Trail Dust: Arrival of horseless carriage transformed New Mexico Local News, A-6
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Judge opens wage-theft case to thousands of hospital workers Class-action lawsuit claims Santa Fe facility denied employees lunch breaks due to inadequate staffing By Patrick Malone
The New Mexican
A Santa Fe judge granted classaction status Thursday to current and former employees at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center in a lawsuit that accuses the hospital of stealing wages from workers by
denying their unpaid lunch breaks due to inadequate staffing. “Basically, this is a time-theft case,” said Shane Youtz, the Albuquerque lawyer representing the plaintiffs. His clients claim they often worked through their scheduled 30-minute breaks, and they weren’t paid for that time.
Report: WIPP fire was preventable Investigators detail faulty safety culture at nuclear dump site By Jeri Clausing
The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — Federal investigators have uncovered a series of shortcomings in safety training, emergency response and oversight at the troubled southeastern New Mexico nuclear waste dump where a truck caught fire and 17 workers were recently contaminated by a radiation leak. A report released Friday on the investigation into the first of back-toback accidents at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad says a Feb. 5 truck blaze apparently was ignited by a buildup of oil and other combustible materials that should have been regularly cleaned off the vehicle. The truck also was operating without an automatic fire sup-
pression system, the Department of Energy report said. And one of several mistakes made in the chaotic moments that followed switched the filtration systems in the mine a halfmile underground and sent smoke billowing into areas where workers expected to have “good air.” The report also identified problems with safety culture at the federal government’s only permanent repository for waste from the nation’s nuclear bomb-building facilities, and it said a series of repeat deficiencies identified by an independent oversight board had gone unresolved. New Mexico Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich called the report “deeply concerning.” “Fortunately, no one was hurt,” the Democrats said in a joint statement. “The community of Carlsbad and the nation expect WIPP to operate with the highest level of safety. The board has identified a number of serious
Please see WIPP, Page A-4
Jury weighs Christmas killings On Saturday, jurors will continue discussing evidence in the 2012 shooting deaths of John Griego and Nicholas Baker. LocAL NEWS, A-6
The ruling by state District Judge Sarah Singleton opens the door for an estimated 1,200 to 1,500 current and past employees who worked at the hospital between 2008 and the present to join the litigation, originally brought by seven plaintiffs in 2010. “The court has determined that we have established the existence of our allegations that this is a corporate culture, that this is a hospitalwide prob-
Please see HoSPITAL, Page A-4
Vandals strike S.F. park
Border attack
Thousands of dollars worth of damage was discovered Thursday at a park on Alto Street.
An immigrant Honduran woman and two girls were kidnapped and assaulted by a U.S. Border Patrol agent as they tried to surrender, officials say. PAgE A-10
LocAL NEWS, A-6
DEMONETTES CONQUER LOS LUNAS, WIN STATE TITLE
Santa Fe head coach Elmer Chavez hugs player Jackie Martinez after the Demonettes beat Los Lunas 34-29 to win the Class AAAA state championship Friday in The Pit in Albuquerque. See the full story in Sports, Page B-1. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Colleges try to give more ‘gap’ experience Programs strive to ease, remove financial barriers By Paige Sutherland
The Associated Press
Operations at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad, the nation’s only underground nuclear waste repository, were halted in February following a truck fire and a release of radiation nine days later. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Obama’s pledge to review deportations carries risks By Jim Kuhnhenn
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s new promise to seek ways to ease his administration’s rate of deportations aims to mollify angry immigrant advocates but carries risks for a White House that has insisted it has little recourse. In asking Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson to review enforcement practices, Obama could undo already fragile congressional efforts to overhaul immigration laws. And he still could fall short of satisfying the demands of pro-immigrant groups that have been increasing pressure on him to dramatically reverse the administration’s record of
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deportations. The White House announced Thursday that Obama had directed Johnson, who was sworn in three months ago, to see how the Jeh Johnson department “can conduct enforcement more humanely within the confines of the law.” Then the president summoned 17 labor and immigration leaders to the White House Friday afternoon for what some participants described as a spirited discussion of his deportations policies and the strategy for enacting a comprehensive
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MEDFORD, Mass. — Colleges are paying students to take a year off after high school to travel, volunteer or do internships so that students of all income brackets can benefit from “gap years.” A new program at Tufts University and existing ones at a handful of other schools aim to remove the financial barriers that can keep cash-strapped students from exploring different communities and challenge their comfort zones before jumping right into college. The gap year program starting this fall at Tufts will pay for housing, airfare and even visa fees, which can often add up to $30,000 or more. Although gap years are more popular in Europe, they have started to gain
traction in the United States. About 40,000 Americans participated in gap year programs in 2013, an increase of nearly 20 percent since 2006, according to data gathered by a nonprofit called the American Gap Year Association. In 2009, Princeton University began offering applicants gap-year aid based on need. Nearly 100 students have participated, volunteering in Brazil, China, India, Peru and Senegal. The University of North Carolina offers $7,500 to gap year applicants, while students at Wisconsin’s St. Norbert College can receive financial aid based on need, although airfare isn’t covered. Lydia Collins, a 19-year-old Tufts freshman from Evanston, Ill., said she took a gap year because she wanted to see what was outside of the classroom before committing to four more years of school. “A lot of kids are very burnt out after high school,” Collins said. “Taking this time to be with yourself and
see yourself in a new community and light will only help you to succeed in college.” Collins worked in microfinance in Ecuador through the poverty-fighting group Global Citizen and said the experience inspired her to pursue international relations, something she would not have known about beforehand. Students who take part are able to see the world beyond the bubble they grew up in and return to school with a better perspective of their future, said Holly Bull, president of the Center of Interim Programs, which counsels students on taking gap years. Bull said the benefit of the structured time away from school is too valuable to exclude lower-income students. “Students return to the classroom more focused, independent and confident,” said Bull, who took a gap year herself to Hawaii and Greece. She said the students also tend to have less trouble adjusting to dorm life.
Parents can only correct so much
Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Eighth annual Spotlight on Young Musicians Youths 6 to 19 years old, with special guest Dave Grusin, 7 p.m., Scottish Rite Center, 463 Paseo de Peralta, $10, discounts available, proceeds benefit music education. Santa Fe Youth Symphony Association, 467-3770, www.sfysa.org. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
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Columnist John Rosemond advises parents dealing with a child who’s exhibiting classic symptoms of “boy” to stay the course and stay sane. FAMILY, A-9
Two sections, 24 pages TV Book, 32 pages 165th year, No. 74 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
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In brief
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. — In the nearly 40 years after he escaped from the maximum-security military prison at Fort Leavenworth, convicted killer James Robert Jones carved out a new life for himself in Florida, living under an assumed name, getting married and working for an air conditioning company. It all came to an end this week when Jones — or Bruce Walter Keith, as the former Army private was known in Florida — was recaptured with the help of technology that was more sci-fi than reality when he broke out during the disco era: facial-recognition software. Jones, 59, was one of the Army’s 15 most-wanted fugitives after his 1977 escape from the Kansas prison. He was convicted of murder and assault in the 1974 killing of a fellow soldier at Fort Dix in New Jersey.
LOS ANGELES — Thousands of Los Angeles International Airport workers had no idea what to do when a gunman opened fire last year in a terminal because they were inadequately trained to deal with an emergency, according to a union report. Members of SEIU United Service Workers West — sky caps, baggage handlers, wheelchair attendants and janitors — weren’t prepared for an evacuation, were hampered by poor communication and were essentially on their own during the chaos as panicked, fleeing passengers ran onto the tarmac and dove onto luggage conveyer belts. In some instances, passengers were left alone in wheelchairs during the Nov. 1 shooting that killed one airport screener and injured three others. Many issues outlined in the union report and by the airport itself were identified as deficient in 2011 by a special panel of experts convened by the former mayor to review public safety at LAX.
New insurance rights for gay couples WASHINGTON — Addressing gay and lesbian concerns, the Obama administration Friday moved to expand health insurance access for same-sex couples and close a loophole that threatened to leave some HIV/AIDS patients without coverage. u Insurers offering spousal coverage for heterosexual couples must also provide it to legally married couples of the same gender. u Insurers cannot turn down HIV/ AIDS patients whose premiums are being paid through the federal Ryan White program. The administration acted after gays and lesbians complained about confusing rules on spousal coverage in the new health insurance exchanges. The Associated Press
U.S. government ceding control, but who will take charge is unknown By Michael Liedtke
The Associated Press
Mervat, 31, holds her 9-month-old daughter, Shurouk, inside their tent camp for Syrian refugees Tuesdayin Kab Elias, Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. Trapped in her northern Syrian village by fighting, Mervat escaped to neighboring Lebanon, and a nurse told her the girl was starving. Malnutrition is rising among children in Syria and among refugees. BILAL HUSSEIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Malnutrition grows among Syrian refugee children By Diaa Hadid
The Associated Press
KAB ELIAS, Lebanon rapped in her northern Syrian village by fighting, Mervat watched her newborn baby progressively shrink. Her daughter’s dark eyes seemed to grow bigger as her face grew more skeletal. Finally, Mervat escaped to neighboring Lebanon, and a nurse told her the girl was starving. The news devastated her. “They had to hold me when they told me. I wept,” the 31-year-old mother said, speaking in the rickety, informal tent camp where she now lives with her husband in the eastern Lebanese town of Kab Elias. Her daughter Shurouk has been undergoing treatment the past three months and remains a wispy thing. The 9-month-old weighs 7 pounds — though she’s become more smiley and gregarious. Her case underscored how dramatically Syrian society has unraveled from a conflict that this weekend enters its fourth year. Such stark starvation was once rare in Syria, where President Bashar Assad’s autocratic state ran a health system that provided nearly free care. That system, along with most other state institutions, has been shattered in many parts of the country where the fighting between Assad’s forces and the rebels trying to overthrow him is raging hardest. The war has killed more than 140,000 people and has driven
T
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nearly a third of the population of 23 million from their homes. Nearly half those displaced by the war are children. Now aid workers believe starvation cases are increasing in besieged areas of Syria and malnutrition is spreading among the poorest Syrian refugees. Before the conflict, doctors inside Syria would see fewer than one case a month of a child with life-threatening malnutrition, now they tell UNICEF they encounter 10 or more a week, said Juliette Touma, a Middle East regional spokesperson for the U.N. children’s agency. In Lebanon, malnutrition grew from 4.4 percent in 2012 to 5.9 percent of Syrian refugee children, according to a recent UNICEF-led survey. An estimated 10,000 Syrian children in Lebanon are likely suffering malnutrition, said Dima Ousta of the International Orthodox Christian Charities, an NGO leading efforts to deal with the issue in Lebanon. UNICEF said nearly 2,000 were at risk of dying because of acute malnutrition. A survey in Jordan found that 4 percent of Syrian refugee children under five needed treatment for malnutrition, the World Food Programme said on Monday. Touma said UNICEF had not yet finished surveys for refugees in Turkey or inside Syria itself. Malnutrition is the product of a series of ever-widening and interconnected problems. Within Syria, fighting in the worst hit areas can
limit access to food supplies and health care for children. Among refugees, children are vulnerable to illnesses from drinking dirty water or being exposed to sewage. Those conditions can exacerbate malnutrition. The poverty and poor hygienic living conditions at the root of the problem are likely only to worsen as Syria’s war drags on. “Malnutrition is not an issue related to food. It’s a health issue,” said Zeroual Azzeddine of UNICEF. In Lebanon, nearly one million Syrians are registered as refugees by the U.N. refugee agency. The poorest 140,000 live in 460 informal camps, where they live with no clean running water and with sewage running down ditches between tents. Aid workers are trying to track down the thousands of malnourished children in Lebanon. UNICEF is training doctors to identify malnutrition among Syrian children undergoing immunizations and other medical checks. Refugees must grapple with another problem. The U.N. and partner organizations only cover basic care because there’s not enough money. Syrian children with illnesses sometimes fall through the gaps — and because they are sick, they don’t eat, and malnutrition becomes a side-effect. Mervat said her other children were often hungry because they had no money to buy food and relied on U.N. donations. “I’m worried about them, I’m afraid of the future,” Mervat said.
SAN FRANCISCO — The U.S. government is relinquishing its control of the Internet’s address system in a shift that may raise questions about the future direction of online innovation and communications. The decision announced Friday begins a long-planned transition affecting the stewardship of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN. That’s a not-for-profit agency launched in 1998 by the Commerce Department to govern the system that assigns website addresses and directs Internet traffic. The department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration, or NTIA, hopes to end its oversight of ICANN’s Internet Assigned Numbers Authority by the time its contract expires in September 2015. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority administers the technology that keeps computers connected to the Web and steers Internet traffic. Proposals for a new ICANN stewardship will be accepted beginning next week at a conference in Singapore. Although it’s too early to tell how future oversight will be handled, the U.S. government appears determined to hand over the reins to an entity without political entanglements. “We will not accept a proposal that replaces the NTAI’s role with a government-led or intergovernmental solution,” Lawrence Strickling, assistant secretary at the Commerce Department, told reporters. That statement may ease concerns that oversight of ICANN will be turned over to International Telecommunications Union, which is part of the United Nations. Although other countries have had a say in how the Internet works, the U.S. government retained veto power over ICANN. That role has fueled recurring debates about whether the U.S. government exerts too much influence. Some Internet groups contend the U.S. government should remain in a supervisory position to prevent leaders in other countries with a history of suppressing free speech from trying to manipulate ICANN in a way that censors online communications. “Without the U.S. government providing an effective backstop to ICANN’s original operating principles, there would be no mechanism in place to stop foreign governments from interfering with ICANN’s operations,” Daniel Castro, senior analyst for the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, wrote in a Friday blog post.
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Saturday, March 15 BEE HIVE MUSICAL STORY TIME: At 11 a.m. at Bee Hive Books, 328 Monezuma Ave., a story time is offered for children ages 2 and up. BELESAMA DANCE: From 4 to 6 p.m. at the Railyard Performance Center, 1611-B Paseo de Peralta, a St. Patrick’s Day community Irish dance workshop will be held. This is a family event, open to all ages. The event includes a performance by the Belisama Irish Dancers and a Ceili dance party. BLISS OUT WITH KIRTAN: From 7 to 9 p.m. at Santa Fe Community Yoga Center, 826 Comino de Monte Rey, Suite B-1, a call-and-response yogic chanting session will be offered with live music provided by kirtan band Sharanagati. FAMILY MOVIE MATINEE: Movies and refreshments from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive. HEARING AIDS: At 10 a.m. at the Vitamin Cottage event center of Natural Grocers, Cerrillos Road at Richards Ave., the meeting of the Santa Fe Hearing Loss chapter will present audiologists Elaine Almquist and Katy Burk, who will discuss telecoils and Bluetooth technologies. The meeting is
Lotteries are free and open to the public. For more information, send an email to whittwil@verizon.net. NEEDLEPOINTERS: From 10 a.m. until noon at the McGee Chapel Community Room, 1399 Luisa St., the Sangre de Cristo Needlepointers, an American Needlepoint Chapter, will meet. New members always welcome. For more information, send an email to SdCNeedlepointers@ gmail.com or call 695-1264. THE MET AT THE LENSIC: Massenet’s opera Werther, 11 a.m.-3:15 p.m., 211 W. San Francisco St. DAR: At 10 a.m. at Pacifica Senior Living, 2961 Galisteo St., the Stephen Watts Kearny Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet. Fred Friedman will discuss “N.M. Railroads: Their Development and Legacies.” For more information, call 670-1089.
NIGHTLIFE Saturday, March 15 ¡CHISPA! AT EL MESON: Pianist Bert Dalton’s jazz trio, 7:30-10:30 p.m., 213 Washington Ave. BISHOP’S LODGE RANCH RESORT & SPA: Multiinstrumentalist Gerry Carthy, 7-10 p.m., 1297 Bishops Lodge Road. CAFÉ CAFÉ: Contemporary-
Latin guitarist Ramón Bermudez, 6 p.m., 500 Sandoval St. COWGIRL BBQ: Santa Fe Chiles Dixie Jazz Band, 2-5 p.m.; Americana Band Boris & The Salt Licks, 8:30 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DINNER FOR TWO: Anderson, Snyder & Wynn Jazz Band, 8-10:30 p.m., 106 N. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Anthony Leon and Joe West, 7-10 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. HOTEL SANTA FE: Guitarist/ flutist Ronald Roybal, 7-9 p.m., 1501 Paseo de Peralta. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Danny Duran and Slo Burning, country licks, 8-11 p.m., 100 E. San Francisco St. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Pat Malone Jazz Trio, 6-9 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL: David Geist and Julie Trujillo, 6-9 p.m., 540 Montezuma Ave. SECOND STREET BREWERY: Blues singer Alex Maryol, 6-9 p.m., 1814 Second St. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Irish-pub tunes with Clancy, 7-10 p.m., 1607 Paseo de Peralta. SWEETWATER HARVEST KITCHEN: Hawaiian slack-key guitarist John Serkin, 6 p.m., 1512 Pacheco St., Building B. TINY’S: Showcase karaoke with Nanci and Cyndi,
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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. 8:30 p.m., 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Bob Finnie, 6:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service @sfnewmexican.com.
WORLD
Crimean premier promises fair vote
U.S., Russia talks fail to resolve Ukraine crisis
By Pamela Constable, Anne Gearan and Kathy Lally The Washington Post
SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Crimea’s de facto prime minister predicted confidently Friday that voters in the peninsula region of 2 million people will turn out en masse and choose to rejoin Russia in Sunday’s referendum, asserting that “we have the right to decide” Crimea’s political status. Sergei Aksyonov, the leader of Crimea’s rightist Russian Unity movement, airily parried questions at a news conference, asserting that there had been no armed intimidation and no unfair barrage of pro-Russia propaganda as the vote approaches. The annexation is popular within Crimea’s 60 percent ethnic Russian population but strongly opposed by its ethnic minorities. “Where do you see any guns?” Aksyonov, 41, demanded at the event in the Crimean capital. Thousands of uniformed forces and civilian “self-defense” vigilantes that have flooded the region in the past two weeks, but the premier said they had been sent to protect public facilities from provocateurs. “Do you see anyone aiming a gun at you?” he added. He also dismissed Western criticism of the referendum, asserting the exercise would be “fair and transparent” with an 80 percent turnout. He said that foreign observers were welcome. The drumbeat of a wellfinanced official campaign continued to intensify throughout the capital. By Friday, every thoroughfare was lined with pro-Russia billboards. But on the quieter outskirts of the capital, hundreds of protesters lined up along a highway, holding up pro-Ukrainian banners and pale blue flags representing the Crimean Tatars. Also on Friday in London, an eleventh-hour U.S. effort to resolve the growing confrontation with Russia over Ukraine failed, and Moscow shipped more troops and armor into the flash-point Crimea region ahead of a planned vote on breaking away from Ukraine and rejoining Russia. Secretary of State John Kerry warned against a “backdoor annexation” by Russia of the strategic Black Sea peninsula. But Kerry conceded that six hours of talks here with Russia’s top diplomat neither stopped Sunday’s vote nor opened a new diplomatic path for Moscow to step back from the Cold War-tinged standoff. The most significant U.S. and European sanctions against Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union appeared all but certain. “We don’t have a common vision of the situation,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said after the crisis talks. No agreements were reached, Lavrov told reporters. He stressed that Russia insists on Crimea’s right to hold the referendum. He said Russia would decide after the vote on how to respond.
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT 370
Radar shows jet shifted path more than once By Michael Forsythe and Michael S. Schmidt
250 mi
The New York Times
MYANMAR VIETNAM
250 km
SEPANG, Malaysia — Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 experienced significant changes in altitude after it lost contact with ground control, and it altered its course more than once as if still under the command of a pilot, U.S. officials and others familiar with the investigation said Friday. Radar signals recorded by the Malaysian military appeared to show that the missing airliner climbed to 45,000 feet, above the approved altitude limit for a Boeing 777-200, soon after it disappeared from civilian radar and turned sharply to the west, according to a preliminary assessment by a person familiar with the data. The radar track, which the Malaysian government has not released but says it has provided to the United States and China, showed the plane then descended unevenly to 23,000 feet, below normal cruising levels, as it approached the densely populated island of Penang, one of the country’s largest. There, officials believe, the plane turned from a southwest-bound course, climbed to a higher altitude and flew northwest over the Strait of Malacca toward the Indian Ocean. Investigators have also examined data transmitted from the plane’s Rolls-Royce engines that showed it descended 40,000 feet in the span of a minute, according to a senior U.S. official briefed on the investigation. But investigators do not believe the readings are accurate because the aircraft would likely have taken longer to fall such a distance. “A lot of stock cannot be put in the altitude data” sent from the engines, one official said. “A lot of this doesn’t make sense.” The data, while incomplete and difficult to interpret, could still provide critical new clues as investigators try to determine what happened on Flight 370, which disappeared early March
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INDIA Bay of Be ng al
THAILAND
Andaman Islands
Indian ships have expanded their search to areas west of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands chain, Friday.
Andaman Se a
Nicobar Islands
South China Sea
Gulf of Thailand
Initial search area
INDONESIA
MALAYSIA
Sources: FlightAware; U.S. Coast Guard
8 carrying 239 people from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Malaysian and international investigators have said in recent days that the plane may have departed from its northerly route toward Beijing and headed west across the Malay Peninsula just after the aircraft disappeared from civilian radar. The plane also is now thought to have continued flying for more than four hours after diverting its course, based on automated pings sent by onboard systems to satellites. But the Malaysian military radar data added significant new information about the flight immediately after ground controllers lost contact. The combination of altitude changes and at least two significant course corrections could have a variety of explanations, including that a pilot or a hijacker diverted the plane or that it flew unevenly without a pilot after the crew became disabled. Because the plane stopped transmitting its position about 40 minutes after takeoff, military radar recorded only an unidentified blip moving through Malaysian airspace. But the person who examined the data said it leaves little doubt that the airliner flew near or through the southern tip of Thailand, then back across Peninsular Malaysia, near the city of Penang, and out over the sea again. That is in part because the data is based on signals
AP
recorded by two radar stations, at the Royal Malaysian Air Force’s Butterworth air force base on the peninsula’s west
“It is extremely difficult for an aircraft to physically, however heavy it might be, to free fall,” he said. An Asia-based pilot of a Boeing 777-200, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, said an ascent above the plane’s service limit of 43,100 feet, along with a depressurized cabin, could have rendered the passengers and crew unconscious and could be a deliberate maneuver by a pilot or hijacker. Other experts said that altitude changes would be expected if the pilots became disabled after the plane’s autopilot was disengaged.
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coast, near Penang, and at Kota Bharu, on the northeast coast. Two radars tracking a contact can significantly increase the reliability of the readings. A senior aircraft industry executive in the United States said the account of Flight 370’s movements that was emerging. “Everything we have heard is consistent with the plane flying under the control of someone with at least some flying experience,” said the executive. Cengiz Turkoglu, a senior lecturer in aeronautical engineering at City University London who specializes in aviation safety, said a deliberate act in the cockpit could cause a radical change in altitude.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
Hospital: Court will notify those eligible to join Continued from Page A-1 lem that is significant enough that all current and former employees will be notified,” Youtz said. The ruling is the latest development in a long-running feud between employees at Christus St. Vincent and hospital administration over staffing levels. Last year, union employees at Christus complained to the state Department of Health that staffing was inadequate. A subsequent investigation cleared the hospital, but employees argued that staffing was stronger than usual at the time the state conducted its review. The Santa Fe City Council recently authorized a study group to review health care in the community, including staffing levels at Christus. Nurses have unsuccessfully pushed for legislation that would require hospitals to publicly announce their staffing levels, and earlier this week, Gov. Susana Martinez vetoed a provision in the
state budget that would have provided $100,000 to the Department of Health to post staffing levels online. Following Thursday’s ruling, the court will mail notices within 30 days to employees eligible to join the suit — including nurses, direct-care providers, technical employees and service and maintenance staff, excluding supervisors. The case is next scheduled on Singleton’s docket in the fall, though no trial date has been set. Youtz said he aims to prove the practice of denying lunch breaks to employees was fostered at the highest levels of the hospital’s corporate administration. “We will establish that the hospital didn’t just know about it, they encouraged it,” he said. “The evidence establishes that it was a corporate culture focused on revenue and the bottom line, and this appeared as a way to cut labor costs — illegally, but as a way to cut labor costs. The evidence will
show they yielded to that temptation.” Because the suit is ongoing, Christus spokesman Arturo Delgado said Friday that the hospital’s administration would reserve comment about it, except to point out that the judge had found the lunch policy in place at the hospital to be lawful. Youtz said the policy, which sets aside scheduled lunch breaks for employees, was not followed because insufficient staffing makes it impractical for workers to take their scheduled breaks. Plaintiffs are seeking damages equivalent to three times their lost wages. Youtz said it’s difficult to quantify how much it could cost the hospital if plaintiffs prevail, considering it’s not clear how many eligible employees will join the suit, what their wages were or how many lunches they skipped. He used the example of a nurse earning $40 an hour to frame how costly a judgment against St. Vin-
cent could be. “If a nurse makes $40 an hour and should have been paid the overtime rate of $60, every missed half-hour lunch is $30,” Youtz said. “That’s a lot of lunches times $30 times three, so the liability could be substantial.” Some nurses at Christus say the wage lawsuit illuminates a staffing shortage that not only forced them to work through their lunch hours, but can compromise the level of care for patients. “This problem, the nurses believe, is indicative of the staffing problems,” Youtz said. “They didn’t staff the hospital in such a manner as to account for lunch breaks, which in the nurses’ opinion is emblematic of the bigger problem of staffing at the hospital.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.
WIPP: N.M. senators call findings ‘concerning’ Continued from Page A-1 safety concerns that will need to be fully addressed. We believe all levels of management at the Department of Energy and at WIPP must take the recommendations from the board very seriously and fully implement them. “ Rep. Steve Pearce, a Republican whose district includes the plant, applauded the DOE for a transparent report that highlights “the sloppy procedures that caused the fire.” An investigation of a radiation release nine days later that contaminated 17 workers and sent toxic particles into the air around the plant is expected to be complete in a few weeks. At this point, officials say they are unsure if the fire and the radiation release are related. The mine has been shuttered since the Feb. 14 release, but investigators hope to be able to get below next week to see what happened. The accidents are the first major incidents at the repository, which began taking radioactive waste 15 years ago. Just hours before the report on the truck fire was previewed at a community meeting Thursday evening, the contractor that runs the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant demoted the facility’s president. At the community meeting, the DOE official who led the investigative team, Ted Wyka, said the fire probably started about 30 minutes before the driver saw the orange glow from the engine compartment and tried to put it out. But the automatic fire-suppression system that might have detected the heat earlier was not active, Wyka said, and the systems activated by the driver didn’t work. Wyka praised the 86 workers who were underground when the fire started at about 11 a.m. Feb. 5 for their response. But he said a number of systems failed. For example, he said emergency strobe lights were not activated for five minutes, not all workers heard the evacuation announcement and workers had trouble using their emergency air canisters. One worker also switched the air system from normal to filtration made, which sent smoke billowing through the tunnels. Six workers were treated for smoke inhalation after the fire. “We were pretty lucky that day,” he said. “… Despite all the safety systems that sort of let them down, the workforce down in the mine that day was very calm, collected and in many ways heroic.” Wyka said the workers “did everything they could” to notify colleagues to get out, even before the evacuation alarm sounded. “Some stayed behind to make sure everyone got in the elevator to get out.” The biggest lesson, he said, is about the mindset at the site. “This is not just a mine, not just an operating nuclear facility — this is both,” Wyka said, noting that trucks used in the part of the mine where waste is hauled are kept much cleaner than the old trucks used to haul salt underground, where massive waste storage rooms are being dug a half-mile into the 2,000-foot thick ancient Permian Sea bed. They also have active fire-suppression systems. The truck that caught fire was hauling salt for removal from the mine. Joe Franco, who runs the Department of Energy’s site office at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, choked up as he addressed the meeting, telling the community that at first, he took the findings personally. “It’s one of those things, being part of the family, one of those things that’s a little tough,” he said. “But I think what’s important [is] we definitely got away with not … having anyone seriously hurt. So we need to learn from that. It is what I wanted to hear, and I wanted the truth. We don’t need any sugarcoating.”
Tufts University Freshman Lydia Collins, 19, took a year after high school and worked in Ecuador through Global Citizen. Hoping to remove the financial barriers that keep cashstrapped students from taking a year off after high school to travel or volunteer, Tufts is launching a gap-year program this fall that will pay for housing, airfare and even visa fees, which can add up to $30,000 or more per student. ELISE AMENDOLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Gap: Proponents of year off say experience helps ease transition Continued from Page A-1 Jeremy Rotblat, a 19-yearold Princeton freshman from Cherry Hill, N.J., said his experience volunteering at a hospital in Senegal better prepared him for college. “This experience taught me that everything I learn in the classroom will be able to help me when I leave Princeton,” Rotblat said. “It is easy at times to question the purpose behind all the schoolwork. But seeing the value firsthand encourages me to push myself academically.” Students selected for Tufts’
1+4 program will be able to defer their admission for a year while still remaining tied to the university through video chat and email. Tufts is planning to work with organizations including Global Citizen, City Year and Lift — which offer volunteering positions in areas such as education, economics, health and the environment — to create packages that fit students’ financial needs, including travel and living costs. Patrick Callan, founding president of the National Center for Public Policy and
Higher Education, applauds the gap year experience but said structure is key. “Sometimes, for less motivated students, taking a year off could lead to them never coming back,” he said, adding that students that go in without concrete goals can be sidetracked from their studies. “You need to come in having a plan.” For Collins, working in a foreign country away from her family and friends was a reality check. “After that experience,” she said, “I can definitely take on college. It’s nothing now.”
Feds propose new college regulations Rules would penalize programs that don’t adequately position grads to pay off school loans By Philip Elliott
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The for-profit college industry says it will vigorously oppose proposed regulations by the Obama administration designed to protect students at for-profit colleges from amassing huge debt they can’t pay off. The proposed regulations would penalize career-oriented programs that produce graduates without the training needed to find a job with a salary that will allow them to pay off their debt. Schools, for-profit or not, that don’t comply would lose access to the federal student aid programs. “Career-training programs offer millions of Americans an opportunity they desperately need to further their education and reach the middle class,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan told reporters Thursday. “Today, too many of these programs fail to provide students with the training that they need at taxpayers’ expense and the cost to these students’ futures.” If finalized, the regulations would take effect in 2016. In 2012, the for-profit colleges convinced a judge that similar regulations were too arbitrary. Steve Gunderson, president and CEO of the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, said in a statement that the proposed regulations would “deny millions of students the opportunity for higher earnings.” His association argues that the regulations would have a long-term impact on the nation’s ability to
address workforce demands and improve the economy, and he called the proposed regulations “discriminatory” and “punitive.” For-profit programs are popular among nontraditional students, some of who have been laid off during the economic downturn. “The government should be in the business protecting opportunity not restricting it,” Gunderson said. He said no decision has been made on whether more legal action will be taken. The administration has long sought to block federal student aid from programs that do not prepare students for “gainful employment” in a recognized occupation. The programs covered under the proposed regulations include nearly all programs at for-profit schools, as well as certificate programs at public and private nonprofit institutions, such as community colleges, according to the Education Department. Duncan said for-profit colleges can receive up to 90 percent of their revenue from federal financial aid programs. If blocked from participating, some could be forced to close, he said. “Some of these programs — whether public, private or for-profit — empower students to succeed by providing high-quality education and career training. But many of these programs, particularly those at for-profit colleges, are failing to do so,” the Education Department said in a fact sheet. On Capitol Hill, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, the chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, said he was concerned that the proposed regulations don’t go far enough in protecting students. But Republicans criticized the administration’s actions and said low-income students would be disproportionately affected.
