Santa Fe New Mexican, March 16, 2014*

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Our View: No more mines for La Bajada Mesa Opinions, B-2

Locally owned and independent

Lobos successfully defend Mountain West title Sports, D-1

Sunday, March 16, 2014

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Focus turns to pilots

Jury finds Christmas killer guilty

Malaysia says jet was intentionally diverted. Page A-3

Man, 19, convicted of second-degree murder, manslaughter in ’12 shooting

School has global view The new Mandela International Magnet School promises to challenge students. Page C-1

By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican

Tensions mount on eve of election As Russia seizes a gas plant near the Crimean border, Kiev says it reserves the right to stop the “invasion.” Page A-5

Joe Rivera

Report details dependency on oil, gas revenue Santa Fe County, while not a production area, still receives benefits By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

For decades, counties in the northwestern and southeastern corners of the state have reaped the rewards of oil and gas production. Now, as other areas of the state weigh the benefits and costs of more oil and gas development, a new report shows just how dependent all New Mexico counties are on fossil fuel revenues — even those like Santa Fe County that

Joe Rivera shook his head Saturday as District Judge Mary Marlowe read a jury’s verdict, convicting him of one count of voluntary manslaughter and one count of second-degree murder in a Christmas Day 2012 shooting that left two men dead.

The jury came to the verdict on its second day of deliberating 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 party. He reportedly shot both men in the chest and fired a second bullet into Griego as he lay wounded under a carport. Griego died at the scene and Baker died from his injuries later at the hospital. Rivera was found guilty of seconddegree murder in Griego’s death and

guilty of the lesser charge for Baker’s killing. He also was found guilty of tampering with evidence and conspiracy to tamper with evidence. Friends and family members spoke with Rivera as he was being escorted out from the courtroom, telling him, “I love you.” But neither his family nor the families of the victims would comment on the verdict. David Silva, Rivera’s attorney, said his client could be facing more than

Please see GUILTY, Page A-4

REPEAT DEFEAT: Huskies deny horsemen crown again

aren’t producers. The report by the New Mexico Tax Research Institute details oil and gas revenues down to the county level and provides a glimpse of the state’s challenge as it tries to diversify its economy without hurting its bottom line. Santa Fe County, which has effectively kept out oil and gas development through a restrictive ordinance, benefits from production in other counties. Santa Fe Public Schools, for example, received $81.7 million from the state general fund in 2013. More than $25 million of that money came from oil and gas revenues, according to the report.

Please see OIL, Page A-4 St. Michael’s High players console one another Saturday after they lost to Hope Christian 55-34 in the Class AAA boys basketball championship game in The Pit in Albuquerque. It was the second straight year in which the Horsemen lost the title to the Huskies. See the full story in Sports, Page D-1. Jane Phillips/The New Mexican

Cop cameras raise privacy concerns Wearable devices gain popularity faster than agencies can police use By Tami Abdollah The Associated Press

Dustin Murray, a lease operator with Lance Oil and Gas Company, works on the engine of a pump jack near U.S. 64, between Farmington and Kirtland, in 2008. Farmington Daily Times file photo

Eldorado board election could affect chicken case New members will be installed 4 days before trial is slated to begin By Anne Constable The New Mexican

Two defendants in the infamous lawsuit over backyard poultry in Eldorado are among the candidates for the board of the Eldorado Community Improvement Association. And they’re sure to win. There are seven candidates and seven open positions on the governing board of the ECIA, which manages the amenities and enforces the rules in the sprawling community (2,650 homes) south of Santa Fe.

Index

Ballots will be mailed to lot owners March 28, and voting will end May 1. The top three vote-getters will receive three-year terms of office. The next two will serve two-year terms, and the bottom two finishers will each receive a one-year term. The two sides in the fight over whether chicken coops are allowed under the subdivision’s covenants will be closely watching the outcome, even though the makeup of the board is already determined. A big win for the pro-chicken candidates could be viewed by them as a mandate to end the ECIA’s lawsuit, which reportedly has already cost the community at least $50,000.

Please see ELDORADO, Page A-4

LOS ANGELES — Officers at thousands of law enforcement agencies are wearing tiny cameras to record their interactions with the public, but in many cases the devices are being rolled out faster than departments are able to create policies to govern their use. And some rank-and-file officers are worried the technology might ultimately be used to derail their careers if, for example, an errant comment about a superior is captured on tape. Most law enforcement leaders and civil liberties advocates believe the cameras will ultimately help officers because the

Please see CAMERAS, Page A-6

Pasapick

Sgt. Daniel Gomez of the Los Angeles Police Department demonstrates video feed from his camera for the media in Los Angeles in January. Thousands of police agencies have equipped officers with cameras to wear with their uniforms, but they’ve frequently lagged in setting policies on how they’re used, potentially putting privacy at risk and increasing their liability. Associated Press file photo

Obituaries www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Billy the Kid in the Movies The New Mexico History Museum marks the closing of Cowboys Real and Imagined with an illustrated talk by historian Baldwin G. Burr, 2 p.m., New Mexico History Museum Auditorium, 113 Lincoln Ave., by museum admission, 476-5200. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo

Yvonne Carleton, 93, Santa Fe, March 4 Lois Marie Merideth, 88, Santa Fe, March 11 Rebecca Ponce-Osborn, March 4 Julian Hector RabaudiDufau, Santa Fe, Dec. 8 Manuel E. Marquez Jr., 79, Santa Fe, March 13 Page C-2

Calendar A-2 Classifieds E-8 Lotteries A-2 Neighbors C-6 Opinions B-1 Real Estate E-1 Sports D-1 Time Out/crossword C-8

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Today Mostly sunny. High 55, low 30. Page D-6

Six sections, 44 pages 165th year, No. 75 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

NATION&WORLD the decision he called invalid. Ali Zidan blasted his Islamist rivals in the hourlong interview with the private television station Libya Ahrar, saying they worked against him from the time he was sworn in in November 2012. “For them, Zidan was rejected in every way. From the first day, they tried to get me to quit or dismiss me,” Zidan said. “Since the prime minister is not a member in their political group, regardless if he is a success or a failure, he must be finished.” Zidan said he didn’t flee Libya, but that he was advised by allies in the parliament to leave the country over concerns about his safety and to avoid getting arrested after he was voted out of office Tuesday.

In brief Gunmen kill 6 Egyptian soldiers CAIRO — Gunmen stormed an Egyptian army checkpoint outside Cairo early Saturday morning and killed six soldiers, including some still in their beds, officials said, in what amounted to an escalation by militants on military targets near the capital. Just days earlier, masked men opened fire on a busload of military police inside city limits, another rare attack on soldiers this far from the restive Sinai Peninsula, where the army is fighting a counterinsurgency campaign. Provincial security chief Maj. Gen. Mahmoud Yousri told state news agency MENA that the gunmen also planted explosive devices after Saturday’s attack in Shubra al-Kheima, but bomb disposal experts managed to diffuse two and detonate another in a controlled explosion. The military blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for the attack, calling the group “terrorists” and saying they had planted the additional bombs to target rescue workers rushing to the scene.

Car bombs kill 19 in Iraq’s capital BAGHDAD — A series of car bomb attacks targeting commercial areas and a restaurant killed at least 19 people Saturday in Iraq’s capital, Baghdad, authorities said. Police officials said a car bomb went off at night in a commercial street in al-Ameen district in southeastern Baghdad, killing four people and wounding 13. Minutes later, police said another car bomb explosion near a falafel restaurant killed three people in the capital’s Qahira neighborhood. A third car bomb exploded in a commercial street in western Baghdad, killing four, police said. Later, a car bomb in a commercial area of Baghdad’s northwestern neighborhood of Shula killed

Comedian David Brenner dies at 78

CHICAGO RIVER RUNS GREEN Kayakers float on the Chicago River after it was dyed a bright emerald green Saturday ahead of the St. Patrick’s Day parade in Chicago. The city’s privately funded river dyeing is a more than 40-year tradition sponsored by the local plumbers union. The project requires 40 pounds of powdered vegetable dye. PAUL BEATY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

four people, police said. In Baghdad’s northern district of Hurriyah, a car bomb also exploded, killing four people, police said. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, but they bore the hallmarks of an alQaida breakaway group. Violence has escalated in Iraq over the past year. Last year, the country saw the highest death toll since the worst of the country’s sectarian bloodletting began to subside in 2007, according to

United Nations figures. The U.N. said violence killed 8,868 last year in Iraq.

Libya’s PM says ouster is invalid TRIPOLI, Libya — Libya’s ousted prime minister gave his first interview since he left the country, saying in the televised appearance aired Saturday that he doesn’t recognize parliament’s dismissal of him and will contest

LOS ANGELES — David Brenner, the lanky, toothygrinned Tonight show favorite whose brand of observational comedy became a staple for other standups, including Jerry Seinfeld and Paul Reiser, died Saturday. He was 78. Brenner, who had been fighting cancer, died peacefully at his home in New York City with his family at his side, according to Jeff Abraham, his friend and publicist. “David Brenner was a huge star when I met him and he took me under his wing. To me, historically, he was the godfather of hip, observational comedy,” comedian Richard Lewis said in a statement. “He mentored me from day one. … His passing leaves a hole in my life that can never be replaced.” The tall, thin and always sharply dressed Brenner became one of the most frequent visitors to Johnny Carson’s Tonight in the 1970s and ’80s. His 150-plus appearances as guest and substitute host turned the former documentary filmmaker into a hot comedian, one who was ubiquitous on other talk shows and game shows. New Mexican wire services

Goodyear unveils next-generation blimp The Associated Press

AKRON, Ohio — The next generation of the well-known Goodyear blimp is getting ready to take flight as the company moves toward replacing its old fleet of airships with a new trio. The helium-filled airship, assembled at an Akron-area hangar and unveiled there Friday, is bigger, quicker and more maneuverable than earlier models, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. said. The 246-foot airship fits 12 passengers and has a semi-rigid internal skeleton, a feature that wasn’t present in earlier models and raises questions about whether it is truly a blimp, though the company still refers to it

as such. The structure is covered by a silver, balloon-like body emblazoned with Goodyear’s yellow logo on a blue background. It can travel at up to 73 mph and has custom computer-controlled avionics, an upgrade from the manual flight system used by the blimp pilots since the 1920s, the company said. It plans to build two more. A spokesman wouldn’t specify the cost of the new airship, which is expected to provide a longer flight range and better aerial broadcast capabilities for event coverage. “The completion of the new blimp marks the beginning of a new era for our airship program and reflects Goodyear’s commitment to remaining at the forefront of aerial broadcast coverage and support,” Paul Fitzhenry, Good-

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WWII vet surprised with medals Son-in-law discovered ex-POW was due Bronze Star, Purple Heart By Michael S. Rosenwald The Washington Post

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Seventy years after he was wounded twice and taken captive during a brutal battle in World War II, 93-year-old James Garnett stood as tall as he could Friday afternoon and finally accepted the medals he hadn’t known he was due. A Bronze Star Medal. A Purple Heart. When the military lawyers and other guests at the Army’s law school on the University of Virginia campus finally stopped clapping, Garnett cleared his throat, let go of his walker, and said: “Serving my country in World War II was honor enough for me, as it was for countless other service men and women. I accept these medals in the name of all who served and especially for those who made the ultimate sacrifice.” Evelyn, his college sweetheart and wife of 67 years, sat nearby with a bouquet of roses. Garnett took it all in, a surprised smile on his face. “I don’t think I deserve all the attention I’m getting,” he said, “but thanks anyway.” Garnett is among the 16 million Americans who served in World War II, a conflict that took the lives of more than 400,000 of them. Nearly 1.6 million veterans of that war are still alive, according to census data. But their numbers are dwindling. The ceremony honoring Private Garnett’s Army service was the result of an extraordinary discovery his son-in-law, Fred Craft, made last year while looking through old papers in a family safety-deposit box: discharge documents listing the medals the former rifleman was due. “Holy mackerel,” Craft remembered saying to himself, “he’s never been awarded these medals.” Craft, a Vietnam veteran who, along with his wife, once worked on the Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee, decided it was time. The Crafts, who live in Georgia, turned to some old connections on the Hill for help. The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School was chosen because Garnett and his wife live in Charlottesville and traveling to Washington, at their ages, wasn’t a viable option. Army Brig. Gen. Stuart Risch outlined Garnett’s life story: He graduated from U-Va. in 1942 and went to work in Washington for the Board of Economic Warfare, which oversaw procurement for the war effort. The next year, he tried to join the Navy but was turned down because of poor eyesight. The Army didn’t mind. Garnett was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 143rd Infantry Regiment, 36 Infantry Division, and his first combat mission was the invasion of Italy. The troops went ashore near Salerno on Sept. 9, 1943. Italy had surrendered the day before, and hopes were high for an easy and swift campaign. Germany had other ideas. The Germans, holding the high ground above the beach, hit the American troops hard. The next few days saw intense battles between the German and Allied forces. On Sept. 13, the Germans counterattacked, assaulting Garnett’s regiment on both flanks and killing, wounding or capturing 500 men. Garnett, then 22, was wounded twice and taken captive. He was held by the Germans in three Stalags until April 22 1945, when the Soviet Red Army seized the prison camp where he was being held. The Russians kept him until May 5, and he eventually was shipped to the States to recover at an Atlanta hospital. He was honorably discharged in November 1945.

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year’s senior vice president for global communications, said in a statement. The airship is scheduled to start test flights this month and go into service this summer. It still needs one component: a name. Ohio-based Goodyear is collecting suggestions through a contest on its website until April 4. Whoever submits the chosen name will get to use the blimp for a day, the company said. Thousands of suggestions were submitted in 2006 when the company named its Spirit of Innovation blimp, which now operates from Pompano Beach, Fla. That is where the old Ohio blimp, Spirit of Goodyear, retired. It is being decommissioned this year.

James Garnett wears his Bronze Star Medal and Purple Heart after they were presented to him during a ceremony at the Army’s law school on the University of Virginia campus in Charlottesville, Va.

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Sunday, March 16 BILLY THE KID IN THE MOVIES: At 2 p.m., the New Mexico History Museum celebrates the closing of Cowboys Real and Imagined with an illustrated talk by Baldwin G. Burr, 2 p.m., 113 Lincoln Ave. ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE: ART, SCIENCE, AND ACTIVISM: At 2 p.m., a panel discussion with Bill Gilbert, Michelle LaflammeChilds, Signal Fire, and others at the Center for Contemporary Arts, 2 p.m., 1050 Old Pecos Trail. INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY POETRY READING: From 5 to 7 p.m. at Teatro Paraguas, Debbi Brody, Moriah Williams, Ann Hunkins and Basia Miller will read their poetry, 3205 Calle Marie. JOURNEY SANTA FE PRESENTS: A conversation with local author Mark Cross on the forces that made New Mexico what it is and the challenges and possibilities for its future at Collected Works Bookstore, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., 202 Galisteo St. SCANDINAVIAN CLUB: From noon to 3 p.m., the club meets to explore Scandinavian heritage from Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland and the immigrant stories in

Lotteries American. A potluck of ethnic dishes is part of the meeting. For more information, call John at 995-0165. RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Railyard Plaza and the Farmers Market Pavilion, 1607 Paseo de Peralta.

KIDS & FAMILY Saturday, March 16 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.

NIGHTLIFE Saturday, March 16 COWGIRL BBQ: Neil Young tribute band Drastic Andrew & The Cinnamon Girls, noon to 3 p.m.; Pray for Brain, Mustafa Stefan Dill on guitar and oud, Jefferson Voorhees on drums, and Chris Nelson on bass, indofunk/sufisurf fusion, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Roaring Jelly,

Balkan/Scottish contra-dance band, 4-7 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Guitarist Wily Jim, Western swingabilly, 7-10 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Bob Finnie, ’50s-’70s pop, 6:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St.

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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 9863035.

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Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Focus turns to pilots as hunt for missing jet widens By Eileen Ng and Ian Mader

Handwritten messages to those affected by the missing jet sit Saturday in the viewing gallery at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia.

The Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Attention focused Sunday on the pilots of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight after the country’s leader announced findings so far suggest someone with intimate knowledge of the Boeing 777’s cockpit seized control of the plane and sent it off-course. Prime Minister Najib Razak on Saturday gave the first detailed findings of the investigation, showing that someone severed communications with the ground and deliberately diverted Flight 307 after it departed Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8 on an overnight flight with a 12-person crew and 227 passengers. Satellite data suggest it flew for at least 7½ hours and that it could have reached as northwest as Kazakhstan or deep into the southern Indian Ocean, Najib said. “Clearly the search for MH370 has entered a new phase,” Najib said at a televised news conference. “It is widely understood that this has been a situation without precedent.” Experts say that whoever disabled the plane’s communication systems and then flew the jet must have had a high degree of technical knowledge and flying experience. One possibility they have raised was that one of the pilots wanted to divert the plane for some reason — possibly even to commit suicide. Piracy and hijacking also have been cited as possible explanations. Najib stressed that investigators are considering all possibilities. “In view of this latest development, the Malaysian authorities have refocused their investigation into the crew and passengers on board,” Najib told reporters, reading from a written statement

WONG MAYE-E THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

but not taking any questions. Police on Saturday went to the Kuala Lumpur homes of both the pilot and co-pilot of the missing plane, according to a guard and several local reporters. Malaysian police have said they are looking at the psychological state, family life and connections of pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, and co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27. They released no details on their investigation so far. Zaharie, who joined Malaysia Airlines in 1981 and has more than 18,000 hours of flying experience, is known as an avid aviation enthusiast who set up his own flight simulator at home. Fariq, who began contemplating marriage after graduating to the cockpit of a Boeing 777, has drawn scrutiny after the revelation that he and another pilot invited two passengers to sit in the cockpit during a flight in 2011. Two-thirds of the plane’s pas-

sengers were Chinese, and China’s government has been under pressure to give anxious relatives firm news of the aircraft’s fate. Beijing’s state media expressed irritation Saturday at what it described as Malaysia’s footdragging in releasing information about the investigation. Najib said he understood the need for families to receive information, but that his government wanted to release only fully corroborated details. The missing Malaysia Airlines flight departed Kuala Lumpur at 12:40 a.m. heading toward Beijing. Investigators now have a high degree of certainty that one of the plane’s communications systems

— the Aircraft and Communications Addressing and Reporting System, or ACARS — was partially disabled before the aircraft reached the east coast of Malaysia, Najib said. Shortly afterward, someone on board switched off the aircraft’s transponder, which communicates with civilian air traffic controllers. Najib confirmed that Malaysian air force defense radar picked up traces of the plane turning back and crossing the Malaysian peninsula into the Strait of Malacca. Authorities previously had said this radar data could not be verified. “These movements are con-

sistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane,” Najib said. To turn off the transponder, someone in the cockpit would have to turn a knob with multiple selections to the “off” position while pressing down at the same time, said John Goglia, a former member of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board. That’s something a pilot would know, but it could also be learned by someone who researched the plane on the Internet, he said. The ACARS system has two aspects, Goglia said. The information part of the system was shut down, but not the transmission part. In most planes, the

information section can be shut down by hitting cockpit switches in sequence to get to a computer screen where an option must be selected using a keypad, he said. But to turn off the other transmission portion of the ACARS, it would be necessary to go to an electronics bay beneath the cockpit. That’s something a pilot wouldn’t normally know how to do, Goglia said. The Malaysia plane’s ACARS transmitter continued to send out blips that were recorded by satellite after the transponder was turned off. The blips don’t contain any messages or data, but the satellite can tell what region the blips came from.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

Guilty: 19-year-old faces up to 30 years Continued from Page A-1 30 years in jail at his sentencing hearing, which likely will be scheduled in a few weeks. “I’ll be dead by the time he gets out,” said a man with Rivera’s family as the courtroom emptied. Rivera, now 19, admitted to killing the two men but claimed he was defending himself and his brother, then 16, after Griego and another man at the party attacked his brother. During a weeklong trial, Rivera’s attorney said he was unarmed when he went to the party. Two older men tried to prevent him and his brother from leaving, Silva told the jury, and then a scuffle broke out. Silva said Rivera picked up a gun that someone else had dropped during the conflict and shot the two men. Prosecutors Susan Stinson and Juan Valencia, however, painted a different picture for jurors, one that portrayed Rivera as a young thug. They said he had attended the party with a pistol and chose to fire it when tensions rose over south-side versus west-side alliances. The dispute was ignited over a $50 bottle of rum Rivera’s female companion had purchased from Griego. The gun used to shoot the men was never recovered. In her closing arguments, Stinson told 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 witnesses while he was in jail awaiting trial. But the jury found Rivera not guilty on a charge of attempting to intimidate a witness. In his closing statements Friday, 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 panicked and “did what an older brother should do. He went in to protect his younger brother.” Silva also stressed inconsistencies in the testimonies 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 to police twice and to lying under oath during a pre-trial hearing in the case last July. Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 986-3062 or ugarcia@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @ujohnnyg.

