Santa Fe New Mexican, June 2, 2014

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Rivals James, Duncan set to face off in NBA Finals rematch

Locally owned and independent

Monday, June 2, 2014

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Hagel celebrates POW’s release

Actress Ann B. Davis dies at 88

‘Inquirer’ co-owner dies in jet crash

Defense secretary makes surprise visit to Afghanistan base after Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl is freed. PAge A-3

Television star won 2 Emmys before becoming lovable housekeeper Alice on The Brady Bunch. PAge A-12

Lewis Katz, 1 of 7 killed, had just reached deal to help end feud at Philadelphia Inquirer. PAge A-2

Groups want independent assessment of PNM plan

Bipartisan panel seeks safer streets, lower cost

H

e calls his one-man law practice MoeJustice, a mix of old-fashioned idealism and modern marketing. State Rep. Antonio “Moe” Maestas says all of New Mexico needs more justice, too. He and seven other legislators, four from each major political party, have joined together in hopes of creating a less expensive legal system, one that would be smarter in dealing with crime Milan and punishment. Simonich Maestas, Ringside Seat D-Albuquerque, says a cold killer convicted of second-degree murder faces a sentence of up to 15 years in prison. But a drug seller convicted of a second offense gets a mandatory prison term of 18 years. The system, he says, is inflexible enough to misfire and hurt taxpayers. That’s because a thick-headed drug buyer who accepts his rocks of crack cocaine in five separate baggies can be sentenced as a distributor and end up doing more time than a murderer. The cost of locking up nonviolent criminals is among many issues that Maestas and the other members of the Criminal Justice Reform Subcommittee have been studying for the last six months. They have heard hundreds of ideas and opinions about how to unclog prisons and reduce the number of repeat offenders. Their goal is to draft a package of bills that would revamp New Mexico’s criminal laws. Safe streets at a lower price tag is what they envision. Sen. Lisa Torraco, R-Albuquerque, is co-chairing the subcommittee with Maestas. Both are former prosecutors, and they hope their credentials will persuade other legislators to consider changes in the justice system. Sequaria Asbury, whose arrest

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Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Santa Fe Opera backstage tours Behind-the-scenes tours including production and frontof-house areas are offered daily through Aug. 22, 9 a.m., Santa Fe Opera, 301 Opera Drive, $10; seniors $8; no charge for ages 22 and under, 986-5900.

Obituaries Emerita Dolores Wallace Ansley, 83, Las Vegas PAge A-10

Today Warm; plenty of sunshine. High 90, low 57. PAge A-12

Index

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Examiner would weigh in on costs, environmental impact of utility’s power source swap By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

Paula Herrera, cafeteria manager at Gonzales Community School, serves lunch for children participating in Santa Fe Public Schools’ Summer Arts Program. This week, Gonzales and other schools will begin offering free summer meals to children between the ages of 1 to 18, regardless of whether they are public school students. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Summer program offers free meals for children Schools among sites providing food to keep city’s youth from going hungry By Robert Nott

The New Mexican

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amirez Thomas Elementary School Principal Robin Noble has seen the negative aftereffects when children return to school in August after a summer of not eating right. All of her school’s students participate in the free and reduced-price lunch program, which is a federal indicator of poverty. This summer, however, her school also is one of about 20 sites within the city that will offer free meals to students through Santa Fe Public Schools’ Summer Food Service Program. The program, which starts this week, offers free breakfast and lunch to children between the ages of 1 to 18, even if they do not attend public schools. “The value of these free lunch programs is huge for our families that are struggling to make ends meet,” Noble said. “During the school year, these kids get free breakfast and lunch at school, so you can imagine that it’s quite an expense to do that for a family that lives paycheck to paycheck, or doesn’t have a paycheck at all.”

Maralis Norwood, 9, gets a cup of applesauce at the Gonzales Community School cafeteria Friday.

The summer program is funded entirely by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and administered by New Mexico’s Children, Youth and Families Department. CYFD spokesman Henry Varela said the program last year served about 2 million meals at 690 sites statewide, at a cost of about $6.7 million. Santa Fe Public Schools served more than 1,500 lunches per day and about 700 breakfasts a day last summer, said Betsy Cull, the district’s assistant director of student nutrition. “The economy is not great for a lot of our parents,” Cull said. “We offer two meals that can help a family that may not be able to purchase that food in their home so their kids remain

healthy and nourished.” The food-relief charitable group Feeding America, using 2012 data, reports that 1 in 6 Americans suffer from “food insecurity,” meaning they don’t have enough food for their families. Feeding America’s most recent data shows that nearly 19 percent of New Mexicans deal with food insecurity. A 2013 Food Research and Action Center report listed New Mexico 21st in hunger ratings for 2012. Jennifer Ramo, executive director of the Albuquerquebased nonprofit New Mexico Appleseed, which works to end hunger in the state, said many

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An unusual coalition wants state regulators to appoint an independent examiner to vet a plan by the state’s largest electric utility for replacing electricity from a coal-fired power plant. They want to make sure the plan is the most cost-effective for consumers and minimizes damage to the environment. The New Mexico Attorney General’s Office, energy company Southwest Generation and New Mexico Industrial Energy Consumers joined the Santa Fe-based New Energy Economy, Interwest Energy Alliance and the New Mexico Green Chamber of Commerce to ask for an independent auditor May 29. Some of these groups — like the big company trade group New Mexico Industrial Energy Consumers and the green power advocates at New Energy Economy — are most often at loggerheads over energy issues. This time, however, the groups agree an independent monitor is needed to ensure Public Service Company of New Mexico is picking new power resources in a “reasonable, unbiased and competitively fair manner,” according to the motion filed Thursday with the state Public Regulation Commisson. Utility companies like PNM can produce their own electricity from facilities they own or buy it through long-term power purchase agreements. In either case, the costs of the power are passed on to rate payers. In a utility case that many consider one of the most important energy decisions public regulation commissioners will make this year, PNM is asking for approval of a plan to retire two coal-fired units at the San Juan Generating Station near Farmington and replace the power with other resources. The groups asking for an independent monitor think PNM’s plan needs careful scrutiny by a third party. Under the joint proposal, an independent examiner would be selected from a list of qualified candidates provided by PNM but approved by state regulators and the attorney general. PNM would pay for the examiner, who would keep a log of all communications with parties involved in the power-replacement case. PNM’s power-replacement plan grew out of a mandate from the federal government to

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INSIDe u Obama administration to unveil new rule on power plant emmissions. PAge A-4

Al-Qaida has changed shape, but is it weaker? Some say restructured terrorist organization might be even stronger By Deb Riechmann

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Al-Qaida has decentralized, yet it’s unclear whether the terrorist network is weaker and less likely to launch a Sept. 11-style attack against the United States, as President Barack Obama says, or remains potent despite the deaths of several leaders. Obama said in his foreign policy speech last week that the prime threat

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comes not from al-Qaida’s core leadership, but from affiliates and extremists with their sights trained on targets in the Middle East and Africa, where they are based. This lessens the possibility of large-scale 9/11-type attacks against America, the president said. “But it heightens the danger of U.S. personnel overseas being attacked, as we saw in Benghazi,” he said, referring to the September 2012 attack on a U.S. diplomatic outpost in Libya that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. Experts argue that this restructured al-Qaida is perhaps even stronger than it has been in recent years, and that the potential for attacks on U.S. soil endures.

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“We have never been on a path to strategically defeat al-Qaida. All we’ve been able to do is suppress some of its tactical abilities. But strategically, we have never had an effective way of taking it on. That’s why it continues to mutate, adapt and evolve to get stronger,” said David Sedney, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia. Decentralization does not mean weakness, he said. “I think Americans think al-Qaida is no longer a threat — that Osama bin Laden’s death means al-Qaida is not a big thing anymore,” Sedney said. He believes al-Qaida is gaining strength in Pakistan, is stronger in Iraq than it was three or four years ago and

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is stronger in Syria than it was a year or two ago. “This is a fight about ideology. Al-Qaida is not this leader or that leader or this group or that group,” he said. The experts say al-Qaida today looks less like a wheel with spokes and more like a spider web stringing together like-minded groups. But they believe there are several reasons that those who track al-Qaida warn against complacency. While bin Laden was killed and his leadership team heavily damaged by U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan, the drawdown of American forces in

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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

In brief

NATION&WORLD ‘Inquirer’ co-owner among 7 dead in jet crash

NASA to test its giant Mars parachute on Earth

By MaryClaire Dale and Rodrique Ngowi

Workmen unload a saucer-shaped test vehicle for NASA’s Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator project April 17 at the U.S Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility at Kekaha on the island of Kauai in Hawaii. AP PHOTO/NASA

By Alicia Chang

The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The skies off the Hawaiian island of Kauai will be a stand-in for Mars as NASA prepares to launch a saucer-shaped vehicle in an experimental flight designed to land heavy loads on the red planet. For decades, robotic landers and rovers have hitched a ride to Earth’s planetary neighbor using the same parachute design. But NASA needs a bigger and stronger parachute if it wants to send astronauts there. Weather permitting, the space agency will conduct a test flight Tuesday high in Earth’s atmosphere that’s supposed to simulate the thin Martian air. Cameras rigged aboard the vehicle will capture the action as it accelerates to four times the speed of sound and falls back to Earth. Viewers with an Internet connection can follow along live. Engineers cautioned that they may not succeed on the first try. “As long as I get data, I’ll be very happy,” said project manager Mark Adler of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The search for a way to land massive payloads on Mars predates the existence of NASA. Back then, engineers toyed with sending a winged

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motherapy. The result could upend the established treatment practice, researchers said Sunday. CHICAGO — Many men with pros“We haven’t seen survival benefits tate cancer put off using chemotherapy like that for any therapy in prostate as long as possible, fearing its side cancer,” said Dr. Michael J. Morris, an effects. associate professor at the Memorial But a new study has found that men Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, who given chemotherapy early in their was not involved in the study but was treatment for advanced disease lived selected to publicly comment on it at a median of nearly 14 months longer the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. than those who did not get early cheBy Andrew Pollack

The New York Times

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Jacques Cousteau’s grandson extends legacy with mission ISLAMORADA, Fla. — Like viewers worldwide, Fabien Cousteau was entranced by his famous grandfather’s films about marine life and human exploration underwater. Now, he’s adding to his family’s sea stories with a 31-day underwater expedition in the Florida Keys. Cousteau dove Sunday to Aquarius Reef Base, a school bus-sized laboratory 60 feet below the ocean’s surface, a few miles off Key Largo. He plans to spend more than a month living underwater with a five-person crew, making a documentary and leading science experiments on the nearby coral reef. Before their boat left an Islamorada dock Sunday morning, Cousteau and his crew said they would miss seeing the sun for more than month, but they weren’t nervous about being isolated in the undersea lab. “I imagine we’ll want to stay down once we get comfy down there,” Cousteau said. “We won’t want to come back up to the surface because it’s such a magical place.” The Associated Press

Another study presented Sunday found that drugs called aromatase inhibitors might be better than the standard drug tamoxifen in preventing a recurrence of disease in premenopausal women with early breast cancer. Both studies were featured in the plenary session Sunday, meaning they were deemed among the most noteworthy of the more than 5,000 studies presented at the meeting. In a conference that typically celebrates the latest

and greatest drug, all four studies chosen for the plenary session this year are about better ways of using older drugs, showing that there can be a lot to learn even after drugs get to market. Dr. Nicholas J. Vogelzang, an author of the study on prostate cancer, said that the findings would change practice and that he had already started discussing this option with patients. The challenge, he said, is getting men to agree.

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spacecraft that would land like an airplane, but the idea was not feasible, space historians say. Landing has always been “one of the big technology challenges for a human Mars mission,” American University space policy professor Howard McCurdy said in an email. When the twin Viking landers became the first spacecraft to set down on Mars in 1976, they relied on parachutes to slow down after punching through the Martian atmosphere. The basic design has been used since including during the Curiosity rover’s hair-raising landing in 2012. With plans to land heavier spacecraft and eventually humans, NASA needed a heftier solution. So it designed a supersonic parachute that’s 110 feet in diameter — twice as big as the one that carried the 1-ton Curiosity. It’s so gigantic that it can’t fit into the wind tunnels that NASA typically uses to test parachutes. Since it’s impractical to test unproven technology on Mars, NASA looked to Earth as a substitute. During the flight, a high-flying balloon will loft the disc-shaped vehicle from the U.S. Navy’s Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai to 23 miles over the Pacific where it will be dropped. Then it will fire its rocket motor to climb to 34 miles, accelerating to Mach 4. The environment at this altitude is similar to Mars’ thin atmosphere.

MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK, Wash. — It’s too dangerous right now to search for the bodies of six climbers who likely plummeted to their deaths while attempting one of the more technical and physically grueling routes to the peak of Mount Rainier in Washington state, park officials said Sunday. Like others who have died on the mountain, there’s a possibility the two guides and four climbers believed to have fallen 3,300 feet from their last known location may never be found, they say. “People are very understanding that we cannot risk another life at this point,” Patti Wold, a Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman, said Sunday. Under safer conditions, crews could go in after the bodies. “The families, I’m sure, would like that closure,” Wold said. But continuous falling ice and rock make the avalanche-prone area too dangerous for rescuers, she said. The climbers were last heard from at 6 p.m. Wednesday when the guides checked in with their Seattlebased company, Alpine Ascents International, by satellite phone. The group failed to return Friday as planned.

Study: Early chemo extends lives of men with cancer

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will press European leaders this week to keep pressure on Russia over its threatening moves in Ukraine, while seeking to assuage fears from Poland and other NATO allies that the West could slip back into a business-asusual relationship with Moscow. Obama’s four-day trip to Poland, Belgium and France follows successful national elections in Ukraine and signs that Russia is moving most of its troops off its shared border with the former Soviet republic. Yet violence continues to rage in eastern Ukrainian cities, and it’s uncertain whether Ukraine’s new president-elect can stabilize his country. U.S. officials say Russia still has not taken the necessary steps to ease tensions and could still face additional economic sanctions.

Official: Too dangerous to look for 6 Mount Rainier climbers

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BEDFORD, Mass. — Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz was killed along with six other people in a fiery plane crash in Massachusetts, just days after reaching a deal that many hoped would end months of infighting at the Lewis Katz newspaper and help restore it to its former glory. The 72-year-old businessman’s Gulfstream corporate jet ran off the end of a runway, plunged down an embankment and erupted in a fireball during a takeoff attempt Saturday night at Hanscom Field outside Boston, authorities said. There were no survivors. Katz was returning to New Jersey from a gathering at the home of Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin. Also killed was a next-door neighbor of Katz’s, Anne Leeds, a 74-year-old retired preschool teacher he had invited along, and Marcella Dalsey, the director of Katz’s son’s foundation. The identities of the other victims weren’t immediately released. Nancy Phillips, Katz’s longtime partner and city editor at the Inquirer, was not aboard. Investigators said it was too soon to say what caused the crash. Katz made his fortune investing in parking lots and the New York Yankees’ cable network. He once owned the NBA’s New Jersey Nets and the NHL’s New Jersey Devils and in 2012 became a minority investor in the Inquirer. Last Tuesday, Katz and former cable magnate Harold H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest struck a deal to gain full control of the Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and Philly.com by buying out their fellow owners for $88 million — an agreement that ended a very public feud over the Inquirer’s business and journalism direction. Lenfest said Sunday that the deal will be delayed but will still go through. “We’ll lose his expertise, but the paper will continue because we both intended to put a new CEO in charge of the day-to-day operations,” Lenfest said.

Obama to urge Europe to keep pressure on Russia

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BREAKFAST WITH O’KEEFFE: The gallery-talk series continues with Preserving Historic Landscape Character, presented by Jillian P. Cowley, National Park Service historical landscape architect, 8:30 a.m., 217 Johnson St. JOHN HODGMAN: The humorist performs, 9 p.m., Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave. SANTA FE OPERA BACKSTAGE TOURS: Hourly behindthe-scenes tours including production and front-of-house areas are offered daily through Aug. 22, 9 a.m., the opera, 301 Opera Drive off U.S. 84/285, north of Santa Fe. SOUTHWEST SEMINARS LECTURE: The series continues with Living in Indian Country: Forever Visitors, with Bruce Bernstein, 6 p.m., Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta. Tuesday, June 3 CITY OF SANTA FE ARTS COMMISSION TRAINING WORKSHOPS: Free businessdevelopment assistance workshop series for Santa Fe artists; “Reality Check and Tips for Artists,” with business consultant Bette Bradbury, 6-7 p.m., the Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau,

Corrections 201 W. Marcy St. SHAVUOT WITH RABBI DRUCKER: Starting at 7 p.m., blintzes, blessings and lessons with Rabbi Malka Drucker, Hazzan Cindy Freedman and others will be presenting Jewish teachings for the Leyl Tikkun Shavuot, along with a dessert potluck to celebrate the giving of the Torah at Sinai. Hosted by Deborah Avren. For directions, send an email to info@ hamakomtheplace.org or call 992-1905. 7 p.m., St. Bede’s Episcopal Church, 1601 S. St. Francis Drive. SHAVUOT AT CHABAD: At 7:30 p.m., an all-night study begins the Kabbalah of Shavuot, with dinner and services at Chabad, 509 Camino de los Marquez, No. 4. for more information, visit www.chabad santafe.com.. FARMERS MARKET KICKOFF PARTY: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta; includes performances by jazz saxophonist Brian Wingard and bluegrass band Paw Coal and The Clinkers, a cooking demonstration by the Santa Fe Culinary Academy and a children’s event hosted by Annie Rose the Flower Fairy. Wednesday, June 4 FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: At 5:30 p.m. at the Santa Fe Public Library’s Main Branch,

“Understanding the Language of Dreams” is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. Reservations required. Call 982-3214, 145 Washington Ave. ICONIC ARCHITECTURE AND THE ROMANCE OF SANTA FE: Friends of Architecture Santa Fe presents architects Craig Hoopes, Barbara Felix and Beverley Spears in a discussion about their work in the creation and renovation of the Lensic Performing Arts Center, La Fonda on the Plaza and the Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 5:30-7:30 p.m., the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. SHAVUOT: At 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., Chabad, 509 Camino de los Marquez, No. 4, will have a dairy dinner and services. For more information, visit www.chabad santafe.com. SOUTHWEST POTTERY DEMONSTRATIONS: Native artists discuss and demonstrate their techniques, clays and styles, 1-3 p.m., 710 Camino Lejo, Museum Hill. Thursday, June 5 ‘FRANKIE & JOHNNY IN THE CLAIR DE LUNE’: Terrence McNally’s play of an intimate encounter between two people, 7:30 p.m., Santa Fe Playhouse, 142 E. De Vargas St.

The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. NEW MEXICO ARTS COMMISSION OPEN MEETING: Quarterly meeting; Room 238, Old Senate Chambers, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 407 Galisteo St. SAN MIGUEL CHAPEL BELL TOWER RESTORATION CONCERT SERIES: Guitarist AnnaMaria Cardinalli performs Legado y Leyenda, 7:30 p.m., 401 Old Santa Fe Trail. SHAVUOT: At 10 a.m., morning services and Yizkor at Chabad, 509 Camino de Los Marquez, No. 4. For more information, visit www.chabadsantafe.com.

NIGHTLIFE Monday, June 2 SWING DANCE: Weekly allages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www.santa fenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmex ican.com.can.com.


NATION & WORLD

Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Hagel celebrates Bergdahl’s release Suspect in Jewish Defense secretary makes surprise visit to Afghanistan base

had bypassed Congress in releasing the Afghans from Guantánamo in exchange for Bergdahl, Hagel said that the sergeant’s health was in serious jeopardy. “It was our judgment that if By Helene Cooper The New York Times we could find an opening, we needed to get him out of there, BAGRAM AIR BASE, essentially to save his life,” Afghanistan — Sgt. Bowe Hagel said. Bergdahl had departed for But there was some ambivaLandstuhl Medical Center in lence among the troops waiting Germany eight hours before, in a hangar at Bagram to hear but that did not stop Defense from Hagel on Sunday. Secretary Chuck Hagel from “Releasing five Taliban for taking a figurative victory lap one — I don’t know about that,” around this base to celebrate said Coast Guard Petty Officer the release of the lone remain2nd Class Matthew McGlynn, ing U.S. prisoner of war in the 23, of Williamstown, N.J. “This Afghan conflict. isn’t a conventional war that For Hagel, who made an we’re fighting. I’m not sure it’s unannounced stop in Afghanian even exchange.” stan on Sunday, the release of Sitting next to him, Coast Bergdahl after five years in cap- Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel greets retired Sgt. BrenGuard Petty Officer 1st Class dan Marrocco during a stop Sunday at Bagram Air Base in tivity marked the high point of Kurt Tomcavage, 28, said he after the release of prisoner of his tenure so far as defense sec- Bagram, Afghanistan, a day war Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/THE NEW YORK TIMES disagreed. retary, made doubly so by the “I’m just happy he can get fact that he is the first enlisted back to his family,” he said. walked off his base voluntarily, was alone, bereft of any solace soldier to serve in the PentaAsked about reports that Bergin violation of Army regulathat could come from knowing gon’s top job. dahl had walked away from his tions. there were fellow soldiers close Like Bergdahl, Hagel was a base five years ago, Tomcavage A senior Defense Department sergeant as well when he served by who were in the same situjust shook his head. official indicated Sunday that in Vietnam. He has friends who ation. “He’s still an American citithe Army would probably not “In this case, Bergdahl was by were prisoners of war during zen,” he said. be punishing the sergeant for himself,” Hagel said. “As far as that time, he said, including A few minutes later, Hagel any violations of rules. we know, there were no other Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. walked into the hangar to “Whatever he may have done, Americans.” “When you can bring one address the troops. He had just I think he’s more than paid for Even as new details were of your own people home, spent five minutes meeting with emerging about the operation to it,” the official said. “Five years when you think of what he has more than a dozen members of is a long time.” swap Bergdahl for five detainendured the last five years — Special Operations units who By the time Hagel arrived ees at Guantánamo Bay — the my own experiences in Vietwere involved in the operation at Bagram on Sunday afterleader of the Special Forces nam as we had POWs taken,” to retrieve Bergdahl. A senior noon, the sergeant had been Hagel told reporters aboard his team that whisked Bergdahl by Defense official said that Hagel transported to Germany, as helicopter from the Pakistani flight to Afghanistan, appearhad thanked the forces, telling military officials and doctors ing to struggle for words. “I am border region had been in determined that the sooner they them that he was proud of what constant communication with intensely happy and gratified.” they do every day. the Taliban in the minutes lead- got him out of Afghanistan, the He said that he was parBut his talk before the 200 or better. Hagel said he planned to ing up to the swap — Defense ticularly struck by the fact talk to Bergdahl soon but would so troops in the hangar was subDepartment officials were also that unlike McCain and other not interfere with the sergeant’s dued. The men and women sat weighing the overall messiness prisoners of war who knew quietly as Hagel spoke. recovery. there were other U.S. prisoners of the case of Bergdahl, who “This is a happy day,” he said. Responding to criticism nearby even when they were in went missing from his unit five “We got one of our own back.” that President Barack Obama years ago, amid reports that he solitary confinement, Bergdahl

Administration defends swap with Taliban By Brian Knowlton

The New York Times

WASHINGTON — Top Obama administration officials pushed back Sunday against Republican criticism that a deal freeing the last American held prisoner in Afghanistan could allow dangerous Taliban leaders to return to the fight, might encourage terrorist groups to seize American hostages and possibly violated a law requiring notification of Congress. Susan E. Rice, the president’s national security adviser, spoke a day after years of fitful negotiations had finally yielded the release in Afghanistan of the prisoner, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. The deal, brokered with Qatari help, also freed five high-level Taliban members from the prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The release of the Taliban officials was sharply assailed by Republicans, including Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, chairman of the intelligence committee, as a dangerous transgression of long-standing policy against negotiating with

terror groups. “If you negotiate here, you’ve sent a message to every alQaida group in the world — by the way, some who are holding U.S. hostages today — that there is some value now in that hostage in a way that they didn’t have before,” Rogers said on the CNN program State of the Union. He added, “That is dangerous.” But Rice said: “Sgt. Bergdahl wasn’t simply a hostage; he was an American prisoner of war captured on the battlefield. We have a sacred obligation that we have upheld since the founding of our republic to do our utmost to bring back our men and women who are taken in battle, and we did that in this instance.” She was speaking on the ABC program This Week. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who was a prisoner of war in North Vietnam for six years, welcomed the return of Bergdahl, who had spent five years in Taliban hands in conditions that remain unclear. But McCain said he had serious concerns about the release of the five Taliban detainees,

calling them “the hardest of the hard core.” He added, “It is disturbing that these individuals would have the ability to re-enter the fight, and they are big, high-level people, possibly responsible for the deaths of thousands” of Shiite Muslims in Afghanistan. Rice, appearing separately on CNN, noted that President Barack Obama had received “very specific assurances” regarding the handling of the freed detainees when he spoke by phone Tuesday with the emir of Qatar. That country is taking in the five. “They enable us to have confidence that these prisoners will be carefully watched and their ability to move will be constrained, and we believe that this is in the national security interest of the United States,” she said. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said while visiting troops in Afghanistan on Sunday that he would not have agreed to the detainees’ release unless suitable security arrangements were in place. Asked whether the sergeant,

who by some reports was captured after leaving his base without authorization, might be subject to military discipline, Hagel replied, “This is a guy who probably went through hell for the last five years, and let’s focus on getting him well,” according to NBC News. Republican lawmakers also questioned the failure of the administration to give Congress the required notice of releases from Guantánamo. Rice said the administration had felt compelled to move swiftly because Bergdahl’s health seemed at risk and the opportunity to retrieve him possibly fleeting. “We had reason to be concerned that this was an urgent and acute situation,” she said on ABC, adding that “had we waited and lost him, I don’t think anybody would have forgiven the United States government.”

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unclear why he went and what he did while there. The Associated Press A video found in the suspect’s possession shows PARIS — A suspected weapons and clothes akin to French jihadist who spent the gunman’s, and includes a time in Syria has been arrested voice claiming responsibility for over the shooting deaths of the “attack in Brussels against three people at a Belgian JewJews,” Belgian federal prosecuish museum, prosecutors said tor Frederic Van Leeuw said. He Sunday, crystalizing fears that said it wasn’t certain whether European radicals will parlay the voice was the suspect’s. their experiences in Syria into The narrator says he tried terrorism back home. to film the killings on May When Mehdi Nemmouche 24 live, but that his camera was arrested in southern failed, Van Leeuw said. When France on Friday, he was in apprehended, the suspect had a possession of firearms, a large GoPro camera in his possession, quantity of ammunition and a the Belgian prosecutor said. video claiming responsibility Belgian police carried out for the May 24 attack at the raids in the Courtrai region of Jewish Museum in Brussels, a Belgium on Sunday morning, Belgian prosecutor said. where the suspect is believed In a one-minute rampage to have spent time, and were that deeply shook Europe’s questioning two people there, Jewish community, a gunman Van Leeuw said. opened fire at the Brussels The suspect has been museum. In addition to the handed to anti-terrorist invesfatalities, another person was tigators and could be held at gravely wounded. least through Tuesday under Authorities raised anti-terror French counterterrorism law. alert levels as they searched “The new elements in this for the attacker. But it was investigation draw attention ultimately a customs inspeconce more to the problem tion in the French port city of of the ‘returnees’ —in other Marseille that turned up Nem- words the people going to mouche, as he disembarked Syria to participate in combat from a bus coming from and return afterward to our Amsterdam, Paris prosecutor country,” Van Leeuw said. Francois Molins said. Interior ministers from The suspect had a revolver around the European Union and a retractable automatic are expected to focus on betweapon like those used in the ter ways to stem Syria-related Brussels attack, and ballistics violence when they meet in analyses were underway to Brussels on Thursday. determine if they were the French Interior Minister same weapons, Molins said. Bernard Cazeneuve called At least one of the weapons Sunday for better international was wrapped up in a white coordination on the issue. His sheet scrawled with the name Belgian counterpart, Joelle of the Islamic State of Iraq and Milquet, called the returnees the Levant, an extremist group “a generalized problem for all fighting in Syria, Molins said. of Europe.” Nemmouche, a French-born The Brussels killings, which 29-year-old from the northern came on the eve of European city of Roubaix, had a criminal Parliament elections in which record, with seven convictions far right parties had a strong for crimes like attempted rob- showing, led Belgian officials bery — but nothing related to to boost their anti-terror meaterrorism, Molins said. sures and raised fears of rising He said the suspect became anti-Semitism. radicalized in prison and left Two Israeli tourists and for Syria just three weeks after a French citizen were killed his last prison stay in late 2012, in the museum attack, and a going to Syria via Brussels, fourth victim remains hospitalLondon and Istanbul. He said ized hovering between life and the suspect had spent about death, the Belgian prosecutor a year in Syria, though it is said Sunday. By John-Thor Dahlburg and Elaine Ganley

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Senate to take up new Veterans Affairs bill after scandal WASHINGTON — The chairman of the Senate Veterans Affairs committee has released details of a refashioned bill to address the problems plaguing the federally run veterans’ health care system. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., posted a draft of his bill Sunday and said it would be introduced

this week. The bill has several new provisions aimed at fixing the long delays for veterans’ care. The long-simmering issue erupted into a scandal in April and led to last week’s resignation of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki. Sanders’ bill would allow veterans to seek care outside

the VA if they face long delays, authorize ways to hire and to attract new doctors and nurses to the VA and gives the department authority to fire poorperforming executives. An earlier version was sidetracked in February. The Associated Press

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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

EPA to unveil new rule on coal plant pollution Power plants expected to trim carbon emissions 30 percent by 2030 By Dina Cappiello

The Associated Press

competitive advantage by removing reliable and abundant sources of energy from our nation’s energy mix,” Jay Timmons, president and CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers, said in a statement issued Sunday. The White House said Obama called a group of Democrats from both the House and Senate on Sunday to thank them for their support in advance of the rule’s official release, which is expected to be rigorously attacked by Republicans and make Democrats up for re-election in energy-producing states nervous. EPA data shows that the nation’s power plants have reduced carbon dioxide emissions by nearly 13 percent since 2005, or about halfway to the goal the administration will set Monday. The agency is aiming to have about 26 percent cut by 2020, but states will get some leeway in trying to meet that target. But with coal-fired power plants already beleaguered by cheap natural gas prices and other environmental regulations, experts on Sunday said getting to 30 percent won’t be easy. The EPA is expected to offer a range of options to states to meet targets that will based on where they get their electricity and how much carbon dioxide they emit in the process. While some states will be allowed to emit more and others less, overall the reduction will be 30 percent nationwide. The options include making power plants more efficient, reducing the frequency at which coalfired power plants supply power to the grid, and investing in more renewable, low-carbon sources of energy. In addition, states could enhance programs aimed at reducing demand by making households and businesses more energy-efficient. Each of those categories will have a separate target tailor-made for each state. Obama has already tackled the emissions from the nation’s cars and trucks, announcing rules to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by doubling fuel economy. That standard will reduce carbon dioxide by more than 2 billion tons over the life of vehicles made in model years 201225. The power plant proposal will prevent about 430 million tons of carbon dioxide from reaching the atmosphere, based on the 30 percent figure and what power plants have already reduced since 2005. The EPA refused to confirm the details of the proposal Sunday. People familiar with the proposal shared the details on condition of anonymity, since they have not been officially released. Beinecke spoke Sunday on ABC’s This Week, before details of the proposal became public. The proposal was first reported Sunday by The Wall Street Journal.

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration on Monday will roll out a plan to cut earth-warming pollution from power plants by 30 percent by 2030, setting in motion one of the most significant actions to address global warming in U.S. history. The rule, which is expected to be final next year, will set the first national limits on carbon dioxide, the chief gas linked to global warming from the nation’s power plants. They are the largest source of greenhouse gases in the U.S., accounting for about a third of the annual emissions that make the U.S. the second largest contributor to global warming on the planet. The Environmental Protection Agency regulation is a centerpiece of President Barack Obama’s plans to reduce the pollution linked to global warming, a step that the administration hopes will get other countries to act when negotiations on a new international treaty resume next year. Despite concluding in 2009 that greenhouse gases endanger human health and welfare, a finding that triggered their regulation under the 1970 Clean Air Act, it has taken years for the administration to take on the nation’s fleet of power plants. In December 2010, the Obama administration announced a “modest pace” for setting greenhouse gas standards for power plants, setting a May 2012 deadline. Obama put them on the fast track last summer when he announced his climate action plan and a renewed commitment to climate change after the issue went dormant during his re-election campaign. “The purpose of this rule is to really close the loophole on carbon pollution, reduce emissions as we’ve done with lead, arsenic and mercury and improve the health of the American people and unleash a new economic opportunity,” said Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has drafted a plan that informed the EPA proposal. Yet the rule carries significant political and legal risks, by further diminishing coal’s role in producing U.S. electricity and offering options for pollution reductions far afield from the power plant, such as increased efficiency. Once the dominant source of energy in the U.S., coal now supplies just under 40 percent of the nation’s electricity, as it has been replaced by booming supplies of natural gas and renewable sources such as wind and solar. “Today’s proposal from the EPA Associated Press writer Josh could singlehandedly eliminate this Lederman contributed to this report.

PNM: Utility says plan will cut reliance on coal ment plan is scheduled Aug. 19-29 at the PRC offices in Santa Fe, but clean up pollution in the Four CorPNM filed a request with the comners region of northwestern New mission Friday to postpone the hearMexico. The San Juan Generating ing to Oct. 6-17. Station, which provides more than PNM says its power-replacement half the electricity used by PNM plan offers the most reliable mix of customers, is a primary culprit electricity for its customers at the behind the emissions clouding up best price while reducing pollution. the region’s skies and obscuring Even with the request for additional nearby national monuments. coal-power capacity at San Juan, To correct the haze problem, “our total reliance on coal as part of PNM proposes retiring two of the overall energy mix would drop by four coal-fired generating units at about 10 percent, which is a signifithe San Juan plant. It will install pol- cant reduction,” said Valerie Smith, a lution controls on the remaining two PNM spokeswoman. units under the plan. But renewable energy advocates The federal Environmental Profrom New Energy Economy, the tection Agency is expected to decide Sierra Club and the New Mexico by September if the plan will suffiGreen Chamber of Commerce think ciently reduce haze. The New Mex- the company can do a lot better. ico Public Regulation Commission, They want to see the company ramp meanwhile, has to decide if PNM’s up renewable energy and steer clear plan to replace the 834 megawatts of of coal and nuclear power. coal power from the two San Juan New Energy Economy’s Mariel units makes the most sense for rate- Nanasi said adding back any coal payers and the environment. capacity to PNM’s mix of resources PNM proposes to replace the will increase environmental risks power with 134 megawatts of and ultimately the costs to consumnuclear power from the Palo Verde ers. Nuclear Power plant, 40 megaOn Monday, the federal governwatts of power from a new solar ment is expected to release a new farm and 177 megawatts from a rule for carbon emissions from coalnatural-gas-fired plant near Farmfired power plants. The costs of coal ington. PNM also wants to add under that rule and the expected 132 megawatts of coal-fired capacity increase in costs associated with on one of the remaining San Juan coal ash under proposed federal Generating units, a recent increase regulations are expected to increase. from 78 megawatts the company Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 originally requested under the or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. power replacement plan. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock. A hearing on the power-replace-

Continued from Page A-1

Ringside: Group wants smarter system Continued from Page A-1 sheet and court record fill up a computer screen, is among those following the subcommittee’s work. Asbury’s mother has spent most of her life in prison. Born into chaos, Asbury received the gift of stability when her maternal grandparents adopted her and took care of her. “Now they are raising my children,” said Asbury, 34, who did not break the cycle of drugs and crime started by her mother. Asbury is a self-described addict. Amphetamines were her drug of choice, but she said she has been clean for more than a year. Looking back on her arrests, Asbury considers herself one of the lucky ones. She was a woman involved in drug trafficking who did not end up in prison. But, she said, she knows people with criminal backgrounds similar to hers who are locked up. “I sold drugs to support my habit,” Asbury said in an interview. “You can put someone in jail all day long, and they’re not going to stop taking drugs.” That a group of legislators also believe prisons are needlessly housing addicts is a source of encouragement to Asbury. “We need more treatment and less jail time,” she said. Asbury is enrolled in community college. She sees potential to make a living in medical records and billing. Asbury also said she might broaden her studies to become a drug and alcohol counselor because she knows the life and wants to help others leave it behind. Also watching the subcommittee is Roxy Ambrose, 36, a recovering meth-

amphetamine addict. She said she has been clean for more than 100 days. Ambrose had plenty of advantages in life, having been adopted by a solidly middle-class family. But she took the wrong path at a young age, she said, and then stayed on it for 22 years. “At 14, I was running the streets,” she said. Ambrose has two children, but she hasn’t seen them for at least six months. She works as a telemarketer. Her record is free of felony convictions, so she hopes she will be able to stay clean and better herself. She knows others doubt her, and she admits she has feelings of self-doubt, too. “Being an addict is a lonely place because you don’t know where to go,” Ambrose said. One area of the justice system that interests Ambrose is the practice of keeping drug addicts who have committed crimes under house arrest and electronic monitoring. In Ambrose’s view, house arrests make it harder for people to get and hold jobs. House arrests, she said, also might drive up recidivism rates over technical violations, turning somebody who could have been a taxpayer into a prisoner who ends up costing taxpayers. Ambrose and Asbury are among 12 women who recently worked with three artists and a community organization on a public education program about addiction. Their message is emblazoned on the sides of buses in Albuquerque. A woman with a baby is pictured on the sunny side of a river, away from a terrible storm. Two sentences accompany the artwork: “I am more than my addiction. I am more than

what you see.” Young Women United paid for the campaign, then turned the artwork over to Torraco and Maestas’ subcommittee. The organization hopes to inspire changes in how the state deals with drug addicts who steal or defraud others. No shortage of suggestions for criminal justice reform are flowing into the panel. But legislators already are poised to reject one of the most controversial — a call to decriminalize prostitution. An attorney, Carolina Martin Ramos, recently told the subcommittee that paid sexual encounters between consenting adults should not be a crime. She calls prostitutes “sex workers” and says subjecting them to prosecution and prison only drives poor women into more dangerous parts of town. Maestas said Ramos’ arguments are thought-provoking, but his subcommittee will not support her proposal. “The liberation of the sex workers, the prostitution stuff, I don’t believe there’s the political will for that right now,” he said. “It probably will not make it into the [reform] package.” His subcommittee has miles to go. Whether it gets anywhere is an open question. Asbury and Ambrose are rooting for the legislative reformers. They said reducing drug addiction will cut the crime rate and lessen human suffering each step of the way. Ringside Seat is a column about New Mexico’s people, politics and news. Follow the Ringside Seat blog at www. santafenewmexican.com. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com.

