Santa Fe New Mexican, June 4, 2014

Page 1

Seventh-seeded Sharapova advances to French Open semifinals Sports, B-4

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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

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Legislature: Rep. Salazar poised to keep seat PAge A-4

Voting-rights suit filed Lawyer: Exclusion of independents from primaries is unconstitutional. PAge B-1

Treasurer: Eichenberg wins heated contest PAge A-5

Dems pick King

More WIPP funds sought New Mexico senators request additional money for recovery efforts. PAge B-1

Crash closes I-25 exit

AG will challenge Gov. Martinez in general election

City employee jailed after crashing into a truck carrying drums of hydrochloric acid near Cerrillos Road. PAge B-1

3 ELECTIONS 2014 UNOFFICIAL RESULTS

DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES

Governor

35% ✓Gary King

23% 20% 14% 8%

Alan Webber Lawrence Rael Howie Morales Linda Lopez

State treasurer

53%

✓Tim Eichenberg 47% John Wertheim

Mayor’s transition team details challenges

Santa Fe County Commission District 1

43%

✓Henry Roybal 42% Daniel Mayfield 15% Kenneth T. Borrego U.S. 3rd Congressional District

88%

✓Ben Ray Luján 12% Robert Blanch

Report cites outdated tech, low morale, key vacancies

First Judicial District

36%

By Uriel J. Garcia

The New Mexican

✓David Thomson 33% Matthew Wilson 31% Yvonne Quintana

Just three months into his term, Mayor Javier Gonzales received sobering news from his transition team Tuesday. City government is handicapped by outdated technology, low morale among employees and vacancies in key positions. The findings were part of a 140-page report presented to city councilors and the mayor in a four-hour, lightly attended meeting at City Hall. All eight members of the council showed up, but halfway through, there were only three left. Those who left the meeting promised they would review the report. The city managers said last week the report would be presented either Wednesday or

Gary King speaks to supporters in Albuquerque after winning the New Mexico Democratic gubernatorial nomination Tuesday. CRAIG FRITZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

ALBUQUERQUE ew Mexico Democrats on Tuesday nominated Attorney General Gary King as their candidate to run against Republican Gov. Susana Martinez in the fall. That was the easy part. Now King faces an incumbent governor who continues to score high in approval ratings, who is sitting on $4.3 million in campaign funds, and who is in command of an experienced attack machine that seems eager for the general election to begin.

N

Please see TRANSITION, Page A-6

Top military officer: POW case not closed

Public Regulation Commission District 4

46%

✓Lynda Lovejoy 32% Theresa Becenti-Aguilar 21% Edward Michael

Election Judge Bill Brown, left, helps Michael Romero cast his ballot Tuesday at the Santa Fe County Fairgrounds. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Please see KINg, Page A-4

u Santa Fe County sees lukewarm turnout ... u Weh wins GOP nod for U.S. Senate ............. u District judge, PRC, Rio Arriba races .......... u National primary election roundup .............

PAge A-4 PAge A-4 PAge A-5 PAge A-6

Roybal has edge in commissioner’s race

WASHINGTON — The nation’s top military officer said Tuesday the Army could still throw the book at Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, the young soldier who walked away from his unit in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan and into five years of captivity by the Taliban. Charges are still a possibility, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said as criticism mounted in Congress about Bowe releasing five high-level TalBergdahl iban detainees in exchange for Bergdahl. The Army might still pursue an investigation, Dempsey said, and those results could conceivably lead to desertion or other charges. Congress began holding hearings and briefings into the deal that swapped Bergdahl for Taliban officials who had been held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and several lawmak-

Newcomer takes slim lead over incumbent By Daniel J. Chacón

The New Mexican

Final unofficial vote counts showed political newcomer Henry P. Roybal winning by a slim margin over incumbent Santa Fe County Commis-

Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Please see POW, Page A-6

Index

Calendar A-2

Classifieds C-3

Comics B-8

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Crosswords B-7, C-4

Lotteries A-2

sioner Daniel “Danny” Mayfield on Tuesday night. The lead see-sawed through the night as results were tallied from precincts in the commission’s District 1, which covers northern Santa Fe County, including parts of the cities of Santa Fe and Española, as well as five pueblos and numerous villages, including Tesuque, Pojoaque, Nambé and Chimayó.

Mayfield, 47, could not be reached for comment late Tuesday as to whether he would seek a recount. The final numbers posted on the Secretary of State’s Office website showed Roybal with a victory margin of only 1.76 percentage points over Mayfield in a three-way race. “I am honored that you have

Please see COUNTY, Page A-5

Arthur Sze: The poet

reads from Compass Rose, 6 p.m., Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226.

Opinions A-7

57%

✓Gus Martinez 32% Phillip Pacheco 10% Sef Valdez

“We worked hard to get here, but I think the real hard part of the race starts tomorrow morning,” King said in a victory speech to Democrats gathered at the DoubleTree hotel. King was flanked by his wife of 26 years, Yolanda King, and his running mate, Debra Haaland, who was unopposed in the lieutenant governor primary. He called them “two of the most powerful women in New Mexico.” “This is the battle for the future of New Mexico, and it starts tomorrow,” King said. New Mexico has wallowed at or near the bottom of the nation in quality of life for

By Lolita C. Baldor and Robert Burns

The Associated Press

Santa Fe County assessor

Sports B-4

Taste C-1

Santa Fe County magistrate 65% ✓Donita Sena 35% Marcus Romero Santa Fe County probate judge 43% ✓Shannon Broderick Bulman 40% Katherine Basham 17% Frank Fischer REPUBLICAN PRIMARIES

U.S. Senate

63%

✓Allen Weh 37% David Clements

State House District 43

53%

✓Geoff Rodgers 47% Vincent Chiravalle

Today

Obituaries

Mostly sunny, breezy and hot. High 96, low 55.

Anthony A. Baca, Albuquerque, June 2 Magda Greenwald Klein, 101, Santa Fe, May 30

PAge A-8

PAge B-2

Travel C-2

Time Out B-7

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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

NATION&WORLD

MarketWatch DOW JONES RUSSELL 2000

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NSA says use of facial recognition within legal boundaries

Decades later, bodies of abandoned kids found By Terrence McCoy The Washington Post

Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — The National Security Agency complies with legal restrictions when it comes to using facial recognition technology on citizens, according to the agency’s new director. “We do not do this in some unilateral basis against U.S. citizens,” Admiral Michael S. Rogers said at a Bloomberg Government cybersecurity conference in Washington on Tuesday. “We have very specific restrictions when it comes to U.S. persons.” The NSA will encounter the communications and images of Americans while pursuing its mission of collecting foreign intelligence and trying to prevent terrorism, Rogers said. In those cases, it can’t collect intelligence on U.S. citizens unless it meets the appropriate legal constraints, said Rogers, who became NSA director in April. Rogers inherits an agency grappling with a domestic and international backlash over spying exposed in documents leaked by former agency contractor Edward Snowden. Congress is considering measures to rein in some of NSA’s data collection. In a wide-ranging interview, Rogers said he wants to change the public focus on what the agency does to how the agency exists to protect the country. The New York Times reported June 1 that the NSA was collecting millions of online images and using facial recognition technology to track suspected terrorists, citing documents leaked by Snowden. Facial-recognition technology uses software to match an image of a person against existing databases, such as police records. The NSA doesn’t access motor vehicle or passport databases to examine images of U.S. citizens, Rogers said. In trying to shift terms of discussion, U.S. agencies and citizens need to come to terms with how data is collected Rogers said. “The idea that you can be totally anonymous in the digital age is increasingly difficult to execute,” he said. “We have framed this debate much too narrow from my perspective. This is much bigger than the National Security Agency.” Rogers said Snowden’s actions were illegal because he stole sensitive documents. However, he said Snowden was “probably not” acting on behalf of others, such as the Russian government. The Senate’s intelligence committee will hold a hearing next week to help develop legislation curbing the NSA’s collection of bulk telephone records and other electronic data, said Sen. Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, the top Republican on the panel.

KEEPING THE MEMORY OF TIANANMEN ALIVE

Protesters wear headbands with a slogan reading ‘Denounce butcher regime’ as they attend a candlelight vigil Tuesday outside the Chinese liaison office in Hong Kong to mark the 25th anniversary of China’s bloody crackdown on Tiananmen Square. For more on the museum that keeps the Tiananmen memory alive, see Travel, Page C-2. KIN CHEUNG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In brief

Thai protesters use movie salute BANGKOK — The three-finger salute from the Hollywood movie The Hunger Games is being used as a real symbol of resistance in Thailand. Protesters against the military coup are flashing the gesture as a silent act of rebellion, and they’re being threatened with arrest if they ignore warnings to stop. Thailand’s military rulers said Tuesday they were monitoring the new form of opposition to the coup. Reporters witnessed the phenomenon and individuals were captured on film making the raised-arm salute. “Raising three fingers has become a symbol in calling for fundamental political rights,” said anticoup activist Sombat Boonngamanong on his Facebook page.

El-Sissi tells Egypt: ‘Time to work’ CAIRO — Egypt’s presidentelect, the former army chief AbdelFattah el-Sissi, told Egyptians it is now “time to work” to rebuild the economy after he was officially declared the landslide winner of last week’s election, restoring a career military man to the country’s top office. Thousands celebrated in public squares around the country with cheers, fireworks and pro-military songs after the Election Commission officially announced el-Sissi’s victory with nearly 97 percent of the vote in an election that it said saw a turnout of just over 47 percent.

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El-Sissi brings Egypt into a new phase in its tumultuous drama since the 2011 pro-democracy uprising that ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak after 29 years in power. The following year, Islamist Mohammed Morsi became the country’s first democratically elected president, only to face massive protests by millions against him and his Muslim Brotherhood. El-Sissi, then the army chief, ousted Morsi last summer and led a heavy crackdown on the Brotherhood and other Islamists that killed hundreds and jailed thousands more. The now retired field marshal was elevated to heroic status among his supporters, who hailed his as the hope for restoring stability after three years of turmoil.

U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan As of Tuesday, at least 2,182 members of the U.S. military had died in Afghanistan as a result of the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001, according to an Associated Press count. The latest identification reported by the military: Pfc. Jacob H. Wykstra, 21, of Thornton, Colo., died May 28, in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, of injuries sustained as a result of an aircraft accident; assigned 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Fort Carson, Colo.

Bridge closes when support pillars tilt WILMINGTON, Del. — Highway engineers say a crucial bridge on the Eastern Seaboard’s interstate highway system could imperil drivers if traffic is allowed back on it.

The bridge, near Wilmington, was closed Monday when its support pillars were found to be tilting. The Interstate 495 bridge won’t reopen anytime soon, highway officials said Tuesday, and the 90,000 vehicles that cross it every day are being diverted onto the main north highway, I-95. Engineers say ground under the columns moved and caused the supports to tilt. Out of concern for public safety, they do not want to allow traffic back on it until they find out what caused the shift.

Veterans kept waiting 90 days TOPEKA, Kan. — The problems with delayed care and unauthorized wait lists that caused a furor at a Veterans Affairs health care campus in Arizona existed at several facilities in the Midwest, but in much smaller numbers, VA officials said in letters to two U.S. senators. The Department of Veterans Affairs maintained 10 such “secret waiting lists” of military veterans in need of care at facilities in Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, the letters said. They also said at least 96 veterans waited more than 90 days for treatment at seven facilities in those states, including 26 in St. Louis and 19 in Columbia, Mo. The VA is conducting a systemwide investigation after it was found that the Phoenix VA Health Care System had about 1,700 veterans on secret waiting lists, and another that had 1,400 waited over 90 days for primary care appointments. The scandal led to the resignation last week of Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki. The Associated Press

In a town in western Ireland, where castle ruins pepper green landscapes, there’s a 6-foot stone wall that once surrounded a place called The Home. Between 1925 and 1961, thousands of “fallen women” and their “illegitimate” children passed through The Home, run by the Bon Secours nuns in Tuam. Many of the women, after paying a penance of indentured servitude for their out-of-wedlock pregnancy, left The Home for work and lives in other parts of Ireland and beyond. Some of their children were not so fortunate. More than five decades after The Home was closed and destroyed — where a housing development and children’s playground now stands — what happened to nearly 800 of those abandoned children has now emerged: Their bodies were piled into a massive septic tank sitting in the back of the structure and forgotten, with neither gravestones nor coffins. “The bones are still there,” local historian Catherine Corless, who uncovered the origins of the mass grave in a batch of never-beforereleased documents, told The Washington Post in a phone interview. “The children who died in The Home, this was them.” The grim findings, which are being investigated by police, provide a glimpse into a particularly dark time for unmarried pregnant women in Ireland, where societal and religious mores stigmatized them. Without means to support themselves, women by the hundreds wound up at The Home. “When daughters became pregnant, they were ostracized completely,” Corless said. According to documents Corless provided The Irish Mail on Sunday, malnutrition and neglect killed many of the children, while others died of measles, convulsions, TB, gastroenteritis and pneumonia. Infant mortality at The Home was staggeringly high. “If you look at the records, babies were dying two a week, but I’m still trying to figure out how they could [put the bodies in a septic tank],” Corless said. Special kinds of neglect and abuse were reserved for Home Babies, as locals call them. They remember how the local nuns accentuated the differences between them and the others. They remember how, as one local told Irish Central, they were “usually gone by school age — either adopted or dead.” According to Irish Central, a 1944 local report described the children living at The Home as “emaciated,” “pot-bellied,” “fragile” and with “flesh hanging loosely on limbs.”

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Wednesday, June 4 CHILDREN’S STORY HOUR: Readings from picture books for children up to age 5; 10:45-11:30 a.m., Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: At 5:30 p.m. at the Santa Fe Public Library’s Main Branch, 145 Washington Ave., a program titled “Understanding the Language of Dreams” is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. Reservations required. Call 982-3214. 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 at 6 p.m. Chabad, 509 Camino de Los Marquez, No. 4, will have a dairy dinner and services. For more information, visit www. chabadsantafe.com. SOUTHWEST POTTERY DEMONSTRATIONS: Native artists discuss and demonstrate their

Lotteries techniques, clays and styles, 1-3 p.m., 710 Camino Lejo, Museum Hill. LIBRARY CRAFTS: Make musical instruments from recycled materials; 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. For ages 5-12 years old. Free and all supplies provided; Main Library, 145 Washington Ave.; 955-6783. FAMILY STORY TIME: Families can hear stories and participate in hands-on activities, 6:30-7:30 p.m. at La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; call 955-4863. 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. 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.

SOUTHWEST SLEEPERS: Learn about sleep disorders, treatment and what’s new in sleep medicine, 5 p.m. in Room 433 In the Building of Health, Math, and Sciences, Santa Fe Community College, 6401 Richards Ave. Call 438-3101 or email pat.donahue@swentnm. com for more information. SFCC PLANETARIUM: Live presentation at 8 p.m., followed by an outdoor viewing of the night sky. Adults $5, preteens and seniors $3, free to students of the college. 6401 Richards Avenue, 4281744. Saturday, June 7 FREE FISHING DAY: In New Mexico, this is a special day when no license is required for residents or nonresidents. Bag limits and all other fishing regulations apply.

NIGHTLIFE Wednesday, June 4 DUEL BREWING: Contraband, reggae/rocksteady/ska, 7-10 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: Guitarist/singer John Kurzweg, 8:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. HUGH LAURIE: Musician/composer; with the Copper Bottom Boys, 7:30 p.m., the Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Guitarist

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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035. Wily Jim, Western swingabilly, 7-10 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. THE PANTRY RESTAURANT: Gary Vigil 5:30-8 p.m., 1820 Cerrillos Road. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www. santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service @sfnewmexican.com.


NATION & WORLD

Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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As civil war rages, Syrians vote for president Voters prick fingers, draw blood to mark Assad’s name on ballot

opposition-held areas of Syria where fighting persisted, with some rebels derisively dropping their shoes in a phony ballot box in a show of disgust. Western leaders also called it a sham. A victory for Assad is likely to bolster his base of support at home and provide further evidence that he has no intention of relinquishing power, making a protracted conflict the likely outcome in fighting that has already lasted three years. Fears that the rebels would rain down mortar shells on governmentcontrolled territory did not materialize, but fighting persisted. State-run media reported that voting closed on midnight Tuesday, and

By Diaa Hadid and Albert Aji

The Associated Press

DAMASCUS, Syria — Against a backdrop of civil war, tens of thousands of Syrians voted in governmentcontrolled cities and towns Tuesday to give President Bashar Assad a new seven-year mandate, with some even marking the ballots with their own blood. The carefully choreographed election was ignored and even mocked in

election officials began the process of checking the number of votes against lists of registered voters to ensure numbers matched. Voting took place only in government-controlled areas, excluding much of northern and eastern Syria. Tens of thousands of Syrians abroad voted last week, although many of the more than 2.7 million Syrian refugees across the region either abstained or were excluded by law. There were ostentatious shows of support for the 48-year-old Assad, who has ruled Syria since 2000, when he took over after the death of his father, Hafez. There was a carnival-like atmosphere, with voters singing, banging

drums and dancing with Syrian flags. Chants of “God, Syria and Bashar!” were heard. At a polling station in the upscale Dama Rose hotel in central Damascus, a blue cup filled with pins was set out for those who wanted to vote in blood. Some pricked their fingers repeatedly to draw enough blood to mark the circle under Assad’s name on the ballot — an act of allegiance and patriotism that has been used in previous elections under both Assads. Most voted in ink, though, and some made their choice for Assad in full sight of other voters and TV cameras instead of using a curtained booth for privacy.

They said re-electing Assad would give him more legitimacy to find a solution to the devastating conflict that opposition activists say has killed more than 160,000 of their countrymen, about a third of them civilians. Most Syrians said they believed some sort of reconciliation had to take place alongside the military crackdown, which they saw as inevitable. The government has portrayed the election as the solution to the conflict, but there is no indication it will halt the violence or mend a bitterly divided nation. Despite the civil war, Assad has retained support among a significant section of the population.

Obama affirms ‘commitment’ to Central and Eastern Europe of Security and International Affairs at the University of Lower Silesia in Wroclaw, said WARSAW, Poland — PresiObama’s announcement was dent Barack Obama flew here just “a smoke screen” because Tuesday to unveil a $1 billion after two wars in Iraq and security plan intended to demAfghanistan, the U.S. military is onstrate the United States’ drained. “rock-solid commitment” to Obama arrived at a tense time stand with Central and Eastern in the region. Although Russia Europe against Russian aggreshas been pulling troops back sion, but it did not settle nerves from the border with Ukraine, rattled by the crisis in neighboring Ukraine. violence has continued to erupt Arriving here for the start of a in the eastern part of Ukraine four-day swing through Europe as pro-Russian separatists wage certain to be dominated by the a low-grade insurgency against President Barack Obama, continuing tension with Mosleft, meets with Polish Presi- the government in Kiev. cow, Obama announced a prodent Bronislaw Komorowski Obama used the visit to insist gram to expand military trainon Tuesday in Poland. that Russia stop the flow of ing, joint exercises and troop ALIK KEPLICZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS militants and weapons across rotations while prepositioning the border and use its influence equipment in the region to bol- said Joachim Brudzinski, presito press the separatists to stand ster defenses for U.S. allies. dent of the executive committee down. “Our commitment to Poland’s of Poland’s largest opposition security, as well as the security party, Law and Justice. “It lacks of our allies in Central and East- specifics.” ern Europe, is a cornerstone of Krzysztof Kubiak, a foreign our own security and it is sacro- policy expert from the Institute sanct,” Obama said. The security program he announced will require congressional approval, so it meant Authorized Rolex Service Buying fine timepieces no immediate assistance for Poland or other allies. 216 Mckenzie Street | Santa Fe, NM Obama offered none of the 505-992-0200 www.WCWTimePieces.com short-term reinforcements or the permanent base sought by Warsaw, and some leading Polish figures expressed disappointment. “President Obama’s declaraFast RepaiR tion has left us a bit hungry,” By Peter Baker and Rick Lyman

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2014 ELECTIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Weh wins Republican nomination for U.S. Senate By Jeri Clausing

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Retired Marine Col. Allen Weh easily defeated political newcomer David Clements for the unlikely chance to unseat popular Democratic Sen. Tom Udall in November. The 71-year-old Weh had 64 percent of the vote in unofficial returns from the GOP primary on Tuesday. A wealthy Albuquerque businessman, Weh spent more than $200,000 of his own money against Clements, a political newcomer with little cash who surprised many by winning 47 percent of delegate support at the state convention earlier this year. Weh is a former state Republican Party chairman who made a run for governor four years ago, coming in second behind Gov. Susana Martinez in a five-way primary.

But despite his veteran status and deep pockets, political watchers have said the GOP has little chance of winning over Udall, a popular former congressman and state attorney general with Allen Weh $3 million on hand. A recent computer model of races conducted for The New York Times showed Udall is one of 14 Senate incumbents with a 99 percent chance of retaining their seats. University of New Mexico political science professor Gabriel Sanchez noted Udall has high approval ratings that will make it difficult for any GOP contender to raise money. Weh, however, insisted those behind the predictions “just don’t understand.” “Things are changing,” he said Tues-

day night from his election headquarters. “They are going to change this year. And my message is real simple: If you like what’s going on in Washington, send Tom Udall back. But if you don’t like what’s going on, you’ve got to change the people.” Part of Weh’s campaign has been to stress the need for more military veterans over lawyers in the Senate, especially in light of the recent revelations of secret waiting lists and delayed care at Veterans Affairs medical centers around the country. Udall is an attorney. Weh served two tours in the Vietnam War in the Marines before rising to the rank of colonel and retiring in 1997. He also served in the Persian Gulf War and in Somalia. On Tuesday night, Weh seized on the Republican anger over the Obama administration’s exchange of five highlevel Taliban detainees for Sgt. Bowe

King: Party united behind its nominee Continued from Page A-1 children during Martinez’s years in office, King said. He said Martinez has failed in her Cabinet appointments, and that he would make changes at the top of the Children, Youth and Families and Human Services departments, among others, if elected. Some expect Martinez to begin running attack ads almost immediately in an attempt to define King in a negative light before he has even had a chance to really introduce himself to the general electorate. In a “post-election memo” issued to news outlets shortly after King was declared the winner, the governor’s campaign bashed King as “an exceptionally flawed candidate.” On the bright side for the Democrat, King has a united party behind him. All five Democratic primary candidates refrained from attacking one another throughout the primary. King, 59, is the son of the late Bruce King, who served three terms as governor between 1971 and 1994. Gary King has been state attorney general for more than seven years. Before that, he served 12 years in the state Legislature, representing District 50 south of Santa Fe. He also has worked as general counsel and senior environmental scientist with Advanced Sciences Inc. as a policy adviser and director of the Office of Worker and Community Transition at the U.S. Department of Energy. Despite his victory in the primary, just how much support King can draw in the general election, even among Democrats, is an open question. One Democratic activist at the DoubleTree gathering early in the evening said he was backing Sen. Linda Lopez of Albuquerque for governor, but he wasn’t expecting her to win. “Gary’s probably going to win, but I’m afraid he won’t get people to work for him. Some people had misgivings about [candidate Alan] Webber because he’s a newcomer, but I think they would have worked for him.” State Rep. Christine Trujillo, D-Albuquerque, who was wearing a King sticker, said some people weren’t excited about King “because he’s not ‘sexy.’ But he’s well seasoned and he has the experience to do the job.” Two of King’s primary opponents, State Sen. Howie Morales, D-Silver City, and Alan Webber, a retired magazine publisher who was voters’ favorite in his home county of Santa Fe, were at the DoubleTree for the King speech.

“I’m disappointed that I disappointed other people,” Webber told The New Mexican. He said he’ll support King. “We’ve got to do what we can to get Gary elected,” he said. That includes fundraising, said Webber, who led the Democratic candidates in fundraising. The Martinez campaign, in its memo, said, “While Democrats have spent four years attacking Governor Martinez and focused all of their primary campaign fire on her, New Mexicans have not been exposed to the serious flaws of Gary King. “Demonstrating how remarkably flawed Gary King is … those who know King best like him least. This was underscored when King finished last in the Democratic pre-primary convention and further illustrated with his anemic primary fundraising effort. And today, two-thirds of Democrats rejected Gary King in favor of someone else.” Earlier this week, Martinez’s camp said King’s “tenure as attorney general has been marked by incompetence and failure, the result of bungling corruption case after corruption case.” Martinez isn’t the first to call King’s fundraising anemic. According to the latest campaign finance report filed last week, King reported only $75,518 still in the bank. Two other Democratic candidates, Webber and Lawrence Rael, reported having more money than King. The Democratic Governor’s Association last month said it did not plan to spend any money in the New Mexico gubernatorial race. In previous New Mexico gubernatorial elections in recent history, the DGA has been a major source of funds. King, in his speech, tried to use his lagging campaign finances to his advantage. “Yesterday, my opponent was in Dallas raising money from the top 1 percent of the country, and I want to tell you something: This race is not about money. This race is about the people of the state of New Mexico.” King told the crowd at the DoubleTree, “I’m a marathon runner, not a sprinter.” In fact, he won the primary running a slow but steady race. King jumped into the race in the summer of 2012 with state Sen. Linda Lopez of Albuquerque joining in a few months later. But last fall, various Democratic officials around the state expressed dissatisfaction with the Democratic

field at that point. “There’s a lot of malaise,” said one elected New Mexico Democrat who asked not to be named. Both King and Lopez are “fine public servants,” he said. “But neither is doing a good job of inspiring Democrats,” he said, echoing what several others said. Within a few weeks after that comment was published, Morales jumped in the race, followed by Webber and Rael. King suffered what seemed at the time to be a big setback when he came in last at the Democrats’ pre-primary convention, which Morales won. But with his ample name recognition — and the lack thereof for his opponents — King was first in all of the public polls taken during the primary. After his victory speech, King talked to The New Mexican about some of the issues on which he might be vulnerable. Asked about the fact that his office has been the target of protests over shootings by the Albuquerque Police Department, King said: “I’ve assigned my investigators to look at it, and I think people know they can rely on me to do the right thing.” He added, “People that want an instantaneous solution to the APD problem are probably not going to be happy with me, but we’re going to do the right thing, and that’s what we’ve always done.” King also talked about last year’s shake-up of the state behavioral health system. Some Democrats have criticized King for keeping most of an outside audit of 15 providers secret while an investigation by his office has gone on for months. “I think it’s become clear to people that the Human Services Department acted precipitously,” King said. “That has caused significant problems in providing services to New Mexicans. So the part we’re working on is indeed to figure out if there’s fraud or not, and we have to be meticulous about that too. If people want to criticize me for doing my job in an ethical manner, I’m willing to take the criticism.” Asked about King and the behavioral health issue, state Sen. Tim Keller, now the Democrats’ nominee for state auditor, said, “There’s an opportunity for a refreshing of his policies out of the Attorney General’s Office, so he’s got six months to show he should be governor.” Reporter Patrick Malone contributed to this report.

Bergdahl, a young soldier who walked away from his unit in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan and into five years of captivity by the Taliban. “I cannot believe what the administration has done in exchanging five hardened killers for what now appears to be an Army deserter,” Weh said. “… That’s ludicrous. That puts a target on the back and a prison value on the back of every American serviceman and woman serving overseas, every CIA agent, every foreign service officer.” Weh joined the race in January and has raised nearly $600,000, including $217,000 of his own money, according to the latest reports. Clements, an attorney from Las Cruces, started his grassroots campaign in November, raising and spending about $40,000, the last filings showed. In other primary races, two political newcomers were vying for the Repub-

lican nomination for the 1st Congressional District seat currently held by Democrat Michelle Lujan Grisham. Mike Frese, a 66-year-old scientist and small business owner from Corrales, defeated Richard Priem, a 64-year-old businessman and retired Army veteran from Albuquerque, with 65 percent of the vote. For the 3rd Congressional seat, Democratic three-term incumbent Rep. Ben Ray Luján easily defeated challenger Robert Blanch, an assistant district attorney in Albuquerque, with 87 percent in unofficial returns. Luján will face Republican Jefferson Byrd of Tucumcari in November. There were no primary races for Southern New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District seat held by Republican Steve Pearce, who will run against Democratic attorney Roxanne “Rocky” Laura from Carlsbad in November.