Oil: State’s dependency likely to grow in coming years Continued from Page A-1 Pojoaque schools received $3.8 million in state funding from oil and gas. Santa Fe Community College saw $3.9 million from oil and gas, and the six charter schools in Santa Fe County got $4.7 million. Statewide, $1.7 billion of the state’s $5.5 billion general fund in fiscal year 2013 was from oil and gas revenues, according to the report. And of the $218 million for 769 capital outlay projects throughout the state — such as water systems, school buildings and parks — $207 million came from oil and gas production. The tax report was partially funded by the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association, with data from the state Taxation and Revenue Department, the state Land Office, the Board of Finance and other agencies. Veteran economist Laird Graeser crunched the report’s numbers. Graeser, a clean energy advocate who powers his own home with solar, noted the revenue report doesn’t address potential downsides of oil and gas drilling, like groundwater pollution, air emissions or water use. But if the state wanted to phase out oil and gas and switch to cleaner energy, he said, “it still comes down to how would you replace the revenue.” The state’s dependence on oil and gas presents a tangled set of problems. When prices decline, as they did in 2008, the state is hit hard in the pocketbook. In addition, the oil and gas industry uses its hefty cash power to influence state regulations. “They want a golden ticket to be free from common-sense rules to protect air and water. Their attitude is, ‘We pay for everything, so hands off,’ ” said Rep. Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe. The state still has plenty of oil and gas reserves to pump and plenty of money to make. So it will take a far-sighted economic plan, and maybe a new tax structure, to transition to a more diversified economy less beholden to extractive industries, Graeser said. “State government rarely looks more than five years into the future for financial planning,” said Shane Woolbright, a former power plant planner. “So I don’t see oil and gas revenues declining to a great degree.” If anything, the state’s dependence on oil and gas is likely to grow in coming years as developers broaden their reach into other parts of the state where drilling rigs have been a rarity. Mora County passed an ordinance banning oil and gas development, which has been challenged in court. While some private landowners on the county’s eastern half want to lease their land for natural gas development, the County Commission and other residents think drilling risks contaminating water resources. San Miguel County, bordering Mora and Santa Fe counties, is considering a draft ordinance that hedges its bets. It would prevent oil and gas development on the west side, which provides most of the water to Las Vegas and nearby villages. But it would allow oil and gas development on the county’s southeast side in the Canadian River Basin. “We’re looking at an ordinance that will be very restrictive, but as far as I’m concerned will allow some development,” said Nicolas Leger, a San Miguel County commissioner. He doesn’t expect the county to see much in the way of direct revenues. But indirectly, it could mean jobs. “We haven’t seen much economic development in this area in decades,” Leger said. “There is that

Walter Gage, a petroleum engineering technician for the Bureau of Land Management, checks an inspection form while a crew works on a natural gas drilling platform near Farmington on April 19, 2012. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

MONEY MAKERS

Raton Basin

San Juan Basin

Santa Fe Bravo Dome

Albuquerque Rio Grande

Permian Basin

Las Cruces Coal field Source: New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources Brian Barker/The New Mexican

Oil/gas basin C02 production

potential benefit, and I don’t think we can ignore it.” San Miguel County will hold public hearings on its draft ordinance in the next few weeks. Meanwhile, even longtime oil and gas pumping counties are struggling to protect some areas as drilling expands. Rio Arriba County is already a top natural gas producer in the state. Graeser said the gas is particularly valuable because it is high in butane and propane. But recently, 16 parcels of land in the Chama River Basin were removed from an oil and gas sale over concerns from the community about potential impacts on water. In 2013, Rio Arriba shipped out 1.1 million barrels of oil worth $83 million and 303 billion cubic feet of natural gas valued at $1.3 billion. Rio Arriba County made $14 million in production and equipment taxes and $1.9 million in gross receipts taxes. New Mexico was blessed with plenty of oil and gas. It’s the sixth top producing oil state in the U.S., according to the Energy Information Administration. The San Juan Basin in the northwest corner of New Mexico has one of the largest natural gas reserves in the world, according to the Bureau of Land Management. The state also is blessed with plenty of sun and wind, both capable of making electricity. But while the state has devised ways to tax oil and gas multiple times and enjoy the revenues, it hasn’t figured out how to do the same with solar and wind to nearly the same degree, Graeser said. The state had a chance to diversify its tax structure, revenue streams and energy resources in the 1980s. “We made a strange decision to just build on the back of oil and gas,” Graeser said. Oil and gas producers pay fees to lease land for drilling and pay royalties on each barrel and cubic foot of hydrocarbons they pump out of the well. They’re taxed at the well head by the state, and if the energy is used for electricity, there’s another tax. In addition to the $1.7 billion that went into the general fund in 2013 from oil- and gas-related activities, including corporate and personal income taxes from related jobs, the industry paid another $420 million in severance taxes, $500 million in royalties and more than $200 million in production and equipment taxes, which go directly to oil- and gas-producing counties, according to Graeser’s report. Oil and gas revenues from more than 9 million acres of state trust land built and continue to sustain the Land Grant Permanent Fund, with revenues going to the state’s public schools, hospitals, universities and other beneficiaries. In the period between 2009 and 2013, oil and gas fees and bonuses contributed $2.5 billion to the fund. By comparison, solar and wind generated just $232,000. Oil and gas revenues account for 86 percent of the Severance Tax Permanent Fund, which provides money for public capital projects. In 2013, producers also paid $419 million to the severance tax bond fund, which paid the debt service on capital project bonds. Established in 1973, the severance tax is charged on natural resources pumped or mined from the ground. At the same time, while oil and gas companies

The San Juan and Permian basins have been high-producing oil and natural gas regions for decades. Leases, taxes and royalties on production account for more than one-third of the state’s general fund, 95 percent of the Land Grant Permanent Fund and 86 percent of the Severance Tax Permanent Fund. Diversifying the state’s economy to make it less dependent on oil and gas revenues is a challenge.

LOCAL BENEFITS (Fiscal year 2013) Santa Fe Public Schools Total general fund support: $81.7 million Amount attributed to oil and gas: $25.7 million Santa Fe Community College Total general fund support: $12.1 million Amount attributed to oil and gas: $3.6 million New Mexico School for the Deaf Total general fund support: $3.3 million Amount attributed to oil and gas: $1 million

receive federal tax subsidies, they receive none from the state, Graeser said. Graeser said given the way the state has structured taxes, there’s now little room to maneuver if the state wants to wean itself off oil and gas revenues. He said there’s no way to tap gross receipts taxes for more money. That leaves tax reform. “Tax reform is really, really hard,” he said. “The screams of the losers are far louder than the huzzahs of the winners. And legislators respond to the screams.” Lawmakers from oil- and gas-producing counties have complained over the years about that money benefiting nonproducing counties like Santa Fe. But oil and gas production doesn’t make economic sense for some counties. Aside from government jobs, Santa Fe County and the city of Santa Fe have economies built on art, culture and tourism. “It would be a competing use to have oil and gas,” Egolf said. “You really can’t have people coming for quiet beautiful vistas if they are covered in pump jacks.” In addition, the county wouldn’t benefit much more financially if there was oil and gas development, Graeser said. If a company looking to drill in the Galisteo Basin had produced 10,000 barrels of oil a year, it wouldn’t have added much to the county’s coffers. It made more economic sense for Santa Fe to protect its water and landscape for tourism, he said. Egolf thinks Graeser’s report may overstate the impact of oil and gas on the state’s budget. Regardless, he said, “It is imperative for New Mexico to diversify its economy because we can’t be dependent on a single industry.” New Mexico has plenty of wind, solar and geothermal to power the state, according to estimates from clean energy advocates. But even if that happened, the shift likely wouldn’t affect the amount of oil and gas produced. “There is very little likelihood that demand for the oil and gas from New Mexico will decline because our output goes out of state to a great degree,” Woolbright said. Even environmental activists such as Mariel Nanasi of the Santa Fe-based New Energy Economy understand a transition away from oil and gas will take time. “I don’t advocate not having oil and gas,” she said. “But I think it is prudent to develop other sources of income and, very importantly, jobs.” That transition could begin with powering all public schools and other government buildings in the state with solar, Nanasi said. Such a move would provide jobs and reduce energy costs for the public sector over the long haul, even if it didn’t generate a lot of revenue for state coffers. “We have to look at a systemwide economy and not just the short term,” Nanasi said. “If we are to be looking into the future, we need to be looking at other sources of energy that will be good for the economy and the environment.” Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.

Eldorado: New members could impact course of pending litigation Continued from Page A-1 Eligible voters (lot owners who have paid their assessments) can vote for as many — or as few — of the candidates as they want. Four of the candidates are currently serving on the board. But only one of them, Todd Handy, was elected by the lot owners. The others were appointed to vacant positions created when members resigned or moved out of Eldorado. “We’re starting over,” Handy said, citing a change in bylaws passed last year to recast the board and the terms of members. Candidates Gershon Siegel and Greg Colello are defendants in the lawsuit, originally brought by the ECIA in 2012 against nine chicken owners who refused to surrender their “pets.” (Three defendants have since been dismissed from the lawsuit after removing chickens from their lots.) A third candidate, David Yard, says he supports protective covenants, but his online candidate profile says that after moving to Eldorado in 1999, he began hearing about conflicts with the ECIA, and “I concluded Eldorado is policed with aggression, and believe we must find a better way.” Motions for summary judgment by both sides in the lawsuit are pending, and a trial is scheduled for May 5, four days after the new board is scheduled to be installed. A state District Court judge has dis-

ELDORADO CANDIDATE FORUMS u Saturday, March 22, from 10 a.m. to noon at the Railroad Building next to the clubhouse in the subdivision. Candidates for the Eldorado Community Improvement Association board will present their positions on issues. There will be a meet-andgreet following the forum. u Wednesday, April 16, from 7 to 9 p.m., at the Performance Space in La Tienda. The candidates will be asked a series of questions submitted by lot owners. Questions from the audience will be accepted. Both events will be led by an independent moderator from outside the community and conducted according to a format established by the ECIA Election Committee.

missed a counterclaim by the defendants, finding they have not suffered legally recoverable monetary damages as a result of the lawsuit. The ECIA says Eldorado’s covenants do not allow backyard poultry. The pro-chicken folks disagree, saying the birds are allowed under a covenant permitting “recognized household pets.” Families have quietly kept hens, and sometimes roosters, in their

yards for decades. And in some cases, the ECIA has granted them variances allowing them to do so. But some residents say chickens threaten property values, attract unwanted wildlife and are noisy. In an election in 2012, nearly 200 more people voted against backyard chickens than for them. In order to pass, the measure had to win the approval of a majority of lot owners, and many apparently didn’t care — opting not to vote. Siegel, who moved to Eldorado in 1991 and published The Eldorado Sun (Sun Monthly) for 12 years, says, “Everybody thinks I’m crazy” for running for the board. He’s been told it’s a “thankless job,” something like “painting a target on your chest.” But he says he wants the new board to stand up to people he believes pressured the old board to sue the chicken owners. “We are now governing by lawsuit,” he said. “That is not building community.” Colello said he had decided not to run for the board until he learned there might be a shortage of candidates. At the last minute, he went to the Agora shopping center in Eldorado to collect signatures (25 eligible voters were necessary to get on the ballot). He told people he was running on a platform of “increased community participation, reducing waste and conflict resolution.” Only one person refused to sign his petition.

He said the two chicken defendants and other like-minded board members could form a majority that could have an impact on the course of the pending litigation. Siegel pointed out that the Eldorado community includes young families and single mothers in addition to the many retirees who have the time and interest in volunteering for various community boards. “They tend to be of like minds, rather conservative,” he said. “They’re not representing the rest of the demographic that’s there. That’s how the whole chicken thing got out of hand. Now they’re going after people putting up solar.” Action Eldorado, a group formed during the chicken debacle to “preserve the integrity of our Protective Covenants,” sent information to its membership about the candidates and asked them to attend the upcoming forums. In the email, Lisa Smith reminded them, “You should vote only for the candidates you support.” In addition to the chicken dispute, issues in the community include the matter of solar arrays, which are gaining in popularity. Although Eldorado was founded on solar principles, builders and lot owners had passive solar in mind — such as heated water and heated tiles. Now homeowners are demanding more power generation and more options — and groundmounted systems are popping up. In some cases, residents have com-

plained the arrays interfere with their views. Although state law says jurisdictions can’t impose restrictions that make solar costs too high, the rules don’t yet apply to older communities like Eldorado. But Handy thinks they eventually will and that Eldorado should try to accommodate the needs of people seeking to install solar collectors on their lots. For Handy, the board treasurer, the real issue in Eldorado is, “How seriously do you want to enforce covenants?” But whatever the decision, he stressed, “You’ve got to have uniformity.” A third issue is the recent increase in the annual assessment paid by lot owners. This year, it went up from $340 to $400. The increase was not due to the lawsuit, Handy said, but the need to build reserves to ensure Eldorado can maintain its facilities and other amenities into the future. An audit, conducted before the assessment increase, projected serious shortfalls in the next year and down the road. Candidate Pam Henline, who moved to Eldorado 14 years ago and began serving on the board last May, said, “I believe the new people have varied opinions, perhaps different [ones]. We will have to see what they will do when in positions of responsibility.” Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@sfnewmexican.com.


WORLD

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Russia seizes gas plant near Crimean border Tensions mount on eve of secession vote

said they do not plan to sanction Putin himself, at least at this point, because he is a head of state, nor do they intend to target Foreign Minister Sergei By David M Herszenhorn, Peter V. Lavrov, because he needs to Baker and Andrew E. Kramer The New York Times travel if there are any future diplomatic talks. SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Obama’s Cabinet secretaries Tensions mounted on the eve of and top advisers huddled in the a secession referendum here in White House on Saturday to Crimea as helicopter-borne Rusdiscuss their strategy, joined by sian forces made a provocative Secretary of State John Kerry, incursion just outside the penwho returned from a fruitless insula’s regional border to seize last-ditch diplomatic trip to talk a natural gas terminal while U.S. with Lavrov in London. and European officials prepared Ukrainian soldiers walk by a pro-Russian soldier in Perevalne, The degree of sanctions and sanctions to impose on Moscow Ukraine on Saturday. VADIM GHIRDA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS the exact timing may depend as early as Monday. on how Moscow reacts immeThe military operation by diately after the referendum, Putin’s closest and most power- as to have the means to further at least 80 troops landing on which is almost universally ful advisers; Dmitry Rogozin, a escalate their response should a slender sand bar just across expected to approve seceding Russia continue to press its from Crimea’s northeast border deputy prime minister; Alexei from Ukraine and becoming Miller, chief executive of Gazseizure of Ukrainian territory. seemed part of a broader effort part of Russia, officials said.Rusprom, the state energy giant; Instead, they may focus at first to strengthen control over the sia left little impression of backand Igor Sechin, head of the oil on lower-level officials, military ing down Saturday. peninsula before a referendum leaders, business tycoons or Sunday on whether its majority company Rosneft. Russian forces made a musparliamentarians. Russian-speaking population President Barack Obama cular show of added strength wants to demand greater auton- and his European counterparts The sanctions would ban here in Simferopol, the regional omy from Ukraine or break may start with only some of the the targets from traveling to capital, stationing armed percompletely and join Russia. Putin confidants in whatever Europe or the United States and sonnel carriers in at least two Whatever its tactical goals, sanctions are imposed immefreeze any assets they had in locations in the city center and the seizure of the terminal sent diately after the referendum, so either place. Western officials parking two large troop carriers a defiant message to the United States and Europe and underscored that a diplomatic resolution to Russia’s recent takeover of Crimea remains elusive. The raid came as U.S. and European diplomats at the United Nations pushed for a vote on a resolution declaring the Sunday referendum illegal, essentially forcing Russia to veto the measure. In the end, Russia cast the only vote against it; even China, its traditional ally on the council, did not vote with Moscow but abstained, an indication of its unease with Russia’s violation of another country’s sovereignty. Western diplomats hoped the result would reinforce Russia’s growing international isolation over Ukraine. U.S. and European officials worked through the day readying lists of Russians to penalize after the referendum, including possibly vital members of President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle. Among the Russians who have been on at least some lists circulated for consideration are Sergei K. Shoigu, the defense minister; Alexander V. Bortnikov, director of the Federal Security Service; Nikolai P. th Patrushev, secretary of the security council; Sergei B. Ivanov AND and Vladislav Surkov, two of INTEREST MONEY PAYMENTS FOR 1 YEAR* DOWN

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outside the headquarters of the election commission. The more provocative move, however, was the seizure of the gas terminal in the Kherson region near a town called Strelkovoye, which drew new threats of a military response from the Ukrainian government. Until now, it has refrained from responding in force to Russian actions, but it sent

troops Saturday to surround the gas terminal, according to a Ukrainian news service quoting local police, though there were no immediate indications of any shots being fired. In Kiev, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement that Ukraine “reserves the right to use all necessary measures” to stop what it called “the military invasion by Russia.”

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A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

QUESTIONS THAT ARISE WHEN PLACING BODY CAMERAS ON LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS LOS ANGELES — New tiny cameras are starting to be worn by police officers across the U.S. — roughly 3,000 of 18,000 law enforcement agencies are using or trying out these cameras and the numbers are expected to grow exponentially as technology has become more affordable and reliable. But with its myriad uses, departments are wrangling over several major policy considerations and their implications on privacy and officer liability.

A Los Angeles police officer models an on-body camera during a demonstration for media in Los Angeles in January. Thousands of police agencies have equipped officers with cameras to wear with their uniforms, but they’ve frequently lagged in setting policies on how they’re used, potentially putting privacy at risk. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

Cameras: Lack of clear guidelines could undermine objectives American Civil Liberties Union and an expert on the cameras. devices give them a way to With the push of a finger, offirecord events from their point cers can show the dangers and of view at a time when citizens difficulties of their work. Unlike armed with cellphones are dashboard cameras, body camactively scrutinizing their every eras follow the officer everymove. where — when their cruiser They say, however, that the stays parked at the curb, when lack of clear guidelines on the they go into homes on search cameras’ use could potentially warrants or when they are runundermine departments’ goals ning after a suspect. of creating greater accountabilThe cameras, if they aren’t ity of officers and jeopardize the turned off, can go with officers privacy of both the public and into a bathroom or locker room, law enforcement officers. or capture private conversations “This is a brave new world between partners. Footage can that we’re entering here, become evidence in a criminal where citizens and police both case, or be used to discipline are going to be filming each officers or exonerate them of other,” said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police false accusations. Without strong policies, Executive Research Forum, a experts say, departments could nonprofit police research and lose the public’s trust. The policy organization. public needs to know cameras The U.S. Justice Department aren’t only being turned on has asked Wexler’s group to when it’ll help officers. But help develop guidelines for the there are certain moments cameras’ use, from when the such as during the interview of devices should be turned on to a sexual assault victim or talk how departments can protect with a confidential informant the privacy of those who are when filming may be sensitive inadvertently captured on the or even compromise a case, footage. said Bay Area attorney Mike Equipping police with camRains, whose firm often repreeras isn’t a new concept. For sents officers and has worked decades police have used cameras mounted to the dashboards on body camera policies with departments. of their patrol cars — initially The Los Angeles Police referred to with suspicion by officers as “indict-o-cams” until Department is now field testing cameras with an eye toward they discovered the footage exonerated them in most cases. ultimately deploying them to all patrol officers — a move As camera technology and that would make its program data storage has become more the nation’s largest. For the six affordable and reliable, the months of the test, underway use of portable cameras has now, there will be no official increased over the last five policy. Department officials say years. Now officers in one a policy will be created with of every six departments are input from the community and patrolling with them on their chests, lapels or sunglasses, union, when they know more according to Scott Greenwood, about how the cameras work in general counsel for the national the field.

Continued from Page A-1

When do you turn them on/off? The biggest question for departments is whether officers should be recording at all times. Should they turn them off when speaking to confidential informants or during sensitive victim interviews? What if the person doesn’t want to be filmed? And how might it impact the prosecution? Many departments tell officers to wear their cameras at all times but allow them some discretion on filming. But that could also create problems later, said Scott Greenwood, general counsel for the national American Civil Liberties Union and an expert on the devices. “If officers are allowed to use the videos only when it’s to their advantage, then there won’t be public support for this, and most of the advantages to accountability and oversight will be lost,” he said.