Yemeni boys look at a vehicle destroyed during a police raid on an al-Qaida hideout in the Arhab region, north of Sanaa, Yemen, that resulted in the death of five militants and six soldiers. According to the Obama administration’s most recent terrorism report, al-Qaida’s core leadership has been degraded, limiting its ability to launch attacks and lead its followers. This has resulted in more autonomous and more aggressive affiliates, according to the report, which recorded a 43 percent increase in terrorist attacks worldwide from 2012 to 2013. HANI MOHAMMED/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Shape: Network poses new challenges Continued from Page A-1 neighboring Afghanistan will dry up field intelligence and restrict the effectiveness of U.S. counterterrorism operations. There is a worry that a pullback could allow al-Qaida to regroup. Moreover, they worry about the thousands of foreign fighters flocking to the civil war in Syria, where the attacks against Iraqis have increased. The Syrian civil war has emboldened the al-Qaida breakaway group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant to expand its cross-border operations into neighboring countries such as Iraq. U.S. officials also are concerned about Westerners who have joined the Syrian fight because they may be recruited to return home and conduct attacks. When the U.S. counterterrorism strategy was conceived, it was thought that if al-Qaeda’s core leadership was dismantled or killed, then affiliated groups would simply become localized threats, said Katherine Zimmerman of the conservative American Enterprise Institute. At that time, there wasn’t a network of connections among all the groups, said Zimmerman, who specializes in the Yemen-based group, Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP, and al-Qaida’s affiliate in Somalia, alShabaab. “As the network has become more decentralized, it’s become much more reliant on these human relationships and the sharing of resources, advice and fighters, which means that you no longer need bin Laden sitting in

Pakistan dispersing cash to various affiliates,” Zimmerman said. “They have developed their own sources. … You can’t simply pound on part of the network and expect to see results.” Tom Joscelyn, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and senior editor of The Long War Journal, a website that tracks how al-Qaida and its affiliates operate around the globe, said he thinks the Bush and Obama administrations mistakenly defined al-Qaida as a top-down pyramid with a hierarchal structure — that “if you sort of lop off the top of the pyramid, the whole thing crumbles.” Al-Qaida leaders have scattered to other parts of the world, he said, noting that Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula is headed by a former aide to bin Laden, who is now general manager of al-Qaida globally. More recently, the Treasury Department penalized a senior al-Qaida operative on al-Qaida’s military committee who relocated from Pakistan to Syria and is involved with a group plotting against Western targets, he said. U.S. officials have tracked communication traffic going back and forth between Syria and Pakistan and Afghanistan, he said. “This shows, to my mind, that we’re not dealing with this sort of discrete core entity in Pakistan and Afghanistan that can be droned to death, but in fact an international network that poses a lot graver challenges,” Joscelyn said. While Obama is keen to burnish his legacy as a president who ended U.S. involvement in the wars in Afghani-

stan and Iraq and killed bin Laden, even he has softened his rhetoric on terrorism. Two years ago, on a trip to Afghanistan, Obama said, “The goal that I set — to defeat al-Qaida, and deny it a chance to rebuild — is within reach.” His administration’s most recent terrorism report, released by the State Department in late April, uses a less definitive voice. “The al-Qaida core’s vastly reduced influence became far more evident in 2013,” the report said. “Al-Qaida leader [Ayman] al-Zawahiri was rebuffed in his attempts to mediate a dispute among al-Qaida affiliates operating in Syria, with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant publicly dissociating their group from al-Qaida.” Michael Sheehan, a terrorism expert at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, said the top two groups he fears could attack the U.S. are “al-Qaida central” in Afghanistan and Pakistan and AQAP, which has attempted several attacks on the United States, including a failed airline bombing on Christmas Day in 2009 and the attempted bombing of U.S.-bound cargo planes in October 2010. “The other organizations right now — although potentially very, very problematic — are currently focused on the local fight,” said Sheehan, the Obama administration’s former assistant undersecretary of defense for special operations and low-intensity conflict. “Whether eventually they shift to Europe first, then the U.S., we’ll see. But certainly a potential is there.”


Lunes, el 2 de junio, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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EL NUEVO MEXICANO Canutito learns Una carrera ‘como hacer pan’ al cuidado E de los niños

Dotson en la Navidad de 1971, un par de años después de que comenzara su Carrera de enfermería. FOTO CORTESÍA

Por Robert Nott The New Mexican

C

uando Cheri Dotson era pequeña, convirtió una casa de muñecas que le regalaron en un hospital. Usaba su disfraz de uniforme de enfermera hasta que se iba a la cama. Ella pasó varios años a su corta edad en hospitales debido a diferentes enfermedades y agradecía todo lo que las enfermeras hacían por ella. Dotson tiene ya cerca de 45 años como enfermera — 21 de los cuales han sido al servicio de las escuelas. Esta semana, se jubilará de las Escuelas Públicas de Santa Fe después de 14 años de servicio como enfermera a cargo. Dotson, oriunda de Silver City, creció en varios lugares, asistiendo a 11 escuelas en 13 años y comenzó su carrera de enfermería con la Fuerza Aérea de E.E.U.U. en 1971. Creció en una familia del ejército, comenta. Dotson dice que las enfermeras escolares son las “pioneras en asistencia médica accesible,” es la gente que ayuda a los niños a recibir tratamiento médico apropiado, medicina, cuidado preventivo y apoyo emocional. Ella recita una letanía de estadísticas relacionadas con las enfermeras del año escolar 2013-14: cerca de 1,645 niños de alrededor de 14,000 tuvieron condiciones médicas que requerían atención en el último año; 650 estudiantes estuvieron bajo algún tipo de medicamento diario y cerca de 79,000 veces los estudiantes visitaron la oficina de la enfermera dentro de las Escuelas Públicas de Santa Fe. Pero, ¿cómo sólo 14,000 niños visitaron a la enfermera 79,000 veces? “Algunos de ellos son ‘clientes frecuentes,’ ” comenta. Otros buscan alguna manera de salirse de la clase, así que Dotson y su equipo de 25 enfermeras y

Cheri Dotson, quien ha trabajado como enfermera escolar por 31 años, incluyendo 15 años en las Escuelas Públicas de Santa Fe, se jubilará este 4 de junio. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

15 asistentes médicos ponen mucha atención a la duración de esas visitas. Si, por ejemplo, un estudiante siempre llega a la oficina de la enfermera durante la misma hora de una clase, eso quizá significa que no le gusta su profesor, está siendo hostigado o se siente perdido. En ese caso, asegura, las enfermeras pueden averiguar la causa detrás de su acción y trabajar con la administración de la escuela para resolver el problema. Claro, hay otros que cuentan mentiras piadosas. Un estudiante de secundaria llegó con Dotson argumentando una súbita ceguera. Ella le sugirió que se lavara los ojos con agua. Cinco minutos después, había recuperado la visión de manera milagrosa. “Algunos chicos se sienten invisibles en las escuelas, así que vienen a la oficina de la enfermera … para apoyo

emocional,” comenta. Ahí los estudiantes encontrarán a una persona que los mirará directamente a los ojos, les preguntará qué es lo que les pasa y hará lo mejor posible para ayudarlos. “Jugamos un poco al Sherlock Holmes la mayoría de las veces, tratando de averiguar qué es lo que tienen,” dice Dotson. Como los tiempos cambian, también así el rol de la enfermera en la escuela. Los casos de asma y diabetes han aumentado con respecto a 30 años atrás, comenta, ahora las enfermeras tienen además el gran reto de las enfermedades mentales. Hambre, generalmente ligado a pobreza (aunque algunas veces los estudiantes de preparatoria olvidan comer su desayuno), impactan el aprovechamiento académico. Ella disfruta ser una enfermera escolar principalmente por los niños, por eso muchas de las enfermeras eligen traba-

jar en el campo de la educación. Pero la desventaja es el salario: Las enfermeras son pagadas como los maestros del estado, con tres niveles que comienzan con $30,000, $40,000 y $50,000. Dotson, que cumplirá 65 este verano, dice que extrañará a la gente con la que ha trabajado más que cualquier otra cosa. Ha sido mentora de varias enfermeras en las escuelas. Una de ellas, la enfermera Cindy Geist de Santa Fe High School, quien comenta que lo que más extrañará de Dotson es su “amor por el puesto, su amor por la enfermería en las escuelas, que puede ser un trabajo difícil de querer. Ha hecho que nuestro trabajo tenga más visibilidad. Ella le ha dado legitimidad y yo no creo que esa sea siempre el caso para las enfermeras escolares.” Traducción de Patricia De Dios para The New Mexican.

O 10596 Crucigrama No.N10596 CRUCIGRAMA Horizontales 3. Sustancia blanca, cristalina, aromática y antiséptica que existe en el aceite de ciertas plantas, especialmente del tomillo. 8. Agua congelada en cristales menudos que cae en forma de lluvia. 10. Del sabor del vinagre (fem.). 12. Hacer admirable, enaltecer una cosa. 13. Hija de Cadmo y Harmonía. 14. Uno con cuerdas. 15. Costumbre o ceremonia. 17. Individuo de cierto bando de la comarca cántabra de Trasmiera, en el siglo XV. 19. Variedad de rosas y frutos muy delicados. 21. Que edita. 23. Que oye (fem.). 25. Voz usada en algunas partes para espantar a las aves. 26. Perito en vinos. 27. Símbolo del iridio. 28. En ese lugar. 30. Roda, parte de la quilla. 31. De una tribu amerindia que habitaba en los estados mexicanos de Querétaro y Guanajuato. 34. Especie de arquita (pl.). 37. Contraer catarro. 39. Especie de coche de dos o cuatro ruedas. 41. De figura de huevo. 43. Natural de Irán. 45. Proposición mantenida con razonamientos. 46. Especie de violoncelo siamés. 47. Las musas. 48. (... en Hunze) Ciudad de Países Bajos. Verticales 1. Integridad, perfección. 2. Envié, dirigí. 3. En Argentina, terotero, teruteru. 4. Jurisconsulto musulmán con autoridad pública, cuyas decisiones son consideradas como leyes. 5. Color rojo que se saca de la cochinilla, de la raíz de

se weekend, Canutito shake for breakfast! ¡Gracame tumbling out cias!” He reached por el glass of el cuarto de dormir all happy con su chocolate and into la cocina. shake. He saw Grampo “I wouldn’t Caralampio sitting drink that if I was en la mesa eating tú,” threatened su breakfast. He Grama Cuca. Ése went and sat down no es un chocolate en la mesa también shake, m’hijo. It y se preparó para is un vaso full of comer his own yeast que I’ve been desayuno. dissolving en agua Larry Torres para hacer pan.” “Boy grampo,” el muchachito began, Growing up “Oh yuck,” dijo “I am so hungry Spanglish Canutito, putting que I could eat un el vaso down muy caballo.” disappointed. “¡Cochino!” grampo teased Canutito watched as him back. “¿Por qué would Grama Cuca added the levaanybody want to comerse a dura to the dough, y luego horse?” she worked that masa back “No es more than una and forth con sus dedos, addexpression,” Canutito said, ing una poca de harina to her stuffing su boca con un piece hands to hacer remove any de hard, day-old toast. dough que se había hecho “Para un buen hambre,” stick. She patted la masa grampo said, “no hay pan into una bola grande, rubbed duro.” some manteca on it and cov“¿Qué quiere hacer mean ered it con un trapo. eso, grampo?” asked Canu“Now what, grama?” tito. Canutito asked as he “It means,” grampo replicó, watched her. “que hunger is the best gravy. “Ahora,” grama said, Si estás hungry enough, “dejamos que la yeast haga you’ll eat anything.” a la masa rise, y cuando it “I would eat a zorrillo,” does, we will apuñarla down Canutito said, haciendo tease again.” a su grampo right back. Mientras que Canutito ate “Yo sí; I did that,” Grampo his breakfast, he kept un ojo Caralampio said. “I ate a en la masa covered with a skunk una vez pero I didn’t dish cloth. Pronto the dough know lo qué era. What had doubled in size. happened fue que una vez, “Ahora sí, grama,” Canucuando I was young, I went tito shrieked todo excited, “It out pa’l baile. I danced toda is time to apuñar the dough.” la noche y cuando I came He watched as Grama back home, I was bien hunCuca inserted her dedos into gry. I saw que there was the dough and stamped una some fried carne in a puela on top of the stove. I thought cruz grande right through la masa. to myself, ‘How thought“Why did you trace a ful de mi mamá. She must cross into la masa, grama?” have fried un conejo for me.’ he asked. Pues what I didn’t know era “Es mi secret ingredient que she had fried a skunk to so that it will be más tasty,” remove the manteca from grama grinned. She divided it. She could then use la fat del zorrillo en sus homemade the masa into bolas that she called ‘testales’ and lay them remedios. So I ended up side by side en una bandeja comiendo skunk sin darme cuenta and still thinking que to rise again. Entonces she popped them into el horno to era rabbit meat.” bake por media hora. “Eso es un poco gross, Cuando el pan was taken grampo,” Canutito said. Pero del horno and cooled down, just then, he noticed que Canutito got to eat some con había algo thick and brown butter y jelly de capulín. He in a glass sobre la mesa. “Oh grama!” he exclaimed, was todo content with his pan de levadura. “You made me a chocolate

Tuesday has LOCAL BUSINESS Tuesday, January 15, 2013

LOCAL BUSINESS

BUSINESS BEAT

Home sales in Santa Fe rise 23 percent By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican

T

he Santa Fe Association of Realtors will announce the details at its media breakfast Jan. 16, but the news is now official: 2012 was the best year for residential home sales since 2007. Alan Ball, an agent with Keller Williams Santa Fe who keeps monthly sales data, reports residential sales hit 1,641 last year — up 23 percent from 2011. But as we’ve reported here all year, that does not mean all is well with the sellers. Due to distressed short sales and foreclosures, the average sales prices dropped 6 percent in 2012 to $421,577. But the year ended with a bang as December saw 150 sales — and the fourth quarter itself saw three strong months in a row, and that despite the fiscal uncertainties coming from Washington, D.C.

www.angelfreire.com

6. 7. 9.

11. 16. 17. 18. 20. 22. 24. 29. 30. 32. 33. 34.

la rubia o del palo de Pernambuco. Viento que en Europa sopla del Sahara. Fijará tenazmente la consideración en una cosa con demasiada insistencia. Residuo que queda en la caldera del alambique después de destilado el vino. Polo negativo de una pila eléctrica. Uno de los estados montañosos de los EE.UU. Tela de seda sin brillo. Alabo. Indoiranios. Prefijo que indica “denominación”. Indígena de raza malaya que habita al norte de la isla de Luzón. Italiana. Extrañas, poco frecuentes. Enfermedad de las fosas nasales. Piojo de las gallinas. En Argentina, gusano que se cría en las heridas de

O Solución del No.N 10596 SOLUCION SOLUCION DEL DEL NO 10596 10595

uuu

When it comes to brewing, Jami Nordby says, ‘There are so many directions people can go. Imagination is the only limit.’ Nordby owns Santa Fe Homebrew Supply. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

His business is hopping los animales. 35. Embarcaciones. 36. Pastor siciliano amado por Galatea. 38. Piedra llana y poco gruesa. 40. Piedra consagrada del altar. 42. Período de veinticuatro horas. 44. Nota musical.

You turn to us.

The restoration project at La Fonda is well under way, and one of the challenges for Jennifer Kimball and her managers is to phase the project so it doesn’t impact visitors. To accomplish that, contractors try to start work at 9 a.m. on the first 100 rooms now under construction. As those rooms come back on line in April or May, the renovation moves to the next 80 rooms with the goal of having all the rooms completely modernized and ungraded by Indian Market weekend. Kimball is also proud that all of the 220 workers will remain employed during the nine-month project and that vacancy rates have not been impacted. Because of the lower supply of rooms, occupancy is close to 100 percent — of course, the $89 a night special La Fonda is offering during the remodeling doesn’t hurt with bargainconscious travelers.


A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

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Cargo por activación o actualización por línea: hasta $35. IMPORTANTE INFORMACIÓN PARA EL CONSUMIDOR: Sujeto al Acuerdo con el Cliente, plan de llamadas y aprobación de crédito. Cargo de hasta $350 por cancelación prematura por línea. Se puede aplicar un cargo por reabastecimiento. Las ofertas y la cobertura varían por servicio y no están disponibles en todas las áreas; visite vzw.com. Hasta agotar existencias. Ofertas por tiempo limitado. El reembolso mediante una tarjeta de débito puede demorar hasta 6 semanas y se vence en 12 meses. No se dará dinero en efectivo o crédito si el descuento excede el precio del aparato después de haber aplicado cualquier otro descuento o reembolso disponibles. Ellipsis™ es una marca comercial de Verizon Wireless. © 2014 Samsung Telecommunications America, LLC (“Samsung”). Samsung y Galaxy S son marcas comerciales registradas de Samsung Electronics America, Inc. y sus entidades relacionadas. En CA: El impuesto sobre la venta está basado en el precio completo de venta al público del teléfono. © 2014 Verizon Wireless.


Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

LIFE&SCIENCE

A-7

Health Science Environment

Astronaut Scott Kelly, a crew member of the mission to the International Space Station, accompanied by his brother Mark Kelly, right, heads to the launch of the Soyuz-FG rocket in 2010 in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. DMITRY LOVETSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Identical twins offer up selves for science Both will undergo rigorous tests to see the impact of space flight By Marcia Dunn

The Associated Press

Red Cross and UNICEF medics administer polio and measles vaccinations to children at an evacuation center in 2013 for typhoon survivors near Tacloban, Philippines. Measles cases in the past five months have caused more U.S. illnesses than in any year since 1996, according to numbers released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. BULLIT MARQUEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. measles outbreaks doubled in past month Overseas travelers have brought illness into country By Mike Stobbe

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Measles cases are accelerating, and in the past five months have caused more U.S. illnesses than in any entire year since 1996. Health officials say 307 cases have been reported since New Year’s Day. About half have been in the past month — most from a huge outbreak in unvaccinated Amish communities in Ohio. That’s a blistering start, even before the customary spurt of cases seen in the late spring and summer, health officials noted. “Measles has reached a 20-year high. This is not the kind of record we want to break,” said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC released the latest numbers Thursday during a news conference. Nearly all the cases have been linked to travelers who caught the virus abroad and spread it in the United States among unvaccinated people. Many of the travelers had been to the Philippines, where a recent measles epidemic has caused more than 30,000 illnesses. Most of the unvaccinated skipped shots for personal or philosophical reasons, Schuchat said. About half of those who got sick have been adults 20 or older. At least 43 people were hospitalized with measles complications — mainly pneumonia. There have been no deaths. No measles deaths have been reported in the U.S. since 2003. The measles virus is highly contagious, spreading easily through the air and in closed rooms. Infected droplets can linger for up to two hours after the sick person leaves.

It causes a fever, runny nose, cough and a rash all over the body. In rare cases, measles can be deadly, and is particularly dangerous for children. Infection also can cause pregnant women to have a miscarriage or premature birth. Before a vaccine became available about 50 years ago, nearly all children got measles by their 15th birthday — that’s hundreds of thousands of cases annually. In those days, nearly 500 Americans died from measles each year. According to CDC records, the last time the nation saw this many cases in an entire year was 1996, when 508 were reported. The last time this many cases were reported this early in the year was 1994, when 764 cases occurred in the first five months. The end-of-year tally turned out to be 963. Schuchat encouraged doctors to be on the lookout for measles, and urged the public to be fully vaccinated — especially before traveling overseas.

30% of world’s populaton is overweight No nation immune, researcher says By Maria Cheng

The Associated Press

LONDON — Almost a third of the world is now fat, and no country has been able to curb obesity rates in the last three decades, according to a new global analysis. Researchers found more than 2 billion people worldwide are now overweight or obese. The highest rates were in the Middle East and North Africa, where nearly 60 percent of men and 65 percent of women are heavy. The U.S. has about 13 percent of the world’s fat population, a greater percentage than any other country. China and India combined have about 15 percent. “It’s pretty grim,” said Christopher Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, who led the study. He and colleagues reviewed more than 1,700 studies covering 188 countries from 1980 to 2013. “When we realized that not a single country has had a significant decline in obesity, that tells you how hard a challenge this is.” Murray said there was a strong link between income and obesity; as people get richer, their waistlines also tend to start

bulging. He said scientists have noticed accompanying spikes in diabetes and that rates of cancers linked to weight, like pancreatic cancer, are also rising. The new report was paid for by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and published online Thursday in the journal Lancet. Recently, the World Health Organization established a highlevel commission tasked with ending childhood obesity. “Our children are getting fatter,” Dr. Margaret Chan, WHO’s director-general, said bluntly during a speech at the agency’s annual meeting in Geneva. “Parts of the world are quite literally eating themselves to death.” Earlier this year, WHO said that no more than 5 percent of your daily calories should come from sugar. “Modernization has not been good for health,” said Syed Shah, an obesity expert at United Arab Emirates University, who found obesity rates have jumped five times in the past 20 years even in a handful of remote Himalayan villages in Pakistan. His research was presented this week at a conference in Bulgaria. “Years ago, people had to walk for hours if they wanted to make a phone call,” he said. “Now everyone has a cellphone.” Shah also said the villagers no longer have to rely on their own farms for food.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — When astronaut Scott Kelly embarks on a one-year space station stint next spring, his twin brother will be offering more than his usual moral support. Retired astronaut Mark Kelly will be joining in from Earth, undergoing medical testing before, during and after his brother’s American-record-setting flight. It’s part of an unprecedented study of identical twins, courtesy of the Kellys and NASA. Researchers hope to better understand the effects of prolonged weightlessness by comparing the space twin with the ground twin. The Earthbound Kelly draws the line, though, at mimicking his brother’s extreme exercise in orbit or eating “crappy space station food.” “It’s not bad when you’re in space,” Mark said. But he won’t be carrying around “a can of Russian lamb and potatoes when I’m out to eat with my friends.” As for matching his brother’s 1½ to 2 hours of daily exercise, Mark replied with a mutinous chuckle, “Sure, I’ll try. No problem.” This is the genetic double, mind you, of the 50-yearold astronaut who has volunteered to spend an entire year aboard the International Space Station beginning next March, along with Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, 54, a former paratrooper. No American has come close to a year; seven months is NASA’s max for a single human mission. The Russians are old hands at long-duration spaceflight, claiming title to a record-setting, 14½-month mission back in 1994-95. “No second thoughts — I’m actually getting kind of excited about the whole idea as we get closer,” Scott said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. Scott knows what he’s getting into: He spent five months on the orbiting lab in 2010-11. Eager to explore new medical territory, Scott offered to have a pressure sensor drilled into his skull to study the impaired vision experienced by some long-term space fliers. He’s also volunteered for spinal taps in orbit. He’ll share quarters at one point, after all, with an emergency medical doctor-turned-NASA-astronaut. The space station crew typically numbers six. “As a test pilot, I like to push the envelope on things and, in this case, I feel like I’m maybe trying to push the envelope on data collection as well,” explained Scott, a retired Navy captain. The Kellys represent a scientific gift, said Craig Kundrot, deputy chief scientist for the human research program at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. “Not only are they the same genetically, but one is an astronaut, one’s a retired astronaut. So they’ve followed very similar career paths. After Scott’s mission is done, he’ll have 540 days of spaceflight [in four missions]. Mark will have 54. So exactly a 10-fold difference,” Kundrot said. “That’s just an uncanny opportunity that we’re taking advantage of.”

Food-service inspections

An overweight person eats in London in 2007. Almost a third of the world population is now fat, and no country has been able to curb obesity rates in the past three decades, according to a new global analysis released Thursday by Christopher Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

“There are roads for [companies] to bring in their processed foods, and the people don’t have to slaughter their own animals for meat and oil,” he said. “No one knew about Coke and Pepsi 20 years ago. Now it’s everywhere.” In Britain, the independent health watchdog issued new advice Wednesday recommending heavy people be sent to free weight-loss classes to drop about 3 percent of their weight, reason-

ing that losing just a few pounds improves health and is more realistic. About two in three adults in the U.K. are overweight, making it the fattest country in Western Europe. “This is not something where you can just wake up one morning and say, ‘I am going to lose 10 pounds,’ ” said Mike Kelly, the agency’s public health director, in a statement. “It takes resolve and it takes encouragement.”

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Richard Olmsted, rolmsted@sfnewmexican.com

For the period ending May 28. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 827-1840. SAGE BAKERY, 5350 Cerrillos Road. Cited for highrisk violations for connecting prep sink directly to drain line, blocked hand-wash station (corrected), improper temperature in small refrigerator, grime buildup on ice-scoop handle (corrected), paper towels not dispensing at hand-wash station. Cited for moderate-risk violations for blocked sink, flour buildup on equipment, floors and ceilings, openings around doors not protected. Cited for low-risk violations for hard-to clean steam soup kettles, lack of protective covers on lights, unsanitary toilet paper dispenser. KAUNE’S NEIGHBORHOOD MARKET, 511 Old Santa Fe Trail. Cited for high-risk violations for problems with food temperatures (some corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violations for lack of internal thermometer in refrigerator, dust on walk-in ceilings (corrected), problem with back door. LONG JOHN SILVER’S, 3257 Cerrillos Road. No violations. RAAGA, 544 Agua Fría St. Cited for high-risk violation for improper food temperatures, no date on prepared food, improper food cooling, food and grime build up on can opener and ice scoop, grease buildup on vent hood. Cited for low-risk violations for grease buildup on door handle, rusted equipment and shelves. PALACIO CAFE, 209 E. Palace Ave. Previous violations corrected.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com


A-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

TECH

COMMENTARY

Four fallacies in the world of technology By David Auerbach Slate

A

Star Avant demonstrates the new LeapBand from LeapFrog during a press event May 1 in New York. CHARLES SYKES/INVISION

More toy than tech? Review: LeapBand offers features of fitness trackers in kid-friendly way By Bree Fowler

The Associated Press

NEW YORK earable technology is all the rage these days for adults. Now, the concept is spreading to kids. LeapFrog, the maker of kids’ tablets and other educational products, recently unveiled the LeapBand, a device worn around the wrist. It’s really more of a toy, designed for kids ages 4 to 7, rather than a true fitness tracker. Yet it does offer some of the same features in a kid-friendly way. And in light of concerns about kids getting too much screen time, some parents may see the new product as a way to satisfy technological cravings while keeping kids active. The LeapBand doesn’t go on sale until August, but I’ve had a chance to try one out in recent weeks. It will retail for $40 and come in blue, green or pink. The LeapBand doesn’t have a GPS receiver, a touch screen or any sensors to tell exactly how much your child is moving. But a little energy bar that encircles the band’s small color screen does keep track of how many activity challenges your child cues up. In that mode, the band will ask your child to do tasks such as “leap like a frog” or “swim like a fish with a wish.” For each challenge, the child earns points and the energy bar charting their progress extends a little bit more. Once the devices launch, parents will be able to sync the bands with software on the company’s website or a smartphone app and track their child’s activities. Those features

W

COURTESY LEAPFROG

weren’t ready when I tested it. I was surprised how eager my 4-year-old daughter was to follow the instructions the LeapBand gave her. She’s an active kid to start with, but it was fun to see her bounce around the room when the device told her to. Integrated into the device are a variety of virtual pets that your child can exercise along with, as well as feed and bathe. Remember those Tamagotchi toys from the 1990s? It’s the same idea. Points earned from activity challenges unlock new pets, as well as treats and toys for them.

There are several different pets and customization options, so little kids may need help setting this up. My daughter selected a cat, customized the color of its fur, chose a name and then danced along as it moved across the screen. But she also got sucked in by some of the band’s more sedate games, particularly one where you use the device’s arrow keys to catch falling food items in your pet’s feeding dish. The first day she had it, she wouldn’t take the LeapBand off. But as with a lot of other toys she’s received, it was pushed aside in favor of something else by the second day. Like many LeapFrog products, the LeapBand is designed to withstand the everyday tortures inflicted by small children. While a bit bulky, its hard, plastic shell is durable and water resistant. The reality is, most small children aren’t going to wear or use this kind of device on a regular basis the way an adult would with a traditional fitness tracker. And unlike adults who buy fitness trackers, most kids aren’t focused on losing weight or staying active. In addition, the LeapBand’s games and activity challenges just aren’t engaging enough to monopolize a small child’s limited attention span for very long. The website will eventually have additional games that parents can download, giving kids more variety. But it’s still tough to draw young kids for long. Yet if a product like this gets some kids that normally would curl up on the couch with a tablet to instead get on their feet and bounce around, then maybe it’s not a bad thing after all.

LG emphasizes simplicity in new G3 Smartphone ditches complex features in favor of essentials

complex to use or don’t work well. With water resistance, for instance, Ma said LG would have had to “sacrifice other key features and functions,” including keeping the weight down and the device small enough to hold comBy Anick Jesdanun The Associated Press fortably. The G3 also promises fast autoNEW YORK — LG’s new focusing and one-touch controls smartphone provides sharper pic- on its 13-megapixel camera. Peotures than other leading phones, ple will be able to unlock phones while sporting a customizable not with passcodes but a pattern keyboard that promises to make of taps on the screen. The keytyping easier. board’s height can be adjusted to The G3 phone’s high-resolution make keys bigger or smaller, and display has 538 pixels per inch. users can choose which symbols Most other phones are in the appear on the bottom row. 300-pixel range, with a handful But many of the innovations in reaching the 400s. The phone’s the G3 are familiar. For instance, display measures 5.5 inches it offers a way to hide certain diagonally, yet the phone is only a photos and video when lending a tad larger and heavier than Samphone to others. Samsung’s S5 has sung’s 5.1-inch Galaxy S5. a similar feature. But the G3 lacks water resisLG said the phone will be tance, a fingerprint reader and a available in the U.S. this summer heart-rate monitor — all of which through all major wireless carriare found in the S5. ers. Prices weren’t announced. In an interview last week, U.S. LG has had trouble getting marketing executive Chang Ma noticed for its smartphones in a said LG wanted to emphasize market dominated by Samsung simplicity and avoid loading Electronics Co. and Apple Inc. According to Gartner, LG had a the phone with features that are

An LG employee holds the company’s newly unveiled smartphone called the G3 at a press event Tuesday in London. LEFTERIS PITARAKIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

market share of less than 5 percent last year, in fourth place just behind Huawei. Samsung had a 31 percent market share last year, and Apple had 16 percent. Last year’s G2 phone was notable for moving the power and volume controls to the back, which the company said made the phone easier to handle and less prone to drops. But the phone

got little attention. The G Flex, a phone with a curved display, was expensive, and the benefits of the slight curve weren’t apparent. LG also makes the Nexus 5 phone under Google’s brand. Ma said LG has learned from past launches and will emphasize not the specifications and the technology, but the benefits that they provide.

s any historian, psychologist, sociologist or scientist will tell you, the truth of an idea has very little to do with how fast it spreads and how well it’s believed. Twitter, Upworthy, BuzzFeed, Tumblr and others can spread simple, easy-toremember notions among friends, acquaintances and even news sites. Some of these ideas, like #YesAllWomen, are admirable and well-intentioned. Many of these ideas are terrible, however, and it drives me fairly crazy to see the same mistaken thoughts being endlessly regurgitated across social networks and online media. So at the risk of giving these ideas even more undeserved exposure, I present four technology fallacies I wish to extinguish. 1. No, the technology business is not computer science. Ninety-five percent of what you read on Valleywag, Pando, Business Insider and the like revolves around business news about technology companies. Correspondingly, 95 percent of the tech business is the equivalent of marketing toilet paper in different colors and different wrappers. If you think that you are any more technically informed for reading this news, you may be fooling yourself. Perversely, the tech business often trumpets just how ignorant it is about the technological guts of the products that make it rich. For example, when I looked at Business Insider’s hit piece on Marissa Mayer, it was clear that a cabal of white male executive dinosaurs, none of whom knew the first thing about computer science, had ganged up to badmouth Mayer to writer Nicholas Carlson. None of them criticized her technical knowledge, of course. That wasn’t an issue for them, and it didn’t appear to be an issue for Business Insider, either. The greatest computer scientists of all time are not people you’ve heard of, with the possible exception of Alan Turing. People like Alan Perlis, John McCarthy, Edsger Dijkstra, Donald Knuth and Frances Allen are brilliant minds, and they devoted themselves to the theoretical underpinnings of computers that made possible all the software applications we use today. Many programmers are not even familiar with their work, but these computer scientists contribute more to computers today than Apple’s Tim Cook does. 2. No, programmers are not all straight, white, libertarian men. I have been enjoying the rich irony of entering the lily-white, all-American world of writing after my time in the tech world, where I worked with as many foreigners as Americans and even had several bosses who weren’t white. No, it was far from perfect; the gender imbalance remains acute and discrimination occurs much as it does elsewhere. But the portrayal of a white male techie monoculture seems to be some bizarre projection by a journalistic cabal made up largely of white men. Google’s ex-CEO Eric Schmidt said in 2013 that India-born CEOs headed 40 percent of Silicon Valley’s startups. You wouldn’t know that from reading American tech journalism. Likewise, while there is a libertarian contingent among programmers, there’s a considerably larger contingent of flaming lefty socialist Burning Man attendees. Many of them do not identify as straight. And there is no overlap whatsoever between geographical techie concentrations and tea party members of Congress — quite the opposite in fact. And did I mention the substantial trans community among techies? Among notable 1980s game designers alone, there was the hugely influential Dani Bunten Berry, Rebecca Heineman and Cathryn Mataga. Writing articles about these people would encourage trans people and women a lot more than writing article after article about white male monocultures, but maybe they don’t get the clicks. 3. No, programmers are not smarter than the rest of us. The stereotype of the programmer is that of the quasi-autistic savant staring at the screen, locked in battle with code and seeing the entire world as a stream of 0s and 1s. The digitalization of society has proceeded with such speed that figures like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates and Larry Page have been made into geniuses — evil geniuses sometimes, but geniuses. For every paean to Jobs that extols him as the Moses of computers parting the sea of bits, there’s another portraying him as the Antichrist who accelerated the hydra of capitalism to throttle us all by the neck that much more quickly. Make no mistake, those entrepreneurs all had or have a sharp combination of business acumen and tech smarts, employing programmers who walk the right line between speed and quality — erring on the side of speed, of course. But those skills often come at a certain price. Just as fiction writers often lose all sense of perspective of how the world works outside of their own creations, software engineers are given to see the world in terms too analogous to machinery. This is only natural. But the smartness of programmers is one kind of smartness and not the only kind. 4. No, Technology X is not here to stay. The desktop is dying. Even the laptop is dying. Mobile is rising. Instagram is huge. Facebook is flatlining. Or is it the other way around? The thunderous voice of daily tech journalism is that of the everpresent Now. The amount of press spilled over bitcoin and Rap Genius should embarrass any publisher. Even as we see technologies of a year or two ago decline, the tiniest shifts in the cool new thing merit microscopic dissection as though they will affect our greatgrandchildren. If only we paid so much attention to climate change. Every change to Google or Amazon’s algorithms is treated as though it’s of life-changing significance but rarely evaluated in terms of what the core business model could look like in five to 10 years. Think about life 10 or 15 years ago, if you can remember that far back. Think about how little time you spent online, whether you even had Internet access, how you didn’t use Facebook, how you didn’t text or Skype or whatever. Try to imagine that many changes 10 years down the line. Facebook and Twitter will either be gone or drastically changed. Google will exist but likely won’t loom as large as it does today. Something we can’t even imagine will rule our lives and channel our thoughts. And there will be a whole new set of mistaken ideas that will be spread through it.


REGION

Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Miss. Senate race steals attention ahead of primaries Voters in eight states, including New Mexico, head to polls Tuesday By Charles Babington The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Strange, unsavory twists in Mississippi’s Senate Republican race are grabbing the most attention of Tuesday’s primary elections in eight states. Sen. Thad Cochran, seeking a seventh six-year term, faces state Sen. Chris McDaniel, who’s backed by tea party groups. Voters in New Mexico, Alabama, California, Iowa, Montana, New Jersey and South Dakota also will nominate

candidates for the Nov. 4 elections. The Mississippi Senate race initially followed familiar themes. Cochran, backed by the Republican establishment, said he consistently steers federal money to the state. McDaniel said Cochran is insufficiently conservative. Things turned bizarre when four McDaniel supporters were charged with crimes after one of them photographed Cochran’s wife in her nursing home, where she has spent 13 years, suffering dementia. Police said the four men conspired to use the images to advance allegations Cochran was having an inappropriate relationship, which the senator denies. McDaniel and others have raised questions about Cochran bringing a female Senate aide on numerous official trips overseas.