Salazar poised to keep District 40 House seat Longtime representative cruises past challenger By Milan Simonich The New Mexican

State Rep. Nick Salazar, who has been in office for 42 years, was on his way to winning a bruising Democratic primary election Tuesday. Salazar, 85, of Ohkay Owingeh, was leading by a comfortable margin over challenger Bengie Regensberg. Regensberg, of Cleveland in Mora County, had said during his campaign that voters should displace Salazar because he is too old and ineffective to continue in the House of Representatives. Regensberg’s campaign tactics riled a number of sitting House members, who sent contributions to Salazar. Regensberg himself is a former House member. By winning the House District 40 primary, Salazar will advance to run against Republican James R. Gallegos of Cimarron in the general election. Three other longtime incumbents in the House were locked in tight primary races. In House District 29 in Albuquerque, Republican Rep. Tom Anderson was trailing David Adkins. Democrat Ronnie Martinez will face the winner. Rep. Mary Helen Garcia, D-Las Cruces, was running second in a three-way primary. She trailed Bealquin Bill Gomez, though results were coming in at a trickle, and it was too close to call. Another Democrat, Rep. Roger Madalena of Jemez Pueblo, pulled ahead after what began as a neckand-neck race with challenger Orlando Lucero in House District 65. Madalena has been a state representative since 1985. Also up in the air was the Republican primary in House District 43. Geoffrey Rodgers and Vincent Chiravalle, both of Los Alamos, competed for the nomination in that contest. The winner will run against a woman whom many consider among the more vulnerable Democrats. She is one-term Rep.

Stephanie Garcia Richard, also of Los Alamos. With the Los Alamos portion of the district reporting, Rodgers had a lead of about 7 percentage points. But Rodgers said it was too early to call the race because returns were lagging in the other three counties that make up the district: Rio Arriba, Sandoval and Santa Fe. In House District 9, even a well-financed candidate could not mount much of a challenge to Rep. Patty Lundstrom, D-Gallup. She cruised to an easy win over three opponents, including Olin Clawson, who loaned his campaign about $104,000. It was an enormous amount for a low-income district. Lundstrom, who won her eighth term in the House, raised about half as much money as Clawson. A newcomer to state politics, Teresa Smith De Cherif, declared victory in the Democratic primary in House District 7 in Valencia County. She defeated former state representative Andrew Barreras in a tight race. Smith De Cherif, a physician from unincorporated Los Lunas, will run against one-term Republican Rep. Kelly Fajardo of Belen in the general election Democrats now control the House of Representatives 37-33. They see the seat that Fajardo holds as especially vulnerable. She intentionally skipped a vote this year on raising the state minimum wage. In House District 5, parts of McKinley and San Juan counties, Doreen W. Johnson pulled ahead of Charles Long. The winner will face sitting Rep. Sandra Jeff, a Democrat who failed to qualify for the primary ballot. Jeff, who lists her residence as Crownpoint, says she will run as a write-in candidate in the fall. In House District 70, Rep. Tomas Salazar of Las Vegas was leading in a rematch race. His opponent is former representative Richard Vigil of Ribera, who lost the seat to Salazar two years ago. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at santafenewmexican.com.

Santa Fe County polling stations see lukewarm turnout By Robert Nott The New Mexican

Don’t tell Robert Moses you have a valid reason for not voting. The 86-year-old, legally blind, wheelchair-bound Santa Fean was so determined to cast his ballot that he actually had an ambulance pick him up after he voted at Chaparral Elementary School around 12:30 p.m. Tuesday. “This is a democracy, and a lot of countries don’t permit the same voting rights,” he said as the ambulance pulled up to give a ride to him and his wife, Agnes, 88, after they voted. “It’s time for people to wake up.” He said he had never missed an election since he was a teen, and that’s partly because his father, the late John Moses, served as both governor and senator in North Dakota. By the time final, unofficial numbers for Santa Fe County were posted late Tuesday night, totals in key Democratic primary races indicated the voter turnout was only slightly

higher than in 2010, when Diane Denish was running uncontested for the gubernatorial nomination. About 29 percent of eligible Democrats had cast ballots Tuesday, compared to just under 24 percent in 2010. Roughly 11 percent of eligible voters registered as Republicans had cast ballots in Santa Fe County. Statewide in the 2010 primary election — the last gubernatorial election in New Mexico — 135,965 Democrats and 122,649 Republicans cast ballots. About 24 percent of registered Democrats cast ballots and 34 percent of Republicans. GOP turnout was up significantly because of a hotly contested gubernatorial race, which was won by Susana Martinez. Turnout was expected to be higher this year, with five Democrats running for governor. Statewide totals were not immediately available Tuesday night. A man who identified himself only as Jim said he was the fourth person to vote during

Precinct 29 voters arrive Tuesday at their polling station at the Santa Fe County Fairgrounds. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

the 15 minutes after the polls opened at the Fort Marcy Recreation Complex. “It’s important to vote, especially when you want to change things,” he said. He was for Gary King in the governor’s race because “I think he has the best chance to unseat the current governor.” King may benefit from name recognition, said Republican JoAnn Eastham Tapia, who spent the day driving registered seniors from both the Demo-

cratic and Republican camps to voting locales within Santa Fe. She said many of the Democrats told her they were voting for King because of that familiarity with the name. “Some of them think it’s Bruce,” she said, referring to Gary’s late father, a former governor. She didn’t care who would win the right to run against Martinez but said, “I hope it’s the easiest one for [incumbent Gov. Susana Martinez] to beat.”

Webber, who showed up at Fort Marcy around 7:30 a.m. to greet voters, said he was feeling confident about his success but predicted it will be a late night for those awaiting results in that race, given there are five candidates. The Santa Fe County Clerk’s Office reported a couple of problems by 10:30 a.m. At Ramirez Thomas Elementary School, voters in Precinct 37 discovered that the machines would not accept Democratic ballots for a while. The problem was fixed by midmorning, according to County Clerk Geraldine Salazar. Presiding judges at that site said that as of 11:45 a.m., 55 voters had cast ballots there. As of Monday, about 47,300 Democrats and 29,950 Republicans had already cast absentee or early votes, according to the Secretary of State’s Office. In Santa Fe, 5,042 Democrats and 548 Republicans already had cast absentee or early ballots by Saturday. According to the County Clerk’s Office, 62,243

Democrats and 16,443 Republicans were eligible to vote in Tuesday’s primary election. Voters who register as independents or “declined to state” cannot vote in primary elections. Roy Padilla, who backed Gus Martinez in the Santa Fe County assessor’s race, said his 1941 Dodge Harvester truck was attracting more voters than Martinez on Tuesday. Padilla sat by the truck, which was decorated with American flags and military and patriotic symbols, as well as a Martinez campaign sign, outside the Chavez Center. He said most people passing by were stopping to talk about the truck, not politics. Padilla, an Army veteran who served during the Korea and Vietnam wars, said he got an offer for $30,000 for the truck Tuesday. He won’t sell. But, given the interest in the vehicle, he said the state should have found a way to put it on the ballot in one of the races. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.


2014 ELECTIONS

Eichenberg wins treasurer race By Milan Simonich

The New Mexican

Tim Eichenberg won the mudslinging Democratic primary election for state treasurer on Tuesday night. Eichenberg moved slightly ahead of rival John Wertheim in the early returns, but then stretched his advantage. Wertheim, 46, turned the normally sleepy treasurer’s race into a high-profile slugfest during the last two weeks by running a series of ads accusing Eichenberg of bigotry. Eichenberg, 62, bristled at Wertheim’s allegations of discrimination based on race, gender and sexual orientation. “I’ve never discriminated against anybody in my life,” Eichenberg said. For his part, Wertheim maintained that every allegation he made in his ads was true. If nothing else, the ads tightened the race and intensified bad feelings between factions of the Democratic Party. Sam Bregman, the state party chairman, denounced Wertheim, calling his charges and ads “despicable.” Meanwhile, Diane Denish, who was the Democratic nominee for governor four years ago, stood by Wertheim and vouched for his ads. She said he was only being

truthful in his charges against Eichenberg. Eichenberg tried to counter Wertheim’s allegations of bigotry by focusing on one point. Eichenberg had the support of state Sens. Michael Sanchez and Gerald Ortiz y Pino, two liberal lions with whom Tim Eichenberg served during his Eichenberg four years in the Senate. Former senator Dede Feldman also publicly backed Eichenberg. Eichenberg said those three, with their long record of advocating for the underdog, would never support someone who worked against Hispanics, women and gay people. Wertheim’s most effective allegation against Eichenberg focused on same-sex couples, although that ad was also the easiest one to pick apart. Wertheim said Eichenberg, as a state senator, had joined with Republicans to block a bill on civil unions. Eichenberg, in fact, had voted for the bill in 2009. The following year, he said he was trying to save the bill from sure defeat the next year when he asked for a procedural maneuver to prevent it from going to the Judiciary Committee. Wertheim said Eichenberg’s push to shift

the bill to another committee effectively killed it. Both candidates are from Albuquerque. Wertheim is an attorney, and Eichenberg works in real estate and appraisals. Eichenberg was the Bernalillo County treasurer in the mid-1970s, when he was in his 20s. The treasurer serves as New Mexico’s banker, investing the state’s short-term funds and sitting on numerous boards and commissions, including the State Investment Council, the Board of Finance and the Public Employees Retirement Association. But investment tactics and experience in managing money took a back seat in the campaign after Wertheim leveled his charges that Eichenberg had discriminated against various minorities. One question is whether bad blood between the two men will open the door for a Republican win in the treasurer’s race this fall. Rick J. Lopez of Santa Fe is the Republican candidate who will face Eichenberg. He was unopposed in the GOP primary. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at santafenewmexican.com.

District Judge Wilson concedes loss to Thomson By Phaedra Haywood

The New Mexican

Lawyer David Thomson late Tuesday held a slight lead over state District Judge Matthew Wilson in the race for the First Judicial District Division 6 judgeship late Tuesday, and a third candidate, Española attorney Yvonne Quintana, was not far behind. Although numbers were still coming in from Rio Arriba County, Wilson conceded the race, saying his campaign manager told him he had lost to Thomson by about 500 votes in the judicial district, which includes Santa Fe, Los Alamos and Rio Arriba counties. A margin of less than five percentage points separated the three Democratic candidates, according to unofficial results posted on the Secretary of State’s Office website as of about 11 p.m. Tuesday. “My campaign manager is telling me it’s over,” said Wilson, who was appointed last year by Gov. Susana Martinez to fill a vacancy on the District Court bench. “So I’ve kind of accepted that. I’m disappointed with the results. I gave it my best shot, and I think I worked really hard and I’m not embarrassed or ashamed of anything.” Wilson congratulated Thomson, saying, “I think he’ll do a good job for the community.” However, with Rio Arriba County still posting only partial numbers, Quintana said she wouldn’t comment on the outcome of the race until she had seen final results. Thomson could not be reached for comment on the race. No Republican candidates filed for the position, so the winner of the Democratic nomination is expected to take the $111,500-per-year post and preside over a family court docket that includes domestic violence, divorce and child custody cases. Thomson, 45, was a deputy attorney general under Attorney General Gary King and director of litigation under Attorney General Patricia Madrid. He was appointed to a First Judicial District judgeship by former Gov. Bill Richardson in 2010 but lost a re-election bid to District Judge Glenn Ellington. Wilson — a former family court hearing officer for the First Judicial District — has been hearing family law cases in Division 6 since he was appointed to the bench in late 2013 to fill a vacancy created by the retirement of Stephen Pfeffer. State law required that he would have to stand for election, after which he would be subject to a retention vote every six years. Both Thomson and Wilson — who lent their campaigns thousands of dollars — spent about $60,000 on their campaigns, more than four times the approximately $12,000 spent by Quintana, who financed her entire campaign herself. Thomson — a native Santa Fean whose father was an attorney and whose mother was a schoolteacher in Santa Fe — stressed his local roots while campaigning. An informal exit poll conducted at a downtown Santa Fe precinct Tuesday indicated what may have been one of the things that gave him an edge over Wilson, who moved to the area 12 years ago from Southern New Mexico. David Gurule, who works in real estate, told a reporter he cast his vote for Thomson because “I knew his dad very well, and he’s a friend of my nephew’s, and everybody had good things to say about him.” Eleanor B. Ortiz, a retired teacher and administrator, also said she voted for Thomson because she knew him and his family. “I taught school with his mother,” Ortiz said. “He was in my math class at Capshaw Middle School. He’s a good man. He’s a family man, and he’s handsome. And I know how dedicated he is, he was such a great student, and I know he’s smart because he did very well in my class.” District Judges Francis J. Mathew and Sylvia F. Lamar were also up for election to their appointed posts this year, but neither drew opponents.

Nadine Gallegos, a presiding judge for the primary election, receives a round of applause Tuesday after arriving first to the Santa Fe County Administration Building in downtown Santa Fe to deliver her precinct’s ballot box after polls closed. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

County: Gus Martinez wins Dem primary for assessor Continued from Page A-1 elected me as your new commissioner,” Roybal said in a Facebook post late Tuesday night. Mayfield is a former government administrator who retired as chief of staff of the Public Regulation Commission to run successfully for the District 1 seat in 2010. Roybal, 44, who works for Los Alamos National Laboratory as a designer and drafter, had never run for political office before. He previously worked as a draftsman for Santa Fe County government and as a real estate title examiner for Santa Fe Abstract. Roybal has been involved in youth athletics for more than a decade and was endorsed by the Sierra Club Northern New Mexico Group. The third candidate, Kenneth T. Borrego, 53, trailed well behind Mayfield and Roybal. Borrego is a general and electrical contractor who owns a small automobile dealership in Española. The former president and vice president of the Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative Board of Trustees, Borrego suffered a crushing defeat when he ran for re-election for that seat, too. No Republican is running for the position, which means the outcome of the Democratic primary election determines who holds the seat on the county’s five-member governing body for the next four years. District 3 incumbent Robert Anaya of Stanley ran unopposed for a second term.

County assessor A longtime county appraiser appeared to win the Democratic primary for Santa Fe County assessor and will likely go on to replace two-term incumbent Domingo Martinez. Gus Martinez, no relation, defeated two other men in Tuesday’s Democratic race. Since there is no Republican running in November, he will likely assume the office Jan. 1. “Right now, the returns look pretty good, and hopefully this trend continues until all the results have been reported,” Gus Martinez said in a text message. “If it does, I look forward to serving the people as county assessor. As assessor, I will be fair, transparent and accessible.” Gus Martinez has been the chief appraiser for the assessor and decided to seek the top job in early 2013. He raised more than $35,000 and campaigned the longest for the seat, seeking out endorsements from Mayor Javier Gonzales and several county commissioners. He ran against another longtime office employee who is in charge of property mapping, Phillip Pacheco, a Santa Fe native who

grew up on Pacheco Street. Sef Valdez, a lifelong resident of Nambé who is a builder and contractor, also sought the job.

County Magistrate Court A former Santa Fe school board member handily won the job of Santa Fe County Magistrate Court judge by outpolling her opponent in Democratic primary voting. Donita Sena, who served two terms on the school board, beat Marcus Romero to the court’s Division 4 seat by a margin of nearly 2-to-1. No Republican is seeking the position. Romero, 54, is a retired state police lieutenant who served 30 years in law enforcement. For the past five years, Sena, 51, has served as coordinator for the court’s DWI/Drug Court Program, an alternative to incarceration for DWI and drug offenders in need of rehabilitation due to alcoholism and drug addiction. Sena won’t face any Republican opposition in the November general election. Magistrates David A. Segura, George Anaya and Donna Vevacqua-Young ran unopposed.

County probate judge An attorney who has practiced law in Santa Fe for nearly 25 years was leading Tuesday in the race for county probate judge. Shannon Broderick Bulman, 51, worked as assistant general counsel for the state departments of Public Safety and Human Services before starting her own law practice in 1996 with an emphasis on elder law issues, including wills and probate. “I’m hopeful, but who knows?” Bulman said. “It’s pretty close.” The other attorney in the race, Katherine Basham, is the wife of current Santa Fe County Probate Judge Mark Basham, who is term-limited. Basham, 49, who graduated from The University of New Mexico, has been in private practice with her husband since 2001, with a focus on collections work and defending government agencies against civil claims. Frank Fischer, 60, another candidate for the position, is a Santa Fe County probate clerk who has worked for the county nearly 25 years. He began as a carpenter but then took a job as a recording clerk and then as probate clerk when repeated knee injuries made carpentry physically impossible. The probate judge handles informal cases involving uncontested estates, helping settle the estates with decedents’ next of kin or designated representatives.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Lovejoy ahead in PRC race By Susan Montoya Bryan

The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — Former Public Regulation Commissioner Lynda Lovejoy was leading in early returns Tuesday night as she vied for her old seat on the powerful state panel. Unofficial results showed Lovejoy leading incumbent Theresa Becenti-Aguilar and Cibola County businessman Edward Michael in District 4 with about 47 percent of the vote. With no Republican challenger, Tuesday’s primary will effectively decide who wins the seat. The race was tighter in District 5, where former Public Regulation Commissioner Sandy Jones was in a virtual tie Lynda with retired automotive execu- Lovejoy tive Merrie Lee Soules with 51 percent of the vote. The winner in that contest will face Republican incumbent Ben Hall in the general election. Incumbent Republican Pat Lyons ran unopposed in District 2, and there were no Democrats vying for his seat. One of New Mexico’s most powerful and highest-paid commissions, the Public Regulation Commission’s five members decide complex utility and telecommunication issues and regulate transportation, transmission and pipeline companies. The primary follows Monday’s announcement of new federal guidelines for greenhouse-gas emissions from power plants. The commission will play a key role in determining how New Mexico utilities adjust to the federal government’s goals for reducing carbon-dioxide emissions and how much of the costs associated with curbing pollution will be funneled to customers. Two of the Southwest’s largest coal-fired power plants are in District 4, along with significant natural gas, coal and uranium deposits. But many residents in the region still lack basic utilities. The district includes part of the Navajo Nation, several other Native American communities, and parts of Farmington, Gallup and Albuquerque. All three District 4 candidates were raised in rural New Mexico, and Becenti-Aguilar and Lovejoy are Navajo. Lovejoy served previously on the commission and is a former state lawmaker. Michael is a former Cibola County commissioner.

Rio Arriba sheriff trailing former deputy in tight race By Anne Constable

The New Mexican

Rio Arriba County had posted only partial election results by 11:10 p.m. Tuesday night. In the race for county sheriff, incumbent Tommy Rodella was trailing James Lujan, a former Rio Arriba deputy who was fired by Rodella, in a race that was too close to call in the Democratic primary. Joe Mascareñas, a former Rio Arriba sheriff, was in third. The figures posted showed Lujan leading Rodella by a couple of percentage points. Jake Arnold, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, said late Tuesday that Rodella and Lujan were neck and neck in nine precincts. Rodella’s wife, Debbie, was running unopposed for her District 41 seat in the state House of Representatives. In the county’s other high-profile race, four candidates were vying to be the Division 2 Magistrate Court judge: Alexandra C. Naranjo, Rudy Martin, Marlo R. Martinez and Cindy V. Fresquez Maestas. Naranjo was in the lead Tuesday night with nearly 49 percent of the vote, early results showed. Martin, who was appointed to the magistrate position May 15 by Gov. Susana Martinez, a Republican, and will serve until the end of the year, had only about 12 percent of the vote. Naranjo is the daughter of Alex M. Naranjo, a candidate for County Commission. She was convicted of drunken driving in connection with a 1986 incident in which witnesses say her car blew a tire and struck and killed a bicycle rider. Rodney R. Sanchez, Randy B. Sandoval and Barney R. Trujillo were running for the District 1 seat on the County Commission. Trujillo was well ahead with 61 percent of the vote. In District 2, Alex Naranjo was leading David P. Sanchez with nearly 70 percent of the vote. Levi Valdez Jr. had about 60 percent of the early vote in a race against J. Fred Vigil for county assessor. In the probate judge contest, Max M. Quintana was leading Andrew Julian Chavez with about 56 percent of the vote. No Republicans ran for county office in Rio Arriba County.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Republicans neck and neck in uncallable Miss. race By David Espo

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Tea party favorite Chris McDaniel and six-term Sen. Thad Cochran dueled inconclusively in Mississippi’s primary election Tuesday night, an epic struggle in a party deeply divided along ideological lines. GOP governors in South Dakota, Alabama and Iowa all coasted to renomination. Senate hopeful Joni Ernst, a state senator, overwhelmed a fistful of Republican rivals in Iowa after uniting rival wings of the party and will challenge Rep. Bruce Braley this fall for a Senate seat long in Democratic hands. In a third Senate race on the busiest night of the primary season, former Gov. Mike Rounds won the Republican nomination in South Dakota — and instantly became the favorite to pick up a seat for the GOP in its drive to capture the six the party needs to capture a majority this fall. Five states picked candidates for governor, including California, where

Democrat Jerry Brown cruised to renomination to a fourth term. The marquee contest of the night was in Mississippi, where Cochran, 76, and the 41-year-old McDaniel remained locked in a close, uncallable race as the count mounted. Returns from 95 percent of the state’s precincts showed the challenger narrowly ahead in a threeway race, but just below the 50 percent threshold needed to avoid a runoff. Officials said the vote tally did not include provisional ballots, at least some of them cast as a result of the state’s new voter ID law. Those voters have five days to furnish proof of residence. An official canvass could take longer, until June 13. Dozens of nomination races for House seats dotted the ballot, and including 38 in California’s open primary system, which awarded spots on the November ballot to the two top vote-getters regardless of party. The Senate contest between Cochran and McDaniel in Mississippi drew top billing, a costly and heated

State Sen. Joni Ernst speaks to supporters in Des Moines, Iowa, on Tuesday after she won the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate. CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

race between a pillar of the GOP establishment who has helped funnel millions of dollars to his state and a younger state lawmaker who drew backing from tea party groups and former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin. The campaign took a turn toward the sensational when

four men, all McDaniel supporters, were arrested and charged with surreptitiously taking photographs of the senator’s 72-year-old wife, who suffers from dementia and has long lived in a nursing home. The race was arguably the year’s last good chance for the tea party wing of the party to topple an establishment favorite in a Senate primary, following losses in Texas, North Carolina, Georgia and Kentucky. But the national stakes were higher in Iowa, where Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin’s retirement created an open seat that Democrat Braley, a fourth-term lawmaker, seeks to fill — as does Ernst. She fashioned her rise in the race on memorable television commercials. “I grew up on an Iowa farm castrating hogs, so when I get to Washington, I’ll know how to cut pork,” she said in one of them, concluding with a smile, “Let’s make ’em squeal.” She was able to transcend many of the intra-party divisions that flared in other races, gathering business groups, abortion foes, the Senate

Conservatives Fund and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. In other Senate races, appointed Democratic Sen. John Walsh and Republican Rep. Steve Daines in Montana each overpowered primary rivals en route to a likely race in the fall that the GOP is expected to target as an opportunity to gain a seat. Republicans eyed another fall pickup opportunity in South Dakota, where Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson is retiring and Rounds easily eclipsed his rivals for the GOP nomination. Rick Weiland, making his third try for a seat in Congress, was unopposed by other Democrats. Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., had no competition for renomination, and Jeff Bell won the GOP spot on the November ballot. Republican governors winning renomination included Robert Bentley in Alabama, Dennis Daugaard in South Dakota and Terry Branstad, seeking a sixth term in Iowa. All are favored to return to office in the fall.

POW: Soldier could Transition: Findings shock city councilors possibly face charges Continued from Page A-1

Continued from Page A-1 ers said that President Barack Obama didn’t notify them as a law governing the release of Guantánamo detainees requires. White House staff members called key members of Congress to apologize, but that didn’t resolve the issue. Since Dempsey issued a statement Saturday welcoming Bergdahl home, troops who served with the soldier have expressed anger and resentment that his freedom — from a captivity that they say he brought upon himself — may have cost comrades’ lives. Troops sat in stony silence at Bagram Air Field when Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel announced Bergdahl’s release over the weekend. “Today we have back in our ranks the only remaining captured soldier from our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Welcome home, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl,” Dempsey said on Saturday. However, Dempsey called The Associated Press on Tuesday to note that charges were still a possibility, and he focused his thanks on the service members who searched fruitlessly for Bergdahl after he walked away, unarmed, on June 30, 2009. “This was the last, best opportunity to free a United States soldier in captivity,” Dempsey said. “My first instinct was gratitude for those who had searched for so long, and at risk for themselves. … Done their duty in order to bring back a missing solider. For me, it was about living up to our ethos, which is to leave no soldier behind. And on that basis, I was relieved to get Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl back in the ranks, and very happy for the men and women who had sacrificed to do so.” Dempsey said Bergdahl’s next promotion to staff sergeant, which was to happen soon, is no longer automatic because the soldier is no longer missing in action and job performance is now taken into account. Dempsey said he does not want to prejudge the outcome of any investigation or influence other commanders’ decisions. But he noted that U.S. military leaders “have been accused of looking away from misconduct” and said no one should assume they would do so in this case. Army Chief of Staff Gen. John McHugh later said that after Bergdahl recovers physically and is “reintegrated,” the Army would “review the circumstances” of his case. Some former soldiers who served with him were already passing judgment. Joshua Cornelison, who was a medic in Bergdahl’s platoon said he believes Bergdahl should be held accountable for walking away. “After he actually left, the following morning we realized we have Bergdahl’s weapon, we have Bergdahl’s body armor, we have Bergdahl’s sensitive equipment [but] we don’t have Bowe Bergdahl,” Cornelison said from Sacramento, Calif. At that point, Cornelison said, it occurred to him that Bergdahl was “that one guy that wanted to disappear, and now he’s gotten his wish.” Evan Buetow, who was a sergeant in Bergdahl’s platoon, said from Maple Valley, Wash., that Bergdahl should face trial for desertion, but he also said

it was less clear that he should be blamed for the deaths of all soldiers killed trying to find him. Buetow said he knew of at least one death on an intelligencedirected infantry patrol to a village in search of Bergdahl. “Those soldiers who died on those missions, they would not have been where they were … if Bergdahl had never walked away,” he said. “At the same time, I do believe it is somewhat unfair for people to say, ‘It is Bergdahl’s fault that these people are dead.’ I think that’s a little harsh.” The White House took more heat Tuesday for not giving Congress the required 30 days notice of a detainee release. Obama had issued a statement when he signed the law containing that requirement giving himself a loophole for certain circumstances under the executive powers clause of the Constitution. Obama, at a news conference in Poland, defended the decision to move quickly on the exchange, saying that U.S. officials were concerned about Bergdahl’s health. Bergdahl was reported to be in stable condition at a military hospital in Germany “We had the cooperation of the Qataris to execute an exchange, and we seized that opportunity,” Obama said. He said the process of notifying Congress was “truncated because we wanted to make sure that we did not miss that window” of opportunity. Obama also said the five Taliban officials’ release was conditioned on assurances from officials in Qatar, where they will have to stay for one year, that they will track them and allow the U.S. to monitor them. Sen. Bob Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat and Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, expressed reservations. “I am concerned about what was given in exchange and I am concerned about what precedents we set here for exchanges,” he said. “I don’t want the message to be, ‘You can go ahead and capture Americans and use them to barter for others.’ ” Senate Republicans bristled, too, about the lack of notification. The Obama administration held two interagency briefings for House Speaker John Boehner and key Republican chairmen on Nov. 30, 2011, and Jan. 31, 2012, in which the possibility was raised of exchanging Bergdahl for the five Taliban detainees. During those sessions, lawmakers raised concerns about ensuring the detainees did not return to the battlefield, the impact on the Afghan war and whether all efforts were being made to rescue Bergdahl. Members of Congress sent letters to the administration, but heard little in response, except assurances that they would be contacted if the chances of a swap became more credible. Then word came on Saturday that the swap had occurred. Boehner welcomed Bergdahl’s release, but warned of a dangerous precedent for the treatment of U.S. troops. “One of their greatest protections — knowing that the United States does not negotiate with terrorists — has been compromised,” he said. Associated Press writers Bradley Klapper, Donna Cassata, Ken Dilanian, Jim Kuhnhenn, Deb Riechmann and Julie Pace contributed to this report.

sets are in the right positions, the mayor said in his announceThursday. Asked why they chose ment. Tuesday, primary election day, The team was split into comcity spokeswoman Jodi McGinmittees that looked into nine nis Porter said, “Most politically different city departments, astute people vote early. Voting including the City Attorney’s only takes a few minutes, and we Office, Public Works, Planning still do our work. and Land Use, Finance, Public “We follow what’s imporUtilities, Community Developtant for the city,” she added. ment, Community Services, “The report was ready, and the Information Technology and scheduling worked out where the tourism and visitors bureau. we had availability.” Each committee presented its During the meeting, Gonzafindings, and six out of the nine les said the people could read made recommendations that the report online and invited called for filling key positions the public to bring up issues or hiring more staff. The report not addressed. said some departments lack the On April 3, Gonzales tapped technological resources to run about 40 volunteers from the efficiently. community to serve on his For example, the report says transition team. Their job was the city needs to fill two key to help him find ways to make positions: city attorney and the city government work more director of the Information efficiently by examining each Technology Department. The city department to determine latter vacancy is hindering if the people with the right skill key planning efforts in other

departments, such as Finance. Most councilors said they were shocked by the findings, especially about low morale in the Land Use Department. The report recommends Land Use Department staff participate in leadership training and implement “a philosophy of appreciation, communication, responsibility and respect for other employees.” It also recommends hiring a full-time information technology employee to update the software and train staff on use of technology. And because of weak communication and leadership within the city’s Information Technology Department, there has not been enough scrutiny of spending of federal grant money, which could threaten future grants, the report said. Gonzales warned at the meeting that the city does not have enough revenue to implement all the recommendations.