Union chief Tyler Izen, who represents more than 9,900 sworn officers, said that while there’ve been no complaints so far, the strategy is risky and could be problematic for his officers as well as the public, which has become an involuntary guinea pig in the trial. “They’re basically taking their chances,” Izen said. There’s still very little research into the impacts of these cameras on policing and their ripple effects on the criminal justice system, said Justin Ready, assistant professor at Arizona State University’s department of criminology and criminal justice. But more studies are underway, including two that Ready is involved in. The police department in Rialto, Calif., concluded a yearlong University of Cambridge study last year that found an 89 percent drop in complaints against officers during the camera trial. The chief has since mandated its deployment to its roughly 90 sworn officers. Rialto police Sgt. Richard Royce said he was exonerated by the footage during the study. “I’d rather have my version of that incident captured on high-definition video in its entirety from my point of view, then to look at somebody’s

Can an officer watch the tape? Some departments allow officers to watch the tape before they write their reports; others require them to make a statement to internal investigators, if that’s applicable, first. “I’m going to acknowledge to you that a member’s recollection actually changes after seeing the video,” Oakland police union chief Barry Donelan said. “I’ve seen it.” Memory doesn’t work like a video camera; it’s impossible to go frame by frame and so what an officer saw and remembered out of a high-adrenaline situation may not match the tape, Donelan said. It doesn’t always mean they’re lying, he said. It just means they’re human. Who gets to see and who pays? A key issue that’s starting to arise is what happens when someone files a public records request for the video — is it considered a police report, an investigatory file? Policies generally don’t always address this and there haven’t been enough requests. Greenwood said the media and public should not have access to anything they wouldn’t have the right to be physically present to observe. For example, a reporter wouldn’t be present during a victim interview nor would they go in with

grainy cellphone camera footage captured a 100 feet away that gets cropped, edited, changed or manipulated,” Royce said. Greenwood of the ACLU said he’s provided input in drawing up the Justice Department guidelines. He said the proposed policy is pretty good, but gives officers more discretion than is wise. “It’s a far better policy decision to mandate the encounter be recorded and deal with the unwanted video,” Greenwood said. Because if a situation goes bad quickly and there’s no footage, the officer is in trouble, Greenwood said. Captured video could protect the department — and ultimately the taxpayer— from a false claim and expensive litigation or result in disciplining a problem officer. One case, also in Oakland, is being used to educate officers in California about the technology. An officer chasing a suspect said he saw the suspect with a

police on a search warrant. In Phoenix, the police union made a records request for all the footage from the initial 90-day camera trial and was told it would cost $11,000 because of the review process and to address privacy concerns, said Phoenix police Officer Joe Clure, who heads the union. They decided not to go for it. How long is it kept? Some civil rights advocates recommend footage be retained for up to the statute of limitations on filing a complaint on an officer, which is usually a year in California. If there’s an ongoing case, or possibility the footage will be used in prosecution, then it should be flagged and kept until that’s completed including any appeal. For basic daily interactions that don’t produce investigatory material, video can be deleted between 30 and 90 days, Greenwood said. Police in Rialto, Calif., keep videos in cases involving felonies for seven years; homicides for 100. Sgt. Richard Royce, the union chief, there’s also a process for purging videos from the system in case something is accidentally recorded. The Los Angeles Police Department is currently keeping video for at least five years. Tami Abdollah The Associated Press

gun in his hand before fatally shooting him three times in three-fourths of a second. A gun was later found in the grass. It cost the city $10,000 to have roughly 15 seconds of video analyzed by an expert, and because of the angle of where the camera was placed — on the officer’s chest — no gun was seen in the suspect’s hand on film, said Rains, an attorney whose firm represented the officer. Sgt. Barry Donelan, the police union chief in Oakland, said the department initially moved

to terminate the officer for an excessive response, but he was ultimately exonerated because the video analysis backed up the officer’s account. Donelan said the danger with such footage is it taps into a human tendency to over rely on video at the expense of other accounts of an event, and can be especially problematic in high-adrenaline situations. When that happens, “it’s just about the camera,” Donelan said. “It’s the ultimate Monday morning quarterbacking tool.”

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Plus applicable tax. Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Shop must retain coupon. No substitutions allowed. Void if copied or transferred and where prohibited or restricted by law. Customer may pay applicable tax. May not be combined with any other coupon, discount, or promotion. Coupon may not be reproduced, copied, purchased, traded or sold. Internet distribution strictly prohibited. Cash Redemption value 1/20 or 1 cent. Expires: 4/30/14

Plus applicable tax. Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Shop must retain coupon. No substitutions allowed. Void if copied or transferred and where prohibited or restricted by law. Customer may pay applicable tax. May not be combined with any other coupon, discount, or promotion. Coupon may not be reproduced, copied, purchased, traded or sold. Internet distribution strictly prohibited. Cash Redemption value 1/20 or 1 cent. Expires: 4/30/14

Plus applicable tax. Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase. Shop must retain coupon. No substitutions allowed. Void if copied or transferred and where prohibited or restricted by law. Customer may pay applicable tax. May not be combined with any other coupon, discount, or promotion. Coupon may not be reproduced, copied, purchased, traded or sold. Internet distribution strictly prohibited. Cash Redemption value 1/20 or 1 cent. Expires: 4/30/14

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NATION

More students turn to food banks on college campuses Pantries provide some relief for cash-strapped kids By Frank Eltman The Associated Press

STONY BROOK, N.Y. — Days after biology major Gillian Carll arrived at Stony Brook University last fall, she encountered a young woman on a bench outside her dormitory who said she had nothing to eat. “I was just like, ‘Oh, my gosh!’ I didn’t know kids could afford to go here but couldn’t have mac and cheese or something like that,” said the Livonia, N.Y., freshman. “It was kind of unbelievable.” Carll got the student some food from her dorm room and later volunteered at Stony Brook’s new food pantry — one of dozens cropping up at colleges across the country in recent years as educators acknowledge the struggles many students face as the cost of getting a higher education continues to soar. “The perception is of college students that if you are able to go to college and you have an opportunity to go to college, you’re part of the haves of this country, not part of the havenots,” said Beth McGuire-Fredericks, assistant director for college housing at the Stony Brook campus on eastern Long Island and a co-founder of the pantry. “How can someone who’s in college be someone who has a need like food?” Tuition alone has become a growing burden, rising 27 percent at public colleges and 14 percent at private schools in the past five years, according to the College Board. Add in expenses for books, housing and other necessities of college life and some are left to choose between eating and learning. Also, most students enrolled in college at least half time are not eligible for food stamps. “A lot of schools are coming

Stony Brook University students Ruby Escalera-Nater and Will Addison fill a bag of food to give to guests at the college’s recently opened food pantry. FRANK ELTMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

to the realization that this is important,” said Nate SmithTyge, director of the Michigan State University Food Bank and co-founder of the College and University Food Bank Alliance, which represents about 50 college food banks across the country. Most of them started in the past four or five years and are run by the colleges or student groups. Smith-Tyge estimates there may be another 50 food pantries on campuses that have yet to join his organization. “That doesn’t surprise me at all,” said Richard Vedder, director of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity, a research organization that has linked the trend of rising college tuitions, in part, to higher personnel costs. Vedder said it was a “little bit hypocritical” of colleges to say they are helping their students. “They wouldn’t need pantries if they hadn’t raised prices.” Clare Cady, a co-founder of the Food Bank Alliance and head of the Oregon State University food bank, said the profiles of recipients vary from undergraduate students who have opted for cheaper meal plans that give students fewer dining options to people dealing with unexpected economic hardships to students

raising children while struggling to pay tuition. “Some of these students are deeply committed to earning a degree and are making very difficult choices,” Cady said. At Stony Brook, where the average cost for an undergraduate residential student — tuition, fees, room and board — is $19,358 a year, officials opened the food pantry last year after learning that students had started a website sharing information about campus events where free food was being offered. “We were hearing rumblings around campus that said students were running out of meal points at the end of the semester,” said Casey McGloin, a food pantry co-founder. “We wanted to serve both the students who were hurting in that they didn’t have enough to eat period throughout the day and also the students who could only afford to buy pizza or ramen,” she said. When the doors opened last September, more than 50 students were waiting to be helped. The pantry, which is located in a dormitory basement, is open two nights a week. The pantry provided more than 500 bags of staples like pasta, fruit, vegetables, tuna, breakfast bars and other items in the first semester.

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Food industry quietly fights wage hike the minimum wage “is a poorly targeted anti-poverty measure.” Its release last week was WASHINGTON — The intended to coincide with a National Restaurant AssociaSenate hearing on the protion did not disclose upfront posed increase, which business its role in helping draft and groups, including the National circulate a statement signed Restaurant Association, by more than 500 prominent oppose, saying it would force economists, including four them to raise prices or cut winners of the Nobel Prize, employment because a portion urging the federal governof their work force is paid the ment to reject the proposal by minimum wage. the Obama administration to The $10.10 proposal, endorsed increase the minimum wage to by the White House and lead$10.10 an hour, interviews with ing Democrats in Congress but signers of the letter showed. opposed by many Republicans, would increase the federal The statement was distribminimum wage, in phases over uted to prominent economists 2½ years, from the current $7.25. nationwide under the name of Vernon L. Smith, a Nobel PrizeBut the statement itself and winning professor of economics the news release made no menand law at Chapman University tion of the fact that the statein Orange, Calif., concluding that ment had been initiated by staff By Eric Lipton

The New York Times

at the restaurant association, who through an intermediary asked Smith if it could be distributed under his name, the association and Smith acknowledged. “If that was not made clear, I will apologize for that,” said Sue Hensley, the senior vice president for public affairs at the National Restaurant Association. She said the restaurant association had distributed the statement the way it had because it was technologically the easiest method, not because of any intentional effort to hide the organization’s role. Smith and several of the other economists who signed the statement said they agreed to support it based on the merits of the argument and that who had initiated it was unimportant.

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NATION & WORLD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

U.S. goes high-tech to oversee Afghan aid work Agency looks for alternatives in light of troop drawdown By Deb Riechmann The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The main U.S. foreign assistance agency wants to step up use of smartphones, satellite imagery and GPS cameras to oversee taxfunded development projects in Afghanistan that aid workers no longer will be able to observe firsthand as American troops leave the country. The U.S. Agency for International Development on Saturday began seeking bids on a monitoring project contract that could cost up to $170 million. The agency hopes the five-year project will allow aid work to continue in Afghanistan despite the troop drawdown and will satisfy lawmakers and others who have criticized the agency for weak monitoring. Unless security improves significantly, Afghans hired by USAID contractors will increasingly be on the front line of overseeing the agency’s largest single-country program. “As the U.S. prepares to have a smaller military footprint, it could become increasingly challenging for us to do our direct monitoring and have U.S. employees on the ground looking at things,” Mark Feierstein, associate administrator for USAID, said in an interview. “We are going to try to do whatever oversight we can with USAID employees,” Feierstein said. “If we conclude that even with the best technology we just can’t have eyes and ears there, we just won’t do the project.” Since 2001, USAID has spent $12 billion on development projects in Afghanistan. Millions more will pour into the country in the years ahead. USAID-funded projects are monitored by aid workers, contractors, other U.S. government employees, USAID’s internal watchdog, the Government Accountability Office, the Afghan government and civil organizations and the office of

Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. The new contract aims to enhance oversight by combining Mark these existing Feierstein monitoring techniques with stepped up use of high-tech tools. USAID already has used them in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq and certain areas of Colombia. The tools include satellite imagery, cameras that take photos with the time, date and GPS coordinates, and cellphones that can be used to collect data and conduct informal public opinion surveys. Typically, Afghans are hired to go to project sites and collect information useful in monitoring the work. Such work can put them in danger if they are seen by insurgents fighting America’s presence in Afghanistan. The drawdown of forces and further restricted movement of U.S. civilian workers in Afghanistan has alarmed Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., long critical of waste and fraud in U.S. reconstruction projects in Afghanistan. At a Senate hearing this past week, McCaskill noted that the Special Inspector General’s Office predicts that soon no more than 21 percent of Afghanistan will be accessible to U.S. civilian oversight personnel. “Now that’s a 47 percent reduction since 2009,” McCaskill said. “We had eyes and ears on the majority of Afghanistan during a time period that … billions of dollars of American taxpayer money was being spent to build things. We’re only going to have eyes and ears in 21 percent of the country.” In its most recent quarterly report, the Special Inspector General’s Office also expressed deep concern that oversight could suffer. “As the U.S. drawdown continues, implementing agencies and oversight bodies will have far less visibility over the reconstruction programs than in the past,” it said in the report in January.

NYC blast site holds grief, treasures which appears to have come down vertically, with each floor “pancaking” on top of the others, investigators have said. The collapse of 1646 Park Ave. was less uniform. The floors collapsed like domiBy Michael Schwirtz and Nate Schweber noes, investigators said, one side falling The New York Times faster than the other. At the blast site Saturday, dozens of NEW YORK — Over three grim and firefighters in black and yellow protecgrueling days of digging through the tive uniforms swarmed around a backhoe. rubble of two East Harlem buildings anniNo longer using a claw for lifting twisted hilated in a gas explosion, rescue workers metal, the backhoe used a bucket to scoop uncovered eight bodies and a catalog of tan dirt into dump trucks. ruined lives. On Saturday, though, they also More than 200 rescue workers, using discovered a small, but precious treasure. heavy machinery and their hands, have Buried among the scorched debris, removed 1,500 cubic feet of debris from the firefighters found a Bible belonging to the Rick Del Rio, pastor of Abounding Grace site. It is being collected in a parking lot on Spanish Christian Church, which occupied church, left, displays a Bible recovered Randalls Island, where it will be available the basement and ground floor in 1644 Park in the rubble of the Spanish Christian to forensic teams. Ave., one of the buildings destroyed. Though Church on Saturday in New York City. Cassano said he expected crews to JIM FITZGERALD/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS dust-covered and crumpled, the Bible was remove the last of the debris Sunday, largely intact, a gold inscription on its spine allowing investigators to gain access to the reading Santa Biblia. pipes and meters in the front of the baseabove the church. That building and the When firefighters presented the Bible, ment. “It’s actually going very smoothly,” one next door at 1646 Park Ave. were levthe church’s 83-year-old pastor, the he said of the progress. eled in the explosion Wednesday. Rev. Thomas Perez, who had often stood The excavation has shifted from what The precise cause of the blast remains vigil over the blast site these past days, was had been primarily a search and rescue unknown, though officials are focusing overcome. Perez, who arrived near the site mission. on the possibility of a faulty or broken gas to lead a small prayer gathering, experiOfficials say they have identified eight enced chest pains, witnesses said, and was main beneath Park Avenue. people who died in the blast, though it is Investigators have said underground air taken away by an ambulance. still possible other victims could be found. samples taken in the vicinity of the blast In a news conference, Commissioner The police said the only known victim site a few hours after the explosion conSalvatore J. Cassano of the Fire Departnot yet publicly named was a 34-year-old tained dangerous levels of methane gas, ment said Perez was recovering at Lenox woman. The authorities were trying to which, they said, is not normally found in Hill Hospital. reach the woman’s family in Japan before “We were very proud to get that back for New York City soil. releasing her name publicly. him,” Cassano said, referring to the Bible. Emergency crews have yet to zero in on The city said it would find housing for at the epicenter of the explosion, though the For Perez, who has led the church for least 55 families, including 50 children, who 56 years, the grief has been overwhelming. pattern of debris and the angle of collapse were displaced by the explosion. On Friday have offered clues. Investigators are focus- evening, the city began moving some of Many of the victims were members of his congregation who lived in apartments ing on the basement of 1644 Park Ave., them from a Red Cross shelter near the site.

Workers uncover Bible from collapsed building’s church

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CALL: 505-424-5459 VISIT: AAA New Mexico Travel, 3517 Zafarano Dr., Suite D Santa Fe Contact your AAA Travel Agent for full terms and conditions. Cruise must be booked March 1– April 15, 2014 (the “Offer Period”). Offers apply to four night and longer cruises departing May 2014 – March 2015; ocean view and higher staterooms booked at the non-discounted standard cruise fare. Offer excludes Celebrity Xpedition, Transatlantic and Transpacific cruises. Offer applies to new individual bookings and to staterooms in noncontracted group bookings that are named and deposited during the Offer Period. The first two guests choose one of the following offers: Classic Beverage Package for Two, Free Gratuities for Two, or Onboard Credit (“OBC”); guests must select the same option(s). One Offer per stateroom. Promo code required and is available from your AAA Travel Agent. Notify AAA Travel of the option(s) you chose by April 15, 2014. All Offers are non-transferable and applicable only to the Offer Cruise. No refunds or credits for unused options. Offers are subject to availability and change without notice, and are capacity controlled. Offers not applicable to charters or contracted groups. Cruise portion of cruise tours eligible for Offers available to first and second guests, based on number of cruise nights. Refer to Cruise Ticket Contract for additional terms and conditions. Ships registered in Malta and Ecuador. 2 Classic Beverage Package includes server gratuities. All Beverage Packages: Each guest must provide date of birth by April 14, 2014. 3 Free Gratuities includes prepaid stateroom, waiter, assistant waiter and head waiter gratuities. 4 Onboard Credit option is one per stateroom; 4-5 nights $100; 6-9 nights $200; 10 nights or more $300. Onboard Credit has no cash value, is applicable to cruise only, non-transferable, not redeemable for cash, and expires 10:00 PM on the final night of the cruise. 5 Guests booking air travel using ChoiceAir have the fourth option of a cruise fare savings. ChoiceAir must be purchased by April 15, 2014. Taxes and fees are additional for all guests. Savings amounts and applicable cruises are available from your AAA Travel Agent. Airfare, taxes, surcharges, gratuities, transfers, and excursions are additional unless otherwise indicated. Fuel surcharges, government taxes, other surcharges and deposit, payment and cancellation terms/conditions are subject to change without notice at any time. Rates quoted are per person, based on adult double occupancy unless otherwise stated. Cruise rates are capacity controlled. Rates, terms, conditions, availability and itinerary are subject to change without notice. Other airline restrictions, including, but not limited to, baggage limitations and fees, standby policies and fees, non-refundable tickets and change fees with pre-flight notification deadlines may apply. Fees and policies vary among airlines without notice. Please contact the airline directly for details and answers to specific questions you may have. Certain restrictions may apply. AAA members must make advance reservations through AAA Travel to obtain Member Benefits and savings. Member Benefits may vary based on departure date. Rates are accurate at time of printing and are subject to availability and change. Not responsible for errors or omissions. Your local AAA club acts only as an agent for Celebrity Cruises Inc. CTR #1016202-80. Copyright © 2014 Auto Club Services, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

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Our view B-2 My view B-3, B-4, B-5, B-6

SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

Advocating for kids with special needs

MY VIEW: LAURA PASKUS

Citizens and journalists: Keep seeking the truth

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he daily work of a journalist involves showing up at wildfires and crime scenes, interviewing experts and asking tough questions of elected officials. We also attend meetings and pore over all manner of documents, including email correspondence among public officials, meeting minutes and police records. Access to meetings and records is crucial for journalists to perform one of their most essential tasks: seeking the truth about how government is conducting the public’s business. In New Mexico, that access is enshrined in the state’s Inspection of Public Records Act and the Open Meetings Act. Both laws ensure that journalists — and all citizens — can peer behind Laura Paskus the curtains powerful people sometimes attempt to keep drawn in an effort to conceal acts of malfeasance, corruption or incompetence. The two laws mandate that state and local agencies allow journalists access to factual and firsthand information — information that hasn’t been manipulated to hide something or tweaked to fit a political agenda. The laws demand that kind of transparency because it’s critical to understanding what’s really happening in New Mexico’s communities. It’s Sunshine Week, a time to celebrate the laws that give citizens access to their government and the important work of journalists. In the past year, New Mexico’s journalists have used public records to illuminate issues from a massive shake-up in the state’s behavioral health system to the erosion of our groundwater protections. Reporters have scrutinized the way guards treat inmates behind closed doors in New Mexico’s jails and prisons and how state officials took advantage of per diem reimbursements. Using public records, journalists exposed controversial police uses of force against citizens and pieced together the way the Treasurer’s Office in the state’s largest county used a suspect broker to invest millions of the public’s dollars. And in every community statewide, reporters attend meetings and carefully document the important discussions and decisions that impact all New Mexicans’ lives. Unfortunately, state government often shields public records to protect its own interests. Within the past year, four media organizations and one government transparency nonprofit have sued the state, alleging it is blocking access to public records. We often think of the media in terms of breaking news. But, to borrow an old phrase, the media also provide a first draft of history for our communities. Journalists offer a clear-eyed look at the challenges New Mexicans face. Sometimes, we tell stories that are difficult to hear. To tackle tough problems and thrive in the years to come, citizens must know the truth. This year, during Sunshine Week, we challenge journalists — and all citizens — across the state to take advantage of the Inspection of Public Records Act and the Open Meetings Act to seek that truth. Journalist Laura Paskus is president of the Rio Grande Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. The piece also was signed by other members of the group’s Board of Directors.

