Hilltoppers clinch sixth straight District 2AAAA title Sports, D-1
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Buddhists prepare for leader’s rare visit to Santa Fe Local News, C-1
Sunday, April 27, 2014
www.santafenewmexican.com $1.25
Market manager leaves SWAIA Paula Rivera becomes the third staff member to announce her resignation on Facebook. PAGE C-1
Discarded Atari games unearthed
Northern regents approve cuts
Hundreds of copies of E.T.: The Extraterrestrial have been found at a New Mexico landfill. PAGE C-3
New $32 million budget eliminates programs, positions and day care center. PAGE C-1
Doctors banned from practice elsewhere land jobs with state Health department hires pair with history of drug abuse amid provider shortage By Patrick Malone The New Mexican
They lied, stole and ultimately confessed to felonies committed to satisfy their drug addictions that in other states cost them the privilege of
practicing medicine. The federal government even banned the two doctors from billing for Medicaid services because of their crimes. But in New Mexico, Drs. Ralph Hansen and Keith Levitt have found welcoming homes and a revival of
their careers. The state government, fully aware of the doctors’ pasts, gave them supervisory jobs with the agency that provides and oversees care of indigent patients.
Please see DOCS, Page A-4
Sainthood for pair of predecessors lets pope straddle divide
Marketing, at new heights Santa Fe Realtor captures bird’s-eye views of high-end properties with drone
By Jim Yardley The New York Times
VATICAN CITY — Pope John XXIII was the rotund Italian pontiff with a common touch, who told jokes, embraced the poor and became beloved as “the Good Pope.” To many liberal Catholics, he is still revered for the Second Vatican Council, the landmark event of the 1960s that sought to move the Roman Catholic Church into the modern age. Pope John Paul II was the charismatic Polish pontiff who liked to sneak away from the Vatican to ski and who retooled the papacy in a new era of globalized media. His vision of a more rigid Catholicism made him a revered figure among many conservative Catholics suspicious of the liberalizing spirit introduced by John XXIII. “The man who took the lid off and the man who tried to put it back on,” said Eamon Duffy, a professor of the his-
Brian Tercero of Keller Williams Realty uses a drone earlier this month to photograph a property he is trying to sell. Agents across the country are adopting such technology to differentiate themselves from the rest of the pack. To see Tercero’s video of the property, visit 323calleestado.com. PHOTOS BY CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
tory of Christianity at the University of Cambridge. Now a new pope, Francis, is making his most public attempt to sew together the two men’s different legacies as he pushes his own vision of a church under a big tent. Francis will preside Sunday over a first-of-its-kind joint canonization of the former popes, both iconic figures in the 20thcentury church who will be elevated to sainthood during a Mass at St. Peter’s Square. For Francis, who has spent the first year of his papacy straddling the divisions within the church, this twinning allows him to deftly avoid elevating one man over the other and serves his broader agenda of de-emphasizing ideological battles as he tries to renew excitement among the faithful and reverse a steady decline in church attendance. “The Catholic Church is big enough to encompass
Please see POPE, Page A-5
By Anne Constable The New Mexican
luxury home for sale just off Old Taos Highway on Santa Fe’s north side has its own website. Buyers, especially those who might be a continent away, can peruse dozens of high-quality photographs of the 3,900-square-foot main house and 1,300-square-foot guesthouse and take a video tour of the 1.2-acre property. There’s also an aerial image from Google. But the website now includes highdefinition video recorded by a camera mounted on a remote-controlled unmanned aircraft — commonly known as a drone. The video gives potential buyers a bird’s-eye view of the property, which is on the market for $1.3 million. Using drones to sell high-end houses is the latest trend in the real estate industry. Agents across the country are adopting the newest technology to differentiate themselves from the rest of the pack. Homeowner Hal Wingo, former senior editor of Life magazine and co-founder of People, hopes the drone photography will attract a buyer. He and his wife, Paula, are decamping to warmer climes after more than eight years in Santa Fe.
A
Obituaries Egle Germanas, 71, Tesuque, April 11
Today Very windy; storms possible. High 59, low 31. PAGE D-6
Index
Feds: ‘Big data’ could feed discrimination Information could hurt economically vulnerable as they seek jobs, housing By Eileen Sullivan The Associated Press
Wingo said when his agent, Brian Tercero of Keller Williams Realty, broached the drone idea, “The more I thought about it, the more I thought, ‘He’s on the edge of something here.’ ” But what may seem like a smart and imaginative new way to sell houses is actu-
Harriett L. Smith, 93, La Puebla, April 8
Janice L. Gloria Martinez, Weatherford, 85, April 23 63, April 23 Arturo “Papa” Louise A. Romero, 93, McKinnon Nambé, April 19 Wellborn, Santa Fe, Lillian K. April 20 Tennyson, 95, Rio Rancho, April 21 PAGE C-2
Calendar A-2
Classifieds E-10
WASHINGTON — A White House review of how the government and private sector use large sets of data has found that such information could be used to discriminate against Americans on issues such as housing and employment even as it makes their lives easier in many ways.
Tercero’s remote-controlled DJI Phantom drone with an attached GoPro Hero 3 camera captures high-definition video of a property for sale.
Lotteries A-2
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ally fraught with complications. Because low-flying drones can pick up tiny details, such as the facial expressions of people on the ground, many people are worried that they’re an invasion of personal privacy.
Pasapicks www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Earth Day at Genoveva Chavez Community Center Entertainment and educational expo includes solar-art projects, free tree saplings, performances and games, 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m., Genoveva Chavez Community Center, 3221 Rodeo Road.
Neighbors C-5
Opinions B-1
Please see DRONE, Page A-4
“Big data” is everywhere. It allows mapping apps to ping cellphones anonymously and determine, in real time, what roads are the most congested. But it also can be used to target economically vulnerable people. The issue came up during a 90-day review ordered by President Barack Obama, White House counselor John Podesta said in an interview with The Associated Press. Podesta did not discuss all the findings, but said the potential for discrimination is an issue that warrants a closer look.
Please see DATA, Page A-6
‘Poetics of Light: Pinhole Photography’ Works from Palace of the Governors Photo Archives; curator talk with Nancy Spencer and Eric Renner at 1 p.m.; reception and signing of the Museum of New Mexico Press book, 2-4 p.m., New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Real Estate E-1
Sports D-1
Adventure on the open sea Santa Fean Michael Johnson is on a mission to make his way through the ice-packed Northwest Passage, and he plans to share his experiences so far in a presentation at Travel Bug. NEIGHBORS, C-5
Time Out/crossword E-16
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
Six sections, 44 pages 165th year, No. 117 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
NATION&WORLD Stabbing suspect popular
In brief Police: Bride killed niece in designated-driver dispute NEW BRIGHTON, Pa. — The lawyer for a Pennsylvania bride accused of killing her niece after the wedding says the fatal shooting was an accident. The attorney told the Beaver County Times on Saturday that 30-year-old newlywed Christina GeorgeHarvan is “obviously completely distraught.” Police say George-Harvan, of Conway, shot 21-yearold Katelyn Francis on Thursday as they left a bar in New Brighton, about 30 miles north of Pittsburgh. The wedding was held earlier that day. Police say they were arguing about who would be the designated driver when the bride grabbed a gun from her husband’s truck and shot Francis, of Fairmont, W.Va. Lawyer J. Lauson Cashdollar says George-Harvan simply tried to move the gun when it went off. She’s charged with homicide and is being held without bail.
TORNADOES HIT SOUTH
Conn. girl may have died in prom dispute By Bynate Schweber and Michael Schwirtz The New York Times
MILFORD, Conn. — Jonathan Law High School has not known much tumult. Students here are often too involved in sports, music or volunteer work to get in much trouble, staff members said, and the biggest source of friction is the annual game between the school football team, known as the Lawmen, and its crosstown rival. Chris Plaskon seemed to thrive here. The third of five brothers, he was a joke-telling wide receiver on the football team who also played baseball and ran track. Although not immune to the stresses of adolescence, teachers and friends said, Plaskon showed little sign in recent months that he was troubled. But a day after authorities say Plaskon, 16 and a junior, fatally stabbed a classmate in a school hallway, teachers and students were struggling to make sense of the incomprehensible: how a student whom many described as funny and popular could suddenly be accused of killing Maren Sanchez, 16, a well-liked honor student and his longtime friend. “They’re looking for the kid in the black cape and the fangs and the black fingernails, but there was no sign,” said Mark Robinson, 38, who was Plaskon’s football coach before retiring last season. “He wasn’t a kid who was in the shadows. He was a well-liked kid. He was funnier than hell. That’s what makes it really strange.” Plaskon was being held at a medical center under psychiatric evaluation, his lawyer, Richard Meehan, said Saturday. He could be held there for as long as 15 days and will then probably be charged as an adult, Meehan said. Plaskon was initially charged as a juvenile with murder, but Connecticut law allows the authorities to try minors as adults for serious crimes, Meehan said. Sanchez, also a junior, was attacked around 7:15 a.m. Friday, just before the start of class, the authorities said. She had stab wounds and cuts to her face, neck and chest. The stabbing occurred by a first-floor stairwell in the math wing, the authorities and witnesses said, and school staff members, including a librarian and a police officer assigned to the school, subdued the attacker and gave Sanchez first aid.
Baby found crawling across busy Utah street is back home
A mobile home hit by a tornado lays in ruins on Saturday in Greenville, N.C. More than 200 homes were damaged Friday by twisters. There were no reports of deaths. AILEEN DEVLIN/THE DAILY REFLECTOR
Housing trembles as rising rates reduce sales By John Gittelsohn and Prashant Gopal Bloomberg News
LOS ANGELES — After a roller-coaster decade of boom-bust-boom, the U.S. housing market is going downhill just when many economists thought annual sales would be heading up. Sales of previously owned properties in March tumbled 7.5 percent from a year earlier to the slowest pace in 20 months, while purchases of new houses sank 14.5 percent from February, according to reports last week. Mortgage applications to buy homes plunged 19 percent from a year earlier, indicating slowing demand during what is typically the busiest season for deals. The housing market’s underlying fragility is emerging as outside influences that fueled a two-year rebound are receding. Mortgage interest rates are rising from record lows as the central bank withdraws its stimulus, and investors, who had helped drive national prices up more than 20 percent as they went on a buying spree, are now retreating. “The very low rate environment and the high level of investment activities really masked how weak the housing market was,” Sam Khater, deputy chief economist at Irvine, Calif.-based CoreLogic Inc., said in a telephone interview. “Once it goes back to the normal owner-occupied purchase market, you really realize how weak the market is.” While last year’s spring buying season was characterized by bidding wars across the country as buyers rushed to take advantage of recordlow mortgage rates amid low inventory, the market so far in 2014 has been more affected by issues specific to local geographic areas. Sales are slipping in Phoenix and Las Vegas, where traditional buyers aren’t stepping in to fill the void left by investors. In San Francisco, Denver and Dallas, where job growth is robust, listings are scarce and overpriced for many house hunters. “We’ve had a boom and we’ve had a bust, and those were all national events,” said Mark Palim, vice president for applied economics and housing research at Fannie Mae in Washington. “Now that national drivers are less significant to
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South Korean leader offers to resign over boat sinking JINDO, South Korea — South Korea’s prime minister offered to resign today over the government’s handling of a deadly ferry sinking, blaming “deep-rooted evils” and societal irregularities for a tragedy that has left more than 300 people dead or missing and led to widespread shame, fury and finger-pointing. The resignation offer comes amid rising indignation over claims by the victims’ relatives that the government didn’t do enough to rescue or to protect their loved ones. Most of the missing and dead were high school students on a school trip. Officials have taken into custody all 15 people involved in navigating the ferry that sank April 16, a prosecutor said. South Korean executive power is largely concentrated in the president, Park Geun-hye, so the resignation offer by Prime Minister Chung Hong-won appears to be largely symbolic. There was no word from Park about whether she would accept Chung’s resignation. The prime minister’s post is largely ceremonial, with the executive power concentrated in the presidency.
Wall collapse injures 4 Memphis firefighters MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Officials say four Memphis firefighters were rescued from a burning building after a wall collapsed on them. Memphis Fire Department spokesman Wayne Cooke said crews were called to a two-alarm blaze at a commercial building south of downtown Saturday afternoon. The fire sent heavy plumes of smoke into the air and created a strong odor in the area, which contains a mix of commercial and residential buildings near train tracks. Cooke says firefighters were inside the building when an exterior wall collapsed, trapping them. Four were taken to hospitals with undisclosed injuries that Cooke said were not life-threatening. The fire was brought under control in about a halfhour. The cause is under investigation. Cooke said it was not clear what purpose the building served. New Mexican wire services
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the market, you’re seeing the re-emergence of local economic factors.” Buyers, already handicapped by tight credit and weak wage growth, felt the hit to their purchasing power when mortgage rates jumped last year. The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage was 4.33 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac, up a full percentage point from near record lows last May as the Federal Reserve scales back bond purchases. That raised the cost of a $200,000 mortgage by 13 percent, with monthly payments climbing to $993 from $881. Average mortgage down payments remain low compared with levels before the housing boom. In 2013, borrowers put down 10 percent, on average, compared with 16 percent in 2003, according to data from the National Association of Realtors. The average dipped to 8 percent in 2009 and 2010, when tax incentives were put in place to encourage purchases by first-time buyers, who more often use federally-insured loans with lower down payment requirements. The National Association of Realtors’ Housing Affordability Index, fell 16 percent in the 12 months through February, the most recent month available. Prices have climbed so fast in the past two years that buyers have sticker shock, said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors. He projects that sales will decline 2 percent this year after predicting, for a small increase over 2013. “Housing is a victim of its own success,” Yun said. “It’s just that the fast price growth is not healthy.” Interest rates on 30-year mortgages are still about half the 8.36 percent average since 1971, according to Freddie Mac’s data. Rates on 30-year loans peaked at 18.6 percent in 1981. Housing affordability is still 25 percent above the average since 1986, based on the trade group’s composite index, which measures housing costs, household income and interest rates. It’s too early to say that the market’s recovery is faltering, said Paul Diggle, a housing economist with London- based Capital Economics. Bad weather accounted for slower sales in parts of the Northeast and Midwest, he said.
BRIGHAM CITY, Utah — Police say a baby found crawling across a busy four-lane street in northern Utah after his 7-year-old sister took him out of his crib is safely back home. The driver who rescued the 1-year-old boy Friday evening returned him to his mother and called police in Brigham City, 60 miles north of Salt Lake City. The unidentified mother told police she was resting and had put the infant in a crib to sleep. Police say her 7-year-old daughter took the baby out to play and he somehow got out of the backyard. They say the baby crawled less than a block when he was found in the lane closest to the sidewalk. Police say charges are unlikely, but the case has been turned over to the Division of Child and Family Services.
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CINDERELLA CONFIDENTIAL: Presented by Santa Fe Performing Arts City Different Players, ages 7-12, 2 p.m., 1050 Old Pecos Trail. LEFT TO OUR OWN DEVICES: STAYING CONNECTED IN THE DIGITAL AGE: Just Say It Theater presents a collaborative performance by students of Santa Fe University of Art & Design and New Mexico School for the Arts at Warehouse 21, 2-4 p.m., 1614 Paseo de Peralta. SPRING AWAKENING: A musical based on Frank Wedekind’s once-controversial play, 2 p.m., 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. ALAYA COMMUNITY: Call 989-8578 or visit www.ishvara.org. Inspired talk with Ishvara at 11 a.m. BELTANE: At 2 p.m. in the grove in front of the Unitarian Church of Los Alamos, 1738 N. Sage St., Our Lady of the Woods Wiccan Church will celebrate Beltane with ritual, feast and a May pole dance to make the begging of the summer for Celts. A potluck will be part of the event of songs, stories and dance. For more information, visit www. ladywoods.org., 2 p.m., 1738 N. Sage St.
Lotteries COLLECTED WORKS OPEN MIC: Monthly event open to unpublished poets, writers, acoustic musicians and stage performers, 3-4:30 p.m., sign up at 2:45 p.m. for 10-minute spots, 3-4:30 p.m., 202 Galisteo St. CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL: Poetry readings. Poets include Janet Eigner, Elizabeth Raby, Jane Lipman, 4 p.m., 107 W. Barcelona Road. EARTH DAY: Entertainment and educational expo; includes solar-art projects, free tree saplings, performances and games, 9:30 a.m.-noon, 3221 Rodeo Road. JOURNEY SANTA FE PRESENTS: Left High and Dry: Managing Water in New Mexico, a conversation with Paul Paryski, vice-president of Northeast by Southwest and KSFR Radio host Xubi Wilson, 11 a.m., 202 Galisteo St. LIFE DRAWING: Weekly figurative-drawing class with models, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. PAJAMA MEN: The Albuquerque-based comedy duo in Just the Two of Each of Us, 7:30 p.m., 211 W. San Francisco St. SECOND ANNUAL COMFORT FOOD CLASSIC: Eight chefs prepare lasagna in support of the nonprofit Gerard’s House, 1-3 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave.
SOLAR FIESTA: Workshops, public forum, and solar-product demonstrations, 8 a.m. -5 p.m., 6401 Richards Ave. SUNDAY SOCIAL SIPPERS - VERTICAL PINOT NOIR WINE TASTING: Vertical wine tasting of five vintages of Estrella Del Norte Vineyard Estate Pinot Noir. Wine tasting features 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2012 vintages. Discussion includes how weather patterns may affect the grapes. A glass of pinot noir and refreshments will be served. Limited to 14 guests. RSVP required, 2-4 p.m., 106 N. Shining Sun, 15 minutes north of Santa Fe on US 84/285. TRADER WALT’S SOUTHWESTERN & INTERNATIONAL MARKETPLACE: More than 100 vendor booths with antiques, folk and fine art, books, jewelry and snacks, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 555 Camino de la Familia.
Roadrunner 13-17-30-34-36 Top prize: $39,000
Pick 3 4-7-4 Top prize: $500
Hot Lotto 5-16-17-23-47 HB–9 Top prize: $6.05 million
Powerball 3-7-22-30-33 PB 20 Power play 3 Top prize: $50 million
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Today DUEL BREWING: Mariachi ensemble Alacran, 5-7 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: Chanteuse Nacha Mendez, 7:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Guitarist Wily Jim, Western swingabilly,
7-10 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. ST. PAUL AND THE BROKEN BONES: Six-piece soul band, 7 p.m., 37 Fire Place. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Kathy Morrow, 6:30-9:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St.
WORLD
Afghan panel claims U.S. has secret prisons Before that, the transfer of the prison itself called attention to The New York Times the deteriorating relationship between the Afghans and their KABUL, Afghanistan — U.S. allies. A commission appointed by The U.S. has accused the President Hamid Karzai to Afghan government of using the investigate detention facilities issue to score political points. run by U.S. and British forces in The Afghans say the foreigners southern Afghanistan claimed have unfairly imprisoned people Saturday to have uncovered without credible evidence and secret prisons on two coalition insist that they run all detention bases, an allegation that could facilities in the country. not be confirmed but that was Dadras said his team was likely to further complicate rela- sent to the southern provinces tions between the Afghan govof Kandahar and Helmand to ernment and its allies. review the prisons on two coali“We have conducted a thortion bases, Kandahar Airfield, ough investigation and search run by the United States, and of Kandahar Airfield and Camp Camp Bastion, run by the BritBastion and found several illegal ish. and unlawful detention facilities run and operated by foreign military forces,” said Abdul Shakur Dadras, the panel’s chairman. He offered no evidence to support his assertion. Lt. Col. J. Todd Breasseale, a spokesman for the Defense Department, wrote in an email, “Every facility that we use for detention is well known not only by the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, but also by the ICRC,” a reference to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The International Security Assistance Force said in a statement that it was “aware of their investigative team looking into the detention facilities in Kandahar and Helmand and we are cooperating fully with the investigation on this matter.” The accusations are the latest salvo in a dispute over the detention of Afghans by foreign forces. The issue reached a climax early this year, when the Afghan government released from the former U.S. prison at Bagram dozens of prisoners the coalition claimed had killed U.S. soldiers. By By Azam Ahmed and Taimoor Shah
He said his team had reviewed the number of prisoners as well as the details of their detention. The issue at Camp Bastion has been aired before. The British military must abide by rules that prohibit the transfer of prisoners to facilities where torture is believed to occur. For now, that concern is unresolved. In Kandahar, the details are less clear. U.S. forces are allowed to detain combatants for up to 96 hours before turning them over to the Afghans. It was unclear whether Dadras was referring to such detainees or whether his commission had uncovered evidence of prisons illegally holding Afghans.
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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5 NATO troops die in copter crash The Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan — A British helicopter crashed in southern Afghanistan on Saturday, killing five NATO troops in the single deadliest day this year for foreign forces as they prepare to withdraw from the country, officials said. In Kabul, an Afghan university official identified two Americans killed by a local policeman at a hospital in the capital earlier this week. The shooting was the latest by a member of Afghanistan’s security forces against those they are supposed to protect. The cause of the helicopter crash was not known. Kandahar provincial police spokesman Zia Durrani said the aircraft went down in the
province’s Takhta Pul district in the southeast, about 31 miles from the Pakistani border. He said five troops were killed. The coalition said it was investigating the crash but said it had no reports of enemy activity in the area. The United Kingdom’s Defense Ministry confirmed that the helicopter was British, but could not confirm the nationalities of the dead. A Taliban spokesman claimed in a text message to journalists Saturday that the insurgents shot down the helicopter. The insurgents frequently exaggerate death tolls and falsely have claimed responsibility for incidents before. The victims in Thursday’s
shooting, where three Americans were killed by an Afghan police officer at a Christian hospital in Kabul, have been identified. Jerry Umanos, a 57-year-old pediatrician from Chicago who had been working at the hospital, was among those killed. A Kabul University spokesman confirmed the identities of the others as John Gabel, a computer-science lecturer at the university, and his father, Gary Gabel. The men were also from the Chicago area, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Mohammad Hadi Hedayati, vice chancellor for administrative affairs, said John Gabel had taught at the university for the past two years and lived in Kabul with his wife.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Docs: State has trouble recruiting providers
Drone: Realtor sees value in the technology Continued from Page A-1 And the Federal Aviation Administration, citing safety concerns, forbids using drones for these kinds of commercial purposes without special agency authorization, though a federal administrative judge ruled in March that such drones don’t fall under the FAA’s purview. On a recent day, Tercero fired up his DJI Phantom in Wingo’s driveway. The device, about 18 inches in diameter, has four propellers and a GoPro Hero 3 camera mounted on the underside. It lifts into the air like a helicopter. Tercero used the device to take video of the long driveway on Wingo’s property, views from the house’s observation deck — it looks out over the Sangre de Cristo Mountains — and the 32-panel solar array on the roof, which is not visible from the front of the house. He used two sticks to manipulate the device, one to move it up and down and the other to move it from side to side. From the ground, he followed the drone on a monitor attached to the controls as the onboard camera took in welcoming scenes of the home’s multiple outdoor seating and eating areas, including one with a fireplace. “This just makes so much sense for out-of-state and out-of-country clients,” Tercero said. “Consumers are going to start demanding this. Buyers searching for homes are looking for a better experience in home shopping.” Looking at the small, insect-like device as it prepared to take off, Wingo said he could not imagine why the FAA would want to “exercise control over something like this.”
FAA mulls drones Drones themselves have been around for a while. Until recently, they’ve been mostly known for military uses. But they’re being adopted now for a wide range of commercial purposes. In addition to real estate sales, drones are useful in firefighting, search-and-rescue operations, disaster relief, weather monitoring, hurricane tracking, crime scene documentation, crop dusting, water leak detection and research of environmental disasters such as the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. “We would’ve loved to be able to have flown unmanned aerial systems in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,” said a man with Mississippi State University in a recent FAA online conference call. Some people are even looking forward to the possibility that in the future, Amazon will deliver orders to customers’ doorsteps via drones. According to the FAA, which is responsible for the safety of U.S. airspace from the ground up, drones, or unmanned aircraft systems, fall under its purview. In 2007, the FAA published a notice in the Federal Register reminding drone pilots that they may not use drones for commercial purposes, such as home sales, by claiming they are operating a model aircraft. (Under FAA guidelines, model aircraft can be flown without authorization below 400 feet and at least three miles from an airport and away from populated areas.) Commercial operators are only authorized on a caseby-case basis, the notice said. Some pilots have subsequently gotten into trouble with the FAA and local authorities. In 2012, the Los Angeles Police Department warned real estate agents not to hire a photographer who was helping to sell luxury properties using a drone to shoot aerial video. And last year, the FAA in Minneapolis told two people photographing homes for real estate brokers to ground their commercial operations. In March, however, an administrative judge with the National Transportation Safety Board dismissed a proposed $10,000 fine against a businessman who used a remotely operated, 55-inch foam glider to take aerial photos for a University of Virginia Medical Center ad. The FAA had claimed the man violated regulations requiring commercial operators of drones to obtain agency authorization. The judge said the drone in that case was not an aircraft as defined by FAA regulations and therefore was not subject to federal aviation regulations. The FAA is appealing the decision. In the meantime, the agency is developing new regulations covering drones. In the FAA’s 2012 reauthorization legislation, Congress ordered it to come up with a plan for “safe integration” of unmanned aircraft systems by Sept. 30, 2015. The agency is currently preparing regulations for small drones (under 55 pounds), and they are likely to include provisions for commercial operators. On Dec. 30, the agency announced it had selected six drone test-site operations to research the new technology. Tercero said he believes that as a real estate agent, he can fly his own drone without breaking any laws, “so long as the owners give the OK.” Tercero, who made news last year for
illegal prescription and obtaining controlled substances by fraud. He The state also sought special pleaded no contest in November waivers from the federal govern2007 to one felony count of obtainment to allow the doctors to bill ing a controlled substance by fraud for Medicaid services. and received a five-year suspended The state hired Hansen and prison sentence. Levitt as regional medical officers In 2009, before his suspended for the Department of Health, jobs sentence was even complete, New that required them to treat patients Mexico hired Hansen as medical and administer public health prodirector at Central New Mexico grams to financially fragile popula- Correctional Facility in Los Lunas tions in multi-county swaths of the and later in the same position state. at the Department of Health’s Recruiting and keeping doctors Developmental Disabilities Supin rural New Mexico is difficult, ports Division. Neither position a challenge highlighted by the required a federal waiver. The state state’s hiring of Hansen and Levitt. obtained a waiver after it hired him Of New Mexico’s 33 counties, in July 2013 as the regional health 32 are designated as health profes- officer for the Albuquerque metro sional shortage areas by the area and the state’s northwest U.S. Department of Health and region. The area covers BernaHuman Services. lillo, Cibola, McKinley, San Juan, “By any measure, the supply Sandoval, Torrance and Valencia and distribution of New Mexico’s counties. health care workforce is inadHansen beat out one other equate,” the New Mexico Health applicant for the job. The Health Policy Commission concluded in a Department would not identify the 2011 report. other candidate or provide specific The New Mexico Human Serdetails about what separated Hanvices Department, which last sum- sen as the department’s top choice. mer suspended the contracts of “I’m an open book,” Hansen said 15 behavioral health firms across in a brief phone interview Friday. the state amid allegations of Med“I don’t have anything to hide.” icaid fraud, successfully petitioned However, he said he could not the federal government earlier this submit to a full interview withyear for waivers that enabled Han- out permission from the Health sen and Levitt to seek Medicaid Department and did not return reimbursement. In its requests, the further phone calls. department said the waivers were Levitt, 56, faced disciplinary necessary because Hansen and actions against his license stemLevitt were the sole medical proming from prescription drug abuse viders in the rural areas they serve, dating back to 1991 in Maryland, though Hansen’s area of responsiArizona and Washington. The last bility also includes Albuquerque, was in early 2009, when he was the state’s most populous city. stripped of his license to practice According to the Department of medicine in Washington after Health, the waiver was sought for pleading guilty in October 2008 to Hansen because he was the only a federal felony of acquiring a consupervising physician in public trolled substance by misrepresenhealth for the region that included tation, deception and subterfuge Albuquerque. and was placed on probation for Currently, only 16 such exempthree years. tions involving 15 doctors are Levitt had written prescriptions active across the United States, for the potent painkiller hydrocoand four of them have been issued done to another person, who filled to New Mexico doctors. The only the prescriptions and shared the other state with more than one pills with Levitt, according to doctor practicing under a waiver is U.S. Department of Justice reports. Montana, which has two. Additionally, after suspension of The U.S. Department of Health his Drug Enforcement Administraand Human Services has no record tion number, which is required to of requests being denied for the prescribe medications, he began Medicaid waivers, according to a to write prescriptions for hydrocostatement provided to The New done for himself and others using Mexican by the Office of the the DEA numbers of his colleagues Inspector General. at a Seattle clinic. “The OIG would deny a waiver The Department of Justice invesif it was determined that the issutigation into Levitt also snared a ance of a waiver would not be in Seattle dentist; the two had teamed the best interests of the Departup to write hydrocodone prescripment’s programs or the beneficiations for each other. ries that the programs serve,” the Former patients told Seattle statement said. television station KOMO 4 in 2007 When state health agencies that Levitt, who was trained as an submit requests stating that docanesthesiologist, had represented tors with tainted histories are the himself to them as a dermatolosole providers available to serve a gist and had botched the cosmetic particular area, the federal govern- procedures he performed, requirment takes their word for it and ing them to have more procedures. does not do further investigation. The patients also told the televi“These groups are considered sion station that they suspected credible sources in making the Levitt was high on drugs when determination for the need in their he treated them because his eyes areas,” the OIG statement said. were glossy and he had trouble Three of the federal waivers focusing. in New Mexico were granted in Levitt was hired by the New 2013 and 2014 to Hansen and Mexico Department of Health in Levitt. The fourth was granted in October 2012 as the regional health 2009 to Union County Medical officer for the state’s southeastern Center Inc. in Clayton, based on region, spanning the rural counties the community’s need for medical of Chaves, Curry, DeBaca, Eddy, services. The center’s owner, Lea, Lincoln, Roosevelt and Quay. Dr. Mark Van Wormer, had No other applicants sought the job, pleaded guilty in 2007 to injecting according to Department of Health about 120 patients with what he spokesman Kenny Vigil. said was Botox but was actually Levitt recently became Hansen’s a substance not approved by the assistant regional health officer, U.S. Food and Drug Administrabased in Gallup. Among the five tion. His medical license in New regional health officer positions, Mexico was revoked. Van Wormonly the southeast region post is er’s center is not affiliated with the vacant since Levitt left. Most of the Union County General Hospital in health officers are paid between Clayton. $130,000 and $135,000 per year, Hansen, 62, had been practicing but Hansen makes about $180,000. medicine in California for 25 years Levitt earns about $135,000. before he began recreational use of In a November 2012 letter to Ritalin, a stimulant typically prethe U.S. Department of Health scribed to patients diagnosed with and Human Services Office of attention deficit disorder, accordthe Inspector General that seeks ing to documents from the Mediconditional reinstatement of cal Board of California. Levitt’s ability to seek Medicaid In June 2007, one month after reimbursement, Brad McGrath, he’d been fired by a medical group, Gov. Susana Martinez’s interim Hansen was caught at a Torrance, Cabinet secretary of the DepartCalif., pharmacy trying to fill a ment of Health, wrote: “Dr. Levitt Ritalin prescription written for would be the sole community his deceased father-in-law. When physician and sole source of mediquestioned by police, Hansen cal oversight of essential Public confessed to stealing prescription Health services in the community.” pads from other physicians at his Numerous attempts to contact former medical group and writing Levitt last week were unsuccessful. prescriptions for himself or in the New Mexico has struggled to names of his relatives and fictitious recruit and retain qualified physipatients, then picking up the drugs cians to provide care for patients in himself. its public health programs in rural Investigators for the Medical parts of the state, McGrath wrote Board of California determined in the letter. that between 2004 and 2007, The state’s safety net program Hansen had filled more than provides clinical services such as 300 fraudulent prescriptions. He family planning, screening for sexwas charged in California District ually transmitted diseases, breast Court with 15 felony counts of Please see DOCS, Page A-5 burglary, forgery, possession of an
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Realtor Brian Tercero says maneuvering the drone takes some practice, but he’s getting better. ‘And my mom told me my video-playing skills would never pay off,’ he jokes. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
his involvement in a $4 million home sale — the biggest residential sale of the year in Santa Fe, has been researching drones for a year. He’s apparently the first agent in Santa Fe to take the plunge and buy one. The device and accessories cost him about $3,000 and he has already flown it to help show off some raw land in Northern New Mexico. He plans to use it primarily to market his high-end listings. “People want to see the reality when they are searching for real estate,” he said. “It gives them a good perspective on how the house is situated.”
An invasion of privacy? Safety is not the only concern associated with drone use. Organizations like the American Civil Liberties Union and many private citizens warn that drones could represent a whole new invasion of privacy rights. Defenders of the growing industry point out that many Americans are used to video surveillance and already accept certain intrusions. People are routinely caught on cameras in public buildings, at traffic intersections or on police car dashboard cameras. And the pervasiveness of cellphones, Facebook and Google (where people are often surprised to find images of their own homes), makes it seem that people have given up expectations of privacy in many situations. But Peter Simonson, director of the ACLU in New Mexico, said the rapidly developing drone technology is a “growing concern” for privacy advocates, especially when the aircraft are used by government agencies. He said his office has raised questions about drone use by the Border Patrol in New Mexico and said he was consulted about the possibility of the Albuquerque Police Department adopting the devices. Government use of drones raises concerns under the Fourth Amendment (the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure), but Simonson warned that when they are used by private entities, the public doesn’t have the same protections against unwarranted invasion of privacy. At the most, he said, a private citizen might have resources under the Tort Claims Act. “A drone that hovers over a municipal area with an extremely high-resolution camera captures video of everything that transpires over a long period of time,” he said. “That kind of data can discern people’s movements, what meetings they’re attending, who is important in their life and why,” he said, adding that drones could be used to spy on a public official having an affair or making a purchase he or she wouldn’t want the public to know about. A year ago, the FAA held a “listening session” on this topic, during which Michael Covari, an analyst with the Rutherford Institute in Charlottesville, Va., warned that drones “will usher in a new age of surveillance in our society. No person, whether he is at a political rally, exiting a house of worship or simply walking around downtown will be safe from the prying eyes of these devices.” Model legislation drafted by the institute, he said, bans drones from carrying lethal or nonlethal anti-personnel devices, such as tear gas, Tasers or even machine guns. Amy Saponovich of the Electronic Privacy Institute warned, “We’ve had aerial surveillance for a very long time,
but drones bring a new capacity for surveillance simply because they’re cheaper and easier to operate than traditional measures.”
A lucrative investment Privacy concerns probably won’t stall the drone industry forever. In its last estimate, the FAA said as many as 7,500 small commercial unmanned aircraft systems may be in use by 2018. The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International is predicting that their popularity will help create 70,000 new jobs and generate $13.5 billion in revenues in the first three years after the FAA integration of drones into the national air space. In March, two major U.S. law firms announced they were starting drone practice groups. And industry giants are getting into the business. Earlier this month, Google acquired a Moriarty-based startup called Titan Aerospace that makes solar-powered drones. Drones designed for the personal and commercial market range in price from several hundred dollars to thousands and weigh as little as a few pounds. Tercero recently used his drone to shoot video of a ranch north of Ojo Caliente. The footage was good enough to hook a buyer. The property, which had been on the market for a long time, is now under contract. The deal, Tercero said, is a perfect example of the value of drones. Standard marketing photographs of trees and rocks don’t begin to convey what the 800-acre property looks like. “Flying over [the property] adds a whole other dimension,” he said. “It’s powerful. And it was instrumental in getting the buyer to bite.” That said, there are technical challenges. Editing the video is time-consuming and required Tercero to learn new skills. For the moment, he and his business partner are doing the work themselves, although they might hire professional photographers or editors sometime down the road. Maneuvering the device also takes some practice. “It’s tricky,” Tercero admitted. On his second flight, he crashed the drone into a juniper tree. But he’s getting better, he said, joking, “And my mom told me my video-playing skills would never pay off.” Tercero, who obtained his real estate license in 2010, tries to keep his pulse on market trends. “When I hear what other real estate agents are doing for clients, especially at the high end, of course I want to bring that to Santa Fe. It helps my clients’ properties stand out. And it helps me differentiate myself from other agents,” he said. As for nervous neighbors, he said, “I would really encourage Realtors to really consider the neighbors so nobody gets panicked.” In the case of the home off Old Taos Highway, homeowner Hal Wingo said, “We’re not going to home in on any other property. If someone felt you were looking down on their house, they might not like that.” Wingo said his home has been on the market for about six months. Not even a newspaper ad — which he paid for himself — was enough to draw a buyer. Now he’s hoping he’ll find one with the help of a drone. Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@sfnewmexican.com.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
THE NEW MEXICAN
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Docs: Both subject to periodic drug tests Continued from Page A-4
Priests sing and dance Saturday in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. Pilgrims and faithful are gathering in Rome to attend Sunday’s ceremony in which Pope Francis will elevate in a solemn ceremony John XXIII and John Paul II to sainthood. EMILIO MORENATTI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Pope: More than 2M might attend Sunday
and cervical cancer screenings, immunizations, low-risk prenatal care and other services. As regional health officers, Levitt and Hansen have overseen and given direction to these programs as well as school health systems, a program for children with special health care needs and the Supplemental Food for Women, Infants and Children program, known as WIC. “Nearly all clients who receive clinical services in public health offices are lowincome,” McGrath wrote in the letter to the federal government. Approximately 70 percent of them are uninsured and 20 percent of the patients are covered by Medicaid. Although the job descriptions say a doctor in the positions held by Hansen and Levitt “diagnoses, treats and helps prevent diseases and injuries that commonly occur in the general public,” the duties they can perform are limited, in Levitt’s case because of his troubled past. “[Levitt] has limited patient care contact for family planning, STD screenings and diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases, such as [tuberculosis],” Vigil said. “He does not prescribe or dispense narcotics.” Hansen mainly consults and oversees clinical providers in the region and does not have direct patient care contact, Vigil said. Levitt first tried to obtain a New Mexico medical license in February 2011, a little more than one year after Washington state had revoked his license for five years. An evaluation by the New Mexico Monitored Treatment Program, which conducts drug testing and provides support to doctors with substance abuse problems, recommended rejection of Levitt’s application, and the New Mexico Medical Board agreed. “ ‘Only with extreme caution’ could MTP recommend a person with Dr. Levitt’s history being in an environment where drugs were easily accessible,” the program evaluators wrote. At the time, Levitt was working as a test-driver for Mercedes-Benz and managed a home for men coming out of drug treatment. In August 2012, Levitt reapplied, and the New Mexico Medical Board granted him a license. Two months later, he was head of a regional office of the state Health Department. In the months between his first application for licensure in New Mexico and his second, Levitt completed continuing medical education programs and was successful in the state’s Monitored
Treatment Program without relapse, according to Debbie Dieterich, investigations and compliance manager with the New Mexico Medical Board. “The board’s mission is to aid in the rehabilitation of its licensees so they can safely practice medicine in our underserved state,” Dieterich said. As conditions of their licenses, both Levitt and Hansen are subject to periodic drug tests. Any violation would constitute grounds for disciplinary action against their licenses. Both doctors have abided by the terms of their employment by avoiding drugs and alcohol, Dieterich said. The federal exemptions granted to them only apply as long as they hold their current jobs, and only in the specified New Mexico counties.
New Mexico Human Services Department spokesman Matt Kennicott said the department’s role in getting the doctors’ federal billing privileges restored is not analogous to its actions that halted funding to New Mexico behavioral health providers and redirected those funds to Arizona firms. “This is very different than committing Medicaid fraud and what the [behavioral health] agencies did,” Kennicott said. James Kerlin, who spent 25 years as the chief executive officer of The Counseling Center of Alamogordo before it closed in the aftermath of the state’s action, disagrees. He contends the Human Services Department deprived behavioral health providers of livelihoods based on mere suspicion
of fraud, but provided careers to doctors proven to have committed crimes. “It surprises me that they had no trouble finding replacements for a fairly decent-sized group of organizations, but they couldn’t find alternatives to a couple of doctors. Come on, that seems a little far-fetched to me,” Kerlin said. “If they’re concerned enough about the treatment the citizens are going to get to close 85 percent of the system’s behavioral health providers, they certainly should be concerned about doctors who have been found guilty in the past.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.
this, he streamlined the canonization process, reducing to five the devotees of John XXIII and years the waiting period after a John Paul II,” said Kathleen person’s death before the canonSprows Cummings, director of ization process can be initiated. the Cushwa Center for the Study When John Paul died, his sucof American Catholicism at the cessor, Benedict XVI, waived the University of Notre Dame. “That shorter waiting period and sped is the message he is sending.” up the process so John Paul will Unquestionably, the pairing become a saint only nine years has transformed the Mass into after his death. When Benedict a global event. Huge crowds unexpectedly resigned last year, are pouring into Rome, with leading to the election of Francis estimates that hundreds of thou- as pope, the sainthood process sands of people — possibly for John Paul had largely been more than 2 million — will fill completed, even as some critics St. Peter’s Square or watch the argued it was happening too fast. ceremony on large screens “Francis has inherited this,” erected in piazzas across Rome. said Duffy, noting that the new “We love both popes,” said pope would have faced a huge Antonio Rossi, 31, a teacher from outcry had he sought to slow Naples who walked with his things down. “In a sense, doing girlfriend around the square Fri- these two together is the leastday. “They are two figures who bad solution. He can’t be accused left a great mark on the Catholic of identifying with a single party.” Church. What is important is Francis himself has shown a that they both become saints, willingness to use his own disbecause that is how I perceive cretion in naming saints. This them in my life.” month, he waived the requireVatican officials have played ment of evidence of two miracles down the political subtext of the performed at the posthumous ceremony, arguing that reducintercession of a candidate and ing the two former popes to a declared three new saints from left-right political shorthand is the Americas: a former Jesuit inaccurate and cheapens what priest from Brazil and two for many Catholics is a joyous leading Catholic figures from and deeply spiritual moment. Canada. The Rev. Thomas Rosica, who With his folksy style, Francis is working with the Vatican is often compared to John XXIII, press office for the ceremony, the son of a tenant farmer in disagreed with those who see the northern Italy. The canonizaceremony as a calculated gesture tion process for John, who died of reconciliation. in 1963, had been underway for “Some would say that, but I decades but was slowed by his wouldn’t go that far,” Rosica said. lack of the second required mir“We don’t use something like this acle. Francis intervened, waiving to do that.” the requirement and pairing him Without question, though, the with John Paul for Sunday’s event. event has stirred considerable Despite the excitement among debate among many Catholics, many Catholics, the precedent of BACK TO WORK 50+ at Santa Fe Community College can help you learn about the process of canonizing canonizing popes worries Duffy saints and about the legacies of new networking strategies, target your job search, get job leads, enroll in and other experts. the two former popes, especially “Are we going to have every short-term training and find resources that can help you stay strong while John Paul. 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That will Funded in part by Walmart Foundation. power to the Vatican ultimately make it a Mass of four popes, led to scandals, and for his failure rather than just three. to confront the clerical sexual abuse scandal, even as evidence mounted of a widespread crisis. Some critics say his canonization Authorized Rolex Service has been wrongly fast-tracked or CROSS SPIRE SALE Buying fine timepieces should not happen at all. AdvoSanbusco Center • 989-4742 216 Mckenzie Street | Santa Fe, NM cates for sexual abuse victims www.santafepens.com 505-992-0200 www.WCWTimePieces.com have come to Rome to protest that he is unworthy of sainthood. At a Vatican news conference Friday, John Paul’s former spokesman, Joaquín NavarroValls, defended the former pope’s record on the response to the sexual abuse scandals and argued that the “purity of his thought” had made it difficult for the pontiff to accept that priests could abuse children. He also said John Paul had taken steps to address the crisis, even as critics have called them grossly inadequate. Even some who are critical of John Paul’s record on the sexual Saturday, May 3, 2014 • 9:00 am – 11:00 am abuse crisis say it does not negate his worthiness for canonization, Hotel Santa Fe since sainthood is not conferred as a statement of perfection in 1501 Paseo de Peralta • Santa Fe, NM life but rather for holiness. 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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Data: Laws haven’t kept up to shield people going to look like a generation from now. But at least we can Federal laws have not kept up look out over the horizon and with the rapid development of say, ‘Here are the trends. What technology in a way that would do we anticipate the likely policy shield people from discriminaissues that it raises?’ ” tion. Podesta led the review, along The review, expected to be with some of Obama’s economic released within the next week, is and science advisers. The goal, the Obama administration’s first Podesta said, was to assess attempt at addressing the vast whether current laws and polilandscape of challenges, beyond cies about privacy are sufficient. national security and consumer Podesta would not discuss privacy, posed by technological the specific recommendations advancements. he will make to Obama. He did President Barack Obama mention an unexpected concern requested the review in January, that emerged during White when he called for changes to House officials’ meetings with some of the National Security business leaders and privacy Agency’s surveillance programs advocates, and merits further that amass large amounts of data examination: how big data could belonging to Americans and be used to target consumers and foreigners. lead to discriminatory practices. The technology that enabled Civil rights leaders, for those programs also enables example, raised in discussions others used in the government with the White House the issue and the private sector. The of employers who use data to White House separately has map where job applicants live reviewed the NSA programs and and then rate them based on proposed changes to rein in the that, particularly in low-paying massive collection of Americans’ service jobs. phone records and emails. “While big data is revolution“It was a moment to step back izing commerce and governand say, ‘Does this change our ment for the better, it is also basic framework or our look supercharging the potential at the way we’re dealing with for discrimination,” said Wade records and privacy,’ ” Podesta Henderson, president and chief said in the interview. executive officer of the Leader“With the rapidity of the way ship Conference on Civil and Human Rights. technology changes, it’s going Some employers might worry to be hard to imagine what it’s
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Ukrainian government troops sit atop an armored personal carrier as it travels on a country road outside the town of Svyitohirsk near Slovyansk, eastern Ukraine, on Saturday. ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sanctions loom as observers are held in eastern Ukraine 28 member nations will meet Monday in Brussels to add to the list of Russian officials and proSLOVYANSK, Ukraine — As Russian leaders in Ukraine that Western governments vowed to have been sanctioned with asset impose more sanctions against freezes and a travel ban. Russia and its supporters in eastThe foreign military observer ern Ukraine, a group of foreign team detained by pro-Russian military observers remained forces was made up of three Gerin captivity Saturday accused man soldiers, a German translaof being NATO spies by a protor and one soldier each from Russian insurgency. Czech Republic, Poland, SweThe German-led, eight-memden and Denmark. Germany’s ber team was traveling under Defense Ministry said the team the auspices of the Organization also included five Ukrainians. of Security and Cooperation in Tim Guldimann, the OSCE’s Europe when they were detained special envoy for Ukraine, told Friday. German public radio WDR on Vyacheslav Ponomarev, the Saturday that “efforts are being self-proclaimed “people’s mayor” made to solve this issue.” He of Slovyansk, described the declined to elaborate. detained observers as “captives” German Foreign Minister and said that they were officers Frank-Walter Steinmeier called from NATO member states. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey “As we found maps on them Lavrov late Friday to press for containing information about the the release of the observers. In a location of our checkpoints, we statement released Saturday, Rusget the impression that they are sia’s Foreign Ministry said it was officers carrying out a certain taking “all measures to resolve spying mission,” Ponomarev said, the situation,” but blamed the adding they could be released in authorities in Kiev for failing to exchange for jailed pro-Russian secure the safety of the team. activists. “The security of the inspecOutside Slovyansk, a city about tors is wholly entrusted to the 90 miles west of Russia, Ukraine host party,” the statement said. government forces continued “Hence it would be logical to operations to form a security cor- expect the current authorities don as it attempts to quell unrest in Kiev to resolve preliminary threatening to derail the planned questions of the location, May 25 presidential election. actions, and safety of the The U.S. and other nations instructors.” in the Group of Seven said in a U.S. Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, joint statement released Friday chairman of the Joint Chiefs of night by the White House that Staff said he told his Russian they plan to impose additional counterpart, Gen. Valery V. Gereconomic sanctions on Rusasimov in a telephone conversasia in response to its actions in tion last week that the observers Ukraine. The West has accused could help stabilize the situation Russia of using covert forces to in Ukraine. encourage unrest in Ukraine and Former Ukrainian Prime says Moscow has done nothing Minister Yulia Tymoshenko told to pressure pro-Russian militias The Associated Press on Saturto free police stations and govday that she welcomed further ernment buildings in at least sanctions against Russia and 10 cities across the region. called for NATO membership Condemning Russia’s earlier for Ukraine to protect itself from annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea Russian aggression. Peninsula, the G-7 said: “We will Tymoshenko, who is runnow follow through on the full ning in the May 25 presidential legal and practical consequences election, said that while only of this illegal annexation, includ- a minority of Ukrainians suping but not limited to the ecoported NATO membership nomic, trade and financial areas.” previously, Russia’s aggressive The European Union is also actions in the country’s east had planning more sanctions and forced a “fundamental change” ambassadors from the bloc’s in public thinking. By Peter Leonard
The Associated Press
that if an applicant lives far enough away from a job, he or she may not stay in the position for long. As more jobs move out of the city and into the suburbs, this could create a hiring system based on class. “You’re essentially being dinged for a job for really arbitrary characteristics,” said Chris Calabrese, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union. “Use of this data has a real impact on peoples’ lives.” The civil rights advocates could not offer specific examples of such injustices, but instead talked about how the data could be used in a discriminatory way. Federal employment laws don’t address this nuanced tactic, Calabrese said. Similarly, anti-discrimination laws for housing make it illegal to target customers based on credit reports. But the laws don’t address the use of other data points that could group people into clusters based on information gleaned from social media. For instance, companies sell data amassed from social media sites that clumps people into clusters, such as the “Ethnic Second-City Struggler” category. A bank could target people who posted something on social media about losing a job as a likely candidate for a highinterest loan. The idea is that a person who lost a job may be
behind on mortgage payments and might be open to a highinterest loan to help get out of a bind, Calabrese said. “You are individually targeted for a loan based on inclusion on one of these lists and get a high interest rate. That is in spite of the fact that if you walked in off the street you might qualify for a lower rate. You never know that you are being targeted individually since you just click on an ad on the side of a website,” Calabrese explained. “That is the discrimination.” Jennifer Barrett Glasglow, chief privacy officer for data broker Acxiom, said her company in Little Rock, Ark., screens clients before selling them data to help ensure that the data will be used appropriately and not for discriminatory reasons. She also said a discriminatory offer can be made without Acxiom data. “We’ve got to be careful that we don’t go after the data itself,” she said. Glasglow said the “Ethnic Second-City Struggler” category can be very effective for reaching communities in need, such as for advertising a sale or an offer that provides more affordable services. Glasglow said consumers can report what they believe to be unfair practices to the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
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Navajo Code Talker remembered. Page B-4
Plaza is Gov. Martinez no Palin — just bad for the people of L Santa Fe B LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
et’s not give the governor the cache in certain circles of Sarah Palin. She’s just the same old Susana Martinez: visionless, bigoted, vindictive and manipulated by oil and gas. Why the outrage? Her position on driver’s licenses for immigrants, her cuts to the Native American Studies program at The University of New Mexico and to the African American Cultural Center speak volumes. It’s probably a safe bet that issues of racism, poverty, lousy education and the many other social ills that plague New Mexico are of no concern to her backers. As to Matt Kennicott, given our retro-educational policies, I suggest that he stand in front of the Legislature with a dunce cap on his head with the words, “I apologize for my racist remarks,” emblazoned on it. It is my hope that these revelations about the Martinez administration will help New Mexican voters to think twice about their choices in the next election.