“We have to align available revenues so that essential services are met,” he said. “And during the course of this year, I expect the council is going to have a series of conversations on what services potentially need to be eliminated.” Councilor Signe Lindell summarized the recommendations when she told her colleagues: “The strategic plan is to find the money.” Karen Heldmeyer, a former city councilor who attended the meeting, said the council had gotten warnings about the impact of the economic downturn in 2008, but the report suggests it did not sufficiently heed them. City Hall reporter Daniel J. Chacón contributed to this report. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @ujohnnyg.

community

CALENDAR Featured events in and around Santa Fe

JUNE

and will not cover, and what alternatives ex- to register for Purpose, Passion and Possibiliist to fund these expenses. This seminar will ties workshop or call 505-603-1037. help you determine if you need a Long-Term BUDDHA NATURE, THE ES- Care policy and the differences between JUNE them. Call 505-216-0838 or email Register. SENCE OF ENLIGHTEMENT BeginSantaFe@1APG.com to RSVP. ning on Wednesday, June 4th Taught by Don Handrick . What is enlightenment? How is it 20th ANNIVERSARY FIESTA! AT possible? Who can achieve it? One of Mahay- JUNE CHIMAYO MUSEUM Sunday, June 8, ana Buddhism’s most important teachings 1pm to 5pm. Celebrate summer and our first is the doctrine of tathagatagarbha, or buddha nature, the innate pure and changeless UNLOCK YOUR SELF-CARE and 20 years in beautiful Chimayo! Enjoy perforessence of the mind which gives rise to the Thrive June 6, 7 & 8th at Santa Fe Soul Health mances of traditional northern New Mexico fundamental potential for each being to attain & Healing Center. An exceptional experiential music under the giant cottonwoods with Rob full enlightenment or Buddhahood. Thubten & transformational weekend with over 16 ex- Martinez and La Familia de Cipriano Vigil. Norbu Ling 1807 Second Street #35. For perts in the health & self-care field. Learn to Sample delicious homemade foods, see work more information call 505-660-7056 or write generate optimum health, gain practical tools, by local artisans, and tour the Museum’s fasinfo @tnlsf.org. resources and strategies for your self-care as cinating collection. Family friendly and FREE! well as solutions to your most pressing health Located behind Ortega’s Weaving Shop just UNDERSTANDING YOUR MEDI- issues. Relax, unwind and play! Live music off county Road 98 (Juan Medina Road), near CARE OPTIONS presented by Peter and free food. For registration & information: the intersection with Highway 76. Presented Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Spe- 505-477-8555/jointheselfcarerevolution.com/ by the Chimayo Cultural Preservation Associalist. This informative two hour seminar cov- unlockyourself-care-and-thrive. ciation, chimayomuseum.org, 505-351-0945. ers Medicare Part A through Part D, including Medicare supplemental insurance plan op- JUNE JUNE tions. This FREE Educational Workshop is offered to the public on Wednesday, June 4th, 6pm at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe READY TO DISCOVER & LIVE Trail, Santa Fe. RSVP is required. Call 505YOUR PASSIONS NOW? Saturday, SANTA FE DOORWAYS: GETTING 216-0838 or email Register.SantaFe@1APG. June 7, 12:15-5:30 p.m., Spend five of the TO THE HEART OF THE MATTER com to register. most valuable hours of your life with four high Healing Through Grief. Thursday June 12 performance life coaches and business con- 11:45 - 1 pm . Ponce de Leon, 640 Alta Vista. JUNE sultants. You’ll learn, reignite and prioritize Presenter: Eileen Joyce. Eileen Joyce, coach your top five passions in life, discover how to and grief specialist, talks about myths of grief, begin living them more fully at home, at work behaviors that prevent recovery, and actions UNDERSTANDING LONG-TERM and at play using powerful decision-making necessary to heal a broken heart. Unhealed CARE – presented by Peter Murphy, Re- tools and processes. You’ll have fun explorpain, either recent or long ago, directly affects tirement & Estate. Planning Specialist. This ing new possibilities in an inspiring and supour capacity for happiness and productivity. FREE two hour seminar is offered at Garrett’s portive atmosphere. Good for those in transiDesert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Thurs- tion, making important decisions, ramping up Eileen has been working for 25 years with day, June 5th at 6pm. We will define Long- life and business. At the Santa Fe Community people dealing with changes-the ones we Term Care, and study the facts and statistics Foundation HUB room, 501 Halona Street. create and the ones we sure didn’t ask for. affecting our aging population. You will learn Make yourself worth it and go to www.in- Join us. All welcome. Brown Bag lunch. Dewhat Long-Term Care needs Medicare will spireuseminars.com for more information and nys Cope 505-474-8383.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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

COMMENTARY: JOE NOCERA

Guns are too easy to obtain

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

I

t is difficult to read stories about Elliot Rodger, the 22-year-old man who went on a murderous spree in Isla Vista, Calif., last month, without feeling some empathy for his parents. We know that his mother, alarmed by some of his misogynistic YouTube videos, made a call that resulted in the police visiting Rodger. The headline from that meeting was that Rodger, seemingly calm and collected, easily deflected the police’s attention. But there was surely a subtext: How worried — how desperate, really — must a mother be to believe the police should be called on her own son? We also learned that on the day of his murderous rampage, his mother, having read the first few lines of his “manifesto,” had phoned his father, from whom she was divorced. In separate cars, they raced from Los Angeles to Santa Barbara hoping to stop what they feared was about to happen. And then, on Monday, in a remarkably detailed article in The New York Times, we learned the rest of it. How Rodger was clearly a troubled soul before he even turned 8 years old. How his parents’ concern about his mental health was like a “shadow that hung over this Los Angeles family nearly every day of Elliot’s life.” Constantly bullied and unable to fit in, he went through three high schools. In college, he tried to throw a girl off a ledge at a party — and was beaten up. (“I’m going to kill them,” he said to a neighbor afterward.) He finally retreated to some Internet sites that “drew sexually frustrated young men,” according to The Times. Throughout, said one person who knew Rodger, “his mom did everything she could to help Elliot.” But what his parents never did was the one thing that might have prevented him from buying a gun: have him committed to a

A-7

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

Ready, get set and start reading

W

psychiatric facility. California’s tough gun laws notwithstanding, a background check would have caught him only if he had had inpatient mental health treatment, made a serious threat to an identifiable victim in the presence of a therapist or had a criminal record. He had none of the above. Should his parents have taken more steps to have him treated? Could they have? It is awfully hard to say, even in retrospect. On the one hand, there were plainly people who knew him who feared that he might someday harm others. On the other hand, those people weren’t psychiatrists. He was a loner, a misfit, whose parents were more fearful of how the world would treat their son than how their son would treat the world. And his mother, after all, did reach out for help, and the police responded and decided they had no cause to arrest him or even search his room, where his guns were hidden. Once again, a mass killing has triggered calls for doing something to keep guns away from the mentally ill. And,

once again, the realities of the situation convey how difficult a task that is. There are, after all, plenty of young, male, alienated loners — the nowstandard description of mass shooters — but very few of them become killers. And you can’t go around committing them all because a tiny handful might turn out to be killers. Indeed, the law is very clear on this point. In 1975, the Supreme Court ruled that nondangerous mentally ill people can’t be confined against their will if they can function without confinement. “In California, the bar is very high for people like Elliot,” said Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, who founded the Treatment Advocacy Center. In a sense, California’s commitment to freedom for the mentally ill conflicts with its background-check law. Torrey believes the country should involuntarily commit more mentally ill people, not only because they can sometimes commit acts of violence but because there are far more people who can’t function in the world than the mental health community likes to

acknowledge. In this, however, he is an outlier. The mainstream sentiment among mental health professionals is that there is no going back to the bad-old days when people who were capable of living on their own were locked up for years in mental hospitals. The truth is, the kind of symptoms Elliot Rodger showed were unlikely to get him confined in any case. And without a history of confinement, he had every legal right to buy a gun. You read the stories about Elliot Rodger and it is easy to think: If this guy, with all his obvious problems, can slip through the cracks, then what hope is there of ever stopping mass shootings? But, of course, there is another way of thinking about this. Instead of focusing on making it harder for the mentally ill to get guns, maybe we should be making it harder to get guns, period. Something to consider before the next mass shooting. Joe Nocera is a columnist for The New York Times.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

ondering what to do with out-of-school youngsters this summer? The answer is as close as your nearest library. The Santa Fe public libraries are launching “Fizz, Boom, Read,” an in-library and at-home reading program from June 1 to July 26 at all three library branches. It is just another example of a city that understands that the minds of children are too precious to waste. Families can go to the Main Library downtown, to the La Farge Branch Library on Llano Street or to the Southside Branch Library on Jaguar Drive and sign up through mid-July. Children from toddlers to 12-year-olds can read on their own, in the library or at home, or with parents or grandparents. They get a free book bag, a reading log and an opportunity to win weekly prizes. The grand prize for students at the program’s end will be drawings for a boy’s and girl’s bicycle outfitted with helmets and bike locks. Families do not have to offer proof of residence. Anyone can read a book in the library or use a book from home. Every child who completes the program will receive a reading certificate. The libraries themselves will look like carnivals during the program, with visits from magicians, musicians, yo-yo artists and Didgeridoo Down Under, a combo playing New Zealand music. All of this is made possible by the Friends of the Library, a bequest and Rob and Charlie’s and the Santa Fe Century, which donated the bikes. Although Santa Fe’s public libraries have been hit by budgetary issues in the last few years, they have maintained their regular hours, and librarians are more enthusiastic than ever. In fact, for the fiscal year that ended in June 2013, more than 15,000 children participated in library programs. Communities that read together learn together and work together. A study by the Pew Research Institute found that parents who take their children to libraries raise more successful offspring. Local research shows that students who have participated in the libraries’ summer reading program, which dates back at least 65 years, are more likely to maintain their grade level when they return to school in August. We’d like to see sufficient funding for Santa Fe’s libraries to increase staffing and to increase hours on the south side, where the library is the heart of the community, and to support more programs like “Fizz, Boom, Read.” Check out the library nearest you. Books expand your child’s world, enhance imaginations and create explosions of knowledge.

Mining La Bajada will destroy landmark

The past 100 years

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From The Santa Fe New Mexican: June 4, 1914: Las Vegas — James Davis, a mesa ranchman, was given 60 days in jail and a fine, the jail sentence being suspended, on the charge of resisting an officer and cruelty to animals. Davis it is alleged refused to let 32 head of cattle belonging to A.J. Gerard to leave his place after they had strayed on it, refused to feed or water them and declined to allow a deputy to drive them off. June 4, 1964: District Attorney Al Sanchez said this morning that he was satisfied that the shooting death of John R. Sullivan, 48, of San Diego, last Monday morning while he was trying to outrun officers was accidental. … Shooting at the car was justifiable considering his acts in Santa Fe and the fact he forced cars off the road while traveling along at 80 to 90 miles per hour between here and Velarde. “The fact that he was killed was an unfortunate accident,” Sanchez stated. June 4, 1989: Almost 12 times the usual number of family requests for permission to divide land among their children came in just under the deadline Friday. It was the last day to file for family transfers under an old ordinance that has been replaced by a new, stricter one. The new ordinance adds these conditions: The land must have been owned for five years before it is transferred to another member of the family; the minimum size of the amount of land that can be transferred is larger than before, and the transfers can occur only among the great-grandparents, grandparents, parents and children. The new ordinance was created to prevent people from subdividing property without following subdivision regulations.

ourism is an essential and growing source of jobs and revenue for New Mexico, generating $5.5 billion annually. It is the natural beauty of Northern New Mexico that inspires visitors to come. Why allow the proposed gravel strip mine on the top of La Bajada mesa to despoil the landscape for short-term financial gain? This is one of the most important cultural and scenic landmarks in New Mexico. This stunning and historically important landmark will be desecrated by this strip mine only to produce gravel. The county has unconscionably agreed to sell scarce, potable water for mining operations and for dust control. Granting this proposal will establish a precedent for future expansion of this new mining zone to adjacent parts of the mesa, further extending the destructive impact. The people around the proposed gravel mine should decide the fate of La Bajada, not politicians and private business people who see only short-term financial gain.

who has been living with us was in a bike accident, and he sustained a concussion and a collapsed cheekbone, along with many cuts and bruises. Though scary and traumatic for him, the accident brought out the best in Santa Feans. We thank the following: the good Samaritan who witnessed the accident, stopped, came to his aid and called 911; the ambulance drivers who stabilized and rushed him to the emergency room; Dr. Jamie Gagan and Dr. James Melisi and the staff at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. Most of all, we would like to thank Dr. Peter Shepard and the staff of Southwestern ENT, along with the team at Physicians Medical Center, for its patience, kindness, professionalism and compassion. You made a huge impression upon this young man, and he will go back to Kenya carrying with him in heart the incredible generosity of Santa Fe. Asante Sana! Suzanne Garney and Daniel Kane

Santa Fe

Thomas French

Taos

A positive impression Recently, a young Kenyan male runner

Stopping ‘someone’ Jay Spielman’s perceptive letter in the paper about the importance of the police tracking down the “someone” who com-

MALLARd FiLLMoRe

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

mits so many crimes reminded me of the suggested solution to the overpopulation problem caused by the fact that a woman somewhere in the world gives birth to a baby every 57 seconds (Letters to the editor, “Looking for ‘someone,’ ” June 1). The solution: find her and stop her. Saul Cohen

Santa Fe

Flying flags I could not agree more with the letter in The Santa Fe New Mexican (Letters to the editor, “Flags missing on Memorial Day,” June 1). For many years, members of the two Santa Fe Lions Clubs have been placing flags at about 100 residences and businesses (including those seen on the Plaza) on eight national holidays. For the small annual fee of $56, the clubs install flag holders and provide the flags. The funds thus raised are used to provide eye exams and eyeglasses for the needy in our community. For more information or to place a flag order, call 474-0190 or email: lionberniesfnm@aol.com. Bernhard “Bernie” Holzapfel

treasurer, Santa Fe Lions Flag Project Santa Fe

Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnewmexican.com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.

LA CUCARACHA

BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAFenewMexiCAn.CoM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today

Tonight

Thursday

Mostly sunny, breezy Clear and hot

Blazing sunshine

55

96

Friday

Saturday

Plenty of sunshine

97/52

Plenty of sunshine

91/48

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

Sunday

Plenty of sunshine

87/52

Humidity (Noon)

Monday

Humidity (Noon)

Tuesday

Mostly sunny; breezy Mostly sunny in the p.m.

82/53

Humidity (Noon)

88/53

88/55

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

8%

14%

6%

8%

9%

26%

22%

18%

wind: WSW 10-20 mph

wind: N 6-12 mph

wind: WSW 8-16 mph

wind: WSW 8-16 mph

wind: WSW 7-14 mph

wind: S 7-14 mph

wind: WSW 8-16 mph

wind: WSW 6-12 mph

Almanac

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Tuesday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 94°/61° Normal high/low ............................ 83°/48° Record high ............................... 94° in 2014 Record low ................................. 35° in 1899 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 ..... 0.09”/3.69” 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

Taos 88/43

84

Española 99/66 Los Alamos 91/55 Gallup 89/50

Raton 94/49

64

666

40

Santa Fe 96/55 Pecos 89/53

25

Albuquerque 100/67

60

Tuesday’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 87

56

412

Clayton 94/58

Pollen index

As of 6/3/2014 Pine, Willow ............................. 29 Moderate Chenopods........................................... 3 Low Dock/Ephedra...................................... 2 Low Grass.................................................... 1 Low Total...........................................................35

25

Las Vegas 91/54

25

54

40

40

285

Clovis 101/64

54

60

Source:

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 108/69

Ruidoso 91/67

25

70

Truth or Consequences 103/74 70

Las Cruces 104/73

70

70

380

380

285

Alamogordo 107/74

180 10

Water statistics

285

64

Farmington 93/53

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. ............ 0.00” 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”

Air quality index

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

Carlsbad 109/71

54

10

Hobbs 104/69

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

Sun and moon

State extremes

Tue. High 106 ........................... Alamogordo Tue. 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 106/66 pc 97/63 pc 78/43 pc 100/68 s 104/69 s 78/51 pc 89/54 pc 96/62 pc 84/52 s 95/64 pc 88/53 pc 105/63 s 96/62 pc 92/55 pc 98/68 pc 89/48 pc 91/44 pc 97/66 s 105/68 pc

Hi/Lo W 107/74 s 100/67 s 80/40 s 109/72 s 109/71 s 81/43 s 91/47 s 94/58 s 85/40 s 101/64 s 88/48 s 105/67 s 99/66 s 93/53 s 102/66 s 89/50 s 91/49 s 104/69 s 104/73 s

Hi/Lo W 106/68 s 99/66 s 79/40 s 108/73 s 109/72 s 81/42 s 88/48 s 88/57 s 85/37 s 100/63 s 88/48 s 105/66 s 98/65 s 92/52 s 100/65 s 89/45 s 89/49 s 106/69 s 106/73 s

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

Hi/Lo W 92/52 pc 105/65 pc 87/62 pc 98/59 pc 97/66 pc 97/54 pc 88/48 pc 98/63 pc 103/68 s 91/61 pc 99/63 pc 95/66 pc 105/60 s 86/45 pc 104/66 pc 100/70 pc 107/67 pc 92/59 pc 89/55 pc

Hi/Lo W 91/54 s 107/73 s 91/55 s 102/64 s 101/65 s 94/49 s 77/41 s 99/61 s 108/69 s 91/67 s 101/62 s 102/68 s 104/68 s 88/43 s 103/74 s 103/66 s 105/75 s 94/57 s 89/50 s

Hi/Lo W 91/52 s 108/73 s 91/55 s 101/61 s 100/64 s 90/50 s 76/42 s 98/60 s 108/68 s 92/66 s 98/60 s 102/67 s 104/68 s 88/41 s 102/72 s 99/65 s 106/75 s 94/56 s 89/45 s

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

Weather for June 4

Sunrise today ............................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:16 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 12:02 p.m. Moonset today ........................... 12:25 a.m. Sunrise Thursday ......................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset Thursday ........................... 8:17 p.m. Moonrise Thursday ..................... 12:56 p.m. Moonset Thursday ...................... 12:57 a.m. Sunrise Friday ............................... 5:49 a.m. Sunset Friday ................................ 8:17 p.m. Moonrise Friday ............................ 1:52 p.m. Moonset Friday ............................. 1:28 a.m. First

Full

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June 5

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The planets

Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 67/51 89/71 85/64 77/53 78/56 82/55 66/57 91/70 90/68 64/51 82/58 72/50 95/76 84/53 70/50 70/45 83/41 88/76 91/72 79/55 86/62 99/72 79/62

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

Hi/Lo 65/50 89/70 81/57 75/45 81/48 84/52 66/56 92/72 89/63 73/50 75/55 66/50 97/77 81/53 71/49 70/50 81/44 87/76 92/74 76/55 78/64 99/79 79/62

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

Set 9:40 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 2:45 a.m. 10:54 p.m. 4:40 a.m. 3:30 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

National cities City Hi/Lo W Anchorage 66/39 pc Atlanta 86/69 pc Baltimore 87/62 t Billings 75/53 t Bismarck 73/42 t Boise 85/58 s Boston 72/57 s Charleston, SC 88/66 pc Charlotte 86/58 pc Chicago 81/68 s Cincinnati 85/69 t Cleveland 86/69 c Dallas 92/75 pc Denver 92/57 pc Detroit 81/70 s Fairbanks 63/47 pc Flagstaff 83/57 pc Honolulu 86/74 s Houston 88/73 pc Indianapolis 84/65 pc Kansas City 89/68 t Las Vegas 100/73 r Los Angeles 79/58 s

Rise 7:08 a.m. 3:58 a.m. 3:01 p.m. 8:32 a.m. 6:02 p.m. 2:52 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

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 87/75 sh 87/65 t 78/59 c 89/73 t 92/75 s 89/73 t 82/76 c 86/75 pc 88/77 pc 78/66 pc 63/49 r 66/49 s 75/56 s 77/58 pc 77/60 pc 83/73 t 88/73 t 88/73 pc 87/67 t 80/63 pc 73/59 r 90/71 pc 96/73 pc 96/73 pc 84/68 pc 90/70 pc 92/73 pc 89/64 t 84/64 pc 76/59 r 108/81 pc 108/80 s 107/78 s 83/68 t 75/55 t 70/48 pc 67/50 pc 76/51 pc 76/52 pc 90/58 pc 88/69 s 87/60 t 92/73 pc 90/62 t 79/62 c 85/67 pc 81/56 s 84/57 s 93/75 pc 93/74 pc 94/75 pc 76/63 s 74/63 pc 74/64 pc 67/53 pc 68/53 pc 68/54 pc 64/52 c 72/50 pc 72/49 pc 68/48 t 74/55 c 80/58 t 88/59 pc 81/62 pc 75/56 r 86/67 t 83/68 s 81/61 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

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National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Tue. High: 109 .................. Death Valley, CA Tue. Low: 25 .............. Mammoth Lakes, CA

High and low records were set on June 4, 1985. Williston, N.D., had a low of 31 that broke the record from 1910. Macon and Augusta, Ga., reached 100 degrees or higher.

Weather trivia™

Q: Who invented the lightning rod? A: Ben Franklin.

Weather history

Newsmakers Jonah Hill apologizes for gay slur to paparazzo

Jonah Hill

NEW YORK — Jonah Hill has apologized for using a gay slur with a paparazzo in an encounter caught on video. A video posted Tuesday by TMZ shows a photographer pestering Hill, who eventually responded with muttered expletives and an anti-gay expression. On The Howard Stern Show on Tuesday, the 30-year-old actor acknowledged that he said “a disgusting word.” Hill said the word “does not at all reflect how I feel about any group of people.”

Dina Lohan avoids jail for drunken driving

Dina Lohan

MINEOLA, N.Y. — The mother of actress Lindsay Lohan won’t go to jail for speeding and driving drunk on a New York highway. A judge ordered Dina Lohan on Tuesday to pay over $3,000 in fines and fees. She will also perform 100 hours of community service and participate in an anti-drunken driving program. Her driver’s license remains suspended. The 51-year-old’s sentence includes a requirement that she install an alcohol-detecting ignition lock on her vehicle. 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 68/48 pc 63/53 r 62/52 sh 70/61 t 75/65 c 83/67 s 91/72 s 97/75 s 105/82 s 99/86 pc 95/81 t 95/81 c 72/64 s 73/62 s 71/63 s 91/69 s 88/67 pc 95/72 s 66/54 pc 74/56 pc 70/48 pc 66/45 pc 67/47 t 67/47 c 66/53 s 60/45 r 59/42 s 99/72 s 110/77 pc 92/66 s 90/75 s 91/75 s 91/75 s 108/76 pc 110/80 s 110/76 s 61/55 r 66/56 s 67/54 sh 59/50 pc 59/43 pc 59/43 pc 70/52 pc 62/44 r 72/46 pc 73/63 t 71/59 t 71/60 t 82/73 c 86/70 t 83/70 t 89/82 t 90/82 pc 90/82 t 79/58 s 94/75 pc 80/58 pc 72/66 c 72/62 pc 71/62 pc

TV 1

3

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 68/57 pc 70/54 s 72/59 pc 66/55 sh 58/49 r 66/47 pc 84/52 s 83/56 s 85/56 pc 72/54 t 73/55 t 74/55 t 81/68 t 70/55 sh 68/55 sh 84/54 s 86/56 pc 88/59 s 108/80 pc 109/85 pc 113/86 pc 68/54 c 63/44 r 68/52 pc 64/46 pc 71/54 s 70/45 sh 75/67 pc 78/68 s 81/73 s 77/54 s 77/58 s 77/58 s 57/36 r 51/33 sh 54/34 pc 68/64 r 84/65 pc 82/63 c 90/82 pc 88/78 t 89/80 t 63/46 r 67/57 c 72/54 r 68/52 s 71/51 s 69/54 sh 81/68 pc 78/66 pc 72/66 r 66/55 pc 66/51 pc 67/48 pc 68/52 pc 73/57 t 71/54 t 70/46 pc 69/43 r 68/44 pc

Looted statues are back in Cambodia Three pieces are representations of Hindu figures By Sopheng Cheang The Associated Press

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Three 1,000-year-old statues depicting Hindu mythology were welcomed home to Cambodia on Tuesday after being looted from a temple during the country’s civil war and put in Western art collections. The pieces were handed over at a ceremony attended by Deputy Prime Minister Sok An and U.S. diplomat Jeff Daigle after being returned by the U.S. branches of auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s, and the Norton Simon Museum in California. Cambodian officials say the statues were looted in the 1970s by being hacked off their bases in the Koh Ker temple complex in Siem Reap province, also home to the Angkor Wat temples. A 1993 Cambodian law prohibits the removal of cultural artifacts without government permission. Pieces taken after that date have stronger legal standing to compel their new owners abroad to return them. But there is also general agreement in the art world that pieces were acquired illegitimately if they were exported without clear and valid documentation after 1970 — the year of a U.N. cultural agreement targeting trafficking in antiquities. The three statues are representations of the mythological Hindu figures Duryodhana, Balarama and Bhima. Their return marks a step forward in efforts to bring back together nine figures that once formed a tableau in a tower of the temple. The scene captured a famous duel in Hindu mythology in which the warrior Duryodhana is struck down by his cousin Bhima at the end of a bloody war of succession while seven attendants look on. Two statues from the same temple that had been dis-

played for nearly two decades at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art were returned to Cambodia last November. The voluntary return of the pair of Kneeling Attendants statues by one of America’s foremost cultural institutions was seen as setting a precedent for the restoration of artworks to their places of origin, from which they were often removed in hazy circumstances. Experts say that looters hacked the Koh Ker figures off their bases during the civil war. Some were smuggled out of the country and eventually landed with private collectors, as did statues from other temples that the Cambodian government hopes to reclaim. The Cambodian government is asking other museums to return similar objects. Sok An said the handover ceremony was “to welcome these three heroes back where they belong.” “In a long 40-year journey, surviving civil wars, looting, smuggling and travelling the world, these three have now regained their freedom and returned home,” he said. The Norton Simon Museum has displayed for nearly four decades its 5-foot-high sandstone figure of Bhima, which is missing its hands and feet. It said last month it had acquired the statue from a reputable dealer in 1976, but that the chaos of war in Cambodia made it unclear how the dealer had acquired it. The Pasadena, Calif., museum announced in a statement that it was returning the statue “as a gesture of friendship, and in response to a unique and compelling request by top officials in Cambodia.” Sotheby’s agreed to return the footless figure of Duryodhana, valued at $2 million to $3 million, which was placed in Sotheby’s catalog in 2011 after the widow of its former Belgian owner gave it up for sale. Sotheby’s later pulled it from its catalog. The auction house agreed to surrender the statue, settling a lawsuit filed by the U.S. government on Cambodia’s behalf.