N.M. county to fight rare bird’s listing The Associated Press

PORTALES — An Eastern New Mexico county is suing the federal government in an effort to stop the listing of a rare grouse as a threatened species. The Roosevelt County Commission will meet in special session Tuesday to give notice of intent to file a suit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Portales News-Tribune reported. The county also is joining an Arizona/New Mexico coalition in combating the lesser prairie chicken listing. Ranchers and oil companies believe the listing will have a negative effect on the ranching, oil and gas and wind farm industries in New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Colorado. That’s where the chicken’s habitat is known. The federal government said those states had fewer than 18,000 lesser prairie chickens in 2013, down almost 50 percent from 2012. Federal officials say the bird has lost more than 80 percent of its traditional habitat, mostly because of human activity such as oil and gas drilling, ranching and the construction of power lines and wind turbines. Roosevelt County Manager Charlene Webb said the listing will hurt the county’s road budget. That’s because every time the road department has a project that is federally or state funded, they have to have an environmental consultation, Webb said. Webb said it could cost the county at least $20,000 a year. The effect of the listing on farmers and ranchers has not been seen yet, according to Webb. Some environmentalists don’t think the federal government is being aggressive enough in preserving the bird’s habitat.

In brief

Boy’s dream of seeing Albuquerque realized A 9-year-old Texas boy’s wish to see Albuquerque before he goes blind has come true in a way he couldn’t have imagined. Ben Pierce got to see the city and its blue skies from inside a hot air balloon Saturday. Ben, who lives in Dallas, was born four months premature. His mother, Heidi Pierce, says the birth and scar tissue from subsequent surgeries is causing him to gradually lose his eyesight. The boy’s parents had him start a “bucket list” of places he would like to see. Ben says Albuquerque made the list because he likes the song of the same name performed by “Weird Al” Yankovic. Other destinations on the boy’s list include the Grand Canyon, Washington, D.C., and the redwood forest.

Memorial honors teens killed in plane crash SILVER CITY — Three students killed in a plane crash more than week ago near Silver City were remembered Sunday. KOB-TV reported a public memorial service was scheduled Sunday afternoon for Ella Kirk, Michael Mahl and Ella Myers. The service is scheduled for 2 p.m. on the Western New Mexico University campus. The three teens were classmates at Aldo Leopold Charter School. School officials say the students were on board the single-engine plane that went down about a mile northeast of Whiskey Creek Airport before bursting into flames. Authorities say a fourth person who died was the plane’s pilot. Brian Myers, 16-year-old Ella Myers’ dad, previously said the trio had gone to look at the Signal Fire, which started in the Gila National Forest on May 11. The Associated Press

Cochran’s adult children say he remains devoted to his wife. McDaniel says he had no part in the photography incident, calling it reprehensible. Still, the matter has dominated the campaign’s closing days, with each side accusing the other of underhanded politics. Whoever wins Tuesday will be favored in November in the heavily Republican state. In Iowa, a much more competitive state, voters will pick nominees to succeed retiring Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin. Rep. Bruce Braley is unopposed for the Democrats’ nod. In the feisty GOP race, state Sen. Joni Ernst faces businessman Mark Jacobs. Ernst’s endorsers range from establishment Republican Mitt Romney to tea party favorite Sarah Palin. Ernst’s TV ad boasting of

her childhood farm chore, castrating hogs, made national waves. In South Dakota, businessman Rick Weiland is unopposed in the Democratic primary to replace retiring Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D. Former Gov. Mike Rounds and four others seek the GOP nomination. Republican Gov. Dennis Daugaard seeks another term. Former state wildfire agency head Joe Lowe and state Rep. Susan Wismer seek the Democratic nod for governor. In Montana, Sen. John Walsh was appointed to the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Democrat Max Baucus. He faces two challengers in the Democratic primary. Rep. Steve Daines and two others seek the GOP nomination. California is holding its first gubernatorial primary under the new allcandidates system in which the top

two finishers, regardless of party, face off in November. Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown is favored to grab one spot. Republicans include former investment banker Neel Kashkari and state legislator Tim Donnelly. In Alabama, Republican Gov. Robert Bentley seeks a second term. Democratic candidates for his job include former U.S. Rep. Parker Griffith and former baseball player Kevin Bass. In New Mexico, five Democrats seek their party’s nomination to challenge Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. In New Jersey, former mayors Steve Lonegan and Tom MacArthur seek the GOP nod to replace retiring U.S. Rep. John Runyan. Democratic contenders include Aimee Belgard and Howard Kleinhendler.

CALIFORNIA

Medical pot farms draining streams dry By Jason Dearen

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Some drought-stricken rivers and streams in Northern California’s coastal forests are being polluted and sucked dry by water-guzzling medical marijuana farms, wildlife officials say — an issue that has spurred at least one county to try to outlaw personal grows. State fish and wildlife officials say much of the marijuana being grown in northern counties under the state’s medical pot law is not being used for legal, personal use, but for sale both in California and states where pot is still illegal. This demand is fueling backyard and larger-scale pot farming, especially in remote Lake, Humboldt and Mendocino counties on the densely forested North Coast, officials said. “People are coming in, denuding the hillsides, damming the creeks and mixing in fertilizers that are not allowed in the U.S. into our watersheds,” said Denise Rushing, a Lake County supervisor who supports an ordinance essentially banning outdoor grows in populated areas. “When rains come, it flows downstream into the lake and our water supply,” she said. Many affected waterways also contain endangered salmon, steelhead and other creatures protected by state and federal law. Wildlife biologists noticed streams running dry more often over the 18 years since the state passed Proposition 215, but weren’t sure why. “We knew people were diverting water for marijuana operations, but we wanted to know exactly how much,” said Scott Bauer, the department biologist who studied the pot farms’ effects on four watersheds. “We didn’t know they could consume all the water in a stream.” So Bauer turned to Google mapping technology and satellite data to find out where the many gardens are, and how many plants each contained. His study estimates that about

A California Department of Fish and Wildlife diver conducts an underwater survey to count fish in a tributary to the South Fork Eel River in Humboldt County, Calif. Some drought-stricken rivers and streams in the state are being polluted and sucked dry by water-guzzling medical marijuana farms, wildlife officials say. CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

30,000 pot plants were being grown in each river system — and he estimates that each plant uses about six gallons per day over marijuana’s 150-day growing season. Some growers and others argue the six-gallon estimate is high, and that pot plants can use far less water, depending on size. He compared that information with government data on stream flows, and visited 32 sites with other biologists to verify the mapping data. He said most grow sites had posted notices identifying them as medical pot farms. Pot farm pollution has become such a problem in Lake County, south of Bauer’s study area, that officials voted unanimously last year to ban outdoor grows. “Counties are the ultimate arbiter of land use conflict, so while you have a right to grow marijuana for medicinal use, you don’t have a right to impinge on someone else’s happiness and wellbeing,” Rushing

said. Saying they were being demonized, pot users challenged the law, and gathered enough signatures to place a referendum on the June 3 ballot. They argue that grow restrictions like the ones being voted on in Lake County lump the responsible users in with criminals. “We definitely feel environmental issues are a concern. But more restrictive … ordinances will force people to start growing in unregulated and illegal places on public land,” said Daniel McClean, a registered nurse and medical marijuana user who opposes the outdoor-grow ban. While some counties are trying to help regulate the environmental effects of pot farms, Bauer hopes his study will lead to better collaboration with growers to help police illegal use of water and pesticides. Previous collaborative attempts between government and growers have not ended well, said Anthony

Silvaggio, a Humboldt State University sociology professor who studies the pot economy. “The county or state gets in there and starts doing code enforcement on other things,” Silvaggio said. “They’ve done this in the past” He said pot farmers believe they are being unfairly blamed for killing endangered salmon while decades of timber cutting and overfishing are the real culprits. However, the environmental damage has led to a split in the marijuana growing community. One business, the Tea House Collective in Humboldt County, offers medicinal pot to people with prescriptions that it says is farmed by “small scale, environmentally conscious producers.” “Patients who cannot grow their own medicine can rely on our farmers to provide them with the best holistic medicine that is naturally grown, sustainable and forever Humboldt,” the group’s website advertises. Despite efforts of some pot farmers to clean things up, the increased water use by farms is a “full-scale environmental disaster,” said Fish and Wildlife Lt. John Nores, who leads the agency’s Marijuana Enforcement Team. “Whether it’s grown quasi legally under the state’s medical marijuana laws, or it’s a complete cartel outdoor drug trafficking grow site, there is extreme environmental damage being done at all levels,” Nores said. Officials say until the federal government recognizes California’s medical marijuana laws, growers will continue to operate clandestinely to meet market demand for their product due to fear of prosecution. Meantime, enforcing federal and state environmental regulations will be harder. “If cherry tomatoes were worth $3,000 a pound, and consumption was prohibited in most states, people would be doing the same thing,” Nores said.

Horse backers seek dismissal of Nev. county suit By Scott Sonner

The Associated Press

RENO, Nev. — Wild-horse advocates fighting government roundups across the West are citing past rulings that shot down their own legal challenges in urging a U.S. judge to throw out a lawsuit by livestock interests seeking the removal of thousands of more mustangs from the range. Although somewhat successful in a few isolated cases in Nevada in recent years, horse groups routinely have been turned away over the past decade by federal judges who say the courts lack the authority to overrule the expertise of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. They point to a series of such rulings in a motion filed this week in U.S. District Court in Reno to dismiss a lawsuit by the Nevada Farm Bureau Federation and Nevada Association of Counties. The rural groups argue more roundups are necessary to cull overpopulated herds competing with livestock for water and forage. The suit filed in December seeks to force BLM to sell older horses deemed unadoptable without the usual prohibition on resale for slaughter.

The American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign and others said in requesting dismissal of the suit that the plaintiffs “seek to overhaul the entire program through litigation” but fail to cite any specific agency action that violates the law, including the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act. It’s “the latest attempt by ranchers to create a legal facade to give the BLM an excuse to cave in to their interests and remove more mustangs,” said campaign director Suzanne Roy. She called the suit a “meritless legal assault on federally protected wild horses and burros by ranchers who view these national icons as competition for cheap, taxpayer-subsidized grazing on our public lands.” BLM estimates there are 40,600 wild horses and burros on federal rangeland in 10 Western states — 14,000 more than the agency maintains the land can sustain. About half of the mustangs are in Nevada. BLM removed about 8,000 of the animals in 2012 but only about 4,000 last year, due in part to budget constraints. The Farm Bureau argues the overpopulation “has severe impacts on the health of the horses as well as the ecological health and

sustainability of Nevada’s rangelands.” “Loss of use of public lands as well as the cost of services associated with the health and safety impacts … decreases tax revenues and yet increases the costs that counties must bear,” the county coalition said. In asking for the suit’s dismissal, the opponents say several suits challenging BLM roundups over the past decade have failed based on the precedent set in a U.S. Supreme Court case involving federal wilderness designations in 1990. In a 5-4 ruling, the justices rejected the National Wildlife Federation’s objection to BLM’s land-use designations on more than 1,200 parcels of federal land in the West, saying courts are “not the appropriate venue to air such generalized grievances about the day-to-day operations of federal agencies.” Advising the conservationists to take their concerns to Congress or pursue administrative channels at the Interior Department, the high court ruled they “cannot seek wholesale improvement of a program by court decree.” That logic has driven numer-

ous cases since then, the horse campaign said, including a 2004 Supreme Court ruling against the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance’s challenge of off-road access to wilderness areas. Courts “can only compel an agency to take action — it cannot direct the agency how to act,” the ruling said. In 2010, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused the Hells Canyon Preservation Council’s bid to force the Forest Service to designate wilderness areas in the canyon along the Snake River dividing Oregon and Idaho. It said courts can compel an agency to act “only in situations where an agency has ignored a specific legislative command.” The horse campaign notes in Thursday’s filing the San Francisco-based appellate court offered similar reasoning in its most significant recent wild horse decision, ruling 2-1 in April against In Defense of Animals’ challenge of the roundup of 1,600 mustangs along the Nevada-California line in 2010. “In sum, the BLM’s actions fell within the discretion which courts have recognized the BLM has to remove excess animals,” Judge Carlos Bea wrote.


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LOcAL & regIOn

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u Police arrested John Garcia, 36, of Santa Fe on shoplifting charges after he allegedly tried to take five T-bone steaks worth $58.12 from Lowe’s, 1700 St. Michael’s Drive, at 11:25 a.m. Saturday. u Kayla Salazar of Santa Fe was arrested on Lincoln Avenue early Saturday morning after police stopped her vehicle and discovered that she had an outstanding Magistrate Court warrant for failure to pay fines. u An unidentified woman stole a pair of boots worth $29.77 from Wal-Mart, 3251 Cerrillos Road, and eluded loss prevention employees by jumping over a wall Friday morning. She escaped, but the merchandise was later located near Rufina Circle. u In what appeared to be an attempt to steal the batteries, unknown suspects damaged the plastic grilles of two county vehicles, causing $1,000 in damage, while the vehicles were parked at 71 Camino Jacobo. The incident occurred between 5:30 p.m. Thursday and 7 a.m. Friday. u Someone stole a backpack worth $40 and a passport from a Santa Fe man’s 1998 Volkswagen Golf while it was parked near the intersection of Guadalupe and Montezuma streets Thursday evening.

u Someone stole a 1996 Chevy pickup between 11 p.m. Thursday and 5:10 p.m. Friday from Calle de Oriente Norte. u Residents of the 4300 block of Paseo de Las Acequias reported that someone attempted to break into a travel trailer parked on their property between 11:50 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Saturday. u Someone stole a toolbox and tools worth $960 from a 1999 Chevy Silverado parked at Home Depot, 952 Richards Ave., between noon and 12:30 p.m. Saturday. u A wallet worth $25 that contained a Santa Fe woman’s driver’s license and a First National Bank card was stolen from a 1988 Jeep Waggoner parked in 1800 block of Quawpaw Street between 11:45 a.m. and noon Saturday. The suspect may be a Hispanic female in her late 30s, the report stated. u A Santa Fe man said that at about 2:45 a.m. Sunday, four or five unknown suspects robbed him of $200 in the 1800 block of Cerrillos Road. The victim said he was intoxicated at the time of the incident and did not know the perpetrators. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following report: u Deputies arrested David Ulibarri, 58, on charges of disorderly conduct and assault on a peace officer after an incident Saturday on Buffalo Thunder Trail in

which he allegedly shouted and cursed in public, despite being warned to stop, and then approached a deputy in an aggressive manner. The report noted that the encounter drew the attention of nearby witnesses.

DWI arrest u Police arrested John Neville, 56, of Santa Fe on charges of drunken driving and leaving the scene of an accident in the 200 block of Old Pecos Trail at about 11 p.m. Saturday.

Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use while the city seeks to approve a new contract.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-2255

How they voted By Targeted News Service

WASHINGTON — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted over the previous week.

House votes House vote 1 Resolution on human rights in China: The House has passed a resolution (H Res 599), sponsored by Rep. Christopher H. Smith, R-N.J. The resolution urged China’s government to respect the human rights of its citizens and allow open discussion of the Tiananmen Square massacre in June 1989. The vote, on May 28, was 379 yeas to 1 nay. Yeas: Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., Rep. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M. Not voting: Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M.

House vote 2 Desert Storm memorial: The House has passed the National Desert Storm and Desert Shield War Memorial Act (HR 503), sponsored by Rep. David P. Roe, R-Tenn. The bill would authorize the National Desert Storm Memorial Association to build the National Desert Storm and Desert Shield Memorial in Washington, D.C., as a memorial to the 1990-91 Persian Gulf War. The vote, on May 28, was unanimous with 370 yeas. Yeas: Lujan Grisham Not voting: Luján, Pearce

House vote 3 Weather forecasting: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Jim Bridenstine, R-Okla., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would increase funding for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research by $12 million, with the increase offset by a $12 million cut in funding for the Census Bureau. The vote, on May 29, was 340 yeas to 71 nays. Yeas: Luján, Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham

House vote 4 Criminal background checks: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would increase funding for the National Instant Criminal Background Check System by $19.5 million, with the increase offset by spending cuts elsewhere. The vote, on May 29, was 260 yeas to 145 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce

House vote 5 Spending on science research: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would redirect $15.35 million within the National Science Foundation from being used for research into the social, behavioral and economic sciences directorate to being used for research into the physical sciences and engineering. The vote, on May 29, was 208 yeas to 201 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 6 Growing industrial hemp: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR4660). The amendment would bar funding for the Justice Department to prevent states from implementing their own laws to authorize the growth and use of industrial hemp. The vote, on May 29, was

237 yeas to 170 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce

House vote 7 Medical marijuana: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would bar funding for the Justice Department to take action to prevent 29 states from implementing their laws authorizing the use of medical marijuana. The vote, on May 29, was 219 yeas to 189 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce

House vote 8 Confidentiality of reporter sources: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Alan Grayson, D-Fla., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would bar funding for the Justice Department to take action to compel journalists to testify about information they have received from confidential sources. The vote, on May 29, was 225 yeas to 183 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce

House vote 9 Managing Internet domain names: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Sean P. Duffy, R-Wis., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would bar funding to end the National Telecommunications and Information Administration’s responsibility for administering the Internet domain name system. The vote, on May 29, was 229 yeas to 178 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

House vote 10 Sanctuary cities and law enforcement: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would bar the Justice Department from providing funding for law enforcement agencies in cities that have sanctuary policies to shield illegal immigrants from being deported by the federal government. The vote, on May 29, was 214 yeas to 194 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

Lucy Robertson, 13, left, and Leila Mckinley, 14, eat lunch in the Gonzales Community School cafeteria Friday. The school is one of several sites that this week will begin offering free meals to children throughout the summer. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Meals: Food helps families, kids Continued from Page A-1 kids who do not have access to school food during the summer tend to eat junk food, which in turn can increase obesity rates. The national Summer Food Service Program began in the late 1960s, and Cull said this is at least the 12th year Santa Fe Public Schools has participated in it. Many of the school sites where food is offered also have regular summer school or citysponsored arts and athletics programs occurring at the same time, she said. At Ramirez Thomas, for instance, about 280 kids are enrolled in various academic summer school programs at the site, and thus can easily take advantage of the program. Parents and other adults also may eat at any of the sites, although they must pay $1.40 for breakfast and $3.50 for lunch. Exact change is required, Cull said. Most of the sites serve break-

House vote 12 Funding commerce, justice, science programs: The House has passed the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660), sponsored by Rep. Frank R. Wolf, R-Va. The bill would provide $51.2 billion to fund the Commerce Department, Justice Department, National Science Foundation and related agencies in fiscal 2015. The vote, on May 29, was 321 yeas to 87 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján, Pearce

Senate votes There were no key votes in the Senate this week.

Santa Fe Public Schools Summer Food Service Program runs from early June to late July at the following sites: u Aspen Community Magnet School

u Gonzales Community School

u Capital High School

u Hopewell Community Center

u Capshaw Middle School u Carlos Gilbert Elementary School u César Chávez Community School u Chaparral Elementary School u De Vargas Middle School u E.J. Martinez Elementary School

fast from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. and all offer lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For a full list of participating sites in Santa Fe,

In brief

u Nava Elementary School u Ramirez Thomas Elementary School u Salazar Elementary School u Tesuque Elementary School u Turquoise Trail Charter School u Zona del Sol u Zona del Sol Pre-K

visit www.sfps.info. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

clothes still bearing price tags. It appears the residents were stealing to support their narcotics habits, he said. Besides Vega, police took two juveniles into custody.

Police search yields cocaine, stolen property Santa Fe police uncovered a cache of stolen property and cocaine in a mobile home in the 1200 block of Zepol Road on Friday night, Lt. Robert Vasquez of the city police department said. Vasquez said detectives obtained a search warrant prior to the raid in which they arrested 46-year-old Joyce Vega on charges of trafficking a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia. According to online records, Vega is being held in the county jail on $25,000 cash bond. In addition, Vasquez said, the investigation turned up numerous stolen items, including

Police arrest 29-year-old on sex abuse charges A Santa Fe man faces four charges of criminal sexual penetration involving alleged intercourse with a 14-year-old girl sometime in the past 10 to 12 months, police say. Mario Deleon, 29, was arrested Sunday after police responded to a report of a suspicious vehicle in the 4600 block of Camino Cuervo Court at about 1:15 a.m. Lt. Robert Vasquez of the Santa Fe Police Department said there is no further information on the case at this time. The New Mexican

Funeral services and memorials ANTONIO (TONY) RODRIGUEZ

House vote 11 Emissions and trade agreements: The House has passed an amendment sponsored by Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., to the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (HR 4660). The amendment would bar funding for reaching trade agreements that limit greenhouse gas emissions. The vote, on May 29, was 226 yeas to 179 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján

PArtIcIPAtIng SIteS

A 1 year anniversary mass will be celebrated in memory of Antonio (Tony) Rodriguez on June 2nd at - 5:30 p.m. at St. Anne’s Catholic Church. We love and miss you every day. You are forever in our hearts. Your Loving Family

EMERITA DOLORES WALLACE ANSLEY Emerita Dolores Wallace Ansley, among the last of her generation of a large extended family, died Saturday with her family at her side. Mother, sister, daughter, wife, business owner, community organizer and champion of the underdog, she was 83. A native of Las Vegas, N.M., where she was born at home on Pecos Street, Emerita was a middle child in a family of seven children. Over the course of her life, she drove stock cars in California, learned to tear apart and rebuild engines, was invited to lunch at the White House, survived cancer for 43 years and cooked everything from tortillas, classic red enchiladas to chicken and dumplings. A rosary will take place at 10 a.m. Monday at Santa María de la Paz Catholic Community, with Mass of Christian Burial to follow at the church. Burial will take place at Santa Fe Memorial Gardens under the direction of Santa Fe Funeral Options. In lieu of flowers, please give to the parish or charity of your choice.

IN MEMORIAM CHARLES W. ROBINSON The Santa Fe Opera Board of Directors and staff wish to express their sympathy to the family of Charles W. Robinson upon his recent death. To his legion of friends and admirers he was a rare Renaissance man whose interests and accomplishments were many and broad. With his wife Mara he was a long-time and generous patron of The Santa Fe Opera, especially in its engagement of young artists. The couple also helped to underwrite many Company productions, including one this season. The Santa Fe Opera was one of the attractions that brought them to Santa Fe more than 35 years ago and they both have been active participants in the cultural life of the City. Chuck, as he was called, will be greatly missed for his enthusiasm and his friendship to the many he has known. Joseph M. Bryan, Jr., Chairman Susan F. Morris, President Charles MacKay, General Director We are here to assist you.

Call 986-3000

Obituary notices: Obituaries can be purchased through a funeral home or by calling our classifieds department at 986-3000, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you need to place a death notice after business hours, please call The New Mexican newsroom at 986-3035.


Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Gov. not looking out for New Mexicans

G

ov. Susana Martinez’s shock troops closed down 15 behavioral health providers because of “suspicion of fraud” generated by a Connecticut auditing company whose suspicions have been proved to be baseless. This closure and subsequent turning over the health care businesses to Arizona providers has cost New Mexico taxpayers to date nearly $24 million. Moreover, these “cowboy” tactics bankrupted several of the New Mexico behavioral health providers, and many needy New Mexico citizens were deprived of badly needed health care. The New Mexico Attorney General’s Office is investigating the so-called fraud accusations. This office should also be investigating the possible criminal activity of our governor and her out-of-state “mafia.” Her actions in this matter, and in our education system and several other areas, show that she and her bankrollers have no interest in serving the people of New Mexico, but only the shadowy, out-of-state “one-percenters” into whose pockets our governor is firmly inserted. David King

Santa Fe

Future investments There are many fine organizations in the Santa Fe area that do so much good for our homeless, elderly, youth and the community. I would hope that we are considered one of

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

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Pot on the ballot? Start talking

I those groups that truly make a difference in the lives of our children. Organizations are always in need of quality volunteers to assist their programs. We serve more than 300 youth yearly at the club with our education, computer technology, fine arts and leadership clubs. We have outreach programs that serve more than another 1,000 young people yearly. We can use volunteers in all of our core programs. We have equipment for anyone interested in music — keyboards, drum line, guitars, dance uniforms and equipment, art, technology, Lego robotics equipment and other programs. There are many current or retired teachers, lawyers,

firefighters, doctors, secretaries, police officers, etc. in our community that are looking for a place to share their lifelong talents. Please call or stop by if you’re interested in helping give our kids new ideas and avenues to better their future. Come join our family. Great futures start here. Donald R. Christy

executive director Pueblo of Pojoaque Boys & Girls Club Teen Center

Move on In reference to chicken as pets, this divisive issue in Eldorado over the last two or three years, promoted by

approximately nine residents, has created much more of a furor than it’s worth. To settle the issue — essentially provide a proper interpretation of the specific covenant — the matter was referred to the District Court. The Honorable Judge Mark Macaron heard the case and provided a carefully prepared, 11-page summary judgment, to be sure there was no doubt that chickens are not recognized as household pets and therefore are prohibited by the covenants. The threat, by the defendants, to appeal the judge’s decision, only adds to the divisiveness in the community. It is time to get past this idiocy. Ray Nichols

Eldorado

COMMENTARY: REIHAN SALAM

Bring back Prohibition — via alcohol tax NEW YORK merica is rushing headlong toward legalizing the recreational use of marijuana. A growing majority — 54 percent as of a Pew survey released just last month — favor legalization, and an even larger majority of millennials (69 percent) feels the same way. Colorado and Washington are the first states to move decisively in this direction, but they won’t be the last. I basically think this is an OK development. Like Mark Kleiman, a public policy professor at UCLA who is my guru on the regulation of controlled substances, I see full commercial legalization as a truly terrible idea, while I think noncommercial legalization, ideally via monopolies owned and operated by state governments, would be an improvement over the status quo. Regardless, marijuana legalization is coming, one way or another. One thing that is really striking about the new Pew data is that 69 percent of Americans believe, correctly, that alcohol is more harmful to society than marijuana. When asked if alcohol would still be more harmful to society than marijuana if marijuana were just as easy to get a hold of as alcohol is now, 63 percent said that yes, it would be. Most people see marijuana’s relative harmlessness as a reason for us to regulate marijuana as lightly as we regulate alcohol. I see things differently. The fact that alcohol is more harmful to society than marijuana is a reason to regulate alcohol more stringently than we regulate marijuana. In other words, let’s ease up on marijuana prohibition and ramp up good old-fashioned alcohol prohibition. More precisely, I favor something like what the libertarian journalist Greg Beato calls, and not in a nice way, “Prohibition Lite.” Though it is true that I was raised in a Muslim household, it is not my intention to impose sharia law on you and yours. As someone who came to drinking late

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in life, I still marvel at its disinhibiting effects, and I genuinely appreciate the good it can do by, essentially, helping awkward people have fun. I also think there is much to be said for psychoactive substances like MDMA, or Molly, which have enormous therapeutic potential. But alcohol is crazily dangerous, and it needs to be more tightly controlled. Everyone knows that Prohibition was a disaster. What most of us forget is that the movement for Prohibition arose because alcohol abuse actually was destroying American society in the first decades of the 20th century, and the strictly regulated post-Prohibition alcohol market was shaped by still-fresh memories of the pre-Prohibition era. For a nightmare vision of where heavy drinking can lead a society, consider Russia, where the pervasiveness of binge drinking contributes to an epidemic of cardiovascular disease and a death rate from fatal injuries that you’d normally see in wartime. Political economist Nicholas Eberstadt has gone so far as to suggest that drunkenness is a key reason why Russia, a country with universal literacy and a level of educational attainment that is (technically) in the same ballpark as countries like Australia and Sweden, has roughly the same living standards as Ecuador. Closer to home, Great Britain has seen a staggering increase in alcohol consumption since the 1990s, much of it among teenagers. Tim Heffernan, writing in the Washington Monthly, has attributed Britain’s binge-drinking crisis to its laissezfaire alcohol market. Why would I, a great lover of the free enterprise system, want the alcohol market to be more heavily regulated? Precisely because I’m a believer in the power of the profit motive, I understand how deadly it can be when the product being sold is intoxication. For-profit businesses exist to

MALLArd FiLLMore

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

increase sales. The most straightforward way to do that is not to encourage everyone to drink moderately, but to focus on the small minority of people who drink the most. That is exactly what liquor companies do, and they’ll do more of it if we let Big Liquor have its way. In Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know, the authors estimate that at current beer prices, it costs about $5 to $10 to get drunk, or a dollar or two per drunken hour. To get a sense of what the world would look like if that price fell significantly, go to a typical town square in England on a weekend night, where alcohol-fueled violence is rampant, or to Russia, where the ruling class has used cheap vodka as a tool to keep the population drunk, passive and stupid for generations. We shouldn’t be satisfied with keeping the per dollar cost of getting drunk where it is today. We should make it higher. Much higher. Kleiman and his colleagues Jonathan P. Caulkins and Angela Hawken have suggested tripling the federal alcohol tax from 10 cents a drink to 30 cents a drink, an increase that they estimate would prevent 6 percent of homicides and 6 percent of motor vehicle deaths, thus sparing 3,000 lives (1,000 from the drop in homicides, 2,000 from safer highways) every year. Charging two-drinkper-day drinkers an extra $12 per month seems like a laughably small price to pay to deter binge drinking. Then, of course, there is the fact that a higher alcohol tax would also raise revenue. If you’re going to tax tanning beds and sugary soft drinks, why on earth wouldn’t you raise alcohol taxes too? If anything, 30 cents a drink isn’t high enough. Let’s raise the alcohol tax to a point just shy of where large numbers of people will start making illegal moonshine in their bathtubs. Reihan Salam, a Slate columnist, also writes for the National Review.

mpatient with slow lawmakers, whether at the state or municipal level, citizens in Albuquerque and Santa Fe have decided to ask the voters to legalize small amounts of marijuana. They hope to use the ballot to do what state legislators couldn’t manage earlier this year, when a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize marijuana failed to make the November ballot. ProgressNow New Mexico and the political arm of the Drug Policy Alliance launched the campaigns last week. They are asking voters to amend local ordinances to make the penalty for possession of an ounce or less of marijuana and marijuana-associated paraphernalia a civil infraction punishable by a fine of no more than $25. In Santa Fe, they need to gather some 2,453 signatures to get the issue on the ballot. With enough verified signatures, the City Council then could either put the issue before voters or adopt the ordinance itself. Currently, possession of an ounce or less of marijuana in Santa Fe is a petty misdemeanor for the first offense, punishable by a fine of not less than $50 or more than $100 and up to 15 days in jail. The proposed ballot initiatives also would make possession of small amounts of marijuana “a lowest law enforcement priority” for local police in both cities. The group wants the initiatives on the ballot by November. State law would remain, and officers could charge offenders under laws with greater penalties, which could make things complicated. We still prefer a statewide change in the law — whether through a constitutional amendment or a statute — to decriminalize (or legalize) and tax marijuana, making it clear what law every citizen must abide by. What this ballot initiative does, though, is turn the conversation to what New Mexicans want. Is it safe to legalize small amounts of marijuana? What could police officers do with their time if they aren’t bringing in people for possession of pot? How much time in the judicial system could be saved? Space in the jail? What kind of tax revenue could the state bring in? What are its dangers? This initiative is a good time to begin discussing marijuana legalization in a substantive manner. The bottom line is clear, as supporters of the change argue convincingly: People who carry small amounts of marijuana for personal use should not spend time in jail. Now, the issue is how best to make such jail sentences a thing of the past.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: June 2, 1914: Silver City — Joseph O. Walkup, medical corps, USA, stationed at Fort Bayard, was struck and instantly killed by a bolt of lightning while traveling in an auto with a party between Central and Fort Bayard. The car was overturned, but the other occupants were uninjured. The deceased leaves a wife and one child. Lordsburg — During the past week, there have been shipped from Lordsburg some 6,000 head of cattle, for which was paid a little over $190,000. This is probably more money than was ever turned loose for cattle here at any one shipment. Every cow man in this section has now got money to burn. However, there was very little of it burned during or after the shipment. A more sober and orderly set of cowboys never visited a town. June 2, 1964: Taos — The daughter of the Taos County School superintendent has been removed from the public payroll. Felipe N. Trujillo said he took his daughter off the payroll on advice from the Taos district attorney, George T. Reynolds. Trujillo’s daughter had been working for her father since about the time he took office in 1963.

We welcome your letters Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. We do our best to get every opinion in the paper. It doesn’t have to agree with ours. In fact, the wider the variety of ideas on the Opinion page, the better our readers are served. We try to run them in their turn. They’re all edited — for language, spelling and length. To give all readers a chance to speak out, we limit letter submissions per individual to once a month. Please limit letters to 150 words. Please print or type your name, and give us your address and telephone numbers — home and work — for verification. We keep numbers and addresses confidential.

LA CuCArAChA

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAFenewMexiCAn.CoM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

The weather

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Warm with plenty of sunshine

Tonight

Partly cloudy

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Sun and areas of high Breezy with plenty of Plenty of sunshine; clouds sunshine remaining warm

57

90

93/52

90/47

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

86/50

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Saturday

Plenty of sunshine

Sunday

Sunny; breezy in the afternoon

83/51

Sunny

87/50

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

86/54

Humidity (Noon)

9%

16%

9%

8%

9%

22%

19%

21%

wind: SW 6-12 mph

wind: SE 4-8 mph

wind: WSW 10-20 mph

wind: W 10-20 mph

wind: W 7-14 mph

wind: S 7-14 mph

wind: WNW 8-16 mph

wind: SSE 7-14 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 87°/51° Normal high/low ............................ 82°/48° Record high ............................... 93° in 2012 Record low ................................. 31° in 1964 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.89” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.03”/3.63” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/2.68”

New Mexico weather 64

The following water statistics of May 23 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 0.000 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 10.270 City Wells: 1.353 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 11.623 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.327 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 32.5 percent of capacity; daily inflow 7.88 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

285

64

Farmington 89/57

666

40

Santa Fe 90/57 Pecos 84/53

25

Albuquerque 94/67

25

87

Clayton 89/57

56

412

Pollen index

As of 5/30/2014 Pine .......................................... 16 Moderate Chenopods........................................... 3 Low Grass.................................................. 33 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................52

25

Las Vegas 86/55

54

40

40

285

Clovis 96/61

54

60 60

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

64

Taos 84/48

Española 93/66 Los Alamos 84/56 Gallup 86/55

Raton 89/50

64 84

Source:

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 102/68

Ruidoso 87/65

25

70

Las Cruces 100/71

70

380

Hobbs 102/67

285

Alamogordo 100/72

180

70

380

70

Truth or Consequences 98/71

10

Water statistics

Air quality index

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

Area rainfall

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.01” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.80” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.51” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/4.84” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/1.87”

Carlsbad 105/69

54

0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

285

10

Sun and moon

State extremes

Sun. High 107 ............................... Carlsbad Sun. Low 43 ................................ Angel Fire

State cities City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 100/64 r 94/62 s 73/43 s 102/68 s 107/69 s 75/47 s 86/57 s 93/61 s 80/43 s 94/62 s 84/51 s 99/63 s 93/61 s 87/57 s 98/66 s 86/44 s 85/46 s 100/64 s 100/64 s

Hi/Lo W 100/72 s 94/67 s 77/43 s 102/73 s 105/69 s 79/47 s 87/48 s 89/57 s 81/51 s 96/61 s 85/54 s 100/65 s 93/66 s 89/57 pc 98/64 s 86/55 pc 88/52 s 102/67 s 100/71 s

Hi/Lo W 102/67 pc 97/65 pc 77/42 pc 107/73 pc 107/72 s 76/36 pc 89/46 pc 99/58 pc 83/37 pc 101/63 pc 85/48 pc 105/68 pc 96/64 pc 89/52 pc 101/63 pc 86/47 pc 87/50 pc 103/67 s 105/73 pc

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni

Hi/Lo W 84/50 s 98/66 s 82/64 s 95/63 s 97/65 s 90/58 s 87/50 s 94/62 s 104/65 s 88/63 s 95/62 s 93/59 s 99/62 s 82/54 s 101/68 s 100/69 s 98/66 s 85/63 s 85/50 s

Hi/Lo W 86/55 s 100/71 s 84/56 s 96/64 s 98/63 s 89/50 s 75/47 s 93/61 s 102/68 s 87/65 s 95/61 s 95/65 s 98/65 s 84/48 s 98/71 s 98/67 s 102/73 s 87/57 s 86/55 pc

Hi/Lo W 90/53 pc 105/70 pc 86/49 pc 100/66 pc 101/63 pc 94/49 pc 74/37 pc 96/58 pc 107/68 pc 91/68 pc 99/63 pc 100/68 pc 100/70 pc 86/41 pc 102/73 pc 104/62 pc 105/75 pc 89/49 pc 86/47 pc

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

Weather for June 2

Sunrise today ............................... 5:50 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:15 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 10:14 a.m. Moonset today ........................... 11:52 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 8:16 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ...................... 11:08 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ................................ none Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 8:16 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................. 12:02 p.m. Moonset Wednesday .................. 12:25 a.m. First

Full

Last

New

June 5

June 12

June 19

June 27

The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 48/42 80/70 75/50 67/49 76/58 80/46 66/51 83/72 78/63 90/63 88/63 84/56 92/71 83/55 83/56 59/44 80/39 86/74 88/71 87/62 86/67 96/72 79/61

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

Hi/Lo 59/48 83/65 83/61 74/52 67/48 85/61 81/61 84/62 80/60 85/68 81/68 83/65 91/74 82/54 83/67 58/39 82/49 87/74 88/72 81/67 84/65 99/79 75/61

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

Hi/Lo 64/49 87/68 88/65 75/52 76/53 82/51 77/58 85/65 86/63 82/63 84/63 81/57 93/75 89/53 83/57 65/45 79/43 87/76 90/73 84/62 86/70 95/76 75/60

W s t t pc s t pc pc t s t t pc pc t pc pc s pc t t s pc

Rise 7:12 a.m. 3:59 a.m. 3:08 p.m. 8:38 a.m. 6:11 p.m. 3:00 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 9:48 p.m. 5:11 p.m. 2:52 a.m. 11:00 p.m. 4:48 a.m. 3:37 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 90/63 t 82/69 t 85/67 t 89/71 pc 84/72 t 89/74 t 88/76 c 85/74 t 82/74 t 84/61 pc 77/62 t 74/55 s 72/65 r 80/57 t 77/61 pc 84/74 t 86/72 t 86/72 t 77/55 s 82/65 pc 84/66 t 87/68 pc 91/72 t 93/72 pc 86/73 t 88/70 pc 84/69 pc 78/54 pc 83/63 s 87/67 t 106/78 s 110/83 s 107/79 pc 83/56 pc 80/66 t 81/62 t 73/51 pc 78/55 pc 74/51 pc 78/53 pc 86/62 s 91/67 t 90/71 pc 84/71 t 89/70 t 76/56 s 84/62 pc 83/56 s 92/73 pc 91/72 s 92/74 pc 74/63 pc 73/63 pc 72/63 pc 72/52 pc 63/50 pc 64/51 s 70/51 pc 76/52 pc 73/51 pc 81/65 t 79/50 pc 76/60 t 75/48 s 82/60 s 84/65 t 77/59 pc 83/67 s 88/68 t

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Cold front

Warm front

Stationary front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 109 ................. Death Valley, CA Sun. Low: 23 ................ Boca Reservoir, CA

The heavy rain from the May 31, 1889, Johnstown Flood raised the levels of other rivers. On June 2, 1889, the Potomac River reached flood stage at Washington, D.C.