Review: Advocates say Obama needs to act swiftly Continued from Page A-1 congressional overhaul of immigration laws. “The president displayed a great deal of sympathy for the families affected by the deportation machinery,” Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, said after the nearly two-hour session. “There was less agreement on when and what should be done about it by the president.” Participants emerged from the meeting unified in their call for House Republicans to act on immigration legislation. Privately, some said Obama voiced frustration during the meeting with the criticism some of them have directed at him, including calling him “deporter in chief.” Republican House Speaker John Boehner’s office pointedly warned that fixes to the immigration system should be carried out by Congress, not by the president on his own. The Democratic-controlled Senate last year passed a comprehensive bill that would enhance border security and provide a path to citizenship for many of the 11 million immigrants who entered the country illegally or overstayed their visas. But the Republican-held House has delayed action and favors a more piecemeal approach. “There’s no doubt we have an immigration system that is failing families and our economy, but until it is reformed through the democratic process, the president is obligated to enforce the laws we have,” Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said. “Failing to do so would damage — perhaps beyond repair — our ability to build the trust necessary to enact real immigration reform.” But immigrant advocates insisted Obama needs to act promptly and broadly to reduce deportations, which have reached nearly 2 million during his presidency. The White House has pointed to the high level of deportations as evidence that Obama is paying heed to border security, a Republican priority. In testimony before Congress last week, Johnson said the deportations meet Immigration and Customs Enforcement priorities by focusing on criminals or suspicious individuals who could pose national security and public safety threats. But he also acknowledged that a large number of immigrants arrested and turned back at the border are also counted as deportations even though previous administrations have not. Still, pro-immigration groups say deportations have broken up families and forced otherwise law-abiding foreigners out of the country. Sharry said his message to the president was: “Go bold, go big, go now.” “The president has the ability to step into the vacuum created by the House Republican inaction to protect millions of people who are low priority, use his executive authority in an expansive way,” he said. In the face of such pressure, including public heckling, Obama has time and again insisted that he must follow the law and the only way to reduce deportations is through legislation passed by Congress. White House officials on Friday downplayed the ability of the administration to take unilateral steps that would greatly reduce deportations, and some conceded that the results of the review were not likely to satisfy all advocacy groups. Still, White House spokesman Jay Carney finetuned Obama’s past declarations that executive action was out of the question, leaving the door open for Obama to take some unilateral steps. “The president understands and is concerned about the pain caused by separations that have come about through deportation, but he also understands and has made clear that there’s no comprehensive fix here that he can himself enact,” he said. Following the meeting, the White House said Johnson, who attended the session in the White House’s Roosevelt Room, committed “to ensure our immigration laws are enforced effectively, sensibly, and in line with our nation’s traditions as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants.” It was unclear what steps the administration would take. It has already acted on its own to keep young people who were brought to the U.S. illegally from being deported, and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency issued a memorandum in 2011 setting priorities for deportation that put an emphasis on persons suspected of terrorism, convicted of crimes or having participated in gang activities. Immigrant advocates say that guidance has been followed sporadically. “I would take a look at why that memorandum has not worked as intended,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., a leading voice in the immigration overhaul effort tin the House and one of several lawmakers who wrote to Obama asking him to review his administration’s deportation policies. “The president doesn’t have limitless authority in this arena,” she said. “But he has more authority than he has yet used.” Asked if simply applying the 2011 guidelines more uniformly would satisfy critics of Obama’s deportation policies, Sharry said: “The answer is no. The fact is you have many immigrant-led groups that are calling for immediate suspension of deportations.” The National Immigration Law Center has called on the administration to make sure the 2011 guidelines are followed and has further proposed that agents who do not follow the policies be held accountable. It also calls for strict application of an Immigration and Customs Enforcement directive from last August that called for using discretion in the deportation of parents or caretakers of minors who are U.S. citizens or legal residents. That is far from a universal view on Capitol Hill. “It is astonishing that the president would order an ‘enforcement review’ not for the purposes of repairing enforcement but weakening it further,” said Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., a leading opponent of allowing immigrants in the U.S. illegally to stay. “This latest action further demonstrates that the administration cannot be trusted to enforce any immigration plan from Congress.”
NATION & WORLD
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Records show Clinton feared ’94 losses By Ken Thomas
should not joke about historic Democratic losses. “I really don’t like the president makWASHINGTON — Sensing a Republican ing fun of our ass-whipping in November, tidal wave, President Bill Clinton worried or suggesting it was because of him we in the summer of 1994 that Republicans got creamed,” Begala wrote in a memo to were energized heading into the midterm speechwriters. elections while his Democratic base was Clinton adviser James Carville disagreed. deflated. “There’s no organization, there’s no “He thinks it’ll be effective self-deprecation; energy, there’s no anything out there,” ClinI’m concerned it could look like a white flag ton said of his own party. of surrender,” Begala wrote. “They’re organized and they’re workDon’t be too contrite, White House aide ing,” the president observed of conservative Todd Stern warned. activists, according to a transcript from “I think the speech sounds too apologetic August 1994. “And our cultural base. … They and mealy mouthed,” Stern wrote in a 1994 walked off.” memo to White House adviser Don Baer. Clinton’s concerns turned out to be justi“One of the president’s problems right now fied: Republicans swept to power in the fall is that too many people see him as lacking elections, wresting control of the House and backbone, vacillating, being too eager to Senate from the president’s party. The tran- please and tell people what they want to script was among 4,000 documents released hear. I think he needs to sound strong and Friday by the National Archives. presidential — in touch, certainly, with what They’re just part of the roughly 30,000 happened on November 8 but not weak.” pages expected to be released in coming Clinton was in touch with the Republiweeks. The documents, which cover Clincan surge more than two months before ton’s two presidential terms, are much antic- the November election, the newly released ipated in the political world, partly because documents show. then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton is “Basically you’ve got Republicans running considering her own bid for the presidency like a house afire all over the country and in 2016. running against me, and saying that WashThe documents shed ample light on her ington has too much government and taxes husband’s administration, highlighting the and too little morality. I mean, that’s their behind-the-scenes maneuvering of aides, the message. It ain’t so, but it’s what they’re sellstroking of allies and erstwhile opponents ing,” Clinton vented to an aide, according to and the sting of the first Republican takean Aug. 25, 1994, transcript. “And there’s no over of Congress in 40 years. organization, there’s no energy, there’s no Clinton’s aides coped with that debacle anything out there. And we’re out of posiby issuing strongly worded but sometimes tion on this government rhetoric deal.” conflicting advice on the Clinton’s tone — in By October 1994, Clinton advisers urged the 1995 State of the Union speech and other the president to put forward a reform agenda “to make government, Congress public events. and the political system work.” As part of it, Adviser Paul Begala said the president The Associated Press
Using sound devices to probe for voices and telescopic cameras to peer into small spaces, workers searching the site of a gas explosion in Manhattan continued to treat it as a rescue operation Friday. SETH WENIG/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK
Search for survivors continues after blast Investigators found gas underground in hours after explosion
an inquiry after police and fire officials locate what might have sparked the blast. Police have identified six of the dead: Griselde Camacho, 45, a Hunter College security By Verena Dobnik officer; Carmen Tanco, 67, a The Associated Press dental hygienist who took part in church-sponsored medical NEW YORK — The bodies of missions to Africa and the Cariball eight people reported missbean; Andreas Panagopoulos, ing after a deadly gas explosion 43, a musician; Rosaura Hernandestroyed two buildings have dez, 22, a restaurant cook from been recovered, the fire commisMexico; George Ameado, 44, sioner said Friday, but workers a handyman who lived in one are treating the scene as a resof the buildings that collapsed; cue operation in case there are and Alexis Salas, 22, a restaurant unknown survivors in the rubble. worker. Salvatore Cassano said no one Mexican officials said another else is known to be unaccounted Mexican woman, Rosaura Barfor, but workers will continue to rios Vazquez, 43, was among scour the debris from the flatthose killed. tened apartment buildings for The eighth body, of a woman victims. More than 60 people whose name hasn’t been were injured by Wednesday released, was pulled from the morning’s explosion, and more rubble Thursday. than 100 others were displaced. Mayor Bill de Blasio, who Cassano said about 70 percent toured a Red Cross shelter where of the debris had been cleared residents of the destroyed buildat the upper Manhattan blast ings are staying, said Friday that site. But he said the pace was the city would find temporary expected to quicken after fireor long-term housing for about fighters removed a hazardous 50 displaced families. rear wall. The Department of Homeless He predicted detectives and Services has about 50 apartments fire marshals would gain access available for families in private to the East Harlem buildings’ buildings where nonprofits are basements by midday Saturday involved in the management, to begin the investigation into he said, adding that officials are what caused the explosion. arranging for more apartments “Right now, we are in the that would be available for up to process of removing the final three months. amount of debris,” Cassano said. “It’s our obligation as the city “We should be moving much of New York, and I know all New more quickly now.” Yorkers feel this way, to stand by The rescue effort continued as them,” he said. federal investigators announced Investigators were trying to that gas was detected in underdetermine whether the gas leak ground tests of the site in the had anything to do with the city’s hours after the explosion, lending aging gas and water mains, some support to the hypothesis a gas of which were installed in the leak may have been the cause. 1800s. Cassano, the fire commisNational Transportation sioner, said they’ll look at meters, Safety Board team member see if there were any breaks in Robert Sumwalt said utility the piping and identify any posConsolidated Edison dug dozens sible ignition sources, such as of holes about 18 to 24 inches light switches. deep around the blast site and On Thursday, Sumwalt, the measured gas levels in them soon NTSB team member, said the gas after the explosion. Gas concenmain and distribution pipe under tration was up to 20 percent in at the street had been examined least five spots, and normal levels in a crater and were found to be in the city’s soil should be zero, intact, with no obvious punctures he said. or ruptures. They had not been “Somehow or another, natural torn from the ground. gas did work its way into the However, he said, NTSB ground,” he said, adding that investigators had been unable pressure testing of nearby pipes to conduct a fuller examination was beginning to look for poten- because of the rescue effort, and tial leaks. it was unclear whether the leak The NTSB, which investigates came from inside or outside the pipeline accidents, will conduct buildings.
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advisers suggested 14 Cabinet-level agencies could be condensed into seven: Defense, State, Justice, Treasury, Human Resources, Natural Resources and Economic Policy. Clinton’s advisers also suggested a 25 percent cut in congressional staff, a congressional and presidential pay freeze and a constitutional amendment that would allow states to limit members of Congress to 12 years in office. Days before the elections, four Clinton advisers wrote that the “public is now more disillusioned, more embittered, than it was in November 1992,” that the “‘mad-as-hell’ atmosphere is not a flash in the pan, but a fireball in the night.” The documents also provide glimpses into other chapters of Clinton history. In the aftermath of the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles, domestic policy adviser Bruce Reed urged his colleagues to be ready to respond if more violence broke out. “Disaster will strike sometime in the Clinton Presidency, even if it doesn’t happen this spring in L.A.,” Reed wrote in March 1993. Not all the documents are so serious. Draft remarks for a 1996 Clinton speech in Portland, Ore., included a pronouncer for “macarena,” a dance crazed that was embraced by Gore. The papers also provide examples of the outsized flattery that sometimes flies in all directions among power brokers. In March 1993, a researcher told Clinton political director Rahm Emanuel, now Chicago’s mayor, that former House Speaker Tip O’Neill was “deeply touched” by a video tribute that Clinton had recorded for O’Neill’s birthday party. “He said Clinton may turn out to be the best President since FDR,” wrote communications researcher Carter Wilkie.
Pakistan court issues arrest warrant for Musharraf Musharraf is currently in a military hospital in the neighboring garrison city of Rawalpindi and ISLAMABAD — A special has repeatedly avoided appearing court on Friday issued a warbefore the special court, citing rant for the arrest of Pervez medical and security concerns. Musharraf, the former military When Musharraf again ruler of Pakistan, after he declined to appear before the failed to appear in court for the court Friday, another of his lawproceedings in a treason case yers, Anwar Mansoor Khan, told against him, lawyers said. the panel of three judges that his The court order said the client could not attend because warrant would take effect of security threats on his life. March 31. It is a type known Pakistani intelligence agencies as “non-bailable,” which means had earlier in the week warned Musharraf cannot apply for that Musharraf could be targeted bail and will be arrested if he by al-Qaida and Taliban militants does not show up for a court during his commute from the hearing that day. military hospital to the capital. “We will review the court Musharraf is facing charges decision and then decide of subverting the constitution in whether to challenge it or not,” 2007, when he imposed emerFaisal Chaudhry, one of Mush- gency rule and fired top memarraf’s lawyers, told reporters bers of the judiciary. after the court hearing. Musharraf, who ruled the By Salman Masood The New York Times
country from 1999 until he was forced to resign in 2008, was considered an important ally of the United States in its efforts against Islamic extremism and militancy. During his time in power, he survived several assassination attempts, which al-Qaida and Taliban militants claimed responsibility for. The special court panel, however, led by Justice Faisal Arab, has insisted that Musharraf must appear before the court to be indicted. It has directed Islamabad police officials to ensure stringent security measures. On Friday, 2,000 police officers were deployed on the route
from Armed Forces Institute of Cardiology in Rawalpindi to the special court, which is temporarily set up in a government library complex, in Islamabad. Legal analysts said the decision Friday to issue an arrest warrant without the possibility of bail was a response by the special court to the noncompliance of Musharraf’s, who has appeared only once in the treason proceedings since they were initiated last December. The treason case is unprecedented in the country’s history, where the military has traditionally remained powerful and unaccountable.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
Speaker’s challenger bows out, saying bid was in error
LOCAL NEWS Police: Youth center vandals hit city park Evidence ties damage to fences, fields at Alto Street park to crashed vehicle stolen from facility for homeless teens By Chris Quintana The New Mexican
Santa Fe police suspect the vandals who ransacked a west-side resource center for homeless teens and damaged some vehicles there also used a stolen station wagon to tear up Bicentennial Park on Alto Street late Wednesday night. Gary Varela, city parks superintendent, said thousands of dollars worth
of damage was discovered Thursday morning at the park between Alto Street and the Santa Fe River. He said someone drove a vehicle through a baseball field and damaged the fence surrounding it in four different places. Additionally, a fence near the park’s “tot lot,” a playground for small children, was damaged. Varela said the field is still usable, but it will cost thousands of dollars to replace the damaged fences. He said
Police believe this station wagon, stolen from the Youth Shelters center for homeless teens, was used to damage Bicentennial Park on Alto Street. COURTESY SANTA FE POLICE DEPARTMENT
his crews should finish the repairs by next week. Celina Westervelt, a spokeswoman for the police department, said police believe the park incident is likely related to the vandalism and theft of a vehicle at the nonprofit Youth Shelters Resource Center, 402 St. Francis Drive. According to police reports, vandals broke into the building on the corner of Agua Fría Street and
St. Francis Drive late Wednesday. Once inside, the intruders scattered food and feces, damaged computer equipment and tagged the walls with graffiti. Police said the culprits then stole one of the nonprofit’s vehicles and crashed it in the 1500 block of Camino La Cañada, but not before running into several cars in the neighborhood.
Please see PARK, Page A-7
Christmas killings go to jury
Defense says teen was protecting younger brother; state portrays thug with gun, gang ties By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican
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losing arguments Friday in Joe Rivera’s doublehomicide trial capped an emotional week for friends and family of the defendant and his victims. Parents of all the men involved in the incident openly wept during testimony. The defendant’s father sat in the back row of the gallery, looking at baby pictures of his son on his cellphone. An hour after getting the case late Joe Rivera Friday afternoon, jurors asked to go home. When they return Saturday, they will continue discussing the evidence against Rivera, who was 18 when he shot and killed John Griego, 23 and Nicholas Baker, 29 outside Griego’s home at a Christmas Day party in 2012. Rivera admits to killing the men but claims he was defending himself and his brother, then 16, after the host and another adult man at the party attacked his brother. The jury was instructed Friday to decide if Rivera is guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter, or to find that he is not guilty because he acted in selfdefense or defense of another. Rivera’s story, as presented by his attorney, David Silva, is that he was unarmed when he went to the party. Silva said two older men tried to prevent Rivera and his brother from leaving, a scuffle broke out, and then he picked up a gun dropped by someone else during that conflict and shot the two men. Prosecutors Susan Stinson and Juan Valencia painted a different
From left, Arthur and Frances Griego and their daughter, Antoinette Romero, listen to testimony Friday in the double-murder case against 19-year-old Joe Rivera, who is accused of killing their son, John Griego, at a party on Christmas Day 2012. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
picture for jurors, one that portrayed Rivera as a young thug who attended the party with a pistol in his pants and sought respect at the end of a gun when tensions rose over southside versus west-side alliances. The dispute was ignited over a $50 bottle of rum Rivera’s female companion had purchased from Griego. Over five days, jurors heard hours of testimony from the teenagers who attended the party with Rivera, including those present when the shooting occurred, forensics scientists, ballistics experts and doctors. They also listened to phone calls Rivera made from the jail, watched recorded interviews with the suspect and viewed sometimes gruesome images of the crime scene and the bodies of the victims. In her closing arguments, Stinson reminded jurors that Rivera fled the scene that night, allegedly disposed of the gun and the clothing he had
been wearing, hid from law enforcement for six days before being apprehended and asked family members via telephone to “pump fear” into potential witness while he was in jail awaiting trial. Stinson also highlighted expert testimony that suggested Rivera’s second shot was fired when Griego lay bleeding in the snow outside his home. “Someone who is truly innocent doesn’t act in those ways,” she said. “This is not a scared young kid without a weapon. “This is a young man who did have a weapon. He carried a gun and he used it, and in the process he killed two people.” In his closing statements, Silva reminded jurors that Rivera and his brother were both short, slim, teenagers, while Griego and Baker were grown men, each around 6 feet tall. Silva said Rivera was “approached in a threatening manner” and “had no time to cool off or think.” He pan-
icked and “did what an older brother should do. He went in to protect his younger brother.” Silva also stressed inconsistencies in the testimony of the teenage witnesses — especially that of Leroy Romero, the only witness who claims to have seen Rivera pull the gun from his pants and shoot Baker in the chest. Romero admitted to lying police twice and to lying under oath during a pre-trial hearing in the case last July. Silva reminded jurors that it’s up to the state to prove Rivera’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury is scheduled to resume deliberations at 9 a.m. Saturday. The First District Courthouse is normally closed on Saturday, but District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco said Friday that members of the public following the case will be allowed to enter.
Horseless carriage transformed New Mexico
B
etween 1895 and the 1920s, the In November 1897, Albuquerque American automobile culture bicycle dealer J.L. Dodson decided he spread across the Southwest, was ready for one of the newfangled changing the old way of life forever. autos. By the time the Ford Motor He took the train to Co. opened its first plant Denver and there bought in 1920, most people were a Locomobile. It had wirealready convinced that spoke wheels, like those motorcars were more effion the bicycles he sold in cient, speedier and safer than his shop. horses. Dodson’s trip back to By late 1895, inventors Albuquerque, over Raton had applied for more than Pass and down the Santa 500 patents related to the Fe Trail, took five days. Marc automobile. It was probably For him, the entire jourSimmons in that year that one of the ney proved an ordeal. early models first reached Trail Dust There were no signs to New Mexico. mark the way, and he kept getting lost. His noisy The effective start of the machine terrified horse traffic and auto industry came in 1897. Manucaused runaways. And obtaining gas facturers turned out gasoline cars, meant delays. electrics, steamers (like the Stanley Steamer) and chain-driven autos. A Service stations did not yet exist. Cleveland company began building So Dodson ordered gas to be delivomnibuses that carried six passengers. ered to railroad depots along his
An automobile at Tesuque Pueblo, 1913. The first motorcar arrived in the state in 1897, but New Mexicans were slow to accept it. By 1911, however, 900 autos were registered. PHOTO COURTESY PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS, NEGATIVE NO. 191916
route. When it failed to arrive on time, he had no choice but to wait. At last the proud owner reached Albuquerque, only to find that his problems had just begun. Residents,
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com
it seemed, were downright hostile. The loud Locomobile frightened horses, scattered sheep and cattle,
Please see cARRiAGe, Page A-7
Former House hopeful misunderstood districts By Milan Simonich The New Mexican
The woman who filed nominating petitions to run against New Mexico House Speaker Kenny Martinez of Grants withdrew her candidacy Friday, saying she had entered the race by mistake. Nicole Shult, 29, submitted paperwork to the secretary of state to challenge Martinez in the June Democratic primary election. Then Shult reversed course and asked to be pulled off the ballot. She said in an interview that she was confused about which House district she lives in, and that she never intended to run against Martinez. A resident of Bluewater in Cibola County, Shult filed to run in District 69, which is the speaker’s district. “My intention this whole time was to submit my petitions for District 6,” she said. District 6 is represented by Democrat Eliseo Alcon of Milan, whose district borders Martinez’s. Had Shult checked her voter registration, she would have seen that she lives in Martinez’s district. Bobbi Shearer, director of the Bureau of Elections for the secretary of state, said Shult submitted her petitions in person. Shult initially listed District 6 on the forms. But when told by the election staff that she actually lived in District 69, Shult went ahead and filed for that race. “There was a lot going on,” Shult said. “It was a mistake.” Shult received many mentions in this week’s political coverage for her nascent campaign as an unknown challenging one of the state’s most powerful politicians. Shult said Friday that the speaker has her backing. “I would love to serve my community someday,” she said. “However, at this time I want to continue to support our state representative for District 69, Ken Martinez.” Democrats have a 37-33 advantage in the House of Representatives. Martinez, free of an election challenge, will be able to focus on helping his candidates in the dozen races that both Democrats and Republicans see as crucial to controlling the House. With Shult’s withdrawal, Martinez becomes the 26th House member who does not have an opponent in either the primary or general election. Contact Milan Simonich at 9863080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican. com. Follow his Ringside Seat blog at santafenewmexican.com.
Fired state police officer in Taos won’t get job back A former state police officer who appealed his termination for shooting at a minivan full of children in Taos will not get his job back, a state official said Friday. Elias Montoya, who was fired in December after an internal investigation into his use of force in the October incident, recently reached a settlement with the state, but a state statute allows details of settlements of claims negotiated by the state Risk Management Division to remain undisclosed for six months, Elias General Services Montoya Department spokesman Tim Korte said. Although state police and Department of Public Safety officials earlier hadn’t responded to inquiries about whether Montoya was granted his request for reinstatement as a police officer, Korte said in an email Friday, “Elias Montoya has not come back to the New Mexico Department of Public Safety, and there are no plans for him to do so. By law, we are prohibited from discussing details of the settlement.” He explained that the Risk Management Division cannot disclose any information related to claims for damages or other relief against the state until 180 days, once certain conditions have been met. The New Mexican
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
LOCAL & REGION
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Carriage: Lack of roads a driver’s headache Continued from Page A-6 and disturbed the city’s heretofore tranquil environment. It also gave off unfamiliar gas fumes, which some people thought might be a threat to health. As Dodson chugged through the streets, pedestrians made fun of his car, calling it a Devil wagon or a buzz wagon. A newspaper claimed that the thing was “cussed more than admired.” For two years, Dodson remained the sole owner of a motorcar in Albuquerque. He campaigned tirelessly to convince fellow citizens that the automobile age was at hand. At one point, the City Council debated passing a law prohibiting buzz wagons from using municipal streets. Gradually, the tide shifted, and people all over New Mexico began buying automobiles. They had a bewildering variety of makes from which to choose — more than 100 different kinds. They included the Thomas Flyer, Sterns, Columbia, Pierce Arrow, Pope Toledo, Baker Electric, Stevens Duryea and, of course, the Ford. In those days, it cost $1.50 to get a driver’s license, which was issued by New Mexico city governments, not the territorial government. The auto registration fee was also modest, a mere $2. By 1911, about 900 cars were registered in New Mexico. but drivers still had their troubles. A simple afternoon’s drive up
A staged demonstration of an automobile on the steps of the New Mexico state Capitol in 1913. PHOTO COURTESY PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS, NEGATIVE NO. 061650
the Rio Grande Valley often resulted in several flats. The first lesson learned by novice motorists was to carry a repair kit. Banker M.W. Flourney had a secondhand Winton shipped to him by train from New York. On
its first run, the Winton broke down outside town, and Flourney, totally humiliated, was obliged to hire a team of oxen to tow him home. Lack of suitable roads presented another headache. Travelers between Santa Fe and Las
Cruces could count on spending many hours digging their stuck autos out of the sand. The New Mexico Legislature took a hand by appropriating funds to build an automobile road from the southern border at El Paso through Albuquerque and Santa Fe, to Raton Pass on the northern boundary. Colorado and Wyoming agreed to join the project, providing a connecting link all the way to Cheyenne. The new route became known as the “Cheyenne to El Paso Trail.” By 1911, the New Mexico section boasted concrete culverts, bridges and guard chains on the sections with steep mountain curves. In little more than a decade after J.L. Dodson had struggled down from Denver in his Locomobile, the unmarked wagon trail he followed had become a modern highway. And a half century later, the total number of vehicles built in the United States had passed the 200 million mark. The automobile, among its many consequences, ended rural isolation. That fact, above all, brought swift change to the Southwest’s wide-open spaces. And the desert country has not been the same since. Now in semi-retirement, author Marc Simmons wrote a weekly history column for more than 35 years. The New Mexican is publishing reprints from among the more than 1,800 columns he produced during his career.
Park: Debris near damage matches vehicle Continued from Page A-6 Police reported finding debris at the park that matched the make and model of the stolen vehicle. The department has asked that anyone with information about the suspects of the vandalism to call police at 428-3710. The resource center’s executive director, David Block, said it will remain closed until cleanup work is completed. He said the nonprofit needs to meet with an insurance adjuster Monday before major work can begin. He said the resource center likely will need new equipment, furniture, computers and other supplies. The Youth Shelters center provides food, clothing, medical aid and other services to homeless teens in the Santa Fe area. Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.
In brief
Last open house for Jemez plan The final open house for a proposed massive landscape restoration project in the Jemez Mountains is from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Valles Caldera Science and Education Center in Jemez Springs. The Santa Fe National Forest is seeking public comment on the Landscape Restoration Plan, which will allow treatments such as prescribed fire, tree thinning and riparian improvements over the next decade on portions of more than 200,000 acres of land. Agency staff will provide an overview of the project and provide information on how the public can comment. Anyone who needs assistance with translation or accessibility can call Lawrence Lujan at4385321 before the meeting.
Habitat to offer St. Paddy’s deals Habitat for Humanity is offering a St. Patrick’s Day deal for a good cause on Monday, with a 20 percent discount on all tools, furniture and building materials at the nonprofit’s ReStore, 2414 Cerrillos Road in Santa Fe. All materials at the ReStore are donated by the community. Sales benefit Habitat for Humanity’s efforts to provide affordable homes to people in Santa Fe. The store is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays. ReStore also will be the site of the next Santa Fe MIX, a monthly event that brings together entrepreneurs,
Police believe vandals drove a stolen vehicle through Bicentennial Park on Alto Street late Wednesday night, causing thousands of dollars worth of damage, after ransacking a center for homeless youth in the area. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
businesses and innovators to share ideas and network. MIX will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday.
Albuquerque. According to the Marshals Service, Medrano was arrested without incident.
Panel: Extend oil moratorium
Peanut plant to be auctioned
LAS VEGAS, N.M. — The San Miguel County Commission is being urged to slow work on a proposed ordinance on oil and gas drilling. The Planning and Zoning Commission says it’s not ready to address perceived shortcomings in the proposed ordinance and that a moratorium on exploration should be extended for another two years. The moratorium has been in effect for more than three years. The Las Vegas Optic reports that the planning panel presented its recommendation to the proposed ordinance to the commission Tuesday. County Attorney Jesus Lopez says the moratorium can be extended if it’s done for sound public policy reasons and done reasonably. The ordinance currently being considered would allow drilling in the eastern part of the county, though it attempts to prohibit drilling near rivers or streams.
Calif. suspect nabbed in N.M. ALBUQUERQUE — Authorities say a man sought in a 2010 homicide in Los Angeles has been apprehended in New Mexico. The U.S. Marshals Service says marshals on Tuesday arrested Jason Medrano after authorities learned he was in New Mexico. He was found living at a residence in northwest
PORTALES — A New Mexico peanut-butter processing plant that went bankrupt after a salmonella outbreak shuttered its operations and prompted a nationwide recall last year is headed to the auction block. The reserve price for all bidders in Thursday’s auction is $18.5 million. That’s the amount California-based Ready Roast
Nut Co. already has offered to buy the defunct Sunland Inc. plant. The sale seemed imminent when a bankruptcy trustee backed Ready Roast’s offer. But the Clovis News Journal reports another potential buyer has emerged. A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge has scheduled a hearing Friday to accept or reject the best bid in the auction. Sunland attorneys had valued the company’s total assets at $50 million when it sought bankruptcy protection last fall. It owes its three major secured creditors about $14 million.
A 1849 first edition map of Texas, considered the first official map after Texas became a state in 1845. It is expected to sell for more than $150,000 when it goes up for auction Saturday in Dallas by Heritage Auctions. COURTESY HERITAGE AUCTIONS
Early map of Texas offered at auction in various colors. Fay said subsequent editions are more plentiful, but the 1849 DALLAS — A rare, 165-year- first edition is rare. He said old map of Texas that has been only a handful exist today, with in the same family for gena couple privately owned and a erations is expected to sell for couple others in institutions. more than $150,000 at a SaturMartin said when his grandday auction. father died in the late 1950s The 1849 document, consid- and the Virginia farm that had ered the first official map of been in the family since the Texas after it became a state in 1750s was being sold, his father, 1845, will be offered in Dallas almost as an afterthought, by Heritage Auctions. loaded up several boxes filled “This is important because with historical items, including it shows Texas at that fledging the map. point where it’s just becomAs a kid, Martin loved reading a new member of a fairly ing through those documents, young nation,” said Joe Fay, and eventually, he came across Heritage’s manager of rare the map. “After I knew the books. map was there, I would open The map was one of sevthe map occasionally and look eral historical family items at the things and show it to 66-year-old Patrick Martin, a retired architect, brought to an friends. My parents never had any problem with it. Of course, appraisal event Heritage held we didn’t have any idea of the last spring in Birmingham, value of the map,” he said. Ala., near his home. He had After inheriting it as an no idea of its value, but realized he had something special adult, he continued to show it to friends, including one recent when he saw Fay’s face light Thanksgiving when he laid it up. out on the table. “In retrospect, “When the eyes fell on the knowing what it is worth, signature, it was a ‘eureka’ that was a dangerous venture, moment,” Fay said. “It was with all that grease and wine that: ‘Wait a minute. This is around,” he said with a laugh. brown ink. This would be As far as he can tell, the map black in any subsequent revidates back to either his greatsion.’ So what we have here is great grandfather, Nicholas the real thing.” Martin, or Martin’s son, HudFay said the map, a lithoson. He said Nicholas Martin graph, was hand-signed by was a colonel in the Virginia Jacob De Cordova, a land militia that fought in Texas agent who commissioned an employee of the Texas General during the Mexican-American Land Office to create the map. War and Hudson Martin, a VirThe map measures about 32 by ginia attorney, helped settlers 35 inches and features counties secure land grants in Texas. By Jamie Stengle
The Associated Press
Join us on our quest to increase literacy one book at a time. •
Saturday, March 29, 2014 Starting at 5 pm Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino A local author at every table Honorary co-chairs Tom Chávez and Doug Preston Other writers: Anne Hillerman, Jon Davis, Kevin Fedarko, Joan Logghe, Carol Moldaw, David Morrell, Arthur Sze, and more! Live Music by Chango, Sol y Luna LitQuest is a Collaboration of Santa Fe School for the Arts & Sciences and Partners in Education benefiting literacy for all of Santa Fe’s youth. •
Tickets Start at $125 litquestgala.org 438-8585 (SFSAS) 474-2740 (Partners in Education)
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
© 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 13
You can turn the carnation dying experiment into a science fair project! Here’s how: Create a control, or something that doesn’t change in the experiment. In this case the control is the carnation in a cup of plain water. Can green water change a white carnation into a green one? will happen:
Describe any changes to the flower after 3 hours.
What I think
After 24 hours:
Race a friend! Who can find the most clovers on this page in 3 minutes? Can you find the four-leaf clover on this page?
1. Fill a plastic cup halfway with water. 2. Add 20-30 drops of green Explain what food coloring. this experiment taught you. 3. Trim the end of the white carnation’s stem to create a fresh cut. 4. Place the carnation into the cup. 5. Check the flower after a few hours. 6. Check after 24 hours.
Next, add a variable, or something that will change in the experiment. In this case you change the color of the water. Then you can compare the control flower to the flower in the colored water (the variable).
Here are some other questions you could ask: What happens if you split the stem of the carnation and put one side of it in plain water and the other side in colored water? What happens if you colored the water with KoolAid instead of food coloring?
Most plants “drink” _____ from the ground through their ______. As water in the ________ petals evaporates, water is pulled up by the _______ of the plant— like sucking water up a straw. The water _________ up the stem of the plant into the ________ and flowers. When a flower is cut, it no longer has its roots, but the stem of the flower still “_______” up the water.
What happens if you put the carnation into soda instead of water? What happens if you put the carnation into salt water? What other “What happens if” questions can you come up with?
To discover the answer to this riddle, look at the picture clues and write the name of each on the correct line. The answer will appear in the diagonal boxes.
Standards Link: Science: Conduct simple investigations.