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MY VIEW: KATHI BEARDEN

Celebrate sunshine in government M

arch 16 to March 22 is Sunshine Week in New Mexico and nationwide. Take a moment to celebrate! Sunshine Week focuses on the importance of open government. No open government, no democracy. No transparency, no government accountability. I care about Sunshine Week both as a citizen and as a former newspaper employee and publisher for 22 years. We relied heavily upon the state of New Mexico’s strong public records and opening meeting acts to help keep public officials accountable and public bodies honest. We have many good examples of open government in our state. If the leader of a local government, school board, state department or other entity is committed to open, professional government, the citizens of that government are well served. In my career, we used the acts to shine a light on government business, such as inequities in salaries of public employees or incorrect and illegal payment of expenses to government employees. When citizens can’t obtain such information, rumors proliferate, trust in our public servants dies, and our officials lose the ability to lead. Our newsroom once requested records about a police shooting that had set the community on edge. Rumors were rampant, and police were placed in the position of being the recipients of wild speculation and accusations. The police report was clearly a public document under our state’s Inspection of Public Records Act. A law enforcement official refused to turn over the records to our newspaper. Fortunately, the District Attorney’s Office faxed the requested records. We then published the story and the community could form opinions based on facts, and rumors were laid to rest. This district attorney is one of many public servants I have encountered over the years who want to follow the law, do the right thing and conduct open government. These officials are shining examples of good government leaders and employees.

On the other hand, I am puzzled and sometimes shocked when public bodies or officials choose not to comply with open records and meetings laws. Such decisions may stem from a lack of education or training about our transparency statutes. Noncompliance may arise out of a Kathi misguided belief that secrecy is Bearden the better path. It never is. Officials may not realize they have become the lawbreakers when they refuse to release information that is legally obtainable. Our country’s history has proven on more than one occasion that secrecy always makes problems worse and erodes public confidence in government. Secrecy is the hallmark of a totalitarian society, not a democracy. Secrecy serves only special interests and not the citizens. Sunshine laws aren’t a special benefit for the press. Sure, it’s often up to the media to be our witnesses in public meetings, to request and inspect records then report news that often protects the public. But all citizens have a right to know. The New Mexico Foundation for Open Government strengthens that right by educating, advocating and litigating on everyone’s behalf for transparency. NMFOG can turn the voice of one person into a mandate for government to conduct business with its doors wide open. The New Mexico Foundation for Open Government hotline at 888-843-9121 answers questions from citizens, government employees and even elected officials. We all benefit from an open government collaboration that serves the citizens of New Mexico. So go ahead and celebrate this week. Celebrate your right to know. And help bring 365 days of sunshine to New Mexico. Kathi Bearden is the president of the Board of Directors for The New Mexico Foundation for Open Government.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Stop strip mining on La Bajada Mesa I strongly oppose the proposed strip mine on La Bajada in an area zoned residential/agricultural. This project is completely contrary to Santa Fe County’s own sustainability criteria. Given the drought, we cannot sacrifice the water needed for this operation that will provide few jobs. The area is of significance historically and important to wildlife. Plus, our Santa Fe economy and brand depends upon beautiful viewscapes, tourism and arts — not strip mining. There is a great wellspring of concern over this strip mine, the proposed Ortiz gold mine and the Lamy transfer station. The democratic consensus is that we want to preserve what we have in the Galisteo Basin for ourselves and our children. I urge everyone who cares for our bio-region to unite to oppose these projects. These greedy outside corporate interests that want to convert our beautiful land into trash and cash for their shareholders around the world must be stopped now.

Marc Choyt

president, Reflective Images Inc. co-organizer, Stop Santa Fe Gold Campaign

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Golfer weighs in on health on Navajo Nation. Page B-3

Support Adelante

Do you often wonder how to do something concrete that will have a positive impact on the children who need it most? Well, here is a wonderful opportunity to help the Adelante Program of Santa Fe Public Schools: Take your family and friends out to eat Tuesday at Santa Fe Bar & Grill in DeVargas Center. The business has generously offered to contribute 20 percent of their sales that day to our program if you mention Adelante. For those who are not familiar, Adelante annually serves more than 1,600 students and youth experiencing homelessness. Our tiny staff works hard — without school operational funds — to provide students, youth and their families with basic services so that children experiencing homelessness can remain in school and build a successful future. It has been a difficult winter. More families than ever are without permanent homes or jobs, and are hungry and unable to afford necessities. Every week, when our last bag of food has been picked up, when we’ve given away our last box of diapers and our last gas card

is gone, there are still more children in need. We thank our community members for your continued generous support of Adelante and the important work that we do to end child homelessness. If you want to know more about our program, check out our website at www.adelante santafe.org.

the gun-show loophole) where he courageously stood in support of the bill even though many in the law enforcement community did not. At times, Chief Rael disagreed with our direction, but he did so with grace and respect. We at New Mexicans for Gun Safety want to thank Chief Rael for everything he did to make our city safer.

Gaile Herling

The Rev. Dr. Harry Eberts III

coordinator, Adelante Program

Thanks, Chief Rael When New Mexicans for Gun Safety had its first meeting more than a year ago, Santa Fe police Chief Ray Rael was there — and he continued to be there. He guarded the safety of the Santa Fe community by advocating for gun safety in many ways. Chief Rael worked with then Mayor David Coss to organize the gun buyback program; he taped a public service announcement to get guns locked up; he helped with a gun safety program; he spoke at rallies for gun violence prevention; and he helped advise our new group regarding how to move forward. He attended every committee hearing in support of House Bill 77 (to close

Santa Fe

Rider rage I hope the March 11 letter to the editor (“Arrogant riders”) was a joke. The writer complains that when he and his car are courteous to bike riders, they don’t acknowledge the courtesies with a nod or wave of appreciation. Although not a bike rider, I recognize that bikes have as much right as cars to be on the road. One might even contend that they have more right, since they take up less space and don’t pollute the air. This driver should consider waving and nodding with appreciation to the bike riders who allow his car space on the road.

Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

Patricia Hopkins Lattin

Santa Fe

hen it comes to providing services and advocacy for Native American children with special needs and disabilities, one organization stands second to none. Education for Parents of Indian Children with Special Needs, or EPICS, is a nonprofit organization based in Albuquerque that provides training, information, resources and support for parents, grandparents, family members and caregivers of Indian children with disabilities, developmental delay and special health care needs. The group’s vision is that “all children will flourish in healthy families, schools and communities.” They provide a circle of support that includes partnerships, resources, advocacy and opportunities for family leadership. EPICS, and their various projects, have an impact on Native families across the state. “The resources we Harlan receive are dedicated to McKosato the services we provide to our children and famiCommentary lies. The organization has grown tremendously, and we are very proud of our accomplishments,” said Jeanette Trancosa (San Felipe), executive director of EPICS. The nonprofit was founded in 1985 by a group of committed parents and professionals. Prior to the 1970s, children with disabilities were institutionalized, sent away and outright discriminated against. A group of parents started rallying and advocating for their children’s rights. In 1975, Congress passed a law that eventually became the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). In the past several years, EPICS has enjoyed a special partnership with Parents Reaching Out (PRO), a nonprofit parent center serving all families in New Mexico. EPICS is proud to highlight its partnership with PRO, a collaboration that has strengthened families and children of New Mexico. “Our partnership with PRO is working because we fill in the gaps anywhere that they don’t have the capacity to fulfill the needs of our Native American families in New Mexico. We also provide access to proper cultural people to ensure that their approach is culturally appropriate,” said Alvino Sandoval (Navajo), program director at EPICS. The heart of what EPICS offers is training and advocacy, led by Ronalda Warito-Tome (Navajo), trainer/advocate for the organization. Funding from the New Mexico Department of Health and Public Education Department, the U.S. Department of Education and private foundations and donors allows EPICS to continue to offer free training to families and professionals in rural tribal and urban Native communities. EPICS provides training in the area of early childhood intervention and early childhood centers such as Head Start programs, Bureau of Indian Education schools and child care centers. “Early intervention is for infants and toddlers with special needs. If a child is born with a significant disability (such as autism, spinal bifida, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, etc.) or is at risk for possible developmental delay due to environmental or biological risk factors, they can access services like one-on-one therapy based on individual needs, or in-home services within the child’s natural environment,” Sandoval said. “I learned about EPICS through [our tribal] Early Childhood Learning Center,” said Larissa Olga Tenorio (Santa Domingo), a parent of a child with special needs. “When I first started out, it was extremely overwhelming. I didn’t understand what was going on … it was like a giant puzzle. “When I went to the EPICS family leadership conference for the first time, I couldn’t believe how much I enjoyed it,” Tenorio added. “For once [our family] could go somewhere crowded and no one stared. It was such an amazing feeling to belong.” EPICS will be holding its Native American Conference on Special Education in Albuquerque, March 26 to March 28. (For more information about EPICS, go to www.epicsNM.org.) “I don’t have children myself,” Sandoval said. “But I got into this field of early childhood special education and advocacy because of my nephew. He’s now 14 years old and he was diagnosed early on with cerebral palsy. Living in a rural tribal community we, as a family, had to really advocate for him. “We also had to educate ourselves. We had to learn how to take advantage of opportunities and become more knowledgeable about special education processes,” he explained. “After that, I made it a lifelong commitment to be available to any other family who shared the same experience, so they wouldn’t have to struggle as we did.” Harlan McKosato is Sauk/Ioway and director of NDN Productions.

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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

For La Bajada, no more mines

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t’s a familiar story: A business storms into River City — in this case, Santa Fe County — with a proposal to dig up the earth, causing noise, commotion and dust, ruining the peace and quiet of country life but bringing in prized jobs and gross receipts taxes to the greater benefit of all. Neighbors revolt, gathering forces to persuade the governing body that, no, their bucolic life must not be destroyed for a business owner’s mining profits. A battle ensues. The ending? That portion of the story remains unwritten. We know that owners of Buena Vista Estates Inc. and Rockology LLC want to mine 50 acres of land on La Bajada Mesa. The company would dig up basalt rock to be crushed into asphalt, roadway base course and ready-mix concrete. The application is before the Santa Fe County Development Review Committee and is scheduled to be heard starting at 4 p.m. Thursday at Santa Fe County offices, 102 Grant Ave. In this particular battle, the winning cards are in the hands of neighbors, environmentalists and outdoor lovers who oppose the proposal. To approve the operation, Santa Fe County must agree to rezone the parcel. It’s zoned for agricultural/residential, not for mining. The county should deny the zoning change for a number of reasons. Start with the location. La Bajada Mesa is that point in the drive from Albuquerque when visitors and locals know they are approaching the magic that is Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico. Topping the hill, with the sky spread out below and the city achingly close, the first view of Santa Fe should not be obscured by a dark cloud of dust. The mine itself might not be visible from Interstate 25, but its dust would be seen. That’s a distraction visitors don’t need. La Bajada Mesa, by the way, has been designated one of New Mexico’s most endangered places by the New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance — and a portion of the designation warns that mining could destroy the area’s singular views. That warning could come to pass if the county allows the mine to begin operations. Still, forget the mine’s impact on passers-by driving along the highway, or even on smaller roads in the area such as Waldo Canyon Road. The effect on residents is the biggest problem with the mine; buying in an area zoned for agricultural and residential purposes should provide security that a mine won’t be setting up next door. A zoning change removes that security. People who choose to live in the area, whether in Madrid or Cerrillos or in rural isolation, do so because they want to live without the commotion of neighbors and nearby businesses. They don’t want the noise and dust of a mining operation, truck traffic and worse, overpowering lights that will allow the operation to continue working through the night. Light pollution alone provides reason to deny this application. There are other environmental concerns, too. The proposal would call for the creation of three pits, each about 60 feet deep, with workers mining one pit at a time for seven or eight years over 25 years. The pits would eventually be reclaimed, but such massive disruption is hard to mitigate. Santa Fe County, for some reason, is agreeing to sell water to the project. We’re in a drought, with wells in the area starting to go dry. That’s the wrong time to sell water so that rock miners can reduce dust, especially water that would be suitable for drinking. It’s just the wrong use of resources for what in the end is estimated to bring in about $122,500 a year in gross receipts taxes. Community members have fought off the mine twice before. They’ll do it a third time. Santa Fe County — both the initial committee and county commissioners who will take the final vote — should remember that approval of this mine could open up the fragile mesa to additional operations. With the possibility of the mesa becoming a national monument (former Santa Fe Mayor David Coss made the request of President Barack Obama in 2013), now is not the time to begin digging into the land. Often, when business interests collide with the concerns of neighbors — the proposal to truck crude oil out of Lamy comes to mind — the county has little authority over permits in Lamy’s case because of federal regulations. With the proposed mine, Santa Fe County holds the cards. No zoning change. No mine.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: March 16, 1914: Silver City — The operations of the great Chino Copper company, which has at Santa Rita one of the largest copper mines in the world, are steadily increasing in magnitude and importance. The Chino Copper company is making excavations for foundations of a new crushing plant through which ore will pass from ore cars to the Santa Fe railroad cars en route to the mill at Hurley, N.M. March 16, 1964: Work on the $65 million San Juan-Chama project, which is expected to start in April, will have a significant effect on the economy of Chama during the next decade, according to Zia Engineering Company. Chama’s population, now estimated at 1,600 is expected to grow to 2,050 next month at the start of the project. Engineering estimates that half of the cost of the $65 million project will be used to defray labor costs of the eventual 2,850 workers on the project.

COMMENTARY: NOAH FELDMAN

Politics aside, Dems take on CIA D ianne Feinstein, chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, says the Central Intelligence Agency breached the separation of powers by searching committee staffers’ computers and then referring a potential security violation to the Justice Department for criminal investigation. CIA Director John Brennan denies that the agency has acted wrongly: “I think a lot of people who are claiming that there has been this tremendous sort of spying and monitoring and hacking will be proved wrong.” The stage is set for a serious constitutional fight between Congress, with its oversight function, and the executive branch, with its national security priorities. Just what the Founding Fathers anticipated when they put the separation of powers into the Constitution, right? Well, not exactly. It’s true that the framers believed that members of Congress would stand up for the privileges of their institution while the president would very probably try to maximize his own authority. But they overlooked an important flaw in the theory of separation of powers: When Congress and the presidency are controlled by the same political party, the incentive for oversight goes down. If Democrats in the Senate embarrass a Democratic president, the Democratic Party may well pay the price; and that price may come in the form of fewer seats in the Senate. The framers didn’t quite see this coming. James Madison, especially, wanted to design the Constitution to reduce the likelihood of legislative faction. As the historian Richard Hofstadter memorably

put it, the framers designed a “Constitution against parties.” The result was that they didn’t focus on how partisanship might distort things. Two of my brilliant former colleagues at NYU Law School, Daryl Levinson and Richard Pildes, have argued that the separation of powers should today be understood primarily as a phenomenon of interparty competition. So, given the combination of the framer’s blindness to party politics and the increasing animosity between Republicans and Democrats, why is party stalwart Feinstein taking on the Obama administration in an election year? There are three answers, each shedding light on the scandal of the day and the difficulties of adapting the founding document to the modern world. The first is that the framers weren’t completely wrong about Congress defending its institutional interests. Feinstein has been deeply involved in intelligence oversight for decades, and has become famous for defending the CIA in public while keeping her criticisms confidential. For her to discover that the agency had in essence turned the tables, overseeing her committee’s oversight functions, struck at the heart of her conception of her job — and her legacy. Humans are invested in a project they have spent their lives pursuing. To be spied on by the spies is not just personally frustrating to her — it makes a mockery of the very idea of oversight. Second is the anomalous nature of the inquiry that the intelligence committee was involved with: A review of the CIA’s secret detention and interrogation prac-

tices during the Bush years. It’s not irrelevant that the Democratically controlled committee is looking closely at practices developed under a Republican president. When the inquiry is eventually published, Republicans, not Democrats, will be the implicit targets. The fact that the conflict between Feinstein and the CIA arose in this more partisan context helps explain why a Democratic committee chairwoman is going after Democratic demonstration. The third answer is most important: The CIA is not in this case acting — and typically does not act — like a partisan agency responsible to a president of a particular party. Sure, the president appoints the head of the CIA with Senate confirmation, and the president can fire the head of the agency at will. The CIA is not an independent agency in any legal sense. Politically, however, the CIA operates with more independence and less direct presidential control than most executive-branch agencies. The combination of the CIA’s de facto independence and the executive branch’s enduring interest in maximizing power to protect national security brings us squarely back to separation of powers. The framers would have detested the idea of a secret agency acting outside the political process. But if one had to exist, at least they would’ve been happy to see the senators trying to take it on, and their document provides the authority for them to do so. Partisan politics complicate the separation of powers. But the idea remains robust in practice nevertheless. Noah Feldman, a law professor at Harvard University, is a Bloomberg View columnist.

COMMENTARY: GAIL COLLINS

School lunches: Another battlefield

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et’s consider school lunches. Always an important topic. But to be honest, it’s only coming up right now thanks to Rep. Paul Ryan, who took a strong, principled stand against school lunches in a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference. (“What they’re offering people is a full stomach and an empty soul.”) Ryan’s point was that mothers who pack their children’s lunches are showing their love, while kids who get their food from the cafeteria lady will feel that nobody cares. Have you ever heard a more terrible thing to say? Most American mothers work, and they are already guilt-ridden over everything under the sun. They are constantly hearing stories about some other woman who has six kids and manages a major corporation yet still finds time to sew a sequin-crusted mermaid costume for the 8-year-old’s Halloween parade. Most American mothers feel remarkably successful when everybody gets off to school with matching socks. Now Paul Ryan wants to tell them they’ve committed child abuse by failure to fill a brown bag. Fortunately, the speech ended badly: Ryan included a story about a poor schoolboy begging for a home-packed lunch, which turned out to be rather fictional. But it was still an interesting window into the right’s growing antipathy toward school meals. School lunches have always been political, in a peculiar agricultural way. The frozen food lobby takes on the fresh produce people. The tomato growers do battle with nutritionists who don’t want to count pizza as a vegetable. The anti-starch advocates versus the potato growers. (In 2011, Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Mark Udall of Colorado led a

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

successful bipartisan drive to protect the right of potatoes to roam free across the menus of American school cafeterias.) But the basic idea of providing healthy subsidized meals for public school students used to be universally accepted. Like Social Security or federally funded bridge reconstruction. No more. These days, you can find vocal opposition to any federal program that gives something to poor people. Rep. Jack Kingston of Georgia, who’s running for the Republican Senate nomination, has been arguing that kids who qualify for subsidized school meals should be required to do janitorial work in order to demolish the idea “that there is such a thing as a free lunch.” Then there’s that vision of the handpacked meal as a symbol of family. Every once in a while, a rumor crops up that an elementary school somewhere is prohibiting brown bags and forcing all its students to eat Obamafare. This does not actually seem to be happening. However, it is true that the Department of Agriculture, which oversees the school lunch program, is wildly sensitive to any suggestions that it would ever get between a child and a homemade peanut butter and jelly sandwich. “What the parent decides is sufficient,” said Undersecretary Kevin Concannon. (Concannon has a picture in his office that was taken when he toured a school in New Orleans. He’s chatting over lunch with a little girl who pointed to his plate and said: “Mister, if you’re not going to finish your broccoli, I’ll finish it for you.” He has seen the future, and it is eating green vegetables.) Finally, there’s the rancor toward the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, which Congress passed in 2010 with the strong

backing of Michelle Obama. Its push toward healthier school menus is a popular target with the right. In theory, this is a rejection of federal interference with local decision-making. But, mainly, I suspect, it’s an attempt to remind average Americans that the first lady gets up to work out at 4:30 a.m. and probably does not approve of some of their lifestyle choices. Plus, it’s always easy to make fun of kale. Los Angeles schools, which were trailblazers, got no end of grief for their rather abrupt transition from chocolate milk and chicken nuggets to a menu that was heavy on things like vegetable curry and lentils. “School kids in Los Angeles have blown the whistle on the east wing chef-in-chief’s healthy lunch diktats,” announced columnist Michelle Malkin triumphantly. David Binkle of the Los Angeles Unified School District says that after a rather rocky shakedown, things are going great and student food sales are way up. “And we don’t even have pizza on the menu,” he said. The kids are drinking more milk than ever, even without chocolate flavoring. The lentils are still there, Binkle said, but they tend to be hidden away in salads. We’ll be hearing more complaints soon; the second phase of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act kicks in this year, and it includes bans on snacks like candy bars, Doritos or sugary soft drinks, even in vending machines. Gone from the cafeteria forever. Unless your mother packs them in a brown paper bag. Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


