vision of what should be happening. Tonight: Flex with someone’s wild idea. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You’ll want to stay centered when having an important discussion. You have a vision of what you want, but you need to communicate it. Tonight: Invite friends over for a pizza.

Cryptoquip

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Your idea of what might be possible could change as you attempt to carry out a long-desired plan. Tonight: Share a new interest. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You’ll start with the best intentions, as you might want to add a couple of new items to your home or wardrobe. An idea you have might inspire you to want more. Tonight: Meet friends for dinner. 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.


Saturday, April 26, 2014

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

TUNDRA

PEANUTS

B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN

NON SEQUITUR

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

RETAIL

ZITS

PICKLES

LUANN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE ARGYLE SWEATER


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