What do you think a Leprechaun needs to survive? Look through the newspaper to find things that you think a Leprechaun would need in his habitat. Write a paragraph describing your idea of a Leprechaun habitat.
Can you unscramble these scientific words? (They’re on this page!) THEMDO
MEERPINTXE
Standards Link: Research: Use the newspaper to locate information.
VATSOROBENI Each of these Leprechaun hats has an identical twin – except one. Can you find it?
Standards Link: Visual Discrimination: Find similarities and differences in common objects.
Green News
Look through the newspaper for articles that are considered “green” or are about protecting the environment. Can you find products advertised that are “green” as well? Standards Link: Reading Comprehension/Research: Students use the newspaper to locate information.
EXPERIMENT CARNATION TRAVELS RAINBOW GREEN TRICK DRINK STRAW ROOTS WATER WHITE FRESH STEM KITE TRIM
Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities. S S T P C W H I T E L F A T A E M T W R E R I R R T C E A S V E T I N I K S T D A S N M A K C O E S R H E A T Y O K R S T N E M I R E P X E C I R W O B N I A R E N G K N I R D C E Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
This week’s word:
EVAPORATE
The verb evaporate means to disappear or gradually fade away. The morning dew began to evaporate in the sunlight. Try to use the word evaporate in a sentence today when talking with your friends and family members.
You caught a Leprechaun, but he grants you one special wish if you’ll let him go. What would happen if your wish came true?
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Family calendar
FAMILY
Saturday, March 15
Parents can only correct so much Question: My 6-year-old son behavior modification (the is a bright and friendly kindermanipulation of reward and pungartner. Each day, a color-coded ishment to “shape” behavior), used properly, will cure chart is sent home any behavior probabout his behavior. lem. When a behavior This year, he’s gone modification-based through several spells approach doesn’t work, during which he will the conclusion is either have a “bad color” for (a) it wasn’t used propseveral days in a row. erly or (b) the child in Each time this occurs, question has a disorwe punish him by not der that renders him allowing him to play John immune to “normal soccer, sending him Rosemond discipline.” to bed early, confining Living With him to his room for the First, consequences Children evening or taking away do not work reliably TV, but none of this is with human beings. having any long-term Another way of saying effect. The misbehavior — talkthis is that behavior modificationing out of turn and not keeping based discipline sometimes has his hands to himself — will hapno lasting effect (as you’ve dispen for a few days, then stop for covered) and can even backfire. a week or two, then start happen- Punishing a child for a certain ing again, and so on. Your advice? misbehavior can make the child that much more determined to Answer: Today’s parents get his way, for example. have a “magical” belief in consequences. They believe that When you use a proper con-
By Christina Barron
sequence for a certain behavior problem and the behavior does not improve, the thing to do is stay the course. Continue using the proper consequence. Unfortunately, at that point, most parents begin an increasingly frustrated search for a consequence that will solve the problem. In so doing, they run the risk of beginning to zig-zag all over the disciplinary playing field. Most adults, if they look back on their childhoods, will realize that they developed misbehaviors that no consequence on God’s green Earth would have stopped them from doing. We all develop misbehaviors during childhood that we carry into our adult lives. Our parents’ best efforts to help us solve these problems failed. We had to come to grips with them as adults. We had to take full responsibility for them and purge them from our lives. The second thing I need to tell you is that talking impulsively
and not keeping one’s hands to oneself is a symptom of “boy.” When all is said and done, and despite the fact that they are inappropriate to a classroom setting, they are not serious problems. He is not doing anything malicious or pre-sociopathic. Unfortunately, schools have lost tolerance for “boy.” They hold boys to a female standard of behavior, which is one reason why lots more boys than girls are diagnosed with the disorders referred to above. So, you’re doing fine. Just stay the course. Keep in mind that your job is not to correct all of his problems before he becomes an adult. You can’t, and the attempt to do so will drive you nuts. Look around you. There are lots of moms who are driving themselves nuts trying to raise perfect kids. Right? Right. Don’t go there. Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions at parentguru.com.
My little angel’s first trip to church
Author adds something new to haiku
By Shani George
The Washington Post
The Washington Post
You may have learned about a form of short poem called haiku. Perhaps you were asked to write one using the five-seven-five formula: one line of five syllables, one line of seven syllables and a final line of five syllables. Jon J. Muth wants to free would-be haiku writers from the limitations of five-seven-five. The children’s author and illustrator tells kids that Japanese, the language of original haiku, has sound parts that are different from English syllables. With Japanese haiku, “sometimes the first line will be just one word,” Muth said. So for his new book, Hi, Koo: A Year of Seasons, he ignored the poetry rule he was taught in school. Eating warm cookies on a cold day is easy. This poem — and 25 other haiku in the picture book — take Koo the panda and two young friends through the seasons. There’s no story, just moments captured in a few words alongside Muth’s gentle watercolors. The first page of Summer features the young boy and girl holding glowing jars as Koo stares into the sky. Tiny lights garden full of blinking stars fireflies The children’s characters are inspired by Muth’s 6-year-old twins, Molly and Leo, who also gave him the idea for a book of poetry. “I was listening to them explain to one another how things work,” he said. “It felt like poetry. It felt like haiku.” Muth said the twins aren’t interested in poetry more than any other kind of writing. But neither was he as a child growing up in the 1960s in Cincinnati. Muth’s mom was an art teacher and took him to many museums. It’s not surprising how he spent his free time. “I drew and drew and drew,” he said. He developed a fascination with Asian art after seeing a painting called Ju (Big Tree). “I wanted to know more about that culture,” he said. Muth said he isn’t using the new book to criticize the way haiku has been taught in schools. He said five-seven-five is an easy way for kids to learn about poetry and begin to write it. “But I wanted to go back to the inspiration of the poetry in the first place,” he said.
I
did it. I went to church with my 17-month-old. On the surface, maybe that doesn’t sound like a feat, but for me it was a moment of conquering a crippling fear that I’d be that mother with the child flinging yogurt at the back of someone’s head or ripping apart the pages of a hymnal. The only alternative, in my mind, was to sit in the nursery during service. But how can you become spiritually fulfilled when you’re unable to hear the sermon in a room full of kids? In that case, I could just schedule another session at the local Gymboree. I haven’t been completely estranged, if attending church for my son’s Baptist christening and Catholic baptism (long story) count. There was also the time we went as a family, but our son was then a pacifierloving newborn and immobile. Finally, after several months in absentia and a laundry list of excuses, I was determined to be present with our 17-monthold in tow. It was a chaotic Sunday morning, but I arrived on time. (Note: In mommy time, that means before the preaching started.) Xavier snacked on Cheerios, animatedly clapped while the children’s chorus sang, engaged with his pop-up book and then played with his
The author at church with her son, Xavier. Taking children to church can be a challenge. FAMILY PHOTO
iPad Mini. I was prepared, or so I thought. The iPad was brand new, and neither my husband nor I had downloaded any apps and there was no Wi-Fi access inside the church. I cowered in my seat and braced for a meltdown. Xavier started swiping and banging on the iPad maniacally, but his attention was easily diverted when I offered him a church program and a pen. Maybe my son doesn’t know he has an inside voice yet or that every child isn’t as social as he — he waved and smiled at a 4-year-old sitting next to us, and his friendly gesture was returned with a blank stare. But
no one gave me the side-eye as if to say, “Control your child.” Mission accomplished. I was proud. Finally, Xavier started to get sleepy. As I curled him into me, one arm around his back and the other across his legs, his pants felt damp. I was optimistically hoping he spilled his water. I checked his sippy cup to see if there was a leak. Negative. Instead, his diaper was swollen to capacity. That never happens, but, of course, that day it did. There went my plans to go directly to the grocery store after church. Because I had double-parked in the church’s reserved parking lot, I wouldn’t have time to change Xavier in the bathroom. When the service ended, I woke up my son, grabbed the diaper bag, put his coat and hat on, and bolted out the church’s double doors. I raced down the steep steps and across the icy road to move my car. I arrived in the parking lot where two stiletto-wearing women (Did I mention there was still snow on the ground?) stood at their car doors. “I’m coming, I’m coming,” I shouted, walking briskly and carrying a bundled-up toddler resembling Ralphie’s brother in A Christmas Story. After strapping Xavier into his car seat, we headed home with a sense of accomplishment and a need for dry clothes.
The playground set gets its own bras By Rachel Felder
The New York Times
Not long ago, Stephanie Sorkin, an author of children’s books who lives in Roslyn, N.Y., was faced with an unexpected request from her daughter Lea, then age 5. “She came home from camp and said, ‘Why am I the only one not wearing a bra?’ ” said Sorkin, 43. “I was like, ‘If you don’t call it a bra, I’ll go to the store and see what you’re talking about, but a 5-year-old doesn’t wear a bra.’ ” Actually, plenty of young girls are indeed wearing a bra-like garment: a truncated, half-camisole top with narrow straps and a bit of stretch. “This is the new undershirt,” said Sandy Sherman, a buyer for several locations of Lester’s, a chain of stores in New York and New Jersey specializing in children’s wear. “It serves the same purpose.” Mainstream retailers and well-established brands are also stocking bralettes for their young customers, including the Children’s Place, Gap
Kids, Zara and Hanes. Target, which carries 65 styles of girl’s bras, offers what it calls crop bras as part of its Xhilaration line. Old Navy has sold cami bras with a peace-sign print. The Maidenform Girls line, aimed at ages 8 to 13, includes bralettes in bubble gum pink; at Macy’s Herald Square, Maidenform’s pieces are sold in a section of the children’s department, near similar items from Calvin Klein Girls. Still, the idea of buying a children’s bra, even if it’s cupless and in a pink and yellow heart print, makes some uncomfortable. “My problem with bralettes as opposed to other things that kids might want is what it does to a girl’s image,” said Lori Evans, a clinical assistant professor in the department of child and adolescent psychiatry at the New York University Langone Child Study Center. “Does it say to a 5-yearold that there’s something wrong with her, that she needs breasts or that there’s an expectation?” Still, Evans said: “I wouldn’t be so horrified by it. If they start stuffing their little bralettes, then that’s a different thing.”
ThE SanTa FE ConCERT aSSoCiaTion Presents
SFCA Family Concert Series - FREE PERFORMANCE
curtis tOur On
Students from Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, one of the world’s leading music conservatories, perform selections by Mozart, Poulenc and more.
March 18, 2014, 6:00 pm • United Church of Santa Fe
1 hour family-friendly performance
A-9
Chamber Concert March 19, 2014, 7:30 pm • St. Francis auditorium
SHARK’S TOOTH RIDGE TRIP: Local geologist Patrick Rowe, of the Los Alamos Geological Society, will lead a group to the aptly-named area near Cabezon, N.M. At this site, trip participants will likely find five different species of Cretaceous Age shark’s teeth. The group meets at the Pajarito Environmental Education Center in Los Alamos, 3540 Orange St.; admission is $8 for a member, $10 for a nonmember, $16 for a member family and $20 for a nonmember family; call 662-0460 or visit www.pajaritoeec.org. SPOTLIGHT ON YOUNG MUSICIANS: The Santa Fe Youth Symphony Association will present a concert at 7 p.m. at the Scottish Rite Center in Santa Fe. Music educator and Grammywinning composer David Grusin will perform, along with outstanding young musicans from Northern New Mexico. Proceeds from the concert will support music education for youth. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students, 467-3770. IRISH DANCE WORKSHOP: Belisama Dance presents a St. Patrick’s Day workshop and Ceili dance party from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Railyard Performance Center, 1611 Paseo de Peralta. The cost is $5 per person. Call 670-2152 or visit www.belisamadance.com for more information. DRAMA CLUB: Join this improvisation group and play theater games from 11 a.m. to noon at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359. CARDBOARD DERBY: From 9 a.m. to noon at the Sipapu Ski & Summer Resort, 575-587-2087. FAMILY MOVIE MATINEE: Movies and refreshments from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; 955-4863. ‘THE SECRET OF KELLS’: Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave., will show a matinee of the animated film based on the famed Book of Kells from noon to 1 p.m.; free for children under 12. DANCE TOGETHER 2014: Dance students at Capital High School, New Mexico School for the Arts and Santa Fe High School perform at Capital High, 4851 Paseo del Sol, from 7 to 9 p.m. QUILT SHOW: The ABQ Bio Park’s Botanic Garden will celebrate National Quilting Day with a display in the Showroom and Heritage Farmhouse from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information, visit www.abqbiopark.com.
Sunday, March 16 NEIGHBORHOOD CONCERT: The New Mexico Philharmonic will present a performance of Faure’s Requiem as part of the Neighborhood Concert Series. The concert at Central United Methodist Church, 201 University Blvd. NE, also will feature performances by the winners of the Jackie McGeHee Young Artists’ Competition in Piano and Strings. The Piano First Prize winner was Ken Lien, a sophomore at Southwest Learning Center. Winner of the Strings Competition is Ryan Downs. Tickets are $20 to 55; www.nmphil.org. RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. PUEBLO STORYTELLING: Emmett “Shkeme” Garcia from Santa Ana and Jemez pueblos will present “Gran Mary’s Place,” a storytelling program, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture on Museum Hill, 710 Camino Lejo. Garcia is a traditional Pueblo singer and dancer, lead singer of the award-winning band Native Roots and a culture educator. He also has published two children’s books.
Monday, March 17 NATURE PLAYTIMES: Toddlers, preschoolers and their caregivers are invited to the Pajarito Environmental Education Center in Los Alamos to explore the natural world from 10 to 11 a.m.. Each Playtime features a craft, story and outside activity; no charge; 3540 Orange St.; call 662-0460.
Tuesday, March 18 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11:15 a.m.; Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; call 9554860. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m.; Main Library, 145 Washington Ave.; call 955-6783. CRAFTS FOR KIDS: Children ages 5 to 12 are invited to participate in a craft activity from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive, or the La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St. call 955-4863. FAMILY CONCERT: The Santa Fe Concert Association presents “Curtis on Tour,” a free performance of students from the elite Curtis Institute of Music, at 6 p.m. at the United Church of Santa Fe, 1804 Arroyo Chamiso Road.
Wednesday, March 19 PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes, songs, crafts and more for children ages 2 to 5 from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; call 955-4863. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Oliver La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St.; call 955-4863. WEE WEDNESDAY: Enjoy bilingual preschool stories, songs and games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359.
Thursday, March 20 CHILDREN’S STORY HOUR: Readings from picture books for children up to age 5; 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. at Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St.; no charge, call 9884226. BOOKS AND BABIES: Children ages 6 months to 2 years can come and enjoy books, songs and finger games from 10:30 to 11 a.m. at the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive; call 955-4863. TRY IT THURSDAYS: Children 16 and under are free on Thursdays after 4 p.m. at the Santa Fe Children’s Museum, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; call 989-8359. SFCC PLANETARIUM: Learn about our galaxy in a presentation called “The New Milky Way,” from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Santa Fe Community College Planetarium, 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1744.
Friday, March 21 GARDEN SPROUTS: Stories and hands-on activities for children ages 3 to 5 with a caregiver from 10 to 11 a.m., sponsored by the Santa Fe Botanical Gardens and Railyard Stewards. Meet in the Railyard Community Room. $5 suggested donation; free to members. Santa Fe Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Road, 316-3596. FRIDAY AFTERNOON ART: Art program for families with supplies provided, from 2 to 3 p.m. at the Main Library, 145 Washington Avenue, 955-6783. PRESCHOOL STORY TIME: Stories, rhymes and crafts for children ages 2 to 5 from 11 to 11:30 a.m. at the Main Library, 145 Washington Avenue, 955-6783. STORY TIME: Children are invited to enjoy stories and activities from 11 to 11:45 a.m. at the Vista Grande Public Library, 14 Avenida Torreon in Eldorado. Call 466-7323. MAGIC SHOW: Magician and juggler John Polinko performs at the La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St., from 4 to 5 p.m.
M ar F Rch 18 E Conc E ert !
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
Race may be factor in fatal shooting State police to review case some compare with Fla. teen’s death By Russell Contreras The Associated Press
ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico State Police will investigate the shooting death of a black Iraq War veteran by his Albuquerque neighbor after complaints by civil rights groups, the agency announced Thursday. In a statement, state police said it has agreed to conduct a thorough review into the March 2013 death of Jonathan Mitchell. Authorities said the 24-year-old was fatally shot by neighbor Donnie Pearson during what Pearson described as an exchange of gunfire. But Albuquerque chapters of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference have disputed Pearson’s version and said he instigated the confrontation. They also suggested race may have been a factor and have compared it to the shooting death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin. George Zimmerman told police he shot Martin only after the African American teenager physically attacked him; Martin’s family and supporters say Zimmerman, who identifies himself as Hispanic, marked Martin as a potential criminal because he was black. Mitchell’s family has long claimed that Pearson drove up to Mitchell’s garage and shot him in his front yard. “There are a lot of similarities with Trayvon Martin,” Albuquerque NAACP President Harold Bailey said. “Pearson shouldn’t have been there in the first place, like Zimmerman.” Video taken from an Albuquerque police helicopter showed Mitchell firing first in an exchange of gunfire with Pearson but also revealed that Pearson’s SUV drove up to Mitchell’s garage. Albuquerque police later said investigators didn’t have probable cause to charge Pearson. Calls to a phone number listed for Pearson were not answered. According to state police, the Albuquerque Police Department, the 2nd Judicial District Attorney’s Office and Mitchell’s family asked for the review. The review will be conducted by the Investigations Bureau of the New Mexico State Police, according to officials. State police said Albuquerque police has provided the state with a copy of their investigation. Bailey said he was pleased about the review. “We just want a fair and objective review of all the facts,” he said.
Immigrants attacked by border agent Officials say Honduran woman, teen girls had been surrendering; man later committed suicide
The woman, who had escaped the attack and walked farther upriver, tripped a camera at the border fence shortly after 5 p.m. Wednesday, the agent and law enforcement official said. They said in the camera image, a woman can be seen walking toward a gap in the fence, and there was blood By Alicia A. Caldwell covering her wrists. Within 10 minutes, and Juan Carlos Llorca agents responded to the woman and The Associated Press began a search. The federal law enforcement official MISSION, Texas — An immigrant and the border agent, who were not Honduran woman, her daughter and authorized to speak about the case, another Honduran girl who said they spoke on condition of anonymity. were kidnapped and assaulted by a Customs and Border Protection, the Border Patrol agent were in the process of surrendering to the agent when their federal agency that oversees Border Patrol, has said that when they found ordeal began, another Border Patrol the woman, she told them she had been agent and a federal law enforcement attacked by a man. The federal official official said Friday. said the woman described the man as Agent Esteban Manzanares, who wearing green fatigues. Border Patrol officials say committed suicide early Thursday morning, is accused of driving agents wear green uniforms. She also the three away from the Rio Grande and described a vehicle that authorities assaulting them after they surrendered. believe to be a Border Patrol vehicle. The official and the agent said a The other agent said Manzanares cut the wrists of the adult woman, assaulted search was quickly launched in the area one teenager in the group, and then fled for the other two victims. One of the teenagers was found near the border in the area with a second teenage girl. the brush, and hours later, the second The FBI has said the woman and girl was located in Manzanares’ home teens were in the country illegally.
in Mission, the federal official and the agent said. Mission is a suburb of McAllen, close to the Texas-Mexico border about 350 miles from Houston. When authorities approached the agent’s apartment, they heard gunfire. A short time later, when investigators went into the apartment, they found him dead and rescued the other girl. A Border Patrol official told The Associated Press that the agent was on duty when he encountered the females and that his shift had ended by the time authorities showed up at his house and he shot himself. Karol Escalante, a spokeswoman for the Honduran embassy in Washington, D.C., said the three Hondurans are recovering at a hospital in McAllen. She would not elaborate on their injuries. R. Gil Kerlikowske, commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said in a statement Friday that such acts are not representative Border Patrol agents. He added that the agency is working to make sure the victims receive proper care. The agency is collaborating with the FBI, which is conducting the investigation. “I am deeply sorry that this incident occurred and am committed to doing
everything in my power to prevent incidents like this from occurring again,” he said. The Border Patrol agent who participated in the search said Manzanares was assigned to Anzalduas Park. The FBI said it is awaiting an autopsy report on Manzanares, who the Border Patrol said had been with the agency since 2008. The number of apprehensions by the Border Patrol —a figure commonly used to gauge the ebb and flow of illegal border crossers — rose by 16 percent last year to 420,789 undocumented immigrants detained. More than half of those arrests were made in Texas. Border Patrol Chief Michael Fisher said last October that much of the increase was due to a rise in the number of people from Central American trying to enter the U.S. in South Texas. While apprehensions of Mexican nationals remained fairly steady, arrests of immigrants from other countries, including Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, rose 55 percent. Limited economic opportunities and widespread gang and drug cartel violence in Central America have driven tens of thousands north along a dangerous route through Mexico.
FBI balks at pot shop checks Feds aim to keep criminals out of industry but won’t aid Washington state
Jury gets 3 chances to mull death for Holmes By Dan Elliott
By Gene Johnson
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — The FBI is refusing to run nationwide background checks on people applying to run legal marijuana businesses in Washington state, even though it has conducted similar checks in Colorado — a discrepancy that illustrates the quandary the Justice Department faces as it allows the states to experiment with regulating a drug that’s long been illegal under federal law. Washington state has been asking for nearly a year if the FBI would conduct background checks on its applicants, to no avail. The bureau’s refusal raises the possibility that people with troublesome criminal histories could wind up with pot licenses in the state — undermining the department’s own priorities in ensuring that states keep a tight rein on the nascent industry. It’s a strange jam for the feds, who announced last summer that they wouldn’t sue to prevent Washington and Colorado from regulating marijuana after 75 years of prohibition. The Obama administration has said it wants the states to make sure pot revenue doesn’t go to organized crime and that state marijuana industries don’t become a cover for the trafficking of other illegal drugs. At the same time, it might be tough for the FBI to stomach conducting such background checks — essentially helping the states violate federal law. The Justice Department declined to explain why it isn’t conducting the checks in Washington when it has in Colorado. Stephen Fischer, a spokesman for the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division, referred an Associated Press inquiry to Justice Department headquarters, which would only issue a written statement. “To ensure a consistent national
DENVER — Jurors in the Colorado theater shooting case will deliberate up to three separate times on whether defendant James Holmes should be executed if they convict him of murder, the judge said Friday. In a written ruling, Judge Carlos A. Samour Jr. said he plans to James Holmes have the jury work through the requirements of Colorado’s death penalty law step by step before moving to the final question of whether Holmes should live or die. The process could end at any step with a sentence of life in prison without parole unless prosecutors convince jurors the requirements for execution have been met. Holmes pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to charges of killing 12 people and injuring 70 in the July 20, 2012, attack on a suburban Denver movie theater. The trial is scheduled to start in October. Under Colorado’s death penalty law, the same jury that decides whether a defendant is guilty of murder decides whether the penalty should be execution or life in prison. The jury determines the penalty after hearing both sides lay out their arguments in steps.
Seattle’s Hempfest kicks off in August 2013. The FBI is refusing to run national background checks on those applying to run legal pot businesses in Washington state. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
approach, the department has been reviewing its background check policies, and we hope to have guidance for states in the near term,” it said in its entirety. In Washington, three people so far have received licenses to grow marijuana — without going through a national background check, even though the state Liquor Control Board’s rules require that that they do so before a license is issued. “The federal government has not stated why it has not yet agreed to conduct national background checks on our behalf,” Washington state Liquor Control Board spokesman Brian Smith said in an email. “However, the Liquor Control Board is ready to deliver fingerprints as soon as DOJ is ready.” In the meantime, officials are relying on background checks by the Washington State Patrol to catch any in-state arrests or convictions. Applicants must have lived in Washington state for three months before applying, and many are longtime Washington residents whose criminal history would likely turn up on a State Patrol check. But
others specifically moved to the state in hopes of joining the new industry. “Both Washington state and Washington, D.C., have been unequivocal that they want organized crime out of the marijuana business,” said Alison Holcomb, the Seattle lawyer who authored the legal pot law. “Requiring, and ensuring, nationwide background checks on Washington state licensees is a no-brainer.” The FBI has run nationwide background checks since 2010 on applicants who sought to be involved in medical marijuana dispensaries in Colorado, Daria Serna, a spokeswoman for that state’s Department of Revenue, said in an email. “Doing background checks and making sure the criminal element has been locked out of the program has been enormously important in Colorado,” said Michael Elliott, director of the Medical Marijuana Industry Group. “The integrity of Washington’s program may be put into jeopardy because the FBI is not willing to ensure that drug cartels and criminals are being locked out, and that is absurd.”
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone tried to cash a fraudulent check at a First National Bank of Santa Fe branch, 4995 Governor Miles Road, about 10 a.m. Monday. u A woman reported that someone stole her passport, a digital camera, two credit cards, an international driver’s license, a Spanish identification card and a black Roxy purse in the 100 block of Sandoval Street between 11 and 11:15 p.m. Thursday. u Belter Morales-Linares, 33, 5250 Joshua Lane, was arrested at 12:08 p.m. Friday at his residence on a warrant in connection with a charge of battery against a household member. He was booked into the Santa Fe County jail in lieu of a $10,000 cash bond. u Several computers were stolen from a home in the 4100 block of Raindance Lane between 1:35 and 3:15 p.m. Wednesday. An officer wrote that a couple of suspects were caught in the area earlier the same day with stolen property. The suspects were not identified. u A tractor battery, a chain saw and
100 feet of extension cord were stolen from a property in the 1300 block of Camino Corrales between 4 p.m. Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. Thursday. u A thief stole a license plate from a vehicle parked at Aaron’s, 3675 Cerrillos Road, between 3 and 5 p.m. Tuesday. u Juan Perez-Guzman, 30, 1489 Zepol Road, Apt. No. 107, was arrested at about 9 p.m. Thursday in the 1700 block of Mann Street on an active warrant related to a charge of battery against a household member. He was booked into the Santa Fe County jail in lieu of a $20,000 cash bond. u Police responded to an unattended death in the 1100 block of Camino Consuelo at about 1:30 p.m. Thursday. The report said there were no signs of foul play. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Deputies arrested Wilfred Gonzales, 31, of Santa Fe on a charge of battery against a household member after a woman reported he was “heavily intoxicated” and accused him of striking her in
the face Thursday at a home on Arroyo Seco Circle. u A man reported Thursday that someone tried to fraudulently use his credit card online, but he was able to cancel the purchase. u A rifle, some ammunition and a TV were stolen from a home on Camino Acote in Eldorado between March 6 and Thursday.
DWI arrests u Jacqueline Zamora, 28, of Santa
Cruz was arrested on a charge of drunken driving after a deputy saw her swerving along U.S. 84/285 at about 1:20 a.m. Friday. A breath test showed she had a breath alcohol content over the legal limit of 0.08. u Cameron Brenneman, 36, 3288 Casa Rinconada, was arrested on charges of drunken driving and lack of insurance at 12:27 a.m. Friday following a traffic stop at Yucca Street and Vista de Jemez. u Ryan Venti, 33, 9 Callejon Road, was arrested on charges of aggravated drunken driving and a lack of a driver’s
license, no proof of registration and no proof of insurance at 3:05 a.m. Thursday following a traffic stop for a speeding violation at Cerrillos Road and Cordova Road.
Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use as the city renegotiates its contract with Redflex Traffic Systems.
Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)
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Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
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The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
ANOTHER VIEW
Bigger cages for chickens? Not so fast, California The Washington Post
Standoff in Ukraine won’t go away
T
everybody loses. This is why Secretary hough the world is mesmerized by the disappearance of a jumboof State John Kerry and his Western jet somewhere in Asia or over colleagues have been engaged in such the Indian Ocean, Crimea and Ukraine frantic diplomatic activity this week. remain the center of a major That does not please the supercrisis. Russia seems impervious warriors or super-ideologues amongst us, but I suspect that to Western diplomatic pressure it pleases the great majority of as Crimea heads for a weekend us who do not want to be part referendum on its future. Will of a vast nuclear wasteland. Crimea declare its independence and then move for union So, does Putin believe in with Russia, as seems likely? diplomacy or in the iron fist, And if it does, what can the with winner take all? Or both, West do? Military action is out, Bill Stewart depending upon the circumand economic sanctions won’t stances? Understanding work in the short run. This is a At the moment, he is doing Your World crisis of major proportions. his best to convince the world Close to 10,000 Russian troops that he believes in the iron fist, have been deployed for suspicious miliand indeed I believe that the hammer and tary exercises near the Ukrainian border. sickle are still an indelible part of his soul. It is hard to believe they will cross that He yearns to restore Russian greatness, border, because the international conand Russian troops, planes, tanks and sequences will be immense. But then ships are all part of that image. who would have believed that Russian But he is neither suicidal nor deluPresident Vladimir Putin would organize sional. I believe he has carefully calcua Russian takeover of its former Crimea lated what he believes he can get away province, because that is what the March with in the year 2014. He believes he can 16 referendum in Crimea is all about. take back Crimea without undo stress, Putin is playing hardball with Ukraine because there is really nothing Ukraine and the West, with an attitude of “damn or the West can do about it. Western the consequences.” Or so it seems. leaders have publicly ruled out a military option. But seizing Ukraine through Diplomacy is not a zero-sum game, in military conflict invites an almost certain which there is a clear winner and loser. Western military reaction, and that, I The whole point of diplomacy is that believe, he is unwilling to risk. the contesting sides give a little and win a little. Perhaps nobody is very happy A surprising development in the past with the end result, but in the meantime, few days is the strong and increasingly we have avoided an all-out war, in which assertive leadership of German Chancel-
lor Angela Merkel. Her reticence in the first week or so of the crisis was attributed to the fact that Germany has the biggest European economic relationship with Russia and depends on Russia for about 40 percent of its energy supplies. But that relationship works both ways. If Germany needs Russian gas and oil, Russia needs German money and investment to fuel its stuttering economy. Merkel has emerged as the de facto European leader in this crisis, and has now begun to call for strong sanctions if Russia does not cooperate to end the standoff. This stance recognizes that the initial phase of the crisis is now over, and, unless the Crimeans greatly surprise us in Sunday’s referendum, Putin has got away with a blatant act of aggression. Now we are in for the long haul, in which the balance tilts towards the West. Europe is shocked by the Russians and looks set to strengthen the Western alliance. The U.S. will look again at its famous “pivot” toward Asia, based upon the view that Russia no longer poses a danger. At the moment, it does. In this sense, Putin has done his country a great disservice. If sanctions are called into play, and sanctions in some form will almost certainly be imposed, then the Russian economy will certainly suffer. Putin’s oligarch friends will not take this lightly. Taking a hit in the pocketbook never goes down well. Bill Stewart writes about current affairs from Santa Fe. He is a former U.S. Foreign Service officer and served as a correspondent for Time magazine.
MY VIEW: IRENE LEVITT
Cursive handwriting still important
M
y friend, Louise, is escaping the cold of Winnipeg, Canada, and enjoying a visit in Phoenix with her grandchildren. She confided to me that she asked her two grandchildren, ages 9 and 7, why they never answered her letters. They said, “We can’t read cursive.” She was quite concerned and complained to her daughter, who said, “Oh Mom, they’ll never use cursive except to sign their names.” Unfortunately, there Irene Levitt are many side effects to this kind of thinking. Not only can this generation not read or write cursive, they can no longer even sign their names. They write everything, including their own names, in block letters. For the past 20 years, schools have been continually de-emphasizing the teaching of cursive writing. In today’s high-tech world of smartphones, tablets and computers, many people feel that cursive writing is no longer needed. If
this continues, in addition to not being able to read their grandparents’ writing and many historical documents, writing thank-you notes, and signing contracts and wills, our children will be robbed of their ability to use a powerful tool of communication. A recent College Board study showed that students who write their SAT essays in cursive score higher than peers who print them. Cursive writing is a potent tool, and we are taking this skill away from our kids. Elementary-age students who wrote compositions by hand rather than by keyboarding wrote faster, wrote longer pieces and expressed more ideas. Will cursive “illiteracy” harm our children in the job market? Perhaps it already has. The word signature is derived from two words, sign and nature. When you sign your name, you are disclosing a little of who you are. You are telegraphing how you think of yourself. Consequently, handwriting is essentially body language. It is a manifestation of what’s happening subconsciously. If all persons are taught
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
only to print, it is possible we will subtly change even the personality of our children. If all writing is done solely on computer, they might gradually lose the ability to express a unique part of their identity. They’ll miss the subtleties in the handwriting that indicate feelings and emotions. Much is lost in the translation. Cursive is an efficient way to communicate or take notes. Not everyone has easy access to computers or iPads. Pens and pencils are still the most affordable, dependable and practical way for people of all demographics to communicate. Writing class notes by hand improves retention. What can you do to keep this tragedy from happening? You can contact your local school committee and encourage them to continue providing instruction in cursive writing. Music therapist Irene Levitt, holds a master’s degree in graphoanalysis. She has been an instructor in handwriting analysis at the college level since 1985.