Weather trivia™

is the record high temperature Q: What for the U.S. in June? 127(F) at Fort Mohave, Arizona, on A: June 15, 1896

Weather history

Newsmakers Car, jewelry taken in burglary of Cyrus’ home

Miley Cyrus

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles police are searching for a pair of burglars they say broke into Miley Cyrus’ San Fernando Valley home and got away with jewelry and a luxury car. The LAPD says officers from the department’s North Hollywood station responded to a report of a burglary Friday at Cyrus’ home. They say a man and a woman scaled a fence and got inside the house and garage while no one was home. A 2014 Maserati luxury sedan and an unspecified amount of jewelry were taken.

Justin Bieber apologizes for making racial slur joke

Justin Bieber

Ann B. Davis arrives at the fifth annual TV Land Awards in 2007 in Santa Monica, Calif. Emmywinning actress Davis, who played the housekeeper on The Brady Bunch, died Sunday at a San Antonio, Texas, hospital. She was 88.

For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/

NEW YORK — Justin Bieber is apologizing after a years-old video surfaced showing the then-teen telling a racist joke with the N-word. In a statement Sunday to The Associated Press, Bieber said when he was a kid he didn’t realize how certain words could hurt. The British tabloid The Sun first published the video, which is five years old. In it, a then 15-year-old Bieber tells a joke about black people that has the racial epithet as the punchline. The Associated Press

City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 64/48 pc 68/51 pc 70/55 pc 81/64 pc 78/64 pc 75/64 t 114/80 pc 104/73 s 98/74 s 93/75 t 96/82 pc 98/81 t 72/57 pc 73/61 pc 72/61 pc 86/73 c 86/61 pc 84/64 s 64/48 pc 70/52 pc 70/53 c 66/50 sh 66/47 c 67/49 sh 66/43 s 64/48 s 63/52 s 84/66 s 90/70 s 99/80 pc 90/75 pc 90/75 pc 90/75 s 102/73 s 104/75 s 106/77 s 66/54 pc 68/54 pc 67/55 r 64/52 c 63/50 c 59/46 sh 72/45 pc 68/42 t 71/46 t 75/63 c 68/61 t 68/61 t 88/72 t 84/72 c 83/71 t 89/83 pc 89/82 pc 87/82 c 73/57 s 71/56 s 80/67 pc 74/67 c 73/63 pc 73/62 s

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

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 79/61 s 77/57 s 70/59 pc 70/52 s 69/55 c 66/53 sh 77/52 pc 81/59 s 81/59 pc 72/51 t 72/53 t 74/55 t 77/50 pc 81/66 t 81/66 t 79/50 pc 81/56 pc 83/55 s 103/78 pc 109/84 pc 111/82 pc 66/50 pc 68/50 c 72/57 c 64/43 s 67/45 c 68/46 pc 82/68 pc 75/66 t 73/65 pc 75/52 s 75/57 s 77/58 pc 66/36 s 66/41 pc 57/39 r 82/66 pc 74/64 r 75/63 r 88/79 r 87/78 t 89/78 sh 66/41 s 67/50 pc 61/52 sh 70/59 r 72/52 pc 73/54 s 88/68 s 83/66 pc 81/64 pc 65/52 s 70/53 pc 70/52 s 68/55 pc 70/51 c 73/54 pc 70/43 pc 71/47 t 71/46 t

TV

top picks

1

7 p.m. on The CW Whose Line Is It Anyway? The New England Patriots’ Rob Gronkowski makes an appearance in this new episode with guest comedian Jonathan Mangum and cast regulars Ryan Stiles, Wayne Brady and Colin Mochrie. Aisha Tyler hosts as the players improvise skits, songs and scenes based on suggestions from the studio audience. 7 p.m. on HIST Swamp People The quest for highdollar gators has the swampers hunting in troublesome areas and under difficult conditions. One team makes the risky decision to hunt in the middle of a lightning storm, while another tries to get through a clogged canal, and a third seeks a record-setting gator in cattle country in “Beasts or Bust.” 8 p.m. on The CW Beauty and the Beast New episodes return with “Beast Is the New Black.” Vincent’s (Jay Ryan) arrest on murder charges has Cat (Kristin Kreuk) and her colleagues joining forces to clear his name. When it becomes clear who turned him in, they realize they’re facing some serious opposition.

2

3

4

8 p.m. A&E Longmire Robert Taylor returns for a third season as laconic lawman Walt Longmire, who keeps the peace in the wild frontier of Wyoming’s Absaroka County. In the season premiere, Walt tries to process the fact that Henry (Lou Diamond Phillips, pictured) has been arrested for murder and to track down the person who shot Branch (Bailey Chase) — who insists the shooter was a ghost. Cassidy Freeman also stars in “The White Warrior.” 8 p.m. on HIST American Restoration Play that funky music, restoration boy. In the season premiere, the legendary George Clinton of Parliament-Funkadelic fame wants Rick and his crew to fix up a baby grand piano from the 1920s — with a P-Funk concert accompanying the big reveal. Brettly and Tyler make it their mission to plan the show in “George Clinton: Funky Yeah!”

5

ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

ANN B. DAVIS, 1926-2014

Actress won 2 Emmys before ‘Brady Bunch’ By Lynn Elber

It even appeared as a Saturday morning spinoff (1972-74). The Brady Bunch Movie, Emmy-winning actress Ann with Shelley Long and Gary B. Davis, who became the Cole as the parents, was a surcountry’s favorite and most prise box-office hit in 1995. It famous housekeeper as the had another actress as Alice, devoted Alice Nelson of The but Davis appeared in a bit Brady Bunch, died Sunday at a part as a trucker. It was folSan Antonio, Texas, hospital. lowed the next year — without She was 88. Davis — by a less successful A Bexar County, Texas, mediVery Brady Sequel. cal examiner’s investigator Older TV viewers rememSara Horne said Davis died ber Davis for another nonSunday morning at University glamorous role, on The Bob Hospital. Horne said no cause Cummings Show, also known of death was available and as Love That Bob. She played that an autopsy was planned Schultzy, the assistant to CumMonday. mings’ character, a handsome, Bill Frey, a retired bishop swinging bachelor photograand a longtime friend of Davis, pher always chasing beautiful said she suffered a fall Saturwomen. day at her San Antonio home It brought Davis supporting and never recovered. Frey said actress Emmy Awards in 1958 Davis had lived with him and and 1959. his wife, Barbara, since 1976. After the series ended in More than a decade before 1959, Davis appeared in such scoring as the Bradys’ loyal movies as A Man Called Peter, Alice, Davis was the razorLover Come Back and All tongued secretary on another Hands on Deck. During layoffs, stalwart TV sitcom, The Bob she played in summer stock. Cummings Show, which brought Between her two betterher two Emmys. Over the years, known shows, she played a she also appeared on Broadway gym teacher at an exclusive and in occasional movies. girls’ school in 1965-66 in The Davis considered her ordiJohn Forsythe Show. nary look an asset. During her stints in The “I know at least a couple Bob Cummings Show and The hundred glamour gals who are Brady Bunch, she used the laystarving in this town,” she told offs to appear in summer thethe Los Angeles Times in 1955, ater with such shows as Three the year the Cummings show on a Honeymoon. began its four-year run. “I’d She was born Ann Bradford rather be myself and eating.” Davis in 1926, in Schenectady, She said she told NBC N. Y ., and grew up in Erie, Pa. photographers not to retouch She said she took to using her their pictures of her, but they middle initial because “just ignored her request and “gave plain Ann Davis goes by pretty me eyebrows.” fast.” Producer Sherwood She was stage-struck since Schwartz’s The Brady Bunch the age of 6 when she and her debuted in 1969 and aired for twin sister, Harriet, earned five years. But like Schwartz’s $2 with their puppet show. other hit, Gilligan’s Island, She attended the University of it has lived on in reruns and Michigan, joking that she was a sequels. premed student “until I discovAs The Brady Bunch theme ered chemistry.” song reminded viewers each She graduated in 1948 with week, the Bradys combined two families into one. Florence Hen- a degree in theater and later joined a repertory theater in derson played a widow raising Erie. She told the AP in 1993 three daughters when she met her TV husband, Robert Reed, a that she got her big break while doing a cabaret act in widower with three boys. In her blue and white maid’s Los Angeles, singing and telling jokes. uniform, Davis’ character, “Somebody said, ‘Get your Alice Nelson, was constantly agent to call the new Bob cleaning up messes large and Cummings show. They’re small, and she was a mainstay looking for a funny lady.’ of stability for the family. Within three hours, I had the “I think I’m lovable. That’s job. That was January 1955. I the gift God gave me,” Davis had such fun with that show. told The Associated Press in “I did a couple of pilots that a 1993 interview. “I don’t do didn’t sell, a few movies and anything to be lovable. I have one year of nightclub work, no control.” Davis’ face occupied the cen- which I hated. Then I did the pilot of The Brady Bunch and ter square during the show’s never had to do another nightopening credits. Her love club.” interest was Sam the Butcher, For many years after The played by Allan Melvin. “I’m shocked and saddened. Brady Bunch wound up, Davis led a quiet, religious life, affiliI’ve lost a wonderful friend ating herself with a group led and colleague,” Henderson by Frey. said in a statement Sunday. “I was born again,” she told Eve Plumb, who played Jan the AP in 1993. “It happens to Brady on the series, called Episcopalians. Sometimes it Davis “an amazing lady.” “She was great to work with, doesn’t hit you till you’re and I have wonderful memories 47 years old. “It changed my whole life of our scenes together on The for the better. … I spent a lot of Brady Bunch,” Plumb said in a time giving Christian witness statement. “She was kind and all over the country to church generous to all of us on set.” groups and stuff.” The Brady Bunch had a She took a long sabbatical successful run until 1974, but from the theater, largely limitit didn’t fade away then. It ing her performances to Brady returned as The Brady Bunch Bunch specials and TV comHour (1977), The Brady Brides (1981) and The Bradys (1990). mercials. The Associated Press


MONDAY, JUNE 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Scoreboard B-2 Fuego schedule B-3 Baseball B-4 Classifieds B-6 Crossword B-7 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12

SPORTS

B

World Cup: U.S. takes down Turkey in warmup match. Page B-2

NHL PLAYOFFS

TENNIS FRENCH OPEN

Kings advance to Stanley Cup final

Federer falls to Gulbis in fourth round Grand Slam champion fails to reach quarters for first time since 2004 By Howard Fendrich

The Associated Press

Los Angeles holds off Chicago in Game 7 thriller By Jay Cohen

The Associated Press

CHICAGO — Alec Martinez scored at 5:47 of overtime, and the Los Angeles Kings beat the Chicago Blackhawks 5-4 in Game 7 of the Kings 5 Western ConferBlackhawks 4 ence finals Sunday night. Martinez’s shot went off Blackhawks defenseman Nick Leddy and over goalie Corey Crawford, stunning the sellout crowd at the United Center and leading to a wild on-ice celebration for Los Angeles. Leddy was disconsolate as the Kings gathered in a big huddle along the boards. Los Angeles improved to 7-0 in elimination games with its third Game 7 win on the road this postseason. It will host the New York Rangers in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup finals on Wednesday night. “We never say die … someone described us as a bunch of cockroaches that don’t go away,” Martinez said. Justin Williams and Tyler Toffoli each had a goal and an assist for the Kings, who once held a 3-1 lead in the series, only to have the defending champion Blackhawks come back to force Game 7. Jeff Carter scored his ninth playoff goal in the first, and Marian Gaborik had the tying goal midway through the third period. Patrick Sharp scored two goals for the Blackhawks, who blew a 2-0 lead. Brandon Saad had a goal and an assist, and Patrick Kane had two more assists. Chicago’s loss means Detroit remains the last NHL team to win consecutive titles in 1997 and 1998. The Kings also got 37 saves from

Roger Federer looks down as he plays Ernests Gulbis during Sunday’s fourth-round match of the French Open. DAVID VINCENT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — So unbeatable for so long until the closing days of Grand Slam tournaments, Roger Federer is suddenly accumulating early exits. Federer’s streak of nine consecutive quarterfinals at the French Open ended Sunday with a 6-7 (5), 7-6 (3), 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 fourth-round loss to 18thseeded Ernests Gulbis of Latvia. “A lot of regrets,” Federer said. “I just couldn’t kind of figure it out.” The 17-time Grand Slam champion

had not left Roland Garros so soon since 2004, when he was beaten in the third round by Gustavo Kuerten. After that decade-old setback, though, Federer made at least the quarterfinals at a record 36 consecutive major tournaments, a streak that ended with a second-round loss at Wimbledon last year. Federer also put together record Slam runs of 10 finals and 23 semifinals in a row when he was at his dominant best. Now the 32-year-old Federer has bowed out before the quarterfinals at three of the last four majors. “I think it was the biggest, probably, win of my career,” said Gulbis, who most certainly could have dispensed

Please see fRencH oPen, Page B-5

NBA FINALS

James, Duncan look to break tie

Please see Kings, Page B-3

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Oakland completes sweep of Los Angeles Athletics lead AL West by 4½ games over Angels By Josh Dubow

The Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. — After two straight seasons of looking up at the Athletics in the AL West standings, the Los Angeles Angels came to Athletics 6 Oakland with a Angels 3 chance to move into first place with a three-game sweep. Instead it was the A’s who got the sweep by battering Angels pitchers for 26 runs. Josh Donaldson hit a two-run single in a four-run third inning against Oakland nemesis Jered Weaver, and the A’s opened up a cushion in the AL West by beating the Angels 6-3 on Sunday. “We stubbed our toe this weekend, but we’re looking at the big picture,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “We’re a good team, and our pitchers are a big part of that.” Jed Lowrie homered and drove in two runs, and Coco Crisp added an RBI double against Weaver (6-4) to give the A’s their first home sweep of at least three games against the Angels since June 29-July 1, 2004. Oakland leads the AL West by

Please see sweeP, Page B-5

inside u American League and National League roundups. Page B-4

ABOVE: Spurs forward Tim Duncan, left, embraces Manu Ginobili Saturday after Ginobili missed a 3-pointer against the Thunder during Game 6 of the Western Conference finals in Oklahoma City. SUE OGROCKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LEFT: Heat forward LeBron James and guard Norris Cole raise their arms Friday during Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals against the Pacers in Miami. LYNNE SLADKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rivals set to face off in Finals rematch of high expectations By Tim Reynolds

The Associated Press

MIAMI ver the past 10 seasons, only one NBA player has been part of more wins than LeBron James. His name is Tim Duncan. Their numbers over that decade are incredibly similar. Duncan has appeared in 622 regularseason and playoff victories, James has played in 621. Duncan is shooting 50.2 percent from the field, James is shooting 50 percent. Duncan has won

O

two championships with San Antonio during this 10-season stretch, James has two with Miami. Plus, when facing each other in the NBA Finals, both has won one, lost one. Here comes the tiebreaker — a Finals rematch that will have high expectations. Miami and San Antonio are the league’s last two teams standing for the second consecutive year, their next chapter starting on the Spurs’ home floor Thursday night. The Heat won a wild series last season for their second straight championship, needing a frantic rally to avoid elimination in Game 6 and then riding the strength of a 37-point,

inside u Capsule preview of the Spurs-Heat Finals. Page B-3

12-rebound effort from James to top the Spurs in Game 7. “I think our guys, they actually grew from the loss last year,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “I call it fortitude. I think they showed an unbelievable amount of fortitude. If I can compliment my own team humbly, to have that tough loss, espe-

Please see tie, Page B-3

GOLF

Japan’s Matsuyama wins Memorial in a playoff By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

DUBLIN, Ohio — With every swing, Hideki Matsuyama appeared to join a cast of top players throwing away a chance to win the Memorial. A tee shot in the water on the 16th for double bogey. An approach over the back of the green on the 17th that led to bogey. And then a drive to the right that made the Japanese star so disgusted that he lightly slammed his club into the turf, and the head of the driver broke off. The ball hit a tree and took one last bounce back into the fairway, and Matsuyama seized on the break. He took dead aim with a 7-iron to just

outside 5 feet for birdie on the 18th hole to force a playoff with Kevin Na, and then won for the first time in America with a 10-foot par putt on the first extra hole. Hideki Matsuyama “Right from the 15th hole, I had a lot of missed shots,” Matsuyama said. “The double bogey at 16, bogey at 17, not a real good tee shot — I thought — at 18. But when I saw the ball on the fairway on the 18th hole there, that’s when I was able to think I still have a chance.”

Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. López, clopez@sfnewmexican.com

The 22-year-old Matsuyama earned validation as one of the game’s bright young stars Sunday by closing with a 3-under 69 and making two clutch putts on the 18th hole for his sixth career victory, the previous five on the Japan Golf Tour. This was his first win against a field of the world’s top players. “I just think you’ve just seen the start of what’s going to be truly one of your world’s great players over the next 10 to 15 years,” tournament host Jack Nicklaus said. Nicklaus spent much of the back nine in the broadcast booth, and it was a brand of golf that was unfamiliar to golf’s greatest champion. The

Memorial became only the latest event where proven players faltered badly. Masters champion Bubba Watson had a one-shot lead with five holes to play. He was 3 over the rest of the way. Adam Scott, the No. 1 player in the world, was tied for the lead until playing the last seven holes in 4 over. “The whole thing is frustrating as I stand here right now,” Scott said after his 71. “But everyone is going to feel like that. We all could have done something different. If we all did, who knows what the result would be?” Scott fell apart by hitting one shot

Please see memoRiaL, Page B-5

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

BASKETBALL BasketBall

NBa Playoffs CoNfereNCe fiNals easterN CoNfereNCe

HoCkey HOCKEY

NHl Playoffs CoNfereNCe fiNals easterN CoNfereNCe

Miami 4, indiana 2 Previous results Indiana 107, Miami 96 Miami 87, Indiana 83 Miami 99, Indiana 87 Miami 102, Indiana 90 Indiana 93, Miami 90 Miami 117, Indiana 92

N.y. rangers 4, Montreal 2 Previous results N.Y. Rangers 7, Montreal 2 NY Rangers 3, Montreal 1 Montreal 3, NY Rangers 2, OT NY Rangers 3, Montreal 2, OT Montreal 7, NY Rangers 4 NY Rangers 1, Montreal 0

san antonio 4, oklahoma City 2 Previous results San Antonio 122, Oklahoma City 105 San Antonio 112, Oklahoma City 77 Oklahoma City 106, San Antonio 97 Oklahoma City 105, San Antonio 92 San Antonio 117, Oklahoma City 89 San Antonio 112, Oklahoma City 107, OT

los angeles 4, Chicago 3 sunday, June 1 Los Angeles 5, Chicago 4, OT Previous results Chicago 3, Los Angeles 1 Los Angeles 6, Chicago 2 Los Angeles 4, Chicago 3 Los Angeles 5, Chicago 2 Chicago 5, Los Angeles 4, 2OT Chicago 4, Los Angeles 3

WesterN CoNfereNCe

fiNals

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Miami vs. san antonio thursday, June 5 Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m. sunday, June 8 Miami at San Antonio, 6 p.m. tuesday, June 10 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. thursday, June 12 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. x-sunday, June 15 Miami at San Antonio, 6 p.m. x-tuesday, June 17 San Antonio at Miami, 7 p.m. x-friday, June 20 Miami at San Antonio, 7 p.m.

CYCLING CyCliNg UCi giro d’italia

sunday at trieste, italy 107 miles from gemona to trieste 21st (final) stage 1. Luka Mezgec, Slovenia, GiantShimano, 4 hours, 23 minutes, 58 seconds. 2. Giacomo Nizzolo, Italy, Trek Factory Racing, same time. 3. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin Sharp, same time. 4. Nacer Bouhanni, France, FDJ.fr, same time. 5. Roberto Ferrari, Italy, LampreMerida, same time. 6. Leonardo Fabio Duque, Colombia, Colombia, same time. 7. Luca Paolini, Italy, Katusha, same time. 8. Tosh Van Der Sande, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, same time. 9. Borut Bozic, Slovenia, Astana, same time. 10. Iljo Keisse, Belgium, Omega Pharma-QuickStep, same time. overall standings final 1. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, 88 hours, 14 minutes, 32 seconds. 2. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Omega Pharma-QuickStep, 2:58 behind. 3. Fabio Aru, Italy, Astana, 4:04. 4. Pierre Rolland, France, Europcar, 5:46. 5. Domenico Pozzovivo, Italy, AG2R La Mondiale, 6:32. 6. Rafal Majka, Poland, Tinkoff-Saxo, 7:04. 7. Wilco Kelderman, Netherlands, Belkin, 11:00. 8. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC Racing, 11:51. 9. Ryder Hesjedal, Canada, Garmin Sharp, 13:35. 10. Robert Kiserlovski, Croatia, Trek Factory Racing, 15:49. also 68. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC Racing, 2:32:42. 147. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 4:38:00.

WesterN CoNfereNCe

fiNals

N.y. rangers vs. los angeles (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Wednesday, June 4 NY Rangers at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. saturday, June 7 NY Rangers at Los Angeles, 5 p.m. Monday, June 9 Los Angeles at NY Rangers, 6 p.m. Wednesday, June 11 Los Angeles at NY Rangers, 6 p.m. x-friday, June 13 NY Rangers at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. x-Monday, June 16 Los Angeles at NY Rangers, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 18 NY Rangers at Los Angeles, 6 p.m.

NHl sUMMary sunday kings 5, Blackhawks 4, ot

los angeles 2 1 1 1—5 Chicago 3 1 0 0—4 first Period—1, Chicago, Saad 6 (Kane, Shaw), 5:06. 2, Chicago, Toews 9 (Kane, Seabrook), 8:36 (pp). 3, Los Angeles, Carter 9 (Brown, Toffoli), 16:31. 4, Los Angeles, Williams 7 (Voynov, King), 17:22. 5, Chicago, Sharp 4 (Kruger), 17:34. Penalties—Williams, LA (tripping), 7:53; Seabrook, Chi (cross-checking), 9:10. second Period—6, Los Angeles, Toffoli 7 (Greene, King), 10:31. 7, Chicago, Sharp 5 (Saad), 18:25 (pp). Penalties—Richards, LA (hooking), 7:01; Mitchell, LA (boarding), 12:11; Doughty, LA (cross-checking), 13:24; Saad, Chi (slashing), 14:40; Lewis, LA (holding), 17:15. third Period—8, Los Angeles, Gaborik 12 (Brown, Kopitar), 12:43. Penalties—None. first overtime—9, Los Angeles, Martinez 4 (Williams, Greene), 5:47. Penalties—None. shots on goal—Los Angeles 11-4-143—32. Chicago 7-16-13-5—41. Power-play opportunities—Los Angeles 0 of 2; Chicago 2 of 5. goalies—Los Angeles, Quick 12-9-0 (41 shots-37 saves). Chicago, Crawford 11-8-0 (32-27). referees—Dan O’Halloran, Wes McCauley. linesmen—Scott Driscoll, Shane Heyer. a—22,315 (19,717). t—3:00.

Conference Champions eastern Conference

season — Winner 2013-14 — New York Rangers 2012-13 — Boston Bruins 2011-12 — New Jersey Devils 2010-11 — Boston Bruins 2009-10 — Philadelphia Flyers

Western Conference

season — Winner 2013-14 — Los Angeles Kings 2012-13 — Chicago Blackhawks 2011-12 — Los Angeles Kings 2010-11 — Vancouver Canucks 2009-10 — Chicago Blackhawks 2008-09 — Detroit Red Wings

golf GOLF

Pga toUr Memorial

sunday at Muirfield Village golf Club Dublin, ohio Purse: $6.2 million yardage: 7,392; Par: 72 (x-won on first playoff hole) final x-Hideki Matsuyama ,$1,116,000 70-67-69-69—275 Kevin Na, $669,600 72-69-70-64—275 B. Watson, $421,600 66-69-69-72—276 C. Kirk, $272,800 66-70-74-68—278 A. Scott, $272,800 69-70-68-71—278 B. Curtis, $215,450 69-71-69-70—279 S. Stricker, $215,450 71-70-70-68—279 L. Guthrie, $167,400 75-69-66-70—280 B. Haas, $167,400 73-67-72-68—280 T. Olesen, $167,400 71-67-74-68—280 C. Schwrtzl, $167,400 72-69-67-72—280 B. Todd, $167,400 71-68-69-72—280 S. Brown, $124,000 70-69-71-71—281 P. Casey, $124,000 66-66-76-73—281 J. Allred, $102,300 74-68-74-66—282 B. Horschl, $102,300 71-69-68-74—282 M. Kuchar, $102,300 74-69-69-70—282 R. McIlroy, $102,300 63-78-69-72—282 J. Dufner, $65,238 71-69-71-72—283 E. Els, $65,238 70-72-69-72—283 M. Flores, $65,238 69-68-75-71—283 J. Furyk, $65,238 73-68-72-70—283 C. Hoffman, $65,238 69-72-73-69—283 R. Moore, $65,238 68-70-72-73—283 B. Van Pelt, $65,238 72-72-66-73—283 J. Spieth, $65,238 69-72-67-75—283 A. Svoboda, $65,238 72-69-68-74—283 K.J. Choi, $38,647 73-71-72-68—284 B. d Jonge, $38,647 73-69-69-73—284 R. Garrigus, $38,647 72-70-70-72—284 D. Hearn, $38,647 71-73-69-71—284 H. Mahan, $38,647 68-70-73-73—284 D. Smmrhys, $38,647 74-70-68-72—284 S. Langley, $38,647 72-66-67-79—284 K. Stadler, $38,647 72-71-68-73—284 R. Streb, $38,647 72-67-69-76—284 A. Baddely, $25,420 69-74-70-72—285 K. Bradley, $25,420 67-75-70-73—285 Jason Day, $25,420 72-69-70-74—285 B. Hurley III, $25,420 73-70-74-68—285 M. Leishmn, $25,420 71-68-73-73—285 J. Thomas, $25,420 73-68-72-72—285 M. Thmpsn, $25,420 67-76-72-70—285 C. Tringale, $25,420 73-70-70-72—285 C. Villegas, $25,420 71-68-72-74—285 D. Johnson, $18,063 73-68-72-73—286 K. Kisner, $18,063 69-72-76-69—286 J. Hicks, $18,063 73-67-71-75—286

lPga toUr shoprite Classic

sunday at stockton seaview Hotel and golf Club, Bay Course galloway township, N.J. Purse: $1.5 million yardage: 6,177; Par: 71 final Stacy Lewis, $225,000 67-63-67—197 Christina Kim, $138,527 64-67-72—203 Haeji Kang, $72,998 68-67-69—204 A. Nordqvist, $72,998 69-65-70—204 Gerina Piller, $72,998 67-67-70—204 J. Johnson, $72,998 62-70-72—204 J. Granada, $42,851 71-66-68—205 Meena Lee, $31,399 70-70-66—206 A. Munoz, $31,399 69-71-66—206 Shnshn Feng, $31,399 74-65-67—206 Karrie Webb, $31,399 69-70-67—206 Inbee Park, $31,399 66-70-70—206 J. Klatten, $21,590 70-71-66—207 Mo Martin, $21,590 70-71-66—207 Mina Harigae, $21,590 68-72-67—207 S. Pettersen, $21,590 70-70-67—207 Na Yeon Choi, $21,590 66-71-70—207 Haru Nomura, $21,590 63-73-71—207 J. E. Shadoff, $17,140 68-73-67—208 Sarah Kemp, $17,140 67-72-69—208 Chella Choi, $17,140 67-71-70—208 B. Lincicome, $17,140 67-70-71—208 P. Creamer, $13,212 73-70-66—209 Line Vedel, $13,212 74-69-66—209 Karine Icher, $13,212 72-69-68—209 H. Young Park, $13,212 70-70-69—209 C. Boeljon, $13,212 71-68-70—209 Laura Diaz, $13,212 67-72-70—209 Becky Morgan, $13,212 69-70-70—209 Michelle Wie, $13,212 67-72-70—209

CHaMPioNs toUr Pga Champions-Principal Charity Classic Par

sunday at Des Moinse, iowa; Purse: $1.75 million; yardage: 6,910; Par: 72 (x-won on second playoff hole) final x-T. Pernice Jr., $262,500 68-67-69—204 D. Garwood, $154,000 68-65-71—204 M. Allen, $95,813 68-66-71—205 M. Calcavecchia, $95,813 66-69-70—205 Bill Glasson, $95,813 72-69-64—205 Jay Haas, $95,813 69-69-67—205 Joe Durant, $63,000 69-67-70—206 B. Clampett, $52,500 67-72-68—207 Tom Lehman, $52,500 69-68-70—207 Bart Bryant, $42,000 71-69-68—208 Jeff Hart, $42,000 70-68-70—208 Duffy Waldorf, $42,000 70-70-68—208 Steve Lowery, $33,250 67-70-72—209 Chien Soon Lu, $33,250 71-65-73—209 John Riegger, $33,250 68-68-73—209 Willie Wood, $29,750 71-69-70—210 Rick Fehr, $24,640 69-70-72—211 Mark McNulty, $24,640 74-66-71—211 R. Mediate, $24,640 69-73-69—211 Mark Mouland, $24,640 68-73-70—211 Kirk Triplett, $24,640 69-71-71—211

TENNIS teNNis

atP-Wta toUr french open

sunday at Paris Purse: $34.12 million (grand slam) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Men - third round Fernando Verdasco (24), Spain, def. Richard Gasquet (12), France, 6-3, 6-2, 6-3. Andy Murray (7), Britain, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber (28), Germany, 3-6, 6-3, 6-3, 4-6, 12-10. fourth round Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. John Isner (10), United States, 6-4, 6-4, 6-4. Ernests Gulbis (18), Latvia, def. Roger Federer (4), Switzerland, 6-7 (5), 7-6 (3), 6-2, 4-6, 6-3. Milos Raonic (8), Canada, def. Marcel Granollers, Spain, 6-3, 6-3, 6-3. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (13), France, 6-1, 6-4, 6-1. Women - fourth round Eugenie Bouchard (18), Canada, def. Angelique Kerber (8), Germany, 6-1, 6-2. Carla Suarez Navarro (14), Spain, def. Ajla Tomljanovic, Croatia, 6-3, 6-3. Maria Sharapova (7), Russia, def. Sam Stosur (19), Australia, 3-6, 6-4, 6-0. Garbine Muguruza, Spain, def. Pauline Parmentier, France, 6-4, 6-2. Doubles Men - third round Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, and Samuel Groth, Australia, def. Jack Sock, United States, and Joao Sousa, Portugal, 6-4, 6-3. Julien Benneteau and Edouard RogerVasselin (11), France, def. Michael Llodra and Nicolas Mahut (5), France, 2-1, retired. Marin Draganja, Croatia, and Florin Mergea, Romania, def. Feliciano Lopez, Spain, and Jurgen Melzer, Austria, 7-5, 6-3. Women - third round Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Peng Shuai (1), China, def. Liezel Huber and Lisa Raymond (15), United States, 6-0, 6-2. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, and Michaella Krajicek, Netherlands, def .Madison Keys and Alison Riske, United States, 7-6 (6), 3-6, 6-1. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Sania Mirza (5), India, def. Jelena Jankovic, Serbia, and Alisa Kleybanova, Russia, 6-3, 6-3. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (2), Italy, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, and Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3.

AUTO RACING aUto raCiNg

NasCar sPriNt CUP fedex 400 benefiting autism speaks

sunday at Dover, Del.; lap length: 1 miles; (start position in parentheses) 1. (4) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 400 laps, 148.3 rating, 48 points, $331,626. 2. (1) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 400, 111.8, 43, $245,113. 3. (21) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 400, 114.5, 42, $218,416. 4. (10) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 400, 100.7, 41, $177,396. 5. (7) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 400, 103, 39, $136,880. 6. (16) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 400, 87.6, 38, $144,878. 7. (20) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 400, 93.5, 37, $154,828. 8. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 400, 100, 36, $146,036. 9. (13) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 400, 104.3, 35, $115,595. 10. (15) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 400, 92.7, 34, $133,559. 11. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 400, 85.5, 33, $132,530. 12. (25) Aric Almirola, Ford, 400, 87.8, 32, $140,496. 13. (19) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 400, 76.7, 31, $135,999. 14. (29) Carl Edwards, Ford, 400, 75.7, 30, $117,510. 15. (6) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 400, 109.5, 29, $145,446. 16. (27) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 400, 68.6, 28, $126,630. 17. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 399, 105.5, 28, $137,418. 18. (24) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 399, 75.4, 26, $98,960. 19. (17) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 399, 83.9, 25, $114,035. 20. (23) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 398, 74, 24, $144,021. 21. (11) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 397, 65.5, 23, $115,268. 22. (18) Brett Moffitt, Toyota, 396, 53.2, 22, $104,460. 23. (28) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 396, 56.7, 21, $103,810. 24. (38) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 396, 49.9, 20, $111,318. 25. (22) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 395, 60.1, 19, $117,243. 26. (30) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 395, 46, 18, $113,493. 27. (31) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 394, 49.1, 17, $93,185. 28. (33) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 390, 45.7, 16, $92,635. 29. (32) David Gilliland, Ford, 388, 45.7, 15, $109,532. 30. (43) Blake Koch, Ford, 388, 30.8, 0, $90,835. 31. (14) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 387, 64.4, 13, $97,185. 32. (41) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 387, 34.4, 12, $89,010. 33. (42) Dave Blaney, Ford, 383, 30.4, 11, $88,860. 34. (36) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 382, 32, 0, $88,660. 35. (39) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 378, 52.1, 9, $88,435. 36. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 350, 37.1, 8, $96,335. 37. (40) David Stremme, Chevrolet, overheating, 297, 37.7, 7, $88,151. 38. (12) Greg Biffle, Ford, 292, 62.5, 6, $127,110. 39. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, engine, 232, 30, 0, $78,535. 40. (35) Alex Bowman, Toyota, accident, 208, 30.6, 4, $74,535. 41. (26) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, accident, 131, 47.1, 3, $106,360. 42. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, accident, 125, 93, 3, $120,176. 43. (9) Brian Vickers, Toyota, engine, 73, 50.1, 1, $95,110. race statistics Average Speed of Winner: 117.724 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 23 mins, 52 sec. Margin of Victory: 0.885 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 41 laps. Lead Changes: 18 among 6 drivers. Lead Changes: 18 among 6 drivers. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Johnson, 7 times for 272 laps; Ky.Busch, 1 time for 81 laps; K.Harvick, 2 times for 24 laps; M.Kenseth, 5 times for 17 laps; C.Bowyer, 2 times for 5 laps; B.Keselowski, 1 time for 1 lap. top 10 in Points 1. M.Kenseth, 463; 2. J.Gordon, 461; 3. C.Edwards, 438; 4. J.Johnson, 436; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 429; 6. J.Logano, 414; 7. Ky.Busch, 411; 8. Bra.Keselowski, 404; 9. D.Hamlin, 379; 10. K.Larson, 377.

iNDyCar Chevrolet indy Dual in Detroit race 2

sunday at the raceway at Belle isle Park Detroit lap length: 2.346 miles (starting position in parentheses) 1. (3) Helio Castroneves, DallaraChevrolet, 70, Running. 2. (8) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 3. (20) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 4. (22) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 5. (2) James Hinchcliffe, DallaraHonda, 70, Running. 6. (7) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Honda, 70, Running. 7. (16) Mikhail Aleshin, Dallara-Honda, 70, Running. 8. (6) Carlos Munoz, Dallara-Honda, 70, Running. 9. (17) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 10. (5) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 11. (4) Mike Conway, Dallara-Chevrolet, 70, Running. 12. (13) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 70, Running. 13. (15) Juan Pablo Montoya, DallaraChevrolet, 70, Running. 14. (19) Jack Hawksworth, DallaraHonda, 70, Running. 15. (12) Carlos Huertas, DallaraHonda, 70, Running. 16. (18) Marco Andretti, DallaraHonda, 70, Running. 17. (10) Josef Newgarden, DallaraHonda, 69, Running. 18. (1) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 69, Running. 19. (21) Ryan Hunter-Reay, DallaraHonda, 61, Electrical. 20. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, DallaraChevrolet, 58, Contact. 21. (14) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 43, Contact. 22. (9) Sebastian Saavedra, DallaraChevrolet, 9, Contact. race statistics Winners average speed: 93.211. Time of Race: 1:45:53.3410. Margin of Victory: 1.6836 seconds. Cautions: 4 for 13 laps. Lead Changes: 7 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: Sato 1-10, Hinchcliffe 11-20, Conway 21-24, Power 25-26, Aleshin 27, Castroneves 28-33, Hawksworth 34, Castroneves 35-70. Points: Power 326, Castroneves 307, Hunter-Reay 299, Pagenaud 247, Andretti 227, Munoz 210, Montoya 187, Dixon 184.