Ellen J. Shabshai Fox, LISW
Santa Fe
No respect Some of us remember comedian Rodney Dangerfield’s signature line: “I don’t get no respect!” Well, according to recently released tapes, Gov. Susana Martinez apparently “don’t give no respect” to New Mexico teachers. That’s why average teacher compensation in our state in 2013 was about $45,500, near the lowest among the 50 states and District of Columbia and well below that national average of about $56,400. That’s why teacher evaluations are being based largely on student performance on high-stakes testing, ignoring health and well-being issues beyond the control of the teacher. That’s why the governor vetoed the bill modestly increasing salaries for Tier 2 and 3 teachers. Even the increase in starting teacher salaries to $32,000, which she approved, keeps New Mexico below that national average of about $35,000. How can one respect a governor who gives no respect to some of the most important professionals in our state? David Prescott
Santa Fe
Dirty tricks In following the script from Richard Nixon’s “dirty tricks” and Karl Rove’s Swift Boat Veterans, the Susana Martinez campaign wasted no time in slinging mud at Democratic gubernatorial candidate Alan Webber because he was endorsed by Mark Rudd, a former Weather Underground man. Never mind that Mr. Rudd renounced “this group and its tactics” more than 44 years ago and has been a productive and lawabiding citizen ever since. Meanwhile, Gov. Martinez continues to: travel to out-of-state Republican and super-PAC fundraisers; ignore Freedom of Information Act requests regarding her activities and expenditures; destroy public education with excessive testing and state interference; wage war on labor unions; and cater to big business and
Big Oil with tax breaks and deregulation, while simultaneously squandering our precious water and natural resources. The majority of New Mexicans know what is really going on here. Don’t insult our intelligence, Gov. Martinez. Edward R. Baca
Santa Fe
Leaving some out In reference to the My Views featuring 40-year Santa Fe resident Beverley Spears (“Traffic is essential to Plaza’s history,” April 20), designer of the Plaza bandstand, and Aaron Detter, 20-something from New York (“Mayor’s car-free Plaza the right way forward,” April 20). What’s striking is Spears’ detailed, cogent argument contrasting the specific situation of the Santa Fe Plaza
with other cities that have plazas. Her persuasive points, which come from experience and education, should convince people not to try what’s been tried numerous times already. Apparently, every time the Plaza has been closed to traffic, residents have found reason to reopen it. Also, leaving cars out of the Plaza means leaving a lot of people out. They will find it too hard to get down there: They’re in a wheelchair or have trouble walking or are very old. The mayor’s purpose for closing the Plaza is not to bring local people back — to shop for what? The purpose is to make Santa Fe a better sell for people in the tourist industry. It doesn’t help my friend’s 90-year-old mother to close the Plaza. It means she can’t easily go there anymore to listen to music. Elissa Heyman
Santa Fe
‘Hurricane’ Carter: The truth behind the legend
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yths hid the hard truths watched him do this one day while about Rubin “Hurricane” he was basking in glory because of Carter, a onetime middleThe Hurricane. weight boxing contender who served Denzel Washington, who por18 years in prison after being contrayed Carter in the movie, had been victed of a triple murder. nominated for an Academy Award Carter, 76, died earlier this month as best actor. The movie depicted of prostate cancer, still a folk hero Carter as a boxer who was robbed to thousands who believed he overof a world championship by racist came runaway racism in America’s judges at ringside and later sent to courts. That is the legend. prison by complicit judges Carter’s biography is in racist courtrooms. another story. The first lie I heard from His case began when the Carter was so brazen that country was seething with I wondered if I had misunracial divides. Carter was derstood him. Speaking at black. The two men and a meeting of the NAACP, the woman he was accused Carter said he was tried of murdering in 1966 were before all-white juries. white. But wait. Didn’t two black Milan people serve as jurors in Many celebrities and ordiSimonich his second trial? nary people assumed that Ringside Seat Carter was a victim of racial “They were elderly,” injustice, and so they lined Carter said. Then he up to support him. His backrushed to answer a softer ers dwindled as they learned more question. about him, only to be replaced by new That was vintage Carter. Caught ones who blindly accepted what was in a lie about the racial makeup of a said about him in popular culture. jury, he steamrolled ahead with his Juries twice convicted Carter and a jaundiced account of a good guy facco-defendant, John Artis, of the three ing evil authoritarians. murders, committed in a tavern in In that same speech, Carter told Paterson, N.J. Judges threw out Cartmore lies. He said he had passed a er’s convictions both times because polygraph test soon after the murthey said he did not receive fair triders, but white prosecutors took him als. Carter won what proved to be a to trial anyway. decisive victory when a federal judge But police records say that Carter freed him in 1985. failed the polygraph test. “… It is the The judge found that prosecutors opinion of the examiner that [Carter] were guilty of misconduct, and that was attempting deception to all the they had poisoned Carter’s retrial by pertinent questions and [he] was saying racial revenge had motivated involved in this crime,” states the him to kill. With witnesses dead police report. and memories blurred, prosecutors Lie-detector tests are imperfect. decided not to try Carter a third Guilty people have passed them and time. innocent people have failed them. He re-emerged as a national celeb- But at least some of Carter’s deceprity in 1999, after Norman Jewison tions are obvious because he lied made a deceitful movie about his about the polygraph results. case called The Hurricane. A man named Cal Deal, who built Not to be outdone by Hollywood’s an impressive website about Carter’s excesses, Carter regularly twisted case, culled the polygraph records. the facts about his arrest and trials. I Deal, a former reporter, believed
Rubin ‘Hurricane’ Carter, left, fights Italian boxer Fabio Bettini in 1965 in Paris. Carter, who spent almost 20 years in jail after twice being convicted of a triple murder he denied committing, died at his home in Toronto on April 20. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Carter to be innocent until he started interviewing him in 1975. He said Carter told lie after lie, and Deal became convinced that Carter was guilty as charged. Two witnesses identified Carter’s vehicle as the getaway car used in the murders. Ten minutes after the slaughter in the tavern, police pulled over Carter’s car. Artis was driving, Carter was lying down in the back seat and a third man was sitting in the front passenger seat. Police initially let them go because witness accounts from the shootings said that two men committed the murders, then jumped into the getaway car. A car carrying three men seemed, at first glance, not to match up. But anyone who listened to Carter never heard that he was lying in the shadowy back seat of a car that matched the one driven by the killers. The movie inaccurately described the witnesses’ accounts. Worse, it presented Carter as a fine citizen who was hounded by police because of racial bias.
Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
Omitted from the script was that Carter was separated from the Army for “unfitness” in 1956 after four courts-martial. He went to prison the following year for snatching a woman’s purse and for assaulting two men in different cases. All this occurred before he was 21. A natural fighter, Carter seemed to turn his life around as a professional boxer. Rippling with muscles, he fought world middleweight champion Joey Giardello in 1964. In the mythology of The Hurricane, Carter gave Giardello a beating, only to be robbed by the judges’ because of racial prejudice. Offended by the movie’s insinuation that he won the fight because he was white, Giardello sued the filmmakers. They reached an out-ofcourt settlement but kept the terms secret. What is known is that director Jewison amended his shoddy version of history by adding a mention to the movie DVD attesting to Giardello’s
Please see TRUTH, Page B-6
ecause I’ve previously written about the Santa Fe Plaza and because I have spent more than 30 years working around it, I wanted to weigh in on the issue of closing off the Plaza to vehicular traffic. Not just out of nostalgia but also because I, like so many other native New Mexicans who love the Plaza, have experienced its changes. City officials should approach any further changes to the Plaza with caution. Most newcomers will probably not remember a movement called “Raza on the Plaza,” where a number of us encouraged folks who felt disenfranchised from their Plaza to return. Before the music events and the new bandstand, people played guitars, sang songs and tried to create a sense of what the Plaza was like years ago, before all the shops moved away and were replaced by art galleries. In the late Orlando 1960s, my wife Romero and I lived a few Commentary minutes from the Plaza. In those days, there were lots of rentals around the Plaza. Because of that, there was always activity as those renters and other locals shopped at the many stores downtown. For example, we had a 1962 Chevy hardtop that we rarely drove. We would walk to Mass at the (then) St. Francis Cathedral or the San Miguel Mission. We walked to shop at Safeway or Kaune’s. We walked to the movies downtown. We walked to play tennis at the Santa Fe High School tennis courts, and sometimes we would even walk up to Three Cities of Spain (now Geronimo’s) for dinner and a play. Eventually, the Plaza changed dramatically, and so did everything around it. There is a saying that might be appropriate here: “If you are living in the past, you are already dead.” I only mention this because sometimes change is inevitable, although not always for the best. My travels also have given me a great deal of insight into the life of a plaza. For example, the cities of Valladolid, Salamanca, Zaragoza and Madrid, Spain, (as well as cities in Italy) have enormous enclosed plazas that are almost always full of pedestrians, shoppers and promenades. But in Spain, el paseo is an obligatory ritual where everyone comes out in the evening. Plaza Santa Ana, for example, in Madrid, is about the same size as our Plaza. On one side is the Spanish Theatre. The other sides have excellent restaurants and shops, and every restaurant has a place designated for tables in the center of the plaza. It is our favorite place to stay in Madrid, because less than five minutes from it is the club, “La Negra Tomasa,” where my wife and I dance salsa and rumba until 6 in the morning. There is one narrow street there that is open and is always full of taxis. Yet, that does not impede pedestrians from the ritualistic promenade. Which brings up another point. Hardly anyone lives around our Plaza anymore. Secondly, even in summer, the Plaza shuts down by 10 or 11 in the evening. Unlike other plazas, where the restaurants serve dinner beginning around 10 p.m., most restaurants around the Plaza are closed by 9 p.m. In a straw poll that I took, most people suggested a compromise — close only San Francisco to Don Gaspar and only from June to October. During the winter months, reopen it to keep the Plaza from looking like a ghost town. More people were concerned with the lack of police presence, the number of buskers, loud revving motorcycles and too many people with dogs panhandling than the closing of the Plaza to traffic. No one solution is going to please everyone, but whatever the choice, it is wise to remember that it is the people’s Plaza. It doesn’t belong to bureaucrats or the tourists. Orlando Romero is a writer and historian.
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Chain the bandstand? Bad guys still remain
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ocking the Plaza Community Stage might cure the symptoms, but it hardly begins to address the problems facing downtown Santa Fe. We don’t blame the city for limiting the stage to “permitted use” only. After all, who wants to clean up vomit and debris every morning on the people’s stage? Who enjoys eating lunch with a bunch of sketchy characters smoking pot on the steps? What vendors want to work with foul-mouthed bums cursing up a storm while they try to sell their art? Still, putting a rope around the place and locking it up doesn’t mean the layabouts are gone. They have just moved the party somewhere else (Cathedral Park, for one place). And late at night, we’d wager they will come back, since the chain can’t really keep anyone out. It’s part of a larger downtown problem. Mayor Javier Gonzales, as one of his first initiatives, has asked interim City Manager Brian Snyder to direct the police force to step up Plaza patrols. Anyone downtown has seen additional police cars and officers, along with public safety patrol officers. They do tend to congregate at the corner of Lincoln and Palace, but we are sure that the officers are walking the beat, riding their bicycles and otherwise spreading out beyond that one spot. Otherwise, the vaunted police presence will be a waste. Despite increased police presence, though, the panhandling continues. To remove some of the great unwashed off the Plaza, the city decided to go the “no loitering” route for the bandstand. That’s a shame, really, since lingering on the steps while eating a sandwich or reading a good book is one of the purposes of the Plaza bandstand. It was designed to be a place people can enjoy. As business owner Deborah Potter put it: “I’ve always loved seeing, particularly children, go up there and perform for imaginary audiences and dream about being performers some day.” She was one of the movers behind the campaign to build the bandstand, a drive spearheaded by the Santa Fe Community Foundation. Since its opening in 2004, the community stage has been a magnet, drawing people and activities to the heart of town. With the chains in place, some of the mess should be reduced. But, as we pointed out earlier, vomit on the Plaza is just the tip of the iceberg. Downtown businesses — The New Mexican is one — have had to deal with such incidents as vagrants spreading feces on the bathroom walls and assorted deadbeats conducting drug deals in the parking lot. The New Mexico History Museum had to shut its public restrooms because they were being destroyed by users. The beloved public library does not always feel safe — it smells, too. The problem of too many people with too little to do radiates out from the Plaza, affecting downtown businesses and workers, not just visitors. A chain around the bandstand does little to address what’s wrong. Summer season is just over a month away. For locals who work and enjoy downtown and for tourists who will spend time and money here, a chain isn’t going to improve the atmosphere. Instead, the bandstand that brings the Plaza alive with music, dancing and other events is shut off to ordinary people. The city looks unwelcoming and overly obsessed with bureaucratic rules. A few bad apples have spoiled it for everyone else. That’s a shame. Let’s get rid of them.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: April 27, 1914: Denver, Colo. — With no open outbreaks reported but with the situation tense in Las Animas, Huerfano and Fremont County coal districts, all parties concerned in the Colorado coal strike today anxiously awaited President Wilson’s reply to the appeal for federal troops. General John Chase with 200 militiamen reached Canon City early today, made a hurried tour of the surrounding territory and reported conditions quiet. The 100 citizens who last night patrolled the town and territory to the south and east were induced to surrender their arms to the sheriff, leaving further protective duties to the militia. April 27, 1964: Guymon, Okla. — Need a farm 37 feet wide and 1½ miles long? Or perhaps 20 feet wide and a half-mile long? These odd-shaped pieces of land — as well as regular tracts — in three Oklahoma Panhandle counties will be auctioned next month, by the Bureau of Land Management. The land, amounting to 4,032 acres, is valued at $70,405. The federal government still holds the land because it was never taken by a homesteader, or because it was lost in old surveying errors. Adjacent property owners will get preferential treatment in acquiring the property, if they desire. April 27, 1989: The onerous task of whittling $2.6 million in requests for Santa Fe public school services, positions and salary increases begins today as administrators and employee groups try to forge a $35 million balanced budget. On the first day of budget hearings, representatives of employee groups, departments and schools requested services, positions and raises they would like to see implemented in the 1989-90 school year.
COMMENTARY: JAMELLE BOUIE
Red meat for the right WASHINGTON ommon Core,” the name for a set of national education standards, is the latest rallying cry for right-wing activists. Derided as “Obamacore,” it’s been attacked as a government attempt to usurp local curriculum and impose liberal values on conservative communities. Glenn Beck calls it a plot to turn children into “cogs” under a police state, and several Republican politicians have jumped on the bandwagon, denouncing the Obama administration for supporting the standards. If this is confusing to ordinary observers — there’s nothing totalitarian about guidelines for what students should know at the end of each grade — it’s bewildering for Common Core advocates, who just four years ago were a boring part of the American policy landscape. Common Core was a bipartisan initiative, with support from the vast majority of governors, including Louisiana’s Bobby Jindal, who has since reversed course as he preps for a potential 2016 presidential run. What happened to make Common Core an object of hate for conservative activists? The answer is easy: “The Republican revolt against the Common Core,” noted The New York Times on Saturday, “can be traced to President Obama’s embrace of it.” That’s it. In his 2012 State of the Union, Obama gave a few words of support for the standards. “For less than 1 percent of what our nation spends on education each year,” he said, “we’ve convinced nearly every state in the country to raise their standards for teaching and learning — the first time that’s happened in a generation.” With that, the right-wing outrage machine revved into action, with a grass-roots campaign that has percolated into mainstream politics. The same Sen. Lindsey Graham who recently sponsored a resolution criticizing Common Core wasn’t aware it existed when the issue was raised at a GOP meeting last year. But, given his current primary fight against four Tea Party challengers, a stand against Common Core was worth its weight in right-wing credibility. Of course, the Republican about-face on Common Core is only one of many such moves during the Obama presidency. An array of issues enjoyed GOP support until the president agreed with them, including payroll tax breaks for individuals, clean debt-ceiling increases and immigration reform policies like the DREAM Act. This near-senseless reaction is just one
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part of a growing tribalism that’s consumed the whole of conservative politics. It doesn’t matter the issue: If liberals are for it, then — for a large portion of the right — that means it is time to be against it. Take light bulbs. In 2007, Congress approved — and President Bush signed — strict efficiency standards for incandescent light bulbs. The practical impact was to make 100-watt bulbs obsolete: an inconvenience, but not a huge imposition. In any case, the rule wouldn’t take effect for a few years, giving homes and businesses a chance to adjust. Industry groups grumbled, but there wasn’t any outrage. That changed in 2011, after a Tea Party-fueled Republican Party took the House of Representatives in a landslide victory over the Democratic Party. This coincided with the implementation of the efficiency standards, and the result was a caterwaul of right-wing rage. Indeed, the same dynamic is at work in the world of solar energy, where conservatives — led by the Koch brothers and anti-tax activists — have launched ferocious attacks on states that favor green energy. In Kansas, for instance, the Kochbacked group Americans for Prosperity has led the effort to dismantle a green energy mandate, which requires the state to obtain 20 percent of its energy from renewable sources. As the Los Angeles Times reports, conservative activists are comparing the energy mandate to the individual mandate in Obamacare. Obviously, there are material interests at work here. The Koch brothers are oil magnates with a financial stake in stopping the spread of solar technology, which is cheaper and more effective than it’s ever been. At the same time, there’s nothing especially political about solar energy; it’s an issue with wide appeal to a variety of different groups and interests. If you want clean air, you can support solar. If you want to reduce our dependence on foreign oil — a rallying cry of presidential candidates on both sides — you can support solar, too. But solar is also a tool in the fight against global warming, and to conservative conspiracy-mongers, that’s enough to condemn it as a step on the road to serfdom, hence claims from Fox News that the Bureau of Land Management is going after rancher Cliven Bundy to make space for a solar energy project. Totalitarianism on the march! Or something. This tribalism is easy to mock, but it has real consequences for our ability to solve problems or do anything constructive, and not just on a national scale. In
Nashville, Tenn., local officials wanted to lay the groundwork for a high-speed bus project that would connect neighboring areas and reduce the pressure on roads and existing buses. The $174 million proposal, called “The Amp,” would cut commute times for Nashville residents and had support from business groups and transit advocates. But last week, after sustained activism from the state branch of Americans for Prosperity, the Tennessee Senate passed a bill that — if approved — would kill the project and “prohibit metropolitan governments and any transit authorities created by a metropolitan government” from constructing a bus rapid transit system. Treat this as a technocratic dispute, and it doesn’t make any sense. If state lawmakers had a problem with The Amp, they could ask local officials to reevaluate the proposal and look for ways to reduce costs and improve safety. It goes beyond overkill to block the project and preclude Nashville from considering mass transit. But if you treat this as a local front in an unending, all-encompassing culture war, then it’s easy to understand. To the right-wing, mass transit is just another liberal attempt to force Americans into a kind of brutalist conformity. “So why is America’s ‘win the future’ administration so fixated on railroads,” wrote conservative commentator George Will in an attack on Obama’s push for new transit infrastructure. “Because progressivism’s aim is the modification of (other people’s) behavior.” Tennessee lawmakers weren’t crippling Nashville’s attempt to manage its future growth, it was defending its residents from the creeping socialism of public transit. At this point, the tribalist hysteria of the conservative movement is a fixture of American politics, and there’s a good chance it gets worse before it gets better. Not only is 2014 an election year, but it’s followed by the official start of the Republican presidential primary, and then — in 2016 — a full-fledged presidential contest. For the next three years, Republican politicians will be fighting to win support from a conservative base that’s rabid for red meat. And if there’s an easy path to the prize, it’s to find something a liberal likes, and denounce it. Jamelle Bouie is a Slate staff writer covering politics, policy and race. His work has appeared in the Daily Beast, The Nation, The Atlantic and The Washington Post.
COMMENTARY: JOSHUA KEATING
China’s Christian population continues to grow WASHINGTON hina likely already has more Protestants — an estimated 58 million — than South Africa or Brazil, major centers of evangelical revival, and 67 million Christians in all — larger than the total population of France. More people go to church on Sunday in China than in all of Europe. But Tom Philips of the Telegraph suggests this growth is just in its early stages: “By my calculations China is destined to become the largest Christian country in the world very soon,” said Fenggang Yang, a professor of sociology at Purdue University in Indiana and author of “Religion in China: Survival and Revival under Communist Rule.” “It is going to be less than a generation. Not many people are prepared for this dramatic change. … By 2030, China’s total Christian population, including Catholics, would exceed 247
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Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
million, placing it above Mexico, Brazil and the U.S. as the largest Christian congregation in the world, Yang predicted. (There are about 247 million Christians in the United States today.) To a certain extent, this is just a “China is really big” story. But Christianity’s rise is nonetheless a fascinating development given the constraints it has faced in an authoritarian, officially atheist country. Christianity in the country — both Protestant and Catholic — is divided between officially sanctioned “patriotic” churches and unsanctioned underground churches, often operating out of private homes, which are frequently subject to crackdowns by the authorities. (The official number of Christians in China is only about 25 million, but that’s generally agreed to be extremely low.) This has, not surprisingly, led to ongoing tension between the church and the Vati-
can, which doesn’t recognize the authority of the Beijing-sanctioned Chinese Catholic Patriotic Church and has excommunicated its bishops. “Underground” Catholic churches, meanwhile, have been fiercely suppressed by the state. Pope Francis has said he wants “friendly relations with China” and plans to visit this summer, though it’s hard to see how this fundamental dispute could be overcome unless one of these institutions radically changes its way of doing business. For what it’s worth, the church seems to be winning the battle for hearts and minds on the Chinese Internet. Jesus is getting more love than Mao on Weibo these days. Joshua Keating is a staff writer at Slate focusing on international news, social science and related topics. He was previously an editor at Foreign Policy magazine.
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OPINIONS MY VIEW: SUSAN FOLWELL
THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS
Sunday, April 27, 2014
MY VIEW: DENISE FORT AND PETER IVES
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f you turn on the lights in New Mexico, most of the power comes from coalfired power, with a small percentage from nuclear power, and a much smaller percentage from wind and solar. While we earnestly hope that Public Service Co. of New Mexico will decide to use more renewable energy in the future, state legislation mandates that only a small percentage of our energy be renewable. Meanwhile, the effects of climate change are already affecting Santa Fe, as we watch forests around us burn every spring and new all-time high temperatures are commonly set. Reduced snowpacks and flows in the Colorado River and Rio Grande basins are already playing havoc with water users. Fortunately, renewable energy is plummeting in price, and many places are rushing to take advantage of these prices. Santa Fe and New Mexico have a legitimate claim to leadership in renewable energy, with the pioneering leadership of the New Mexico Solar Energy Association and a new generation of entrepreneurs. And there should be no question that Santa Fe residents want to be part of the transition to cleaner energy. There are several paths that the Santa Fe region should pursue. The first is investing in conservation and efficiency in our existing buildings, perhaps paid for by a modest general obligation bond. For example, let’s replace light fixtures in city parking lots with LEDs, and save money on our electric bills. Second, we must reach agreement with PNM on a model for “community solar,” in which we can place solar generation off-site. We are in the process of installing solar on city-owned buildings; the next step is to cover the remaining buildings, where solar installations aren’t practical, with solar energy from city-owned solar facilities, as we have at the Buckman diversion site. Community solar, in which the city or individuals jointly own small solar facilities, is well-suited for those who do not have appropriate buildings for solar installations and for renters. Citizens of Taos worked with the Kit Carson Rural Electric Co-op to build a facility on school grounds, with individuals owning shares, thus sharing tax benefits, maintenance and
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oing on 93 years, the Santa Fe Indian Market is a direct reflection of the lives of Native peoples and the communities they represent. Despite the current leadership transition, we are very encouraged that our artists believe in and support what is being done at the Southwestern Association for Indian Art, which puts on the market. No artists have canceled their participation in Indian Market, including more than 100 artists on the waiting list. We have a professional fulltime staff and many dedicated volunteers who are continuing to work hard to ensure that our yearlong programs and events move forward while making preparations for the 93rd annual event. We are a nonprofit organization that raises just more than half of our modest operating budget through booth fees and the generosity of artist donations on an annual basis. In return, Santa Fe Indian Market provides a platform for established and aspiring Native/indigenous artists to nurture and sell the art they create. SWAIA looks forward to the many traditional and contemporary Native art forms that will enrich the lives of those who attend. In the process, the event will generate about $100 million in revenue for the city of Santa Fe and continue to highlight the beauty and importance of Native art. SWAIA has been unwavering in its commitment throughout the years to artists and the families of artists. In turn, we know that artists value the continued accomplishments and future goals of our organization. While we continue the process of bringing on an interim manager, the board of directors (including a majority who are Native American and five of whom are artists) are providing the leadership as needed, to staff and event volunteers. We remain confident that this year’s market will showcase amazing work, making for another spectacular show. Indian Market was established to serve as an economic benefit for Native artists and their families. As artists thrive, we thrive. This has been and will continue to be the mission of the Southwestern Association for Indian Art.
guaranteed utility rates. Finally, PNM could build solar facilities in the Santa Fe region, complete with storage capabilities to extend the quality and time of solar-generated electrons. PNM currently is contemplating an additional gas-generated facility near Bernalillo; could solar take its place? There are good options available for financing renewable energy and efficiency. The city, county and school district could enter performance contracts, as the state recently did, to pay for job-creating deep energy retrofits and installation of solar panels, with the energy savings used to pay off the contracts. Financing should be made available to any homeowner or business owner willing to install solar panels on their rooftops, backyards or parking lots. In addition to the financing currently offered through Homewise and directly from solar installers, two more mechanisms show promise. “On bill financing,” through a water, electric or other utility, allows one to pay off panels through a familiar monthly bill. And solar leasing, which is sweeping through other Western states, allows a property owner to lease their rooftop to a solar company, and then pay for electricity at rates equal to or less than current electric bills. There has been discussion of a regional acquisition of the system from PNM. Boulder, Colo., is pursuing this for the same reasons that we might, but progress for such a complicated undertaking has been painfully slow. We can do a great deal at the regional level if we have the political commitment to make it happen. At the state level, we need a stronger Renewable Portfolio Standard that makes PNM and the other utilities move out of the carbon economy more rapidly. And Congress must wake up, shake off the influence of the coal, oil and gas lobbies, and bring the U.S. energy sector into line with that of more forward-looking nations. There is no panacea, but a tax on carbon would go far in changing U.S. energy policy for the better. But as we work for change at the state and federal level, let’s get Santa Fe powered by renewables. Denise Fort is the energy chairwoman of the Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra Club. Peter Ives is a Santa Fe city councilor and mayor pro tem.
We can do a great deal at the regional level if we have the political commitment to make it happen.
This was written by Susan Folwell and the Santa Fe Indian Market Board of Directors.
MY VIEW: FONDA OSBORN
Nurses and Christus St. Vincent: Full disclosure
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Santa Fe can declare energy independence
Indian Market continues to nourish artists
n a recent My View article (“At Christus St. Vincent, quality comes first,” April 20), Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center CEO Bruce Tassin rather defensively writes, “Some people are concerned that we do not have as much staff as we used to have, and that our staffing is impacting quality.” He then goes on to suggest that people have it all wrong (including, apparently, patients, as more than a few have written letters of complaint and have spoken out at forums). On behalf of hospital employees represented by District 1199 NM of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees at Christus, I would like to address a few of Mr. Tassin’s assertions and omissions. First, of the nearly 600 nurses Christus St. Vincent employs, nearly 200 of them are management and not direct caregivers. Here is another important fact he neglected to mention: More than 200 experienced local nurses left the hospital during the last 30 months. Why? Was it the lack of employee satisfaction, better pay or more opportunity elsewhere?
THE NEW MEXICAN
We have evidence that most have left because of poor staffing, which compromises a nurse’s ability to function in the way the law requires, as advocates for their patients, their patients’ families and the community. Mr. Tassin claims, “More nurses do not mean better care.” Well, he is wrong. He is a hospital administrator, not a health care practitioner who has firsthand experience delivering patient care. Nurse staffing levels are best determined by professional practitioners. The American Nurses Association considers the following critical factors in the determination of appropriate staffing: “Number of patients; levels of intensity of the patients for whom care is being provided; contextual issues including architecture and geography of the environment and available technology; level of preparation and experience of those providing care.” The New England Journal of Medicine published a study in 2011 that highlighted the need to match nurse staffing to patients’ acuity and actual real-time census of hospitals. They stated: “Our findings sug-
gest that nurse staffing models that facilitate shift-to-shift decisions on the basis of an alignment of staffing with patients’ needs and the census are an important component of the delivery of care.” This is not what Mr. Tassin’s administration practices as to nurse staffing policy. And it has been a matter of contention for more than two years, as members of the hospital’s Nurse Staffing Committee (created by Christus) have month after month presented concerns that management is not following its own staffing policy — which was established by consensus of the entire Nurse Staffing Committee — managers and direct-care nurses. Just last month, we presented the hospital with a study done by Cornell University regarding the success of hospitals engaging in true labormanagement development of nursing policy and staffing. We await its response. We would like to see it become the policy of Christus St. Vincent. It promotes safe practices and outcomes for patients. Here is the link to that study: www.
ilr.cornell.edu/news/upload/HowLabor-Management-PartnershipsImprove-Patient-Care-Cost-Controland-Labor-Relations.pdf Finally, Mr. Tassin decided to inject the issue of compensation into his discussion. Our current bargaining unit that represents direct-care nurses has 406 nurses. It is a fact that direct-care nurse salaries are loqwe than management nurse salaries. Could the compensation numbers he cites be affected by this fact? We have no problem with the public knowing how much (or little) our workers are paid, but it’s interesting that he never mentioned the salaries and benefits he and other administrators receive. Like so much else about Christus, such detailed information escapes transparency. Isn’t the public entitled to access all of this information? Fonda Osborn represents District 1199 NM of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center and previously worked at the hospital.
My Views We are happy to consider publication of My Views, commentaries of up to 600 words, from writers who live within our reporting area. Provide verification information: full name, home address and telephone number, along with a sentence about yourself for the tagline. All copy is subject to editing for length, grammar, spelling, language and obvious errors. We encourage writers to include a photo of themselves. We do not return edited copy for writer’s approval. However, we try to respect the writer’s voice and edit as lightly as possible. We run My Views on Sundays — and no, we cannot guarantee a publication date. Please note: There’s a three-month waiting period between the publication of a My View and submission of another one. However, we accept letters of up to 150 words in the interim, about once a month. Send your My Views to letters@sfnewmexican.com.
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
MY VIEW: MICHAEL SMITH
Remembering my dad, a Navajo Code Talker D
ec. 7, 1941: Three young Navajo men hear that the Japanese have bombed Pearl Harbor, and they decide that they have to defend their country. Samuel “Jesse” Smith, Samuel Billison and Virgil Kirk, then students at Albuquerque Indian School, decide that the United States Marines are the fiercest fighting unit in the world and head to the recruiter in Albuquerque to enlist. It takes Jesse two years from this day to head to Marine Corps boot camp. He first goes into the recruiters’ station with Billison and Kirk, but is turned away because the date he gave as his birth date makes him
too young to enlist. He walks out the door and turns around, telling the recruiter he made a mistake and gives the recruiter a “new” birth date, which makes him a year older. The recruiter signs up 16-year-young Samuel “Jesse” Smith and tells him to finish the school year, then report for boot camp in summer of 1943. Jesse enlists to be a pilot, because “that’s where I think I can do the most damage.” He passes all the aptitude tests after graduating boot camp and heads to flight school. The Marine Corps finds that Jesse doesn’t have a high school diploma. He had just finished
his junior year in high school when he left for boot camp. Jesse’s cheii, (grandfather) reminds him how young he is: “You haven’t even caught a pup yet.” His cheii takes Jesse to a sweat and preforms the male puberty ceremony, giving him a shield for protection. The next thing Jesse hears is, “Are you Navajo?” Jesse replies, “Yes sir!” “Pick up your seabag and come with me!” It is from this point that Jesse has no more choices. The Marines take him to Camp Elliot to a barracks full of Indians, and put each of these men through a series of tests, finding
At the age of 17, Samuel “Jesse” Smith is assigned to the 4th Marine Division, later nicknamed the Fighting Fourth, for its battles in the Marshall Islands. out who is proficient in Navajo and English and of substantial intelligence, with the ability to retain a satisfactory amount of information. Then they send these men to communications school to learn every form of communication the Marine Corps has available. After that,
the men attend Navajo Code Talker school to learn the code. At the age of 17, Jesse is assigned to the 4th Marine Division, later nicknamed the Fighting Fourth, for its battles in the Marshall Islands. Jesse is assigned to HQ company and assigned to transmit mes-
sages for Gen. Clifton B. Cates, commander of the landings in Saipan and Tinain. Gen. Cates later becomes commandant of the Marine Corps, and Jesse is sent to Hawaii to refresh the code. The 4th Marine Division sets sail for an undisclosed island in the Pacific, Iwo Jima. Samuel “Jesse” Smith Sr., Navajo Code Talker, 4th Marine Division, survives the battles of Roi Namur, Saipan, Tinian and Iwo Jima. Michael Smith is the clerk for the Navajo Nation and son of Samuel “Jesse” Smith, who died earlier this month.
MY VIEW: MICHAEL GROSS
Code Talkers’ example inspires I learned of Samuel “Jesse” Smith’s passing, at age 88 in Albuquerque on April 15, from complications of a viral infection. His son, Michael Smith, a Marine Corps veteran like his dad, called me with the news. I was legal counsel for the Navajo Code Talkers Association for many years from the 1980s until 2009. During that period, I suggested, helped organize, and with my wife, Andrea, helped finance a film expedition that we called “Back to the Battlefields.” The Navajo Code Talkers were all Marines and fought exclusively in the Pacific Theater. Their story is generally better known now than it used to be. The New Mexico Department of Indian Affairs later helped finance the filming of the expedition and I understand now owns the resulting raw footage. The filming was done by a film producer named George Colburn and his company, Starbright Enterprises Inc. Tom McCarthy, who retired from the New Mexico Film Division and lives near Santa Fe, was a co-producer, along with Santa Fe resident Pilar Faulkner and did much of the filming: First to Guam, Saipan and Tinian in November 2005; the second to Guam, Iwo Jima and Okinawa in 2006. My memories of Jesse are intense and wonderful. I last saw him in December 2013 at his home in Acoma. He was a real character. At the monthly Code Talkers Association meetings, he used to sit in the back row in the old Gallup Chamber of Commerce building next to the noisy railroad tracks. From there he would listen to the flow of discussion, which was often rambling, and then come up with a quip or an incisive view that nailed the issue at hand, allowing the meeting to move on. He was intelligent and perceptive. Along with most of the other five Code Talker participants on the two expeditions, Jesse didn’t really want to go. Too many bad memories. But they saw the expedition as a duty. They wanted to preserve the history for their children, their tribe and their country. In July 2001, the first 29 Code
Santa Fe County Meetings
Talkers — those who originated the famous code in 1942 — were awarded Congressional Gold Medals. Only five of them were still alive. They were seated in front, facing the audience. But many other Code Talkers were in attendance in the Capitol Rotunda, waiting for President George W. Bush to present the medals. The Rotunda was packed with press, dignitaries, military, Code Talker families and friends. I was sitting next to a reporter for Agence FrancePresse. Code Talkers, in their bright orange uniforms, were all around us. At one point, she turned to me and asked, “Why has this story not been known before now?” I could sense the nearest Code Talkers had heard the question. “Because Navajo people, and especially the Code Talkers, are not boastful,” I replied, “They don’t brag.” As I glanced around, I saw the tiniest nods of their chins. Jesse From left, Samuel ‘Jesse’ Smith, Michael Gross, Samuel Tso and Keith Little atop Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, Japan, in was among them. March 2006.
Michael Gross is an attorney in Santa Fe.
AAA Travel Sale
Arts, Culture & Community
April 21 – May 3, 2014
IN THE RAILYARD AT EL MUSEO
Hurry! Limitedtime offers!
Hosted by:
Discover what’s new in cruises, tours and more from helpful AAA Travel Agents. Plus, take advantage of limited-time booking savings of up to $2,400 per stateroom on Double Upgrades1 on select cruises. Visit your local AAA branch during the sale and you can: advantage of limited-time special offers on a variety • Take of cruise and land vacations. • Save up to $960 per couple on privately guided vacations
2
Offers are only valid April 21 – May 3, 2014-call or visit today!
Contact a AAA Travel Agent or visit the website below for sale details.
Santa Fe County Housing Authority Board Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at 10 a.m. Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Ave.
CALL: 505-424-5459
Board Of County Commissioners (BCC) Meeting Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at 1 p.m. Commission Chambers, 102 Grant Ave. Santa Fe, NM
CLICK: AAA.com/Travelsale VISIT: AAA New Mexico Travel, 3517 Zafarano Dr., Suite D Santa Fe
Board Of County Commissioners acting as the Board of Finance Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at 1 p.m. Commission Chambers, 102 Grant Ave.
For More information call 505-986-6200 or visit www.santafecountynm.gov
PHOTO BY ASHLEY GROSS COURTESY MICHAEL GROSS
Exclusive
Healthcare Assistance Program Board (COUNTY INDIGENT HOSPITAL AND HEALTHCARE BOARD) Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at 9 a.m. Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Ave., Santa Fe, NM
Health Policy and Planning Commission Friday, May 2, 2014 at 9 a.m. Health Conference Room, 2052 Galisteo Street, Suite B., Santa Fe, NM
...bringing great music to Santa Fe
Featuring: 1All
rates, savings offers and itineraries are subject to change without notice. Savings offers may be withdrawn at any time. Government taxes & fees are additional. Double Upgrade Promotion: This promotion allows guests book Club Veranda staterooms at Club Interior stateroom prices (category 12). Bookings must be created at standard fares between April 1 and May 3, 2014. This promotional offer must be selected at the time of booking to qualify. Bookings must be made in desired category, which will be priced at the lower fare after the valid promotion is selected. Offer is valid for all sailings starting in 2015 with the exception of Journey’s May 21, June 23, August 6 departures and Quest’s July 4 departure. Call your AAA Travel Agent for full listing of applicable sailings. Offer is applicable to new individual bookings and to staterooms in non-contracted group bookings with staterooms named and fully deposited during the offer period. This promotional offer is combinable with back to back savings, onboard booking savings, and reduced single supplements. The promotion is not combinable with any other program, promotion or discounted rates. Offers are subject to change, and may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain restrictions apply. Azamara Club Cruises is a boutique brand with two jewel box ships focusing on destination immersion. Azamara is an inclusive product offering, select standard spirits, international beers, wines, gratuities, bottled water, soft drink and specialty coffees and teas plus an AzAmazing EveningSM. A customized night tour just for the Azamara guest.© 2014 Azamara Club Cruises®. Ships’ Registry: Malta. 2Savings valid for AAA members only. Save up to $960 per couple on new General Tours Small Group, Privately Guided or Small Ship journey when paid in full at time of booking from April 21-May 3, 2014. For travel April 21 – April 30, 2015. Not valid on Hosted and Free Style journeys. Other restrictions apply. Offers may be withdrawn at any time without notice. Certain restrictions apply. Not responsible for errors and omissions. Travel Sale will take place April 21–May 3, 2014 during normal business hours. Your local AAA club acts as an agent for the various travel providers featured at the Sale. CTR #1016202-80. Copyright © 2014 Auto Club Services, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Esperanza Shelter & El Museo
el
MUSEO
CULTURAL de Santa Fe
May 3: Silent Auction 5:30-8:00 PM Tickets $35 (includes admission to dance)
Dance 9:00 PM-12:00 AM $10 FEATURING
Lumbre del Sol
Santa Fe’s #1 Band
May 4: Free Community
Celebration 1:00-5:00 PM with
• Mariachi Buenaventura • Danza Azteca/Refugio Clandestino •“Kids Corner”– Piñatas, Arts & Crafts, Games • Community Potluck & much more!
FOR MORE INFO AND TICKETS: Call Esperanza @ 505-474-5536 or go to www.esperanzashelter.org
OPINIONS
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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MY VIEW: SHAWNA SHANDIIN SUNRISE
Visions of feathers, dancing in the desert E
arlier this month, I traveled out to California for the legendary concert in the desert, the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. As I boarded the plane from Albuquerque to LAX, thoughts of bands like Broken Bells, Pharrell, NAS, Motorhead and Beck filled my expectations for the weekend. Fast forward to Friday morning, as my best friend and I prepared to jump on the shuttle to Coachella. Water bottles, sunscreen, cash, comfortable shoes — all check. We all loaded up in the shuttle. Sounds of excitement surrounded us from first-timers (like myself), even Canadians who drove miles just to get there. As the excitement rose, I looked around at the masses joining this music
As soon as we walked in to get our IDs checked, we saw a guy wearing a headdress. pilgrimage in the desert. Then I realized that I had packed everything I thought I needed to attend this colossal music fest except for one thing — my feathered headdress. What? Yes, in the haze of thousands of people moving toward the entrance of this center for music, people are in full “fake-feathered headdresses.”
I thought it was so hot that I might be seeing things. But then I realized, just before I stepped onto the grounds of Coachella, that I was facing a stereotype that I have been avoiding my whole life. As a Diné/Santo Domingo (Kewa) Pueblo girl growing up in Albuquerque, I have faced my share of stereotypes. There is, “Indian girl this and that;” “She is an Indian, that is why she can read animal footprints;” or “Do you live in a teepee?” But at a concert? Why? Why, as a lover of music, did I have to watch white people dance around with feathers and paint to some of my favorite music? As soon as we walked in to get our IDs checked, we saw a guy wearing a headdress. My friends tried to
take pictures of him to post on Facebook, unbelieving that people still do this in 2014. His response was of complete ignorance. “I have a Native friend who said it was OK!” Really? Hmm, so if I wore a ceremonial shawl from the Jewish religion to dance around in the desert, that would be “OK,” too? Of course it wouldn’t! Yet, here we were, dealing with cultural appropriation in our faces. We couldn’t look in any direction without seeing people in headdresses, war paint, single feathers, as if they were in a John Ford Western. As an independent filmmaker myself, this misuse of ceremonial objects sacred to many Indians had project
written all over it. At the moment, though, the presence of feathers and headdresses ruined my experience at Coachella 2014. Not to mention, I work for Americans for Indian Opportunity, a social-justice, nonprofit organization in Albuquerque, under one of the most amazing women, LaDonna Harris (Comanche), who has helped change how our people are viewed since the 1960s through all her work in legislation for all Native American people. Obviously, there’s more work to be done. Shawna Shandiin Sunrise, Diné (Navajo)/Kewa (Santo Domingo Pueblo) is the social media and public relations specialist for Americans for Indian Opportunity.
Bathrooms Need Facelift?
MY VIEW: STEVEN HAMP
River flow brings renewal of spring
S
igns of spring in Santa Fe are becoming abundant as mid-April turns to early May. It’s easy to take notice of the many flowering fruit trees and shrubs around the city that add a pleasant luster of color. Days are warmer and getting longer, so spending more time outside is an attractive activity. Santa Fe sits at the southern end of the Sangre de Cristo mountains, so when we think of spring, it’s natural to think of snowmelt and water runoff. Walking along the Santa Fe River through downtown, we can hear water flowing. It gives a rhythm to spring. The cascading water running through the numerous check dams along the river creates a special sound. It’s vibrant and lets us know there is a seasonal change in the air that is refreshing. Even as we enter what looks to be a fourth year of drought in much of New Mexico, with a winter snowpack that was again well below average, there is a feeling of renewal as water flows through the city. Spring is about rejuvenation, and it can’t happen without the runoff from the mountains. This is a great time to enjoy water in the Santa Fe River, but it isn’t sustainable, even if there were more snow in the mountains. Much of our precious runoff is stored in the municipal reservoirs above the city and used to supply part of our drinking water throughout the year.
Monday has TECH TECH
Some of our mountain runoff is released for irrigation and diverted away from the river, only to return to the river channel below Frenchy’s Field Park. Allowing water to flow in the river during the spring is part of the city’s Living River Ordinance. It’s a well-thought-out
plan that gives a commitment to release water to the river, although the amount depends on the reservoir levels each year. The river usually will flow into June, giving everyone time to listen to the rhythm that enhances the experience of spring and to reinforce our
understanding of the city’s strong connection to the scenic mountains.
Think Chapman Homes. Free estimates!
983-8100 chapmanhomes.com
Steven Hamp is a hydrologist, retired and living in Santa Fe.
Building and remodeling homes since 1966
Zoning Map Adoption Draft public review and comment period April 14 through May 2 2014
Brian McPartlon Roofing LLC.
Santa Fe County is initiating the Public Review and Comment period as part of the Zoning Map Adoption Process. All property has been assigned a zoning classification in accordance with the SLDC. Santa Fe County Staff can assist property owners in locating their property on the map and provide information on the assigned zoning classification and applicable section of the SLDC. Join us.
Got a FOAM ROOF? Call us, we fix foam roofs.
Community Information Sessions: **All community office hours are from 10 am - 8 pm**
• •
505-982-6256 • www.mcpartlonroofing.com
• •
April 15 10 am - 8 pm Edgewood Senior Center 114 Quail Trail, Edgewood April 16 10 am - 8 pm Eldorado Satellite Office 16 Avenida Torreon, Eldorado, (in the Ken and Patty Adams Senior Center) April 22 10 am - 8 pm Nancy Rodriguez Community Center 1 Prairie Dog Loop, Santa Fe April 23 10 am - 8 pm Pojoaque Satellite Office 5 West Gutierrez, Suite 9, Pojoaque, NM (in the Pojoaque Pueblo Plaza)
Open Office Hours will also be held at County Administrative Offices (County Administration Building, 102 Grant Ave, Santa Fe)The Board of County Commissioners will hold two Public Hearings on the Zoning Map adoption draft at the County Commission Chambers on Wednesday May 28, and June 25 2014.
©2014 Raymond James & Associates, Inc. member New York Stock Exchange/SIPC
Enroll your child in Early Head Start! PMS' Santa Fe County Children’s Services is Opening a New Early Childhood Center in
Pojoaque Valley!
NDI NEW MEXICO
20TH ANNIVERSARY GALA MAY 3, 2014
.
PMS high quality programs are available FREE for pregnant women & children, birth to 3 years of age. Families must meet income eligibility guidelines & live in Santa Fe County.
Full Day, Full Year infant/toddler classrooms will start in August 2014
TECH TEST
VIDEO GAMES
What you’ll need: ♥ Birth certificate or Baptismal record ♥ 2013 Income Tax Return or all W-2’s, or most recent pay stub with final December 2013 pay stubs ♥ Current Immunization Record ♥ Social Security Card (if available) ♥ Medicaid or Insurance Card (if available)
Applications can be picked up or submitted at the Nambe Head Start Center, State Road 503, Nambe, NM or any PMS Santa Fe Head Start Center.
For more information call Diane Uphoff at
(505) 428-2569 You turn to us.
www.pms-inc.org
PUBLICATION NOTICE (“Posted Notice”) THE CIVIL CORPORATIONS OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP, ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP AND THE BISHOP OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP, WHICH ARE COMMONLY REFERRED TO AS THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP, HAVE FILED FOR REORGANIZATION IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO. IF YOU WERE ABUSED OR SUFFERED INJURY BY CLERGY OR OTHER PERSONS WORKING FOR THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP OR FOR A CATHOLIC PARISH, SCHOOL OR MISSION WITHIN THE TERRITORY OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP AND YOU CONTEND THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP IS RESPONSIBLE, YOU MUST ACT NOW TO FILE YOUR CLAIM. THE LAST DAY TO FILE CLAIMS IS 5:00 P.M. MDT ON MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 2014. The United States Bankruptcy Court has ordered that all persons claiming injury against the Diocese of Gallup for acts of sexual abuse must file a claim on or before 5:00 p.m. Mountain Daylight Time on Monday, August 11, 2014. YOU MUST COMPLETE A PROOF OF CLAIM IF YOU CONTEND THAT THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY INJURY OR OTHER DAMAGES CAUSED TO YOU BECAUSE YOU CLAIM THAT YOU WERE SEXUALLY ABUSED, WHETHER (1) BY A PRIEST, A NUN, A WORKER, A VOLUNTEER, AN EMPLOYEE OR OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY ASSOCIATED WITH THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP, OR ASSOCIATED WITH A PARISH, SCHOOL OR MISSION WITHIN THE TERRITORY OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP; OR (2) THROUGH ACTS THAT OCCURRED BEYOND THE TERRITORY OF THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP FOR WHICH YOU CLAIM THE DIOCESE OF GALLUP IS RESPONSIBLE. For additional information or to obtain a proof of claim form please call toll free in the United States at 1-888-570-6269, or go to the Diocese of Gallup website at http://www.dioceseofgallup.org. Spanish and Navajo translators are available through the toll free number. You can also download the forms from and follow the directions to the link on the website. Legal #96815 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 20, 27, July 27, 2014
Among the ELEVEN varied members of the ASSOCIATION OF NATIONAL DANCE INSTITUTE’S across the country, NDI NEW MEXICO is the BRIGHTEST STAR. I am full of ADMIRATION for what you all have accomplished. With warmest WISHES for a robust and CREATIVE FUTURE. - Jacques d’Amboise, Co-Founder of NDI New Mexico
(505) 983-7646 x. 110
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Truth: We don’t know
MY VIEW: DOUG NAVA
Moving Zozobra is a great idea F
or more than 300 years, the city of Santa Fe has not forgotten the Great Promise of Don Diego de Vargas, a promise of peace amongst the cultures. To some it is a heartfelt celebration of multicultural togetherness, and to some it is a mockery of multicultural togetherness. No cultural history is perfect, and many do celebrate their ancestorial past. As human beings, we build our own interpretation and beliefs of what really happened, based on what we have read through books, historical documents and oldfashioned storytelling. In today’s world, we have all become very sensitive when we feel there is an attack on our beliefs and changes to historical traditions and events. As a proud native of Santa Fe, I am one of those who see the Fiesta
celebration as a heartfelt celebration of multicultural togetherness. I have even chosen to express my love with tattoos on my Doug right arm with Nava an image of de Vargas and my beloved La Conquistadora, representing the great Promise of Peace. I was a part of the family that was destroyed in 1997, when my cousin, Carlos, with whom I grew up, lost his life on the night of Zozobra and the Fiesta celebration. It was not an easy time for my family, but I can truly say that we have never blamed Zozobra and the peaceful promise of de Vargas for the tragedy that hap-
pened that night. When Zozobra moved from Friday to Thursday, the city seemed to have an outpouring of anger that the Friday night burning of Zozobra would now be a day earlier. Over the past 16 years, the burning of Zozobra has gone through many changes, and just two years ago seemed to have hit a brick wall when the price to attend doubled and angered the community. Zozobra is an icon that we all relate to, with its symbol of “burning our troubles.” Nowadays, we all have something we would like to put behind us. The burning of Zozobra is now under new leadership and this group of individuals wants nothing more but to make the burning of Zozobra not only one of Santa Fe’s family events,
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but more importantly, a safe one. Sponsors are working hard to bring back the traditional ways of the burning, as stated by creator Will Shuster. I do not find it wrong in any way or form to move the burning of Zozobra a week earlier as long as we make it safe, as long as we make it family friendly, and as long as Zozobra is burned so that we can burn our troubles away to enjoy the Fiesta celebration as it was intended and traditions have been followed through. I am sure that Will Shuster and Don Diego de Vargas would both agree to that. Doug Nava is a native Santa Fean and who has run to portray to Don Diego de Vargas and has also run for the Santa Fe City Council.
been a world champion. The truth is harsher. Carter talent in the ring. Even Carter had lost seven of his last once agreed that Giardello had 15 fights before the murders. won their 15-round fight. He no longer was a contender. Carter benefited mightily But did he kill three people? from his celebrity status and We don’t know. by the way he was depicted in No one can dispute that popular culture. His defendracial prejudice has tainted ers were emboldened by The many prosecutions. In Carter’s Hurricane and by Bob Dylan’s case, though, he convinced ballad claiming that Carter was thousands that he was a model railroaded. They will always citizen who was persecuted for insist that he was an innocent no reason except the color of man, and that he could have his skin.