C
alifornia was the first state to crack down on tailpipe emissions and the first to establish a comprehensive in-state greenhouse gas program. Now it is positioning itself as a national leader on animal rights — if, that is, its move to give hens more cage room survives a legal attack from other states. Unfortunately, California’s legal case isn’t as strong as its moral one. Americans rely on cheap chicken and eggs, the products of supersizing livestock operations while squeezing costs. Farmers pack animals into tiny, crowded and dank pens, leaving hens with scarce room to extend their wings, let alone move around. There is a balance to be struck between keeping food prices low and mitigating the miserable conditions that humans impose on livestock. California’s voters tried in 2008 to push their state closer to achieving that balance, opting to require egg growers to provide hens at least enough room to extend their wings and turn around. The rule takes effect next year. But there was a problem: The voters didn’t appreciate that other states weren’t going to follow along, and California imports about 4 billion eggs a year. States such as Missouri and Iowa, which between them account for nearly half of California’s egg imports, haven’t imposed similar cage-size requirements, so they might enjoy a cost advantage over California producers. To right that imbalance, the Golden State’s leaders approved a law requiring all eggs sold in California to come from farms that comply with its cage-size standards, no matter where they are located. Missouri sued last month, arguing that the Constitution gives Congress the exclusive right to regulate commerce that crosses state lines. Last week, five other states, including Iowa, joined in. Though California’s law treats all businesses — in-state and otherwise — the same, the state has to show that its effects on commerce outside the state are small relative to the local concerns it addresses. That is, rightly, a tough standard: Without strong and exclusive federal regulation of interstate commerce, states could enact all sorts of nice-sounding laws in an effort to benefit local producers. Congress could and should step in to establish more humane farming rules, or at least to grandfather California’s law. Federal lawmakers did something similar for the state’s tailpipe emissions program when they passed the Clean Air Act. Absent federal action, and if the courts rule against the state, California could at least demand labels to distinguish eggs produced according to state standards from those that aren’t. That would give Californians an opportunity to vote at the store as well as the ballot box.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: March 15, 1914: Filadelfo Baca, assistant superintendent of public instruction, is back from Las Vegas, where he spent a few days on private business. He also visited the school of precinct 25, where his daughter is teaching. Mr. Baca says that 20 years ago his father made the benches which the pupils of that school used until a few days ago, when they were given new, up-to-date desks, which have pleased them so much that they prefer to study rather than take the customary recess. March 15, 1964: Public school teachers engaging in strikes of work stoppages could be dismissed under a new regulation adopted by the State Board of Education. The regulation has been filed with the state Supreme Court law library and has the effect of law. The Board of Education will distribute to every school superintendent and local school board member in the state copies of the compilation of laws and regulations covering dismissal of school personnel.
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DOONESBURy
BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
Keep the Faith Places of Faith & Service times in Santa Fe ANGLICAN
St. Thomas The Apostle Anglican Church An Anglican Holy Communion service is celebrated every Sunday morning at 11 a.m. by St.Thomas the Apostle Anglican Church. Services are held in the chapel located on the 3rd floor at Christus St.Vincent Regional Medical Center, 455 St. Michaels Drive, Santa Fe. Members of all faiths and traditions are welcome to attend. For information, contact Rev. Lanum, 505-603-0369.
BAPTIST
First Baptist Church of Santa Fe First Baptist Church of Santa Fe, 1605 Old Pecos Trail. Come join us this Sunday! 9:15 a.m. – Bible Study for all ages; 10:30 a.m. – Worship Service (interpreted for deaf). Wednesday – 6:15 p.m. – Bible Study/Prayer Meeting led by Pastor Lee H erring; Adult Choir Rehearsal; 6:30 p.m. – “Ignite” for Youth. Childcare available for all services. For more information, please call the church office at 983-9141, 8:30 – 4:00, Monday - Friday, or visit our website www.fbcsantafe.com.
Rodeo Road Baptist Church Sunday March 16th Message – “Paul’s Final Thoughts on His Ministry Team” continuing our message series - How to be a Christian in an Unchristian World - A Contemporary look at the Letter to the Church at Colossae at 10:45am. Celebrate Recovery on each Wednesday at 5:30pm. 3405 Vereda Baja (One block south of Rodeo Road on Richards) Visit us on the web at www.rrbcsantafe. com Call (505) 473-9467. Like us on Facebook!
BUDDHIST
Prajna Zendo Meditation, Koan study, private interviews with two qualified Zen teachers. Retreats, classes, book study, dharma talks and more. Prajna Zendo is committed to its members and all beginners and practitioners who walk through its doors. Based on the lineage of Hakuyu Taizen Maezumi Roshi. Upcoming seven-day retreat: April 27- May 4. Sunday service, zazen and dharma talk starting 9:00am.Tuesday evening zazen at 7pm.Tuesday through Sunday morning zazen at 6am. Call 660-3045 for more information. 5 Camino Potrillo, Lamy, 15 minutes from Santa Fe just off of Hwy 285 next door to Eldorado. www.prajnazendo.org
Thubten Norbu Ling Buddhist Center
Thubten Norbu Ling provides education and practice in Tibetan Buddhism following the tradition of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and in accord with the lineage teachings of Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche. Classes are offered to all levels of western students seeking a path to personal clarity and wellbeing, and are generally held on Sunday morning and on Wednesday and Thursday evenings. Practices and meditations are offered on Tuesday evenings, and on weekend mornings. Our resident teachers are Geshe Thubten Sherab and Don Handrick. 1807 Second Street, #35. For more information visit our website
CATHOLIC
The Church of Antioch at Santa Fe Mother Jenni speaks on:“Transfiguration and the Cosmic Christ” Sunday at 8:45 a.m. in the Loretto Chapel, 207 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe, NM. Pastor, Most Rev. Daniel Dangaran, D. Min, Assoc. Pastor Rev. Mother Carol Calvert, Resident Priests Mother Jenni and Father Doug Walker invite you to come home to God, who has always loved you! (505) 983-9003 http://coasf.org <http://coasf.org/> We are a community of Faith in the Catholic Tradition (non-Roman) offering the Sacraments within a context of personal freedom, loving acceptance, service and mysticism. All are welcome.
Step-By-Step Bible Group Experience the true teachings of the Catholic Church. Giving your youth a starting chance away from the TV and video games. Bring them to a place where they can explore the bible at their own pace. Let them get to know God in a fun and unique atmosphere just a couple feet away. We invite you to join us for Bible Study Every Thursday 6-8pm at St.Anne’s 511 Alicia Street. Everyone is invited.There is a different subject every week. For More information Call Paul 470-4971 or Sixto 470-0913 www.stepbystepbg. net
CENTER FOR SPRITUAL LIVING
Santa Fe Center for Spiritual Living We are a spiritual community, living and growing through love, creativity and service.Active in Santa Fe for 55 years. Conveniently located 505 Camino de los Marquez, near Trader Joe’s.All are welcome. Sunday Services: Meditation at 9 am, Inspirational Music and Joyful Celebration at 10:00 am when
Live Video Streaming starts at www.santafecsl.org. Music:The Living Spirit Drummers led by Jim Kinney. Message:“What does it mean to surrender?” by Rev. Dr. Bernardo Monserrat. Information on workshops, classes, concerts, rentals, past lectures videos at www.santafecsl.org - www.facebook.com/SantaFeCSL - 505-9835022.
Everyday Center For Spiritual Living Everyday CSL is a spiritual community committed to empowering people to live joy-filled lives. Our Sunday service celebrations speak to living our lives to the fullest with rockin’ upbeat music to open our hearts. Come join our community as we grow together into our best lives. Join Rev. Heather Venegas for “All Things Made New-A Metaphysical Spring Cleaning” workshop on March 23rd from 12pm-3pm.This delightful afternoon will include interactive and meditative processes, sharing and celebrating and utilizing tools to help us on our journey. $36 in advance/$45 at door. On March 30th from 12:30p-3:30p, join George and Sedena Cappannelli, co-founders of AgeNation, for “Living the Life You Were Born to Live” workshop.This empowering, interactive and entertaining program includes sage wisdom, practical and relevant strategies, life affirming truths and inspiring stories. $36 in advance/$45 at door.Visit us at www.everydaycsl.org for a calendar of events. We are located at 2544 Camino Edward Ortiz, Suite B, Santa Fe across from UPS.
CHRISTIAN
The Light at Mission Viejo Sunday Service 10:30; Men’s Prayer Ministry: Monday- Thursday Morning Prayer 6 a.m.; Women’s Ministry: Monthly on 4th Saturday, 9- 11 a.m.; Missions: Palomas, Mexico, monthly, second weekend;Youth:Amped- 6 p.m. Fridays; Consumed- Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m.; Singles (30+) meet monthly, 1st & 3rd Tuesday at 6 p.m.; Mid-week Spanish Service, Wednesday at 6 p.m.; Homeless Ministry, monthly 3rd Saturday; Mid-Week Prayer: Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. Information: 505-982-2080. www.thelightatmissionviejo.org
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church of Christ Scientist, Santa Fe Our church is designed to support the practice of Christian healing. Services consist of readings from the King James Bible and Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy. Sunday service/Sunday School/Child care at 10:00 a.m.”Substance” is the Bible Lesson for March 16th. Wednesday meetings at 12:10 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Readings are on a timely topic followed by sharing healings attesting to the practical presence of God in our life. The noon meeting is informal. Bring your lunch and friends. Please join us! 323 East Cordova Road. www. christiansciencesantafe.org
DISCIPLES OF CHRIST
First Christian Church of Santa Fe First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Santa Fe, 645 Webber Street, worships at 10:30 on Sunday mornings.We are an open and affirming congregation with communion open to all who wish to partake.Viento de Gracia (Disciples of Christ) meets in the same building with services in Spanish on Sundays 5 p.m. and Thursdays at 7 p.m. All are welcome. Located two blocks south of the state capital building.We support global hunger relief through Week of Compassion, Christian Ministry through the Disciples of Christ, and local hunger relief through Food for Santa Fe. We can be found on the web at www.santafedisciples.org
EPISCOPAL
Church of the Holy Faith - Episcopal
LENT AT HOLY FAITH:You are invited to join us on Wednesdays in Lent for Soup and Salvation, a study of the Easter Vigil Liturgy and the Old Testament Lessons read during the service.The Reverend Kenneth J. G. Semon will lead the class. Come to pray The Stations of the Cross on Wednesdays in Lent at 5:00 p.m. in the Church and join us for a Soup Supper at 5:45 p.m.The Soup and Salvation Study is from 6:30-8:00 p.m. Free Parking. Nursery available under four years.Taize Service on Tuesdays, 6:00 p.m., continues with special Lenten Liturgy and Music.The Church of the Holy Faith welcomes all people to an ever deepening relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ. Sunday Eucharists:7:30 a.m.(spoken); 8:30 a.m. (with Children’s Chapel) and 11:00 a.m. (both with Choir).Adult Forum: Sundays at 9:50 a.m. in Palen Hall. Sunday Nursery from 8:15-12:15 p.m.Taize Eucharist with Prayers for Healing at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesdays (Nursery at 5:30-7:00 p.m.). Holy Eucharist Wednesdays and Thursdays at 12:10 p.m. in Chapel. Evening Prayer on Monday -Fridays at 4:30 p.m. in the Chapel. Children’s Adventures on Tuesday Afternoons seasonally and Youth Group on the first and third Sundays with pizza lunch at 12:15 p.m. Call 982 4447. www.holyfaithchurchsf.org.
St. Bede’s Episcopal Church St. Bede’s is a Christ-centered servant community rooted in Holy Scripture, tradition and reason as practiced by the Episcopal Church, located at 1601 S. St. Francis Drive. Holy Eucharist on Sunday March 16, 2014, at 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. (7:00 p.m. in Spanish). At the 9:15 Forum on Sunday The Rev. Catherine Volland will discuss the Episcopal Mass. Visit www.stbedesantafe. org or call 982-1133 for more information. St. Bede’s welcomes traditional and nontraditional families.The Episcopal Church welcomes you. La Iglesia Episcopal les da la bienvenida.
JEWISH
Congregation Beit Tikva Located at 2230 Old Pecos Trail, our synagogue follows Traditional Reform Judaism led by Rabbi Martin Levy and Cantor Michael Linder. Shabbat services are on Friday evenings at 7:30 pm.Torah Study on the Book of Leviticus is on Saturday mornings at 9:15 am.The Wednesday evening class is reading “The Death of Death.” For more information on other programs, and our Adult Education classes, please call 505-820-2991 or visit our website http://beittikvasantafe.org.
Temple Beth Shalom
Unity Are you looking for an inclusive spiritual (not religious) commUnity? Please join us this Sunday at 10:30am for music, meditation, and inspiring messages.This week, Rev. Brendalyn’s message,“What’s Next?” will support you in embracing your eternal journey.All are welcome and honored. Please join us Thursday, March 20, for our monthly Healing Service, 6:30pm. Our beautiful sanctuary, classrooms and outdoor facilities are perfect for weddings, workshops and retreats. Call 505-989-4433 for information. unitysantafe.org Unity Santa Fe 1212 Unity Way (North side of 599 bypass at Camino de los Montoyas (2.4 miles from 84/285, 8.4 miles from Airport Road).
ORTHODOX
Holy Trinity Orthodox Church Great Lent has begun and we invite you to experience it within the mystical beauty of the Eastern Orthodox Church! Our Services include Great Vespers every Saturday at 5:30pm, and the Divine Liturgy on Sunday, at 9:30am. Following Liturgy we have a meal
Temple Beth Shalom is a handicap accessible, welcoming Reform Jewish Congregation with a great religious school and preschool (www.preschool.sftbs.org). Friday services begin at 6:30pm. Saturday mornings, enjoy bagels, lox, and Torah study at 9:15. Stay for morning services at 10:30. Pray and study with Aaron Wolf at the Monday morning minyan, 8:00-9:00am in the Upper Sanctuary. Purim Carnival & Book Sale, tomorrow, Sunday, March 16, Noon-2pm. On Friday, March 21, come to a community dinner at 5pm with local author Murray Tucker (RSVP req’d, $10/adults, $5/kids under 12) and stay for the 6:30 service. 205 E. Barcelona Road, 982-1376, www.sftbs.org
study will be on the meaning and mystery of death, led by Fr.
LUTHERAN
Christ Church Santa Fe (PCA)
Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church
and Sunday School for the kids.All are welcome. Weekly Classes: include an Inquirer’s Class each Saturday afternoon at 4pm, and throughout Lent we also have a Wednesday Presanctified Liturgy at 5:30pm followed by a Soup Supper and Study.This year our John Bethancourt. 231 E Cordova Road 983-5826 FrJohnB@aol. com.www.holytrinitysantafe.org
PRESBYTERIAN
Our Presbyterian church is at Don Gaspar and Cordova Road. Our focus is on the historical truths of Jesus Christ, His Love and
LENTEN SERVICES at 12 noon followed by lunch at Sunrise Restaurant and at 5:30 with a soup supper followed by worship at 6:30. Theme this year is “Making Change”. March 24th, starting Monday 7pm Book Group:The Wisdom of Progressive Christianity. Good Friday. March 29th, we will walk the stations of the cross. 3/30Easter! 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 505-983-9461
Redemptive Grace... and our contemporary response. Sunday
Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS)
First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA)
Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS) 209 East Barcelona Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505 Sunday service schedule: Divine Service: 9:30AM, Christian Education for Children and Adults: 10:45AM, Lenten Vespers 6:30PM (Wednesday evenings; Soup: 5:45PM) Immanuel members invite you to worship with us during the season of Lent. Lutherans observe Lent as a time to reflect on the great sacrifice of Jesus Christ who brings salvation to the world. Through Christ’s death on the cross, God declares humanity justified, that is, freed from experiencing His eternal wrath. 983-7568 www.ilc-sfnm.org
METHODIST
St. John’s United Methodist Lent is intended to lead us into an always hidden future with an always greater opportunity to grow our faith. We invite you to join one of our small groups for discussion and reflection during Lent. We are reading Lent for Everyone by N.T.Wright. Choose Sunday morning at 9:45am, Wednesday afternoon at 1:15-2:15pm, Wednesday evening 6:15-7:15pm, or our Facebook Bible Study Group. We have two worship celebrations on Sunday morning at 8:30 and 11am in the Gathering Room. Pastor Greg Kennedy preaches at both services. Sunday Classes for all ages at 9:45 - 10:45am. Children’s message and nursery at both services. St. John’s is on the web at www.sjumcsantafe.org, on Facebook, and by phone 982-5397.
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
Eckankar Eckankar, Religion of the Light and Sound of God, offers ways to grow spiritually through one’s own personal inner and outer experience. There will be a worship service on Sunday, March 16, 10:30 a.m. at the Santa Fe Women’s Club. The topic will be “Dreams of Adventure and Transformation.” Worship services include a brief singing of the universal word HU to open the heart and an open discussion where we can learn from each other’s insights. In addition to the monthly worship service, Eckankar holds community HU chants in Eldorado and Santa Fe. For information, see www.eckankar.org or call 800-876-6704.
The Celebration The Celebration of Santa Fe, a Sunday Service Different! Now in our 22nd year as an ongoing experience of a heart-based, nondenominational spiritual community. Our service is truly new and different every week because we create it anew. Lively, creative, synchronistic, music-filled, inspirational, uplifting, that’s us! The speaker for Sunday, March 23 is Dianne Deloren,“This Much I Know is True.” Special music by Catherine Donavon. Sunday at 10:30am, NEA-NM Bldg., 2007 Botulph Rd., enter around back. www.facebook.com/thecelebrationsf; www.thecelebration.org
services are 9:00 and 10:45 am (childcare provided). Children and Youth Ministry activities also available. Call us at (505)9828817 or visit our website at christchurchsantafe.org for m ore information.
Second Sunday in Lent, services 8:30 and 11:00 a.m., led by the Rev. Dr. Harry Eberts III.The Christian Education Hour from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. has classes for adults and children. Childcare is available. On Wednesdays year-round Morning Prayer at 7:00 a.m. and during Lent Contemplative Gatherings at 5:30 p.m.TGIF Concert on Friday, March 21, at 5:30 p.m. is the annual Bach’s Birthday Bash with Linda Raney, organ. We are located downtown at 208 Grant Ave. More information is available at www.fpcsantefe.org or by phone 982-8544.
Westminster Presbyterian (PCUSA) Westminster Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) A Multi-cultural Faith Community St. Francis Dr. at West Manhattan 11 AM on March 16,THE SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT Message: “The Journey is the Destination” Genesis 12:1-4 and Romans 4:1-5, 13-17 Preacher: Rev. Dr. James E. Roghair Social Hour following Worship ¡ ALL ARE WELCOME ! Thursday at 5:30 PM – Taizé Services PEACE, JOY & BLESSINGS UNTOLD for singles and married; seekers and doubters; slackers and workaholics; can’t sing, black and proud; no habla ingles; tourists; bleeding hearts… AND YOU! Contact us at 505-983-8939 (Tues-Fri, 9-1) or wpcsantafe@gmail.com
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
The United Church of Santa Fe “Got Power? “ Second Sunday of Lent. 8:30 Contemplative Communion and 11:00 Rejoice and Respond Worship, with Rev. Talitha Arnold, Rev. Brandon Johnson and Guest Lin Raymond, Sanctuary Choir directed by Karen Marrolli, D.M.A. at 11:00. Children’s Ministry “Jesus Grows Up” with Andrea Hamilton and Rachel Baker;Young Adventurers with Rev. Johnson at 11:00.Adult Forum (9:45):“What Do We Tell Kids (or not) about Jesus’ Last Week?”Also at 9:45 Youth “Initiation to Adulthood,” Children’s Games and Music. Childcare all morning. Next weekend (March 21-23) “Sing, Pray,Act for the Earth” with guest Bishop Jeffery Rowthorn and Dr.Anne Rowthorn. Family Fun Night Celebration of Creation (5:30, supper provided). Saturday morning keynote and workshops (8:30 to 12 Noon, followed by park cleanup and picnic).All welcome! 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). unitedchurchofsantafe.org. Facebook, too!
Need to add your organization? Contact Keyana at 995-3818 • kdeaguero@snewmexican.com
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Prep schedule B-3 Prep basketball B-4 Weather B-5 Markets in review B-6 Classifieds B-7 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
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State basketball tournament: Huskies steamroll Dons to advance to title game. Page B-4
MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
No. 8 San Diego St. defeats UNLV By W.G. Ramirez
The Associated Press
San Diego State’s Skylar Spencer, right, blocks a shot from UNLV’s Deville Smith during the first half of the semifinal game of the Mountain West tournament Friday in Las Vegas, Nev. ISAAC BREKKEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT AAA BOYS
St. Mike’s rolls over Wildcats
LAS VEGAS, Nev., — Dwayne Polee II had 18 points and six rebounds to SDSU 59 lead No. 8 San UNLV 51 Diego State to a 59-51 win over UNLV in the semifinals of the Mountain West Conference tournament Friday night.
In Friday’s other semifinal game, New Mexico beat Boise State 70-67. The Lobos will play the Aztecs at 4 p.m. Saturday. San Diego State used a 19-9 run out of the break to open up a 48-33 lead with 8:13 left in the game. The Aztecs scored 12 points off of turnovers and outrebounded UNLV 34-29. The feisty Runnin’ Rebels kept
it close in the first half, and made a last-minute rally, but it wasn’t enough against the quicker and defensively sound top-seeded Aztecs. Trailing 50-37 with just under six minutes left in the game, UNLV’s Bryce Dejean-Jones scored seven points during a 14-6 run to cut the lead to five with 48.9 seconds left in the game. But Polee made 5 of 6 free throws down the stretch to seal
the Aztecs’ win. Xavier Thames added 17 and six assists for the Aztecs (29-3), who will face New Mexico or Boise State in the title game on Saturday. And while San Diego State is assuredly headed to the NCAA tournament, the loss dealt a severe blow to UNLV’s chances of making the Big Dance for a fifth consecutive year.
STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT CLASS AAAA GIRLS
sfHs wins it aLL
For third straight year, Horsemen will battle Hope Christian for title By James Barron
The New Mexican
ALBUQUERQUE — Chris Brattain winced at the mere mention of “the putback.” The Lovington head coach knew he had the 6-foot-8 post, and the Wildcats should be able to do something as simple as a box-out. But when the opponents are the St. Michael’s Horsemen and there’s something important on the line — like a third straight appearance in the Class AAA state boys basketball championship — things don’t always happen as they should. So when Horsemen senior Isaiah Dominguez came up with the offensive rebound on Marcus PincheiraSandoval’s missed free throw with 2:21 left in a AAA semifinal in The Pit on Friday morning, all it did was leave Brattain breathless with envy.
Please see st. miKe’s, Page B-4
Up next Saturday: Class AAA Boys State Championship Game, No. 2 St. Michael’s (24-7) vs. No. 1 Albuquerque Hope Christian (27-3), 10 a.m., The Pit. Radio: KVSFAM (1400). Web: proviewnetworks.com. Twitter: live updates at @sfnmsports
Jackie Martinez, holding the trophy, is surrounded by her team and the cheerleading squad while the Demonettes celebrate their win against Los Lunas in the AAAA state championship Friday in The Pit. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Demonettes edge No. 1 Los Lunas 34-29 to earn first state title since 1988 Fe High with 15 points to a 34-29 Class AAAA state championship victory over the top-seeded Los Lunas Lady Tigers in The Pit on Friday. ALBUQUERQUE “My word is my bond, and he remembers that,” ackie Martinez made a promise to Santa Fe Martinez said. High girls basketball coach Elmer Chavez four Chavez does remember that promise, but that years ago, and on Friday, she made good on may be because Martinez didn’t let him forget that promise. about it all week. When the senior guard went to her first “She tells me every day,” Chavez said. “It looked practice as a freshman for the Demonettes, she kind of shaky at halftime, but she delivered.” approached Chavez and introduced herself with a Santa Fe High (30-2 overall) trailed Los Lunas very bold prediction. (27-4) 18-9 at the intermission. Both teams gave the “I shook his hand and I looked him straight in the face and I said, ‘Coach Elmer, my name is Jackie ball away — with Los Lunas turning the ball over 12 times and Santa Fe High 11 — but the Lady Tigers Martinez, and in the four years here, I’m going to won the shooting battle by going 8-for-16 from the get you a state championship,’ ” Martinez said. field while the Demonettes made 4 of their 24 tries. In her final season with the Demonettes, Martinez made good on her promise by leading Santa “We did a good job in the first five minutes, but By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
NCAA BASKETBALL
Top things to know for Selection Sunday By Jim O’Connell
The Associated Press
Pencils ready (it has to be a pencil with a large eraser because there will be plenty of changes). Pristine bracket hot off the printer. It’s time to pick, change, rethink and settle. The feeling of possibly being the one who fills the perfect sheet. The conviction of knowing you have one of the Final Four teams. The satisfaction of knowing you’ll definitely get more than half the early-round games correct. Things to know as Selection Sunday nears: Who’s picking: The 10-person NCAA Tournament Selection Committee is chaired by Ron Wellman, the Wake Forest athletic director. There are six other ADs (Joe Alleva of LSU, Scott Barnes of Utah State, Joe Castiglione of Oklahoma, Mark Hollis of Michigan State, Bruce Rasmussen of Creighton and Peter Roby of Northeastern), two conference commissioners (Doug Fullerton of the Big Sky and
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J
we weren’t scoring anything,” Chavez said. “We missed a lot of easy shots.” After a lackluster first half, Santa Fe High opened the second half with a five-second violation. That was offset by an 8-4 run by the Demonettes that cut the Los Lunas lead down to 22-17 at the start of the fourth quarter. Santa Fe High opened the final quarter on a 9-4 run and knotted the game at 26-all with just under four minutes remaining. With just over three minutes left, Santa Fe High junior wing Kayla Herrera hit a 3-pointer to give the Demonettes a 29-26 lead. Herrera had already missed four 3-pointers, so she was a little hesitant on this one. “Coach Oliver [Torres] was just like, ‘Let it go,
Please see sfHs, Page B-4
Victory puts spotlight on Santa Fe High junior Reagan was packing up the White House and one of the main reasons was their 6-foot-3 post, Lozada-Cabbage. ALBUQUERQUE — For three rounds, While her and Zeller’s comparative the heavyweight champ was having her stats were a push — both had eight points, way, landing solid shots and side-stepping Zeller had nine rebounds to Lozada-Cabthe big blows. bage’s eight, and Zeller had one more assist When it mattered most, the challenger with three — the mere fact that Zeller, scraped herself off the mat, landed a few bound for the University of Nevada’s womequalizers and got the job done. en’s program next year, couldn’t do more Welcome to the limelight, Sabrina was a victory for the Santa Fe High junior. Lozada-Cabbage. You are now the state’s Not many players have stood toe to toe highest-profile girls basketball player mov- with Teige Zeller and walked away a wining forward into the 2014-15 season. ner. You earned that distinction by getting “It felt good to play against a real good the best of the outgoing occupant of that player,” Lozada-Cabbage said. “It gets me post, Los Lunas senior Teige Zeller, during better, it gets her better.” Friday night’s Class AAAA state championWhat helps is a little motivation. Lozadaship game in The Pit. The Demonettes (30Please see spotLiGHt, Page B-4 2) won their first blue trophy since Ronald
By Will Webber
The New Mexican
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
Los Lunas’ Teige Zeller, right, covers Santa Fe’s Sabrina LozadaCabbage during the third quarter of the state championship Friday in The Pit. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
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THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
BASKETBALL BasketBall
NBa eastern Conference
atlantic Toronto Brooklyn New York Boston Philadelphia southeast x-Miami Washington Charlotte Atlanta Orlando Central x-Indiana Chicago Cleveland Detroit Milwaukee
W 37 33 26 22 15 W 44 34 32 28 19 W 48 36 26 25 13
l 27 30 40 44 50 l 19 31 34 35 48 l 17 29 40 40 52
Pct .578 .524 .394 .333 .231 Pct .698 .523 .485 .444 .284 Pct .738 .554 .394 .385 .200
Western Conference
GB — 31/2 12 16 221/2 GB — 11 131/2 16 27 GB — 12 221/2 23 35
southwest W l Pct GB San Antonio 49 16 .754 — Houston 44 21 .677 5 Dallas 39 27 .591 101/2 Memphis 38 27 .585 11 New Orleans 26 39 .400 23 Northwest W l Pct GB Oklahoma City 48 17 .738 — Portland 43 23 .652 51/2 Minnesota 32 32 .500 151/2 Denver 29 36 .446 19 Utah 22 44 .333 261/2 Pacific W l Pct GB L.A. Clippers 47 20 .701 — Golden State 41 26 .612 6 Phoenix 37 28 .569 9 Sacramento 23 42 .354 23 L.A. Lakers 22 44 .333 241/2 x-clinched playoff spot Friday’s Games Washington 105, Orlando 101, OT Indiana 101, Philadelphia 94 Toronto 99, Memphis 86 Charlotte 105, Minnesota 93 Phoenix 87, Boston 80 Denver 111, Miami 107 Portland 111, New Orleans 103 San Antonio 119, L.A. Lakers 85 L.A. Clippers 96, Utah 87 Cleveland 103, Golden State 94 thursday’s Games Chicago 111, Houston 87 Atlanta 102, Milwaukee 97 Oklahoma City 131, L.A. Lakers 102 saturday’s Games Milwaukee at New York, 12 p.m. Brooklyn at Washington, 7 p.m. Memphis at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m. Indiana at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Denver at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Sacramento at Chicago, 8 p.m. sunday’s Games Charlotte at Milwaukee, 1 p.m. Phoenix at Toronto, 1 p.m. Houston at Miami, 3:30 p.m. Boston at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Sacramento at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Dallas at Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Utah at San Antonio, 7 p.m. Golden State at Portland, 9 p.m. Cleveland at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
Pacers 101, 76ers 94
INDIaNa (101) George 9-15 3-4 25, West 8-13 2-4 18, Hibbert 2-5 0-0 4, G.Hill 4-11 3-4 14, Stephenson 6-8 0-0 13, Allen 6-6 1-2 13, Turner 1-4 0-0 2, Watson 1-2 0-0 3, Scola 2-3 5-8 9. Totals 39-67 14-22 101. PHIlaDelPHIa (94) Thompson 3-5 0-0 8, Young 10-31 5-6 25, Sims 2-8 2-2 6, Carter-Williams 5-16 1-1 12, Anderson 5-11 0-0 11, Wroten 1-4 6-6 8, Varnado 0-0 1-2 1, Williams 3-6 1-1 8, Mullens 6-9 0-0 15. Totals 35-90 16-18 94. Indiana 27 25 26 23—101 Philadelphia 20 25 21 28—94 3-Point Goals—Indiana 9-21 (George 4-7, G.Hill 3-8, Watson 1-2, Stephenson 1-3, Turner 0-1), Philadelphia 8-26 (Mullens 3-5, Thompson 2-4, Williams 1-2, Anderson 1-4, Carter-Williams 1-4, Wroten 0-1, Young 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Indiana 52 (Stephenson 12), Philadelphia 41 (Carter-Williams 9). Assists—Indiana 27 (G.Hill 9), Philadelphia 25 (Young 10). Total Fouls—Indiana 19, Philadelphia 20. Technicals—G.Hill. A—14,754.
Bobcats 105, timberwolves 93
MINNesOta (93) Brewer 3-6 4-6 10, Love 7-17 2-4 18, Pekovic 4-11 0-0 8, Rubio 1-6 4-4 6, Martin 6-13 4-4 19, Cunningham 5-8 0-0 10, Barea 4-9 1-1 9, Muhammad 2-3 0-0 4, Mbah a Moute 0-1 2-2 2, Budinger 2-4 0-0 5, Dieng 1-3 0-0 2, Hummel 0-0 0-0 0, Shved 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 35-82 17-21 93. CHaRlOtte (105) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-6 2-2 10, McRoberts 3-11 0-1 6, Jefferson 12-26 1-1 25, Walker 3-12 0-2 7, Henderson 4-9 0-2 10, Zeller 5-8 0-0 10, Neal 6-10 4-4 19, Douglas-Roberts 3-5 2-2 10, Ridnour 3-3 0-0 6, Biyombo 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 44-91 9-14 105. Minnesota 33 20 22 18—93 Charlotte 33 32 23 17—105 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 6-15 (Martin 3-5, Love 2-4, Budinger 1-2, Shved 0-1, Barea 0-1, Rubio 0-1, Brewer 0-1), Charlotte 8-19 (Neal 3-3, Henderson 2-3, Douglas-Roberts 2-4, Walker 1-2, Jefferson 0-1, McRoberts 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Minnesota 41 (Love 6), Charlotte 62 (Jefferson 16). Assists—Minnesota 23 (Rubio 9), Charlotte 28 (Walker 7). Total Fouls— Minnesota 15, Charlotte 19. A—16,983.