THIS DATE oNON tHis Date June 2

1932 — Lou Gehrig becomes the first major league player to hit four consecutive home runs in a game, giving the New York Yankees a 20-13 win over the Philadelphia A’s. Gehrig’s feat, however, is overshadowed by the resignation of John McGraw, manager of the New York Giants for 30 years. 1992 — Chicago’s Michael Jordan scores a record 35 points, including a record six 3-pointers, in the first half as the Bulls beat Portland 122-89 in the opening game of the NBA Finals. Jordan finishes with 39 points and Chicago is only two points shy of the largest victory margin in the finals. 1995 — Pedro Martinez of Montreal pitches nine perfect innings against San Diego before giving up a leadoff double to Bip Roberts in the 10th inning of the Expos’ 1-0 win. 2011 — Roger Federer ends Novak Djokovic’s perfect season and 43-match winning streak, beating him 7-6 (5), 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (5) in the French Open semifinals. Federer advances to the title match against five-time champion Rafael Nadal.

SOCCER WORLD CUP

NASCAR

U.S. takes down Turkey in warm-up

Johnson dominates at Dover, extends win record

By Ronald Blum

The Associated Press

HARRISON, N.J. — The combinations started to click. The confidence grew a little bit. Goals by Fabian Johnson and Clint Dempsey led the United States over Turkey 2-1 Sunday for the Americans’ second U.S. 2 straight win in their Turkey 1 World Cup sendoff series. Getting ready for their World Cup opener against Ghana on June 16, the Americans move on to Florida for next weekend’s stateside finale against Nigeria knowing preparation is far from complete. “It’s important not to overanalyze these games,” said midfielder Michael Bradley, who set up the first goal with a gorgeous chip. “There’s a World Cup coming up, and everybody wants to now look at every play in every minute in every game, but it’s important to now look at these games in the context of a bigger picture.” Tim Howard made his 99th international appearance, and with his 54th victory, he surpassed Kasey Keller to set the American record for wins by a goalkeeper. Other than that, the way the U.S. played was far more significant than the result. “Quite an open game,” coach Jurgen Klinsmann said. “We still want to see a lot of little pieces.” Klinsmann made the decision 10 days earlier to cut American career scoring leader Landon Donovan, who got his third goal in two games for the Los Angeles Galaxy on Sunday. Klinsmann’s roster, lineup picks and formation choices are highly debated by a growing American fan base. The 26-year-old Johnson, among the five German Americans on the 23-man roster, made his second straight start at right back. He received a backpass about 40 yards from goal in the 26th minute, made a run and laid the ball off to Bradley. Johnson

The United States’ Fabian Johnson is congratulated by Clint Dempsey, right, and Jozy Altidore after scoring a goal against Turkey Sunday during the first half of a World Cup sendoff series game in Harrison, N.J. JULIO CORTEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

continued his run, Bradley chipped the ball over the defense and Johnson coolly slotted past goalkeeper Onur Kivrak with a leftfooted volley from 6 yards. “He kind of told me with the way he was running that he was going to keep running through,” Bradley said Johnson, who had not scored in 20 previous national team games, jogged down the endline with both arms outstretched, stopped, turned and gave Dempsey a double high-5. “On his celebration, you could see that he’s not an experienced goal-scorer,” Klinsmann said. Johnson joked about his lack of preparation for jubilation. “I’m a defender. On this part, a Jozy or a Clint are better,” he said. Jozy Altidore, who started alongside Dempsey in the 4-4-2 formation with a diamond midfield, remained scoreless in six international matches since October. Altidore put the ball into the goal in

the 15th minute after Kivrak saved Matt Besler’s header off a corner kick, but Tunisian referee Slim Jedidi called a foul on Altidore for pushing the goalkeeper. Altidore was saved on a breakaway in the 71st, but Jedidi had whistled off the play for a foul on defender Hakan Balta. Altidore broke in with a nice move in the 81st only for Kivrak to block his shot. At this point, Klinsmann would be happy to wait 2½ weeks for the drought to end. “I wouldn’t mind if the goal comes against Ghana right now,” he said. Dempsey, who missed Tuesday’s win over Azerbaijan in San Francisco because of a sore groin, made it 2-0 in the 52nd with his 37th international goal, joining Eric Wynalda and Brian McBride as the only Americans to score in 10 consecutive years. Bradley brought the ball up the middle and passed to Brad Davis, who laid it off for Timmy Chandler on the left flank. Starting his first game for the U.S. since February 2013, Chandler sent a cross that Balta mis-hit in his clearance attempt. The ball went into the path of Dempsey, who poked it in from 1 yard. “Especially the first half, I felt really sharp, energetic, got in some good positions,” said Dempsey, who replaced Carlos Bocanegra as the U.S. captain last year. Brad Guzan took over for Howard in goal at the start of the second half, and Turkey scored on a 90th-minute penalty kick by Selcuk Inan after Mustafa Pektemek went around Chandler, cut back and his shot hit the right arm of Geoff Cameron at the goal line. “Just a mental lapse,” Cameron said. “That’s where we need to maybe just not make that mental mistake and not switch off for that few minutes.” Julian Green, the 18-year-old surprise pick for the U.S. roster, entered in the 64th for his second international appearance. He had a great chance two minutes later following a cross by Graham Zusi but wasted it with a heavy touch.

By Dan Gelston

The Associated Press

DOVER, Del. — Jimmie Johnson handled the pothole at Dover the same way he disposed of a rough patch to start the season. He won. A week after shaking off a lengthy winless streak by his championship standards, Johnson raced his way to another routine romp at Dover International Speedway. He followed last week’s victory in the CocaCola 600 with another sensational run at Dover, extending his track victory record to nine. Johnson was the class of the field in a race red-flagged for 22 minutes to repair a pothole in the concrete track. “Whatever they put in the pothole, it worked awfully well,” Johnson said. His No. 48 Chevrolet was even better. Johnson led 272 of 400 laps, and won consecutive races for the 13th time. The six-time Cup champion swept Dover in 2002 and 2009 and won races in 2005, 2010, 2012 and 2013. Brad Keselowski was second, followed by Matt Kenseth, Clint Bowyer and Denny Hamlin. “For sure, when you come to Dover, it’s always the 48,” Kenseth said. “We’ve got to figure out how to get ahead of him.” Good luck. Johnson’s checkered flag celebrations at Dover have seemingly become a rite of the NASCAR season. He became Dover’s career leader in laps led when he hit the 2,802 mark, and again stamped himself as contender for a seriestying seventh championship.

“It’s amazing that we can stay on top of things here with the different generation car, different rules, different Jimmie tires,” Johnson Johnson said. “This place just fits my style and [crew chief] Chad Knaus’ style.” His lone regret? That owner Rick Hendrick was not at the track. Johnson is heating up right as the NASCAR heads into its summer schedule. Up next, Pocono, where Johnson won last season and has two other wins. “We can get on a roll,” he said. “We’ve got some good tracks ahead of us.” Johnson had some wondering what was wrong after an 0 for 11 start to the season. Turned out, it was nothing racing at some of his favorite tracks couldn’t fix. But Johnson also revealed he had surgery to repair three hernias at the end of last season, which cost the No. 48 team testing time. “We felt like it was time to shut things down and let the team kind of recoup,” he said. Johnson never left any doubt his No. 48 Chevrolet was the car to beat, the only drama coming when the race was stopped 160 laps into the race after Ryan Newman’s car pulled up chunks of the track that kicked back and damaged Jamie McMurray’s car. The race was soon stopped and crews weren’t allowed to work on the cars.


SPORTS

Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-3

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD

Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. COLLEGE BASEBALL 5 p.m. on ESPNU — NCAA, Division I playoffs, regionals, teams TBD 7 p.m. on ESPNU — NCAA, Division I playoffs, regionals, teams TBD COLLEGE SOFTBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN2 — World Series, finals, Game 1, teams TBD, in Oklahoma City MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN — Kansas City at St. Louis

SANTA FE FUEGO Team record: (14-4)

Upcoming schedule: Today’s game — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. Tuesday — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m.

Wednesday — (DH) vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. Thursday — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. June 7 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 8 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 9 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 10 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS Los Angeles Kings celebrate Sunday after defeating the Chicago Blackhawks 5-4 during Game 7 of the Western Conference finals in Chicago. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kings: 22,315 fans attended series finale Continued from Page B-1 Jonathan Quick in another resilient performance for Darryl Sutter’s team. Los Angeles trailed San Jose 3-0 in its first-round series and was down 3-2 to top-seeded Anaheim in the second round before rallying each time. Gaborik, Williams and Mike Richards each improved to 7-0 in Game 7s. Sutter moved to 7-3 in such games, breaking a tie with Blackhawks adviser Scotty Bowman and Pat Burns for the NHL record for most coaching wins in Game 7s. Sharp sent a big power-play drive past Quick to give the Blackhawks a 4-3 lead at 18:25 of the second. Sharp, who has been mostly quiet this postseason, celebrated the tiebreaking goal with a big fist pump and scream as his teammates rushed in to congratulate him. The Blackhawks held onto that slim lead all the way to 7:17 of the third, when Gaborik swept in a rebound on the break for his NHL-best 12th playoff goal, sparking a celebration on the Kings’ bench and setting the stage for a frantic finish to regulation. Quick turned away prime opportunities for Sharp and Bryan Bickell before

he made a terrific save on Andrew Shaw in the final seconds. Dustin Brown had a great rush to the net for Los Angeles that he nearly completed for a breathtaking score. Jonathan Toews also scored for the Blackhawks, and Crawford finished with 27 saves. The finale of the epic series between the last two Stanley Cup winners attracted a frenzied crowd of 22,315 that included NBA Hall of Famer Charles Barkley and Bears wide receiver Brandon Marshall. And they were treated to another heart-stopping classic full of big shots and great saves by each side. Just like in Game 5, a 5-4 double-overtime victory for Chicago, the Blackhawks got off to a fast start, only to have the Kings come storming back. Kane picked up an assist on each of the first two goals, finding Saad with a slick pass from behind the net, and then getting to the right place at the right time for a lucky power-play carom that went right to Toews for an easy tap-in at 8:36 of the first. The comeback Kings, who seem to play their best the closer they get to the brink of elimination, then went to work. Carter batted a rebound out of the air and past

Crawford at 16:31, and Williams scored his seventh of the playoff 51 seconds later, tying it at 2. It was Williams’ seventh career goal in a Game 7, tying Glenn Anderson for the NHL record. Williams added an assist on Martinez’s winning score, breaking Doug Gilmour’s record for most points in such games with 14. Add in Sharp’s first score at 18:25 of the first, and the five goals set an NHL record for the highest total in the opening period of a Game 7, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. The Blackhawks then held the Kings without a shot on goal for the first part of the second, but Los Angeles took advantage of its own lucky bounce to tie it at 3 with 9:29 left in the period. Matt Greene’s long shot went off the right skate of Blackhawks forward Michal Handzus and right to an open Toffoli on the right side of the net. The rookie poked it in for his 7th of the playoffs. Chicago wasted a prime scoring chance when it was unable to generate much action when it 46 seconds of a 5-on-3 power play later in the second, and Quick made a great stop on a streaking Shaw on a 2-on-1 with 2:45 left in the period.

Tie: League’s first rematch since 1997, 1998 Continued from Page B-1 cially the Game 6 and not have a pity party and come back this year and get back to the same position, I think that’s fortitude.” It’s the league’s first Finals rematch since Chicago and Utah played in 1997 and 1998. The teams have actually played three times since last season’s classic series ended, twice in the regular season, another being a preseason meeting in Miami, where the Spurs acknowledged that the pain of losing Game 7 on that floor was still real. Then again, it’s almost like they wanted to feel that hurt at times. Popovich showed the Spurs clips of Games 6 and 7 early in training camp this season, not so much to open old wounds but rather speed up the healing process. “We were just trying to put it away, just get over that part of it, learn from it, and move forward from there,” said Duncan, a champion in 1999, 2003, 2005 and 2007. Move forward, they did. San Antonio won 62 games in the regular season, the best record in the league. One of those wins was a 24-point romp over Miami, on the same floor where this series will start on Thursday. The Heat know what wanting revenge

SAN ANTONIO SPURS (62-20, 12-6) vs. MIAMI HEAT (54-28, 12-3). Starters: Spurs — C Tim Duncan (16.5 ppg, 8.9 rpg), F Tiago Splitter (7.9 ppg, 6.8 rpg) or Matt Bonner (1.2 ppg, 0.6 rpg), F Kawhi Leonard (13.3 ppg, 6.8 rpg), G Danny Green (9.3 ppg, 3.3 rpg), G Tony Parker (17.2 ppg, 4.9 apg). Heat — C Chris Bosh (15.2 ppg, 5.7 rpg), F Rashard Lewis (4.0 ppg, 2.2 rpg), F LeBron James (27.1 ppg, 6.8 rpg, 5.0 apg), G Dwyane Wade (18.7 ppg, 4.3 apg), G Mario Chalmers (7.1 ppg, 3.9 apg). Key reserves: Spurs — G Manu Ginobili (14.3 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 4.1 apg), F Boris Diaw (10.0 ppg, 3.8 rpg), G Patty Mills (6.5 ppg, 1.4 apg), G Marco Belinelli (5.7 ppg, 2.6 rpg), G Cory Joseph (3.3 ppg, 0.6 apg). Heat — G Ray Allen (9.1 ppg,

feels like. They lost the 2011 NBA Finals to Dallas, then opened the following season on the Mavericks’ floor and simply blew them away. Heat forward Chris Bosh called it “extra motivation” for the Spurs. “It’s just something that we have to deal with, and we know that they’re going to be very passionate, and they’re going to play some good basketball,” Bosh said. “So whoever we play, we just have to continue to keep our approach the same and play good basketball.” While the Spurs were punching their ticket by ousting Oklahoma City from the West finals on Saturday night, the Heat were getting a day off. James was taking his kids to see X-Men. James Jones went to a home-improvement store for some supplies. Bosh insisted he was going to do as little as possible, and Heat coach Erik Spoelstra isn’t summoning his team to practice again until Monday. By then, James will be locked in on the Spurs. “It hasn’t really hit us that much yet because I think we’re in it,” James said Friday night after Miami beat Indiana and clinched its fourth consecutive East championship. “I think it will once we’re

3.5 rpg), F Chris Andersen (6.1 ppg, 6.1 rpg), G Norris Cole (5.1 ppg, 1.8 apg), F Shane Battier (3.1 ppg, 0.8 rpg), F Udonis Haslem (3.0 ppg, 3.1 rpg), G James Jones (3.8 ppg, 0.8 rpg). Season series: Tied, 1-1. Each team won easily on its home floor, with the Spurs handing the Heat their worst loss of the season in a 111-87 victory March 6. Miami won 113-101 on Jan. 26, a game in which the Spurs played without Leonard, Green and Splitter because of injuries and trailed by as many as 29 points. San Antonio shot 50 percent in both games, though the Heat hit 58 percent of their shots in their victory. Story line: The first NBA Finals rematch since 1998 features the Heat going for their third straight championship against a San Antonio team

done and we’re able to look back at what we were able to accomplish as players, as a franchise. I think that’s when it will really hit us. We definitely don’t take it for granted to be in this position.” So for the next few days, all the highlights of last year’s finals will be played over and over again. The shot by Tony Parker — who missed the second half of Saturday night’s game with a left ankle injury — to win Game 1 in Miami for the Spurs. James’ twirl-onthe-rim dunk as the Heat pulled away in Game 2. San Antonio sharpshooter Danny Green’s Finals-record 3-point display. Bosh’s rebound that led to Ray Allen’s shot that saved Miami’s season in Game 6. The yellow rope, the precursor to a Spurs celebration that never happened. All made for an epic series. The encore could be even better. “Obviously, we are very happy and pleased with the season we have had so far, but we are not by any means satisfied,” Green said. “We know we have a lot of work to do against a very good team. There is a reason why they’re back there and are two-time champs. We have our work cut out for us, but we are happy with going back — just not satisfied.”

that rebounded from last year’s heartbreak to get another shot at them. San Antonio blew a five-point lead in the final halfminute of regulation of Game 6 last year with a chance to clinch, then Miami pulled out Game 7. Key matchup I: Leonard vs. James. James is the MVP of the last two NBA Finals and had 37 points and 12 rebounds last year in Game 7. Leonard was pretty good, too, with 19 points and 16 rebounds. He’s another year better and forced James into a 6-for-18 shooting night in the Spurs’ regular-season rout, though James’ bigger problem might have been the sleeved jersey he complained about afterward. Key matchup II: Duncan vs. Bosh. Duncan shot 9 for 13 in each game against Miami this

season, scoring 23 points in both. Bosh was just a little bit better, with a pair of 24-point performances, and went 9 for 10 in the Heat victory. The Heat may not need him to be that good, but probably must get something better than his scoreless outing they overcame to win Game 7. X-factor: Parker’s health. The All-Star point guard missed the second half of Game 6 of the Western Conference finals with left ankle soreness. The Spurs were good enough to beat Oklahoma City without him that night, but it would be tough to defeat Miami four times if Parker is too far from his normal form. Prediction: Spurs in 7. The Associated Press

Basketball u The Santa Fe High boys basketball program will begin open gym sessions from 4:45-7 p.m. Wednesday in Toby Roybal Memorial Gymnasium. It will be open to students starting their freshmen year to incoming seniors from Mondays through Thursdays until mid-July. u The Capital boys basketball program will hold a camp from 8 a.m.-noon Monday through Friday in Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gymnasium. The camp is for boys and girls in grades 4-8. Registration is $50. For camp registration information, email chsjag1@ gmail.com or call coach Ben Gomez at 467-1161. u Santa Fe Preparatory is conducting its fourth annual summer basketball camp from 9 a.m.-noon Monday through Friday in Prep Gymnasium. The camp is for boys and girls ages 8-15. Cost is $100 per participant. For more information, call coach Darren Casados at 995-7825. u The Santa Fe Indian School boys basketball program is holding its “Perfect Shots” shooting camp and “Dynamic Scoring” camp on June 17-18 in the Pueblo Pavilion. The camp is open to boys and girls in grades 3-12, but only 50 campers will be allowed in each of the two sessions on both days. For pre-registration and other information, call coach Zack Cole at 989-6373, or email him at zcole@sfis.k12.nm.us. u The St. Michael’s Horsemen fundamental camps are scheduled for June 9-12 and July 14-17 in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium. Both camps are from 8 a.m.-4 p.m., and open to boys and girls in grades 1-9. Cost is $40 for first- and second-graders and $75 for third- through ninth-graders. For more information, go to www. stmichaelssf.org or call head coach Ron Geyer at 983-7353. u The St. Michael’s Horsemen shooting camp is June 16-17, and is open to boys and girls in grades 1-9. Both camps are from 9 a.m.-4 p.m., and open to boys and girls in grades 3-9. Cost is $40 for all grades. For more information, go to www.st michaelssf.org or call head coach Ron Geyer at 983-7353.

Volleyball u The West Las Vegas volleyball program is hold kids summer camps throughout June in Gillie Lopez Memorial Gymnasium. The first camp is scheduled from 7:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday and will focus on skill development, games, daily workouts and exercise. Cost is $10 per day and family rates are available. For more information, call coach Karli Salazar at 927-6914. u The Española Valley volleyball program will conduct a camp from Friday to Sunday in Edward Medina Gymnasium. The camp times are from 6-9 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m.-noon and 2-5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Sunday. Cost is $50 per camper. Registration can be done at www.stadiumroar.com/sundevilvbcamp. For more information, call coach Damon Salazar at 690-2982 or email damon@computerassets.com.

Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com.

In brief Fuego rout Train Robbers

Another offensive explosion led the Santa Fe Fuego to a 17-6 rout of the visiting Las Vegas Train Robbers in Pecos League action Sunday night at Fort Marcy Ballpark. Eric Kozel and Nick Billinger each had four hits as Santa Fe (14-4) matched its team record with its sixth straight win. It’s also the first time in team history that the Fuego have been at least 10 games over .500. Kozel finished 4-for-5 with three runs scored and six runs batted in. He punctuated his big night by launching a grand slam in the bottom of the seventh inning. He has three home runs and 19 RBI for the season. Billinger remained red hot, going 4-for-6 while batting out of the No. 6 hole. He had four hits in Saturday night’s 17-2 rout of Las Vegas and extended his hitting streak to seven games. He is 17 for his last 27, including 8-for-11 over the past two games against the Train Robbers. Starting pitcher Brandon Marris (2-1) got the win, logging six innings while giving up six hits and three runs. He walked four and struck out three. The Fuego lead the Northern Division by four games, the largest lead it has ever had since joining the Pecos League three years

ago. They visit Las Vegas on Monday night, then return home Wednesday night to face Southern Division leader Alpine for four games at Fort Marcy Ballpark.

’Topes fall after throwing error A two-run throwing error by Albuquerque second baseman Miguel Rojas brought home two runs in the top of the sixth inning, propelling the visiting Salt Lake Bees to a 4-3 victory in Pacific Coast League action Sunday night at Isotopes Park. With Albuquerque (25-31) leading 2-1 after five innings, Salt Lake’s Luis Jimenez tripled with one out, then Efren Navarro walked. Brennan Boesch rolled a ball to Rojas, but his his errant throw allowed Jimenez and Navarro to score the tying and go-ahead runs. The Bees would add another run in the seventh. Albuquerque got one back in the bottom of the eighth, but Salt Lake’s Ryan Chaffee worked the final frame to earn his second save of the season. The Isotopes had the tying run on base when he induced a game-ending double play out of Albuquerque’s Carlos Triunfel. Red Patterson (2-5) took the loss for Albuquerque. He started and pitched into the sixth. The teams have split the first two games of their four-game set. The series resumes Monday night at Isotopes Park. The New Mexican


B-4

BASEBALL

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Blue Jays blank Royals The Associated Press

TORONTO — Mark Buehrle pitched eight sharp innings to become baseball’s first 10-game winner, Blue Jays 4 Edwin Encarnacion Royals 0 homered again, and the Blue Jays beat Kansas City 4-0 on Sunday. Buehrle (10-1) won his sixth straight decision. He gave up six hits, walked one and struck out three. He lowered his ERA to 2.10, second-best in the AL to New York’s Masahiro Tanaka, and he improved to 25-12 lifetime against the Royals. Encarnacion, who matched Mickey Mantle’s AL record with 16 home runs in May, started off a new month with another drive. He hit a two-run shot off Aaron Crow in the eighth for his 19th homer of the season. Jeremy Guthrie (2-5) lost his fifth straight decision. TWINS 7, YANKEES 2 In New York, Phil Hughes pitched eight poised innings in his return to New York and wound up a winner when the Twins rallied past the Yankees behind big hits from Josh Willingham and Brian Dozier in a six-run ninth. Willingham belted a tying homer on the first pitch from closer David Robertson, denying rookie Chase Whitley his first major league victory. Robertson (0-2) then walked two batters and gave up Dozier’s two-out double, putting the Twins on top 3-2. RED SOX 4, RAYS 0 In Boston, Jon Lester pitched seven shutout innings, and Brock Holt drove in two runs with one of his four doubles to lift the Red Sox to their seventh straight win, completing a three-game sweep over the reeling Rays. Boston’s streak follows a 10-game skid, its longest in 20 years. The Red Sox said that matches a major league record for consecutive wins after a double-digit losing stretch, according to research by the Elias Sports Bureau. The 1989 Detroit Tigers did it after losing 12 in a row, and the 1942 Pittsburgh Pirates also did it after dropping 10 straight. ORIOLES 9, ASTROS 4 In Houston, Manny Machado hit his first career grand slam, David Lough homered and drove in three runs, and Baltimore beat the Astros. Orioles slugger Nelson Cruz, leading the majors with 20 home runs and 52 RBIs, left in the third inning with a bruised left hand after being hit by a pitch from Scott Feldman. X-rays were negative and Cruz was listed as day to day. Machado’s towering shot capped a six-run sixth inning.

East

W

American League

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

GB

WCGB

L10

GB

WCGB

L10

Toronto New York Baltimore Boston Tampa Bay

34 29 28 27 23

24 26 27 29 34

.586 .527 .509 .482 .404

— 3½ 4½ 6 10½

Detroit Chicago Minnesota Cleveland Kansas City

31 29 26 27 26

22 29 28 30 30

.585 .500 .481 .474 .464

— 4½ 5½ 6 6½

Oakland Los Angeles Texas Seattle Houston

35 30 29 28 24

22 26 28 28 34

.614 .536 .509 .500 .414

— 4½ 6 6½ 11½

Central

W

West

L

W

Pct

L

Pct

Sunday’s Games Cleveland 6, Colorado 4 Minnesota 7, N.Y. Yankees 2 Toronto 4, Kansas City 0 Boston 4, Tampa Bay 0 Baltimore 9, Houston 4 Chicago White Sox 4, San Diego 1 Oakland 6, L.A. Angels 3 Seattle 4, Detroit 0

— — 1 2½ 7

— 1½ 2½ 3 3½ — — 1 1½ 6½

Str

Home

Str

Home

Str

Home

8-2 5-5 5-5 7-3 4-6

W-2 L-1 W-2 W-7 L-6

4-6 6-4 3-7 5-5 3-7

L-2 W-1 W-1 W-3 L-2

5-5 4-6 6-4 5-5 7-3

W-3 L-3 W-1 W-2 L-2

Away

18-13 12-13 11-12 15-17 12-14

16-11 17-13 17-15 12-12 11-20

14-11 17-14 13-14 18-11 13-14

17-11 12-15 13-14 9-19 13-16

17-12 15-13 13-13 14-15 12-17

18-10 15-13 16-15 14-13 12-17

Away

Away

Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 3, Minnesota 1 Toronto 12, Kansas City 2 San Diego 4, Chicago White Sox 2 Cleveland 7, Colorado 6 Baltimore 4, Houston 1 Boston 7, Tampa Bay 1 Oakland 11, L.A. Angels 3 Seattle 3, Detroit 2

Monday’s Games Boston (Lackey 6-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 2-4), 5:05 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 7-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Phelps 1-2), 5:05 p.m. East

W

National League

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

GB

WCGB

L10

Atlanta Miami Washington New York Philadelphia

31 28 27 27 24

25 28 28 29 30

.554 .500 .491 .482 .444

— 3 3½ 4 6

Milwaukee St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago

34 30 26 26 20

23 27 29 30 34

.596 .526 .473 .464 .370

— 4 7 7½ 12½

San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado San Diego Arizona

37 30 28 26 23

20 28 28 31 36

.649 .517 .500 .456 .390

— 7½ 8½ 11 15

Central

West

W

L

W

Pct

L

Pct

— 1 1½ 2 4

GB

— — 2½ 3 8

WCGB

— — 1 3½ 7½

Str

Home

Str

Home

5-5 5-5 3-7 6-4 4-6

W-3 L-3 L-1 W-2 L-2

6-4 4-6 5-5 6-4 4-6

W-1 L-1 W-3 W-1 L-1

8-2 5-5 2-7 5-5 5-5

W-1 L-1 L-4 L-1 L-3

L10

Str

Away

18-12 20-11 16-15 13-17 12-18

13-13 8-17 11-13 14-12 12-12

18-12 16-12 12-12 16-13 10-13

16-11 14-15 14-17 10-17 10-21

19-9 12-17 16-7 14-15 9-22

18-11 18-11 12-21 12-16 14-14

Away

Home

Away

Saturday’s Games Washington 10, Texas 2 St. Louis 2, San Francisco 0 N.Y. Mets 5, Philadelphia 4, 14 innings Atlanta 9, Miami 5 Chicago Cubs 8, Milwaukee 0 L.A. Dodgers 12, Pittsburgh 2 Cincinnati 5, Arizona 0

Sunday’s Games Atlanta 4, Miami 2 N.Y. Mets 4, Philadelphia 3, 11 innings Texas 2, Washington 0 Milwaukee 9, Chicago Cubs 0 San Francisco 8, St. Louis 0 Cincinnati 4, Arizona 3 Pittsburgh 5, L.A. Dodgers 3

Monday’s Games N.Y. Mets (Colon 4-5) at Philadelphia (R.Hernandez 2-2), 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Cobb 1-2) at Miami (Wolf 0-1), 5:10 p.m. Minnesota (Gibson 4-4) at Milwaukee (Garza 2-4), 5:20 p.m. Kansas City (Duffy 2-5) at St. Louis (S.Miller 6-4), 6:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 3-4) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 3-2), 8:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Morton 1-7) at San Diego (Stauffer 2-1), 8:10 p.m.

MLB PitCHiNG COMPARiSON

Subject to change. National League tEAM PitCHERS New York Colon (R) PhiladelphiaHernandez (R) tEAM Pittsburgh San Diego

2014 team LiNE W-L ERA 5:05p 4-5 4.73 -115 2-2 3.76

PitCHERS Morton (R) Stauffer (R)

LiNE 8:10p -110

W-L 1-7 2-1

ERA 3.29 4.50

team REC 5-5 5-4

2013 vs. Opp. W-L iP ERA No Record 0-0 6.0 1.50

REC 4-7 1-1

W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

team REC 6-5 6-6

2013 vs. Opp. W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

American League tEAM PitCHERS Boston Lackey (R) Cleveland Masterson (R)

2014 team LiNE W-L ERA -115 6-3 3.27 5:05p 2-4 5.21

tEAM PitCHERS Seattle Hernandez (R) New York Phelps (R)

LiNE -125 5:05p

W-L 7-1 1-2

REC 8-4 1-4

W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

iNtERLEAGUE tEAM PitCHERS Tampa Bay Cobb (R) Miami Wolf (L)

LiNE -135 5:10p

2014 team W-L ERA REC 1-2 2.93 2-3 0-1 4.50 0-1

2013 vs. Opp W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

tEAM Minnesota Milwaukee

LiNE 5:20p -150

W-L 4-4 2-4

W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

PitCHERS Gibson (R) Garza (R)

tEAM Kansas City St. Louis

PitCHERS Duffy (L) Miller (R)

tEAM PitCHERS Chicago (AL)Quintana (L) L.A. DodgersKershaw (L)

ERA 2.57 3.38

ERA 4.18 4.84

REC 5-5 6-5

LiNE 6:10p -170

W-L 2-5 6-4

ERA 3.57 3.94

REC 1-4 6-5

W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

LiNE 8:10p -220

W-L 3-4 3-2

ERA 3.61 3.57

REC 5-6 3-3

W-L iP ERA No Record No Record

MLB Boxscores Sunday Mets 4, Phillies 3, 11 innings New York AB R H Bi BBSO Avg. Orioles 9, Astros 4

Baltimore

Markakis dh Machado 3b N.Cruz rf D.Young lf A.Jones cf C.Davis 1b Hardy ss Schoop 2b Lough lf-rf Hundley c totals Houston

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

4 4 1 3 4 5 4 4 3 3 35

1 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 0 9

1 2 0 0 1 1 2 3 2 0 12

0 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 9

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

2 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 7

.299 .230 .314 .273 .283 .230 .306 .226 .176 .176

0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 4 2 12 000—9 120—4

.318 .302 .259 .251 .248 .250 .193 .208 .164 .183 .195

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Altuve 2b 3 Ma.Gonzalez 2b 0 Springer rf 5 Fowler cf 3 Presley cf 1 M.Dominguez 3b4 Carter dh 4 Guzman 1b 3 Grossman lf 4 Corporan c 3 Villar ss 4 totals 34 Baltimore 021 Houston 000

0 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 8 006 100

12 0 8 0

LOB—Baltimore 5, Houston 7. 2B—Machado (2), Springer (7), Grossman (3). HR— Lough (1), off Feldman; Machado (3), off Feldman; M.Dominguez (8), off Guilmet. RBIs—Machado 4 (9), A.Jones (30), Lough 3 (6), Hundley (2), M.Dominguez 2 (24), Carter (22), Corporan (9). SB—Machado (1), N.Cruz (1). S—Lough. SF—A.Jones, Hundley, Corporan. Runners left in scoring position—Baltimore 4 (A.Jones, C.Davis, Markakis 2); Houston 2 (Grossman, Springer). RISP— Baltimore 3 for 8; Houston 1 for 6. Runners moved up—M.Dominguez. GIDP—N.Cruz. DP—Houston 1 (Villar, Altuve, Guzman). Baltimore iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Lagares cf Edgin p Dan.Murphy 2b D.Wright 3b Campbell 1b-lf C.Young lf-cf Granderson rf Tejada ss d’Arnaud c Niese p b-B.Abreu ph Duda 1b totals Philadelphia

5 1 5 4 5 4 3 5 2 3 1 1 39

0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4

1 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 8

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 4

0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 5

1 1 2 1 2 2 2 0 0 2 0 0 13

.288 .000 .291 .293 .294 .202 .200 .226 .193 .059 .314 .241

1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 2 0 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 3 1 9 000 02—4 000 01—3

.284 .251 .278 .290 .229 .224 .156 .167 .250 .205 .169

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Revere cf 4 0 Rollins ss 5 0 Byrd rf 5 1 Ruiz c 5 1 Howard 1b 5 1 Mayberry lf 4 0 C.Hernandez 2b 4 0 Brignac 3b 3 0 Hamels p 2 0 a-D.Brown ph 1 0 c-Gwynn Jr. ph 1 0 totals 39 3 New York 000 101 Philadelphia 000 200

8 9

0 2

a-singled for Hamels in the 7th. b-flied out for Niese in the 9th. c-struck out for De Fratus in the 10th. E—Rollins (4), Brignac (1). LOB—New York 9, Philadelphia 5. 2B—D.Wright (13), Campbell (3), Ruiz (13). HR—Duda (8), off Aumont; Howard (11), off Niese; Byrd (8), off Mejia. RBIs—C.Young (14), Granderson (24), Duda 2 (26), Byrd (32), Howard 2 (39). SB—Lagares (1). CS—Tejada (1). SBrignac. SF—C.Young, Granderson. Runners left in scoring position—New York 6 (Campbell, d’Arnaud, Niese 3, C.Young); Philadelphia 2 (Rollins, Revere). RISP— New York 1 for 11; Philadelphia 2 for 4. Runners moved up—Dan.Murphy, Tejada 3. GIDP—d’Arnaud, Rollins. DP—New York 1 (Tejada, Dan.Murphy, Campbell); Philadelphia 1 (Brignac, C.Hernandez, Howard). New York iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Giants 8, Cardinals 0

San Francisco

Pagan cf J.Perez rf Pence rf Colvin lf Posey c Sandoval 3b Blanco lf-cf B.Crawford ss B.Hicks 2b Arias 1b T.Hudson p Adrianza 3b totals St. Louis

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

5 1 5 1 5 4 4 4 3 4 4 1 41

1 0 1 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 8

2 0 1 0 3 1 2 1 0 3 0 1 14

1 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 3 0 0 8

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 0 0 6

0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 6

.327 .048 .284 .260 .264 .251 .238 .236 .178 .174 .080 .163

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 6 000—8 000—0

.291 .202 .268 .270 .154 .252 .170 .286 .232 .281 .241 .043 .000 .169

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

M.Carpenter 3b 3 a-Bourjos ph 1 Wong 2b 4 Holliday lf 2 Grichuk lf 1 Craig 1b 2 b-Descalso 3b 1 Taveras rf 4 Jh.Peralta ss 4 Jay cf 3 T.Cruz c 3 Lynn p 1 C.Martinez p 1 M.Ellis 1b 1 totals 31 San Francisco 402 St. Louis 000

0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 101 000

Athletics 6, Angels 3

Los Angeles

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Oakland

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Calhoun rf Aybar ss Pujols dh Ibanez lf H.Kendrick 2b Freese 3b Cron 1b Conger c a-Iannetta ph Cowgill cf totals

4 2 3 4 4 2 4 3 1 3 30

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3

1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 7

0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 4

2 0 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 2 11

.228 .277 .253 .147 .294 .208 .299 .253 .255 .288

Crisp cf 5 1 1 1 0 1 Jaso dh 3 1 0 0 1 0 Donaldson 3b 4 0 2 2 0 0 Cespedes lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 Lowrie ss 3 1 2 2 1 1 Vogt c 4 0 0 0 0 1 Callaspo 1b 4 0 3 0 0 0 Gentry rf 4 2 1 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 4 1 3 0 0 0 totals 35 6 12 5 2 4 Los Angeles 000 020 100—3 Oakland 004 011 00x—6

.257 .296 .284 .240 .245 .000 .249 .270 .207

7 2 12 0

a-struck out for Conger in the 9th. E—H.Kendrick 2 (5). LOB—Los Angeles 7, Oakland 7. 2B—Calhoun (6), Aybar (14), Crisp (10). HR—Lowrie (4), off Weaver. RBIs—Aybar 2 (31), Pujols (33), Crisp (16), Donaldson 2 (48), Lowrie 2 (22). 14 0 CS—Callaspo (1), Sogard (2). S—Aybar. 4 1 SF—Aybar, Pujols. a-grounded out for M.Carpenter in the Runners left in scoring position—Los 8th. b-grounded out for Maness in the 8th. Angeles 4 (Conger 3, Pujols); Oakland 3 E—Wong (4). LOB—San Francisco 12, St. (Vogt 2, Jaso). RISP—Los Angeles 1 for 6; Louis 7. 2B—Sandoval (11), B.Crawford Oakland 4 for 10. (10), M.Carpenter (14). 3B—Blanco (3). DP—Oakland 1 (Lowrie, Callaspo, CalRBIs—Pagan (17), Posey (26), Blanco (10), laspo, Donaldson). B.Crawford 2 (26), Arias 3 (5). Los Angeles iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Runners left in scoring position—San Weaver L, 6-4 6 11 6 5 1 2 90 3.33 Francisco 7 (T.Hudson, Blanco 2, Arias Morin 1 1 0 0 1 1 17 1.32 Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 4.13 2, B.Hicks, Colvin); St. Louis 3 (T.Cruz, Oakland iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Taveras 2). RISP—San Francisco 4 for 17; Gray W, 6-1 6 2-3 7 3 3 3 5 113 2.45 St. Louis 0 for 3. Otero H, 6 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 8 2.41 Runners moved up—Wong. GIDP—T. Gregerson H, 7 1 0 0 0 1 2 17 2.40 Hudson. Doolittle S, 5-6 1 0 0 0 0 3 17 2.77 DP—St. Louis 1 (M.Carpenter, Wong, Inherited runners-scored—Otero 1-0. M.Ellis). IBB—off Morin (Lowrie). PB—Conger. San Francisco iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T—2:58. A—32,231 (35,067).