OPINIONS

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

MY VIEW: NOTAH BEGAY III

MY VIEW: KIM SORVIG

Support the Healthy Diné Nation Act

Mine is wrong for gateway to Santa Fe

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s I sit here listening to my 6-yearold daughter read, I wonder what the future holds for her and the next generation of Navajo children. Childhood obesity and diabetes continue to plague the Navajo Nation and American Indian communities across the United States. These negative trends among Navajo youth raise important questions for tribal communities. How will our Navajo Nation government and we, as Navajo people, work together to combat these negative trends? Let’s not kid ourselves. Defeating diabetes and obesity will not be easy. It will take commitment, creativity and reliance on our traditional values to solve these problems. More importantly, these issues require all of us to take a stand as we work to reclaim control of our health, wellness, diets and community well-being. But we need a partner in the Navajo Nation government. The passing of the Healthy Diné Nation Act by the Navajo Nation Council was a big step forward. The battle to prevent our kids from developing Type 2 diabetes cannot be won without the support of our tribal leaders. This legislation has a very simple, two-part approach: first, increase access to and affordability of fresh and healthy foods sold on the reservation by removing the 5 percent Navajo sales tax on fresh fruits, vegetables and water sold

MY VIEW: LESLIE MEEHAN

César Chávez: Dual-language program to brag about

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n article earlier this year, (“Santa Fe Public Schools program offers students bilingual instruction, Jan. 21”) featured an in-depth look at a wonderful program our city has to offer in the public schools — the two-way Dual Language Immersion Program. This article mentioned that there are “seven schools in the district with duallanguage programs” but spoke only of Agua Fría Elementary. In fact, there are several kinds of “bilingual education” programs and not all seven schools have the two-way Dual Language Immersion Program where students with two differLeslie ent native languages Meehan (in this case Spanish and English) come together to learn from one another — that is a unique program offered by only a few schools in our district. As a parent of a second-grader in the two-way Dual Language Immersion Program at César Chávez Community School (she spoke only English when she began kindergarten and is now bilingual and biliterate), it is disheartening and discouraging that our school is never mentioned in any of the publicity about these wonderful programs in our community. I know it is also disheartening for the wonderfully dedicated teachers and administration not to receive the recognition they deserve in this regard and to only hear how our schools aren’t measuring up and our students aren’t “proficient” based on state-mandated testing. Although faculty and staff members do what they do for the children and not for public praise, validation of their hard work and dedication is most deserved. The teachers in this program are highly trained and eager to see what the latest research has to say about educating our children in a duallanguage environment. In fact, my daughter’s teacher and another dual language teacher at César Chávez will take a trip to Mexico this summer to further their knowledge and learn from other educators about best practices in this specialized program. In spite of its low “grade” (which is calculated using a flawed algorithm that doesn’t take into account the huge bilingual population, among other things), families are asking to transfer to César Chávez because of the wonderful programs and teachers it offers. In fact, with the new school boundary changes, our daughter is zoned for the new Nino Otero school, but since it will not be offering our language program, we are asking for a transfer back to César Chávez. I know of several other families doing the same thing. We intend to enroll our second child in the dual-language program in the fall when she begins kindergarten and, eventually, our third child once he is ready for school. Leslie Meehan is speech-language pathologist and a proud Santa Fe Public Schools parent who wants the best for our city’s teachers, school staff and students.

on the reservation; and second, implement a small 2 percent additional sales tax on “junk food” sold on the reservation, with revenues generated from the tax going back into Navajo communities for health Notah and wellness programs. Begay III The two parts work together for the good of the people. I am inspired by the grass-roots movement among the Navajo people that led to this important legislation, and the Navajo Council members who stood up to be a part of this movement. I stand with them today. But a week after the Healthy Diné Nation Act passed, I was disappointed and discouraged to learn that this important legislation was vetoed. The veto sends a dangerous message that the futures of our children are for sale to outside corporate interests that have no concern for the health of the Navajo people. I realize that new Navajo tax laws will not be the sole solution to an epidemic that results in the rate of diabetes being 2.3 times higher within the Navajo Nation than elsewhere in the U.S. Fifty percent of American Indian children are projected to develop Type 2 diabetes in their lifetimes based on current childhood obesity

rates. But the Healthy Diné Nation Act represents an idea that brings together the resources and leadership of Navajo government and combines them with the best interests of the Navajo people. The reality facing our communities is that if government and family leaders continue to ignore the childhood obesity and diabetes issue, it will ensure that some of our children will not outlive their parents. Just as my grandfather, Notah Begay Sr., and the Navajo Code Talkers played an instrumental role in winning the Pacific Theater during World War II, the Healthy Diné Nation Act sets us on a path forward for the Navajo people to win in the fight against diabetes and obesity and to build healthier communities. It also demonstrates that the Navajo people will not sit idly by and allow their children to slide into lives of chronic disease. It is time for our citizens — and our Navajo leaders — to exercise a new path of self-determination that encourages the government and its people to work together in order to find solutions to these major health problems. It is time for the council to overturn the veto. Notah Begay III (Navajo, San Felipe, Isleta) is a professional golfer who founded the Notah Begay III Foundation, whose mission is to battle obesity and Type 2 diabetes in Native American children.

DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS

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o Strip Mine on La Bajada Mesa” signs are springing up around Santa Fe. Fifty acres, 60 feet deep, the mine proposed by an Albuquerque gravel firm demands a million gallons of county-supplied water annually. If you think this would only affect county residents, think again. The proposal has been rejected twice. I urge the County Development Review Committee to do so again Thursday because: u La Bajada Mesa is a cultural and historic treasure — often overlooked as we sail up Interstate 25 or ride the New Mexico Rail Runner Express. It has sacred sites connected to the long history of the pueblos. It was the last challenge on the Camino Real from Mexico City. On its face, a segment of old Route 66 can still be hiked. For Santa Fe residents, it is the threshold that tells us we’re home. It is worth far more to us as a landmark than as road-base. u The proposal asserts a “need” for a new mine. Apparently based on dreams of a captive market during Rail Runner construction, this need is entirely private and mostly imaginary. Within Santa Fe County, we already have Caja del Rio Quarry producing these products, with decades of reserves. The CdR Quarry uses effluent, not drinking water; its excavations will be reused by the landfill where it is located. Permitting a new mine would undercut the CdR operation, canceling out economic benefits. Even proponents estimate only seven new jobs; good pay or preferential local hiring are not assured. Besides, demand for virgin gravel is decreasing; construction is slow and recycling old roads by crushing them for aggregate is increasingly cost-effective. u La Bajada provides regional “environmental services.” Its geology influences surface and subsurface water: The Santa Fe

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River and La Cienega springs support traditional agriculture, and La Bajada pushes groundwater into Rio Grande Basin aquifers, which supply water to more than 50 percent of New Mexico’s population. The Rio Grande Valley, which La Bajada helps define, is one of the top 20 wildlife and migratory bird corridors in the U.S. And as you know if you’ve driven up from Albuquerque with the top down, La Bajada buffers local climate by about 10 degrees — an increasingly important function. u Last but far from least, the county utility wants to sell drinking water, treated at public expense, to an operation that doesn’t need potable water. Indefensible in itself, this is a terrible precedent. The county and city of Santa Fe share water sources and treatment plants — the county’s taxpayer-funded distribution lines are separate. Water sold by either utility comes out of the same pot. This proposal would deprive residents of city and county alike of a million gallons a year. By permitting this inappropriate and unnecessary use of drinking water, saying no to other industries becomes much harder. Oil and gas drillers use several million gallons of water per well, and in Texas have hoarded potable water while livestock and crops died of thirst. In the desert Southwest, we cannot afford to set such a precedent. Since prehistory, La Bajada has been a landmark and gateway. Crushing it to gravel would dramatically hurt recreational and educational resources, tourism and filming — reason enough to stop the mine. For the county utility to connive in La Bajada’s destruction at the expense of regional water would be a double travesty. Kim Sorvig lives near Cerrillos. He is a research associate professor and George Pearl Fellow at The University of New Mexico School of Architecture and Planning.

MY VIEW: ALEXIS HIGGINBOTHAM

La Bajada a treasure that must be protected

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s many residents of Santa Fe are now aware, the Santa Fe County staff is recommending the approval of an application to mine gravel on historic La Bajada Mesa, a treasured New Mexico landscape. Buena Vista Estates and Rockology Limited LLC is the company that wants to strip the basalt cap to a depth of 61 feet (their estimates) and crush it for gravel over a period of no less than 25 years. How much should we hate this dreadful and destructive idea? This much: u The current owners have no protected rights to demand a rezoning for the extractive industry since they bought the property with the current agricultural/residential zoning in place. Yet, this is precisely what they are demanding. u 710,000 gallons a year or 2.19 acre feet, which the applicant insists is enough, is considered by most to be grievously insufficient to accomplish the suppression of dust. And there will be dust. Lots and lots of dust. u This water that Buena Vista Estates Rockology intends to buy from Santa Fe County is in fact potable water. They intend to use valuable drinking water in an attempt to keep dust down, and they would be charged only pennies for each gallon. u The applicants don’t even address how much water they would want for reclamation. The stark reality is that reclamation would be virtually impossible after stripping some 20 feet of basalt off the top of La Bajada Mesa. There are no standards to insure that reclamation would be a success. u There are more than enough gravel mines down Interstate 25 and over by the Santa Fe animal shelter. There isn’t a need for yet another one. u La Bajada Mesa, listed by the New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance as a Most

Endangered Place, is the gateway to the city of Santa Fe and needs to be a protected cultural landscape. u Buena Vista Estates Rockology touts the fact that they would be providing job opportunities for residents of Santa Fe County. Yet officials neglect to mention that the total number of jobs that would actually be available is a whopping seven. u Developing gravel mining on La Bajada Mesa would result in increased air pollution from carbon emissions and dust from multiple crushers, conveyors and heavy industrial traffic, not to mention bone-rattling blasting and annoying night lighting. This simply shouldn’t be allowed to happen. Fingers are crossed that New Mexicans care enough about this precious historic cultural landscape to speak their minds at the upcoming hearing before the County Development Review Committee 4 p.m. Thursday in the County Building in Santa Fe, 102 Grant Ave. If you can’t attend, then email these people and tell them you do not support a mining zone on La Bajada Mesa: Case Manager Jose Larrañaga, joselarra@co.santa-fe. nm.us CC these people: Penny Ellis-Green, director, pengreen@santafecountynm. County Attorney Steven Ross, sross@co.santa-fe.nm.us Commissioner Robert A. Anaya, ranaya@santafecountynm.gov Commissioner Daniel “Danny” Mayfield, dmayfield@ santafecountynm.gov Commissioner Miguel M. Chavez, mchavez@santafecountynm.gov Commissioner Kathy Holian, kholian@santafecountynm.gov Commissioner Liz Stefanics, lstefanics@santafecountynm. gov Alexis Higginbotham is ceramic artist, community activist and a 30-year resident of the San Marcos District.


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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

MY VIEW: ALAN RICHARDSON

Zia Road Rail Runner station not ADA accessible A

community-based New Mexico Rail Runner Station might be opening for the general public (unless you have disabilities). The New Mexico Department of Transportation issued a traffic study of the Zia Road Station at St. Francis Drive and Zia Road on Feb. 19. Unfortunately, the study was just a traffic study. The study did not address traffic issues involving people with disabilities who live in the surrounding area, especially those living in the Candlelight Subdivision west of St. Francis Drive. The study did state that, “other concerns [e.g. … pedestrian connectivity along West Zia Road, and Americans with Disability Act compliance in the vicinity of the intersection, etc.] may need to be considered before the station can be opened.” The study should state that the Zia Road Station will be

ADA compliant before it is opened. The Americans with Disabilities Act recognizes that people with disabilities face barriers that allow access to public and private conveniences most of us take for granted and attempts to remove those barriers. Even if the north and south sides of Zia Road west of St. Francis Drive had usable sidewalks (they do not) leading to Zia Road Station, individuals confined to wheelchairs, walkers or who have other mobility issues would be unable to access Zia Road Station unless they were provided transportation to and from the facility. The grade to the station from just west of Galisteo Road far exceeds standards of access defined by ADA. Even the city’s existing sidewalks ending at the intersection of Galisteo Road and Zia Road have ADA curb cuts with grades that exceed ADA requirements.

Although newly constructed sidewalks along Zia Road will conform to the grade of Zia Road (which is acceptable by the law); they would be unusable for many people with mobility issues trying to access the station by traveling up the grade to the station. So if you face mobility issues and live in the Candlelight area and do not have reliable transportation to and from the station, you might be unable to use Zia Road Station — although your tax dollars built it and you have a right to use it. Former Gov. Bill Richardson, former Mayor David Coss, the Santa Fe Metropolitan Planning Organization, Lawrence Rael, past Director of the MidRegion Council of Governments, New Mexico Department of Transportation and SF Brown, Inc. (owner of the land surrounding the station) might have chosen the location without thorough

consideration for disabled area residents or pedestrians in general. In my opinion, the site for Zia Road Station seems to have been selected for the sole benefit of SF Brown’s development. However, the residents living near the station were told that the station would be a community station; that should include people with disabilities living only one-tenth of a mile from the station. I believe that if Zia Road Station were closely examined by ADA experts, a number of issues would be found that make the site’s access difficult for people with disabilities. All ADA-related issues in the vicinity of the station and at the Zia Road Station should be corrected before the station is opened. If ADA issues cannot be corrected, Zia Road Station should be permanently closed (there is an ADAcompliant station just two miles from

Zia Road Station). One fewer station in Santa Fe may save the state some money in the long run. The Rail Runner was meant to be a commuter train between Albuquerque and Santa Fe not a trolley service for Santa Fe. I encourage the New Mexico Governor’s Commission on Disability and the city of Santa Fe’s ADA adviser to review the Zia Road Station site before it is opened for the general public’s use. Alan Richardson is a retired resident living in the Candlelight Subdivision. His employment in New Mexico included: director of the New Mexico Economic Development Division, deputy secretary of the New Mexico Economic Development Department and the commute options coordinator for the New Mexico Department of Transportation.

MY VIEW: BOB WILLIAMS

Additives add to dangers of tobacco use T homas J. Bollyky is correct, that efforts to curb tobacco use should be increased (“Fight against tobacco should go global,” Jan. 27). But it is not really the plant itself that is mainly to be blamed for the health problems, but the additives that tobacco companies use to insure that users become, and stay, addicted. Ban those additives and cancer rates from smoking would plummet. Have you seen the list? (See www.lung.org/stop-smoking/ about-smoking/facts-figures/ whats-in-a-cigarette.html) Let’s take a look at just a few of the compounds, using information found on the standard Material Data Safety Sheets:

Acetone: “Classified Reproductive system/toxin/female … The substance is toxic to central nervous system. The substance may be toxic to kidneys, the reproductive system, liver, skin. Repeated or prolonged exposure to the substance can produce target organs damage. … If inhaled, remove to fresh air. … Forms explosive mixtures with … acetic acid … Do not breathe gas/fumes/ vapor/ spray.” Arsenic: Used in rat poison. “Very hazardous in case of ingestion, of inhalation. … The substance is toxic to kidneys, lungs, the nervous system, mucous membranes. Repeated or prolonged exposure to the substance can produce target

organs damage. … If inhaled, remove to fresh air.” Benzene: “Very hazardous in case of eye contact (irritant), of inhalation. Hazardous in case of skin contact, of ingestion. Inflammation of the eye is characterized by redness, watering, and itching. … Carcinogenic Effects: Classified A1 (confirmed for human) by ACGIH, 1 (proven for human.) by IARC. Mutagenic Effects: Classified Possible for human. Mutagenic for mammalian somatic cells. Mutagenic for bacteria and/ or yeast. … The substance may be toxic to liver, urinary system. Repeated or prolonged exposure to the substance can produce target organs damage. … Do not breathe gas/fumes/

LOOKING IN: PHILIP J. TACCETTA

Mine would spoil proud mesa

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am writing to express my firm opposition to the proposed Buena Vista Estates and Rockology LLC basalt mine on the La Bajada Mesa. The unspoiled mesa is most suitable as a symbol of our pride in and respect for our shared home. The La Bajada Mesa and escarpment is as enchantingly monumental and sublime an open space as is found Philip J. anywhere in this Taccetta country. As part of a state park or national monument, it can contribute to the allure of Santa Fe and surrounding areas as desirable places to live and to visit and will help grow our economy in a broadbased and sustainable way into the future. The proposed basalt mine is situated conspicuously at the doorstep of our capital city, at the gateway most often experienced by residents and visitors alike. It is adjacent to the well-traveled Interstate 25 corridor, one of the largest arteries of our economic life. Therefore, the mesa top landscape is a strong component of collective psyche; it influences human regard for the

people and place and those who govern and manage the land. Allowing the irreversible destruction of the La Bajada Mesa for the acquisition of materials more suitably obtained from existing mine operations or from other previously impacted sites is analogous to smashing an irreplaceable artifact for bits of disassociated jewels and gold. If the mesa top is rezoned and a strip mine is allowed to oper-

F I L T E R

S Y S T E M S

www.goodwatercompany.com 933 Baca Street 471-9036

ate, we will shame ourselves in the eyes of future generations and create a monument to our lack of respect for the cultural heritage of our population and disregard for the future life of Central New Mexico. Philip J. Taccetta is a lifetime resident of Central New Mexico and a master’s student in landscape architecture at UNM’s School of Architecture and Planning.

vapor/spray. … Very hazardous in case of inhalation.” Formaldehyde(!): Ewww! Embalming fluid! “Formaldehyde is a sensitizing agent that can cause an immune system response upon initial exposure. It is also a cancer hazard. … long-term exposure to low levels in the air or on the skin can cause asthma-like respiratory problems and skin irritation such as dermatitis and itching. … The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health considers 20 ppm of formaldehyde to be immediately dangerous to life and health.” Other obviously bad boys: Cadmium, lead, nicotine (extra is often added), methanol, toluene and acetic acid, to name

just a few from the incredibly long list. It is almost criminal that these are never mentioned and are really what gives “tobacco” its bad name. Equally reprehensible is the lack of studies that compare the effects of smoking organic tobacco with “cancer sticks.” After all, mankind has evolved breathing smoke from nature’s and his own fires, so it is illogical to blame the smoke particles themselves. Bob Williams resides in Los Alamos and is a retired nuclear chemist and data acquisition computer scientist who worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory for 23 years.

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We do our best to get every opinion in the paper. It doesn’t have to agree with ours. In fact, the wider the variety of ideas on the Opinions page, the better our readers are served. We try to run them in their turn. They’re all edited — for language, spelling and length. To give all readers a chance to speak out, we limit letter submissions per individual to once a month. Please limit your letters to 150 words. Please include your name, address and telephone numbers so we can verify that you wrote it. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@ sfnewmexican.com.

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President and CEO

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Contact us to place your personalized memorial 505-986-3000 | yourpet@sfnewmexican.com.

The Santa Fe Community Foundation seeks a President and CEO to lead and direct the Foundation. Primary functions include creating and executing a clear vision for advancing leadership initiatives, achieving financial sustainability and setting the overall direction and tone of the organization consistent with the Foundation’s mission. Community leadership, fund development, public relations, financial oversight/management, and staff development and mentoring are major responsibilities. BA required, MA preferred along with background in non-profit leadership; please send a cover letter and resume to SFCFLeader@gmail.com. Compensation commensurate with experience; the Foundation offers a generous benefits package. The Foundation is an equal opportunity employer. For more details about this opportunity please visit www.santafecf.org.