Raptors 99, Grizzlies 86
MeMPHIs (86) Prince 2-8 0-0 4, Randolph 7-13 2-4 16, Gasol 3-8 2-2 8, Conley 4-12 2-2 10, Lee 5-9 1-1 12, Koufos 2-5 2-3 6, Calathes 3-3 5-8 11, Miller 1-4 1-2 4, Allen 5-7 0-0 10, Leuer 1-5 1-3 3, Udrih 0-0 2-2 2, J.Johnson 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-74 18-27 86. tORONtO (99) Ross 2-5 2-2 7, A.Johnson 6-10 0-0 12, Valanciunas 11-15 1-2 23, Lowry 6-14 6-7 22, DeRozan 4-12 7-8 16, Salmons 0-3 0-0 0, Hansbrough 0-0 0-0 0, Vasquez 6-11 2-3 17, Novak 0-0 0-0 0, Hayes 1-1 0-0 2, Stone 0-0 0-0 0, De Colo 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-71 18-22 99. Memphis 24 20 23 19—86 toronto 19 28 24 28—99 3-Point Goals—Memphis 2-8 (Lee 1-2, Miller 1-2, Allen 0-1, Conley 0-1, Randolph 0-1, Prince 0-1), Toronto 9-17 (Lowry 4-7, Vasquez 3-5, Ross 1-2, DeRozan 1-2, A.Johnson 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Memphis 46 (Randolph, Calathes 8), Toronto 43 (Valanciunas 9). Assists—Memphis 16 (Conley 6), Toronto 23 (Lowry 12). Total Fouls—Memphis 17, Toronto 22. Tech— Memphis delay of game. A—18,465.
Wizards 105, Magic 101, Ot
WasHINGtON (105) Ariza 6-16 5-6 21, Booker 5-9 1-2 11, Gortat 6-13 7-8 19, Wall 7-18 3-5 21, Beal 8-19 2-2 20, Webster 0-4 0-0 0, Harrington 1-2 0-0 2, Gooden 0-3 0-0 0, Miller 1-3 5-6 7, Seraphin 2-3 0-0 4, Temple 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-90 23-29 105. ORlaNDO (101) Harkless 3-5 0-0 6, O’Quinn 3-5 0-0 6, Vucevic 4-9 0-1 8, Nelson 5-16 2-3 13, Afflalo 7-21 2-2 18, Nicholson 3-5 0-0 6, Oladipo 7-15 0-0 15, Harris 8-14 4-4 21, Moore 3-6 0-0 8, Maxiell 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 43-97 8-10 101.
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
Washington 27 17 23 20 18—105 Orlando 21 20 25 21 14—101 3-Point Goals—Washington 10-23 (Wall 4-6, Ariza 4-8, Beal 2-5, Harrington 0-1, Webster 0-3), Orlando 7-25 (Moore 2-3, Afflalo 2-5, Harris 1-4, Oladipo 1-4, Nelson 1-8, Harkless 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Washington 59 (Gortat 14), Orlando 57 (Vucevic 12). Assists—Washington 24 (Wall 11), Orlando 26 (Nelson 8). Total Fouls—Washington 14, Orlando 24. Technicals—Wall. A—16,011.
3-Point Goals—Cleveland 10-22 (Irving 3-5, Dellavedova 2-2, Deng 2-3, Waiters 2-5, Hawes 1-7), Golden State 11-29 (Curry 5-10, Iguodala 3-6, Green 2-5, Crawford 1-3, Barnes 0-2, Blake 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Cleveland 47 (Hawes 13), Golden State 48 (Bogut 12). Assists— Cleveland 19 (Jack, Waiters, Irving 4), Golden State 23 (Curry 8). Total Fouls—Cleveland 20, Golden State 16. Technicals—Bogut, Golden State defensive three second. A—19,596.
PHOeNIX (87) Tucker 5-11 0-0 11, Frye 1-9 2-2 4, Plumlee 2-2 1-2 5, Dragic 8-15 1-2 20, Bledsoe 6-12 5-6 17, Mark.Morris 6-13 2-2 15, G.Green 2-9 0-0 4, Marc.Morris 1-4 1-1 3, Smith 0-0 0-2 0, Goodwin 1-3 0-0 2, Len 2-2 2-3 6. Totals 34-80 14-20 87. BOstON (80) J.Green 2-14 4-4 9, Bass 4-12 0-0 8, Humphries 5-8 1-2 11, Rondo 4-15 0-0 8, Bayless 1-4 2-2 5, Sullinger 2-12 5-6 9, Bradley 4-12 1-1 9, Johnson 3-7 4-4 11, Olynyk 4-8 0-0 8, Pressey 0-2 2-2 2. Totals 29-94 19-21 80. Phoenix 29 17 18 23—87 Boston 22 22 16 20—80 3-Point Goals—Phoenix 5-26 (Dragic 3-6, Mark.Morris 1-2, Tucker 1-4, Goodwin 0-1, Marc.Morris 0-1, Bledsoe 0-3, Frye 0-4, G.Green 0-5), Boston 3-21 (Bayless 1-2, Johnson 1-4, J.Green 1-7, Sullinger 0-1, Bradley 0-1, Pressey 0-1, Olynyk 0-2, Rondo 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 55 (Bledsoe, Tucker 10), Boston 64 (Humphries 13). Assists—Phoenix 14 (Bledsoe, Dragic 4), Boston 17 (Pressey, Rondo 5). Total Fouls— Phoenix 18, Boston 21. Technicals— Tucker. A—18,624.
through tHURsDaY scoring G FG Durant, OKC 64 667 Anthony, NYK 63 630 James, MIA 60 597 Love, MIN 60 513 Harden, HOU 57 429 Griffin, LAC 66 605 Aldridge, POR 60 572 Curry, GOL 63 509 DeRozan, TOR 61 477
suns 87, Celtics 80
Nuggets 111, Heat 107
DeNVeR (111) Chandler 2-8 1-1 6, Faried 9-15 6-8 24, Mozgov 1-3 2-2 4, Lawson 2-7 9-10 13, Foye 2-7 2-2 7, Hickson 5-9 1-2 11, Fournier 6-14 0-0 14, Arthur 7-11 3-3 18, Miller 2-3 1-1 5, Brooks 3-5 0-0 9. Totals 39-82 25-29 111. MIaMI (107) James 8-17 5-7 21, Battier 0-1 0-0 0, Bosh 4-12 3-4 11, Chalmers 7-11 0-0 16, Wade 8-18 3-5 19, Allen 7-9 3-3 22, Andersen 6-7 2-2 14, Beasley 2-4 0-0 4, Cole 0-2 0-0 0, Oden 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-81 16-21 107. Denver 20 38 27 26—111 Miami 30 23 18 36—107 3-Point Goals—Denver 8-21 (Brooks 3-4, Fournier 2-5, Arthur 1-1, Chandler 1-4, Foye 1-5, Mozgov 0-1, Lawson 0-1), Miami 7-24 (Allen 5-7, Chalmers 2-4, Beasley 0-1, Battier 0-1, Andersen 0-1, Cole 0-2, James 0-4, Bosh 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Denver 48 (Faried 10), Miami 43 (Bosh 8). Assists—Denver 26 (Lawson 9), Miami 23 (James, Chalmers, Wade 6). Total Fouls—Denver 21, Miami 19. A—19,600.
trail Blazers 111, Pelicans 103
PORtlaND (111) Batum 8-16 2-2 22, Wright 4-8 3-4 15, Lopez 9-13 1-1 19, Lillard 8-17 8-10 27, Matthews 6-13 5-6 20, Barton 1-7 0-0 2, Leonard 0-0 0-0 0, McCollum 1-2 0-0 2, Watson 0-1 2-2 2, Robinson 1-1 0-2 2. Totals 38-78 21-27 111. NeW ORleaNs (103) Aminu 4-4 0-0 8, Davis 15-27 6-6 36, Ajinca 0-2 0-0 0, Roberts 8-14 2-2 19, Gordon 6-15 2-4 16, Evans 7-12 2-2 16, Morrow 1-8 1-1 3, Rivers 0-3 4-4 4, Babbitt 0-0 1-2 1, Withey 0-0 0-0 0, Miller 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 41-86 18-21 103. Portland 29 24 27 31—111 New Orleans 26 29 26 22—103 3-Point Goals—Portland 14-33 (Wright 4-6, Batum 4-8, Matthews 3-8, Lillard 3-8, Barton 0-1, McCollum 0-1, Watson 0-1), New Orleans 3-11 (Gordon 2-5, Roberts 1-2, Miller 0-1, Morrow 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Portland 47 (Batum 18), New Orleans 47 (Davis 9). Assists—Portland 23 (Batum, Lillard 5), New Orleans 22 (Evans 8). Total Fouls—Portland 19, New Orleans 22. Technicals—Portland Bench. A—16,913.
spurs 119, lakers 85
l.a. lakeRs (85) Johnson 4-10 1-2 9, Kelly 2-8 2-2 6, Gasol 8-16 2-3 18, Marshall 2-9 0-0 6, Meeks 5-17 4-6 15, Bazemore 3-9 4-6 10, Henry 1-7 4-4 6, Farmar 3-9 0-0 7, Sacre 3-6 2-2 8. Totals 31-91 19-25 85. saN aNtONIO (119) Leonard 3-8 3-3 9, Duncan 4-10 1-1 9, Splitter 1-4 1-2 3, Parker 3-4 0-0 7, Green 5-11 0-0 15, Diaw 3-3 0-0 6, Ginobili 3-6 0-0 7, Belinelli 4-11 3-3 12, Joseph 5-8 0-0 11, Baynes 6-11 0-0 12, Bonner 5-9 0-0 13, Mills 2-7 0-0 5, Ayres 4-6 2-4 10. Totals 48-98 10-13 119. l.a. lakers 14 20 26 25—85 san antonio 29 32 28 30—119 3-Point Goals—L.A. Lakers 4-21 (Marshall 2-4, Meeks 1-4, Farmar 1-5, Gasol 0-1, Kelly 0-1, Johnson 0-2, Bazemore 0-2, Henry 0-2), San Antonio 13-27 (Green 5-8, Bonner 3-7, Parker 1-1, Joseph 1-1, Belinelli 1-2, Ginobili 1-3, Mills 1-4, Leonard 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Lakers 50 (Gasol 11), San Antonio 69 (Bonner 10). Assists—L.A. Lakers 23 (Marshall 9), San Antonio 36 (Joseph 7). Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 15, San Antonio 19. Technicals—. A—18,581.
Clippers 96, Jazz 87
l.a. ClIPPeRs (96) Barnes 6-9 0-0 15, Griffin 7-17 6-6 20, Jordan 4-6 1-3 9, Paul 8-12 2-3 18, Collison 5-15 2-4 14, Green 4-9 1-2 12, Granger 0-4 0-0 0, Davis 2-2 1-2 5, Turkoglu 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 37-76 13-20 96. UtaH (87) Jefferson 6-12 1-1 14, Kanter 5-17 1-2 11, Favors 7-10 4-4 18, Burke 7-10 2-2 18, Hayward 2-8 1-2 7, Evans 3-6 0-0 6, Burks 4-12 1-2 10, Garrett 1-2 0-0 3, Gobert 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-77 10-13 87. l.a. Clippers 22 21 34 19—96 Utah 33 18 21 15—87 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 9-23 (Barnes 3-6, Green 3-6, Collison 2-7, Turkoglu 1-2, Griffin 0-1, Paul 0-1), Utah 7-14 (Hayward 2-2, Burke 2-3, Garrett 1-1, Burks 1-4, Jefferson 1-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 42 (Jordan 10), Utah 49 (Kanter 15). Assists—L.A. Clippers 20 (Paul 7), Utah 18 (Hayward 10). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 16, Utah 17. A—19,381.
Cavaliers 103, Warriors 94
CleVelaND (103) Deng 6-10 2-4 16, T.Thompson 1-7 2-2 4, Hawes 8-18 5-6 22, Irving 6-12 1-2 16, Jack 4-5 1-1 9, Waiters 8-17 0-0 18, Dellavedova 2-4 0-0 6, Varejao 2-4 1-2 5, Zeller 3-5 1-1 7. Totals 40-82 13-18 103. GOlDeN state (94) Iguodala 3-6 2-2 11, Lee 7-16 2-2 16, Bogut 2-4 0-0 4, Curry 8-17 6-7 27, Barnes 3-8 0-4 6, Blake 1-4 0-0 2, Green 7-12 2-2 18, O’Neal 2-3 0-0 4, Crawford 2-6 0-0 5, Speights 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 35-77 13-19 94. Cleveland 16 36 32 19—103 Golden state 32 21 18 23—94
NBa leaDeRs Ft 556 365 329 417 418 392 258 240 376
Pts 2036 1770 1611 1590 1404 1613 1405 1459 1383
NCaa BasketBall Men’s top 25 schedule
avg 31.8 28.1 26.9 26.5 24.6 24.4 23.4 23.2 22.7
Friday’s Games No. 1 Florida 72, Missouri 49 No. 4 Arizona 63, Colorado 43 No. 5 Louisville 94, Houston 65 No. 6 Virginia 64, Florida State 51 No. 7 Duke 63, Clemson 62 No. 8 Michigan 64, Illinois 63 No. 8 San Diego State 59, UNLV 51 N.C. State 66, No. 11 Syracuse 63 No. 12 Wisconsin 83, Minnesota 57 No. 14 Creighton 86, Xavier 78 Pittsburgh 80, No. 15 N. Carolina 75 No. 16 Iowa State 94, No. 10 Kansas 83 St. Bonaventure 71, No. 18 Saint Louis 68 No. 20 New Mexico vs. Boise State No. 21 UConn 58, No. 13 Cincinnati 56 No. 22 Michigan St. 67, Northwestern 51 No. 23 VCU 71, Richmond 53 No. 24 Ohio State 71, Nebraska 67 saturday’s Games schedule tBD
Men’s Division 1
Friday’s Games tournament american athletic Conference semifinals Louisville 94, Houston 65 UConn 58, Cincinnati 56 atlantic 10 Conference Quarterfinals George Washington 85, UMass 77 Saint Joseph’s 70, Dayton 67 St. Bonaventure 71, Saint Louis 68 VCU 71, Richmond 53 atlantic Coast Conference Quarterfinals Duke 63, Clemson 62 NC State 66, Syracuse 63 Pittsburgh 80, North Carolina 75 Virginia 64, Florida St. 51 Big 12 Conference semifinals Baylor 86, Texas 69 Iowa St. 94, Kansas 83 Big east Conference semifinals Providence 80, Seton Hall 74 Creighton 86, Xavier 78 Big sky Conference semifinals North Dakota 79, Portland St. 63 Weber St. 66, N. Colorado 63, OT Big ten Conference Quarterfinals Michigan 64, Illinois 63 Michigan St. 67, Northwestern 51 Ohio St. 71, Nebraska 67 Wisconsin 83, Minnesota 57 Big West Conference semifinals Cal Poly 61, UC Irvine 58 Conference Usa semifinals Louisiana Tech 88, Southern Miss. 70 Tulsa 76, Middle Tennessee 69 Mid-american Conference semifinals Toledo 59, E. Michigan 44 W. Michigan 64, Akron 60, OT Mid-eastern athletic Conference semifinals Morgan St. 79, Coppin St. 64 NC Central 68, Norfolk St. 45 Mountain West Conference semifinals San Diego St. 59, UNLV 51 Pacific-12 Conference semifinals Arizona 63, Colorado 43 southeastern Conference Quarterfinals Florida 72, Missouri 49 Kentucky 85, LSU 67 Tennessee 59, South Carolina 44 southland Conference semifinals Sam Houston St. 69, Texas A&M-CC 63 Stephen F. Austin 85, Northwestern St. 78 southwestern athletic Conference semifinals Texas Southern 73, Alabama St. 61 sun Belt Conference second Round Arkansas St. 116, UALR 114, 4OT Western athletic Conference semifinals Idaho 74, Utah Valley 69
Women’s aP top 25
Friday’s Games No. 22 Middle Tennessee 64, FIU 57 Ball State 73, No. 25 Bowling Green 55 saturday’s Games schedule tBD
Women’s Division I
Friday’s Games tournament Big sky Conference semifinals Montana 73, S. Utah 69 North Dakota 78, Idaho St. 53 Big West Conference semifinals CS Northridge 78, UC Irvine 60 Cal Poly 66, Hawaii 52 Colonial ath. association Quarterfinals Coll. of Charleston 70, Towson 64 Delaware 63, Northeastern 61 Drexel 60, Hofstra 55 James Madison 69, UNC Wilmington 56 Conference Usa semifinals Middle Tennessee 64, FIU 57 Southern Miss. 84, UTEP 70 Horizon league semifinals Green Bay 68, Ill.-Chicago 59 Wright St. 98, Youngstown St. 70 Mid-american Conference semifinals Akron 85, Cent. Michigan 69 Ball St. 73, Bowling Green 55 MeaC semifinals Coppin St. 57, NC A&T 55 Hampton 65, Savannah St. 49 Missouri Valley Conf. Quarterfinals Drake 71, Evansville 61 Illinois St. 65, N. Iowa 63 Indiana St. 61, Loyola of Chicago 52 Wichita St. 71, Missouri St. 53 Mountain West Conference semifinals Colorado St. 95, Wyoming 92, 3OT Fresno St. 82, Nevada 71 southland Conference second Round Northwestern St. 69, Nicholls St. 65 McNeese St. 66, Cent. Arkansas 62 sWaC semifinals Prairie View 72, Southern U. 43 Texas Southern 79, Jackson St. 77, OT sun Belt Conference semifinals Arkansas St. 59, Texas St. 48 W. Kentucky 66, UALR 62 Western athletic Conference semifinals Idaho 75, New Mexico St. 65 Seattle 84, CS Bakersfield 79
GOlF GOLF
HOCKEY HOCkeY
Friday at Palm Harbor, Fla. Purse: $5.7 million Yardage: 7,340; Par: 71 second Round Robert Garrigus 69-66—135 Kevin Na 70-68—138 Pat Perez 68-71—139 Justin Rose 71-68—139 Matteo Manassero 69-70—139 Matt Every 68-71—139 Scott Langley 71-69—140 Jim Furyk 71-69—140 John Merrick 70-70—140 Greg Chalmers 68-72—140 Luke Guthrie 70-70—140 Tommy Gainey 69-72—141 Carl Pettersson 71-70—141 Michael Thompson 72-69—141 Freddie Jacobson 70-71—141 David Hearn 71-70—141 Charles Howell III 71-70—141 Harris English 72-69—141 Jordan Spieth 71-70—141 Brian Harman 71-70—141 Michael Putnam 69-72—141 Ricky Barnes 70-72—142 Nicolas Colsaerts 69-73—142 Bill Haas 69-73—142 Charley Hoffman 70-72—142 Ken Duke 71-71—142 Kevin Streelman 73-69—142 Justin Leonard 71-71—142 Rory Sabbatini 70-72—142 Woody Austin 71-71—142 Ben Crane 70-72—142 Stephen Ames 72-70—142 Jason Kokrak 74-68—142 Eric Axley 72-70—142 James Hahn 69-74—143 James Driscoll 73-70—143 Will MacKenzie 73-70—143 Jonathan Byrd 70-73—143 Morgan Hoffmann 74-69—143 John Senden 72-71—143 Graham DeLaet 75-68—143 Josh Teater 73-70—143 Gary Woodland 72-71—143 Luke Donald 71-72—143 Russell Knox 70-73—143 John Mallinger 71-73—144 Paul Goydos 75-69—144 K.J. Choi 72-72—144 Matt Kuchar 73-71—144 Ted Potter, Jr. 73-71—144 Ben Curtis 70-74—144 Stuart Appleby 71-73—144 Mark Calcavecchia 73-71—144 D.H. Lee 74-70—144 Jerry Kelly 76-68—144 Chad Collins 73-71—144 Marc Leishman 75-69—144 Davis Love III 74-70—144 Robert Allenby 73-71—144 George McNeill 73-71—144 Brian Gay 75-69—144 Sean O’Hair 73-71—144 Justin Hicks 72-72—144 David Lingmerth 73-72—145 Padraig Harrington 75-70—145 Jason Bohn 71-74—145 Brendon Todd 70-75—145 Jason Dufner 72-73—145 Brandt Snedeker 72-73—145 Sang-Moon Bae 72-73—145 Darren Clarke 71-74—145 Ryo Ishikawa 73-72—145 Tim Herron 73-72—145 Nicholas Thompson 76-69—145 Peter Hanson 75-70—145 J.B. Holmes 71-74—145 Cameron Tringale 74-71—145 Chesson Hadley 75-70—145 Boo Weekley 74-71—145 Tim Clark 73-72—145 Y.E. Yang 73-72—145 Retief Goosen 72-73—145 Daniel Summerhays 77-68—145 Erik Compton 72-73—145
atlantic GP Boston 66 Toronto 68 Tampa Bay 66 Montreal 67 Detroit 66 Ottawa 65 Florida 67 Buffalo 66 Metro GP Pittsburgh 65 N.Y. Rangers 68 Columbus 66 Philadelphia 65 Washington 68 New Jersey 67 Carolina 66 N.Y. Islanders 68
PGa tOUR Valspar Championship
CHaMPIONs tOUR toshiba Classic
Friday at Newport Beach, Calif. Purse: $1.75 million Yardage: 6,584; Par 71 (35-36) First Round Bernhard Langer 31-32—63 Chien Soon Lu 33-32—65 Jeff Hart 32-33—65 Fred Couples 31-34—65 Duffy Waldorf 33-33—66 Scott Simpson 34-32—66 Michael Allen 33-33—66 Kirk Triplett 32-34—66 Kenny Perry 31-35—66 Bill Glasson 35-32—67 Mark Brooks 33-34—67 Colin Montgomerie 33-34—67 Fred Funk 35-32—67 Esteban Toledo 35-32—67 Kohki Idoki 34-33—67 Tom Byrum 32-36—68 Jim Carter 34-34—68 Joey Sindelar 32-36—68 Steve Pate 33-35—68 Jay Don Blake 35-33—68 Jay Haas 34-34—68 Willie Wood 34-34—68 Scott Dunlap 32-36—68 Mike Goodes 35-34—69 Bruce Fleisher 34-35—69 Bobby Wadkins 34-35—69 Tommy Armour III 37-32—69 Hale Irwin 36-33—69 Bart Bryant 34-35—69 Tom Pernice Jr. 37-32—69 Loren Roberts 35-34—69 Dan Forsman 36-33—69 Brad Faxon 37-32—69 Corey Pavin 34-35—69 Scott Hoch 36-33—69 Jim Gallagher, Jr. 35-35—70 John Jacobs 37-33—70 Jose Coceres 36-34—70 Wes Short, Jr. 35-35—70 Chip Beck 35-35—70 Steve Lowery 37-33—70 Peter Senior 35-35—70 Tom Purtzer 34-36—70 Bob Tway 34-36—70 Rick Fehr 36-34—70 Brian Henninger 37-33—70 Rod Spittle 33-37—70 Mark McNulty 35-35—70 Mike Reid 35-35—70 Roger Chapman 37-33—70 Russ Cochran 35-35—70 Olin Browne 36-34—70 P.H. Horgan III 34-36—70 John Riegger 36-34—70 Morris Hatalsky 36-35—71 Ben Crenshaw 35-36—71 Mark Wiebe 36-35—71 Rocco Mediate 36-35—71 Mark O’Meara 34-37—71 Tom Watson 34-37—71
eUROPeaN PGa tOUR trophee Hassan II
Friday at agadir, Morocco Purse: $2.08 million Yardage: 6,951; Par: 72 second Round Alejandro Canizares, Esp Seve Benson, Eng Rafa Cabrera-Bello, Esp Magnus A Carlsson, Swe David Horsey, Eng Connor Arendell, USA Gregory Bourdy, Fra Michael Hoey, NIr Robert Karlsson, Swe Marcel Siem, Ger George Coetzee, SAf Tommy Fleetwood, Eng James Morrison, Eng
62-68—130 63-68—131 68-67—135 65-71—136 72-64—136 65-71—136 68-69—137 68-70—138 71-67—138 69-69—138 69-69—138 66-72—138 69-69—138
NHl eastern Conference W 44 36 35 35 30 28 25 19 W 44 36 34 33 31 29 29 25
l Ol 17 5 24 8 24 7 25 7 23 13 25 12 35 7 39 8 l Ol 17 4 28 4 26 6 25 7 27 10 25 13 28 9 34 9
Pts GF Ga 93 210 145 80 201 207 77 191 175 77 167 170 73 174 184 68 185 213 57 166 217 46 131 196 Pts GF Ga 92 206 159 76 177 169 74 193 183 73 184 190 72 197 205 71 166 173 67 167 187 59 191 232
Western Conference
Central GP W l Ol Pts GF Ga St. Louis 66 45 14 7 97 219 150 Colorado 67 43 19 5 91 206 180 Chicago 67 38 15 14 90 227 178 Minnesota 66 35 22 9 79 163 162 Dallas 66 32 23 11 75 191 185 Winnipeg 68 30 29 9 69 186 199 Nashville 67 29 28 10 68 163 197 Pacific GP W l Ol Pts GF Ga Anaheim 67 44 16 7 95 216 171 San Jose 68 44 17 7 95 213 165 Los Angeles 67 38 23 6 82 164 142 Phoenix 67 31 25 11 73 185 191 Vancouver 69 30 29 10 70 163 187 Calgary 67 27 33 7 61 163 199 Edmonton 68 23 36 9 55 169 223 Note: 2 points are awarded for a win; 1 point for an overtime or shootout loss. Friday’s Games Detroit 2, Edmonton 1, SO Calgary 4, Dallas 3, SO San Jose 4, N.Y. Islanders 3 Washington 4, Vancouver 3 Florida 5, New Jersey 3 Nashville 3, Chicago 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, Winnipeg 2 Anaheim 6, Colorado 4 thursday’s Games San Jose 4, Columbus 3, SO Boston 2, Phoenix 1 Carolina 4, Buffalo 2 Tampa Bay 5, Florida 4 St. Louis 6, Edmonton 2 Minnesota 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 Toronto 3, Los Angeles 2 saturday’s Games Carolina at Boston, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Nashville, 8 p.m. Columbus at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Calgary at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Anaheim at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
NHl sUMMaRIes Panthers 5, Devils 3
New Jersey 1 2 0—3 Florida 1 1 3—5 First Period—1, Florida, Campbell 7 (Huberdeau, Hayes), 9:59. 2, New Jersey, Jagr 22 (Brunner, T.Zajac), 18:45 (pp). second Period—3, New Jersey, Salvador 1 (Elias, Clowe), 2:02. 4, New Jersey, Elias 15 (Brunner, Greene), 13:13. 5, Florida, Howden 2 (Gomez, Huberdeau), 14:30. third Period—6, Florida, Boyes 18, 4:24. 7, Florida, Upshall 13 (Boyes), 10:00. 8, Florida, Trocheck 1 (Campbell), 19:27 (en). shots on Goal—New Jersey 6-1411—31. Florida 13-2-7—22. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 1 of 1; Florida 0 of 3. Goalies—New Jersey, Schneider 12-14-9 (21 shots-17 saves). Florida, Luongo 21-18-6 (31-28). a—14,496. t—2:27.
Predators 3, Blackhawks 2
Nashville 2 0 1—3 Chicago 1 0 1—2 First Period—1, Nashville, Fisher 17 (Josi, Weber), 15:33. 2, Nashville, Hornqvist 13 (Weber, Josi), 18:51 (pp). 3, Chicago, Toews 26 (Versteeg), 19:46. second Period—None. third Period—4, Nashville, Ellis 4 (Josi), :45. 5, Chicago, Regin 4 (Oduya, Shaw), 8:32. shots on Goal—Nashville 12-10-7—29. Chicago 8-13-12—33. Power-play opportunities—Nashville 1 of 2; Chicago 0 of 1. Goalies—Nashville, Rinne 6-7-1 (33 shots-31 saves). Chicago, Crawford 25-12-10 (29-26). a—22,106. t—2:25.
Red Wings 2, Oilers 1, sO
edmonton 0 0 1 0—1 Detroit 1 0 0 0—2 First Period—1, Detroit, Sheahan 5 (Tatar, D.Miller), 13:53. second Period—None. third Period—2, Edmonton, Smyth 10, 8:43. Overtime—None. shootout—Edmonton 0 (Eberle NG, Perron NG, Hall NG), Detroit 1 (Bertuzzi NG, Alfredsson NG, Tatar G). shots on Goal—Edmonton 8-7-61—22. Detroit 6-7-7-3—23. Power-play opportunities—Edmonton 0 of 2; Detroit 0 of 4. Goalies—Edmonton, Fasth 3-2-2 (23 shots-22 saves). Detroit, Howard 1415-10 (22-21). a—20,066. t—2:39.
Capitals 4, Canucks 3
Vancouver 1 0 2—3 Washington 1 2 1—4 First Period—1, Washington, Ward 19 (Fehr, Chimera), 8:17. 2, Vancouver, Schroeder 3 (Kassian), 11:41. second Period—3, Washington, Ovechkin 45 (Carlson, Kuznetsov), 8:28 (pp). 4, Washington, Wilson 3 (Kuznetsov, Beagle), 12:35. third Period—5, Vancouver, Matthias 10 (Higgins, Tanev), 4:28. 6, Vancouver, Jensen 1 (Higgins, Tanev), 7:34. 7, Washington, Green 9 (Backstrom, Kuznetsov), 10:19. shots on Goal—Vancouver 13-1117—41. Washington 12-6-3—21. Power-play opportunities—Vancouver 0 of 3; Washington 1 of 2. Goalies—Vancouver, Lack 11-13-4 (21 shots-17 saves). Washington, Halak 26-11-4 (41-38). a—18,506. t—2:30.
sharks 4, Islanders 3
san Jose 2 2 0—4 N.Y. Islanders 0 2 1—3 First Period—1, San Jose, Nieto 10 (Couture, Marleau), 13:27. 2, San Jose, Demers 4 (Havlat, Sheppard), 14:46. second Period—3, N.Y. Islanders, Lee 6 (Nielsen, Okposo), :32. 4, San Jose, Thornton 10 (Burns), 9:32. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Nelson 12 (Donovan, Bailey), 17:02. 6, San Jose, Havlat 7 (Sheppard), 18:15. third Period—7, N.Y. Islanders, Nielsen 21 (Okposo, Lee), 19:38. shots on Goal—San Jose 12-7-7—26. N.Y. Islanders 11-11-16—38. Power-play opportunities—San Jose 0 of 1; N.Y. Islanders 0 of 0. Goalies—San Jose, Niemi 33-13-6 (38 shots-35 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Nabokov 12-14-6 (26-22). a—13,128. t—2:23.
Rangers 4, Jets 2
N.Y. Rangers 2 1 1—4 Winnipeg 2 0 0—2 First Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 14 (Pouliot, Klein), 1:15. 2, Winnipeg, Byfuglien 17 (Wheeler, Enstrom), 2:33. 3, Winnipeg, Ladd 19 (Little, Frolik), 3:26. 4, N.Y. Rangers, Kreider 17 (Stepan, Girardi), 11:28. second Period—5, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 15 (St. Louis, Klein), 19:52. third Period—6, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 16 (Richards), 8:50. Penalties— Bogosian, Wpg (interference), :11; McDonagh, NYR (interference), 14:10; Kane, Wpg (tripping), 16:12. shots on Goal—N.Y. Rangers 8-78—23. Winnipeg 11-11-10—32. Powerplay opportunities—N.Y. Rangers 0 of 4; Winnipeg 0 of 4. Goalies—N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 2521-4 (32 shots-30 saves). Winnipeg, Pavelec (8-6), Montoya 10-5-3 (0:00 second, 15-13). a—15,004. t—2:24.