T.Hudson W, 6-2 7 J.Lopez 1 Huff 1

St. Louis

3 1 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

2 0 0

6 101 0 12 0 22

1.75 1.54 6.87

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

indians 6, Rockies 4

Colorado

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Blackmon cf 4 0 0 1 0 3 Lynn L, 6-3 3 1-3 8 7 4 4 2 88 3.48 Cuddyer 3b 4 1 2 0 0 0 C.Martinez 2 2-3 2 1 1 1 4 47 4.70 C.Gonzalez lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 Maness 2 3 0 0 0 0 26 2.92 Tulowitzki ss 4 0 1 0 0 2 Motte 1 1 0 0 1 0 13 1.50 Morneau 1b 4 1 0 1 0 1 Inherited runners-scored—C.Martinez 2-1. Dickerson dh 4 1 1 2 0 1 HBP—by T.Hudson (Craig). WP—T.Hudson. Barnes rf 4 1 1 0 0 2 T—3:04. A—42,734 (45,399). Pacheco c 2 0 0 0 2 1 LeMahieu 2b 2 0 1 0 0 1 Brewers 9, Cubs 0 totals 32 4 7 4 2 12 Chicago AB R H Bi BBSO Avg. AB R H Bi BBSO Bonifacio cf-3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .269 Cleveland Bourn cf 4 2 1 2 1 1 Lake lf-cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 A.Cabrera ss 3 1 0 0 1 0 Rizzo 1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Brantley lf 4 2 2 1 0 1 Schlitter p 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.000 Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 a-Ruggiano ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .239 Chisenhall 1b 3 0 0 1 0 0 S.Castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 .272 Giambi dh 2 0 0 1 1 1 Schierholtz rf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .212 a-Raburn ph-dh 1 0 1 0 0 0 Castillo c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .242 Dav.Murphy rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 Jo.Baker c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .163 Aviles 3b 4 1 2 0 0 1 Olt 3b-1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .162 Kottaras c 1 0 0 0 2 0 Barney 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .179 totals 29 6 7 6 5 6 Samardzija p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .148 Colorado 021 000 100—4 Coghlan lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .139 Cleveland 301 000 002—6 One out when winning run scored. totals 30 0 3 0 0 6 Milwaukee

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Segura ss 4 Braun rf 3 Lucroy c 3 C.Gomez cf 3 K.Davis lf 4 Gennett 2b 4 Mar.Reynlds 3b 2 E.Herrera 3b 1 Overbay 1b 4 Lohse p 3 totals 31 Chicago 000 Milwaukee 215

1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 3 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 9 9 000 010

0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 3 0 1 2 0 0 8 3 4 000—0 00x—9

.268 .327 .317 .313 .253 .281 .205 .226 .211 .179 3 9

0 0

a-grounded out for Russell in the 9th. LOB—Chicago 4, Milwaukee 2. 2B—Gennett 2 (11), Overbay (5). HR—Braun (9), off Samardzija; Gennett (3), off Grimm. RBIs—Braun 2 (28), Gennett (15), Overbay 3 (14), Lohse 2 (4). Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 1 (Olt). RISP—Chicago 0 for 2; Milwaukee 3 for 6. GIDP—Lucroy. DP—Chicago 2 (Barney, Barney, Olt), (Bonifacio, Barney, Olt). Chicago iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Samardzija L, 1-5 Grimm Schlitter Russell

Milwaukee

Lohse W, 7-1

3 2 2 1

8 1 0 0

8 1 0 0

8 1 0 0

2 1 0 0

3 0 0 1

65 28 18 10

2.54 2.77 2.22 3.46

9

3

0

0

0

6 93

2.60

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

HBP—by Samardzija (C.Gomez), by Lohse (Rizzo). T—2:18. A—36,277 (41,900).

twins 7, Yankees 2

Minnesota

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Dozier 2b 5 Mauer 1b 4 Plouffe 3b 4 1-Nunez pr-3b 1 Arcia rf 5 Willingham dh 4 Kubel lf 4 K.Suzuki c 3 E.Escobar ss 4 A.Hicks cf 3 totals 37

1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 7

Gardner lf 4 Jeter ss 4 Ellsbury cf 4 McCann c 2 Solarte 3b 3 I.Suzuki rf 2 B.Roberts 2b 3 Ke.Johnson 1b 3 Z.Almonte dh 3 totals 28 Minnesota 001 New York 000

1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 000 200

New York

1 1 2 1 2 1 0 1 0 1 10

1 0 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 7

0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3

0 2 0 0 1 2 4 0 3 2 14

.231 .267 .254 .273 .271 .275 .232 .297 .317 .190

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 6 006—7 000—2

.284 .273 .269 .229 .294 .314 .242 .212 .158

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

.310 .318 .258 .350 .299 .341 .301 .236 .284 Avg.

.288 .242 .307 .226 .361 .143 .217 .270 .286 .500

Blue Jays 4, Royals 0

Kansas City

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

toronto

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Aoki rf Infante 2b Hosmer 1b B.Butler dh A.Gordon lf S.Perez c L.Cain cf Moustakas 3b A.Escobar ss totals

4 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 3 33

Reyes ss 4 Me.Cabrera lf 4 Bautista rf 3 Lind dh 4 Encarnacion 1b 3 J.Francisco 3b 3 St.Tolleson 2b 1 Lawrie 2b-3b 4 D.Navarro c 3 Gose cf 3 totals 32 Kansas City 000 toronto 010

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 6

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 4

.264 .255 .271 .249 .276 .254 .328 .148 .265

0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 4 10 4 2 6 000 000—0 100 02x—4

.250 .308 .311 .357 .271 .277 .294 .239 .273 .265

6 1 10 0

E—Guthrie (5). LOB—Kansas City 7, Toronto 6. 2B—Infante (5), Hosmer (20), A.Escobar (14), Encarnacion (15), J.Francisco (7). HR—D.Navarro (3), off Guthrie; Encarnacion (19), off Crow. RBIs—Encarnacion 2 (50), D.Navarro (22), Gose (4). Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 2 (B.Butler, Hosmer); Toronto 3 (J.Francisco 2, Lawrie). RISP—Kansas City 0 for 6; Toronto 1 for 6. GIDP—Bautista. DP—Kansas City 1 (A.Escobar, Infante, Hosmer). Kansas City iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Guthrie L, 2-5 Crow

7 1

8 2

2 2

2 2

2 0

5 104 1 15

4.00 3.04

Buehrle W, 10-1 8 Loup 1

6 0

0 0

0 0

1 0

3 102 1 8

2.10 2.60

toronto

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

T—2:14. A—38,008 (49,282).

Red Sox 4, Rays 0

tampa Bay

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Zobrist ss-rf 4 De.Jennings cf 2 Longoria 3b 4 Sands dh 4 S.Rodriguez lf 4 Forsythe 2b 4 Loney 1b 3 J.Molina c 2 a-Y.Escobar ss 2 Kiermaier rf 3 totals 32

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Holt 1b 4 Bogaerts ss 5 Pedroia 2b 2 Cecchini 3b 2 D.Ortiz dh 2 J.Gomes lf 2 Hassan rf 3 D.Ross c 4 Bradley Jr. cf 3 J.Herrera 3b-2b 3 totals 30 tampa Bay 000 Boston 000

1 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 7 000 300

Boston

1 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 5

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

1 1 1 3 2 3 0 1 0 2 14

.253 .232 .265 .000 .233 .194 .293 .127 .251 .278

2 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 4 7 10 000—0 10x—4

.337 .296 .272 .500 .262 .236 .333 .167 .204 .208

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

5 7

0 1

a-flied out for J.Molina in the 7th. E—Holt (5). LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Boston 10. 2B—Loney (13), Holt 4 (9), Cecchini (1). 7 2 RBIs—Holt 2 (11), Cecchini (1), J.Herrera 7 1 (6). SB—Holt (3). SF—J.Herrera. Runners left in scoring position—Tampa Bay 5 (S.Rodriguez 2, Kiermaier 2, Sands); E—Chacin (1), Kahnle (1), Aviles (3). LOB—Colorado 6, Cleveland 6. 2B—Barnes Boston 7 (Hassan 2, D.Ortiz, Bogaerts 2, D.Ross 2). RISP—Tampa Bay 0 for 10; (8), LeMahieu (7), Brantley (13). HR— Boston 2 for 14. Dickerson (7), off Tomlin; Bourn (2), off Runners moved up—D.Ross. GIDP— Ottavino. RBIs—Blackmon (38), Morneau (34), Dickerson 2 (16), Bourn 2 (14), Brant- Longoria. DP—Boston 1 (Cecchini, Holt). ley (40), Chisenhall (16), Giambi (5), Dav. iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Murphy (32). SB—Aviles (5). S—LeMahieu tampa Bay Bedard L, 2-4 4 2-3 5 3 3 4 4 104 4.27 2, Kottaras. SF—Blackmon, Chisenhall, Boxberger 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 21 1.47 Dav.Murphy. 1 1 1 1 3 2 32 2.50 Runners left in scoring position—Colorado Oviedo Balfour 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 5.23 5 (Blackmon 2, Dickerson 2, Cuddyer); Boston iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cleveland 3 (Aviles, A.Cabrera, Kottaras). Lester W, 6-6 7 4 0 0 1 12 112 3.15 RISP—Colorado 0 for 7; Cleveland 2 for 11. Mujica 1 1 0 0 1 1 20 6.10 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 0.76 Runners moved up—Tulowitzki, Morneau Inherited runners-scored—Boxberger 1-0. 2, Bourn, Kipnis. IBB—off Oviedo (D.Ortiz). HBP—by Lester DP—Colorado 1 (Morneau, Tulowitzki). (Loney). WP—Lester. PB—Solis. Colorado iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T—3:12. A—37,688 (37,071). Chacin 5 3 4 4 5 4 97 5.51 Kahnle 1 Brothers 1 Logan 1 Ottavino L, 0-2 1-3

1 0 1 2

0 0 0 2

0 0 0 2

0 0 0 0

0 8 2 11 0 11 0 6

2.12 3.55 5.40 2.16

Tomlin 5 2-3 Outman H, 1 1-3 Shaw BS, 2-4 1 1-3 Rzepczynski 2-3 Atchison W, 2-0 1

4 0 2 0 1

3 0 1 0 0

2 0 1 0 0

1 0 1 0 0

8 1 0 0 3

3.06 2.89 1.63 3.10 2.49

Cleveland

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 100 3 24 10 17

Inherited runners-scored—Rzepczynski 1-0. T—3:11. A—16,682 (42,487). Cincinnati

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Arizona

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

4 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 36

G.Parra rf 4 Pennington ss 4 Goldschmidt 1b 3 M.Montero c 4 Prado 2b 4 Er.Chavez 3b 3 D.Peralta lf 4 Inciarte cf 4 Miley p 2 a-Hill ph 1 c-Evans ph 1 totals 34 Cincinnati 002 Arizona 000

1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 4

1 1 0 1 1 2 1 2 0 9

0 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 9 110 300

1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 4

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 1 2 1 2 2 0 0 2 12

.239 .269 .270 .351 .290 .253 .246 .225 .087

0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 8 000—4 000—3

.270 .243 .299 .261 .267 .258 .500 .163 .231 .252 .000 9 9

Mariners 4, tigers 0

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

R.Davis lf 4 Kinsler 2b 4 Mi.Cabrera 1b 4 V.Martinez dh 3 Tor.Hunter rf 3 A.Jackson cf 3 Castellanos 3b 3 Holaday c 3 Worth ss 2 totals 29

Seattle

Reds 4, Diamondbacks 3

Heisey rf-lf Frazier 3b Phillips 2b Mesoraco c B.Pena 1b Ludwick lf Schumaker cf Cozart ss Simon p totals

Detroit

0 1

a-lined out for E.Marshall in the 7th. b-was hit by a pitch for Broxton in the 9th. c-struck out for A.Reed in the 9th. E—O.Perez (1). LOB—Cincinnati 7, Arizona 1-ran for Plouffe in the 8th. 6. 2B—M.Montero (9). HR—Cozart (2), off LOB—Minnesota 7, New York 2. 2B—Dozier Miley; Frazier (10), off Miley; Ludwick (8), Plouffe (20), Nunez (2). 3B—Gardner (4), off Miley; Heisey (2), off Miley. RBIs— (3). HR—Willingham (3), off Dav.RobertHeisey (8), Frazier (29), Ludwick (18), son. RBIs—Dozier (27), Plouffe (34), Nunez Cozart (13), M.Montero (27), Er.Chavez 2 (8), Arcia 2 (5), Willingham (7), Jeter (8), Inciarte (3). CS—Mesoraco (2). SF—Er. (11), I.Suzuki (5). SF—I.Suzuki. Chavez. Runners left in scoring position—MinRunners left in scoring position—Cincinnesota 2 (E.Escobar, Arcia); New York 1 nati 4 (Schumaker, Frazier 3); Arizona 3 (B.Roberts). RISP—Minnesota 4 for 9; New (Miley, Pennington, Er.Chavez). RISP— York 1 for 3. Cincinnati 0 for 5; Arizona 2 for 5. Runners moved up—Dozier. GIDP—I. GIDP—Prado. Suzuki. DP—Cincinnati 1 (Cozart, Phillips, B.Pena). DP—Minnesota 1 (Dozier, Mauer). iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Minnesota iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cincinnati

10 0 3 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 3

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1

0 1 1 0 1 2 1 1 1 8

.288 .304 .325 .335 .276 .240 .235 .255 .167

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

En.Chavez dh 4 J.Jones cf 4 Gillespie rf 0 M.Saunders rf-cf4 Smoak 1b 4 Seager 3b 4 Zunino c 4 Ackley lf 4 B.Miller ss 3 Bloomquist 2b 3 totals 34 Detroit 000 Seattle 100

1 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 2 1 2 1 0 1 4 11 4 0 9 000 000—0 020 10x—4

.250 .293 .276 .275 .218 .258 .221 .238 .161 .237

3 1 11 0

E—Castellanos (4). LOB—Detroit 4, Seattle 6. 2B—En.Chavez (2), M.Saunders (6), Bloomquist (2). HR—B.Miller (4), off Scherzer. RBIs—J.Jones (2), M.Saunders (22), B.Miller (12), Bloomquist (8). SB—J. Jones (6), Ackley (3). CS—Bloomquist (1). Runners left in scoring position—Detroit 1 (Holaday); Seattle 3 (Seager, M.Saunders 2). RISP—Detroit 0 for 1; Seattle 3 for 11. GIDP—R.Davis, Zunino. DP—Detroit 1 (Worth, Mi.Cabrera); Seattle 1 (Seager, Bloomquist, Smoak). Detroit iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Scherzer L, 6-26 2-3 9 Coke 2-3 2 Knebel 2-3 0

4 0 0

4 0 0

0 0 0

7 116 1 24 1 5

3.20 6.50 7.36

Elias W, 4-4

0

0

1

8 111

3.53

Seattle

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 9

3

Inherited runners-scored—Knebel 1-0. HBP—by Elias (Worth). T—2:46. A—31,407 (47,476). Atlanta

Braves 4, Marlins 2

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Heyward rf 4 B.Upton cf 4 F.Freeman 1b 4 Gattis c 4 Doumit lf 4 C.Johnson 3b 4 La Stella 2b 3 b-J.Schafer ph-lf 1 A.Simmons ss 3 Harang p 1 R.Pena 2b 2 totals 34

0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 4

2 1 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 9

1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 6

.251 .216 .297 .252 .203 .251 .400 .133 .267 .050 .200

Yelich lf Dietrich 2b a-Lucas ph-2b Stanton rf McGehee 3b G.Jones 1b Ozuna cf Hechavarria ss Mathis c Eovaldi p c-R.Johnson ph totals

0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2

1 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 1 7

0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2

1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 5

1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

.255 .246 .319 .311 .291 .268 .264 .267 .300 .091 .324

Atlanta Miami

002 000 002—4 020 000 000—2

9 7

0 0

a-struck out for Dietrich in the 7th. b-singled for A.Wood in the 9th. c-singled for Cishek in the 9th. LOB—Atlanta 5, Miami 8. 2B—Yelich (9), G.Jones (14). HR—Gattis (11), off Cishek; Ozuna (10), off Harang. RBIs—Heyward (17), B.Upton (14), Gattis 2 (24), Ozuna 2 (35). SB—J.Schafer (4), Yelich (8). SHarang, Eovaldi. Runners left in scoring position—Atlanta 2 (Gattis, R.Pena); Miami 5 (Yelich 2, Eovaldi, McGehee, Lucas). RISP—Atlanta 1 for 4; Miami 1 for 7. Runners moved up—F.Freeman. GIDP—B. Upton, Hechavarria 2. DP—Atlanta 2 (La Stella, A.Simmons, F.Freeman), (A.Simmons, R.Pena, F.Freeman); Miami 1 (Lucas, Hechavarria, G.Jones). Atlanta iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harang 6 2-3 5 A.Wood W, 5-5 1 1-3 0 S.Smmns S, 1-1 1 2

2 0 0

2 0 0

4 0 1

2 100 1 13 0 18

3.24 3.32 0.00

Eovaldi Cishek L, 4-2

2 2

2 2

0 1

4 98 2 27

3.24 2.78

Miami

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 8 1

6 3

Inherited runners-scored—A.Wood 1-0. IBB—off Harang (Mathis). WP—Harang. T—2:39. A—21,997 (37,442). texas

Rangers 2, Nationals 0

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

D.Robertson lf 5 Andrus ss 4 Rios rf 4 A.Beltre 3b 3 Do.Murphy 1b 4 L.Martin cf 4 Gimenez c 4 Sardinas 2b 2 Darvish p 3 b-Choo ph 0 totals 33

1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2

Span cf Rendon 3b Werth rf LaRoche 1b W.Ramos c Desmond ss McLouth lf Espinosa 2b Roark p a-Dobbs ph totals texas Washington

0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 000 000

Washington

1 2 2 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 10

0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 4

0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 6

.154 .257 .320 .291 .238 .277 .414 .235 .000 .289

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 2 14 110—2 000—0

.273 .263 .290 .321 .246 .226 .180 .202 .176 .200

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

4 4 4 3 4 4 4 3 2 0 32 000 000

10 0 5 1

a-walked for Roark in the 7th. b-walked for Darvish in the 9th. 1-ran for Choo in the 9th. E—Span (1). LOB—Texas 9, Washington 7. 2B—Gimenez (4), Span (13). HR—L.Martin (3), off Roark. RBIs—Do.Murphy (11), L.Martin (17). SB—Rios (11), Span (8). CS—Rios (7), Do.Murphy (1). S—Andrus. Runners left in scoring position—Texas 4 (Darvish, A.Beltre, L.Martin, Andrus); Washington 3 (W.Ramos, Werth, Desmond). RISP—Texas 1 for 9; Washington 0 for 6. Runners moved up—D.Robertson, Rendon. GIDP—Rios. DP—Washington 1 (Rendon, Espinosa, LaRoche). texas iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Darvish W, 5-2 Soria S, 11-12

Washington Roark L, 3-4 Storen Blevins R.Soriano

8 1

5 0

0 0

0 0

2 12 102 0 2 10

2.08 2.25

7 2-3 1-3 1

7 2 0 1

1 1 0 0

1 1 0 0

2 1 0 1

3.25 1.37 4.15 0.82

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA 4 104 1 19 0 6 1 26

Inherited runners-scored—Blevins 2-0. IBB—off Storen (A.Beltre). T—3:06. A—32,813 (41,408).

White Sox 4, Padres 1

San Diego

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

Chicago

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

E.Cabrera ss Denorfia rf Quentin dh Headley 3b Medica lf Gyorko 2b Alonso 1b Rivera c Venable cf a-Grandal ph totals

4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 1 28

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2

Eaton cf 4 G.Beckham 2b 4 Viciedo lf 4 A.Dunn 1b 4 1 Al.Ramirez ss Konerko dh 3 Semien 3b 3 Flowers c 3 Sierra rf 3 totals 29 San Diego 000 Chicago 010

0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 4 6 010 012

Stults L, 2-6 Quackenbush Thayer

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 9

.247 .272 .313 .201 .286 .167 .211 .233 .211 .188

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 1 8 000—1 00x—4

.259 .279 .277 .228 .327 .191 .218 .287 .173 2 6

0 0

a-lined out for Venable in the 9th. LOB—San Diego 0, Chicago 3. 2B—A.Dunn (9), Konerko (5). HR—Headley (5), off Sale; Konerko (3), off Stults; Flowers (4), off Stults. RBIs—Headley (19), Konerko 3 (14), Flowers (16). CS—Eaton (5). Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 2 (Konerko, Semien). RISP—San Diego 0 for 0; Chicago 1 for 3. GIDP—Gyorko. DP—Chicago 1 (Al.Ramirez, G.Beckham, A.Dunn). San Diego iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Chicago

Sale W, 5-0

6 1 1

5 1 0

4 0 0

4 0 0

1 0 0

6 96 1 20 1 12

5.03 4.22 2.13

9

2

1

1

0

9 100

1.59

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

HBP—by Stults (Al.Ramirez). T—2:08. A—23,185 (40,615).

Pirates 5, Dodgers 3

Pittsburgh Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi JHrrsn rf 4 1 1 1 DGordn 2b 5 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 Ethier cf 4 0 0 0 Melncn p 0 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 0 2 0 GSnchz ph 1 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 0 0 Grilli p 0 0 0 0 AdGnzl 1b 3 0 0 0 NWalkr 2b 4 0 0 0 Kemp lf 4 1 1 0 AMcCt cf 4 3 3 1 JuTrnr 3b 3 2 2 2 I.Davis 1b 2 1 0 0 Butera c 3 0 0 0 RMartn c 2 0 0 0 Romak ph 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 2 3 Greink p 2 0 0 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 C.Perez p 0 0 0 0 Barmes ss 4 0 0 0 Figgins ph 1 0 0 0 Volquez p 2 0 0 0 Howell p 0 0 0 0 JuWlsn p 0 0 0 0 League p 0 0 0 0 Snider ph 2 0 0 0 VnSlyk ph 1 0 1 1 Totals 32 5 6 5 Totals 33 3 6 3 Pittsburgh 201 001 100—5 Los Angeles 010 100 001—3 LOB—Pittsburgh 5, Los Angeles 7. 2B—A.McCutchen 2 (14), Puig (15), Kemp (14). HR—J.Harrison (4), A.McCutchen (5), Ju.Turner (3). CS—I. Davis (2). iP H R ER BB SO Pittsburgh Volquez W,3-4 5 5 2 2 1 6 Ju.Wilson H,8 1 0 0 0 1 1 Watson H,14 1 0 0 0 0 0 Melancon H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1 Grilli S,8-11 1 1 1 1 2 2 Los Angeles Greinke L,8-2 6 5 4 4 2 7 C.Perez 1 1 1 1 0 2 Howell 1 0 0 0 2 2 League 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Greinke (R.Martin). T—3:22. A—51,020 (56,000).

MARINERS 4, TIgERS 0 In Seattle, rookie Roenis Elias pitched a three-hitter for the first complete game of his career, leading the Mariners over Detroit. Elias (4-4) struck out eight and walked one in his 12th major league start, and the first one to last longer than seven innings. The 25-year-old left-hander from Cuba kept Detroit off balance with his curve, striking out five with the breaking ball. The Tigers only put one runner in scoring position, and Elias matched a career high with 111 pitches.

4 solo HRs push Reds past Diamondbacks

INTERLEAGUE

The Associated Press

WHITE SOX 4, PADRES 1 In Chicago, Chris Sale pitched a two-hitter, Paul Konerko homered, and the White Sox defeated San Diego. Sale (5-0) struck out nine, walked none and threw 100 pitches. He froze Everth Cabrera for a called strike three to end the game, lowering his ERA to 1.59 ERA in seven starts. Sale has allowed just one earned run in his last 25 innings, a span of four starts. The lefty was on the disabled list in late April because of a strained muscle in his pitching arm.

PHOENIX — Chris Heisey hit a goahead homer in the fifth inning, and Cincinnati connected four times in all, beating the Diamondbacks 4-3 on Reds 4 Sunday. D-Backs 3 Cincinnati led 3-0 after homers by Zack Cozart and Todd Frazier in the third and by Ryan Ludwick in the fourth. Arizona tied it with a three-run fourth, then Heisey’s second home run of the season put the Reds on top for good. Alfredo Simon (7-3) gave up three runs in 6⅓ innings. Aroldis Chapman hit 103 mph on the Chase Field radar gun in a perfect ninth, earning his seventh save in eight opportunities.

INDIANS 6, ROCKIES 4 In Cleveland, Michael Bourn’s two-run homer in the ninth inning gave the Indians a win over Colorado and a sweep of their three-game series. Bourn hit an 0-1 pitch into the right-field seats off Adam Ottavino (0-2). Mike Aviles singled and took second on George Kottaras’ sacrifice before Bourn hit his second home run of the season.

W.Chen W, 6-2 Brach Guilmet Matusz

5 1-3 1 2-3 1 1

4 2 2 0

1 1 2 0

1 1 2 0

1 1 0 0

6 3 2 1

97 32 15 16

4.26 4.85 4.50 3.26

Feldman L, 3-3 Fields Clemens D.Downs

5 1-311 2-3 0 2 0 1 1

9 0 0 0

9 0 0 0

1 0 0 0

3 106 0 4 3 24 1 16

4.25 6.97 3.66 1.93

Houston

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Inherited runners-scored—Brach 1-0. IBB—off Feldman (Markakis). HBP—by Matusz (Ma.Gonzalez), by Feldman (Machado, N.Cruz). Balk—Feldman. T—3:14. A—17,022 (42,060).

Niese Rice Black Edgin W, 1-0 Mejia S, 6-6

8 1-3 2-3 1 1

8 0 0 0 1

2 0 0 0 1

2 0 0 0 1

1 0 0 0 0

6 0 0 3 0

91 5 11 12 12

2.69 4.97 0.00 1.59 4.07

7 1 1 1 1

6 1 0 0 1

2 0 0 0 2

1 0 0 0 2

4 0 0 0 1

8 1 1 1 2

125 4.01 16 0.00 15 1.61 12 3.48 18 18.00

Philadelphia iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Hamels C.Jimenez Papelbon De Fratus Aumont L, 0-1

IBB—off Hamels (d’Arnaud, d’Arnaud, D.Wright). T—3:29. A—36,039 (43,651).

P.Hughes W, 6-1 8 Thielbar 1

New York

3 0

2 0

2 0

2 0

6 100 0 9

3.12 3.79

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

Whitley 5 5 1 1 0 6 Betances H, 6 2 0 0 0 0 5 Warren H, 9 1 1 0 0 0 1 Dv.Rbrtsn L, 0-2 2-3 2 5 5 3 2 Daley 0 1 1 1 0 0 Thornton 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Daley pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.

83 22 20 27 1 8

2.37 1.38 1.71 4.50 3.86 4.50

Inherited runners-scored—Daley 3-2, Thornton 2-2. IBB—off Dav.Robertson (Mauer). HBP—by Whitley (Willingham). T—2:58. A—42,449 (49,642).

Simon W, 7-3 6 1-3 LeCure H, 8 2-3 Broxton H, 7 1 A.Chapmn S, 7 1

7 1 1 0

3 0 0 0

3 0 0 0

1 0 0 0

4 99 0 6 2 20 2 9

3.03 1.19 0.52 1.80

Miley L, 3-6 E.Marshall Ziegler O.Perez A.Reed

8 0 0 1 0

4 0 0 0 0

4 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

9 0 2 1 0

4.85 1.42 2.22 2.86 3.91

Arizona

iP H R ER BB SO NP ERA

6 1 1 1-3 2-3

98 15 12 15 11

Inherited runners-scored—LeCure 1-0, A.Reed 3-0. HBP—by O.Perez (Bernadina), by E.Marshall (Heisey). WP—E.Marshall. PB—Mesoraco. T—2:59. A—24,119.

Miami

AB R H Bi BBSO Avg.

4 3 1 3 4 4 3 4 2 2 1 31

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BREWERS 9, CUBS 0 In Milwaukee, Kyle Lohse allowed only had three hits, and Ryan Braun had a two-run homer to lead the Brewers to a rout of Chicago. Milwaukee pounded Cubs ace Jeff Samardzija (1-5) for eight earned runs in three innings, raising his ERA from 1.68 to 2.54.

Braun homered to left on the first pitch he saw from Samardzija, and the Brewers rolled from there with Samardzija having trouble locating his fastball. Lyle Overbay broke the game open with a three-run double in the third. Lohse’s RBI single drove in Overbay to make it 8-0 for the pitcher’s second run-scoring hit of the game. Lohse (7-1) struck out six in Milwaukee’s first complete game shutout this season. BRAVES 4, MARLINS 2 In Miami, Evan Gattis broke a ninthinning tie with a two-run homer, and Atlanta completed a three-game sweep by beating the Marlins. Shae Simmons, pitching in his second big league game, earned his first career save when he retired Christian Yelich with two on for the final out. Closer Craig Kimbrel was given the day off because of a heavy recent workload. The Braves pulled off the sweep after losing four consecutive games to Boston. Miami, which began the series tied with Atlanta atop the NL East, fell three games back. The Marlins have lost four home games in a row but are still 20-11 at Marlins Park.

the Atlanta Braves. He retired the last 11 batters he faced.

METS 4, PHILLIES 3 (11 INNINgS) In Philadelphia, Lucas Duda hit a two-run homer with two outs in the 11th, lifting New York over the Phillies in the third straight extra-innings game between the teams. The Mets and Phillies split a pair of 14-inning games the previous two days. Duda came off the bench in the 10th to play first base, then connected in the 11th as the Mets won for the fifth time in six games. The teams conclude their rare five-game series on Monday night. Ryan Howard hit an early two-run homer for the Phillies. Marlon Byrd hit a solo shot in the 11th.

PIRATES 5, DODgERS 3 In Los angeles, slumping Andrew McCutchen hit his first home run in over a month, doubled twice and scored two runs to help Pittsburgh beat the Dodgers and take three of four from the defending NL West champions. Josh Harrison also homered and Pedro Alvarez drove in three runs, helping the Pirates win for the eighth time in 12 games.

gIANTS 8, CARDINALS 0 In St. Louis, Tim Hudson threw seven shutout innings, and Joaquin Arias keyed a four-run first inning with a tworun single to lead San Francisco to a win over the Cardinals. The Giants have won five of six and have the best record in the NL at 37-20. St. Louis has lost four of five. The Cardinals managed just four hits. Hudson (6-2) gave up three hits, struck out six, and walked two in improving to 4-4 against St. Louis. Hudson’s previous win against the Cardinals came on July 19, 2007, as a member of

RANgERS 2, NATIONALS 0 In Washington, Yu Darvish struck out 12 over eight innings, Leonys Martin broke open a scoreless duel with a homer in the seventh, and Texas beat the Nationals to avert a three-game sweep. Pitching for the first time since May 22 after missing his last turn with a stiff neck, Darvish (5-2) gave up five hits and walked two in dropping his ERA to 2.08. The right-hander matched his season high in strikeouts and overpowered a team that amassed 19 runs in the first two games of the series.

INTERLEAGUE


SPORTS

Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B-5

Sweep: ‘This is a totally different A’s club’ French Open: 4thseeded Federer makes 59 unforced errors Continued from Page B-1

4½ games over Los Angeles, its largest pre-All-Star break lead since being 5½ up in 1990. “Any time you get swept, you’re not happy about it,” Angels catcher Hank Conger said. “We’re fine. No one is pushing the panic button. This is not going to get us untracked from what we’re doing this season.” The big inning was more than enough support for Sonny Gray (6-1), who allowed a pair of sacrifice flies and an RBI double by Erick Aybar in 62/3 innings to rebound from a rare rough start. Gray has 11 quality starts in 12 outings this season for a 2.45 ERA. As good as Gray has been this season, Weaver has been even better against the A’s of late. He allowed just two runs in 441/3 innings over six starts the past two seasons against Oakland, proving to be the one Angels pitcher who befuddled the A’s on their way to back-toback AL West titles. Oakland more than doubled that scoring output in the fourth inning with a rally that

Los Angeles Angels’ C.J. Cron, right, flips his bat after striking out during the second inning of Sunday’s game against the Oakland Athletics in Oakland, Calif. BEN MARGOT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

got started when Craig Gentry hustled to beat out a potential double play. Gentry went to third on Eric Sogard’s single and scored on Crisp’s double. Donaldson added his two-run single and Lowrie capped the inning with a two-out single that made it 4-0. “This is a totally different A’s club,” Weaver said. “They have great pitching, guys who can get on base at the bottom of

the order and who can do the little things. I had one inning that got away from me. I wish we played better this series, but it is not the end of the year. We’ll see them again.” Gray escaped a bases-loaded jam by striking out Conger to end the fourth inning before allowing the sacrifice flies to Aybar and Albert Pujols in the fifth. Lowrie, who entered the game in a 4-for-30 slump, hit

his solo homer in the bottom of the fifth to put Oakland back up by three, and the A’s added an unearned run in the sixth as Oakland matched its highest scoring output ever against Weaver in 27 career starts. “I think he just left some pitches up,” Donaldson said. “He tries to execute up at times, but there are times when he left some off-speed pitches up and that gives us a chance to definitely hit the ball a little bit harder.” Gray was replaced by Dan Otero after Aybar’s two-out double in the seventh made it 6-3. Otero struck out Pujols to end the inning. Luke Gregerson pitched a scoreless eighth, and Sean Doolittle struck out the side in order in the ninth for his fifth save in six chances. The Angels committed a base-running gaffe in the first inning when Kole Calhoun tried to advance from second base on Pujols’ groundout to shortstop. Alberto Callaspo made a strong throw from first base to nail Calhoun at third for the final out of the inning.

Memorial: First PGA win for Matsuyama Continued from Page B-1 into the water, taking two shots to get out of a bunker and losing all hope when his third shot to the par-5 15th hit the pin and caromed back into the fairway, leading to a bogey. Watson dropped three shots by hooking two tee shots. The most damaging was his drive on the 15th that was so high, so powerful and so far right that it cleared the trees and went into a neighborhood, leading a double bogey. Needing a birdie on the 18th, his shot looked good until it took one small hop and stayed in the rough. A few inches closer, it would have fed down the slope for a short birdie chance. He closed with a 72 and finished third, moving him to No. 3 in the world ahead of

the injured Tiger Woods. “It’s tough,” Watson said, who was going for his third win of the year. “I made one bad decision. If I hit 4-wood off the tee instead of driver on the par 5, we make 5 and we win by one. But I made double, so we lost by one.” Na finished his round of 64 about two hours earlier. He was in the clubhouse at Muirfield Village, leaning against two pillows on a sofa as he watched the calamity unfold, even joking he might win by not hitting another shot. Thanks to Matsuyama, he had to. And it wasn’t pretty. Na hooked his tee shot on the 18th in the playoff, and it went into the creek. He still had 10 feet for bogey when Matsuyama made the winning putt. Na did not speak to reporters.