Today’s talk shows

top picks

6 p.m. on NBC 2014 Stanley Cup Finals The grueling tournament known as the Stanley Cup playoffs has winnowed 16 teams down to two, and they’ll compete starting tonight in Game 1 of the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Finals. Last year, the Chicago Blackhawks defeated the Boston Bruins in six games to capture the franchise’s fifth NHL title. 7 p.m. on ABC The Middle Mike (Neil Flynn) agrees to help Bill Norwood (Pat Finn) coach Sue’s (Eden Sher) soccer team, then ends up with the head coach’s job after Bill bails. Frankie (Patricia Heaton) tries to get Brick (Atticus Shaffer) to practice better hygiene. Axl (Charlie McDermott) has trouble understanding a painting that Cassidy (Galadriel Stineman) made for him in “The Smell.” 8 p.m. on ABC Modern Family While driving Luke (Nolan Gould) home from a ballroom dancing lesson he tricked him into attending, Phil (Ty Burrell) is pulled over and ends up in jail, thanks to Haley’s (Sarah Hyland) unpaid parking tickets. Mitch and Cam (Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Eric Stonestreet) search for a wedding venue,

2

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

A Cambodian man prays Tuesday before one of three 10th-century Cambodian sandstone statues on display after they were returned from the United States in a handover ceremony at the Council of Ministers in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Cambodia has welcomed back the statues, which had been in Western art collections since they were looted during war. HENG SINITH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

while Jay and Gloria (Ed O’Neill, Sofia Vergara) plan a joint birthday party for Manny (Rico Rodriguez) and Joe in “And One to Grow On.” 8 p.m. on CBS Criminal Minds The BAU’s investigation of a series of murders in Kansas City brings Blake (Jeanne Tripplehorn, pictured) into the orbit of her father (Tom Bower), a retired police captain, and her brother (Brennan Elliott), a detective, in “Bully.” 8 p.m. on CW The 100 Finn and Clarke (Thomas McDonell, Eliza Taylor) escape from one perilous situation only to encounter a new enemy. Raven (Lindsey Morgan) is also confronted with a new danger. Bellamy (Bob Morley) acts heroically to save Jasper (Devon Bostick). Murphy (Richard Harmon) gets his long-awaited revenge. Those still aboard the Ark begin to come to terms with their fate in the new episode “We Are Grounders — Part 1.”

4 5

3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Leonardo DiCaprio; Courteney Cox; Sara Bareilles performs; guest DJ Loni Love. KRQE Dr. Phil KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Guests confront their mates. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show Processed chicken from China; vitamin D; the tonsils; thinning hair; superseeds. KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show Jenny’s son says her grandfather molested him. FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club

FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show 8:00 p.m. E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan 9:30 p.m. KCHF Life Today With James Robison James and Betty Robison. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show Tom Bergeron; Gugu Mbatha-Raw; comic Jimmy Ouyang; Jermaine Dupri sits in with the Posse. MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show TBS The Pete Holmes Show 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan

10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Tom Cruise; Kendall and Kylie Jenner; Chrissie Hynde. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS The Pete Holmes Show 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actress Susan Sarandon; author Garrison Keillor. 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Seth Meyers 1:07 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly 1:15 a.m. HBO Real Time With Bill Maher Journalist Jose Antonio Vargas; comic Sarah Silverman; journalist David Frum.


Obituaries B-2 Police notes B-2 Time Out B-7 Comics B-8

sports,B-4

LOCAL NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

B

Sharapova digs big hole, then digs out in French Open.

Suit seeks to open primary to all S.F. city Man who is registered as independent says state constitution backs him By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

As Democrats and Republicans began voting in the 2014 primary Tuesday, an Albuquerque lawyer filed a suit on behalf of the 248,741 voters barred by state law from participating because they are registered as “declined to state” or independent.

primary elections are paid for with tax dollars. Hollington, according to his suit, went to an early voting center in Albuquerque on May 21, but — as he expected — was denied because he is registered as “declined to state.” Hollington told The New Mexican on Tuesday that he’s been thinking of pursuing such a suit for several years. “Back in the late ’80s and early ’90s, I did some contract work for Bernalillo County, including some electionlaw cases,” he said. “This issue just always bugged the crap out of me.”

According to the suit filed in state District Court in Albuquerque by J. Edward Hollington, the law prohibiting independents violates the state constitution. The suit argues that the constitution grants all citizens who are “qualified electors” the right to vote “at all elections for public officers.” Also, the suit says, the constitution states that all elections are to be “free and open, and no power, civil or military, shall at any time interfere to prevent the free exercise of the right of suffrage.” The suit notes that in New Mexico,

Hollington said he’s doing this on his own. “No group is backing me.” But the executive director of New Mexico Common Cause, which long has backed the idea, applauded the lawsuit. “For us, it just makes sense for all voters to be able to vote,” said Viki Harrison. “It’s just good old democracy to let people vote.” In April 2013, Fred Nathan, founder and executive director of Think New Mexico, wrote to the state chairmen of both major parties, asking them to

Please see VoteRs, Page B-3

manager backed by mayor Snyder was on 3-month contract after election By Daniel J. Chacón

The New Mexican

Emergency crews clean up the accident scene at Cerrillos Road and Interstate 25 on Tuesday morning. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

Suspected DWI crash closes I-25 exit City worker arrested in wreck on Cerrillos Road The driver of this Toyota Tacoma was able to walk away after crashing into a parked tractor trailer Monday night, Santa Fe police say. Albert Roybal was later arrested on suspicion of DWI, reckless driving and possession of an open container.

By Robert Nott

The New Mexican

A Santa Fe city employee, suspected of driving drunk, crashed his Toyota Tacoma into a tractor trailer carrying three dozen 55-gallon drums of corrosive hydrochloric acid near the intersection of Cerrillos Road and Interstate 25 shortly before midnight Monday, according to city police. No drums Albert Roybal were damaged in the crash. Police have identified the suspected drunken driver as Albert Roybal, 38, who was booked into jail Tuesday morning. According to online jail records, Roybal was arrested on suspicion of DWI, reckless driving, having an open container and other charges. Jodi McGinnis Porter, the city spokeswoman, said Roybal is a plant operator in the city’s Wastewater Management Division. Roybal has been with the city since 1996, she said. She said there will be a human resources investigation, and appropriate action will be taken. The I-25 southbound exit ramp

COURTESY SANTA FE POLICE DEPARTMENT

Cerrillos Road remained closed Tuesday afternoon as police awaited another truck to safely remove and transport the hazardous material. The driver of the tractor trailer apparently had pulled off to the side of the road to sleep. He told police he was suddenly awakened by a loud noise and the vibration of another vehicle striking his truck. The Toyota Tacoma ran into the rear of the tractor trailer, damaging

one of the wheels. Police said Roybal walked away from the accident and was found by police later near the Waldo Canyon exit of I-25. He suffered minor injuries. There were no passengers in either vehicle, according to Celina Westerfelt of the Santa Fe Police Department. Of the suspect, she said, “He was definitely drunk. We are waiting on the results of blood tests to see how drunk.”

She said police will issue an advisory when the intersection is open for traffic. “We are waiting on a special delivery truck out of Denver to pick up these highly sensitive materials,” she said. The Tacoma had been removed from the scene. Reporter Uriel J. Garcia contributed to this report. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

Expect the new boss at City Hall to look the same as the old boss. Mayor Javier Gonzales said Tuesday he wants to keep Brian Snyder on as Santa Fe’s city manager. “I think he’s doing a good job,” Gonzales said. “I’m going to talk to some councilors, all the councilors, over the next day, and I anticipate I’ll be putting his name forward.” Snyder, appointed to the job by former Mayor David Coss last June, stayed in the position after Gonzales was elected in March, signing a threemonth contract that Brian Snyder expires June 10. Snyder’s reappointment as city manager requires approval by a majority of the City Council. City Councilor Joseph Maestas, who also took office after the March election, said he plans to vote in support of Snyder. He called Snyder “pragmatic and focused on problemsolving.” “Over the course of the last several months, I’ve had a chance to see Brian in action, and I think he’s doing a good job as interim, and I would support him as permanent,” Maestas said. However, Maestas, a former mayor

Please see manaGeR, Page B-2

Senators seek more WIPP funds By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

New Mexico’s two U.S. senators wrote a letter to President Barack Obama on Monday, urging additional funding for recovery efforts at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, where a radiation leak was detected in February. In the letter, Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich appealed to Obama to ask Congress for more than the $220.5 million currently in the president’s budget request for WIPP during fiscal year 2015, and possibly into the future. “WIPP is likely to require recovery spending in [fiscal year 2016] and we urge you to give consideration to the extra amounts needed to restore full operations at WIPP,” the senators wrote. Federal officials have been tightlipped about the anticipated cost of rehabilitating WIPP following the radiation leak. A U.S. Department

Please see wiPP, Page B-3

Teacher attendance at 94% nationally, study says Report: 16% of educators are chronically absent By Robert Nott The New Mexican

Teachers are showing up for school about 94 percent of the time, missing an average of about 11 days per year, according to a new national study released Tuesday. But the report — Roll Call: The Importance of Teacher Attendance, on the 2012-13 school year — notes that 16 percent of all teachers are chroni-

cally absent, meaning they missed at least 18 days of school that year. The National Council on Teacher Quality, a Washington, D.C.-based research and policy group, collected attendance data from 40 large urban school districts around the country, including New York City, Philadelphia, Orlando, Fla., Dallas, Phoenix and Los Angeles. No New Mexico cities were included in the report. The report did not include long-term absences, consisting of 10 consecutive days or more, assuming those involved illness or maternity/paternity leave. It

did, however, take into account professional development days that pull teachers out of the classroom. The report states that in 73 percent of the districts, teachers took less short-team leave than what was offered to them in terms of sick and personal days. Indianapolis had the highest rate of teachers who were present nearly every day, followed by Buffalo, N.Y. Other high-ranking districts include Milwaukee, Atlanta and the District of Columbia. Cleveland had the highest rate of absentee teachers, averaging 15 days, followed by Columbus, Ohio, at

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Richard Olmsted, rolmsted@sfnewmexican.com

14 days. Seventy-five percent of the teachers in the 40 districts studied work in high-poverty schools. But the report concludes there is little evidence to suggest educators in those schools miss more days of work than teachers in schools with students from higherincome families. Nancy Waymack, managing director for district policy at the National Council on Teacher Quality, said by phone Monday that this was a bit of a surprise, since it often is assumed that there is a higher rate of teacher absences in high-poverty schools.

Waymack said the organization initiated the report following reports of high absentee rates among teachers in certain districts. In fall 2012 in Santa Fe, Superintendent Joel Boyd and several school board members expressed surprise to learn that district teachers missed an average of 17 days in the 2011-12 school year, when the national average was around nine or 10 days. Districts who pay teachers for unused sick leave when they retire, or offer other incentives, have the best teacher attendance rates, according to

Please see teacHeRs, Page B-2

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


B-2

LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Deputies face discipline over DWI Pair gave ride instead of making an arrest By Uriel J. Garcia

The New Mexican

Santa Fe County Sheriff Robert Garcia said Tuesday he has recommended punishment against two deputies who drove a suspected drunken driver away from the scene of a domestic dispute. Garcia said he couldn’t say what action he recommended

because it’s a personnel issue, but he confirmed the woman was driven away because she’s the sister of a deputy who was not at the scene. “After he [the woman’s brother] found out what happened, he said he was highly embarrassed and concerned,” Garcia said. The “corrective action” recommendation was made to the county’s human resources department and will be forwarded to the county manager, who will have the final say on

what actions should be taken, Garcia said. The names of the two deputies were not released Tuesday but may be released on a later date, the sheriff said. In the April 26 incident, an unidentified man called police to report that the woman, his ex-girlfriend, had showed up at his residence yelling. When three deputies arrived at the scene, the man told investigators the woman had driven drunk to his residence in Cuyamungue, about 15 miles north of Santa Fe.

The man started making a video recording of the incident as a senior deputy escorted the woman away from the scene, the sheriff said. Garcia said the woman was not arrested or charged with any crimes. The sheriff conducted an internal investigation after the man provided a copy of the video to the sheriff’s office about more than a month ago, Garcia said. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062.

In brief

CARLSBAD — A New Mexico man is recovering for burns after authorities say two men on bicycles doused him with a flammable liquid and set him ablaze while the man was watering his grass. Carlsbad police say the 42-year-old man was attacked for unknown reasons Monday night and transported to Carlsbad Medical Center for treatment of burns to his upper body and face. Authorities say he was later transported to an area hospital for a higher level of care. No arrests have been made.

LAS CRUCES — Minimum-wage workers in New Mexico’s second most populous city will be getting raises. The Las Cruces City Council voted 4-3 to raise the minimum wage in the city from New Mexico’s $7.50 hourly rate to $8 an hour in July 2015 and to $8.50 in January 2016. The Las Cruces Sun-News reports that

BURRO STATUE’S TAIL RESTORED

Taylor Mott, artist and metal worker, welds a new tail on the Burro in Burro Alley on Tuesday. Mott also repaired the hoofs which had some rust. The tail was broken off in May. LUIS SANCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

the vote followed three hours of debate Monday. Supporters said the increases are necessary for workers and reasonable for businesses, while councilors voting against the measure said the increases doesn’t do enough to help struggling families.

Las Cruces voters ultimately could decide the issue. A group is proposing a three-phased measure to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 per hour by 2017. The Associated Press

Manager: Snyder earns $130,000 annually got somebody you can trust and that’s very qualified,” Maeof Española, said he would stas said. have preferred that Gonzales Snyder, a civil engineer, advertise the top administrative joined Santa Fe city governpost in city government, at least ment in 2004. Before he throughout New Mexico, “to became city manager, he was see what talent is out there.” director of the Public Utilities “But being a former mayor, I Department and the Water know how important it is to fill Division beginning in 2010. a position as important as city Snyder has a bachelor’s manager and know that you’ve degree in civil engineering

Continued from Page B-1

from Drexel University in Philadelphia. Snyder is paid $130,000 annually as city manager, whose responsibilities include overseeing day-to-day operations of the city government, including hiring and firing. It’s unclear whether Gonzales proposes to increase Snyder’s salary. “I don’t yet have a copy of the

contract,” city spokeswoman Jodi McGinnis Porter said. “It should be ready sometime on Friday.” Staff writer Uriel Garcia contributed to this report. Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter at @danieljchacon.

Teachers: S.F. schools address attendance Continued from Page B-1 the national report. Richard Bowman, director of accountability and assessment for Santa Fe Public Schools, said Monday the district is working to improve teacher attendance. In its latest contract with NEA-Santa Fe employees, SFPS included an attendance incentive package, wherein teachers with perfect attendance receive $100 for one semester and $150 for the second semester. In addition, the district offers those employees a buy-back of sick and personal leave at the rate of 20 percent. “Between these two incentives, we estimate that an employee may receive over $1,000 each year for perfect

verdict. “It is so rare for an animal to get any semblance of justice in our court system,” she told the newspaper. BOULDER, Colo — A forCarter argued that the elk had mer Boulder police officer was become dangerously domesticonvicted Tuesday of killing a cated and aggressive. But prosbull elk that had become a trea- ecutors told the jury the killing sured companion in an upscale was a case of poaching by an neighborhood and whose death officer who sought to use his sparked marches, prayer vigils position to get an illegal trophy and at least one tribute song. mount. A jury found Sam Carter After shooting the elk, prosguilty of nine charges. He could ecutors said, Carter called a face up to six years in prison friend and former officer to pick after shooting the animal known up the carcass and butcher it. as “Big Boy” last year as it They also said Carter later grazed beneath a crabapple tree, forged a tag to pass off the dead The Daily Camera reported. animal as road kill. Boulder animal activist The Associated Press Jessica Sandler applauded the

Funeral services and memorials

Police: Carlbad man set on fire by 2 others

Las Cruces council OKs hike in minimum wage

Ex-cop convicted of killing elk

attendance,” Bowman said. He would not comment on the national report or how it compares to Santa Fe Public Schools’ teacher attendance because he isn’t clear what measures various districts use in collecting attendance and absentee data, he said. Bowman said SFPS is collecting data on teacher attendance daily and reviewing the information monthly with principals. Grace Mayer, president of NEA-Santa Fe, did not return a call seeking comment Monday. Making attendance part of a teacher evaluation system seems to have some impact, as well, according to the national report. Ten of the 40 districts — including top-ranked Indianapolis, Buffalo and D.C. — partly base teacher evaluations

on attendance. Earlier this year, Albuquerque Public Schools reported that teacher absences due to illness dropped 15 percent in the last year, since the district included attendance as part of its evaluation system. Waymack said it will be interesting to see whether that approach expands to other districts around the nation and whether it continues to play a role in increased teacher attendance. She said the cost of substitute teachers to these 40 districts is about $424 million, or $1,800 per teacher. “Think about what could be done in a classroom for that $1,800,” she said. She said districts should focus on teachers who are chronically absent and find

out why they are missing so much school and what can be done to turn that tide. She also urges districts to plan professional development programs so they don’t coincide with regular school days. Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a news statement released Monday that the report displays the dedication of teachers across the country. Stephanie Ly, American Federation of Teachers New Mexico president, said via email Tuesday that the union urges staff members who are sick to stay home, and that many times children of teachers are ill, forcing the teachers to miss days.

MAGDA GREENWALD KLEIN Magda Greenwald Klein died peacefully on May 30, 2014 at age 101 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Born in Marosvasarhely, Hungary in 1912, Magda arrived at Ellis Island on New Year’s Day, 1920. A witness to the world’s painful transition into modernity, she endured through adversity, heartache and triumph with grace, kindness, and most of all, love. To know Magda was to experience that seemingly boundless capacity for love. After losing her mother at an early age, Magda, with her brother, Ernest; sister, Olga; their father, David; and 9 months’ pregnant stepmother came to the United States as refugees of the First World War. Magda’s second mother died of pneumonia, just days following the birth of Magda’s brother, Benjamin. The three older siblings were offered a choice: give baby Benjamin up for adoption to remain together, or live in an orphanage. Without hesitation they opted for the orphanage, and resided there, until David was able to remarry and establish a home in Passaic, New Jersey. The loyalty among Ernest, Olga and Magda remained a touchstone throughout their adult lives. In 1942, Benjamin died in the North African theater of World War II. In 1938, following an approximately one-week courtship, Magda married Jose Klein, in Santiago Chile. Jose’s entrepreneurial successes brought Magda material comforts as great as her beginnings were modest. In 1968, Magda and Jose relocated to Geneva, Switzerland, where they lived until Jose passed away in 1977. Following Jose’s death, Magda enjoyed many years of independence and self-reliance. She married her old friend Alejandro Schlesinger. In 1992, Alejandro died. Magda spent her remaining years in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where her daughter Diana Klein Thomas and son-in-law, Anthony Thomas were able to provide her with care and companionship for her last 21 years of her life. Magda was a gifted writer and communicator. However, because the contributions and aptitudes of women historically have been so undervalued, Magda was denied an opportunity to continue her studies through high school. There’s is no telling what greatness she may have achieved had she come of age in a time of greater enlightenment. In addition to Diana and Anthony, she leaves behind son and daughter-in-law, Rolando and Linda Klein, as well as son Arturo Klein and his wife Ester. She also leaves behind a legacy of 12 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. All of us look to Magda as a testament to the enduring powers of tenacity, and love. Thank you, Memi. You will be sorely missed. EDWINA QUINTANA 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY Dear Wife, Mom & Grandma in Heaven, We sit here and ponder how very much We’d like to talk with you today There are so many things That we didn’t get to say. We know how much you cared for us And how much we cared for you, And each time that we think of you We know you miss us too. An angel came and took you by the hand, and said Your place was ready in Heaven, far above... And you had to leave behind, all those you dearly loved You had so much to live for, you had so much to do... It still seems impossible that God was taking you. And though your life on earth is past, in Heaven it starts anew You’ll live for all eternity, just as God had promised you. And though you’ve walked through Heaven’s gate We are never far apart For every time we think of you, You’re right here, deep with-in our hearts. Love & Miss You, Isidro, Rayleen & Faron, Lynette & Sam, Joelle & Matthew & Your Grandchildren KATE MIERA

Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following report: u Someone stole a PlayStation 4 game console between 8:25 a.m. and 2:10 p.m. Monday from a residence in the 2000 block of Calle Navidad. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following reports:

u A woman reported that someone went into her room at the Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino and stole $200 from her purse between 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. Monday. u Johanna Chavez, 30, of Albuquerque was arrested on suspicion of possession of a controlled substance and other charges after a Santa Fe County

correctional officer found her Monday with a baggie containing heroin, a deputy’s report says. u Someone broke into a parked car on West Gutierrez Street in Pojoaque on Monday and stole an Xbox game console and a wallet. u Between April 17 and June 2, someone stole a 2003

Nissan Frontier truck, which was parked on Juan Medina Road in Chimayó. u Someone broke into a car parked in the 2000 block of Dail Circle between midnight and 4 a.m. Monday and stole a touch-screen stereo, a computer tablet, a Victoria’s Secret makeup bag and about 15 pairs of children’s shoes.

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LOCAL & REGION

Arizona inmate gets life term for killing couple Linda Haas of Tecumseh, ALBUQUERQUE — An Okla. Arizona inmate convicted of But jurors kidnapping and murdering a deliberating retired Oklahoma couple in the sentencing New Mexico after he escaped for McClusfrom prison was sentenced key failed to Tuesday to life behind bars reach a unaniJohn without the chance of parole. mous verdict, McCluskey U.S. District Judge Judith Herdeciding they rera officially handed down the couldn’t agree sentence to John McCluskey, on the death penalty. That who also received a consecutive earned McCluskey an automatic term of 235 years. The 49-yearlife sentence, which wasn’t old declined to read a statement made official until Tuesday. at his sentencing. “With the help of his conspirMcCluskey was convicted in ators, John Charles McCluskey October of 20 counts of aggramercilessly killed two innocent vated murder, carjacking and victims and burned their bodies other charges for the August as he fled law enforcement after 2010 slayings of Gary and escaping from prison,” AssisThe Associated Press

tant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell said. “Our thoughts are with those whose lives were changed forever by these heinous crimes.” McCluskey was serving 15 years for attempted seconddegree murder, aggravated assault and discharge of a firearm when he and two other prisoners escaped from a medium-security prison near Kingman, Ariz., in July 2010 with the help of McCluskey’s cousin and fiancée, Casslyn Welch. One of the inmates was quickly captured after a shootout with authorities in Colorado, while McCluskey, Welch and inmate Tracy Province headed to New Mexico.

WIPP: Radiation leak halts work Continued from Page B-1 of Energy official contacted last week by The New Mexican would only say that internal discussions have been held about the figure, but no formal request for additional funds has been made to date. Senate Appropriations Committee staff said any requests for additional funding for WIPP in the 2015 federal budget are likely to be submitted formally within the next few weeks, as Congress expects to begin work on the spending package within the next month or two. “The preliminary report on the release laid out a number of changes in design and operation at WIPP that must be made, and once the cause of the release is identified, there is going to be a lot of work to do to return to operation,” Heinrich told The New Mexican. Udall, a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said he will fight for Congress to authorize additional money for WIPP in the interest of public safety. “This is in the nation’s interest as well as that of New

Mexico and the Carlsbad community,” he said. “But the safety of the community and the workers is paramount.” The nation’s only belowground repository for waste generated during decades of Cold War nuclear weapons research, WIPP ceased receiving waste from Los Alamos National Laboratory after the radiation leak was detected. Its cause remains under investigation, but federal investigators have focused on a compromised drum within WIPP that originated at LANL. The drum comes from a waste stream that was treated by contractor EnergySolutions with organic kitty litter instead of the standard clay-based variety. Investigators are reviewing whether the change could have triggered a chemical reaction that caused the radiation leak at WIPP. Meanwhile, waste from LANL is being stored in fortified containers on site and shipped to a Waste Control Specialists site in Andrews, Texas. Last week, the U.S. Department of Energy notified the New Mexico Environment

Department that because of the situation at WIPP, complete removal of Cold War-era transuranic waste at LANL will not be done before the June 30 deadline imposed by the state. Also last week, the Energy Department informed the state that WIPP could be closed for up to two years during the recovery effort following the radiation leak. Heinrich said he was encouraged by remarks made by Monica Regalbuto, Obama’s appointee for assistant secretary for environmental management at the Department of Energy, during her recent confirmation hearing, when she identified reopening WIPP as a priority. “We are eager to see the facility reopened,” the senators wrote in their letter to the president, “but want to ensure that it is done with proper oversight and careful deliberation to provide the community with the confidence they need to allow operations and safe storage of defense legacy waste to continue.”

Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Agents seize 600 pounds of pot FORT HANCOCK, Texas — Border Patrol agents have confiscated nearly 600 pounds of marijuana in two incidents. Agents near the Texas town

of Fort Hancock seized 428 pounds of marijuana last Friday from a truck that had been traveling toward Interstate 10 from the U.S.-Mexico border. The driver, Jose Lopez, 60, a naturalized U.S. citizen and his passenger, Tomas Anguiano-Vera, 52, of Mexico,

B-3

were turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration. Earlier on Friday, agents in Lordsburg seized 156 pounds of marijuana from three individuals who had been spotted crossing illegally near of Playas. The Associated Press

Voters: Opponents fear mischief — would continue having their primaries in June. But when consider changing the rules of “declined-to-state” voters go to their respective primaries to the polls, they would be given allow independent voters to a choice of receiving a Demoparticipate. cratic or Republican ballot. One of his arguments was Such a change would not affect that, “By including and listenthe 38,754 voters registered in ing to independent voters, you minor political parties. will better position your party Opponents of allowing indeto win the general election. pendents to vote have argued Since independents often com- that such a practice would prise the deciding swing votes encourage mischief at the polls. in close elections, gaining their For instance, Democrats could support early could make the register as “declined to state,” difference in many elections. then vote in the Republican So there will be an advantage primary for the weakest GOP to whichever party moves first candidate. Democrats who to open its primaries.” oppose independents in the GOP Chairman John Billing- primary say the same thing sley was noncommittal in 2013 about Republicans. when asked about Nathan’s But Harrison scoffed at the proposal. However, then Dem- idea of “roving bands of votocratic Party Chairman Javier ers” sandbagging the party they Gonzales said he liked the idea. oppose. “The thing is, you can Gonzales, now mayor of Santa do this anyway,” she said. “Any Fe, was in his final days as party Democrat can register Repubchairman at the time. Neither lican and vice versa and go Billingsley nor Gonzales’ sucvote in the primary. The thing cessor, Sam Bregman, took any is now, nobody is voting in the action in opening their respec- primaries.” tive primaries to independents. Indeed, primary elections in If he is successful in getrecent years have seen lower ting the courts to overturn the and lower voter turnout. Meanstate law, Hollington said, New while, independent voters are Mexico would have a “semithe fastest-growing group of open” primary system. Demoregistered voters. They make crats and Republicans — and up 19 percent of registered votother parties if any others ever ers statewide and 20 percent in Santa Fe County, where qualify for major-party status

Continued from Page B-1

independent voters outnumber Republicans. In the 2012 Legislature, Rep. Andy Nuñez of Hatch, who at the time was the lone independent in the Legislature, went before the House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee with a proposed constitutional amendment to allow unaffiliated voters to vote in primaries. Supporters, including Common Cause New Mexico, argued that opening the primaries would lead to more participation in the process. But all present Democrats and Republicans voted to table the joint resolution, effectively killing it. Nuñez, who was defeated for re-election that year running as an independent, is now trying to win back his seat, this time as a Republican. Hollington said he doesn’t expect a hearing on the suit for several months. His hope is to have the state Supreme Court decide in time for the 2016 primary. The defendants in Hollington’s suit are Bernalillo County Clerk Maggie Toulouse Oliver and Secretary of State Dianna Duran. Republican Duran and Democrat Oliver are running against each other for secretary of state in the November election.

Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017.

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B-4 THE NEW MEXICAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 2014

SPORTS

STANLEY CUP FINALS

MLB: Cruz homers in return to Texas, Orioles win. Page B-6

NBA FINALS

A healthy Dwyane Wade is ready to go

By Tim Reynolds

The Associated Press

Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda, left, and first baseman Steve Garvey look dejected in the dugout during an Oct. 17, 1978, loss to the New York Yankees in Game 6 of the World Series.

MIAMI — The last time Dwyane Wade played in an NBA Finals game, he needed fluid drained from his left knee and eight hours of intense game-day therapy just to get into uniform. The Miami Heat guard later described it in a single word.

“Hell,” Wade said. It was also worth it, after he scored 23 points, grabbed 10 rebounds and hoisted his third Larry O’Brien Trophy. Now, unlike last year, Wade is not dealing with any injuries heading into the Miami’s finals rematch against the San Antonio Spurs. At 32 years old and with 866 NBA games already on his playing odom-

eter, Wade still deals with plenty of aches and pains, good days and bad days, and basically has a standing appointment in the Heat training room. But compared to last season’s NBA Finals, his knees are good as new. “He’s a big-time, huge piece to our puzzle,” four-time NBA MVP and Heat star LeBron James said. “To have him out there in the groove that

he’s in right now, it’s going to help us.” The Heat are looking to win their third straight title and Wade is on the cusp of joining a list of all-time NBA greats. There are just seven players with four championships and at least one NBA Finals MVP award on their

Please see waDe, Page B-6

ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

New York vs. L.A. can be as big as it gets It’s been 33 years since cities fought for a title

TENNIS FRENCH OPEN

Rally queen

Down set, Russia’s Sharapova charges back, advances to semifinals

By Tim Dahlberg

The Associated Press

The last time New York and Los Angeles teams met in a big championship final, the Dodgers found themselves up against a pitcher who had undergone Tommy John surgery. How long has it been? Well, here’s a clue: The lefty on the mound was Tommy John himself. Thirty-three years after the Dodgers won a World Series against John and the Yankees, L.A. and New York finally meet again. This time it’s on the ice, with the teams from the country’s two biggest cities squaring off in the Stanley Cup final. It may not bring thoughts back of Willis Reed limping onto the court, willing his team to a win in Game 7 of the 1970 NBA Finals. Or Reggie Jackson hitting three home runs in one game in 1977 as the Yankees beat the Dodgers. The Big Apple and Hollywood don’t have any championship history in hockey, but there’s some buzz on both coasts for the first New YorkLos Angeles major sports final since 1981. “The big markets, that adds another level to the excitement of the finals here,” said the Rangers’ Dominic Moore. “I know New York is excited.”

Please see BiG, Page B-5

COLLEGE SOFTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS

Florida beats Alabama in Game 1 By Cliff Brunt

The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — Hannah Rogers threw a four-hitter to help Florida defeat Alabama 5-0 in Game 1 of the best-of-three national championship series Florida 5 Monday night. Alabama 0 Rogers had a perfect game through four innings and a one-hitter going into the bottom of the seventh in the matchup of SEC rivals. Florida (54-12) now is just one win from its first national title after runner-up finishes in 2009 and 2011. Game 2 will be played Tuesday night. Jackie Traina got the loss for Alabama (53-12). She gave up five runs in 6 1-3 innings after having allowed just one earned run in her first three games during the World Series. The Crimson Tide hadn’t been shut out since Feb. 16. Aubree Munro got the Gators going with a solo homer to leftcenter in the third inning. It was her third of the season. In the top of the fifth, Florida got it going with two outs. Leadoff hitter Kelsey Stewart had a bunt single, then Kirsti Merritt doubled to left center to score Stewart. Stephanie Tofft singled to score Merritt and push Florida’s lead to 3-0.

Russia’s Maria Sharapova returns the ball to Spain’s Garbine Muguruza during their quarterfinal match of the French Open on Tuesday at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris. MICHEL EULER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Howard Fendrich

The Associated Press

PARIS his is what Maria Sharapova does. She digs herself a big hole in a match, then figures a way out, no matter what it takes. She hits shots left-handed. Takes her time between points. Pumps her fists and screams “Come on!” after her opponent’s mistakes. And wins. Did it in the fourth round at the French Open, turning things around by winning the last nine games. Did it Tuesday, too, reeling off nine of the

t

last 10 games to put together a 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 victory over 35th-ranked Garbine Muguruza of Spain that put 2012 champion Sharapova in the semifinals at Roland Garros for the fourth consecutive year. “When you just don’t feel like anything is going your way, you want to try to find a little door to get into,” Sharapova said. “Once you start feeling, you know, like you got your foot in the door, then it’s a little bit easier.” After beating one 20-year-old, Sharapova now faces another, 18th-seeded Eugenie Bouchard of Canada, who earned a semifinal spot for the second straight Grand Slam tournament.

Like Sharapova, Bouchard was not fazed by falling behind in the quarterfinals. Bouchard trailed 5-2 in the first set, and 4-1 in the third, but beat No. 14 Carla Suarez Navarro of Spain 7-6 (4), 2-6, 7-5. “I’m just proud,” Bouchard said, “of the way I stayed in there.” Tuesday’s men’s quarterfinals offered far less intrigue. No. 2 Novak Djokovic kept up his bid to complete a career Grand Slam by muting Milos Raonic’s dangerous serve and defeating the eighthseeded Canadian 7-5, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Djokovic’s next

Please see RaLLY, Page B-6

Every sports great walks in the shadow of another

A

fter Indiana lost to the Miami The answer is: no, they cannot. Heat in Game 6 of the NBA Every good team is cursed by the fact Eastern Conference finals, that it will be compared to another Pacers head coach Frank good team. No matter how Vogel told the media that good you are, you will always be compared to the the Heat are the Chicago Bulls of the ’90s. Must feel Bulls of this era, and good to be them. LeBron James is the Michael Jordan of this era. Unfortunately, the Heat Those comparisons are may have to hear the Bulls very accurate, being as the comparisons until they win Heat are looking to win enough championships their third consecutive to make everyone forget Edmundo about them. championship, but why Carrillo does the Heat have to be I guess that’s just the way Commentary compared to another team? things work in the competitive world. You’re either a Comparing things is team that is always being very common in the sports compared to another, or you’re the world, but why is that so? Can’t the team that every other team is being Miami Heat of this era just be the Miami Heat of this era? Can’t LeBron compared to. James just be the LeBron James of The same thing goes for players. People will always be questioning if this era?

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

LeBron James is not as good, just as good or better than Michael Jordan — and every basketball fan has an opinion on that. It’s not just James who gets the comparisons. Pretty much any good athlete is compared to another. You especially hear this during draft time, where all prospects are compared to a seasoned player to give the audience an idea of what the new player is all about. You’ll hear stuff like, “This kid will be the next Allen Iverson” or, “He reminds me of a young ‘Pistol’ Pete Maravich.” OK, I don’t think anyone has said that last one in a while, but you get the idea. Every time a team wins the Super Bowl, the talking TV heads are quick to rank it on various all-time greatest team lists. That goes doubly for Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks.

Can Tom Brady stop being compared to Joe Montana? These kinds of things aren’t limited to just sports. Good bands are often compared to The Beatles, every new Martin Scorsese movie is compared to one of his old ones and How I Met Your Mother was basically Friends for a new generation. Maybe one day we can move on from constant comparing and contrasting and finally let a good team or player exist just as it is. Maybe one day LeBron can be LeBron and Michael can be Michael. It might be difficult considering that it is human nature to compare the present to the past, but maybe we’ll learn to let things be as they are. With all that said, the Heat are the new Bulls and the Spurs are the new Utah Jazz — they’re good, but just not better than the Bulls.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


NATIONAL SCOREBOARD Nationals 7, Phillies 0

BASEBALL BaseBall

MlB american league

east W l Pct GB Toronto 35 24 .593 — Baltimore 29 27 .518 4½ New York 29 28 .509 5 Boston 27 31 .466 7½ Tampa Bay 23 36 .390 12 Central W l Pct GB Detroit 31 23 .574 — Chicago 30 30 .500 4 Cleveland 29 30 .492 4½ Kansas City 28 30 .483 5 Minnesota 27 29 .482 5 West W l Pct GB Oakland 36 22 .621 — Los Angeles 30 27 .526 5½ Seattle 30 28 .517 6 Texas 29 29 .500 7 Houston 25 34 .424 11½ Tuesday’s Games Cleveland 5, Boston 3 Oakland 5, N.Y. Yankees 2, 10 innings Toronto 5, Detroit 3 Baltimore 8, Texas 3 Houston 7, L.A. Angels 2 Wednesday’s Games Boston (Workman 0-0) at Cleveland (Kluber 6-3), 5:05 p.m. Oakland (J.Chavez 4-3) at N.Y. Yankees (Nuno 1-2), 5:05 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 5-4) at Detroit (Porcello 8-2), 5:08 p.m. Miami (Koehler 4-5) at Tampa Bay (Price 4-4), 5:10 p.m. Baltimore (B.Norris 3-5) at Texas (N.Martinez 1-1), 6:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Richards 4-2) at Houston (Cosart 4-4), 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 5-2) at Minnesota (Nolasco 3-5), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 8-3) at Kansas City (Vargas 5-2), 6:10 p.m.

National league

east W l Pct GB Atlanta 31 26 .544 — Miami 30 28 .517 1½ Washington 28 28 .500 2½ New York 28 30 .483 3½ Philadelphia 24 32 .429 6½ Central W l Pct GB Milwaukee 35 24 .593 — St. Louis 30 29 .508 5 Pittsburgh 28 30 .483 6½ Cincinnati 27 29 .482 6½ Chicago 21 34 .382 12 West W l Pct GB San Francisco 37 21 .638 — Los Angeles 31 29 .517 7 Colorado 28 29 .491 8½ San Diego 26 33 .441 11½ Arizona 24 36 .400 14 Tuesday’s Games Washington 7, Philadelphia 0 Cincinnati 8, San Francisco 3 Seattle 7, Atlanta 5 Miami 1, Tampa Bay 0 Kansas City 8, St. Louis 7 Chicago Cubs 2, N.Y. Mets 1 Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 4 Arizona 4, Colorado 2 Pittsburgh 4, San Diego 1 Chicago White Sox 4, L.A. Dodgers 1 Wednesday’s Games Seattle (Iwakuma 3-2) at Atlanta (Minor 2-3), 10:10 a.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-5) at San Diego (Kennedy 4-6), 4:40 p.m. Philadelphia (A.Burnett 3-4) at Washington (Strasburg 4-4), 5:05 p.m. Miami (Koehler 4-5) at Tampa Bay (Price 4-4), 5:10 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 3-2) at Cincinnati (Cingrani 2-5), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Matsuzaka 2-0) at Chicago Cubs (E.Jackson 3-5), 6:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 5-2) at Minnesota (Nolasco 3-5), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 8-3) at Kansas City (Vargas 5-2), 6:10 p.m. Arizona (Collmenter 4-2) at Colorado (Lyles 5-1), 6:40 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 3-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 3-2), 8:10 p.m.

MlB Boxscores Tuesday astros 7, angels 2

los angeles ab r Calhon rf 5 0 Trout cf 1 0 Cowgill cf 3 1 Pujols 1b 4 0 JHmltn lf 3 1 HKndrc 2b 4 0 Ibanez dh 3 0 Cron dh 1 0 Freese 3b 3 0 Iannett c 4 0 Aybar ss 3 0 Totals

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

Houston

Fowler cf Altuve 2b Springr rf JCastro c MDmn 3b Singltn 1b Carter dh Grssmn lf Villar ss MGnzlz ss

34 2 5 2 Totals

ab r 3 1 5 0 3 1 4 1 3 1 3 1 4 1 4 0 2 1 0 0

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

31 7 10 7

los angeles 000 000 020—2 Houston 005 000 02x—7 E—Singleton 2 (2). DP—Los Angeles 3. LOB—Los Angeles 8, Houston 8. 2B— Calhoun (7), Fowler (7). HR—Cowgill (4), J.Hamilton (3), Singleton (1), Carter (9). los angeles IP H R eR BB sO C.Wilson L,6-5 2 2-3 6 5 5 5 4 Morin 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Salas 1 1 0 0 0 2 Bedrosian 1 0 0 0 0 1 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 1 1 Shoemaker 1 2 2 2 1 2 Houston IP H R eR BB sO McHugh W,4-3 5 2 0 0 2 4 D.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 1 Fields 1 2-3 1 1 1 0 3 Sipp 0 1 1 1 0 0 Farnsworth H,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Qualls 1 1 0 0 0 0 Sipp pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. HBP—by Shoemaker (Villar), by McHugh (Freese). WP—Shoemaker. T—3:31. A—23,219 (42,060).

Philadelphia ab r Rollins ss 3 0 Utley 2b 4 0 Byrd rf 4 0 Howard 1b 4 0 Ruiz c 3 0 DBrwn lf 3 0 EMartn p 0 0 CHrndz ph 1 0 Brignc 3b 4 0 Revere cf 4 0 Buchnn p 2 0 Mayrry lf 1 0 Totals

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

Washington ab r Span cf 5 3 Clipprd p 0 0 Rendon 3b 4 2 Werth rf 4 0 LaRoch 1b 3 0 Zmrmn lf 4 0 McLoth cf 0 0 WRams c 4 0 Dsmnd ss 3 1 Espinos 2b 4 1 Zmrmn p 2 0 Frndsn lf 1 0

33 0 6 0 Totals

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

34 7 10 7

Philadelphia 000 000 000—0 Washington 003 013 00x—7 E—Rollins (5), Buchanan (2). LOB— Philadelphia 8, Washington 7. 2B— Brignac (1), Werth (10), Zimmerman 2 (5). HR—Rendon (7), Desmond (11). S—Zimmermann. Philadelphia IP H R eR BB sO Buchanan L,1-2 6 10 7 7 2 6 E.Martin 2 0 0 0 1 1 Washington IP H R eR BB sO Zimmermann W,4-2 8 5 0 0 1 4 Clippard 1 1 0 0 1 1 T—2:42. A—25,291 (41,408).

Marlins 1, Rays 0

Tampa Bay ab r Kiermr cf 4 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 DeJess lf 4 0 Longori 3b 3 0 Loney 1b 3 0 Joyce rf 3 0 YEscor ss 3 0 JMolin c 3 0 Archer p 2 0 DJnngs ph 1 0 Totals

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

Miami

Yelich lf Lucas 2b Stanton rf McGeh 3b GJones 1b Ozuna cf Hchvrr ss Mathis c HAlvrz p

30 0 8 0 Totals

ab r 2 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 3 1 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 0

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

27 1 5 1

Tampa Bay 000 000 000—0 Miami 000 010 00x—1 DP—Tampa Bay 2, Miami 3. LOB— Tampa Bay 3, Miami 4. 2B—Ozuna (7). 3B—Kiermaier (1). CS—DeJesus (2), Y.Escobar (1). Tampa Bay IP H R eR BB sO Archer L,3-3 7 5 1 1 2 8 Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 2 Miami IP H R eR BB sO H.Alvarez W,3-3 9 8 0 0 0 5 T—2:10. A—21,303 (37,442).

Blue Jays 5, Tigers 3

Toronto

ab r Reyes ss 4 1 MeCarr lf 4 0 Bautist rf 4 1 Encrnc 1b 3 1 Lind dh 3 0 Pillar ph 0 0 Lawrie 3b 4 1 JFrncs 3b 4 0 StTllsn 2b 0 0 DNavrr c 3 0 Gose cf 2 1 Totals

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

Detroit

ab r Kinsler 2b 3 1 TrHntr rf 4 0 MiCarr 1b 3 1 VMrtnz dh 4 0 JMrtnz lf 4 1 D.Kelly 3b 4 0 AJcksn cf 3 0 Avila c 3 0 AnRmn ss 3 0

31 5 5 5 Totals

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

31 3 4 3

Toronto 000 000 005—5 Detroit 000 000 003—3 LOB—Toronto 2, Detroit 3. 2B—Encarnacion (16), J.Francisco (8). HR— Lawrie (9), J.Martinez (3). SB—Gose (3). SF—Pillar. Toronto IP H R eR BB sO Hutchison 7 3 0 0 0 7 McGowan W,3-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Delabar 2-3 1 3 3 2 1 Janssen S,9-10 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit IP H R eR BB sO A.Sanchez 7 2 0 0 0 5 Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan L,2-2 1-3 2 4 4 2 0 Krol 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Alburquerque 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 T—2:51. A—33,488 (41,681).

Reds 8, Giants 3

san Francisco ab r Pagan cf 3 1 Kontos p 0 0 Pence rf 4 1 Posey 1b 4 0 Adrianz 2b 0 0 Sandovl 3b 3 0 Morse lf 4 0 HSnchz c 3 1 BCrwfr ss 4 0 Arias 1b 2 0 Linccm p 2 0 Blanco cf 1 0 Totals

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

Cincinnati ab r BHmltn cf 5 2 Frazier 3b 2 2 Phillips 2b 4 1 Bruce rf 4 2 Mesorc c 4 1 B.Pena 1b 3 0 Schmkr lf 4 0 Cozart ss 4 0 Bailey p 3 0 Hoover p 0 0 Lutz ph 0 0

30 3 5 3 Totals

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

33 8 8 7

san Francisco 111 000 000—3 Cincinnati 400 040 00x—8 E—Lincecum (1), Posey (2), H.Sanchez 2 (3). DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—San Francisco 4, Cincinnati 5. 2B—Pence (12), B.Crawford (11), B.Hamilton (7), Phillips (16), Bruce (6). HR—Pence (8), Mesoraco (9). SB—B.Hamilton 2 (22), Phillips (1), Bruce (6). SF—Sandoval, Arias. IP H R eR BB sO san Francisco IP H R eR BB sO Lincecum L,4-4 4 1-3 6 8 8 3 3 Huff 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 Kontos 2 0 0 0 1 1 Cincinnati IP H R eR BB sO Bailey W,6-3 6 5 3 3 1 7 Hoover 2 0 0 0 0 1 Ondrusek 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Bailey (H.Sanchez). T—2:57. A—27,152 (42,319).

Indians 5, Red sox 3

Boston

ab r Holt 1b 5 0 Bogarts 3b 4 2 Pedroia 2b 4 0 D.Ortiz dh 4 0 JGoms lf 3 1 GSizmr ph 1 0 Przyns c 4 0 Hassan rf 4 0 BrdlyJr cf 3 0 JHerrr ss 4 0 Totals

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

Cleveland ab r Bourn cf 4 1 ACarer ss 4 1 Brantly lf 4 1 Kipnis 2b 4 0 Chsnhll 1b 4 0 Raburn dh 4 0 DvMrp rf 3 0 YGoms c 4 1 Aviles 3b 2 1

36 3 10 3 Totals

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

33 5 11 4

Boston 001 001 100—3 Cleveland 300 000 20x—5 E—Peavy (1). DP—Boston 2, Cleveland 1. LOB—Boston 11, Cleveland 6. 2B— Bogaerts (16), Pedroia (19), Bourn (6). HR—Bogaerts (5). SB—Kipnis (6). S—Aviles. Boston IP H R eR BB sO Peavy L,1-3 6 1-3 8 5 5 1 3 A.Miller 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Breslow 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Badenhop 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland IP H R eR BB sO House 5 2-3 6 2 2 2 4 Rzepczynski H,6 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Atchison BS,2-3 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 Hagadone W,1-0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 3 Allen S,5-6 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Rzepczynski (Bradley Jr.), by House (Bogaerts). WP—Rzepczynski. T—3:09. A—18,738 (42,487).

Mariners 7, Braves 5

seattle

ab r J.Jones cf 3 0 Gillespi ph 0 0 Leone p 0 0 Blmqst ph 1 0 Farqhr p 0 0 Rodney p 0 0 MSndrs rf 5 0 Cano 2b 5 0 Seager 3b 5 0 Smoak 1b 5 0 Ackley lf 5 1 Buck c 4 3 BMiller ss 3 2 Romer ph 1 1 EnChvz cf 1 0 Totals

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

atlanta

ab r Heywrd rf 5 1 BUpton cf 5 2 FFrmn 1b 4 1 J.Upton lf 4 0 Gattis c 3 1 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 LaStell 2b 4 0 ASmns ss 3 0 Floyd p 2 0 Avilan p 0 0 JSchafr ph 1 0 A.Wood p 0 0 Doumit ph 1 0

38 7 13 7 Totals

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

36 5 10 5

seattle 020 300 200—7 atlanta 410 000 000—5 E—J.Jones (1), C.Johnson (4). DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Seattle 8, Atlanta 7. 2B—Cano (12), Heyward (8), C.Johnson (11). HR—Buck (1), Romero (3), B.Upton (5), Gattis (12). SB—B. Upton (9). S—E.Ramirez, En.Chavez. seattle IP H R eR BB sO E.Ramirez 3 8 5 5 1 4 Wilhelmsen 2 1 0 0 2 2 Leone W,2-0 2 0 0 0 0 4 Farquhar H,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Rodney S,15-17 1 0 0 0 0 2 atlanta IP H R eR BB sO Floyd 5 10 5 3 1 4 Avilan 1 0 0 0 1 1 A.Wood L,5-6 2 2 2 2 0 2 Varvaro 1 1 0 0 0 1 Floyd pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. WP—E.Ramirez, Farquhar. T—3:08. A—36,503 (49,586).

Royals 8, Cardinals 7

Kansas City ab r Aoki rf 4 1 Infante 2b 5 1 Hosmer 1b 4 1 AGordn lf 4 1 S.Perez c 5 1 L.Cain cf 3 0 Crow p 0 0 WRdrg p 0 0 BButler ph 1 0 Mostks 3b 4 1 AEscor ss 4 1 Shields p 2 1 Dyson cf 2 0 Totals

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

st. louis

ab r MCrpnt 3b 2 1 Wong 2b 5 1 Rosnthl p 0 0 Hollidy lf 3 1 Craig 1b 5 1 YMolin c 5 0 Tavers rf 3 1 JhPerlt ss 4 0 Jay cf 3 0 Descals 2b 1 0 JGarci p 2 1 Bourjos cf 2 1

38 8 13 8 Totals

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

35 7 10 7

Kansas City 000 060 011—8 st. louis 040 021 000—7 E—Moustakas (4), Hosmer (5). DP— Kansas City 2, St. Louis 2. LOB—Kansas City 6, St. Louis 7. 2B—Infante (6), Moustakas (9), Shields (1), Jh.Peralta 2 (14). 3B—A.Escobar (1). HR—A.Gordon (6), Wong (1), Bourjos (2). S—M. Carpenter. SF—Taveras. Kansas City IP H R eR BB sO Shields 5 1-3 9 7 5 4 1 Crow 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Wi.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 0 W.Davis W,5-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 G.Holland S,16-17 1 0 0 0 0 2 st. louis IP H R eR BB sO J.Garcia 5 8 6 6 0 3 Maness 1 0 0 0 0 0 S.Freeman H,2 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2 Neshek BS,2-2 2-3 3 1 1 0 0 Rosenthal L,0-3 1 2 1 1 1 0 HBP—by J.Garcia (Hosmer). T—3:12. A—41,192 (45,399). New York

Cubs 2, Mets 1

ab r dnDkkr cf 5 1 DnMrp 2b 5 0 DWrght 3b 2 0 Grndrs rf 3 0 CYoung lf 4 0 Duda 1b 3 0 Flores ss 4 0 dArnad c 4 0 ZWhelr p 1 0 Black p 0 0 BAreu ph 1 0 Totals

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

Chicago

ab r Bonifac 2b 3 0 Lake cf 4 0 Rizzo 1b 4 1 SCastro ss 4 0 Valuen 3b 3 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 Coghln lf 3 1 JoBakr c 3 0 Arrieta p 1 0 Barney ph 1 0 Russell p 0 0 Ruggin ph 1 0

32 1 9 1 Totals

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

31 2 6 2

New York 100 000 000—1 Chicago 000 000 011—2 Two outs when winning run scored. E—Rizzo (3). DP—Chicago 1. LOB— New York 10, Chicago 5. HR—Coghlan (1). SB—den Dekker (1), Granderson (3), Bonifacio (13). CS—Schierholtz (4). S—Z.Wheeler 2. SF—Granderson. New York IP H R eR BB sO Z.Wheeler 6 2-3 2 0 0 2 7 Edgin BS,1-1 2-3 1 1 1 0 2 Black 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Rice L,1-2 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 Chicago IP H R eR BB sO Arrieta 4 2-3 7 1 1 3 2 Schlitter 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Russell 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 N.Ramirez 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 H.Rondon W,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 WP—Arrieta. T—3:19. A—34,697 (41,072).

Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Twins 6, Brewers 4

Minnesota ab r DSantn cf 4 1 A.Hicks cf 0 0 Dozier 2b 3 2 Mauer 1b 3 1 Wlngh lf 4 1 Arcia rf 4 0 Plouffe 3b 4 1 Pinto c 4 0 EEscor ss 4 0 Deduno p 2 0 Kubel ph 1 0 Parmel ph 1 0 Totals

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

Milwaukee ab r Segura ss 4 1 Gennett 2b3 0 Lucroy ph 1 0 Braun rf 4 0 CGomz cf 5 1 KDavis lf 3 1 MrRynl 3b 3 0 Overay 1b 2 0 Maldnd c 4 0 Gallard p 2 0 LSchfr ph 0 0 RWeks ph 0 1

34 6 8 6 Totals

Pirates 4, Padres 1

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

31 4 8 4

Minnesota 013 020 000—6 Milwaukee 100 100 011—4 E—Gennett (4). DP—Minnesota 3. LOB—Minnesota 3, Milwaukee 9. 2B—C. Gomez (16). HR—Dozier (12), Willingham (4). SB—Segura (11). SF—Braun. Minnesota IP H R eR BB sO Deduno W,2-3 5 6 2 2 4 2 Guerrier 1 0 0 0 1 1 Burton 1 0 0 0 1 2 Fien 1 2 1 1 0 0 Perkins S,15-17 1 0 1 1 2 1 Milwaukee IP H R eR BB sO Gallardo L,3-4 5 8 6 6 1 6 Thornburg 2 0 0 0 1 1 Kintzler 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fr.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP—Gallardo. T—3:18. A—25,634.

Orioles 8, Rangers 3

Baltimore

ab r Markks rf 6 1 Machd 3b 5 1 N.Cruz lf 4 1 Lough lf 0 0 A.Jones cf 5 2 C.Davis 1b 4 0 Hardy ss 5 0 DYong dh 5 1 Schoop 2b 4 1 CJosph c 4 1 Totals

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

Texas

ab r Choo dh 3 0 DMrph pr 0 0 Andrus ss 5 0 Morlnd 1b 4 0 ABeltre 3b 4 1 Rios rf 3 0 Choice lf 3 0 LMartn cf 3 1 Chirins c 3 1 Odor 2b 3 0

42 8 17 8 Totals

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

31 3 7 3

Baltimore 000 101 060—8 Texas 000 100 101—3 DP—Baltimore 1, Texas 2. LOB— Baltimore 11, Texas 8. 2B—Schoop (8), C.Joseph (1), Chirinos (6). 3B—L. Martin (3). HR—N.Cruz (21), A.Jones (7), A.Beltre (6), Chirinos (3). SOdor. SF—Chirinos. Baltimore IP H R eR BB sO U.Jimenez 5 2-3 4 1 1 4 5 Matusz W,2-1 BS,1 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 O’Day 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Guilmet 1 1 1 1 1 0 Texas IP H R eR BB sO J.Saunders 6 10 2 2 1 2 Frasor 1 1 0 0 0 1 Ogando L,2-3 1-3 2 3 3 0 0 Cotts 0 2 2 2 0 0 Sh.Tolleson 2-3 1 1 1 1 1 Ross Jr. 1 1 0 0 0 0 J.Saunders pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Cotts pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. HBP—by Ogando (Schoop), by Ross Jr. (C.Joseph). T—3:15. A—31,542.