Flames 4, stars 3, sO
Calgary 0 1 2 0—4 Dallas 0 3 0 0—3 First Period—None. second Period—1, Dallas, Roussel 12 (Fiddler, Jo.Benn), :13. 2, Calgary, Cammalleri 18 (Colborne, Giordano), 6:20. 3, Dallas, Ja.Benn 27 (Daley, Seguin), 14:16. 4, Dallas, Cole 16 (Dillon, Morin), 16:29. third Period—5, Calgary, Byron 4 (Glencross, Russell), 12:51 (pp). 6, Calgary, Cammalleri 19 (Brodie, Colborne), 15:30. Overtime—None. shootout—Calgary 2 (Colborne NG, Cammalleri NG, Monahan G, Knight G), Dallas 1 (Ja.Benn NG, Sceviour NG, Jo.Benn G, Seguin NG). shots on Goal—Calgary 10-10-9-1—30. Dallas 9-8-7-1—25. Power-play opportunities—Calgary 1 of 1; Dallas 0 of 0. Goalies—Calgary, MacDonald 4-3-1 (25 shots-22 saves). Dallas, Thomas 18-20-4 (30-27). a—18,532. t—2:42.
Ducks 6, avalanche 4
anaheim 0 6 0—6 Colorado 1 3 0—4 First Period—1, Colorado, Mitchell 8 (Landeskog, Guenin), 12:25. second Period—2, Anaheim, Winnik 4 (Bonino, Allen), 3:08. 3, Colorado, McGinn 16 (O’Reilly, Holden), 5:21 (pp). 4, Anaheim, Palmieri 10 (Maroon, Getzlaf), 7:47. 5, Anaheim, Palmieri 11 (Lindholm, Bonino), 8:34. 6, Anaheim, Perry 36 (Selanne, Fowler), 9:40. 7, Anaheim, Lovejoy 4 (Fowler, Getzlaf), 11:53. 8, Colorado, McGinn 17 (Johnson, O’Reilly), 18:08 (pp). 9, Colorado, Landeskog 20 (Mitchell, Hejda), 18:41. 10, Anaheim, Perreault 13 (Silfverberg, Sbisa), 19:11. third Period—None. shots on Goal—Anaheim 13-16-4—33. Colorado 12-17-9—38. Power-play opportunities—Anaheim 0 of 4; Colorado 2 of 5. Goalies—Anaheim, Hiller 27-10-6 (38 shots-34 saves). Colorado, Varlamov 33-13-5 (24-19), Giguere (11:53 second, 9-8). a—18,030. t—2:39.
BASEBALL BaseBall MlB spring training
al W l Pct Cleveland 12 2 .857 Seattle 13 4 .765 Tampa Bay 8 4 .667 Baltimore 9 5 .643 Oakland 7 6 .538 Detroit 8 7 .533 New York 8 7 .533 Houston 7 7 .500 Kansas City 7 7 .500 Los Angeles 8 8 .500 Boston 7 8 .467 Minnesota 6 7 .462 Chicago 5 7 .417 Toronto 6 9 .400 Texas 3 10 .231 Nl W l Pct Miami 10 4 .714 San Francisco 10 5 .667 Pittsburgh 9 6 .600 Arizona 9 9 .500 Washington 8 8 .500 Milwaukee 8 9 .471 Chicago 7 8 .467 Colorado 8 10 .444 New York 6 8 .429 San Diego 6 8 .429 St. Louis 5 7 .417 Atlanta 7 10 .412 Los Angeles 5 9 .357 Cincinnati 6 12 .333 Philadelphia 4 11 .267 Note: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. Friday’s Games Minnesota (ss) 2, Baltimore 2, tie Detroit 12, Washington 6 Minnesota (ss) 7, N.Y. Yankees 3 Boston 3, Toronto 1 Atlanta 6, Tampa Bay 1 Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 5 St. Louis 6, Houston 4 San Diego 4, L.A. Angels 2 Kansas City 9, Oakland 9, tie Chicago Cubs 5, L.A. Dodgers 4 San Francisco 4, Colorado (ss) 0 Milwaukee 9, Arizona 8, 10 innings Chicago White Sox 2, Cleveland 2, tie Miami 1, N.Y. Mets 0 Colorado (ss) 2, Seattle 2, tie, 10 inn. Cincinnati 2, Texas 1
TENNIS teNNIs
atP-Wta tOUR BNP Paribas Open
Friday at Indian Wells, Calif. Purse: Men: $6.17 million (Masters 1000) Women: $5.95 million (Premier) surface: Hard-Outdoor singles Men Quarterfinals Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Julien Benneteau, France, 6-1, 6-3. John Isner (12), United States, def. Ernests Gulbis (20), Latvia, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (3). Women semifinals Agnieszka Radwanska (2), Poland, def. Simona Halep (6), Romania, 6-3, 6-4. Doubles Men semifinals Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (2), Brazil, def. Roger Federer and Stanislas Wawrinka, Switzerland, 6-4, 6-1. Women semifinals Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Peng Shuai (1), China, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia, and Samantha Stosur, Australia, 3-6, 7-6 (5), 10-2.
sPORTs
End of a draining season for Dons coach
A
the gravity his feelings. moment to savor for any coach or player is Mary Bustos, David’s wife, the one spent walking passed away last November. down the ramp before a game She was a fixture on the bench in The Pit. with her husband, often serving The sounds, the bright lights, as his emotional rock — and the energy. It all flows through voice of reason — the concrete tunnel during games. that leads away from Every previous trip the floor and toward down the ramp, she the locker rooms was there. more than 100 feet “Bittersweet to away. It’s enough to walk down today make the toughest without her,” he said person pause in a later. “This is, formoment of reflection. tunately, my fourth Will Webber final four, and I’ve For David Bustos, Commentary that moment was been able to bring particularly taxing on three other teams Friday morning. Five to The Pit. This parminutes before the start of the ticular one was tough because Class AAA boys state tournaMary was a big part of my life.” ment semifinal game between The couple’s first semifinal top-seeded Hope and his West appearance came two decades Las Vegas Dons, the longtime ago when he led Cobre to the coach stood away from his AAA state championship game. players and leaned casually The couple’s oldest son, Justin, against one wall, coping with was just an infant back then.
On Friday, Justin stood at his father’s shoulder as the two gazed down the ramp before the game. “Just all kinds of memories,” Bustos said. “She was here my last one when Justin was a senior at Robertson in 2012. I can picture her up and down. I can picture her on the ramp. I can picture her on the sidelines. Telling me to shut the heck up sometimes with the officials.” As Friday’s game slipped away and the Dons’ season came to a close, Bustos was asked how he would begin to process the emotional season that began with his wife’s passing. He fell silent for nearly a full minute, then shared a handful of stories about his wife, his kids and the team he got to coach this season. Coaching wasn’t just his calling; it was hers. It was the family’s. Exactly what happens mov-
ing forward is anyone’s guess, but it’s a fair assumption that Bustos will do what he and his wife did for so many years together. He’ll persevere, he’ll adapt, he’ll keep on fighting. Once known as a fiery, emotional coach with a short fuse and hot temper, he’s now much more reserved and soft spoken. He calculates each step with a quiet reflection, the kind one might expect from someone who has experienced what he and his kids have endured. Looking ahead, he sees West Las Vegas’ boys basketball program becoming the respected and feared club it used to be his first go-round with the school — back when he and Mary were so inseparable on the sidelines and off. When that happens, perhaps his next walk down the ramp will come with a sense of purpose that Mary would have enjoyed. Or demanded.
Pittsburgh holds off No. 15 UNC
GREENSBORO, N.C — Talib Zanna had 19 points and a career-high 21 rebounds to help Pittsburgh beat No. 15 North Carolina 80-75 in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament quarterfinals. NO. 1 FlORIDa 72, MIssOURI 49 In Atlanta, Scottie Wilbekin scored 15 points and No. 1 Florida remained unbeaten in the Southeastern Conference, using one of its customary spurts to rout Missouri in the quarterfinals of the league tournament. NO. 4 aRIZONa 63, COlORaDO 43 In Las Vegas, Nev., Nick Johnson scored 16 points, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson added 12 and Arizona ran away from tired Colorado in a dominating second half of their Pac-12 tournament semifinal. NO. 5 lOUIsVIlle 94, HOUsTON 65 In Memphis, Tenn., Russ Smith scored a career-high 42 points and Louisville cruised to victory over Houston in the semifinals of the inaugural American Athletic Conference tournament. NO. 6 VIRGINIa 64, FlORIDa sTaTe 51 In Greenboro, N.C., Joe Harris matched a season high with 20 points, and No. 6 Virginia pulled away in an Atlantic Coast Conference tournament quarterfinal. NO. 7 DUke 63, CleMsON 62 In Greensboro, N.C., Rodney Hood hit
two free throws with 3.8 seconds left to lift Duke past Clemson in the Atlantic Coast Conference quarterfinals. NO. 8 MICHIGaN 64, IllINOIs 63 In Indianapolis, Jordan Morgan scored on a layup with 7.9 seconds left to send No. 8 Michigan to the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament. NO. 16 IOWa sTaTe 94, NO. 10 kaNsas 83 In Kansas City, Mo., Georges Niang scored 25 points before leaving with a bloody gash to his forehead in the closing minutes, and Iowa State held on to beat Kansas and reach its first Big 12 tournament title game since 2000. N.C. sTaTe 66, NO. 11 sYRaCUse 63 In Greensboro, N.C., T.J. Warren scored 28 points while Ralston Turner banked in the go-ahead 3-pointer with 2:28 left to help North Carolina State upset Syracuse in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament quarterfinals. NO. 12 WIsCONsIN 83, MINNesOTa 57 In Indianapolis, Ben Brust scored a career-high 29 points and Frank Kaminsky had 12 rebounds to lead Wisconsin over Minnesota in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals. NO. 21 UCONN 58, NO. 13 CINCINNaTI In Memphis, Tenn., Shabazz Napier hit a free throw with 11.1 seconds left and Connecticut held off Cincinnati to advance to
the American Athletic Conference tournament final. NO. 14 CReIGHTON 86, XaVIeR 78 In New York, Doug McDermott scored 32 points and second-seeded Creighton beat Xavier to advance to the Big East tournament championship game in its first year in the conference. sT. BONaVeNTURe 71, NO. 18 saINT lOUIs 68 In New York, Jordan Gathers hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer, and St. Bonaventure stunned No. 18 Saint Louis in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 tournament. NO. 22 MICHIGaN sTaTe 67, NORTHWesTeRN 51 In Indianapolis, Branden Dawson had 16 points and Gary Harris added 13 points to lead Michigan State over Northwestern in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals Friday night. NO. 23 VCU 71, RICHMOND 53 In New York, Defensive ace Briante Weber scored 18 points in 18 minutes, and VCU routed crosstown rival Richmond in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 tournament. NO. 24 OHIO sTaTe 71, NeBRaska 67 In Indianapolis, LaQuinton Ross had 26 points and 13 rebounds and No. 24 Ohio State rallied from an 18-point second-half deficit in the quarterfinals.
WESTERN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT
No. 5 Idaho tops No. 1 Utah Valley St. The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Stephen Madison scored 25 points to help No. 5 seed Idaho knock off top-seeded Utah Valley State 74-69 Friday night and advance to the Western Athletic Conference Champi-
onship. The Vandals (16-17) will play in the WAC finals Saturday. Mike Scott had 14 points and Connor Hill added 12. Utah Valley (20-11) was led by Mitch Bruneel with 18 points. Holton Hunsaker had 14
of his 15 points in the first half. Idaho used an 8-0 run in the second half to push their lead to 10, but the Wolverines climbed back within one with 4:04 remaining. The Vandals responded as Madison hit a jumper, Hill drained a 3-pointer
and Sekou Wiggs added a layup to make it 70-64. Keawe Enos hit a 3-pointer and Hunsaker followed with a steal, but Bruneel couldn’t connect on a 3-pointer with 10 seconds left. Madison hit two free throws to ice it.
selection: Final Four to be held in Dallas the championship game does so, the committee must wait Jamie Zaninovich of the West and see who would be the last Coast) and Judy MacLeod, exec- at-large team that would be out. utive associate commissioner of The title game could also affect Conference USA. seeding so there might be a few The field: The 68-team scenarios laid out and ready to field, composed of 32 confergo. The conferences are Atlanence champions — the autotic Coast Conference, Atlantic matic qualifiers, or “AQs’” to 10, Big Ten, Southeastern Conthe insiders — and 36 at-large ference and Sun Belt. teams will be announced SunNo. 1 seeds: The reward for day at 4 p.m. MST on CBS. an exceptional regular season More conversation and arguis a No. 1 seed. Most years there ments than can be imagined are six, maybe seven teams ensues immediately and condeserving mention for a top tinues until play begins. The spot as the conference tournafirst round starts Tuesday in ments approach. The talk was Dayton, Ohio, and the second narrow this season, and it’s round gets underway Thursday. pretty sure Florida, Wichita The end: The Final Four State and Arizona will be will be held in Dallas for the No. 1 seeds. The fourth spot second time. In 1986, Louisville was muddied with Villanova’s and a freshman call “Never loss to Seton Hall in the quarNervous” Pervis Ellison won it terfinals of the Big East tournaall at Reunion Arena. This time, ment and Kansas’ late-season it will be at AT&T Stadium in loss at West Virginia and the North Dallas, the home of the injury to freshman center Joel Cowboys. A crowd of more Embiid that will keep him out than 80,000 is expected, so pick of the first weekend of the tourteams that like to play in wide- nament at the least. Michigan open areas. or Wisconsin could enter the Last minute: One possible race by winning the Big Ten. complication is the Sunday Overall No. 1: Take a poll finish by some of the major and it seems Florida is the conferences. If a team that can choice over Wichita State, only get in the field by winning the team with perfect regular
Continued from Page B-1
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Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. UNM MeN’s BaskeTBall 4 p.m. on CBS — Mountain West Conference Tournament: championship, New Mexico vs. San Diego State aUTO RaCING 7 a.m. on FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Food City 500, in Bristol, Tenn. 8 a.m. on ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for Drive to Stop Diabetes 300, in Bristol, Tenn. 8 a.m. on FS1 — United Sportscar Championship, Twelve Hours of Sebring, start of race, in Sebring, Fla. Noon on ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Drive to Stop Diabetes 300, in Bristol, Tenn. 11 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, qualifying for Gatornationals, in Gainesville, Fla. (delayed tape) 11:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Formula One, Australian Grand Prix, in Melbourne, Australia BOXING 7 p.m. on NBCSN — Heavyweights, Tomasz Adamek (49-2-0) vs. Vyacheslav Glazkov (16-0-1), in Bethlehem, Pa. 7 p.m. on SHO — Heavyweights, Deontay Wilder (30-0-0) vs. Malik Scott (36-1-1); champion Danny Garcia (27-0-0) vs. Mauricio Herrera (20-3-0) for WBA/WBC super lightweight titles, in Bayamon, Puerto Rico COlleGe BaseBall 11 a.m. on FS1 — Texas Tech at Baylor
TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
season and an imperfect schedule. Last year it really wasn’t that big a deal to get the nod. Gonzaga had it and the Zags didn’t make it out of the second weekend, losing to ninthseeded Wichita State on the Shockers’ run to the Final Four. How about if the committee puts West Coast Conference champion Gonzaga as a No. 8 or 9 seed in the same region as Wichita State and let them meet again in the third round. Looking low: Don’t be so quick to dismiss the teams toward the bottom of the seed list. Although a No. 16 seed has never beaten a No. 1 (Imagine being the first coach to lose that matchup?), No. 15 seeds have ruined some postseasons for power teams, including two last season by Florida Gulf Coast, which dunked its way into the spotlight. Defending the crown: Louisville got to cut the nets down last season in Atlanta, and the Cardinals could have a shot at going all the way again. The odds are against Louisville, however, as only Florida in 2007 and Duke in 1992 have repeated as champion since the end of UCLA’s run of dominance in the 1960s and 1970s.
Russ Smith and Luke Hancock are back from Louisville’s title team and the Cardinals entered the week ranked No. 5. Smart pick: There always seems to be a team on either the 8 or 9 seed line that makes a run to the Final Four, and Wichita State was that team last year. VCU was an 11 seed when it went to the Final Four in 2011. This year, it could be Oklahoma State. The Cowboys had a seven-game losing streak during the season, three of those the games the ones missed by guard Marcus Smart for pushing a fan at Texas Tech. Since his return, the Cowboys have been a different team and Smart has played the way people expected the preseason All-America to. Oklahoma State lost four overtime games this season, including 77-70 loss to Kansas in the Big 12 semifinals. Limping in: Syracuse started the season 25-0, then lost four of five. Flying below the radar — well, not really since Billikens can’t fly — is Saint Louis. It followed a schoolrecord 19-game winning streak with four losses in five games, including Friday’s stunner to St. Bonaventure in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals.
GOlF 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Valspar Championship, third round, in Palm Harbor, Fla. 1 p.m. on NBC — PGA Tour, Valspar Championship, third round, in Palm Harbor, Fla. 5 p.m. on TGC — Champions Tour, Toshiba Classic, second round, in Newport Beach, Calif. 12:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Trophee Hassan II, third round, in Agadir, Morocco (delayed tape) MaJOR leaGUe BaseBall 2 p.m. on WGN — Preseason, Chicago Cubs vs. N.Y. Mets, in Las Vegas, Nev. MeN’s COlleGe BaskeTBall 9:30 a.m. on CBS — Conference USA, championship, Tulsa-Middle Tennessee winner vs. Southern Miss.-Louisiana Tech winner, in El Paso, Texas 9:30 a.m. on ESPN2 — America East Conference, championship, Albany (N.Y.) in Stony Brook 11 a.m. on ABC — Southeastern Conference, semifinal, Florida vs. Tennessee, in Atlanta 11 a.m. on ESPN — Atlantic Coast Conference, semifinal, Virginia vs. Pittsburgh, in Greensboro, N.C. 11:40 a.m. on CBS — Big Ten Conference, doubleheader, semifinals, Michigan vs. Ohio St., in Indianapolis 1 p.m. on ABC — Southeastern Conference, semifinal, Kentucky-LSU winner vs. Georgia-Mississippi winner, in Atlanta 1 p.m. on ESPN — Atlantic Coast Conference, semifinal, SyracuseN.C. State winner vs. Duke-Clemson winner, in Greensboro, N.C. 2:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Southwestern Athletic Conference, championship, Texas Southern-Alabama St. winner vs. Prairie View-Alabama A&M winner, in Houston 4 p.m. on ESPN — American Athletic Conference, championship, Houston-Louisville winner vs. Cincinnati-UConn, in Memphis, Tenn. 4 p.m. on ESPNU — Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, championship, NC Central-Norfolk St. winner vs. Coppin St.-Morgan St. winner, in Norfolk, Va. 4 p.m. on FS1 — Pacific-12 Conference, championship, Arizona-Colorado winner vs. UCLA-Stanford winner, in Las Vegas, Nev. 4:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Mid-American Conference, championship, W. Michigan-Akron winner vs. Toledo-E. Michigan winner, in Cleveland 6 p.m. on ESPNU — Big Sky Conference, championship, North Dakota-Portland St. winner vs. Weber St.-N. Colorado winner, in Ogden, Utah 6:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Southland Conference, championship, Stephen F. Austin-Northwestern St. winner vs. Texas A&M-CC-Sam Houston St. winner, in Katy, Texas 6 p.m. on FS1 — Big East Conference, championship, Seton HallProvidence winner vs. Creighton vs. Xavier winner, in New York 7 p.m. on ESPN — Big 12 Conference, championship, Iowa St.-Kansas winner vs. Baylor-Texas winner, in Kansas City, Mo. 8 p.m. on ESPNU — Western Athletic Conference, championship, Utah Valley-Idaho winner vs. Cal State Bakersfield-New Mexico St. winner, in Las Vegas 8:30 p.m. on ESPN2 — Big West Conference, championship, UC Irvine-Cal Poly winner vs. Long Beach St.-CS Northridge winner, in Anaheim, Calif. MOTORsPORTs 9 p.m. on FS1 — AMA Supercross, in Detroit (same-day tape) NBa 6 p.m. on WGN — Sacramento at Chicago sOCCeR 6:40 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Sunderland vs. Crystal Palace 8:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Cardiff at Everton 11:25 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Chelsea at Aston Villa 2 p.m. on NBCSN — MLS, Toronto at Seattle TeNNIs 1 p.m. on ESPNEWS — ATP World Tour/WTA, BNP Paribas Open, men’s semifinals, in Indian Wells, Calif. WINTeR PaRalYMPICs In Sochi, Russia 11 a.m. on NBC — Ice Sledge Hockey - Final (same-day tape) 4:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Wheelchair Curling - Final (same-day tape) 2:30 a.m. on NBCSN — Events TBA
Today on radio PReP BaskeTBall 10 a.m. on KVSF 1400-AM — Boys, Class AA championship: St. Michael’s vs. No. 1 Hope Christian
PREP SCHEDULE A list of this week’s varsity high school sporting events for all Northern New Mexico teams. For additions or changes, email us at sports@ sfnewmexican.com
Today Baseball — Santa Fe High, Española Valley at Bloomfield Tournament, TBA Capital at Albuquerque West Mesa (DH), 11 a.m./1:30 p.m. St. Michael’s at Roswell Invitational, TBA Pojoaque Valley at Bernalillo (DH), 10 a.m./noon Tierra Encantada at Peñasco (DH), 1/3 p.m. Boys basketball — Class A/AA/AAA State Tournament, in The Pit Championships Class AAA, No. 6 Lovington/No. 2 St. Michael’s winner vs. No. 4 West Las Vegas/ No. 1 Albuquerque Hope Christian winner, 10 a.m. Class A, No. 5 Escalante vs. No. 3 Hagerman, 6 p.m. Softball — Santa Fe High at Albuquerque Rio Grande (DH), 11 a.m./1 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Albuerque Sandia Preparatory Tournament, TBA Lovington at West Las Vegas (DH), 1/3 p.m. Tennis — Santa Fe High, Las Vegas Robertson at Albuquerque Academy roundrobin, TBA St. Michael’s at Capital High quadrangular, 9 a.m. Track and field — Santa Fe High, Capital, Taos, Las Vegas Robertson at Bernalillo Invitational, 9 a.m. Los Alamos at Rio Rancho Cleveland Invitational, 9 a.m. West Las Vegas at Jemez Valley Invitational, 8 a.m.
B-4
PREP BASKETBALL
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT CLASS AAAAA GIRLS
Volcano Vista goes from upstart to standout in 7 years Lady Hawks to take on No. 3 Las Cruces for crown
4 p.m. in The Pit, making it twice in the past three years they have reached the final game of the prep basketball season. But where the 2012 title was By James Barron a foray into uncharted territory for The New Mexican Volcano Vista, this one will be about establishing a point of interest on the ALBUQUERQUE — This is no lon- state basketball road map. ger a team that feels disrespected. And no one can exemplify that more It’s no longer a flash in a pan. than senior Hannah Fenske. The NavyWhat Lisa Villareal has is much more bound guard is the first Division-I than short-term success. What the product Volcano Vista has produced, Española Valley graduate and former and she represents what the program head coach of the Lady Sundevils and can produce. Capital has created is a program, and “She was a role player on her first a very good one at that. Albuquerque’s two seasons on varsity,” Villareal said. Volcano Vista, the fifth seed in the “But she always accepted whatever Class AAAAA State Girls Basketball role was given to her. Last year, she Tournament, has gone from upstart to took on the role of point guard and standout in the span of seven years. really improved her game. She’s the On Saturday, the Lady Hawks (24-6) last one in the gym, always taking a lot will take on No. 3 Las Cruces Mayfield of shots, just getting her game to be the best it can be.” (27-3) for the AAAAA state title at
St. Mike’s: Hit 15 of 21 free throws Continued from Page B-1 Dominguez’s putback following the miss gave St. Michael’s a 46-37 lead that eventually turned into a 54-44 win, and Brattain had to relive that moment in a postgame interview. “The free-throw thing, the little things like that, those are things you got to take care of in a game of this magnitude, for sure,” Brattain said. Or, as Dominguez succinctly put it, “Whatever it took. I just wanted to get to the state championship.” Then again, those things always seem to happen for the second-seeded Horsemen, who will play No. 1 Albuquerque Hope Christian for the third straight year for the AAA title at 10 a.m. on Saturday. Those good things are born out of good coaching, and St. Michael’s head coach Ron Geyer, who didn’t deviate from his philosophy. Even though Lovington’s Stephen Lennox struck an imposing figure at 6-foot-8, St. Michael’s (24-7) went right to the basket. Usually, that meant the ball went to 6-foot-4 Justin Flores or the 6-foot-3 Dominguez. The pair combined for 23 points and 17 rebounds to offset the 15 points, 10 rebounds and six blocked shots Lennox posted for the Wildcats. “That’s the way I’ve always done it,” Geyer said. “Even when I had little posts. Try to make the refs make a decision.” While the plan was to try to get Lennox in foul trouble, it had the side effect of drawing fouls on the Wildcats’ two key supporting players in Jared Wilks and Quantel Nash. Wilks had three fouls in the first half and picked up his fourth 2 minutes into the third quarter. Nash had eight points — all in the second half — and fouled out late in the game. “It’s hard to play in foul trouble,” Brattain said. “Once you get in that situation with three starters with three or four fouls and they had one with three, it’s hard.” St. Michael’s took advantage of the Wildcats’ foul troubles and hit 15 of 21 free throws, including 6 of 8 in the final 1:08. The key moments came in the third quarter, as the Horsemen hit three 3-pointers and had a three-point play that gave them a 35-25 lead heading into the fourth quarter. Chris Lovato, who had struggled from the perimeter, hit consecutive 3s to open the quarter for a 27-20 lead. “Those were huge,” Geyer said. “He had made 25 3s coming into the state tournament and he’s struggled with his shot. Those shots were huge for us.” When Lovington rallied with a Lennox layup and a 3 from Nash, St. Michael’s responded with two Flores free throws, a Pincheira-Sandoval 3 and a three-point play from Dominguez for the 10-point margin. The margin grew to 42-30 on a Flores putback, but Lovington (15-15) made one more charge — a 7-0 spurt that was capped Joanus Rueda for 42-37. Wesley Vaughan followed with a breakaway layup, which set up Dominguez for his crushing putback. While Geyer talked about enjoying the win, Brattain was trying to figure out how to break the stranglehold the Horsemen and the Huskies have had on the AAA scene for the past eight years. Only once has neither of those two schools not played in the final game of the season (2008, when it was Pojoaque Valley vs. West Las Vegas). Brattain had an unlikely fan in that endeavor — Hope Christian head coach Jim Murphy. “He was telling me [on Thursday], ‘You need to beat those guys, so we can play someone different,’ ” Brattain said. Of course, Murphy didn’t mention his team in that equation.
What Fenske becomes, though, is a role model for the younger players coming up — for Deezha Battle, a sophomore who is the second-leading scorer on the team at 11.1 points per game. For Kavionnia Brown, a freshman starter who earned the spot in part due to a leg injury to Bianca Perez in December. She was the defensive cog to the Lady Hawks 52-45 upset of No. 1 and previously undefeated Clovis in the AAAAA semifinal on Thursday, as she frustrated Clovis’ Danni Williams into an 8-for-20 night shooting while she scored 18 points. They are the future of the program, and Fenske sees a great one at that. “I think Volcano Vista is still going to be a great team after this year,” Fenske said. “I think they are going to be able to win even more. I just hope that we win it tomorrow and end my senior year on
a really, really good note.” It would be another note hit by Villareal and her assistant coach Ross Villareal, her brother. When they took over the infant program at the new school in 2007, the Villareals hadn’t had a chance to put their stamp on a program. They spent two years at Capital, advancing to the AAAA quarterfinals both years and winning a share of the District 2AAAA title in 2007. She got two years at Española Valley from 2000-2002, where the Lady Sundevils made it to the state tournament her second season. What she hadn’t established was her ability to create a program. “It’s been something that we always talked about,” Lisa Villareal said. “We got our program and run it the way we felt we needed to run a program. We’ve been given the opportunity and
the reins to run it as we see fit. We’ve worked really hard. We changed our game plans and we worked really hard to improve as coaches.” While the two siblings have come far in their development, they haven’t lost that desire to keep growing as coaches. If anything, the experiences of developing a program has emboldened them to be more creative. “My coaching staff and I continually go to coaching clinics,” Villareal said. “We may listen to the same speakers over and over again, but they might throw that one thing out at you that just sticks. I can go to to a three-day clinic, but that one statement they make, or that one drill they show can be a big difference in how you, as a coach, can change.” And what’s changed is that Volcano Vista has become a program — and among the state’s best right now.
SFHS: Demonettes had 17-9 run in 4th quarter Continued from Page B-1 shoot it,’ ” Herrera said. “I did, and when I felt it coming off my wrist, I knew it was good.” It was the finishing touch of a long day for Herrera. She woke up at 5 a.m. on Friday and started going over the game plan. When the Demonettes arrived at The Pit to watch the earlier games, she knew she wanted to be the one holding up the blue trophy at the end of the night. “I want that to be us,” Herrera said about the winning teams. “I don’t want to be crying and leave here without a win.” The Demonettes almost did leave without a win, but a 17-9 run in the fourth quarter guaranteed them a state championship. It was a goal that the team set for itself since last March, when they lost in the semifinals. The Demonettes knew they had the team to win it all this year, but the problem was, so did everyone else. Throughout the season, people would approach the players and tell them that they could win a cham-
pionship. Despite all the praise, the Demonettes knew they still had to put in the work “We stayed humble this whole year,” junior post Sabrina LozadaCabbage said. “We knew we could take it, but we knew we had to work to get there. It’s just been a great journey.” Chavez won a state championship with Grants as an assistant coach in 1987. He wanted to experience that feeling again, but more importantly, he wanted his players to experience it. This is the first state championship for Santa Fe High since 1988, well before any of the players on the roster were born. Herrera is friends with some of those players from the old championship team, and they gave her encouragement during the tournament. Now she is a part of the team that brought another blue trophy to Santa Fe High after the old one had collected some dust. “It’s an honor to bring this back to Santa Fe after 26 years,” Herrera said. “Who knows if Santa Fe is ever going to do this again?”
Los Lunas’ Elise Tapia, left, covers Santa Fe High’s Jackie Martinez during the first quarter of the AAAA state championship Friday in The Pit. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Spotlight: Lozada-Cabbage hit game-tying shot the day when Demonettes assistant coach Chris Williams — he of the neon-yellow shoes and noCabbage said she got hers in the weeks and nonsense approach — passed along some wisdom months leading into Friday’s matinee. It included a during a shootaround at Albuquerque Eldorado TV appearance in which Zeller reportedly said she High School. was looking forward to her head-to-head matchup Santa Fe High’s low post coach, he has worked with Lozada-Cabbage for a full year. as closely with Lozada-Cabbage as anyone for the The teams did not meet during the regular seapast several months. He knows her strengths and son, but the players were definitely aware of one sees her potential. another. On Friday, he got into her head with a little edu“All I’ve been hearing about is Teige this and cational material. Teige that,” Lozada-Cabbage said. “You know, I’m “I showed her Teige’s signature move, how to glad I got to play against her, and hopefully my recognize it and what to do when she sees it,” Wilname will get out there, too.” liams said. “Sabrina’s a good player. A real good Surely it will. With offseason camps and tourplayer. People don’t know this but she can play ing club tournaments, it’s clear Lozada-Cabbage’s any position out there, but we needed her to be stock is ready to skyrocket. Watching her every there in the middle against [Zeller]. She stepped move in Friday’s game was University of New up the way I knew she would. She handled it like I Mexico head coach Yvonne Sanchez. thought she would.” Where and when Lozada-Cabbage gets her The start wasn’t terribly promising, though. offers remains to be seen. On Friday, it was all Zeller blocked Lozada-Cabbage’s first shot in the about zeroing in on the state’s best. The process game’s first minute, then the Demonettes’ center for turning things in her favor began earlier in
Continued from Page B-1
was called for a blocking foul just seconds later. She picked up her second foul later in the first quarter and was guilty of two turnovers. She got to halftime with just two points on 1 of 7 shooting, two fouls and zero trips to the free throw line. A good sign was Zeller’s stat line. Although she made both of her shots in the first half, the fact remained that she only attempted two shots. She finished the night with only eight tries, a season low. In the fourth quarter, things swayed in LozadaCabbage’s favor, and with it a state title for Santa Fe High. She had four points, hitting the gametying basket with a 17-foot jumper from the top of the key, then giving the Demonettes the lead for good with another bucket less than 20 seconds later. She later added a blocked shot of Zeller. “Well, we talked about the Super Bowl this year,” said Elmer Chavez, Santa Fe High’s head coach. “You guys saw that the best defense overcame the best offense.” And in this case, the best defense revolved around Lozada-Cabbage’s play in the paint.
STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT CLASS AAA BOYS
Huskies steamroll Dons, advance to title game
rotated as many as six starter-quality players off the bench. “I think with everything being ALBUQUERQUE — We’ve heard said and everything being played out this story before, and it almost always there, the whole bottom line is this: ends the same way. You have to have 10 kids that can get Big, bad Hope Christian, the Albu- out there and perform at a high level querque private-school boys basketfor 32 minutes,” said West Las Vegas ball juggernaut, taking an upstart, head coach David Bustos. “At halftalented opponent time we were just a little bit winded and casting it to Hope Chr. 83 and they were probably in there just the wayside like a recharging their batteries.” W. Las Vegas 54 pair of used socks. The Huskies advance to the state In this case, finals for the 14th time in school West Las Vegas was that opponent, history. They’ve won 11 of those; and Friday morning was the time their only two losses coming to they were so easily dismissed. St. Michael’s, Saturday’s opponent. At least, in the second half. They never trailed in Friday’s Trailing Hope 38-34 at halftime of game, using a 9-0 run to start things Friday’s Class AAA state semifinal in off. The Dons cut it two late in the The Pit, the Dons were completely half on a Cody Najar runner in the dismantled in the final two quarters lane, but they never drew even. as the Huskies steamrolled their way While there isn’t necessarily a into Saturday’s title game with an blueprint on how to beat Hope, 83-54 blowout. Bustos said it’s probably different For a while, West Las Vegas was than the one he rolled out on Friday. able to match Hope’s frenetic pace. For a telltale few moments in the The one thing they had no answer second half, he ran a zone defense for was the Huskies’ overwhelming and essentially dared the Huskies to depth as the Huskies continuously shoot over it. By Will Webber The New Mexican
They did so with impressive results. Dedrick Milford hit a 3-pointer 90 seconds into the second half, followed a minute later by another trey from the corner by Brandon Zabala. Barely three minutes into the third quarter, the Dons’ four-point deficit mushroomed to 12. By the end of the quarter, it was 23. “Once we hit a couple outside shots, then we started playing a little bit better basketball,” said Hope head coach Jim Murphy. A little? The Huskies held West Las Vegas to 19 percent shooting (5 of 26) in the second half after allowing the Dons to convert 57 percent of their tries in the first two quarters. They outscored them 26-9 in the third quarter and led by as many as 32 in the fourth. They attempted 22 of their 67 shots in the third quarter, pushing the tempo further and faster than West Las Vegas was ready for. Dons guard D.J. Bustos said overcoming Hope’s rotation of fresh legs is a lot harder than it seems. “Well, you just have to go,” he said. “You have to work your butt off. Keep
going and fight it, fight the pain. If you have pain, fight it and keep going until coach gets you a break.” Bustos and Andres Gallegos each had 17 points for the Dons, while Najar had 14. The rest of the roster combined for six points and just 10 of the team’s 33 rebounds. Zabala had a game-high 24 points for Hope. As if to demonstrate their depth, the Huskies didn’t have another player crack double digits, despite scoring 83 points. Murphy joked that his big halftime adjustment was doing a lot of yelling. In truth, it had more to do with staying the course, that eventually his depth and apparently endless supply of talent would win out. One of these days, Bustos said someone will figure out Hope’s weakness. If there’s anyone in AAA who can do it right now, he suggested that team might be St. Michael’s. “We’re talking about up-tempo, they actually like to slow things down a little and that might be the way to go,” he said. “I think it’s going to be tough to beat them either way you go.”
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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
Mostly sunny and breezy
Tonight
Mostly cloudy with winds subsiding
57
Sunday
Monday
Mostly sunny
28%
25
56/31
35%
20%
Almanac
66/30
Mostly sunny
61/24
Humidity (Noon)
Thursday
Mostly sunny
57/27
Humidity (Noon)
14%
13%
20%
wind: W 6-12 mph
wind: W 7-14 mph
wind: WSW 6-12 mph
285
64
Farmington 57/25
Raton 57/22
64
Air quality index
40
Santa Fe 57/25 Pecos 54/24
25
Albuquerque 63/33
87
56
412
Clayton 58/24
Pollen index
As of 3/14/2014 Juniper...................................... 86 Moderate Elm ...................................................... 4 Low Other ................................................... 1 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................91
25
Las Vegas 56/20
25
54
40
40
285
Clovis 64/31
54
60 60
Friday’s rating .............................. Moderate Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 52/19
84
Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
70
Truth or Consequences 70/40 70
Las Cruces 70/40
70
Hobbs 73/35
Carlsbad 78/42
54
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
285
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Sun and moon
State extremes
Fri. High: 76 .................................. Carlsbad Fri. Low 10 ................................. Eagle Nest
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 72/41 pc 59/36 t 44/23 sn 72/37 pc 76/36 s 46/28 t 51/35 c 59/40 pc 52/30 pc 65/38 pc 50/31 t 70/36 pc 58/35 t 61/34 pc 68/42 r 55/31 t 53/22 c 75/37 pc 70/40 s
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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 53/31 66/43 48/38 61/39 68/40 55/36 55/23 59/38 74/38 55/36 63/40 63/36 64/44 54/23 67/46 67/39 71/47 50/36 50/31
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Hi/Lo W 53/30 s 66/40 s 54/25 s 62/39 s 58/32 pc 55/22 s 46/17 s 60/32 s 61/36 pc 51/37 s 60/35 s 60/37 s 66/40 s 54/21 s 63/40 s 60/30 s 64/42 pc 56/29 s 57/25 s
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for March 15
Sunrise today ............................... 7:15 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:12 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 6:35 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 6:28 a.m. Sunrise Sunday ............................. 7:14 a.m. Sunset Sunday .............................. 7:12 p.m. Moonrise Sunday .......................... 7:32 p.m. Moonset Sunday ........................... 7:00 a.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 7:13 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 7:13 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 8:30 p.m. Moonset Monday .......................... 7:33 a.m. Full
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Mar 16
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The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 43/30 65/34 55/22 56/30 46/32 55/37 39/16 65/33 63/26 53/39 63/33 59/24 73/48 63/29 51/17 42/10 52/34 83/70 75/47 61/33 64/46 77/51 71/52
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Hi/Lo W 25/16 s 67/52 c 63/34 pc 52/35 pc 25/8 sn 58/40 s 50/24 pc 76/55 c 70/51 pc 42/15 pc 56/32 pc 41/18 pc 70/50 t 52/24 c 40/16 pc 17/-11 c 56/29 s 80/67 sh 74/61 t 54/26 pc 67/30 s 76/58 s 83/58 s
Hi/Lo 26/25 65/50 45/29 64/40 45/26 66/45 36/16 72/61 61/51 28/17 36/20 26/17 55/37 62/36 25/12 17/0 57/28 76/67 67/43 35/18 36/23 75/58 90/58
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Rise 6:08 a.m. 4:56 a.m. 9:33 p.m. 1:05 p.m. 11:44 p.m. 8:00 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 4:56 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 8:56 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 10:14 a.m. 8:28 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles
Reporter covered Hollywood stars
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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 64/37 65/45 76/60 53/33 44/36 70/42 46/22 73/46 73/45 51/24 80/62 60/25 63/50 62/23 69/50 65/35 77/46 69/56 69/53 58/49 49/33 48/20 60/28
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Hi/Lo 41/25 62/32 82/76 23/12 24/17 75/53 39/24 49/28 82/66 42/26 82/58 35/20 59/42 50/33 39/20 63/45 70/43 81/59 71/50 52/38 33/24 41/23 46/31
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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) Fri. High: 91 ........................... Thermal, CA Fri. Low: -15 ................... Saranac Lake, NY
It was no “Midsummer Night’s Dream” on March 15, 1843, in North Carolina, where 15 inches of snow accumulated. Beware the Ides of March.
Weather trivia™
At what temperature are large snowQ: flakes most likely to occur?
A: Near or just above the freezing mark.
Weather history
Newsmakers Chris Brown arrested on warrant without bail
Chris Brown
LOS ANGELES — Chris Brown was arrested Friday and will be held without bail on a warrant issued by probation officials in the latest legal entanglement for the R&B singer who has struggled to put his 2009 attack on Rihanna behind him. The warrant was issued by officials overseeing the singer’s sentence for the Rihanna case. Sheriff’s officials said Brown was cooperative when he was arrested at a Malibu treatment facility where he had been staying. Brown had been ordered to remain in rehab for treatment related to anger issues. No other details on why the warrant was issued were released, and there was no immediate word on when the singer would appear in court. Brown’s probation for the Rihanna assault had been scheduled to end this year, but a judge revoked it last year after Brown was arrested on a misdemeanor assault charge in Washington, D.C. That case is pending. In addition to getting treatment, the singer remained under strict orders to complete 1,000 of community labor. A probation report dated Feb. 26 stated that Brown had completed 250 hours. 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 48/36 66/37 68/54 95/79 61/48 61/37 55/32 68/48 77/68 64/53 91/74 75/51 50/39 52/39 61/36 75/59 81/55 64/60 48/42 79/69
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TV 1
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City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 66/50 63/39 63/36 81/53 30/1 50/35 81/56 66/41 61/32 86/75 63/41 73/52 46/25 93/77 50/32 82/66 52/47 52/46 64/36 64/32
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Hi/Lo 69/52 59/43 68/43 81/55 39/10 45/34 82/56 58/44 48/39 90/77 64/43 82/54 54/37 89/77 40/27 89/70 53/39 49/44 60/45 54/39
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Hi/Lo 70/50 63/41 68/45 78/47 18/3 39/26 87/57 64/42 51/43 92/77 64/45 82/54 57/37 88/78 40/30 88/59 63/42 49/39 56/47 56/36
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top picks
9:30 a.m. on ESPN2 College basketball Conference championship play is the order of the day today, starting with this final of the America East Tournament. Later on ESPN2, there are title games in the Southwest, MAC, Southland and Big West tournaments, while on ESPN look for finals in the AAC and Big 12 tourneys. Noon on ESPN2 NASCAR Racing Fans of old-time “boys have at it” short-track racing will want to tune into today’s Nationwide Series race from Tennessee’s Bristol Motor Speedway, host of the Jeff Foxworthy’s Grit Chips 300. A field including Austin Dillon, Parker Kligerman, Reed Sorenson and J.J. Yeley will do battle on the high-banked .533-mile oval in a race Kyle Busch won by .023 seconds last year ahead of Kyle Larson. 6 p.m. on LIFE Movie: The Grim Sleeper Based on a true story, this new docudrama stars Dreama Walker as reporter Christine Pelisek, who connects the dots in dozens of unsolved Los Angeles murders and determines they’re the work of one killer. Ernie Hudson and Michael O’Neill also star, with singer Macy Gray as the killer’s sole surviving would-be victim.
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Reporter Bob Thomas attends the 81st Academy Awards in Los Angeles in 1999. Thomas, who kept the world informed on the comings and goings of Hollywood’s biggest stars, died Friday. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
BOB THOMAS, 1922-2014
70
380
Alamogordo 70/38
180
Water statistics
Roswell 77/39
Ruidoso 57/32
25
10
69/39
Humidity (Noon)
13%
Española 63/32 Los Alamos 52/27
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.08”/0.26” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.01”/0.10” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.02” Month/year to date .................. 0.33”/0.38” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 1.09”/2.58” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.44”/0.64”
64/31
Humidity (Noon)
wind: WNW 10-20 mph
666
Gallup 56/21
Times of clouds and sun
17%
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
Friday
wind: W 10-20 mph
New Mexico weather
Area rainfall
The following water statistics of March 12 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.354 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 5.630 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 6.984 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.092 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 63.3 percent of capacity; daily inflow 2.71 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • 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
Wednesday
Partly sunny and breezy
Humidity (Noon)
wind: NNW 10-20 mph wind: NNW 8-16 mph
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Friday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 54°/29° Normal high/low ............................ 57°/27° Record high ............................... 74° in 2007 Record low .................................. 5° in 1969 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.55”/0.66” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.37”/1.50” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.63”/0.72”
Tuesday
Warmer with plenty of sunshine
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon) wind: NW 12-25 mph
B-5
7 p.m. on ABC Castle A mortally wounded man carrying a baby stumbles into a church and leaves the infant with a priest before he dies. As Castle and Beckett (Nathan Fillion, Stana Katic) investigate, they discover that the dead man was no relation to the child. Now they must find his killer and the little one’s parents in “The Good, the Bad & the Baby.” 7 p.m. on CBS Summer Dreams This new documentary takes viewers behind the scenes of the NBA’s Summer League, an annual exhibition event where rookies and unsigned players show coaches and team managers what they can do on the court. Two rookies — Michael Carter Williams of Philadelphia 76ers and Shane Larkin of the Dallas Mavericks — are prominently featured.
By Hillel Italie and John Rogers
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES e was the institutional memory for the movies at The Associated Press and a passage for the world to a Hollywood both longed for and long gone. Bob Thomas, who died Friday at his Encino, Calif., home at age 92, started reporting when Clark Gable was a middle-aged king, Bette Davis was in her big-eyed prime, and Kirk Douglas and Lauren Bacall were emerging stars. “Independent” movies were a rarity during the studiocontrolled era, and celebrity gossip was dispensed by rival columnists Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons rather than Internet sites. Younger reporters knew the names and the credits, but Thomas knew the people and lived the history. He could tell you what Jack Lemmon liked to drink at parties or recall Marilyn Monroe’s farcical inability to show up on time, or speak fondly of his times with “Greg” Peck. Around the country, and beyond, at least one generation of movie fans learned the latest about Hollywood by reading Bob Thomas. He interviewed most of the great screen actors of the 20th century, among them Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy, Marlon Brando, James Dean, Humphrey Bogart, Jack Nicholson, Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise. When a story ran, Thomas often heard directly from the stars. Soon after her marriage to actor John Agar in 1945, Shirley Temple wrote: “John and I want you to know that we are very grateful to you for the manner in which you handled the story on our wedding.” A postcard from Rita Hayworth passed on regards from Orson Welles. Bing Crosby shared warm thoughts about Bob Hope. Groucho Marx noted that Thomas’ interview with him had been syndicated in 400 newspapers. “But as faithful as I am to you in my fashion, I read them all,” Groucho wrote to him. Thomas worked well into his 80s, covering a record 66 consecutive Academy Awards shows, beginning in 1944. During his nearly seven decades writing for the AP, Thomas reviewed hundreds of films and television shows and wrote numerous retrospective pieces on Hollywood and how it had changed. Thomas also was the author of nearly three dozen books, including biographies of Walt Disney, Brando and Joan Crawford, and an acclaimed portrait of studio mogul Harry Cohn, King Cohn. He wrote, produced and appeared in a handful of television specials on the Academy Awards and was a guest on numerous TV news and talk shows, including The Tonight Show, Good Morning America and Nightline. His biographies of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes and the comedy team
H
of Abbott and Costello were made into television movies. He is listed twice in Guinness World Records: for most consecutive Academy Awards shows covered by an entertainment reporter and for longest career as an entertainment reporter (1944-2010). In 1988, Thomas became the first reporter-author awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and on Friday, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce placed a wreath of flowers on the star, located in front of the Dolby Theatre, home of the Oscars. One of Thomas’ biggest stories had nothing to do with entertainment. Helping out during the 1968 presidential election, Thomas had been assigned to cover Sen. Robert F. Kennedy on the night the New York Democrat won the California primary. Minutes after declaring victory, Kennedy was shot to death in the kitchen of Los Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel. “I was waiting in the press room for Kennedy to arrive when I heard what sounded like the popping of balloons in the hotel kitchen,” Thomas would recount years later. “I rushed into the kitchen where men were screaming and women sobbing,” he recalled. “I jumped onto a pile of kitchen trays and saw Kennedy lying on the floor, his head bloody.” He ran to a phone and delivered the bulletin to The Associated Press. As the son of a newspaper editor turned Hollywood press agent, Robert Joseph Thomas seemed destined to become an entertainment writer from his earliest days. In junior high school and high school he wrote entertainment columns for the campus newspaper, and in college his favorite reading was the industry trade paper Daily Variety. But when he joined the AP in Los Angeles in 1943, it was with aspirations of becoming a war correspondent. Instead, the wire service named him its Fresno, Calif., correspondent, a job he gave up after little more than a year. Soon he would become a ubiquitous presence in Hollywood, attending awards shows, wandering studio back lots or going from table to table at the Polo Lounge, Musso and Frank and other favored Hollywood hangouts of the day. The gentlemanly, soft-spoken reporter with the wry sense of humor enjoyed access to the stars that modern journalists rarely attain, whether visiting with Nicholson at his home or chatting on the set with Tracy and Hepburn. His encyclopedic knowledge of the industry was well appreciated by his colleagues. A former AP editor, Jim Lagier, would recall that Thomas had a filing system that rivaled that of any news bureau. Through the years, Thomas’ enthusiasm for his profession never waned. “I get to interview some of the most beautiful people in the world,” he said in 1999. “It’s what I always wanted to do, and I just can’t stop doing it.”
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
NYSE
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name
Name
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Vol (00) Last %Chg
Markets The weekininreview review Dow Jones industrials Close: 16,065.67 1-week change: -387.05 (-2.4%)
17,000
-34.04
-67.43
-11.17 -231.19 -43.22
MON
TUES
WED
THUR
FRI
16,500
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
16,000 15,500 15,000
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last Chg %Chg
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
14,500
S
O
N
D
J
F
Last Chg %Chg
DIARY
Volume
Name
Wk %Chg
YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg
Volume
Wk YTD Last Chg %Chg
Last
Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … %YTD Chg: Percentage loss or gain for the year to date. No change indicated by … How to use: The numbers can be helpful in following stocks but as with all financial data are only one of many factors to judge a company by. Consult your financial advisor before making any investment decision.
Stock footnotes: Stock Footnotes: cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52-week low. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf - Late filing with SEC. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. rs - Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50% within the past year. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name.
YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
NASDAQ National Market NATIONAL NASDAQ Name
Wk Chg
DIARY
New York Stock Exchange NEW Name
Last
Here are the 944 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange and 670 most active stocks worth more than $2 on the Nasdaq National Market. Stocks in bold are worth at least $5 and changed 10 percent or more in price during the past week. If you want your stocks to always be listed, call Bob Quick at 986-3011. Tables show name, price and net change, and the year-to-date percent change in price.
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
MARKET SUMMARY 52-Week High Low
M
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW
MARKET
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name
Div
PE
Last
Wk Chg
YTD %Chg
Wk YTD Chg %Chg
CURRENCY EXCHANGE New York rates for trades of $1 million minimum: Fgn. currency Dollar in in dollars fgn. currency Last
Prev.
Last
Prev.
KEY RATES AT A GLANCE Here are the daily key rates from The Associated Press.
Last
Week ago
Prime rate Discount rate Federal funds Treasuries 3-MO. T-Bills 6-MO. T-Bills 5-YR. T-Notes 10-YR. T-Notes 30-YR. T-Bonds
METALS
Prev. Last day Aluminum, cents per lb, LME 0.7722 0.7785 Copper, Cathode full plate 2.9458 2.9473 Gold, troy oz. Handy & Harman 1385.00 1368.75 Silver, troy oz. Handy & Harman 21.360 21.275 Lead, per metric ton, LME 2007.00 2022.00 Palladium, NY Merc spot per troy oz. 773.05 778.75 Platinum, troy oz. N.Y.(contract) 1469.60 1479.40
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-7
to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 »real estate«
FARMS & RANCHES
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
GUESTHOUSES
146.17 AC. 1 hour from Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Electricity, views of Sangre De Cristo Mountains and Glorieta Mesa. $675 per acre, 20 year owner financing. Toll Free 1-877-797-2624 newmexicoranchland.net .
813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY: Live-in studio, full kitchen and bath, tile. $680 with gas, water paid. 1303 RUFINA LANE: 2 bedroom, 1 full bath, washer, dryer hook-ups, living and dining room. $765 plus utilities. NO PETS! 505-471-4405
FURNISHED CASITA, utilities, television, internet included. fully equipped kitchen. 44 Arroyo Viejo. $950 monthly. www.santafecasita.info ABQ Properties LLC 505-717-3002 x702
LOTS & ACREAGE
Down Town Area Studio Apartment
HOUSES FURNISHED
1 bedroom, 1 bath, Fenced yard, Non-Smoking. Small pet may be considered. $680 includes utilities.
Taylor Properties 505-470-0818 SANTA FE 2 RENTALS. 5600 SQ.FT WAREHOUSE, with live-in space, Southside, $295,000. 3.3 acres, La Tierra, Shared well, Paved access, $155,000. 505-4705877.
Get your property value today! www.SantaFeHomeValue.com NAVADE, SHORT walk to clubhouse, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, yard, garage, vigas, fireplace. Ready to move in. $235,000. 505-466-8136.
(3) 2.5 Acre Lots, Senda Artemisia, Old Galisteo Road, Close to town. Easy building sites. Views, utilities, shared well. Owner financing. No Mobile homes. $119,700- $129,700 each. Greg. 505-690-8503, Equity Real Estate. 21 ACRES of Paradise on the San Juan River. Great for fishing, hunting, and ranching. 6 Acre feet of deeded water rights. 575-937-3135
»rentals«
COMMERCIAL SPACE
3100+/- sq.ft. main level and 2400+/sq.ft. daylight basement. 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, remodeled kitchen, 3 fireplaces, 2 car garage on 1.43 acres near Richards Ave. 2916 Calle Vera Cruz. NOW $424,000
Santa Fe Executive Realtors, 505-670-9466
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 bedroom, 1 bath- $385.00 monthly; 1 Bedroom park model, 1 bath- $450; Deposit and background check required. Non-smoking, no pets. 505471-2929 appointment.
Gated Community. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $219,900.
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, fireplace, wood and tile floors, washer and dryer. No pets. $750 monthly. 505-471-7587 or 505-690-5627. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. RUFINA LANE. Fireplace, balcony, laundry facility on site. $745 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH T E S U Q U E D R I V E . Fenced yard, washer & dryer. $625 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH DON DIEGO, close to town, nice complex $600/mo 1yr lease only.
CONDO DOWTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $329,000. Jay, 505-4700351.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED 2 1/2 acres, 700 squ.ft Manufactured 2 bedroom home, stucco, pro-panel, 360 views. Lone Butte area. 1 year contract. Serious Inquiries only. No Texting. 505-440-7093 259 STAAB ST. One bedroom. 3 blocks from Plaza. Washer, dryer, hardwood floors. Private Patio. Gas fireplace. Off-street parking. $850 plus utilities. 505-983-7678, 670-9368
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath adobe duplex. Washer, dryer. No pets. Clean, carport. Owner, Broker, $750 deposit, $750 plus utilities. 505-469-5063 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH in Las Acequias. Recently renovated. One car garage, enclosed yard, quiet neighborhood. $1,150 monthly. No pets or smoking. 505-929-4120
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH DON DIEGO. G orgeous town house close to downtown. $750 monthly. Lease only.
Chamisa Management Corporation 988-5299
12X24 FOR ONLY $195.00. CALL TO RESERVE YOURS TODAY!!!
OLD ADOBE OFFICE
Brick floors, large vigas, fire places, ample parking 300, 800, or 2100 sq. ft. $12 per sq. ft. per month.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
Down Town Area 3 Bedroom, 2 bath
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com LOVELY CONDO
2 bedrooms and 1 bath, granite counter tops, washer, dryer, kiva fireplace, vigas, tile, carpet flooring, conveniently located. $850 plus utilities.
LOCATED AT THE LOFTS ON CERRILLOS
This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities
LOVELY HOME
3 bedroom, 2 bath home with kiva fireplace, beamed ceilings, carpet and tile flooring, washer, dryer hook-up, 2 car garage and large fenced back yard on a corner lot. $1300. Deposit $1200. Plus utilities.
GUESTHOUSES
$950. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, sunny, washer, dryer, woodstove, LP gas, brick floors. Pet ok. Hwy 14, Lone Butte. Steve 505-470-3238
Beautiful floor plan. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1500 sq.ft., all tile, private patio, 2 car garage. AVAILABLE NOW! $1,550 monthly. Call 505-989-8860.
OFFICES PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!
Please call (505)983-9646.
plus an office, hard wood floors, 1 car garage, covered patio and fenced yard, Non-smoking. Pet may be considered. $1250 monthly plus utilities.
Taylor Properties 505-470-0818 ELDORADO New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603 FABULOUS HIGH-end, views, secluded. 4 blocks to Plaza. 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths (2500) yard-parking $1750 monthly + utilities. Lease. Call Connie 505-553-1975.
ROOMMATE WANTED ROOM FOR RENT, LA CIENEGA. Separate entrance, share adobe farmhouse, bathroom, kitchen. Washer, dryer. $425 monthly plus utilities. 170 sq.ft. 505-269-7410
UNFURNISHED ROOM TO RENT 3 bedroom home. 2 adults live here- 1 female and 1 male and 2 dogs. Room has walk-in closet. Private bathroom but share the shower with one of other roommates. Common spaces including patios. Available immediately. First, last, $600 monthly. Credit check, references. Year lease. Please call Cia at 858-8298387.
STORAGE SPACE
NEWLY REMODELED, CENTRALLY LOCATED
3 BEDROOM 1 BATH DUPLEX . Large yard, front & back. $1,150 monthly, utilities included, $1,000 deposit. Prefer long term. Pets are negotiable.
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 505-204-1685
STUDIO, LA CIENEGA. Skylights, private. 490 sq.ft. $375 monthly plus utilities. Call Dan, 505-269-7410.
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CONDO, Zia Vista. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, microwave, air, fireplace. Ground floor. $925 monthly + utilities. $900 deposit. non-smoking. no pets. 505-9544378
REMODELED CASITA, FURNISHED, 1 BEDROOM, saltillo tile, wood ceilings, best location, walk to town, views, patio, washer, dryer, $1,050 monthly including utilities. 505-984-1290
COUNTRY LIVING Pecos, sunny remodeled, 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, deck. Responsible People. $995 plus deposit. No Pets. 505-351-0063, 505920-7326.
SOUTH OF SANTA FE, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath. Handicap access. Washer, dryer. First, last, plus deposit. Cat okay. $800 MONTHLY. 505-473-4186
1,800 SQU.FT Retail Space at GARCIA RETAIL CENTER. 5984 Airport Rd. $12 per squ.ft. 505-753-8303 1,900 sq.ft. Warehouse, 600 sq.ft Office space, reception area, two offices, kitchen, security, fenced yard, On-site parking. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2511.
Reduced Price!
VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT IN CIENEGUILLA. $400 monthly, $200 cleaning deposit. No pets, nonsmoking, no drugs. Quiet. Long-term tenant. 505-424-3755 INCREDIBLE SANGRE VIEWS! $935. ZIA VISTAS LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, large walk-in closets. Fireplace. Exceptional layout. Gated. Much more. 505-316-0986. LOOKING FOR A STUDIO WITH A WALK-IN CLOSET AND A KITCHEN WITH LOADS OF CABINETS? We have what you’re looking for at Las Palomas Apartments, 2001 Hopewell Street! We pay your water, sewer, trash. Call 888-482-8216 and move in today! Hablamos Espanol! STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Small patio. Ready to move-in! No Pets. All utilities paid. CALL 505-9202648.
ADOBE GUESTHOUSE East side, 1 bedroom, fully equipped, private. $1,250 including cable TV, DSL and utilities. Available Now. 505-988-4055.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
VIEWS! GREAT DEAL! Exclusive Estancia Primera 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Den. Pool, tennis. Walk to Plaza. 2700 square feet. Great views, 2 car garage, 2 fireplaces, washer, dryer. $2,500. 214491-8732
10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744450. www.airportcerrillos.com
WAREHOUSES WAREHOUSE WORK SPACE. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. 2000 sq.ft. Workshop, art studio, light manuafacturing. Siler Road area. $1470 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505670-1733.
»announcements«
LIVE IN STUDIOS 2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET. 800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-6997280.
FRONTING ON 2ND STREET 2160 sq.ft on 2nd Street.
Live- Work. Studio. Gallery, or Office. High ceilings, 2-story. Handicap bath. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
FOUND FOUND KEYS: Nissan Car key + House key at San Isidro dog park area. 505204-2244 to identify. FOUND PURSE on street at Marcy and Otero Thursday March 13 10:00 am. Call 908-963-9337 FOUND PURSE on street at Marcy and Otero Thursday March 13 10:00 am. Call 908-963-9337.
FOUND RING OF KEYS, at Frontage Road and Avenida Aldea, March 6th. About 20 keys. Call to identify. 505989-3966
business & service exploresantafe•com
Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!
CLEANING
ANIMALS Dog Training Obedience, Problem Solving. 30 Years Experience. In Your Home Convenience. Guaranteed Results. 505-713-2113
MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE.
Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062.
FIREWOOD
A+ Cleaning
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction. House and Pet sitting. Senior care. References available, $18 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677. Clean Houses in and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-9204138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-3166449. ELIZABETH BECERRIL General Cleaning for your home. Low prices. Free estimates. References available. 505-204-0676
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for more information, 505670-9867, 505-473-2119.
505-983-2872, 505-470-4117
HANDYMAN TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583
LANDSCAPING YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 Years Experience, Residential & Offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655
CONSTRUCTION Genbuild Corporation Additions, Remodels, New Construction, Foundations, Garages, Roofing, and Block Walls. Licensed, Bonded, Insured. 505-401-1088 LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877 So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
ROOFING
PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
Dry Pinon & Cedar
HOUSE & PET SITTING. Reasonable, Mature, Responsible. Live in Sol y Lomas area. Former Owner of Grooming store in NYC. 505-982-6392
CLEANING
HANDYMAN
Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load.
CARETAKING
directory«
COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 15% off! 505-9072600, 505-990-0955.
E.R. Landscaping
Full Landscaping Design, All types of stonework, Coyote Fencing, Irrigation, sodding. 15% discount, Free Estimates! 505-629-2871 or 505204-4510.
HOMECRAFT PAINTING SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.
STORAGE
ROOFING ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Gravel Driveway. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182. ALL TYPES OF ROOFING. Free estimates with 15 years experience. Call Josue Garcia, 505-490-1601.
JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
NEED SOME STORAGE? Stars & Stripes Storage is having a special March move-in deal just for you! Call 505-473-2222.
YARD MAINTENANCE 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.
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds LOST
HOSPITALITY
LOST KEYS ANY CAR KEYS FOUND IN SANTA FE DURING LAST MONTH, PLEASE CALL 505-424-1420 ASK FOR LIBBY. REWARD REWARD FOR INFORMATION ON Mens grey-white, Rocky Mountain Bike taken on February 21st, evening, from Zia Vista Condos. 505-473-0326
»jobs«
to place your ad, call TRADES
for Experienced Front Desk Clerk Reservationist Cities of Gold Casino Hotel, has an immediate opening for an experienced Hotel Front Desk Clerk Reservationist. Only candidates with experience will be considered. The position requires a flexible schedule including nights, 3 p.m. - 11 p.m., and weekends. Applicant must pass pre-employment drug screen.
REPUTABLE RESTORATION & CLEANING COMPANY
is hiring Service Technician. Specializing in carpet, upholstery, rug, hard surface cleaning & water, fire, smoke and mold remediation. 24 hour emergency on call service. Experience, certification is a plus. 1 week PTO after 1 year of employment. Pay DOE. Call 505-4717711 for interview.
»merchandise«
IN HOME CARE ELITE HOME Care is seeking seasoned caregivers. CNA. 2 year experience. $15 hour. 1010 Marquez Pl St.B or elitehomecare.steve@aol.com
PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST & DATA EN T R Y . Quickbooks experience a plus, with excellent PR skills. Call 505-438-4773 for an interview.
ADMINISTRATIVE
Assistant Marketing and Sales
Our marketing team seeks a dynamic candidate with a proven record in sales and marketing. A Bachelor’s degree and some understanding of finance, contracts and senior retirement living a plus. Position requires knowledge of CRM Mgmt , daily telephone communication, prospect property tours. Hours are 8:30 5:00, M-F (F/T). Great medical and retirement benefits and working environment. Email resume t o hum anresources@ elcnm .com or fax to 505-983-3828.
CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATE Nambé, a 50+ year tabletop- giftware company, is looking for warehouse associates and quality control personnel for its busy Distribution Dept. in Espanola. Successful applicants have attention to detail, are organized, and have a positive attitude. Excellent communication and numerical skills are a must. Positions are non-clerical, applicants must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Must be able to pass both a background and drug test. Salary DOE. Benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com.
MANAGEMENT POLICE CHIEF The City of Santa Fe is seeking to fill the highly responsible law enforcement position which involves directing employees, functions, and operations of the Police Department and involves responsibility for control and coordination of police activities. The City offers competitive compensation and a generous benefit package including excellent retirement program, medical, dental, life insurance, paid holidays, generous vacation and sick leave. For detailed information, visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. Position closes 4/4/14.