A PGA Tour official tracked him down in the parking lot, and he gave credit to Matsuyama for making a great putt. Adding to the bizarre ending was how Matsuyama played the extra hole. It was not an angry slam of the driver after his tee shot on the 18th in regulation, and he was shocked to see the head fall off. He could have replaced the club because the playoff is not considered part of the round, but he had no replacement. Instead, he went with 3-wood off the tee in the playoff, and it went into the front bunker. He hooked his 5-iron, hitting a spectator in the knee left of the green, and hit a flop shot safely to 10 feet. It was the first par he made on the 18th hole all week. Matsuyama became the first player

to make birdie on the closing hole at Muirfield Village four straight rounds. “To win my first PGA Tour event is enough,” Matsuyama said. “But to win it here at Mr. Nicklaus’ course, it really gives me a lot of confidence now going on. And hopefully, I’ll be able to use this week as a stepping stone to further my career.” Matsuyama became the fourth Japanese player to win on the PGA Tour, the most recent being Ryuji Imada in the 2008 AT&T Classic. The Memorial, even with Woods out with a back injury, featured the strongest field of the year outside the Masters, World Golf Championships and The Players Championship.

Continued from Page B-1 with the word “probably.” Addressing the spectators during an on-court interview, Gulbis said: “I’m sorry I had to win. I know all of you like Roger.” The fourth-seeded Federer’s résumé includes the 2009 French Open, and he was a four-time runner-up in Paris to Rafael Nadal. Loudly serenaded and supported by the Court Philippe Chatrier crowd Sunday with singsong chants of his first name, Federer was hardly in top form. He made a whopping 59 unforced errors and was broken seven times, including twice while serving for a set. That included at 5-3, 40-15 in the second, when Federer had set points and a chance to put away an overhead but sent the ball right to Gulbis, who took full advantage by whipping a backhand passing winner. “Things got tough from then on for, like, a half-hour for me,” said Federer, who also was ahead in the second-set tiebreaker, before allowing Gulbis to grab five points in a row. After dropping the third set, too, Federer appeared to be getting back into the match until Gulbis left the court with a trainer to take a medical timeout while trailing 5-2 in the fourth. As he walked out, Gulbis motioned to Federer, as if asking for permission to go. When Gulbis returned, some fans jeered and whistled at him, and he pointed to his lower back and raised his palms, as if to say, “Hey, I was injured.” His strokes had momentarily gone astray before that break, but afterward, the 25-year-old Gulbis once again played the sort of free-flowing, big-hitting tennis that had many marking him as a future star when he was a teenager. He won 10 of the next 12 points, punctuating most shots

with exhales that sounded like growls. The fifth set was all Gulbis, who hadn’t been to the quarterfinals at a major tournament since the 2008 French Open. He’s spoken openly about focusing more on enjoying the nightlife than perfecting his craft, and he drew attention last week for saying he wouldn’t encourage his younger sisters to pursue professional tennis because, “A woman needs to enjoy life a little bit more. Needs to think about family, needs to think about kids.” In the concluding set, Gulbis needed only 10 minutes to race to a 3-0 lead, thanks in part to Federer miscues. In the second game, Federer netted backhands and forehands to offer up break points, then pushed a forehand wide to give Gulbis a lead he never relinquished. After that miss, Federer grabbed a ball and swatted it in anger straight up in the air, a rare sign of exasperation from him. The result fit with the topsyturvy nature of this tournament: Both reigning Australian Open champions, No. 3 Stan Wawrinka and No. 2 Li Na, lost in the first round; No. 1 Serena Williams left in the second round. Gulbis now plays No. 6 Tomas Berdych, who eliminated the last American man, No. 10 John Isner. In another fourth-round match, No. 8 Milos Raonic of Canada beat 39th-ranked Marcel Granollers of Spain 6-3, 6-3, 6-3. Wimbledon champion Andy Murray and No. 24 Fernando Verdasco set up a fourth-round meeting by finishing off victories in matches suspended Saturday night because of fading light. In women’s action, No. 18 Eugenie Bouchard of Canada swept No. 8 Angelique Kerber of Germany 6-1, 6-2 and will face No. 14 Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain in the quarterfinals.


B-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

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

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

SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

YOU RECOGNIZE THE BEST AND CAN AFFORD IT.

OWNER FINANCE. CLOSE IN, 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH SANTA FE 5,600 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE in mostly residential area. 3 rental areas with month-to-month tenants, paying 2100 plus utilities. 1 acre. $295,000. 505-470-5877

A/C, Good condition, large fenced lot, all city utilities, new carpet, tile. Large porches front and rear. $110,0000. Small down, pay like rent. 2470 Agua Fria Street. 505-670-0051

VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY

5 Acre Lot, 11 Roy Crawford at Old Santa Fe Trail, $195,000. (2) 2.5 acre lots, Senda Artemisia at Old Galisteo, $119-124,000. Rural setting near town. Equity RE. 505-690-8503

FOR SALE BY OWNER: Last Gated Community Lot: Vista Primera. All utilities, Private Park. $65,000, make offer. 505-490-1809, 505-471-4751.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

FSBO 1600 SQ.FT. METAL WAREHOUSE. 12 foot ceilings, overhead door. 1/2 bath. Good shape. Close to Silar Road. $160,000. 505-660-1256

Thirty Day Discount

CONDO DOWTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $315,000. Jay, 505-4700351.

House For Sale off of Mutt Nelson. 2 1/2 acres, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, living room. $260,000. 505-670-3286.

LOTS & ACREAGE

LAND

2 1/2 Acre Lots in Eldorado Vicinity, utilities to lot line, modular homes permitted. Owner financed to qualified buyers. $87,250. 505466-7032, 505-470-6999, 505-7218440.

5 Acres in Pinon Hills only $120,000. 2 ½ acres in Cienega on Nancy’s Trail. 5 acres off South Fork near Lone Butte Store only $50,000. All these properties can be bought with owner financing. 988-5585

FOR SALE: "NEW" 2014 KARSTEN 16x80 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. SPACE #26 RANCHO ZIA MHP. BANK FINANCING AS LOW AS 4.5%. $56,062 MOVE IN READY.

Where treasures are found daily

MODULAR HOMES OK on these 1 acre lots. Located on 599, Just 5 miles from Santa Fe, utilities, shared well, great views. Price starting at $125,000 with owner financing available. Ron Sebesta Realty owner broker 505-577-4008 MLS # 4689.

for buyers of 640 acres in the Buckman Road, La Tierra area, bordering BLM. Price dropped over $500,000 to $1,425,000. Principals only call Mike Baker, Only 505-6901051. Sotheby’s International 505-955-7993.

5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Welll water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.

.75 and 1.10 acres directly off the Arroyo Chamisa Trail. $85,000 each, utilities. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.

STUDIO, $675. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Utilities paid, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505-4710839

COMMERCIAL SPACE

CALL 986-3000

»rentals«

A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

this live- work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities

Old Adobe Office

APARTMENTS FURNISHED

TWO LARGE LOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF TOWN

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre

SPEND THE summer relaxing in your new home at Las Palomas Apartments! Our pools, playgrounds, and BBQs are ready for you to enjoy. Call 888-482-8216 or stop by 2001 Hopewell today for a tour! Hablamos Espanol. JOIN US for our OPEN HOUSE on Thursday 6/5 from 3-6 p.m.!

Place an ad Today!

TWO 1.5 acre in town lots. Community water, natural gas and electricity on street. New Mexico Properties Homes 989-8860

3.3 ACRES with shared well in place. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenance. $165,000. 505-470-5877

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

DARLING 1 B E D R O O M . Fireplace, saltillos, patio. Close to railyard 1700 Paseo de Peralta 5. No pets. $660. Nancy Gilorteanu Realtor, 983-9302

CLASSIFIEDS

BUILDINGS-WAREHOUSES

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on R u fin a Lane , balcony, fire place, laundry facility on site. $629 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Mann Street, front end of a duplex, near K-Mart. $699 monthly. 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, on Golden Mesa, spacious house near Santa Fe Country Club. Garage, deck, yards, new appliances, beautiful finishes throughout. $1449 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Tesuque dr. with off-street parking and yard. $595 monthly.

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Washer, dryer. 1493 NICOLE PLACE, Apt 3. $700 monthly utilities included. $250 deposit. 505-982-4174, 505-316-0882

CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

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

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

5 ACRE LOTS- 25 acres total. Tall pines, Santa Fe views. Gated. Behind St. John’s College. No trailers. $150,000 each, Terms. Jim, 505-2318302.

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

DOS SANTOS

Santa Fe’s best estate site. 542 acres, 18 minutes from town, 360 degree views, bordering BLM, 6 minutes from Las Campanas. Call Mike Baker only! 505-690-1051. $6,750,000. Also tracts from 160 to 640 acres. SantaFeLandEmpire.com. Sotheby’s International Realty 505-955-7993

ELDORADO AREA, 2.5 acre lots, water, electric, telephone, mobile or manufactured allowed, owner financing. $85,000. Tom, Santa Fe Agency, 505-780-8888.

CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $689,000. 505-795-3734

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

LOTS & ACREAGE

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. FURNISHED. 1000 Square Feet. Yard, washer. Private, quiet. North end. Walk to Plaza. $1200 includes utilities, DSL, cable. 505-670-1306

2 BEDROOM, $800 1 BEDROOM, $700

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

Located On the North Side of Town, Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fire places, private bathroom, ample parking 1300 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1320. plus water and CAM or combined with the adjoining unit; total of 2100 square for $2100. Plus water and CAM RAILYARD AREA, CORNER GUADALUPE & MONTEZUMA. 1 BLOCK FROM NEW COUNTY COURTHOUSE. 1400 SQ.FT. PLUMBED FOR HAIR SALON, OFFICE, RETAIL, STUDIO SPACE. Good lighting. Limited off-street parking. NMREB Owner, (505)9831116. So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

COMMERCIAL SPACE

CANYON ROAD Gallery space for lease, share. Current tenant, artist (Abbate Fine Art) wishes to share with one painter and one sculptor. Share expenses (approximately $3,500 month each). Non-smokers only. Contact Anthony, 820-6868.

CONDOSTOWNHOMES LARGE 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom, mountain views, washer-dryer, AC, dishwasher, walk-in closets, fireplace, 2 car garage, landscaped yard in quiet, safe neighborhood, trails behind house! First, last month rent, deposit required. Available July 1st. Non-smoking, pets considered. Call 505-204-8066. LUXURY LONG TERM QUAIL RUN, GATED COMMUNITY rental unfurnished or furnished. Full fitness facility, golf, tennis, indoor swimming and therapy pools, restaurant and other social activities. NO stairs. New carpeting and blinds, open floor plan, split bedroom. Gas Fireplace, Underground private parking. BEAUTIFUL! 505-466-0693. NO dogs allowed. $1800 -$2000.00 SERENE 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath Cochiti Lake townhouse, 900 sq.ft, big garage, mountain view. $875 plus gas, electric. Water included. 505-4650016.

GUESTHOUSES CHARMING COUNTRY GUESTHOUSE Off Old Santa Fe Trail 7 miles from Plaza: furnished or unfurnished adobe, 1 bedroom, full bath with tub, living room, 2 kivas, kitchen-dining room. Washer, dryer, southern deck, private separate driveway after gated entrance to ranch. Western sunset portal with 100 mile views. Satellite TV-Internet. Non-smoking. No pets. $1350 monthly includes water, radiant heat & garbage but not telephone or electric. Available in June. References. One year minimum. Mobile, 505-670-8779 Ranch, 505-983-6502

HOUSES FURNISHED PRIVATE, QUIET. 1300 sq.ft. Guesthouse house on 1.5 acres. Plaza 8min. 2 Bedroom, 2 bath. Skylights, 2 patios, Hiking, Gardening Wifi. $2500 monthly. 505-992 0412

business & service exploresantafe•com CARETAKING

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CLEANING

EXPERIENCED PROPERTY MANAGER- CARETAKER COUPLE seeks live-in, long-term, salaried position in a private residence in Santa Fe area. We have over 17 years of experience in estate management. We are discrete, conscientious selfstarters who have an eye for detail and take pride in our work. We can be reached at queenflea26@gmail.com. References available. HOUSE & PET SITTING. Reasonable, Mature, Responsible. Live in Sol y Lomas area. Former Owner of Grooming store in NYC. 505-982-6392

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

HANDYMAN

A+ Cleaning Service Homes, Office, Move-ins- Move-outs Window cleaning. Also, House and Pet sitting. Dependable, Experienced. $18 hourly. Julia, 505204-1677.

GLORIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING SERVICE

Houses and Offices, 15 years of experience. References Available, Licensed.

505-920-2536 or 505-310-4072. CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

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

Sell Your Stuff!

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

986-3000

LANDSCAPING

PLASTERING

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

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

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

COOLER START-UPS, $45. PLUMBING SERVICE & NEW. HEATER & COOLER CHANGE-OUTS. Free estimates. Lic #31702. 505-316-0559

LANDSCAPING

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877

Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-310-7552.

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

HAULING OR YARD WORK

HEATING-PLUMBING AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

MEDIA SANTA FE you have a choice. We convert VHS tapes, audio cassette tapes, reel to reel and film to digital files to enjoy for generations to come. 20 years experience. Professional, knowledgeable, and experienced. Don’t trust just anyone, trust the professionals at Rolling R Productions. 505-268-8341. Call for a free quote!

PAINTING

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information. TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583. So can you with a classified ad

directory«

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

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

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

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

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

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

HOMECRAFT PAINTING

STORAGE A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815. G & G Self Storage. Near I-25 and 599 bypass. 5x10, $45. 10x10, $70. Boat, trailer, RV spaces available. 505-424-7121

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

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

YARD MAINTENANCE

Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.

Berry Clean - 505-501-3395

Look for these businesses on exploresantafe•com Call us today for your free Business Cards!*

986-3000

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Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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LIVE IN STUDIOS

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986-3000

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B-7

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

FOR RELEASE JUNE 2, 2014

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

HUGE, BEAUTIFUL 3,200 sq.ft. 2-story, 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath. Near Country Club. Lots of extras, must see. Nonsmoking. $1,850 monthly, deposit. 505-490-3686.

Need some extra cash in your pocket?

Sell Your Stuff!

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities

Conveniently Located

2 bedrooms, 1 bath 800 sq.ft., on site laundry, $600 plus utilities.

Studio Apartment

1 bath, full kitchen, carpet, fireplace, small yard. Rent plus utilities $500.

Close to Downtown- Railyard

1 bedroom, 1 bath with small office, wood/tile floors, vigas, washer, dryer, sq.ft. 1179. $975 plus utilities. Private enclosed yard, 1 car only driveway.

1 bath, full kitchen with beautiful tile counters, tile flooring, and gas burning stove. $550 plus utilities.

986-3000

MANUFACTURED HOMES MOBILE HOME, 2 bedroom, 1 bath off Highway 14. New carpet, washer, dryer. $800 plus utilities, 505-6299573.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. Beautiful & Sunny! Tiled floors, countertops, washer, dryer. Southside near National Guard, $1,100 includes utilities. $1,100 deposit. 505-470-0162

2 BEDROOM Townhome in Rancho Viejo across from park. 1,150 squ.ft., 2 car garage, AC, great neighborhood. $1,300 monthly plus utilities. 505-577-7643. A COLORFUL Home plus attached mother-in-law quarters. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths. Available 6/1. $1,850 plus utilities. Monte VIsta Services, 505913-1631. CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $2895. Year lease. 505-7953734

Taylor Properties 505-470-0818 East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,450 plus utilities. 505-982-2738. EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS, EAST ALAMEDA. Walk to Plaza. Pueblo-style. Washer, dryer. Kiva, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1500 sq.ft. Garage. Nonsmoking, no pets. $1800 monthly. 505-982-3907

ELDORADO: 3 Bedroom, 2 bath

CLEAN, artistic, recently upgraded, Washer, dryer, Kiva fireplace, radiant heat, evaporative cooler, double car garage, no pets. References and credit check required, $1500 monthly, first and last, $1000 damage deposit. Available 7/8. Please call Terry or Sheila, 505-471-4624.

ELDORADO 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH. All utilities paid. Washer, new paint, radiant floor heating. 1500 sq.ft. $1400 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505-920-6977

ELDORADO Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, High-end contemporary home: Super Energy efficient. Southern views on 2 acres, near 285 entrance. 505-660-5603

ELDORADO Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, High-end contemporary home: Super Energy efficient. Southern views on 2 acres, near 285 entrance. 505-660-5603 HOUSE FOR RENT, 3 bedroom, 2 bathroom in Espanola. $850 month plus one month deposit (not including utilities). Call 505-901-2268. NICE 2 bedroom, $1050 monthly. Kiva, 2 baths. Bus service close. 1 bedroom, $750 monthly. No pets. Utilites paid on both. 505-2046160 PASEO BARRANCA, 3 bedroom, 4 bath, 3425 sq.ft., 2 car garage. $2500. Western Equities, 505-982-4201.

CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955

Classifieds Where treasures are found daily

LOST NECKLACE WITH MUSTARD SEED AND GOLD CHARM on thin black necklace. Possibly near Devargas Center, 5/22. REWARD. 828329-5713

LOST ORANGE tabby with lazy eye. Indoor cat escaped during storm. Last seen 5/23. Camino Carlos Rey area. Call 395-0059.

SCHOOLS - CAMPS OPEN YOUR heart and your home. Host an international student or become a Local Coordinator! CIEE is seeking host families and Local Coordinators for the 2014-2015 school year. Globalize your community and promote cross-cultural understanding while changing a young person’s life. Host Families welcome a student into their home for 5 or 10 months as one of their own. Local Coordinators work with students, schools, and families and qualify to earn placement supervision fees, bonuses and all-inclusive travel. To learn more, contact Lindsey Holloway 866-219-3433 lholloway@ciee.org or visit us at www.ciee.org/highschool.

Larger Type

Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!

will help your ad 986-3000 get noticed

DOWN 1 __ Romeo: Italian sports car 2 Feeling of remorse

By Bruce Venzke and Gail Grabowski

3 Target in alienattack films 4 Japanese fish dish 5 Long-eared beast 6 Doggie doc 7 On the ball 8 Non-domestic beer, e.g. 9 Film collie 10 Hang on (to) 11 Boisterous behavior 12 Savings option, briefly 13 ASAP kin 18 Lawsuit basis 22 Amazed 24 Distinguished soprano, say 25 Pole or Croat 26 Campground users, briefly 30 Driver’s license prerequisite 31 Frizzy do 32 Loses on purpose? 33 Summer, at ski resorts 34 Orchestra sect. 36 Chair support 38 Tech co. known as Big Blue

6/2/14

Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

40 All keyed up 41 Poet Ogden 42 Peter Fonda title role 48 More absurd 49 Clothes 51 Young cow 53 Sci-fi pioneer Jules 54 Artist Rousseau 55 Computer invader

6/2/14

56 Tickle pink 57 Snitch, when identifying the bad guys 60 “__ la vie!” 61 “That smells disgusting!” 62 Jack of “Barney Miller” 64 Freight measure 65 Baseball roundtrippers: Abbr.

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986-3000

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LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by:

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OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $275 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

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

Please call (505)983-9646. RETAIL SPACE CANYON ROAD, 2-room high visibility GALLERY SPACE, in multi-unit building. Common area, restrooms, fireplace. $1075 plus utilities. 505-4388166

ROOMMATE WANTED FRIENDLY, EMPLOYED, responsible, single female, 57, looking to share residence with likewise female roommate in Santa Fe. Call 501-2403669.

ROOMS NEWLY REMODELED room with private secure entrance, $695 plus $400 deposit. Wifi, utilities paid, No pets, Nonsmoker, References. 505-4900015.

STORAGE SPACE

SOUTH OF CAPITOL NEIGHBORH O O D , 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Large backyard, washer, dryer. NO PETS, Non-smoking. $1,950, First, Last, Deposit. 208-870-5002. SOUTHWEST NAVA ADE, Interior Designer’s Home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Non-smoking, no pets, $1,300 monthly, $1,000 deposit. Available Now! 505-473-2606.

1200, 1300 squ.ft. 800 downstairs, 400-500 upstairs living area. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

LOST: 27 March, downtown Santa Fe or hotel parking lot, a battery pack for a Rascal 370 scooter. REWARD. Johnlprather@aol.com.

Place an ad Today!

WAREHOUSES

2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

LOST

Using "NEW"16X80. MOBILE HOME FOR RENT, SPACE #96 CASITAS DE SANTA FE MHP. SECTION 8 ACCEPTED. $1,000 PLUS UTILITIES. WASHER AND DRYER INCLUDED. DEPOSIT REQUIRED.

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

LIVE IN STUDIOS

FOUND SILVER BRACELET, on Old Santa Trail. Call to identify. 505-6909692

SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT...

DOWNTOWN AREA MOVE-IN SPECIAL 2 Bedroom, 1 full bath. Wood floors, fenced yard. Pet considered. Non-smoking . $895 plus utilities.

FOUND SET OF KEYS, 5/23 on Governor Miles Road, near Nava Ade. Call to identify. 505-473-0272

Newly Remodeled

2 story, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, gas fireplace, pergo & tile flooring, new kitchen appliances, washer, dryer hook-up, A/C, 2 car garage, fenced backyard. 1548 sq.ft. $1695 plus utilities.

Studio Conveniently Located

Call Classifieds For Details Today!

FOUND

ACROSS 1 A rather long time 5 Be of use to 10 Greenside golf shot 14 Kauai cookout 15 Alabama civil rights city 16 Titled nobleman 17 Baby book milestones 19 Baghdad’s country 20 Even if, briefly 21 Prepares, as a violin bow 23 Backup player’s backup 27 Dusk-dawn link 28 Steeped brew 29 Low mil. rank 31 Commotions 35 Actor Kilmer 37 Road Runner chaser __ Coyote 39 Hershey’s chocolate-andpeanut-butter products 43 Prepare beans, Mexican-style 44 Square dance lass 45 Island in a computer game 46 NHL tiebreakers 47 Zadora of “Hairspray” 50 “Wait a __!” 52 Bliss 58 Fill with bubbles 59 Purple flower 61 Cold War country: Abbr. 63 Penultimate bowling game division 66 Hired hood 67 Baseball bobble 68 Sport __: family cars 69 Sharpen 70 Steed stoppers 71 Spanish muralist José María

1208 PARKWAY, 2,800 SQ.FT. OVERHEAD DOOR, PARKING, HEATED, COOLED. NEW CARPET. FLEXIBLE OWNER WILLING TO MODIFY. RENTS NEGOTIABLE. AL, 466-8484. INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 750 SQUARE FEET FOR $600 TO 1500 SQUARE FEET FOR $1050. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, HALF BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166.

2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507 ACCOUNTING VACANCY NOTICE

SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A COMPTROLLER. MUST HAVE 5 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE, A DEGREE IN ACCOUNTING OR RELATED FIELD. SALARY 70K + BENEFITS, DEPENDING ON EXPERIENCE. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL FILLED. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-2167311 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us . Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

505-473-2886

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5


B-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

sfnm«classifieds ACCOUNTING

CONSTRUCTION

LPN/ RN

WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON @505-982-2574 OR COME BY THE FACILITY TO FILL OUT AN APPLICATION. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVALIABLE

Experience, needed for paving crew. Albuquerque, Santa Fe Area. Steady Work.

BILLING MANAGER

ESPANOLA, Responsible for billing, accounting functions for a wellestablished and fast growing behavioral health network. Accountable for the productivity and profitability of our Billing Department. Develop and implement new efforts to improve billing cycle performance. Builds good relationships with the current MCO’s and IHS to ensure speedy and accurate payments. Audit delinquent accounts considered to be uncollectable. Review and approve adjustments to accounts. Prefer bachelors in accounting and 7 plus years of managing a medical billing office. Experience with electronic practice management systems and electronic medical records. Working knowledge of insurance and billing procedures. Generous Benefits Package. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment.

ADMINISTRATIVE FULL-TIME, PART-TIME (CSR) NEEDED ASAP- INTERACTS WITH PATIENTS, MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS, INSURANCE COMPANIES TO SUPPORT PPS OPS. WILL COMPLETE THE FINAL ORDER VERIFICATION PROCESS TO ENSURE BILLING ACCURACY. PLEASE APPLY WITH RESUME TO JEFFS@PPSC.COM

Office: 505-821-1034, Fax: 505821-1537. Email: frontdesk@ sparlingconstructi o n .n e t . 8900 Washington NE, Albuquerque, NM SCHOOL FOR Advanced Research seeks a physical plant director. This full-time, exempt, position is responsible for the care of the School’s buildings and grounds, equipment, vehicles, and mechanical systems pertaining to the institution. Prior management experience and a journeyman’s contractor’s license desired. Visit www.sarweb.org for details

EDUCATION VACANCY NOTICE

SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL I ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A GIFTED & TALENTED PROGRAM TEACHER, HIGH SCHOOL MATH TEACHER, HIGH SCHOOL LANGUAGE ARTS TEACHER, HEALTH TE A C H E R , DORM COUNSELOR, SCHOOL NURSE AND A RECREATION PREVENTION SPECIALIST. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL FILLED. FOR MORE INFO CALL 505-989-6353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

HOSPITALITY

PASATIEMPO COPY EDITOR The Santa Fe New Mexican has an immediate opening for a full-time, expert copy editor to join the staff of Pasatiempo, the weekly arts and culture magazine. The selected candidate must possess: A background in the arts; an eye for detail; grace under pressure; ability to work well as a team member with designers, writers & other editors; five years editing experience with newspapers or magazines; and Bachelor’s degree in journalism, English, or writing-intensive discipline. Facility on Mac, Adobe InDesign, and NewsEditPro is preferred. Duties include: Fact checking; editing copy for style, tone, accuracy, punctuation, and grammar; editing stories for content, structure, and overall interest; creating appropriate headlines & imaginative cutlines and proofreading pages in pre-press stage, among other duties. The Santa Fe New Mexican offers competitive compensation; medical, dental and vision insurances with option to cover your family; paid sick and vacation; retirement and Flexible Spending Accounts; paid life insurance, free downtown parking and passes to local gyms. Send cover letter and résumé by 5 p.m. on Tuesday, June 6th to: Kristina Melcher, Editor/Pasatiempo, 202 East Marcy St., Santa Fe, NM 87501. kmelcher@sfnewmexican.com Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD

FOOD DISTRIBUTION CERTIFIER

NAMBE. Responsible for accepting, reviewing and certifying applications for eligibility within the Generous Benefits Package. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment.

IN HOME CARE FULLTIME-PARTTIME RN: Direct home care services. Patient visits, travel required. Excellent communication and documentation skills needed. A p p l y @ www.harmonyhomehealth.com MI CASA Home Health Care seeks reliable caregivers in Santa Fe. You must be physically capable of transfer assistance. Experience required. Apply Online @ https://micasa.clearcareonline.com/ apply1

ATTN: CNA’S

DIRECTOR OF CLINICAL SERVICES

Provide clinical supervision for all COLBHN sites. Staff is comprised of clinical supervisors, residential inpatient and outpatient therapists, family health and LADACs. Assure appropriate clinical management and clinical services are provided to all COLBHN clientele Requires participation and direction in areas of marketing and outreach services. Will travel ABQ to Taos. Master’s Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work with no less than two years clinical experience with children, adolescents, and families. Licensed in the State of New Mexico as one of the following: LISW, LPCC, or Ph.D

CLINICAL SUPERVISOR

Albuquerque. Assure appropriate clinical management and clinical services are provided to clientele, conduct trainings to the therapeutic staff as well as all agency staff on pertinent clinical issues. Requires participation and direction in areas of marketing and outreach services. Master’s Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work with no less than two years clinical experience with children, adolescents, and families. Licensed in the State of New Mexico as one of the following: LISW, LPCC, or Ph.D Generous Benefits Package. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment.

Private Assistant needed, must have good communication skills with great attitude to work. Offer $610 per week interested person Should contact: ban101971@outlook.com

AUTOMOTIVE

BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is hiring managers for its Santa Fe Stores. 2+ years of management experience and excellent customer service skills required. Excellent pay and benefits! Send resume to Cristin at cheyns@lotaburger.com or by mail to 3205 Richmond Dr. NE, Albuquerque NM 87107.

J ob Fair, June 4th, 2014

We are currently hiring for our SERVICE DEPARTMENT TEAM. We are in need of experienced technicians preferably Chrysler certified. Diesel and transmission experience a plus. To apply, visit us online at www.desertsunmotors.com or visit us at 517 N Riverside Dr in Espanola, NM.

COMPUTERS IT

Location: Cities of Gold Hotel Ballroom (Pojoaque) Time: 10:00 a.m - 2:00 p.m Hiring Managers on Site! Cities of Gold Hotel QB’s Sports Bar & Grill And More!

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000

MEDICAL DENTAL DENTAL OFFICE has an opening for a FRONT OFFICE MANAGER Experience and proficiency with dental software programs is important. Position entails: insurance coordinator, billing, scheduling office and hospital cases, prior authorizations, and professional correspondence with doctors. 35-40 hours weekly, Monday-Thursday, 7:30-5. Compensation based on experience. Email resume: dr@childs2thdr.com

INPATIENT THERAPISTS

Taos. Provide inpatient individual and family therapy, group psychotherapy, substance abuse counseling, mental health/substance abuse evaluations, case management, and other related therapeutic services for residential clientele. Masters Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work. Licensed in the State of New Mexico as an LMSW, LISW, LPCC, LPC, LMHC, or Ph.D.

FAMILY SERVICE THERAPIST

Espanola, Albuquerque. Will provide individual and family therapy, group, psychotherapy, substance abuse counseling, mental health, substance abuse evals, case mgmt, etc. Mstrs in counseling, psychology or social work. Must be licensed in the State of NM as an LMSWM, LISW, LPCC, LMHC or Ph.D.

Apply at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS Toll-free jobs hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook.

when you buy a

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

986-3000

Responsible for effective overall management of the Nursing Department and coordination with other disciplines to provide quality care to all patients & residents. This position is significant in facility leadership If interested in the position. Please come see Craig Shaffer Admin, or stop by our facility, and fill out a application. 635 Harkle RD Santa Fe NM 87505

(Outpatient) Albuquerque. Provide range of clinical services, including. Will provide consultation services as the organization’s Cultural Competence Liaison to management. Require LSAA, LADAC, LMSW, LISW, LPCC, LPC, LMHC, or Ph.D.

SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELOR, LADAC

(Outpatient) Espanola. Provide range of clinical services. Require LSAA, LADAC, LMSW, LISW, LPCC, LPC, LMHC, or Ph.D.

Taos, Espanola The BHT ensures client safety, therapeutic and physical needs are properly met as directed by the individual’s treatment plan, therapeutic goals and interventions determined by the clinical team. HS Diploma or equivalent. Generous Benefits Package. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment.

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

FURNITURE

FRAMERS & HELPERS wanted for Los Alamos Area for stucco removal and for window installs. Please call 505220-4450.

Full-Time Baker Needed! A’viands is currently hiring for a Full-time Baker to work in the food service operation at New Mexico Highlands University located in Las Vegas, NM. Interested applicants are encouraged to complete an online application at www.Passion4Foodservice.com or by calling 1-855-436-6373 (Hiring Code: 101)

DROP-FRONT DESK. Narrow width Two upper, two lower shelves. Walnut finish, gently used. 25x38x12. $150. Relocated SF, no space. (518)763-2401.

Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action/ Minorities/ Women/ Individual with Disabilities/ Protected Veteran Employer

HVAC/R SERVICE TECH & JOURNEYMAN PLUMBER Controls and trouble shooting. EMAIL RESUME TO: hawkmech@laplaza.org or fax to: (575)758-3366

HAND-PAINTED STEIN WORLD CABINET. Beautiful floral d ecora tion , drawer, two shelves. Brand new, unused. Relocated SF, no space. 24x32x14. $450. (518)763-2401

»merchandise« We’re a non-medical company with a need for caring, compassionate and honest people to provide home care services to seniors. Make a difference by helping us keep our elderly happy and at home! We are currently looking to fill weekend shifts that range from 3 hours up to 24 hour care and are available in Santa Fe, Espanola, and Los Alamos areas. For more information call our 24-hour info line at 505-6615889. HomeInsteadJobsSF@yahoo.com

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS FULL-TIME MAID, HOUSEKEEPER Great Salary & Paid Vacation

505-660-6440

GREAT PAY! GREAT HOURS! GREAT ATMOSPHERE!

Enivornmentally safe, living wage company has an opening for Dry Cleaning Production and customer service. Must have strong computer skills. No Sundays or evening work. Apply in person at: 1091 St. Francis Drive

TREE EXPERTS

Looking for self-motivated, dependable hard working tree trimmers, to prune, trim, shape, and remove ornamental trees and shrubs. Must be willing to follow safety procedures. Wages DOE Coates Tree Service 505-983-8019. Application online at www.coatestree.com submit to jobs@coatestree.com

PART TIME

Memorial Weekend Sale! 20% off storewide. Saturday, May 24 and Monday, May 26. Gently Used Furniture, Building Supplies. 505-4731114.

ANTIQUES $4,250 (OBO) Cash Only. 1880-1890s antique upright PIANO made by "J. Bauer Co. Chicago S/N 27583". Buyer is responsible for loading and transporation 1000 lbs. (505) 8042459 SEWING MACHINE. SINGER FEATHERWEIGHT, TABLE MODEL. 1930S. All accessories, with case. Good condition. $400. 505-466-6205

APPLIANCES KENMORE WASHER & Dryer, white, works fine, need cleaning. $295 OBO, for both. 505-424-8584

THE ULTIMATE wine chiller for serious Wine Collectors! New, still in GE box. MODEL ZDWC240NBS. MSRP $1599. Selling $900. 505-471-9943

BAC METAL Roofing Tiles, approximately 250 squ.ft., $100 OBO, 505-6723844. BUILDING MATERIALS Gr e e n House kits, Flea Market kits, Landscaping & Fence materials. Vehicles, 5th-wheel Trailer. Contact Michael, 505-310-9382, OR 505-310-2866.

CLOTHING PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT

The Santa Fe New Mexican has the perfect position for an early bird who likes to get the day started at the crack of dawn! We are seeking a part-time Home Delivery Assistant to deliver newspaper routes and replacement newspapers to customers, and resolve customer complaints. Must have valid NM drivers’ license, impeccable driving record and be able to operate a vehicle with manual transmission. Must be able to toss newspapers, lift up to 25-50 lbs; climb in and out of vehicle, bend, climb stairs and reach above shoulder. Have hearing and vision within normal ranges. Hours are 5 to 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Pay rate is $10.66 per hour. No benefits. Selected candidates must pass a drug screen. Submit references and job application or resume by Monday, June 9th, to: Human Resources The Santa Fe New Mexican 202 East Marcy Street Santa Fe, NM 87501-2021 Or email to gbudenholzer@ sfnewmexican.com

PAIR OF BAR OR COUNTER STOOLS. Metal base, cane backs, cushion seats. $20 for pair. 505-986-1199 Set of 6 Dining chairs, tropical wood with carving. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.

DOONEY BOURKE Leather Satchel. Brand NEW, brown, 11x8x5D". $145. (was $319 retail). 505-490-5623

FIREWOOD-FUEL WONDERFULLY COMFORTABLE SWIVEL CHAIR. Sage green, s u e d e d microfiber, tufted surround. Half year use. Relocated SF, no space. 31x28x27. $400. (518)763-2401.

KIDS STUFF

KIVA FIREPLACE Inserts. Custom built to fit the fireplace. 25 years experience. Rusty Dobkins 575-535-2905.

FOOD FRUIT

Chest of drawers, $300. New Carseat, $40. Basinet, $40. Steel Full bedframe, clean, brand new. $60. 505-795-8884

LAWN & GARDEN PUSH LAWNMOWER. Self-sharpening blades with grass catcher attachment. Good condition. $50. 505-2319133 TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999

NAMBE CHILE SEEDS! Old Variety. Very HOT! Only $6 per ounce (includes postage) Call: 505-455-2562

SANTA FE CHEVROLET CADILLAC is in need of two quality individuals for sales opportunity. Experience is a plus but will train. Must be responsible, energetic and enthusiastic. We offer one of the best new and used vehicle inventories in the state, management support & assistance, and an opportunity to advance. No phone calls please. Stop in and visit with David Hill or David Craver.

OAK DESK, excellent condition. 30"height x 72"width x 27 1/2"deep. $325. 505-986-1632 Please leave a message.

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

Job application may be obtained at above address or 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. Or you may apply online at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. EOE

SALES MARKETING

NARROW WIDTH. Modern. Two upper and two lower shelves. Walnut finish, gently used. 25x38x12. $150. Relocated SF, no space. (518)7632401

BUILDING MATERIALS

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

SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELOR, LADAC CULTURAL LIAISON

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHNICIAN

Sr Network and Systems Administrator Full-time position with excellent benefits. Experience required. See website for additional information.

DIRECTOR OF NURSES (SANTA FE CARE CENTER)

WE GET RESULTS!

MANAGEMENT BLAKE’S LOTABURGER is Hiring General Managers for its Santa Fe locations! 2 plus years management experience required. Salary DOE, Vacation, Benefits Package Included. Email resume to cheyns@lotaburger.com.

WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVALIABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, or CRAIG SHAFFER, ADMINISTRATOR, 505-982-2574. OR COME BY THE FACILITY AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION.