Diamondbacks 4, Rockies 2

arizona

ab r GParra rf 3 0 Hill 2b 5 0 Prado 3b 3 0 MMntr c 3 0 C.Ross lf 3 0 DPerlt lf 1 1 Evans 1b 4 1 Owings ss 4 1 Inciart cf 4 1 CAndrs p 2 0 EMrshl p 0 0 ErChvz ph 1 0 Totals

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

Colorado

ab r Blckmn cf 3 0 Cuddyr rf 4 0 Mornea 1b 4 0 Tlwtzk ss 4 1 CGnzlz lf 2 0 Dickrsn lf 2 0 Rosario c 4 0 Culersn 3b 4 0 LeMahi 2b 3 1 JDLRs p 2 0 Barnes ph 1 0 Hwkns p 0 0

33 4 9 4 Totals

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

33 2 7 2

arizona 000 300 010—4 Colorado 000 010 001—2 DP—Colorado 2. LOB—Arizona 7, Colorado 6. 2B—Prado (10), D.Peralta (1), Owings (11), Rosario (8), Culberson (4). 3B—Owings (3). HR—Evans (1), Owings (4), Tulowitzki (15), LeMahieu (2). SB—Prado (1). S—C.Anderson. arizona IP H R eR BB sO C.Anderson W,4-0 6 4 1 1 2 3 E.Marshall H,5 1 1 0 0 0 2 Ziegler H,13 1 0 0 0 0 0 A.Reed S,15-17 1 2 1 1 0 2 Colorado IP H R eR BB sO J.De La Rosa L,6-4 7 7 3 3 3 0 Brothers 1 2 1 1 0 1 Hawkins 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by J.De La Rosa (Prado). WP—J. De La Rosa. T—3:03. A—29,682.

athletics 5, Yankees 2, 10 innings

Oakland

ab r Crisp cf 4 0 Jaso c 4 0 Dnldsn 3b 5 0 Moss dh 4 2 Cespds lf 3 1 Lowrie ss 4 1 Callasp 1b 3 1 Gentry rf 2 0 Vogt ph 1 0 Blanks rf 1 0 Sogard 2b 4 0 Totals

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

New York

Gardnr lf Jeter dh Ellsury cf Teixeir 1b Solarte 3b ASorin rf ISuzuki rf SSizmr 3b BRorts 2b JMrphy c McCnn c Ryan ss

35 5 7 5 Totals

ab r 5 1 5 0 4 0 5 1 3 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 4 0

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

37 2 7 2

Oakland 000 010 010 3—5 New York 100 001 000 0—2 E—Ellsbury (1). DP—New York 2. LOB—Oakland 4, New York 8. 2B— Lowrie (16), Vogt (1). HR—Moss 2 (15), Teixeira (10). SB—Ellsbury (16). Oakland IP H R eR BB sO Kazmir 6 1-3 6 2 2 2 10 Abad 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Otero W,5-1 Doolittle S,6-7 1 0 0 0 0 1 New York IP H R eR BB sO Kuroda 6 2-3 2 1 1 1 2 Betances BS,1-1 1 1-3 1 1 1 1 2 Dav.Robertson 1 0 0 0 0 0 Warren L,1-3 1-3 3 3 3 1 0 Claiborne 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Abad pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:33. A—41,677 (49,642).

Pittsburgh ab r JHrrsn lf 4 0 NWalkr 2b 4 1 AMcCt cf 3 0 I.Davis 1b 4 0 RMartn c 3 1 PAlvrz 3b 4 1 Snider rf 4 0 Mercer ss 4 0 Cole p 2 1 SMarte ph 1 0 Totals

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

san Diego ab r ECarer ss 3 0 Headly 3b 4 1 S.Smith lf 4 0 Alonso 1b 4 0 Gyorko 2b 4 0 Venale rf 2 0 Denorfi ph 2 0 Maybin cf 2 0 Rivera c 2 0 Lane p 1 0 Quentn ph 1 0

33 4 6 4 Totals

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

29 1 4 1

Pittsburgh 002 200 000—4 san Diego 000 001 000—1 LOB—Pittsburgh 4, San Diego 5. 2B—Venable (9). HR—N.Walker (11), P.Alvarez (11). S—Hahn. IP H R eR BB sO Pittsburgh Cole W,6-3 5 2-3 4 1 1 2 6 J.Hughes H,3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Watson H,15 1 0 0 0 1 1 Melancon H,11 1 0 0 0 0 2 Grilli S,9-12 1 0 0 0 0 2 san Diego Hahn L,0-1 3 2-3 6 4 4 2 5 Lane 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 Quackenbush 1 0 0 0 0 0 Street 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:43. A—20,520 (42,302).

White sox 4, Dodgers 1

Chicago

ab r Eaton cf 3 1 GBckh 2b 4 1 JAreu 1b 4 1 A.Dunn lf 4 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 Gillaspi 3b 3 0 Viciedo rf 4 0 Flowrs c 3 1 Noesi p 2 0 Konerk ph 1 0 Totals

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

los angeles ab r DGordn 2b 4 0 Ethier cf 5 0 Puig rf 4 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 AdGnzl 1b 4 0 Kemp lf 4 1 Figgins 3b 3 0 Butera c 3 0 Haren p 1 0 Romak ph 1 0

32 4 7 4 Totals

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

32 1 6 1

Chicago 201 100 000—4 los angeles 010 000 000—1 DP—Los Angeles 2. LOB—Chicago 3, Los Angeles 12. 2B—G.Beckham (8), Puig (16). HR—J.Abreu (17), Flowers (5). SB—Al.Ramirez (12). IP H R eR BB sO Chicago Noesi W,1-4 6 5 1 1 4 6 S.Downs H,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Petricka 0 0 0 0 2 0 Putnam H,6 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 Belisario S,4-7 1 0 0 0 0 0 los angeles Haren L,5-4 6 6 4 4 1 2 Maholm 2 1 0 0 0 1 C.Perez 1 0 0 0 1 0 Petricka pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. T—3:05. A—44,477 (56,000).

NCaa DIvIsION I suPeR ReGIONals BaseBall

all Times eDT Best-of-3; x-if necessary Host school is Game 1 home team; visiting school is Game 2 home team; coin flip determines Game 3 home team at Jim Patterson stadium, louisville, Ky. Friday: Kennesaw State (40-22) at Louisville (48-15), 6:30 p.m. Saturday: Kennesaw State vs. Louisville, 7 p.m. x-Sunday: Kennesaw State vs. Louisville, 6 p.m. at Hawkins Field Nashville, Tenn. Friday: Stanford (34-24) at Vanderbilt (44-18), 1 p.m. Saturday: Stanford vs. Vanderbilt, 3 p.m. x-Sunday: Stanford vs. Vanderbilt, 3 p.m. at allie P. Reynolds stadium stillwater, Okla. Friday: UC Irvine (38-23) at Oklahoma State (48-16), 9:30 p.m. Saturday: UC Irvine vs. Oklahoma State, 2 p.m. x-Sunday: UC Irvine vs. Oklahoma State, 2 p.m. at uFCu Disch-Falk Field, austin, Texas Friday: Houston (48-16) at Texas (4119), 4 p.m. Saturday: Houston vs. Texas, 2 p.m. x-Sunday: Houston vs. Texas 2 p.m. at Davenport Field, Charlottesville, va. Saturday: Maryland (39-21) at Virginia (47-13), Noon Sunday: Maryland vs. Virginia, Noon x-Monday: Maryland vs. Virginia, 4 p.m. at M.l. ’Tigue’ Moore Field lafayette, la. Saturday: Mississippi (44-18) at Louisiana-Lafayette (57-8), 8 p.m. Sunday: Mississippi vs. LouisianaLafayette, 9 p.m. x-Monday: Mississippi vs. LouisianaLafayette, 7 p.m. at Charlie and Marie lupton stadium Fort Worth, Texas Saturday: Pepperdine at TCU, 4 p.m. Sunday: Pepperdine vs. TCU, 6 p.m. x-Monday: Pepperdine vs. TCU, 7 p.m. at Rip Griffin Park lubbock, Texas Saturday: College of Charleston (4417) at Texas Tech (43-19), 1 p.m. Sunday: College of Charleston vs. Texas Tech, 3 p.m. x-Monday: College of Charleston vs. Texas Tech, 1 p.m.

HOCKEY HOCKeY

NHl PlaYOFFs FINals

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) NY Rangers vs. los angeles 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.

B-5

BASKETBALL BasKeTBall NBa PlaYOFFs 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.

NBa CaleNDaR

June 5 — NBA Finals begin. June 16 — Draft early entry withdrawal deadline. June 26 — NBA draft.

NBa leaDeRs

Through Tuesday scoring G FG Durant, OKC 19 194 James, MIA 15 140 Harden, HOU 6 50 Westbrook, OKC19 167 Aldridge, POR 11 113 Howard, HOU 6 58 DeRozan, TOR 7 45 Griffin, LAC 13 117 Curry, GOL 7 51 Lillard, POR 11 83 George, IND 19 138 Johnson, Bro 12 98 Lowry, TOR 7 44 Ellis, DAL 7 52

FT 132 106 45 145 60 40 71 71 37 59 101 36 43 27

PTs 563 407 161 507 288 156 167 306 161 252 429 254 148 143

avG 29.6 27.1 26.8 26.7 26.2 26.0 23.9 23.5 23.0 22.9 22.6 21.2 21.1 20.4

TENNIS TeNNIs

aTP-WTa TOuR French Open

Tuesday at stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $34.12 million (Grand slam) surface: Clay-Outdoor singles Men Quarterfinals Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Milos Raonic (8), Canada, 7-5, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Ernests Gulbis (18), Latvia, def. Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. Women Quarterfinals Maria Sharapova (7), Russia, def. Garbine Muguruza, Spain, 1-6, 7-5, 6-1. Eugenie Bouchard (18), Canada, def. Carla Suarez Navarro (14), Spain, 7-6 (4), 2-6, 7-5. Doubles Men Quarterfinals Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, and Sam Groth, Australia, def. Lukasz Kubot, Poland, and Robert Lindstedt (9), Sweden, 6-3, 6-3. Women Quarterfinals Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Peng Shuai (1), China, def. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Sania Mirza (5), India, 6-2, 3-6, 6-3. Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (2), Italy, def. Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua (7), Australia, 6-0, 6-1. Mixed Quarterfinals Anna-Lena Groenefeld, Germany, and Jean-Julien Rojer, Netherlands, def. Arantxa Parra Santonja, Spain, and Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, 6-2, 6-4. Yaroslava Shvedova, Kazakhstan, and Bruno Soares (3), Brazil, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, and Daniel Nestor (5), Canada, 6-3, 1-6, 10-3.

AUTO RACING auTO RaCING

NasCaR sPRINT CuP leaders

Through June 1 Points 1, Matt Kenseth, 463. 2, Jeff Gordon, 461. 3, Carl Edwards, 438. 4, Jimmie Johnson, 436. 5, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 429. 6, Joey Logano, 414. 7, Kyle Busch, 411. 8, Brad Keselowski, 404. 9, Denny Hamlin, 379. 10, Kyle Larson, 377. Money 1, Dale Earnhardt Jr., $3,271,269. 2, Brad Keselowski, $3,222,218. 3, Jimmie Johnson, $3,154,257. 4, Jamie McMurray, $3,043,064. 5, Jeff Gordon, $3,024,502. 6, Denny Hamlin, $2,837,366. 7, Joey Logano, $2,830,377. 8, Kevin Harvick, $2,823,528. 9, Matt Kenseth, $2,783,536. 10, Kyle Busch, $2,617,409.

NasCaR NaTIONWIDe

Money Through May 31 1. Kyle Busch, $482,375 2. Regan Smith, $442,088 3. Kyle Larson, $437,219 4. Chase Elliott, $434,803 5. Elliott Sadler, $406,224 6. Trevor Bayne, $379,428 7. Ty Dillon, $339,253 8. Brian Scott, $337,573 9. Brendan Gaughan, $313,783 10. Dylan Kwasniewski, $311,728 Points Through May 31 1. Regan Smith, 448. 2. Elliott Sadler, 444. 3. Chase Elliott, 426. 4. Trevor Bayne, 421. 5. Ty Dillon, 414. 6. Brian Scott, 391. 7. Brendan Gaughan, 341. 8. James Buescher, 332. 9. Chris Buescher, 328. 10. Dylan Kwasniewski, 303.

Big: Sunday’s Game 7 most-watched non-Stanley Cup Final ever Continued from Page B-4 So is Tommy Lasorda, who managed the Dodgers to their last win over the Yankees and is friends with Kings executive Luc Robitaille. “I’ll be rooting for them, no doubt,” Lasorda said. “I’m so impressed with what the Kings have accomplished through these playoffs. Even if they don’t beat the Rangers they’ve got to go down in history of hockey with one of the greatest teams ever the way they’ve performed.” Why the New York-L.A. matchup hasn’t happened any sooner can only be chalked up to the vagaries of sports. Certainly when the Lakers and Knicks met three times in four years for the NBA title in the early 1970s, there were high expectations the rivals would

square off again. And when the Dodgers finally beat the Yankees in the third World Series in five years between the teams, it seemed like they would trade championships for some time. That World Series thrilled a lot of people in Los Angeles, which hadn’t won a championship since 1965 when Sandy Koufax was on the mound. But the Yankees beat the Dodgers back-to-back in 1977-78, including the iconic game where Jackson earned the nickname Mr. October by hitting three home runs at Yankee Stadium. “We were suffering and the guy was making a fool out of us,” Lasorda said. “I was hoping and praying we would get another shot at him.” Longtime broadcaster Vin Scully said the rivalry between the Dodgers and Yankees was more intense than

any other sport because the teams had met so often in the World Series when the Dodgers were still in Brooklyn and there were still bitter feelings about the Dodgers leaving town. The Dodgers biggest World Series win was arguably in 1963, when they swept the Yankees in four games. “The ultimate was not only beating the Yankees but sweeping them in four,” Scully said. “And to New York fans it was still the old Brooklyn Dodgers and there was a lot of bitterness toward them.” The ultimate for Knicks fans was 1970. Without Reed in Game 7 the Knicks figured to have a tough time beating Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West and Elgin Baylor. But he suffered a torn thigh muscle in Game 5 and needed an injection just before game

time to limp out on the court. The sight of Reed in uniform sent the 19,500 fans into a frenzy. He scored just four points, but kept Chamberlain in check for a 113-99 win. The Lakers would go on to beat the Knicks two years later, and lose to them again in 1973. Since then they haven’t met in a championship final. There’s never been a Super Bowl between New York and L.A. teams and no possibility of one until Los Angeles gets an NFL team. While the Rangers and Kings have never met in the Stanley Cup finals, teams from Southern California and the New York area have. New Jersey and the Anaheim Ducks played in 2003, and the Kings beat the Devils two years ago. Still, New York against Los Angeles

somehow seems different. “I think it’s important for the league. This league has done everything for us, I want it to grow,” said Brad Richards of the Rangers. “These matchups are great for the game, and we understand that. It’s great for hockey.” Despite the matchup of the two biggest cities in the country, executives at NBC had to be rooting for Chicago to advance instead of Los Angeles. Sunday’s Western Conference Game 7 was the most watched non-Stanley Cup Final ever, averaging more than 4.1 million viewers, but a lot more of those were Blackhawks fans than Kings fans. While nearly 23 percent of all homes with televisions watched in the Chicago area, less than 5 percent of the homes in L.A. were tuned in.


B-6

SPORTS

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

BASEBALL

Cruz homers in return to Texas, Orioles win Lincecum (4-5), who has beaten the Reds during the playoffs but never during the regular season. Bruce, who spent time on the disabled list following surgery for torn knee cartilage, knocked in his first run since April 25.

The Associated Press

Nelson Cruz hit a towering three-run homer in his return to Texas and the Baltimore Orioles won their third straight game, 8-3 over the Orioles 8 Rangers on Tuesday night. Rangers 3 Cruz hit the first pitch thrown by reliever Shawn Tolleson, an estimated 404 feet deep into the left field seats to cap a six-run Orioles outburst in the eighth. The slugger, who spent the previous eight seasons in Texas, is hitting .313 and leads the majors with 21 homers and 55 RBIs. BLUE JAYS 5, TIGERS 3 In Detroit, Brett Lawrie’s three-run homer highlighted a big burst for Toronto. After eight scoreless innings between the AL East and AL Central leaders, both bullpens came unglued in the ninth. The Blue Jays broke through against Joe Nathan (2-2). NATIONALS 7, PHILLIES 0 In Washington, Jordan Zimmermann rebounded from a mini-slump to throw eight crisp innings for the Nationals, and Ryan Zimmerman hit a pair of doubles and handled two chances with aplomb in his debut in left field. Zimmermann (4-2) allowed five hits and struck out four, recovering well from four middling starts that had raised his usually impeccable ERA to 4.07. He got all the support he needed when the Nationals scored three in the third inning off David Buchanan (1-2), making his third career start. INDIANS 5, RED SOX 3 In Cleveland, Michael Bourn hit a tiebreaking two-run double in the seventh inning, helping the Indians to their seasonhigh fifth straight win. Bourn’s double off Andrew Miller sent the Red Sox to their second straight loss after

The Orioles’ Nelson Cruz swings on a grand slam against the Rangers in Tuesday’s game in Arlington, Texas. SHARON ELLMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

winning seven consecutive games. ATHLETIcS 5, YANkEES 2 In New York, Brandon Moss hit his second homer of the game leading off the 10th inning, and Oakland rallied for a victory over the Yankees. Returning to the lineup after missing two games with a strained right calf, Moss drilled a full-count pitch from Adam Warren (1-3) into the second deck down the right field line for his 15th homer. That gave the AL West-leading A’s their first lead in a game that was delayed more than an hour at the start by rain. ASTROS 7, ANGELS 2 In Houston, Jon Singleton homered and had two RBIs in his major league debut, Chris Carter also homered and the Astros beat Los Angeles. NATIONAL LEAGUE REDS 8, GIANTS 3 In Cincinnati, Devin Mesoraco hit a tworun homer, and Jay Bruce emerged from a slump by driving in a pair of runs, leading the Reds to a season-high fourth straight win. Mesoraco hit his ninth homer off Tim

cUBS 2, METS 1 In Chicago, Nate Schierholtz hit a twoout game-ending RBI single, after Chris Coghlan homered to tie it in the eighth, and the Cubs beat New York. Curtis Granderson had three hits for the Mets and drove in their run with a sacrifice fly in the first inning. The Mets failed to win a season-high four straight games. DIAMONDBAckS 4, ROckIES 2 In Denver, Nick Evans and Chris Owings hit back-to-back homers, rookie Chase Anderson won his fourth straight start and Arizona beat the slumping Rockies. Evans’ solo shot in the fourth was his first homer since Sept. 3, 2011, when he was with the New York Mets. Four pitches later, Owings hit another off Jorge De La Rosa (6-4). Owings also added an RBI double and finished a single shy of the cycle.

opponent is No. 18 Ernests Gulbis of Latvia, who followed his victory over Roger Federer with a 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 win over No. 6 Tomas Berdych of the Czech Republic. Djokovic, 27, and Gulbis, 25, go way back, having overlapped in their early teens at a German tennis academy. Their paths quickly diverged, with Djokovic focusing on tennis and thriving, to the tune of six major titles. Gulbis admits he enjoyed the nightlife too much for his game’s good. Only recently did Gulbis realize he needed to take his job more seriously. “It’s really important, for my happiness, just to be successful on the tennis court,” Gulbis said. “Forget about the money. Forget about fame. It’s just about my inner comfort. That’s it.” Djokovic will be playing in his 22nd career Grand Slam semifinal; Gulbis in his first. Similarly, Sharapova is headed to her 18th, Bouchard her second. Bouchard is 7 years younger, and tracked Sharapo-

FRENcH OPEN AT A GLANcE A look at the French Open on Tuesday: Weather: Partly cloudy. High of 70 degrees. Men’s quarterfinals: No. 2 Novak Djokovic beat No. 8 Milos Raonic 7-5, 7-6 (5), 6-4; No. 18 Ernests Gulbis beat No. 6 Tomas Berdych 6-3, 6-2, 6-4. Women’s quarterfinals: No. 7 Maria Sharapova beat Garbine Muguruza 1-6, 7-5, 6-1; No. 18 Eugenie Bouchard beat No. 14 Carla Suarez Navarro 7-6 (4), 2-6, 7-5.

va’s career from afar. “First I noticed, like, her cute dresses and things like that when I was young,” said Bouchard, who recalled being a spectator at a tournament in Florida as a youngster and posing for a photo with Sharapova. “She, of course, is very strong mentally. It is one of her strengths, I think,” Bouchard said. “I’m just looking forward to the challenge.”

ROYALS 8, cARDINALS 7 In St. Louis, Eric Hosmer hit a tiebreaking single off closer Trevor Rosenthal in the ninth inning, and Kansas City earned its second straight road victory in the fourgame, two-city series. TwINS 6, BREwERS 4 In Milwaukee, Josh Willingham hit a three-run homer, and Minnesota beat the Brewers in a game delayed when a fan fell into the Brewers’ bullpen. MARINERS 7, BRAVES 5 In Atlanta, John Buck had three hits, including a tiebreaking two-run homer in the seventh inning that helped Seattle rally for its fourth straight win.

Stat of the day: 27 — Number of Grand Slam appearances for Gulbis, who reached his first major semifinal by winning Tuesday. On court Wednesday in quarterfinals: No. 1 Rafael Nadal vs. No. 5 David Ferrer, No. 7 Andy Murray vs. No. 23 Gael Monfils; No. 4 Simona Halep vs. No. 27 Svetlana Kuznetsova, No. 10 Sara Errani vs. No. 28 Andrea Petkovic. Wednesday’s forecast: Chance of rain. High of 63. The Associated Press

For 18 miserable minutes against Muguruza, Sharapova did nothing right. She lost 15 of the first 20 points and fell behind 4-0. “I thought, ‘I’m going to win,’ ” said Muguruza, who was one game away at 5-4 in the second. Then, serving at 5-all, Muguruza went ahead 30-love. “Suddenly, I had the impression that it was so easy,” Mugu-

ruza said. “Maybe I relaxed a little.” She double-faulted, opening the door. Sharapova barged through, hitting a pair of backhand winners, then forcing Muguruza’s forehand error, to get the break. “I’m sure she feels like she has a good chance of getting that game in the bag,” Sharapova said, “and all of a sudden, I’m serving for the set.” Brushing off a warning from the chair umpire for taking too much time between points, Sharapova broke to go ahead 2-1 in the third, her first lead. In the next game, Sharapova saved five break points to hold for 3-1. And that was that. Little adjustments, here and there, made the difference. Sharapova took more chances on returns, attacking Muguruza’s second serves. Sharapova tried to extend points — even shifting her racket to her off hand for a couple of lefty strokes — to force Muguruza to hit extra shots. One telling final-set stat: Muguruza made 26 unforced errors, Sharapova five.

wade: Missed 28 games in the season Continued from Page B-4 resumes: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, John Havlicek, Magic Johnson, Shaquille O’Neal, Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan and the Spurs’ Tim Duncan. Wade could be the eighth person in that club. “We just want to continue to add to what we’re accomplishing,” Wade said. Almost forgotten amid all the memories of Wade limping about during last year’s playoffs — he whacked what was his “good” knee at this time last year, the surgically repaired left one, in a collision with the Spurs’ Manu Ginobili during Game 6 of the finals — is he had big games when Miami needed him.

Through his first 14 games of the 2013 playoffs, Wade was averaging 13.6 points. In the final eight games of that postseason run, starting with Game 7 against Indiana, he averaged 19.8 points. And in the last four games of the finals, he averaged 23.5 points against the Spurs to close the series. As his knees got worse, Wade seemed to get better. “He still found a way last year,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “He really did. He had some of his biggest games not only in the finals, but Game 7, we didn’t think necessarily he was going to even play that game in the Eastern Conference finals.”

Isotopes win series, beat Bees 5-3 It only took six weeks for the Albuquerque Isotopes to get the monkey off their backs. For the first time since April, the Isotopes won a baseball series against a Pacific Coast League opponent after beating the Salt Lake Bees 5-3 on Tuesday at

This year, the Heat tried to leave nothing to chance with Wade’s health. The so-called maintenance plan for Wade — limiting his minutes to save his knees — kicked in on the second night of the regular season. He wound up missing 28 games in all, mostly because of that restand-rehab scheme, to ensure that he would be good to go in the playoffs. The results can’t be argued. Wade is averaging 18.7 points on 52 percent shooting, Miami is 12-3 in the playoffs and when getting more than three days rest — like the Heat will have before Game 1 in San Antonio on Thursday night — the perennial All-Star has had

Isotopes Park to take three of four games. Prior to that, the Isotopes had lost their last 10 series after sweeping the El Paso Chihuahuas on April 15-18. Albuquerque (27-31) got the boost it needed with Miguel Rojas, who led off the bottom of the sixth inning with a solo home run — his fourth homer in the last seven games — for a 3-2 Isotopes lead. Mike Baxter followed a pair of walks with a two-run triple for 5-2.

SCOREBOARD

Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. cOLLEGE SOFTBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN — World Series, finals, game 3, Florida vs. Alabama, in Oklahoma City (if necessary) GOLF 3 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Lyoness Open, first round, part I, in Atzenbrugg, Austria MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 10 a.m. on MLB — Seattle at Atlanta 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — Oakland at N.Y. Yankees 6 p.m. on WGN — N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs NHL 6 p.m. on NBC — Playoffs, finals, game 1, N.Y. Rangers at Los Angeles TENNIS 6 a.m. on ESPN2 — French Open, men’s and women’s quarterfinals, in Paris

INTERLEAGUE

Rally: No. 2 Djokovic advances to semis Continued from Page B-4

Northern New Mexico

games of 23, 14, 27 and 23 points on a combined 60 percent shooting. “Dwyane is playing great,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said Tuesday. “He looks a lot more spry and ready to go then he did last year in the finals.” Maybe the biggest payoff of the regular-season maintenance plan has been how Wade has closed games in this postseason. Wade is shooting 56 percent in fourth quarters during the playoffs, the best clip of his career and the best percentage of any guard with more than 30 shots in the final period of postseason games this season. San Antonio’s Danny Green is second on that list, shooting just under 49 percent.

Rojas has been on a tear for the past week, hitting .433 with four homers, seven RBIs and 10 runs scored. That was enough to give starter Zach Lee (5-5) the win, as he went six-plus innings and allowed three runs on seven hits. Albuquerque takes Wednesday off and heads on the road for a four-game set at Tacoma on Thursday. The New Mexican

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

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

SANTA FE FUEGO SCHEDULE Team record: (14-5)

Upcoming schedule: Today’s game — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. Thursday — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. Friday — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. Saturday — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. Sunday — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. Monday — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. Tuesday — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 11 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 12 — vs. Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 13 — vs. Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 14 — vs. Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 15 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. June 16 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. June 17 — at Raton, 6 p.m. June 18 — at Raton, 6 p.m. June 19 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 20 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 21 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 22 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. June 23 — vs. Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 24 — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. June 25 — vs. Alpine, 6 p.m. June 26 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. June 27 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m.

June 28 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 29 — at Las Vegas, 6 p.m. June 30 — Pecos League All-Star Game (at Fort Marcy), 6 p.m. July 1 — vs. Taos, 7 p.m. July 2 — at Taos, 6 p.m. July 3 — vs. Taos, 7 p.m. July 4 — at Taos, 6 p.m. July 5 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 6 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 7 — at Raton, 6 p.m. July 8 — at Raton, 6 p.m. July 9 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 10 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 11 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 12 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 13 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 14 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 15 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 16 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 17 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 18 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 19 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 20 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 21 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 22 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 23 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketball u The Santa Fe High boys basketball program will begin open gym sessions from 4:45 to 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. to 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.