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MY VIEW: MIGUEL ACOSTA
Dropout initiative deserves support
I
am writing regarding about Santa Fe Public Schools’ proposal, Engage Santa Fe, to seek out dropouts and help them graduate. I am deeply concerned. I am concerned because in all the debate around a dropout re-engagement initiative that the current board and the current superintendent are proposing, the voice and needs of the community are once again being ignored. As many know, I have been actively pursuing such an option for south-side youth for the past seven years. I understand legislators and the teachers unions might have concerns about privatization of public dollars, in this case, flowing to Atlantic Education Partners. I, too, am concerned about the privatization of education, but I am more concerned about the thousands of young people and young adults who have not been able to complete their high school educations. They are thus blocked from better jobs, more education, higher quality of life and better health. I am more concerned about the increased risk of these young people ending up in prison, on welfare, on the streets and with diminished life chances. I am even more concerned for the children they will have and the impact of their limited opportunities on the next generation. Several years ago, I proposed essentially the same initiative to the previous board and then Superintendent Bobbie Gutierrez. We named it Colegio Sin Fronteras. All were supportive,
but the challenge of funding the initial year was too much for us to overcome. Now it seems that this current team has found a way to do it. I and the families I work with on the south side are excited. Our public education systems have been privatizing aspects of their work for years. Counseling services, cleaning and maintenance and other work is often contracted out to private, forprofit entities. There is no debate there. The issue that has been raised now is that in this case it is the primary work of the district that is being contracted, teaching and the curriculum that is to be used. But that was done a long time ago, in the form of E2020 or Pearson textbooks or any other packaged program that pretty much dictates a curriculum and an instructional strategy. The difference now is that these are real people, not a computer program or a textbook. So let’s talk to these people and make it work. The proposed initiative could be and should be given a chance, but as a partnership that includes the community. We are talking about a one-year contract. During that time, we can assess the strengths and challenges that this type of partnership presents. Working together, we can identify local educators who are culturally proficient, as well as find wraparound services that are meaningful, helpful and delivered in a culturally competent manner. We can engage not just students but families, putting focus on building a healthier
City of Santa Fe HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD FIELD TRIP TUESDAY, May 13, 2014 at 12:00 NOON HISTORIC PRESERVATION DIVISION, 2nd FLOOR CITY HALL HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD HEARING TUESDAY, May 13, 2014 at 5:30 P.M. CITY HALL COUNCIL CHAMBERS A. B. C. D. E.
CALL TO ORDER ROLL CALL APPROVAL OF AGENDA APPROVAL OF MINUTES: April 8, 2014 FINDINGS OF FACT & CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Case #H-14-016
116 Calle la Pena
Case #H-14-022
723 & 725 Canyon Road
Case #H-05-179
270 Las Colinas Drive (Lot 7)
Case #H-14-023
623 W. Alameda Street
Case #H-13-010
303 East Alameda Street
Case #H-14-025
113 Washington Avenue
Case #H-11-035
505-A Cerrillos Road
Case #H-14-026
511 E. Palace Avenue
Case #H-14-021
229 Galisteo Street
Case #H-13-086B 918-C Acequia Madre Case #H-14-020 F. G.
125 W. Santa Fe Avenue
BUSINESS FROM THE FLOOR ACTION ITEMS 1. Case #H-11-081. 460 Camino de las Animas and 449 Camino Monte Vista. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Karl Sommer, agent for Theodora Portago, proposes to construct a 6’ high coyote fence along the west lotline of a contributing residential property. (David Rasch). 2. Case #H-14-027. 653 Don Gaspar Avenue. Don Gaspar Area Historic District. Mercedes Marchand, agent/owner, requests primary elevation(s) designation for two contributing residential structures. (David Rasch). 3. Case #H-14-029. 860 East Palace Avenue. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Deborah Fritz, agent/owner proposes to remodel a non-contributing residential structure by replacing windows, infilling a door with a fireplace, and creating a new door opening. (David Rasch). 4. Case #H-14-030. 1049 and 1051 Camino San Acacio. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Gabriel Browne, agent/owner, requests an historic status review of a contributing residential structure. (David Rasch). 5. Case #H-14-031. 607 Webber Street. Don Gaspar Area Historic District. Stephen Machen, agent for Stephen and Meredith Machen, owners, proposes to construct a 925 sq. ft. residential structure to 17’ high were the maximum allowable height is 17’10”. An exception is requested to construct a pitched roof where a pitch is not allowed (Section 14-5.2(D)(5)(d)). (David Rasch).
community with the capacity to create a brighter future for everyone. We can build partnerships with local merchants and help students gain valuable work experiences while enhancing the power of the business community. We can partner with city officials as they look to revitalize the south side with the support of our new mayor. This could be a wonderful opportunity, if we approach it as such. I would ask that our honorable legislators and the teachers union sit with us and find a way forward rather than dismiss this out of hand. I would also ask the public schools and its contracted group to consider a community partnership approach where we are also at the table. Then, we can help convene the stakeholders to search for ways of making this program work, rather than finding more ways to give up on our youth without giving them a fighting chance. Miguel A. Acosta resides in Santa Fe and is a community education and development specialist focusing on civic engagement of marginalized communities.
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Featured events in and around Santa Fe
APRIL
27
DUMP YOUR GREEN WASTE: On April 27, BuRRT will accept up to 8 passenger tires per resident and clean green waste. Green waste includes tree and shrub cuttings, grass, leaves and manure that contain no contamination such as bags, dirt, rocks, or garbage. All loads must be covered to prevent material from falling out of a vehicle. Secure your load with rope, straps, chains or another means. A “covered load” is covered with a tarp, securely fastened to a vehicle. Unsecured or uncovered load will be assessed a $15 surcharge. Tipping fees apply for material generated from businesses, organizations, contractors, landscapers, and private haulers. APRIL
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WELCOME TO THE VALLEY OF CHAMPIONS! Pojoaque Valley School District (PVSD) will be accepting Out-ofDistrict Transfer Requests through April 30, 2014 for the 2014-2015 school year. PVSD has several award-winning teachers as well as exciting and supportive curricular and extra-curricular programs organized into five professional schools. To learn more about PVSD, please explore the district website: www.pvs.k12.nm.us. Applications may be
obtained from the website or by contacting Diahann Cordova at 505-455-2282. Applications received after the due date of April 30 will be considered only after applications received prior to deadline are reviewed and processed. Thank you for considering PVSD to provide an excellent education for your child.
5:45 pm - 7:00 pm at Mountain Cloud Zen Center, 7241 Old Santa Fe Trail. Meditation on the Breath, Mindfulness, Meditation on Mind States, and Loving-kindness. A $20 fee, which can be waived if someone cannot otherwise attend, covers rent and administrative costs for the four weeks. Sponsored by the Santa Fe Vipassana Sangha, the class MAY will be taught by Stefan Dobusyznski. For more information, and Stefan’s bio, check the sangha’s webpage. www.santafevipassana. UNITED WE RUN! Sunday, May 4. 5K org. To register contact Stefan Fun Run/Walk to benefit three Santa Fe Shelstefand@cybermesa.com, 505-470-5097. ters (St. Elizabeth, Interfaith, and Esperanza) sponsored by the United Church of Santa Fe. Sunday, May 4 at 12:30 (immediately af- MAY ter 11:00 worship service). 1 K walk/run for children, too. Sign up to run, walk or sponsor! All proceeds go to the three agencies. For PASSPORT TO RETIREMENT more information, please call 505-988-3295 Educational Workshop - presented by Peter or email unitedchurchsf@gmail.com. Love God, Neighbor, Creation! The United Church Murphy. This complimentary, full day seminar of Santa Fe. 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Mi- will take you step-by-step through the imporchael’s Drive). Check us out on Facebook, tant areas of retirement. You will learn how to: too! You can also donate online at united- Define and Create Your Retirement, Assess churchofsantafe.org. (Designate “united we the Costs, Evaluate Your Sources of Income, run.”) Thank you! Invest for the Future, Protect Your Health and Wealth, Receive Funds from Your Retirement MAY Plans, and Manage Your Estate Distribution. The workshop will be held on Saturday, May 10th, from 9am to 5pm at the Holiday Inn ExINTRODUCTION TO INSIGHT press, 60 Entrada Drive, Los Alamos. Seating MEDITATION. A series of four classes is limited and registration is required. RSVP: meeting Tuesdays May 6, 13, 20, 27 from LoisGolden@1APG.com / 505-216-0838.
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6. Case #H-14-028. 627 Webber Street. Don Gaspar Area Historic District. Mack C. Hughes, agent/ owner, proposes to remodel a non-contributing residential structure by replacing doors and windows and restuccoing. (David Rasch). H.
COMMUNICATIONS
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MATTERS FROM THE BOARD: Vote on Preservation Awards
J.
ADJOURNMENT
Cases on this agenda may be postponed to a later date by the Historic Districts Review Board at the noticed meeting. Please contact the Historic Preservation Division at 955-6605 for more information regarding cases on this agenda.
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-3 Neighbors C-5 Celebrations C-6
LOCAL NEWS
Stuck in ice: Adventurer Michael Johnson will head back to Canada to finish sailing the Northwest Passage. Neighbors, C-6
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Northern regents ax programs Day care center also cut in approval of $32 million budget at Española’s Northern New Mexico College
Dig uncovers Atari games Hundreds of Atari E.T. game cartridges are found at an Alamogordo landfill. PAGE C-3
By Robert Nott The New Mexican
The Board of Regents of Northern New Mexico College in Española on Saturday unanimously approved a $32 million budget that eliminates three educational programs and the campus day care center — a move
expected to save the financially strapped school about $500,000. The cuts, which drew immediate criticism, also eliminate seven faculty positions for the construction, automotive and radiology programs, though one of those jobs is currently vacant and another is filled by a
teacher who plans to retire this year. Nine staff member positions also will be removed under the budget plan: Four that are currently occupied, three that are vacant and two part-time jobs, according to a budget presentation to the board. Board President Rosario “Chayo” Garcia also urged the college — which serves about 745 full-time students and some 800 part-time students and has about 260 full-time employees — to place an immediate freeze on new
hires and to eliminate travel expenses. “We are in dire straits,” she said. The board stuck to a vow it made earlier this week to not raise student tuition. While a few students and staffers agreed that was a positive step, many expressed disgust with the program cuts, particularly the automotive department. “They’re just taking the community out of the college,” said auto body
Please see AX, Page C-4
Gray skies can’t stop Zona del Sol’s party for the sun
SWAIA Indian Market
Solar celebration
manager steps down
By Milan Simonich The New Mexican
O
n the gloomiest, grayest day Santa Fe could conjure up, solar power was the talk of the south side. The Zona del Sol Santa Fe Youth and Family Center became one of the first buildings in the quadrant to install solar panels, and that led to a neighborhood celebration Saturday. “Sol Not Coal” was one theme, though the unusually overcast afternoon cast a shadow on the event. Because not enough voltage was entering the solar panels, the new energy system did not register on the center’s electric meter. Nonetheless, organizers told the shivering crowd of about 80 that the the solar system is operating and represents a breakthrough. It will make a sizable difference in energy savings during the 310 days of bright sunshine that Santa Fe has each year, said Karen Paramanandam, spokeswoman for Positive Energy Solar, one of the organizations that made the project possible. She said solar power now provides about 25 percent of the electricity for the Zona del Sol building. But that figure will climb as efficiency improvements are made with the airconditioning and giant refrigerator in the center, she said. The total cost of the solar project was about $15,000. Area high school students, part of Earth Care Youth Allies, raised more than a third of the money. They worked with Santa Febased New Energy Economy. “First and foremost, we want to do something about climate change and be part of the solution,” said Josue Martinez, one of the organizers of Earth Care Youth Allies. Mariel Nanasi, executive director of New Energy Economy, called the project another example of solar power nudging out “dirty sources of energy.” Nanasi said installing solar panels in a community building on the south side is a nice step forward. Solar energy ought to be embraced by all parts of the city and by people of every income level, she said. Santa Fe is a fertile market for solar energy. Regina Wheeler, CEO of Positive Energy Solar, said the employeeowned company also operates in Las Cruces and Albuquerque, but Santa Fe is the state leader. “Albuquerque is 10 times the size of Santa Fe, but we sell three times the solar here,” she said. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at santafenewmexican.com.
Rivera takes aim at chief development officer, board in resignation By Patrick Malone The New Mexican
A staff exodus from the Southwestern Association for Indian Arts is growing, as a third member has taken to Facebook to publicly announce resignation from the organization responsible for putting on Santa Fe’s internationally known Indian Market that packs the Plaza each August. On Friday, Paula Rivera, the Indian Market manager and artist services associate who has been with SWAIA for five years, posted her resignation letter on Facebook. It takes aim at SWAIA Chief Development Officer Charlene Porsild and the SWAIA board. Rivera is the third SWAIA staffer to step down during the past month and announce it on Facebook. On March 31, John Torres Nez announced his resignation the same way, citing his
By Patrick Malone The New Mexican
From left, Alfredo Damian and his brother, Josue Damian, 17, perform Saturday during the solar celebration at Zona del Sol, the first community building on the south side to be equipped for solar power. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Ten solar panels have been installed on the roof of Zona del Sol. The project is part of New Energy Economy’s Sol Not Coal initiative.
All-day celebration features talks, special dinner for head of Sakya lineage of Tibetan Buddhism The New Mexican
Dorjee Gyaltsen of Santa Fe is refashioning a patio umbrella with sunny yellow cloth in preparation for the visit next week of Sakya Trizin, head of the Sakya lineage of Tibetan Buddhism. Local Tibetan families are getting ready to assemble momos, juicy meat or vegetable dumplings, for a “grand
Please see MANAGER, Page C-4
Albuquerque nurse faces child pornography charges A registered nurse employed by an Albuquerque psychiatric center for children was arrested Friday by federal agents and booked into the Santa Fe County jail on allegations of viewing and sharing online graphic pornography involving children. John Jaramillo, 44, of Albuquerque was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service and booked into the jail on a warrant charging receipt and possession of visual depictions of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. A report says the children in the images ranged in age from 3 to 12 and were portrayed in activities with adults. It is unclear why the Albuquerque man was booked in the Santa Fe County jail. Federal court records show a warrant was issued in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque on Thursday for Jaramillo’s arrest. According to an affidavit in Jaramillo’s court file, New Mexico State Police tipped federal agents in November to child pornography files being shared by an Internet protocol address later traced to Jaramillo. Federal agents with Homeland
Local Buddhists prepare for leader’s rare visit By Anne Constable
“fiduciary duty.” The resignation of Tailinh Agoyo, marketing director for SWAIA, followed on April 18. In her resignation letter, dated April 16, Rivera praised unnamed members Paula Rivera of SWAIA’s “dynamic team” and relished her interactions with artists, vendors and employees of the Indian Market. But she singled out Porsild, who was hired last year, and the SWAIA board as the reasons for her departure. “I chose to support and work for what was in the best interest of the artists, who are the family and community which I am part of,” Rivera wrote. “Unfortunately, my vision is not aligned with the SWAIA board or that of the CBDO [Porsild]. I do not support the current direction of Santa Fe Indian Market and because of this I must present my resignation today. I leave with a heavy heart.” By Saturday evening, dozens of
appreciation dinner.” And April Dolkar, who moved to Santa Fe last year on the advice of Sakya Trizin, is working with the Santa Fe Community Convention Center to put on the all-day event. This will be Sakya Trizin’s first trip to Santa Fe and one of his few stops in the West during a long, worldwide teaching tour that continues on to Canada and Europe. His trip here comes 23 years after the Dalai Lama
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com
himself, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, visited Santa Fe for a week that included a famous ride on a ski lift. Both trips were organized after personal invitations from Buddhists living in Santa Fe. Dolkar said Sakya Trizin will see many familiar faces in the audience because his followers are coming from all over to see him. Gyaltsen, for example, has known Sakya Trizin for many years, dating back to when he lived in the Sakya monastery in Rajpur, India. Sakya Trizin is the leader of one of the four sects of Tibetan Buddhism.
The tradition is named for a monastery founded in 1073 in southwestern Tibet. He is a descendant of the Khon clan and is considered the incarnation of wisdom, in much the same way that the Dalai Lama is considered the incarnation of compassion. Sakya Trizin is traveling here with his wife, Gyalyum Kushok-la, and six attendants who will help prepare ritual items and displays during the sessions. Sakya Trizin chose his talks specifically for Santa Fe, said Dolkar, who is starting a Sakya center here. The
John Jaramillo
Security Investigations and Albuquerque police and state police on Thursday seized computer equipment from the apartment Jaramillo shares with his fiancée and found more than 255 images and videos of child pornography, according
to the affidavit. When federal agents questioned Jaramillo on Thursday, allegedly he told them that he had sole access to the computer where the pornography was found. “Jaramillo stated he is a Registered Nurse and works with children on a daily basis through his positions at Footprints Home Care and home visits through Children’s Psychiatric Residential Center, Bernalillo Academy,” the affidavit says. New Mexico Board of Nursing records show Jaramillo has been a licensed registered nurse in the state since October 2012. Federal agents reported that child pornography activity on his computer was detected beginning June 23, 2013.
IF YOU GO Who: Sakya Trizin, the leader of one of the four sects of Tibetan Buddhism What: First visit and teachings in Santa Fe Sakya Trizin When: May 6; 9:30 a.m., “Buddha Dharma in Daily Life”; 2 p.m., “The Three Bodhisattvas”; 7 p.m., dinner Where: Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy St. Tickets: tsechennamdrolling.word press.com; The Ark, Bell & Dorje Tibetan Gallery, Project Tibet; and at the door
Please see VISIT, Page C-4
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014 ★
Infamous Teapot Dome for sale Oil reserve played role in ’20s scandal By Mark Jaffe The Denver Post
DENVER — Teapot Dome, the Wyoming federal oil reserve that was at the root of a 1920s political scandal, is up for sale, this time to the highest bidder to make sure the deal is legitimate. The U.S. Department of Energy has hired DenverAlbert B. Fall based Meagher Energy Advisors to sell the Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 3, known as the Teapot Dome. In 1922 and 1923, Albert B. Fall, a former U.S. senator from New Mexico who served President Warren G. Harding’s secretary of the Interior Department, leased Navy petroleum reserves at Teapot Dome, near Casper, and in California in low, nobid contracts. Fall was convicted of taking bribes from the oil companies that received the leases, and the leases were returned to the Navy in 1927. Among the oilmen involved in the scandal were Denver businessmen Albert Edmund Humphreys and Henry “Harry” Blackmer. The tycoons paid Fall and also newspaper publishers — including Frederick G. Bonfils of The Denver Post — to keep quiet. When Humphreys was ordered to testify before a congressional committee investigating the scandal, he committed suicide at his Grant-Humphreys Mansion in Denver. The 9,500-acre oil field, which produced 28 million barrels, still has 300 million barrels of oil in place, said Meagher Energy President Matt Meagher. “Of course, not all that is recoverable,” he said. “It is a good candidate for enhanced oil recovery.” Operators probably would pump carbon dioxide gas into the field to boost production. Teapot Dome, about 30 miles north of Casper, has been home to the Rocky Mountain Oilfield Testing Center, which works with academic and industry researchers on new technologies. The Teapot Dome sale process will begin this summer. The highest bidder will be selected in a competitive, sealed-bid process in the fall. Bidders probably will have to send a single, best-offer bid. “Everyone will get one shot at the apple,” Meagher said. “We are pleased to have Meagher advising the DOE in the sale,” Cheryl A. Thompson, business manager for the department in Casper, said in a statement. “Meagher’s technical knowledge and oil and gas transactional experience will be critical in a successful disposition.” In 2012, Meagher successfully leased the former Lowry Bombing Range, a 21,000-acre parcel on the edge of Denver, for the Colorado State Land Board. ConocoPhillips purchased the lease for a $137 million bonus payment and an 88-well commitment estimated to generate $500 million in royalties for Colorado K-12 public schools. “The success at Lowry is probably one of the reasons we got Teapot,” Meagher said.
LOCAL & REGION
Funeral services and memorials 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. TENNYSON, LILLIAN K. 1919 - 2014 Age 95, passed away peacefully at her home in Rio Rancho, NM on Monday, April 21, 2014. She was preceded in death by her husband, Leslie W. Tennyson, Sr.; son, Leslie W. Tennyson, Jr.; daughter, Cecilia T. Hanrahan. Lillian is survived by her son, Kenneth Tennyson and spouse Bernadette; daughter, Carol T. Martinez and spouse Edward; son-in-law, Bill Hanrahan; daughter-in-law, Betty Tennyson; grandchildren, Larry Waterman and spouse Alicia, Chandra Almaraz, Jason Waterman and spouse Pamela, Paul Tennyson and spouse Carla, Kimberly Garcia and spouse Manuel, Sarah Tennyson and spouse Heather, Miguel Martinez, Leslie Lujan, Shyla Chavez and spouse Angel, John Tennyson and spouse Danielle; 22 great-grandchildren; sisters-in-law, Virginia Jaramillo, and Marge Tennyson; numerous nieces and nephews. Pallbearers will be Larry Waterman, Jason Waterman, Paul Tennyson, Miguel Martinez, John Tennyson and John Koury. Honorary pallbearers will be Jerry Koury, Jim Koury, Michael Varela, Jimmy Varela, and Manuel Garcia. A visitation will be held at 5:00 p.m., with the recitation of the Rosary at 6:00 p.m., Monday, April 28, 2014 at Daniels Family Funeral Services, Sara Chapel, 4310 Sara Road SE, Rio Rancho, NM. The Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, April 29, 2014 at Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, 131 Cathedral Place, Santa Fe, NM. Interment will follow at 1:30 p.m. at Santa Fe National Cemetery, 501 North Guadalupe Street, Santa Fe, NM. To view information or leave a condolence please visit www.danielsfuneral.com . Daniels Family Funeral Services 4310 Sara Road SE Rio Rancho, NM 87124 505-892-9920 WELLBORN, LOUISE MCKINNON Louise passed away after a brief illness on Sunday, April 20, 2014. At the time of her death, she resided in Santa Fe. Louise had many wonderful friends who will miss her dearly. Louise is survived by her stepsons and their families, who loved and admired her greatly, Fred Wellborn Jr., Chuck Wellborn, Bill Wellborn, Jim Wellborn and Tom Wellborn; and her nieces and nephews and their families, Nancy Alzate, Michael Burnett, Barbara McKinnon, Ian McKinnon, Linley Allen and Alexis Keijer. She was preceded in death by her husband, Fred W. Wellborn; her parents, Dr. Daniel Angus McKinnon, Jr. and Mary Love McKinnon; and her siblings, Joan McKinnon Allen, Molly Love McKinnon, Daniel Angus McKinnon III and Paula McKinnon. According to Louise’s wishes, cremation will take place. Donations in her memory to support UNM Women’s Athletics may be made to the UNM Foundation, 2 Woodward Ct NE, Albuquerque NM 87102. A memorial gathering will be held at a time and place to be announced in May. Please visit our online guestbook for Louise at www.FrenchFunerals.com. FRENCH - University 1111 University Blvd NE 505-843-6333
IN LOVING MEMORY OF EGLE GERMANAS Egle Germanas, age 71, passed away with great gentleness on Friday evening, April 11, 2014 at her home in Tesuque, New Mexico surrounded by family and friends. Egle was born in Kaunas, Lithuania on March 3, 1943 and emigrated to America in 1947. She grew up in the metropolitan Chicago area and completed her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in English at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. It was there that she met her husband of 49 years, Kestutis Germanas. Shortly after her wedding, Egle and Kestutis asked her mom, Vida, “If she could live anywhere in the United States, where would it be?” Vida’s reply was, “New Mexico” as she recalled a vacation with a particularly enchanting drive at sunset overlooking Albuquerque. In the fall of 1968 Egle and Kestutis moved to Santa Fe where they built their home and life together. Egle taught American literature to 11th graders at Santa Fe High School for 25 years. In addition to teaching students The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby, and insisting that they keep a personal journal, she taught them about life, compassion and being good stewards of the earth. Egle was an avid reader and collector of good vocabulary words as well as rocks, which friends and students would bring her from around the world or their front yards. She loved all living things, but held a soft spot for spiders and snakes and especially her many dogs, with whom she loved to take long hikes. Egle dedicated her life to teaching but also to a lifelong pursuit of knowledge, meaning and a higher spiritual purpose. She is survived by her loving husband Kestutis Germanas, her daughter Nida Sanger and husband Christopher, two granddaughters Zada Belle and Liliana Grace, her mother Vida Tumasonis, her uncle Jonas Vazbys and wife Rasa, her brother Rimas Tumasonis and wife Betsy, her sister Rita Schiefelbein and husband Mark, and nieces and nephews Erik, Courtney, Kristina and Matthew Schiefelbein. Egle will be deeply missed by her family, her extended family and her beloved community of friends. A commemoration of her life will be held on Friday, May 2, 2014 at 3:00 p.m. at the Randall Davey Audubon Center & Sanctuary, 1800 Upper Canyon Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Parking is limited, there will be a shuttle available from the Watershed Park across from Cristo Rey Church. The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations in her name be made to St. Elizabeth Shelter in Santa Fe (steshelter.org), or LA’s BEST After School Enrichment Program in Los Angeles (lasbest.org). MARTINEZ, GLORIA 85 died peacefully at the RR Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center in Rio Rancho, NM on Wednesday, April 23, 2014. Gloria was born on April 9, 1929 in Santa Fe, NM to Lucinda and Eliseo Quintana. Gloria lived in Santa Fe for much of her life, graduating from Santa Fe High School. She was a homemaker raising her six children. When she moved to Albuquerque she worked for Albuquerque Public Schools in the book depository. She will be remembered for her love of family, sense of humor, laugh, great joke telling and generous spirit. Gloria is preceded in death by her parents Eliseo and Lucinda Quintana, brothers Tony Quintana, Freddy Quintana, Michael Quintana and sister Mary (Midge) Lawless. Those left behind to cherish her memories are her husband Thomas E. Martinez; children Yvonne Martinez, Lynette Martinez, Rene Gately, Thomas Martinez, Dion Martinez, and Gerard Martinez. Grandchildren Tara Fauteck, Garrett Fauteck (Lindsey), Erin Gonzales (Matthew), John Gately (Amanda), Ryan Gately, Nicholaus Martinez, Jonathan Martinez, Crystal Martinez, and Eliseo Martinez and 10 great grandchildren. She also is survived by her sister Evelina Baca and brother Gilbert Quintana (Darlene), along with nieces and nephews cousins, and other family members. Pallbearers are her grandsons: Garrett Fauteck, John Gately, Ryan Gately, Eliseo Martinez, Jonathan Martinez, and Noah Fauteck. Rosary will be held on Thursday, May 1st at 6 p.m at the Santa Maria De La Paz Catholic Church located at 11 College Dr, Santa Fe, NM. Mass will be celebrated Friday, May 2nd at 10:00 a.m. at Santa Maria De La Paz Catholic Church. Interment will follow at The Santa Fe National Cemetery at 1:30 p.m., a reception will follow at the Elks Lodge.To view information or leave a condolence, please visit www.danielsfuneral.com Daniels Family Funeral Services 4310 Sara Road SE Rio Rancho, NM 87124 505-892-9920 HARRIETT L. SMITH Harriett L. Smith of La Puebla, age 93, was called home to be with her Lord on April 8, 2014 surrounded by her loving family. She is at peace with The Savior she loves so dearly and has been reunited with her husband Peter, who passed away October 15, 2003. Harriett is survived by sons Eric Smith of Santa Fe & Randy Smith (wife Gina) of Los Alamos; daughters Yvonne Smith of La Puebla & Laurie Smith-Garner (husband Rob) of Placitas; sister Helen Trotter of Salem, OR & brother Harland Gaskill of Dallas, TX. Harriett is also survived by 13 grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren. Harriett was preceded in death by her parents Cecil and Lewis Gaskill; granddaughter Elizabeth McKenna; brothers Millard, Clifford and Lewis Gaskill & Cousin Harold Gaskill. Harriett graduated from Wichita High School East in Kansas. She received her degree in Business Administration from North Texas Agricultural College. Harriett was active with the USO during the War. Harriett married Peter Smith on October 13, 1951. She worked with the Girl Scouts in Kansas, Texas, and Albuquerque for over 30 years. Girl Scouting had a profound influence on Harriett’s life, and her love of camping, hiking, archaeology, and just being in the great outdoors would remain with her for the rest of her life. Harriett spent most of her later years teaching basic nutritional principles through seminars and school programs. She counseled and assisted others in their working towards a more natural, healthier way of life. Harriett was so devoted to her family and friends that she spent very little time or money on herself and she gave generously. Her strong and enduring faith sustained her family and through God’s love, she had the amazing compassion to touch so many lives. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, May 3, 2014 at 2:00 PM at New Beginnings Fellowship located at 112 East Road, Los Alamos, NM. A covered dish reception will be held immediately following at New Beginnings Fellowship. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Crisis Center of Northern NM, 577 El Llano Rd, Espanola, NM 87532 in memory of Harriett.
LUPE RODRIGUEZ DECEMBER 12, 1933 MAY 14, 2009
Mom, Five years have past since you’ve been gone and we still miss you each and every day. You were a loving mother and we know that you are our guardian angel watching over and protecting us. We love you with all of our hearts. A Five Year Anniversary Mass will be held at San Isidro Church at 5 p.m. on May 3, 2014. With love, Gilbert Jr., Dolores, Frances, Patsy, and Grandchildren ROMERO, ARTURO "PAPA" A. ~ AGE ~ 93~ NAMBE ~ APRIL 19, 2014
Arturo A. Romero, 93, a lifelong resident of Nambé, died Saturday, April 19, 2014. He was preceded in death by his wife Mary Romero. Mr. Romero is survived by his daughters, Sheila Vigil and Cleo Romero. All services will be held at the Sacred Heart Church in Nambe. Visitation will be Monday April 28th at 5:00 p.m. and the Rosary will follow at 7:00 p.m. His funeral will be Tuesday at 11:00 a.m.
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Take-home fertility test created for men The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — Two former Sandia National Laboratories scientists have come up with what they say is a takehome fertility test for men, the Albuquerque Journal reported Friday. Researchers Greg Sommer and Ulrich Schaff have created a portable test kit for gauging a man’s sperm quality that could be available to consumers as early as 2015. “It allows men to test and track their fertility from the comfort and privacy of their own homes,” Sommer said. “It’s a portable, easy-to-use diagnostic system with the accuracy of a clinical lab test.” The test would give results within a few minutes, the scientists said. They said technology they helped create during their time at Sandia was the basis for the device. Both participated in a project at a Sandia California lab site where they created a device that quickly detects toxins or other biological threats in emergency first responders. Sommer and Schaff licensed the technology from Sandia. In 2012, they founded their own startup, Sandstone Diagnostics Inc., to develop the fertilitytest device, which they called
TrakFertility. The home diagnostic would help men who are focused on fertility issues to regularly keep watch over their sperm quality, Sommer said. They also are developing a mobile app so men can use their phones to study the results and learn how to discuss them with their doctors. Fertility solutions are often more focused on women, Sommer said. “We want to help people conceive in a way never done before,” he said. “The market today is completely focused on females to monitor hormones, temperatures and so forth for peak fertility windows each month. But one of every five men has low-sperm counts that can impair conception.” John Chavez, president of the New Mexico Angels, looks for startups the 70-member group can jointly invest in. The group plans to invest in the company because “Sandstone is addressing a truly untapped market need. That adds a lot of value to their product,” he said. Sandstone, however, has no plans to mass-market the test kits. Sommer and Schaff said they would rather sell to consumers through a partnership with established medical companies.
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Crew finds ‘E.T.’ treasure trove Diggers unearth copies of Atari video game By Juan Carlos Llorca The Associated Press
ALAMOGORDO — A decades-old urban legend was put to rest Saturday when workers for a documentary film production company recovered E.T. Atari game cartridges from a heap of garbage buried deep in the New Mexico desert. The “Atari grave” was, until that moment, a highly debated tale among gaming enthusiasts and other self-described geeks for 30 years. The story claimed that in its death throes, the video game company sent about a dozen truckloads of cartridges of what many call the worst video game ever to be forever hidden in a concrete-covered landfill in southeastern New Mexico. The search for the cartridges of a game that contributed to the demise of Atari will be featured in an upcom-
An E.T. doll stands guard at the scene of Saturday’s dig at a landfill in Alamogordo. The crew found hundreds of Atari E.T. game cartridges. JUAN CARLOS LLORCA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ing documentary about the biggest video game company of the early ’80s. As a backhoe scattered a huge scoop of 30-year-old trash and dirt over the sand, the film crew spotted boxes and booklets carrying the Atari logo. Soon after, a game cartridge turned up, then another and another. Film director Zak Penn showed assembled gaming fans one cartridge retrieved
from the site and said that hundreds more were in the surrounding mounds of garbage. About 200 residents and game enthusiasts gathered early Saturday at the old landfill in Alamogordo to watch crews search for up to a million discarded copies of E.T. The Extraterrestrial that the game’s maker wanted to hide forever. “I feel pretty relieved and
psyched that they actually got to see something,” said Penn as members of the production team sifted through the mounds of trash, pulling out boxes, games and other Atari products. Most of the crowd left the landfill before the discovery, turned away by strong winds that kicked up massive clouds of dust mingled with garbage. By the time the games were found, only a few dozen people remained. Some were playing the infamous game in a make-shift gaming den with a TV and an 1980s game console in the back of a van, while others took selfies beside a life-size E.T. doll inside a DeLorean car like the one that was turned into a time machine in the Back To The Future movies. Among the watchers was Armando Ortega, a city official who back in 1983 got a tip from a landfill employee about the massive dump of games. “It was pitch dark here that night, but we came with our flashlights and found dozens of games,” he said.
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u The resident of a home on Soreno Drive fired a weapon at a female suspect as she tried to break in at about 2 a.m. Saturday. Police did not locate the suspect. u Someone entered an apartment in the 500 block of West Zia Road between noon and 4 p.m. Thursday and stole a video game console, video games, jewelry and money. u Thomas Aguilar, 20, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on a charge of possession of drug paraphernalia. u Derek Billie, 25, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on a charge of driving with a suspended or revoked license. u Jon Jay Cheresposy, 26, of Española was arrested Saturday on charges of criminal damage to property and four counts of resisting or obstructing arrest. He is accused of breaking the window of a residence on Montaño Street at about 1:45 a.m. Saturday. The resident of the property chased Cheresposy until police caught him as he ran through the Santa Fe River. u Kristin D. Coble, 24, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on charges of possession of a controlled substance, two counts of child abuse and possession of drug paraphernalia. u Sonia Gonzales, 30, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on a charge of shoplifting. She is accused of stealing $152.74 worth of merchandise, including a backpack and makeup from Wal-Mart, 3251 Cerrillos Road. u Rhonda Hays, 37, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on a charge of solicitation on public property. u Audrey Herrera, 30, of Las Vegas, N.M., was arrested Friday on a charge of shoplifting. She is accused of stealing $293 worth of merchandise from Kmart, 1217 St. Michael’s Drive. u Shawn Jansson, 37, of Edgewood was arrested by Edgewood police Friday on charges of possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia. u Deserae Miller, 24, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on charges of possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and shoplifting. She is accused of stealing merchandise from Kmart, 1712 St. Michael’s Drive, and possessing prescription pain pills. u Mariano J. Romero, 21, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on charges of negligent use of a deadly weapon and felon in possession of a firearm. u Rudy Vigil, 21, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on charges of battery against a household member, aggravated assault against a household member and negligent use of a weapon. The arrest stemmed from a call of shots fired during a domestic disturbance in the 900 block of Lorenzo Street at about 9:50 p.m. Thursday. Vigil was not at the scene when
police arrived but was found later at his mother’s residence and arrested. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Between April 10 and April 17, someone forced their way into a home in the Valle Tapia area of Pojoaque and stole tools and electronics. u Adan Cardeñas, 32, of Galisteo was arrested Saturday on charges of driving with a revoked license and possession of a controlled substance. Deputies stopped the silver Toyota pickup Cardeñas was driving near Camino los Abuelos and N.M. 14 in Galisteo after an Edgewood police officer saw the truck drifting out of its lane, according to a report. Cardeñas’ driver’s license requires him to use an interlock device to test whether he has been drinking alcohol before driving. The truck was not equipped with an interlock device, so he was placed under arrest. Inside the truck, deputies discovered a plastic bag containing marijuana, according to the report. u Juan L. Varela-Chaparro, 39, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on a charge of aggravated battery on a family member.
DWI arrests u Sarah Averill, 32, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday on charges of aggravated DWI, careless driving, driving on divided highways, resisting, evading or obstructing arrest, having an open container of alcohol, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of a controlled substance and driving without insurance. u Brandon W. Bernal, 21, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on charges of DWI and having an open container of alcohol. He was stopped at a DWI checkpoint at Cerrillos Road and Tesuque Drive. u Glenda G. SanchezRomero, 42, no city of residence listed, was arrested Saturday on a charge of DWI, as well as a red light violation, driving on divided highway and driving without insurance.
TRAINING FOR AN AIRLINE DISASTER Airport emergency responders trained for a full-scale airline disaster in a simulation Saturday at the Santa Fe Municipal Airport. The disaster exercise, formally called the Triennial Full Scale Airport Emergency Exercise, is required by the Federal Aviation Administration every three years. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
In brief One dead, one injured in motorcycle collision One person was killed and another was seriously injured Saturday in a crash involving a motorcycle and another vehicle near the Fashion Outlets of Santa Fe. The crash happened at about 8 p.m. near Cerrillos and Beckner roads. Investigators were still on scene at 9:30 p.m., and details about the cause of the accident and the identities of the people involved were not available, according to Santa Fe police Lt. Marvin Paulk. Earlier in the day, police were involved in a brief, unrelated car chase that ended with minor injuries to the person, when police used spikes to disable the driver’s vehicle at about 3 p.m., Paulk said. One person was arrested. The person’s identity and circumstances of the pursuit had not been released by late Saturday.
City budget hearings to air on cable, Internet The city of Santa Fe for the first time plans to televise city budget hearings, beginning Monday, on its government access cable TV channel and via live streaming on the Internet. The budget will determine the city’s spending plans for the fiscal year 201415, which runs from July 1, 2014, through June 30, 2015.
A news release said the proposed budget will be reviewed during three meetings of the city Finance Committee in the City Council Chambers at City Hall, scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, and from 1 to 5 p.m. May 5. The meetings will be broadcast live on Comcast Channel 28 or on the Internet with Video on Demand at www.santafenm.gov/sfgtv-28. The meetings also will streamed on the Internet at www.santafenm.gov/video_on_demand. The announcement said Mayor Javier Gonzales will be reading tweets, Facebook posts and emails sent to him regarding the budget throughout the hearing. Comments via Twitter may be sent to his handle @javiergonzales or posted to his Facebook page (facebook.com/javierfor mayor). Use the hashtag #santafebudget on messages submitted through social media. Messages by email may be sent to mayor@santafenm.gov with the subject “Santa Fe Budget.” “One of the most important things we do each year at the city of Santa Fe is pass a budget that reflects the values of our community,” Gonzales said. “In Santa Fe, before we pass a final budget this year, I want to hear from you directly.”
Chimayó growth plan under public review A proposed plan to guide future growth in the community of Chimayó is up for public review. “It represents about two years worth of work that the community has done in order to provide direction and a voice for
the future of Chimayó,” said Sarah Ijadi, a senior planner for in the Santa Fe County Growth Management Department. “It addresses a lot of different aspects of the community and what are the goals and strategies towards achieving those goals as the they move into the future.” For information on the planning effort and to review the Chimayó Community Review Draft, go to: http://www.santa fecountynm.gov/growth_management/ community_planning_center/Chimayó. For more information about the plan or to request a hard copy, call 986-6236. Copies are also available at the Bennie J. Chavez Community Center on Juan Medina Road, Ijadi said.
NMHU regents vote in favor of tuition hike LAS VEGAS, N.M.— Regents at New Mexico Highlands University have voted in favor of a tuition increase. The Las Vegas Optic reported this marks the second straight year that regents have accepted the administration’s recommendation and signed off on a double-digit tuition increase. With the higher tuition rates, full-time undergraduate resident students will end up paying nearly $500 more a year. That’s a 12.5 percent increase over current rates. Last year’s increase for full-time resident students was 14.2 percent. Regent Jesus Lopez says regents were concerned about having to raise tuition but the increase was unavoidable. Staff and wire reports
Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use while the city seeks a new photoenforcement contractor.
Drones unearth more details about Chaco culture
Help lines
The Associated Press
Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)
ALBUQUERQUE — Recently published research describes how archaeologists outfitted a customized drone with a heat-sensing camera to unearth what they believe are ceremonial pits and other features at the site of an ancient village in New Mexico. The discovery of the structures hidden beneath layers of sediment and sagebrush is being hailed as an important step that could help archaeologists shed light on mysteries long buried by eroding desert landscapes from the
By Susan Montoya Bryan
American Southwest to the Middle East. The results of the research were published earlier this month in the Journal of Archaeological Science. Since the 1970s, archaeologists have known that aerial images of thermal infrared wavelengths of light could be a powerful tool for spotting cultural remains on the ground. But few have had access to million-dollar satellites, and helicopters and planes have their limits. Now, technology is catching up with demand. Archaeologists can get quality images from very specific altitudes and angles at any
time of day and in a range of weather using inexpensive drones and commercially available cameras that have as much as five times the resolution of those available just a few years ago. A basic eight-rotor drone starts at about $3,700. Jesse Casana, an archaeologist at the University of Arkansas, teamed up with University of North Florida professor John Kantner last summer to test the drones in a remote area of northwestern New Mexico, south of Chaco Canyon — once the cultural and religious center of an ancient Puebloan society. Kantner has been studying
a village in the area known as Blue J. He found two households at the village’s edge through test digs, but much of Blue J’s secrets remain buried under eroded sandstone and windblown silt. Blue J was most active close to 1,000 years ago, around the same time as Chaco. So finding structures such as kivas and great houses at the site would help solidify the theory that Chaco’s influence spread far and wide. Aside from dozens of anthills, the drone picked up on much larger, unnatural circular shapes that are thought to be kivas.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Ax: College faces Visit: Talks introduce Buddhist principles declining enrollment Continued from Page C-1
dent Nancy “Rusty” Barcelo acknowledge the declining instructor Dean Moya. Auto enrollment and increase in department head Gil Sena said tuition but maintain all other the move is a “disservice to the charges are false. Barcelo said community and culture of the Saturday that critics have a Española Valley.” lack of information on how the College leaders contend the college is run, which leads to departments being cut suffer “misrepresentations.” from poor enrollment and low Other college advocates graduation rates. Based on a claim its leaders had to overreport that Vice President of spend in the past few years to Finance and Administration make up for operational defiDomingo Sanchez gave to cits from previous years before the regents Saturday, both the Barcelo took over in summer automotive technology and 2010. auto body repair classes had an Saturday’s meeting was a average enrollment of about 14 continuation of a lengthy and students per semester and only contentious meeting held two or three graduates per year Thursday, which drew about from 2011 to 2013. The construc- 100 people. At that meeting, tion trades department reported nearly 30 people spoke out even smaller numbers, with an against the program cuts. average of just one student per A few accused the board of semester taking the construcincompetence, and several tion trades technology class and cited an atmosphere of fear no graduates. and retaliation. Only three of Sena challenged the enrollthe speakers voiced support ment figures in the auto for the administration. department. The college is Public commentary was not not counting many students on the agenda Saturday, but who major in other programs board member Michael Branch but take auto as an elective, addressed some of the accusahe said — a point confirmed tions to the assembly of about by Ricky Serna, vice president 30 people. He said charges of institutional advancement. that any of the board members Sena did not contest the gradu- would want to hurt the college ation figures, but he said other or its students are “ridiculous” academic programs face the and said the budget process same enrollment challenges. has been transparent. He said he believes the college He suggested students and is not reporting those numbers staff had not been paying because it wants to focus on attention to the college’s finaneliminating trades classes. cial problems until this past Many students and employ- week’s meeting. “Where have ees have accused college you been?” he asked. leaders of mismanaging the He said negative comments budget, leading to overspendabout the college are damaging ing, declining enrollment and a to Northern. “Fear of retaliatuition hike of 13 percent or tion? Come on,” he said, draw14 percent over the past year. ing some laughter from audiSanchez’s budget report ence members. estimates a drop in student Board member Alfred Herenrollment of 5 percent for the rera said it is time the college coming year, though he told start posting its operational the board he would have been budget online. “more comfortable” estimating that number at 10 percent. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 Regents and college Presior rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
Continued from Page C-1
Tribe resolves Skywalk dispute
morning talk, “Buddha Dharma in Daily Life,” is about finding joy through skillful living. Dharma, Dolkar explained, is a Sanskrit word that means a “preventive measure,” something we do to see problems in life and face them with courage. Sometimes people attribute emotions such as “unsatisfactoriness, bad moods or relationship difficulties” to external sources such as economic situations or traumatic childhood events, but to discover the deepest source of our difficulties, “We need to look
within,” she said. Buddhism says that if we do, “we start to see that our attitudes toward life, ourselves and our situations contribute to how we feel. … When we notice the symptoms of our problems, we need to apply ‘opponents’ to overcome them,” she said. Study, reflection and meditation can help in practicing the dharma in daily life, she added. There will be a brief ceremony after the talk for those who wish to “take refuge,” or embark on the first step along the Buddhist path. In the afternoon, there will
be a ceremony introducing the Buddhist principles of wisdom, compassion and power represented by the three principal bodhisattvas used to transform one’s daily life. “The effectiveness of these methods in developing one’s awareness cannot be overestimated,” Dolkar said. Of Sakya Trizin’s visit, she said, “It is an extremely rare opportunity to receive authentic, unbroken transmission of teachers from a great master from the Sakya tradition of Tibetan Buddhism.” Dolkar, who has met Sakya
Trizin on a number of occasions, said the Tibetan Buddhist leader has been told that Santa Fe looks very much like Tibet, a region in Asia northeast of the Himalayas that is now occupied by China. Gyaltsen, who is co-chairing the event with Dolkar, said Sakya Trizin will be sitting on a throne covered in gold brocade surrounded by flowers, offerings, a painting and the monks traveling with him. Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@ sfnewmexican.com.
Manager: Deadlines approaching for market Continued from Page C-1 people had commented on Facebook about the resignation letter Rivera had posted, showing overwhelming support for her decision and sadness over her departure. Porsild could not be reached for comment. Agoyo, following her resignation, criticized the conditions at SWAIA and blamed the board in a Facebook post. She said
the board “allowed a hostile environment where staff is demeaned, insulted and bullied on a constant basis.” On Feb. 14, Agoyo signed a complaint letter against Porsild, who shared leadership of the nonprofit with Torres Nez between her arrival and his resignation. Agoyo contends she was retaliated against by the SWAIA board and demoted following the compliant. Board members of SWAIA have told The New Mexican that
an outside firm was hired to review Agoyo’s complaint but found no basis for them. The upheaval at SWAIA comes at a challenging time. May 1 is the deadline for donations to be auctioned at SWAIA’s Aug. 23 gala during the Indian Market, and some artists have withdrawn theirs, while others have stepped up efforts to find more donors. Likewise, some artists have expressed reticence to pay their booth fees for the Indian Market amid the
turmoil, while others have said a boycott would only hurt artists. May 23 is the deadline for artists to pay booth fees without a late fee, and May 30 is the deadline to secure a booth with a late fee. More than 100 people are on the waiting list for booths. Despite the unrest among its ranks, SWAIA board members insist the nearly century-old organization is stable and advancing toward its fundraising goals for the year.
Governor kicks off reading challenge Gov. Susana Martinez announced a “New Mexico True” Summer Reading Challenge program to help children maintain reading proficiency during the summer months. The program is open to New Mexico elementary schoolchildren ages 5 through 12. Student readers who complete a reading log confirming they read six books during the summer receive a “New Mexico True” bookmark and a certificate. Students who read 12 books receive the bookmark and
the certificate and have their names entered into a random drawing for prizes, including an all-expenses-paid vacation to Disney’s Animal Kingdom in Orlando, a family vacation to Red River and a hot-air balloon ride with the governor. The New Mexico True brochure and reading log will be distributed at public schools throughout the state, and is also available online at the Public Education Department’s website at ped.state.nm.us.
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FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — A threeyear contract dispute over the Grand Canyon Skywalk is over. The Hualapai Tribe, which owns the horseshoe-shaped glass bridge on the northwestern Arizona reservation, and the family of the Las Vegas, Nev., businessman who developed it have reached a financial settlement. The terms of the agreement are confidential, but it resolves all legal battles in tribal, bankruptcy and federal court. The tribe maintains management of the Skywalk that has been the signature of its tourism operation since it opened in 2007. Tribal Chairwoman Sherry Counts thanked David Jin in a statement late Thursday for his contribution to the popular attraction. Jin died last year, but his family pursued what he said were violations of his constitutional rights when the tribe used an eminent domain ordinance to write Jin out of his management role. Jin’s attorneys argued the tribe owed him as much as $277 million. The tribe argued that Jin breached the contract by failing to complete a visitors center.
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Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
NEIGHBORS
Lensic takes gala guests to Oz. Faces & Places, C-6
YOUR NEIGHBOR: MICHAEL JOHNSON
Out on the
OPEN SEA
Michael Johnson’s schooner, Gitana, is shown iced in near Greenland in the Northwest Passage. The boat is currently stuck up in Cambridge Bay on Victoria Island after being slowed by ice floes in the Gulf of St. Lawrence late last summer. He intends to continue working his way through the passage come June. PHOTOS COURTESY THE MICHAEL JOHNSON CREW
By Robert Nott The New Mexican
S
anta Fean Michael Johnson has paddled down crocodile-infested rivers in New Guinea, driven across the Sahara in a jeep, studied archaeology in the Guatemalan jungle and served as a paratrooping ski ranger for the U.S. Army. So, how does he top all those achievements? By spending seven years sailing around the world — in the days before GPS. Johnson, 70, is currently working his way through the ice-packed Northwest Passage in the Canadian Arctic. Well, that is, he intends to work his way through it come June. His 44-foot schooner, Gitana (Spanish for Gypsy), is currently stuck up in Cambridge Bay on Victoria Island after being slowed by ice floes in the Gulf of St. Lawrence late last summer. He and his two-man crew got hemmed in from all sides by ice, and had it not been for an Internet connection to a sea-savvy friend — who told Johnson, “Tack north against the wind within 20 hours or you’re going to disappear” — he may not have gotten out alive. He proudly notes that not many people have successfully sailed the Northwest Passage. The first reported successful operation was conducted by Roald Amundsen in the early 1900s. Previous to that expedition, others, including one led by Sir John Franklin, have simply disappeared up there. Johnson said hundreds have died trying to traverse it.
Johnson loves the sea and finds parallels between it and the New Mexico desert: ‘Both are severe environments that can kill you if you are not paying attention.’
Johnson loves the sea and finds parallels between it and the New Mexico desert: “Both are severe environments that can kill you if you are not paying attention.” The ocean, he said, can be deadly, but it also reminds a man how insignificant he is. “[The ocean] doesn’t care. You don’t ever conquer the
El mitote Comedian and former Daily Show correspondent John Hodgman is set to perform stand-up comedy at the Jean Cocteau Cinema in the movie theater’s latest venture into all things hip. Hodgman has made a name for himself as a character actor, appearing in a number of TV shows and movies, from Parks and Recreation to Community and Bored to Death, in addition to his stint on The Daily Show. He is perhaps most well-known as the personification of the PC in a long-running series of Macintosh TV ads. Hodgman also performed a stand-up special
ocean. You just survive it.” Yet he finds comfort in that notion and said he loves to sail because of the never-ending challenge inherent in the activity and the fact that, as a history major, he is continually learning new things
Please see SEA, Page C-6
called Ragnarok exclusively on Netflix in 2012. The Cocteau will host Hodgman on June 2. Tickets are $20 and are on sale now, so mark your calendars.
IF YOU GO What: Michael Johnson will give a presentation on his Northwest Passage experiences — and probably a lot of other travel stories. When: 5 p.m. May 17 Where: The Travel Bug, 839 Paseo de Peralta
day in Albuquerque — bring your motorcycle. uuu
You may have heard about WGN America’s new original series Manhattan about the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos. Now the show has unveiled its first teaser trailer. Building an atomic bomb is kind of a big deal, and keeping it secret is a big deal, too. It looks like the trailer focuses on the problems keeping a secret that big can cause within a family. The show stars John Benjamin Hickey and Olivia Williams, as well as Daniel Stern of Home Alone fame (“We’re the wet bandits!”). WGN has ordered 13 episodes of the show, its second original series after the witchcraft drama Salem. Manhattan will premiere in
Mel Gibson
uuu
Breaking Bad is getting operatic again, courtesy of New York’s One World Orchestra. The Breaking Bad opera first premiered in January, but it’s back by popular demand. The new version, called Heisenberg Revisited, features new vocalists and will premiere in May. uuu Mel Gibson is New Mexico-bound, and his new movie, Blood Father, is seeking biker types for extras. The open casting call is happening Satur-
Section editor: Cynthia Miller, 986-3095, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
C-5
New tech calls for fresh phone etiquette Question: My wife and I experience on a regular basis the habit of people not listening to voice messages. We get calls back from friends who saw that we called and never accessed the message. Maybe I am too touchy, but perhaps you would find a spot in your column to address this. — H.M., Santa Fe Answer: As a sentimental sap with 35 saved voice mails from my late grandmother and late father, I’ll back you up on this one, but I can assure you we are in the minority. “Please don’t leave voicemails for anyone under 40,” writes one reader. I know … it stings. Voice mail is old school. I polled readers, and it was unanimous: Callers are looking Bizia Greene for efficiency, and caller ID Etiquette Rules! and text messaging are the way to communicate in this technological age. If you are inclined to make voice-to-voice contact and reach a “message taker,” as my grandmother referred to it, you may as well hang up. Chances are your message will land in the black hole of the deleted unspoken word. The important thing is to think of the individual’s preference. Some aunties and uncles love the sound of your voice from afar, with the tone that caller ID doesn’t convey. And if you have voice mail from these lovelies, etiquette dictates listening first before calling back. For those of us who prefer talking over texts, keep messages brief and concise for your busy, tech-savvy friends. Save the details for actual live contact or an email. Smartphone users can use a service that translates voice messages into texts or emails. While I do enjoy the efficiency technology offers, the emotions that the human voice, recorded or live, can stir are unmatched by CAPS or smiley faces. Question: Frequently in restaurants, the server picks up my water glass or coffee cup to refill it. Sometimes they pick it up by the rim. Is this the correct way of refilling a beverage? It seems more sanitary to simply pour the water into the glass from the pitcher without picking up your glass. — G.S., Santa Fe Answer: If I had a nickel for every time a server or bartender handled my glass by the rim, I’d have a personal chef. Having said that, I can’t be certain I’ve caught a bug because of it. I know that the glassware, along with silverware and even my food, has been handled multiple times before it reaches my table, but I’m not witnessing that, so it’s “out of sight, out of mind.” While servers should be washing hands frequently, they absolutely should not hold a glass by the rim where mouths touch. And when they do, it is simply bad form and reflects the restaurant’s training (not to mention a few oversights with the Department of Health guidelines). When handling glassware of any type, always handle it by the stem or base, whether the glasses are clean or dirty. Guests don’t know how clean hands may or may not be. Servers should not get into the habit of grabbing glassware by the rims or sticking fingers into several glasses at once to bus a table. It is unsanitary and disturbing to guests who witness it. But what can you do when your server hands you your pint of local micro brew with fingers right where you’re about to take a sip? u Drink up and take vitamins when you get home. u Ask for an extra glass and pour your drink into it. u Wipe the rim with your napkin or ask for a cup of hot water and use that. u Politely tell the server there are finger prints on the rim of the glass and ask for a new one. I do that when I see lipstick residue. Gross! They should keep makeup wipes behind the bar. u Tell management in person or via email. Cheers!
Bizia Greene is an etiquette consultant and owner of the Etiquette School of Santa Fe. Send your comments and conundrums to 988-2070 or hello@etiquettesantafe.com.
July. Check out the trailer here: http://sfnm. co/1fbsC3T. uuu Viggo Mortensen may be on his way back to New Mexico. The Lord of the Rings star is set to star in the upcoming film Captain Fantastic. Not to be confused with the stretchy comic book hero Mr. Fantastic, the film follows Mortensen’s character as he tries to reconnect with his family and assimiViggo late back into society after livMortensen ing in the forests of the Pacific Northwest for years.
Send your celebrity sightings to elmitote@ sfnewmexican.com.
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
C-6
NEIGHBORS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
IF YOU GO What: “Writing from the Edge of Time” — a selection of readings from residents of El Castillo When: 7 p.m. Thursday at El Castillo, 250 E. Alameda St.; 2 p.m. June 8 at Collected Works, 202 Galisteo St.
Sea: Sailor survives crocs, headhunters
LENSIC’S EVENING IN OZ
Continued from Page C-5
El Castillo writing group to share life stories ABOVE: From left, Jim Carney as the Flying Monkey, Kathleen Fontaine as the Lion, Lisa Barker, Nancy Zeckendorf and Susan Mele, as the Tin Man, attend the 2014 gala fundraiser for the Lensic Performing Arts Center. The event, titled Dinner Onstage at The Lensic in the Land of Oz, was held April 12.
The New Mexican
Tanya Taylor Rubinstein has been working with all different types of people who want to record their life stories — from families of the mentally ill to cancer survivors and AIDS patients. But seldom has she worked with a group like the one at the El Castillo retirement center, she said, adding that the retirees, while taking her writing lessons, have returned wisdom. Resiliency, overcoming adversity and engaging with life as one ages are all values that flow from the work of the El Castillo group. “The members of the group have taught me much more about living than I could ever teach them about writing,” Rubinstein said. “What I’ve learned is that people who stay creative can stay connected to youthfulness at whatever stage of life they are in.” The writers group, which has compiled a book, is planning two readings, one set for Thursday at El Castillo and another for June 8 at the Collected Works Bookstore. The reading’s title says it all, according to Rubinstein: “Writing From the Edge of Time.” The events feature the work of eight El Castillo residents, ranging in age from 79 to 94, who probably have more stories to tell than time in which to tell them, Rubinstein said. “We have been meeting weekly for over five years,” she said. “The publication is really a culmination of some significant work and a testament to what can develop with sustained creative support in community.” Rubinstein hopes the group and the public events can help inspire similar groups among other retirees. Members of the El Castillo group are: Holger Homann: Born on Germany in 1937, Holger came to the United States and became a faculty member at Johns Hopkins, where he taught German language and literature. Following years of academia, he went on to work in the circulation department of The Baltimore Sun. Patricia Jahoda: A lifelong resident of New Mexico and a graduate of Los Alamos High School, she went on to a career in public health nursing and as a volunteer advocate for persons with mental illness. Robert Miles: Born in Roanoake, Va., in 1920, Miles received degrees in English, philosophy and library science. He is a published musician, having written pieces of music and musical-theater productions that have been performed in regional theaters. Sibyl Saam: Also born in Germany, she emigrated to the United States at age 9 and worked in fine arts, and was a greeting card designer for Hallmark. She finished her longtime novel, Be My Enemy, while working in the El Castillo group. Robb Thomson: He grew up in El Paso and graduated from the University of Chicago and Syracuse University, where he received a doctorate in physics. He had a career in research and teaching before settling down to write poetry at El Castillo. Elizabeth Upton: The selfdescribed Army brat has a lifelong love for drawing and painting. She completed graduate studies in Spanish literature and developed educational workshops and teaching courses in Latin American art and culture. Karen Wells: The registered nurse who had a career in public and policy planning, including with the New Mexico Legislature and the state Aging and LongTerm Services Department. Robert Wilson: Wilson had a career in management consulting and was a volunteer in Santa Fe for SCORE — the Service Corps of Retired Executives.
RIGHT: Lensic high school interns Raina Wellman, Mateo Messer, Eva Allison and Gabe Kessler, dressed up as characters from The Wizard of Oz, were on hand to greet guests at the gala. COURTESY PHOTOS
Faces & Places Grant Longacre, son of Regina and Ian Longacre of Nambé, is the recipient of the Santa Fe County Farm and Livestock Bureau 20132014 Bud Hagerman Memorial Scholarship. The scholarship is awarded Grant to a son or Longacre daughter of a member of the Santa Fe County Farm and Livestock Bureau and is judged on character, desire and goals, according to a news release. Grant, a senior at Pojoaque High School, plans to pursue his education at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., majoring in finance. Grant has a 4.14 GPA. He is the senior class president and is a member of the National Honor Society. Grant also is involved in the Link Crew Leadership Program, Mock Trail Team, Skills USA, soccer, and track and field at Pojoaque High.
uuu
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently recognized Gov. J. Michael Chavarria of the Pueblo of Santa Clara for his leadership on environmental issues. Chavarria received the Jan Stevens Award for outstanding contributions to environmental protection by a tribal staff member. As the pueblo forestry director, he coordinated response efforts during the Las Conchas wildfire and flooding of 2011. He has also led restoration projects in the Santa Clara Creek watershed. To imple-
ment these projects, he coordinated a team with other pueblo departments and federal agencies such as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Bureau of Indian Affairs. During his time as tribal governor, he has been integral in working with other tribes within EPA Region 6 to address environmental concerns. He has worked with several EPA regional administrators, educating them on tribal history and issues. The Jan Stevens Award is given in memory of Jan Stevens, environmental coordinator for the Sac and Fox Nation of Oklahoma and a selfless advocate for tribes and the environment. uuu
The Board of Directors of the Santa Fe Railyard Stewards has named Linda J. Shafer as its executive director. The Santa Fe Railyard Stewards, in a partnership with the city, provides community stewardship and advocacy for the 10-acre Railyard Park and Plaza. The group also manages community gardening programs and offers environmental education programs. Shafer has worked in community leadership positions with local organizations, including the Georgia O’Keefe Museum, New Mexico’s Own, Spanish Market-Museum of Spanish Colonial Art and the Southwestern Association of Indian Arts. She holds a B.S. in psychology from the University of Pittsburg and is a U.S. Department of Agriculture Master Gardner. Shafer will manage all aspects of the organization’s administration and programs.
Eanger Irving Couse | 1866-1936 NA, TSA | Indian in Moonlight Oil on panel | 20 by 24 inches | Sold at auction for $90,000
NOW ACCEPTING CONSIGNMENTS FOR AUCTION AUGUST 16TH, 2014 SANTA FE
FOR COMPLIMENTARY ART EVALUATION
SUBMIT ARTWORK WITH INFORMATION TO: INFO@ALTERMANN.COM
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505-983-1590
Travel Bug Ken Collins Fri May 2 Walking the European Countryside Duch Routt Sat May 3 Guyana 839 Paseo de Peralta
5 pm
992-0418
N M
about foreign places. Plus, it’s nice that there are usually not a lot of people around when he’s out there at sea. He was born in Virginia and raised in Florida. He recalls his first visit to Santa Fe when he was a teenager in the late 1950s, trading with Native American vendors on the Santa Fe Plaza. The city, he said, is the sort of place that draws you back, and he returned to live here about eight years ago. Johnson joined the Army at 16. “It was a great adventure,” he said of learning how to parachute and ski with a rifle slung over his shoulder. “I didn’t realize they were training us to invade the Soviet Union.” He attended Madison University in Virginia under the GI Bill to study psychology. Then he entered the field and discovered it wasn’t for him. “I got tired of listening to everybody’s problems,” he said. From there on, he moved from one adventure to another, perhaps driven by childhood memories of fishing with his father, who was a rugged World War II Army Ranger veteran who displayed little compassion and once told Johnson, “Quit when it becomes easy, not when it becomes hard.” He sailed small crafts while attending college and over time taught himself everything he needed to captain his own
ship. He worked shipjack — oyster dredging — boats in Chesapeake Bay, sailed a ship owned by a former Navy commander through the south seas — “I did all the celestial navigating” — and eventually met a man from Maine who charged people to work on his schooner. Johnson now does the same thing, taking small two- and three-person crews on working holidays that basically fund his own travel plans. He survived crocodiles and a group of headhunters in the New Guinea jungle, avoiding the former and bluffing the latter into believing he was a man of great medicine as he doled out aspirin to them to heal their aching stomachs. He once ran his schooner into a sperm whale — “Lots of damage, blood everywhere” — while sailing between Tahiti and New Zealand. Santa Fean Connie Schaekel has paid to sail with Johnson twice in the Mediterranean. She said she did this to learn “how a person achieves these far-fetched goals. What in his personality keeps him going?” After he returns to his schooner to finish sailing the Northwest Passage this June, Johnson isn’t sure what the next challenge will be. Asked if he sees himself eventually perishing on the high seas, he said, “I don’t want to die on the ocean. I don’t want to die, period!”
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Scoreboard D-2 Prep roundup D-3 Baseball D-5 Weather D-6
SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS
D
New plan: Phelps taking a different approach to training this time around. Page D-4
PREP TRACK AND FIELD RICHARD HARPER MEMORIAL INVITATIONAL
Santa Fe High’s Tiffany Garcia, right, and Akeisha Ayanniyi, center, finish in first and second place respectively in the 100 meters at the Richard Harper Memorial Invitational on Saturday at Albuquerque Academy. The pair helped the Demonettes take third place at the meet with 49 points.
Santa Fe High girls take third Demonettes finish with best score among AAAA teams By James Barron The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — Shantal Roybal didn’t use to hang out until the end of track meets. Now, she can’t wait for the ending. In the four years Roybal has been a member of the Santa Fe High track and field team, she has watched herself
JAMES BARRON THE NEW MEXICAN
become more involved in the results of her teammates. It’s no longer a chore to watch Noel Prandoni run the 1,600 meters or Madeline Weibe compete in the 300 hurdles. “Before, I used to just do my race and just leave,” Roybal said. “Now, we hang out and cheer Noel in the [1,600]. We’ll support Maddy in the hurdles. It’s just different now. There’s a bond.” That’s because the Demonettes are competing for something more than just individual honors. They are bringing home trophies and raising hopes that they might
INSIDE u For a list of winners in Saturday’s meet, see PAGE D-3.
be contenders for a Class AAAA state title. Those hopes were buoyed on Saturday afternoon when Santa Fe High brought home the third-place trophy at the Richard Harper Memorial Invitational meet at Albuquerque Academy. That made it the highest score among
Please see THIRD, Page D-3
PREP BASEBALL LOS ALAMOS 11, ESPAÑOLA VALLEY 1
NBA
Dallas squeaks by Spurs
Hilltoppers clinch No. 6 Los Alamos stomps Sundevils to earn sixth straight District 2AAAA title
By Schuyler Dixon The Associated Press
DALLAS — Vince Carter knew right away the exact date of the last time he had a buzzer-beating try in a playoff game — 13 years ago. It’s seared in the memory of the 16-year veteran because he missed that one. He was on target Saturday. Carter hit a Mavs 109 double-pump 3-pointer at the Spurs 108 buzzer to give the Dallas Mavericks a 109-108 victory in Game 3 and a first-round series lead over the top-seeded San Antonio Spurs. With 1.7 seconds left, Carter took an inbound pass from Jose Calderon in the left corner. After a quick pump fake got Manu Ginobili in the air — moments after the Argentine guard had given the Spurs the lead — Carter released the ball just in time. He strutted stone-faced toward Dirk Nowitzki, who was waving his arms wildly as he jumped on Carter. Mavericks owner Mark Cuban joined
Please see DALLAS, Page D-4
INSIDE u NBA Playoffs roundup. PAGE D-4
Owner of Clippers investigated for racism By Antonio Gonzalez The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Anger, frustration and calls for action echoed around the NBA on Saturday after an audio recording surfaced of a man identified as Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling, who has a decades-long history of discrimination, telling his girlfriend not to bring black people to games. The league said it was investigating the recording posted on TMZ’s website. Lakers Hall of Famer Magic Johnson, a target of Sterling’s remarks, said he wouldn’t attend Clippers’ games as long as Sterling was the owner. Clippers President Andy Roeser said in a statement that the team did not know if the tape is legitimate or has been altered. He said the woman on the tape, identified by TMZ as V. Stiviano, “is the defendant in a lawsuit brought by the Sterling family alleging that she embezzled more than $1.8 million, who told Mr. Sterling that she would ‘get even.’” In the recording, the man questions his girlfriend’s association with minorities. TMZ reported Stiviano, who is of black and Mexican descent, posted a picture of herself with Johnson on Instagram — which has since been removed. The man asked Stiviano not to broadcast her association with black people or bring black people to games. The man specifically mentioned Johnson on the recording, saying “don’t bring him to my games, OK?”
Los Alamos’ Connor Mang, right, tags out Española Valley’s James Martinez at second base Saturday at Bomber Field in Los Alamos. The Hilltoppers clinched their sixth straight district title with an 11-1 win in the first game of the doubleheader. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
LOS ALAMOS ast year, it was one for the thumb. This year, the Los Alamos baseball team is going to need two hands to count its consecutive district championships. The Hilltoppers clinched their sixth straight District 2AAAA title with an 11-1 win over Española Valley in the opening game of a home doubleheader on Saturday in six innings with the 10-run mercy rule. For good measure, the Hilltoppers didn’t allow the Sundevils to get a hit in the sec-
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“
It shows that all the hard work we put in during the season and the offseason really pays off.” Los Alamos head coach Mike Gill ond game en route to a 9-0 victory. A lot of hard work goes into getting that many district championships, but Los Alamos head coach Mike Gill says Lady Luck has to be on the roster too. “We’ve had some things fall our way over the years. You have to get lucky, too,” Gill said. “We’ve also had a lot of kids that have bought in to what
we’re trying to do.” Getting kids to buy in also meant trying to get them to offseason workouts. Last summer, Gill made his volunteers spend a lot of time off the field, but the fruit of that labor is starting to show several months later. “All the hard work we put in during the season and the offseason really pays off,” Gill said. “We really
dedicated the offseason this summer to getting in the weight room, and I think it’s starting to show right now. It sets us up to do what our ultimate goal is.” But all that time in the weight room isn’t intended for players to hit the ball out of the park. The majority of the 15 Los Alamos hits in the second game were grounders that made it to the outfield. Five of those hits came in the second inning, and they led to a 5-0 Los Alamos lead. Five more hits in the sixth inning led to four more runs and solidified the 9-0 Hilltoppers lead. Despite all of
Please see CLINCH, Page D-3
NHL
Avalanche edge Wild in OT By Pat Graham The Associated Press
DENVER — Nathan MacKinnon scored 3:27 into overtime after P.A. Parenteau tied the game late in regulation, Avalanche 4 helping the Colorado Avalanche rally for a 4-3 win Wild 3 over the Minnesota Wild on Saturday night and a 3-2 lead in the firstround series. MacKinnon poked the puck past Darcy Kuemper’s glove with two defenders all over him. The rookie also had two assists. Parenteau scored with 1:14 left after Avalanche coach Patrick Roy pulled goaltender
Semyon Varlamov with 2:22 remaining. The strategy worked out yet again. The series switches back to Minnesota for Game 6 on Monday. Nick Holden and Cody McLeod also added goals for the Avalanche. Kyle Brodziak, Zach Parise and Matt Moulson scored for the Wild. Two of Minnesota’s goals came after a Colorado defenseman shattered their stick and had to play without one. When his team trails, Roy has been rather liberal in pulling Varlamov all season long, preferring to send out an extra skater with plenty
Please see AVALANCHE, Page D-4
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
Minnesota Wild defenseman Nate Prosser, left, and Colorado Avalanche right wing P.A. Parenteau fight for the puck in the first period of Saturday’s game in Denver. CHRIS SCHNEIDER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
INSIDE
u NHL Playoffs roundup. PAGE D-4
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
D-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
HOCKEY
BASKETBALL BASKETBALL
HOCKEY
NHL PLAYOFFS First Round Best of 7; x-if necessary
EASTERN CONFERENCE Boston 4, Detroit 1 Saturday’s Game Boston 4, Detroit 2 Previous Results Friday, April 18 Detroit 1, Boston 0 Sunday, April 20 Boston 4, Detroit 1 Tuesday, April 22 Boston 3, Detroit 0 Thursday, April 24 Boston 3, Detroit 2, OT
Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 0 Wednesday, April 16 Montreal 5, Tampa Bay 4, OT Friday, April 18 Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 1 Sunday, April 20 Montreal 3, Tampa Bay 2 Tuesday, April 22 Montreal 4, Tampa Bay 3
Pittsburgh 3, Columbus 2 Saturday’s Game Pittsburgh 3, Columbus 1 Monday, April 28 Pittsburgh at Columbus, TBA x-Wednesday, April 30 Columbus at Pittsburgh, TBA Previous Results Wednesday, April 16 Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 3 Saturday, April 19 Columbus 4, Pittsburgh 3, 2OT Monday, April 21 Pittsburgh 4, Columbus 3 Wednesday, April 23 Columbus 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT
N.Y. Rangers 2, Philadelphia 2 Sunday’s Game Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 10 a.m. Tuesday, April 29 N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia, TBA x-Wednesday, April 30 Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, TBA Previous Results Thursday, April 17 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1 Sunday, April 20 Philadelphia 4, N.Y. Rangers 2 Tuesday, April 22 N.Y. Rangers 4, Philadelphia 1 Friday, April 25 Philadelphia 2, N.Y. Rangers 1
WESTERN CONFERENCE Colorado 3, Minnesota 2 Saturday’s Game Colorado 4, Minnesota 3, OT Monday, April 28 Colorado at Minnesota, TBA x-Wednesday, April 30 Minnesota at Colorado, TBA Previous Results Thursday, April 17 Colorado 5, Minnesota 4, OT Saturday, April 19 Colorado 4, Minnesota 2 Monday, April 21 Minnesota 1, Colorado 0, OT Thursday, April 24 Minnesota 2, Colorado 1
Chicago 3, St. Louis 2 Sunday’s Game St. Louis at Chicago, 1 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 29 Chicago at St. Louis, TBA Previous Results Thursday, April 17 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3, 3OT Saturday, April 19 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3, OT Monday, April 21 Chicago 2, St. Louis 0 Wednesday, April 23 Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, OT Friday, April 25 Chicago 3, St. Louis 2, OT
Anaheim 3, Dallas 2 Sunday’s Game Anaheim at Dallas, 6 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 29 Dallas at Anaheim, TBA Previous Results Wednesday, April 16 Anaheim 4, Dallas 3 Friday, April 18 Anaheim 3, Dallas 2 Monday, April 21 Dallas 3, Anaheim 0 Wednesday, April 23 Dallas 4, Anaheim 2 Friday, April 25 Anaheim 6, Dallas 2
San Jose 3, Los Angeles 2 Saturday’s Game Los Angeles 3, San Jose 0 Monday, April 28 San Jose at Los Angeles, TBA x-Wednesday, April 30 Los Angeles at San Jose, TBA Previous Results Thursday, April 17 San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3 Sunday, April 20 San Jose 7, Los Angeles 2 Tuesday, April 22 San Jose 4, Los Angeles 3, OT Thursday, April 24 Los Angeles 6, San Jose 3
NHL SUMMARIES Bruins 4, Red Wings 2 Detroit 0 1 1—2 Boston 1 1 2—4 First Period—1, Boston, Eriksson 1 (Hamilton, Rask), 3:27 (pp). Penalties—Abdelkader, Det (hooking), 2:34; Thornton, Bos (high-sticking), 4:26; Krejci, Bos (tripping), 17:12. Second Period—2, Detroit, Datsyuk 3 (Franzen, Zetterberg), 14:41 (pp). 3, Boston, Chara 2 (Bergeron, Krug), 19:56 (pp). Penalties—Lucic, Bos (high-sticking), 14:29; DeKeyser, Det (holding), 16:48; Eriksson, Bos (goaltender interference), 18:40; Franzen, Det (holding), 19:23; B.Smith, Det (cross-checking), 19:45. Third Period—4, Boston, Lucic 3 (Krug), 4:27. 5, Detroit, Zetterberg 1 (Abdelkader, Datsyuk), 16:08. 6, Boston, Iginla 2 (Lucic, Krejci), 19:44 (en). Penalties—Marchand, Bos (roughing), 1:11; Alfredsson, Det (tripping), 6:59; Bergeron, Bos (hooking), 8:27; Marchand, Bos (roughing), 12:42; Detroit bench, served by Tatar (too many men), 16:56. Shots on Goal—Detroit 8-12-13—33. Boston 11-13-9—33. Power-play opportunities—Detroit 1 of 7; Boston 2 of 6. Goalies—Detroit, Gustavsson 0-2-0 (32 shots-29 saves). Boston, Rask 4-1-0 (33-31). A—17,565 (17,565). T—2:33.
Penguins 3, Blue Jackets 1 Columbus 1 0 0—1 Pittsburgh 0 1 2—3 First Period—1, Columbus, Jenner 3 (Savard, Johansen), 12:55 (pp). Penalties—Jenner, Clm (high-sticking), 5:44; Kunitz, Pit (goaltender interference), 5:53; Goc, Pit (slashing), 11:00. Second Period—2, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 2 (Crosby, Niskanen), 7:42 (pp). Penalties—Wisniewski, Clm (crosschecking), 6:55; Wisniewski, Clm (high-sticking), 14:51.
Third Period—3, Pittsburgh, Jokinen 3 (Sutter, Stempniak), 6:16. 4, Pittsburgh, Letang 1 (Adams, Kunitz), 18:59 (en). Penalties—Comeau, Clm (interference), 15:05; Calvert, Clm (cross-checking, roughing), 20:00; Letang, Pit (roughing), 20:00. Shots on Goal—Columbus 9-8-7—24. Pittsburgh 15-21-15—51. Power-play opportunities—Columbus 1 of 2; Pittsburgh 1 of 4. Goalies—Columbus, Bobrovsky 2-3-0 (50 shots-48 saves). Pittsburgh, Fleury 3-2-0 (24-23). A—18,618 (18,387). T—2:29.
Avalanche 4, Wild 3, OT Minnesota 0 1 2 0—3 Colorado 0 2 1 1—4 First Period—None. Penalties—Holden, Col (boarding), 4:03; Granlund, Min (goaltender interference), 12:50. Second Period—1, Colorado, McLeod 1 (O’Reilly), 8:04 (sh). 2, Minnesota, Moulson 1 (Spurgeon, Heatley), 9:17. 3, Colorado, Holden 1 (Benoit, MacKinnon), 12:16. Penalties—Stoner, Min (cross-checking), 4:37; Colorado bench, served by McGinn (too many men), 6:47; Koivu, Min (roughing), 11:44; Landeskog, Col (roughing), 11:44; Coyle, Min (roughing), 17:31. Third Period—4, Minnesota, Parise 1 (Pominville, Granlund), 4:34. 5, Minnesota, Brodziak 2 (Heatley, Coyle), 6:25. 6, Colorado, Parenteau 1 (Stastny, MacKinnon), 18:46. Penalties—Landeskog, Col (unsportsmanlike conduct), 15:27. First Overtime—7, Colorado, MacKinnon 2 (Landeskog, Wilson), 3:27. Penalties—None. Shots on Goal—Minnesota 11-9-102—32. Colorado 8-12-12-3—35. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 0 of 3; Colorado 0 of 3. Goalies—Minnesota, Kuemper 2-1-0 (35 shots-31 saves). Colorado, Varlamov 3-2-0 (32-29). A—18,418 (18,007). T—2:49.
Kings 3, Sharks 0 Los Angeles 2 1 0—3 San Jose 0 0 0—0 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Toffoli 2 (Pearson, Martinez), 8:09. 2, Los Angeles, Kopitar 1 (D.Brown), 12:52. Penalties—Stoll, LA (roughing), 14:09; Braun, SJ (tripping), 19:28. Second Period—3, Los Angeles, Carter 2 (Gaborik, Doughty), :22 (pp). Penalties—King, LA (roughing), 4:03; Demers, SJ (roughing), 4:03; Boyle, SJ (tripping), 7:12; Clifford, LA (tripping), 13:24; Carter, LA (roughing), 19:23. Third Period—None. Penalties— Burns, SJ (tripping), :16; Kopitar, LA (goaltender interference), 1:08; Marleau, SJ (slashing), 7:05; Demers, SJ (tripping), 10:19; Williams, LA (interference), 14:22. Shots on Goal—Los Angeles 18-1310—41. San Jose 6-10-14—30. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 1 of 4; San Jose 0 of 5. Goalies—Los Angeles, Quick 2-3-0 (30 shots-30 saves). San Jose, Niemi 3-2-0 (19-16), Stalock (0:22 second, 22-22). A—17,562 (17,562). T—2:23.
Calendar May 25-31 — NHL combine, Toronto. June 18 — Last possible day for Stanley Cup finals. June 25 — NHL awards, Las Vegas. June 27-28 — NHL draft, Philadelphia. July 1 — Free agency begins. July 5 — Deadline for player-elected salary arbitration notification. July 6 — Deadline for club-elected salary arbitration notification. July 20-Aug. 6 — Salary arbitration hearings held. Aug. 8 — Deadline for salary arbitration decisions.
SOCCER SOCCER NORTH AMERICA Major League Soccer East W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 3 1 3 12 10 7 Kansas City 3 2 2 11 9 6 D.C. United 3 2 2 11 10 8 New England 3 3 2 11 7 9 New York 2 2 5 11 13 12 Toronto 3 3 0 9 6 7 Philadelphia 1 3 5 8 9 11 Houston 2 4 1 7 7 12 Montreal 1 4 3 6 7 14 Chicago 0 1 6 6 10 11 West W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 5 2 1 16 18 12 Dallas 5 2 1 16 18 14 Salt Lake 3 0 4 13 11 6 Colorado 3 2 2 11 9 9 Vancouver 2 2 3 9 10 8 Los Angeles 2 1 2 8 7 4 Chivas USA 1 3 3 6 8 13 Portland 0 3 4 4 8 12 San Jose 0 2 3 3 5 7 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. Wednesday’s Games New York 4, Houston 0 Saturday’s Games Montreal 1, Philadelphia 0 Seattle 4, Colorado 1 D.C. United 4, Dallas 1 Columbus 1, New York 1, tie New England 2, Kansas City 0 Vancouver at Salt Lake Chivas USA at San Jose Sunday’s Game Portland at Houston, 1 p.m.
THIS DATE ONON THIS DATE April 27 1956 — Rocky Marciano retires as the undefeated heavyweight boxing champion. He finished with a 49-0 record, including six title defenses and 43 knockouts. 1960 — The Minneapolis Lakers announce that they will relocate to Los Angeles. 1968 — Jimmy Ellis won the world heavyweight boxing title with a 15-round decision over Jerry Quarry in Oakland, Calif. This is the final bout of an eight-man elimination tournament to fill Muhammad Ali’s vacated title. 1994 — Scott Erickson, who allowed the most hits in the majors the previous season, pitched Minnesota’s first no-hitter in 27 years as the Twins beat Milwaukee 6-0. 1994 — Dave Hannan scores 5:43 into the fourth overtime to keep the Buffalo Sabres going in the NHL playoffs with a 1-0 victory over the New Jersey Devils, the sixth-longest game in NHL history. 2001 — Jamal Mashburn of Charlotte sets an NBA playoff record by making all 25 of his free throws during the three-game sweep of Miami. Mashburn is 10-for-10 in Charlotte’s 94-79 victory. 2002 — Derek Lowe pitches a nohitter against Tampa Bay. Brent Abernathy is the only baserunner Lowe allows in Boston’s 10-0 victory.
NBA PLAYOFFS First Round (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlanta 2, Indiana 2 Saturday’s Game Indiana 91, Atlanta 88 Monday, April 28 Atlanta at Indiana, 6 p.m. Thursday, May 1 Indiana at Atlanta, TBA x-Saturday, May 3 Atlanta at Indiana, TBA Previous Results Saturday, April 19 Atlanta 101, Indiana 93 Tuesday, April 22 Indiana 101, Atlanta 85 Thursday, April 24 Atlanta 98, Indiana 85
Miami 3, Charlotte 0 Saturday’s Game Miami 98, Charlotte 85 Monday, April 28 Miami at Charlotte, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, April 30 Charlotte at Miami, 5 or 6:30 p.m. x-Friday, May 2 Miami at Charlotte, TBA x-Sunday, May 4 Charlotte at Miami, TBA Previous Results Sunday, April 20 Miami 99, Charlotte 88 Wednesday, April 23 Miami 101, Charlotte 97
Brooklyn 2, Toronto 1 Sunday’s Game Toronto at Brooklyn, 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 30 Brooklyn at Toronto, 4, 5 or 6 p.m. x-Friday, May 2 Toronto at Brooklyn, TBA x-Sunday, May 4 Brooklyn at Toronto, TBA Previous Results Saturday, April 19 Brooklyn 94, Toronto 87 Tuesday, April 22 Toronto 100, Brooklyn 95 Friday, April 25 Brooklyn 102, Toronto 98
Washington 2, Chicago 1 Sunday’s Game Chicago at Washington, 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 29 Washington at Chicago, 6 p.m. x-Thursday, May 1 Chicago at Washington, TBA x-Saturday, May 3 Washington at Chicago, TBA Previous Results Sunday, April 20 Washington 102, Chicago 93 Tuesday, April 22 Washington 101, Chicago 99, OT Friday, April 25 Chicago 100, Washington 97
WESTERN CONFERENCE Dallas 2, San Antonio 1 Saturday’s Game Dallas 109, San Antonio 108 Monday, April 28 San Antonio at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 30 Dallas at San Antonio, 7, 6:30 or 7:30 p.m. x-Friday, May 2 San Antonio at Dallas, TBA x-Sunday, May 4 Dallas at San Antonio, TBA Previous Results Sunday, April 20 San Antonio 90, Dallas 85 Wednesday, April 23 Dallas 113, San Antonio 92
Memphis 2, Oklahoma City 2 Saturday’s Game Oklahoma City 92, Memphis 89, OT Tuesday, April 29 Memphis at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Thursday, May 1 Oklahoma City at Memphis, TBA x-Saturday, May 3 Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA Previous Results Saturday, April 19 Oklahoma City 100, Memphis 86 Monday, April 21 Memphis 111, Oklahoma City 105, OT Thursday, April 24 Memphis 98, Oklahoma City 95, OT
L.A. Clippers 2, Golden State 1 Sunday’s Game L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 29 Golden State at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 1 L.A. Clippers at Golden State, TBA x-Saturday, May 3 Golden State at L.A. Clippers, TBA Previous Reults Saturday, April 19 Golden State 109, L.A. Clippers 105 Monday, April 21 L.A. Clippers 138, Golden State 98 Thursday, April 24 L.A. Clippers 98, Golden State 96
Portland 2, Houston 1 Sunday’s Game Houston at Portland, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 30 Portland at Houston, 7:30 p.m. x-Friday, May 2 Houston at Portland, TBA x-Sunday, May 4 Portland at Houston, TBA Previous Results Sunday, April 20 Portland 122, Houston 120, OT Wednesday, April 23 Portland 112, Houston 105 Friday, April 25 Houston 121, Portland 116, OT
NBA BOXSCORES Pacers 91, Hawks 88 INDIANA (91) George 10-18 0-2 24, West 7-13 3-6 18, Hibbert 3-5 0-0 6, G.Hill 5-8 3-4 15, Stephenson 2-9 0-0 5, Turner 4-8 2-2 11, Mahinmi 1-1 0-0 2, Scola 2-7 0-0 4, Watson 3-8 0-0 6. Totals 37-77 8-14 91. ATLANTA (88) Carroll 1-6 0-0 3, Millsap 10-18 6-6 29, Antic 1-6 0-0 2, Teague 5-15 2-2 14, Korver 4-9 4-4 15, Brand 0-1 0-0 0, Williams 2-7 2-2 6, Mack 3-6 0-0 7, Martin 0-1 0-0 0, Scott 4-15 3-3 12. Totals 30-84 17-17 88. Indiana 29 13 24 25—91 Atlanta 22 26 17 23—88 3-Point Goals—Indiana 9-23 (George 4-7, G.Hill 2-4, West 1-1, Turner 1-2, Stephenson 1-7, Watson 0-2), Atlanta 11-31 (Millsap 3-6, Korver 3-8, Teague 2-5, Carroll 1-2, Mack 1-2, Scott 1-4, Williams 0-1, Antic 0-3). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Indiana 49 (George 10), Atlanta 51 (Korver 9). Assists— Indiana 22 (G.Hill, George 5), Atlanta 22 (Teague 7). Total Fouls—Indiana 19, Atlanta 18. Technicals—G.Hill, Stephenson, Scott. A—19,043 (18,729).
Mavericks 109, Spurs 108 SAN ANTONIO (108) Leonard 7-8 1-3 17, Duncan 8-14 6-6 22, Splitter 6-8 2-2 14, Parker 9-18 0-0 19, Green 1-5 0-0 3, Ginobili 4-14 4-4 12, Diaw 3-5 0-0 7, Belinelli 3-3 0-0 7, Mills 2-5 1-2 5, Bonner 1-1 0-0 2, Joseph 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 44-81 14-17 108.
DALLAS (109) Marion 3-11 1-2 9, Nowitzki 7-13 4-6 18, Dalembert 4-8 5-5 13, Calderon 7-10 0-0 16, Ellis 12-22 2-2 29, Carter 3-8 4-4 11, Blair 1-1 0-0 2, Harris 1-5 0-0 3, Wright 2-2 0-0 4, Crowder 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 42-82 16-19 109. San Antonio 34 20 20 34—108 Dallas 27 32 18 32—109 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 6-18 (Leonard 2-2, Belinelli 1-1, Parker 1-2, Diaw 1-2, Green 1-4, Mills 0-3, Ginobili 0-4), Dallas 9-23 (Ellis 3-7, Calderon 2-3, Marion 2-6, Carter 1-3, Harris 1-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— San Antonio 39 (Splitter 13), Dallas 44 (Dalembert 10). Assists—San Antonio 26 (Parker 6), Dallas 25 (Calderon 9). Total Fouls—San Antonio 20, Dallas 19. A—20,636 (19,200).
Heat 98, Bobcats 85 MIAMI (98) James 10-18 9-10 30, Haslem 2-5 0-0 4, Bosh 3-7 0-0 8, Chalmers 3-7 1-2 8, Wade 7-16 3-4 17, Lewis 0-1 0-0 0, Andersen 4-7 4-4 12, Allen 3-6 0-0 8, Cole 3-7 0-0 8, Jones 1-6 0-0 3, Douglas 0-3 0-0 0, Battier 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-83 17-20 98. CHARLOTTE (85) Kidd-Gilchrist 1-6 1-4 3, McRoberts 3-9 5-6 13, Jefferson 8-13 4-5 20, Walker 4-7 4-5 13, Henderson 2-6 2-4 6, Zeller 0-3 0-0 0, Neal 2-8 4-4 9, Ridnour 1-5 0-0 3, Douglas-Roberts 6-8 3-3 17, Tolliver 0-0 0-0 0, Biyombo 0-0 1-2 1, Pargo 0-0 0-0 0, White 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 27-65 24-33 85. Miami 23 35 28 12—98 Charlotte 27 19 19 20—85 3-Point Goals—Miami 9-18 (Bosh 2-2, Cole 2-3, Allen 2-4, James 1-2, Chalmers 1-2, Jones 1-5), Charlotte 7-18 (Douglas-Roberts 2-4, McRoberts 2-4, Walker 1-2, Neal 1-3, Ridnour 1-3, Henderson 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Miami 48 (James 10), Charlotte 49 (McRoberts 9). Assists— Miami 26 (James, Wade 6), Charlotte 21 (Ridnour 6). Total Fouls—Miami 25, Charlotte 18. A—19,633 (19,077).
Thunder 92, Grizzlies 89, OT OKLAHOMA CITY (92) Durant 5-21 4-6 15, Ibaka 6-11 0-0 12, Perkins 1-4 2-2 4, Westbrook 6-24 2-2 15, Sefolosha 1-4 0-0 3, Collison 1-1 0-0 3, Jackson 11-16 8-8 32, Adams 0-0 0-0 0, Butler 2-6 0-0 6, Fisher 0-3 2-2 2. Totals 33-90 18-20 92. MEMPHIS (89) Prince 1-2 0-0 2, Randolph 5-14 1-5 11, Gasol 10-21 3-4 23, Conley 5-16 4-5 14, Lee 3-10 1-2 9, Allen 6-14 2-3 14, Davis 1-2 0-0 2, Udrih 2-6 0-0 6, Miller 2-7 2-4 8, Koufos 0-1 0-0 0, Johnson 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-94 13-23 89. Oklahoma City15 27 22 16 12—92 Memphis 18 17 17 28 9—89 3-Point Goals—Oklahoma City 8-28 (Jackson 2-4, Butler 2-4, Collison 1-1, Sefolosha 1-3, Westbrook 1-6, Durant 1-7, Ibaka 0-1, Fisher 0-2), Memphis 6-20 (Udrih 2-3, Lee 2-5, Miller 2-6, Conley 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Oklahoma City 66 (Ibaka 14), Memphis 62 (Allen 13). Assists— Oklahoma City 14 (Westbrook 7), Memphis 19 (Conley 10). Total Fouls—Oklahoma City 22, Memphis 19. A—18,119 (18,119).
TENNIS TENNIS ATP WORLD TOUR Barcelona Open Banc Sabadell Saturday At Real Club de Tenis Barcelona Barcelona, Spain Purse: $2.94 million (WT500) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Kei Nishikori (4), Japan, def. Ernests Gulbis (9), Latvia, 6-2, 6-4. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, def. Nicolas Almagro (6), Spain, 7-5, 6-3. Doubles Semifinals Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic (5), Serbia, def. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (3), Brazil, 6-4, 6-4. Jesse Huta Galung, Netherlands, and Stephane Robert, France, def. Fabio Fognini, Italy, and Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 6-2, 6-0.
BRD Nastase Tiriac Trophy Saturday At Progresul BNR Arenas Bucharest, Romania Purse: $670,500 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Grigor Dimitrov (1), Bulgaria, def. Gael Monfils (3), France, 5-1, retired. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Doubles Semifinals Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski (3), Poland, def. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, and Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, 3-6, 6-3, 11-9. Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, and Horia Tecau (1), Romania, def. Jamie Murray, Britain, and John Peers (4), Australia, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 10-8.
WTA TOUR Tour Porsche Grand Prix Saturday At Porsche-Arena Stuttgart, Germany Purse: $710,000 (Premier) Surface: Clay-Indoor Singles Semifinals Maria Sharapova (6), Russia, def. Sara Errani (8), Italy, 6-1, 6-2. Ana Ivanovic (9), Serbia, def. Jelena Jankovic (5), Serbia, 6-3, 7-5. Doubles Semifinals Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Sania Mirza (2), India, def. Antonia Lottner and Anna Zaja, Germany, 6-2, 2-6, 10-4.
Tour Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem Saturday At Le Royal Tennis Club de Marrakech Marrakech, Morocco Purse: $250,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Romina Oprandi, Switzerland, def. Daniela Hantuchova (1), Slovakia, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor, Spain, def. Garbine Muguruza (5), Spain, 6-0, 6-3.
GOLF GOLF PGA TOUR Zurich Classic Saturday At TPC Louisiana Avondale, La. Purse: $6.8 million Yardage: 7,425; Par: 72 Third Round Seung-Yul Noh Keegan Bradley Robert Streb Jeff Overton Ben Martin Andrew Svoboda Paul Casey Charley Hoffman Tommy Gainey Tim Wilkinson Danny Lee Bud Cauley Retief Goosen J.B. Holmes Peter Hanson Brooks Koepka Daniel Summerhays Kevin Kisner Erik Compton Joe Durant Freddie Jacobson Robert Allenby Justin Rose Mark Anderson Fabian Gomez David Duval Will Wilcox Kevin Chappell Bronson La’Cassie David Toms Alex Prugh Morgan Hoffmann Graham DeLaet Cameron Tringale Martin Flores John Senden Troy Matteson Stuart Appleby Vijay Singh Kyle Stanley Brendan Steele Briny Baird Troy Merritt Mark Calcavecchia D.A. Points Rory Sabbatini Charlie Wi Bo Van Pelt Robert Garrigus Sean O’Hair Sang-Moon Bae Andres Romero Charles Howell III David Hearn Lucas Glover Y.E. Yang Ricky Barnes Kevin Tway Boo Weekley Wes Roach Andrew Loupe J.J. Henry Michael Thompson Tag Ridings John Rollins John Merrick Shawn Stefani Doug LaBelle II Chad Collins Derek Ernst Jim Renner Padraig Harrington Greg Chalmers Max Homa
65-68-65—198 69-66-65—200 67-66-68—201 67-68-67—202 62-67-73—202 64-68-70—202 71-68-64—203 68-67-68—203 71-66-67—204 70-70-65—205 71-69-65—205 71-68-66—205 72-65-68—205 71-65-69—205 65-69-71—205 71-68-67—206 72-66-68—206 69-68-69—206 66-68-72—206 69-71-67—207 72-69-66—207 71-68-68—207 71-67-69—207 72-65-70—207 72-69-66—207 68-69-70—207 68-68-71—207 72-67-69—208 70-69-69—208 73-68-67—208 70-68-70—208 70-68-70—208 69-68-71—208 73-69-66—208 72-68-69—209 70-70-69—209 72-68-69—209 67-72-70—209 70-71-68—209 71-67-71—209 73-67-70—210 71-69-70—210 71-69-70—210 71-70-69—210 73-68-69—210 69-72-69—210 70-71-69—210 74-63-73—210 73-69-68—210 71-69-71—211 68-72-71—211 70-71-70—211 68-73-70—211 71-71-69—211 71-71-69—211 72-70-69—211 70-72-69—211 70-72-69—211 71-70-71—212 74-67-71—212 71-70-71—212 68-69-75—212 66-71-75—212 71-70-72—213 74-66-73—213 69-72-72—213 69-72-72—213 68-73-72—213 66-71-76—213 71-71-71—213 75-67-71—213 70-72-71—213 71-71-71—213 71-71-71—213
LPGA TOUR LPGA Swinging Skirts Classic Saturday At Lake Merced Golf Club Daly City, Calif. Purse: $1.8 million Yardage: 6,507; Par: 72 Third Round a-amateur Stacy Lewis 69-69-68—206 Lydia Ko 68-71-68—207 Jenny Shin 68-74-68—210 Hee Young Park 70-73-68—211 Shanshan Feng 74-70-68—212 P.K. Kongkraphan 74-68-70—212 Karine Icher 66-73-73—212 Line Vedel 72-71-70—213 Haeji Kang 72-70-72—214 Hyo Joo Kim 69-73-72—214 Brittany Lang 71-71-72—214 Inbee Park 73-68-73—214 Pornanong Phatlum 72-72-71—215 Michelle Wie 72-72-71—215 I.K. Kim 72-71-72—215 Carlota Ciganda 70-72-73—215 Ashleigh Simon 73-70-73—216 Catriona Matthew 73-69-74—216 Sun Young Yoo 72-76-69—217 Mo Martin 69-74-74—217 Ilhee Lee 68-73-76—217 Cristie Kerr 73-75-70—218 Wei Ling Hsu 70-77-71—218 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 73-72-73—218 Azahara Munoz 76-69-73—218 Eun-Hee Ji 73-71-74—218 Anna Nordqvist 72-72-74—218 Christel Boeljon 69-74-75—218 Mika Miyazato 72-69-77—218 Danielle Kang 73-75-71—219 Haru Nomura 75-73-71—219 So Yeon Ryu 76-72-71—219 Karrie Webb 74-73-72—219 Alison Walshe 74-69-76—219 Paola Moreno 71-71-77—219 Sandra Gal 73-76-71—220 Sandra Changkija 73-74-73—220 Katherine Kirk 74-73-73—220 Ariya Jutanugarn 73-73-74—220 Caroline Masson 74-75-72—221 Paula Creamer 76-72-73—221 Mina Harigae 75-73-73—221 Caroline Hedwall 76-72-73—221 Meena Lee 75-73-73—221 Huei-Ju Shih 70-75-76—221 Dewi Claire Schreefel 68-76-77—221 Suzann Pettersen 70-72-79—221
WEB.COM TOUR WNB Golf Classic Saturday At Midland Country Club Course Midland, Texas Purse: $600,000 Yardage: 7,380; Par: 72 Third Round Andrew Putnam 66-66-64—196 Richard S. Johnson 68-69-66—203 Rod Pampling 66-69-68—203 Mathew Goggin 69-68-67—204 Tom Gillis 69-64-71—204 Jin Park 74-67-64—205 Sam Saunders 70-68-67—205 Harold Varner III 68-69-68—205 Matt Fast 73-68-65—206 Jeff Klauk 69-70-67—206 Derek Fathauer 71-67-68—206 Trevor Murphy 66-71-69—206 Oscar Fraustro 68-69-69—206 Carlos Ortiz 67-68-71—206 Brett Wetterich 72-70-65—207 Andy Pope 73-67-67—207 Roberto Diaz 71-68-68—207 Camilo Benedetti 74-69-65—208 Ryan Blaum 68-72-68—208 Ryuji Imada 70-70-68—208 Scott Pinckney 71-68-69—208 Blayne Barber 74-68-67—209 Andres Gonzales 71-71-67—209 Fernando Mechereffe 68-74-67—209 Henrik Norlander 70-71-68—209 Scott Parel 72-69-68—209 Kyle Reifers 73-68-68—209 Albin Choi 68-70-71—209 Hunter Haas 68-70-71—209 Josh Broadaway 70-67-72—209
AUTO RACING AUTO RACING NASCAR SPRINT CUP Toyota Owners 400 Saturday At Richmond International Raceway Richmond, Va. Lap length: .75 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (17) Joey Logano, Ford, 400 laps, 126.8 rating, 47 points. 2. (25) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 400, 134.8, 44. 3. (19) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 400, 96.2, 41. 4. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 400, 128.5, 41. 5. (12) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 400, 102.7, 40. 6. (14) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 400, 88, 38. 7. (13) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 400, 112.1, 38. 8. (18) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 400, 99.1, 36. 9. (16) Carl Edwards, Ford, 400, 90.2, 35. 10. (22) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 400, 85.6, 34. 11. (5) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 400, 108.7, 34. 12. (6) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 400, 86.5, 32. 13. (7) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 400, 94.4, 31. 14. (4) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 400, 101.3, 30. 15. (26) Greg Biffle, Ford, 400, 81.5, 29. 16. (1) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 400, 66.1, 28. 17. (15) Aric Almirola, Ford, 400, 75.2, 27. 18. (11) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 400, 71.6, 26. 19. (34) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 400, 70.2, 25. 20. (33) David Gilliland, Ford, 400, 60.7, 24. 21. (31) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 400, 68.2, 23. 22. (28) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 400, 78.6, 22. 23. (21) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 400, 68.4, 21. 24. (9) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 400, 63.5, 20. 25. (20) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 399, 59.7, 19. 26. (43) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 398, 47.9, 0. 27. (27) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 398, 54.9, 17. 28. (24) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 398, 51.6, 16. 29. (30) David Reutimann, Ford, 397, 50.1, 15. 30. (37) David Ragan, Ford, 396, 44, 14. 31. (8) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 396, 42.9, 13. 32. (10) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 396, 84.2, 12. 33. (23) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 396, 48.1, 11. 34. (35) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 395, 36.5, 10. 35. (38) David Stremme, Chevrolet, 395, 37.5, 9. 36. (32) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 394, 33.4, 9. 37. (41) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 391, 28.2, 0. 38. (29) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 390, 40.7, 6. 39. (39) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 390, 27.3, 5. 40. (42) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, engine, 380, 30.3, 0. 41. (40) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 367, 28.2, 3. 42. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, electrical, 225, 35, 2. 43. (3) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, suspension, 159, 67, 1. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 93.369 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 12 minutes, 47 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.946 seconds. Caution Flags: 9 for 66 laps. Lead Changes: 20 among 8 drivers. Lap Leaders: B.Keselowski 1-31; K.Harvick 32-42; T.Kvapil 43; K.Harvick 44-55; B.Keselowski 56101; L.Cassill 102; J.Gordon 103-165; B.Keselowski 166; J.Gordon 167-172; B.Keselowski 173-208; J.Gordon 209227; J.Logano 228; J.Gordon 229-242; J.Logano 243-251; J.Gordon 252-298; D.Earnhardt Jr. 299-305; J.Logano 306-337; J.Gordon 338-361; M.Kenseth 362-396; J.Logano 397-400. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Gordon, 6 times for 173 laps; B.Keselowski, 4 times for 114 laps; J.Logano, 4 times for 46 laps; M.Kenseth, 1 time for 35 laps; K.Harvick, 2 times for 23 laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 1 time for 7 laps; L.Cassill, 1 time for 1 lap; T.Kvapil, 1 time for 1 lap. Wins: K.Harvick, 2; J.Logano, 2; Ku.Busch, 1; Ky.Busch, 1; D.Earnhardt Jr., 1; C.Edwards, 1; Bra.Keselowski, 1.
TRANSACTIONS TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed 3B Conor Gillaspie on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 22. Activated RHP Hector Noesi. NEW YORK YANKEES — Signed RHP Chris Leroux and selected him from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Optioned RHP Shane Greene to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Released LHP Nik Turley.
National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Released 1B Ernesto Mejia. CHICAGO CUBS — Placed RHP Jose Veras on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Brian Schlitter from Iowa (PCL). CINCINNATI REDS — Placed C Devin Mesoraco on the 15-day DL. Recalled C Tucker Barnhart from Louisville (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed RHP Jason Grilli on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 21, and C Russell Martin on the 15-day DL. Recalled C Tony Sanchez and RHP Jared Hughes from Indianapolis (IL).
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Suspended Washington F-C Nene one game for head-butting and grabbing Chicago G-F Jimmy Butler around the neck with both hands and attempting to throw him down during an April 25 game.
FOOTBALL National Football League DALLAS COWBOYS — Re-signed DE Anthony Spencer to a one-year contract.
SPORTS
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
D-3
PREP ROUNDUP
McCurdy tops Questa for district lead two hits and scored a run. “The guys just calmed down It wasn’t the start the and they battled,” DeVargas McCurdy baseball team wanted. said. “They settled down and The Bobcats, though, will took care of business. We got take the finish. the hits when we needed to, and After falling behind 3-0 in we weren’t nerve-wracked.” a District 1A game at home SOFTBALL against Questa, the Bobcats scored seven unanswered runs LOS ALAMOS 16, ESPAÑOLA to win 7-3 and take the district VALLEY 3 (5 INNINGS) lead. It looked like it was going LOS ALAMOS 11, ESPAÑOLA to be a long day after the Wild- VALLEY 1 (6 INNINGS) cats scored twice to open the The Lady Hilltoppers crept game. within a game of Santa Fe High “I said, ‘Oh my God, guys. for second place in District You need to relax,’” said 2AAAA with a doubleheader McCurdy head coach Robert sweep of the Lady Sundevils. With one game remaining in DeVargas. the regular season, Los Alamos The margin became 3-0 (13-12, 7-4) needs a win and a after the top of the second, but Demonettes loss to nail down McCurdy (7-13 overall, 1-0 1A) second. struck back with its bats. The Lady Hilltoppers made Consecutive RBI doubles sure the final game has some by Dennis Padilla and Derrick drama to it by hammering Valdez got the rally going, and Española in both of Saturday’s Valdez scored on an RBI single games. for a 3-all score. In winning the opener, they Jordan Sanchez continued the blew open a close game with a five-run fourth inning in which comeback in the third, as his they sent 11 batters to the plate. two-run double broke the tie and the Bobcats added another They had a triple and two doubles in the frame. run for insurance. Krista Salazar went 4-for-4 in Alejandro Croff kept the the game with five runs batted Questa (11-5, 0-1) silent the rest in and two runs scored. She also of the way, as he allowed two hit her third home run of the hits and struck out 10. season. Padilla was 2-for-2 with two Alyssa Mojica was 3-for-3 runs scored, while Valdez had with a double while Kianna Zerr
The New Mexican
had two hits, walked twice, scored four runs and drove in three. Jordan Hammock tossed a complete game for the win, giving up six hits while fanning five. Zerr was the winner in the second game, striking out nine batters in six innings. The only run she allowed came in the fourth inning. The game ended in the bottom of the sixth when Zerr had a two-run triple that opened a 10-run lead and initiated the mercy rule. Makaela Jones had three hits and scored twice in the nightcap. Los Alamos closes its regular season Wednesday against Capital while Santa Fe High faces district champion Bernalillo. The Lady Hilltoppers own the tiebreaker after having won two of three games from the Demonettes this season. ST. MICHAEL’S 5, S.F. INDIAN 4 ST. MICHAEL’S 5, S.F. INDIAN 4 (8 INNINGS) A pair of identical final scores helped the Lady Horsemen (1011, 3-3) re-enter the fray in the District 5AAA race. Allie Berhost was the starting — and winning — pitcher in both games for St. Michael’s, which won the opener after scoring three runs in the fourth inning and two more in the fifth. Berhost, A.J. Lovato and Latysha Archuleta each went
2-3 with a triple. Lovato’s threebagger came in the fourth, driving home a pair of runs. She also had a hit in the following frame. More than that, she was outstanding behind the plate. She turned a pair of double plays when she made lunging catches of short pop flies in the infield, then throwing a runner out at second. The second time came in the nightcap when, with international rules in place that start each extra inning with a runner at second, she dove for a bunted pop near the pitcher’s circle, then gunned the throw to second for the double play. “You don’t see catchers get a lot of chances like that, but she made four great plays for us today,” said St. Michael’s head coach Rosanne Noedel. Berhost had five strikeouts in the first game, then worked all eight innings of the second game to outduel counterpart Chassity Sam of SFIS. Brianna Vigil was 2-for-3 with a huge two-out, two-run single in the fifth inning. With the game in extra innings, Miranda Lovato (A.J.’s younger sister) drove home the game-winner when she rolled a groudner to second base and Lady Horsemen pinch runner Hayley Benavidez standing on third. Benavidez comfortably beat the throw, giving St. Michael’s the walk-off win.
Third: Injury kept Woodman from 2 relays Continued from Page D-1 all AAAA teams at the meet, which included District 2AAAA foes Capital and Los Alamos. In fact, Santa Fe High more than doubled its team total over the Lady Hilltoppers (24 points, good for seventh place). With two weekends left in the regular season — both of which will be spent in enemy territory at Sullivan Field for the Los Alamos Classic on May 3 and the 2AAAA meet the following weekend — the Demonettes are making their mark. Perhaps the one person unsurprised by Santa Fe High’s ascension is Los Alamos head coach Paul Anderson. He saw it coming last spring, especially at the district meet that May, even though Los Alamos won by a 204-123 margin. The Demonettes could match Los Alamos with sprinters, but the Lady Hilltoppers’ depth — especially in the distance and field events — made the tally much larger. “Our depth was the difference,” Anderson said. “I thought at their home meet [last week], they could very easily beat us. [Santa Fe High did by a 125-100 margin]. At the district meet, they won all four relays. Now, their talent is
definitely over the top.” That won’t change much this year, as Santa Fe High’s quality will match wits with Los Alamos’ quantity once again. The Demonettes are strongest in the sprints, paced by Roybal, Akeisha Ayanniyi, Samantha Woodman, Ryann Tanuz and maybe the best sprinter in the state, Tiffany Garcia. The senior continued to dominate, helping Santa Fe High to wins in the 100, 200 and 400 relay, while the 800 relay took second behind Albuquerque Eldorado, which won the meet on the girls side. Garcia was .08 away from setting the meet’s 100 record, as she won in a time of 12.29 seconds. A day after setting the Harper’s 400 relay mark (47.60), the Demonettes won with a time of 49.79 The 400 and 800 relays were without Woodman, who tweaked her injured left hamstring after the 100 preliminaries Friday. Still, both Saturday times would be No. 1 in AAAA with Tanuz in Woodman’s place. Not even injury could affect the chemistry of the relay teams. “Me and Tiff are seniors, so we bond that way,” Roybal said. “Samantha and I have known
each other forever, so we have that bond. Me and Akeisha didn’t know each other and just saw each other as teammates, but now we have that bond. Next year, it’s going to be hard watching them.” What might be hard to watch over the next two weeks will be the throng of green-and-gold uniforms the Demonettes will face. While Santa Fe High has Prandoni in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200 (She is top in the longer two distances), Los Alamos counters with: u Kathryn Stockton, Haley Butler-Moore and Julia O’Brien in the 800; u Sophia Galvez and Amanda Mercer in the 1,600; u Galvez, Mercer, Nicola Vasquez and Mikayla Pulliam in the 3,200; u Chelsea Challacombe in the 110 hurdles, high jump and long jump; and u Elizabeth Lockhart in the triple jump. Santa Fe High head coach Peter Graham likens his team’s strategy at the 2AAAA meet to a chess match. “We may not load up on things like we have before,” Graham said. “A lot depends on how we’re feeling and what we need
to work on. We’ll see how people are feeling. They definitely have depth. They can score in every event, and we can maybe match them in a couple.” The strategy changes, though, when it comes to the following week at the state championships. Schools like defending AAAA champion Aztec, Piedra Vista, Belen and Los Lunas play a factor with their wide variety of talent, and that changes the game plan for Los Alamos and Santa Fe High. But for all the strategy teams might employ to maximize their points potential, luck might be the biggest factor of them all. “It’s always the bad breaks, because things go wrong,” Anderson said. “That’s why you can’t just go off the seeds. By this point in the season, I don’t think anyone is going to have a breakout performance. You might get a couple of extra points here and there, but it’s the bad breaks that will affect. The dropping of a baton, you no-height, any of those things.” That’s the beauty and drama of track and field meets. With the way Santa Fe High has performed lately, that keeps Roybal and the Demonettes watching to the bitter end.
PREP TRACK AND FIELD RESULTS
Richard Harper Memorial Invitational Results from the Richard Harper Memorial Invitational track and field meet, held on Friday and Saturday at Albuquerque Academy. Race distances are in meters: Boys Team scores — 1. Rio Rancho Cleveland, 98.5; 2. Rio Rancho, 49.5; 3. Albuquerque Volcano Vista, 49; 4. Albuquerque Academy, 37.75; 5. Albuquerque Cibola, 34.75; 6. Los Alamos, 27.75; 7. Valencia, 27; 8. Albuquerque Eldorado, 21; 9. Albuquerque Sandia, 17; 10. Albuquerque Manzano, 15; 11. (tie) Albuquerque Highland, Albuquerque La Cueva, 11; 13. (tie) Albuquerque Atrisco Heritage, Albuquerque Del Norte, 10; 15. Capital, 9; 16. Los Lunas, 7.75; 17. Albuquerque Rio Grande, 5; 18. Albuquerque West Mesa, 4; 19. Belen, 3; 20. (tie) Piedra Vista, Albuquerque Valley, 2. Individual results 100 — 1. Joshua Burbank, Valencia, 10.92 seconds; 2. Dante Hernandez-LaCour, Atrisco Heritage, 11.04; 3. Tyler Chavez, Cleveland, 11.22; 4. Hunter Ferguson, Capital, 11.33; 5. Devon Sparkman, Valencia, 11.33; 6. Ryan Stebbins, Cibola 11.35. 200 — 1. Joshua Burbank, Valencia, 22.96; 2. Camden Davis, Cleveland, 23.06; 3. Simon Bailey, Los Alamos, 23.47; 4. Isaiah Cordova, Manzano, 23.59; 5. Augie Larranaga, Capital, 24.12. 400 — 1. John Finnegan, Rio Rancho, 48.43; 2. Tyler Chavez, Cleveland, 48.57; 3. Augie Larranaga, Capital, 50.34; 4. Uriel Urquigi, Valencia, 51.84; 5. Randy Moore, Los Lunas , 52.98; 6. Matthew Gonzales, Piedra Vista, 59.18. 800 — 1. Franki Scorfina, Cibola, 1:53.44; 2. Adam Monroe, Eldorado, 1:54.08; 3. Fernando Lucero, Rio Rancho, 1:58.13; 4. Gilbert Ramirez, Atrisco Heritage, 1:58.48; 5. Colin Hemez, Los Alamos, 1:58.62; 6. Josh Pyeatt, Rio Rancho, 1:58.64.1,600 — 1. Frankie Scorfina, Cibola, 4:25.38; 2. Jared Mayoral, Cleveland, 4:25.75; 3. Colin Hemez, Los Alamos, 4:26.66; 4. Kevin Wyss, Alb. Academy, 4:27.92; 5. Taylor Potter, Eldorado, 4:29.01; 6. Justin Kerstetter, Manzano, 4:30.36. 3,200 — 1. Jared Mayoral, Cleveland, 9:36.47; 2. Kevin Wyss, Alb. Academy, 9:37.41; 3. Chris Harlow, Cibola, 9:45.09; 4. Jared Garcia, Belen, 9:45.65; 5. Mike Walker, Los Alamos, 9:50.23; 6. Aaron Flores, Cleveland, 9:54.72. 110 hurdles — 1. Noah Weig-Pickering, Alb. Academy, 14.53; 2. Nathan Munoz, Cleveland, 14.84; 3. Matthew Jackson, Rio Rancho, 15.55; 4. Nick Slade, Alb. Academy, 15.59; 5. Josh Foley, Rio Rancho, 15.89; 6. Orion Kaminky, Piedra Vista, 15.91. 300 hurdles — 1. Keaton Frieberg, Cleveland, 39.63; 2. Daniel Hammon, Los Lunas, 40.87; 3. Matthew Jackson, Rio Rancho, 41.57; 4. Ethan Gifford, Sandia, 41.68; 5. Nick Slade, Alb. Academy, 41.82; 6. Gus
Swanson, La Cueva, 43.00. 400 relay — 1. Cleveland, 42.22; 2. Valencia, 42.72; 3. Volcano Vista, 42.97; 4. Rio Rancho, 43.10; 5. Atrisco Heritage, 44.49. 800 relay — 1. Volcano Vista, 1:28.74; 2. Cleveland, 1:29.36; 3. La Cueva, 1:31.51; 4. Manzano, 1:31.74; 5. Rio Rancho, 1:31.78; 6. Los Alamos, 1:32.04. 1,600 relay — 1. Cleveland, 3:21.14; 2. Eldorado, 3:24.81; 3. Volcano Vista, 3:25.65; 4. Highland, 3:27.80; 5. Rio Rancho, 3:29.74; 6. Los Alamos, 3:30.34. Medley relay — 1. Cleveland, 3:34.97; 2. Rio Rancho, 3:35.77; 3. Eldorado, 3:41.42; 4. Volcano Vista, 3:42.50; 5. Los Alamos, 3:43.46; 6. Del Norte, 3:45.54. High jump — 1. Parker Hibbett, Alb. Academy, 6 feet, 4 inches; 2. Skyler McCall, Los Alamos, 6-0; 3. Jacob Earnest, Cleveland, 6-0; 4. Stephen Criel, La Cueva ,6-0; 5. Randy Moore, Los Lunas, 5-10; 6. (Tie) Alexander Armenta, Cibola; Noah WeigPickering, Alb. Academy; Greg Ahlers, Los Alamos; 5-10. Pole vault — 1. Hayden Walker, Manzano, 13-1; 2. Joseph Barney, Sandia, 12-0; 4. Liam Johnson, Los Alamos, 12-0; 4. Matthew Montoya, West Mesa, 12-0; 5. Seth Drop, Los Alamos, 12-0; 6. Richard Getchell, Rio Rancho, Tristan Bem, Cleveland, 12-0. Long jump — 1. Matt Blumenschein, Alb. Academy, 22-4 1/4; 2. Matt Baca, Del Norte, 22-3 3/4; 3. Darryl Wiggins, Del Norte, 21-10 1/4; 4. Nick Slade, Alb. Academy, 21-9 3/4; 5. Ryan Stebbins, Cibola, 21-1; 6. Stephen Criel, La Cueva, 20-11. Shot put — 1. Mike Budick, Volcano Vista, 59-10 1/2; 2. Juan Pimentel, Cibola, 56-6; 3. Desmond Branch, Cleveland, 55-11 1/2; 4. Colby Stinson, Rio Rancho, 55-10; 5. Steven DiGregorio, Sandia, 49-1; 6. Joey Bertram, Sandia, 48-5. Discus — 1. Mike Budick, Volcano Vista, 173-2; 2. Michael Roseborough, Cleveland, 151-9; 3. Elijah Hammond, Rio Rancho, 149-9; 4. Juan Pimentel, Cibola, 1399; 5. Jacob Anderson, Cleveland, 137-6; 6. Colby Stinson, Rio Rancho, 137-4. Javelin — 1. Malik Matthew-Gordon, Sandia, 182-7; 2. Mike Budick, Volcano Vista, 177-3; 3. Paul Chavez, Rio Grande, 171-11; 4. Mitchell Armijo, Rio Rancho, 171-10; 5. Brandon Leitch, Cleveland, 169-7; 6. Kian Homme, Cleveland, 164-10. Girls Team scores — 1. Eldorado 113; 2. La Cueva 50; 3. Santa Fe 49; 4. Volcano Vista 42; 5. Rio Rancho 35; 6. Sandia Prep 28; 7. Los Alamos 24; 8. Cibola 22; 9. Sandia 19; 10. Los Lunas 14; 11. Piedra Vista 12.5; 12. Highland 11; 13. Valencia 10; 14. Belen 8; 15. Abq. Academy 6.5; 16. Del Norte 4; 17. Manzano 3; 18. Albuquerque 2. Individual results 100 — 1. Tiffany Garcia, Santa Fe. 12.29; 2. Akeisha Ayanniyi, Santa Fe. 12.48; 3. Hannah Thompson, Cibola. 12.56; 4. Erynn Caldwell, Volcano Vista. 12.63; 5. Alexis Lafave, Los Lunas. 12.64; 6. Quinlyn Borneo, Cibola, 13.30.
200 — 1. Tiffany Garcia, Santa Fe, 25.19; 2. Erynn Caldwell, Volcano Vista, 26.41; 3. Amelia Kloer, Sandia, 26.79; 4. Lindsey Gallinger, Manzano, 27.02; 5. Bailey Brion, Eldorado, 27.06. 400 — 1. Jamie Fenton, La Cueva, 1:00.07; 2. Kaylee Amershek, Volcano Vista, 1:00.61; 3. Lindsey Zellner, Eldorado, 1:00.76; 4. Hayley Schake, Los Alamos, 1:00.90; 5. Sierra Quinones, Volcano Vista, 1:00.90; 6. Quinn Truyol, Cibola, 1:01.70. 800 — 1. Jessie Hix, Eldorado, 2:12.44; 2. Molly Klein, Rio Rancho, 2:15.48; 3. Carisma Lovato, Valencia, 2:20.35; 4. Natasha Bernal, La Cueva, 2:21.82; 5. Kalei Yepa, Sandia Prep, 2:22.89; 6. Kaylee Amershek, Volcano Vista, 2:23.61. 1,600 — 1. Jessie Hix, Eldorado 5:09.66; 2. Crissey Amberg, Eldorado 5:10.58; 3. Mackenzie Everett, La Cueva 5:12.25; 4. Molly Klein, Rio Rancho 5:13.46; 5. Noel Prandoni, Santa Fe 5:14.93; 6. Madison Foley, Los Alamos 5:21.38. 3,200 — 1.Mackenzie Everett, La Cueva, 11:23.57; 2. Arena Lewis, Belen, 11:35.62; 3. Rachel Fleddermann, Sandia Prep, 11:37.45; 4. Crissey Amberg, Eldorado, 11:38.92; 5. Noel Prandoni, Santa Fe, 11:39.14; 6. Cassey Amberg, Eldorado, 11:48.81. 100 Hurdles — 1. Kyra Mohns, Eldorado, 15.71; 2. Kiersten Huitt, Sandia Prep, 15.89; 3. Chelsea Chalacombe, Los Alamos, 16.77; 4. Lindsey Larsen, Volcano Vista, 17.16; 5. Kristina Contratto, Valencia, 17.18; 6. Rebecca Restrepo, Abq. Academy, 17.53. 300 Hurdles — 1. Kyra Mohns, Eldorado 45.90; 2. Mackenzie Blackburn, Sandia Prep 45.94; 3. Kiersten Huitt, Sandia Prep 47.74; 4. Bailey Brion, Eldorado 48.59; 5. Bethany Hammon, Los Lunas 48.92; 6. Madeline Weibe, Santa Fe 49.41. 400 Relay — 1. Santa Fe 49.79; 2. Cibola 50.23; 3. Eldorado 50.33; 4. Volcano Vista 50.52; 5. Los Alamos 50.75; 6. Piedra Vista 50.82. 800 Relay — 1. Eldorado 1:45.29; 2. Santa Fe 1:46.09; 3. Los Lunas 1:46.94; 4. La Cueva 1:48.29; 5. Del Norte 1:48.33; 6. Abq. Academy 1:48.87. 1,600 Medley Relay — 1. Rio Rancho 4:14.41; 2. Eldorado 4:18.66; 3. La Cueva 4:19.55; 4. Highland 4:25.33; 5. Del Norte 4:28.47; 6. Volcano Vista, 4:34.29. 1,600 Relay — 1. Eldorado 4:06.15; 1. Sandia Prep 4:07.50; 2. Volcano Vista 4:08.57; 3. Piedra Vista 4:08.89; 5. La Cueva 4:12.39; 6. Los Alamos 4:13.66. High Jump — 1. Chelsea Chalacombe, Los Alamos, 5-4; 2. Kyra Mohns, Eldorado, 5-2; 3. Lindsey Larsen, Volcano Vista 5-0; 4. Simone Sanchez, Belen, 5-0; 5. (tie) Anna Rekow, Abq. Academy, and Samantha Sofka, Piedra Vista, 4-10. Pole Vault — 1. Lauren Martinez, Eldorado, 13-3; 2. Merica Valdez, Rio Rancho, 10-9; 3. Meaghan Martinez, Eldorado, 9-3; 4. Allie Ogawa, Abq. Academy, 9-3; 5. Abigayle Christiansen, Sandia, 8-9; 6. Cassandra Crowell, Piedra Vista, 8-9. Long Jump — 1. Akeisha Ayanniyi, Santa
Fe, 18-2.25; 2. Lauren Martinez, Eldorado, 17-3.25; 3. Chelsea Chalacombe, Los Alamos, 17-2.5; 4. Cera Chavez, Los Lunas, 16-7.5; 5. Savannah Meadors, Albuquerque, 16-4.5; 6. Renee Brinson, Cibola, 15-9.25. Triple Jump — 1. Kyra Mohns, Eldorado, 36-3; 2. Shaye Romero, La Cueva, 34-0; 3. Destiny Ryan, Highland, 33-8; 4. Renee Brinson, Cibola, 33-5.25; 5. Elizabeth Lockhart, Los Alamos, 33-1; 6. Meaghan Martinez, Eldorado, 32’ 8. Shot Put — 1. Alison Mady, La Cueva 39-9; 2. Kaleigh Graham, Piedra Vista 39-0; 3. Alanna Young, Volcano Vista 37-11; 4. Amaris Blount, Rio Rancho 37-4; 5. Merica Valdez, Rio Rancho 35-0; 6. Jaden Ortiz, Sandia 34-5. Discus — 1. Jaden Ortiz, Sandia, 119-3; 2. Alison Mady, La Cueva, 115-3; 3. Marissa Cruz, Eldorado, 110-5; 4. Destinee Thayer, Highland, 107-11; 5. Alanna Young, Volcano Vista, 105-1; 6. Mariah Doyle, Los Lunas, 104-0. Javelin — 1. Nicole Pendley, Rio Rancho, 129-0; 2. Alayna Latimore, Sandia, 118-3; 3. Kim Chapman, Cibola, 111-8; 4. Mariah Ibuado, Valencia, 110-4; 5. Mekayla Welch, Volcano Vista, 107-0; 6. Peyton Linthicum, Valencia, 95-5.
Tiger Relays Results from Saturday’s Tiger Relays, hosted by Taos High School. Distances for running events are in meters. Team scores — 1. Taos 205.5; 2. St. Michael’s 128.5; 3. Pojoaque Valley 52; 4. Shiprock 30; 5. Española Valley 22; 6. Questa 11; 7. Santa Fe Waldorf 3 St. Michael’s boys results High Jump — Chris Lovato, 1st place, 5-10; Luke Moran, 3rd, 5-6 Triple Jump — Lovato, 1st, 38-9; Mathias Hochanadel, 2nd, 38-0; Estevan Alcaraz, 6th, 36-4.5 Discus — M. Hochanadel, 1st, 156-11; Joris Hochanadel, 2nd, 141-9; Antonio Garcia, 4th, 124-9 Shot Put — M. Hochanadel, 1st, 46-7.5; J. Hochanadel, 2nd, 45-9.5 Long Jump — Isaiah Dominguez, 4th, 20-2 110 Hurdles — Wyatt Moran, 2nd, 16.31; Diego Montoya, 5th, 19.11; Isiah Vigil, 6th, 19.65 300 Hurdles — Alcaraz, 2nd, 44.56; Moran, 3rd, 44.80 100 — Nathanyel Leyba, 1st, 11.12 400 — Armando Blea, 1st, 52.94; Dominguez, 5th, 54.19 800 — Joey Najjar, 3rd, 2:11.37 400 Relay — 2nd, 43.10 (Ben Dahlman, Blea, Lovato, Leyba) 800 Relay — 2nd, 1:35.75 (Dahlman, Blea, Lovato, Leyba) Medley Relay — 4th, 4:12.75 1600 Relay — 2nd, 3:39.28 (Blea, Alcaraz, Najjar, Moran) St. Michael’s girls results Team Scores — 1. Taos 157; 2. St. Michael’s 139; 3. Shiprock 41; 4. Pojoaque
Valley 40; 5. Questa 25.5; 6. Española Valley 25; 7. Santa Fe Waldorf 5 High Jump — Ellie Breeden, 2nd place, 4-6; Hannah Edwards, 3rd, 4-6; Amanda Marbough, 6th, 4-2. Triple Jump — Abbey Dahlman, 2nd, 32-1.5; Lainie Serna, 3rd, 30-9.25; Breeden, 5th, 29-6.5. Javelin — Jocelyn Fernandez, 1st, 105-0; Alex Groenwold, 5th, 81-1 Discus — Lauren Wissman, 2nd, 85-2; Marbough, 5th, 81-9 Shot Put — Groenwald, 2nd, 32-3.5; Katarina Romero, 4th, 29-7.5; Wissman, 5th, 28-8.5; Haley Marcus, 6th, 28-1. Long Jump — Breeden, 4th, 14-11.5. 100 Hurdles — Monique Rivera, 1st, 18.50; Joliaunna Fernandez, 2nd, 18.56; Taylor Smith, 6th, 19.49 300 Hurdles — Jol. Fernandez, 2nd, 54.90 200 — Amaia Bracamontes, 4th, 27.34 400 — Dahlman, 1st, 1:04.02; Serna, 6th, 1:07.34 800 — Lily Day, 3rd, 2:38.09; Brianna Farrier, 5th, 2:39.13; Espi Cortez, 6th, 2:40.24 1600 — Kaitlin Dobesh, 6th, 6:01.81 3200 — Rachel Saladen, 1st, 11:59.96; Farrier, 3rd, 12:05.24 400 Relay — 2nd, 52.28 (Joce. Fernandez, Bracamontes, Dahlman, Breeden) 800 Relay — 2nd, 1:52.69 (Joce. Fernandez, Bracamontes, Dahlman, Breeden) Medley Relay — 1st, 4:57.65 (Jordan Fernandez, Bracamontes, Serna, Gabby Dalton)
Mark Shumate Invitational Santa Fe Preparatory’s results at the Mark Shumate Inviational, a meet hosted by Hope Christian and held at Menaul School in Albuquerque: Boys 400 — Wyatt Trevathan, 1st place, 51.35 seconds High jump — Ian Andersson, 1st, 6-4 (school record and state qualifying mark) 800 — Mike Ewers, 5th, 2:07.63 800 Relay — 1st place, 1:35.45 (Patrick Boyd, Konrad Asprodites, Mason Hurlocker, Wyatt Trevathan) 400 Relay — 6th place, 48.46 (Thomas Naylor, Lucas Warner, Jimmy Buchanan, Lucas Smith) 1600 Medley — 6th place, 4:26.94 (Thomas Naylor, Beckett Maestas, Lucas Smith, Tristan Olrik Long Jump — Hurlocker, 3rd, 19-3.75 Triple Jump — Anderson, 2nd, 40-9 Discus — Jeremy Brooks, 4th, 111-0.5 Girls 300 Hurdles — Courtney Timlen, 1st place, 51.03 100 Hurldes — Timlin, 3rd, 17.30 400 Relay — 6th place, 56.66 (Piper Hees, Selma Flint, Peyton Lawrenz, Sarah Raboff) Javelin — Gressia Burrola, 6th, 80-8 Discus — Burrola, 6th, 82-9 Triple Jump — Desiray Anderson, 1st, 32-8.5
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. ARENA FOOTBALL 2 p.m. on ESPN2 — Iowa at Philadelphia AUTO RACING 12:30 p.m. on NBCSN — IndyCar, Grand Prix of Alabama, in Birmingham, Ala. 3:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Indy Lights, Indy Lights 100, in Birmingham, Ala. (same-day tape) 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, Springnationals, in Baytown, Texas (same-day tape) COLLEGE BASEBALL 11 a.m. on ESPN — Alabama at South Carolina 2 p.m. on ESPNU — Oregon at Oregon St. 5:30 p.m. on ESPNU — Arizona St. at Arizona 8:30 p.m. on ESPNU — Hawaii at Cal St.-Fullerton GOLF 4:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, China Open, final round, in Shenzhen, China (same-day tape) 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, final round, in New Orleans 1 p.m. on CBS — PGA Tour, Zurich Classic, final round, in New Orleans 5 p.m. on TGC — LPGA, Swinging Skirts Classic, final round, in Daly City, Calif. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11:30 a.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, Cincinnati at Atlanta or Kansas City at Baltimore Noon on WGN — Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee 6 p.m. on ESPN — L.A. Angels at N.Y. Yankees MOTORSPORTS 10 a.m. on FS1 — MotoGP World Championship, Grand Prix of Argentina, in Santiago del Estero, Argentina NBA 11 a.m. on ABC — Playoffs, first round, game 4, Chicago at Washington 1:30 p.m. on ABC — Playoffs, first round, game 4, L.A. Clippers at Golden State 5 p.m. on TNT — Playoffs, first round, game 4, Toronto at Brooklyn 7:30 p.m. on TNT — Playoffs, first round, game 4, Houston at Portland NHL 10 a.m. on NBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 5, Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers 1 p.m. on NBC — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 6, St. Louis at Chicago 6 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference quarterfinals, game 6, Anaheim at Dallas SOCCER 4:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Cardiff at Sunderland 7 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Chelsea at Liverpool 9:05 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Manchester City at Crystal Palace
Clinch: Los Alamos excels at small ball Continued from Page D-1 the hits, none of the Hilltoppers were trying to go yard because there will be serious repercussions for doing so. “Our focus is to hit the ball hard up the middle,” Gill said. “It’s ingrained in them every day. Popping the ball up is worthless. We don’t tolerate guys dropping their shoulders and trying to hit the ball out of the ballpark. They know I’ll make them bunt after that.” While the Hilltoppers were sending the ball all over the yard, the Sundevils did not manage a single hit in the second game. Los Alamos starting pitcher Lane Saunders threw five innings without a single strikeout, and reliever Connor Mang only managed three, but every one of the Sundevils’ grounders and pop-ups led to outs. “The contact we made were weak hits to the infield,” Española head coach Anthony Alarid said. “We certainly didn’t do what we had to do. Offensively, we have been very inconsistent. We’ll have a hell of an offensive game one game, and then the next game, we’ll leave men in scoring position.” The Sundevils never gave themselves a chance in the second game, but they had one in the first. After giving up four runs to the Hilltoppers in the first inning of the opening game, Española scored a run in the third, but it also left two runners in scoring position. “I think that right there was the biggest momentum change because it kept [the score] 4-1,” Gill said. “It could have easily been 4-3 after that.” Regardless of the sweep and the blowouts, both team still have a tremendous amount of respect for each other. Both head coaches met near home plate after the second game and talked as if they were friends instead of district rivals. “I just told him I wish him good luck and I hope they make it to the playoffs,” Gill said. Even though Los Alamos seems to always beat out Española for the district crown, there is no bitterness in the Valley. “It seems like every season comes down to this doubleheader to determine who’s going to take the district,” Alarid said. “They came in and did their job today and beat us fair and square.”
Los Alamos’ Jared Mang pitches Saturday against Española Valley in Los Alamos. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
D-4
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
SWIMMING
KENTUCKY DERBY
Four Pletcher horses could compete Phelps
takes new training approach
Colt on four-race streak chosen as favorite in next weekend’s event By Beth Harris The Associated Press
Todd Pletcher is going after the Kentucky Derby with numbers again. The trainer who has won the America’s greatest race once could saddle four horses. Little-known Mike Maker could have three starters, while threetime Derby winner Bob Baffert has two contenders. Art Sherman has just one. But it’s a really good one. California Chrome is expected to be the favorite for the 140th Derby on Saturday. The colt brings a four-race winning streak into Churchill Downs, having won those by a combined 24¼ lengths. “I’ve never had a horse that did that before,” said Sherman, who began training in 1980 after being a jockey for 21 years and later a racing official. “I just want my horse to have a fair shake at it and have good racing luck, and I’m sure hopeful for him. He’s a gutty little horse.” Pletcher knows something about luck. Four years ago, he ended a 0-for-24 skid when long shot Super Saver, one of four horses he entered, won under a rail-hugging ride by Calvin Borel. That was the year Pletcher had the favorite, Eskendereya, who was forced to drop out six days before the Derby with a leg injury. He also had the horse to beat in 2011, Uncle Mo, who was scratched with a stomach ailment on Derby eve. This year, Pletcher’s quartet is made up of Arkansas Derby winner Danza, Risen Star winner Intense Holiday, Spiral Stakes winner We Miss Artie and Vinceremos, who finished 14th in the Blue Grass. California Chrome will need some luck tangling with an expected full field of 20 horses for the 1¼-mile race at Churchill Downs. The final lineup won’t be known until Wednesday, when entries are drawn and post positions are assigned. Baffert’s ace is Hoppertunity, who won the Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn Park. The colt will try to buck a Derby jinx that has no horse since Apollo in 1882 winning without racing as a 2-year-old. “You need a really good horse because you need a lot of luck,” said Baffert, who also has Sunland Derby winner Chitu. Maker’s trio of contenders is Louisiana Derby winner Vicar’s in Trouble, General a Rod and Harry’s Holiday. “I think it’s going to be a very lively pace,” he said.
By Beth Harris The Associated Press
California Chrome and jockey Victor Espinoza win the $250,000 California Cup Derby horse race Jan. 25 at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif. A full field of 20 is expected for the 140th Kentucky Derby on May 3. California Chrome is the early favorite. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
“I feel my horses they can adjust to whatever the pace calls for.” Maker has had five previous Derby starters, including Hansen, who was ninth in 2012. Both he and Pletcher are former assistants to Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, a four-time Derby winner. Vicar’s in Trouble will be ridden by Rosie Napravnik, who will try to become the first female jockey to win the Derby. Her husband, Joe Sharpe, is an assistant to Maker. Last year, Napravnik rode Mylute to a fifth-place finish in the Kentucky Derby behind Orb and a third-place finish in the Preakness behind Oxbow. Those finishes were the best by a female rider in each race. Sherman is going for a bit of history himself. The 77-year-old could become the oldest trainer to win, surpassing Charlie Whittingham, who was 76 when Sunday Silence won in 1989. Graham Motion, who trained 2011 Derby winner Animal Kingdom, is back with Ring Weekend, who
won the Tampa Bay Derby. Steve Asmussen trains Tapiture, the Southwest Stakes winner. He’s under investigation after an animal rights group alleged mistreatment by him and a former assistant. Asmussen’s nomination to the Racing Hall of Fame was put on hold last month in the wake of the allegations. This year’s road to the Derby trail claimed a number of contenders, including Constitution, who is trained by Pletcher, and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile winner New Year’s Day, who is trained by Baffert. Also knocked out with an injury was Cairo Prince. Another of Baffert’s horses, Midnight Hawk, was dropped from Derby consideration after finishing second in the Illinois Derby. For the second straight year, the field of 20 starters is being determined by points. Churchill Downs established a system that awards a sliding scale of points to the top four finishers in 34 designated races. The top 20-point earners earn a spot in the Derby starting gate.
Avalanche: Colorado struggles with power plays Bryzgalov in Game 2. The Avalanche’s trouble on the of time left on the clock. It worked power play kept on going as they in Game 1, with Paul Stastny scoring went 0 for 3. They’ve now scored just with 13.4 seconds remaining in regula- one goal in 18 power-play chances, the tion and then adding the OT winner. lowest percentage of any playoff team. This time, it was MacKinnon’s turn Colorado generated some quality to step up. He was mobbed by teamscoring chances and found more open mates shortly after scoring. ice in front of a capacity Pepsi Center Parise tied the game at 2 early in the crowd. The Avs were outshot 78-34 in third when he glided down the left the last two games. side and beat Varlamov with a shot McLeod had a short-handed goal over his glove. at 8:04 of the second period, when he Nearly two minutes later, Brodziak redirected a pass from Ryan O’Reilly gave the Wild the lead after defensepast Kuemper. man Jan Hejda broke his stick and The lead was short-lived as the struggled to cover anyone. Wild answered 1:13 later when The Avalanche finally figured out Moulson tipped in a shot by Jared a way to get the puck past Kuemper Spurgeon from the blue line. On the — by tipping in shots. Kuemper had play, Maxime Talbot gave his stick to allowed just one goal heading into defenseman Andre Benoit after his Saturday since taking over for Ilya broke and then Jamie McGinn passed
Continued from Page D-1
his to Talbot, leaving McGinn without a stick. BRUINS 4, RED WINGS 2 In Boston, Tuukka Rask made 31 saves to help the defending Eastern Conference champion Boston Bruins beat the Red Wings 4-2 in Game 5 of their first-round playoff series on Saturday and eliminate Detroit from the postseason. The Bruins, who finished the regular season with the best record in the NHL, advanced to the conference semifinals against the Montreal Canadiens. PENGUINS 3, BLUE JACKETS 1 In Pittsburgh, Jussi Jokinen scored the go-ahead goal in the third period and the Pittsburgh Penguins topped the Columbus Blue Jackets to take a 3-2 lead in their Eastern Conference playoff series.
Chris Kunitz and Kris Letang also scored for Pittsburgh, which has the upstart Blue Jackets on the verge of elimination with an opportunity to close out the series Monday during Game 6 in Columbus. KINGS 3, SHARKS 0 In San Jose, Calif., Jonathan Quick made 30 saves to shut out San Jose for the fourth time in his career in the postseason and the Los Angeles Kings staved off elimination for a second straight game by beating the Sharks 3-0 on Saturday night in Game 5 of their first-round series. Tyler Toffoli, Anze Kopitar and Jeff Carter scored for the Kings, who have rebounded after losing the first three games of the series. Quick allowed 16 goals in those losses but once again is starting to look like the goalie who stymied the Sharks in a second-round series a year ago.
Dallas: Mentality helps Carter with buzzer beaters Continued from Page D-1 the celebration on the court before the automatic review confirmed the obvious: The shot was good. And it’s one Carter said he practiced. “May 20th, Game 7,” said Carter, referring to an 88-87 loss to Philadelphia in the 2001 Eastern Conference finals when he was he was the dunking sensation known as “Vinsanity” with Toronto. Carter had graduated from North Carolina earlier that day before flying on a private plane to Philadelphia. “I don’t mind taking the game-winning shot,” said Carter, who otherwise had a rough day before finishing with 11 points. “I don’t mind missing them and dealing with it. So I think having that mentality helps me.” Monta Ellis kept the eighth-seeded Mavericks close in the fourth quarter and finished with 29 points. Tim Duncan led the Spurs with 22 points. Game 4 is Monday night in Dallas. Ginobili, who scored 12 points, dribbled out most of the last 24 seconds before going around Duncan and scoring over Samuel Dalembert for a 108-106 lead. His go-ahead shot spun around the rim and almost came out before falling in. “You never think it’s over, especially in here,” Ginobili said. “We’ve got experience on that. As long as you don’t see ‘zero zero’ over there, it’s not over.”
two wins apiece. In a game they had to have, the Pacers finally showed some grit. George put the Pacers ahead 86-85 with a jumper beyond the arc, and West hit another trey with 1:33 remaining. Atlanta had a chance after Kyle Korver was fouled in the corner and knocked down three free throws. But George pulled down an offensive rebound to set up George Hill’s driving shot with 56 seconds left.
Fans cheer as Dallas Mavericks guard Vince Carter stands in the corner after he made the game-winning 3-point basket at the buzzer against the San Antonio Spurs on Saturday. LM OTERO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HEAT 98, BOBCATS 85 In Charlotte, N.C., LeBron James had 30 points and 10 rebounds, and Miami defeated Charlotte to take a 3-0 lead in the series. Dwyane Wade added 17 points for the Heat, who can close out the bestof-seven Monday night. James, who was an efficient 10 of 18 from the field, pushed his record to 18-0 against the Bobcats since joining the Heat in 2010. Miami has won 19 straight overall against Charlotte.
The Mavericks kept the homecourt advantage they earned by taking Game 2 in San Antonio to snap a 10-game losing streak against the Spurs. And Dallas won despite the Spurs holding Nowitzki under 20 points in a third straight playoff game for the first time since they did it to him in his first postseason in 2001. The big German finished with 18. Dallas still had a chance in the closing seconds because of Ellis, who had a playoff career high that included
THUNDER 92, GRIZZLIES 89 (OT) In Memphis, Tenn., reserve Reggie Jackson scored a playoff-best 32 points, and the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Memphis Grizzlies 92-89 in overtime Saturday night, tying up their first-round Western Conference series at two apiece. Jackson had only scored 15 points combined in this series, but the guard shook off his shooting woes by hitting 11 of 16. He outscored Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, who struggled through their worst scoring game of the series. Durant was 5 of 21 for 15 points.
12 fourth-quarter points. He tied the score twice in the final 1:10, first with a three-point play on a floater after he was fouled by Boris Diaw. After Diaw put the Spurs back in front with a baseline jumper, Ellis hit another high floater in the lane with 24.9 seconds left, setting up Ginobili’s dramatic shot. PACERS 91, HAWKS 88 In Atlanta, Paul George and David West hit key 3-pointers down the stretch, and the top-seeded Indiana evened the opening-round series at
MESA, Ariz. — Michael Phelps tied the fourth-fastest time in the world this year swimming the 100-meter butterfly in his first competition in nearly two years. His comeback has gotten off to a strong start, albeit with a much different approach than he took in winning 22 medals over three Olympics. After a 20-month retirement, Phelps resumed training last September with his longtime coach Bob Bowman at the North Michael Baltimore Aquatic Phelps Center in his hometown. But he didn’t pick up the grueling regimen that had ruled his life since he was a teenager. Phelps has slowly started back and now trains just once a day in the afternoon. No double or triple sessions or plowing through thousands of meters a day. Call this comeback Phelps 2.0. While his workload will go up eventually, for now, Phelps is doing half the amount of training he did during the height of career, when he won a record eight gold medals at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. “I’m sort of experimenting with stuff that I didn’t have the guts to do before, like not swim as far,” Bowman said. “I’m very pleased with how he’s doing.” This relaxed approach appears to suit both Phelps and Bowman just fine. Their decades-long partnership — rare in a sport where swimmers frequently change coaches — survived fiery clashes as Phelps grew up and rebelled against Bowman’s hard-nosed ways. “Our last several years together, it really wasn’t much fun for everybody,” the coach said. Without committing to specifics, Phelps seems intent on swimming fewer events and shorter races this time around. He turns 29 in June, and as the most decorated Olympian in history, his place in the record books is secure. “I’m not putting any pressure on myself,” he said. “I’m just enjoying myself right now.” At the Arena Grand Prix meet in Mesa, he competed in just two events — the 100 fly (he finished second to Ryan Lochte) and the 50 freestyle, where he instead used a butterfly stroke and finished 42nd. Phelps’ time of 52.13 seconds in the 100 tied for fourth-quickest in the world this year. In his other event, he swam 50 meters of fly in 24.06, faster than his split time a day earlier in the 100 fly.
Highlands baseball team takes title On Saturday in Pueblo, Colo., a loss equalled a big win for the New Mexico Highlands University baseball team. Despite losing the opener of a doubleheader against Colorado State-Pueblo, the Cowboys (28-16 overall, 25-9 in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference) nailed down the RMAC Plains Division title with a win in the nightcap, assuring no worse than the No. 2 seed in the upcoming conference tournament. The team with the best regular season record will host the RMAC Tournament. With five games remaining, NMHU still has an outside chance at hosting. The Cowboys trail Colorado Mesa by three games heading into the final week. On Saturday, they were beaten 5-2 in the opener before clinching the title with a 15-8 win in the second game. NMHU head coach Steve Jones said his team is playing well when it matters most. “We’ve really turned it on and been playing good ball the last month or so,” he said. “We have to feel good about what we’ve accomplished. We’ve come a long way.” Highlands pitcher Lonny Schoon (5-2) took the loss in the opener while reliever Zach Settles (3-2) got the win in the clincher, working the final four innings and giving up just one run. The New Mexican
BASEBALL
Yankees hold off Angels The Associated Press
NEW YORK — John Ryan Murphy hit his first big league homer and drove in three runs, Dellin Betances earned his first win in the majors, and the Yankees Yankees 4 bounced back against Angels 3 the Angels for a 4-3 win Saturday night. RAYS 4, WHITE SOX 0 In Chicago, Cesar Ramos and two relievers combined for a five-hitter, leading the Tampa Bay Rays to a win against the Chicago White Sox. Ramos (1-1) pitched five innings of five-hit ball in place of Matt Moore, who had Tommy John surgery on Tuesday. Brandon Gomes then tossed three innings and Juan Carlos Oviedo finished. RED SOX 7, BLUE JAYS 6 In Toronto, A.J. Pierzynski hit his eighth career grand slam, and Will Middlebrooks added a solo homer, powering Boston to the road win. Jose Bautista and Juan Francisco hit solo home runs for the Blue Jays, who have lost a season-high four straight games. ORIOLES 3, ROYALS 2 (10 INNINGS) In Baltimore, Nick Markakis singled in the winning run in the 10th inning after two throwing errors by pitcher Danny Duffy laid the groundwork for the Orioles’ victory. The Orioles went eight straight innings without scoring before facing Duffy, who had pitched 8 1-3 scoreless innings on the season. TWINS 5, TIGERS 3 In Minneapolis, Phil Hughes threw seven strong innings, and Josmil Pinto hit his fifth homer, leading Minnesota to the victory. Hughes (2-1) had six strikeouts with no walks. He retired 16 straight at one point and has won two straight. ASTROS 7, ATHLETICS 6 In Houston, Dexter Fowler hit a tiebreaking RBI single in Houston’s four-run eighth inning, and the Astros held on for the win. INTERLEAGUE GIANTS 5, INDIANS 3 In San Francisco, Hunter Pence hit a two-run single in San Francisco’s four-run fifth inning, leading the Giants to a victory over the Cleveland Indians. Buster Posey added a solo homer in the sixth as San Francisco earned its third consecutive win.
Istopes sweep twin bill vs. Fresno Four Albuquerque pitchers combined to throw 14 scoreless innings of four-hit ball as the Isotopes swept a Pacific Coast League doubleheader at Fresno on Saturday night. Matt Magill (2-1) gave up two hits in six innings of a 1-0 win in the opener, paving the way for Paco Rodriguez to work a scoreless ninth to earn his first save of the season. Magill didn’t allow a hit through the first four innings, getting all the support he would need in the third when he reached on a sacrifice bunt attempt, got to second on a single by Chone Figgins, moved to third on a wild pitch, then scored on a bases-loaded walk issued to Albuquerque’s Clint Robinson. The Isotopes had just five hits in the game; two of them from shortstop Carlos Triunfel. Magill struck out three and walked three. Stephen Fife (1-2) was equally brilliant in the second game, allowing two hits in six innings. Sam Demel worked a perfect ninth for his fifth save of the season. Fife struck out two and walked one, needing just 76 pitches to get through his six frames. The game was scoreless until the fifth when Figgins scored on an error by Fresno third baseman Adam Duvall. The Isotopes (13-9) added another run in the sixth on a wild pitch that scored Nick Buss from third. The New Mexican
American League W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
New York Baltimore Boston Tampa Bay Toronto
14 12 12 11 11
10 11 13 13 13
.583 .522 .480 .458 .458
— 1½ 2½ 3 3
— — 1 1½ 1½
6-4 6-4 6-4 4-6 3-7
W-1 W-1 W-2 W-1 L-4
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
Detroit Minnesota Chicago Kansas City Cleveland
12 12 12 11 11
9 11 13 12 13
.571 .522 .480 .478 .458
— 1 2 2 2½
— — 1 1 1½
6-4 6-4 4-6 5-5 4-6
L-1 W-1 L-1 L-1 L-2
West
W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
Oakland Texas Los Angeles Seattle Houston
15 15 11 9 8
9 9 12 14 17
.625 .625 .478 .391 .320
— — 3½ 5½ 7½
— — 1 3 5
5-5 8-2 5-5 2-8 3-7
L-1 W-1 L-1 L-1 W-1
Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 4, L.A. Angels 3 Boston 7, Toronto 6 Minnesota 5, Detroit 3 Baltimore 3, Kansas City 2, 10 innings Houston 7, Oakland 6 Tampa Bay 4, Chicago White Sox 0 Texas 6, Seattle 3
Home
Away
7-4 5-5 5-8 7-7 4-7
7-6 7-6 7-5 4-6 7-6
Home
Away
9-5 6-5 7-5 6-3 7-6
3-4 6-6 5-8 5-9 4-7
Home
Away
6-6 9-4 3-6 4-6 4-9
9-3 6-5 8-6 5-8 4-8
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
Monday’s Games Oakland at Texas, 6:05 p.m.; Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m.; Cleveland at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.
National League East
W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
Atlanta Washington New York Philadelphia Miami
16 14 13 12 11
7 11 11 12 13
.696 .560 .542 .500 .458
— 3 3½ 4½ 5½
— — ½ 1½ 2½
7-3 5-5 6-4 6-4 6-4
W-3 W-2 L-1 W-1 W-1
Central
W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
Milwaukee St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago
18 13 11 10 7
6 12 13 15 16
.750 .520 .458 .400 .304
— 5½ 7 8½ 10½
— 1 2½ 4 6
8-2 4-6 6-4 3-7 3-7
W-3 L-1 L-2 W-1 L-4
West
W
L
Pct
GB
WCGB
L10
Str
San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona
14 14 13 11 8
10 11 12 14 19
.583 .560 .520 .440 .296
— ½ 1½ 3½ 7½
— — 1 3 7
5-5 5-5 6-4 4-6 4-6
W-3 W-1 L-1 L-2 L-1
Home
Away
8-3 9-7 7-8 4-5 9-4
8-4 5-4 6-3 8-7 2-9
Home
Away
9-5 5-3 4-5 6-8 5-8
9-1 8-9 7-8 4-7 2-8
Home
Away
7-4 6-8 8-4 7-6 2-12
7-6 8-3 5-8 4-8 6-7
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 5, L.A. Dodgers 4, 11 innings San Francisco 5, Cleveland 1
Monday’s Games Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 5:10 p.m.; Milwaukee at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m.; Colorado at Arizona, 7:40 p.m.; San Diego at San Francisco, 8:15 p.m.
MLB PITCHING COMPARISON LINE 11:10a -130
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Cincinnati Cueto (R) Atlanta Teheran (R)
LINE
TEAM PITCHERS ERA San Diego Kennedy (R) Washington Jordan (R)
LINE
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Chicago Hammel (R) Milwaukee Peralta (R)
LINE
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Pittsburgh Volquez (R) St. Louis Wainwrght (R)
LINE
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Colorado D La Rosa (L) Los Angeles Ryu (L)
LINE
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Philadelphia Burnett (R) Arizona McCarthy (R) American League TEAM PITCHERS ERA Boston Lester (L) Toronto Dickey (R)
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Tampa Bay Price (L) Chicago Carroll (R)
LINE
TEAM ERA Texas Seattle
LINE
Interleague TEAM PITCHERS ERA Cleveland Salazar (R) San Fran Vogelsong (R)
ERA
W-L
6.38 2.12 ERA
0-1 0-4
2.73 6.23
2-3 1-3 W-L
2.67 5.90 ERA
2-2 1-1 W-L
1.91 5.40 ERA
0-1 1-0 W-L
4.24 0.00 ERA
3-1 3-1 W-L
2.18 3.63 ERA
3-1 — W-L
4.04 — ERA
— 0-0 W-L
6:05p -165
— 2.08 ERA
2-0 3-0 W-L
2:05p -105
2.52 2.15
REC
7.85 7.71
1-0 24.0 1-0 12.1 W-L
2-3 4-1 REC
REC
W-L
W-L
W-L
W-L
W-L
W-L
W-L
4-1 —
IP
IP
IP
IP
2-0 16.0 2.25 No Record W-L
— 0-1 REC
2.55 8.53
2-0 25.0 2.52 No Record W-L
IP
No Record 1-1 16.2 3.78 W-L
3-1 3-1
IP
0-1 8.0 2.25 No Record 2013 vs. Opp W-L IP
1-3 2-2
KEY TEAM REC-Team’s record in games started by today’s pitcher. AHWG-Average hits and walks allowed per 9 innings. VS OPP-Pitcher’s record versus this opponent, 2013 statistics. Copyright 2014 World Features Syndicate, Inc.
2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
2 2 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9
0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
.275 .227 .253 .128 .273 .218 .268 .286 .500 .390 — — — .000 —
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Pagan cf 3 0 1 Pence rf 4 0 1 Belt 1b 4 0 0 Posey c 3 1 1 Morse lf 3 1 1 J.Perez lf 1 0 0 Sandoval 3b 3 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 Romo p 0 0 0 B.Crawford ss 3 1 1 B.Hicks 2b 2 1 0 Lincecum p 1 0 0 J.Gutierrez p 0 0 0 a-Blanco ph 1 1 1 Machi p 0 0 0 Arias 3b 1 0 0 Totals 29 5 6 Cleveland 101 010 San Francisco 000 041
1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 10 000—3 00x—5
.337 .250 .274 .224 .288 .000 .165 — — .265 .222 .000 — .129 — .139
E—McAllister (2). LOB—Cleveland 9, San Francisco 3. 2B—Bourn (1), Swisher 2 (6), Pagan (6). HR—Posey (5), off C.Lee. RBIs—Swisher (10), Kipnis 2 (12), Pagan (13), Pence 2 (8), Posey (11), Blanco (2). SB—Blanco (1). SF—Pagan. Runners left in scoring position—Cleveland 4 (Bourn, Y.Gomes 2, Kipnis); San Francisco 2 (Posey, Belt). RISP—Cleveland 1 for 9; San Francisco 2 for 6. Runners moved up—Swisher 2, Kipnis 2, Pence. GIDP—McAllister. DP—San Francisco 1 (Belt, Sandoval, B.Hicks). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McAllister L, 3-1 5 C.Lee 1-3 Outman 2-3 Shaw 2
5 1 0 0
4 1 0 0
4 1 0 0
1 0 0 0
6 75 1 13 2 9 1 21
3.14 4.05 2.16 1.54
San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lincecum 4 2-3 9 J.Gutierrez W, 1-1 1-3 3.18 Machi H, 2 1 2-3 0 Affeldt H, 2 1 1-3 0 Romo S, 6-6 1 0
3 0
2 0
2 0
3 98 0 1
5.96 5
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 0 0
1 20 0 11 0 14
0.84 0.00 2.70
Inherited runners-scored—J.Gutierrez 3-0, Affeldt 1-0. HBP—by Shaw (Posey), by Romo (Giambi). PB—Posey. T—2:47. A—42,088 (41,915). Cincinnati
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
B.Hamilton cf Votto 1b Phillips 2b Bruce rf Ludwick lf B.Pena c N.Soto 3b Cozart ss Leake p a-Bernadina ph Totals
4 3 4 2 3 3 3 3 2 1 28
Atlanta
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2
Heyward rf 4 0 0 B.Upton cf 4 1 1 Freeman 1b 4 1 1 J.Upton lf 3 1 3 Gattis c 4 1 1 Uggla 2b 3 0 0 C.Johnson 3b 3 0 1 Simmons ss 3 0 1 Hale p 3 0 0 Totals 31 4 8 Cincinnati 100 000 Atlanta 202 000
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1
0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 6
.220 .298 .273 .235 .277 .286 .200 .141 .231 .130
0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 1 5 000—1 00x—4
.191 .209 .352 .321 .308 .207 .250 .300 .000
No Record No Record
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Arroyo 6 1-3 7 2 2 1 2 96 Thatcher 2-3 1 1 0 0 0 16 Cahill L, 1-5 BS, 1-2 1 4 3 3 2 2 7.66 Putz 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 Thatcher pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
Cincinnati
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 7 8 2-3 0 1-3 0
Atlanta
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 8 1
2 0
4 0 0 1 0
4 0 0 1 0
0 1 0 2 1
4 83 1 14 0 2
3.82 4.35 4.00
4 102 2 21
2.31 2.61
Inherited runners-scored—Christiani 1-0. T—2:17. A—33,702 (49,586). Philadelphia
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Revere cf Rollins ss Utley 2b Howard 1b Byrd rf D.Brown lf Ruiz c Galvis 3b Cl.Lee p a-Gwynn Jr. ph b-Asche ph Totals
5 5 4 5 4 5 4 5 2 1 1 41
Arizona
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Pollock cf 5 Prado 3b 5 Goldschmidt 1b 3 Montero c 4 Hill 2b 3 C.Ross lf 4 G.Parra rf 3 Owings ss 3 Arroyo p 2 Cahill p 0 c-Pennington ph 1 Totals 33 Philadelphia 000 Arizona 212
0 0 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 1 0 6
2 1 1 0 1 2 3 0 1 1 1 13
1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 6
0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3
1 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 5
1 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 10 5 5 4 000 240—6 000 000—5
.303 .270 .353 .244 .269 .276 .296 .033 .250 .250 .214 .273 .243 .318 .268 .255 .115 .250 .296 .250 .167 .273 13 1 10 3
Twins 5, Tigers 3 AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Kinsler 2b Tor.Hunter rf Mi.Cabrera 1b V.Martinez dh A.Jackson cf Castellanos 3b An.Romine ss b-J.Martinez ph Holaday c a-Avila ph-c R.Davis lf Totals
4 4 4 3 4 4 3 1 2 1 3 33
Minnesota
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 3 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 8
1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 5 4 000 040
Cl.Lee 6 Manship W, 1-0 1 Bastardo H, 3 2-3 Mi.Adams H, 1 1-3 Papelbon S, 7-8 1
8 1 0 0 1
5 0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 0
2 2 1 0 0
2 89 0 19 1 11 0 4 1 8
3.29 6.75 4.09 2.08 2.61
0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 1 8
0 2 2 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 4 8 9 001—3 01x—5
.278 .310 .259 .286 .314 .258 .229 .222 .235 .220 .353
.217 .266 .310 .115 .308 .303 .230 .298 .188 .240 8 4
1 1
a-walked for Holaday in the 8th. b-struck out for An.Romine in the 9th. E—Holaday (2), Fuld (1). LOB—Detroit 5, Minnesota 7. 2B—Tor.Hunter (6), Mi.Cabrera (7), A.Jackson (6), Fuld (4), A.Hicks (3). HR—V.Martinez (4), off Perkins; Pinto (5), off Alburquerque. RBIs—Mi.Cabrera (15), V.Martinez 2 (10), Mauer (6), Plouffe 2 (17), Pinto (9). SB—A. Jackson (2), Fuld (2). CS—Dozier (1). S—E. Escobar. SF—V.Martinez. Runners left in scoring position—Detroit 4 (Mi.Cabrera 2, An.Romine, Avila); Minnesota 5 (Pinto 3, Dozier, E.Escobar). RISP—Detroit 1 for 8; Minnesota 1 for 10. GIDP—Mi.Cabrera, Pinto. DP—Detroit 1 (Kinsler, An.Romine, Mi.Cabrera); Minnesota 1 (E.Escobar, Colabello). Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.Sanchez Ortega L, 0-1 Coke Alburquerque
Minnesota
2 2-3 1 1-3 2 2-3 1 1-3
0 0 2 2
0 4 0 1
0 4 0 1
2 4 2 0
2 1 2 4
53 3.13 36 27.00 46 8.10 28 5.00
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
P.Hughes W, 2-1 7 4 2 1 0 6 105 Burton H, 4 1 2 0 0 1 0 13 Perkins S, 6-7 1 2 1 1 0 2 24 Ortega pitched to 4 batters in the 5th.
5.14 9.00 4.09
Inherited runners-scored—Ortega 1-0, Coke 3-3. HBP—by Ortega (Plouffe). WP—Coke. T—3:13. A—28,122 (39,021).
Yankees 4, Angels 3 Los Angeles
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Cowgill rf Trout cf Pujols dh H.Kendrick 2b Aybar ss Iannetta c 1-Boesch pr-lf I.Stewart 1b Freese 3b Shuck lf a-Ibanez ph Conger c Totals
5 3 5 4 4 4 0 3 4 3 1 0 36
New York
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
1 2 2 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 9
0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 4
1 1 0 2 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 10
0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 1 6 000—3 00x—4
.290 .313 .299 .299 .262 .222 .231 .256 .149 .164 .155 .310
.322 .292 .281 .270 .361 .212 .272 .212 .213 .308
Boston Toronto
006 010 000—7 300 000 021—6
for 7. Runners moved up—H.Kendrick, A.Soriano, K.Johnson. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Buchholz W, 1-2 7 Tazawa 1-3 Capuano H, 3 1-3 Uehara S, 5-5 1 1-3
Toronto
6 4 0 3
Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 6 Boston
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Toronto
0 1 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 7
1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 5
0 0 0 0 2 4 1 0 0 7
1 1 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 9
0 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 3 8
.275 .133 .253 .226 .221 .277 .286 .182 .225
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Reyes ss 3 Me.Cabrera lf 5 Bautista dh 5 Francisco 1b-3b 4 Navarro c 4 Rasmus cf 5 Lawrie 3b-2b 5 Sierra rf 3 a-Encrnacion 1b 2 Goins 2b 3 b-Diaz ph-rf 1 Totals 40
1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
0 1 3 1 3 1 2 0 1 1 0 13
0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 5
2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
0 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 6
.188 .339 .296 .333 .309 .188 .165 .074 .231 .150 .194
3 2 0 1
3 2 0 1
3 0 1 0
3 0 1 2
105 18 16 25
6.66 1.74 0.00 0.96
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Morrow L, 1-2 2 2-3 0 Jenkins 1 2-3 5 Loup 1 2-3 0 Cecil 1 0 Delabar 1 0 Santos 1 0
4 3 0 0 0 0
4 3 0 0 0 0
8 0 0 1 0 0
1 2 1 2 0 2
65 6.04 37 16.20 14 4.09 14 3.72 11 4.32 17 5.40
Inherited runners-scored—Capuano 2-0, Uehara 3-0, Jenkins 3-3, Loup 1-0. WP— Buchholz. PB—Navarro. Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, Marty Foster; Second, Alan Porter; Third, Rob Drake. T—3:23. A—40,322 (49,282).
Nationals 4, Padres 0 San Diego
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
E.Cabrera ss Denorfia lf Venable rf Gyorko 2b Alonso 1b Amarista cf Peterson 3b Rivera c a-Grandal ph-c Cashner p Roach p b-Nady ph Thayer p Totals
4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 0 1 0 1 0 29
Washington
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Span cf Rendon 3b Werth rf LaRoche 1b Desmond ss Espinosa 2b Frandsen lf Leon c Roark p Totals San Diego Washington
5 4 4 3 4 3 3 4 3 33 000 300
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
1 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 8
0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 4 10 4 1 7 000 000—0 001 00x—4
.300 .324 .200 .149 .182 .188 .200 .200 .250 .200 — .161 — .233 .300 .272 .321 .242 .282 .267 .152 .111
Brewers 5, Cubs 3 Chicago
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Bonifacio cf Valbuena 2b Rizzo 1b S.Castro ss Schierholtz rf Olt 3b Sweeney lf Castillo c T.Wood p b-Lake ph Totals
4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 1 31
Milwaukee
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
C.Gomez cf 2 Segura ss 0 a-Bianchi ph-ss 4 Braun rf 4 E.Herrera rf 0 Ar.Ramirez 3b 3 Lucroy c 4 K.Davis lf 4 Mar.Reynolds 1b4 R.Weeks 2b 3 Gennett 2b 0 Estrada p 2 Totals 30 Chicago 000 Milwaukee 120
0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 3
Runners left in scoring position—San Diego 2 (Denorfia, Gyorko); Washington 6 (Frandsen, Rendon 2, Espinosa 3). RISP— San Diego 0 for 3; Washington 4 for 9. Runners moved up—Venable. GIDP—Nady. DP—Washington 1 (Desmond, Espinosa, LaRoche). San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cashner L, 2-3 Roach Thayer
Washington Roark W, 2-0
6 1 1
9 1 0
4 0 0
4 0 0
1 0 0
5 99 1 17 1 20
2.68 4.32 0.71
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 9
3
0
0
1
8 105
2.76
IBB—off Cashner (LaRoche). HBP—by Thayer (Frandsen). Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings; First, Marvin Hudson; Second, Cory Blaser; Third, Jim Joyce. T—2:19. A—31,590 (41,408).
Pirates 6, Cardinals 1 Pittsburgh
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
St. Louis
1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
0 1 1 1 0 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7
0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6
1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5
.238 .217 .298 .220 .208 .242 .271 .175 .318 .091 .000 — .231 — — .169 —
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
1 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 400 010
0 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 8 002—6 000—1
.272 .175 .270 .330 .345 .174 .163 .100 .000 .283 — — — .111 7 5
0 0
a-grounded out for Lyons in the 6th. b-grounded out for J.Hughes in the 7th. c-walked for G.Sanchez in the 9th. d-flied out for Watson in the 9th. e-struck out for Choate in the 9th. LOB—Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 9. 2B—G. Sanchez (3), Jh.Peralta (5), Holliday (7). RBIs—A.McCutchen (14), G.Sanchez 2 (7), Tabata (5), T.Sanchez 2 (6), Holliday (13). SB—Bourjos (2). S—Mercer. Runners left in scoring position— Pittsburgh 1 (Snider); St. Louis 7 (M.Ellis, Y.Molina 4, Jay, Ma.Adams). RISP—Pittsburgh 4 for 8; St. Louis 2 for 12. Runners moved up—Mercer. Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Liriano 2 2 Pimentel W, 2-02 2-32 J.Hughes 1 1-3 0 Ju.Wilson H, 1 1 1 Watson H, 5 1 0 Melancon 1 0
St. Louis
0 1 0 0 0 0
0 1 0 0 0 0
2 2 1 0 0 0
2 3 1 0 1 1
45 53 18 28 9 14
3.97 2.38 0.00 1.86 2.38 1.50
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Lyons L, 0-2 6 4 4 4 1 4 75 Maness 2 1 0 0 0 1 18 Fornataro 2-3 2 2 2 1 0 13 Choate 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 Liriano pitched to 2 batters in the 3rd.
4.50 2.70 4.91 1.42
Inherited runners-scored—Pimentel 2-0, J.Hughes 2-0, Choate 1-0. PB—T.Sanchez. T—3:02. A—46,254 (45,399).
0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 4
1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 5 8 100 101
0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3 2 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 11
.337 .216 .286 .272 .213 .192 .191 .246 .250 .220
1 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 5 3 5 020—3 00x—5
.299 .239 .238 .318 .200 .292 .317 .265 .215 .172 .313 .000 4 8
0 0
a-singled for Segura in the 1st. b-struck out for Schlitter in the 8th. LOB—Chicago 1, Milwaukee 6. HR— Valbuena (1), off Estrada; Castillo (4), off Estrada; K.Davis (3), off T.Wood. RBIs—Valbuena (4), Castillo 2 (11), C.Gomez (13), Bianchi 2 (3), Ar.Ramirez (18), K.Davis (7). SF—Ar.Ramirez. Runners left in scoring position—Milwaukee 1 (Braun). RISP—Chicago 0 for 0; Milwaukee 1 for 6. Runners moved up—Braun. DP—Chicago 1 (Valbuena, Valbuena, Castillo). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Wood L, 1-3 5 2-3 7 Schlitter 1 1-3 1 Strop 1 0
Milwaukee
5 0 0
5 0 0
3 0 0
3 107 0 11 2 12
3.52 5.14 3.86
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Estrada W, 2-1 7 2-3 4 W.Smith H, 7 1-3 0 Fr.Rodriguez S, 11-11 15 0.00
3 0 1
3 0 0
0 0 0
9 107 1 6 0 0
2.87 0.00 1
Inherited runners-scored—Schlitter 1-0. HBP—by T.Wood (R.Weeks). T—2:51. A—40,008 (41,900).
Orioles 3, Royals 2, 10 innings Kansas City
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Aoki rf 5 Infante 2b 4 Hosmer 1b 4 B.Butler dh 4 A.Gordon lf 5 S.Perez c 5 1-Paredes pr 0 Hayes c 0 Valencia 3b 3 a-Dyson ph-cf 1 Maxwell cf 3 b-Mstakas ph-3b1 A.Escobar ss 4 Totals 39 Baltimore
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2
2 0 1 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 11
0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2
0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2
0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 7
.270 .265 .300 .209 .267 .226 — .000 .286 .375 .190 .156 .299
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
J.Weeks dh 4 1 N.Cruz rf 4 1 3 3 Markakis 1b 5 0 10 1 A.Jones cf 4 0 a-walked for Rivera in the 8th. b-grounded Wieters c 4 0 into a double play for Roach in the 8th. Hardy ss 4 0 E—E.Cabrera (3), Alonso (1), Gyorko (3), Flaherty 3b 4 0 LaRoche (2). LOB—San Diego 4, Washing- Schoop 2b 3 1 Lough lf 4 0 ton 9. 2B—Desmond (4). RBIs—Span (6), Totals 36 3 LaRoche (15), Desmond (16), Espinosa (5). SB—Desmond (1). S—Cashner, Roark. Kansas City 001 001 Baltimore 200 000 SF—Espinosa.
M.Carpenter 3b 3 Jh.Peralta ss 3 Holliday lf 4 Ma.Adams 1b 4 H.Sntgo L, 0-4 4 1-3 6 4 4 1 3 77 4.44 Y.Molina c 4 Jepsen 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 11 5.63 Craig rf 4 Maronde 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 1.93 Bourjos cf 3 Kohn 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 16 1.38 M.Ellis 2b 4 Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 7.59 1 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lyons p 1 Nuno 4 1-3 5 3 3 2 4 72 6.59 a-Jay ph 0 Betances W, 1-0 2 1 0 0 1 3 32 0.77 Maness p 0 Kelley H, 3 1 1-3 2 0 0 1 1 24 2.38 Fornataro p Choate p 0 Thornton H, 7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 7 1.80 1 Dv.Robrtsn S, 3-31 1 0 0 0 2 26 0.00 e-Descalso ph Totals 32 Inherited runners-scored—Jepsen 2-0, Pittsburgh 000 Kohn 1-0, Betances 1-0, Kelley 1-0, 000 Thornton 2-0. HBP—by Frieri (Gardner), by St. Louis H.Santiago (Teixeira). Balk—H.Santiago, Betances. T—3:05. A—40,908 (49,642).
5 0 13 0
a-singled for Sierra in the 8th. b-struck out for Goins in the 8th. LOB—Boston 4, Toronto 11. 2B—Carp (3), G.Sizemore (3), Bautista (4). HR— Pierzynski (2), off Jenkins; Middlebrooks (2), off Jenkins; Francisco (2), off Tazawa; Bautista (7), off Uehara. RBIs—G.Sizemore 2 (7), Pierzynski 4 (12), Middlebrooks (4), Bautista 2 (16), Francisco (3), Navarro (14), Encarnacion (10). CS—Pedroia (2). Runners left in scoring position—Boston 3 (Carp, J.Herrera, Middlebrooks); Toronto 6 (Rasmus, Navarro, Bautista, Me.Cabrera 2, Encarnacion). RISP—Boston 2 for 7; Toronto 3 for 13. Runners moved up—Pierzynski, Middlebrooks, Reyes, Me.Cabrera, Francisco. GIDP—Carp, J.Herrera. DP—Toronto 2 (Goins, Reyes, Francisco), (Reyes, Francisco). Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Marte lf 3 J.Harrison 3b 4 A.McCutchen cf 4 G.Sanchez 1b 3 c-I.Davis ph-1b 0 9 0 N.Walker 2b 4 7 1 Tabata rf 4 a-lined out for Shuck in the 8th. Mercer ss 3 1-ran for Iannetta in the 8th. T.Sanchez c 4 Liriano p 1 E—B.Roberts (3). LOB—Los Angeles 10, Pimentel p 1 New York 6. 2B—Iannetta (5). HR—Trout 0 (6), off Nuno; J.Murphy (1), off H.Santiago. J.Hughes p b-Snider ph 1 RBIs—Trout (15), Iannetta (9), J.Murphy 3 Ju.Wilson p 0 (3). SB—Trout (3), Gardner (6). Watson p 0 Runners left in scoring position—Los d-P.Alvarez ph 1 Angeles 6 (Aybar, Shuck, H.Kendrick 3, Melancon p 0 Ibanez); New York 2 (Teixeira, J.Murphy). Totals 33 RISP—Los Angeles 2 for 14; New York 1
Pedroia 2b 4 Victorino rf 4 a-doubled for Cl.Lee in the 7th. b-doubled D.Ortiz dh 1 for Manship in the 8th. c-struck out for Carp 1b 3 Cahill in the 8th. G.Sizemore lf 2 E—Rollins (2), C.Ross (1), Prado (6), Ow3 ings (3). LOB—Philadelphia 11, Arizona 8. Pierzynski c 2B—Gwynn Jr. (2), Asche (3), Pollock (6), Middlebrooks 3b4 Hill (9). 3B—Pollock (1). RBIs—Revere (5), J.Herrera ss 4 Rollins (15), Ruiz (7), Gwynn Jr. (2), Asche Bradley Jr. cf 4 2 (6), Pollock (4), Goldschmidt (16), C.Ross Totals 29 3 (4). SB—Revere (8). CS—Pollock (1), Prado (1). S—Arroyo. SF—Goldschmidt. Runners left in scoring position—Philadelphia 5 (Galvis 2, Utley, Howard 2); Arizona 4 (G.Parra, Arroyo, C.Ross 2). RISP—Philadelphia 6 for 14; Arizona 3 for 10. Runners moved up—Rollins, Ruiz, Galvis, Prado. DP—Arizona 1 (Owings, Hill). Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
4.00
Detroit
0 0
Leake L, 2-2 M.Parra Christiani
7.77 2.89 34
Inherited runners-scored—Mi.Adams 1-0, Thatcher 1-1, Cahill 1-1. IBB—off Manship (Montero), off Cahill (Utley). T—3:05. A—35,462 (48,633).
Ellsbury cf 4 0 1 Jeter ss 4 0 1 Beltran dh 4 0 0 a-grounded out for Leake in the 8th. 4 0 1 LOB—Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 4. 2B—Ludwick A.Soriano rf (3). HR—Freeman (6), off Leake; J.Upton I.Suzuki rf 0 0 0 (7), off Leake; Gattis (6), off Leake. RBIs— Teixeira 1b 3 1 0 Ludwick (10), Freeman 2 (16), J.Upton (16), Gardner lf 3 1 2 Gattis (13). SB—J.Upton (3). B.Roberts 2b 3 1 0 Runners left in scoring position—CincinK.Johnson 3b 3 0 0 nati 3 (B.Pena 2, Bruce); Atlanta 1 (Uggla). J.Murphy c 3 1 2 RISP—Cincinnati 1 for 3; Atlanta 0 for 1. Totals 31 4 7 GIDP—B.Pena, Simmons. Los Angeles 100 200 DP—Cincinnati 1 (Phillips, Cozart, Votto); New York 030 010 Atlanta 1 (Simmons, Uggla, Freeman). 2 8
Phillies 6, Diamondbacks 5
1-0 19.2 4.58 No Record
4-1 3-1
REC
5.29 3.60
No Record 0-1 4.2 11.57 W-L
San Francisco
Hale W, 1-0 Kimbrel S, 8-9
IP
4-0 42.1 0-2 12.2
0-3 1-0
REC
IP
2013 vs. Opp W-L IP
2-3 2-2
REC
6.55 2.19
No Record 0-0 8.0 0.00
2-3 2-3
REC
IP
2-1 17.0 1-1 10.0
3-2 0-5
REC
IP
1-1 11.0 3-0 37.0
2-3 3-3 REC
IP
No Record 2-2 29.1 3.07
2-2 4-1 REC
IP
No Record No Record
3-1 4-0 REC
1.50 2.92
No Record 0-1 5.1 8.44
2-3 1-3
2014 Team ERA REC
0-3 0-1
2013 vs. Opp W-L IP
2-2 2-3
2014 Team W-L ERA REC
-120 2:10p
LINE
1.93 1.46
1-3 3-1
-180 12:10p
LINE
ERA
W-L
-170 12:10p
Harrison (L) Maurer (R)
2.60 2.19
1-1 4-1
-150 12:10p LINE
ERA
W-L
-115 11:35a
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Detroit Verlander (R) Minnesota Gibson (R)
3.60 6.23
3-1 3-0
-120 11:07a
Milone (L) McHugh (R)
ERA
W-L
2:10p -110
LINE
1.38 1.80
1-3 0-3
2:10p -170
LINE
ERA
W-L
12:15p -190
LINE
2.13 3.58
2-2 2-1
12:10p -160
TEAM ERA Oakland Houston
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Los Angeles Richards (R) New York Tanaka (R)
W-L
11:35a -115
LINE
PITCHERS
2-1 1-1
11:35a -115
TEAM PITCHERS ERA Kansas City Shields (R) Baltimore Gonzalez (R) PITCHERS
2014 Team W-L ERA REC
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Bourn cf 5 Swisher 1b 5 Kipnis 2b 5 C.Santana 3b 3 Brantley lf 3 A.Cabrera ss 3 Y.Gomes c 4 Dav.Murphy rf 4 McAllister p 2 b-Chisenhall ph 1 C.Lee p 0 Outman p 0 Shaw p 0 c-Giambi ph 0 1-Kluber pr 0 Totals 35
Braves 4, Reds 1
Sunday’s Games Miami (Koehler 2-1) at N.Y. Mets (Gee 1-1), 11:10 a.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 2-2) at Atlanta (Teheran 2-1), 11:35 a.m. San Diego (Kennedy 1-3) at Washington (Jordan 0-3), 11:35 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-1) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 3-0), 12:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Volquez 1-1) at St. Louis (Wainwright 4-1), 12:15 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 0-3) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 0-1), 2:05 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 1-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 3-1), 2:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Burnett 0-1) at Arizona (McCarthy 0-4), 2:10 p.m.
Subject to change. National League TEAM PITCHERS ERA Miami Koehler (R) New York Gee (R)
Cleveland
Dozier 2b 2 Mauer dh 2 Plouffe 3b 2 Florimon ss 1 Colabello 1b 3 Kubel lf 4 Pinto c 3 Fuld rf 3 9 1 3 6 0 A.Hicks cf a-singled for J.Gutierrez in the 5th. b-lined E.Escobar ss-3b 3 out for McAllister in the 6th. c-was hit by Totals 26 a pitch for Shaw in the 9th. Detroit 200 1-ran for Giambi in the 9th. Minnesota 000
Sunday’s Games Boston (Lester 2-3) at Toronto (Dickey 1-3), 11:07 a.m. Kansas City (Shields 2-2) at Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 1-1), 11:35 a.m. Detroit (Verlander 3-1) at Minnesota (Gibson 3-1), 12:10 p.m. Oakland (Milone 0-1) at Houston (McHugh 1-0), 12:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Price 3-1) at Chicago White Sox (Carroll 0-0), 12:10 p.m. Texas (Harrison 0-0) at Seattle (Maurer 0-0), 2:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Richards 2-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 3-0), 6:05 p.m.
Saturday’s Games Washington 4, San Diego 0 San Francisco 5, Cleveland 3 Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 1 Milwaukee 5, Chicago Cubs 3 Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 1 Miami 7, N.Y. Mets 6, 10 innings Philadelphia 6, Arizona 5 L.A. Dodgers 6, Colorado 3
Arizona
Giants 5, Indians 3
East
2 0 0 0 .500 0 0 1 3 .286 2 2 0 1 .299 1 1 0 0 .277 0 0 0 0 .338 1 0 0 0 .254 1 0 0 1 .188 1 0 0 1 .250 0 0 0 0 .164 8 3 1 6 000 0—2 11 2 000 1—3 8 0
One out when winning run scored. a-sacrificed for Valencia in the 8th. bgrounded out for Maxwell in the 8th. 1-ran for S.Perez in the 10th. E—Duffy 2 (2). LOB—Kansas City 11, Baltimore 8. 2B—Hosmer (7), S.Perez (8), A.Escobar (7). 3B—J.Weeks (1). RBIs— Hosmer (7), Maxwell (2), Markakis 2 (8), A.Jones (13). S—Infante, Dyson, J.Weeks. Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 7 (A.Gordon 3, Hosmer, A.Escobar 2, Dyson); Baltimore 2 (N.Cruz, Lough). RISP—Kansas City 3 for 11; Baltimore 2 for 6. Runners moved up—Moustakas. GIDP— Lough. DP—Kansas City 1 (Infante, A.Escobar, Hosmer). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Guthrie W.Davis Crow Duffy L, 1-1 Coleman
7 1 1 0 1-3
6 0 1 0 1
2 0 0 1 0
2 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0
3 97 2 12 0 17 0 8 1 9
4.22 3.18 0.00 0.00 4.91
Baltimore
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
W.Chen 7 9 2 2 2 6 102 Meek 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 7 Matusz 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 O’Day 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 Tom.Hunter 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 20 Britton W, 3-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 Duffy pitched to 3 batters in the 10th.
4.34 3.60 5.40 1.04 3.12 1.17
Inherited runners-scored—Coleman 3-1, Matusz 1-0, O’Day 1-0, Britton 1-0. IBB—off W.Chen (B.Butler). HBP—by Duffy (Schoop). T—3:09. A—34,941 (45,971).
Astros 7, Athletics 6 Oakland
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Crisp dh D.Norris c a-Jaso ph-c Lowrie ss Donaldson 3b Callaspo 1b Barton 1b Reddick rf Gentry cf Moss lf Punto 2b Totals
4 3 2 5 4 3 0 4 2 4 4 35
Houston
AB R H BI BBSO Avg.
Altuve 2b 4 Fowler cf 4 J.Castro c 4 Springer rf 4 Krauss 1b 3 Guzman 1b 0 Carter dh 3 Presley lf 3 M.Dominguez 3b3 Ma.Gonzalez ss 3 Totals 31 Oakland 200 Houston 120
1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 6
1 2 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 2 2 11
1 1 2 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 7 8 000 000
1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 5
0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 3
0 1 2 2 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 9
0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 3 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 7 2 9 103—6 04x—7
.273 .362 .224 .291 .286 .269 .167 .232 .313 .278 .250 .284 .238 .221 .186 .132 .182 .176 .246 .229 .261 11 0 8 0
a-struck out for D.Norris in the 7th. LOB—Oakland 6, Houston 2. 2B—Crisp (2), D.Norris (3), Springer (2). HR—Moss (4), off Williams; Fowler (2), off Straily; Carter (3), off Straily. RBIs—Crisp (10), Lowrie (11), Moss 3 (20), Fowler 2 (5), J.Castro (13), Springer (2), Krauss (5), Carter 2 (8). SB—Crisp (7). SF—Crisp. Runners left in scoring position—Oakland 3 (Gentry, Callaspo, Jaso); Houston 1 (M.Dominguez). RISP—Oakland 4 for 10; Houston 2 for 7. Runners moved up—Springer, Krauss, Presley. GIDP—Donaldson, Callaspo. DP—Oakland 1 (Reddick, Reddick, Donaldson); Houston 2 (Ma.Gonzalez, Altuve, Krauss), (Williams, Ma.Gonzalez, Krauss). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Straily 6 1-3 Cook 2-3 Doolittle L, 0-2 0 Gregerson 1
Houston
4 0 4 0
3 0 4 0
3 0 4 0
2 0 0 0
7 89 1 7 0 13 1 17
5.14 1.23 6.17 2.63
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Keuchel 6 1-3 6 3 3 2 6 97 Williams W, 1-1 BS, 1-1 2 5 3 3 1 49 6.75 Valdes S, 1-1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 9 Doolittle pitched to 4 batters in the 8th.
3.56 1 9.00
Inherited runners-scored—Cook 1-0, Gregerson 2-2, Williams 2-1, Valdes 1-0. WP—Gregerson. PB—Jaso. T—3:13. A—17,850 (42,060).
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Roark’s shutout leads Nationals to win over Padres The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Tanner Roark pitched a three-hitter for the first complete game of his career as the Washington Nationals beat the San Diego Padres 4-0 Nationals 4 on Saturday. Padres 0 Roark set down the first 16 batters before San Diego catcher Rene Rivera, an .074 batter entering the game, hit a solid single to center field with one out in the sixth inning. Roark (2-0) walked one and struck out eight, including Jedd Gyorko to end the game on his 105th pitch. The 27-yearold right-hander extended his run of consecutive scoreless innings to 18, improved to 4-0 in his career at Nationals Park. In 35 innings there he has given up one earned run. BRAVES 4, REDS 1 In Atlanta, rookie righthander David Hale allowed only two hits over eight innings in a performance that may not
be enough to save his spot in Atlanta’s rotation and the Braves beat Cincinnati. Freddie Freeman, Justin Upton and Evan Gattis each homered off Cincinnati’s Mike Leake (2-2). Hale gave up a walk and two hits, including Ryan Ludwick’s run-scoring double, in the first inning. He didn’t allow another hit as he faced the minimum 21 batters over the next seven innings. Cincinnati’s only other baserunner against Hale came on Jay Bruce’s leadoff walk in the fourth, and the Braves ended that inning with a double play. PIRATES 6, CARDINALS 1 In St. Louis, Gaby Sanchez had two RBIs in a four-run fourth inning and Pittsburgh’s bullpen worked seven strong innings after starter Francisco Liriano left with flu-like symptoms and dizziness in a victory over St. Louis. Matt Holliday had an RBI double for the Cardinals, who have mustered five runs in their last six games. They got three hits and a run in seven innings
off five Pittsburgh relievers. Yadier Molina was a bust on his jersey giveaway day, striking out with the bases loaded to end the third against Stolmy Pimentel (2-0) and popping out with runners on second and third to end the fifth against Jared Hughes. He entered batting .431 during a 15-game hitting streak. MARLINS 7, METS 6 (10 INNINGS) In New York, Jarrod Saltalamacchia homered leading off the 10th inning, Giancarlo Stanton also went deep and Miami rallied from four runs down to beat New York. Stanton hit a two-run shot and Miami climbed out of a 5-1 hole with a five-run sixth capped by pinch-hitter Reed Johnson’s two-run double. Stanton’s seventh home run of the season gave him 29 RBIs, most in the majors. Bobby Abreu hit his first major league homer since 2012 and Lucas Duda had a two-run single for the Mets, who had won three straight and five of six.
Mike Dunn (2-3) struck out four in two hitless innings and Steve Cishek earned his fifth save, one night after coughing up a ninth-inning lead for his first blown save since June 4, 2013. BREWERS 5, CUBS 3 In Milwaukee, Jeff Bianchi had a two-run single, and Marco Estrada threw 7 2/3 strong innings to lead Milwaukee past Chicago. Bianchi went 2 for 4, entering the game as a pinch-hitter in the first for Jean Segura, who was hit in the head in the dugout by a bat. A TV replay showed the AllBy La Mesa RV of Albuquerque
AMERICAN LEAGUE
D-5
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Star getting hit on the right side of the head during a warmup swing by teammate Ryan Braun, who was facing the field on the top steps of the dugout while Segura was coming up behind him. PHILLIES 6, DIAMONDBACKS 5 In Phoenix, pinch hitter Cody Asche hit a two-run double in Philadelphia’s four-run eighth inning and the Phillies rallied after a shaky start by Cliff Lee to beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 6-5 on Saturday night. The Phillies fell behind 5-0 in the first three innings as Lee struggled.
ByLaMesaRV ofSanford
SUPER
RV SHOW
Santa Ana Star Center
Thur-Sun • April 24-27 • 9a-7p rking FREE Paission & Adm 3001 Civic Center Circle NE in Rio Rancho • www.rvshowusa.com
D-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 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
Very windy; cooler with a t-storm
Tonight
Monday
Breezy with patchy clouds
59
Tuesday
A shower possible
31
Mostly sunny
59/29
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
32%
32%
Wednesday
Partly sunny
Times of clouds and sun, a shower
65/36
70/41
75/41
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
16%
New Mexico weather
33%
27%
10%
20%
wind: SW 7-14 mph
wind: SSW 6-12 mph
wind: WNW 8-16 mph
wind: WNW 6-12 mph
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 285
64
Farmington 58/39
Raton 63/30
64
Española 65/42 Los Alamos 53/32 40
Santa Fe 59/31 Pecos 54/30
25
Albuquerque 66/43
25
87
56 412
Clayton 67/35
Pollen index
54
40
40
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
Clovis 70/38
54 60
Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
Roswell 81/52
Ruidoso 60/47
25
Truth or Consequences 72/53
70
70
Hobbs 78/49
285
Alamogordo 74/51
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.
70
180
Las Cruces 72/55
Carlsbad 83/56
54
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes Sat. High 92 .................................. Carlsbad Sat. Low 27 ................................... Moriarty
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Hi/Lo W 81/57 pc 73/53 c 57/43 pc 86/61 pc 92/58 r 53/42 c 67/46 pc 81/50 pc 59/45 pc 85/53 pc 60/42 r 80/53 pc 72/52 c 65/40 sh 82/59 pc 59/31 sn 64/33 t 88/59 s 79/61 pc
Hi/Lo W 74/51 s 66/43 t 43/25 t 81/57 s 83/56 s 44/27 t 59/32 t 67/35 pc 51/19 s 70/38 pc 52/36 t 72/47 s 65/42 t 58/39 t 74/46 pc 54/39 t 56/37 t 78/49 s 72/55 s
Hi/Lo W 72/36 s 62/38 pc 43/16 pc 82/50 pc 85/52 s 43/20 pc 56/24 pc 62/34 sh 54/12 pc 69/36 pc 52/28 pc 77/51 s 61/37 pc 57/31 pc 72/36 pc 55/28 pc 52/29 pc 80/46 s 78/54 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 68/45 75/59 63/49 74/56 83/59 74/42 67/41 74/53 89/57 66/50 77/54 72/48 78/52 63/37 77/62 88/59 82/65 63/49 56/46
W pc pc pc pc pc pc pc sh pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc r c
Hi/Lo W 59/35 t 72/51 s 53/32 t 67/46 t 73/44 pc 63/30 c 40/23 sh 64/41 t 81/52 s 60/47 s 70/43 pc 67/45 s 71/48 pc 52/23 t 72/53 s 74/44 pc 74/55 s 57/34 t 54/39 t
Hi/Lo W 57/26 pc 78/49 s 52/23 pc 68/39 pc 71/36 pc 57/29 pc 40/12 pc 63/32 pc 79/45 pc 63/39 pc 68/34 pc 72/45 s 74/45 pc 51/16 pc 77/49 pc 72/35 pc 80/56 s 56/26 pc 55/28 pc
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Sunrise today ............................... 6:17 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:47 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 5:16 a.m. Moonset today ............................. 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. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:15 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 7:49 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 6:35 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 8:32 p.m. New
First
Full
Last
Apr 29
May 6
May 14
May 21
The planets Rise 6:24 a.m. 4:28 a.m. 5:39 p.m. 10:30 a.m. 8:45 p.m. 5:17 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 7:55 p.m. 4:15 p.m. 5:26 a.m. 12:58 a.m. 7:18 a.m. 5:51 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities
Weather for April 27
Yesterday Today Tomorrow 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
Hi/Lo 45/34 80/52 76/49 63/50 64/39 55/37 46/43 81/58 80/44 58/42 80/48 59/41 84/61 78/46 59/41 57/29 35/31 84/73 83/68 78/50 79/54 69/51 68/50
W pc s pc t sh c r s pc pc pc s pc pc pc pc sn c c pc t pc s
Hi/Lo 56/39 84/62 65/44 54/37 52/38 56/35 53/41 86/63 85/61 56/48 75/58 55/41 87/59 52/31 56/41 57/31 53/33 86/70 86/71 72/58 75/51 75/61 70/56
W c s s r r sh c s s r pc pc t r pc s pc pc pc sh t s pc
Hi/Lo 53/39 84/64 62/49 51/37 44/38 56/36 56/41 84/65 80/62 58/51 74/57 64/55 89/56 51/29 54/51 60/34 57/33 83/69 90/70 73/58 70/45 76/62 77/58
W pc pc r c r pc pc pc c r t r pc c r s pc pc t t t s s
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 81/49 83/52 89/70 45/40 55/37 84/68 67/46 90/61 89/68 72/48 78/59 70/42 57/42 80/52 80/60 48/42 92/69 65/56 62/49 59/42 68/46 70/46 78/50
W pc pc pc pc pc pc t pc pc t sh pc r pc t sh c c pc pc c t pc
Hi/Lo 82/63 78/68 87/74 49/43 48/43 81/71 61/45 81/51 88/66 65/45 79/64 62/40 55/42 73/52 79/63 52/35 95/64 67/59 61/47 53/42 64/48 64/41 68/52
W pc t s sh r pc pc t t s s pc r s t c t pc pc r r pc s
Hi/Lo 79/61 83/64 86/77 54/46 50/44 83/71 64/49 76/50 89/68 65/48 86/65 66/47 60/45 67/58 81/56 50/36 95/63 70/60 64/50 58/42 64/44 65/46 65/53
W t t pc r r t pc pc pc pc s r pc r t pc pc s pc pc r pc r
World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Stationary front
Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Warm front
Ice
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 100 ........................... Zapata, TX Sat. Low: 9 ........... Tuolumne Meadows, CA
Weather history
Weather trivia™
On April 27, 1928, winter returned briefly to Bayard, W.Va. Over 34 inches of snow fell in 24 hours, West Virginia’s heaviest April snowfall ever.
and what type of storm occur in Q: Bees swarms?
A: Tornadoes
Travel Bug
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
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380
380
70
10
Water statistics
As of 4/25/2014 Trees .................................................. 12 Low Grass........................................... 7 Moderate Other ................................................... 2 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................21
25
Las Vegas 59/35
285
60
Saturday’s rating ................................ Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 52/23
84
666
Area rainfall
Sunny to partly cloudy
59/36
Almanac
Gallup 54/39
Plenty of sunshine
Humidity (Noon)
18%
64
Saturday
59/34
wind: WNW 15-25 mph wind: WNW 8-16 mph
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”
Friday
Giant tortoises mate in the highlands of Santa Cruz Island in the Galápagos of Ecuador. This is one of the few times tortoises make a sound. The 600-pound male emits a howl. The only other time they make sounds is when males or females are frightened and pull their heads and legs inside their shell, emitting a loud hiss. COURTESY TOM SHARPE
Humidity (Noon)
wind: WNW 25-35 mph wind: NW 12-25 mph
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 70°/47° Normal high/low ............................ 69°/37° Record high ............................... 83° in 2012 Record low ................................. 20° in 1964 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 ..... 0.65”/2.59” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/0.95”
Thursday
LASTING IMAGES TORTOISES
Hi/Lo W 64/52 pc 73/59 pc 105/77 s 97/82 pc 72/54 pc 74/54 pc 70/50 pc 66/52 r 68/46 s 82/64 s 89/76 pc 84/66 pc 64/43 s 52/46 r 68/52 pc 81/64 pc 90/68 pc 82/75 c 72/59 s 73/64 c
Hi/Lo 60/51 69/54 99/75 99/81 68/53 78/51 71/50 62/47 75/55 88/68 89/73 75/63 62/45 55/43 57/46 73/61 92/67 84/75 76/56 75/59
W Hi/Lo W r 61/53 sh r 73/56 sh pc 102/72 pc s 99/81 s pc 67/55 pc pc 82/54 s pc 72/50 sh r 65/49 r pc 75/55 pc s 92/65 s s 89/73 s s 79/54 s pc 61/43 pc sh 59/43 pc r 54/46 sh pc 74/60 t t 90/69 t c 83/72 pc s 79/57 s pc 74/61 pc
(505) 992-0418 839 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, NM 87501 Saturday, April p 19th, 9t , 55:00 00 PM
Yesterday Today Tomorrow 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
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 63/55 pc 68/55 pc 70/55 pc 59/46 sh 59/48 sh 61/45 sh 64/48 pc 69/50 pc 72/52 pc 78/55 pc 81/57 t 78/55 s 48/41 r 52/37 sh 57/41 c 50/37 s 61/43 c 63/45 c 104/74 pc 104/72 pc 106/76 pc 54/46 sh 58/45 sh 61/45 sh 70/45 pc 69/48 pc 67/50 r 81/68 pc 74/65 pc 75/65 pc 68/55 pc 64/50 r 64/50 r 55/48 sh 66/43 s 68/41 s 75/50 pc 59/54 r 57/50 r 93/81 t 90/78 t 90/78 t 64/27 s 64/39 pc 68/43 pc 75/59 pc 69/57 pc 75/55 c 72/57 s 72/58 s 70/59 pc 55/41 r 54/42 r 54/42 c 63/55 sh 69/49 pc 70/53 r 66/54 pc 56/42 r 56/46 sh
Eatery sued over plan to move Picasso painting Kratenstein said in court papers. Rather, he wrote, it is about whether an art NEW YORK — New York’s owner can insist that a private storied Four Seasons restaulandlord hang a work indefirant has for decades harbored nitely, the building’s needs be one of the city’s more unusual damned. “The answer to that artworks: the largest Pablo question is plainly no.” Picasso painting in the United Picasso painted the curtain States. But a plan to move in 1919 as a set piece for Le Triit has touched off a spat as corne, or “three-cornered hat,” sharply drawn as the bullfight a ballet created by the Pariscrowd the canvas depicts. based Ballet Russes troupe. Pitting a prominent presThe curtain isn’t considered ervation group against an a masterwork. Breen said it art-loving real estate magnate, was appraised in 2008 at the dispute has unleashed an $1.6 million. outcry from culture commenStill, “it was always considtators and a lawsuit featuring ered one of the major pieces of dueling squads of art experts. Picasso’s theatrical decor,” says The building’s owner says Picasso biographer Sir John Picasso’s Le Tricorne, a 19-byRichardson. “And it is sort of a 20-foot painted stage curtain, gorgeous image.” has to be moved from the resThe scene depicts spectators taurant to make way for repairs in elegant Spanish dress socialto the wall behind it. izing and watching a boy sell But the Landmarks Conserpomegranates as horses drag a vancy, a nonprofit that owns dead bull from the ring in the the curtain, is suing to stop the background. move. The group says the wall Le Tricorne has been at the damage isn’t dire and taking Four Seasons since its 1959 down the brittle curtain could opening in the noted Seagram destroy it — and, with it, an Building. integral aspect of the Four SeaThe restaurant, which isn’t sons’ landmarked interior. affiliated with the Four Sea“We’re just trying to do sons hotel a few blocks away, our duty and trying to keep is the epitome of New York a lovely interior landmark power lunching, having served intact,” says Peg Breen, presiPresident Bill Clinton, Princess dent of the conservancy. Diana, Madonna and other The landlord, RFR Holding A-listers. Corp., a company co-founded The curtain hangs in what’s by state Council on the Arts become known as “Picasso Chairman Aby Rosen, says a Alley,” a corridor that joins the structural necessity is being restaurant’s majestically modspun into an art crusade. ern, Phillip Johnson-designed “This case is not about Picasso,” RFR lawyer Andrew main dining rooms. By Jennifer Peltz
The Associated Press
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Guyana Saturday, April 26th at 5 pm A Peace Corps Volunteer ‘s tale of installing solar energy in impoverished local communities. I am Mr. Duch, a returned Peace Corps Response Volunteer (11-12) that served as a solar educator and technician in remote AmerIndian communities throughout the interior of Guyana. For 2 years I assisted these communities by teaching the value of solar energy generation and develop programs to provide energy to those who have none. My number one goal was to have residents take interest in caring for their own off-grid energy needs and depend less on non-reliable sources of petroleum and overly abused national and international government subsidies. This land of many waters, tropical forests and exotic animals gave way to an adventure that will live on in my heart forever, and has provided a path to assist others around the world in generating their own power in life
A stage curtain painted by Pablo Picasso hangs on a wall at the Four Seasons restaurant in New York.
Travel presentations most Saturdays at 5pm. Google ‘Travel Bug Events’ for full ll schedule.
2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507
505-473-2886 www.FurrysBuickGMC.com
$49,649
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2013BuickEnclave PremiumAWD
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SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
REAL ESTATE
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EMPLOYMENT ES OPPORTUNITI S COUNCIL, INC. RN INDIAN PUEBLO ENCE EIGHT NORTHE ER OF EXCELL - A LOCAL EMPLOY
and compliance – MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head
the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and serded approval of the current grant Human and Disability structure. Maintain the review and recommen Administration, in supervisory/ Work oversee and Social experience Education, (5) years of application process in Early Childhood Minimum of five Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme Elementary vices, services position in human administration provided nt and services manageme cal OR – TAOS appropriate clinical will provide direct psychologi Director will assure CLINICAL DIRECT , and training to The Clinical Director Center Clinical Healing Center. leadership, supervision Health, D.O.J. The Butterfly Healing Butterfly clinical Inc.’s settings, Optum of ENIPC, to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have New Must of participatio n. State requires in the organizatio Work. Licensed delivered by the network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed LPCC, or Ph.D. health/subESPANOLA ERQUE AND substance abuse counseling, mental apy, IST – ALBUQU Mus FAMILY THERAP and family therapy, group, psychother or social work. nseling psychology Will provide individual
E
s Director of Athletic u.edu/jobs n see: www.nmh Athletics. The Director of Athletjob descriptio a Director of For a complete personnel activities application for s. l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education experiNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE ative Balance . Preferred: Administr experience. that it offers. MINIMUM DII Life in the coaching e in those sports coaching experience to be competitiv e: Five (5) years fund raising. Collegiate Sports Science. field. Experienc ated success with al Leadership, or Exercise and Degree in any Demonstr University 3) athletics. Education iate 2) resume; ation, Business, ence in intercolleg a letter of interest; e numbers of 3 in Sports Administr must submit 1) Names/address/phon official Master’s degree PROCEDURE: Candidates transcripts; 5) s interviews and advanced degree with on-campu APPLICATION n; 4) Copies of in conjunction s interview. Employment Applicatio References will be contacted acceptance of the on-campu upon professional references. should be requested transcripts University New Mexico Highlands Human Resources Search Athletic Director Box 9000 87701 Las Vegas, NM jobs@nmhu.edu ns will be accepted: 242 or TDD 505-454-3003. Email applicatio R 505-454-3 or services call IS AN EEO EMPLOYE UNIVERSITY For disabled access HIGHLANDS NEW MEXICO
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SPOUSES SELLING HOUSES ROGER CARSON & MELISSA PIPPIN-CARSON
THE SMALL-KITCHEN MAKEOVER
Should be a good year for local market O
n April 15, the Santa Fe Association of Realtors released the first-quarter statistics of Santa Fe’s improving housing market. Along with the rest of the country, Santa Fe finally seems to be enjoying strong buyer interest and consistent appreciation in most neighborhoods. While the median price point overall in Santa Fe had a minute increase, the average sales price shifted upward to $382,064, which indicates the gains made by Santa Fe’s luxury market. Pending sales were down more than 18 percent from the same time last year, perhaps as choosy buyers wait for more selection sure to come in the spring and summer. Inventory levels remain steady at 10 months, but the average time a home stays on the market before selling has fallen by 10 percent, to 171 days. Location, location, location. The area with the biggest gains is the southeast city, including South Capitol and the east side. With a 30 percent increase in units sold and a 22 percent increase in median sales price to $549,786, buyers shopping in this area know the frustration of finding a good deal. The northeast-city quadrant experienced a surge in sales for the first quarter of 2014 with elrigh arket Whe astle’on m 30 homes sold versus Garrett ‘C 19 from this same time last year. The median sales price, however, was only up 2 percent MORE HOME to $645,000. Southwest This column runs city appears flat with regularly in Home, 83 units sold, down 2 Santa Fe Real Estate percent from the first Guide. Look for Home quarter last year. The every first Sunday of median sales price, too, the month inside The dropped from $200,000 New Mexican and at to $197,000. www.santafenew mexican.com/life/ The areas around home. Tesuque enjoyed some good gains this past quarter over last year. Units sold increased from eight to 11, and the median sales price is up from $456,000 to $486,000. The northwest county also had a surge in sales for the first quarter, up almost 65 percent with 38 homes sold. The median sales price here also climbed to $743,399 from $710,000 in 2013. The southeast county, including Old Las Vegas Highway, sold 12 more homes than first quarter 2013. However, the median sales price slipped from $372,500 to $326,000. The southwest section of Santa Fe County experienced an 11 percent decline in sales and an 11 percent decline in median sales price, now $282,089 from last year’s $318,000. The slide is due to the increase in new construction being offered by Rancho Viejo and La Pradera, which are advertising new homes starting in the low $200s. Eldorado was dead even in sales for this first quarter as compared to last year at 27 homes sold, but the median price was down 19 percent from $358,000 in 2013 to $290,000. Other residential sales, including for condominiums, enjoyed small gains. Units within the city limits were up, with 67 sold in the first quarter of 2014 from 58 last year, and the median sales price was up 1 percent to $215,000. Some ease in financing for condos will aid this market segment. Land sales in the county were down slightly, but that’s not surprising when it’s cold outside. Look for land sales to increase next quarter, while the overall median sales price for a lot in Santa Fe was up 10 percent to $107,500. While there were dips in certain neighborhoods, all indicators point to a strong summer selling season ahead. Interest rates are still historically low, and consumer confidence has improved greatly. Santa Fe’s affordability index was up only slightly and there are still some good deals to be had. Some sellers will certainly try to test the market with higher list prices, and only time will tell if buyers will take the bait. All in all, 2014 appears to be on track to be a wonderfully good year in the Santa Fe real estate market. 4 Apr il 201
After Lorena Bow, a retired schoolteacher, installed her dream kitchen in a dramatic makeover, adding more cabinets and preparation space and replacing all the appliances. PHOTOS BY JOHN MCDONNELL/THEWASHINGTON POST
From ‘time capsule’ to a thing of beauty By Jura Koncius The Washington Post
L
orena Bow never minded having a small kitchen. But the tiny slivers of counter space it provided made it hard to get excited about cooking. When Bow retired after 35 years as a Washington, D.C., public schoolteacher, she decided it was time to do something about her harvest gold refrigerator, hulking fluorescent light fixture, skimpy cabinets and leaky faucet. “My kitchen was just worn out,” says Bow, whose 1950s threebedroom, semi-detached brick house is in Washington’s North Michigan Park neighborhood. She called in Iantha Carley, a designer with whom she had worked before. Carley plotted a stunning renovation, using the same footprint, that would give Bow, 66, a reason to buy some new cookbooks. “Her kitchen was a sad time capsule,” Carley says. “The space was spotless and relatively well preserved, but definitely showing signs of wear and past its time.” The project required a total gut job of the narrow 17-foot by 5½-foot room. There would be all new appliances,
more than double the number of cabinets and an updated version of the small table where Bow, who is single, savored her morning coffee. “Although the kitchen was very compact, my goal was to get in all the conveniences you would want,” Carley says. Bow, who has lived in her house since 1980, had never made many changes to it. But when she retired in 2004 after a long teaching career, she decided she had to either move or update her home. She chose to stay in her house and start by refreshing her living and dining rooms. She hired Carley in 2007 to help pull things together. It was a comment from a family member about five years ago that made her focus on the forlorn room at the back of the house. “My first floor looked great, and I was really happy with it,” Bow says. “My sister was over one day and said, ‘That kitchen looks terrible. You have to do something about it or otherwise you have to keep the door to it closed.’ ” Bow knew it was time to call Carley back. Carley surveyed the situation and came up with a plan to turn the narrow, dated space into a functional
Please see KITCHEN, Page E-4
•
Before Bow’s old kitchen, which she hadn’t changed since she moved into the home, had outdated appliances and inadequate storage space.
A cook’s detour: The three-month renovation By Amy Joyce The Washington Post
You would think after months of going back and forth over a kitchen remodel, we would have been packed and ready to tackle a kitchenless life weeks in advance. But 24 hours before our little kitchen was to be demolished, the cabinets were still stuffed, the refrigerator was full of food, the dishwasher brimming with clean dishes and
the silverware lined up in its drawer like a battalion awaiting its instructions. But no instructions were coming. I was just out of a minor surgery that rendered me helpless, leaving my husband to do the dirty work. He had this, he said. And he did — in his own way. But the lack of a plan, and my inability to help, made me anxious. Now — nearly three months later — our kitchen is almost done and we’ve started to cook again, even though the work isn’t
completely finished, and, as I write this, we still have a slow cooker, a KitchenAid mixer and assorted utensils, plates and chopsticks in our living area. And Tupperware. Lots of Tupperware. During the renovation, our living and dining rooms were filled with boxes and bags and plastic containers. The refrigerator was in the dining room. The kids’ art table
O P EN SU N DAY 1 - 3
SANTA FE | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088
920 OLD SANTA FE TRAIL | $620,000 Potential, Potential, Potential! Prime location—come out and see for yourself. #201304047 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335
Please see DETOUR, Page E-4
OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 3
NEW P RICE
81 BLUESTEM | $1,075,000 Custom-built main house and guesthouse with mountain views in gated community. #201204510 Brunson and Schroeder Team | 505.690.7885
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Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
Roger Carson and Melissa Pippin-Carson are Realtors at KW. Contact them at 699-3112 or twicetheselling power@gmail.com, or follow them on Twitter @ CarsonandCarson .
1267 SPANISH HILL | $1,395,000 Summit North adobe home has been meticulously maintained with many upgrades. #201304330 Ricky Allen | 505.470.8233
to see more extraordinary homes, turn to page E-3
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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711 Panorama Lane - This John Gaw Meem masterpiece has been fully updated and restored with wonderful contemporary design elements. The chef's kitchen and adjoining butler's pantry space will delight. A separate guesthouse enhances the view-filled property. 5 br, 7 ba, 6,280 sq.ft., 4-car detached garage; 2-car attached garage, 2.8 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201401840 Matthew Sargent 505.490.1718 $4,150,000
17 Green Meadow Loop - Las Campanas - This remodeled home has an open living area and big views to the west and east. There are three bedroom suites, a study and a large studio facing north with views that could be another bedroom suite. The 'Corn Maiden' sculpture by Frank McGuire in the back yard is included. 3 br, 5 ba, 3,481 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 1.78 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201305746 Laurie Farber-Condon 505.412.9912 $1,125,000
153 Cantera Circle - This exceptional home is just blocks from Canyon Road, the river and downtown, with sweeping unobstructed mountain and city light views. The Santa Fe style includes high ceilings and doors and three portals. 3 br, 4 ba, 3,260 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.32 acre. Directions: Gonzales Road to Cantera Circle. Second house on left; call for the gate code. SantaFeProperties.com/201400804 Gavin Sayers 505.690.3070 $1,100,000
68 Camino Quien Sabe - Enjoy spectacular forever views from this warm and inspiring, Zen-like mountaintop retreat. The home has large windows, concrete floors, vigas, plaster walls and four large private bedrooms, plus a lovely patio areas and a pond. 4 br, 5 ba, 4,632 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 4.95 acres. Directions: OSFT, left on Double Arrow Rd, right on Camino Quien Sabe. SantaFeProperties.com/201303958 Susan Loomis 505.470.2001 $949,000
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
OPEN 2:00 TO 4:00
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
OPEN 2:00 TO 4:00
IN TOWN, OLD CHARM, ALL NEW!
ELEGANT, MULTI-LEVEL PUEBLO-STYLE HOME
EAST MOUNTAIN VIEWS DOWNTOWN
UPDATED SOUTH CAPITOL HOME
1100 Old Taos Highway - Vigas, latillas, nichos, kiva fireplaces, old world charm are all yours in this newly redesigned and remodeled home. There is a chef's kitchen with top-of-the-line appliances, views and lush landscaping on a large downtown lot. 4 br, 3 ba, 3,600 sq.ft., 1.34 acres. Directions: Paseo de Peralta to Old Taos Hwy, all the way to end on right side of the street. SantaFeProperties.com/201303608 Deborah Bodelson 505.660.4442 $898,000 Cary Spier 505.690.2856
16 A Camino Calabasas - Nestled comfortably on a hillside sits this elegant home with interior flagstone and hardwood floors, hard-troweled plaster walls and fantastic views. Cozy niches and sunny spaces grace the interior. 4 br, 4 ba, 4,000 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 2.5 acres. Directions: Rt 599 to Camino La Tierra, 2 miles north, turn onto Arroyo Calabasas, left onto Camino Calabasas. SantaFeProperties.com/201305161 Mike Perraglio 505.660.9999 $895,000 HOST: Janie Shafer 505.670.7313
901 Calle Arco - One mile up from historic Santa Fe Plaza, with panoramic Sangre views, it's as if you are living in a painting! From the covered portal entrance to the walled interior courtyard with covered fresh air kitchen, this onelevel home is set up for comfort and entertaining. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,814 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 1.16 acres. Directions: Old Taos Highway, right on Calle Arco. SantaFeProperties.com/201305222 Deborah Bodelson 505.660.4442 $888,000 Cary Spier 505.690.2856
1022 Galisteo Street - This updated South Capitol adobe/ frame home is close to everything Santa Fe is famous for, and features an 'unreal' guest apartment and an oversized garage. Enjoy easy access to all areas in the city and surrounding Santa Fe. 4 br, 3 ba, 2525 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Cordova To Galisteo North To 1022 Galisteo on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201400868 John Herbrand 505.670.9668 $599,000 HOST: Connie Johnson 505.629.7007
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
OPEN 12:00 TO 2:30
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:30
OPEN 1:30 TO 4:00
TWINKLE, TWINKLE LITTLE STAR
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY, IN-TOWN DUPLEX
BIG PRICE REDUCTION ON A HORSE PROPERTY
RANCHO DE SAN SEBASTIAN ADOBE & STUDIO
20 Star Vista Road - Near El Gancho, this lovely pueblo style home sits high above Santa Fe enjoying western views, sunsets, city lights and evening stars. The bedrooms are separated by a lovely dining area with a raised kiva fireplace, and the kitchen has Bosch and Jenn-Air appliances. 4 br, 3 ba, 2,581 sq.ft., 3.16 acres. Directions: Santa Fe Trail south to Star Vista, first driveway on right. SantaFeProperties.com/201401406 Christy Stanley 505.660.3748 $525,000 Susan Kelly 505.690.5417
304 Villeros - This conveniently-located duplex near the DeVargas Mall is an investment opportunity, with generously-sized units, outstanding natural light, multiple indoor fireplaces, all finished with vigas and saltillo tile floors. Both units have cozy outdoor spaces complete with outdoor fireplaces. 2 br, 2 ba, 2,800 sq.ft., 0.14 acre. Directions: Villeros off Sabino. SantaFeProperties.com/201401491 Don DeVito & Matt Desmond 505.670.1289 $445,000 HOST: Rick Green 505.470.5422
7 Camino Caballos Spur - Price Reduced! Enjoy glorious views, a two-horse stable (or possibly a studio), and direct trail access. There are all-brick floors, great room with kiva fireplace, master bedroom with fireplace, updated bathrooms and large guestrooms. 3 br, 2 ba, 2,100 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 5 acres. Directions: Hwy 285, right on Camino Caballos Spur- property on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201303543 Peter Van Ness 505.660.6409 $419,000
34 Ellis Ranch Road - New Listing! This adobe home is accessed from paved Ellis Ranch Road in the historic Rancho de San Sebastian area, twelve minutes from downtown. It has a fenced lot, studio, pasture, hay barn and more. 3 br, 2 ba, 2102 sq.ft., 2.7500 acres. Directions: Old Las Vegas Highway to Ellis Ranch Road to #34, look for Santa Fe Properties sign. SantaFeProperties.com/201401331 James Congdon 505.490.2800 $419,000
OPEN SATURDAYS 1:00 - 4:00, SUNDAYS 12 :00 -3:00
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
PRICE NOW REDUCED IN THE RIDGES
A LITTLE SLICE OF HEAVEN IN JACONA
CONVENIENT TO SHOPPING, SCHOOLS AND I-25
ELEGANT CONVENIENCE IN QUAIL RUN
5 S Hijo de Dios - This single-level, pueblo-style home is on a cul-de-sac lot in The Ridges, offering great privacy and quietude. The well-planned home has an open concept floor plan creating a feeling of spaciousness. Features include hardwood cabinetry and granite counter tops. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,951 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 2.87 acres. Directions: Alma Drive to South (right) Hijo de Dios SantaFeProperties.com/201304485 Georgette Romero 505.603.1494 $395,000
Condos in Jacona - Choose from one of two different remodels of beautiful historic adobe homes in a ten-acre idyllic country compound. One is classic adobe, while the other contemporary. The compound has a guesthouse, community garden and gorgeous grounds, trees, chickens and goats, and a large pond. Both homes are single level with thick adobe walls. SantaFeProperties.com/201305011/201305062 Kate Prusack 505.670.1409 $395,000 & $475,000
19 Caballo Viejo, La Pradera Model Home - The Sunflower model home, with its 13-foot living room ceiling, is aptly named for its bright sunny and open design with formal dining, gourmet kitchen and kiva fireplace. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,856 sq.ft., 3-car garage. La Pradera offers choice of three different builders. Directions: Richards to Dinosaur Trail, then right into La Pradera subdivision (3 entrances). SantaFeProperties.com/201304128 Bob Lee Trujillo 505.470.0002 $369,900 Host: Ernie Zapata 505.470.7314
3101 Old Pecos Trail, Unit 105 - This ground-level Plaza A model has portals and a patio, a living room with fireplace and Mexican tile in the master bath, French doors, and a guest bedroom/bathroom. There is easy parking and full access to all of the Quail Run amenities. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,138 sq.ft., 1-car garage. Directions: Old Pecos Trail to Quail Run. SantaFeProperties.com/201303151 Susan Munroe & Terry Smith 505.577.0648 $325,000
NEW LISTING
OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00
BUY INTO A BEAUTIFUL LIFESTYLE IN ELDORADO
PRICE REDUCED ON THIS RAILYARD PIED-A-TERRE
A 'STYLISH' PUEBLO-STYLE HOME IN ELDORADO
TWO LOTS, A HAVEN FOR OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES
1 Casa Del Oro Court - This beautifully-updated two-story home has a private master suite and deck on the second level, with one bedroom, a bath and the den on main floor. There is travertine in the baths and kitchen, and mahogany flooring, plus wooden ceilings throughout. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,575 sq.ft., 1-car garage, 1.49 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201401760 Gary Wallace 505.577.0599 $310,000
824.5 Manhattan Avenue - This private and walled pied-aterre in the Railyard District has great outdoor entertaining areas with landscape lighting and a fireplace. The home is a small quiet oasis that lives much larger2 br, 1 ba, 880 sq.ft. Directions: From St. Francis turn onto Manhattan, down the little lane to the end. The lane is just after Juanita Street. SantaFeProperties.com/201305351 Johnny Chacon 505.690.1226 $299,500
5 Cerrado Way - This stylish home features an office with a built-in desk, and the large living room, with one step down, has a wood-burning kiva fireplace. Amenities in the home include hexagonal-shaped saltillo tiles throughout, wood ceilings and talavera tile in both the kitchen and baths. The property has a two-party shared well. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,726 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 1.48 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201401151 Gary Wallace 505.577.0599 $285,000
Lot 19 & Lot 10, Moon Dance Ranch - An immense amount of history inhabits these beautiful pieces of land, a place once known as Robber’s Ridge. Commute to Santa Fe or be minutes from Las Vegas. Both lots boast wildlife abutting the forest, close to skiing, fishing and golfing, these are true horse havens with views. 140 acres and 141.88 acres SantaFeProperties.com/201302327/201304815 Georgette Romero 505.603.1494 $170,000 Ernest D. Zapata 505.470.7314
1000 Paseo de Peralta . 216 Washington Ave . Santa Fe, NM 87501 • 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com . FaceBook.com/SantaFeProperties . LuxuryPortfolio.com All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act and Equal Opportunities Act. Santa Fe Properties (“SFP”) strives to confirm as reasonably practical all advertising information herein is correct but assumes no legal responsibility for accuracy and should be verified by Purchaser. SFP is not responsible for misinformation provided by its clients, misprints, or typographical errors. Prices herein are subject to change. Square footage amounts and lot sizes are approximates.
BE•THINK•BUY
LOCAL
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 3
2232 WILDERNESS ARROYO $2,250,000 Exquisite home offering privacy, convenience, and magnificent views. The property includes a 3BR main house plus a large studio casita. The grounds include multiple entertaining areas and spectacular gardens. Neil Lyon,CRB,CRS,GRI 505.954.5505 #201303307
OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 4
13 TECOLOTE CIRCLE $1,150,000 Sited high on the ridge overlooking the lake on the 18th holes of the Sunrise and Sunset golf courses at Las Campanas, this Pueblo-style home offers three separate suites and great entertaining spaces. Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117 #201401785
16 EAST GOLDEN EAGLE $1,595,000 Located on a nearly 2-acre select home site at the end of a private cul-de-sac, this immaculate 5,762 sq ft, 4BR, 6BA Puebo-style home offers magnificent Jemez Mountain views and expansive outdoor living. Johnnie Gillespie & Marion Skubi 505.660.8722 #201400515
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410 A SOUTH DOUBLE ARROW ROAD $1,100,000 Ideally sited on five acres, this 4,022-square-foot home offers three bedrooms, three baths, elegant living spaces with breathtaking views, wonderful outdoor areas, and lush, colorful gardens. Susan Shields 505.954.5510 #201401473
N EW L ISTING
21547 HIGHWAY 84 $1,450,000 Over 500 ft. of Chama River frontage is virtually at your door with 28+ acre property, acequia, farmland, three newer houses (built in 2000); 20+ acre feet of water rights, fishing pond, swimming pond, and more. Webb Sherrill 505.955.7970 #201401576
OP EN SUNDAY 1 - 3
1520 CERRO GORDO $1,075,000 NEW LISTING. A rare opportunity to be a part of Santa Fe’s history. This south-facing double adobe, pitchedroof home exudes the charm and romance of Old World Europe with modern conveniences and views. Caroline D. Russell, CRS 505.954.5530 #201401575
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O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 4
521 CAMINO DON MIGUEL $1,195,000 Classic Santa Fe style in the heart of the Eastside filled with peaceful spaces and unexpected surprises. From the moment one closes the gate, one enters a world surrounded with imagination and whimsy. 5BR, 5BA. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201400012
O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 4
19 FALLING STAR CIRCLE $1,075,000 Classic Doug McDowell-built 4,891-sq-ft home featuring two large master suites, plus a home office or third bedroom, an incredible kitchen with large walk-in pantry, and an open living and dining room. #201302376 Bob Burbic & Stephanie Yoder 505.670.9399
Expect Expertise Precise valuation. Deep market knowledge. Exceptional experience. NEW PRICE
27 CALLE CASCABELA $895,000 Stunning views, high-end details, and fine architecture distinguish this four-bedroom, three-bath home. Every room enjoys a view, from sunrises over the Sangre de Cristos to sunsets over the Jemez. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201401105
NEW LISTING
3101 OLD PECOS TRAIL #675 $585,000 Lovely 2-bedroom 2-bath plus den floorplan. Cozy and quiet location with access to all the Quail Run amenities. 24-hour hosted security gate, club, golf, tennis, and fitness center. PamWickiser & Bob Dunn 505.438.6763 #201401558
NEW PRICE
NEW LISTING
112 CAMINO ESCONDIDO #4 $895,000 Impeccably remodeled and expanded condominium a short stroll from Canyon Road and the Santa Fe River. The property has been extensively renovated including new windows, roof, and flooring. Penelope Vasquez 505.954.5551 #201401770
OPEN SUNDAY 1 - 3
16 MADRE MOUNTAIN $555,000 Among this home’s fine features are a formal dining room, three comfortable bedrooms, a den, a central patio, a large eat-in kitchen, a family room, a heated garage, and a portal with mountain views. #201401227 Victoria Murphy & Lois Sury 505.984.5156
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OP EN SU NDAY 1 - 4
22 IMMANUEL $645,000 NEW LISTING. This classic home features a country kitchen, living and dining rooms, a media room, two garages, a deck and portal, and a light-filled master suite. The owner is a New Mexico Real Estate Broker. David & Bonnie Sorenson 505.954.0735 #201401605
OPEN SUNDAY 1:30 - 4
32 CAMINO DE COLORES $525,000 Enjoy phenomenal mountain, pond and golf course views from one year new—custom three bedroom, two bath home in the desirable Las Campanas subdivision. A full Equity Golf Membership is included. Gary Bobolsky 505.984.5185 #201400343
N EW LI STING
OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 4
1630 VILLA STRADA $599,000 Tremendous finishes and thoughtful upgrades abound in this Villa di Roma 2,535 sq ft home. Wood floors, granite counters, deluxe maple cabinets, wood-burning fireplace, and custom wood shutters. Charles Weber 505.954.0734 #201304669
O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 4
34 CRESENCIO LANE $489,000 Private and secluded near the end of a lush lane with easy access to Santa Fe and Los Alamos, this 4.4-acre property features a main house, architectdesigned guest house, and studio. MaryJoy Ford 505.946.4043 #201303618
“All Things Real Estate” 12 - 2 pm on 1260-AM & 101.5-FM Streaming on ATREradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 4
927 ALTO STREET B $465,000 Great location close to downtown and near the Santa Fe River. Contemporary design with 3 bedrooms and a loft and a 2-car garage on a cul-de-sac. Concrete and wood floors, great views from upstairs deck. Janice Cox 505.954.5536 #201400017
22 CAMINO DE VECINOS $368,000 This light, bright 3BR, 3BA Aldea townhome is ready for its new owners. Open-concept living areas plus 1 bedroom downstairs and a spacious master third bedroom with 2 full baths upstairs. Great views. Katherine Blagden 505.490.2400 #201401552
SANTA FE BROKERAGES | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
914 A HICKOX STREET $318,000 A Santa Fe landmark, this 1,389-square-foot, twobedroom, one-bath Prairie-style “tower” home has been lovingly maintained for generations and preserved with sensitive upgrades. Roxanne Apple 505.954.0723 #201401586
14 TANO POINT LANE $1,500,000 Panoramic views from this spacious adobe castle. Emily Garcia 505.955.7963 #201302788
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REAL ESTATE
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Detour: Remodel tough on family Continued from Page E-1 became our cooking space, with a toaster oven, coffee pot and a hotplate. On top of the fridge, just out of my reach without a chair, was our microwave. Next to the refrigerator was the useless dishwasher, where we put our dirty dishes before taking them downstairs to the laundry room to wash them by hand. I know I shouldn’t complain. We were lucky enough to be able to redo our outdated, notworking-for-us kitchen. But you’ve heard the cliche about the kitchen being the heart of the home? It was. And with that heart scattered all over the house, I felt lost. We all love to cook and missed it terribly. I missed watching my husband and sons making homemade pasta. I missed the smells of burbling pots of soup and homemade bread. I missed the comfort of a warm kitchen and all-hands-ondeck cookiemaking. The neighbors pitied us. Our friends who had just had their third child had us to dinner, even though we should have been cooking for them. Another took one look at how we were living and brought over one meal and then another — and insisted we bring back the dirty dishes so they could wash them. Other little things that got us through the weeks: homemade pizza night at another neighbor’s house and ordering several home-cooked meals from a local mom/chef. Our nights mostly consisted of me feeding the boys dinners that were passable. It helps that 6- and 4-year-old boys aren’t dependent on halibut in a browned butter sauce or oyster stew. My father would stop by, then excuse himself and go out to eat. Meanwhile, my husband and I picked at cheese and crackers, olive tapanade and sometimes (in my case) cereal until we were sated. Inevitably, our 4-year-old decided he was vegetarian during this period, so most of the frozen chicken cutlets I stockpiled are still in our freezer. Our policy of serving different vegetables every night quickly gave way to “More raw carrots, kids! Enjoy!” They were thrilled to have pizza delivered at least once a week, though. It could have been worse. Maybe it’s a bit like childbirth. I’ll forget what it was like and just see those pretty cabinets and that sleek countertop and want more. Then again, maybe not.
Six tips for small-kitchen renovation By Jura Koncius The Washington Post
Designer Iantha Carley loves a good challenge, and designing a small kitchen puts her problem-solving skills to the test. “You have to be really creative to make the most out of a tight space that is such an important part of a home,” Carley says. For those looking for inspiration, Carley suggests starting a Pinterest dream kitchen board and creating an “ideabook” from photos on Houzz.com. Include examples for storage, lighting, cabinetry, flooring, countertops, appliances, hardware and accessories. Here are six of her favorite sugges-
tions for making every inch count. Plan carefully. Creating the best solution for a limited amount of space takes longer than designing a massive trophy kitchen. Do your homework. Create generous storage by maximizing cabinet possibilities, add interest with custom design details and mix materials and textures. Create a wish list, but know you can’t have it all. Write down everything you’ve ever dreamed of having, then start eliminating. It’s better to shoot for the moon rather than wish you’d added something when it’s too late. Some goodies: a pot-filler faucet that’s mounted on the wall behind a cooktop; pop-up electrical outlet strips
that retract into a countertop; pull-out trays for dog food and water bowls built in under cabinets. A pull-out trash can that is built in behind a kitchen cabinet is a must; otherwise it will take up too much valuable floor space. Splurge on appliances. Even if you can’t have yards of cabinetry or a huge center island, you can add luxury to your tiny kitchen. Check out European appliance makers, which are always trying to save space while delivering energy savings and knockout style. Heat your floor. You’re going to spending a lot of time standing in this room, so why not feel a cozy warmth from the bottom of your feet? Heated floors can be pricey, but with fewer
square feet, it’s a smaller outlay. Don’t clutter up counter space. Workspace is the most valuable real estate in a tiny kitchen. Avoid drilling too many holes in your counter. Skip the built-in soap dispenser and spray hose. In the galley kitchen Carley designed for Lorena Bow, the only built-in feature around the sink is the garbage disposal button. Avoid pendant lighting. Although the wow factor of hanging artsy lamps is tempting, avoid this trendy choice. Pendant lights, often used in trios, take up lots of visual space. Recessed lighting and under-cabinet lighting are your best options.
Kitchen: Remodel bumps up cabinets from 5 to 11 used to having her breakfast and that she wanted to keep. Carley found the and modern room. The renovation, Uppity, a 27-inch round glass-topped which had a budget of $53,000, took table by LumiSource, and two West four months to complete. The new Elm Scoop-Back chairs that took up space bumped up her number of cabiless room and looked fresh and stylish. nets from five to 11 and created more Carley mixed patterns and textures open counter space. A cluttered pantry was ripped out, and the space was in earthy shades of gold, bronze and fitted with a 24-inch-wide Blomberg cream: travertine tile floors, subtly refrigerator. “One of the most imporstriped wood cabinets, horizontal backtant choices we made was to opt for splash tiles and grass woven blinds. smaller, European-size appliances to Bow was excited about her new, allow for more cabinet and counter modern yet warm and cozy kitchen space,” Carley says. Bow had not had with so much more space for food a dishwasher, and Carley found an 18-inch-wide Miele model that fit nicely preparation. She went out and replaced her toaster, canisters, pots and pans and next to the sink. teakettle, mostly in stainless to go with For cabinets, they chose a semicustom KraftMaid line in cherry, with the appliances. She admits to buying a stainless bar pulls. She was able to put few more cookbooks, and she has tried in a counter and more cabinetry at the out a few new recipes. end of the room, where a window looks “The truth is, I really don’t like cookout onto a community garden. Here, ing, although I’m working on it,” Bow she installed lower cabinets that float confesses. “My friends all wonder a few inches off the floor and are fitwhy I did the kitchen. But I love to sit ted with low-voltage lighting below so in there and read the paper and have there is a nice glow at night. my coffee. I just love that room. It’s so Bow had squeezed a small square table and two chairs in the corner of the peaceful and sunny. It’s my favorite kitchen, an eating spot where she was place to relax.”
Continued from Page E-1
European appliances, which are often compact and energy-efficient, are a good solution for a small kitchen. JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
NOW IS THE TIME TO SELL!
TIPS TO GET THROUGH A KITCHEN REMODEL Plan. Figure out just how much stuff you have and where it will go in the interim. If you have a guest room or extra closet space, lucky you. Edit. We got rid of chipped plates, an unbelievable amount of expired cooking supplies and old, stained placemats and napkins. We could probably do more of that. Disposable everything. Unless you have access to a nearby (large) sink, go disposable. We mostly did, and although it felt wasteful at times, I promise to recycle for the rest of my life. Get a system in place for meals. Breakfast was easy: bagels/toast/cereal/ frozen waffles, repeat. Lunches had to be packed anyway, so that didn’t change much. Dinner? If I had to do it again (won’t, ever), I would have kept the fridge much more organized; made a schedule of which nights we were ordering in or going out; and prepared more frozen meals in advance. Keep a designated “nice” space. Just because there’s chaos doesn’t mean you should give up. I did. Pack early, pack often. There were many things we didn’t need during the walk-up to the remodel. We should have packed up those things way in advance.
Team R & L
D i s t i n c t i v e P r o p e r t i e s - E x t r a o r d i n a r y B r o k e r s 505.465.9597 Hablamos Español
505 County Road B31A - $700,000 Unique and stunning architectural details set this home apart and with nearly 300 New Mexico acres at your disposal, you’ll be able to live the life of your dreams. The beauty of nature is on display with exposed adobe and stone interior surfaces, and wooden vigas and beams in the home. And you’ll have the opportunity to explore the landscape on horseback with a riding arena, barn/shop and hay storage all conveniently on the property. 3BD, 2BA MLS#201400565
P
d duce e R d rice
14 Tano Road
1109 E Alameda
11 Rougemont
Impressive architecture, custom woo work, and tasteful styling abound in this luxury home and guest house. 5BD, 4BA $1,175,000 MLS#201400114
Buybeforecompletionfortheopportunity to request the customizations you desire. Just a few blocks from the Plaza. 2BR, 2BA $750,000 MLS#201400891
Dwell magazine style contemporary home custom built to accommodate chemically sensitive owner. 2BD, 2BA $170,000 MLS#201400466
6753 Camino Rojo
1040 Alto Street
Beautiful, well-situated home offers great location and excellent value. North facing views of the golf course. 4BD, 3BA $294,900 MLS#201400564
Complete remodel with an estimated completion in April. Hardwood and tiled floors. 3BR, 3BA $325,000 MLS#201400623
1133, 1135, & 1137 Cerro Gordo
505.983.5151
www.SantaFeLuxuryRealEstateOnline.com 130 Lincoln Avenue Suite K, Santa Fe NM
Incredible views, incredible location! 3 lots available together or separately with views covering nearly all of Santa Fe. $995,000 MLS#201401019 GLOBAL PROPERTY SPECIALIST
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
OPEN 2-4
602A Canyon Road Used as a gallery (current use) or as a
home (sublime idea), this exquisite, light-filled property features three bedrooms and three bathrooms. The historic attached studio casita features a bedroom, bathroom and kitchen--all updated and air conditioned. In the Doug Atwill-designed main structure, the bathrooms and kitchen have also been elegantly updated with top-of-the-line fixtures, appliances and materials. $1,795,000 MLS# 201303944
JEFF HARAK AL (505) 216-6106 • jeff.harakal@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Ave., Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OPEN 1-4
41 Sunflower “Teeing Off Open House Tour” – Adobe masterpiece in Las Campanas with casita! Gorgeous views in 3 directions, high beamed ceilings, plastered walls, 5 fireplaces, large rooms, great floors and doors. $895,000 MLS# 201303174
ASHLEY MARGETSON (505) 920-2300 • ashley.margetson@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-8088 231 Washington Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OAD R N O Y N A C OPEN 1-3
1020 Canyon Road A brand new adobe residence at Canyon Road’s premier Alma del Cañon. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, radiant floor heat, hard trowel plaster walls, high end appliances, off street parking, and energy efficient! $799,500 MLS# 201305472 DAVID FRIES (505) 310-3919 • david.fries@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OPEN 1-3 VIEWS
North side OASIS Pristine, 3441 sqft, 4 beds plus office plus
renovated 122 sqft studio, 3 bath, 2 car garage privately located on 1.5 beautifully landscaped acres w/ mountain views to die for. Home has been remodeled with high end finishes-Diamond plaster, granite, travertine till floors, wood floors, vigas, nichos, Hunter Douglas Blinds, newer wood windows, decks and covered portals and MORE! $1,145,000 MLS# 201400362
SABINE ANDRAUD (505) 690-4857 • frenchsabine@msn.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com
ANAS LAS CAMP -4 OPEN 1:30
5 Chocolate Flower Las Campanas “Tee-Off Tour” – Sweeping Sangre de Cristo and Sandia Mountain views from this 4 + office/4.5 bath home in gated Las Campanas. Fabulous chef’s kitchen and butler’s pantry for entertaining. Directions: Camino la Tierra, left at West Wildflower (4-way stop), left at the Sunflower gate. Dial 0555 for access. Left at Chocolate Flower. $1,095,000 MLS# 201401632 TIM GALVIN (505) 795-5990 • tim@galvinsantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
00 OPEN 1-4: 0,000 5 $ D E C U RED
53 HOLLYHOCK CIRCLE Close-in custom hilltop home with
mountain views in Las Campanas’ rolling hills. 4BR/3BA with excellent master suite separation. Eat-in kitchen with granite countertops, new refrigerator and dishwasher. Six-burner range, double oven. Kitchen opens to wisteria covered view portal. Dining room shares corner fireplace with living room. Portal with pond and fireplace provides for outdoor entertaining. Another walled courtyard provides privacy. $850,000 MLS# 201304905
LESLIE MUTH (505) 660-9921 • Leslie@LeslieMuth.com City Different Realty • (505) 983-1557 1709 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.CityDifferentRealty.com
G
N NEW LISTI
696 E. Zia Road Meticulously renovated Contemporary Home. Wood Gormley School District. Wonderful natural light creates warm and inviting spaces. 3 Bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, family room, gourmet kitchen, stainless steel appliances. 0.7 acre lot. $745,000 MLS# 201303370
PAUL DURAN (505) 310-5566 • paulduran777@gmail.com Keller Williams Realty • (505) 983-5151 130 Lincoln Avenue Suite K, Santa Fe, NM http://kw.com
M OPEN 1-3P VIEWS!
115B Old Galisteo Rd Delightful setting on 2.5 acres with
36o° mountain views. Approx 1996 sqft; 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, open living, dining & Kitchen with pine-plank & saltillo-style tile floors. A 2 car garage, large covered portal & kiva fireplace, protected gardens within walled courtyards, mature landscape, Aspens and shade trees. So convenient to shopping, schools, medical and hiking/ biking trails. $450,000 MLS# 201401166
LORI LANIER (505) 577-3888 • lorilanier@hotmail.com Maria Borden Concierge • (505) 466-4956 24 Vista Estrella S., Lamy, NM 87540 http://lorilanierrealestate.com
SE OPEN HOU 1PM-3PM
35 Koshari PART OF THE TEE OFF TOUR! A lovely three-bedroom home and one-bedroom casita in Las Campanas. Features include sweeping views, grand portal, spacious living/dining, gourmet kitchen, and a lavish master suite. $899,000 MLS# 201401262 NEIL LYON (505) 660-8600 • neil@neillyon.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue , Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
ANAS P M A C S A L 4:30 0 3 : 1 N E OP
7 Bluesky Las Campanas “Tee-Off Tour” – Panoramic Jemez view
from this 3+den/3.5 bath home in gated Las Campanas. Gourmet kitchen with island, breakfast nook and walk-in pantry. Directions: Las Campanas Drive, right at Sierra Rosa gate 7. Dial 0555 for access. Right at Sierra Rosa Loop, left at Ridgetop, right at Bluesky. Hosted by Paula Galvin. $849,000
MLS# 201401260
TIM GALVIN (505) 795-5990 • tim@galvinsantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue , Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
NAS A P M A C S LA -4 OPEN 1:30
9 Camino de Colores Las Campanas “Tee-Off Tour” – Panoramic golf course and Jemez mountain views from this incredible portal in gated Las Campanas. Perfect “lock and leave” lifestyle. Directions: Las Campanas Drive, to Paseo Aragon gate. Dial 0555 for access then stay on Paseo Aragon to Camino de Colores. Hosted by Angela Gutierrez, (505) 577-4790. $699,000 MLS# 201205013 TIM GALVIN (505) 795-5990 • tim@galvinsantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OPEN 1-3 RMING A H C Y L E T ABSOLU
NEW LISTING Way past charming, 2 bed 2 bath 1200 sq ft with separte lovely sun room that has separate entrance. Great lot, walled garden area light and bright with Kiva fireplace. Lovingly well kept one owner property and the views are special. Property also has a BuiltRite accesssory building perfect for small studio or workshop. $269,000 MLS# 201401384
JENNY BISHOP/TRUDI CONKLING (505) 469-0469 • jbishop610@aol.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-0936 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com
E-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
OPEN 1-4
Get your headlines on the go!
SE OPEN HOU 1PM-3PM
41 Violet Circle Family compound in Las Campanas with incredible views. Antique beams and doors, brick floors, private portales and outdoor kitchen. Grand Sala for entertaining. Three bedrooms in main residence. Three-car garage. Detached, duplex-able guest house with 1-car garage. $1,795,000 MLS# 201305736
NANCY LEHRER (505) 490-9565 • nancy.lehrer@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 982-6207 417 East Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
46 Hollyhock Circle PART OF THE TEE OFF TOUR! Gorgeous 3 BR, 3.5BA home perfectly sited on 2+ acres to capture fabulous mountain views. Wonderful outdoor spaces including private portals from every bedroom. $997,000 MLS# 201400881 MICHAELENE SARGENT (505) 660-3850 • michaelene.sargent@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue , Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
Don’t miss the latest news right to your inbox with our new and improved Morning News Updates email newsletter! http://www.santafenewmexican.com/newsletters/
Colorful roofs growing in popularity By Diana Marszalek The Associated Press
To create an inviting habitat for leaf cutter and mason bees, add nesting sites to your yard to maximize the production of native bees. PHOTOS BY DEAN FOSDICK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Make your garden bee-friendly By Dean Fosdick The Associated Press
B
ees are pulling a disappearing act. Honeybees are vanishing from their hives. Bumblebee numbers have crashed so radically that some species are believed extinct. Even native solitary bees are in decline. Food supplies dependent upon pollinators are threatened. But gardeners can help. There is no single explanation for what is causing the pollinator losses, said Matt O’Neal, an associate professor of entomology at Iowa State University. “There are multiple sources of stress,” he said. “There are your basic pests, also pathogens like viruses, pesticide exposure and land use practices reducing the kinds of forages bees can feed on. It looks like a combination of all those.” As insect pollinators, bees broaden our diets beyond meats and wind-pollinated grains. An estimated one-third of all foods and beverages are made possible by pollination, mainly by honeybees, the U.S. Department of Agriculture says. Pollinators also are essential for flowering plants and entire plant communities. “Common species are disappearing at a dramatic rate. I’m terrified in the extreme,” said Mace Vaughan, pollinator program director with The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation in Portland, Ore. “I worry in particular about pollinator species with limited ranges and that have unique habitat requirements that are being threatened. A lot of species are dropping out of the landscape.”
You don’t have to become a beekeeper to restore or boost bee populations. night when bees are less active. Spray from ground level to reduce drift, and create buffer zones next to agricultural areas. Rethink the use of herbicides, which reduce pollinator food sources by removing flowers from the landscape. X Add signage to advertise the presence of pollinators. Bees often range several miles from their hives or nests. Place pollinator habitat signs around pastures, community gardens, city parks, bike trails or suburban yards to promote conservation. Honeybee numbers are dropping so steeply that some species are believed extinct. Gardeners can help by adding What it comes down to is plants that flower both early and late in the season like these providing at least two important Rosemary blooms. things, Vaughan said: “Plant wildflowers that provide a high succession of bloom. Have You don’t have to become a X Install bee hotels around home gardens free of chemicals. beekeeper to restore or boost the yard by drilling holes in Get into natural gardening.” bee populations. Gardeners can: wood blocks and creating reed or bamboo bundles. They proX Plant flowers and crevide instant habitat and can be ate green spaces, especially in RECOMMENDED built on the cheap. “Another urban areas. Leave patches of READING thing you can do is plant woody bare soil, rocks and brush piles Attracting Native Pollinators: plants [elderberries, raspberfor use by ground-dwelling Protecting North America’s Bees ries, sumac] with branches that native bees. Add caterpillar host and Butterflies (Storey Press, plants. “I can’t recommend par- have soft insides,” Vaughan said. 2011) ticular plants for all areas of the “Grow these shrubs up and then cut them back to expose the country but I can recommend ON THE WEB the concept,” O’Neal said. “Pro- stems. Carpenter and mason u For more about creating bee vide pollen and nectar through- bees will nest in them.” sanctuaries in your yard, see out the [growing] season. Plant X Eliminate or change the this Xerces Society link: www. the right habitat. Every state has way you apply pesticides. bringbackthepollinators.org land grant agencies and agents. Don’t use them on plants that u You can contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdicknetscape.net Look to them for help.” are blooming. Apply them at
When a 2011 storm destroyed their black shingle roof, Carol and Ray Knoff of Vinton, Iowa, opted to replace it with a roof in vintage Victorian colors: a clay-like red and gray. Victorian homes typically had red slate roofs, which weathered gray over time, so the blend worked, says Carol Knoff. “It took Vinton a while to like it,” she says, but the neighbors have since come around. The 1901 house is among several Victorians built when Vinton housed one of the world’s largest canneries. Many homeowners these days are shunning monotone roofs of brown, black and gray and perking things up with color — blues, reds, purples, greens or combinations of those hues. “A lot of people are going with roofs that stand out on their own,” says Kate Smith, a Newport, R.I.-based color consultant. “They want something different that expresses them and expresses their personality.” Which could be a tricky proposition, says Smith: “You want to stand out while still fitting into your neighborhood,” she says. She admits to being taken aback herself when colored roofs first came into vogue several years ago. Exterior home color should always be used judiciously, she says. But it is even more crucial to use it correctly when you’re adding it to a large fixed feature, like a roof, that is not easily changed with a fresh coat of paint. “Anything that’s permanent needs to blend,” she says. “You don’t want to have too many colors that aren’t working together.” One trick for doing that, Smith says, is to select roof colors true to your home’s history and architecture, and in natural shades. For instance, Victorian homes originally had col-
ored roofs — reds, orange, purple and green were typical — because the color of the slate varied so much, she says. Homeowners wanting to restore that look should match those subtle tones. “When you saw purple, it was not a bright Barney purple,” she says. Bright metal roofs — most often red or green — are better suited for farmhouse-style homes, or used over small structures like porticos or bay windows. Steel blue is more European. Colored roofs are also starting to crop up on “new American-style” homes, which Smith describes as combining popular styles and materials — perhaps, say, a stone and brick exterior with a copper roof. The demand for colored roofs led DaVinci Roofscapes of Kansas City, Kan., to create faux slate and shake (wooden shingle) roofing in 49 colors “so homeowners can mix and match those if they want to get really creative,” says the company’s Wendy Bruch. DaVinci’s palette is based on the naturally occurring colors seen on historically accurate roofs, she says. But custom colors are increasingly popular, too. “There can be some crazy things going on because we can create new colors,” Bruch says. DaVinci has worked with customers to create colors ranging from a chateau blue for a French provincial-style house to a green that matched the color on a metal roof with weather-related damage. Many customers appreciate help picking the right shades, Bruch says. “It can make it confusing for the homeowner when you have too many options,” she says. For Knoff, the risk of installing a colored roof was well worth taking. “We absolutely love it,” she says. “When you see our house, it really stands out. But Victorians are supposed to be homes that stand out.” A red and gray colored roof that replaced a storm damaged black one at Carol and Ray Knoff’s home in Vinton, Iowa. The colors, produced by DaVinci Roofscapes, are typical of the original roofs on Victorian homes. DAVINCI ROOFSCAPES
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Showcase Properties Specialties in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate M
AY D N
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HISTORIC IN-TOWN ESTATE 815 East Palace Avenue, Unit 5 & 1
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Exceptional estate within blocks of the Plaza, the main house includes a gracious high-ceiling living room, a large solarium room facing the gardens, a master suite that includes a sitting room, bedroom and 2 bathrooms. There is a second bedroom and bath also in the main house. Additionally there is a complete guest house with 2 bedrooms and 2 baths, a full kitchen and 2 fireplaces. Finally there is a charming studio/guest quarters with full kitchen and bath. This is a rare and unique opportunity to own an historic estate close to Canyon Road, the Plaza, restaurants, and museums. MLS# 201304844 Offered at $2,150,000 CHRIS K HAYNES 505.660.6121 chris.haynes@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 505.988.2533 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
HE ” T R O 4! G U N RI TO 1 T U D USE AS E M HO PAN O H EN AM S I H OP S C T A F E SE E OF IN L Y “TE ODA NT E OP
A Tremendous Opportunity For A Special Home 21 Tecolote Circle What an incredible opportunity to own a beautiful home in the heart of Las Campanas, close to the Clubhouse, Golf and Spa. The home is in the Pueblos enclave and is adjacent to the first fairway of the Sunset Golf Course with unobstructable Sangre views. Originally styled after a traditional kiva, this home features a fantastic living room/dining room combination for a perfect great room concept all focused outdoors and toward the magnificent views! A large open concept kitchen adjoins a cozy family room and sweet banco breakfast nook. There are spectacular hand-hewn wide plank wood floors and flagstone floors throughout, and a lovely flagstone patio and east-facing portal, perfect to watch the morning sunrise and sip your coffee. 3 br, 3 ba, 3,175 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.3 acre. Directions: Las Campanas drive to Clubhouse Drive thru security. Left on Trailhead. Right on Palomita Drive. Left onto Tecolote Circle. MLS #201400571
Offered At $785,000 LINDA MURPHY · 505.780.7711 · linda@lindamurphy.com SANTA FE PROPERTIES · 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com
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Open Houses
Listings for today.
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Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Open Houses NORTH WEST
A-38 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 34 Cresencio Lane - Private and secluded near the end of a lush lane with easy access to Santa Fe and Los Alamos, this 4.4 acres property features a main house, architect-designed guest house and studio. $489,000. MLS 201303618. (Hwy 285 N; at 503 intersection. Turn left (CR103), follow to Cresencio Lane.) MaryJoy Ford 505-946-4043 Sotheby’s International Realty.
F-21 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m.-8 Placita Anita - Artistic sanctuary on over 11 acres. Contemporary styling one bedroom main home, one bedroom guest house, plus large studio. Brick floors, radiant heat & evap. cooling, plaster walls, forever views! $699,000. MLS 201400992. (Take Camino La Tierra to Paseo la Tierra. Left on Calle Adelina then right on Vuelta Maria then right on Placita Anita. The property is on the corner - drive way to the right off of Placita Anita.) Roger Carson 505-699-8759 Carson & Carson at Keller Williams.
L-34 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 5 Colibri Tierra - Pueblo-style single-level 3BR, 3BA residence on 2.5 private and tranquil acres w/ fabulous views of the Sangre de Cristo and Jemez Mountains. Gated acreage and beautiful landscaping. $1,025,000. MLS 201401562. (Tano Rd west to Cam de Los Montoyas to Colibri Tierra) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.
L-39 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 14 Tano Point Lane - Panoramic views from this grand and spacious adobe castle, built with Santa Fe style and comfort. Enjoy privacy only minutes to the plaza. Over 10,000 sq. ft., 5 bedrooms and 5 baths, on 5 acres. $1,500,000. MLS 201302788. (599 to North Ridgetop to Tano Road, left on Tano Point.) Emily Garcia 505-699-6644 Sotheby’s International Realty.
M-23 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-41 Violet Circle - Family compound in Las Campanas with incredible views. Antique beams and doors, brick floors, private portales and outdoor kitchen. Grand Sala for entertaining. 3 br in main residence. 3-car garage. $1,795,000. MLS 201305736. (Camino La Tierra right on Parkside drive, left on Violet Circle #41 on right.) Nancy Lehrer 505-490-9565 Sotheby’s International Realty. 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-53 Hollyhock Circle - Understated elegance in this 3 bedroom, 3 bath adobe house. Brick & stone floors & beautiful Santa Fe ceilings. 3 outdoor portals add to the ambiance of this 2 acre property. Great western views. $850,000. MLS 201304905. (599 to Camino las Tierra. Right on Las Tierra approximately 3 mi. to ’Y’ in road, bear right on Las Campanas/Clubhouse. First right is Paradise, go through gate, straight to Hollyhock, then left.) Leslie Muth 505-660-9921 City Different Realty.