CLINICAL DIRECTOR

Taos. Assure appropriate clinical management and clinical services are provided to the residents, conduct trainings to the therapeutic staff as well as all agency staff on pertinent clinical issues. Requires participation and direction in areas of marketing and outreach services. Master’s Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work with no less than two years clinical experience with children, adolescents, and families. Licensed in the State of New Mexico as one of the following: LISW, LPCC, or Ph.D

No phone calls, please. An ADA/Equal Opportunity Employer

MEDICAL DENTAL

MANAGEMENT

ASPHALT RAKER, SCREED OPERATOR & ALL PAVING POSITIONS *Good pay *Health insurance *401K *Salary DOE(EOE) *Drug testing

986-3000

to place your ad, call

FURNITURE 6’ DIning Table. Tropical Wood, with carving along apron, very beautiful. Matching chairs available. $500. 505231-9133.

MISCELLANEOUS 100 WATT GENERAL HOUSEHOLD SOFT WHITE BULBS BRAND NEW I HAVE SEVERAL 4 PACKS FOR $4.50 PER PACKAGE 505-753-3164 BACK ISSUES OF MOTHER EARTH NEWS. .50 CENTS EACH. CALL 505231-9133.

ELDORADO AREA, dining table, couches, beds, tables, rugs, jewelry, and much more! Please text for fotos and more information: 505-901-7282

ALMOST NEW Heavy Dining Table, 3 chairs and bench. $385. 575-621-9267

TECHNICAL THE NEW MEXICO BUREAU OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL RESOURCES, a research and service division at New Mexico Tech in Socorro, NM, invites applications for the position of ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR FOR HYDROGEOLOGY PROGRAMS, SENIOR HYDROGEOLOGIST. For details and how to apply, view the full posting at http://geoinfo.nmt.edu/news/annou ncements.cfml and at http://www.nmt.edu/hr-jobs-at-nmt E-mail applications NOT accepted. for activists rally Immigrants,

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

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

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

CALL 986-3010

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 last year. near E.J. Martinez the city morning check, and got a a Saturday he the fine by Sovcik paid in early December, fee because Then fora penalty cashed it. would be he owed letter saying late, and his case was his check a collections agency. who were of people later warded to of dozens SUV, paid up and He’s one by the speednotices of default. ticketed erroneous Robbin acknowledged Trafreceived Anthony Santa Fe Police Capt. problems in the he’s corsaid the accounting Program and exact number fic OperationsHe’s not sure the STOP not, but rected them. paid their automated they had who the of people got letters stating calls about tickets and he got many phone he admittedthis year. includfrom issue early of the default notices, resulted A number by Sovcik, mailed to the received or ing the onemade at City Hall the bank but not into Robpayments keeping, were deposited early city that to police for record during the forwarded Others originated Page A-9 bin said. CITATIONS, see Please

The New

living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators

N

Committee some Resources and Natural the comMonday. also asked in towns The committeeclaims offices help resito better pany to establish the crisis affected by will be seeking compensation natural-gas during the dents who suffered Gas Co. officials for losses Mexico link on the outage. New phone line and running. said a claimswebsite is up and New Mexico company’s than two hours, legislators’ For more answered week’s caused last Gas representatives about whatduring bitterly cold questions Natural from El Pasothe huge service interruption An official weather. that manages gas across company Gas, the pipeline delivering interstate also spoke. a lot more the Southwest, Gas purchased New Mexico Page A-10 CRISIS, Please see State 2011 LEGISLATURE cut for the

OKs budget ◆ Panel Office. measures sponsor Auditor’s A-7 ◆ GOP newcomers reform. PAGE for ethics

Terrell

Lois Mexico, by Skin of New Wells and Cady Under the author of in conjunction Rudnick, Modernism of New Southwestern Under the Skin(1933Wells with the exhibit 5:30 Art of Cady Mexico: The UNM Art Museum, Arts. 1953) at the of Spanish Colonial A-2 p.m., Museum in Calendar, More eventsin Pasatiempo and Fridays

The New

at tax agenc

y

Friday, offiup for work not showingfrom top department leave for was to e-mails New Mexican. just who according said by The Mahesh agency about to return to cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one sion in at and who was expected Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were on “essential” that afternoon next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department The resulting and Revenue of personal ed for a day e employe state Taxation

up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked he New Mexican

Art lecture

in North16,000 people without natural among the were still They are days of Mexico whohomes, despite five expected ern New their snow Constable With more than 20 perand Anne gas for heating Matlock less temperatures. relit freezing a fourth of Taos and had been Mexican Ellen Cavatoday, only Arriba County villages Gas Co. put and his housemate, their fireplacetheir cent of Rio New Mexico and pipefitin front of John Hubbard Near on Monday. plumbers huddled by noon stay warm. plea to to licensed naugh, were trying to on meters. out a message morning away them turn Monday they’ve posted a handwritten do not go ters to help Lucia Sanchez, public-information front gate, saying, “Please Page A-10 Meanwhile, FAMILIES, the gas company,us with no gas.” 75, live in PajaPlease see leave both again and San Ildefonso and Cavanaugh, Hubbard small inholding on a rito Village, west of the Rio Grande. Pueblo just

By Staci

sion sparks confu Shutdown workers may By Steve

Pasapick

g homes: in freezin cracks’ Families h the ‘We fell throug

Today

with Mostly cloudy, showers. snow afternoon 8. High 37, low PAGE A-14

Obituaries

Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 Santa Fe, Sarah Martinez Erlinda Ursula Esquibel Feb. 2 “Ollie” Lucero, 85, Oliver Phillip 4 Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 “Trudy” Gertrude Santa Fe, Lawler, 90, Feb. 3 Two sections,

28 pages

No. 38 162nd year, No. 596-440 ublication

BRAND NEW Round Oak Table with four chairs. $100. 505-471-0555 LARGE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER. Space for tv, stereo, and storage. Smokey glass doors. $100 OBO. 505So can you with a classified ad 231-9133. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

Fine Pawn Jewelry The Flea at the Downs Saturdays and Sundays Through September 8 am to 3 pm www.santafeflea.com walt@sfflea.com 505-280-9261

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

CALL 986-3000


Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

»finance«

STEINWAY MUSIC Room Grand ModelB. This magnificent 6’11" piano is often referred to as "the perfect piano." Excellent condition. $39,500. 505-467-8647

OFFICE SUPPLY EQUIPMENT PANASONIC 2-LINE Telephone system. Base plus 4 satellites. Manual included. $100. 505-820-6174

SPORTS EQUIPMENT Thule Parkway bike rack. Holds 2 bikes. Heavy-duty. $75. 505-231-9133.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

to place your ad, call

986-3000

DOMESTIC

DOMESTIC

2004 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE$7,000. Call 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2009 PONTIAC G6. $9,000. Call 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

B-9

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! 4X4s

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2005 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED-4x4

IMPORTS

2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L - another 1owner Lexus trade-in, AWD, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $19,897. 505-2163800.

Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Manuals, Non-Smoker, 80,698 Miles, Moonroof, Leather, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo DESIRABLE, $13,950.

UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY for the animal lover. Full-service pet boarding business, crematory, residence, rental units. $950,000. Sam Goldenberg & Associates, 505-8200163.

VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: SANTAFEAUTOSHOWCASE.COM PAUL 505-983-4945

»cars & trucks«

TV RADIO STEREO 2012 DODGE CHARGER HEMI R/T $28000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.

AIWA WX220 CASSETTE DUBBING DECK. BARELY USED, $75 OR MAKE OFFER. CALL 505-231-9133.

When was the last time you smiled as you turned the ignition key? Feel it again with this charming 2013 Dodge Charger.

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

CAT MOTOR grader 112 F series, 1969, clean tight machine. $14,500. 12’ mow board, 4 cylinder, 3304 cat engine, roll bar, new radiator, 1,200 hours. Call Ron, 505-577-4008.

AUTOS WANTED DO YOU have a 2000 Subaru Outback, that you would like to sell for parts or as is? Frank, 575-421-0129.

when you buy a

HEAVY EQUIPMENT

2011 HONDA Odyssey Touring Elite- recent Lexus trade-in! Low miles, single owner, every option, mini-van LUXURY, the one to own! Clean CarFax $32,871. Call 505-216-3800.

4X4s

CLASSIC CARS

2014 Pet Calendar for $5!

Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

2009 DODGE AVENGER. 100,841 miles. Don’t let the miles fool you! What a price for an ’09! $9,155. Call today.

2006 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4WD. ONLY 58,000 MILES. $19,000. Call Today! 505-795-5317 www.furrysbuickgmc.com

IMPORTS

2010 HONDA ODYSSEY EX - $19000. 5 0 5 - 7 9 5 - 5 3 1 7 . www.furrysbuickgmc.com.

100% of sales donated to SFAS.

986-3000 »animals«

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com ACURA 3.2TL Type S 2003 Leather seats, 4 door, Moon roof. Fast with 260 hp $4,800. 505-412-0021

DOMESTIC 2005 FORD F350 CREW 4WD LARIAT - $16000. Call 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2008 INFINITI M35- great tires, new brakes, just serviced, fully loaded with navigation, heated, cooled leather, and Bose stereo, clean CarFax, luxury for less! $18,721. Call 505-216-3800.

2003 DODGE NEON THIS SPOTLESS 20,000 MILES, A/T A/C READY FOR COLLEGE, $6,849. CALL 505-473-1234.

HORSES 1989 FORD F150 4X4. Just over 100,000 miles. With Racks. Excellent condition. $2,500. 1996 S U B U R B A N 4x4. Needs head gaskets. $1,000. 505-310-7552

2004 BUICK REGAL LS, LOW MILES - LIKE NEW! $8,000. 505-795-5317 www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2004 Acura MDX fresh trade-in, just one owner clean CarFax, AWD, well-maintained, extremely clean $9.781. Call 505-216-3800.

ACURA INTEGRA 1994 Runs good, sunroof. If interested please call 505930-1317.

BREEDING SERVICE Triple Registered, gaited, homozygous tobiano stallion. Live spotted foal guaranteed. $350-$300. TBeckmon@SkiesRBlue.com www.SkiesRBlue.com 505-470-6345

2001 BUICK LESABRE, GREAT RIDE FOR THE MONEY, $7,999. CA L L 505-473-1234. 2010 FORD FOCUS $8000. Call 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

PETS SUPPLIES

2003 JAGUAR S-TYPE 3.O - $6000. Call 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

1993 GMC 3500 4X4 FLATBED DUMP 5-speed, 6.5 turbo diesel, 2K winch and bumper, CD, toolbox, 170K miles. $6,300 575-779-7958

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

7 1/2 weeks old ready for their new homes. 4 males and 1 female puppy left. Very large parents over 100lbs.. Serious buyers only text 505-695-5279

2008 HONDA RIDGELINE 4WD $14000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2014 CHEVROLET CRUZE 2 LT. 16,791 miles. Just one owner, who treated this vehicle like a member of the family. $16, 989.

2009 KIA SPECTRA - NICE CAR. LOW MILES. $8,000. Please Call for Information. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2008 GMC ENVOY SLE - $11,000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2008 NISSAN Xterra S, 4X4, Automatic, 4.0L 6-Cyl. Only 76,220 miles, New Tires, Windshield, Battery. Has cosmetic dings. Powerful and dependable on, off road. Never abused. $11,995 OBO.

2011 BMW 328XI - ONLY 20k MILES - $29000 - 2 at THIS PRICE. 5057 9 5 - 5 3 1 7 . WWW.FURRYSBUICKGMC.COM.

AKC AKITAS. Loveable & Loyal playful puppies for sale. Black & White. 6 weeks old. $600. First shots. 2008 CIVIC 4-door LX. Beige exterior, Ivory interior. Fully maintained records. Excellent condition. $12,799. 43k miles. 505-473-2750

2010 CHRYSLER Town & Country LOADED!- $14,000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2005 GMC CANYON EXTRA CABGAS SAVER - $9000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com .

2013 Lexus CT200h- Receive over 40 mpg, recent local trade-in, low miles. All one owner, clean CarFax with original MSRP ranging from $33k-$37k, 4 to choose from, starting at $27,931. Call 505-216-3800.

2006 SILVERADO 1500 4WD EXTRA CAB$9,000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

(3) 13 week pups- One white, 2 blackbrindle. $500, all shots. 505-681-4593 CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, Teacup size. Male & Female, 12 weeks. Grey, brown, and black. Negotiable price. 505-216-8278 2011 Ford Fiesta SE recent tradein, single owner clean CarFax, low miles, auto, great MPG! immaculate $12,971. Call 505-216-3800.

Fix your puppy or kitten for only $20!

Call the Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s spay, neuter clinic at 474-6422 and stop unplanned births that create millions of homeless pets. Special for June only - limited availability, book an appointment now! P e t s must be under 6 months of age. Funded by PetSmart Charities. PURE BREED English bulldog puppies for sale, all registered, AKC, shots, brindle markings, 8 weeks old. All puppies cost $450 each, call or text 575-322-8017.

2006 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER $7000. Call Today! 505-795-5317 www.furrysbuickgmc.com

for activists rally Immigrants,

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

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN

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

CALL 986-3010

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 last year. near E.J. Martinez the city morning check, and got a a Saturday he the fine by Sovcik paid in early December, fee because Then fora penalty cashed it. would be he owed letter saying late, and his case was his check a collections agency. who were of people later warded to of dozens SUV, paid up and He’s one by the speednotices of default. ticketed erroneous Robbin acknowledged Trafreceived Anthony Santa Fe Police Capt. problems in the he’s corsaid the accounting Program and exact number fic OperationsHe’s not sure the STOP not, but rected them. paid their automated they had who the of people got letters stating calls about tickets and he got many phone he admittedthis year. includfrom issue early of the default notices, resulted A number by Sovcik, mailed to the received or ing the onemade at City Hall the bank but not into Robpayments keeping, were deposited early city that to police for record during the forwarded Others originated Page A-9 bin said. CITATIONS, see Please

The New

living from the neighborshortage their through natural-gas about the Co. crews came report MondayMexico Gas a TV news by when New MEXICAN NEW listen to passed in They were BY NATALIE GUILLÉN/THE Residents Ellen Cavanaugh, VilPueblo. PHOTOS Pajarito housemate, San Ildefonso relight pilots. and his lage, outside home near gas lines and John Hubbard to clear their frigid San Ildefonso room of the weekend post Pueblo, hopes hood over signs in their of having gas service Matlock back By Staci turned Mexican have The New on. Despite Gas Co. may calls repeated ew Mexico in its power Mexico left more to New some done everything crisis that Gas Co., are to avert the homes and busifew residents than 25,000 gas for the last still depending natural the emerwoodon their stoves, nesses without or ask it didn’t communicate burning and days, but enough to its customers have, fireplaces gency fast help when it should Energy for space heaters the state on the House said for warmth. legislators

N

Committee some Resources and Natural the comMonday. also asked in towns The committeeclaims offices help resito better pany to establish the crisis affected by will be seeking compensation natural-gas during the dents who suffered Gas Co. officials for losses Mexico link on the outage. New phone line and running. said a claimswebsite is up and New Mexico company’s than two hours, legislators’ For more answered week’s caused last Gas representatives about whatduring bitterly cold questions Natural from El Pasothe huge service interruption An official weather. that manages gas across company Gas, the pipeline delivering interstate also spoke. a lot more the Southwest, Gas purchased New Mexico Page A-10 CRISIS, Please see State 2011 LEGISLATURE cut for the

OKs budget ◆ Panel Office. measures sponsor Auditor’s A-7 ◆ GOP newcomers reform. PAGE for ethics

Terrell

Lois Mexico, by Skin of New Wells and Cady Under the author of in conjunction Rudnick, Modernism of New Southwestern Under the Skin(1933Wells with the exhibit 5:30 Art of Cady Mexico: The UNM Art Museum, Arts. 1953) at the of Spanish Colonial A-2 p.m., Museum in Calendar, More eventsin Pasatiempo and Fridays

The New

at tax agenc

y

Friday, offiup for work not showingfrom top department leave for was to e-mails New Mexican. just who according said by The Mahesh agency about to return to cials obtained spokesman S.U. many workleast one sion in at and who was expected Departmenthe didn’t know howFriday. were on “essential” that afternoon next day. Monday their jobs when state a work the return to who on Thursday ers didn’t by late Thursday began Thursday because of Employees “nonessential” by Gov. Susana The situation told to go home considered “essential” were Page A-9 deemed employees had been administration. means CONFUSION, Please see apparently Martinez’s confusion Department The resulting and Revenue of personal ed for a day e employe state Taxation

up Some ‘essential’ for not showing get docked he New Mexican

Art lecture

in North16,000 people without natural among the were still They are days of Mexico whohomes, despite five expected ern New their snow Constable With more than 20 perand Anne gas for heating Matlock less temperatures. relit freezing a fourth of Taos and had been Mexican Ellen Cavatoday, only Arriba County villages Gas Co. put and his housemate, their fireplacetheir cent of Rio New Mexico and pipefitin front of John Hubbard Near on Monday. plumbers huddled by noon stay warm. plea to to licensed naugh, were trying to on meters. out a message morning away them turn Monday they’ve posted a handwritten do not go ters to help Lucia Sanchez, public-information front gate, saying, “Please Page A-10 Meanwhile, FAMILIES, the gas company,us with no gas.” 75, live in PajaPlease see leave both again and San Ildefonso and Cavanaugh, Hubbard small inholding on a rito Village, west of the Rio Grande. Pueblo just

By Staci

sion sparks confu Shutdown workers may By Steve

Pasapick

g homes: in freezin cracks’ Families h the ‘We fell throug

Today

with Mostly cloudy, showers. snow afternoon 8. High 37, low PAGE A-14

Obituaries

Victor Manuel 87, Feb. 4 Baker, Martinez, Lloyd “Russ” Ortiz, 92, Ursulo V. Feb. 5 Jan. 25 Santa Fe, Sarah Martinez Erlinda Ursula Esquibel Feb. 2 “Ollie” Lucero, 85, Oliver Phillip 4 Gay, Feb. PAGE A-11 “Trudy” Gertrude Santa Fe, Lawler, 90, Feb. 3 Two sections,

28 pages

No. 38 162nd year, No. 596-440 ublication

2004 HONDA Accord real 83,780 mi. Very clean car with no accidents, Auto trans. 2L with 4-Cylinder Gasoline engineSoruns smoothly. $4,200 can you with a classified ad Call or text at 724-964-6550. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

2012 Toyota Corolla LE Just 22k miles! Single owner, Clean CarFax. This one’ll be gone quick, don’t miss it! $16,851 Call 505-216-3800.

2003 NISSAN XTERRA 4WD - $7000. Call Today!! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2013 Lexus ES350- just 13k miles, local 1 owner clean CarFax, great MPG, super nice, over $40k orig inal. MSRP, SAVE at $34,897. Call 505-216-3800.


B-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS

IMPORTS

to place your ad, call

986-3000

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

»recreational«

SPORTS CARS

SUVs

2013 FORD MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, CRUZIN IN STYLE, LOW MILES, $23,945. CALL 505-4731234.

2011 FORD Explorer. ANOTHER Lexus trade! only 39k miles, AWD, 3rd row, clean CarFax $25,971. Call 505-216-3800.

IMPORTS

2011 Lexus GS350 AWD. Recent single owner trade, Lexus CERTIFIED 3 year warranty, LOADED, and absolutely pristine! $34,921. Call 505-216-3800.

2012 SCION iQ low miles, recent trade, $2k in factory options, super nice, clean CarFax. $12,971. Call 505-216-3800.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2012 TOYOTA PRIUS-C

Another One Owner, Local, Records, X-Keys, Manuals, Factory Warranty, 18,086 Miles, W53 City, 46 Highway, Navigation, Pristine Soooo ECONOMICAL $18,450

BRAND NEW BICYCLE: Trek Navigator 1.0, 34cm. Fully equiped: new lock, helmet, water bottle, wicker basket. $340. ($700 VALUE). 505-988-2713

View vehicle, CarFax:

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

BICYCLES

RAYLEIGH M60 mountain bikes (2624") like new, originally $500 each, both for $450, includes all accessories with car rack. 505-990-2665

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

SUVs

BOATS & MOTORS

2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, ANOTHER Lexus trade! AWD, Sunroof, Just 14k miles, Single owner, Clean CarFax. Why buy new? Buy Preowned for $22,981. 505-216-3800.

GRUMMAN 17’ ALUMINUM $500 OBO. 505-672-3844. 2011 TOYOTA RAV4 AWD. Low miles, new tires and brakes, clean CarFax, AND rare 3rd row! don’t miss it $17,987 $34,921. Call 505216-3800.

Add a pic and sell it quick!

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

1991 3/4 ton GMC, auto form, Vandura, conversion Van. Recent valve job. Low miles, excellent condition. $2,500. 505-660-8989.

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

CAMPERS & RVs PAMPERED ALFA SeeYa 2002, 36’, 2 slides. Too many features for ad! See online ad or call for viewing. $44,500. 505-690-8100

2012 CHEVROLET CAPTIVA. 34,991 miles. Your lucky day! Don’t pay too much for the SUV you want. $15,974. Call today!

Using

Sell Your Stuff!

will help your ad get noticed

986-3000

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

Your quest for a gently used SUV is over with this charming 2013 Toyota Venza. Take some of the worry out of buying a used vehicle with this one owner gem.

986-3000

Call Classifieds For Details Today!

MOTORCYCLES

986-3000

1998 LEXUS LX470. Just one owner, clean CarFax, very wellmaintained, super clean, must see it to believe it! $12,871. Call 505-216-3800.

DUCATI MONSTER 900ie 2002 Red, 15,000 miles, Warner clutch, Penske shock, restored with new stock parts, recently tuned by PJs, new tires, $4,000. 505-667-7929 or 865-8043961

2008 CHRYSLER ASPEN , ONLY 64K, THIRD ROW SEATING, $17,999. CALL 505-473-1234.

2013 TOYOTA Camry SE - just traded!, low miles, excellent upgrades, 1-owner, clean CarFax . Why would you buy new? $21,481. Call 505-216-3800.

CANOE

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 SUBARU IMPREZA 2.5-GT PREMIUM

Another One Owner, Local, Records, Factory Warranty, 10,129 Miles, Soooo PRISTINE, $23,450 3-WHEELED MOPED WITH TRAILER. Only 6 months old. $2,200 OBO. Will trade for older camper trailer. 575520-4041.

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945 Climb into this great Toyota Tundra, knowing that it will always get you where you need to go, on time, every time. 2014 NISSAN VERSA. 16,603 miles. Don’t pay too much for the stunning car you want. $14,774. Call us today!

Don’t miss your opportunity at buying this gorgeous 2013 Dodge Durango. With plenty of passenger room, you won’t have to worry about being cramped when it’s more than just you in the SUV.

HARLEY DAVIDSON Heritage Softail Classic 2003 Stage II big bore, SE.403 cams, SE EFI race tuner kit, loaded to the max - major chrome. Purchased new ABQ + options - $30k+. Always garaged. Adult owned. Appx 18k miles. Amazing bike. Only $16,500 FOB Santa Fe. 972-989-8556 or email 2craig@airmail.net

2013 TOYOTA Camry SE. Just traded! Low miles, excellent upgrades, one owner, clean CarFax . Why would you buy new? $21,481. Call 505-216-3800.

VOLKSWAGEN 2005 Golf GLS TDI. VW 4 cylinder 1.9L turbo diesel. Odometer 98697. Average MPG 38. Excellent condition. 505-660-1822

2003 TEXAS CHOPPER 107 CCI ONE OWNER, 8K MILES, FUN IN THE SUN, RED RIVER READY $10,988. CALL 505-473-1234.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 TOYOTA-FJ CRUISER

Another One Owner, Local, Records. Factory Warranty, 13,617 Miles, Loaded, Pristine. Soooo TOYOTA DEPENDABLE $28,950

16’ DUAL AXLE TRAILER. 7,000 pound capacity. Electric brakes. Load ramps. 12" side-rails. 1 year old. $ 2 , 5 0 0. 205-603-7077 (located Eldorado).

View vehicle, Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

2006 NISSAN ALTIMA - $6000. Call today. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

505-983-4945 2012 FORD EXPLORER XLT. 38,768 MILES. ARE YOU STILL DRIVING AROUND THAT OLD THING? COME ON DOWN TODAY! $28,881. 2004 VW PASSAT WAGON 4MOTION - $8000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2006 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE $11000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

PICKUP TRUCKS So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS Legal #96957 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY In accordance with the New Mexico Self Storage Lein Act, Valley U Stor-It hereby notifies the following that the contents of their storage units will be sold or otherwise disposed of on June 20, 2014. Please contact Valley U StorIt, 17709 D., Santa Fe, NM 87506. 505-4552815: Vera Vigil, Rt 42, Box 57, Tesuque Pueblo, Santa Fe, NM 87506 Reina Chavez, PO Box 56, Hernandez, NM 87537 Samuel Harold, Rt 42, Box 10, Santa Fe, NM 87506 Sandra Herrera, 247A County Rd, Santa Fe,

Continued...

LEGALS

LEGALS

1998 DODGE 1500. V6 Magnum. Transmission just replaced. A/C. Pioneer- Alpine Stereo system. Headache & bed racks. $3500 OBO. 505-685-0800.

So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS

LEGALS

g p of the City of Santa Fe; Changing the Classification from R1 (Residential, 1 Dwelling Unit to the Published in The San- Acre) to C-2 (General and ta Fe New Mexican on Commercial); Providing an Effective May 26, June 2, 2014 Date with Respect to a Certain Parcel of legal #96961 Land Comprising CITY OF SANTA FE 4.65± Acres Located ADOPTION OF ORDIat 2791 and 2797 Agua NANCE NO. 2014-20 Fria Street ("2791 and AND RESOLUTION 2797 Agua Fria Street 2014-31 (Rivera) Rezoning," Notice is hereby giv- Case No. 2013-102). en that the Governing Resolution Body of the City of 2) Santa Fe held a public No. 2014-31: A Resohearing at their regu- lution Amending the lar meeting on Wed- General Plan Future nesday, April 30, 2014 Land Use Classificaand approved the fol- tion from ResidentialRural/Mountain/Corri lowing: dor (1 Dwelling Unit 1) O r d i n a n c e Per Acre) to General for a No. 2014-20: An Ordi- Commercial nance Amending the 4.65± Acre Parcel of Located ApOfficial Zoning Map Land

p proximately 1,100 Feet North East of Siler Road on the North Side of Agua Fria Street (2791 and 2797 Agua Fria Street) within T17N, R9E, Section 33 N.M.P.M. Santa Fe County New Mexico ("2791 and 2797 Agua Fria Street (Rivera) Rezoning," Case No. 2013-101).

y Avenue, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Yolanda Y. Vigil, City Clerk PUBLISHED in The Santa Fe New Mexican on JUNE 2 2014

Continued...

Continued...

y NM 87506 Rosa Hernandez, #7 Camino del Antonio, Santa Fe, NM 87506

Continued...

Copies of this ordinance and resolution are available in their entirety on the City’s web site http://www.santafen m.gov (click on Departments/City Clerk/Documents, Agendas and Packets/Ordinances) or upon request and payment of a reasonable charge, in the City Clerk’s Office, City Hall, 200 Lincoln

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

2009 VESPA 200 Gt-L, Automatic Transmission, extra clean, very little wear, under 800 miles. $3,600. Call 505-470-6123. ZACH 505. Moped from 70s. Recent tune-up. 2-stroke motor. Was garaged until 2013. $650. 505946-8183

email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS OF SUIT

STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO Victor Mendoza Carrera . GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that Joseph P. Kellenyi, the above named Petitioner /Plaintiff , has filed a LEGAL # 97009 civil action against FIRST JUDICIAL DIS- you in the aboveentitled Court and TRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXI- cause, The general object CO thereof being : COUNTY OF Santa Fe (Check one ) Elsa Estrada Petitioner/ Plaintiff, to establish guardianship of Alvaro J. Esvs. trada Gardea Joseph P. Kellenyi Respondent/Defenda Unless you enter your appearance in this nt. cause within thirty Case No.: D 101 DM (30) days of the date of the last publication 2013 827 of this Notice, judgeNOTICE OF PENDENCY ment by default may

Continued...

KENWORTH SEMI truck 1991 6 cylinders, 300 Cummins L-10, 9 speed, 411 Gear Ratio, 1200 lb. Front Axel, 275,000 miles. In good condition. $12,500.00 Ron, 505-577-4008. So can Call you with a classified ad

Continued...

LEGALS be you.

y entered

y against

Joseph P. Kellenyi Petitioner / Plaintiff 26-B Sierra Pl. N. Address Santa Fe NM 87508 City/State/Zip 505-469-5730 Phone Number Witness this Honorable Matthew J. Wilson , District Judge of the First Judicial District Court of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe , this 12 day of May, 2014. STEPHEN T. PACHECO CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT /S/ By: Michelle Garcia Court Clerk Leadworker

Continued...

LEGALS

Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican May 19, 26 and June 2, 2014. LEGAL # 97073 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT SANTA FE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CHRISTINE BOURQUE DECEASED. No. 2014-0029 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

Continued...

LEGALS two (2) months after the date of the first publication of any published notice to creditors or the date of mailing or other delivery of this notice, whichever is later, 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 NM, 87501 Dated: April 1, 2014 Andrew Seubert 3585 North Falls Road Burdett, NY 14818 607-426-5078 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican May 26, 2014 and June 2, 2014


TIME OUT

ACROSS 1 Protein-rich food 5 Brand of instant coffee 10 Titles for attorneys: Abbr. 14 Mimicked 15 ___ terrier (dog breed) 16 Here: Sp. 17 Direct, as competition 19 Bankrupt 20 Newspaper advertising flier, e.g. 21 “___ Your Enthusiasm” 23 Snakelike fish 24 Four: Prefix 25 17-Across, literally: Fr. 27 Driver’s licenses and such, for short 28 Co. bigwig 30 Flabbergasts 31 Italian ice cream 34 Sneakers since 1916 35 Star stand-ins … or a hint to 17-, 25, 48- and 58-Across?

38 ___ .45 40 Sleek fabric 41 Combination punch 44 M.A. or M.B.A.: Abbr. 45 Wide mouth 48 58-Across, literally: Sp. 51 Japanese cartoon art 53 Roush of the Baseball Hall of Fame 54 “Avatar” race 55 Filched 56 Crosby, Stills, ___ & Young 58 Direct, as combat 60 Redding of R&B 61 Winter pear 62 Memorial Day race, informally 63 Traveled 64 What a witness takes at a trial 65 Hurl DOWN 1 Polynesian paradise 2 Made the first bid 3 Eats grandly

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

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, June 2, 2014: This year you say what you feel in a direct yet charming way. You often discover that life has a surprise for you waiting just around the corner. When you’re upset, you tend to withdraw.

4 What a milking machine connects to 5 Many a person whose name starts “Mc-” 6 Reaction to a cold drink on a hot day 7 Aunt’s girl 8 “Sauer” hot dog topping 9 Newswoman Mitchell 10 ___-piercing 11 Hugs tightly 12 Shushed 13 Immaculate 18 Followed back to its source, as a phone call

22 Collision sound 25 Ones with warts and all? 26 No longer available 29 English cathedral town 31 Reached 32 “Ode ___ Nightingale” 33 Best in competition 35 Is inconspicuous, say 36 Honey maker 37 In a smooth, flowing manner, in music 38 “Don’t be absurd!” 39 Out with one’s sweetie

42 Pale 43 Plains Indians 45 Certain Pepperidge Farm cookie 46 Changes, as the Constitution 47 Hamburger chain that offers the Baconator 49 ___-garde 50 Masked Japanese fighter 52 Perfect, as a pitcher’s game 55 Hunky guy 57 F.D.R.’s successor 59 “___ we now our gay apparel”

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes. com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscroptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

Chess quiz WHITE HAS A CRUSHER Hint: An “interference” theme. Solution: 1. Rd5! If 1. ... Rxd5, 2. Qf8 mate! If 1. ... Qxd5, 2. Qg7 mate! Or if 1. ... exd5, Qxd8 mate!

Hocus Focus

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

Subject: HISTORY (e.g., What was the name of Napoleon’s first wife? Answer: Josephine.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Its two sister ships were Britannic and Olympic. Answer________ 2. In which year did the United States enter World War I (1914-1918)? Answer________ 3. Henry VIII’s six wives were of three different nationalities. Name the three. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. His diary entries include The Great Plague and The Great Fire of London. Answer________ 5. For what act is Mark Chapman infamous? Answer________ 6. Which country is closely associated with the name Grimaldi? Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Which country’s secret police were called the Tonton Macoute? Answer________ 8. If Henry VIII’s older brother had not died, he would have become King ___. Answer________ 9. What is Charles “Pete” Conrad’s claim to fame? Answer________ ANSWERS: ANSWERS: 1. Titanic. 2. 1917. 3. English, Spanish, German. 4. Samuel Pepys. 5. Assassinated John Lennon. 6. Monaco. 7. Haiti. 8. Arthur. 9. Third man to walk on the moon.

Jumble

Monday, June 2, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher

Today in history Today is Monday, June 2, the 153rd day of 2014. There are 212 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On June 2, 1864 (New Style Calendar; May 21, 1864, Old Style), after decades of scorched-earth warfare, leaders of the Circassians, a Muslim ethnic group in the Caucasus region, surrendered in Sochi to the army of the Russian Empire, which proceeded to expel hundreds of thousands of Circassians.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHHH Your creativity surges and adds an interesting touch to whatever you do. A partner has been on the warpath. Tonight: Act as if you don’t have a care in the world. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Do not push someone too far, as you could get an unusually strong reaction. Maintaining an even pace will be difficult. Tonight: Happily head home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Count on your intuition to take the lead should you become insecure when dealing with people you count on. Tonight: Hang with a friend or two. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Stay on top of your finances. A mistake made right now could be rather costly. Don’t just assume that the cheapest way is to do it yourself. Tonight: Stay close to home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH You’ll feel empowered and ready to tackle any task that might appear. Don’t take this personally. Handle what you must. Tonight: Be in the limelight. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might want to see a situation in a new light. First, determine how much your innate prejudices could be affecting your perspective. Tonight: A must appearance.

B-11

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Mom learns son’s wife is cheating

Dear Annie: Thirteen years ago, my son met “Nadia.” She became pregnant and brought my first beautiful grandchild into the world. After they married, I did many things for her and enjoyed her company. They now have another child, a son who is 8. Nadia was fired from her job after breaking some rules — I don’t know which ones — and hasn’t worked since. She also doesn’t cook, clean or do laundry. My son does all of these things after a full day at work and then helps the kids with their homework and bedtime routines. I’m a former private investigator. A few years ago, I caught Nadia cheating and discovered that the other man lived with his mother and had custody of his child. I didn’t want my grandchildren to have divorced parents, so instead of telling my son, I called this man’s mother. I told her to end things, or I’d inform her ex-daughter-in-law about the affair and she could gain custody of those kids. The affair ended. Last year, I noticed that Nadia was paying a lot of attention to my granddaughter’s horse trainer. A mutual friend told me that Nadia has been sleeping with this man for two years. Nadia texted graphic details to this friend, which she forwarded to me. The friend told my son about the affair, and he sent Nadia packing. But she convinced him that the friend was lying, and he took her back. Annie, I have the proof in those text messages, but I don’t think my son can handle it. Their home life is a disaster. My grandson has stress migraines, and my granddaughter is angry. It upsets me terribly to see my son treated in such a degrading way. Do I share the truth or wait until the children are grown? — Grandmother in Distress Dear Grandmother: We understand your concern, but you are already overly involved in your

son’s messed-up marriage. Please don’t put evidence in front of him, forcing him to confront a situation he is trying to deal with in his own way. The very best thing you can do is encourage your son to get his family into counseling. Explain that it is for the children’s sake. They are truly suffering. Dear Annie: My son and his fiancee mailed wedding invitations, and for some reason, friends and relatives sent back the RSVP cards and included additional guests who were not listed on the invitation. Why do people assume they can do this? My son now has to call each one and tell them they cannot bring extra guests. Should there have been a note in the invitation stating that the wedding venue is small and seating is limited? — Aggravated Mother Dear Aggravated: No. Your son is handling this correctly by calling. We don’t know whether it is simply colossal nerve, a sense of entitlement, the fact that weddings have become less formal or that TV shows and movies often show invited guests bringing along their friends, but it is not uncommon for people to assume it’s OK to add extra people to the RSVP. It is not. Dear Annie: Thanks for printing the letter from “Saddened.” I am so relieved to know I am not the only husband with the same dilemma. It’s hard for a male to confess he has these feelings and needs without sounding like a nag. I wish there was an answer. Everything the writer said is the same at my home, including my deep love for my very uninterested wife of 44 years. I would show her this column, but it would only start tears. If she would just initiate holding hands or give me an occasional kiss, that would be so cool. I know she truly loves me, but she feels no need for physical intimacy. — O.

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You’ll want to get through a problem quickly. Be careful as to how assertive you are. Your actions could make someone more defensive. Tonight: Find your friends. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Approach forthcoming news with an eye toward making the right decision, and others will follow your lead. Tonight: Out late. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might want to look at a situation that surrounds a potential trip. You have a unique way of handling pressure. Tonight: Try something new. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You could be worn out by a sequence of events that emerge from out of the blue. Know when to push back and say “enough.” Tonight: Let the good times roll.

Cryptoquip

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You could be taking on too much, even for you. Allow greater give-andtake within a relationship. Tonight: Sort through invitations. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH Dive into work, and get as much done as possible. Everyone has his or her limits, and you are no different. What works best for you? Tonight: Relax at home. Jacqueline Bigar

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, June 2, 2014

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

TUNDRA

PEANUTS

B-12

NON SEQUITUR

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

RETAIL

ZITS

PICKLES

LUANN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE ARGYLE SWEATER


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