Running u The second Trek for Tassels 5-kilometer run is scheduled for June 22 at the Municipal Recreation Complex. Registration cost is $10 before June 22 and $15 on the day of the event. Proceeds from the race go to the “Trek for Tassels” scholarship fund, which goes to a prospective high school senior in the Santa Fe County area who is interested in pursuing a career in the health care field in college. For more information, call Kara Shain at 231-5374, or Nicolette Serrao at 670-3306. u The third annual Gonzales Community School Lobos River Run will be Sept. 28, at the school. The event includes a 5-kilometer run and a 1-mile community fun run/walk. Proceeds benefit related PTA-sponsored enrichment activities, such as the National Dance Institute and Cooking with Kids programs. To register, email gonzalespta@gmail.com or go to www.gcspta.org.

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. to 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. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.

NEw MEXIcAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

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


TIME OUT

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33 36 37

ACROSS Unruly bunch [Grr-r-r] Pulls (out) Gate posting, for short Ketchup is one Aimée of “La Dolce Vita” Bada Bing!, on “The Sopranos” Copy, for short Part of a car alarm, maybe Puzzlers’ direction: Abbr. Loud kisses Sitcom set at a Vermont inn Like a well-kept lawn Ewers’ mates Like Ogden Nash’s verse Milo of “Ulysses” Player of the hot-tempered Corleone Rubber ducky’s spot Peeples of “Fame” Epic battle in technology … or a hint to four crossings in this puzzle

40 G.I. morale booster 41 Locale for a hammer 42 “-zoic” periods 43 Comparable to a beet? 45 “Going Rogue” author 47 Like Muddy Waters’s music 48 Antiriot spray 50 Stick in a purse, maybe 53 Online music source 55 “The signature of civilizations,” per Beverly Sills 56 Dark purple fruit 60 “Two Women” star, 1960 61 Winning advantage 63 Singer who’s the subject of Carl Perkins’s “The Whole World Misses You” 64 Award for 60-Across for her role in “Two Women” 65 Flying Cloud of autodom

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 Wednesday, June 4, 2014: This year is significant to your security and wellbeing. Your home and your personal life become even higher priorities. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Your usual style of handling an issue won’t be as successful as you might have hoped it would be. Tonight: Work late if need be. 66 Large item in Santa’s bag, maybe 67 Pint-size 68 Close one

1 2 3

4 5 6 7 8

DOWN Fit nicely Palindromic man’s name “Fierce workingclass domestic goddess” of a sitcom AOL, for many Colorful parrots Garden ground cover Honda line Ball belle

9 Early tie score 10 Movies, TV, hit songs, etc. 11 Lira spenders 12 Wee bit 15 Escort’s offer 17 Belly button type 21 Subway handful 23 Fabergé coating 24 Nutritional figs. 26 Doggie bag item 27 Home to most 11-Down 28 Hairpin, e.g. 30 At the ready 32 Rx-dispensing chain 34 Draws upon 35 Soul mate?

38 39 44 46 47

48 49 51 52 54 57 58 59 61 62

Seed covers “Ple-e-ease?” Poison ___ Post-Trojan War epic Superhero ally of Commissioner Gordon Marathon markers Coral ring Break down, in a way ___ Wayne, a.k.a. 47-Down U.S.N.A. grad: Abbr. Be a nag Field Heathen’s figurine Rug rat Be nosy

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 BLACK HAS A CRUSHER Hint: Make a small move. Solution: 1. ... b5! (threatens ... b4 mate as well as a win of a rook) from [SambuevCordoba ’14].

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: SPORTING AWARDS NAMED AFTER PEOPLE The name of the award is given. Iden-

Hocus Focus

tify the sport in which it is awarded. (e.g., Walker Cup. Answer: Golf.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. Stanley Cup Answer________ 2. Cy Young Award Answer________ 3. Heisman Trophy Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Davis Cup Answer________ 5. Ryder Cup Answer________ 6. Grey Cup Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. Naismith Awards Answer________ 8. Thomas Cup Answer________ 9. Yashin Award (now the Golden Glove Award) Answer________ ANSWERS:

ANSWERS: 1. Hockey. 2. Baseball. 3. Football. 4. Tennis. 5. Golf. 6. Football (Canadian). 7. Basketball. 8. Badminton. 9. Soccer.

Jumble

Wednesday, June 4, 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 Wednesday, June 4, the 155th day of 2014. There are 210 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On June 4, 1944, during World War II, U505, a German submarine, was captured by a U.S. Navy task group in the south Atlantic; it was the first such capture of an enemy vessel at sea by the U.S. Navy since the War of 1812. The U.S. Fifth Army began liberating Rome.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You could have difficulty getting going in the morning, but around noon you are likely to get a second wind and feel energized. Tonight: Go for something wild. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Schedule an important talk for the morning, because other events could distract you later. Tonight: Take some muchneeded downtime. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Communication will flourish in the afternoon. You finally will have time for a conversation with a loved one. Tonight: Make nice, and enjoy the results. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might want to reconsider a change of pace. You often can be found dashing from one meeting or happening to another. Tonight: Your treat. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You could be off-kilter for a while, but you’ll loosen up considerably by noon. You need to do what you feel is important. Tonight: Let the good times roll.

B-7

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Friends, family don’t take advice

Dear Annie: I work at a regional medical center, and friends and family often ask me to recommend a doctor or a physician’s group for them. For a while, I didn’t mind giving these people a few names, but I have grown reluctant to do so. My reluctance is not because I don’t trust in the knowledge and care provided by the doctors I work with. It’s because of the negative feedback I get after these people visit the specialists I recommend. I am tired of handing out the names of good, hardworking practitioners to people who refuse to listen to the advice given to them. They don’t want to take the prescribed medications or regimens, nor do they follow through with the therapy as ordered. Then they complain to the entire community about what terrible doctors I told them to see. I feel as if the doctors are judging me each time they see my name as a referral. Yet when I decline to give suggestions, people react as if I am being a snob. How do I keep my sanity, as well as my career? — Please Stop Asking Me Dear Please: Medical professionals are accustomed to patients who disregard their instructions, but you certainly can ask directly whether they would prefer that you not refer your friends and family to them. We suspect they are glad to know that someone who works closely with them thinks highly of their skills. But either way, you are under no obligation to give out recommendations. It’s OK to tell people nicely that you no longer make referrals because you don’t wish to mix your professional and personal lives. If they don’t like it, too bad. Dear Annie: My 85-yearold aunt, who was quite active, recently underwent extensive abdominal surgery and ended up in the hospital for six weeks. During this entire time, she was not bathed by the overworked nursing staff except for the times we complained about the smell. There wasn’t even a washbasin

in her room. Eventually a friend of hers who is a retired nurse came in regularly and bathed her. This was in Florida, but I’ve heard similar stories from friends and family in other states. I think this is absolutely disgusting. When I was a student nurse in the 1970s, my textbook dedicated 20 pages to the importance of bathing, not only for physical health, but for psychological well-being. Florence Nightingale said that nurses who allow sick patients to remain unwashed are interfering with their healing. This lack of care did not occur where I worked. We bathed our patients daily and gave them back rubs to increase circulation and prevent bedsores. Since then, nurses aides and LPNs have practically been eliminated. My aunt is now home, but she is still weak from fighting off infections. It’s no wonder. I would like to see the doctors and medical staff running the hospitals again and not the insurance companies, which seem to know nothing about human dignity. This kind of care is appalling. — Disgusted in New York Dear New York: Health care costs have skyrocketed since you were in nursing school, and it is unfortunate that in some cases the level of care has deteriorated in an effort to save money. We, too, wish there were a better solution. Dear Annie: This is for “Wish I Could Turn Back Time,” the 62-year-old great-grandmother who served prison time for a nonviolent felony and can’t get a job because of her record. Most states have laws allowing for the expungement of criminal records, especially for nonviolent offenses. This allows those who made a mistake and learned their lesson to get a conviction removed from their record, in which case, she wouldn’t need to tell prospective employers. She should check out the expungement requirements in her state. — L.

Sheinwold’s bridge

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might want to think through a decision that comes up in a meeting. Take some time to process your thoughts. Tonight: Relax. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Be willing to look at your obligations as well as your passion regarding a project. Tonight: Where your friends are. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might not be sure about taking a stand, but you’ll sense that it is important. Tonight: Go with the moment; it could be a late night. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH You might want to look at your long-term desires, as you could want to revise your thinking. Tonight: Surf the Web.

Cryptoquip

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You’ll prefer to relate on a one-on-one level. Take the opportunity to have that type of conversation with a special associate. Tonight: With someone special. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Consider what is happening with a loved one. On many levels, the two of you have a lot in common; however, this person lives in constant stress. Tonight: Have a long-overdue talk. 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 Wednesday, June 4, 2014

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

TUNDRA

PEANUTS

B-8

NON SEQUITUR

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

MUTTS

RETAIL

ZITS

PICKLES

LUANN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

THE ARGYLE SWEATER


WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Travel C-2 Classifieds C-3 Puzzles C-4

TASTE

C

Hong Kong museum keeps alive memory of Tiananmen protests. Travel, C-2

Georgia

aims for simple & sophisticated Chef takes ‘a step away from Santa Fe’ with new restaurant next to O’Keeffe Museum

if you go What: Georgia When: 5:45 to 10 p.m. daily (dinner service only) Where: 225 Johnson St., downtown More information: Call 9894367

By Carlos Andres López The New Mexican

I

nside Georgia, the latest downtown restaurant to open its doors, there’s not a trace of Santa Fe to be seen: no adobe walls, saltillo tile, Native art or turquoise accents in sight. And in the kitchen, there’s not a trace of green chile. Housed in the century-old building next to the O’Keeffe Museum on Johnson Street, Georgia instead features exposed brick walls, dark wood floors, a neutral yet warm color scheme and offers “contemporary American” food. “Just coming in, you feel like you’re not in Santa Fe,” Brett Sparman, Georgia’s executive chef, said Saturday, the day after the restaurant opened. “Everything from the aesthetics of the building to the food is a step away from Santa Fe.” And that’s the point, according to Sparman. Tired of the restaurant scene in Santa Fe, business partners Lloyd Abrams and Terry Sweeney designed and built Georgia — once home of the O’Keeffe Café — to inject life back into the local dining sector. “This place is pretty unique and offers a level service that’s different from what people typically find in Santa Fe,” Sparman said. “We really want to create a personal experience [for diners] … and help liven up the restaurant scene.” For Sparman, a Phoenix native and the former executive chef of Luminaria at the Inn and Spa at Loretto, much of that experience is tied to Georgia’s food. In contrast to the regionally driven food at Luminaria, Sparman’s dishes at Georgia are “more simple and sophisticated,” much like the restaurant itself, he said. “We want this place to be very inviting, very simple, very elegant, a place where the service is very personal but not overbearing — and I think you can see that in the food as well,” said Sparman, whose career as a chef spans 13 years. A fan of “clean” flavors, Sparman describes the food at Georgia as “night and day” from

Georgia executive chef Brett Sparman, left, on Saturday prepares seared diver scallops served with oyster mushrooms, yam purée and edamame, above. PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON THE NEW MEXICAN

what he was doing at Luminaria. “Here, we’re not doing green chile or really any New Mexican cuisine,” he said. “There are enough places that serve green chile,” Abrams told The New Mexican last month before the restaurant opened. For Georgia’s menu, Sparman said he took inspiration from a host of sources, including other chefs, the seasons and even his emotions. “My influences are very environmental. And I definitely get inspired by the people around me,” he said. “All of us at this restaurant drive each other and inspire each other to be better and to try new things.” Sparman said the current dinner menu took about two weeks to develop — a task he tackled after leaving Luminaria in April after three years. It features a range of entrées ($19 to $35) and appetizers ($8 to $18) that he considers “contemporary American” food, including a kale salad tossed in a shallot and thyme vinaigrette, crispy

calamari, pan-roasted Scottish salmon, Talus Wind Ranch rack of lamb and a Lone Mountain Wagyu beef burger, to name a few. On opening night, Sparman said he and his staff served a crowd of about 50, mostly friends and family members, and said early reviews of his dinner offerings were favorable. “Our first night went really well,” he said. “All of our guests really enjoyed the food and were awed by the experience here.” Popular dishes that night included the crab cakes, halibut and Texas quail, Sparman said. One of Sparman’s favorite dishes is the beet salad. Made with an assortment of raw and roasted beets, it also features goat cheese yogurt, toasted pistachios and edible flowers. He also said he enjoys the mesquite-grilled New York strip steak served with romesco sauce as well as the seared diver scallops served with oyster mushrooms, yam purée and edamame. Sparman said he’s working to begin lunch

service as early as next week. The plan is to offer small-plated dishes, including sandwiches, salads, and cheese and charcuterie plates, between 1:30 and 5 p.m. “We felt like there’s not really any place to eat after 2 o’clock in downtown Santa Fe, so that’s why we’re going to stay open for lunch much later than most other restaurants.” With the O’Keeffe Museum only steps away, Sparman said he hopes to lure museumgoers during lunch hours. “The hope is that patrons of the museum will walk on down the road and have a glass of wine and a charcuterie or cheese plate.” But more than that, Sparman wants the service at Georgia to stand out with guests. “Essentially, I want diners to feel like they were taken care of in a more personal and genuine way, so they want to come once or twice a week.” Contact Carlos A. López at clopez@ sfnewmexican.com.

Cheesesteak that’s delicious — even minus the steak By Sara Moulton

The Associated Press

Like Philadelphia itself, there is a lot to love about the city’s signature sandwich — the cheesesteak. But that delicious combination of beef, onions and cheese isn’t the sort of thing you want to pack away every day, unless you’re looking to pack on pounds. So I decided to see if I could make a healthier sandwich that is inspired by the cheesesteak, but is a bit more suited to the everyday. I started by swapping out the beef in favor of that most steak-like of mushrooms, the portobello. Actually, it’s just the roomy cap of the portobello, filled to the brim with

roasted red peppers, grilled scallions, olives and mushroom trimmings, then topped with melted provolone cheese, and lubricated with a little bit of rosemary mayonnaise. Finally, the whole thing is set on a slice of grilled rustic bread. OPEN-FACED STUFFED PORTOBELLO SANDWICHES To remove the gills from the underside of the portobello mushrooms, use a spoon to gently scrape them out. Total time, 40 minutes (25 active), makes four servings 1 garlic clove, minced 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 2 tablespoons sherry vinegar 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

Salt, ground black pepper 4 large portobello mushrooms, stems and gills discarded ½ cup light mayonnaise 2 teaspoons finely minced fresh rosemary Olive oil cooking spray ½ cup medium chopped jarred roasted red peppers ½ cup pitted black olives, medium chopped 6 large scallions, bottoms trimmed 4 slices rustic whole-grain bread 4 thin slices provolone cheese (3 ounces total) Preparation: Heat the grill to medium. In a small bowl, combine the garlic, mustard, vinegar, olive oil, and a hefty pinch each of salt and pepper. Brush the

An openfaced stuffed portobello sandwich. MATTHEW MEAD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

marinade on both sides of the mushrooms, then transfer them to a zip-close plastic bag, along with any remaining marinade. Let them marinate at room temperature for 20 minutes. Meanwhile, in a small bowl combine the mayonnaise and rosemary, then season with salt and pepper. In a medium bowl combine the peppers and

Section editor: Carlos A. López, 986-3099, clopez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

olives, then season with pepper. Set aside. Spray the scallions with the cooking spray and grill them, turning often, until they are charred on the edges and crisp tender, 3 to 4 minutes. Transfer them to a cutting board and let them cool slightly. Medium chop the scallions and add them to the bowl with the pep-

pers and olives. Mist the bread with cooking spray, then grill it until it is lightly toasted on both sides. Set aside. Grill the mushrooms, gill sides down, 3 to 4 minutes. Turn them over and grill on the on the second side until tender when pierced with a knife, another 3 to 4 minutes. Spoon a quarter of the olive-pepper mixture evenly on top of each mushroom. Top with a slice of cheese, cover the grill and cook until the cheese is melted, 1 to 2 minutes. Spread the mayonnaise mixture on each piece of bread. Transfer each mushroom to one slice of bread. Cut in half and serve right away.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com


C-2

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Who will pay for federal rules; fliers or airlines?

TRAVEL

By Christopher Elliott

The Washington Post

Lee Cheuk Yan, head of the pro-democracy group that operates the June 4th Museum, poses after an interview at the museum in Hong Kong. The 800-square-foot museum is the world’s only museum chronicling the brutal crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen protests. The Chinese words projected on Lee are ‘Exonerate the June 4.’ PHOTOS BY VINCENT YU/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tiananmen memory kept alive Hong Kong museum displays images from 1989 protest By Kelvin Chan

The Associated Press

HONG KONG o find the world’s only museum chronicling the brutal crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen protests, look for the skinny office building wedged between a Tibetan-themed pub and a sports bar on a side street on the edge of a Hong Kong tourist district. With nothing to indicate its location, aside from a listing on the lobby directory, there’s no clue for passers-by that it houses the June 4th Museum, dedicated to preserving the memory of one of the darkest periods in China’s recent past through photographs, artifacts, videos and written histories of the events. Yet a steady stream of visitors, many from mainland China, has been trickling in since it was opened in April. The interest shows that even though authorities have deleted the events from China’s official record, their memory flickers 25 years on in Hong Kong. The protests remain a taboo topic in mainland China, and Beijing has never given a full accounting of what happened during the crackdown that killed hundreds, possibly thousands. But in Hong Kong, which retains Western-style civil liberties unseen on the mainland, the memory of the Tiananmen protests are just one of many reminders of how the city’s differences with China continue to widen 17 years after it ceased to be a British colony. Every year the city holds a candlelight vigil to commemorate the victims that’s attended by tens of thousands, with numbers rising in recent years. But otherwise, Hong Kong residents are more worried about the hordes of mainland visitors buying up everything from baby formula to luxury apartments and their bad manners, such as eating on the subway and letting their children urinate on the street. “The world memory of it is fading and the younger generation doesn’t know of it in China, where it’s also banned,” said Lee Cheuk Yan, chairman of the Labour Party and head of the pro-democracy group that

T

A photograph of ‘tank man,’ the lone protester who stood to block the way of a line of several tanks during the 1989 pro-democracy movement in Beijing, is displayed at the June 4th Museum.

operates the museum. “So we think it’s very important for us to preserve this historical truth.” Lee said the museum aims to challenge the Communist Party to overturn its official verdict that the mostly student-led protests were a “counterrevolutionary riot.” His group, the Hong Kong Alliance In Support of Democratic Patriotic Movements in China, bought the space for nearly $1.3 million. But in a sign of the discomfort felt by some businesses about being associated with the Tiananmen protest, the building owners’ committee is taking the group to court. The committee says the office’s use as an exhibition hall violates the property deed and that visitors would swamp the building’s two small elevators. “We are confident about our legal position,” Lee said. Committee members could not be reached for comment. But committee member Yeung Cho-ming, secretary-general of a plastic manufacturing trade group, told the South China Morning Post newspaper in April that the museum is “definitely a political problem” and that they were afraid it would

A statue of the ‘Goddess of Democracy’ and a portrait of the late Communist leader Mao Zedong are displayed at the museum.

Travel page information: Brian Barker, 986-3058, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

“bring us trouble.” The museum, just 800 square feet, is hidden away on the fifth floor of the nondescript Foo Hoo Center in Kowloon’s Tsim Sha Tsui district. Staffers say they see about 200 visitors a day on weekdays and 500 on weekends. About half are mainland Chinese. The museum features a timeline of events, black-and-white news photos of scenes from those tumultuous days, including the famous shot of “tank man” — the lone protester who stood in front of a line of tanks. Archival news footage of the student leaders is broadcast continuously on a computer tablet mounted on a wall. Another tablet shows a documentary in English. Nearly all the other exhibits are in Chinese. A labyrinthine layout reflects “the maze which is the China of today,” according to its website. Visitors walking down an L-shaped section turn into a brightly lit passageway before emerging in front of a 6-foot-tall replica of the Goddess of Democracy statue that was famously erected by the protesters in Tiananmen Square. A copy of the statue is also displayed at Hong Kong’s annual vigil. “Entrance into turbulence, through the maze of chaos and exit onto democratic light,” the website says. The museum’s collection of 100 artifacts, 16,000 photos, 33 rolls of microfilm and hundreds of books and magazines will be rotated regularly. Visitors can write messages of support on a narrow chalkboard running the length of the wall. Souvenirs on sale include USB memory sticks — some unmarked, others with logos — loaded with photos and documents and videos on the crackdown, as well as T-shirts, mugs and miniature Goddess of Democracy statues. Penny Leung, visiting from Malaysia — and who was a Hong Kong high school student in 1989 — said it was important to have the museum as a way to counter Beijing’s influence, which has been growing since it regained control of the city from Britain in 1997. “Everyone should come to see history, to view the truth because the Chinese government has been concealing the truth. They do not have the guts to face history,” said Leung, 42.

At 36,361 words, the document laying out the latest proposed Transportation Department passenger protection rule is an epic, a few pages longer than Franz Kafka’s novella The Metamorphosis. Passenger advocates hope that after a 90-day comment period, the proposed regulation will bring positive changes to the way Americans fly. Airlines, however, claim that the story will have a darker ending, leading to an overregulated aviation industry in which customers pay more to fly. The proposal, which you can view and comment on at Regulations.gov (search for DOT-OST-2014-0056), would require airlines to show certain basic fees upfront, at the time a fare is displayed. It would also add new reporting requirements for smaller airlines and require online travel agencies to adopt consumer protection policies. Taken together, these requirements represent an incremental, and long overdue, upgrade in the air travel experience. But this assumes that the Transportation Department will embrace the planned rules, and that Congress won’t interfere. In a statement, Airlines for America (A4A), an industry trade group, denounced the Transportation Department’s actions as overreaching and warned of “negative consequences.” “The government does not prescriptively tell other industries — hotels, computer makers, rental car companies — how they should sell their products, and we believe consumers are best served when the companies they do business with are able to tailor products and services to their customers,” it said, adding that the rules, if enacted, would probably “further increase airline expense, and force airlines to pass on the additional costs to customers in the form of higher fares or reduced levels of air service.” I asked an A4A representative how these rules might increase the cost of a ticket and was told that the industry group was still studying the proposal. Passenger advocates are pleased with the proposed regulations. “DOT’s actions reinforce the agency’s unique role as the only forum — state or federal, judicial or regulatory — where consumer protections exist for airline consumers,” says Kevin Mitchell, who runs the Business Travel Coalition, a group that represents corporate travelers. Mitchell notes that the proposal is particularly necessary in light of an effort in Congress to turn back the Transportation Department’s previous rule, which created the “full-fare” advertising rule for tickets, requiring airlines to quote a ticket price that includes mandatory taxes and fees. At the heart of the proposal is a requirement that airlines and ticket agents reveal fees for services associated with airline tickets at all points of sale. The Transportation Department defines these as a first and second checked bag, a carry-on item, and advance seat assignment. The Transportation Department says fees for additional services are often difficult to determine. As a result, many travelers can’t understand the true cost of travel before purchasing a ticket. Airlines have made billions by systematically redefining what’s included in the cost of an airline ticket. Quietly stripping the ability to check a bag, reserve a seat and even carry a bag on board from the base fare allows air carriers to claim their tickets have never been more affordable. Last year, for example, domestic airlines collected $3.3 billion in baggage fees. Forcing airlines and ticket agents to disclose these fees for a particular passenger on a specific flight at the time a fare is displayed would effectively end what many consumer advocates claim is an airline business model based on deception. Air travelers would know exactly how much they’d pay for each service at the time they pull up a fare quote. It’s one reason airlines are likely to fight this proposal at the rulemaking stage.

LASTING IMAGES SPANISH COAST Susan Swarztberg of Santa Fe poses in May on the coast of Galicia, Spain, in a picture taken by her son. COURTESY SUSAN SWARTZBERG

share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be published twice a week as space is available and on our website, www.santafenewmexican.com. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.

BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexiCan.Com


Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

C-3

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

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

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

BUILDINGS-WAREHOUSES

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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

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE

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

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Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on R u fin a Lane , balcony, fire place, laundry facility on site. $629 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Mann Street, front end of a duplex, near K-Mart. $750 monthly. 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, on Golden Mesa, spacious house near Santa Fe Country Club. Garage, decks, yards, new appliances, beautiful finishes throughout. $1449 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Tesuque dr. with off-street parking and yard. $595 monthly.

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Just Listed a great 2 story Townhome loaded with extras. 3 bedroom, 2 ½ bath, 2 car garage neat and clean. Move in pronto...$242,000.

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CONDO

Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

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Old Adobe Office

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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

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

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.

TOWNHOUSE 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. 2-story. Vaulted ceiling plus loft. Kitchen with dining area. Gas stove. Central A/C & heat. Washer, Dryer. Single garage plus storage. Convenient to shopping, and Plaza. $1300 plus utilities. 505-501-1903

Have a product or service to offer?

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

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

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.

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 $880, plus utilities. Hardwood floors, washer, dryer hookup, patio, carport, quiet, private fenced yard. Pet negotiable. 505-4711270, appointment.

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.

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.

business & service exploresantafe•com

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

CLEANING

CARETAKING 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.

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

CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared! So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

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

MEDIA

STORAGE

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

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!

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

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

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

MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

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

HEATING-PLUMBING

LANDSCAPING

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

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

G & G Self Storage. Near I-25 and 599 bypass. 5x10, $45. 10x10, $70. Boat, trailer, RV spaces available. 505-424-7121

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

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

YARD MAINTENANCE

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

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

directory«

JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112. THE YARD NINJA! PRUNING TREES OR SHRUBSDONE CORRECTLY! STONEWORK- PATIOS, PLANTERS, WALLS. HAUL. INSTALL DRIP. CREATE BEAUTY! DANNY, 505-501-1331.

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

HOMECRAFT PAINTING

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

HOW ’BOUT A ROSE FOR YOUR GARDEN... to clean-up, maintain, & improve. Just a call away! Rose, 4700162. Free estimates. If you need a helping hand call LJC, yard work, interior painting, haul trash. 505-603-4840, 575-421-2538.

PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specan Felix, you with a classified ad cialty.So Call 505-920-3853. WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

YARD MAINTENANCE

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

Berry Clean - 505-501-3395

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

986-3000

*With your paid Business and Service Directory advertising program.


C-4

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

sfnm«classifieds HOUSES UNFURNISHED

MANUFACTURED HOMES

to place your ad, call

»jobs«

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. $1,200 plus utilities. Open Floor Plan, brick Floors, sunny, passive solar, fenced, wood stove, 2 car garage, pets OK. Lone Butte Area, Steve 505-470-3238.

4 BEDROOMS plus attached apartment for in-laws or office. Pet okay. Available now! $1,850 plus utilities. Monte Vista Services, 505-913-1631. 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

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

"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.

CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955

COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

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

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

East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,450 plus utilities. 505-982-2738.

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

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

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

WAREHOUSES

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

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

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.

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.

»announcements«

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.

LIVE IN STUDIOS 2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE

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

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

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.

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.