OPINIONS

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: GAYLA BECHTOL

Remodeling codes good for the planet

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MY VIEW: EVELYN COLE

War on Poverty can be won

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t has been 50 years since President Lyndon Johnson declared the War on Poverty. At that time, Congress passed many bills to begin the war. Initially the programs (Medicaid, Medicare, Food Stamps, Head Start, expansion of Social Security, Community Action, Vista and Child Nutrition Act) reduced poverty by 50 percent. In 1975, the Earned Income Tax Credit was created, which also was successful in reducing poverty. These programs did significant good for this country’s poor. In recent years, these same programs often have been under attack, with financial cuts that have made life harder for those living in poverty. Consequently, “economic mobility” — the measure of how many people can move up from poverty — has remained stagnant for many years. Today, the rates for poverty are 15 percent of U.S. adults and 22 percent of U.S. children; i.e., 46.5 million people, 16 million of whom are children. What are the ways we can help them financially rise to a decent standard of living? For starters, we can raise the

As Lyndon Johnson stated, we cannot afford to lose the War on Poverty. It must be waged in private homes, public offices, from the courthouse to the White House. minimum wage. At $7.50 per hour (New Mexico’s minimum wage), no one can afford the necessities of living. Those trying to live on this get help from SNAP (food stamps), child care and the Federal Earned Income Tax Credit or Child Tax Credit. However, if their income increases, they begin to lose these benefits, dragging them again into poverty. This is known as the “cliff effect.” We can restructure benefits so that, as a person’s income grows, benefits gradually decrease, allowing a family to begin to save. Help with savings could also come through the Financial Security Act, which will be considered by Congress this year. Low-income families who are eligible for the Earned Income

My Views We are happy to consider publication of My Views, commentaries of up to 600 words, from writers who live within our reporting area. Provide verification information: full name, home address and telephone number, along with a sentence about yourself for the tagline. All copy is subject to editing for length, grammar, spelling, language and obvious errors. We encourage writers to include a photo of themselves. We do not return edited copy for writer’s approval. However, we try to respect the writer’s voice and edit as lightly as possible. We run My Views on Sundays — and no, we cannot guarantee a publication date. Please note: There’s a three-month waiting period between the publication of a My View and submission of another one. However, we accept letters of up to 150 words in the interim, about once a month. Send your My Views to letters@sfnewmexican.com.

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Santa Fe County Meetings Santa Fe County for the week of March 17, 2014 Aamodt Water Settlement Outreach Workshop Tuesday, March 18 at 6 p.m. El Rancho Community Center, 394 County Road 84, El Rancho Registration is required - contact Darcy Bushnell 505-277-0551 or bushnell@law.unm.edu Investment Committee Meeting Thursday, March 20 at 2 p.m. In the Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Ave. County Development Review Committee (CDRC) Thursday, March 20 at 4 p.m. County Commission Chambers, 102 Grant Ave. Aamodt Water Settlement Outreach Workshop Thursday, March 20 at 6 p.m. Pojoaque Satellite Office, 5 West Gutierrez, Suite 9 Registration is required - contact Darcy Bushnell 505-277-0551 or bushnell@law.unm.edu For More information call 505-986-6200 or visit www.santafecountynm.gov

out of existence because it supposedly duplicated the Historic Districts Review Board. Alas, a glaring oversight has occurred in the Railyard District, which is not included in historic districts. Solar panels were allowed to obstruct views of the Santa Fe Depot and the Gross Kelly Warehouse. If the BCD-DRC were reviewing projects, this oversight might have been corrected. Was there a more sensitive placement possible, nestling the sturcture between three landmark historic buildings? Could the structure have been lowered? I don’t know, but at least a public discussion would have taken place. Of course we all benefit from the lowered non-renewable energy use of one of our favorite restaurants but have sacrificed the view of the adjacent landmark buildings. I encourage our new administration (congratulations to all, by the way) to either bring back the BCD-DRC or include the

Railyard in the historic districts before it is too late for the rest of the Railyard buildings. It is important that the public has a chance to learn about major changes to their adjacent neighborhoods and decide as a community our collective values. And last but not least, one more piece of the Acequia Trail is nearly complete (behind the Santa Fe Indian School) and the St. Francis underpass design charrette was wellattended, and I am so glad it is moving forward. Thanks to Leroy Pacheco and his staff for their persistence. I am so grateful that the Railyard is the hub of trails, events and activities we envisioned so many years ago connecting the citizens of Santa Fe easily, by bicycle. Gayla Bechtol is a certified historic architect, longtime Railyard planning and implementation leader and activist, and founding board member of the Railyard Stewards.

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Tax Credit can have a savings account set up when they file their taxes, so that they can put all or part of their tax credit into the account, with a match from the federal government. Then, if a job is lost or illness happens, families would have money to fall back on. Such savings can also help with their children’s education or with buying a house. The Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit also needs to be expanded so that low-income workers without children will benefit. Such increased benefits will increase economic mobility and security. As Lyndon Johnson stated, we cannot afford to lose the War on Poverty. It must be waged in private homes, public offices, from the courthouse to the White House. That means everyone! Let’s all work for the passage of legislation to increase opportunities for those in poverty. This wealthy country cannot allow the present income disparities to continue.

reat news! On Feb. 26, the city of Santa Fe passed the Green Code for Remodels. Thanks to former Mayor David Coss and then Councilor Rebecca Wurzburger’s leadership, Santa Fe is positively responding to climate change by requiring lower energy use that reduces greenhouse gases. As the historic architect on the Historic Green Task Force, I was privileged and very grateful to my cohorts who had a voice in making sure that greenhouse gases are reduced, and at the same time that the historic character that defines the city of Santa Fe is preserved. Thank you to the great city staff, especially Katherine Mortimer, who guided us in this endeavor. Thank you to the governing body for making this a priority. On another note, a few years ago the Business Capitol District-Design Review Committee, or BCD-DRC, was voted

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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

MY VIEW: GERALDINE SALAZAR

MY VIEW: GLENN SCHIFFBAUER

Informed electorate Energy efficiency smart for business is the foundation Business energyN efficiency upgrades of our democracy often are good

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encourage eligible voters in Santa Fe County to participate in the upcoming 2014 primary election on June 3. All qualified citizens of the United States who are 18 years of age or older have the right to vote. Remember, however, that for the primary election in New Mexico, you must be a registered Republican to vote in the Republican primary or a registered Democrat to vote in the Democratic primary. Primary elections determine which candidates will appear on the ballot for the national election, Nov. 4. Please take your right to vote seriously. Your participation helps determine who will represent the community and what authorities will be bestowed upon government by an electoral victory. The voters who participate have the ability to decide what direction the community will take for the benefit of its people. A state legislator, for example creates laws that affect various aspects of our lives: taxes, education, use of vital resources, road development and repair, trade and health care. Judges interpret laws that affect our constitutional rights or the outcomes of legal disputes. County commissioners and city councilors set policy and create ordinances that affect taxes, water issues, health care, zoning, traffic, etc. In general, elected officials and their official actions affect our daily lives. Therefore, it is the responsibility of every voter to study the issues, facts, and the qualifications and effectiveness of candidates desirous of becoming elected officials. An informed elector is prepared to vote in what he or

she believes to be the best interests of the community. Weighing the facts and the potential outcomes is crucial to Geraldine the advanceSalazar ment of our democracy. It is democracy that guarantees the rights of freedom, justice, and liberty for all our citizens. As a qualified voter, you choose whether or not to vote, but I encourage you to participate, study the issues, discuss them with others and exercise your right to vote. The Bureau of Elections of the County Clerk’s Office is tasked with conducting fair, unbiased and secure elections. The bureau staff provides voters with information regarding elections, registers every eligible citizen, trains precinct board members and is responsible for the conduct of elections assigned to them by the election code. These public services are part of the county clerk’s mission to enhance public knowledge about the election process in Santa Fe County. If you have questions about your status as a voter, if you wish to register to vote or change your registration, or if you wish to participate as a poll worker, please call the Bureau of Elections at 986-6280. The last day to register or change your registration for the primary election is May 6. Please participate in this upcoming election and exercise your right to vote! Geraldine Salazar is the Santa Fe County clerk.

MY VIEW: REMBRANDT SMITH

uart Gallery on Canyon Road saved $5,500 last year through lower utility bills after an energy-efficiency upgrade to better new LED lighting and controls. With a rebate from the utility that helped to offset the cost, Nuart Gallery’s payback was six months. The gallery has lowered the overall cost of doing business. Business energy-efficiency upgrades often are good news for customers because businesses with lower overhead can keep prices low. This is one of many benefits of energy efficiency that the Santa Fe Green Chamber of Commerce points out to its members. Recently, the Green Chamber’s message got a big boost from Gov. Susana Martinez, who proclaimed the week of Jan. 13-20, as Energy Efficiency Awareness Week. In her energy-efficiency proclamation, Martinez rightly recognized responsible management of energy use as a local, statewide, national and global concern both fiscally and environmentally. She called for public education and leadership in developing a “realistic energy ethic” and becoming aware of “energy efficiencies within our communities.”

Bonanza,” concluded that, if New Mexico’s electric utilities boost comprehensive, cost-effective energy conservation programs for their customers, and customers take advantage of them then: u Collectively, those customers will save nearly $1.7 billion between 2013 and 2020; u The state’s overall energy use in 2020 will decrease by 24 percent or the equivalent of 580,000 typical households; u The state will create 2,330 new jobs in the energy-efficiency industry and boost economic activity; u Air pollution from power plants will improve, as will public health; and She went on to note that New Mexico’s u 4.6 billion gallons of water consumed own state government projects have by power plants will be saved annually by resulted in a 16 percent energy savings and 2020. more than $2 million in annual utility bill These benefits of energy efficiency savings. That is a savings that taxpayers are real, and they are available to all New can applaud. Mexicans. Energy Efficiency Awareness Week preWe urge our members and members of sented an opportunity to tell New Mexithe larger community to contact their local cans how conserving energy — in busiutility and take advantage of an energynesses, government and homes — together efficiency program this year. adds up to huge potential benefits for us all. A recent 360-page regional report Glenn Schiffbauer is the executive director of the Santa Fe Green Chamber of Commerce. on energy efficiency, “The $20 Billion

news for customers because businesses with lower overhead can keep prices low.

community

CALENDAR

Featured events in and around Santa Fe

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$80, 6 CEUs. At Center for Spiritual Living, 505 Camino de los Marquez, Santa Fe. For information and workshop pre-registration NOT YOUR FIDDLER ON THE contact Jerome Bernstein, 505-989-3200. www.santafejung.org.

ROOF: The Religious Thought MARCH of Hasidism Thursday, March 20 7 PM.

5, 10am-5pm. Led by Judith Tripp and presented by the Labyrinth Resource Group, SoulQuest is an experiential retreat using the RAILYARD STEWARDS YARDlabyrinth as a tool for transformation; explorMASTERS VOLUNTEER ORIEN- ing personal and collective paths through movement, song, discussion and reflection. TATION: Saturday 3/22, 10 am - 12 pm, Working with the labyrinth, participants will Railyard Community Building. Yardmasters are volunteers that serve the community and engage in large and small groups, focusing themselves by providing specialized care to on the theme of gratitude. $95 advance/$110 at the door, $20 discount for students. St the 150 native & low-water plant varieties in John’s United Methodist Church, 1200 Old the Railyard Park. Meet at various times in Pecos Trail, Santa Fe. For more information: the week, garden in the park with specialized training with Railyard Stewards staff and 505-982-0662 or soulquest2014@icloud. com. www.labyrinthresourcegroup.org. horticulturists. Work more than 24 hours in MARCH the park and earn a reward from the Railyard Stewards! To register or learn more contact Marc Grignon at Marc@railyardpark.org or call 505-316-3596. SING FOR THE EARTH, PRAY CURIOUS VISITOR QUESTIONS! FOR THE EARTH, ACT FOR THE DO YOU LIKE TO SING? Don’t miss Friendly, Resourceful answers are provided this unique opportunity to join together with at the Visitor Information Window on the EARTH United Church of Santa Fe’s The Santa Fe Symphony Orchestra & Chorus Plaza. Why not join the fun and share your Annual “Faith and the Environment” Conand sing “Ode to Joy” from Beethoven’s ference with Bishop and composer Rev. knowledge of Santa Fe while enjoying the Ninth Symphony, under the direction of reJeffery Rowthorn and environmentalist Dr. friendship of our Bienvenidos volunteer nowned choral director Tom Hall. This mas- group. Training begins in April so now is Anne Rowthorn. March 21-23. Friday (Mar. terpiece has been sung around the world-as 21): All-Age Celebration of Creation, 5:30 the perfect time to join us. The Plaza Visitor pm. (supper provided). Saturday (March 22): people stood up for freedom in Chile, as (and Information Window opens on May 12, and 8:30 to 12:00 Keynote, workshops on music, after) the Berlin Wall was dismantled, in Chi- remains open daily until October 12. Monthly na as students demonstrated in Tiananmen prayer, and readings, children’s programs. Luncheons at the Hilton Hotel Foster ComSquare, and as the Japanese healed from a 12:00 Noon Picnic and Park Cleanup. radery with members and the enjoyment of Sunday (March 23): 8:30 and 11:00 Worship devastating earthquake. Two performances informed speakers on enriching local topics. with Bishop and Dr. Rowthorn, Revs. Talitha take place at The Lensic: Saturday, May 17 For additional information please phone & Sunday, May 18. For a complete rehearsal Arnold and Brandon Johnson, Steinway Membership Chair, Marilyn O’Brien, at 505Artists Jacquelyn Helin, adult and children’s and performance schedule, visit www.santaf- 989-1701. choirs. 9:45 Adult Forum “Our Covenant with esymphony.org/Auditions_Chorus.html. Call BEAD SALE! The Beading Heart of 505-983-3530 to schedule a short audition the Earth.” Children’s and youth programs Santa Fe is closing it’s doors at the end of held on Saturday, March 22 from 9:00 a.m. at 9:45 and 11:00. Childcare all morning. March. Effective immediately! All merchanto noon. 988-3295. 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Midise is 50% off the retail price, mostly at chael’s). unitedchurchofsantafe.org. APRIL or below cost. Many seed beads, Delicas, WORKING WELL WITH A DISCzech Glass, Firepolish Crystals, SemiABILITY Fridays, March 21 to May 9, 2:00 Precious Strands and Findings are still in STORYSHARDS SUSTAINABILto 4:00 P.M. This 8 week free course helps stock. This is your last chance to get quality adults with disabilities or chronic illnesses ITY: It’s An Inside Job. Friday evebeads and findings at wholesale prices. No to set and accomplish goals, advocate for ning April 4th, 5:30pm-7:30pm & Saturday further reductions will be taken. Additionally, themselves, improve their problem solving April 5th, 9:30-am-3:30pm. $75 including some slat-wall hooks, displays and fixtures skills and abilities to adapt to change. Work- lunch. Unique among workshops, STOare still available for sale. Located at 939 ing Well emphasizes creating a balanced and RYSHARDS is a vibrant art-video inviting West Alameda Street Santa Fe, NM 87501, healthy lifestyle that supports employment womens’ wisdom and story sharing around 505-988-8961 and careers. New Vistas, 1205 Parkway personal sustainability in their own lives. “SACRED JOURNEYS, HEALDrive Ste. A, Santa Fe, NM. 87507. For The STORYSHARDS conversation connects more information and to register: Call: Ken ING EARTH.” United Church of Santa your core stories with evocative visual and Searby: 471-1001 ext.118 or Marilyn BenFe offers 2 different four-week Lenten study musical alchemies from around the world. nett: 471-1001 ext. 120. Email: ksearby@ series. “Sacred Journeys,” led by Rev. BranIn consideration of personal sustainability, newvistas.org mbennett@newvistas.org. don Johnson explores the power of pilgrimVisual Artist and Story Guide Lisl Dennis C. G. JUNG INSTITUTE of Santa interweaves her far-flung travel experiences, age, be it the Holy Week Walk to Chimayo or the Islamic Hadj. Rev. Talitha Arnold offers creative imagination, and visual savvy in Fe Lecture & Workshop Friday, “Healing Earth,” an exploration of the Biblical a sequencing of multimedia stories which March 21st, 7-9 pm, public lecture by Donald healing stories, prayer, and the connection Kalsched, Ph.D., Jungian analyst: “Images of establish creative contexts and evocato God’s earth, water, and breath. Weds., tive atmospheres for this vital and relevant the Lost and Recovered Soul in the Psy6:00 to 7:00 pm. All welcome. Childcare conversation. In this innovative format, Lisl chotherapy of Early Trauma,” $10, 2 CEUs. provided. Please register at 988-3295. 1804 inspires your creative thinking around perSaturday, March 22nd, 9:00 am-4:30 pm, Arroyo Chamiso (corner of St. Michael’s). workshop by Dr. Kalsched: “The Soul in Hell sonal SUSTAINABILITY- It’s An Inside Job. unitedchurchofsantafe.org; look us up on and its Liberation: Reflections on Clinical De- For more information: 505-986-1106. See Facebook, too. pression in light of Dante’s Divine Comedy,” SUSTAINABILITY at www.storyshards.info. Hasidism is a movement within Judaism that blends traditional Jewish concepts, mysticism and psychology. Founded in Eastern Europe in the 18th Century, it swept the imagination of a large segment of Jewish society. With UNM professor Michael Nutkiewicz, we’ll explore the key concepts of Hasidism and “unpack” some Hasidic texts to help us understand this fascinating movement that still exists today. Presented by HaMakom Continuing Education. Suggested donation: $10. St. Bede’s, 1601 St. Francis at San Mateo. 505.992.1905. www.hamakomtheplace.org.

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Weathering storm of public education 21

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he history of New Mexico public education is rich with examples of communities meeting the needs of their people. This Land of Enchantment embodies a creative culture that nurtures individual freedom of exploration and expression. The needs of the child, which are addressed by parents and family since birth, create an educational current that will carry each child through life. This current is strengthened by educational models which agree that meeting individual student needs is paramount to effective learning and success. At present, the winds of progress are telling our political leaders that the skills required for successful competition in global markets are the ultimate measure of success. They are being told that this skill set should be evaluated through standards-based testing. These standards-based assessments are often in direct opposition to the ideologies of our community-based education. This has created a sea of confused factions upon which our vessels of public education are being tossed about. We are fortunate to have many superb educators navigating this storm. It seems important for proponents of the Common Core Standards to recognize that changing a community’s educational system necessitates changing community ideology. They must also recognize that many of our communities have successfully sustained their ideologies through hundreds of years of foreign intrusion. On the other hand, it is important for communities to recognize that the Common Core skills for college and career readiness are critical to gaining knowledge and communicating outside one’s own community. New Mexicans will weather this storm because we know that winds change, currents ebb and flow and change is inevitable. I found the public education town hall meeting, which aired on PBS on Jan. 16, to be extremely encouraging.

The teachers who participated in this presentation made it clear that their focus remains on the needs of the individual students within their communities, despite the overwhelming distractions mandated by outside forces. They are the guiding light and they need our help. Material support is not enough. Parents, community leaders and businesses must all pull together, focus on our children and recognize that they are the most critical aspect of a sustainable future. Everyone must contribute. We must inspire them by example and implant within them a lifelong desire to learn. Naturally, parents must take the lead. Unfortunately, a society that considers commercial consumption and entertainment to be the apex of achievement often requires both parents to work multiple jobs in order to compete. Time and resources for family education are often relegated. There are, however, a great many of us who could engage. Retired professionals, emptynesters or anyone looking for a rewarding experience can simply walk into their neighborhood school’s administrative offices and volunteer. Funding for public education initiatives will be a main feature of the legislative sessions this month. We must ask our leaders to see through this storm of public education reform and focus on the individual needs of our children. We must ask them to reduce teacher to student ratios and support and encourage volunteer programs. This will ease the administrative burden on our teachers and provide them opportunity to provide for the needs of their individual students. Rembrandt Smith is a graduate student in secondary education at The University of New Mexico. He is a retired naval officer and an Albuquerque native. He is currently a student teacher at Cibola High School in Albuquerque.

SOULQUEST: Sowing Seeds of Gratitude for the Journey - April

ONGOING

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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-2 Neighbors C-6 Celebrations C-7 Time Out C-8

LOCAL NEWS

Still serving: Former Supreme Court justice doesn’t let retirement slow him down. Neighbors, C-6

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SFCC program offers a look at criminal justice Officers get an edge in training, while others get a chance to explore everything from legal matters to forensics By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

Franchesca Perdue has known since high school that she wanted a career in law enforcement. But she was too young to enroll in the New Mexico Law Enforcement Academy when she graduated. Cadets must be 21 by the time they finish their training. So Perdue did the next best things: She

enrolled in the criminal justice program at Santa Fe Community College and became a public safety aide with the city police department. When she does get the chance to go to the academy, she said, she figures she’ll be ahead of the curve. “I feel they’re going to be talking about a lot of things I have already learned,” she said. “And if you already know it, that’s an exciting feeling.”