M-39 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 1767 Ridge Pointe Loop - Price Reduced! Magical mountain views and the serenity of single-level living, with gardening potential or the promise of relaxing. Enjoy the privacy of Las Estrellas from your front portal! $429,000. MLS 201302020. (3 br, 2 ba, 599 to Ridgetop exit, go north, follow around to Ridge Pointe Loop) Julia Gelbart 505-699-2507 Santa Fe Properties.
N-13 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 21 Tecolote Circle - Tee Off Open House Tour. An opportunity to own a beautiful home in the heart of Las Campanas, a close distance to the Clubhouse, Golf and Spa. Furthermore, the home is in the Pueblos enclave. $785,000. MLS 201400571. (3 br, 3 ba, Las Campanas drive to Clubhouse Drive thru security. Left on Trailhead. Right on Palomita Drive. Left onto Tecolote Circle) Linda Murphy 505-780-7711 Santa Fe Properties.
N-14 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 7 Sendero Centro Santa Fe, NM - Part of the Sunday Tee Off Tour. Sweeping lake and golf course views set this finely finished Las Campanas home apart. Quality craftsmanship is evident throughout this beautifully constructed home. $1,295,000. MLS 201401523. (Las Campanas Dr to Clubhouse Dr, to Plaza del Corazon. Left on Sendero Centro. First house on left.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams.
N-24 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 81 Bluestem Drive - Custombuilt main house and guesthouse with mountain views in gated community. Fabulous outdoor spaces including portales and courtyard, gourmet kitchen, high beamed ceilings, formal dining room. $1,075,000. MLS 201204510. (599 to Camino La Tierra to Parkside Drive...go right on Parkside and buzz LC security and tell them you are going to 81 Bluestem. Go through gate and go to 3rd stop sign and L on BlueStem; house on L.) Ed Schroeder 505690-1007 Sotheby’s International Realty.
O-13 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 13 Tecolote Circle - Sited high on the ridge overlooking the lake on the 18th holes of the Sunrise and Sunset golf courses at Las Campanas, this Pueblo style home offers three separate suites & great entertaining spaces. $1,150,000. MLS 201401785. (Camino Las Campanas to Clubhouse Drive to Trailhead to Tecolote.) Ray Rush 505-984-5117 Sotheby’s International Realty.
O-14 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 17 Plaza Del Corazon - Tee Off Open House Tour. This authentic adobe embodies SF’s most unforgettable style: gracious lines, finishes, spectacular view of the lake, golf course & sunsets. Furniture package available. $699,000. MLS 201400480. (2 br, 3 ba, Las Campanas Drive to Clubhouse Drive then left on Plaza Del Corazon. The home is on the left. This is the "Nambe Casita") Laurie Farber-Condon 505-412-9912 Santa Fe Properties. 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-; 23 Plaza Del Corazon - Tee Off Open House Tour. Enjhoy sunset views over shimmering water. Two master suites, great room, AC, by the Las Campanas Clubhouse & Fitness Center. Designed by renowned architect Bill Tull. $719,000. MLS 201400141. (2 br, 3 ba, Hwy 599 to Camino La Tierra to Las Campanas Drive to Clubhouse Drive. Left on Plaza del Corazon. Last Casita on left. Zuni Casita.) Laurie Farber-Condon 505412-9912 Santa Fe Properties.
O-19 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. -27 Wildhorse - Captivating 3BR, 3BA residence featuring regal living and dining spaces, an inviting kitchen, and bedrooms in two separate, very private wings. Nestled amid beautiful native vegetation and aspens. $1,050,000. MLS 201305948. (Las Campanas Drive to Wildhorse, left at 27 Wildhorse.) Tim Van Camp 505-984-5118 Sotheby’s International Realty.
O-39 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-1630 Villa Strada - Tremendous finishes and thoughtful upgrades abound in this Villa di Roma 2535 sq ft home. Wood floors, granite counters, deluxe maple cabinets, wood burning fireplace, and custom wood shutters. $599,000. MLS 201304669. (From Ridgetop turn East on Avenida Rincon. 2nd left is Via Bosque. 1st left is Villa Strada.) Charles Weber 505-6709377 Sotheby’s International Realty.
P-17 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 16 E Golden Eagle - Located on a nearly 2-acre select home site at the end of a private cul-de-sac, this immaculate 5,762 sq ft, 4BR, 6BA Puebostyle home offers magnificent Jemez Mountain views, expansive outdoor living $1,595,000. MLS 201400515. (Las Campanas Drive to Pojoaque Drive; right on East Golden Eagle.) Marion Skubi/Johnnie Gillespie 505-690-1909 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Q-11 1:30P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 32 Camino de Colores - Enjoy phenomenal mountain, pond and golf course views from one year new - custom three bedroom, two bath home in the desirable Las Campanas subdivision. A full Equity Golf Membership is included. $525,000. MLS 201400343. (From 599, exit off onto Camino La Tierra (Las Campanas), follow signage to Las Melodias, make a right at Paseo Aragon (at gate contact Realtor), make a right onto Camino de Colores.) Gary Bobolsky 505-4700927 Sotheby’s International Realty. 1:30P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 9 Camino De Colores - Enjoy a sweeping panoramic view of the Jemez Mountains and golf course from this upgraded home in Las Campanas. Over $250,000 in builder upgrades. Bosch appliances and an audio/video/security system. $699,000. MLS 201205013. (Hwy 599, RT @Camino La Tierra @ 1st y, LT @ 2nd y, follow the signs To Clubhouse Past Clubhouse Drive, RT @ Paseo Aragon, thru the gate. Stay on Paseo Aragon, then RT@ Camino de Colores to #9 on left.) Angela Gutierrez 505-577-4790 Sotheby’s International Realty.
R-15 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 15 Canyon Vista Court - By Santa Fe’s most award-winning builder, Tierra Concepts, we are pleased to present this custom home on a large 2.24 acre sunset and mountain view lot in Las Campanas. Private cul-de-sac setting. $899,000. MLS 201303006. (599 to Camino La Tierra, head west, follow signs to stay on Las Campanas Drive, past Clubhouse Drive, right at Sierra Rosa Loop Gate, immediate left onto Thundercloud, left on Canyon Vista Court.) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.
R-16 1:30P.M. - 4:30p.m. - 7 Bluesky Circle - This exquisite Estates III home features a living room with a sweeping Jemez view, a portal, a landscaped courtyard, a gourmet kitchen, a master suite, two guest bedrooms, and an oversized garage. $849,000. MLS 201401260. (599, R at Camino La Tierra, 2 miles to Las Campanas Drive (under bridge). Go to club house drive gate for entry. Immediate L through another gate. L at Sierra Rosa Loop, R at Ridgetop, R on Bluesky) Paula Galvin 505-795-5990 Sotheby’s International Realty.
R-20 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. -Sunflower Drive - Immaculate 2BR, 2.5BA custom Kim Dressel built home in Las Campanas. Large, open kitchen with informal eating area, living room/dining room opening onto a beautiful covered portal with views. $895,000. MLS 201304167. (599 to Camino La Tierra, left on W. Wildflower, left on Sunflower.) John Rigatti 505-984-5141 Sotheby’s International Realty.
S-13 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-19 Falling Star Circle - Classic Doug McDowell built 4,891 sq ft home featuring two large master suites, plus a home office or third bedroom, an incredible kitchen with large walk-in pantry, and an open living and dining room $1,075,000. MLS 201302376. (Las Campanas Drive to Sierra Rosa, left on Thundercloud to Falling Star Circle.) Stephanie Yoder 505-412-9911 Sotheby’s International Realty.
S-19 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m.-1520 Cerro Gordo Road - A rare opportunity to be a part of Santa Fe’s history. This south-facing double adobe, pitched roof home exudes the charm and romance of old world Europe with modern conveniences and mountain views. $1,075,000. MLS 201401575. (Located off Gonzales between E. Alameda and Hyde Park Road; from Gonzales go East on Cerro Gordo just past fork on the right) Caroline D. Russell 505-699-0909 Sotheby’s International Realty.
S-24 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-14 Mint Circle - A part of the Las Campanas "Tee Off Tour"! Built in 2008, this 2750 sq. ft. contemporary home also has 400 sq. ft. of liveable outdoor space ! Hosted by Dustin Duty: 469-1731, Contemporary beauty. $899,000. MLS 201401121. (599 to Camino La Tierra exit. Head West on Camino La Tierra. Take left on Dayflower. You’ll need to call security from the gate for entry 0555#. Right on Sunflower.Left on Mint Circle.) Stephanie Duran 505-204-2491 Barker Realty.
S-25 1:30P.M. - 4:30p.m. - 5 Chocolate Flower - Mountain views and a chef’s kitchen are highlights of this threebedroom home conveniently located in Estates II of Las Campanas. The private attached casita includes a kitchenette and full bath. $1,095,000. MLS 201401632. (Hwy 599, Right @ Camino la Tierra, Left @ West Wildflower (4-way Stop). Left at Sunflower gate into Las Campanas Call 0-5-5-5 for access. Thru the gate and Left @ Chocolate Flower to #5 on left.) Tim Galvin 505-795-5990 Sotheby’s International Realty.
U-23 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. -26 Vista Precioso - Handsome, light-filled 3BR, 2.5BA townhome with open floor plan, Sangre and Sandia Mt. views, enclosed garden/patio. large 2nd floor master with view deck, + 2-car garage overlooking Aldea open space. $339,000. MLS 201401153. (NM 599/SF Bypass to Camino La Tierra. R on Camino La Tierra, then immediate L onto SF Bypass Service Rd. Continue to Ave. Aldea; turn R on Ave. Aldea to rotary beyond town centre. L at rotary.) David Rosen 505-4709383 Sotheby’s International Realty.
V-34 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.-130 Placito de Oro - Well maintained Stamm home in Casa Solana. Spacious, hybrid garage. Great starter home in pleasant neighborhood with clubhouse and pool close by. $295,000. MLS 201306013. (Take W. Alameda, turn right onto Placita de Oro just before Solana Center. Continue straight. House on the left. Large pine tree in front of house) Tai Bixby 505-577-3524 Tai Bixby and Associates.
NORTH EAST
Q-40 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 1100 Old Taos Highway - Vigas, latillas, nichos, kiva fireplaces, old world charm all newly redesigned and remodeled. Chef’s kitchen, top of the line appliances, new baths, views & lush landscaping on 1.3 acres downtown! $898,000. MLS 201303608. (4 br, 3 ba, Paseo de Peralta to Old Taos Hwy, all the way to end on right side of the street. Agency: Santa Fe Properties) Cary Spier 505-690-2856 Santa Fe Properties.
R-40 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 1114 Calle Largo Pristine/remodeled, 3441 sqft, 4/3/2 + office + 122 sqft studio, oasis privately located on 1.5 beautifully landscaped acres w/ mountain views to die for.Diamond plaster-granite-vigas-wood flrs & more $1,145,000. MLS 201400362. (Paseo de Peralta-to Old Las Vegas HwyRight on Calle Largo to home on Left.) Sabine Andraud 505-690-4857 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty Ltd. 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 901 Calle Arco - One mile from Plaza, panoramic mountain views all one level. Comfortable, perfect for entertaining, interior courtyard with kitchen. This home is 2814 sq ft. on just over one acre, 3 bedrooms, 3 bath $888,000. MLS 201305222. (Old Taos Highway, right on Calle Arco) Deborah Bodelson 505660-4442 Santa Fe Properties.
T-43 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - Camino Chamisa Unit E - This single-level contemporary condominium home in a culde-sac location close to downtown has three bedrooms and bath, great outdoor spaces, a wonderful sense of privacy, plentiful upgrades. $775,000. MLS 201401256. (No sign on property. Gonzales to Vallecita to Camino Chamisa or Valley Drive to Vallecita to Camino Chamisa.) Susan Shields 505-470-3286 Sotheby’s International Realty.
U-39 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m.- 203 Rosario Boulevard - On .25 landscaped and walled acres, this craftsman-style 2bed/3bth plus office home plus 1bed/1bth guesthouse is a gem on the NE side. Hosted by Kristina Lindstrom; 577-9060. 5 minute walk to Plaza. $895,000. MLS 201305960. (Paseo De Peralta to Old Taos Hwy. Take left on Rosario, the first left off of Old Taos.) Stephanie Duran 505-204-2491 Barker Realty.
SOUTH WEST
VV-27 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 36 E Chili Line - Great 5 bedroom, 3 1/2 bath home on .25 acre lot with mountain views. Fresh paint, new carpet, saltillo tile, this home is turn key and ready. Lots of elbow room with over 3000 sf! Tremendous value!! $479,000. MLS 201305927. (Richards Avenue to Chili Line) Melissa Pippin Carson 505-699-3112 Carson & Carson at Keller Williams.
X-34 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 1040 Alto St - Features include hardwood and tile floors with carpeted bedrooms, solid wooddoors, Travertine and Granite countertops, kitchen cabinets by ’Kitchens by Jeanne’, and new stainless steel appliances. $325,000. MLS 201400623. (St Francis Dr to Roybal St. Veer right and go straight after stop sign onto Alto St.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams Santa Fe.
KK-28 1:00P.M - 3:00p.m.-3212 El Trebol Ct. - A priced to sell quickly, nicely maintained town home that is centrally located and move-in ready! 2 bedrooms with 2 bathrooms and a 2 car garage. Stucco was done in 2007 and is in great condition. $189,900. MLS 201401515. (Rodeo Rd to Paseo de Los Pueblos to El Trebol Ct.) J.C. Linson 505690-7333 Barker Realty.
TT-24 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. -16 Madre Mountain - Among this home’s fine features are a formal dining room, three comfortable bedrooms, a den, a central patio, a large eat-in kitchen, a family room, a heated garage, and a portal with mountain views. $555,000. MLS 201401227. (Richards Avenue, Right on Saddleback Mesa, Right on Madre Mountain. #16 on corner of Madre Mountain and Saddleback.) Victoria Murphy 505-6605395 Sotheby’s International Realty.
UU-23 1:00PM -3:00PM - 2 Coyote Pass - Beautiful Luminaria model on corner lot. Spacious master suite with huge walk-in closet. High ceilings, light and bright. 4 bed/2bath, 2350 sq.ft. Family room, flagstone patio, 2 car garage. $355,900. MLS 201400516. (Richards Ave. to 5Right on Avenida del Sur. Pass Rancho Viejo Blvd., Left on Canada del Rancho, Left on Arroyo Ridge Rd. to corner of Coyote Pass Rd.) Nancy Clark 505-699-0171 Keller Williams Realty.
UU-24 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - Autumn Light, Santa Fe, NM Peace, Shade Trees, Parks and trails, Convenient location, in a home with 1500 sf, one level, 3 bedroom, 2 bath and 2 car garage. This is an extraordinary buy for first home, last home or inbetween. $255,000. MLS 201401320. (Rodeo Road to Richards Ave, Right on Avenida del Sur, Left on Canada Del Rancho, Right on Brilliante Sky located on the corner of Autumn Light.) Anna Vanderlaan 505-231-3410 Keller Williams.
WW-27 12:30P.M. - 2:30p.m. - 4 La Jara Court - First time open! Pristine, 1,828-square-foot home offers open living and dining areas, a den, an eat-in kitchen, three bedrooms, and two baths. Raised walls make the yard safe for pets. $310,000. MLS 201401355. (Richards Avenue to Tecolate Mesa to La Jara Court.) Bob Burbic 505-6709399 Sotheby’s International Realty.
SOUTH EAST
Y-44 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m.- 1020 Canyon Road B - A brand new adobe residence at Canyon Road’s premier Alma del Canyon. 2 Bd / 2 Bth, radiant floor heat, hard trowel plaster walls, high end appliances, off street parking, and energy efficient! $799,500. MLS 201305472. (Paseo de Peralta to Canyon Road.) David Fries 505-310-3919 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Z-43 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. -; 521 Camino Don Miguel - Classic Santa Fe style in the heart of the Eastside filled with peaceful spaces and unexpected surprises. From the moment one closes the gate, one enters a world surrounded with imagination and whimsy $1,195,000. MLS 201400012. (Acequia Madre to Camino Don Miguel.) William Lee 505-795-9978 Sotheby’s International Realty.
FF-37 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 2125 Ridgeview Circle - Contemporary tri-level home conveniently located on the southside of town. Easy access to downtown, schools, hospital and major roadways. Wonderful light filled spaces, open concept floorplan. $338,000. MLS 201401216. (2 br, 2 ba, St. Francis to Siringo (East) North on Ridgeview, bear right.) Debra Hagey 505-670-6132 Santa Fe Properties.
FF-43 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m.- 920 Old Santa Fe Trail - Territorial home set on a generous lot catty corner from the Amelia White park with big views to the Sangre de Cristo Mountain range from this in-town property. Beautifully proportioned bedrooms. $620,000. MLS 201304047. (On Old Santa Fe Trail on R as you head out of town. Property on the corner of Old Santa Fe Trail and Camino Cacto. Turn onto Camino Cacto and park in first driveway.) Abigail Davidson 505-570-0335 Sotheby’s International Realty.
GG-41 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 3101 Old Pecos Trail No. 105 Ground level Plaza A. Easy parking; portals & patio; living room with fireplace; master with Mexican tile BA; French doors, guest BR/BA; good kitchen; etc. Quail Run amenities. Home Warranty Contract $325,000. MLS 201303151. (2 br, 2 ba, Old Pecos Trail to Quail Run) Susan Munroe 505-577-0648 Santa Fe Properties.
HH-38 12:00PM-4:00PM - 493 Calle Volver - This contemporary home has clean lines, rich wood finishes, modern details of stainless steel & natural stone. Make this your home or design your own at Plaza Bonita Subdivision plazabonitasantafe.com Homes starting in the low $400’s. MLS 201305329. (St. Francis, east on San Mateo, right on Calle De La Vuelta, left on Calle Redondo, first house on the left.) Aaron Borrego 505-577-0740 Logic Real Estate.
II-44 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 3101 Old Pecos Trail # 149 Along the promenade at Quail Run, this charming 2BR, 2BA Plaza home has an open floorplan, tile floors, gasfired kiva., wood ceiling with vigas, a wonderful and large patio, AC, underground parking. $315,000. MLS 201401514. (Old Pecos Trail to Quail Run Condominium entry gate at Quail Run Drive. Immediately past Club House turn L into parking lot adjacent to tennis courts. Walk between 2 Plaza buildings, enter bldg on R.) Christopher Rocca 505-490-2999 Sotheby’s International Realty.
MM-45 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. -20 Star Vista Road - Near El Gancho, this lovely pueblo style home has four bedrooms and three bath on 3-plus acres high above Santa Fe with western views, sunsets, City lights and evening stars. $525,000. MLS 201401406. (4 br, 3 ba, Santa Fe Trail south to Star Vista (opposite Desert Academy entrance) first driveway on right.) Susan Kelly 505-690-5417 Santa Fe Properties.
UU-39 3:00P.M. - 5:00p.m.-108 Leaping Powder Road - A fabulous equestrian estate just seven minutes from the historic Santa Fe Plaza. $995,000. MLS 201400999. (3 br, 4 ba, Old Las Vegas Highway to Arroyo Hondo Road to Leaping Powder Road. Call The Efrain Prieto Group at 505.470.6909) The Efrain Prieto Group 505-470-6909 Santa Fe Properties.
ELDORADO EAST
I-70 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. 12 Melado Dr - On 1.5 acres, this sweet 3bedroom/2bath home also has a new, attached 500 sq. ft. studio! Vigas, open concept, view-filled back courtyard and great proximity to Eldorado’s amenities. $399,000. MLS 201400803. (Off of 285, turn onto Avenida Vista Grande, Left on Melado Drive.) Stephanie Duran 505-204-2491 Barker Realty.
J-70 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 7 Duende - This wonderful Eldorado home is close to schools, library & biking/outdoor trails w/convenient access to shopping. Fully walled backyard, which opens onto a greenbelt. Updated kitchen, attached studio $398,500. MLS 201401308. (3 br, 3 ba, Avenida Vista Grande to Avenida Torreon to Duende to No. 7) Cav Merchant 505-690-6826 Santa Fe Properties.
J-77 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m- 6 Caliente Place - Absolutely charming one owner 2 bed 2 bath 1200 sq ft with lovely sun room...great view lot extremely well kept, light and bright with kiva and special custom touches. $269,000. MLS 201401384. (Avenida Vista Grande to Caliente left to Caliente Place left to home) Jenny Bishop, Trudi Conkling 505-469-0469 Barker Realty.
N-66 12:30P.M. - 2:00p.m.- 29 Bosque Loop - Naturally bright throughout this elegant, open and spacious home. High viga ceilings in main living area, tile floors, large fireplace and fabulous mountain views from inside to the portalled patios. $515,000. MLS 201401581. (3 br, 2 ba, Avenida Eldorado west, right onto Bosque Loop (2nd) Home on left.) Sue Garfitt 505-577-2007 Santa Fe Properties.
N-78 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 22 Immanuel - You’ll love the feeling of this wonderfully renewed residence in The Ridges. Enter a nestled walkway lined w/ mature piñon trees to a big front portal and in through beautiful front doors. $645,000. MLS 201401605. (Hwy 285 South/Left on Alma Drive/up Alma aka Principe de Paz to Agua Viviendo/Left on Agua Viviendo/1st Left on Immanuel/to last property on left at cul de sac.) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.
OTHER 1:00P.M. - 3:30p.m.- 7 Camino Caballos Spur - Big Price Reduction! Glorious views, 2-horse stable (possible studio), direct trail access. All brick floors, great room w/kiva fireplace, master bedroom w/FP, updated bathrooms & large guestrooms. $419,000. MLS 201303543. (3 br, 2 ba, Hwy 285 - right on Camino Caballos Spur - property on left) Peter Van Ness 505-6606409 Santa Fe Properties.
Z-45
1:30P.M. - 3:30p.m. - Rancho de Bosque S. Architect-designed contemporary home, plus guest house and exceptional artist studio. Many green features and high-end finishes throughout. Sangre de Cristo and Galisteo Basin views. $1,395,000. MLS 201305489. (I-25 south on US 285, left on Ranch Road, right on Cattle Drive, right on Bishop Lamy, left on Rancho de Bosque. Home on left. No sign.) Jim DeVille 505690-4815 Sotheby’s International Realty.
1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 1170-A Camino San Acacio Walking distance to Canyon Road! High end features including plaster walls, flagstone & wood flooring, tile counters, 2 Kiva fireplaces, stainless appliances, vigas & beams and an enclosed courtyard. $544,900. MLS 201400117. (East Alameda to Camino Cabra to Camino San Acacio. Property is on Southwest corner.) Gail Stratton 505-670-6843 Logic Real Estate.
1:30P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 34 Ellis Ranch Road - Adobe home accessed from paved Ellis Ranch Road in the historic Rancho de San Sebastian area twelve minutes from downtown off the Old Las Vegas Highway. Fenced lot, studio, pasture, hay barn and more. $419,000. MLS 201401331. (3 br, 2 ba, Old Las Vegas Highway to Ellis Ranch Road to #34, look for Santa Fe Properties Sign.) James Congdon 505-490-2800 Santa Fe Properties.
E-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 SANTA FE
OUT OF TOWN
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME FOR SALE!
CHECK THIS OUT!!
Sits on one acre of land next to the Rio Grand. 505-995-0318 DETAILS: www.northernnewmexicohome.com
GET NOTICED! 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
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»rentals«
GUESTHOUSES
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818 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.
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.
VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY
APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122
FUR N ISH ED STUDIO, $675. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839
Old Adobe Office Located On the North Side of Town
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
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
CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
X-LARGE
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! INCREDIBLE SANGRE VIEWS! $945. ZIA VISTAS LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, large walk-in closets. Fireplace. Exceptional layout. Gated. Much more. 505-316-0986.
STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Ready to move-in! No Pets. $600 monthly, all utilities paid. CALL 505920-2648.
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
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
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.
1 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, radiant heat, washer, dryer, large balcony. $775. Plus utilities
CALL 986-3000
CONDOSTOWNHOMES SERENE 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH townhouse, scenic Cochiti Lake. Rent $875 monthly includes water, you pay electric & gas. Pet OK. Call Steve 505465-0016
GUESTHOUSES TESUQUE CASITA. 1 bedroom, 1 bath FURNISHED in gated estate. Pets okay. References needed. All utilities. $900. jsfsilver@aol.com
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!
Please call (505)983-9646. RETAIL OR OFFICE 2 Great Locations
992-6123 or 690-4498
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Cozy Condo
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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.
ROOMMATE WANTED HOUSEMATE WANTED. Female preferred. Newer Home, 2 Bedrooms, 1 private bath., kitchen. $600 monthly. Southside, near St. Vincent Hospital. 505-239-1269.
Beautiful Views
LARGE, CLEAN one bed room furnished guest house, $1,300 monthly includes utilities. 2 acres in SF Community College District. 505-901-7415.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
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. East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2738.
New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603
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
New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603
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 3 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH. Polished brick floors, kiva fireplace, wood beamed ceilings, garage, rural setting in town. $1095 monthly.
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299 EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS, EAST ALAMEDA. Walk to Plaza. Pueblo-style. Washer, dryer. Kiva, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1500 sq.ft. Garage. Nonsmoking, no pets. $1900 monthly. 505-982-3907
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
ELDORADO
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
FREE FREE
House 1800 sqft, 4 car garage, 1000 sqft workshop, 10 ½ acres of privacy. All for only $230,000. This property is on State Rd. 14 just beyond Lone Butte Store.
ART DECO Adobe Duplex, 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Vigas. Off-street parking. Enclosed yard. No Tobacco. No Dogs. $925-$975. 505-988-8022.
Place an ad Today!
Lovely, Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $475 monthly. 505-690-5092
Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
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
2 BEDROOM 1.5 BATH, 900 square feet, great, safe neighborhood. Small yard, no pets. $795 plus utilities. 505-470-0727. 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.
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, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities
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.
Lovely TOWNHOME
2029 CALLE LORCA
Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS
COMMERCIAL SPACE
1 bedroom, 1 bath. Fireplace, upgraded unit with granite countertops. End-unit. Low foot traffic. $109,000.
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
A 1 Bedroom Apt. $0 Security Deposit For Qualified Applicants & No deposit required for Utilities, Ask me How!!
505-471-8325
OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
$420 MOVES YOU IN
( 12 Mo. Lease, required for special )
DOS SANTOS
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
ELDORADO
LIVE IN STUDIOS 2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
1208 PARKWAY, 2,800 SQ.FT. OVERHEAD DOOR, PARKING, HEATED, COOLED. NEW CARPET. FLEXIBLE OWNER WILLING TO MODIFY. RENTS NEGOTIABLE. AL, 466-8484.
1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET. 800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-6997280.
WORK STUDIOS
FRONTING ON 2ND STREET 2160 sq.ft on 2nd Street.
Live- Work. Studio. Gallery, or Office. High ceilings, 2-story. Handicap bath. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280. 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.
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.
988-5585
FARMS & RANCHES
Ask About Our…
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
LOTS & ACREAGE
2 acres of irrigated land and 2.5 acres of irrigated land in Anton Chico. Please call 575-799-0890 for more information.
(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. SAN MIEGEL on Pecos River irrigation 1.76 acre for home site, trailer or campoing. Utilities available. $38,000 OBO. 575-421-7000
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Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES EIGHT NORTHERN INDIAN PUEBLOS COUNCIL, INC. - A LOCAL EMPLOYER OF EXCELLENCE 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
CIRCLE OF LIFE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NETWORK DIRECTOR OF CLINICAL SERVICES – COLBHN CLINICAL DIRECTOR – Butterfly Healing Center - Taos DIRECTOR OF QUALITY ASSURANCE/QUALITY IMPROVEMENT - Butterfly Healing Center located in Taos CLINCIAL SUPERVISOR FAMILY SERVICES – COLBHN Albuquerque INPATIENT THERAPISTS – Butterfly Healing Center –Taos FAMILY SERVICE THERAPIST – Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos SUBSTANCE ABUSE CO9UNSELOR/LADAC - Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHS – Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos DIRECTOR OF HEAD START – NAMBE - SAN ILDEFONSO Responsible for the overall administration and management of the ENIPC’s Head Start Program located in the Pueblos of Nambe and San Ildefonso. Carry out day- to-day administration, management, and supervision of the Head Start Program. Supervise Lead Teachers and any administrative staff. Maintain the current grant and budget and aggressively search for additional funding. Director will work in conjunction with the Executive Director and Governors of both Pueblos to grow the program. Bachelor’s Degree with Master’s preferred in Early Childhood Education, Social Work Administration, Human and Disability services, Elementary Education, or Business Administration. Minimum of 3 (three) years of experience in a director role for a Head Start or similar program Grant management is a requirement. Generous Benefits Package: All Employee Medical Premiums Paid, Employer Match 401k, PTO, and Much Much More! Employment with ENIPC requires a valid NM State Driver License and must be insurable under ENIPC’s auto insurance. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC ensures Native American Preference. ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment*
YOUR JOB LISTING DESERVES NEW MEXICAN EXPOSURE.
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sfnm«classifieds »announcements«
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
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.
»jobs«
to place your ad, call ADMINISTRATIVE
DRIVERS
COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS OF NEW MEXICO seeks a part-time DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANT. Working closely with the Executive Director and Associate Director, the ideal candidate will have a minimum of 3 years of development administrative experience. Responsibilities include: donor database management, donor acknowledgements, special events, assisting with public relations and marketing activities and other organizational communication. Knowledge of Microsoft Office Suite required. Enthusiasm for missiondriven education & human services work. Demonstrated ability to set and achieve goals. Excellent communication skills. Ability to multi-task. Ability to work collaboratively and independently in a fast-paced and fun professional work environment. CISNM is an EOE. Email Cover Letter, Resume and references to Julia Bergen at jbergen@cisnm.org. NO PHONE CALLS, Please. Deadline is May 9.
MOTHER’S DAY Delivery Drivers Needed, apply in person at Rodeo Plaza Flowers, 2801 RODEO ROAD, SUITE A2.
AUTOMOTIVE
when you buy a
2014 Pet Calendar for $5!
PREOWNED SALES MANAGER
100% of sales donated to SFAS.
986-3000 LOST ACCOUNTING
3 1/2 year old netuered male Dog. Black Lab, Pit mix. White paws and spot on chest. Freckled face. 505-9468778.
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..
Excellent Employment Opportunity Credit Department Specialist
REWARD!
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.
No questions asked. 505-660-1772.
LOST CAT: Tan and white Siamese mix, black collar. Lives in Casa Solana, missing since 4/23. Call 9829385.
FULL-TIME, EXPERIENCED IN ACCOUNTING, DATA ENTRY, INVOICING, PAYROLL. Must Have references, English-Spanish a plus. Please call 505-988-9876.
ADMINISTRATIVE
90% SUCCESS RATE GRANT-WRITER. Research based grant applications in social, education, economic and environmental development. marianna_king@adams.edu. 719852-2698. 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
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.
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.
SWAIA SANTA FE INDIAN MARKET
is now hiring for the following positions:
Indian Market Zone Manager
986-3000
EDUCATION 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.
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.
HOSPITALITY THE ELDORADO Supermarket Deli is looking for experienced, reliable, dependable Kitchen and Counter Help. Ask for Guy or Corey, 505-466-2602.
Don’t forget to ask about our sign on bonus!
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS 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.
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
Hospice Registered Nurse-PRN,
EXPERIENCED SALES ASSOCIATE for luxury art jewelry gallery. Must be sophisticated, energetic, and organized. See classified ad @ santafenewmexican.com
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.
MEDICAL DENTAL
GALLERIES
MASSAGE THERAPIST
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
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.
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
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
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
(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 .
GET NOTICED! Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
CALL 986-3000
PART TIME 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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
DRIVERS
The Santa Fe New Mexican is an Equal Opportunity Employer
Drivers Needed to drive Executive. Excellent salary plus commission. Cash Daily. 310-281-1159, 817-595-6936.
202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303
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
TECHNICIAN TRAINEE Santa Fe Clinic
OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN REGISTERED NURSE / PACU-Holding Area Santa Fe Surgery Center Casual/prn
Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions open at our Santa Fe Clinic and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com. Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.
at
MANAGEMENT
Interested individuals should email a cover letter, resume, and 35 references to Interim Head of School, Patrick Brown, at patrick_brown@riograndeschool.o rg.
LOST WHITE AND GRAY CAT with dark gray stripes. Missing since 4/2/14. Please call 719-510-3367.
PUBLIC NOTICES
COMPUTERS IT
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.
Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!
Iphone 5C
Bright turquoise case. Left at Ft. Marcy open grass area. 6pm, 5/24/14 Please return.
MEDICAL DENTAL
MANAGEMENT
SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT...
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 THE SCHOOL for Advanced Research seeks a full-time scholar programs assistant. Visit our website for full position description. www.sarweb.org
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
986-3000
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Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds »merchandise«
PART TIME
to place your ad, call CLOTHING
986-3000
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.
$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.
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.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999
LOOKING TO BUY US Stamp Collections. 1847-1920. Call 603-727-8315.
SEASONED FIREWOOD: PONDEROSA $80 PER LOAD. Pinion or Cedar $120 per load. CALL: 508444-0087. Delivery free!
APPLIANCES Electric Stainless Steel counter top 5 burner, 36" wide. $95. 505-986-9765, if no answer leave a message.
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
FIREWOOD-FUEL
FURNITURE
REMODELING SALE: Iron pot-hanger, $150. Microwave vent-a-hood, $30. 432-634-3334
AMERICAN COUNTRY COLLECTION down-blend sofa and Kilim wingback chair. Both excellent condition and have nail-head trim. $800 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 HANDMADE SPANISH Colonial Style red oak with carved rosettes: Large desk, Credenza, Bookcase, 2 chairs. $9,750. Call 505-982-0778 for appointment.
WASHER, DRYER, Refrigerator, $500 for all. 505-470-8861.
REMODELING SALE. 3 shelf TV stand, $100. Kitchen island, $500. Indian Rug, $450. Turkish Runner Rug, $400. 432-634-3334
ART
Upholstered Church Pews in Good Condition (8) 14 ft. to 18 ft. long. Price Negotiable. Call: 505-4731114.
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
TWO SOLID oak pews from St. Catherine Indian School, kneelers inlcuded, $500 each. (505)466-8581
ATTN: KACHINA MAKERS. COLORFUL small feathers for sale. $20 for a quart jar full. 505-473-4241
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES COW HAY for sale. 70 bales- $10 per bale. 505-610-0994
GENERAL, ALL-TERRAIN Bicycle, 18speed. Lock, cable, rear carrier, raincover, two spare tires. $50. 505982-6438.
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
GREAT BIKE Trailer, Yak, single wheel. Waterproof cargo bag, perfect for touring. Like, new. $250. 505983-7057.
HORSES
HEALTH MARK INVERSION TABLE from Guyim. For hanging upside down. Like new condition. $125. 505231-9133 LOWE BACKPACK. Alpine model. Brand new, never used. $125. 505490-2494 SPECIALIZED MOUNTAIN BIKE. Full suspension, 8 years old. $450 OBO. 505-490-2494
TENT, NORTHFACE VE25. Mount Everest Expedition Tent. Never setup. Golden Yellow, Geodesic Dome, extras $500. 505-983-7057. Thule Parkway bike rack. Holds 2 bikes. Heavy-duty. $100, 505-2319133.
STEARNS-FOSTER QUEEN MATTRESS. Luxury Plush Euro Pillow Top. 18 months old: perfect condition. ASKING $600. New: $1079. 505-989-3916.
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
LAWN & GARDEN
COLLECTIBLES
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.
Equal Opportunity Employer
TODDLER BED with mattress, and bedding, almost new. $50. 505-9869765, if no answer leave message.
ANTIQUES MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment. 505-795-7222
»animals«
SOLID BIRCH WOOD CRIB with Sealy mattress. Converts to youth bed. Never used. $200 firm. 505-820-3127
Five "name-brand" pairs of shoes for sale.
PART-TIME ARCHIVE COORDINATOR
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! KIDS STUFF
FURNITURE
E-13
WANT TO BUY ANTLER BUYER COMING SOON! Top Grades and Prices! Call for information 435-340-0334.
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
INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINES- Juki Serger and Consew straight sewer, almost new. Must see, make offer. 505-470-5759, 505-757-2381.
TECHNICAL
BUILDING MATERIALS
Maintenance Technician
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.
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
RECYLCLED ASPHALT (millings). $18 per cubic yard. Free deliver with 11 yard purchase. 505-316-2999
CLOTHING DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down baseball jersey. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205
Classifieds
Get Results! Call 986-3000 to place your ad!
business & service Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!
exploresantafetcom ANIMALS
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.
HANDYMAN
Clean Houses
MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE
Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062.
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
CONSTRUCTION LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084
CLASSIFIEDS
Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.
HAULING OR YARD WORK FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
BE READY, PLAN NOW * 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 COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 15% off! 505-9072600, 505-990-0955. JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
PLASTERING
LANDSCAPING EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE !! Rock walls, patios, fireplaces, etc. Over 30 years experience. Call for estimate. HENRY THE STONE MASON, 505-490-0317.
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
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!
LANDSCAPING
In and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449. HOUSEKEEPER: GREEN & ME T IC ULOUS. English. Licensed and insured. Windows, move-in, move-out. Excellent references. Adriana, 505-5015856.
directory«
THE YARD NINJA! PRUNING TREES OR SHRUBSDONE CORRECTLY! STONEWORK- PATIOS, PLANTERS, WALLS. HAUL. INSTALL DRIP. CREATE BEAUTY! DANNY, 505-501-1331.
PAINTING A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLE PRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RELIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-9821207
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
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
YARD MAINTENANCE
ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.
HOMECRAFT PAINTING
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
MAC’S OLD MILL RESTORATIONS. Specialize in all painting and decorating needs since 1984. Call James McFeely at 505-204-1022.
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 exploresantafetcom Call us today for your FREE BUSINESS CARDS!*
986-3000
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E-14
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
sfnm«classifieds 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.
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
AKC CAVALIER King Charles Pups. 3 males available May 2nd. Asking $1,200. butteboyzmom@yahoo.com or call 575-740-2401 for more information.
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.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
DOMESTIC
DOMESTIC
4X4s
4X4s
2008 BUICK ENCLAVE WITH ALL THE GOODIES, VERY SHARP RIDE, $18,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
2011 Dodge Avenger 4-door Sedan Heat. $12,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
2011 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 . Extended Cab Standard Box 2-Wheel Drive LT. $19,000. 505-473-2886.
F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $14,900. 505-470-2536
986-3000 www.furrysbuickgmc.com
ESTATE SALES DON’T MISS THIS SALE! 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!
Once In A Lifetime! AKC DOBERMANS. Excellent bloodlines, tempermants. Tails, Dewclaws, shots. Puppies Raised with love, 9 weeks. Jozette 719-5882328. Check online ad pics.
986-3000
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.
Sell Your Stuff! AKC AKITAS FOR SALE. $600. White, black, black and white, brindle. 8 weeks old, first shots. 505-315-7736 or 505-490-3523.
to place your ad, call
Stephen’s A Consignment Gallery
2008 CADILLAC DTS. $12,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2002 Ford Taurus 4-door Wagon SE Standard. $3,000. Call 505-4732886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2005 CHEVY-1500 CREWCAB 4X4
Another local Owner, Records, Manuals, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo PRACTICAL $17,250
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
The Ann Lawrence Collection, NEXT Saturday, May 3rd. Watch for details Go to: www.stephensconsignments.com
2011 Ford F-150 4WD SuperCrew 51/2 Ft Box XLT. $33,000. 505-4732886.
View vehicle, Carfax:
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»cars & trucks«
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DOG CAGE. STAINLESS STEEL 43"Lx24"Wx44"H. $75. 505-929-0235, 929-7230.
2005 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER. Asking $7,200 OBO. New Kenwood stereo, headrest TVs. 124,031 miles. Runs good. 4WD. Paul, 505-204-4704.
2000 Ford Windstar Wagon 4-door SE. $3,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2006 CHEVROLET HHR. A RARE TREASURE. $8,488. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES POMERANIAN puppies. Quality double coats, registered and UTD shots. Beautiful tiny Chihuahua female, chocolate, first shots, $450. 505-9012094 or 505-753-0000.
Where treasures are found daily 2010 Dodge Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab, 6.3 Ft Box SLT. $26,000. Call 505-473-2886.
Place an ad Today!
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.
PUG PUPPIES FOR SALE. Fawn. 1 girl, 3 boys. 8 weeks. Vaccinated. Healthy, Playful. Well socialized for dogs, children. $850. 505-795-6420
2003 Ford SuperDuty F-350 DRW 4WD Crew Cab 6-3/4 FT BOX LARIAT. 505-473-2886. $16,000.
CLASSIFIEDS
CALL 986-3000 www.furrysbuickgmc.com
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2010 TOYOTA TACOMA front bumper. Good condition. $100. 505-471-8817.
CLASSIC CARS
2007 Chrysler 300-Series 4 door Sedan 300 Touring RWD. $14,000. Call now to view: 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2000 GMC JIMMY 4WD -- $3000 Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2013 GMC Sierra 1500 Crew Cab Short Box 4-Wheel Drive SLE. $34,000. Call now! 505-473-2886.
SHIH TZU PUPPIES, 9 weeks old Rare Red. Registered, First Shots. Asking $475. 505-469-9211 or 505-469-0118.
»finance«
2005 DODGE Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab, 6.3ft box SLT. $15,000. Call 505-473-2886. 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.
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
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
1997 JEEP CJ-5, 4X4 runs good, rebuilt engine, V8, high rise and headers $3,800. Please call 505-660-1674
FINANCIAL LOANS WE LOAN on Commercial Real Estate, Income Property, Offices, Retail, Multi-Family, Motels, Storage, Land, Farms, Easy Qualify. PMIFUNDING.COM . 505-275-2244
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.
GET NOTICED!
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.
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
CALL 986-3000
2008 RAM 2500 HEAVY DUTY 4X4. 5.7 Hemi, Auto, Tow Package, Great Tires, Serviced, Detailed. $11,000 Good condition! 505-927-7364
QUICK. SAFE. EASY. CHEAP!
»garage sale«
Auto Classifieds 2 weeks in print and online for only 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 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.
$
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.
Sunday, April 27, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds
to place your ad, call
4X4s
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
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.
2009 KIA SPECTRA. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
IMPORTS
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
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
986-3000
E-15
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! IMPORTS
2004 Volkswagen Passat Wagon 4-door Wagon GLS Auto Wagon. $8,000. Call www.furrysbuickgmc.com
SUVs
2010 Chrysler Town & Country 4 door Wagon Touring, $12,000. Call now to test drive: 505-473-2886 www.furrysbuickgmc.com
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, CarFax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
2006 HONDA Element LX 4WD - recent local trade, freshly serviced, nice condition, clean CarFax, priced to go $9,471. Call 505-2163800.
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
1993 VOLVO GLT 850. FWD. Clean. $1500 cash. 505-490-3686, or 505-4709262.
2008 MINI Cooper Clubman. ANOTHER Lexus trade! low miles, clean CarFax, well-equipped, immaculate! $13,871.Call 505-2163800
2001 JEEP CHEROKEESPORT 4X4
2009 BMW 335Ci xDrive. WOW! Merely 43k miles, just 1 owner, Premium & Cold Weather Packages, clean CarFax $24,841. Call 505-216-3800.
Another One Owner, Local, Every Record, Manuals, X-Keys,NonSmoker, Garaged, Loaded Pristine. Soooo CLASSIC! $9,250.
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
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2008 GMC Envoy 2WD 4 door SLE1 Call $11,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2007 TOYOTA FJ CRUZIER. VERY CLEAN WELL KEPT VEHICLE. ONLY $16,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
PICKUP TRUCKS
View vehicle, CarFax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
2004 MINI COOPER-S MANUAL
505-983-4945
»recreational«
Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo CUTE, $10,650. 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! 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.
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
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, CarFax:
ATVs
santafeautoshowcase.com 2012 Ram 1500 4WD Quad Cab. 6.3 Ft Box Laramie. $33,000. Call 505-473-2886.
505-983-4945
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.
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 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.
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).
2004 Saab 9-5 4-door Sedan Arc. $7,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
1999 FOREST RIVER CAMPER. 21’, duel axles, self-contained. Excellent condition. $6,500 OBO. 505-660-4079
2010 Honda Odyssey EX. $17,000. Call 505-473-288. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2012 Toyota Tundra 4WD Truck CrewMax Short Bed 4.6L (Natl) $33,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
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.
MOTORCYCLES
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.
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.
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.
2008 SMART fortwo Cabriolet. Spring is here! Fun & practical, well-equipped, red interior, pristine condition, clean CarFax, $8,541. 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.
Add a pic and sell it quick! 2010 Toyota Tacoma 4WD Double Cab Short Bed V6 Manual. $27,000. Call 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2008 Mercedes ML350 - another Lexus trade! AWD, good miles, well-maintained, truly excellent condition, Luxury for less at $20,997. Call 505-216-3800.
IMPORTS
It’s that easy!
2004 TAURUS SES Flex Fuel. V-6, Auto, Loaded, Leather, Detailed, Serviced. Carfax. 106,375 miles. $4,800 Great condition! 505 927-7364
SPORTS CARS
2012 TOYOTA COROLLA. DON’T PAY MORE. LOW, LOW MILES. $13,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
2012 SRT-8 DODGE CHALLENGER. FASTEST CAR IN SANTA FE, SAVE THOUSANDS $36,999 SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
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. 2011 AUDI A3 TDI - DIESEL, 40+mpg, one owner, clean CarFax, this is your chance $22,341. Call 505-2163800. 2009 TOYOTA Matrix, Standard transmission. 75,000 miles, excellent condition. Asking $12,500, OBO. Call for questions, 505-982-2286. 2005 HONDA CIVIC. Perfect condition. 13,500 low low miles. Dark grey. Four door. Automatic. $8,000 OBO. Call 949-338-3850
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.
2005 Toyota Camry XLE, 134,095 miles, good condition, red & gray, automatic, 4 door. $4,500, Call 505-3363950.
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.
986-3000
E-16
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, April 27, 2014
TIME OUT
Bad beginnings
W
Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, April 27, 2014: This year you head down a new path, as you are determined to fulfil a goal that could affect your life. You transform, and your desires transform as well. You will discover the importance of staying true to yourself. If you are single, you could meet people who are not authentic and who can’t offer you what you desire. Don’t worry; someone who is true to him- or herself is likely to appear. If you are attached, your sweetie will need to catch up to you. Know that that might not happen until the new year. ARIES is a natural healer for you. The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You’ll smile a lot, as if you have a secret you have not yet shared. Others will try to find out what is going on as they discover that your lips are sealed on this topic. Be spontaneous when making a purchase. Tonight: You are not ready to end the weekend. This Week: Hold on tight to your wallet.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Try as you may, no one seems to be letting the cat out of the bag. The smart move would be to ignore the situation, as someone is likely to spill the beans. Make plans for yourself right now. You need some muchneeded downtime. Tonight: Stay in and watch a movie. This Week: Stay levelheaded, if possible, as no one around you seems stable. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You seem to have a secret or something you would prefer not to share. You seem to beam with this information, which could trigger a friend’s curiosity. Go off and watch a game, but do not push too hard. Fatigue could be high. Tonight: Forget the idea of to bed.” This Week: Make a doctor’s appointment. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH If you are not going on a mini day excursion, plan on going on one very soon. A change of pace always grounds you and helps you gain a new perspective. Whatever you do, you’ll do it intensely. Tonight: Start thinking “Monday.” This Week: A friend could do a reversal.
Last week’s answer
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Deal with one person at a time. You might be easily distracted, as a phone call or news from a distance could put you on high alert. A change seems to be flying your way. Are you ready for some diversity in the near future? Tonight: Catch up on a favorite show. This Week: Tension seems to build at work and at home. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might want to seriously consider a partner’s request. This person needs a change of pace. Friends are likely to call you to head out and join them. Making a point to get some exercise, whether it is mental or physical, could reduce stress. Tonight: Enjoy a leisurely dinner. This Week: Reach out to a loved one. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Just let others do their thing. Decide when you would like to join in and when you would prefer to do something else. You often give in for the sake of keeping the peace, which is one of the reasons why your anger is so close to the surface, Tonight: Enjoy a fun night out. This Week: Show concern for a partner or loved one who could be fed up. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might be hard-pressed to follow through on a project and also get to a game on time. Know that you will manage to do both, if you want to. How-
Chess quiz
BLACK’S BEST MOVE? Hint: Get a rook, not a pawn. Solution: 1…. Bf8! If 2. Rc2 or 2. Rc1, 2. … Bb5ch (targets the rook at e1).
New York Times Sunday Crossword
ever, don’t hesitate to adjust your plans. You need to let go of stress. Tonight: Take the dog for a walk. This Week: What you want could change radically once you get it. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21) HHHH Let your imagination color your plans. You will have a great time, as will others. Curb any frustration you have toward a loved one who seem to playing out a mock war. Do not feed this person’s hostilities. Tonight: So what if tomorrow is Monday? This Week: Plan on taking off for a few days. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Stay close to home and handle a personal matter. An older parent or relative could seem out of sorts. Asking this person what is wrong might be a mistake. Invite him or her along if you have plans, but do not create more pressure. Tonight: Order in. Make it easy. This Week: Let your creativity point to a new path. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Make some phone calls that you have been putting off. Your ability to read between the lines is an important skill, especially as someone is vested in not sharing. Do not push. Run some errands or meet up with friends. Tonight: Swap jokes or gossip with a friend. This Week: Hang close to home. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Be aware of the cost of proceeding as you have been. You could pretend that your actions have no effect on others, and you actually might believe that. Revise your thinking. Make calls to a neighbor or dear friend to get together. Tonight: Do what you want to do. This Week: Choose your words with care; they could haunt you later.
Scratch pad
hen I was a teenager, I loved murder mysteries from the 1920s, ‘30s and ‘40s, particularly those by Agatha Christie. Until recently, I thought I had read everything Dame Agatha had ever written featuring her idiosyncratic Belgian detective Hercule Poirot. So I was surprised and delighted to discover in a bookstore a collection of Poirot short stories I had not seen before. Most of them were from very early in Christie’s career, published only in magazines. I bought the book and settled in for a trip down Memory Lane. Alas, it turned into a trip down the descending colon. These stories stank. Christie had yet to figure out exactly who Poirot would be. Instead of having a charmingly ordered Gene mind, he was an annoying fussbudget. Instead of being a likable aesthete, he Weingarten was comically effeminate. Instead of The Washington being a little full of himself, he was an Post insufferable egomaniac. The plots were derivative: Poirot and his loyal sidekick, Hastings, did not so much resemble Holmes and Watson as duplicate them to a potentially litigable degree. Far from feeling betrayed, as a writer I felt relief. If Agatha Christie had once been this bad, there is always hope for hacks like me. Maybe I’m not mediocre, maybe I just need more time to find my voice. Y’know, work out the kinks. I bet all the great writers had dreadful misfires before they got it right. Who knows what you’d find in that first balled-up sheet of paper in the trash can next to their writing desks? Gabriel Garcia Marquez: “Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendia was to remember that distant afternoon when his father taught him to use the potty like a big boy.” Jane Austen: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a prudent investment strategy.” Charles Dickens: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair. I mean, it was just nucking futz.” Groucho Marx: “Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog is whatever maggoty dreck they last snorked up from the gutter.” Vladimir Nabokov: “Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins, irritant of my pancreas ... ” F. Scott Fitzgerald: “In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I’ve been turning over in my mind ever since. Never drink orange juice right after brushing your teeth.” Leo Tolstoy: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, but it usually stems from the uncalled-for implementation of noogies.” Edward George Bulwer-Lytton: “It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents, except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies) ... ” (Actually, that last one’s verbatim, as written. Couldn’t make it any worse.)
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