SELL IT FOR $100 OR LESS AND PAY $10. Larger

ACROSS 1 Elevators, in Leeds 6 Milo of “Ulysses” 11 Squelch 14 Classic soap 15 Complete, for short 16 Gold, in them thar cerros 17 *Computer logic game named for a warship 19 Novelist Umberto 20 Place to pick up litter? 21 “__ better to have loved ...”: Tennyson 23 Radical ’60s gp. 24 *Loose-leaf organizer 29 Electrical measure 31 Formal talk 32 Blue shade 34 Fed 36 Elevator innovator 37 *Upscale golfwear brand 40 Indochina country 41 Elevated for driving 42 “Draft Dodger Rag” singer Phil 43 Entertainer 45 Durable wood 46 *Recruiting specialist 49 eHarmony.com abbr. 52 Leaves at Starbucks? 53 Like herb gardens 56 Serious hwy. violation 58 Phoenix-based ballplayer, and what the start of each answer to a starred clue can be 61 NASDAQ debut 62 Like some seals 63 Minolta competitor 64 Mark, as a survey box 65 PowerPoint unit 66 WWII surrender celebration DOWN 1 Favors one side 2 Like some college walls

by Mike Peluso

3 Assortment in a formatting menu 4 Cuatro menos uno 5 Fed. Reserve, for one 6 ’90s “SNL” regular Cheri 7 Polished look 8 Old school dance 9 Before, to Blake 10 __ valve: heart part 11 Splits the tab 12 Welding flash 13 Slime 18 Fishhook attachment 22 Communicating regularly 25 Endocrinologist’s concern 26 Give a little 27 Estrada and Satie 28 Legal thing 29 Slim, as chances go 30 Bowler, e.g. 32 Without __ in the world 33 Entry at Bartleby.com 34 There’s always a hole in one

6/4/14 Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

35 West of Hollywood 38 Caesarean rebuke 39 Fenway team, on scoreboards 40 “Well, __-di-dah!” 44 Oakleys or RayBans 45 Elvis’ middle name 47 Under control 48 Cut into

6/4/14

49 Unemotional 50 Book of Shadows religion 51 Emmy-winning sportscaster Jim 54 16th-century yr. 55 Have __ in one’s bonnet 56 New Jersey fort 57 Press initials 59 Suffix with adverb 60 The 58-Acrosses, on scoreboards

LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by:

Using

Typeeasy! It’s that

FOUND FOUND SET OF KEYS on Old Santa Trails near Zia Road, Saturday 5/31.Call to describe, 505-982-6620. FOUND SILVER BRACELET, on Old Santa Trail. Call to identify. 505-6909692

LOST KIKI IS a small cat, 2 years old, with calico-tabby mixed fur. Her fur is short but thick and soft. She has been missing since the night of Wednesday, May 28th. She has a microchip but might not have her collar. If you see her, please call us at 920-3444. We miss her very much. Thank you, Cris, Tracy, and Rosemary.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

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.

VACANCY NOTICE

ELDORADO

FOR RENT: 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH Unit. Part of a duplex. $700 monthly plus gas, electric. 2-car parking. Call 505989-7916

ACCOUNTING

OFFICES

ROOMMATE WANTED

Washer, new paint, radiant floor heating. 1500 sq.ft. $1400 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505-920-6977

FOR RELEASE JUNE 4, 2014

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis

Taylor Properties 505-470-0818

ELDORADO 3 BEDROOM, 3 BATH. All utilities paid.

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

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH, on Golden Mesa, spacious house near Santa Fe Country Club. Garage, deck, yards, new appliances, beautiful finishes throughout. $1449 monthly. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH plus additional office and large family room with fire place. 2 separate garages for plenty of storage, extra large lot, out of traffic near Siringo Road. $1350 monthly.

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

986-3000

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

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

will help your ad get noticed

986-3000 Call Classifieds For Details Today!

986-3000

2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507

505-473-2886

www.FurrysBuickgMC.com

ADMINISTRATIVE

2014 GMC ACADIA SLE-1

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

ULTRA LOW-MILEAGE LEASE FOR WELL-QUALIFIED VETERANS, ACTIVE DUTY AND RESERVISTS

STOP IN FOR PRICING INFORMATION! XX 299 X,XXX USAA MEMBERS RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL

$

$

PER MONTH

2

MONTHS

due at signing after all offers

$750 PRIVATE OFFER

NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. TAX, TITLE, LICENSE, DEALER FEES EXTRA. MILEAGE CHARGE OF $.25/MILE OVER 32,500 MILES. AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS ONLY.

AT GMMILITARYDISCOUNT.COM

Not available with some other offers. Take delivery by 6/2/14. See dealer for details.

JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU

Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and 3x3 block. Use logic and process elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest). Rating: GOLD Solution to 6/3/14

Newly Remodeled

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.

Studio Conveniently Located

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

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

when you buy a

© 2014 Janric Enterprises Dist. by creators.com

Studio Apartment

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

986-3000 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.

0

5

Conveniently Located

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

OR

SEE ALL SPECIAL MILITARY DISCOUNTS

HIRING PART-TIME Position for Secretary. Must have secretarial experience, must be professional. Please call 505-989-7916.

2 bedrooms, 1 bath 800 sq.ft., on site laundry, $650 plus utilities.

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. $1600 plus utilities.

5

6/4/14


Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds CONSTRUCTION

ADMINISTRATIVE

ASPHALT RAKER, SCREED OPERATOR & ALL PAVING POSITIONS

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

Sell your car in a hurry!

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

*Good pay *Health insurance *401K *Salary DOE(EOE) *Drug testing 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

to place your ad, call MANAGEMENT

HOSPITALITY

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.

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

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 DIRECTOR

FOOD DISTRIBUTION CERTIFIER

COMPUTERS IT

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.

Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

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

MEDICAL DENTAL

MEDICAL DENTAL

CALL 986-3000

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

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

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. GREATER ALBUQUERQUE HOUSING PARTNERSHIP- EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR POSITION. Complete job description at www.abqgahp.org/executivesearch. Apply before June 30, 2014 by 5:00 pm.

santafenewmexican.com

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS 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

Consulting Pharmacist Full-Time Position. Provides supervision of pharmacy operations and supportive services at assigned facilities throughout service area. Assists in the development, implementation, monitoring or measurement, and drug use evaluation criteria. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS, Toll free hotline 1-866-661-5491, EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA. Follow us on Facebook.

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.

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

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.

EDUCATION

Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000

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.

986-3000

C-5

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 FULL-TIME MEDICAL office position for fast paced office. Must be personable, conscientious, reliable and computer literate. Email resume to Ella@nnmgastro.com

LPN/ RN

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

ATTN: CNA’S

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

DIRECTOR OF NURSES (SANTA FE CARE CENTER)

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

PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT

SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELOR, LADAC

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

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHNICIAN

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

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.

SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELOR, LADAC CULTURAL LIAISON

(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.

(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.

Physician Assistant or Nurse Practitioner Needed

The Physicians IPA in Las Vegas, New Mexico is seeking a fulltime practitioner to manage an outpatient Clinic located in Las Vegas. Competitive salary and benefits including malpractice coverage offered. Please contact Joann Lucero at 505-454-7945 or send resume to 1118 9th Street, Las Vegas, NM 87701.

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS 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

PART TIME

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.

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

OFFICE MANAGER, Solo Provider, approximately 2 days per week Espanola, 2 days per week Los Alamos. Billing-Claims experience required, bookkeeping necessary. Fax resume 747-9696.

WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad

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SALES MARKETING

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.

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.

TRADES FRAMERS & HELPERS wanted for Los Alamos Area for stucco removal and for window installs. Please call 505220-4450. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY, Licensed HVAC Technicians. Must have experience. Call for info. 505-982-2511 or 505-670-7862.

santafenewmexican.com

PART-TIME HOME DELIVERY ASSISTANT

PasatiemPo CoPy editor

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!

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; the ability to work well as a team member with designers, writers & other editors; grace under pressure; five years editing experience with newspapers or magazines; and a 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.

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 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. The Santa Fe New Mexican is an Equal Opportunity Employer 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303

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 Friday, 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 No phone calls, please. An ADA/Equal Opportunity Employer 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303


C-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 2014

sfnm«classifieds 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)

986-3000

COLLECTIBLES

FURNITURE

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

COLLECTOR PLATES, inherited from my Dad. Some very good ones. $30 plus value. Motivated, will sell for $510 each. 505-471-0007

MEXICAN PRIEST’S chair, 1800’s, from Santa Fe, carved decoration, $495. 505-424-8584.

ANTIQUE PUMP ORGAN, came to New Mexico on a wagon train! Make me an offer. Carol, 505-471-0007.

TRADES Full-Time Baker Needed!

to place your ad, call

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

GARAGE SALE ELDORADO GARAGE SALE on Sunday, 9:00 a.m 2:00 p.m (no early birds).

FIREWOOD-FUEL

AKC AKITAS. Loveable & Loyal playful puppies for sale. Black & White. 6 weeks old. $600. First shots.

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

OAK DESK, excellent condition. 30"height x 72"width x 27 1/2"deep. $325. 505-986-1632 Please leave a message. KIVA FIREPLACE Inserts. Custom built to fit the fireplace. 25 years experience. Rusty Dobkins 575-535-2905.

PAIR OF MAHOGONY DESK or Table Chairs. No cushions. Verticle rungs at back. $20. 505-986-1199 Set of 6 Dining chairs, tropical wood with carving. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.

FOOD FRUIT

HVAC/R SERVICE TECH & JOURNEYMAN PLUMBER

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

Controls and trouble shooting. EMAIL RESUME TO: hawkmech@laplaza.org or fax to: (575)758-3366

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

»merchandise« NAMBE CHILE SEEDS! 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.

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

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

1887 ROOKWOOD Vase, 2 handles, signed by Artus Van Briggle, glazed flaw, rare, 7x9", $495. 505-424-8584.

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

SEWING MACHINE. SINGER FEATHERWEIGHT, TABLE MODEL. 1930S. All accessories, with case. Good condition. $400. 505-466-6205

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

HORSE TRAILER EQUIPMENT

POLY WATER Tank. 1000 gallon capacity. Excellent condition. No leaks. $500. 505-660-4079.

CUSTOM-MADE SECTIONAL. 4 pieces including ottoman. White fabric. 84" on side. Very clean. Very lightly used. Excellent condition. Removable arm covers. $850. CASH ONLY. Call 843-817-6846 for more information.

PUSH LAWNMOWER. Self-sharpening blades with grass catcher attachment. Good condition. $50. 505-2319133

DESK- OFFICE- CHAIR. High back, arm rests, swivel seat, on wheels. Black vinyl. Assembled, never used, perfect condition. $60. 774-400-4646

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

MISCELLANEOUS

ORIGINAL LARGE WOOD PAINTED RETABLO OF ST. JOSEPH. 18X20", $295. 505-424-8584.

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

BAC METAL Roofing Tiles, approximately 250 squ.ft., $100 OBO, 505-6723844.

5 HOT Water Solar Panels, 210 gallon tanks, electric hookup for non sunny days. Working well! $2,500 all together. 505-983-6947. BACK ISSUES OF MOTHER EARTH NEWS. .50 CENTS EACH. CALL 505231-9133.

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

CLOTHING

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

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

LARGE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER. Space for tv, stereo, and storage. Smokey glass doors. $100 OBO. 505231-9133.

CLASSIC CARS Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

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

Sell Your Stuff!

DOMESTIC

986-3000

TINY WHITE FLUFFY MALTESE. Papers, shots, health guarantee, potty pad trained. Non-Shedding, HypoAllergenic, $800- 1,000. $100 will hold. Great payment plan. I accept PayPalDebit-Credit Cards. Text for pictures. 575-910-1818. cingard1@hotmail.com.

»garage sale«

any way YOU want it any way anyway way any 2004 BUICK REGAL LS, LOW MILES LIKE NEW! $8,000. 505-321-3920 www.furrysbuickgmc.com

RARE SHIHTZUS 2 BUFF CHAMPAGNE colored twins and 1 white with redorange markings. Show coat. Papers, shots, Health Guarantee, Potty pad trained. Paypal-Credit-Debit card. Non-Shedding, Hypo-Allergenic. $650. $100 will hold. 575-910-1818 . cingard@yahoo.com Text for pictures. Deerskin Dresses, Capes and Skirts The Flea at the Downs Saturdays and Sundays Through September 8 am to 3 pm www.santafeflea.com walt@sfflea.com 505-280-9261

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

LIVESTOCK

PETS SUPPLIES

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.

4 ANSON Magnesium Wheels. 15", 6 hole. Fits GM Trucks. $100, 505-6604079.

QUALITY PUPPIES. POMERANIANS, CHIHUAHUAS, POODLES, MORKIES, SHORKIE, YORKIE-POOS, RAT TERRIER-YORKIE, COCK-A-POO-CHIS. $250- 1,000. 575-910-1818. Text for pictures. cingard1@hotmail.com. Registered, shots, health guarantee, potty pad trained. Great payment plan. PayPal-Debit-Credit cards. Hypo-Allergenic, Non-Shedding.

100 WATT GENERAL HOUSEHOLD SOFT WHITE BULBS BRAND NEW I HAVE SEVERAL 4 PACKS FOR $4.50 PER PACKAGE 505-753-3164

LARGE ZIA Pot, 8x10", Birds, Katherine Pino, $495. 505-424-8584.

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES

1959 CHEVY TRUCK hood & gas tank. Tank is sealed. $425. 505-577-6295

HORSES

BRAND NEW Round Oak Table with four chairs. $100. 505-471-0555

»cars & trucks«

PARELLI BAREBACK PAD. Dark green suede. Practically new. Asking $175. Originally $280. 774-400-4646

LAWN & GARDEN

ART

BUILDING MATERIALS

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.

LIKE NEW HOT TUB. Seats 4. Make me an offer! Carol, 505-471-0007.

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

LARGE MEXICAN elaborate Tin Chandelier, 1950’s, minor damage, $495. 505-424-8584.

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, Teacup size. Male & Female, 12 weeks. Grey, brown, and black. Negotiable price. 505-216-8278

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.

KIDS STUFF

$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

(3) 13 week pups- One white, 2 blackbrindle. $500, all shots. 505-681-4593

I DON’T HAVE A GARAGE, BUT I AM OLD AND HAVE A LIFE-TIME OF STUFF THAT I MUST GET RID OF BEFORE I DIE! Come to 86 PASEO CDEBACA #41 in La Cienega on June 6, 7, 8th, 9-3 pm. Wood table with 4 chairs, treadmill, tools, camping stuff, yard stuff. No kid stuff. Carol, 505-471-0007.

Fix your puppy or kitten for only $20!

WPA, ERA, carved Child’s bed, fine rosettes, no rails, gorgeous, $495. 505-424-8584.

FURNITURE

ANTIQUES

»animals«

If you are interested in the bedroom suit and/or Daybed and cannot make the garage sale on Sunday June 1, call 505-450-4721 after Sunday for availability of those items.

ESTATE SALES

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

King size bedroom suit (Bed, rails, boards, two three-drawer nightstands, Seven drawer two cabinet Dresser with mirror, Seven drawer Armoire Wardrobe cabinet with mirror, A New wood Daybed with new mattress, Native American circular rug, artwork, blankets, clothing, jewelry, law books, new massaging chair insert.

TEA CUP AND TOY Yorkie pups. Papers, Shots, Health Guarantee. Potty pad trained. Great payment plan. PayPal, Debit-Credit cards. Nonshedding, Hypo-allergenic. $100 Deposit will hold. $1,000- 1,800. 575-9101818. Text for pictures: cingard@hotmail.com

GARAGE SALE SOUTH

2001 BUICK LESABRE, GREAT RIDE FOR THE MONEY, $7,999. CA L L 505-473-1234.

COMMUNITY YARD SALE at LAS ACEQUIAS on CALLE ATAJO, SATURDAY June 7th from 8-2 p.m. Follow the signs, over 30 houses participating. Variety of items: furniture, tools, toys, books, movies, CDs. LOTS of great stuff! Free moving boxes.

YOU YOU YOU any way want want it it want it 95 2 $ 95 You turn to us.

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Get unlimited digital access to santafenewmexican.com and pasatiempomagazine.com on your tablet, smartphone or computer PLUS your choice of print delivery for one low monthly price. Choose from 7-day, weekend or Sunday only. *Automated monthly payments. Must reside within in The New Mexican’s home delivery area.

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Wednesday, June 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds

to place your ad, call

986-3000

C-7

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

DOMESTIC

DOMESTIC

4X4s

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

IMPORTS

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

2008 GMC ENVOY SLE - $11,000. Call Today! 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2008 HONDA RIDGELINE 4WD $14000. Call Today! 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

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

2010 HONDA ODYSSEY EX- $19000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.

2011 LEXUS GX460 AMAZING 12k miles! barely driven, loaded, Factory Certified 3year warranty, one owner, clean CarFax $46,721. Call 505-216-3800.

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

2004 HONDA Accord real 83,780 mi. Very clean car with no accidents, Auto trans. 2L with 4-Cylinder Gasoline engine runs smoothly. $4,200 Call or text at 724-964-6550.

2006 SILVERADO 1500 4WD EXTRA CAB$9,000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2011 BMW 328XI - ONLY 20k MILES - $29000 - 2 at THIS PRICE. 5053 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . 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.

Classifieds

2010 LEXUS HS250h former Lexus of SF loaner vehicle, Factory Certified 3year warranty, hybrid 35+ mpg, loaded, clean CarFax $25,341. Call 505-216-3800.

Where treasures are found daily

2004 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE$7,000. Call Today! 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

Place an ad Today!

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.

2011 Ford Fiesta SE recent tradein, single owner clean CarFax, low miles, auto, great MPG! immaculate $12,971. Call 505-216-3800. 2003 JAGUAR S-TYPE 3.O - $6000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2010 LEXUS RX 350 AWD, loaded, Factory Certified 3year warranty, new tires, new brakes, freshly serviced, Immaculate! $31,897. CALL 505-216-3800.

2009 PONTIAC G6. $9,000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2012 DODGE CHARGER HEMI R/T $28,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.

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

2011 FORD Mustang GT Premium Roush exhaust and headers, sounds mean, leather, single owner clean CarFax $24,871. CALL 505216-3800.

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

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

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

VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: SANTAFEAUTOSHOWCASE.COM PAUL 505-983-4945 When was the last time you smiled as you turned the ignition key? Feel it again with this charming 2013 Dodge Charger. 2009 DODGE AVENGER. 100,841 miles. Don’t let the miles fool you! What a price for an ’09! $9,155. Call today.

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.

2009 KIA SPECTRA - NICE CAR. LOW MILES. $8,000. Please Call for Information. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

4X4s

2006 Lexus SC430. UNREAL! Merely 35k miles, still smells new, collector quality and condition, new tires, all services complete, pristine and just absolutely PERFECT, don’t miss it. $32,871. Call 505-2163800.

2006 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4WD. ONLY 58,000 MILES. $19,000. Call Today! 505-795-5317 www.furrysbuickgmc.com ACURA 3.2TL Type S 2003 Leather seats, 4 door, Moon roof. Fast with 260 hp $4,800. 505-412-0021

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

To place a Legal ad Call 986-3000

2005 FORD F350 CREW 4WD LARIAT. $16000. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

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.

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.

2010 ACURA MDX merely 22k miles! immaculate, AWD, 3rd row, loaded, single owner clean CarFax $30,741. CALL 505-2163800.

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

2010 HONDA Accord Crosstour EXL. ONLY 31k miles! AWD, leather, moonroof, super nice, single owner clean CarFax $20,931. Call 505216-3800.

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

2014 NISSAN VERSA. 16,603 miles. Don’t pay too much for the stunning car you want. $14,774. Call us today! 2006 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE $11000. Call Today! 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2010 FORD FOCUS - $8000. Call 5 0 5 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . 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

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

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

2008 CIVIC 4-door LX. Beige exterior, Ivory interior. Fully maintained records. Excellent condition. $12,799. 43k miles. 505-473-2750

Don’t miss out, 0% EnDs soon!


C-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Wednesday, June 4, 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!

SUVs

SUVs

CAMPERS & RVs

2010 CHRYSLER Town & Country LOADED! $14,000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

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.

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

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

2004 VW PASSAT WAGON 4MOTION - $8000. 505-795-5317. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2006 NISSAN ALTIMA - $6000. Call today. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com

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

2005 GMC CANYON EXTRA CABGAS SAVER - $9000. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com .

MOTORCYCLES

Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?

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

SPORTS CARS

Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.

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

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

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

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

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.

3-WHEELED MOPED WITH TRAILER. Only 6 months old. $2,200 OBO. Will trade for older camper trailer. 575520-4041.

2007 CORVETTE 3LT Z51. Copper Orange. 21,300 Miles. Stunning Car! Always Garaged Covered, 2nd Owner, CarFax. Excellent Upgrades. Asking $32,900. 505-660-1537

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.

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD!

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

Using

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

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.

Type

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.

will help 986-3000 your ad

get noticed

Climb into this great Toyota Tundra, knowing that it will always get you Call Classifieds For Details Today! where you need to go, on time, every HARLEY DAVIDSON Heritage Softail 986-3000 time. 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

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

We always Larger get results!

SUVs

KAWASAKI 2008 KLR-650. Suspension upgrades, touring bags, many extras. Very good condition. Rio Rancho. $4,400 OBO. 505-867-5848

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

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

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.

2012 FORD EXPLORER XLT. 38,768 MILES. ARE YOU STILL DRIVING AROUND THAT OLD THING? COME ON DOWN TODAY! $28,881. 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).

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

»recreational« 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

View vehicle, Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

2000 TOYOTA 4-Runner recent trade-in, just serviced, well maintained, super tight, runs and drives AWESOME! $7,991. Call 505216-3800.

Classifieds Where treasures are found daily

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

sfnm«classifieds LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

Legal #96959 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or be forever barred.

NO. D-101-PB-201400071

By: Dara L. McKinney, Trust Officer Personal Representative c/o Thompson, Hickey, Cunningham, Clow, April & Dolan, P.A. 460 St. Michael’s Drive, Suite 1000 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 505-988-2900

coln Avenue. The purpose of this hearing is to discuss a request from Loyal Hound, LLC for a Restaurant Liquor License, (Beer and Wine On-Premise Consumption Only) to be located at Loyal Hound, 730 St. Michaels Drive, #3RW, Santa Fe. All interested citizens are invited to attend this public hearing. Yolanda Y. Vigil City Clerk PUBLISHED in The Santa Fe New Mexican on MAY 28, June 4 2014

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH M. MAGRATH, DECEASED. NOTICE TO CREDITORS LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL BANK has been appointed Personal Representative of the Estate of Joseph M. Magrath, Deceased. Claims against the Estate must be presented to the Personal Representative at the address shown below or filed in the above referenced cause in the First Judicial District Court of Santa Fe County, P.O. Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico 875042268 (Judge Steve Herrera Judicial Complex, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501), within two months after the date of the

Continued...

LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL BANK

986-3000

to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS

Notice is hereby given that Deborah T. Meem and Peter F. Wirth, whose address is c/o Catron, Catron, Pottow & Glassman, P.A., have been appointed Personal Representatives of Barbara T. Meem, deceased. Creditors of decedent must present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this notice or be forever barred.

LEGALS

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

Notice is hereby given that the Governing Body of the city of Santa Fe will hold a public hearing on C A T R O N , Wednesday, June 11, CATRON, POTTOW & 2014 at its regular PUBLISHED in The LEGAL # 97077 City Council Meeting, GLASSMAN, P.A. Santa Fe New Mexi7:00 p.m. session, at can on MAY 28, June Hall Council A t t city 4 2014 IN THE PROBATE Chambers, 200 Linorneys for Personal COURT coln Avenue. Representatives Legal #96960 CITY OF SANTA FE COUNTY OF SANTA FE Pos The purpose of this NOTICE OF STATE OF NEW MEXIhearing is to discuss t Office Box 788 PUBLIC HEARING CO a request from Eldorado Service Notice is hereby giv- Case No. 2014-0074 Company, LLC for a Santa Fe, en that the Governing transfer of Ownership New Mexico 87504 Body of the city of of Dispenser License Santa Fe will hold a IN THE MATTER OF # 0195 from Guardian public hearing on THE ESTATE OF (505) 982- Santa Fe Partnership Wednesday, June 11, BARBARA T. MEEM, to Eldorado Service 1947 2014 at its regular Deceased Company, LLC. This City Council Meeting, license will remain at 7:00 p.m. session, at By Fletcher the Eldorado Hotel, City Hall Council NOTICE TO CRED309 W. San Francisco R. Catron Chambers, 200 Lin- ITORS

Continued...

Continued...

Continued...

LEGALS

Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican All interested citizens May 28, 2014 and June are invited to attend 4, 2014. this public hearing.

CITY OF SANTA FE

Continued...

CANOE

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

Street, Santa Fe.

LEGAL # 97081

BOATS & MOTORS GRUMMAN 17’ ALUMINUM $500 OBO. 505-672-3844.

CALL 986-3000

2009 VESPA 200 Gt-L, Automatic Transmission, extra clean, very little wear, under 800 miles. $3,600. Call 505-470-6123.

Yolanda Y. Vigil City Clerk Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican May 28 and June 4, 2014 LEGAL # 97094

LEGALS g 3 NMSA 1978, et. seq. the petitioner Karen C. Martinez and Alejandro Chumasero will apply to the Honorable Francis J. Mathew, District Judge of the Firdt Judicial District at the Santa fe Judicial Complex, 100 Catron St., in Santa Fe, New Mexico at 11:45 a.m. on the day of June 10, 2014 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of the child Alejandra Chumacero to Alejandra Chumasero.

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk FE IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF CORRECTION OF BIRTH CERTIFICATE A L A J A N D R A CHUMACERO, A CHILD. DOB 2012 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec . 408-1 through Sec. 40-8-

Continued...

LEGALS p Interested parties may Request for Proposal (RFP) Packages from the Purchasing Officer at: Taos County Purchasing Office OR Phone: 575-737-6319 105 Albright Street, Suite I Fax: 575-737-6326 Taos, NM 87571 E-mail: elsa.vigil@taoscounty .org OR Via the internet at the following address: www.taoscounty.org

A mandatory walk Published in The San- through site visit with all interested parties ta Fe New Mexican will be conducted on June 4 and 11, 2014 Thursday, June 12, 2014 at 10:00 am. All LEGAL # 97096 interested parties will meet at the Taos RFP-2014-05 Notice is hereby giv- County Commission en that the County of Chambers located at Taos, New Mexico 105 Albright Street, calls for sealed pro- Taos, New Mexico (Taos County Adminposals for: istration Building) Design and Installation of a Sculpture for The proposal/s must the Taos County Ad- be mailed or delivministrative and Judi- ered to the above address by 2:00 p.m. cial Complex Thursday, June 26,

Continued...

Continued...

LEGALS y 2014. Timely submission by mail means that the proposal must actually be delivered to Taos County by 2:00 p.m., Thursday, June 26, 2014. Proposals received after 2:00 p.m. will be considered unresponsive. Proposals will be received by the Purchasing Officer at the Taos County Administration Office on the above date and time. Taos County reserves the right to reject any or all proposals, and waive all formalities. By Order of the Governing Body Taos County Commission Elsa Vigil, Purchasing Officer May 29, 2014 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican June 4, 2014.

You can view your legal ad online at sfnmclassifieds.com


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RETRO REWIND ThuRsDays DJ OoNa FRIDay DJ Quico

wi n!

junE 14, 21 & 28

2014 CHEVY Camaro

We’ll be giving aWay three Chevy Camaros in june hourly Drawings on saturday, june 14, 21 & 28 from 6 pm to 10pm. see lightning rewards Club desk for complete contest rules and details.

E arn 10x EntriEs on MonDaYs!

Pasa 6.6 CTRFLD

saTuRDay DJ Flo Fader


Page 2 & 3

j un e 13 - 2 9 / 2 014

the santa fe international new media festival video & interactive installations, animation, art-apps, digital dome screenings, experimental documentaries, multimedia performances

Pasa 6.6 CTRFLD

cur rentsnewmedia.or g

fresh

Open 12 - 5 Sunday

Open 10 - 6 Mon - Sat

983-3900

opening night at el museo 6pm - midnight Synthesis by Luftwerk / photo by Kate Joyce

Presented by Parallel Studios, El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, SARC, Center for Contemporary Arts, Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe University of Art and Design, Zane Bennett Contemporary Art, David Richard Gallery, Santa Fe Art Institute, Heath Concerts, Axle Contemporary, the Santa Fe Railyard and the City of Santa Fe

983-4498

Bodhi Bazaar • Cost Plus World Market • Dell Fox Jewelry

Pandora’s • Pranzo Italian Grill/Alto • Raaga Restaurant

Eidos Contemporary Jewelry • El Tesoro Café • Get It Together

Ristra Restaurant • Rock Paper Scissor SalonSpa

Kioti • Mercedes Isabel Velarde Fine Jewelry And Art • On Your Feet • On Your Little Feet • Op. cit. Bookstore

982-0003

FREE PARKING

500 Montezuma Avenue • www.sanbusco.com

Santa Fe Pens • Teca Tu – A Paws-Worthy Pet Emporium The Reel Life • Wink Salon

Welcome New Executive Chef Marc Quiñones #loveluminaria | 505.984.7915 luminariarestaurant.com


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