MEDICAL DENTAL
ANTIQUES Merry Foss Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER m o v i n g . Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment, 505-7957222.
APPLIANCES 2 Dryers, $140 each, 1 Washing Machine $150, 1 stainless steel Dishwasher $150, 1 stainless steel Gas Stove $225. 505-412-7327
ART
El Centro Family Health Behavioral Health Therapist LMSW or LISW (Preferred). Must travel to outlying clinics. Resumes & cover letter: hr@ecfh.org, or mailed to ECFH PO Box 158 Española, NM 87532 or www.ecfh.org
Full-Time or Part-Time RN Los Alamos Visiting Nurse Service is currently interviewing for Full-time, part time or per diem Registered Nurses. Home Care experience preferred but we are willing to train the right candidate (must have NM RN license). Hospice experience a plus.If you would like to work with our team please fax your resume and/or call for an interview appointment. Los Alamos VNS 6622525 (fax 662-7390). ask for Beverly or Sarah. Don’t forget to ask about our sign-on bonus!
MAGNIFICENT STONE Cliff Fragua sculpture, 30"high, rare 2003, $4,000, must sell, Santa Fe, retail $10,500. 505-471-4316, colavs19@comcast.net
FIREWOOD-FUEL
CLASSIFIEDS
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EDUCATION
Hospice Patient Care Manager Santa Fe Must possess a current RN license In the state of New Mexico. Prior supervisory experience in Hospice Preferred. Contact: Ashli Flock at 505861-0060 or aflock@ambercare.com.
LPN/RN WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE
CNA’S An independent elementary school in Santa Fe, seeks candidates for a Full-time 3rd Grade Teacher, Parttime 3rd Grade Associate Teacher (twenty hours), and a Full-Time Early Childhood Associate position beginning August 2014. Rio Grande School serves students from three years old to sixth grade, with class sizes ranging from 15-20 students, and a total school population of 160. Please review the full position description at www.riograndeschool.org Competitive salaries offered, and all full-time employees receive a retirement plan with matching contributions, medical insurance, life insurance, and both short and long term disability insurance. Interested individuals should email a cover letter, resume, and 3-5 references to Interim Head of School, Patrick Brown, at patrick_brown@riograndeschool.o rg Rio Grande School does not discriminate on the basis of age, sex, race, color, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and national or ethnic origin in its hiring practices. TEMPLE BETH SHALOM Preschool Director. BA, early childhood education. Knowledge of Judaism necessary. Job description at www.sftbs.org; resume to info@sftbs.org
WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVAILABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE.
Firewood for sale A full measured cord for $150. Split and stacked. Mostly cottonwood. 505-455-2562.
CHERRY SHAKER BEDFRAME & Simmons World Class B E A U T Y R E S T boxspring & mattress, extra- extra firm. Queen size. Excellent condition. $800. 505-983-4684
MISCELLANEOUS
RETAIL Resale Store Associate
HOSPITALITY
Full-time Furniture Mover, Sales Associate wanted for Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s south-side resale store. Visit www.sfhumanesociety.org for details.
Downtown Santa Fe French Restaurant & Patisserie, with liquor license looking for Prep-Cook and Executive Chef. 505-216-1845 or email chezmamousf@gmail.com
SALES ASSOCIATE. Full or parttime. Experience in high end apparel and jewelry. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. Resume emailed karenmalouf@ maloufontheplaza.com.
O N -C ALL S WITCHBOARD O PERATOR For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.stjohnscollege.edu. Click on — “About” “Santa Fe Campus” “Santa Fe Jobs.” This is a temporary on-call position. Please stop by the Human Resources Office at St. John’s College, 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, NM 87505, in Weigle Hall – Room 106 to fill out an application. Applications will be accepted until interviews begin. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
3 Cabs, e.g. 4 Winter coat 5 Two-time 1990s A.L. batting champ Edgar 6 Procreates 7 Help desk sign 8 Deltiologist’s collection 9 Post-op area 10 Basque baskets 11 Shot 12 People 13 Rat 14 They come and go 21 Storyteller? 23 Arrangements may be made in them 24 Weed killer 25 Horrific 26 Classic board game 27 Daughter of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands 29 Tribute maker 30 Key 31 Inane ones
Friday’s Puzzle Solved
(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
33 Absorbed 34 Salon, for one 36 Big name in movies? 37 Nickname in 20th-century British leadership 42 Short time out? 43 Word on a Canadian loonie 44 San Diego attraction
3/15/14
45 Picked up 46 Tide table term 47 Words before time or point 48 Wood __ 50 City on the Brazos 51 Apple product 52 Converse 54 Touchdown info 56 Nod, at times
Outside Lottery Sales Representative
WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATES NAMBÉ, A 50+ year tabletop- giftware company, is looking for warehouse associates for its busy Distribution Dept. in Espanola. Successful applicants have attention to detail, are organized, and have a positive attitude. Excellent communication and numerical skills are a must. Positions are non-clerical, applicants must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Must be able to pass both a background and drug test. Salary DOE. Benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com.
DOWN 1 Colorado State’s __ Arena 2 MLB nickname in recent news
3/15/14
By Barry C. Silk
FURNITURE
DISPATCHER: EARN more than Living Wage, will train! Customer service & computer skills, leadership, know Santa Fe geography required. Free drug test! Apply in person with copy of your clean driving record, Monday- Friday 8am- 2pm ONLY. 2875 Industrial Road.
FULL-TIME HOUSEKEEPER’S ASSISTANT 505-660-6440
ACROSS 1 Instrument played with mallets 8 Pitcher’s coup 15 Mine carriers 16 Orwell superstate 17 1980s Hollywood sex symbol 18 Hang 19 Meas. seen on a tee 20 Beguile 22 Warthog features 23 Screened conversation? 25 28-Across natives, e.g. 28 The Mekong flows along its border 29 Fighter acronym 32 Going downhill 33 “The __ Affair”: Jasper Fforde novel 34 Lighten 35 Winter forecast 38 Servers at affairs 39 Ballpark figs. 40 Needles 41 Food-curing chemical 42 “__ Mia”: 1965 hit 43 Give away 44 Funk band instrument 46 When to see die Sterne 49 Pasta bit 50 Card quality 53 Odorless fuels 55 Tennessee neighbor 57 Zip up 58 Extreme 59 Surfing annoyance 60 Ship maintenance site
SEASONED FIREWOOD . P ONDEROSA $80.00 PER LOAD. Pinion or Cedar $120.00 per load. tel# 508-444-0087 delivery free
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
GALLERIES SORREL SKY GALLERY IS HIRING staff for its new location on W. Palace Ave. Please email m a rg a re t@ s o rre ls k y .c o m for job descriptions.
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Resumes may be emailed to: mdelao@citiesofgold.com. Applications may be picked up and dropped off at Cities of Gold Casino Hotel. EOE
ACCOUNTING
Have a product or service to offer? 986-3000 Call our small business experts today! FOR RELEASE MARCH 15, 2014
WESTON MANDOLINE Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-4666205
The New Mexico Lottery Authority is seeking to fill a full-time position as Outside Lottery Sales Representative servicing northern New Mexico. Must possess excellent organizational and communication skills, be a self-starter and have a high level of creativity and motivation to maximize sales. Duties include; recruiting, sales and service of retail accounts, inventory management, retailer training, merchandising of product, implementation of retail promotions, and participation in special events. Qualified applicants must possess a high school diploma or equivalent, have a minimum of two years experience in a selling or service environment, possess and maintain a valid New Mexico driver’s license and be insurable for standard vehicle insurance with a good driving record, and must be able to lift 50lbs. In compliance with New Mexico state laws, applicants for this position must be at least 21 years of age. Successful candidate must live in the Santa Fe area or be willing to relocate at own expense. Daily travel and overnight travel within assigned territory, as well as, periodic overnight travel outside of sales territory is required. Applicants should have a working knowledge of MS office suite programs. Selected candidate must pass an extensive background check. Letter of interest and resumes must be postmarked or faxed to (505)342-7525 by no later than March 21, 2014. Send to NMLA, HR Dept., P.O. Box 93130, Albuquerque, NM 87199-3130. EOE
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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DOMESTIC
4X4s
4X4s
4X4s
2008 Hummer H2 SUT - REALLY! ONLY 38k miles, totally loaded with leather, NAV and chrome brush guard, clean CarFax, this one’s HOT $46,731. 505-216-3800.
2010 FORD F150 EXTRA CAB 4X4. LOW MILES, ZERO DOWN, WAC. CREAM OF THE CROP. $21,995. Please call 505-473-1234.
2004 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE V8 LIMITIED. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call, 505-3213920.
2006 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER HYBRID 4WD Limited. Fresh Lexus trade! Leather, moonroof, needs nothing, clean CarFax, pristine car! $15,881. Call 505-216-3800.
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IMPORTS
Steinway Upright 45", manufactured 1988. Exceptionally fine condition. Flawless finish. Turning pins uniformly snug. No cracks in sound board. Bench included. $5,500. Willing to negotiate. 505-982-9237.
TOOLS MACHINERY REMINGTON RAM Set 22 caliber, Brand new condition, with case and 12 boxes of charges and nails. $150.00. John 808-346-3635
TV RADIO STEREO SPEAKERS FOR SALE!! ALTEC Lansing BX1120, Computer Speakers, $25; Advent Wireless Speakers, AW820, with transmitter, $40. Bill, 505-466-2976.
IT’S OUR ANNIVERSARY!
GARAGE SALE NORTH ESPANOLA, "LA Mesilla" 13 CR 126. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday 3/14 & Saturday 3/15. Old Toyota Truck Also.
GARAGE SALE WEST
2005 FORD Sport Trac Crew Cab, 4x4, automatic, 50,000 miles, fully loaded, XLT, $12,500. 505-471-2439
Help animals and save at Santa Fe’s premier resale store, The Cat 2, 541 W. Cordova Road, 505-7808975. 25% off EVERYTHING, FridaySunday, All proceeds benefit the Santa Fe Animal Shelter.
WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! Using
We always Larger get results!
Type
Moving Sale: Lots of great stuff.
Pine and oak furniture, planter pots, exercise equipment, Frigidaire front loading washer, sofa, cabinets, building materials and tools, china, kitchen pots and pans, and much more. Saturdays and Sundays March 15-16, March 22-23 and March 29-30. 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. In duplex at 2210-2214 West Alameda. Watch for yard sale signs!
2005 MERCURY MONTEGO - Premium luxury. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-9204078.
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2001 FORD F150 4WD - You have to see this! $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-9204078.
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www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2707 VEREDA Rodiando 3/15/14 ONLY, 8 to NOON - Boys clothing, household goods, linens, great furniture, tv, lamps, shelving. EXCELLENT QUALITY, PRICES.
ESTATE SALES
1996 FORD F-250 super cab. Great 4x4. Super low miles, 130k, with big block power for all your hauling needs. $5,200 OBO. 505-350-0572 2007 PONTIAC G6 Coupe GT. One owner, no accidents! 89,331 miles. $9,999. Schedule a test drive today!
2006 PONTIAC G6 4 door Sedan with 1SV Brand new tires. Great price. Checked out well. $4,999. Schedule a test drive today!
Frank and Friends Estate Sale, 621 Halona St. Saturday, 3/15, 9-2, Antique. Player Piano- Orchestra. Condo Full. Go to www.stephensconsignments.com for details.
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES GRASS, ALFALFA MIX BALES. $9.50 each. 100 or more, $9 each. Barn stored in Ribera, NM. Please call 505-4735300.
Hay for sale Barn-stored pasture grass. Bales average 60 lbs. $13 per bale. Load your own in Nambé. 505-455-2562. PETS SUPPLIES
2801 FLORAL ROAD NW, 87104. Friday 12-5, Saturday & Sunday 8-5. Fine Premium Antiques, crystal, china, linens, jewelry, art work, antique frames & furniture, statuary, mirrors, tools. Sewing machines, notions, material galore, patterns and much more! Huge to Small- Come OneCome All! Check out our website daily, www.Lucas-estatesaleabq.com.
4X4s
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MOVING SALE! Furniture Only. Saturday, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. 1807 C Arroyo Chamiso Rd.
Saturday 9-1. Beds, love seat, chest, chairs, deck furniture, shop vac, tools, carpet steam cleaner, cameras, misc. 2238 Calle Cacique.
2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Yup, another 1 owner from Lexus! NEW tires, NEW brakes, clean CarFax, low miles, the search is over! $18,611. Call 505-216-3800.
2001 CHEVROLET 1500 4WD - Trust worthy at a great price. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
2010 BMW 535Xi AWD. Recent trade-in, factory CERTIFIED with warranty & maintenance until 3/2016, fully loaded, clean CarFax $23,897. Call 505-216-3800.
2003 GMC SIERRA 4WD EXT CAB Great work truck! $8,000. Sxchedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.
»cars & trucks« www.furrysbuickgmc.com
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AKC SHIH TZU PUPS . Will be ready late March with first shots, vet checked, and deworming in L.A. Call 505-690-3087 for prices and details.
2011 TOYOTA Tacoma Double Cab 4WD. Good miles, local vehicle, well maintained, TRD Off-Road, clean CarFax, NICE! $29,421. Call 505-216-3800.
ATTENTION DOG OWNERS!
DOMESTIC 1999 CADILLAC SEVILLE with 68,000 miles. Runs great. Sunroof, leather seats, fully loaded. A/C. $3,700. 505316-6409
2007 BMW 328XI - WOW! Just 43k miles and a single owner! AWD, navigation, NEW tires and brakes, clean CarFax, what a gem! $18,821. Call 505-216-3800.
1996 CHEVROLET C O R V E T T E manual, 64,117 miles, beige int. rear wheel drive. $13,999. Schedule a test drive today! 2009 HONDA ACCORD SEDAN LX Automatic Sedan New brakes and tires! One owner - it doesn’t get any better than that! Local car, we know where it comes from. $11,999. Schedule a test drive today! .
CHEVROLET CHEVELLE 1970 SS unrestored 396, 350HP, blue, white with white stripes, $9600, M-21 MUNCIE 4SPD manual, huffyk9@outlook.com, 505-609-8587.
D A L L A S is a one year old spayed German Shepherd cross. She is smart and energetic! She would love to be part of an active family who will take her for long hikes or daily jogs. micro-chipped and has all her shots. Call 505-501-0790 for more information & a personal introduction.
2010 BMW 335Xi - Another Lexus trade! Low miles, AWD, completely loaded with Navigation, still under warranty! clean CarFax $27,817. Call 505-216-3800.
1994 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4WD $2,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
!!!Huge Estate Sale!!! March 14-16.
AKC REGISTERED German Shepherd Puppies (Eastern European Bloodline). 5 Females, $500 each. 4 Males, $600 each. Sable, Black, Black-Tan. Call 505-490-1748.
Paws Plaza has $40 haircuts, dogs under 40 pounds. Full Service with teeth brushing. Fourth Street. 505820-7529.
2005 Acura MDX AWD
Sweet MDX loaded with leather, navigation, new tires, in excellent condition. No accidents, CarFax, warranty $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com .
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2003 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY HSE. Check this baby out! $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
986-3000
2005 CHEVY Impala, 87,000 miles, V-6, 4-door, in good condition. $6,000. 505-424-0233.
2006 BMW X5 4.4V8
Immaculate X5 with V8, Automatic, DVD, Satellite radio, chrome wheels, 71k miles, Carfax, Warranty. $16,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2007 DODGE RAM 1500 TX 4WD What a truck! $17,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505321-3920.
2009 Toyota 4Runner 4X4
2012 CHRYSLER 200, CERTIFIED, ONLY 1700 MILES, SAVE THOUSANDS, QUEEN OF ROAD $18,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.
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2012 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED. FULL LUXURY, ALWAYS IN FASHION. $31,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.
Sweet 7 Passenger, Automatic V6, Power windows & locks, cruise, tilt, CD, alloys, immaculate, CarFax, warranty. $17,995. www.sweetmotorsales.com . 505954-1054.
2004 BMW X3 AWD
Sweet, mint condition, low mileage, panoramic moonroof, CD, alloys with new tires. Carfax, warranty. $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com .
QUALITY TINY POMERANIAN puppies. Sable male $600, sable female $800, rare chocolate male $800. Registered, 1st shots. 505-901-2094 or 505753-0000. F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $15,500. 505-470-2536 2012 DODGE AVENGER, BLACK. LEAD THE PACK. CERTIFIED FOR $12,995. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.
YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPPIES, 2 females, 2 males. Small, teddybear faces. Non-shedding, hypoallergenic, registered, shots, $800$1000. Call, or text, 505-577-4755.
2005 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4WD. Well maintained, veteran owned, recently serviced, super clean, great reliable modest 4WD, clean CarFax, $9,971. Call 505-216-3800.
2008 TOYOTA FJ Cruiser. Another Lexus trade-in! 60k miles, 4x4, lifted, super nice, clean CarFax, $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.
2002 LEXUS RX300. Loaded & Very Good condition. Gold. Factory warranted transmission. Newer tires. Leather interior, sunroof. $6,800. 505660-6008
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS
IMPORTS
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Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
IMPORTS
PICKUP TRUCKS
2005 BMW X-5 4.4i Sport, premium package, cold weather package, moon roof, navigation, premium sound, More! 92,000 miles, $15,000. 505-424-0133
1998 TOYOTA 4-door Corolla. 124,000 miles, good condition. $2,800. Call to schedule a test drive, 505-231-5370.
2012 HONDA CIVIC. 26K MILES, ONE OWNER, STYLISH SPLENDER. $16,999. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.
2007 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350. 64k miles, navigation, back-up camera, moonroof, heated seats, excellent! $18,000. Please call 505699-8339.
2003 FORD F-150 2WD Regular Cab Flareside 6-1/2 Ft. Box XL. 99,602 miles. $7,999. Schedule a test drive today.
2011 SUBARU OUTBACK LIMITED
Another One Owner, Local, 41,985 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, Records, Factory Warranty, New Tires, Pristine. Soooo Perfect $23,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE!
SUVs
2008 CHEVROLET EQUINOX 4WD LTZ - Room for the whole family. $13,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
2009 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN SE AWD, navigation, moonroof, turbo, clean CarFax, prisitine! $15,897. Call 505-216-3800.
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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2007 GMC Acadia Front wheel drive 66k, sunroof, 7 passenger, excellent condition, $13,500. 505-982-4609
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CALL 986-3000 2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L - another 1owner Lexus trade-in, AWD, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $20,981. 505-2163800.
2009 MINI Cooper S - ASTONISHING 30k miles! Recent local Lexus trade in! Fully loaded, NAV, leather, panoramic roof, and 1 owner clean CarFax, immacualte $15,961. Call 505-216-3800.
2007 GMC SIERRA DURAMAX 4WD. NICE TRUCK!! - $26,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
1999 Subaru GT Wagon AWD
Immaculate grey leather interior, automatic, moonroof, CD, pwr windows, locks, alloys, well maintained Carfax, free extended warranty $6,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2004 VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE. Automatic. Leather interior, excellent condition. 68,000 miles. $7,500 OBO. 505-577-1159.
2004 GMC YUKON DENALI AWD WOW! Superstar status SUV. $10,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
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www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2005 Honda Civic EX
Automatic, Moonroof, Sat Radio, tint, alloys, Carfax, Extended Warranty $8,695. 505-954-1054 www.sweetmotorsales.com
2005 Mini Cooper
Sweet Chili red, black and tan leather, panoramic moonroof, heated seats, 5 speed manual, Carfax, free extended warranty $7,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2006 VOLVO-C70 CONVERTIBLE FWD
Another One Owner, Local, Garaged, Non-Smoker, X-Keys, Manuals, 36,974 Miles, Every Service Record, Press Button Convertible-Hardtop. Soooo Desirable $16,450 PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
2005 GMC 3500 CREWCAB DURAMAX 4WD. If you like trucks, this is the one! $22,000. 505-3213920.
Using
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1999 Subaru GT Wagon AWD
Sweet accident free GT. Leather, panoramic moonroof, power seats, windows, locks, cruise, CD Low miles, Carfax, warranty $6,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2012 Infiniti M37x AWD - Just traded! Gorgeous and loaded, good miles, navigation & technology packages, local one owner, clean CarFax $33,752. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000 2009 HUMMER H3T ALPHA V8. $34,000. Schedule a test drive today! Call 505-321-3920.
2008 Land Rover LR3 HSE
Fully loaded in showroom condition. Impeccable tan leather and wood, service history, Carfax, free extended warranty. $18,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
2011 TOYOTA AVALON LIMITED. Another 1 owner Lexus trade, only 20k miles, loaded, navigation, clean CarFax, pristine condition $25,881. Call 505-216-3800.
VIEW VEHICLE:
santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
PICKUP TRUCKS
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
TOYOTA 2002 TACOMA TRUCK, 2door. Silver exterior, Grey interior. Auto, 2WD. 169,000 miles. Good cond. $4100. 830-719-4371.
SPORTS CARS 2006 NISSAN ALTIMA. $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.
2008 TOYOTA CAMRY-SE
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2004 LEXUS RX-330 AWD
Another One Owner Local, Carfax, 69,454 Miles, Garaged, NonSmoker, X-Keys, Manuals, Service Records, New Tires, Sunroof, Bluetooth, XM Radio, Front Wheel Drive, Pristine Soooo Desirable $13,950. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
Another One Owner, Carfax, 80,014 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Service Records, New Tires, Chrome Wheels, Moon-Roof, Loaded. Pristine. Soooo Beautiful $16,250. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2005 CADILLAC CTS 4 door Sedan 3.6L One owner with no accidents!! REPLACED FRONT & REAR BRAKE PADS AND MACHINED ROTORS. This is an awesome buy! $12,999. Schedule a test drive today! .
NEW!! 2012 FLAT BED TRAILER. 14,000 pounds. GVW, 18’x8’ extra heavy duty. Loading ramps, tool box & spare. $4,499 OBO. 808-346-3635
Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today! 1994 CHEVROLET S10 - GAS SAVER! Check it out. Only $2,000! Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
2003 TOYOTA 4RUNNER LIMITED
986-3000
2004 FORD Mustang Convertible. Excellent condition, automatic, 44,000 miles $9,500. 505-471-2439
VANS & BUSES
2008 JEEP RUBICON 4 door. TWO TOPS - NICE! - $25,000. Schedule a test drive today! $6,000. 505-9204078.
2011 KIA SEDONA LX - This van is perfect for your family. $14,000 Please call 505-321-3920.
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Another Local Owner, Garaged, Non-Smoker X-Keys, Manuals, Every Service Record From Day One, Loaded, Pristine. Soooo Toyota Dependable $11,950. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2006 TOYOTA Prius. WOW! Another 1 owner Lexus trade-in, merely 45k miles! Back-up camera, awesome condition, clean CarFax $11,471. Call 505-216-3800.
TRUCKS & TRAILERS
2004 CHEVROLET AVALANCHE Z71 4WD Crew Cab. ONLY $10,000! Please call 505-920-4078 .
2012 SMART fortwo Passion - Just 14k miles, rare totally loaded model, navigation, upgraded sound, HID lights, heated seats, alloys, super cool and fun! $11,841. Call 505216-3800
2011 SUBARU IMPREZA 5 D O O R HATCHBACK. AWD, 26,000 miles, Silver, excellent condition, Manual 5speed transmission, 6 CD player. Call 505-699-8389.
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986-3000
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2010 LEXUS IS-250 SEDAN
Another One owner, Local, Carfax, 16,226 Miles, Service Records,Factory Warranty, Fully Loaded, Why Buy New, Pristine, Soooo Desirable, $26,950.
2004 VOLVO XC-90 AWD - Sporty and luxurious. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505920-4078.
Call Classifieds For Details Today!
2006 VW Touareg AWD V8
1 owner, fully loaded, 60k miles, navigation, leather, moonroof, Carfax, free extended warranty $15,995. 505-954-1054. www.santafenewmexican.com
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
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2008 NISSAN SENTRA-S FWD
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TIME OUT
Saturday, March 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX ACROSS 1 Things millions of people have received in history?: Abbr. 4 Snap 15 Dieter’s beef? 16 Foreigner hit in the musical film “Rock of Ages” 17 ___ poco (soon: It.) 18 Western way 19 Guy 21 Until 2007, youngest player to qualify for an L.P.G.A. Tour event 22 Not equal to 23 Ticket number? 24 Lock combinations? 25 Jewish community org. 26 Running back’s target 27 Five minutes in a campaign itinerary, maybe 29 Physics class subj. 30 Chestnut, say 31 2013 Spike Jonze love story 34 Piece in a fianchetto opening 36 Squalid
38 Yo-yo 39 Play with someone else’s toy? 43 “Check it out!,” in Chihuahua 44 Induces a shudder in 45 Hominy makers extract it 46 One attached to a handle 48 Decks 49 Something a baton carrier might pick up 50 ___ passu (on equal footing) 51 Head, for short 52 This point forward 53 Sri Lankan export 56 Day of the week of the great stock market crash, Oct. 29, 1929 57 It once had many satellites in its orbit 58 Prefix with -gram 59 Prized cuts 60 Nutritional inits. DOWN 1 Biblical figure famously painted nude by Rembrandt 2 Certain temple locale
Requested reprint of ‘A Dog’s Plea’
3 Not likely to blush 4 Steep-sided inlet 5 It may be on the line 6 Nickname on old political buttons 7 Watchmaker’s cleaning tool 8 Threesome needed in Wagner’s “Ring” cycle 9 Bar ___ 10 Call routing abbr. 11 Peewee 12 Useful item if you 39-Across 13 “Three Sisters” sister 14 Fool 20 Tree with burs
24 Shipping choice 25 Protest vehemently 27 Low-priced American vodka known affectionately (and ironically) as “Russia’s finest” 28 Brewers’ hot spots 31 Music genre of Poison and Guns N’ Roses 32 Poet arrested for treason in 1945 33 Golden Globes nominee who was a Golden Gloves boxer 35 River through Silesia
37 Reddish remnant 40 Quit working 41 Austrian neighbor 42 “___ alive!” 44 Curb 46 Health store snack ingredient 47 “Inside the Actors Studio” channel 49 Nancy Drew never left hers behind 50 Honeycomb maker 51 “I’m game” 52 Left or right, say 54 “No kiddin’!” 55 “The Power to Surprise” sloganeer
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.
Hocus Focus
Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.
Subject: FOOD AND DRINK (e.g., Dom Perignon is associated with which drink? Answer: Champagne.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. This process is designed to rid milk of bacteria. Answer________ 2. It is also known as a groundnut, earthnut and goober pea. Answer________ 3. Dried plums are called ____. Answer________ 4. In which musical film was the song “Food, Glorious Food”? Answer________ 5. A person who eats no food of animal origin is called a ____. Answer________
Jumble
Sheinwold’s bridge
Today is Saturday, March 15, the 74th day of 2014. There are 291 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On March 15, 44 B.C., Roman dictator Julius Caesar was assassinated by a group of nobles that included Brutus and Cassius.
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, March 15, 2014: This year you head in a new direction and add to your life possibilities. Be willing to take a wellthought-out risk or two, but curb an impulsive streak. If you follow your emotional and intuitive thoughts, you will land well. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You might experience a lot of optimism throughout the day. You’ll feel good about those in your immediate circle. Tonight: A must appearance. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Your romantic nature emerges. You will head in a direction where you feel comfortabl. Tonight: Be naughty and nice. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You will be much happier dealing with a family member than you have been in a while. Tonight: Invite others over for a fun evening. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You’ll speak your mind loud and clear. You could be shocked by someone who you look up to. Tonight: Out and about. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Curb a need to be selfindulgent. Today you will be able to back away from a touchy situation. Tonight: Enjoy your friends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH A family member could try to show you who is in control, but you will show this person that he or she is in for a shock. Tonight: Not to be found. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You will succeed, especially if you are involved in an important engagement or project. Tonight: Enjoy the moment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might feel as if someone is raining on your parade by mentioning what you must do. Tonight: A must appearance.
Cryptoquip
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
Horoscope
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH Sometimes people don’t get to see who you really are because of your demeanor. Tonight: As you like it.
PH.D. LEVEL 11. Ancient Egyptians placed a hand on this vegetable when taking an oath. Answer________ 12. The name of which alcoholic beverage is derived from the wormwood plant? Answer________ 13. What magical phrase used by Ali Baba contains the name of a seed? Answer________ 14. What is the literal meaning of the Italian word “linguine”? Answer________ 15. On the cookie, “OREO” appears in an oval. What symbol sits atop the oval? Answer________
ANSWERS: 1. Pasteurization. 2. Peanut. 3. Prunes. 4. Oliver! 5. Vegan. 6. Cocoa Puffs. 7. “Master of the House.” 8. Burger King. 9. Wendy’s. 10. Beans. 11. Onion. 12. Vermouth. 13. “Open sesame.” 14. Little tongues. 15. A two-bar cross.
WHITE TO PLAY Hint: Simplify and win. Solution: 1. Qc7ch! Ke6 2. Qxf4 Rxf4 3. Kxf4 (the a-pawn queens easily) [from Najer-Morozevich ’14].
Dear Annie: Our children are now adults, and every year we give them a check for their IRA’s, as well as something personal. Last year, I decided to make them a cookbook and write down my best recipes. I printed them, placed them in plastic sleeves and put them in a binder. Then I put all of my recipes on flash drives and gave them to my kids. They really enjoyed having the recipes they enjoyed as children. If you don’t know what to get your parents or grandparents, I highly recommend the gift of your time. If Grandma makes the best piecrust in town, ask her to show you. Take your parents out to lunch. You may also want to check to be sure that your parents have everything they need to be comfortable. Older people may have trouble opening cans, so a good can opener would make their lives easier. Winters are cold, and it is expensive to heat the house, so warm slippers, socks, etc., make a difference. — S.S. Dear S.S.: Thank you for your thoughtful and creative gift ideas. People often assume a gift means money, but it’s the less expensive things that can mean the most. Dear Annie: “Hurt and Exasperated” said her husband refused to help around the house. About 30 years ago, we were expecting friends over, and it was my husband’s turn to do the dishes, but as usual, he conveniently “forgot.” I wasn’t in the mood to do his job, but I couldn’t leave those dirty dishes out for my friends to see. So I put them in the oven. We lived in a tiny house without airconditioning. Did I mention it was a hot summer? Several days later, when he was looking for a clean dish, I told him to check the oven. Inside there was a pile of nasty crusted plates with mold growing on them. He never “forgot” again. — A.
GRADUATE LEVEL 6. Sonny the Cuckoo Bird was cuckoo for this breakfast cereal. Answer________ 7. Which song contains “Food beyond compare. Food beyond belief”? Answer________ 8. Where would you buy a Whopper? Answer________ 9. Who advertises “We do it Dave’s Way ... we don’t cut corners”? Answer________ 10. If black-eyed peas are not peas, what are they? Answer________
ANSWERS:
Chess quiz
Dear Annie: You printed an essay about a year ago regarding the loss of a pet from the pet’s point of view. I’m sorry, but that’s all I remember. I recall the way that poem made me feel. I hope you can help me dig it up. — A.S. Dear A.S.: That poem is one of our most requested, and we are pleased to reprint it. A Dog’s Plea By Beth Norman Harris Treat me kindly, my beloved friend, for no heart in all the world is more grateful for kindness than the loving heart of me. Do not break my spirit with a stick, for though I might lick your hand between blows, your patience and understanding will more quickly teach me the things you would have me learn. Speak to me often, for your voice is the world’s sweetest music, as you must know by the fierce wagging of my tail when the sound of your footstep falls upon my waiting ear. Please take me inside when it is cold and wet, for I am a domesticated animal, no longer accustomed to bitter elements. I ask no greater glory than the privilege of sitting at your feet beside the hearth. Keep my pan filled with fresh water, for I cannot tell you when I suffer thirst. Feed me clean food that I might stay well, to romp and play and do your bidding, to walk by your side and stand ready, willing and able to protect you with my life, should your life be in danger. And, my friend, when I am very old, and I no longer enjoy good health, hearing and sight, do not make heroic efforts to keep me going. I am not having any fun. Please see that my trusting life is taken gently. I shall leave this Earth knowing with the last breath I draw that my fate was always safest in your hands.
B-11
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.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You might want to defer plans to take off spontaneously. You know what is good for you. Tonight: Follow the music. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Understand what a partner wants. Ask questions — don’t make assumptions. Tonight: Stop and enjoy the person you are with. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Others come toward you. Touch base with a loved one, even if he or she seems off-kilter. Tonight: Do not stand on ceremony. Jacqueline Bigar
THE NEW MEXICAN Saturday, March 15, 2014
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
B-12
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER