Santa Fe New Mexican, June 25, 2013

Page 1

Pair of late third-period goals lift Blackhawks to Stanley Cup victory Sports, B-1

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Proud day for Petry Hidden towers disturb locals

‘Music’ silenced A permitting snafu shuts down a Railyard screening of The Sound of Music. LOcAL NewS, A-7

Pair claim physical side effects; cell company says antennas aren’t on

Providers faulted in state audit

By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican

Two Santa Feans concerned about the potential health effects of cellphone towers say a new stealth array atop the Hotel Santa Fe has been giving them fits and causing high readings on a microwave detector since the first of the month. But an AT&T spokesman says the antennas haven’t been connected yet. Arthur Firstenberg, known for suing a neighbor for using an iPhone, Wi-Fi and other common electronic devices, and Monica Steinhoff, an artist who runs A Sea in the Desert Gallery, 407 S. Guadalupe St., have been monitoring electromagnetic signals around the hotel with a Steinhoff’s Electrosmog meter. Both say they have experienced adverse reactions since June 1 and assumed they were due to transmissions from the array of nine antennas hidden in a faux fourth floor atop a portion of the Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta — the latest and largest local effort so far to hide cellphone towers, both from sight and public controversy, in such structures as bell towers, chimneys and metal trees. “I can feel it’s higher in my gallery because my stomach is constantly in kind of an agitated state,” Steinhoff said earlier this month. “So I’m trying to find out how much it has actually gone up and what I can do about it to mitigate it for myself.” Firstenberg said he thought he was having a heart attack on June 1, a Saturday, at his house, about a third of a mile from the hotel. He said he confirmed that the array was in use by checking the electricity use on a new

Report cites fraudulent practices, overbilling for mental health services By Russell Contreras The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Fifteen New Mexico providers of mental health and substance abuse services failed to meet standards, overbilled the federal and state government by tens of millions of dollars, and may have taken part in fraudulent activities, according to a new state audit released Monday. New Mexico Human Services Department officials said the audit found “errors and overpayments were so widespread that the business and billing practices of every provider [in the audit] warrants careful scrutiny.” It also found “mismanagement, fraud, waste and abuse” in the treatment of potential suicide victims, including disregard for follow-up care and basic policies. Department Secretary Sidonie Squier said that, as a result of the audit, Medicaid payments would stop immediately to all 15 providers and out-ofstate managers would be brought to New Mexico to manage behavioral health care services for patients. In addition, she said the results of the five-month audit have been forwarded to the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office for further investigation of potential fraud. “New Mexico can’t risk this type of activity,” Squier said in an interview with The Associated Press. The audit did not list the names of the providers targeted. But state officials said they accounted for more than 85 percent of the state’s behavioral health spending. Providers contacted by the AP did not immediately return messages. New Mexico has some of the highest suicide and drug overdose rates in the country, with 19.9 suicides per 100,000 people. The audit also found that providers overbilled taxpayers by $36 million and that the companies’ error billing rates far exceeded the U.S. average.

Please see TOweRS, Page A-5 Santa Fean and Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry speaks Monday during the unveiling of the Hometown Hero statue that was made in his image. PHOTOS BY CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Military hero swoops in for statue unveiling, ceremony

Obituaries Anna Marie Agni, 60, June 16 Roberta Lorraine Gomez (Peña), 49, June 21 Anita Morris Kaune, 79, June 19 Dr. Robert H. Lessard, 77, May 20 Charlotte Valencia-Lindahl, 55, Rio Rancho Stella T. Romero, 90, Santa Fe, June 11 Neil A. Rougemont, 30, June 23 Maria F. Ulibarri, 97, June 23 Father Anthony Vasaturo PAge A-9

A person touches the outstretched stainless steel hand on the statue of Petry after it was unveiled outside City Hall.

The Associated Press

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fter parachuting onto the field next to the Fort Marcy Recreation Complex on Monday morning, Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry said there’s no better way to see the American flag flying in the wind than to watch one floating to earth while attached to a parachutist. The Santa Fe native and Medal of Honor recipient made his entrance into the downtown area at about 8:20 a.m., dropping from the sky along with retired U.S. Army Special Forces Sgt. John Hart, retired U.S. Navy SEAL Jim Woods and retired U.S. Special Forces Sgt. 1st Class Dana Bowman. Later in the morning, during an hourlong event honoring Petry’s military achievements, dignitaries unveiled a bronze statue of Petry

Please see PeTRY, Page A-4

In wake of recession, world’s higher education paths diverge By Didi Tang and Justin Pope

Today

By Robert Nott

The New Mexican

CHONGQING, China — On the outskirts of this sprawling megalopolis of 29 million in southwest China stand a pair of college campuses — one representing

Comics B-12

Lotteries A-2

education’s past in the world’s most populous country, and the other, perhaps, its future. In its mission and dreary name, the College of Mobile Telecommunications is typical of China’s hundreds of Soviet-era universities: rote learning, hyper-specialization

Opinions A-10

Police notes A-9

Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, rdean@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, kdunham@sfnewmexican.com

Please see PATHS, Page A-4

Time Out B-11

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Lawyers for the Arts’ summer series “Understanding the ArtistGallery Consignment Agreement,” with Peter Ives, 6 p.m., Santa Fe Arts Commission Community Gallery, Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy St., no charge, for information email info@ nmlawyersforthearts.org. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

Michael Hoffman works last month at the University of Farmers Insurance Group offices in Michigan. ‘I want what’s going to be specifically oriented to my career and my career goals,’ he says about a curriculum focused on insurance issues.

and a lock-step course of study for all. On a hill above it, surrounding a secluded courtyard, stands Yuanjing Academy, a new experiment with a very different feel. Here,

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THUNDER ROLLS INTO CHICAGO

A thunderstorm with rains approaches downtown Chicago on Monday. SCOTT EISEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In brief

Rob Dean Editor

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s national plan to combat climate change will include the first-ever regulations to limit carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants, as well as increased production of renewable energy on public lands and federally assisted housing, environmental groups briefed on the plan said Monday. In a major speech Tuesday at Georgetown University, Obama will announce that he’s directing his administration to allow enough renewables on public lands to power 6 million homes by 2020, effectively doubling the capacity from solar, wind and geothermal projects on federal property. He’ll also say the U.S. will significantly expand production of renewable energy on low-income housing sites, according to five individuals briefed on the plan, who were not authorized to discuss it publicly ahead of Obama’s announcement and spoke on condition of anonymity. The far-reaching plan marks Obama’s most prominent effort yet to deliver on a major priority he laid out in his first presidential campaign and recommitted to at the start of his second term: to fight climate change in the U.S. and abroad and prepare American communities for its effects. Environmental activists have been irked that Obama’s high-minded goals never materialized into a comprehensive plan.

Bombings in Iraq kill at least 42 people, wound dozens BAGHDAD — A series of evening bombings near markets in and around Baghdad and other blasts north of the capital killed at least 42 people and wounded dozens of others Monday in the latest eruption of bloodshed to rock Iraq. The attacks were the latest in a wave of violence that has claimed more than 2,000 lives since the beginning of April. Militants, building on Sunni discontent with the Shiite-led government, appear to be growing stronger in central and northern Iraq. The violence came as tens of thousands of Shiites poured into the holy city of Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad, for the annual festival of Shabaniyah, marking the anniversary of the birth of the ninth-century Shiite leader known as the Hidden Imam. Tight security measures were in force to try

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SANFORD, Fla. — George Zimmerman was fed up with “punks” getting away with crime and shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin “because he wanted to,” not because he had to, prosecutors argued Monday, while the neighborhood watch volunteer’s attorney said the killing was self-defense against a young man who was slamming Zimmerman’s head against the pavement. The prosecution began opening statements in the long-awaited murder trial with shocking language, repeating obscenities Zimmerman uttered while talking to a police dispatcher moments before the deadly confrontation. The defense opened with a knock-knock joke about the difficulty of picking a jury for a case that stirred nationwide debate over racial profiling, vigilantism and Florida’s expansive laws on the use of deadly force. “Knock. Knock,” defense attorney Don West said. “Who is there?” “George Zimmerman.” “George Zimmerman who?” “All right, good. You’re on the jury.”

Documents show IRS also targeted liberal groups WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service’s screening of groups seeking tax-exempt status was broader and lasted longer than has been previously disclosed, the new head of the agency acknowledged Monday. Terms including “Israel,” ”Progressive” and “Occupy” were used by agency workers to help pick groups for closer examination, according to an internal IRS document obtained by The Associated Press. The IRS has been under fire since last month after admitting it targeted tea party and other conservative groups that wanted the tax-exempt designation for tough examinations. While investigators have said that agency screening for those groups had stopped in May 2012, Monday’s revelations made it clear that screening for other kinds of organizations continued until earlier this month, when the agency’s new chief, Danny Werfel, says he discovered it and ordered it halted.

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WASHINGTON — A sweeping immigration bill gained the lopsided Senate majority that supporters hope will pressure reluctant House Republicans, clearing a key test vote Monday and moving along an all-butcertain path to passage in the Senate later this week. The 67-27 tally, with 15 Republicans joining all the Democrats who voted, largely validated the strategy set by Sen. Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., one of the bill’s chief architects, who had sought to reach out to Republicans at the cost of sidetracking some liberal priorities. But the vote also showed how divided Republicans remain on the issue, with opponents sharply criticizing those in their party who have sided with the immigration overhaul effort. Many Republicans in Congress have hesitated to support a bill that critics in their party deride as amnesty for the 11 million immigrants living in the U.S. without legal status. Others believe the party must back immigration changes to fix a dysfunctional system and to avoid alienating the country’s fast-growing Latino population. To win over reluctant Republicans, Schumer and other backers of the bill accepted a revision that would spend $46 billion to improve security on the border with Mexico. Some immigrant advocates and liberal groups decried that as unnecessary spending that would militarize the border. A top Democrat, Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, said the border buildup “reads like a Christmas wish list for Halliburton.” Defense contractors, he added late last week, were surely “high-fiving at the prospect of all the spending.” Monday’s vote was on a motion to end debate on the revised bill and cleared the way for final passage later this week, possibly after a few more amendments are considered. Several senators missed Monday’s vote because they were traveling back to Washington. In the end, the bill seems likely to gain the 70-vote majority that Schumer and others had been aiming for. While many Republicans hailed the border security plan as a key improvement, others denounced it as a fraud. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, a chief opponent of the immigration bill, said the measure was a “fig leaf” that would not provide security on the Mexican border but would allow Republican senators “to tell gullible constituents that we have done something.” Six-term Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, argued that the chamber was poised to repeat the mistakes of the last major immigration overhaul in 1986, when President Ronald Reagan signed legislation that granted amnesty to those in the country without legal status. “I know firsthand that we screwed up, and I was certain that other members in this body could learn from our mistakes,” Grassley said.

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WASHINGTON — Affirmative action in university admissions survives for now, under a Supreme Court ruling in a closely watched case that involves the University of Texas. In a 7-1 decision Monday, justices directed a lower appellate court to examine more the University of Texas’ admissions policies that may take race into account. Though the university now faces tougher scrutiny, the decision leaves intact an earlier Supreme Court ruling that concluded racial diversity in college admissions can be justified as a compelling state interest. “A university must make a showing that its plan is narrowly tailored to achieve … the benefits of a student body diversity that encompasses a broad array of qualifications and characteristics of which racial or ethnic origin is but a single though important element,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority. The decision sends the University of Texas affirmative action challenge back to the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. There, Kennedy said, judges must determine whether the university has demonstrated that its admissions program is “narrowly tailored” to obtain the educational benefits of diversity.

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Tuesday, June 25 LUNA UNLACED: Presented by Chicagobased pan-Latina theater company Teatro Luna, 8 p.m. today and Wednesday, $12 and $15. 3205 Calle Marie, Suite B. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: Understanding the language of dreams is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. Reservations are required. Call 982- 3214. 145 Washington Ave. NANCY KURSHAN: The author reads from and signs copies of Out of Control: A Fifteen Year Battle Against Control Unit Prisons, 6 p.m. 202 Galisteo St. NEW MEXICO LAWYERS FOR THE ARTS’ SUMMER SERIES: Understanding the Artist-Gallery Consignment Agreement, with Peter Ives, 6 p.m., Santa Fe Community Convention Center, no charge, for information email to info@nmlawyersforthearts.org. 201 W. Marcy St. SANTA FE OPERA BACKSTAGE TOURS: Visit the production areas, costume shop and prop shop, 9 a.m., $10, discounts available, weekdays, through Aug. 13. 301 Opera Drive. SANTA FE PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKSHOPS’ INSTRUCTOR IMAGE PRESENTATION SERIES: Open conversation and slide presentation of works by Andrew Southam, Syl Arena, Julieanne Kost and Christopher James, 8:30-10 p.m., no charge, 983-1400,ext 11. 1101 Camino de Cruz Blanca. WHAT’S IN A CLICK? THE WONDERS OF HIGH-SPEED IMAGING: As part of Los Alamos’ “Downtown Friday Nights” events taking place every other Friday in the summer (June 28, July 12 and July 26), Bradbury Science Museum will host “What’s in

Lotteries a Click? The Wonders of High-Speed Imaging” at 5 p.m. June 25. Find out in what capacity LANL is using high-speed cameras; what scientists discover by using them; and advances you never thought possible. 15th and Central Avenues. YOUTH NIGHTS AT THE OPERA: Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro; special program for families with children ages 6-22 to attend select final dress rehearsals at reduced prices, 986-5900, santafeopera.org. 301 Opera Drive. THE TOLSTOY FAMILY STORY CONTEST: Michael Katz discusses his retranslation of Tolstoy’s The Kreutzer Sonata, 7 p.m., no charge. 1160 Camino de Cruz Blanca.

NIGHTLIFE Tuesday, June 25 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Argentine Tango Milonga, 7:30-close, call for cover. 213 Washington Ave. COWGIRL BBQ: Kenny Skywolf Band, local blues trio, 8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Canyon Road Blues Jam with Tiho Dimitrov, Brant Leeper, Mikey Chavez and Tone Forrest, 8:30 p.m.-midnight, no cover. 808 Canyon Road. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Los Wise Guys, oldies/country/rock, 7:30-11 p.m., no cover. 100 E. San Francisco St. SANTA FE BANDSTAND: Singer/songwriter Shannon McNally, 6 p.m.; folk singer/songwriter Eliza Gilkyson, 7:15 p.m., on the Plaza, santafebandstand.org, continues through Aug. 23. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Acoustic open-mic nights with Case Tanner, 7:30-10:30 p.m., no cover. 1607 Paseo de Peralta.

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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.

TINY’S: Mike Clymer of 505 Bands’ acoustic open-mic night, 8:30 p.m., no cover. 1005 St. Francis Drive Suite 117. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, jazz and classics, 6-8 p.m.; pianist/vocalist Bob Finnie, pop standards, 8 p.m.-close, no cover. 427 W. Water St.

VOLUNTEER ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Operate five separate residential facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — a twice-weekly daytime Resource Center and monthly Homeless Court. Volunteers are needed to help at two emergency shelters and the Resource Center. If you are interested in volunteering, contact Rosario at volunteer@steshelter.org or call 505-982-6611, ext. 108.


NATION & WORLD

Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Snowden not on flight to Cuba, whereabouts unclear countries, Assange said. An Aeroflot representative who wouldn’t give her name told The Associated Press that Snowden didn’t board Flight SU150 to Havana, which was filled with journalists trying to track him down. Two AP journalists on the flight confirmed after it arrived Monday evening in Havana that Snowden wasn’t on the plane. Security around the aircraft was heavy prior to boarding in Moscow and guards tried to prevent the scrum of photographers and cameramen from taking pictures of the plane, heightening speculation that Snowden might have been secretly escorted on board. But about two dozen journalists who made the flight searched up and down the plane after boarding in a fruitless

By Fernando Gonzalez The Associated Press

HAVANA — Confusion over the whereabouts of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden grew on Monday after a jetliner flew from Moscow to Cuba with an empty seat booked in his name. Aeroflot said earlier that Snowden had registered for the flight using his U.S. passport, which the United States recently annulled. The founder of the WikiLeaks secrets-spilling organization, Julian Assange, insisted he couldn’t go into details about where Snowden was, but said he was safe. Snowden has applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland and possibly other

hunt for Snowden. One increasingly desperate Russian television reporter was briefly convinced that AP reporter Max Seddon might be the NSA leaker. When the journalists realized Snowden wasn’t there, they settled in for a long haul flight to Cuba for nothing. Some read, others chatted. “A substantial percentage of people on board were journalists,” Seddon said. “The flight would have been empty without us.” Security also was tight at the Havana airport, where Cuban officers forced journalists waiting for the flight to arrive to move outside. Snowden had not been seen since he arrived in Moscow on Sunday from Hong Kong, where he was in hiding for several weeks to evade U.S. justice and

left to dodge efforts to extradite him. After spending a night in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, he had been expected to fly to Cuba and Venezuela en route to possible asylum in Ecuador. Experts said it was likely the Russians were questioning Snowden on what he knew about U.S. electronic espionage against Moscow. “If Russian special services hadn’t shown interest in Snowden, they would have been utterly unprofessional,” Igor Korotchenko, a former colonel in Russia’s top military command turned security analyst, said on state Rossiya 24 television. Ecuadorean Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino said his government had received an asylum request, adding Monday that the decision “has to do with freedom of expression and

Ruling favors Colorado transgender girl By Nicholas Riccardi and P. Solomon Banda

Coy Mathis Her parents recognize they should not try to force her to be a boy.

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June 2013 Public Notice of Class 2 Permit Modification Request and Public Meeting for Technical Area 54, Building 38 (TA-54-38) West Los Alamos National Laboratory Hazardous Waste Facility Permit, EPA ID No. NM0890010515 Activity:

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Los Alamos National Security, LLC (LANS), have requested to modify the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Hazardous Waste Facility Permit via a Class 2 permit modification request. The modification supports increases in container storage capacity at the two permitted units located at TA-54-38, West; increases the footprint of the indoor unit at TA-54-38 West; and updates and clarifies text within the Permit.

Facility:

LANL is owned by DOE, and is operated jointly by DOE and LANS. Under authority of the New Mexico Hazardous Waste Act (Section 74-4-1 et seq., NMSA 1978, as amended, 1992) and the New Mexico Hazardous Waste Management Regulations (20.4.1 NMAC), the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) can approve or deny hazardous waste permits and closure plans, permit modifications, and amendments.

Availability: The proposed permit modification is available for public review weekdays between 8:00 am and 5:00 pm at NMED - Hazardous Waste Bureau 2905 Rodeo Park Drive East, Building 1 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505-6313 Copies are also available at the LANL Hardcopy Public Reading Room weekdays from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm at Northern New Mexico Citizens’ Advisory Board Office 94 Cities of Gold Road in Pojoaque, New Mexico http://www.lanl.gov/community-environment/ environmental-stewardship/public-reading-room.php Electronic copies of the permit modification request can also be found in the LANL Electronic Public Reading Room (EPRR) at http://eprr.lanl.gov. The LANL Hazardous Waste Facility Permit can be found on the NMED LANL Permit web page at: http://www.nmenv.state.nm.us/HWB/Permit.htm

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The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center invites Pueblo teachers to participate in a 2013 Pueblo-based curriculum writing project. Deadline to submit application June 28, at 4 pm. Applicants must commit to a five day writing workshop in Albuquerque at the Center starting July 28th through August 1, 2013

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district, however, can seek arbitration or a public trial, said Cory Everett-Lozano, a spokeswoman with the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies. Silverman said transgendered civil rights are largely where gay rights were in the 1980s. He said progress in gay rights has made it easier for transgendered people to dare to fight in court. Coy, he said, is such an example. Her parents grew up during a more tolerant era and recognized that they should not try to force her to be a boy. “That has allowed children like Coy to make their voices heard,” Silverman said. Peter Sprigg, a senior fellow at the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C., said there is clearly “a new social movement,” which his group opposes, to protect the rights of transgendered people in court and state legislatures.

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wants to go in the restroom and be a peeping Tom?” Coy was born a triplet with two sisters and identified as a girl before she began attending elementary school in FountainFort Carson School District 8, an area heavy with military personnel near an Army base. Her father, Jeremy, is an ex-Marine. At 5 months, she took a pink blanket meant for her sister Lily. Later, she showed little interest in toy cars and boy clothes with pictures of sports, monsters and dinosaurs on them. She refused to leave the house if she had to wear boy clothes. After her parents accepted her identity, they said, Coy come out of her shell. Coy was diagnosed with “gender identity disorder” — a designation the American Psy-

In

DENVER — Colorado officials say a suburban Colorado Springs school district discriminated against a 6-year-old transgender girl by preventing her from using the girls’ bathroom, in what advocates described as the first such ruling in the next frontier in civil rights. Coy Mathis’s family raised the issue after school officials at Eagleside Elementary in Fountain said the first-grader could use restrooms in either the teachers’ lounge or in the nurse’s office, but not the girls’ bathroom. Coy’s parents feared she would be stigmatized and bullied. On Monday, the Mathis family and its lawyers celebrated the ruling on the steps of the state capitol. Coy, dressed in a glittering tank top, jeans and pink canvas sneakers, ran around a towering blue spruce tree as her mother spoke to reporters. “Her future will be better if we get to this place where this is nothing to be ashamed of,” Kathryn Mathis said, noting the family hadn’t sought a civil rights battle but was happy for the Colorado Division of Civil Rights’ ruling. As the gay rights movement has won mounting legal and electoral victories in recent years, advocates hope the latest decision will lend momentum to the struggles of transgendered people. “This is by far the high-water mark for cases dealing with the rights of transgendered people to access bathrooms,” said the Mathis family’s attorney, Michael Silverman of the Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund. He and other advocates said the case is one of several potentially groundbreaking transgendered civilrights cases winding their way through the nation’s courts. The Maine Supreme Court is considering the case of a 15-year-old transgendered girl who was forbidden from using her school’s girls’ bathroom. Mat Staver of Liberty Counsel, which focuses on religious and family litigation, said transgender cases are “a mockery of civil rights.” He said his group got involved defending a department store employee who was disciplined for ordering a person who was obviously male to leave the women’s changing room. “How do you know if someone is really thinking this way or not,” Staver said, adding that Coy is too young to decide on such a different identity. “How do you know if someone just

chiatric Association removed last year from its list of mental ailments. The removal reflected the growing medical consensus that identification as another gender cannot be changed. The Mathises said they feared the district’s decision would stigmatize Coy, who was reduced to tears when her teacher briefly put her in the boys’ line. The Mathises filed their complaint in February. The civil rights board’s director, Steven Chavez, found in a legal determination issued June 18 that the district’s solution of letting Coy use staff bathrooms smacked of “separate but equal” and clearly violated her rights. Since they filed their complaint, the Mathises have moved to the Denver suburb of Aurora because of health problems suffered by another daughter. They said they hope the ruling will make it easier for Coy to start at a new school without worrying about which bathroom she can use. Fountain-Fort Carson School District 8 declined to discuss the case Monday. The

with the security of citizens around the world.” Icelandic officials have confirmed receiving an informal request for asylum. Snowden gave documents to The Guardian and The Washington Post newspapers disclosing U.S. surveillance programs that collect vast amounts of phone records and online data in the name of foreign intelligence, often sweeping up information on American citizens. It isn’t clear Snowden is finished disclosing highly classified information. Snowden has perhaps more than 200 sensitive documents, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Sunday on CBS’s Face the Nation.

Lodging, lunches & round-trip mileage are paid. Stipends are paid at the end of the workshop. For more information Email: curriculumIPCC@gmail.com

Meeting:

A public meeting about the permit modification will be held from 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm on July 31, 2013 at Betty Ehart Senior Center, 1101 Bathtub Row, Los Alamos, NM.

Comments:

Any person who would like to comment on the proposed Class 2 permit modification may do so by contacting:

Dave Cobrain NMED-Hazardous Waste Bureau, 2905 Rodeo Park Drive East, Building 1, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505-6313 Telephone (505) 47-6000 or e-mail: dave.cobrain@state.nm.us. The Permittee’s compliance history during the life of the permit being modified is available from the NMED contact person. The 60-day public comment period for this permit modification will run from June 25, 2013 through August 26, 2013. Any person who wishes to comment on this action should submit written or e-mail comments with the commenter’s name and address to the address above. Only written comments received on or before August 26, 2013, will be considered. Facility Contact: If you have questions, please contact Los Alamos National Laboratory. Lorrie Bonds Lopez Environmental Communication & Public Involvement P.O. Box 1663, MS M996 Los Alamos, NM 87545 Phone/email: 505-667-0216 / envoutreach@lanl.gov


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Petry: Honoree says statue is about what the military represents Continued from Page A-1 titled Hometown Hero, created by Pojoaque Pueblo Gov. George Rivera. Petry had set up the parachute jump with Bowman, who lost both legs in a parachuting-training exercise in Arizona in 1994. Bowman, who wears prosthetic legs, landed with a large banner of an American Flag tailing from his parachute. Petry called the action “a great way to represent military service and all veterans.” As he made the jump from a small plane at about 10,000 feet above the field, Petry said, “Coming down, seeing all the people below, seeing our city, was pretty amazing.” Petry, born in Santa Fe in July 1979, joined the Army in 1999. He lost his right hand during action in Paktia province, Afghanistan, in May 2008 while trying to throw away an enemy grade that landed between him and two fellow soldiers. The grenade exploded as Petry, who had already been wounded in the legs by enemy fire, was throwing it. President Barack Obama presented the Medal of Honor to Petry at a White House ceremony in July 2011. Petry also is the recipient of two Bronze Stars, a Purple Heart and a number of other military awards and medals. He and his family now live in Steilacoom, Wash. About 200 people attended Monday’s event at Fort Marcy park, including Petry’s wife, Ashley, and three of their children. Daughter Reagan, 15, said it was important for the family to be together “to make history for my dad.” Ashley and the couple’s 19-year-old son, Austin, said they’d actually like to take part in some parachute training so they could make future jumps with Petry.

Santa Fean and Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry raises his prosthetic hand in celebration Monday morning after he parachuted onto the field at Fort Marcy park. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Petry’s father, Larry, was in attendance. The younger Petry said he was raised well and he spoke respectfully of his late grandfather, Leo, who served in the Air Force. During the City Hall ceremony, Petry said he made the parachute jump for his grandfather as well. Petry got a laugh when, following a string of speeches by dignitaries including Gov. Susana Martinez, Mayor David Coss and state Veterans’ Affairs Cabinet Secretary Timothy Hale, he told the crowd that Roman

statesman Julius Caesar reportedly complained that public speeches were too long. “I think that’s why they stabbed him,” Petry said, “so I’ll try to keep it short.” Petry said Rivera’s statue of him isn’t about an individual but about what the military represents. “I’ll always be a Santa Fean,” he said. “Santa Fe will always be a part of me. I guess now I’ll always be a part of it.” Ron Lucas, mayor of Steilacoom, made his first trip to Santa Fe to honor Petry on Monday. He said Steilacoom

dedicated a street — Sgt. First Class Leroy Petry Medal of Honor Way — to Petry, who has lived in Steilacoom for about 10 years. He said Petry, who still serves with the Army, continues to be involved with veterans’ organizations, including the Wounded Warrior Project, which works to provide services for disabled vets and help them adjust to civilian life. Among the other spectators Monday were several children, including Austin Wilson, 12, and siblings Kaylen, 11, and Tyler, 8. They watched in awe

as Petry and the other parachutists circled over the Fort Marcy field before coming in to land from the north side of the field, narrowly missing the tops of some trees. Tyler, who said he wants to join the Marines when he grows up, called the entire affair “crazy, cool.” Kaylen said it was exciting to see the American flag banner that Petry had attached to his chute. Austin said it was important for community members to support military veterans because “they fought to save us.” The children in attendance at the parachute landings immediately surrounded both Petry and Bowman. Bowman told the youngsters that others may see him as having a disability, but “I don’t consider myself disabled.” He urged them to overcome any such obstacles and pursue active lives. According to New Mexico’s Department of Veterans’ Affairs, Petry is the 14th New Mexican veteran to receive the Medal of Honor and the only Santa Fean. During his public comments, Hale said Petry “represents the best of America” and said Rivera’s statue is a tribute to “every soldier, every airman, every sailor and every marine who has served to protect this great nation.” Petry will be honored again at a 10:30 a.m. ceremony Tuesday, June 25, at the South Meadows Bridge over the Santa Fe River, which county officials will dedicate as the “Sgt. First Class Leroy Arthur Petry Bridge.” Access to the bridge will be closed from 9 a.m. to noon at both access points: Agua Fría Road at South Meadows and N.M. 599 at South Meadows. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

Paths: Liberal arts gain steam abroad as popularity wanes in U.S. Continued from Page A-1 college students take a broad array of subjects their first year, in small classes, learning to do things like argue about literature and play the guitar. “We are adults,” says Zhang Panyu, an 18-year-old student whose reading of Jane Eyre helped him navigate his own first romance. “We need to know something about everything,” The Great Recession began in late 2007 with the near-collapse of the financial system, depressing economies and employment worldwide. It also drove millions more than ever to seek higher education. Global enrollment is closing in on 200 million, after passing 100 million barely a decade ago. In the U.S., it surged by 18 percent during the last few years of economic turmoil. Yuanjing shows how different countries are drawing different lessons from recent economic history about what to study and what kind of knowledge will drive future economic growth. In the United States — where top schools have long championed a liberal style of learning and broad education before specialization — higher education’s focus is shifting to getting students that first job in a stillshaky economy. Broad-based learning and the liberal arts and sciences are losing favor with students and politicians. Tuition is so high and the lingering economic distress so great that an education not directly tied to an occupation is increasingly seen as a luxury. Elsewhere in the world, there is a growing emphasis on broader learning as an economic necessity. In Europe, where for centuries students have jumped straight into specialized fields and studied little else, recent changes have pushed back specialization. In Africa and the Middle East, experiments are moving away from a relentlessly narrow education tradition. And on a much bigger scale, China is breaking down the rigid disciplinary walls that have long characterized its higher education system. The trend is far from universal; many countries remain urgently focused on narrow skills and job-training. But advocates in a broad range of places around the world hear employers demanding the “soft skills” — communication, critical thinking and working with diverse groups — that broad-based learning instills. These advocates argue their countries need job-creators, not just job-fillers. They think the biggest innovations come from well-rounded graduates — from empathetic engineers, say, or tech-savvy anthropologists.

Students relax between classes at Akhawayn University in Ilfrane, Morocco. Morocco’s public universities follow the traditional French model of early and strict separation of subjects, but Al-Akhawayn — a favorite among job recruiters — follows the model of St. John’s College in Santa Fe, which offers a curriculum based on the foundations of Western literature. PAUL SCHEMM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

There’s “a weird symmetry” at work in the educational world, says Columbia University professor Andrew Delbanco, author of College: What it Was, Is, and Should Be. As people in the U.S. “talk less and less about the value of liberal education,” he says, “our so-called economic competitors talk about it more and more.” uuu

Though the United States invented broad-based learning, getting a job has always driven Americans to college and affected what they study, says researcher Arthur Levine. Now head of the New Jerseybased Woodrow Wilson Foundation, which supports leadership development in education, Levine has tracked attitudes toward college since the 1960s. As recently as the 1970s, fewer than half of U.S. college students felt increasing earnings was the chief benefit of college, his research has found. Now, about two-thirds do. A national survey of U.S. college freshmen shows a jump in such attitudes starting in 2007, when the economy turned. About three-quarters of freshmen want colleges to provide more specialized career training. “There’s just been a lot more emphasis in the kitchen-table conversations about choosing a college and choosing a major that is a clear path to a goodpaying job,” says Richard Ekman, president of America’s Council of Independent Colleges. “That has shown up in the pattern of majors and in the choice of institutions.” And it has shown up at a place called the University of Farmers. It’s not actually a single place — there are two campuses, one in California, the other in a suburban office park beside the Grand Rapids airport in Michigan. And it’s not officially

a university, but rather Farmers Insurance’s much-praised corporate training operation. Michael Hoffman, 29, started working at Farmers two years ago but hit a ceiling without a degree. He’s one of thousands of employees Farmers is helping pursue their diplomas. In Michigan, many shuttle between the Farmers training program and nearby Davenport University, which awards the degrees. Farmers will support degrees in a range of fields, and emphasizes that specialized business degrees aren’t required to work there. But virtually all choose business. Some, including Hoffman, are in a new management program that focuses them even more narrowly: They are essentially majoring in insurance. “I want what’s going to be specifically oriented to my career and my career goals,” says Hoffman, explaining a curriculum focused on things like underwriting regulation, ethics and licensing. And with an infant at home, “Really, that’s all I have time for.” With tuition up 27 percent above inflation over the last five years, and students’ combined debt now exceeding $1 trillion, students are demanding specialized, job-focused offerings. Colleges have obliged: u Over the last decade, the number of academic subjects tracked by the U.S. government has expanded about one-fifth, with 354 new, specialized subjects identified since 2000. u The fastest-growing majors in the United States are mostly tied narrowly to professions, areas like homeland security, law enforcement and firefighting (up 76 percent over the last decade); health professions (up 60 percent) and parks, recreation, leisure and fitness studies (up 90 percent). The largest undergraduate major by far is business, accounting for nearly

one-quarter of U.S. degrees. u The share of four-year degrees in the general arts and sciences has held fairly constant; some fields, like psychology, have even grown. But overall, humanities like literature and philosophy have suffered. Harvard reported this month that one-third fewer students enter planning to major in the humanities than did in 2006. American politicians are encouraging the trend of practicality in higher education. The governors of Florida and North Carolina have pushed to shift funding to programs that lead more directly to jobs. A half-dozen states now publish employment and earnings outcomes, broken down by school and degree program, for new graduates. On average, people with career-focused degrees have higher earnings and lower unemployment — at least out of the gate, according to research by the Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce. But how majors affect careers over the long term is harder to pin down. Employers lament a technical skills gap that left millions of jobs unfilled even at the peak of unemployment in the Great Recession. But in surveys, they also complain students aren’t well-rounded enough — lacking an ability to communicate and continue to learn. A recent employer survey by the Association of American Colleges and Universities found 93 percent reported that capacities to think critically, communicate clearly and solve complex problems were more important than undergraduate majors. AAC&U president Carol Geary Schneider says even seemingly staid fields like insurance are evolving rapidly, and will require sharp and creative thinking. Students can get broad learning in focused degrees, but too often don’t. “Employers are saying to us, ‘We don’t want to hire people who have been locked into mental cubicles,’ ” Schneider said. “The best way to be locked into a mental cubicle is to study only one subject and look at it only from a particular point of view.” Another price, Levine says, is too many students studying subjects they aren’t passionate about, and failing to grasp that a strong liberal arts major complemented with a more practical minor or a foreign language is desirable in the job market. “Part of it is overreaction,” Levine said of the trend. “Part of it is lack of knowledge about what it takes to get a job. And part of it is these are really scary times.” Frank Novakowski, an associate Davenport dean, says the

school’s curriculum injects broad-based learning throughout its curriculum. But he also calls Davenport pragmatic, noting Farmers is halfway through hiring 1,600 new workers here. “People are getting really serious about ‘What am I getting an education for, and what am I going to do after?’ ” he said. “And if the kids aren’t asking, their parents are.” uuu

In its once tightly planned economy, China’s universities churned out graduates for specific lines of work. Universities often were overseen by a national ministry or trade agency. Their names say it all: Chongqing Nanfang Translators College, Nanjing Audit University, North China Electric Power University. Yuanjing founder Peng Hongbin excelled in that system, studying at a prestigious university and, after a government job, later getting rich in the flooring business. But he doesn’t credit his education for his success: Under the rote learning style he never learned to speak up. “China does not teach you how to communicate,” says Peng, who in 2007 bought the telecommunications college when it went private and, five years later, founded Yuanjing on the hill above it. Now, he’s a leader in an effort to bring broader-based, liberalarts-style learning to China’s education system. His academy picks 150 students from the freshman class of 5,000 at the telecommunications college, which also is undergoing changes, adding clubs, sports, community service and art appreciation. His advisers include a Dutch academic named Hans Adriaansens, who on a recent sunny afternoon sat in the checkered shadow of a traditional Buddhist “Bodhi” tree of wisdom on the Yuanjing’s campus, talking to students about their ambitions, work and daily worries. Adriaansens’ journey is a kind of microcosm of the global movement. Decades ago he studied at American campuses including Harvard and Smith College, falling in love with liberal arts learning. He struggled for decades to bring the model to Europe, where students historically have been channeled into specialties as early as age 12. “When I started, everybody was against it, even at my own university,” he says. But in recent years, he’s helped leading Dutch universities install liberal arts colleges within their campuses. Now, Europe-wide changes he’s encouraged have opened space during the first years of higher

education for broader learning, delaying specialization. Singapore and Hong Kong have made similar moves. Elite St. Petersburg State University in Russia recently created its first liberal arts faculty, and there are similar projects in Poland, Slovakia and even Germany, which invented the rigid disciplinary model. Jonathan Becker, the vice president for international affairs at Bard College in New York who has worked in Europe for decades, says it’s no accident that the St. Petersburg effort’s been led by a former Russian finance minister. “They realize,” Becker says, that “narrow boundaries of disciplines are not the answer to modern world problems.” Not every country is embracing the trend. In much of the world, facing cripplingly high youth unemployment, broadbased or liberal-style learning is still viewed as an unaffordable luxury. India’s development efforts are focused on vocational training for 500 million people by 2022. Turkey is rapidly expanding vocational training, while Rwanda is focused on information technology, agriculture and tourism. Still, from Morocco to Saudi Arabia to Malaysia, experiments in learning are expanding. And China is the movement’s promised land. Leaders may not have fully considered the potential political implications of liberal education, but they’ve endorsed the economic case. They want China to invent the next iPad, not build the last one. Change is apparent not just at experiments like Yuanjing but across China’s big public universities. Hangzhou’s Zhejiang University in eastern China, for example, has reduced the number of majors from more than 200 to seven general directions. “It’s new to them but, to my surprise, it’s going much faster than it went in my country,” Adriaansens says. There is no suggestion that the Chinese system yet resembles the traditional American one, or will soon. “The 12 years of education has not given our students the habit of thinking,” says Bai Fengshan, who is leading a new liberal arts curriculum at prestigious Tsinghua University, traditionally known for technology and engineering. “They simply take whatever is given. They can tell when what’s given is bad, but they don’t know why.” Students “lack the ability to be critical,” he says, “which is different from the ability to criticize.” He is committed to the transition. “When a person leaves the university,” he says, “he or she should be a whole person.”


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Court: Faulty generics don’t warrant suits Exception remains for rare cases in which company has bad manufacturing process By David G. Savage, Jim Puzzanghera and Melanie Mason

Tribune Washington Bureau

Using an Electrosmog meter, Monica Steinhoff and Arthur Firstenberg measure electromagnetic radiation near the Hotel Santa Fe recently. TOM SHARPE/THE NEW MEXICAN

Towers: Site is still under construction Continued from Page A-1

that she has been passing around at businesses along Guadalupe Street and in the Santa Fe Railyard, initially said she doubted the company’s claim. “AT&T may be playing kind of a cat-and-mouse game,” she said. “I don’t know if they would tell anyone the truth.” But after considering the situation, she said it’s difficult to be objective about your own health when you measure the electromagnetism in the environment. “When you’re expecting it,” she said, “your body reacts to the expectations.”

WASHINGTON — The nation’s most widely used medications, generic drugs, now carry a legal side effect: If you’re badly injured by one of them, you can’t sue the manufacturer. The Supreme Court on Monday eliminated the last major avenue for consumers to seek damages for faulty generic drugs, giving manufacturers a broad shield from liability for the low-cost versions of brand-name prescription medicines. In a 5-4 decision, the court tossed out a $21 million jury verdict won by Karen Bartlett, a New Hampshire woman who suffered horrible skin burns over most of her body and was nearly blinded after taking a pill to relieve shoulder pain. The court majority admitted that the woman’s plight was tragic. But the justices said the Food and Drug Administration had approved the drug sulindac for sale and that federal approval trumped a state’s consumer-protection laws, under which she had sued. “You go to the pharmacy, and in most states, they substitute a generic drug for the name-brand drug because it’s cheaper. And when they do that, they wipe out your rights,” said Arthur Bryant, executive director of public interest law firm Public Justice. The ruling creates an oddity in the law. People who are

electric meter on the building where the new array is hidden, just off Guadalupe Street, behind Sissel’s Indian Jewelry. “I left my house for several days and gingerly came back and tried it out, and I’ve discovered that during the week it’s not so bad, but on Sundays I have to leave. It’s terrible, and even Monday sometimes,” Firstenberg said. “Last night, it woke me up in the middle of the night with heart symptoms. … I can’t swear to what they’re doing, but I’m told that the middle of the night is when they download updates Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080 into everybody’s phones.” or tsharpe@sfnewmexican.com. Scott September, senior real estate and construction manager for AT&T’s regional office in Phoenix, said plans don’t call for Receive connecting the Hotel Santa Fe $75 OFF array until sometime between July 1 and Sept. 30. The installation of “The site is not active and is A new still under construction, so it is not currently providing service,” Evaporative Cooler he wrote in an email this week. He said AT&T’s electric meter is running “because our equipment Beat the heat and call us today!!!! must be internally tested before it can be ‘turned on’ for customer traffic.” September said the new stealth array should provide better 4G, or fourth-generation, services on the near west side of downtown, but that AT&T customers already get 4G services via several neighboring towers. Told that AT&T says the array hasn’t been connected yet, Firstenberg initially said, “Maybe there’s a 1 percent chance that all this is coincidence and I’m sick for some other reason.” But after using Steinhoff’s meter to take measurements near the hotel and observing a new electric conduit being built on the back side of the hotel, Firstenberg said he’s confident Santa Fe Baking Co. the array hasn’t been activated of equal or lesser value, yet. He said he found higher Mon - Sat: 6am - 9pm of equal or lesser value. electromagnetic emissions just with purchase of Sun: 6am -7pm outside Steinhoff’s gallery than Nottwo valid w/any other offer. menu beverages. near the hotel. Expires Expires2/18/13 7/1/13 Steinhoff, who began a peti504 West Cordova Rd. 988-4292 tion protesting the installation

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ers,” said James M. Beck, a lawyer that has no accountability to consumers and responsibility with the Reed Smith law firm for its products,” she said. in Philadelphia who has repreThe generic drug industry sented drug makers. hurt by a brand-name drug can painted the court’s decision as The exception would be for sue the maker for damages, the a win for the majority of cona company that had a flaw in its Supreme Court said in 2009. manufacturing process, which is sumers because it will keep the But, with Monday’s ruling, price of generic drugs low. extremely rare, he said. the same is not true for those Although the decision could Allison Zieve, director of who take generic drugs, which be considered “a blow to indithe litigation group at Public account for about 80 percent viduals who may have been Citizen, another public-interest of prescriptions written in the injured, the incidence of that is organization, said the court has country. actually very low,” said Victogone down “a troubling path” on Generic drug maker Mutual ria Davis Lockard, vice chairgeneric drugs. Pharmaceutical Co. Inc. argued woman of law firm Greenberg “The decision expands the successfully that the FDA had Traurig’s health care practice. range of claims from which approved Clinoril, the brand“If the case came out the generic drug manufacturers are name drug, as safe and effective, other way, it would have been and that the company simply was immune from liability, and, in selling a version of the same drug doing that, they go further along far more detrimental to average this road of creating an industry citizens,” she said. with the same formulation. With the decision, the court now has handed down two rulings that have largely closed the door to lawsuits from people injured by generic drugs. Monday’s decision, which applied to the design of a drug, followed a 2011 decision that shielded generic manufacturers from suits for improper labeling. Taken together, the rulings mean there now are “very few claims left that can be brought 505-982-6256 • www.mcpartlonroofing.com against generic drug manufactur-

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REGULAR MEETING OF THE GOVERNING BODY JUNE 26, 2013 CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS AFTERNOON SESSION – 5:00 P.M. 1. CALL TO ORDER 2. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE 3. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG 4. INVOCATION 5. ROLL CALL 6. APPROVAL OF AGENDA 7. APPROVAL OF CONSENT CALENDAR 8. APPROVAL OF MINUTES: Reg. City Council Meeting – June 12, 2013 9. PRESENTATIONS a) Introduction of Law Enforcement Academy Graduates and Lateral Hires. (Chief Ray Rael) (5 minutes) b) Installation of Healthy Vending Machines. (Sue Perry, Wellness Coordinator) (5 minutes) c) LEAD Task Force Update. (Sgt. Jerome Sanchez, Co-Chair) (5 minutes) d) Regional Coalition of LANL Communities. (DeAnza Sapien, Executive Director) (5 minutes) (Postponed at the June 12, 2013 City Council Meeting) (Postponed to July 10, 2013 City Council Meeting) 10. CONSENT CALENDAR a) Bid No. 13/16/B – Hospital Tank Valve Vault Construction Project and Agreement Between Owner and Contractor; Sasquatch, Inc. (Bill Huey) b) Bid No. 13/19/B – McClure and Nichols Reservoirs Infrastructure Improvements; RMCI, Inc. (Robert Jorgensen) c) Bid No. 13/29/B – Wastewater Division Publicly Owned Treatment Works Repair, Replacement and Extension Contract for FY 2013/14; TLC Plumbing & Utility. (Stan Holland) d) Bid Renewal for FY 2013/14 – Polyelectrolyte Chemicals (Sludge Thickening Aids) for Wastewater Management Plant (Bid No. 12/12/B) and Compost Dewatering Facility (Bid No. 12/24/B); Polydyne, Inc. (Luis Orozco) e) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 1 to Professional Services Agreement – Maintenance and Repair for HVAC Units for Santa Fe Community Convention Center; Yearout Service, LLC. (Jim Luttjohann) f) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 4 to Professional Services Agreement – Public Relations Services for Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau; Locas Communications, Inc. (Jim Luttjohann) g) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 3 to Professional Services Agreement – FY 2013/14 Development and Management for “Official Travel Site of Santa Fe” Website for Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau; Studiox, Inc. (Jim Luttjohann) h) Request for Approval of Sole Source Procurement and Professional Services Agreement – FY 2013/14 Water Meter Testing and Repair for Water Division; Great Southwest Meters. (Mike Moya) i) Request for Approval of Agreement – Lease Abiquiu Reservoir Storage Space; The Club at Las Campanas. (Rick Carpenter and Marcos Martinez) j) Request for Approval of Exempt Procurement and Contract – FY 2013/14 Advertising Services for City of Santa Fe; The Santa Fe New Mexican. (Robert Rodarte) k) Request Approval of Grant Award – FY 13/14 New Freedom Program Section 5317 for Santa Fe Ride Paratransit Program; U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Administration. (David Chapman) 1) Request for Approval of Budget Increase – Grant Fund. l) Request for Approval of Procurement Under State Price Agreement – Cold Milling Pavement Resurfacing of Various City Streets; Albuquerque Asphalt, Inc. (David Catanach) m) Request for Approval of Procurement Under State Price Agreement – Pavement Resurfacing Project of Various City Streets; EMCO of Santa Fe, LLC. (David Catanach) n) Request for Approval of Sole Source Procurement – Special Street Profiling Pavement (Diamond Grinding) for Streets and Drainage Maintenance Division; A-Core, Inc. (David Catanach) o) Request for Approval of Reduction in Services of Other City Departments Cost Allocation for FY 2012/2013. (Randall Kippenbrock) 1) Request for Approval of Budget Decrease – Solid Waste Management Agency Fund. p) Request for Approval of Memorandum of Understanding and Joint Powers Agreement – Region III Drug Task Force; Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department, Espanola Police Department, Tesuque Tribal Police Department, Probation/Parole Division, New Mexico State Police and City of Santa Fe Police Department. (Deputy Chief William Johnson) q) Request for Approval of Lease Agreement – MRC Rugby Fields and Concession Facility; Santa Fe Youth Athletic Association. (Jennifer Romero) r) Request for Approval of Professional Services Agreements – Provide Homebuyer Support Services, Create Affordable Housing for Santa Feans and Support to City for its Affordable Housing Policies and Programs for FY 2013/14. (Kate Noble and Alexandra Ladd) 1) Homewise 2) Santa Fe Community Housing Trust s) Request for Approval of Professional Services Agreements – FY 2013/2014 HUD’s Shelter Plus Care Program. (Kate Noble and Alexandra Ladd) 1) Santa Fe Community Housing Trust 2) The Life Link/La Luz t) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Wurzburger) A Resolution Directing Airport Staff to Perform an Update of the 2002 Airport Master Plan for the Purpose of Providing for Long Range Economic Sustainability and Ongoing Safe and Efficient Operations at the Santa Fe Municipal Airport. (Francey Jesson) u) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Ives) A Resolution Directing Staff to Establish Administrative Policies and Procedures Relating to Parking Citation Processing and Collections. (Sevastian Gurule) v) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Dominguez) A Resolution Directing Staff to Explore the Options for Developing a Collaboration Between the City of Santa Fe, Santa Fe County and the Santa Fe Public Schools to Establish a Transitional Educational Setting for High Needs/At Risk Juveniles. (Richard Demella) w) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Bushee) A Resolution Directing Staff to Terminate the Agreement Between Service Line Warranties of America (SLWA) and the City as Soon as the Contract Permits. (Peter Ortega) Note: This Title May be Amended in Accordance With the Amendment Provided in the Packet. x) CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013 ___. (Councilor Bushee) A Resolution Amending City of Santa Fe Utility Billing Administrative Policy No. 7.0.0 Relating to Water Leak Credits. (Peter Ortega) y) Request for Approval of Utility Billing Disconnect for Non-Payment Policy for Public Utilities Division. (Peter Ortega and Kathy Valdez) z) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 3 to Lease and Management Agreement – Parking Rate for Cinema Patrons at Railyard; Santa Fe Railyard Community Corporation. (Bob Siqueiros) aa) Request for Approval of Amendment No. 6 to Professional Services Agreement – Advertising Services on Behalf of Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau; TKO Advertising, Inc. (Jim Luttjohann) bb)Request for Approval of Grant Project Agreement – TraCS Version 10 Pilot Program Software Upgrade and New Equipment for FY 2013/14; New Mexico Department of Transportation and City of Santa Fe Police Department. (Police Chief Raymond Rael) cc) Request to Publish Notice of Public Hearing on July 31, 2013: Bill No. 2013-29: An Ordinance Relating to the Campaign Code, Article 9-2 SFCC 1987: Amending Section 9-2.3 to Amend the Definition of Contribution and Add the Definitions for “Anonymous Contribution” and “Charity”; Amending Section 9-2.9 to Amend the Duties of the Campaign Treasurer and Deputy Treasurer, Including that All Contributions Shall Be Reported and Clarify the Process for Disposition of Tangible Assets; Amending 9-2.11 to Amend the Requirements for the Contents of the Campaign Finance Statement; Amending Section 9-2.12 to Exempt Judicial Candidates from Signing Campaign Finance Statements and Making Such Other Stylistic or Grammatical Changes That Are Necessary; and Relating to the Public Campaign Finance Code, Article 9-3 SFCC 1987: Amending Section 9-3.3 to Amend the Definition of Contribution; Amending Section 9-3.6, to Clarify Requirements for Seed Money Contributions and Unspent Seed Money; Amending 9-3.7, to Clarify that Qualifying Contributions Shall BePlaced in a Non-Interest Bearing Account; Amending 9-3.8 to Clarify Candidate Application Requirements; 9-3.10 to Clarify that Seed Money Shall Be Turned Over to the Municipal Clerk When a Candidate Has Not Been Certified; Amending Section 9-3.11 to Clarify the Required Disposition of Unspent Payments from the Fund and Tangible Assets; Amending Section 9-3.14 to Require that the Date Shall Be Included on All Reports of Expenditures and Clarify that Seed Money and Qualifying Contribution Reports Shall Not Be Signed or Acknowledged by a Candidate for Municipal Judge; and Making Such Other Stylistic or Grammatical Changes That Are Necessary. (Councilor Calvert) (Yolanda Y. Vigil) dd)Request for Approval of Sole Source Procurement and Professional Services Agreement – Santa Fe Municipal Watershed Investment Program for Water Division; Santa Fe Watershed Association. (Alan Hook) ee) Cerletti Park 1) A Resolution Directing Staff to Enter Into a Non-Exclusive Temporary License Agreement for 240 Square Foot Area Located in the Area of Fountainhead Rock Near the Water Street Parking Lot; and Directing Staff to Seek Approval for Converting The City-Owned Land Around the Water Street Parking Lot to a City Park and Naming the New Park “Cerletti Park”. (Mayor Coss and Councilor Wurzburger) (PJ Griego) (Postponed to July 10, 2013 City Council Meeting) 2) A Resolution Directing Staff to Begin the Process for Dedicating the City-Owned Land Around the Water Street Parking Lot as a City Park and Naming the New Park “Cerletti Park”. (Councilor Bushee) (Ben Gurule) (Postponed to July 10, 2013 City Council Meeting) 11. CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Calvert, Councilor Wurzburger and Councilor Bushee) A Resolution Encouraging The United States of America Veterans’ Administration to Support the Expansion of the Santa Fe Community Based Outpatient Clinic (“CBOC”) that is Designed to Deliver Primary Care Services to Eligible Veterans and to Support Continued Collaboration of Comprehensive Services Offered Between the Santa Fe Vet Center and the Santa Fe CBOC. (Terrie Rodriguez) 12. CONSIDERATION OF RESOLUTION NO. 2013-___. (Councilor Bushee)An Emergency Resolution Related to the Health, Safety and Welfare of the Residents of the City of Santa Fe; Authorizing that All Urban Trails Within the Jurisdiction of the City of Santa Fe Remain Open During this High Fire Danger Season for the Purpose of Allowing Residents to Continue Using the Trails and Report Any Fire Safety Hazards to the City Fire Department; and Granting the Fire Department the Authority to Reevaluate the Open Trails and if Necessary, On a Case by Case Basis, Close Trails. (Greg Gallegos) 13. MATTERS FROM THE CITY MANAGER 14. MATTERS FROM THE CITY ATTORNEY Executive Session In Accordance with the New Mexico Open Meetings Act, §10-15-1 (H)(8), NMSA 1978, Discussion Regarding the Disposition of Real Property Rights, a Requested Assignment of the Conservation Easement that Currently Exists Between the Trust for Public Lands and the City of Santa Fe for the Railyard Park and the Santa Fe Railyard. 15. Action Regarding the Disposition of Real Property Rights, Requested Assignment of the Conservation Easement that Currently Exists Between the Trust for Public Lands and the City of Santa Fe for the Railyard Park and the Santa Fe Railyard. (Judith Amer) 16. MATTERS FROM THE CITY CLERK 17. COMMUNICATIONS FROM THE GOVERNING BODY EVENING SESSION – 7:00 P.M. A. CALL TO ORDER B. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE C. SALUTE TO THE NEW MEXICO FLAG D. INVOCATION E. ROLL CALL F. PETITIONS FROM THE FLOOR G. APPOINTMENTS • Audit Committee • Santa Fe Water Conservation Committee • Airport Advisory Board H. PUBLIC HEARINGS: 1) Request from 60 Plus, Inc. for a Transfer of Ownership of Canopy License #1334 from Maria’s Santa Fe, Inc. to 60 Plus, Inc. This License Will Remain at Maria’s New Mexican Kitchen, 555 W. Cordova Road. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 2) Request from Murphy Oil USA, Inc. for a Transfer of Ownership and Location of Dispenser License #0649 from 838, LLC, dba The House of Booze, 838 Agua Fria Street, to Murphy Oil USA, Inc., dba Murphy Express #8609, 5301 Las Soleras Drive. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 3) Terracotta Wine Bistro, LLC has Requested the Issuance of a Restaurant Liquor License (Beer and Wine On-Premise Consumption Only) to be Located at Terracotta Wine Bistro, 304 Johnson Street. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 4) Plaza Burritos, LLC has Requested the Issuance of a Restaurant Liquor License (Beer and Wine On-Premise Consumption Only) to be Located at the Burrito Company, 111 Washington Avenue. (Yolanda Y. Vigil) 5) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2013-26: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2013-____: (Councilor Ives, Councilor Calvert and Councilor Bushee) An Ordinance Relating to Water Conservation; Amending Section 25-4.2 SFCC 1987 to Remove the Expired Commercial Water Rate Adjustment Provisions; and Creating a New Section 25-4.3 SFCC 1987 to Establish Commercial Water User Rebate Regulations. (Laurie Trevizo) 6) CONSIDERATION OF BILL NO. 2013-27: ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NO. 2013-____: (Councilor Bushee, Mayor Coss and Councilor Trujillo)An Ordinance Relating to Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Devices; Creating a New Article 20-6 SFCC 1987 to Prohibit the Transfer, Possession or Sale of Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Devices in the City of Santa Fe. (Chief Ray Rael) I) ADJOURN Pursuant to the Governing Body Procedural Rules, in the event any agenda items have not been addressed, the meeting should be reconvened at 7:00 p.m., the following day and shall be adjourned not later than 12:00 a.m. Agenda items, not considered prior to 11:30 p.m., shall be considered when the meeting is reconvened or tabled for a subsequent meeting. NOTE: New Mexico law requires the following administrative procedures be followed when conducting “quasi-judicial” hearings. In a “quasi-judicial” hearing all witnesses must be sworn in, under oath, prior to testimony and will be subject to reasonable cross-examination. Witnesses have the right to have an attorney present at the hearing. Persons with disabilities in need of accommodations, contact the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520, five (5) days prior to meeting date.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

LOCAL NEWS STAGE COACH APARTMENTS HOUSING COMPLEX TO OFFICIALLY OPEN

Ready for residents

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12 suits accuse Gallup diocese of covering up sexual abuse Complaint says ex-bishop protected priests accused of molesting kids By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican

The Housing Trust of Santa Fe will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday to officially open the Stage Coach Apartments, 3360 Cerrillos Road. The apartment complex features 60 new units, which have all been leased to tenants who qualify for the complex’s affordable housing provision. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

By David J. Salazar

The New Mexican

O

n Tuesday afternoon, Gov. Susana Martinez and Mayor David Coss will be on hand at the Stage Coach Apartments, 3360 Cerrillos Road, for a ribbon-cutting ceremony that will officially open the apartment complex that has replaced the Stage Coach Motor Inn. The Housing Trust of Santa Fe purchased the land where the old motel sat and began construction on the 60 new apartments in 2012. Despite some weather-related setbacks, every apartment has been leased to tenants who qualify for the complex’s affordable housing provision and some moved in as early as mid-May. “We wanted to provide affordable housing that’s service enriched and can be an asset to the community,” said Sharron Welsh, executive director of the Housing Trust. To be eligible to live in the new apartments, tenants must earn no more than 60 percent of Santa Fe’s median income — $62,000 for a family of four. According to Sharron Welsh, the Housing Trust’s executive director, on average, the tenants make around

50 percent of median area income. Welsh’s organization worked in partnership with UnitedHealth Group and Enterprise Community Partners to secure funding for the project, which cost about $12 million. In addition to working together to fund the Stage Coach project, UnitedHealth and Enterprise are teaming up on affordable housing projects throughout the country, with three in New Mexico alone — the Stage Coach apartments and two other developments in Deming and Las Cruces, according to UnitedHealth spokeswoman Kristen Hellmer. UnitedHealth invested $22 million on its own to the New Mexico projects as part of its Affordable Housing Investment program, Hellmer said in an email. “These investments, along with our presence in the state in serving the health care needs of more than 600,000 New Mexicans with employer-sponsored plans, as well as providing Medicare and Medicaid services, are helping improve the quality of life for New Mexicans throughout the state,” Hellmer wrote. In addition to the apartments providing exclusively affordable housing — with rents

In brief

show that Serrano was being held without bond in Santa Fe County jail on a charge of criminal sexual penetration.

A 27-year-old Santa Fe man was arrested Monday on a rape charge following a night of drinking at a southwest-side house. Ryan Serrano is accused of raping an 18-year-old girl in the early Monday morning hours at a home off Calle P’o Ae Pi. A Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office arrest affidavit states that Serrano and the girl were acquaintances and that they were drinking Sunday night at the house. The affidavit states that the girl told police Monday that she had fallen asleep in a bed with a friend when she awoke at about 3 a.m. to Serrano assaulting her. The affidavit states that the girl told deputies that she was unable to move or wake the friend lying next to her. “She was unable to move because of her level of intoxication,” Lt. William Pacheco said on Monday. The affidavit states that during a medical exam by a nurse, the girl told the nurse that she drank five shots of tequila and one mixed drink. Serrano did not speak with deputies when he was arrested just after noon Monday at his house off Comanche Road but only asked to speak with an attorney. Online court records

A Pojoaque man told deputies he fired a warning shot aimed at the ground, but it hit his neighbor in the leg, on Saturday after the neighbor entered his property, authorities reported. Aaron Park, 41, is charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in connection with the incident. An arrest affidavit filed by the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office says Park was working on a car on his property when his neighbor walked onto his property to speak with some mutual friends. Park, according to the document, told the man to leave, and the two got into a physical altercation. Park told deputies, who found him providing first-aid to the victim, that he brandished his Taurus .357 Magnum from his pocket and fired it once as he was “trying to scare” the victim. The shot, instead of going into the ground, went into the victim’s left upper thigh. The victim told deputies hat he was only trying to visit some friends and was leaving the property when Park initially asked him to leave. The victim, according to the affidavit, told officers that Park began striking him as

Man accused of Man shoots raping 18-year-old neighbor in leg

ranging from $260 to $853 per month — a quarter of the apartments are reserved for those who are emerging from homelessness or who have special needs. Lifelink, working with shelters around town and other organizations, helped find these tenants, who will receive ongoing case management from their referring organizations. At the same time, Welsh said, there will be quarterly wellness checks done onsite, as well as after-school programs by YouthWorks, which might come in handy for the 25 percent of tenants who are families with children. She added that job training, including instruction on how to prepare résumés, would be provided onsite, utilizing the complex’s computer lab, which will be installed in about month. The site is managed by the Albuquerquebased Monarch Properties and is expected to be Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design platinum certification. The ribbon-cutting ceremony begins at 3 p.m. Tuesday at the Stage Coach Apartments, 3360 Cerrillos Road. Contact David Salazar at dsalazar@ sfnewmexican.com or 986-3062. Follow him on Twitter @davidj_salazar.

he left the property and eventually shooting him. Park was arrested and booked Sunday into Santa Fe County jail morning, where he later posted a $25,000 surety bond and was released.

KSFR radio station chief steps down Linda Highhill, the general manager of KSFR, Santa Fe’s public radio station, has resigned, the chairwoman of the station’s board announced Monday. Highhill, who has managed the station for four years, “decided to pursue other interests,” board Chairwoman Marilyn Mason said in an email to KSFR program producers. “We owe Linda our deep thanks,” Mason’s statement said. “She took over in 2009 at a time of sudden transition and has served the station well as general manager.” Mason said a search for Highhill’s successor is “well underway.” Bill Dupuy, the station’s news director, will serve as interim manager until a successor is found.

Police on hunt for Taco Bell robber Santa Fe police are trying to identify the thief who robbed a south-side Taco Bell cashier at gunpoint Sunday evening. A police report indicates that

a man stole $1,700 from the fastfood outlet, 3875 Cerrillos Road, at about 5 p.m. after he walked in and pointed a handgun at the female cashier. Police are reviewing surveillance footage of the incident that shows a man who stood about 6 feet tall, wearing a long-sleeve gray T-shirt, a baseball hat and sunglasses.

Disarmament talk set for Thursday The Los Alamos Study Group is hosting a panel discussion on Thursday entitled “The New Disarmament Movement.” The event will be held at 6 p.m. at the Santa Fe Woman’s Club, 1616 Old Pecos Trail. The speakers will be Ray Acheson, director of “Reaching Critical Will,” a disarmament program of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom; Mia Gandenberger, a visiting disarmament fellow at the Los Alamos Study Group; and Gregg Mello, executive director of the group. “Ray and Mia are part of a burgeoning new international disarmament movement that has taken many people by surprise. There are new faces coordinating, and leadership is widely distributed,” Mello said. “The movement is growing on all the continents and this summer it is beginning to touch us here in New Mexico.”

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com

The New Mexican

Twelve lawsuits filed recently in Arizona charge that the Roman Catholic bishop of Gallup protected alleged pedophile priests by assigning them to pastoral duties in small parishes for more than two decades. Robert E. Pastor of the Phoenix law firm of Manly Steward Finaldi said the lawsuits were filed in Coconimo County on behalf of 10 men and two women, who were minors when they were allegedly molested in Arizona by priests from the Diocese of Gallup. He said he filed a similar lawsuit about two years ago on behalf of a man, which is set to go to trial in February. “That first case came to me and, like a lot of people, you think, ‘Well, that’s just one bad priest. There can’t possibly be any more’ — even though we know about Boston, we know about L.A., we know about Milwaukee, and, lo and behold, what do we find out?” Pastor said. “That there were many priests in the Diocese of Gallup and we know why — because the bishop of Gallup was picking his priests from the sex-offender treatment center there at Jemez Springs, New Mexico, and that’s got to be one of the poorest decisions anyone’s ever made.” The Rev. James Wall, Gallup’s bishop for the last four years, did not respond to a message seeking comment, but issued a pre-prepared written statement though the diocese’s media liaison, the Rev. Tim Farrell of Farmington. The statement says that while the diocese can’t comment on pending litigation, Wall prays for the victims of abuse and urges anyone who has experienced misconduct by any official of the church to contact law enforcement. “There can be no dispute that the diocese has extremely limited resources and may not have the financial wherewithal to continue to investigate and attempt to compensate victims of criminal sexual misconduct claims,” the statement says. “It is public knowledge that many dioceses with resources far greater than the Diocese of Gallup have been forced to consider and/or file bankruptcy in the face of mounting clergy-abuse lawsuits.” All 13 complaints seek damages from the Diocese of Gallup for allegedly covering up molestations of children from the 1950s through the early 1970s in the Arizona towns of Holbrook, Flagstaff, Winslow, Kingman and Humbolt. The clerics accused of the molestations include: the Revs. William Allison, John T. Sullivan, Clement Hagerman and Raul Sanchez; Brother Mark Schomack; and Monsignor James Lindenmayer. All but Sanchez are believed to be dead; Sanchez is believed to be living in Mexico. Wall said in his statement that the diocese had never before heard charges of sexual abuse against Lindenmayer or Sanchez, but did not address the other four priests. Pastor said at least three different men served as the Gallup diocese’s bishop during the time addressed in the lawsuit. “We’re talking about the office of the bishop covering all of this up and certainly that coverup continues today because Bishop Wall refuses to disclose information about these priests and the history of abuse that has occurred within the diocese,” he said.

Noise complaints force cops to stop Railyard movie By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

A permitting snafu effectively silenced The Sound of Music for those watching the classic movie at the Railyard Park on Friday night. Four Santa Fe Police officers shut down the free movie because of multiple noise complaints from the surrounding community and an expired permit, said Celina Westervelt, the Santa Fe Police public information officer. Westervelt said the permit granted to Heath Concerts was only good until 10:30 p.m., and officers chose to err on the side of caution. “We’re sorry for the people inconvenienced,” she said. “Legally, we didn’t have a choice. You either upset all the people watching the movie or you upset the people in the neighborhood. We erred on the side of the law.” Sandra Brice, the event director for the Santa Fe Railyard Community Corporation, issued the original permit, and she said she underestimated how long the movie would last. In the future, Brice said the permits would be good until 11 p.m. “We don’t ever want to disappoint people like that again,” she said. “I was devastated.” Brice said she was unaware of any noise complaints, and that she had worked with the community in the past to avoid such issues. According to the city’s rules, the park is open to the public from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., but some special events can go beyond that time with a permit. Unlike other parks, the city of Santa Fe does not issue permits for the Railyard Park — that duty falls to the Santa Fe Railyard Community Corporation. Jamie Lenfestey, event promoter with Heath Concerts, said the movies have gone forward without incident for three years. “We have never had so much as a warning before, much less a film shut down,” he wrote in an email to The New Mexican. The Sound of Music is a nearly three-hour long musical that debuted in 1965. Lenfestey said that organizers wait to start films until sundown, about 8:30 p.m. Friday, which meant the film would have concluded around 11:30 p.m. The next Railyard Park movie, Apollo 13, is set for July 5.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


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THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Authorities: Silver Fire likely to grow this week Southern N.M. blaze 20 percent contained

potential fuel such as trees and brush. Close to 500 firefighters are battling the massive blaze, which is still 20 percent conThe Associated Press tained. SILVER CITY — A nearly No structures have been lost. 119-square-mile wildfire burning Crews have begun reducing in the mountains of Southern fire fuels around the community New Mexico’s Gila National of Cooney and started examinForest will likely grow larger ing Hermosa, where a few resithis week due to expected hot, dents live on ranches. Officials dry weather, fire managers said said those communities are not Monday. directly threatened. The erratic Silver Fire gained “No one is in danger in those strength over the weekend with communities at this time,” inforhigh winds as firefighters were mation officer Connie Birkland forced to shift resources from told the Silver City Sun-News. the northern parts of the inferno “We’re just taking precautionary where it’s expanding into Animeasures.” mas Canyon and the Aldo LeopEarly in the fire, crews at the old Wilderness. camps in the Mimbres Valley Crews were scheduled to and outside Hillsboro were construct indirect fire lines in using water from local wells. As the northwest part of the blaze the fire has grown, fire officials and prepare to possibly start became worried about causing fires along the west to clear out long-term effects to residents’

water supply. The crews’ water now comes from Bear Canyon Reservoir, a source they’re less likely to seriously deplete, Birkland said. Matt Reidy’s Northern Arizona Incident Management Team also is scheduled to transfer the fire Monday to John Pierson’s New Mexico Incident Management Team. Residents of the Mimbres Valley were expected to see more fire vehicles and some additional firefighters. Meanwhile, crews in the Pecos Wilderness continued to fight a stubborn 6-square-mile blaze that remained zero percent contained. Officials announced Monday that the entire Santa Fe National Forest would be closed for the protection of human health and safety as crews worked to get a handle of the wildfire.

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COLORADO

Colorado State Patrol Officer Jessie Bartunek talks to a motorist Sunday at a checkpoint near South Fork, Colo. The West Fork Fire likely will burn for months, said incident Commander Pete Blume. Crews are not expecting to make any real gains against the 117-square-mile burn until the summer monsoon season brings cooler temperatures and rains. GREGORY BULL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

No relief in sight for crews battling West Fork Fire Officials unlikely to make gains until monsoon season

about business as usual. West of The blaze started June 5 with town, on U.S. 149, hills smoldered a lighting strike in a rugged, above homes where firefighters remote area of the San Juan worked to contain the blaze. Mountains, west of the ContiSuch larger and longer-burnnental Divide. A second lightning ing fires are far from unusual in strike sparked a fire east of the By Jeri Clausing the drought- and beetle-stricken divide. The two then joined, The Associated Press West. The Rio Grande Forest, making a fast run Thursday and for example, had another dry Friday at popular tourist areas, DEL NORTE, Colo. — Crews winter. More than half of its including South Fork and the defending small homes, a ski area hundreds of thousands of acres Wolf Creek Ski Area. and a handful of roads against A third lightning strike, mean- of mature spruce trees have an erratic wildfire in Colorado’s been killed by beetles, turning time, sparked another fire to southwest mountains hoped the usually fire resistant trees the West, creating what is now Monday for a break — any break into tinder, Blume said. called the West Fork complex, — in the weather that will allow Crews in Colorado also are the largest and most intense to them to launch a more strategic being challenged by the high ever hit this area, Blume said. assault on the backcountry blaze. altitude, which adds to the danThat fire was moving north The West Fork Fire likely ger and complexity of launchbut was several miles from the will burn for months, said inciing air assaults in smoke and historic mining town of Creede. dent Commander Pete Blume. high winds, said Larry Trapp, Near the headwaters of the Rio And crews are not expecting Grande River, the town now has a branch director of air operato make any real gains against tions with Rocky Mountain a thriving tourist industry that the 117-square-mile burn until Type 1 Incident Command relies on its colorful past. the summer monsoon season working the east side of ContiIn Creede on Monday, resibrings cooler temperatures and nental Divide. dents and tourists shopping went rains, hopefully in early July. “This is a significant fire with significant problems, and we are not going to see any significant containment until we have significant changes in the weather,” said Blume, who is with the Rocky Mountain Type Electrical New Construction 1 Incident Command. The fire is feeding on beetleRemodel Lighting Design killed trees and is fanned by hot, Building Trust in Santa Fe for 15 years. windy weather. Those conditions were expected to continue 505-989-3564 across much of Colorado, Utah, www.Gormanlightning.com Arizona and New Mexico, where a 119-square-mile wildfire in the mountains of Gila National Forest is expected to grow this week. Some 900 firefighters with a variety of aircraft were in southwestern Colorado, and more were arriving. But so far, they have been in an almost completely defensive mode, waiting for the 30-to 40-mile-an-hour afternoon winds that have grounded aircraft and driven flames to subside. More than 1,000 residents and visitors left homes, cabins and RV parks in South Fork and surrounding areas Friday. As of Monday, no structures were known to have been lost.

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LOCAL & REGION

Police notes

about 9 p.m. Sunday. Police do not suspect foul play. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the fol- the following reports: u Someone stole appliances lowing reports: from a property off Christine u A woman reported that someone stole a set of keys Court in Edgewood on Sunday. from her purse while in the u A 21-year-old man from women’s locker room of Santa Albuquerque is suspected of Fe Spa, 786 Calle Mejia, at about breaking into a house off Eques9:20 a.m. Sunday and stole her trian Trail in Edgewood at about 2010 red Suzuki Grand Vitari midnight Sunday and grabbing SUV from the parking lot. a 19-year-old woman, taking her u Someone stole a backpack cellphone to prevent her from from the back of a 2003 Toyota calling police, and then fleeing Rav4 parked in the 600 block before deputies arrived. of North Guadalupe Street u James Humphrey, 54, of between 10:30 and 10:55 a.m. Albuquerque was arrested Friday. Monday afternoon on charges u A gym bag and other items of burglary and larceny for allegwere stolen from a 1999 Toyota edly breaking into a house in 4Runner parked in the 200 block of Shelby Street sometime the 600 block of Old Santa Fe Trail and stealing a pillow case, between 9 p.m. Saturday and jewelry and four jewelry boxes. 7 a.m. Sunday. Humphrey was caught after the u Police responded to the scene of an unattended death in homeowner came home to find the 2200 block of Calle Pulido at Humphrey in her house.

DWI arrests u Francesca Martinez, 33, 4744 Vista del Sol, was arrested by Santa Fe police on charges of aggravated driving while intoxicated, possession of marijuana and speeding at about 11 p.m. Sunday on Cerrillos Road near St. Michael’s Drive.

Speed SUVs u The Santa Fe Police Department listed the following locations for mobile speed-enforcement vehicles: SUV No. 1 at Zia Road at Vo Tech; SUV No. 2 at Airport Road at Fields Lane; SUV No. 3 at Rodeo Road between Richards Avenue and Paseo de los Pueblos.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611

Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

In brief

Bicyclist hit on St. Francis Drive in critical condition A 50-year-old Santa Fe bicyclist was hospitalized Monday after being hit by a car Monday morning on St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe police say. The bicyclist, identified as Andye Maillard, was headed north on St. Francis Drive at 11 a.m. when he turned left onto Camino de Monte Rey and was struck by a 1984 Nissan 330ZX twodoor coupe. Maillard was crossing three south-bound lanes of traffic, and the Nissan was driving in the middle lane. The driver of the Nissan attempted to swerve to avoid the bicyclist but couldn’t, said Celina Westervelt, police spokeswoman. Maillard was not wearing a helmet, according to Westervelt, and the impact sent him through the Nissan’s windshield. Westervelt said it appears Maillard failed to yield to traffic, and the driver has not been charged or cited for any

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wrongdoing. Maillard was taken to Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center and the Intensive Care Unit, where he remained in critical condition Monday evening, Westervelt said.

Santa Clara, Santa Ana pueblos join fireworks ban ALBUQUERQUE — Two pueblos have agreed to join a fireworks ban amid New Mexico’s dangerously dry conditions. KOAT-TV reports that Santa Clara Pueblo and the Santa Ana Pueblo agreed last week to join a ban on fireworks on the reservation after meeting with Gov. Susana Martinez. The governor recently met with leaders from all 22 American Indian reservations and told them about the effects of the state’s extreme drought. Martinez says this is the worst drought the New Mexico has seen in 118 years. Officials hope to have a list next week of all the pueblos that have banned fireworks. Staff and wire reports

Funeral services and memorials NEIL A. ROUGEMONT

ANITA MORRIS KAUNE

Nov. 6, 1982 - June 23, 2013 Neil Rougemont passed away suddenly on Sunday June 23. Neil leaves behind many relatives and friends who loved him and appreciated his warm nature and kind heart.

STELLA T. ROMERO APRIL 19, 1923JUNE 11, 2013

Although his time here was short Neil touched the lives of many people in a positive manner. Neil will be remembered for his warm smile and charismatic personality. We will miss him dearly.

Anita Kaune (Morris), passed away after a long battle with cancer in Golden, Colorado, on June 19, 2013, at the age of 79. Born in Santa Fe, New Mexico, she spent her formative years with her family in Espanola, Santa Fe and Santa Barbara, California. She moved back to New Mexico after graduating from Santa Barbara High School in 1952. She attended the University of New Mexico, where she studied Home Economics. Anita’s joys included travel, fine food and dining, and spending time with family, friends, and Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority sisters from the University of New Mexico. Anita enjoyed her time working as a home economist for Southern Union Gas Company. Anita is survived by her son, Mark Kaune (Megan), of Denver, Colorado; brother, Robert Morris (Jan) of Tijeras, New Mexico; sister, Mary Margaret Lynch of Houston, Texas; grandson, Randy Kaune (Jacqueline), of Aurora, Colorado; granddaughter, Elizabeth Sanchez (Levi) of California; grandson, Benjamin Kaune of Denver, Colorado’ and three greatgranddaughters: Jordyn Kaune, Ashlyn Kaune, and Peyton Sanchez and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, Ben and Jessie Morris; and by her brother Eugene Morris. A celebration of life event will be held in Santa Fe, New Mexico later this summer. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the American Cancer Society or Halcyon Hospice of Colorado, P.O. Box 177, Mead, CO 80542.

DR. ROBERT H. LESSARD Dr. Robert H. Lessard was born May 14, 1936 and passed away at the age of 77 on May 20, 2013. His knowledge was vast and extensive, as his students and colleagues from Highlands University and SFCC, and family knew well. Robert is survived by his children: Richard, Elizabeth and Alexandria Lessard. A Memorial in remembrance will be held at the SFCC Planetarium on June 26, 2013 at Noon to 1:30 pm.

Roberta Lorraine Gomez (Peña) 7/12/1963 - 6/21/2013 Roberta passed away on Friday, June 21, 2013 following a lengthy illness. She is survived by her parents Clyde and Mary Peña, her son, the light of her life, Daniel J. Gomez, daughter Jolene Anaya, son Joseph Anaya and her life partner Joe Anaya, Aunt Linda Chavez, sisters Angela, Sandy (Danny), Laurene (Kevin), brother Mike, nieces, nephews and grandchildren Analiyah and Uzziah, Carmen and Benji Anaya, and the extended Anaya, Peña, and Chavez Families. Berta, as she was lovingly known, was a beautiful and kind person. She took comfort in making others laugh and smile, and was an important and influential part of the lives of everyone who knew her. Her nieces and nephews, whom she raised, lovingly called her“Mabo”. Berta was a talented artist and poet, and her works will be forever cherished. She was the family organizer and she enjoyed cooking for them as a way to express her love. She loved the outdoors, took pleasure in the beauty and abundance of nature, and gave thanks to God for His wondrous creation. Her humor, wisdom, kindness, faith, and most of all her abundant and unconditional love will be dearly missed. We will always love you Berta, and you will be in our hearts forever. Rosary will be held at St. Anne Catholic Church on Wednesday, June 26 at 7:00pm. Funeral Mass will be held at St. Anne Catholic Church on Thursday, June 27 at 11:00am.

MARIA F. ULIBARRI Born September 23, 1915, Maria passed away peacefully at home on June 23, 2013. Maria was preceded in death by her parents, Ramon and Rita Flores; three brothers and one sister. Maria is survived by her only son, Dan C. Ulibarri and wife Virginia; grandchildren: Daniel P. Ulibarri, Brandie M. Ulibarri, Emilio C. Ulibarri, Santiago C. Ulibarri, Maria Andrade and Pee Wee Ulibarri; great grandchildren: Jordan T. Ulibarri and Gabrielle E. M. Dobyns Ulibarri; many nephews, nieces and friends. Maria was born in Bernal, NM. She worked for LANL as a clearance processor and retired in 1974. Maria was such a wonderful mother, grandmother and loving wife. Maria was an animal lover especially with all her dogs. Maria had an amazing sense of humor, she laughed and smiled up until her last day on earth. She was truly loved and will truly be missed. Serving as pallbearers will be: Santiago, Emilio and Daniel Ulibarri, Johnny Roybal and Jimmy Lucero. A Rosary will be recited at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church on Thursday, June 27, 2013 at 7 p.m. A Mass will be celebrated at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church on Friday, June 28, 2013 at 9 a.m. with interment to follow at 11:15 a.m. at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. The family would like to thank everyone for all the loving prayers.

Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

Services are currently pending and will be announced at a later date.

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505)984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

CHARLOTTE VALENCIA-LINDAHL Charlotte Valencia-Lindahl age 55, lifelong resident of Rio Rancho passed away suddenly and unexpectedly. Charlotte committed her life to God, her family, and others. She was married twenty five years to her life long best friend Carl Lindahl. Her life accomplishments included a Bachelors of Science degree in Political Science and English. Charlotte single-handedly won the "James Madison Fellowship", and she earned her Master’s degree in Constitutional Law. Charlotte was an educator for eighteen years as she had dedicated her life as a mentor and advocate to Hispanic and Native American women in which she touched many lives. Charlotte is survived by her loving husband, Carl Lindahl; her stepson, Caleb Lindahl from Richmond, Texas, and his wife, Regan Lindahl. Her grandchildren: Sethy Lindahl, Samantha Martinez, and Gavin Lindahl. Charlotte was the youngest of six siblings who include: Mary Jo Valencia of Albuquerque, John Valencia of Rio Rancho, Anna Dorame of Tesuque Pueblo, Socorro Oropallo of Prospect, Oregon, and Patrick Valencia of Albuquerque, as well as her nieces and nephews: Gretchen Valencia, Nicole Zilveti, Tony Dorame, Sasha Valencia, Leslie Costa-Guerra, Michael Valencia, and Patrick Oropallo. She will be greatly missed. The family has asked that any monetary and flower donations be made in her name to The American Diabetes Association. A rosary will be held at St Jude Thaddeus, 5712 Paradise Blvd NW Albuquerque, NM 87114 on Tuesday, June 25, 2013 at 6pm. Funeral and other arrangements will follow.

ANNA MARIE AGNI 2/15/53 - 6/16/13

DEVARGAS FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORY Ernestine "Tina" Martinez, 80, Espanola, June 23, 2013 Lucia Lucero, 94, El Rito, June 22, 2013

Proceeded in death by mother, Emma Agni. Survived by: Amy, Edward, Steve, Richard, Judy and special friend, Mike. Teacher at Agua Fria Elementary and Capital High School. Service at St. Johns Osage on July 1st at 9 a.m.

Celebrate the memory of your loved one with a memorial in The Santa Fe New Mexican

Call 986-3000

Stella lived to be 90, then on June 11, 2013, she peacefully went home to be with God where she can continue to enjoy her hobbies of gardening and quilting. She was born in Pojoaque and later moved to Santa Fe. She was the Santa Fe County Treasurer from 1960 until 1968. She then became executive assistant to the State Land Commissioner. She retired from the state in 1982. She is survived by her children: Edward Romero (Michelle), Gene Romero (Helen Marquez), Richard Romero (Bonnie), Leroy Romero (Alicia), Roberto Romero, Yola Romero (Don Wilson); grandchildren: Jeneara Haren, Shawn Johanasson, Eric and Katie Wilson. Sisters: Celine Probst, Aurora Sanchez (Herman), Elsie Montes (Roy), Rebecca Ortiz, Margaret Romero, Sylvia Lujan, and many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband, Ernest Jerry Romero; her parents, Teodoro and Ninfa Trujillo; siblings: Arsenio, Ted, Ernestine Sedillo, Estafanita Lujan. Memorial mass will be held on June 28, 2013, 10am at Our Lady of Guadalupe Santuario in Santa Fe. There will be a private burial at a later date.

FATHER ANTHONY VASATURO Formerly of The Missionary Society of St. James the Apostle serving in Bolivia and Peru. Brother of Marie White (James) and Peter Vasaturo (Margaret). Uncle of Ann Cole (Stephen), Mary White, Barbara Gorham (Berto), James White (Florianne Aresta), Peter D. White (Tina Alarid), John Vasaturo (Lisa Minacci), Paul Vasaturo, Laura Vasaturo (Eric Kolodner), and many greatnieces and great-nephews. Father Vasaturo spent many happy times in Santa Fe, often making adobes with his friends on Apodaca Hill. He said many masses at Cristo Rey Church, where he performed marriages of nieces and nephews. Funeral services will take place on Friday, June 28th at St. Edward’s Church in Medfield, Massachusetts, the town in which he was born in 1929.

CALENDAR LISTING: To get an item on the calendar, deliver your listing to The New Mexican newsroom at 202 E. Marcy St. Or mail it to P.O. Box 2048, Santa Fe, 87504. You can send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com or send a fax to 986-9147. The deadline for listings is 5 p.m. Tuesday. Because of space limitations, listings cannot be guaranteed.


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OPINIONS E-XTRA

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

e-Voices Our Web readers speak out: Longtime Plaza retailer Packard’s set to close, June 17 It breaks my heart. I remember when I was “ growing up going into Packard’s just to look at the

beautiful things. The clerks were always so kind and patient, if it was not too busy, to point out different aspects that made it ‘high quality.’ I learned a lot about what to look for in quality, handmade, Southwestern jewelry. How sad.” D.F.

Buy your Native American items from the people “ (or family members) who made them at the portal

of the Palace of the Governors. Variable quality, pay attention. Or go to the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque for the whole gamut, from non-Native kitsch to high-end goods none of us can afford. I buy lots of Christmas gifts there, instead of at Santa Fe galleries. My last purchase was sterling silver cuff links to match my belt buckle. A small expense, but the artist gets the best deal from IPCC. Or it’s always rewarding to go right to the pueblos and buy directly from artists, while learning more about their craft. While the Indian Market makes the majority of income for the artists who get in, there are others who deserve your attention, year-round.” L.E.B.

LOOKING IN: RALPH ARELLANES

LULAC wants more from Whole Foods

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ince this story about Whole Foods’ “English-Only” policy broke two weeks ago, we at the New Mexico League of United Latin American Citizens have been inundated with calls and messages from people, primarily Hispanics, saying they have been treated badly by Whole Foods personnel and refuse to shop there. We have received calls from California, Oregon, Arkansas, various locations in Texas, Arizona and several other cities and states. Clearly, Whole Foods’ “English-only” policies have spilled over into the treatment of Hispanic employees, as well as how their management and employees treat Hispanic customers. One woman wrote to us saying: “Oh my God. I have seriously considered starting a ban of Whole Foods myself. I have had and continue to have problems at Whole Foods with racist, rude and disrespectful sales people. I have written the corporate office, the store manager and also posted a couple of long letters on a specific store’s Facebook pages. They are all individually managed but connected by the franchise. Seeing how I continue to have problems at Whole Foods to this day, I feel my letters and comments were not addressed or

taken seriously. The store I am speaking of is the Northeast Sandy Blvd., Portland, Ore. I am by no means surprised that this is a national problem with the chain.” Because of such experiences, New Mexico LULAC has called for a meeting with the top leadership of Whole Foods here in Albuquerque for the week of July 8. After all, Hispanics and Spanish-speaking people have explored and settled all of the Americas, including the United States of America, long before Jamestown or Plymouth Rock were discovered. It was the Spanish-speaking settlers who brought the first printing presses to the Americas, so the first books and documents ever published on these lands were in Spanish. It is ironic that we are talking about Whole Foods, a grocery store, because the Spanish brought the first farm and ranch animals to these lands. That includes the first horses, cows, bulls, fruit and vegetable seedlings. The Spanish also developed water networks, in the form of acequias, to feed and help these new foods and crops flourish. Today, Spanish-speaking workers raise those “whole foods” that the Whole Foods

chain prides itself in selling. I am willing to bet dollars to doughnuts that the corporate offices of Whole Foods looks completely different to those that are working to raise and pick the whole foods in the fields. Here in New Mexico, Hispanics have paid a tremendous price because of discrimination and oppression. Despite a history dating back 400 years, there have been numerous attempts to keep New Mexicans from speaking Spanish. Our lands and livelihoods were taken away in the form of more than 30 million acres of land grants being denied to their rightful owners and families. We do not take such corporate policies lightly in a state where more than 30 percent of our children and 25 percent of our families suffer from food shortages and poverty. New Mexico LULAC looks forward to meeting with Whole Foods leadership to speak about the effect these policies have on our community. Ralph Arellanes is the New Mexico LULAC state director and a national LULAC board member and chairman, Hispano Roundtable of New Mexico.

Depp says he ‘took shot at erasing’ clichés with Tonto role, June 19 For crying out loud, it’s a movie. I don’t go to piec“ es when movies like White Girls are made. Sheesh. Grow up and get a thicker skin.” B.F.

It is extremely rude and condescending when those “ who feel insulted by an action are told to get over it by those it does not and will never affect!” R.C.

Any way you look at it, Tonto still means foolish stupid idiot. I’m surprised the Natives let that one slide by. And you’re worried about the proud Redskins?” G.A.

Judge gives Legal Tender green light to reopen, June 20 Yeehaw! Bravo! Olé! So glad to hear. I ride the “ train and am at that station a lot. Horrible place when nothing is open.” P.C.C.

Finally, some justice and sanity brought to Lamy. “ Thank you Brian Egolf and Judge Raymond Ortiz.

Have to wonder what the museum board’s real agenda is. They let Cindy and John Jednak bring the place back to life, then try to wrestle it away for their own special interests. Wishing John and Cindy and the volunteers a smooth restart and a long and successful presence. Can’t wait to go back and enjoy the Legal Tender’s wonderful atmosphere, historic character and the good food.” S.F.R.

Only in New Mexico would someone testify, in “ court, ‘He’s a Taurus. He’s good with money. I’m an Aquarian. I’m a people person.’ Even in California, that person would be laughed out of town.” S.F.

Reader View: Climate change science doesn’t add up, June 22 Any time you would like to sit down with this “ oceanographer, I will be happy to show you why not

only are your facts wrong but also why the rate of warming has slowed. It has not stopped. Your objections only lead to a greater disaster by slowing the appropriate response.” S.R.

I am a grandparent and my real motive is pass“ ing on a sustainable environment to my children and

grandchildren. Global warming is real and the current costs due to extreme weather are substantial, but the catastrophic costs of climate change will be felt by our children and grandchildren. Carbon taxes are one way of establishing the true costs of energy alternatives and the price for ‘cheap’ fuels will be far more costly in the long run. Let’s find practical alternatives to our fossil fuel dependence now, while there is still time to assure a livable future for our children.” B.W.

No, it hasn’t been cooling since 1998. Even if we “ ignore long-term trends and just look at the record-

breakers, that wasn’t the hottest year ever. Different reports show that, overall, 2005 was hotter than 1998. What’s more, globally, the hottest 12-month period ever recorded was from June 2009 to May 2010. Though humans love record-breakers, they don’t, on their own, tell us much about trends — and it’s trends that matter when monitoring climate change. Trends only appear by looking at all the data, globally, and taking into account other variables — like the effects of the El Niño ocean current or sunspot activity — not by cherry-picking single points.” J.F.

Most read stories on www.santafenewmexican.com 1. Increasing crowds of bikers, hikers and off-leash dogs are creating conflicts on the trails 2. Depp says he ‘took shot at erasing’ clichés with Tonto role 3. State still mum on Franco’s hunting trip 4. Judge gives Legal Tender green light to reopen 5. Man accused of raping teen at Cross of Martyrs 6. Diego Mulligan, 1950-2013: Radio show host remembered for educating community on climate issues 7. Couple plead guilty to trading nuclear secrets with Venezuela 8. Longtime Plaza retailer Packard’s set to close 9. For new Iconik Coffee, it’s all about the beans 10. Super full moon shines brightly this weekend

AbOuT LOOkINg IN

Looking In presents an opportunity for people who read The Santa Fe New Mexican but who live outside its reporting area to comment about things happening in our city and state. Please send such My Views and Letters to evoices@sfnew mexican.com

LOOKING IN: LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Sportsmen support Valles Caldera transfer

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he Valles Caldera National Preserve was set up as an experiment by Congress. The Valles Caldera was supposed to be financially self-supporting by 2015, but it is far from reaching that goal — about $4 million short in a $5 million budget. Unless Congress passes Senate Bill 285 (The Valles Caldera National Preserve Act) the preserve will cease to exist in 2020, becoming just another part of Santa Fe National Forest, which as anyone who hunts, fishes or camps knows, is chronically underfunded and poorly managed. Under SB 285, the Valles Caldera would continue to be a national preserve. A key reason sportsmen like me support this bill is that it requires that hunting and fishing continue. In fact, access for sportsmen would improve by eliminating the high fees that Valles Caldera currently charges to hunt and fish there. In short, New Mexico sportsmen support SB 285 because it’s the best guarantee we have to improve access and opportunity for hunting and fishing in the Valles Caldera. Oscar Simpson

chairman New Mexico chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers

As a New Mexico outfitter and longtime hunter I am among the many sportsmen to support Senate Bill 285, the proposal to transfer the Valles Caldera from the U.S. Forest Service to the National Park Service. The hunting component of the bill does not deter hunting opportunity in the area. In fact, it will make it easier to access the preserve and ensure that the unique hunting opportunity there benefits sportsmen, local businesses and the public. The Valles Caldera, “New Mexico’s Yellowstone,” is truly one of the most outstanding pieces of country in the Southwest. Without congressional action, the Valles Caldera will revert to Santa Fe National Forest, with no provisions to keep the science and education programs, visitor management or the law enforcement necessary to ensure this public lands jewel remains a high-quality hunting and fishing experience. I speak for many when I say Congress should move forward with the transition of Valles Caldera to the National Park Service. John Olivas

JACO Outfitters LLC Holman

All the wrong moves I would like to respond to a recent letter regarding New Mexican drivers’ lack of communication when making a turn. I have to disagree. New Mexican drivers have a unique way of signaling they are about to make a turn onto another street. Here’s how it works: The first indication that a turn will be performed is that the driver brakes when there is no apparent reason to do so. Watch the brake-lights. Second, watch which direction the driver points his/her vehicle and assume they will turn in the opposite direction. Point the car to the left before turning right and vice-versa. Simple enough? A note to local drivers: Remember, that little lever on the left of the steering column is not a luxury item that came with your car. It is not only a courtesy to let other drivers and pedestrians know of your intentions, it is also a safe driving practice. Neil Jacobs

Woodland Hills, Calif.

LOOKING IN: CRAIG L. TOTH

Proposed magazine ban is not constitutional

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ave Mayor David Coss and Santa Fe city councilors examined the New Mexico State Constitution before addressing an ordinance concerning magazines for weapons? The ordinance would outlaw the sale, transfer or possession of high-capacity magazines. My recommendation is to recant it as soon as practicable before the upcoming general session this Wednesday. Let’s observe Article II, entitled Bill of Rights Section(s): u Popular Sovereignty — All political power is vested in and derived from the people: all government of right originates with the people, is founded upon their will and is instituted solely for their good. u Right of Self-Government — The people of the state have the sole and exclu-

sive right to govern themselves as a free, sovereign and independent state. u Inherent Rights — All persons are born equally free, and have certain natural, inherent and inalienable rights, among which are the rights of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property, and of seeking and obtaining safety and happiness. u 23 Reserved Rights — The enumeration in this constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny, impair or disparage others retained by the people. Based on these unbeatable facts, the magazine ban item is purely null and void. No exceptions. Furthermore, Article XX Section 1, Oath of Office, reads, “Every person elected or

appointed to any office shall, before entering upon his duties take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation that he will support the Constitution of the United States and the constitution and laws of this state, and that he will faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of his office to the best of his ability.” I understand you are attempting to prevent mass murders and/or violent crime in your prestigious city; however, this motion shall only affect honorable individuals in the Santa Fe area. With all due respect and in good faith, it’s nothing more than an inadequate concept. So please select wisely, by voting no on this proposal and shred it into oblivion. Craig L. Toth resides in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

COMMENTARY

Familiar tales found within NSA By David Barrett

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

Robert Dean Editor

Special to The Washington Post

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he young man was employed by the National Security Agency for only a couple of years before feeling shocked at its intrusions into other countries’ affairs and even private mail addressed to U.S. citizens. He was also disgusted at the contrast between the idealistic language of the president, serving his second term, and the behavior of the government he headed. The young man talked repeatedly with a close friend who also worked at the NSA. The two tried informing a member of Congress of the agency’s activities. But the representative — Wayne Hays, D-Ohio — did not expose what they told him. So the two devised a plan to publicize what they considered the extraordinarily hypocritical actions of the government. They would travel secretly to a country where no extradition agreements could affect them and tell the press what the NSA had done. It was the summer of 1960, and 29-year-old William Martin and 31-year-old Bernon Mitchell told their bosses they were going on a three-week vacation. On June 25, they took a cab from their homes near NSA headquarters in Maryland to National Airport, discussing chess during the ride. They flew to New Orleans and then Mexico City before making their way to Cuba and then — by way of a long boat ride — to the Soviet Union. A month later, NSA officials obtained a warrant to open a safe-deposit box rented by Mitchell and learned of the defection. In August, the government announced that two mathematicians working for the NSA had defected but played down the significance. But on Sept. 6, 1960, the two walked into the elaborately gilded Soviet Journalists Union headquarters in Moscow and faced an audience of reporters from around the world, including the United States. Under strong lights, the two cryptologists revealed far more than had ever been dis-

OUR VIEW

Celebrating our hero

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closed about U.S. intelligencegathering activities since the NSA was created by secret executive order in 1952. The agency, they reported, “gathers communications intelligence from almost all nations of the world.” They emphasized their disenchantment over the NSA “intercepting and deciphering of the secret communications of its own allies,” naming France, Italy, Uruguay and others. The U.S. government had gone “so far as to recruit agents from among the personnel of its allies” by giving money to a “code clerk working in the Washington embassy of a United States ally for supplying information, which assisted in the description of the ally’s coded messages.” That ally was Turkey, they said. They also revealed that the CIA’s spy flights over the Soviet Union — which had been exposed in the infamous downing of a U-2 a few months earlier — were not rare: For years, the U.S. government had frequently sent military aircraft over the U.S.S.R. to gather intelligence. A decade and a half before the Senate’s Church Committee would reveal that the U.S. government had attempted

the overthrow of various foreign governments, Martin and Mitchell said just that: “Since going to work for the National Security Agency in the summer of 1957, we have learned that the United States government … secretly manipulates money and military supplies in an effort to bring about the overthrow of governments which are felt to be unfriendly to the United States.” Citing press reports, they also claimed that the federal government had opened millions of pieces of mail sent from abroad to U.S. residents. In sum, the United States had employed intelligence methods “as unscrupulous as it has accused the Soviet government of being.” Whereas Edward Snowden’s recent revelations have provoked significant debate about whether the NSA’s activities are legal, properly monitored by Congress and justifiable, such a debate did not occur in 1960. Legislators and the press seemed interested in the revelations, but no one expressed sympathy for Martin and Mitchell. They were “selfconfessed” traitors, said President Dwight D. Eisenhower. They “ought to be shot,” Harry

Truman said. On Capitol Hill, the focus was on who erred in hiring Martin and Mitchell, who had brought about “one of the worst security breaches in American history.” After the government revealed that at least one of the two was gay, there also was debate about whether homosexuals were a threat to national security. (The press routinely referred to them as “close bachelor friends.” Rep. Francis Walter, D-Pa., who would investigate the personnel security practices of the NSA, referred to Martin and Mitchell as “deviates” and “poor, unfortunate homosexuals.”) But except for having to change its security clearance procedures, the NSA was largely unscathed by the controversy. Martin and Mitchell, who thought they had moved to a workers’ paradise, soon became disillusioned. They went on to lead long, unhappy lives in the Soviet Union. In contrast, such a quiet resolution seems unlikely for either the NSA or Snowden. David Barrett is a professor of political science at Villanova University, where he teaches a course on U.S. intelligence.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Valles Caldera transfer has strong support

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s an outdoorsman and longtime Santa Fe resident, I’ve been following the news about Valles Caldera National Preserve since Congress purchased the Baca Ranch back in 2000. It’s a little surprising to read about opposition to legislation (Senate Bill 285) to transfer the Valles Caldera to the National Park Service. This legislation has strong local support from the people most familiar with the two agencies in question, the National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service. They overwhelmingly want the Park Service — including hunters, fishermen and Jemezarea businesses. As I recall, The New Mexican also has endorsed the transfer. The Valles Caldera and its hunting and fishing opportunities need to be protected and Park Service management would do that. A recent economic study showed such management would yield more jobs and economic growth than Forest Service management would. Importantly, SB 285 requires that hunting and fishing continue. Count me among the many who support SB 285. John Crenshaw

Santa Fe

SEND US yOUR lEttERS Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnew mexican.com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.

Logical move Every citizen of the United States bought the Valles Caldera. Not just New Mexicans. Making it part of the National Park Service makes sense. Otherwise it is another earmark, something for us locals but paid for by everybody. Gerald Hotchkiss

Tesuque

Broken promises Let’s examine what has been accomplished by the executive branch of our

MAllARD FillMORE

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

federal government in 4½ years. u Promised to bring down the deficit. FAILED. u Promised to bring down unemployment, still at 7.5 percent. FAILED. u Has had years to do something about illegal immigration. FAILED. u Bailed out General Motors, spent billions, they went to China to build a plant. u $800 billion stimulus package. FAILED. u Used the IRS to punish political opponents. u During the campaign for the presidency, criticized Bush for using executive privilege to authorize wire taps on private citizens. Promised to use his attorney general to stop this activity. What really happened? The program was expanded tremendously. FAILED. So, progressive liberals of Santa Fe, how do feel about your privacy now? Are you still comfortable and love the president as much as you did 4½ years ago? Clinton Coffman

Santa Fe

hat a day in Santa Fe! Early on Monday, several hundred people jumped out of bed to head out to Fort Marcy Park. They wanted to be there in person to see Medal of Honor recipient Sgt. 1st Class Leroy Petry parachuting from the sky, nailing his landing like only a hero can. The early-morning jump kicked off a day of celebration, including the dedication of a statue in Petry’s honor at City Hall. For the city of Santa Fe, the statue dedication offered another opportunity to say thank you to our hometown hero. The statue, made by sculptor George Rivera and then donated by Pojaque Pueblo, shows the world that Santa Fe’s citizens honor those who serve. It’s 9 feet tall and weighs about 1,500 pounds, with a smiling Petry in uniform, prosthetic hand outstretched. As art and tribute, the statue is a wonderful addition to downtown. The dedication was packed, of course, and Mayor David Coss and Gov. Susana Martinez were on hand to pay tribute to Petry’s heroics. Family, friends, too, turned out, as well as strangers who wanted to be present for a moment of history. Best of all, though, was seeing the faces of small children watching Petry tandem jump from the sky, or experiencing their excitement at meeting a true live hero after his landing. Also parachuting down were U.S. Army Special Forces Sgt. John Hart, retired U.S. Navy SEAL Jim Woods and retired U.S. Special Forces Sgt. 1st Class Dana Bowman. With Bowman, the last jumper, a banner of the U.S. flag trailed behind the parachute. As Petry pointed out, there are few better ways to see the U.S. flag flying than when it’s unfurled against a bright blue sky in the morning. To see children out so early, learning about one man’s brave deeds, was impressive. The prededication event was organized by Horses for Heroes, the group that unites veterans with horses to aid in their recovery. Petry’s story — one of service and sacrifice — is a tale that all Americans should hear. His decision to grab a grenade in Afghanistan back in 2008 meant that two soldiers would live. He grabbed it with his right hand and tossed it — but not soon enough, and in the explosion, Petry’s hand was blown away. After landing at Fort Marcy on Monday, he raised his prosthetic hand overhead in celebration, evidence once more of his ability to triumph over adversity. Because of that moment — the choice to grab the grenade whatever the consequences — Petry was awarded the Medal of Honor in 2011. That someone from Santa Fe received the nation’s highest military honor is something his hometown won’t forget. In addition to the statue downtown, Santa Fe County is naming a bridge in Petry’s honor. That dedication, of what had been the South Meadows Bridge, takes place at 10:30 a.m. today. In Santa Fe, we know how to honor heroes. What’s more, Petry’s presence should remind all of us that many veterans still need the help of their fellow citizens. Medal of Honor recipient Bruce Crandall, visiting from Seattle to watch his friend honored, reminded everyone to remember all veterans — whether supporting Horses for Heroes-like programs or visiting veterans in hospitals. Their service, their sacrifice is testament to character and force of will. Our gratitude — with statues, certainly, but also with community support, good jobs and a willing hand outstretched to help — must never fade.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: June 25, 1913: More ruins of the prehistoric people have been explored near Tesuque, south of the pueblo and adjacent to the river. Many black and white potsherds of the old type, similar to the fragments found on the other side of the Rio Grande, at the Rito de los Frijoles, Puye and other points on the south side of the river were found. The more that is unearthed in this country the more it seems certain that there was a large population dwelling not only in Puye but scattered throughout the valley along the Rio Grande. The fact that the builders near Tesuque used boulders which they got from the river, shows that they utilized the material at hand for the construction of their villages, in place of bringing tufa rock a great distance and cutting it to build their walls.

DOONESBURy

BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM


A-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

LOCAL BUSINESS

BUSINESS BEAT

Changes are needed for city to be truly

sustainable By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican

T

he politicians and elected officials who slap themselves on the back and talk about Santa Fe being a sustainable community because of curbside recycling or its bus service or the green building code should have been at a recent lunch discussion sponsored by the Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association. The topic — “The future of housing in Santa Fe” — was innocent enough. But panelists Zane Fisher, Daniel Werwath and Kate Noble also probed the underbelly topic often ignored during campaigns: What legacy will the baby boomers that now lead Santa Fe leave to future generations? It’s easy to push the question aside — Santa Fe has been here 400 years and has survived fire, drought and ethnic infighting. Still, Werwath, a Maine native who is a community development consultant and one of the founders of MIX Santa Fe, said that question is at the fore for his generation of 30-somethings. “Santa Fe is not a sustainable community as it is,” Werwath said. “A lot of people come to Santa Fe for quality of life but leave for lack of opportunity … it’s fairly urgent that we do this.” By this, he means taking what is different about Santa Fe, but also looking at what other communities have done to bring new and different housing mixes to Santa Fe’s core and underutilized neighborhoods. One example for Fisher, a former music writer for The Santa Fe Reporter and owner of Anagram, a Web-design firm, is a building code that allows flexible wiring so an outlet can be used for electricity one day and a Bluetooth connection the next. “Don’t staple electrical wiring to joists,” he said; instead, make the wiring pull through and flexible with co-axle and cable connectivity options. He also said younger people with less money to spend on housing might want to buy a loft or a commercial space with a smaller mortgage and then be able to add on and customize when they are ready or if their needs change. Is it possible to borrow money for a housing unit that doesn’t have a kitchen right now but can be added later? One option for this might be the industrial spaces along Cerrillos and Siler roads and Agua Fría Street that are used by day but shuttered nights and weekends. Current codes, however, do not allow residential housing in industrial zones for health and safety reasons. And Noble, of the city’s economic development department, said that work life and home life are not separate worlds for her generation. “For the younger generation there is no line; you want to do something you’re passionate about,” she said. And many younger workers don’t even want to purchase a home, instead opting for the freedom and flexibility of rentals. But there remains a shortage of quality rental units that are close to public transit and cultural venues. One irony, expressed by Kim Shanahan, a general contractor and executive director of the Santa Fe Area Home Builders Association, is that compact and well-maintained rental housing close to city services, with low maintenance and flexible space, would appeal to both the baby boomers as they age and to young professionals. Imagine a complex with space for electric car sharing? Or flexible space that can be used for work or to house a family member or homehealth care worker. Of course there are real-world obstacles to all this — banks, loan underwriters, powerful neighborhood groups and state building codes. But the alternative is to do what Santa Fe does best: Gobble up land on the edge of town for large-scale housing and “big, crappy, thin-walled apartment buildings,” as Fisher said. That may be the easy answer, but it is not the one that will sustain Santa Fe for the next 400 years.

ABOVE: A New York strip steak is carefully weighed at Rio Chama Steakhouse on Old Santa Fe Trail. LEFT: Sous chef Chris Tostenson puts the steak on the grill. BELOW: The 9-ounce steak is served. Like other restaurants, the steakhouse is trying to hold the line on prices but recently this entrée went from $38 to a $40 a plate. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

Something to chew on Tied to drought, rising beef prices concern for ranchers, restaurants By David J. Salazar The New Mexican

F

orest fires and fireworks bans aren’t the only effects of long-term drought being felt across much of the nation. As feed gets more expensive and arid land becomes harder to graze on, cattle ranchers around New Mexico and elsewhere in the U.S. are being forced to sell off their herds, which leads to a price spike as demand for beef remains high and supply gets lower and takes years to recharge. The latest numbers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for May show ground beef at $3.31 per pound on average, up 32 cents per pound from May 2012. And though the price of choice boneless sirloin steak is at $6.79 a pound for May — about 8 cents cheaper than in April — that’s still 37 cents more per pound than the same time last year. The increased cost of meat is passed on to local restaurant owners and, ultimately, to their patrons, despite the best efforts of owners and chefs to manage high beef prices. Boe Lopez, who sits on the U.S. Cattlemen’s Association’s board of directors and whose family owns Diamond Arrow, LLC and several ranches near Springer, attributes a lot of problems facing cattle ranchers — including high feed costs, poor grazing lands and ultimately selling off cattle — to the recent dryness in the state. “The demand is remaining about the same and the cattle numbers are down due to the extended drought,” Lopez said. “And the other part of it is that all the inputs have gone up. With the drought, the price of hay has gone up — all the feed costs have really gone up. I think ultimately that’s what’s caused the price of beef to increase.” As a result of the increased cost of feed, many cattle ranchers have to take drastic measures. Lopez said that last year Diamond Arrow took its cattle to graze in Nebraska, and others he knows about took their herds to Oklahoma and Wyoming. But there are costs associated with

that, including the price of hauling the cattle out of state and the cost of leasing the land. When grazing at home or in other states becomes financially untenable, ranchers are forced to sell off part or all of their herds. “We’ve reduced our numbers by half and we’re still not out of it,” Lopez said. “We’re trying to hang on now and see what we’re going to have to do, but I don’t know if we’ll have cattle by the end of the year.” For longtime ranchers, selling off herds means selling off years of work in breeding healthy cows with specific traits.

In brief

Art and the law talks set The city of Santa Fe’s Arts Commission Community Gallery, in affiliation with New Mexico Lawyers for the Arts, will present a series of panel discussions addressing issues related to art and the law. All events will take place at the gallery, 201 W. Marcy St., and are free. Among the lectures are Understanding the Artist-Gallery Consignment; the Art of the Dealer; and Agreement: Lecture, Public Art and Censorship. Panelists are Katherine Erickson, Samantha Furgason, Pascal Pierme, Sid Monroe, Darrah Wills and Peter Ives. For more information about the Community

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, brucek@sfnewmexican.com

about getting their numbers back up, they have to wait for grass to grow back on the range. That means more time with less supply for consumers, which translates into high prices. At Rio Chama Steakhouse, 414 Old Santa Fe Trail, executive chef Russell Thornton is doing everything he can to save money, not only re-evaluating the meat the restaurant offers but also looking to cut costs elsewhere. “What I’m having to do is engineer portion size, being super, super careful with the way we handle food so that we don’t have any waste,” Thornton said. “To some degree, we’ve already got some things in place that help us — for example, cutting a lot of our own steaks helps because we can buy in bulk.” Manager Dave Readyhough said that another focus is on “portion control, cheaper cuts of meat, things we can braise to get more bang for our buck out of it.” At the same time, Thornton said he’s “being more sensitive toward considering whether guests really need things,” like bread and butter. These are “other ways to offset cost so that we don’t have to pass it on 100 percent to the consumer.” Eventually, though, prices are going to go up as profit margins diminish with increased costs for the restaurant. “We’re hoping not to for as long as we can, but eventually we’ll have to,” Readyhough said. For Harry Georgeades, owner of The Bull Ring, 150 Washington Ave., it’s a matter of increasing the number “What’s sad about it is these ranch- of customers to keep prices where ers have spent generations putting they are and keep consumers from together a select genetic of herd — bearing the brunt of increased costs. and these are cattle that will walk to “You can’t take it to the public water or mama cows who are good — although people know the price birthers without assistance,” Delene of beef is rising, because they go to Hodnett, spokeswoman for the New the store and they pay it in the store Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau, for good beef, there’s only so much said. “They’ve been breeding them they’ll pay for retail,” Georgeades for these characteristics and for these said. “For right now we’re swallowtraits for years, and now they’re hav- ing it and hoping the market will get ing to sell them off.” back to level. That’s all we can do.” Once the herds are gone, Lopez Contact David Salazar said, it can be expensive to buy the herd back, and it can be hard to start at dsalazar@sfnewmexican.com or 986-3062. Follow him on Twitter from scratch. Additionally, before farmers can even begin to think @davidj_salazar.

Gallery, visit www.SantaFeArtsCommission.org, email rdlambert@santafenm.gov or call 505-955-6705. New Mexico Lawyers for the Arts is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing artists and arts organizations with pro bono legal clinics and educational programming throughout New Mexico.

Spice shop to open A specialty spice shop that originated in Denver will be opening a Santa Fe franchise July 11 at 225 Galisteo St. The Savory Spice Shop will feature 160 spice blends for specialty recipes such as Greek cooking and barbeque as well as all-purpose baking. It also sells extracts and spiceware. The business originated in Denver and now has outlets in 12 states.

Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com.

The Savory Spice Shop Santa Fe store is owned by Kate Wheeler, who worked at the original Denver location since in 2005 and has a culinary arts degree from Johnson & Wales University.

New Mexico jobs predicted Notwithstanding economic and political shocks, New Mexico will create 335,000 new job openings over the next decade, according to a new report by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. There will be 152,000 openings for new jobs and 183,000 will open up due to baby boomer retirements. “If the U.S. Congress can deal with budgetary challenges, we are on schedule for recovery,” Anthony P. Carnevale, director of the center said in a news release. “But we will still face a major shortage of college-educated workers especially as baby boomers retire.”

Total employment in New Mexico is projected to expand 18 percent between 2010 and 2020 (from 856,000 to 1 million jobs), slightly above the national average of 17 percent. Industries poised for the strongest growth over the 10-year time frame are: u Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction, 38 percent, and; u Health care and social assistance, 30 percent; u Education services, 29 percent. Yet, with 63 percent of all jobs in 2020 expected to require postsecondary education, New Mexico trails the national average of 65 percent. The report, “Recovery: Job Growth and Education Requirements Through 2020,” comprises an executive summary, a national report card and a state-level analysis is available online at http://cew.georgetown.edu/recovery2020. The New Mexican

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Announcements B-3 Weather B-4 Classifieds B-5 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

Hot bat: Michael Brantley’s homer, four RBIs help power Cleveland’s win. Page B-2

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Injured Van Slyke looks for return with Dodgers Left fielder expected to be called up after rehabbing injuries with Isotopes

Dodgers left fielder Scott Van Slyke, who is playing in Albuquerque until he heals from a bad shoulder, is batting .221 with six home runs and 11 RBIs in 24 games with Los Angeles this season.

By Will Webber The New Mexican

ALBUQUERQUE — When his body skidded to a stop after diving for a Yadier Molina fly ball on May 25 in Los Angeles, Scott Van Slyke knew something wasn’t right with his non-throwing left shoulder. He was right. The impact left him with soreness in his neck and shoulder, eventually leading to a case of bursitis. An MRI revealed no significant damage like a torn labrum, but it did mean a trip to the Dodgers’ 15-day disabled list and, eventually, his current rehabilitation stint with Triple-A Albuquerque.

ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

COLLEGE WORLD SERIES

Bruins hold off Bulldogs

A corner outfielder who also spends time at first base, Van Slyke is expected to return to the big club this week, possibly as early as Wednesday. He says he is relatively pain free, although the signs of rust are everywhere. In his first three games with the Isotopes (43-36), he’s 2-for-12 with seven strikeouts and two doubles in this rehab. He also had a throwing error and had another throw sail well wide that wasn’t scored an error. In Monday’s game against Round Rock (45-34), he went 1-for-4 with a double and one strikeout in Albuquerque’s 10-9 win at Isotopes Park. “For about a week my neck and shoulder were equally sore,” he said, recalling his reaction to the injury against the St. Louis Cardinals exactly one month ago. “Then the neck thing went away and the shoulder just kept getting worse

Please see inJUReD, Page B-2

STANLEY CUP FINALS BLACKHAWKS 3, BRUINS 2

winDy city title

Mississippi St. must win Game 2 to remain alive By Eric Olson

The Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — Adam Plutko limited Mississippi State to a run on four hits in six innings, and UCLA survived some UCLA 3 anxious moments to beat the BullMiss. St. 1 dogs 3-1 in Game 1 of the College World Series finals Monday night. Plutko retired nine straight to start, worked out of trouble twice and turned the game over to the bullpen in the seventh. The Bulldogs (51-19) left runners in scoring position four of the last six innings. The Bruins (48-17) are one win from their first national championship in baseball and the school’s record 109th in a team sport. Mississippi State must win Game 2 on Tuesday night to keep alive its hopes for its first NCAA title in any sport. UCLA made it 3-0 in the fourth on Eric Filia’s two-out, two-run single off Chad Girodo, who replaced starter Trevor Fitts (0-1) in the second. That was the last of the Bruins’ six hits. Plutko (10-3) walked in the Bulldogs’ run in the fourth. UCLA is 40-0 when leading after seven innings. There was drama all the way to the end. The estimated 8,000 Mississippi State fans at TD Ameritrade Park started the “Maroon and White” chant in the bottom of the ninth after C.T. Bradford and pinch-hitter Sam Frost singled to put runners on first and second with one out against closer David Berg. Nick Ammirati flew out, and pinch-hitter Jacob Robson ended the game with his comebacker to Berg, who sprinted toward first base before throwing the ball to Pat Gallagher. Berg earned his NCAA-record 24th save for 1⅔ innings of work. The loss spoiled a splendid performance by Girodo, who pitched the last 7⅔ innings. He allowed three hits, walked two and struck out nine. Both runs against him were unearned. UCLA’s Plutko wasn’t overly sharp, unable to rely on his breaking ball and changeup to get outs. But he still continued his dominance in postseason play. In eight career NCAA Tournament games, he’s 7-0 with an 0.94 ERA. The Bruins brought a .248 season batting average into the finals, and a .182 average through their first three CWS games. They eked out enough offense to win again. In the first three innings, they had batters reach on a dropped third strike, infield single, two hit batsmen and a throwing error. But there were big hits, too. Filia, who came in 1-for-9 in the CWS, doubled after Kevin Kramer struck out but reached because strike three was in the dirt. Pat Valaika’s single to center drove in Kramer for a 1-0 lead. The Bruins added two more in the fourth.

toDay on tv u World Series, Game 2: UCLA vs. Mississippi St., 6 p.m., ESPN

Chicago celebrates after defeating the Bruins in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Monday night in Boston. The Blackhawks earned their fifth league championship with the 3-2 victory. CHARLES KRUPA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Blackhawks score two late third-period goals to win Cup By Jimmy Golen

The Associated Press

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OSTON — Two goals. Seventeen seconds apart. A second Stanley Cup victory in four seasons for Chicago. Seventy-six seconds away from defeat and a trip home for a decisive seventh game, Bryan Bickell tied it. Then, while the Bruins were settling in for another overtime, Dave Bolland scored to give Chicago a 3-2 victory in Game 6 of the Stanley Cup Finals on Monday night. The back-to-back scores in about the time it takes for one good rush down the ice turned a near-certain loss into a championship clincher, stunning the Boston players and their fans and

starting the celebration on the Blackhawks’ bench with 59 seconds to play. “We thought we were going home for Game 7. You still think you’re going to overtime and you’re going to try to win it there. Then Bolly scores a huge goal 17 seconds later,” said Patrick Kane, Chicago forward, who won the Conn Smythe Trophy as the postseason’s Most Valuable Player. “It feels like the last 58 seconds were an eternity.” The team that set an NHL record with a 24-game unbeaten streak to start the lockout-shortened season won three straight games after falling behind 2-1 in the best-of-seven finals, rallying from a deficit in the series and in its finale. Corey Crawford made 23 saves, and Jonathan Toews returned from injury to add a goal and an assist in the first finals between Original Six teams since 1979. “I still can’t believe that finish. Oh my God, we never quit,” Crawford said. “I never lost confidence. No one in our room ever did.”

Trailing 2-1, Crawford went off for an extra skater and the Blackhawks converted when Toews fed it in front and Bickell scored from the edge of the crease to tie the score. Perhaps the Bruins expected it to go to overtime, as three of the first four games in the series did. They sure seemed to be caught off-guard on the ensuing faceoff. Chicago skated into the zone, sent a shot on net and after it deflected off Michael Frolik and the post it went right to Bolland, who put it in the net. “It’s unbelievable man,” Crawford said. “So much hard work to get to this point. Great effort by everyone on the team.” The Blackhawks on the ice gathered in the corner, while those on the bench began jumping up and down. It was only a minute later, when Boston’s Tuukka Rask was off for an extra man, that Chicago with-

Please see title, Page B-3

WIMBLEDON

No. 135 Darcis upsets Nadal in first round By Howard Fendrich

The Associated Press

Steve Darcis advanced to the second round of Wimbledon after upsetting Rafael Nadal 7-6 (4), 7-6 (8), 6-4 on Monday at the All England Club in London. KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

LONDON — Just like that, in a span of 15 days, Rafael Nadal went from French Open champion for a record eighth time to first-round Grand Slam loser for the only time in his career. Limping occasionally and slower than usual, but unwilling afterward to blame an old left knee injury, the two-time Wimbledon winner exited 7-6 (4), 7-6 (8), 6-4 Monday against 135th-ranked Steve Darcis — one of the most stunning results ever at the All England Club. “Nobody remembers the losses. People remember the victories,” Nadal said, shaking his head as he leaned back in a black leather chair. “And I don’t want to remember that loss.” Everyone else definitely will.

It certainly belongs in the same category as his loss a year ago at Wimbledon, in the second round to Lukas Rosol, a player ranked 100th. After that setback, Nadal missed about seven months because of his bad left knee. Since returning, he had gone 43-2 and reached the finals at all nine tournaments he entered, winning seven. Most recently, in Paris, he collected his 12th Grand Slam trophy, tied for third-most in history, while extending his winning streak to 22 matches. “Two weeks ago, I was in a fantastic situation, winning a fantastic tournament,” Nadal said. “Two weeks later, I lost here in the first round. That’s the positive and the negative thing about this sport.”

Please see UPsets, Page B-3

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

HOCKEY Hockey

GoLF GOLF

Chicago 4, Boston 2 Monday’s Game Chicago 3, Boston 2 Previous Results Chicago 4, Boston 3, 3OT Boston 2, Chicago 1, OT Boston 2, Chicago 0 Chicago 6, Boston 5, OT Chicago 3, Boston 1 Best-of-7

Through June 23 1. Tiger Woods 2. Rory McIlroy 3. Justin Rose 4. Adam Scott 5. Matt Kuchar 6. Phil Mickelson 7. Luke Donald 8. Brandt Snedeker 9. Graeme McDowell 10. Louis Oosthuizen 11. Steve Stricker 12. Lee Westwood 13. Charl Schwartzel 14. Ernie Els 15. Sergio Garcia 16. Keegan Bradley 17. Bubba Watson 18. Jason Day 19. Webb Simpson 20. Ian Poulter 21. Jason Dufner 22. Hunter Mahan 23. Dustin Johnson 24. Peter Hanson 25. Nick Watney 26. Matteo Manassero 27. Bo Van Pelt 28. Jim Furyk 29. Bill Haas 30. Rickie Fowler 31. Zach Johnson 32. Henrik Stenson 33. Branden Grace 34. Martin Kaymer 35. Billy Horschel 36. Thorbjorn Olesen 37. Kevin Streelman 38. G. Ferndez-Castano 39. Jamie Donaldson 40. Scott Piercy 41. Nicolas Colsaerts 42. Francesco Molinari 43. Carl Pettersson 44. Robert Garrigus 45. Ryan Moore 46. Paul Lawrie 47. David Lynn 48. Hideki Matsuyama 49. Michael Thompson 50. D.A. Points

NHL PLayoffs NHL stanley Cup final

Blackhawks 3, Bruins 2

Chicago 0 1 2—3 Boston 1 0 1—2 first Period—1, Boston, Kelly 2 (Seguin, Paille), 7:19. Penalties—Oduya, Chi (hooking), 10:40; Rozsival, Chi (high-sticking), 18:25. second Period—2, Chicago, Toews 3, 4:24. Penalties—Shaw, Chi (roughing), 2:24; Seabrook, Chi (tripping), 5:12; Seguin, Bos (hooking), 13:57. Third Period—3, Boston, Lucic 7 (Krejci), 12:11. 4, Chicago, Bickell 9 (Toews, Keith), 18:44. 5, Chicago, Bolland 3 (Frolik, Oduya), 19:01. Penalties—Kelly, Bos (highsticking), 14:21. shots on Goal—Chicago 6-9-16—31. Boston 12-6-7—25. Power-play opportunities—Chicago 0 of 2; Boston 0 of 4. Goalies—Chicago, Crawford 16-7-0 (25 shots-23 saves). Boston, Rask 14-8-0 (31-28). a—17,565 (17,565). T—2:32. Referees—Wes McCauley, Dan O’Halloran. Linesmen—Jay Sharrers, Pierre Racicot

stanley Cup Winners

2013 — Chicago Blackhawks 2012 — Los Angeles Kings 2011 — Boston Bruins 2010 — Chicago Blackhawks 2009 — Pittsburgh Penguins 2008 — Detroit Red Wings 2007 — Anaheim Ducks 2006 — Carolina Hurricanes 2005 — Lockout 2004 — Tampa Bay Lightning 2003 — New Jersey Devils 2002 — Detroit Red Wings 2001 — Colorado Avalanche 2000 — New Jersey Devils 1999 — Dallas Stars 1998 — Detroit Red Wings 1997 — Detroit Red Wings 1996 — Colorado Avalanche 1995 — New Jersey Devils 1994 — New York Rangers 1993 — Montreal Canadiens 1992 — Pittsburgh Penguins 1991 — Pittsburgh Penguins 1990 — Edmonton Oilers 1989 — Calgary Flames 1988 — Edmonton Oilers 1987 — Edmonton Oilers 1986 — Montreal Canadiens 1985 — Edmonton Oilers 1984 — Edmonton Oilers 1983 — New York Islanders 1982 — New York Islanders 1981 — New York Islanders 1980 — New York Islanders 1979 — Montreal Canadiens 1978 — Montreal Canadiens 1977 — Montreal Canadiens 1976 — Montreal Canadiens

GP 21 22 21 21 22 22 21 15 15

G 9 9 7 6 10 8 7 4 3

12.89 9.53 8.16 7.43 6.73 6.21 6.06 5.98 5.51 5.19 5.12 4.98 4.89 4.87 4.82 4.80 4.58 4.53 4.40 4.34 4.31 4.19 4.06 3.61 3.52 3.49 3.47 3.38 3.23 3.18 3.16 3.15 3.08 2.99 2.91 2.86 2.83 2.77 2.73 2.72 2.70 2.70 2.69 2.57 2.57 2.56 2.53 2.51 2.50 2.46

FootbaLL Triggers end

aReNa LeaGue Fuego’s streak National Conference

Central W L T Pct Pf Pa Santa Fe’s four-game Chicago 8 6 0 .571 776 750 to572 an 641 Sanwinning Antonio streak 7 6 came 0 .538 end Monday night at Fort Iowa 6 8 0 .429 666 684 Marcy Ballpark 15-14Pf Pa West W L in T aPct x-Arizona 12 2 in 0 Pecos .857 914 660 loss to Trinidad Spokane 10 4 0 .714 935 734 League action. San Jose 9 4 0 .692 728 668 The ending couldn’t Utah 5 8 0 .385 656 712

Leaders

Through June 23 scoring David Krejci, BOS Patrick Kane, CHI Nathan Horton, BOS Milan Lucic, BOS Patrick Sharp, CHI Bryan Bickell, CHI Marian Hossa, CHI Evgeni Malkin, PIT Kris Letang, PIT

a PTs 16 25 10 19 12 19 12 18 6 16 8 16 9 16 12 16 13 16

AUTO RACING aUto

SOCCER SocceR

BASEBALL baSebaLL

How seeded Players fared Monday at The all england Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Men first Round Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Benjamin Becker, Germany, 6-4, 6-3, 6-2. Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. Victor Hanescu, Romania, 6-3, 6-2, 6-0. Rafael Nadal (5), Spain, lost to Steve Darcis, Belgium, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (8), 6-4. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (6), France, def. David Goffin, Belgium, 7-6 (4), 6-4, 6-3. Marin Cilic (10), Croatia, def. Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Stanislas Wawrinka (11), Switzerland lost to Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-4, 7-5, 6-3. Janko Tipsarevic (14), Serbia, lost to Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Nicolas Almagro (15), Spain, def. Jurgen Zopp, Estonia, 6-4, 7-6 (2), 7-5. John Isner (18), United States, def. Evgeny Donskoy, Russia, 6-1, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3). Mikhail Youzhny (20), Russia, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 6-4, 7-5, 7-5. Juan Monaco (22), Argentina, def. Bastian Knittel, Germany, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3. Jerzy Janowicz (24), Poland, def. Kyle Edmund, Britain, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4. Benoit Paire (25), France, def. Adrian Ungur, Romania, 6-4, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1. Fabio Fognini (30), Italy, lost to Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-3, 6-2. Julien Benneteau (31), France, def. Tobias Kamke, Germany, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-2. Tommy Robredo (32), Spain, def. Alex Bogomolov Jr., Russia, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4. Women first Round Victoria Azarenka (2), Belarus, def. Maria Joao Koehler, Portugal, 6-1, 6-2. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 7-6 (5), 6-3. Sara Errani (5), Italy, lost to Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, 6-3, 6-2. Petra Kvitova (8), Czech Republic, def. CoCo Vandeweghe, United States, 6-1, 5-7, 6-4. Caroline Wozniacki (9), Denmark, def. Estrella Cabeza Candela, Spain, 6-0, 6-2. Ana Ivanovic (12), Serbia, def. Virginie Razzano, France, 7-6 (1), 6-0. Marion Bartoli (15), France, def. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine, 6-3, 7-5. Jelena Jankovic (16), Serbia, def. Johanna Konta, Britain, 6-2, 7-5. Sloane Stephens (17), United States, def. Jamie Hampton, United States, 6-3, 6-3. Carla Suarez Navarro (19), Spain, def. Lourdes Dominguez Lino, Spain, 6-2, 6-2. Kirsten Flipkens (20), Belgium, def. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, 7-5, 6-4. Sorana Cirstea (22), Romania, def. Stefanie Voegele, Switzerland, 7-5, 7-6 (3). Ekaterina Makarova (25), Russia, def. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, 6-3, 6-3. Varvara Lepchenko (26), United States, lost to Eva Birnerova, Czech Republic, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4. Lucie Safarova (27), Czech Republic, def. Lauren Davis, United States, 6-4, 6-0. Alize Cornet (29), France, def. Vania King, United States, 4-6, 6-3, 6-1.

Through June 23 1. Jimmie Johnson, $5,178,970 2. Kyle Busch, $3,398,265 3. Matt Kenseth, $3,311,596 4. Kevin Harvick, $3,187,498 5. Brad Keselowski, $3,165,460 6. Dale Earnhardt Jr., $3,063,463 7. Carl Edwards, $3,006,084 8. Tony Stewart, $2,765,804 9. Martin Truex Jr., $2,764,774 10. Jeff Gordon, $2,760,254 11. Joey Logano, $2,705,252 12. Clint Bowyer, $2,695,506 13. Ryan Newman, $2,637,791 14. Kasey Kahne, $2,620,733 15. Greg Biffle, $2,602,789 16. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $2,568,474 17. Aric Almirola, $2,435,172 18. Kurt Busch, $2,416,058 19. Juan Pablo Montoya, $2,321,698 20. Jamie McMurray, $2,299,813 21. Paul Menard, $2,277,274 22. Marcos Ambrose, $2,265,672 23. David Ragan, $2,168,791 24. Mark Martin, $2,155,479 25. Denny Hamlin, $1,966,249 26. Casey Mears, $1,964,138 27. Jeff Burton, $1,896,148 28. David Gilliland, $1,878,236 29. Bobby Labonte, $1,837,789 30. Travis Kvapil, $1,789,277

east W L T Pts Gf Ga Montreal 9 3 2 29 24 17 Philadelphia 7 5 4 25 25 24 New York 7 6 4 25 23 22 Kansas City 6 5 5 23 20 15 Houston 6 5 5 23 19 16 Columbus 5 6 5 20 19 18 New England 5 5 5 20 18 13 Chicago 5 7 3 18 15 21 Toronto 2 7 6 12 14 20 D.C. United 2 11 3 9 8 26 West W L T Pts Gf Ga Portland 7 1 9 30 28 16 Salt Lake 9 5 3 30 26 16 Dallas 8 3 5 29 25 20 Los Angeles 7 6 3 24 23 18 Vancouver 6 5 4 22 25 24 Seattle 6 5 3 21 19 17 Colorado 5 7 5 20 17 19 San Jose 4 7 6 18 15 25 Chivas USA 3 10 2 11 14 30 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. Monday-friday No games scheduled.

east W L Pct GB Boston 45 33 .577 — New York 41 34 .547 21/2 Baltimore 42 35 .545 21/2 Tampa Bay 40 37 .519 41/2 Toronto 38 37 .507 51/2 Central W L Pct GB Detroit 42 32 .568 — Cleveland 39 36 .520 31/2 Kansas City 35 38 .479 61/2 Minnesota 34 38 .472 7 Chicago 31 42 .425 101/2 West W L Pct GB Texas 44 32 .579 — Oakland 44 34 .564 1 Seattle 34 43 .442 101/2 Los Angeles 33 43 .434 11 Houston 29 48 .377 151/2 Monday’s Games Cleveland 5, Baltimore 2 Tampa Bay 4, Toronto 1 Tuesday’s Games Cleveland (Masterson 9-5) at Baltimore (Tillman 8-2), 5:05 p.m. Texas (Darvish 7-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 7-5), 5:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 6-5) at Detroit (Porcello 4-4), 5:08 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 4-3) at Boston (Dempster 4-8), 5:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle 4-4) at Tampa Bay (M.Moore 9-3), 5:10 p.m. Atlanta (Medlen 4-7) at Kansas City (E.Santana 5-5), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Z.Wheeler 1-0) at Chicago Sox (Sale 5-6), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Westbrook 3-2) at Houston (Bedard 2-3), 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Arroyo 6-5) at Oakland (Milone 6-7), 8:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Locke 6-1) at Seattle (J.Saunders 5-7), 8:10 p.m.

aTP-WTa TouR Wimbledon

INTeRNaTIoNaL World Golf Ranking USA NIr Eng Aus USA USA Eng USA NIr SAf USA Eng SAf SAf Esp USA USA Aus USA Eng USA USA USA Swe USA Ita USA USA USA USA USA Swe SAf Ger USA Den USA Esp Wal USA Bel Ita Swe USA USA Sco Eng Jpn USA USA

TENNIS teNNIS

have been any worse as american Conference Fuego pinch runner Chris south W L T Pct Pf Pa Carrera was out729 673 x-Jacksonville 9 5thrown 0 .643 at the Tampa Bay plate 7 for 7 the 0 final .500 787 749 out while5attempting to666 738 Orlando 8 0 .385 Newsteal Orleans 3 with 10 0the.231 578 758 home bases east W the L top T of Pctthe Pf Pa loaded and Philadelphia 8 plate. 5 0 .615 766 632 order at the Pittsburgh 3 10 0 .231 503 708 Santa Fe up745 Cleveland 2 (17-21) 11 0 wraps .154 576 its two-game set with the x-clinched playoff spot Triggers saturday, Juneon 29 Tuesday night. Philadelphia at Cleveland, 5 p.m. for First pitch is scheduled New6:05. Orleans at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Orlando at Jacksonville, 5 p.m. The New San Antonio at Iowa, 6:05 p.m.Mexican San Jose at Utah, 7 p.m.

THISDate DATE oNON tHIS June 25

1921 — Jock Hutchinson is the first American to win the British Open, a nine-stroke victory over Roger Wethered in a playoff. 1932 — Gene Sarazen wins the U.S. Open by shooting a 286, the lowest in 20 years. 1948 — Joe Louis knocks out Jersey Joe Walcott in the 11th round in New York to defend his world heavyweight title. Louis announces his retirement after the fight.

NasCaR sPRINT CuP Money Leaders

NasCaR NaTIoNWIde Money Leaders

Through June 22 1. Kyle Busch, $540,525 2. Sam Hornish Jr., $524,324 3. Austin Dillon, $475,286 4. Trevor Bayne, $453,959 5. Regan Smith, $433,265 6. Justin Allgaier, $427,122 7. Kyle Larson, $421,265 8. Elliott Sadler, $420,369 9. Parker Kligerman, $396,059 10. Brian Vickers, $390,069 11. Alex Bowman, $376,219 12. Brian Scott, $371,544 13. Travis Pastrana, $340,494 14. Mike Bliss, $339,039 15. Nelson Piquet Jr., $337,509 16. Reed Sorenson, $332,394 17. Eric McClure, $327,799 18. Mike Wallace, $316,348 19. Jeremy Clements, $284,615 20. Joe Nemechek, $283,644 21. Blake Koch, $267,638 22. Brad Keselowski, $259,200 23. Jeffrey Earnhardt, $248,349 24. Hal Martin, $242,099 25. Dexter Stacey, $220,781 26. Johanna Long, $216,679 27. Juan Carlos Blum, $210,551 28. Jason White, $203,644 29. Jeff Green, $196,250 30. Robert Richardson Jr., $191,253

NasCaR CaMPING WoRLd TRuCks Money Leaders

Through June 7 1. Johnny Sauter, $175,490 2. Jeb Burton, $162,295 3. Matt Crafton, $156,780 4. Kyle Busch, $134,295 5. Ty Dillon, $120,480 6. Brendan Gaughan, $117,870 7. Ryan Blaney, $113,855 8. Ron Hornaday Jr., $101,240 9. James Buescher, $100,965 10. Joey Coulter, $99,925 11. German Quiroga, $95,410 12. Miguel Paludo, $90,300 13. Timothy Peters, $87,160 14. Darrell Wallace Jr., $86,605 15. Ryan Sieg, $85,200 16. Max Gresham, $84,375 17. Dakoda Armstrong, $84,230 18. Todd Bodine, $81,875 19. John Wes Townley, $81,350

NoRTH aMeRICa Major League soccer

INTeRNaTIoNaL fIfa Confederations Cup

first Round Group a G W d x-Brazil 3 3 0 x-Italy 3 2 0 Mexico 3 1 0 Japan 3 0 0 Group a G W d x-Spain 3 3 0 x-Uruguay 3 2 0 Nigeria 3 1 0 Tahiti 3 0 0 Monday-Tuesday No games scheduled. sunday’s Games Uruguay 8, Tahiti 0 Spain 3, Nigeria 0 semifinals Wednesday’s Game at Belo Horizonte, Brazil Brazil vs. Uruguay, 1 p.m. Thursday’s Game at fortaleza, Brazil Spain vs. Italy, 1 p.m. Third Place at salvador, Brazil sunday, June 30 Semifinal losers, Noon final at Rio de Janeiro sunday, June 30 Semifinal winners, 4 p.m.

Atlanta Chicago New York Washington Connecticut Indiana

L 1 3 3 4 6 6

W L Minnesota 6 2 Los Angeles 5 2 Phoenix 4 4 Seattle 4 4 San Antonio 3 5 Tulsa 3 8 Monday’s Games No games scheduled. Tuesday’s Games Indiana at Atlanta, 10 a.m. Phoenix at San Antonio, 6 p.m.

Pct .875 .625 .571 .500 .250 .143

Pct .750 .714 .500 .500 .375 .273

GB — 2 21/2 3 5 51/2 GB — 1/2 2 2 3 41/2

east W L Pct GB Atlanta 44 33 .571 — Washington 37 38 .493 6 Philadelphia 36 40 .474 71/2 New York 30 42 .417 111/2 Miami 25 50 .333 18 Central W L Pct GB St. Louis 47 29 .618 — Pittsburgh 46 30 .605 1 Cincinnati 45 32 .584 21/2 Chicago 31 43 .419 15 Milwaukee 31 43 .419 15 West W L Pct GB Arizona 41 34 .547 — San Francisco 38 37 .507 3 Colorado 39 38 .506 3 San Diego 38 38 .500 31/2 Los Angeles 32 42 .432 81/2 Monday’s Games Philadelphia at San Diego San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers Tuesday’s Games Arizona (Cahill 3-8) at Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-3), 5:05 p.m. Minnesota (Correia 6-4) at Miami (Fernandez 4-4), 5:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (E.Jackson 3-9) at Milwaukee (Lohse 2-6), 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 6-4) at San Diego (Marquis 9-2), 8:10 p.m. San Francisco (Kickham 0-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Fife 1-2), 8:10 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS tRaNSactIoNS HoCkey National Hockey League

ANAHEIM DUCKS — Acquired D Alex Grant from the Pittsburgh for LW Harry Zolnierczyk. DALLAS STARS — Signed F Matt Fraser and D Cameron Gaunce to one year contracts.

Injured: Hitter has six homers with Dodgers Continued from Page B-1

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Yards would reverse their slide. But their only offense came on two swings of the bat. After Markakis put Baltimore up 1-0 in the first inning with his eighth home run, the Orioles left the bases loaded in the second and stranded two runners in the third. Wieters led off the fourth with his 10th home run to end an 0-for13 skid and make it 2-0.

W 7 5 4 4 2 1

Western Conference

RAYS 4, BLUE JAYS 1 In St. Petersburg, Fla., Jeremy Hellickson pitched seven strong innings and rookie Wil Myers homered in his home debut, helping Tampa Bay end Toronto’s 11-game winning streak. Myers homered in his first atbat at Tropicana Field and received a standing ovation from a crowd of 11,407 getting its initial closeup view of the key acquisition in the offseason trade that sent pitchers James Shields and Wade Davis to Kansas City. Myers’ drive to center off Esmil Rogers (3-3) was sandwiched between homers by James Loney and Sam Fuld as Tampa Bay went deep three times within a span of eight pitches in the second inning. Luke Scott added a bloop RBI double to make it 4-0 in the third, and that was all the support Hellickson needed. DODGERS 3, GIANTS 1 In Los Angeles, rookie sensation Yasiel Puig hit his seventh home run in 20 MLB games and added a tiebreaking single in the eighth inning against Madison Bumgarner, leading the Dodgers past San Francisco. Nick Punto, who replaced third baseman Juan Uribe in a double switch, led off the eighth with an opposite-field double down the right-field line. Mark Ellis sacrificed Punto to third and reached safely when Bumgarner threw high to first for an error. Puig greeted George Kontos with a line-drive single to left that scored Punto. Hanley Ramirez drove in the final run on a liner toward the middle that shortstop Brandon Crawford knocked down with a lunging attempt before getting the out at first.

National League

WNBa eastern Conference

Brantley drives in four to lift Indians BALTIMORE — Michael Brantley homered and had four RBIs, and Cleveland beat the Orioles 5-2 Monday Indians 5 night for their ninth win in Orioles 2 12 games. Brantley put the Indians ahead with a two-run single in the sixth inning and made it 5-2 with a tworun shot in the eighth off Darren O’Day. His four RBIs tied a career high, reached twice previously. Nick Swisher had two hits and scored a run for the Indians, and former Oriole Mark Reynolds went 1-for-2 with two walks. The victory improved Cleveland’s record against the AL East to 7-17 and provided an uplifting start to an 11-game road trip. Ubaldo Jimenez (6-4) allowed two runs in 5⅓ innings and Vinnie Pestano, the fourth Indians reliever, worked the ninth for his fourth save. Nick Markakis and Matt Wieters homered for the Orioles, who have lost four straight. Zach Britton (1-2) allowed only two hits through five innings and took a 2-0 lead into the sixth before faltering. Jason Kipnis led off with a double and scored on a single by Swisher. Carlos Santana followed with a double to put runners at second and third, and after Reynolds received an intentional walk, Brantley grounded a single up the middle to chase Britton. Brantley iced it in the eighth with his fifth homer after a leadoff single by Reynolds. After being swept in a threegame series in Toronto, the Orioles hoped a return to Camden

P 9 6 3 0 P 9 6 3 0

BASKETBALL baSketbaLL

BASEBALL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

L f a 0 9 2 1 8 8 2 3 5 3 4 9 L f a 0 15 1 1 11 3 2 7 6 3 1 24

MLB american League

pADRES 4, phILLIES 3 (10 INNINGS) In San Diego, Kyle Blanks singled home the winning run in the 10th inning for his fourth hit of the game, and the Padres rallied from a three-run deficit in the ninth. Blanks also had a two-run single and scored the tying run on a passed ball in the ninth as the Padres fought back against Cliff Lee and struggling closer Jonathan Papelbon. Looking for his 10th win of the season, Lee took a six-hit shutout into the ninth but lasted only three more pitches. Carlos Quentin led off with a single and went to third when Chase Headley followed with a double that ended Lee’s night.

and worse. It was one of those things you just try and play through, I guess.” The injury couldn’t have come at a worse time for Van Slyke. After starting the season not on the Dodgers’ 40-man roster, he reported to Triple-A thinner and stronger following a strict offseason fitness program. He promptly shredded Triple-A pitching in the first six weeks of the season before getting called up to Los Angeles in May. In just 25 games with the big club, he was second on the team in home runs (six) before lunging for that Molina hit. He says the injury has affected his swing, not his throwing motion. Doctors in Los Angeles conducted extensive tests and ruled out the possibility of corScott rective surgery. It’s an injury Van Slyke similar to the one suffered late last season by outfielder Matt Kemp, one that did end up with him going under the knife. Kemp also began a rehab stint with the Isotopes over the weekend. Combined the two had 11 strikeouts in 16 plate appearances in their first two games against Round Rock. Meanwhile, the big league outfield is getting more crowded by the minute with the emergence of rookie sensation Yasiel Puig and veterans Andre Ethier and Skip Schumaker. “Scotty’s timing is off, obviously,” said Lorenzo Bundy, Isotopes manager. “He’s swinging at balls, chasing pitches he knows he shouldn’t. Getting back is going to take time, but that’s what he’s here for.” Time isn’t a luxury Van Slyke thinks he has. After playing with a chip on his shoulder for much of the early part of the season, it’s ironic that his own aggression in trying to prove himself with the big club ended up with his trip to the disabled list. “It’s frustrating because I was swinging the bat pretty well before it all happened,” he said. “The last four or five games, though, it was really affecting me because I was cutting off my swing a little early.”


SPORTS

Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

WIMBLEDON

B-3

Northern New Mexico

Only two U.S. women advance SCOREBOARD By Sandra Harwitt

Local results and schedules

LONDON — Sloane Stephens breezed through her match in time to keep her plans for the evening. Stephens needed only 62 minutes to brush aside fellow American Jamie Hampton 6-3, 6-3 in the opening round at Wimbledon on Monday, and then renewed one of her favorite traditions — a trip to a nearby Indian restaurant for dinner. “We need to speed this up,” Stephens said. “Normally I get the chicken tikka masala, but the last two nights I’ve got the chicken korma.” Stephens was a bright spot on an otherwise disappointing day for the American women. Seven of them lost their firstround matches. The only two to advance — Stephens and Christina McHale — were pitted against other Americans. The two American men in action fared better, with No. 18 seed John Isner and unseeded Rajeev Ram each advancing. In the win over Hampton, Stephens was successful on 73 percent of her first serves and her powerful groundstrokes were on display, especially from the forehand side. “I just stayed really aggressive the whole time,” said Stephens, who played no grass tuneup tournaments before Wimbledon. “I think that worked well for me.” The only time Hampton had a lead in the match was when she broke Stephens’ serve in the fourth game of the second set to go ahead 3-1. She didn’t win another game. “She served well,” Hampton said. “She won the big points.” Last week, as a qualifier, Hampton reached her first career final, losing to Elena Vesnina. She upset fourth-ranked Agnieszka Radwanska and ninth-ranked Caroline Wozniacki along the way. Hampton also defeated former Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova at the French Open.

Today on TV

The Associated Press

Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. COLLEGE BASEBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN — World Series, Game 2: Mississippi State vs. UCLA in Omaha, Neb. GOLF 2 p.m. on The Golf Channel — PGA of America: Professional National Championship third round in Corvallis, Ore. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. on MLB — Texas at N.Y. Yankees or Cleveland at Baltimore SOCCER 8:45 a.m. on ESPN2 — FIFA U-20 World Cup: Mexico vs. Paraguay in Gaziantep, Turkey TENNIS 5 a.m. on ESPN — Wimbledon early round matches in London WNBA 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — Phoenix at San Antonio

Sloane Stephens advanced to the second round of Wimbledon after knocking off Jamie Hampton 6-3, 6-3 in 62 minutes Monday. ALASTAIR GRANT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stephens has enjoyed some Grand Slam success this season. She upset Serena Williams on her way to the Australian Open semifinals. At the French Open, she advanced to the fourth round. In the other all-American outing, the 70th-ranked McHale defeated No. 147 Alexa Glatch 6-4, 6-4 to move into the second round. McHale is still trying to regain her confidence after a bout with mononucleosis took its toll in the second half of last season. McHale’s best result this season is reaching the third round at the Doha tournament. Otherwise, she has posted seven first-round losses and six second-round losses. “I’m excited with this win and I think it was a good match that I played really well

on the big points,” McHale said. “It’s just been a tough year because I didn’t get the match play. When it’s 4-all in the third and you haven’t won a lot of matches it’s a matter of confidence.” Isner served 22 aces during his 6-1, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (3) win over Evgeny Donskoy. The victory was payback for Isner, who lost to Donskoy 6-7 (3), 6-3, 6-4 in the first round of a tuneup tournament in the Netherlands last week. The 86th-ranked Ram captured a 7-5, 6-4, 6-7 (2), 6-2 win over Lukas Lacko. All the other American women in action lost: 26th-seeded Varvara Lepchenko, CoCo Vandeweghe, Melanie Oudin, Vania King and Lauren Davis. All but Davis went three sets.

Upsets: Nadal won event in 2008 and 2010 Continued from Page B-1 His early defeat rendered moot all the debate in the preceding days about whether Nadal’s No. 5 seeding was appropriate or whether Wimbledon officials should have bumped him higher because of past success at the grass-court tournament. In five appearances at Wimbledon from 2006-11 (he missed the 2009 edition because of knee trouble), Nadal reached the final five times. He won the 2008 and 2010 championships, and was the runner-up to Roger Federer in 2006-07, then to Novak Djokovic in 2011. Because of Nadal’s low-for-him seeding this time he wound up in the same half of the draw as seven-time champion Federer and second-seeded Andy Murray. A possible Nadal-Federer quarterfinal loomed, as did a potential Nadal-Murray semifinal. So much for that.

“Pretty irrelevant right now,” said Murray, who won in three sets Monday, as did Federer. “It’s obviously surprising. But, you know, the consistency that Rafa, Roger, Novak have shown in the Slams over the last five, Rafael Nadal six years, it’s going to be almost impossible to keep that up forever.” Two days before Wimbledon started, Nadal spoke about having more trouble on grass than other surfaces lately because its low skids force him to bend his knees so much to reach shots. Nadal decided to skip a grass-court tuneup tournament between the French Open and Wimbledon, opting to rest instead, and arrived in England on Tuesday to begin preparing in earnest. On Monday, he said, “I didn’t move the way I need to if I’m going to win on this surface.”

Nadal avoids discussing health issues in the immediate aftermath of a defeat — he didn’t reveal the left knee injury last year until weeks after the Rosol match — and Monday was no different. Still, anyone who watched Nadal play Darcis could tell something wasn’t right. Nadal deflected three questions in English about his left knee, saying it’s “not the day to talk about these kind of things” and that it would sound like “an excuse.” When a reporter asked in Spanish about the knee, Nadal replied: “You’re assuming I’m injured.” Nadal later did repeat what he mentioned at Roland Garros, which is that the knee is painful at times. “Maybe he was not in the best shape ever. Maybe he didn’t play his best match,” Darcis said, noting that he wants to get his hands on of a DVD of the most significant victory of his career. “But I have to be proud.” That’s for sure.

Title: Toews had tying goal in second period Continued from Page B-1 stood Boston’s final push and swarmed over the boards, throwing their sticks and gloves across the ice. “In 2010, we didn’t really know what we were doing. We just, we played great hockey and we were kind of oblivious to how good we were playing,” said Toews, who scored his third goal of the playoffs to tie it 1-1 in the second period. “This time around, we know definitely how much work it takes and how much sacrifice it takes to get back here and this is an unbelievable group,” Toews said. “We’ve been through a lot together this year and this is a sweet way to finish it off.” The Bruins got 28 saves from Rask, who was hoping to contribute to an NHL title after serving as Tim Thomas’ backup when Boston won it all two years ago. “It’s obviously shocking when you think you have everything under control,” Rask

said quietly, standing at his locker with a blue baseball cap on backward and a towel draped over his shoulders. The sold-out TD Garden had begun chanting “We want the Cup!” after Milan Lucic’s goal put the Bruins up 2-1 with eight minutes left, but it fell silent after their team coughed up the lead. “Probably toughest for sure, when you know you’re a little bit over a minute left and you feel that you’ve got a chance to get to a Game 7,” said Claude Julien, Bruins head coach. “And then those two goals go in quickly.” The arena was almost empty — except for a few hundred fans in red Blackhawks sweaters who filtered down to the front rows — when NHL commissioner Gary Bettman handed the 35-pound Cup to Toews, who left Game 5 with an undisclosed injury and wasn’t confirmed for the lineup until the morning skate. The Chicago captain skated the Cup

right over the crease in which the Blackhawks mounted the comeback and in front of the fans in Blackhawks sweaters who lined the front row behind the net. Toews banged on the glass while the remaining Bruins fans headed up the runways. He then continued the tradition of handing it from player to player before the team settled to the side of the faceoff circle for a picture with the trophy they will possess for the next 12 months. The Blackhawks opened the season on a 21-0-3 streak and coasted to the Presidents’ Trophy that goes to the team with the best regular-season record. Chicago is the first team with the best record to win since the 2008 Red Wings. The final series seemed headed for a Game 7 before Bickell and Bolland turned it around. “Dave Bolland, what else can you say about that guy?” Kane said. “He just shows up in big playoff games.”

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

OVERALL RECORD: 17-21 June 24: Triggers 15, Fuego 14 Today: Trinidad 6 p.m. June 26: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. June 27: at Trinidad, 7 p.m. June 28: at Raton, 7 p.m. June 29: at Raton, 6 p.m. June 30: Raton, 6 p.m. July 1: Raton, 6 p.m. July 2: at Taos, noon July 3: Taos, 6 p.m. July 4: Taos, 6 p.m. July 5: Taos, 6 p.m. July 6: All-Star Game, 7 p.m. July 7: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 8: Las Vegas, 6 p.m. July 9: Las Vegas, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketball u Santa Fe High’s boys program will hold open gym from 5-7 p.m. in Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium through July 2. It is open for all incoming Santa Fe High students from grades 9-12. u St. Michael’s High School will host boys and girls camps this summer in Perez-Shelley Memorial Gymnasium. The camp runs July 15-18. The cost is $75 for players in grades 3-9, and $40 for players in grades 1-2. Registration forms are available at www.stmichaelssf.org at the athletics page, or call 983-7353. u Open gym for the Española Valley girls’ program is Mondays and Wednesdays from 5-7 p.m. at Edward Medina Gymnasium. For more information, call assistant coach Kevin Hauck at 505753-2854 or 505-470-6795. u The Capital boys program will hold its inaugural alumni game in Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gymnasium on Saturday. The game pits former Jaguars against the current varsity team. The game will begin at 6:30pm. Cost is $5 for adults and $3 for students. Current Capital students will be granted free admission with a student ID. All proceeds will go to the program. For more information, call coach Jonathan Salazar at 470-0983. u The Santa Fe Indian School boys program is holding its first Running Braves camp in the Pueblo Pavilion Wellness Center on June 28-29. There’s also a shooting camp June 30 directed by professional shooting coach David Nurse. For more information, call Matt Martinez at 989-6350 or coach Zack Cole at 216-7364.

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

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

Soccer u The 18th annual Mighty Micks Camp is July 22-26 from 9 a.m. to noon at St. Michael’s High School. The camp is open to children ages 5 to 15. Cost is $100, and includes a ball and T-shirt. For more information, call Ed Velie at 466-1633 or email evelie@stmikessf.org for a registration form. u St. Michael’s is seeking applicants for its varsity assistant coach and junior varsity head coach for the girls program. Applicants must have a current NMAA coaching license and previous coaching experience. A college degree and playing experience preferred. For more information, emaill head coach Robyn Serge at rserge@stmikessf.org, or call 983-7353, extension 140.

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

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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

Mayweather, Alvarez kick off 11-city tour in New York City The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Floyd Mayweather and Saul “Canelo” Alvarez stared each other down for nearly a minute and the cheers from the fans packed into Times Square grew louder by the second. This is the matchup they’ve been waiting to see: Four belts, two undefeated fan favorites — and a title fight simply billed as “The One.” “Canelo, I appreciate you for taking the fight,” Mayweather said on a steamy Monday in the heart of Manhattan in front of a few thousand fans standing behind metal barriers or sitting in makeshift bleachers with

Broadway marquees serving as a colorful backdrop. “Now,” Mayweather said, “let’s give the fans what they want to see.” The fighters kicked Canelo off an 11-city tour to Alvarez officially announce and promote their title fight at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev., on Sept. 14. The promotional tour includes stops in cities such as Washington D.C., Chicago, Miami and Mexico City, and is jumpstarting the hype ahead of

one of boxing’s most anticipated bouts in recent memory. Mayweather, 36, is unbeaten in 44 fights with the last a unanimous 12-round decision over Robert Guerrero on May 4 in defense of his 147pound title. “The Earth is my turf,” Mayweather said. “You can put me in any ring and I will always come out victorious.” Alvarez, a 22-year-old Mexican star, is 42-0-1 and unified the 154-pound titles in April with a unanimous victory over Austin Trout on April 20. “In the sport of boxing, it’s everybody’s time, and this is my time,” Alvarez said through a translator as fans

chanted “Mex-i-co!” “I’m going to win.” The 12-round fight will be contested at 152 pounds with both men’s super welterweight/junior middleweight titles on the line — Mayweather’s WBA super welterweight “super” championship, and Alvarez’s WBC, WBA and Ring Magazine super welterweight championships. The bout, expected to be a monstrous draw on pay-per-view for Showtime, also just might satisfy many fans who had been wishing during the last several years for Mayweather to take on Manny Pacquiao. “In every sport, there are certain

rare occasions when you have the best fighting the best,” said Stephen Espinoza, executive vice president and general manager of Showtime Sports. “The Super Bowl, Final Four, the college football national championship. Sept. 14 will be one of those occasions — the two biggest stars in the sport, the two biggest fan bases. “We have America’s No. 1 fighter versus Mexico’s No. 1 fighter. We have the No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter in the sport versus the No. 1 new star in the sport.” The fighters each announced on Twitter last month that they would face each other.


B-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Sandra Bullock, left, and Melissa McCarthy in a scene from The Heat, which opens in theaters Friday. COURTESY PHOTO

‘The Heat’ breaks rules of cop films By Rebecca Keegan Los Angeles Times

F

aithfully conforming to the macho genre made famous by movies such as Bad Boys and Lethal Weapon, The Heat has all the elements you’d expect from a buddy cop movie — the oil-and-water partnership, the car chases, the wisecracks — and a few you wouldn’t — for instance, a scene involving Spanx. The Heat also is — curiously — summer’s only studio film built around female leads: Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy. Directed by Paul Feig (Bridesmaids) from a script by Parks and Recreation writer Katie Dippold, The Heat pairs Bullock as Sarah Ashburn, an uptight FBI agent in ill-fitting suits, with McCarthy as Shannon Mullins, a brusque Boston cop who dresses like a 1980s lady rapper. Instead of romantic pining, the story’s emotional undercurrent comes from the loneliness of women who are very good at their jobs. “It wasn’t a movie written for two guys,” Feig said. “It was funny in a way women are funny and touched on themes of female friendship, professional women in the workplace who have chosen career over family and kids.” That both women are older than 40 — a demographic Hollywood typically ignores — and that McCarthy’s body doesn’t conform to Size 0 industry norms makes their shared success that much more unusual. Bullock, 48, and McCarthy, 42, have both risen on that ineffable quality that creates movie stars and sometimes presidents — they seem like they’d be fun to get a beer with. Bullock, the Virginia-born daughter of a Pentagon contractor and an opera singer, came up in the ’90s, propelled by a tomboyish charm in movies such as Speed and Miss Congeniality before winning an Oscar for playing the brassy Southern mother in

Newsmakers Marriage, the sequel for ‘Star Wars’ creator Lucas

George Lucas

LOS ANGELES — It’s marriage, episode II for George Lucas. A Lucasfilm spokeswoman confirms the Star Wars creator married longtime girlfriend Mellody Hobson in a weekend ceremony at Skywalker Ranch north of San Francisco. It’s the second wedding for the 69-year-old Lucas. It’s the first marriage for Hobson, 44, an investment firm president and contributor to ABC’s Good Morning America.

Bollywood’s Salman Khan faces homicide charge Mellody Hobson

Salman Khan

NEW DELHI — A Mumbai court has ruled that Indian movie star Salman Khan will be tried for homicide for his alleged involvement in a fatal road accident more than 10 years ago. If convicted he faces up to 10 years in jail. Monday’s court decision is a blow for one of Bollywood’s biggest stars. One man was killed and another three were injured when Khan allegedly rammed his car into a group of homeless people sleeping on a Mumbai sidewalk in September 2002. The trial will begin July 19. The Associated Press

TV

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Today’s talk shows

top picks

7 p.m. on CBS NCIS A naval reservist calls on Gibbs (Mark Harmon) and the team to find her husband after she comes home to find him missing and her living room covered with blood. Tony (Michael Weatherly) worries about what Ziva (Cote de Pablo) might have planned to avenge her father’s death in “Chasing Ghosts.” David McCallum, Pauley Perrette and Sean Murray also star. 7 p.m. TNT Rizzoli & Isles Returning for a fourth season, Jane and Maura (Angie Harmon, Sasha Alexander) find themselves helping each other through more family troubles as they investigate more troublesome cases, including a deadly shooting of a state senator, the brutal killing of a young and earnest journalism student, and the pending murder trial of Maura’s mob boss father, Paddy Doyle (guest star John Doman). 7:30 p.m. on NBC Betty White’s Off Their Rockers In this new episode, senior pranksters direct traffic inside a grocery store, give moviegoers bad reviews of the films they’re about to see and cut loose with a dance machine in an arcade.

2009’s The Blind Side. McCarthy, raised on a farm in Illinois, performed in the L.A.-based improv comedy group the Groundlings and has appeared on TV shows such as Gilmore Girls and her current program Mike & Molly but is a more recently minted star on the big screen. She emerged in a breakout role as a rambunctious and occasionally lewd member of a wedding party in 2011’s Bridesmaids and solidified her status this year as a star who can open a movie by playing a crook who plagues Jason Bateman’s character in the surprise hit Identity Thief. The actresses had never met until Bullock called McCarthy in her trailer on the Identity Thief set to see whether she was interested in playing Mullins. As in any screen pairing, chemistry would be critical — The Heat calls for their characters to evolve from elbowflinging rivals to glass-clinking buddies over less than two hours. “You have to instantly bond, instantly create a relationship in this weird world that we’re in,” Bullock said. “She was game for anything,” McCarthy said. “It was fun to poke and jab at her.” When it comes to the box office, The Heat is in heavy male company, coming out in the hyper-masculine season of movies such as Man of Steel and The Lone Ranger. The film was originally scheduled to be released in the spring, but 20th Century Fox shifted it to Friday, in part because the summer had little to offer women but also because The Heat tested so well, according to Feig. “We were completely fourquad,” Feig said, referring to the four demographic groups as measured by movie studios — men and women over and under age 25. “I made sure we didn’t tilt too much either way. The lady jokes I like are like the Spanx. It’s relatable to women, and yet guys can find it kind of funny.”

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8 p.m. TNT Perception Eric McCormack returns for Season 2 as eccentric neuroscience professor Daniel Pierce, whose paranoid schizophrenia helps the FBI solve crimes. This season, Pierce’s personal life is even more complicated. He finds it difficult to walk away from his imaginary friendship with Natalie Vincent, but he must do so in order to embark on a romance with his doctor, Caroline Newsome. Kelly Rowan (The O.C.) plays both Natalie and Caroline. 9 p.m. on ABC Body of Proof In “Abducted — Part 1,” Megan (Dana Delany, pictured) teams up with police detective and former flame Tommy Davidson (Mark Valley) and his partner, Adam Schaeffer (Elyes Gabel), to stop a serial killer who’s taken Lacey (Mary Mouser) hostage.

3:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey A couple try to blend seven children into a family; hidden cameras reveal germs; Judge Lynn Toler. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Actor Zac Efron; actress Rebel Wilson; Ed Sheeran performs. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura Escenario para la discusión de todo tipo de asuntos que afectan a la comunidad en la actualidad. Conducido por: Laura Bozzo. KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Fighting families search for solutions. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show A doctor cured her own energy crisis; three instant fatigue fighters;

stopping emotional eating. KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste María Celeste conduce este espacio donde informa al televidente sobre el acontecer diario, presenta videos dramáticos e insólitos, además ofrece segmentos de interés. KASY The Steve Wilkos Show E! Access Hollywood Live FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC The FOX Report With Shepard Smith 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Hannity MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show

7:15 p.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher 8:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 E! E! News FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 9:00 p.m. FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan 10:00 p.m.KTEL Al Rojo Vivo María Celeste conduce este espacio donde informa al televidente sobre el acontecer diario, presenta videos dramáticos e insólitos, además ofrece segmentos de interés. CNN Piers Morgan Live FNC Hannity MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show With Jay Leno Actress Sandra Bullock; comic Bob Saget; Il Volo performs.


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-5

sfnm«classifieds classifieds to place an ad, call

986-3000

or email us: classad@sfnewmexican.com visit santafenewmexican.com sfnmclassifieds.com (800) 873-3362

»real estate«

SANTA FE

1804 San Felipe Circle, House, Guest, 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath. Remodeled. 3,352 SF, on acequia. Private well, 1/3 acre. Irrigated landscaping, garage. $585,500. 505-577-6300

SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

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

RIVER RANCH Private River Frontage 1,000 Acres, high Ponderosa Pine Ridges. Well, utilities. Rare opportunity to own this quality ranch. $1,599,000 Great New Mexico Properties www.greatnmproperties.com 888-883-4842

SANTA FE HABITAT FOR HUMANITY

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

is offering home ownership opportunities. Own a 2 to 4 bedroom home for $400 to $600 monthly. (está ofreciendo la oportunidad de que sea propietario de una casa de 2 a 4 recámaras, por un pago de $400 a $600 mensuales). To apply, call 505-986-5880 Monday - Friday, 1 to 4 p.m. (Para aplicar llame al 505-986-5880 Lunes - Viernes de 1 a 4 p.m.)

3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath in La Cienega area. Outside living area, covered parking, all appliances included. Property is fenced with gate. Being completely Refurbished. Property includes office building, shop and barn. Ready by 7/15/13. Rent $1,750 monthly, Clem Murski at 979-5510230.

»rentals«

TRIPLEX, 2 BEDROOM HOME, plus 2 apartments. Close to Mall. Excellent Investment. Located in the Las Acequias Subdivision. $340,000, 575-910-1131.

DESIGNER RESTORED S T A M M off of Osage. 3 bedroom 2 bath. Vigas, wood floors, kiva, portal, stunning landscaping, 1140 sq.ft., Qualified buyers only. $289,500. 505-930-0993

Garden of gods area South of Santa Fe on State Hwy 14, near Village of Cerrillos. Possible 50% rent reduction in exchange for about 20 hours help per month around house and property. 2 room studio with kitchen. Shared bath house. Beautiful, quiet area. $500, 1 person, $600 2 people. Available July 1, 2013. Call 505-473-0797. HUMMINGBIRD HEAVEN! 25 minutes North East. SPOTLESS! 2 baths, terraces, granite, radiant. Private. Safe. Acre. Non-smoking. No pets. $1400. 505-310-1829

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

CONVENIENT LIVING. Security patrolled. 2 blocks to Plaza. Cozy & Bright. Studio Apartment, $390 square feet. $695. Parking available. No pets. 505988-1815

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

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

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

SALE OR LEASE Just North Santa Fe US285 4.5acres 6900sf HighBay building 1575sf Office, Home Jerry, 505-263-1476.

CONDO

CHARMING, CLEAN 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839 CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800 Private estate. Walled yards, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

24 - 7 Security Quail Run

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

THE RESERVE, 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM. Balcony, mountain views. Heated Pool, Spa and fitness center included. $950 monthly, 505-690-2202

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CHARMING ADOBE

on Onate Place. 1750 square feet, light & bright. Walled yard, wood floors, dishwasher, fireplace. Close to Railyard. Great live-work set-up. $1500 monthly. Non-smoking. 505-5771779

GUESTHOUSES 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

MODERN LOFT CONDO

Designed by Ricardo Legorreta. End unit in private location. Extra windows enhance this open floor plan which includes 1 bedroom, 1 bath. Large 1 car garage. High ceilings, stained concrete floors, large formal dining room, entry with large closet, custom amenitites in both the kitchen and bathroom. Gated private patio. Club House, gym, and pool. $1300 plus deposit. 818-599-5828

HOUSES FURNISHED ADOBE HOME in the Tranquil village of Cundiyo. Washer, dryer, full kitchen, furnished. Non-smoker pets ok. $700 monthly with water, electric. 505 501-5782

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

LOTS & ACREAGE

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH DOWNTO W N , quiet neighborhood, short distance to down town. Laundry facility on site. $695 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299 1 BEDROOM 1 BATH GUEST H O U S E . Rural living in city limits. Fenced yard nicely landscaped. $700 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

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

AGUILAR, COLORADO

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

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, plus den. 1450 square feet on greenbelts. Gas fireplace. Evaporative cooler, radiant heat. Two portals. Rancho Viejo, Windmill Ridge. $255,000. 505995-0846

LAND FOR SALE IN PECOS

2 acre lots and 3 acre parcel. Pinon covered. Great building sites! Possible owner financing. Call (505)490-1347 for more information.

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre

5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Well water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864. TEN TO Twenty Acre tracks, east of Santa Fe. Owner Financing. Payments as low as $390 a month. Negotiable down. Electricity, water, trees, meadows, views. Mobiles ok. Horses ok. 505-690-9953

1 UNIT AVAILABLE 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH

Upstairs Apartment, $675. Plus deposit, utilities. Coronado Condos. Please call 505-473-7366 or 505-5010847 for information or to view home.

2 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH. NICE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD.

900 square feet with yard. Off Cerrillos, near St. Michael’s Drive. $795 monthly, not including utilities, No Cats or dogs. Call, 505-470-0727.

2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH. VERY NICE. $725 PLUS UTILITIES. $500 DEPOSIT. WASHER, DRYER HOOK-UPS. 1311 RUFINA LANE. 505-699-3094 RAILYARD NEIGHBORHOOD! Picturesque adobe, walled yard, completely remodeled. 1 bedroom, kiva fireplace, covered porch, pet considered. $675 includes utilities. 505-8984168

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2 BEDROOM 1 BATH ON RUFINA LAN E, patio, fireplace, laundry facility on site. Close to Walmart, Taco Bell. $699 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH DOWNTOWN AREA , small three-plex, private yard, washer dryer hookups, beautiful location. $1000 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299

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(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.

Dowstairs Apartment, $625. Plus deposit, utilities. Coronado Condos. Please call 505-473-7366 or 505-5010847 for information or to view home.

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1 UNIT AVAILABLE 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH

SWEET HOME LOVELY GARDENS

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

1.00

a

ELDORADO AREA

HACIENDIA STYLE HOME

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH

VERY NICE AND CLEAN HOME. FENCED BACKYARD, DOUBLE CAR GARAGE, FIREPLACE. ALL APPLIANCES. $1,400. 505-920-4568

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OWNER FINANCED CONDO FSBO Beautiful fully furnished 1 bedroom 1 bath, gated community. pool, hot tub, exercise room. Close to Plaza and easy access to 285 North. $119,500. 10% down. $878.77 monthly at 5.5% interest for 15 years. 505-4731622

3700sq.ft.; 3 fireplace, 3 AC, Radiant Heat, 4 car garage, + 1 bedroom. guest apartment. Beautiful landcape, 2 adobe enclosed patios; Viking Appliances; high celings; large vigas, latias; many extras see web page. http://rudyrod82.com $585,000 Call, 505-670-0051.

3 BEDROOM 2 Bathroom Home in gated Vista Primera (Airport and 599)$1300 mo Spacious master bedroom double sinks. Call Brad 6905190.

TESUQUE ADOBE HOME

COUNTRY ENVIRONMENT Comfortable, fully furnished 1 bedroom. Small yard. Local shopping, restaurants. Non-smoking, no pets. $600 utilities included. $200 deposit. (505)471-0276

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

2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, Carport House For Rent In the Village of Cordova. 40 minute drive from Santa Fe. $550 Rent, $550 Deposit. 505-263-1420 or 505-351-4572.

CONVENIENT LIVING. Security patrolled. 2 blocks to Plaza. 1 Bedroom apartment furnished. Hardwood & carpeted floors. $800 monthly. Parking available. No pets. 505-988-1815

Downtown with country feel. Near Old Taos Highway. 2 bedroom 2 bath, study. $375,000 NM Properties and Homes 505-989-8860

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

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. $675 monthly. Fenced yard. 4 miles southwest of mall. Nice neighborhood. Washer/ dryer. Pets negotiable. 1/2 acre, dirt road. 800 square feet. 505-920-9748

LIKE NEW. Rancho Viejo 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. Plus office- playroom. Refrigerated air conditioning. 2 car garage. $1300 monthly. No smokers, no pets. 505-984-1414

APARTMENTS FURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, $850 per month, North side. Fireplace, reference lease, utilities paid, No Pets. 505-982-7922

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

*813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY - 2 AVAILABLE: LIVE-IN STUDIO , tile throughout, $680 gas and water paid. 1 BEDROOM with living room, $750 gas and water paid. BOTH: full bath and kitchen with small backyards. 1301 RUFINA LANE, 2 bedroom, 1 full bath, living/ dining room, washer/ dryer hookups, tile throughout. $765 PLUS utilities. DOWNTOWN: *1425 PASEO DE PERALTA, 1 bedroom, full bath & kitchen, tile throughout, $735 all utilities paid. Free laundry room. NO PETS IN ALL APARTMENTS! 505-471-4405

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

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

ARROYO HONDO 13 ACRES

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

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

Award-winning ZOCOLA CONDO

VIA CAB 2587 CALLE DELFINO Total remodel, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car, 2 Kiva, AC. Huge lot $290,000. 505-920-0146 1875 SQUARE FEET 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH FAIRWAY VILLAGE Laundry room, central heat and AC, 2 car garage, newly remodeled kitchen. New enclosed hot tub. Storage building, dog pen, covered concrete patio, pro-panel pitched roof, city water, sewage. Stucco, track lighting in closets. $195,000. Call Now! 505474-4811 or 505-414-2376

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

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B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

to place your ad, call OFFICES DOWNTOWN 239 JOHNSON STREET

Santa Fe style, includes large open space ideal for lawyers, realtors, gallery, restaurant, near O’Keeffe Museum. Great parking, skylights, courtyard. Up to 2,039 square feet. Call Carl for details: (505)988-4418. 505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com LOCATED ABOVE FORT MARCY PARK Amazing mountain and city views, 2 bedroom, 2 bath Townhome, wood floors, washer, dryer, 2 car garage $2,150 plus utilities. OLD SANTA FE CHARM 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fireplace, wood floors, saltillo tile, small fenced in backyard $850 plus utilities.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com NORTHSIDE CONDO 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath, Kiva fireplace, vigas, covered patio, washer, dryer. $995 plus utilities. OLD SANTA FE CHARM 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fireplace, wood floors, saltillo tile, small fenced in backyard $850 plus utilities.

HISTORIC HACIENDA NEAR HOSPITAL

2550 feet, 2 bedrooms plus study, 2 baths. Fireplaces, vigas and beams, saltillo and oak floors, granite kitchen. Laundry. Carport. Walled garden. $2100 plus utilities. 505-982-0596. LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271

Mid-century Santa Fe Classic. 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Gallery entry on acre near Museum Hill and Plaza. Open dining & living room, with Sangre views, hardwood floors, central AC, washer, dryer, security system, 2 car garage and carport, portal over looking private courtyard with mature shade tree. $2500 monthly plus utilities. 505-629-7619.

DARLING STUDIO 1 bedroom, full kithcen, tile counters, $550 plus utilities.

CHARMING, CENTRALLY LOCATED. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 1 CAR GARAGE. Wood floors, tile baths, kiva, mature landscaping. $1200 monthly . 505-470-2272 COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes to Santa Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet, affordable, luxury. 505-470-4269, 505455-2948. COUNTRY LIVING NEAR GLORIETA 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage or studio, 4 acres. $1050 monthly, references required. Available June. 303913-4965

CUSTOM HOME, HIGHWAY 14. 2 BEDROOMS. 1290 SQUARE FEET. All appliances, fenced yard. Views. $1200, first, last, deposit. 505-501-4124 www.santafenewmexicorentals.com /211main4rent.htm ELDORADO NEW, LARGE 3 bedroom, 3 bath, hilltop home. 12-1/2 acres. Energy efficient. All paved access from US 285. 505-660-5603

HURRY TO see this beautiful newly u p g r a d e d 3 bedroom 2 bath home off of Siringo Road, Carport, large back yard with storage shed, wood floors, washer dryer hookups. $1250 monthly. Chamisa Management Corp. 505-988-5299 NICE 2 BEDROOM , UTILITES PAID, $1050 MONTHLY Kiva fireplace, private backyard, bus service close. Possible Section 8. No pets. (505)204-6319

NEW SHARED OFFICE

$250 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

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

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives! Please call (505)983-9646.

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

CLOSE TO DOWNTOWN Main house - 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer, dryer, additional storgage available, $1200 plus utilities. Guest house - 1 bedroom, 1 bath, small yard $850 plus utilities. CHARMING 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath House. Near Plaza, Fireplace, Saltillo Floors, Washer, Dryer, Open floor plan, skylights, a lot of closets, private courtyards. Non smokers, No garage, $1,695 monthly with year lease. 256 La Marta Drive. 505-986-8901, 505-670-0093.

HALF-TIME OFFICE SHARE FOR BODY WORKER Rolfing, Orthobionomy... No oils, lotions, or fragrances. Sunny, clean space in professional building near Hospital. $350, 690-0078

QUIET 3 BEDROOM , 2 BATH. 5 MINUTES TO PLAZA. Remodeled, all appliances. Nonsmokers, No pets. Lease. $1100 Deposit, $1250 monthly. 303-332-9122 UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM 1 BATH, single garage. All appliances. Southside off Rufina. $950 monthly plus utilities & deposit. 505-670-4195 VIA CABALLERO, 4, 2, well maintained spacious home, 2 car garage, views, a must see. $2200 Western Equities 505-982-4201

LIVE IN STUDIOS

2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET

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

LIVE-IN STUDIOS

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

VACATION

»announcements«

ROOM FOR RENT $475 plus half utilities. New, 5 year old house, nicely furnished, kitchen access and house share!

Furnished or Unfurnished Bedroom with Private Bath Washer & Dryer. Safe, quiet, nice neighborhood. Close to Community College.

ADOPTION

Lease preferred, but not mandatory. Available July 1st 505-238-5711

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

TV book STORAGE SPACE A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 4x5 $45.00 5x7 $50.00 4x12 $55.00 6x12 $65.00 8x10 $65.00 10x10 $75.00 9x12 $80.00 12x12 $95.00 12x24 $195.00

HIGH-END EXECUTIVE RENTAL Views, 2 bedroom, office, 2 bathroom. Quiet neighborhood, Old Santa Fe Trail, Pet approval. $2,500, 505-795-3707 505-699-6161

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

FOUND

WAREHOUSES CENTRALLY LOCATED WAREHOUSE FOR RENT 1,600 sq. ft. warehouse in gated, fenced property on Pacheco Street. 1,600 area includes; 1 bathroom, furnace, and office area with upstairs storage. Walk through and overhead doors. $1,600 per month with $1,600 deposit and one year signed lease. Space is great for many things; work shop, auto shop, dance co, etc. Please call 505-983-8038 or email us at a1sspacheco@gmail.com

Have a product or service to offer?

IPOD AT Ski basin on Sunday 6/23/2013. Call to identify 505-9834828.

LOST CAT, GREY TA BB Y , "Kismet". 1-1/2 year old spayed female with multiple white highlights. Missing from the Rosario neighborhood since Wednesday night. Friendly, sweet. If seen, please call 505-660-3025. DOG, BROWN MALE CHIHUAHUA. 10 pounds. Lost on Jaguar near State Police and Capital High School. REWARD! Any information, please call Frances, 505-988-2297.

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

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

GREY MALE TABBY, BLACK COLLAR named Calyx. Last seen off Bishop’s Lodge and Artist Road. 505-795-1982, 505-577-5889.

RETAIL ON THE PLAZA

Discounted rental rates . Brokers Welcome. Call Southwest Asset Management, 505-988-5792. ST. MICHAEL’S DRIVE OUTSTANDING SPACE FOR RETAIL OR OFFICE. 505-992-6123, OR 505-690-4498

MANUFACTURED HOMES

ST. MICHAEL’S VILLAGE WEST SHOPPING CENTER

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

ROOMS

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

FANTASTIC RETAIL SPACE LOCATION ON CERRILLOS ROAD ACROSS FROM RAILYARD. APPROXIMATELY 1900 SQUARE FEET. LOTS OF PARKING. 505470-7458, DAYS ONLY.

S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906

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

986-3000

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

ROOMMATE WANTED QUIET AND PEACEFUL. $350 PER MONTH, SHARE UTILITIES. 505-4733880

service«directory CALL 986-3000

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts to learn how we can help grow your business! CLASSES

CONSTRUCTION

HANDYMAN

LANDSCAPING

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

Landscaping Plus

CLEANING A+ Cleaning

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

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

HOUSE SITTING EXPERIENCED AND RELIABLE Great with pets and flexible to travel within the Santa Fe area. References available. (505)-670-1003 Carrie-ccarr23@unm.edu/

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina, 920-0493

CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUT

Windows and carpet. Own equipment. $18 an hour. Silvia, 505-920-4138. HANDYMAN, LANDSCAPING, FREE ESTIMATES, BERNIE, 505-316-6449. LAURA & ARTURO CLEANING SERVICES: Offices, apartments, condos, houses, yards. Free phone estimates. Monthly, weekly. 15 Years experience. 303-505-6894, 719-291-0146

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

LANDSCAPING

MATURE, RESPONSIBLE man looking for position as house-sitter, caretaker, resident. blongarborist@wildblue.net Bill 505-919-8453, 405-996-0411.

Chris Keiper

27B Paseo de River • Santa Fe

(505)690-9742 chris@trafficcontrolrentals.net ELECTRICAL SEMI-RETIRED ELECTRICIAN PLUS PLUMBING Many years experience in different types of electrical systems, intelligent thought out guaranteed work. Alan Landes 1-800-660-4874.

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

IRRIGATION PROFESSIONAL IRRIGATION

sprinklers, drip, new installations, and rennovations. Get it done right the first time. Have a woman do it. Lisa, 505-310-0045. TURN ON...TURN OFF Irrigation Services. $10 off start-up service. License #83736. 505-983-3700

LANDSCAPING TRASH HAULING, Landscape clean up, tree cutting, anywhere in the city and surrounding areas. Call Gilbert, 505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ESTIMATES!

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

GREENCARD LANDSCAPING

Plan Now! New Installations and Restorations. Irrigation, Hardscapes, Concrete, retaining walls, Plantings, Design & intelligent drought solutions. 505-995-0318 I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599. JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112

L A N D S C A P E R - will do flagstone, moss rock, painting, fencing and stucco work. All work done with pride. Please call Luis, 505-577-8874. PROFESSIONAL, HONEST, REASONABLE Excavating, Paving, Landscaping, Demolition and Concrete work. Licensed, Bonded, Insured References. 505-470-1031

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

505-819-9836 MOVERS

Aardvark DISCOUNT M O VERS serving our customers with oldfashioned respect and care since 1976. John, 505-473-4881. PASO DEL N O RTE. Home, Offices: Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly & Reliable. Weekends, 505-3165380.

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

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

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

PLASTERING STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Faux Plaster, paint to match, synthetic systems. Locally owned. Bonded, Insured, Licensed. 505-316-3702

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

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

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

EXTRA LARGE UNIT BLOWOUT SPECIAL

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

DALE’S TREE SERVICE.

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

THE TREE SURGEON Removes dangerous limbs and trees any size. Average cost $50 per limb, $750 per tree. Insured, 505-514-7999


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds LOST

»jobs«

LOST CAT: Grey tabby named Pricilla. Last seen June 16th at Camino Dimitrio and Calle Electra area in Eldorado. Please call 225-939-3447.

to place your ad, call IN HOME CARE

DISABLED MAN NEEDS HONEST DEPENDABLE HELP. Mornings. 505-490-0429

MANAGEMENT FACILITIES MANAGER

Needed for the Santa Fe Animal Shelter.

ADMINISTRATIVE FULL-TIME MONDAY- FRIDAY 8-5:30 RECEPTIONIST- OFFICE ASSISTANT Data of entry, taking phone orders, customer service, light cashier duties. Apply: billingwm@newmexico.com

LOST CAT: Recently seen in your area! Sammy is a black and white, 19 pound friendly cat. Please Rescue! Call if seen, Sandi, 575-202-4076.

AUTOMOTIVE

Salary is dependent on experience. Health care and paid time off is included. Fax resumes to: 505-820-6901 or email rhernandez@sfhumesociety. org ABSOLUTELY NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

LOST GERMAN SHEPHERD. black & tan female. 2 stars from snake left of nose. Lost Tuesday night Canyoncito Ojo De La Vaca area. 05-795-5079 MY FATHER Lawrence T. Valdez passed away on May 24th 2013. During that time he left his flat bed trailer with someone who is currently cleaning out their orchard. That person was going to load the trailer with wood for my dad for the winter. The trailer is black with chevy hub caps on the rims, it is a tounge tow 16’. It also has a metal sign screwed on the floor boards towards the rear side of the trailer. I hope that the person that has it returns it I would greatly appreciate it. Please contact Justin Valdez at (505) 929-1426 with any information thank you.

The Facilities Manager manages facilities, grounds, and vehicle maintenance, safety, purchasing, and janitorial with the goal of keeping the vehicles and the physical plant safe and in good working order. The manager is also responsible for preparing and managing the facilities budget.

UNITED WORLD

COLLEGE-USA

Seeks a JIFFY LUBE is hiring for various Part Time automotive positions in the Santa Fe area. Please apply online at www.myjiffy.com or fax your resume to 505-897-6706 or email beverley@myjiffy.com

ALUMNI RELATIONS

MANAGER

For more information and to Download an application Visit our website at www.uwc-usa.org/employment EEOE

COMPUTERS IT OFFICE OF THE STATE ENGINEER/ INTERSTATE STREAM COMMISSION (OSE/ISC)

IT BUSINESS ANALYST

This position serves as a liaison between the IT Applications workgroup and employees to conduct business and information system needs analysis, lead business process redesign efforts, gather and translate business requirements into functional information system design specifications. This position requires a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science, Finance, Operations Management, or Industrial Engineering: 3 years IT business analysis experience. Salary range $48,963 - $87,048. This position will work out of Santa Fe or Albuquerque.

Be Seen & Read Your

L og o

Here

986-3000

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

MEDICAL DENTAL

SALES MARKETING

SANTA FE CARE CENTER MDS COORDINATOR We are currently looking for a part time MDS Coordinator. Hours will flexible according to census. Responsibilities: Would be to complete MDS according to State and Federal Regulations. Qualifications: Registered Nurse, Experience in completing MDS. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSES WE HAVE OPENING FOR Full time The position requires that you must be a REGISTERED NURSE. The duties will be to help the DON with dept. Oversight & Systems Management. This is a salary position. CERTIFIED NURSING ASST. ATTN: CNA’S We have a CNA position Available We have a part time and a full time position. The Hours are as follows: 6 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., and 6 p.m. - 6:30 a.m. If interested, please contact Raye Highland RN/DON, at 505982-2574. Also PRN and part time shifts available. LPN/RN ATTN; NURSES Full time Positions The shifts are 6 a.m.-6:30 p.m. or 6 p.m. - 6:30 a.m., Any questions, please contact Raye Highland RN/DON or Craig Shaffer Administrator. at 505-982-2574 Also PRN and part time shifts Available.

Non-profit seeks Mac savvy student for internship. Social media, editing, website, correspondence skills. Possible permanent employment. Please call 970-379-1508

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

Now available in-column in The Classifieds from

REWARD! For lost Minature Pincher. No questions asked. Babe is wearing a red collar with tags. Has a knick on one of her ears. Please call 505-4705702 or 505-471-8123 REWARD. MENS SILVER W e d d i n g Ring. Lost in Jackalope, Sanbusco, or Zia Diner Area. 580-225-0654

Please submit a cover letter and resume to: Terry Passalacqua, Head of School Desert Academy 7300 Old Santa Fe Trail Santa Fe, NM, 87505 Or via email to: communications@desert academy.org For more information on Desert Academy, please visit our website: www.desertacademy.org

SCHOOLS - CAMPS School Time Children’s Fundraiser. Super car and bike show, Saturday, June 29, 2013. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Santa Fe Downs.

SCRAP METALS, nuts, and botls. Stephanie 505-989-8634 VIGAS ALL Sizes, Fencing Material 6 feet high by 300 feet length. MIscellaneous wood for building or fire. Bob 505-470-3610

CLOTHING 5 GOOD MAN’S Heavy Knit Long Sleeve Shirts. $30 All, 505-954-1144. FEET TIRED? MBT BLACK SHOES. Womens 10, mens 8. Like new! $25. 505-474-9020 GOOD MAN’S Shorts, sizes 36-38, Dillards, 11 pairs, $30 for all. 505-9541144. GOOD QUALITY Dress Slacks, adjustable waist. Sizes 44x32, 38x34. $10 each. 505-954-1144. VERY FLATTERING skirted bathing suit. Worn 3 times. Can send photos. Geri - 505-438-0738

ANTIQUES COLLECTIBLES CHARLIE’S ANTIQUES 811 CERRILLOS TUESDAY- SUNDAY 11-5:30. WORLD COLLECTIBLES of art, jewelry, pottery, military and more! We buy. (505)470-0804 NORWEGIAN ANTIQUE CAST IRON WAFFLE & KROMKAKE IRON with wooden cone. $50. 505-466-2530

DIVORCE LIQUIDATION. Autographed guitar collection. Clapton, McCartney, Eagles, others. Valued over $2500 each. Asking $475 each with certification and appraisal. 561880-7352 Encyclopedias -

THE SWAIA SANTA FE INDIAN MARKET is now hiring for the following position:

MEDICAL DENTAL NEW MEXICO SINUS INSTITUTE is currently recruiting a Mid-level Practitioner in Rio Rancho & Roswell The ideal candidate would have ENT experience or a desire to be trained, be certified, and possess a New Mexico License and DEA. This individual would need to be committed to quality care while treating for patients in a fast-paced environment. Competitive compensation and benefit package with CME, Medical, Dental, Vision, malpractice. Salary 90K with performance incentives. To apply, send resume to Steve Harris at sharris.pa@gmail.com PLANNED PARENTHOOD is seeking a Health Center Manager for our Santa Fe clinic. Apply at www.pprm.org, fax 303-861-0282. EOE

PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE Has an immediate opening for a

Registered Nurse

Full-Time and Part-Time. Santa Fe, and surrounding areas. We offer competitive salaries.

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

50 gal water heater (American Water Heater Company) Nina 577-3751

ESTATE SALE BROADWAY THEATER DIRECTOR

Barricade Crew 8/15 - 8/18.Ability to direct traffic flow and give clear instructions. Hand out SWAIA approved literature. Must be friendly yet assertive, extremely dependable and prompt, able to work long hours outdoors at one designated barricade point. Zero tolerance for alcohol and drug use. Mandatory training session required for this position on 8/9, if hired.

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

HIGH QUALITY ELECTRIC RANGE $300 505-954-1144 Sunshine Legend Propane Grill, with griddle, wooden shelves. $100 OBO. 505-231-9133

Please call the SWAIA Office to pick up an application, 505-983-5220. EOE

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

SALES MARKETING EXPERIENCED SALESPERSON Wanted Local design showroom seeks experienced salesperson for flooring and solid-surface countertop sales. Please fax resume to 505-467-8016 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

WASHER AND DRYER PEDESTALS FOR FRONT LOADING MACHINES. NEW $458 ASKING $350. 505-470-9820. WASHER, DRYER set, old but still works, $50. 505-690-9235

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

Please contact Carol, 505-982-8581.

in the Pecos, NM area.

THE UNM TAOS BRANCH, NORTHERN EARLY CHILDHOOD TRAINING & TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (TTAP) IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A HALF-TIME TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT SPECIALIST SERVING CHILD CARE EDUCATORS ACROSS NORTH CENTRAL NEW MEXICO. BASED OUT OF THE SANTA FE OFFICE. ********************************* Training & Devt Job Title: Specialist- TTAP Program Part Time Department: UNM-Taos BranchBased out of Santa Fe Posting # 0820455 ********************************* All positions will remain open until filled. For a detailed job description and how to apply visit our website at: https://unmjobs.unm.edu/ The University of New Mexico is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer and educator

HOSPITALITY New restaurant, Omira Grill, looking for server and cook positions. Must have passion for food and want to learn and grow with the restaurant. 505-930-1444.

505-983-1380

Raypak boiler

• CAREGIVERS VACANCY ANNOUNCEMENT

CATHOLIC CHRISTIAN STREET PREACHER, Thomas Horan Jr. lectures end-time prophecies, with art paintings displayed. 6/25/13, LaFarge Library, (Llano Street), 12-3.

»merchandise«

OLD MARBLE DOUBLE BATHROOM SINK. Good condition. All parts. $100. 505-466-8808

1966 CHEVY PICK-UP 350, V-8 CASH OR CHECKS ONLY. OLD LARGE MORRIS CHAIR, original upholstery. Queen Ann. $100. 505466-8808

When you need

THE BEST OF New Mexico, start with

Looking for

SMALL WHITE-GREY DOG in L a Cienega area. $1000 gift certificate reward! Please call 505-629-8500 or 505-316-1533. She is very missed!

PUBLIC NOTICES

Chalmers Capitol Ford Lincoln is accepting resumes to hire a professional with a strong Automotive Sales Background Automotive Sales Experience is preferred, but we will train the right individual. We are passionately committed to our community, our customers, but most of all - our employees. We offer affluent clientele, constant traffic, incredible inventory, we promote from within. Submit your resume to. rsalazar@ chalmerscapitolford.com

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

PROFESSIONAL HOME HEALTH CARE

REWARD! WHITE SIBERIAN HUSKY, male. Blue eyes. Has tags & chip. Goldmine Road, Cerrillos, 6/23. Needs meds. 609-752-2588

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

Sales - Automotive

GE Spacemaker Microwave XL 1400

EDUCATION

Please see the qualifications & instructions for submitting a resume below: *BA, equivalent or higher in Spanish (or related degree) *Experience teaching ELE at secondary level *Native or near-native speaking proficiency *Part time position *Knowledge of/experience with the International Baccalaureate curriculum is preferred but not required.

ASSORTED STEEL BUILDINGS Value discounts as much as 30% Erection info available Source#18X 800-964-8335

GE Profile Double oven 1 convection

SPANISH TEACHER WANTED!

"PIPPA", Our 6 pound, female Havanese/ Yorkie mix, grey & tan. Escaped from yard Friday night near E. Zia & Old Pecos Trail. Grey rhinestone collar, black harness--but not wearing her tag. Long legs, delicate body, sweet natured. Microchipped, spayed. My best companion and friend...please help her find her way home! 505-603-5049 cell.

Peruvian Connection

Looking for friendly, energetic, parttime sales associate, includes Saturdays, Sundays, 15 to 20 hours. Please apply in person, 328 South Guadalupe Street.

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

The OSE/ISC is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Desert Academy in Santa Fe, New Mexico is seeking a part-time Spanish teacher for grades 7 - 12 beginning September 2013. Desert Academy is an authorized International Baccalaureate World School offering the Middle Years and Diploma Programmes to approximately 180 students in grades 6 - 12. We are looking for an experienced teacher of Spanish to participate in a challenging, internationally recognized curriculum that values the individual, teaches the whole student, and privileges inquiry and process over absolutes and products.

BUILDING MATERIALS

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

Open 6/20/13 - 7/11/13. Apply at www.spo.state.nm.us. Refer to requisition #2013-02878 .

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

B-7

Please call 505-982-8581 for more information.

RADIOGRAPHIC CERTIFIED DENTAL ASSISTANT

Position available in a oral surgery based practice. Qualifications include but not limited to: New Mexico Board of Dental Healthcare radiographic certified, dental assisting experience, high level of computer skills, able to focus and follow directions, exceptional communication skills and team oriented. Submit resume: Attention Cheryl, Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Center of Santa Fe, 1645 Galisteo Street, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Fax: 505-983-3270. RPRO RENAISSANCE, LLC is looking for an O c c u p a t i o n a l TherapistSenior Director of Rehabilitation. We are recruiting an Occupational Therapist- Senior Director of Rehabilitation with the following experience: * Bachelor Degree in Occupational Therapy * 5 years experience as OT required. * Must have OT license. Position requires travel to multiple anticipated locations including Santa Fe, NM, Espanola, NM, and Taos, NM. RPRO Renaissance, LLC offers competitive salaries. Please send resume to: Tiffani Hamilton RPRO Renaissance, LLC. 117 West Main Street, Allen, TX 75013

THE

OLDEST

newspaper

in the WEST.

ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE The Santa Fe New Mexican is seeking a dynamic media sales executive to represent its award winning publications and state of the art digital platforms to existing and future advertising clients. This position manages relationships with clients to grow and develop their business needs. Maintains a thorough understanding of each customer’s business goals, products and services. In addition is aware of client’s industry and provides appropriate advertising solutions. Will be expected to maintain comprehensive understanding of competitive media and understand how the utilization of other media sources fit with customer’s strategic business objectives. Actively seeks out new business to meet or exceed sales goals. QuaLificaTiOnS Requires a college degree or equivalent sales experience. Must have a minimum of two years plus consultative sales experience. Must have demonstrated ability to prospect qualified leads. Ability to sell a wide range of products. Must have knowledge of sales process, the ability to establish product value and close a sale in a timely manner. Understands strengths and weaknesses of competitive media. Must have demonstrated territory management experience. Must have strong negotiation, presentation and problem-solving skills. Excellent oral and written communication skills and be proficient in Microsoft Office applications. Must be driven, proactive and have a strong desire to achieve results and be successful. Must have proof of valid driver’s license, auto insurance and have reliable transportation. Base salary, team bonus and commission plan are offered with an excellent benefits package. Apply with cover letter and resume to: Tamara M. Hand, Advertising Director The Santa Fe New Mexican, 202 East Marcy St., Santa Fe, NM 87501 or e-mail thand@sfnewmexican.com No phone calls, please. Application deadline: Friday, July 12, 2013


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

sfnm«classifieds COLLECTIBLES

to place your ad, call MISCELLANEOUS

FURNITURE

986-3000

MISCELLANEOUS

BEN HUR. Best Picture 1959, Academy Award. VHS. $15. 505-474-9020

BEN HUR. Best Picture 1959, Academy Award. VHS. $15. 505-474-9020

RECUMBENT CYCLE, $100. TREADMILL, $200. HEALTH-RIDER, $100. WOMEN’S RALEIGH, 6-speed MOUNTAIN BIKE, Like new. $150. Cash only. 505-992-8852

4’X4’ OAK WALL BOARD. Like new with dry marker board, flip chart, and pull-down screen. Originally $900. Best offer. 505-920-7275

TRAILER SKIRTING. White vinyl, approximately 27"H, 28x80. $100. 505692-9188

FIREWOOD-FUEL

BALING TWINE used Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888

WHEELED WALKER: Foldable. Adjustable. Perfect condition. $20. 505-2319133

COACH, BLACK leather garment bag, like new, used once $100, 505-9895366

WOODEN PALLETS - Scott 505-4769692

FURNITURE 6 PERSON DINING TABLE. $100, 505490-9095.

SIDE TABLES 12 x 34 x 42 with Willows $250 each. Very Colorful. 505982-4926 WALNUT BOOKCASES, open shelves. 4 1/2 x 3 x 12, $45 each. 505-989-5366

COMPRESSOR 2HP 7 gallon tank on wheels, $65. 505-662-6396 FAUCET AERATOR, brand new still in package. Kohler, polished brass 15/16 male part no. 41007VF. $17. 505753-3164

HEAT & COOLING

Feet Tired? MBT BLACK SHOES. Womens 10, mens 8. Like new! $25. 505-474-9020

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

Foreign language study books. French, German, Russian. $5 each obo, 505-231-9133

Holmes Standing, Oscilating Floor Fan. Works Great! $20, 505-231-9133. LARGE AIR CONDITIONER (swamp cooler), side draft. $100. Tom, 505692-9188.

ANTIQUE COFFEE TABLE. White wash finish over wood, diamond shape cutouts along sides, heavy duty removable glass top. 44"x23"x19". $99. 774-400-4646 cell.

YORUBA, NIGERIA, Vintage Strip Woven Cotton Ashoke cloth. 31x45, $60, 505-795-9009

OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT

DIGITAL FAX- ANSWERING MACHINE. Sharp Ink-jet. New, with manual & ink. $35. 505-231-9133

OFFICE DESKS in good condition 505-466-1525

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

ATTRACTIVE GLASS-TOP END TABLE. Metal legs with faux verde marble finish. $40. 505-231-9133

LARGE ROCKY MOUNTAIN BULL ELK.

large antler spread six points per side, 46" length, 38" spread, nice for home, office, lodge, conference room, gallery, casino, lounge or other. $3,000. Santa Fe, 520-906-9399.

LARGE COUCH 86" x 38", good condition, $95. 505-438-3301

USED 3 ring binders in good condition, 30 to 40, inezthomas@msn.com or 505-989-1859

RESTAURANT CLOSING! Everything must go. Furniture, equipment Hobart dishwasher, walk-in freezer- cooler, steam table, 20’ hood system, art, small wares. Michael, 505-438-3862, 505-990-6580.

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

LAWN & GARDEN

EUREKA PUP Tent for two. Perfect condition. Includes storage bag. 1/2 Price of $90. 505-989-4114

BIRDERS ALERT: Selling Seed Hanging tray, seed tube feeder, cage, crook pole, hummer feeder. All for $90. 505-989-4114

THERM-A-REST AIR mattress in bag. Perfect condition. 1/2 Price of $90. 505-989-4114

HORSE MANURE (free tractor loading) Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888 HORSE MANURE (you haul any amount) Barbara 466-2552

LEATHER, full-grain, cream color. Good condition. 4 items: Sofa $600, Loveseat $500, Chair $350, Ottoman $200. Orig $4K. 505-989-3591 OAK 2 door filing cabinet with locks. $75, 505-989-5366 OFFICE DESK CHAIR, never used. Black, swivel, with arms, adjustable height. $60. 774-400-4646 cell.

QUEEN MATTRESS. Good condition. $30. 505-662-6396 ROCKING CHAIR, Teak. Excellent condition. $70. 505-474-9097 SOUTHWESTERN STYLE COFFEE TABLE Tinwork trim under glass top, 39" square, $150. 505-989-3492. SOUTHWESTERN QUALITY COUCH, down filled, peach, linen. $100, 505474-7005 TEAK ENTERTAINMENT table, with shelves. 40" x 28" x 16", $90, 505-9895366

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

IRRIGATION DRIP System - Tim 505501-1325

TV RADIO STEREO SONY SPEAKERS, Model SS-82600U. Black. $40. Great condition. Call 505231-9133.

»animals«

ORGANIC HORSE Manure Barbara 471-3870

DOG HOUSE. Rubbermaid Igloo. 32"Lx24"Wx26"H. Opening 12" Wide. $129 new, sell for $70. 505-989-4114

FREE TO good home. Spayed female black calico cat. 2 years old. Well behaved and indoor only. Call 505-6299215.

1978 CHEVY, 4 door .75 ton Truck TOO MUCH to list! This is a complete restored custom truck, with a racing cam and only 2,000 miles on engine, loaded with chrome and extras, 23,000.00 in reciepts not including labor, trophy winner, with first place, best of show, engine, class, sound system and more. I can send photos. Call for details make offer. 505-4693355 $23,000

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

Even a stick kid gets it.

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

Toy Box Too Full?

CAR STORAGE FACILITY

sfnm«classifieds 986-3000 classad@sfnewmexican.com

PAWS PLAZA , no appointment needed. Bath, brushing, nail trimming services. Gentle, fast, afforadable. Call 505-820-7529 or come in to Paws Plaza. 4th St. off Cerillos, behind Empire Lumber.

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

TRAINING PET INFORMATION flyers and pamphlets - Geri 438-0738

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000 DOMESTIC 2002 Cadillac Eldorado ESC. Great condition. Limited edition. H a v e maintenance receipts. $8,000 OBO. 505-603-9087

»finance«

PLANT STAND or Stool, wood, metal. 14" x 16", round. $10, 505-954-1144. POTTING BENCH. Hand made with storage shelf. $15 505-231-9133 TOMATO CAGE. 32"H. Yellow powder coated. $10. 505-989-4114

MISCELLANEOUS 3 RUBBER MADE Type Boxes. 1 large tote bin, 1 medium box with lids. $15, 505-954-1144.

Tube feeding sets: 36 sealed packages of Kangaroo Joey, 1000ml pump sets with FeedOnly Anti-Free Flow (AFF) Valve. Suitable for use with pump or gravity drip. Nina (505)988-1889

pets

Santa Fe Animal Shelt 983-4309 ext. 610

make it better.

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

1982 Chrysler Cordoba 318 4BBL rear power amplifier, mag wheels, all power, excellent maintenance records, second owner, $3,400 or best offer. noga7@sisna.com 505-471-3911

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC M a g a zines most recent 5 years in mint condition great for school or reading room. Email: h.wayne.nelson@q.com or 989-8605 NYLON POTATO or onion 50lb sacks Dan 455-2288 ext. 101 Ornamental bird cage far east style carving. aproximately 11" x 15" x 25". $25, 505-231-9133

SIX 5 Gallon plastic drinking water bottles, $5 each. 505-982-1010

Life is good ...

pets

DOG BED, Orvis. Green zippered 30" round cover on top of zippered 2nd cover. $80 new, sell for $40. 505-9894114

It sells, you make money.

BEAT THE Heat! Swimming pool 16’ x 3.5’. Almost New $140 includes never used pump, filter, maintenance kit! 505-690-2191

CLASSIC CARS

TYPEWRITER AND a Xerox tabletob copy machine - 505-983-1380

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

HARDWOOD TABLE. Made in Paraguay. Great dining or picnic table. $95. 505-466-1975

PETS SUPPLIES

3 BUSINESS phones in good shape Gabe 466-0999

HP Printer 13X LASER PRINTER CARTRIDGE (505)983-4277

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

"COMET"- GENTLE MUSTANG. 3 year old mare, 12 hands. Sweet, kids pony. Halter broke. $125 USFS adoption fee. Will deliver. John, 505-419-9754

HP PHOTO Smart model #D7560, 983-3838

6’ X 9’, white, Area Rug. $65, 505-4909095. ADIRONDACK CHAIR. Weathered teak. From Wood Classics. Needs minor repairs. Originally $265. Now $75. 505-989-4114

»cars & trucks«

THE GODFATHER! Collector’s Edition. 7-piece VHS. Perfect condition. $25. 505-474-9020

EXERCISE EQUIPMENT

OAK, HICKORY, PECAN, FIREWOOD. Seasoned, any quantity. Stacking extra. $550 percord with delivery. For fireplace or BBQ. 505-919-8453

HORSES

Quality clothing, accessories, books, native american jewelry, artwork, new fire extinguishers, towels. Call for appointment 505-670-1786 or 970379-1508

THE GODFATHER! Collector’s Edition. 7-piece VHS. Perfect condition. $25. 505-474-9020

HUNDREDS OF T R U C K L O A D S . We thinned 30 plus acres of Ponderosa and some CEDAR FIREWOOD AND FENCEPOSTS. It is piled in random lengths and diameters in our forest. SOLD BY TRUCKLOAD DEPENDING ON BED SIZE. $70 FOR 8 FOOT BED. You load. Five miles east of Peñasco. Call for haul times- days and location. 575-587-0143 or 505-660-0675

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

HORSES

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

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

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


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

DOMESTIC

4X4s

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

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

WHAT YOU see is what you get! 1990 TOYOTA 4RUNNER. Runs great. $2850.

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

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

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

GET NOTICED!

Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out Call our helpfull Ad-Visors for details

2003 LEXUS ES-300 SEDAN FWD One Owner, Clean Carfax, Records, Manuals, X-REMOTES, 60,567 Miles, Non-Smoker, Garaged, Chrome Wheels, Loaded, Pristine $13,995 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2009 SCION XD, 31k miles, automatic transmission, power everything, white, excellent condition inside and out, studded snow tires, $11,500. 575779-7672.

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

Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

2010 Toyota Corolla LE. Only 12k miles, like new, clean, 1 owner, CarFax. $15,471 Call 505-216-3800

SMART Convertible 2008 Mercedes built, 21k, 1 Owner, Garaged. Leather, heated seats, tinted windows, AC, Premium Sound, Impeccable $11,395. 505-699-0918 2010 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID FWD One Owner, Local, Service Records, Carfax, 38,109 Miles, Garaged, NonSmoker, Remaining Factory Warranty, Pristine $19,495. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2001 BMW 330Xi. Amazing 54k miles!, clean, 1 owner, impeccably maintained. $12,461 Call 505-216-3800.

1 9 99 NISSAN Sentra with a new clutch. Very clean reliable car. Really good gas milage, clean inside and outside. Clean title, the engine is completly clean, no leaking oil, no check engine light. $3200 O.B.O. Call or txt 505-469-7295

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

GET NOTICED!

BANK REPO! 2011 Honda CRV EX-L NAVI - Every option including navigation! low miles, clean 1 owner CarFax, gorgeous! $24,972. Call 505-216-3800

2008 Jeep Rubicon Low miles, custom wheels, looks and runs great! $21,350 Sam’s Used Cars 505-820-6595

2009 HONDA CIVIC HYBRID. EXCELLENT CONDITION. ONE OWNER. 57K MILES. GRAY WITH TAN LEATHER SEATS. $13,400 OBO. CALL BILL 210744-1333.

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

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

CALL 986-3000

RECUCED!

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

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

2008 MERCEDES-BENZ CLK350. Extra clean, 43k miles. moonroof, CD, cruise, keyless go, power windows, locks, seats. Alloy wheels. Clean CarFax, freshly serviced. $19495. Top dollar paid for trade-ins. Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe 505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6

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

2007 TOYOTA CAMRY HYBRID , 57,000 miles, 35, 38 MPG, Beige with sand interior, power seats, alloy wheels, new Michelin tires, JBL sound system includes 6-disc indash CD changer with bluetooth and 8 speakers, power windows and doorlocks, leather, moonroof, one owner, very clean. $14,995, Call Jim at 505-466-4714

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

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

2008 HONDA Fit Sport, plum colored, 80,000 miles, automatic transmission. $10,000, 505-473-7137.

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

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

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

2011 MINI Cooper Countryman S AWD. Only 17k miles! Free Maintenance till 09/2017, Cold Weather & Panoramic Roof, 1 owner $27,431. Call 505-216-3800

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

IMPORTS

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

4X4s

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

MITSUBISHI LANCER, 2002. $3000 OBO. Call 505-424-0293.

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

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

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

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

IMPORTS

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

CALL 986-3000

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

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

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?

2000 SUBARU FORESTER AWD. Freshly serviced. Must see. $3995. Ask for Lee 505-316-2230.

IMPORTS

B-9

2006 VOLVO, V50, T5 29,000 miles body, 4,000 miles engine. Warranty 3 years or 30,000 miles. Good Maintenance. $19,500, 505-986-8367

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

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

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

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

PLUS YOU GET THIS GREAT OFFER FROM:

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

25 OFF 3 OFF

$

O R

A Detail for Resale*

$

Any Car Wash

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

*Detail for Resale and classified minimum purchase restrictions apply.


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

IMPORTS

PICKUP TRUCKS

PICKUP TRUCKS

SPORTS CARS

VANS & BUSES

CAMPERS & RVs

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

2002 CHEVY Avalanche. 116,000 miles, black leather interior, 24" rims, new single din multimidia DVD receiver, new window tint, has no oil leaks. Runs like new! NOT 4x4. For more info: Call txt 505-261-9565 if no answer txt or call 505-316-0168 Asking $8500. Might consider trades. Serious buyers only please.

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

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

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

1984 JAYCO. Needs work. $1,000. Call 505-424-0293.

SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!

CALL 986-3000

SPORTS CARS

Sell Your Stuff!

MOVING MUST SELL!

Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!

»recreational«

SUVs

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

CLASSIFIEDS

2001 AUDI TT QUATRO Ideal ’Santa Fe’ sports car: open roof for summer, four wheel drive for winter. 136k miles, silver grey, excellent mechanical condition. $7,500. Call 505-8202087.

CALL 986-3000

986-3000

Call Andrew at (505) 231-4586.

Locally owned

and independent

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

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

8, 2011

Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

50¢

mexican.com

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

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

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

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

Grimm

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

The New

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010

2001 FORD Explorer Excellent condition, 115,000 miles, EDDIE BAUER V8. 4 wheel-drive. NEW stereo, tires, shocks and brakes. $5,800, 505-982-9464

CITY OF SANTA FE ADOPTION OF ORDINANCE NOS. 2013-24, 2013-25, 2013-26 and RESOLUTION 2013-62 Notice is hereby given that the Governing Body of the City of Santa Fe held a public hearing at their regular meeting on Wednesday, June 12, 2013 and approved the following: 1)Ordinance No. 2 0 1 3 - 2 4 : An Ordinance Authorizing the Issuance and Sale of City of Santa Fe, New Mexico, General Obligation Bonds, Series 2013, in the Principal Amount of $12,000,000, Payable from Ad Valorem Taxes Levied on all Taxable Property Within the City, Levied Without Limit as to Rate or Amount; Providing for the Form, Terms and Conditions of the Bonds, the Manner of Their Execution, and the Method of, and Security for, Payment; Providing for the Award and Sale of the Bonds to the Purchaser and the Price to be Paid by the Purchaser for the Bonds; and Providing for Other Details Concerning the Bonds. 2)Ordinance No. 2 0 1 3 - 2 5 : An Ordinance Approving Certain Leases Between the City of Santa Fe and the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority for the Lease of Certain Real Property To Be Used for Public Housing Family Units Located at 1222-1265 Cerro Gordo Road, 1227-1265 Gallegos Lane, 1237-1246 Senda del Valle, 12091219 Senda Lane, 911 A-F Agua Fria Street, 1752-1788 Hopewell Street and 1750-1765 Mann Street; and Public Housing Senior Units Located at 664670 Alta Vista Street and 1510-1520 Luisa Street. A.Property to be Leased. The City of Santa Fe Shall Lease to the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority the Parcels of Land Known as: (1)Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Family Sites, More

Continued...

Family Sites, More Fully Described on Exhibit A to Lease 1; and (2)Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Senior Sites More Fully Described on Exhibit A to Lease 2 and Exhibit A to Lease 3. B.Market Value of the Leasehold Premises. The Appraised Value of Each of the Leasehold Premises is: (1)Lease 1, Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Family Sites $1,210,000 (2)Lease 2, Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Alta Vista Senior Site $1,230,000 (3)Lease 3, Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Luisa Senior Site $1,170,000 C.Payment Terms of the Leases. The Rental Payment for Each of the Leasehold Premises Described in Lease 1, Lease 2 and Lease 3 Shall be in an Amount of $1.00 Per Year for Each Lease, for 99 years, for a Total of $297 Over the Term of the Leases, in Consideration for the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority Providing Public Housing and Other Affordable Housing Opportunities for City Residents. D.Lessee. The Lessee is the Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority, 664 Alta Vista Street, Suite 200, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505. E.Purpose of the Lease. The Purpose of the Leases is for the Lessee to Develop the Premises for MultiFamily Mixed Income Affordable Housing, Low-Income Housing and Such Other Uses as May be Approved by the City as More Fully Described in the Leases. This Ordinance Shall be Effective FortyFive Days After the Date of Adoption, Unless a Referendum is Held Pursuant to 354-1 NMSA 1978. 3)Ordinance No. 2013-26: An Ordinance Relating to the Municipal Recreation Complex (MRC), City Sports Fields and League Fees; Repealing Article 23-7 SFCC 1987 and Adopting a New Article 23-7 SFCC 1987 to Establish Regulations and Fees at the MRC;

ees e C; Adopting a New Section 23-4.12 SFCC 1987 to Establish Regulations and Fees for City Sports Fields, Other Than MRC Sports Fields; and Creating a New Section 23-4.13 SFCC 1987 to Establish a Voluntary Sports Field Maintenance Fund. a)Resolution No. 2 0 1 3 - 6 2 : A Resolution Establishing City of Santa Fe Sports Field Clean-Up Days at the Municipal Recreation Complex and at Other Sports Fields Throughout the City of Santa Fe.

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Copies of these ordinances and resolution are available in their entirety on the City’s web site http://www.santafen m.gov (click on Government/City Clerk/Ordinances) or upon request and payment of a reasonable charge, in the City Clerk’s Office, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Yolanda Y. Vigil, City Clerk

1995 Ford Mustang Gt V8. Runs great, has after market rear lights, nice stereo. High miles but runs great! Good heater & AC, nice tires and rims. New paint job only 2 months old. Must drive! Interior needs seat covers and a little cleaning but fast car! call to see 505-930-1193 $4000

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Governing Body of the City of Santa Fe will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at its regular City Council Meeting, 7:00 p.m. session, at City Hall Council Chambers, 200 Lincoln Avenue. The purpose of this hearing is to discuss a request from Francisco S. Alvaradofor for a Restaurant Liquor License (Beer and Wine onPremise Consumption Only) to be located at Taqueria Adelitas, 3565 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe.

LEGALS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

LEGALS guage interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact NMHIA office at 1800-204-4700, prior to the meeting.

LEGALS NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY

WADLEIGH, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby given that Christopher Thaddeus Wadleigh has been appointed as personal representative of this Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice or their claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the personal representative in care of Felker, Ish, Ritchie & Geer, P.A., Attorneys at Law, 911 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505, or filed with the Clerk of the First Judicial District Court, P.O. Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2268.

By: /s/ Randolph B. Felker, Esq. Legal#93963 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican June 25, July 2, 2013

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ta Fe New Mexican June 21, 24, 25, 26, 27, 875 W. San Mateo Rd. Santa Fe NM 87505 28, 2013 505-986-1546

NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF AMENDING NOTE RESOLUTION, BID RESOLUTION, AND BOND RESOLUTION STATE BOARD OF FINANCE

The personal goods stored therein by the following may include, but are not limited to general household, furniture, boxes, clothes, and appliances.

NOTICE IS GIVEN that the Board of Finance of the State of New Mexico (the "State") has adopted (i) an amending note resolution (the "Note Resolution") amending the resolution authorizing the issuance of the State’s Severance Tax Note, Series 2013S-A (the "Senior Note") in the maximum principal amount of $73,830,800, (ii) a bond resolution (the "Bond Resolution") authorizing the issuance, sale, and delivery of the State’s $157,560,000 Severance Tax Bonds, Series 2013A (the "Bonds"), and (iii) a bid resolution (the "Bid Resolution") authorizing the acceptance of the best bid for the purchase of the Bonds, and otherwise relating to the Senior Note and the Bonds. Complete copies of the Note Resolution, the Bond Resolution, the Bid Resolution and other documents related to the Senior Note and the Bonds are on file and available for inspection during normal business hours at the offices of the State Board of Finance, 181 Bataan Memorial Building, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501. DATED this 18th day of June, 2013.

E24-Educators Ethics Bureau 300 Don Gaspar Rm#101, Santa Fe-Office Files H23-Diana Connell P.O. Box 164811, Fort Worth, TX 76161 J07-Sandy Anderson P.O. Box 514, Glorietta, NM 87535 Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Extra Space Storage reserves the right to bid. Sale is subject to adjournment. LEGAL #95281 PUBLISHED in The Santa Fe New Mexican on June 18, 25, 2013

PUBLIC NOTICE REQUEST FOR QUOTES / QUALIFICATIONS (RFQ) 13-0003

Northern New Mexico College (NNMC) is soliciting Request for Qualifications (RFQs) for the following service on the date and time as listed below: Submission of RFQ by Tuesday July 9, 2013, no later than 2:00 p.m. -Qualifications are due for Student Housing Development ServicesAdvertisement: Northern New Mexico College invites interested real estate firms to submit their qualifications to design, finance, construct, and potentially manage and maintain a purpose-built student housing comLegal#93964 Published in the San- munity. Firms are ta Fe New Mexican sought with demonstrated expertise in June 25, 2013 developing and delivering quality turnkey j To place a Legal ad t d t h i

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Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will sell, to satisfy lien of No. D-101-PB-2013the owner, at public sale 00087 by competitive bidding on July 10th 2013 at IN THE MATTER OF 9:30am at the Extra THE ESTATE OF Legal#93961 Space Storage facility BARBARA ANNE Published in the San- located at:

Notice is hereby given of the next Board meeting of the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange, to be held on Friday June 28th, 2013 from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. The meeting will be held at New Mexico State Capitol Building, 411 State Capitol Santa Fe, NM 87501, Meeting Room 322. This meeting is being called pursuant to the Open All interested citizens Meetings Act Resoluare invited to attend this tion NMSA 1978, Ch. public hearing. 10, Art. 15. If an individual with a disabiliYolanda Y. Vigil ty is in need of a City Clerk reader, amplifier, qualified sign lanLegal#93924 guage interpreter or Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: June 25, July 2, 2013

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2004 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350. New Michelin tires, all power, sunroof, leather seats, 80k miles. $7,900 OBO. Excellent condition! Call 505-4638486

2004 YELLOW Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 51,000 miles, manual transmission, 3 tops, wench, numerous additional add ons. $20,000, 505-473-7137.

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Legal#93923 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: June 25, 2013 FELKER, ISH, RITCHIE & GEER, P.A. Attorneys at Law 911 Old Pecos Trail Santa Fe, N.M. 87505 CITY OF SANTA FE

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MOTORCYCLES 2010 POLARIS Razr, 800 EFI. Very low miles, $8,000 OBO. Please contact Joseph 505-204-3870, serious inquiries only.

2002 FORD Mustang. V6, automatic, cold AC, new tires, 170k miles. Runs great! Calls only 5o5-930-9528 2001 VW Passat GLX V6 2.8L automatic with tiptronic. Clean inside and out, Loaded! New tires. 105,000 miles! $6,200. 631-259-1995, 505920-8719

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1984 CHEVROLET 2-ton, 16 foot flatbed. 2WD, 454 manual transmission (4-speed). 56,000 original miles. $1,750 OBO! (PRICE REDUCED)

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

student housing projects on time and within budget. This project will be located on property on the College’s main campus that will be leased to the selected ownership entity. Occupancy is desired for August 2014, but the College recognizes a December 2014 opening may be required. Project Requirements: Four (4) copies of the response should be sealed in a package and sent to the individual listed on the coversheet of this RFQ. Responses must be received on or before 2:00p.m. MDT on July 9, 2013. The individual identified on the coversheet will serve as the only authorized contact person during the RFQ process. Under no circumstances will an electronic, telephone, fax machine or telegraph response be accepted. Procurement code 13-1-191 prohibits bribes, gratuities, and kickbacks. Questions concerning this RFQ may be directed to: Ryan Cordova Director of Athletics Telephone: (505) 7472288 E-mail: rcordova@nnmc.edu

LEGALS erning Body of the City of Santa Fe to consider the following requests by Duty and Germanas Architects, agents for Santa Fe Civic Housing Authority and Casas de Buena Ventura, regarding land located in the vicinity of the Siringo Road and Yucca Street intersection: Amending the General Plan Future Land Use classification from Low Density Residential (3 to 7 dwelling units per acre) to Medium Density Residential (7 to 12 dwelling units per acre) for 3.44± acres of land. " Amending the Official Zoning Map of the City of Santa Fe; changing the zoning classification for 3.44± acres of land from R-1 (Residential, 1 dwelling unit per acre) to R-9 (Residential, 9 dwelling units per acre) and providing an effective date.

LEGALS CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two(2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below or filed with the Probate Court of Santa Fe, County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 102 Grant Ave, Santa Fe New Mexico 87501 Dated:June 19, 2013 Cynthia Funsch-Sena Signature of Personal Representative 4397 Mesa Bonita Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-474-6780

Legal#93922 Published in the SanThese requests were ta Fe New Mexican approved by the Plan- on: ning Commission on The New Mexico May 2, 2013. Notice is Health Insurance Exhereby given that a change is seeking adpublic hearing will be vertising and marketheld by the Governing ing, educational conBody of the City of tent, and public relaSanta Fe, New Mexi- tions services from co, in the City Council experienced contracChambers, City Hall, tors for the purpose 200 Lincoln Avenue at of designing and im7:00 p.m. on July 10, plementing a comAll proposals can be 2013 on said request prehensive health inhand delivered or at which time and surance marketing mailed to: place any and all inNorthern New Mexico terested parties will and public relations campaign aimed at College be heard prior to the reaching uninsured Business Office City Council taking and insured individuAttention: Monique action. als and small employRomero er populations that 921 Paseo De Onate DATED AT SANTA FE, will be impacted by Espanola, NM 87532 NEW MEXICO THIS health care reform. 18th DAY OF JUNE, The purpose of this Legal#93965 2013. campaign is to eduPublished in the Sancate these populata Fe New Mexican YOLANDA Y. VIGIL, tions on the availabilJune 25, July 2 & 8, CITY CLERK ity and benefits of 2013 health insurance to Legal#93921 be offered through RESOLUTION # Published in the Santhe Exchange beginCASE #2013-25. RANCHO SIRINGO ta Fe New Mexican ning on January 1, 2014. Submission RESIDENCES GENERAL on: June 25, 2013 PLAN AMENDMENT. STATE OF NEW MEXI- deadline is July 3, BILL #2013-28 CO IN THE DISTRICT 2013. The electronic CASE #2013-26. COURT Santa Fe version of this RFP is available for downRANCHO SIRINGO COUNTY load from NMHIA R E S I D E N C E S at REZONING TO R-9. IN THE MATTER OF website THE ESTATE OF Joe http://www.nmhia.co NOTICE OF PUBLIC Frank Sena, DE- m / n m h i x / r f p s . p h p Refer to website for MEETING CEASED. RFP updates. No. 2013-0081 A request has been Legal#93913 presented to the GovNOTICE TO Published in the Sanerning Body of the CREDITORS ta Fe New Mexican 21, 24, 25, 26, 27, Continued... Continued... June 28, July 1, 2013


Tuesday, June 25, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

TIME OUT Horoscope

Crossword

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday, June 25, 2013: This year you have many exciting options appear, yet a sense of negativity might come forward. You will need to pinch yourself in order to believe your good fortune. Aquarius is challenging, but he or she is a good friend. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Someone whom you deal with regularly could be out of sorts. Steer clear of this person for now. Tonight: Hang out with friends at a favorite place. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Defer to a boss who has a strong vision of what he or she wants. In fact, the more responsibility this person has, the happier he or she will be. Tonight: Speak your mind. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You will be more willing to venture out than you have been in years. Consider your options carefully regarding a financial matter. Tonight: Follow the music. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Jupiter enters your sign today. This transition brings you good luck, and it also marks the beginning of a new life cycle. Use it well. Tonight: Dinner for two. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might feel as if you are the center of attention, until you have to bend to keep the peace. In any case, the cards are not stacked in your favor. Tonight: Enjoy the moment with friends. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Zero in on priorities in your day-to-day life. You might have a lot of energy that’s being focused on organizing and making your life easier. Tonight: Hang with friends.

Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Subject: ANIMALS OF AUSTRALIA (e.g., Many Australian animals are endemic, meaning ____. Answer: Unique to Australia.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Term for animals with a pouch for rearing their young. Answer________ 2. This dog was the first animal introduced to Australia by humans. Answer________ 3. These animals have large hind legs and powerful tails. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. This “bear” is one of Australia’s best-known marsupials. Answer________

5. Identify the venomous, egglaying, duck-billed amphibious mammal. Answer________ 6. This large bird appears on the coat of arms of Australia. Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. This bird’s call sounds like loud human laughter. Answer________ 8. Name the largest carnivorous marsupial. Answer________ 9. What is unique about the Australian snake population? Answer________

ANSWERS:

1. Marsupial. 2. Dingo. 3. Kangaroo (also wallaby). 4. Koala. 5. Platypus. 6. Emu. 7. Kookaburra. 8. Tasmanian devil. 9. More venomous than nonvenomous snakes.

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2013 Ken Fisher

Cryptoquip

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

B-11

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Taming your imagination will help you funnel your creativity appropriately. You know the virtues of finding solutions and showing compassion to others. Tonight: Act as if there is no tomorrow.

Sick sister guilts siblings for money Dear Annie: My older sister, “Johanna,” was diagnosed with inflammatory breast cancer two years ago. Since then, she seems to have one new “lifelong dream” after another that she expects my brother and me to finance. My brother has worked hard his entire life and saved his money. He tried helping Johanna with her first dream (a house) with a loan. Her husband initially told Johanna that my brother refused to help, and Johanna told him to “die a miserable death.” She lightened up when she found out the truth. When the bank didn’t approve the deal, she did repay most of the money. I’ve tried to help her, too, but I could not afford to keep giving her money. Johanna’s latest dream is a hobby farm. She asked my brother to give her $18,000 as an outright gift. He told her no. Johanna stopped speaking to both of us, even though I have no control over what my brother does. Here’s the real problem. Her husband recently asked both of us for money and, as always, made sure to mention that she might die any moment. They have both used her possible death to guilt us into giving her money. Annie, I love my sister, but it doesn’t seem right that they use this as a weapon against us. It also bothers me that Johanna stops speaking to us if we deny her. None of us is wealthy. If I had the cash, I’d give it to her. But I also understand my brother’s point of view. Another sibling took him for a lot of money many years ago, running up thousands of dollars in credit card debt. There is a good possibility that nothing will come of this hobby farm, and we’d all be out a lot of money, and for what? We aren’t young anymore. What do you advise? — Torn Sister Dear Torn: It’s obvious that you

Sheinwold’s bridge

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You’ll want to rethink a tension-driven reaction. You might not want to think through the issue, but it would benefit you to do so. Tonight: Entertain from home. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You will be more open with someone than you have been in the past. This person will become more transparent as a result. Tonight: Visit with friends, but first check in with a loved one. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You’ll feel more comfortable relating to others. What had been a problem in the past will be resolved easily. You might have more choices than you realize. Tonight: Sort through invitations. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You need to understand what is happening around you. In the next few weeks, you might notice that you’ll have more energy than you have had for a while. Tonight: Do your own thing. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Allow your imagination to lead the way. A loved one might delight in your humor. You will see a situation from a different perspective. Tonight: You might want to vanish with a loved one. Jacqueline Bigar

Chess quiz

BLACK WINS A PIECE Hint: First, nudge the king. Solution: 1. … h5ch! 2. Kxh5 Rxd5ch!, etc. gets a knight. Benjamin-Ramirez ’13].

Today in history Today is Tuesday, June 25, the 176th day of 2013. There are 189 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On June 25, 1973, former White House Counsel John W. Dean began testifying before the Senate Watergate Committee, implicating top administration officials, including President Richard Nixon as well as himself, in the Watergate scandal and cover-up.

Hocus Focus

want to be a good sister to Johanna. When someone is having health problems, you should be supportive emotionally, offer to cook meals or help with errands. But there is no obligation to buy them a hobby farm or any other expensive slice of wish fulfillment. Johanna is using her illness to manipulate you, counting on your guilt to get what she wants. Too bad she cannot appreciate what you are already giving her: your love and caring. Dear Annie: My family is planning a surprise party for my mom’s big birthday. One sibling lives far away, but he has frequent-flier miles and can fly free. Plus, he has friends in the area with whom to stay. The others all live nearby. \However, it will cost me more than $2,000 to attend (airfare, hotel and car rental). I also am not eligible for vacation and will be docked pay for the days I miss. I want very much to attend. I am afraid I will not be able to afford it all. Any suggestions? — Not Rich Kid Sis Dear Not Rich: Please don’t wait until your siblings send you a bill. Any costs that are expected to be shared should be discussed in advance.Call your siblings and explain your dilemma. Ask what they expect from you, and tell them what you can afford. Work it out now so there are no hard feelings down the road. Dear Annie: “Disgusted” said that a charitable organization had sent him various free items, including a check for $2.50. Anyone who receives an unsolicited check in the mail should read the endorsement area carefully. By signing and cashing the “free” check, you may be entering into an agreement to buy or invest in something in which you have no interest, and it will cost much more than you think. — Ed in Florida

Jumble


B-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Tuesday, June 25, 2013

THE NEW MEXICAN WILL BE TESTING OUT SOME NEW COMIC STRIPS IN THE COMING MONTHS. PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: EMAIL BBARKER@SFNEWMEXICAN.COM OR CALL 505-986-3058

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

PEANUTS

THE ARGYLE SWEATER

LA CUCARACHA

LUANN TUNDRA

ZITS RETAIL

BALDO STONE SOUP

GET FUZZY KNIGHT LIFE

DILBERT

MUTTS

PICKLES

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PARDON MY PLANET

BABY BLUES

NON SEQUITUR


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