Jerry Trujillo, a former Santa Fe Police Department captain who is chairman of the community college’s School of Trades, Technology, Sustainability and Professional Studies, said the criminal justice program draws people who are interested in the broader issues of law enforcement. Students in Anita Nugent’s forensic science class, for example, include Marty Burney, an investigator with the New Mexico State Fire Marshal’s Office. He doesn’t plan to enter the law enforcement field — he’s currently focusing on busi-

Anita Nugent speaks to Irin Saldivar about his facial reconstruction project during a criminal justice class at Santa Fe Community College on Thursday. JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

Please see PROGRAM, Page C-3

Magnet school challenges students to consider their place in the world

Man fights to regain medical license Former ER physician says ailments prevented him from understanding board’s terms By Anne Constable The New Mexican

De Vargas Middle School Principal Marc DuCharme, left, and Tony Gerlicz, principal learner at the new Mandela International Magnet School, take a recent tour of the space the new International Baccalaureate school will be using at the De Vargas campus. The school will open in August. PHOTOS BY LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

Taking a global outlook By Robert Nott The New Mexican

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n a recent afternoon, Tony Gerlicz — sporting a tie with images of children from around the world — spoke with parents and students about Santa Fe Public Schools’ first International Baccalaureate school, set to open in August. “What type of adults do you want your kids to be?” he asked the group gathered in the Kearny Elementary School gym. The answers varied: Responsible. Productive. Happy. Inspired. Forward-looking and empowered to pursue their own vision. Prepared for the global economy. Bilingual — and maybe even trilingual. “That, collectively, is the answer to why we’re doing an IB school,” said Gerlicz, head of the Mandela International Magnet School.

The school — named after the late South African president and civil rights leader — will open in on the campus of De Vargas Middle School as a public alternative to the regular middle school and high school programs, following the curriculum set by the nonprofit International Baccalaureate organization. Eventually, Mandela International will serve students in grades 7-12, but it will start this fall with 50 students in grades seven and eight. Admission will be by lottery, scheduled for March 28. To ensure geographical fairness, 10 students for each grade level will be randomly selected from each of the district’s five zones. As of Friday, the district had received about 135 applications. Gerlicz has hired three teachers so far — one from an IB school in Pakistan, one from a public high

In brief Procession honors Santa Fe firefighter The Santa Fe Fire Department will host a memorial service and procession for a 12-year-veteran of the department who died last month. Capt. Wayne Mueller died Feb. 24 following a long battle with pancreatic cancer. Mueller served as one of the station captains at Fire Station No. 3, 1751 Cerrillos Road, which is near Ashbaugh Park. The memorial service begins at 11 a.m. Monday at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. The procession to Station 3 will start at about

Please see GLOBAL, Page C-3

LEARN ABOUT THE MANDELA SCHOOL

Gerlicz, who spoke to parents and students about the program Wednesday at Kearny Elementary School, said the new school will be open to everyone.

noon from the center. The processional route will be south on Sheridan Street, east on Palace Avenue, south on Lincoln Avenue and around the Plaza to Old Santa Fe Trail. From there, the procession will head south on Old Santa Fe Trail before turning west on Alameda Street and then southwest on Sandoval Street. Eventually, the procession will merge onto Cerrillos Road and ccontinue on to Fire Station No. 3, where another memorial service and reception will follow at 12:30 p.m..

Amtrak museum train to be on display The Amtrak Exhibit Train, described as a “museum on wheels,” is scheduled to make a stop in the Santa

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com

Fe Railyard next Saturday, March 22. Visitors will be able to climb aboard the train to learn about the history of the passenger-train company, created in 1971, and “catch a glimpse into the company’s future,” an announcement said. Displays in the free exhibit include vintage advertising, past menus and dinnerware, period uniforms, photographs and other memorabilia. “Visitors will also see a model of today’s modern-sleeping accommodations and high-speed rail service displays,” the statement said. Interactive exhibits include railroad horns, trivia questions, workable signals and an engineer’s stand. The public can tour the train from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Activities for children will include an interactive model railroad display,

Santa Fe Public Schools will host several informational sessions about its new Mandela International Magnet School this week: u 7 a.m. Tuesday, March 18, at Wood Gormley Elementary School on Booth Street u 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 18, at Sweeney Elementary School on Airport Road u 3:10 p.m. Thursday, March 20, at Salazar Elementary School on Apache Avenue u 3:10 p.m. Tuesday, March 25, at Carlos Gilbert Elementary School on Griffin Street

George Schwartz was once a respected physician, board certified in family practice and emergency medicine. Considered a pioneer in emergency medicine who spent most of career in the ER, he was the senior editor of a 2,100-page tome on the field. And he says that in 35 years, no one filed a malpractice suit against him. But eight years after the state’s Medical Board revoked his license, alleging misconduct in prescribing painkillers, the Santa Fe doctor is still fighting for the right to practice medicine — and for his reputation. At the crux of Schwartz’s George tangled case is a settlement Schwartz with the board that he signed in 2008, saying he agreed to never again seek a new medical license. But Schwartz says he didn’t intend to sign away his right to practice medicine. At the time he signed the agreement, he says, he was suffering from several ailments, was heavily medicated and didn’t understand the terms of deal. Last week Schwartz, 72, told a court-appointed mediator that he would accept any conditions set by the board if he could regain his medical license. “Let them do whatever monitoring they want. I don’t care,” he said in an interview Tuesday. Schwartz earned his medical degree from the State University of New York in 1967. He worked for many years as an emergency physician. At one time, he focused his practice on treating Morgellons disease, a controversial disorder characterized by disfiguring sores on the skin and crawling sensations. Some call it a physical disorder and others say it is a condition involving delusions of a parasitic infection. He also treated people addicted to narcotics. Then questions began to arise over Schwartz’s prescribing practices and the medical records he kept for his patients. In 2005, he received a notice from the New Mexico Medical Board alleging misconduct tied to painkiller and narcotics prescriptions. The following year, the board voted to revoke his license. Among the allegations were that Schwartz did not maintain adequate medical records for at least 55 patients for whom he prescribed controlled substances, that he obtained more than

Please see LICENSE, Page C-3

bean bag toss and a “Chuggington Depot” area. The event will take place on the east side of Market Street between Manhattan Avenue and Alcaldessa. Visitors can choose to ride the Rail Runner to the Santa Fe Depot or use city buses. For those arriving by motor vehicle, parking is available at the Railyard Parking Garage.

Projects to close parts of county roads Santa Fe County’s Public Works Department is warning motorists of a couple of road closures beginning Monday. A section of Calle Enrique in the Piñon Hills subdivision is scheduled to be closed Monday, March 17,

through April 4 while crews replace culverts under the road. Local properties will have access at all times, the notice said. The bridge section of County Road 88 (La Puebla Road) and County Road 88D (Placita Road) will each be closed for five days while bridge deck work is completed. The roads will not be closed simultaneously, the department said. Placita Road will be closed to through traffic from Monday, March 17, through Friday, March 21. During this time, traffic will be rerouted through La Puebla Road. La Puebla Road will be closed to through traffic south of N.M. 76 from March 24 through March 28. The New Mexican

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

Austin police: DWI suspect accelerated car into crowds police lights behind him around 12:30 a.m. Thursday By Will Weissert because outThe Associated Press standing warrants meant AUSTIN, Texas — The he could go Rashad drunken-driving suspect to prison for Charjuan who police say killed two five years. The Owens people after he smashed his car warrant says through a street barricade at Owens said the South By Southwest festival he’s facing kidnapping warrants did not use his brakes and even issued as part of a custody accelerated as he approached battle over his daughter. crowds, according to an arrest A breath test indicated warrant released Friday. Owens’ blood alcohol content Rashad Charjuan Owens was 0.114, exceeding the legal was charged Friday with one limit of 0.08, the warrant says. count of capital murder, though The officer who tried to additional charges can be pull over Owens was looking added later. Austin Police Chief for suspected drunken drivers Art Acevedo has said Owens when he spotted a 2012 gray intentionally steered toward Honda Civic that didn’t have its pedestrians early Thursday in headlights turned on, the arrest hopes of escaping an officer warrant says. Owens then who was trying to pull him made a turn from a middle over. Acevedo has suggested lane and “would have caused a Owens could face two capital crash” with the police cruiser murder charges and as many as had the officer not turned to 23 counts of aggravated assault avoid it, according to the warwith a vehicle. rant. The 21-year-old from Killeen, Investigators say Owens then about 70 miles north of Austin, cut through a gas station and remains in police custody after sped the wrong way down a a District Court judge set his one-way street before crashing bail at $3 million. Jail records through police barriers blockdid not list an attorney for him. ing a street closed for South By According to the arrest war- Southwest festivities — forcing rant, Owens told police that another police officer manning he “got scared” when he saw the roadblock on foot to dive

Driver charged with capital murder

out of the way. Police say Owens then plowed into a crowd of concertgoers, hitting and killing a man from the Netherlands on a bicycle and an Austin woman on a moped. Investigators say he eventually crashed into a taxi and parked van and tried to run before police subdued him with a stun gun. The warrant says a video from the police unit giving chase “shows the Honda accelerating into crowds, not simply crowded areas but crowds of people who are hit by the car and flung into the air.” It adds that Owens drove “for almost three city blocks, accelerating into crowds and does not use his brakes, as in the video there are no brake lights visible from the rear of the Honda.” Court records indicate that Owens pleaded guilty to driving under the influence in Fairbanks, Alaska, in October 2011, when he was 19. He also was charged with leaving the scene of an accident, but that was later dismissed. Owens also faced 2012 charges in Alaska of criminal mischief, and a warrant was issued for him after he failed to appear in court. In 2010, meanwhile, he was arrested in Texas by Killeen Independent School District police for criminal trespassing and pleaded guilty.

Los Angeles subway dig uncovers prehistoric stash LOS ANGELES — Scientists have long known that long before hipsters and tourists were crowding Los Angeles’ trendy Miracle Mile district, prehistoric animals were doing the same. Now, thanks to a subway dig, they’re discovering that sea lions may have been swimming nearby as well. An exploratory subway shaft dug just down the street from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art has uncovered

a treasure trove of fossils in the land where saber-tooth cats and other prehistoric animals once roamed, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday. They include mollusks, asphalt-saturated sand dollars and possibly the mouth of a sea lion dating to 2 million years ago, a time when the Pacific Ocean extended several miles farther inland than it does today. “Here on the Miracle Mile is where the best record of life

ASPEN, Colo. — Authorities said Saturday that a third suspect was arrested in the killing of a socialite in this Colorado resort town, more than a week after a couple who rented the woman’s home were taken into custody. Katherine M. Carpenter, 56, was apprehended Friday night in the death of Nancy Pfister, 57, the Pitkin County Sheriff’s Office said. Carpenter was being held without bond on

suspicion of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder. Pfister was the daughter of the late Betty and Art Pfister, longtime prominent Aspen residents who co-founded the Buttermilk ski area west of town that’s hosted the Winter X Games multiple times. Her body was found in an upstairs closet at her home on Feb. 26, but investigators have not said when or how she was

killed. Authorities said they arrested William F. Styler III, 65, and Nancy Christine Styler, 62, at a lodge in Basalt on March 3. They were staying at the lodge after apparently moving out of Pfister’s home Feb. 22, the same day she returned from a vacation. The Stylers, who are married, are expected to be formally charged Monday with first-degree murder.

DWI, failure to pay fines and a probation violation. A sheriff’s deputy responded to a report of a driver striking a curb on the 4000 block of Calle Lucia, according to a deputy’s report. The suspect submitted to a blood test after telling officers she had taken prescription medication. u Martin J. Romero, 25, of Santa Fe was arrested at about 8:30 p.m. Friday on charges of DWI, no insurance and a traffic violation. According to a report, a deputy pulled Romero over because he had passed a vehicle in front of him that was preparing to make a left turn in 4100 block of South Meadows Road. The suspect had a breath alcohol content of 0.08, the report said. u Noe Dominguez, 29, of Santa Fe was arrested at about 12:30 a.m. Saturday at a checkpoint on Cerrillos Road and Vegas Verdes on charges of aggravated DWI, careless driving, no insurance, no proof of registration and having an open container. u Eldi Tena-Hernandez, 43, of Santa Fe was arrested at about

1 a.m. Saturday on St. Francis Drive and Paseo de Peralta on charges of DWI, a red-light violation, careless driving and having an open container.

by his mother, Victoria Marquez; his father, Manuel Marquez Sr.; sons John Marquez and Thomas Marquez; and granddaughter Melissa Marquez. His survivors include his wife, Helen A. Marquez; children: Marie Tower; Richard Marquez; Cathy Marquez; grandchildren: Chris M. Lucero (Tessa); Curtis Broadnax (Lisa); Gerald Lucero; Jessica Tapia (Antonio); Vanessa Marquez and Jacob Sprunger (Jennie); great-grandchildren: Isaiah Gutierrez, Joshua Lucero, GianCarlo Lucero, Aujolique Lucero, Kylee Paige

Broadnax, Genesis Lucero, Ezekiel Lucero, Kayla Lovato, Alisha Tapia, Angelo Tapia, Julianna Marquez, Jasiah Sprunger, Elijah Sanchez, Lalo Lucero and Donavin Lucero; siblings: Betty Gonzales, Gloria Morales, Maria Moreno, Frank Marquez, Juan Marquez, Patrick Marquez and Anthony Marquez and best friend Bob Lopas (Marie). A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Tuesday, March 18, at St. Anne’s Catholic Church. Burial will follow Mass at Rosario Catholic Cemetery. Services are arranged by Berardinelli Family Funeral Service.

The Associated Press

Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone broke into a house at about 9:50 p.m. Friday in the 1700 block of West Alameda Street. The owner of the house and his daughter told police the man had interrupted the burglary. Several items were tampered with, and an iPod worth about $300 was missing. u Melissa Garcia, 32, of Santa Fe was arrested Friday night on Siringo Road and Fifth Street on charges of possession of a controlled substance, driving with a suspended license, speeding and possession of an open container of alcohol. u A man reported that at about 10 p.m. Friday, someone vandalized a structure he was trying to sell and that copper piping was stolen from his property on the 400 block of Rodeo Road.

DWI arrests u Christina Sandoval, 40, of Santa Fe was arrested at about 8:40 p.m. Friday on charges of

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, 800-7217273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)

Death notice MANUEL E. MARQUEZ JR. Manuel E. Marquez Jr., a longtime resident of Santa Fe, died March 13, after a long battle with prostate cancer. He was 79. He will be greatly missed by his family and friends. The oldest of eight children, Marquez was born in Denver on Dec. 26, 1934. He worked for the Santa Fe Public Schools and as a car mechanic. He loved God, his family, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Lakers, the Green Bay Packers, the Denver Broncos and the Lobo basketball team. He was proceeded in death

The Associated Press

Funeral services and memorials JULIAN HECTOR RABAUDI-DUFAU

REBECCA PONCE-OSBORN

Colorado police arrest third suspect in socialite’s death

from the last great ice age in the world is found,” paleontologist Kim Scott said. The area, dotted today with museums, restaurants, boutiques and apartment buildings, also includes the world-famous La Brea Tar Pits. It was there that mammoths and sabertoothed cats got stuck in the pits’ oozing muck, which preserved their skeletons for millennia.

April 17, 1964 - March 4, 2014 Rebecca Ponce-Osborn passed March 4th 12:48am. Becky will live on through her sons Taylor Osborn, Korbin Osborn, her sister Geniphyr Ponce-Pore, her brother Rafael Ponce, her Father Rafael Ponce Sr., the Father of her children Douglas Osborn and her best friend and companion Darren Bartlett. Becky touched so many lives through her kindness, unconditional love and humor. Becky held her Master’s Degree in Psychology focusing on social work specifically helping under privileged young mothers make a life for themselves in the face of adversity. Becky successfully accomplished getting all her young mothers into College and continued a relationship/friendship with many of them long after counseling. From her son Taylor: "She will live on through the lives she touched and the people she helped. Her kindness and compassion were an inspiration to everyone she met." From her son Korbin: "She was a loving mother. She tried to help everyone she knew. I never met anyone who didn’t like her. If you were having any problems, she always would find a way to help you, or make you feel better. She was an amazing person, who was selfless, caring, passionate, and inspiring." From her sister Geniphyr: "Becky’s gifts were her laugh, her joy, and her open heart for anyone and everyone - and taught me about loving without boundaries. Thank you, Beck." From her best friend and companion Darren: "Becky’s laughter, love of life and people was contagious. You made me a better person Bec. You will be missed my love." YVONNE CARLETON Yvonne Carleton passed away on March 4th peacefully in her home at the Commons in Santa Fe, NM. She was 93. Strong willed, and sometimes irreverent, Yvonne was able to combine out-of-the box thinking with a down-to earth sense of practicality. As an active participant in life, she loved building community and managed to make an indelible connection with those around her every day. Born April 20th, 1920 in Kent, England, Yvonne grew up in Yorkshire. She lived through World War II in London where she served six years in the Royal Air Force. Following the war, she set out alone for NYC with $80 in her pocket. She worked at NY Columbia Presbyterian Hospital before moving to Chicago where she met and married children’s book author and illustrator Brinton Turkle. Yvonne moved to Santa Fe with her husband in 1948 where they had their three children. Yvonne moved back to NYC with Brinton and raised their family. Yvonne continued her career as an orthoptist at Long Island College Hospital. She went back to college at NYU to become an art therapist and later founded the Santa Fe Playback Theater when she moved back to New Mexico in the early 1980s. She is survived by her children Matilda Rubin, Haynes Turkle and Jonathan Turkle, as well as her grandchildren Liam and Anna Turkle. Yvonne lived a full life filled with numerous adventures across many countries and places in the US. She enjoyed ceramics, folk dancing, camping, theater, and art. Through her life experience, she learned never to be afraid to ask for what she wanted. In later years, she designed and built her own home and gardens at the Commons in Santa Fe where she continued to use her creative energy on art, poetry, and the community around her. She graced all those around her with her unique style, strength, and self determination. Heartfelt thanks to her caregivers: Anna Turkle, Egis, Hospice and many friends. A memorial service is planned at the Commons in Santa Fe on Sunday, March 23. In lieu of flowers please send donations to Compassion & Choices: (https://www.compassionandchoices.org/)

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

Call 986-3000

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service Jose Luis Gonzales, May 20, 1934 - March 9, 2014 Dr. Jane W. Selbe, March 16, 1926 - March 8, 2014 William O. Wiese, September 26, 1939 - March 12, 2014 Peter Padilla, November 11, 1964 - February 18, 2014 Marilyn Jean Young, August 31, 1934 - February 5, 2014

Con muchisima tristeza le damos el ultimo adios al artista, companero, y residente de Santa Fe, JULIAN HECTOR RABAUDI. Nacido en Argentina, marzo 22, 1948, llamado por Dios diciembre 8, 2013. Era bohemio, gaucho, generoso, y muy carinoso. Rebuscado por clientes privados y galerias por su trabajos artistico de restauraciones y patinas. Era muy buen pintor, compartiendo su sabiduria de restauracion con amigos. Entre muchas obras, restauro Maccaione para Matteucci, y pinto las puertas del Anasazi Hotel. Julian amo mucho sus hijos Facundo y Lucero. Lo hecharan de menos su familia en Buenos Aires, hermano Enrique, cunada Marta, y sobrinos, y su companera en SF Lisette, amigas del alma Sara Jo Mendez y Raul Goler, Sergio, Dierdre, Ethel, y muchos mas aqui y en Ithaca, New York. En un barco de amores se fue el corsario Julian, a su vida Eterna. Vaya con Dios, y suene con los angeles, Querido y Inolvidable, Julian! FAREWELL! A celebration of Julian’s life will be held at 4 p.m. on March 22 at Balaam Restaurant on Third Street.

LOIS MARIE MERIDETH

Lois Marie Merideth, 88, of Santa Fe, passed away peacefully at home on March 11, 2014, with her family present. Lois was born in Detroit, Michigan, to Norman and Mildred Gidday. She married her devoted husband Ben in 1949 and raised a family with him in Orchard Lake, Michigan. Throughout her life, Lois was an excellent singer and swimmer. As a child she sang on a live Detroit radio program. She also taught her own children and many other young people to swim with strength and safety. Her passions were her family, her home, and gardening. She enjoyed a long career as a talented interior designer in Michigan before retiring with Ben to Sonoma, California, then later, Santa Fe. She is survived by husband Ben, daughter Lynne (husband Steven) of Santa Rosa, California, son Bennie (wife Sandra) of Santa Fe, and grandchildren Erin Payton, Flannery Merideth, Oakley Merideth, and Sean Carlson.

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Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Opposition builds over purchase of New Mexico Gas Co. tions being cut are “back office” jobs. The cuts will ALBUQUERQUE — A make New Mexico Gas more Florida company making a competitive and efficient bid to buy New Mexico Gas and help lower rates, he Co. will address concerns added. about layoffs and costs to Company officials previconsumers at a public hearously offered to share up to ing next week. half of a projected $7.9 milThe state attorney genlion in annual savings from eral and other New Mexico the workforce cuts with cusstakeholders have expressed tomers by issuing unilateral worries about Teco Energy rate cuts that would stay in Inc. purchasing the utility, effect from 2015 to 2017. The the Albuquerque Journal company also said it would reported Saturday. retain New Mexico Gas Teco reached an agreePresident Annette Gardiner. ment last May with ContiBut representatives for nental Energy Systems LLC, energy consumers said they the parent company of New haven’t see anything official. Mexico Gas, worth about “Teco has been very reluc$950 million, including the tant to provide specifics,” assumption of $200 million said Peter Gould, general in debt. The company in counsel for New Mexico September filed for regulaIndustrial Energy Consumtory approval from the state’s ers, which represents large Public Regulation Commisusers such as the University sion, which will hold a series of New Mexico. “They have of hearings starting March 22. yet to explain how the job “It’s a pretty contested cuts and consolidation will case,” said Carolyn Glick, the impact customer service.” commission hearing examAfter testimony is heard iner assigned to the case. from both sides, Glick will “Almost everybody who has make a recommendation on filed testimony has opposed final approval by the fivethe transaction.” member commission. Opponents say Teco is New Mexico Gas serves paying too much for the deal about 509,000 customers, and has plans to cut 100 jobs most of them residential. in New Mexico. Company If the deal officially closes, executives say there are Teco’s subsidiaries would plans to eliminate 136 jobs — serve more than 1.5 million 99 of those in New Mexico. regulated electric and gas Teco President and CEO utility customers in Florida John Ramil told The Journal and New Mexico, the comon Thursday that the posipany said. The Associated Press

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Program: College education helps recruits Continued from Page C-1 ness administration — but he said he finds criminal justice fascinating. Cindy Mascarenas is eying the field. She has been working toward her associate degree for the past several years. And she cited the popular TV show CSI as a motivating factor. She has worked in mortuaries and with the state Office of the Medical Investigator, she said. Irvin Saldivar hopes to get into the field of law enforcement, but at 20 he’s too young for the academy. The classes give him a chance to prepare and decide what branch of law enforcement he wants to chase — and he’s saving some money by attending school close to home. Some of the students are already employed in law enforcement, like patrol Sgt. Donald Duran, who is approaching retirement and used to work with Trujillo. He said he wanted to go back to school to get credit for some of the material he learned at the state’s Law Enforcement Academy. To his surprise, the veteran officer said, he found he learned a lot from the courses. Report writing, he said, was a great refresher course for his grammar, and he said the courtroom survival course was good preparation for testifying in highprofile trials. The criminal justice program offers 22 classes that range from legal matters to more hands-on activities, such as a forensics. Students in the program can pursue one of two associate degrees, as well as a couple of certifications. The program attracted 110 students this semester. Students can transfer the credits to a criminal justice degree program at New Mexico

Cindy Mascarenas works on a facial reconstruction of a 35-year-old female during Anita Nugent’s criminal justice class Thursday at Santa Fe Community College. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Highlands University, and Trujillo said he’s developing similar partnerships with other colleges. Most local law enforcement agencies don’t require officers to have a degree, but the Santa Fe department offers an extra $50 a month to officers with an associate degree, $100 a month for a bachelor’s degree and a $150 a month for a master’s degree. The New Mexico State Police

requires officers to take 60 credit hours as part of their employment. Santa Fe County Sheriff Robert Garcia said he believes some college education definitely helps new recruits, although he also pointed out that each law enforcement agency has its own curriculum. He said taking criminal justice courses demonstrates dedication. The community college’s criminal justice program undeniably benefits from Trujillo’s’s experience. He retired from the force in 2010 as a captain, citing a desire to spend more time with family. Around that time, he started working more at the community college and eventually took over its criminal justice program. Trujillo teaches an introduction to criminal justice class and a higher-level course. He said he uses his old bullet-proof vest to demonstrate how Kevlar works. Trujillo has nearly finished setting up a summer internship program with the city department for his students, and he helped create a police supervision certificate for officers looking for promotions. Andrea Sassa Archuleta, a lawyer who has worked both as a prosecutor and defense attorney, teaches several legal classes in the program, including the popular courtroom survival class for officers. She said she often hears that she worked her students hard, but that they’re grateful for the experience. “Students do need to learn theory, but they also need to learn how theory works in the real world,” Archuleta said. “It behooves all of us to have people in those positions who are well-educated, thoughtful and perform their jobs with integrity.” Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@sfnewmexican.com.

Global: First IB school started in late 1960s Continued from Page C-1

License: Board wants court to dismiss complaint Continued from Page C-1 1,000 doses of controlled substances from pharmacies and distributors that he could not account for — including hydrocodone and oxycodone — and that he prescribed questionable quantities of drugs. Schwartz denied these allegations and appealed in District Court. Judge Daniel Sanchez overturned the board’s decision, saying it was arbitrary, capricious and “tantamount to denial of due process,” in part because Schwartz was denied the chance to have a lawyer help him during a hearing on the misconduct allegations. Sanchez sent the matter back to the board. But a new hearing was never held, and the Medical Board did not respond last week to a request for an explanation. Instead, Schwartz’s attorney and the board’s prosecutor reached a settlement in 2008. Under the deal, Schwartz surrendered his medical license in return for being allowed to continue to consult and perform research. But he could never reapply for a medical license. The order also stipulated the action would be reported to national physician databases. Schwartz says he was suffering from severe medical problems at the time — renal failure, gallstones and bilateral hernias — was heavily medicated and didn’t fully understand the meaning of the order. For example, he said, he thought it allowed him to continue to consult with patients and offer second opinions on cases. He alleges the board’s chief prosecutor placed “undue pressure” on him to sign. Within three days of learning the “true meaning and implications” of the order, Schwartz says, he twice faxed a rescission letter to the board, the last time on June 30, 2008. In subsequent years, Schwartz, lacking financial resources, started filing lawsuits to try to undo the agreement. “He tried to do a variety of things to get his reputa-

tion restored and obtain a hearing,” said attorney Brian Egolf, who filed a motion for declaratory judgment last year on Schwartz’s behalf. The complaint, filed in May 2013, says the settlement was “procured by duress” and is “illegal” because Schwartz’s rescission was “timely and legally valid.” It also points out that the order is in conflict with a statute prohibiting medical consulting by someone who is not a licensed physician, and is therefore null and void. If the court agrees, that could set up the possibility of a new hearing on whether Schwartz’s license should have been revoked. The board, which is seeking to have the complaint dismissed, said in a motion filed in January that Schwartz has unsuccessfully litigated the issue of whether he should be licensed to practice medicine in three previous cases, including one in federal court. In this case, the board says he “presents no better merits than the previous three cases.” The board asks to “dismiss this lawsuit in the hopes that such dismissal will finally result in an end to [Schwartz’s] putative litigation against the Board.” The board claims in its motion that the relief Schwartz is seeking is barred by the statute of limitations and that he made a “unilateral mistake” in signing the order. Stephen Fox, a gallery owner and friend of Schwartz’s, said last week, “I think he’s suffered some terrible injustices at the hands of the Medical Board that deserve to be aired in court. He’s never really had a chance to rescind. It was a bogus agreement, and all George is looking for is a medical license hearing.” “He does have a shot,” Egolf said of Schwartz’s latest effort. And as for whether it is safe for Schwartz to return to the practice of medicine, Egolf said, “I don’t see why not.” Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@ sfnewmexican.com.

school in Alaska and a third from Santa Fe — and plans to hire two more soon. The school will share some campus resources with De Vargas, including the nurse and counselor, and the cafeteria and gym facilities. Within two years, he said, the school will have a permanent campus of its own. Gerlicz said classes will likely start around 9 a.m. and end at about 4 p.m.

A program of deeper inquiry International Baccalaureate advocates say their lessons are set up to draw deeper inquiry out of students about their place in the world and how the topics they study impact their communities. Students are required to choose two languages — English and Spanish at Mandela, and, if Gerlicz gets his way, Mandarin eventually will be an option. Students also will study core subjects, including English, language arts, science and math, and will receive social studies lessons in Spanish as well as English. They will take physical education and art classes, too.

Understanding the IB mission Whether students and parents understand the difference between an IB public school and a regular public school is another matter, which is why the district has scheduled informational sessions through this week. Several parents and their children at the Kearny event acknowledged they didn’t quite get it, but they assumed an IB school requires more study and offers smaller class sizes. Laura Miramontes, a sixthgrader at Kearny, said, “Maybe it means more work. It will prepare me for college better. It will challenge me in ways I can understand.” Mack Synder, a senior at Desert Academy, which adopted an IB curriculum in 2007, said an IB school “likes to study subjects with a vision of their global importance.” A science report for a neurology class involves writing a paper on how drugs impact the brain while focusing on the drug-use

De Vargas Middle School Principal Marc DuCharme, right, and Tony Gerlicz with the Mandela International Magnet School, tour the new school’s space at the DeVargas campus. Gerlicz says the school will have its own campus within two years. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

problems of Northern New Mexico, he said. “It’s a very in-depth look at one area. You can take it to a greater scale of knowledge.” He said the project enabled him to understand why drug use can follow a family line for generations. Desert Academy math teacher Bob Alley said the IB environment allows him to focus more on statistics rather than calculus courses as he also delves into the history of math to keep students engaged. Desert’s arts and film chairman, Randy Bennett, said the philosophy of International Baccalaureate schools allows teachers to “set up the classroom so that students teach students, putting learning and teaching in their hands.” This approach can include Socratic-style discussions, in which a student facilitates the conversation for up to 30 minutes, according to Desert junior Taylor Bacon. But shouldn’t this sort of learning occur in every public school? Gerlicz shrugged and smiled at the thought. “You’re preaching to the choir,” he said, adding that it may, in fact, be occurring in some classrooms but may not be part of a school’s overall approach to learning. The first IB school was established in the late 1960s in Geneva by the nonprofit.

Gerlicz said the international program was designed to develop inquiry skills while fostering communication and peace among nations. As of 2014, there are more than 3,700 IB schools in 147 countries. New Mexico has seven, including the private Desert Academy in Santa Fe. More than 90 percent of those schools are public schools.

IBs require extra operation costs Districts must apply for IB accreditation and ensure that their teachers undergo continual professional development, which usually takes at least two weeks every summer. At Desert, the cost of each teacher’s two-week IB training ranges from $1,200 to $1,500. Santa Fe Public Schools is paying an application fee of $4,000 to receive IB accreditation. The district also must pay an annual fee of $9,500 in 2014 and 2015. Once the school receives accreditation, it will pay $8,920 each year. Mandela International’s total operating cost for the first year is about $429,000. All but $85,000 of that has been approved in the district’s 201314 budget. In addition, IB schools pay assessment fees — for IB officials at other sites

around the world to grade and review students’ work every semester. According to the IB website, that fee is $684 for every subject assessed, plus $67 per student. Michael Hagele, who is coordinating the district’s secondary reform plan, said SFPS will bear those costs.

‘Anybody can do it’ Gerlicz founded Monte del Sol Charter School in 1999 and directed it for 10 years before becoming the director of the American School of Warsaw — an IB school — in Poland for several years. He said he is aware of criticisms of IB schools: Because they teach the history of the world, they are accused of being un-American; they are expensive; and they often are considered elitist. But in Santa Fe, he said, the IB school will be open to all Santa Fe students — there there are no requirements for incoming students. “Anybody can do it,” he told the Kearny assembly. “It will be challenging, but don’t we want them to be challenged?” Visit www.sfps.info/MIMS for more information and an application form. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.

State laboratory tests show dog shot by Albuquerque police wasn’t rabid ALBUQUERQUE — Tests show a dog shot by Albuquerque police after it bit three teenagers did not have rabies. KOAT-TV reports that results from a state laboratory test on

the dog indicate the canine did not suffer from rabies. Authorities say officers shot the dog Feb. 24 near a school in southwest Albuquerque as it lunged at an officer.

They say the dog had bitten a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old who were walking home and a 17-year-old getting off a school bus. All three were bitten on the

ankle but they had no serious injuries. According to police, the dog had been foaming at the mouth. The Associated Press


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REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

Texas county eager for nuke waste

New Colo. corrections chief aims for reforms

triple-lined steel and concrete casts would be vertically set By Erica Goode atop a 3-foot-deep concrete slab The New York Times LUBBOCK, Texas — Texas or stored horizontally in a vault. officials in the nation’s least DENVER — Rick Raemisch, A presidential commission has populous county want to store Colorado’s new chief of correcommended the U.S. look for used nuclear fuel from the rections, has been in his job for an alternative to Yucca Mounstate’s four reactors — and pos- tain. The panel recommended just over seven months. His sibly from other states — in a predecessor was shot to death looking for communities interbusiness venture they believe a year ago Tuesday by a former ested in hosting a nuclear waste could bring jobs and billions of inmate who had spent years in facility, noting that attempts to dollars to the region. solitary confinement. During force such facilities on unwilling Loving County Judge Skeet that time, Raemisch has gained states, tribes and communities Lee Jones said he’s met with a reputation as an outspoken have failed spectacularly. elected officials at the local, state reformer and has made clear Other West Texas counties and federal level — and all are that he wants to make signifihave been approached about Crews from Waste Control Specialists load low-level radioacsupportive of the effort to build cant changes in the way the tive waste from Los Alamos National Laboratory into a reinthe idea, but none has been as a site that would store spent state operates its prisons. forced concrete container at a federal dump near Andrews, enthusiast as Loving County. nuclear fuel rods in West Texas. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS Texas, in June. On Jan. 23, two corrections There is strong interest, too, “When we first mentioned it, in southeastern New Mexico. officers escorted Raemisch to there was a little hypertension,” Carlsbad, Hobbs Eddy County a cell, removed his handcuffs and 11 other counties, said getfuel is added, it could bring in Jones said of the county comand leg shackles, and slammed and Lea County have formed ting support from those living billions, he said. There are no missioners’ reaction when the the door shut. His 20-hour the Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance near the site is paramount. estimates on the number of jobs subject was broached about a stay in solitary drew local and LLC. Its board has been working “The region needs to be that would come from building year ago. “After we learned how national headlines. on bringing an interim storage behind it,” said Navarez, who and operating a storage site. it’d be taken care of, the benefit On Capitol Hill, where Raesite to the area for a couple of added he would be willing to Some in Loving County are of having one is much greater misch testified before a Senate years. author legislation if stakeholdadamantly opposed, including than the risk that’s involved.” subcommittee last month that New Mexico is already home ers in the area agree. “The fear Skeet Lee Jones’ father, Elgin The topic could be part of solitary confinement was “overto the nation’s only underground doesn’t stop at the county line.” Jones. He spent time in the the 2015 legislative session used, misused and abused,” he nuclear waste dump. The Waste One developer, Austin-based military in Japan after atomic after House Speaker Joe Straus was besieged by well-wishers, Isolation Pilot Plant, which priAdvanced Fuel Cycle Initiative, bombs were dropped on Nagainstructed lawmakers to study including representatives of the marily handles low-level radiois working to help find a home the issue. Straus asked for spesaki and Hiroshima, he said. American Civil Liberties Union. active waste from the manufacfor Texas’ 2,400 tons of spent cific recommendations on state “If they put [a storage site] in Others called his action a politituring of Cold War-era nuclear fuel. Co-owner Monty Humble and federal action needed to Loving County, I know there’s cally motivated stunt. weapons, recently made news said he’s spoken with officials permit a disposal or interim In the last two years, an going to be some accidents,” he after two separate incidents in several West Texas counties, storage site in Texas. increasing number of states, said. “It’s just a matter of time.” forced its closure weeks ago, including Andrews County. If built, the site in Loving including a leak that exposed The company wants to work County, population 84, would www more than a dozen workers to to get a place ready for conbe the second radioactive waste low levels of radiation. struction and then turn it over operation in that part of Texas. Texas environmentalists to an operator with expertise in Dallas-based Waste Control oppose an interim storage site nuclear storage, Humble said. Specialists operates a low-level Texas. “I think it’s a pretty stuLoving County last fall passed radioactive waste disposal site pid idea,” said Tom “Smitty” a resolution to explore the projin Andrews County, about 80 Smith of Public Citizen. “Every ect further. Jones said the counmiles from Loving County’s ty’s sparse population makes it lone town of Mentone. Dallas is other state that’s looked at this has rejected it because it’s just ideal. A storage site for Texas the nearest big city in Texas, too dangerous.” and possibly other states could 430 miles to the northeast. State Rep. Poncho Navarez, bring in millions of dollars. If a There is currently no diswho represents Loving County recycling plant for used nuclear posal site in the United States for spent rods from the more than 100 commercial nuclear FREE ESTIMATES reactors across the country — including Texas’ four reactors INC. at Comanche Peak in Glen Rose and the South Texas Project near Bay City. Nevada’s conflictridden Yucca Mountain site doesn’t appear viable at this point, so spent fuel is currently Diamond, Structolite, Variance and American Clay stored next to the reactors in pools or in dry casks. To construct an interim storwww.southwestplasteringcompany.com age site in Loving County, tall,

By Betsy Blaney

The Associated Press

prodded by lawsuits, lower budgets and public opinion, have been rethinking solitary confinement, the practice of locking prisoners alone in cells for 22 or more hours a day over a period of months, years or even decades. Tom Clements, Colorado’s previous executive director of corrections, believed many inmates in segregation cells did not need to be there. He had cut the number of inmates in solitary confinement in half, to 726 from about 1,500. Raemisch has decreased that number to 577, and he has moved all but a few inmates with serious mental illnesses into other settings. Raemisch emphasizes that 97 percent of inmates will eventually be released. “It’s our job to get them prepared and determined to be law-abiding citizens when they go back,” he said. “I don’t want any new victims.” He hopes to go further, making changes in the training of corrections officers, the preparation inmates receive before they are released and the way that corrections officers interact with inmates.

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NATION

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

C-5

Crude mars Ala. swamp Oil spills into N.D. rivers months after train crash

The department is monitoring approximately 30 wells that are at risk in that area. Roberts said state officials this week had warned well SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — As many as 33 barrels operators about potential flooding. He said most of oil have been contained after spilling from a operators temporarily sealed their wells and well into floodwaters near the confluence of the moved some of their equipment after the warnYellowstone and Missouri rivers in northwest ing, but others didn’t take precautions. North Dakota, the state’s Department of Health “There’re a lot of oil companies operating said Saturday. up here that just don’t understand the state,” Ice jams in the rivers resulting from warmer Roberts said. “They don’t understand how fast weather have caused the waters to rise and floodwaters can rise when you get an ice dam flood at least 16 wells southwest of Williston, but like this. That’s what caught some of them.” only one spilled Friday, said Kris Roberts, the Zavanna workers used containment booms to head of the health department’s environmental trap the oil, according to Roberts. He also said response team. the company owns three other wells that were “A tank didn’t have a sufficient amount of under water Saturday. fluid in it to keep it anchored, and it started About 17 miles of the Yellowstone River flows flooding a bit,” Roberts said. “It had about through North Dakota before it joins the Mis33 barrels of oil in the tank, and the valve at the souri River. bottom of the tank broke.” The big chunks of ice have created a dam in Roberts said the wells are surrounded by the Missouri River and caused the waters to dikes, but one had a breach, allowing the oil to accumulate near Williston, said Adam Jones, get into the floodwaters. It is unknown exactly meteorologist with the National Weather Serhow many of the 33 barrels actually spilled. vice in Bismarck. The river on Saturday was at The well is operated by Colorado-based 26 feet, which is considered to be a moderate Zavanna LLC. The company did not immeflood stage. The Yellowstone River, which at the diately return calls seeking comment. An beginning of the month was at around 5 feet, hit employee who wouldn’t identify himself Sat15 feet on Wednesday. urday said a company representative would Jones said the ice jams are expected to start address questions Monday. breaking in the next couple of days. By Regina Garcia Cano The Associated Press

Four months later, how much oil spilled, burned still unclear By Jay Reeves The Associated Press

ALICEVILLE, Ala. — Environmental regulators promised an aggressive cleanup after a tanker train hauling 2.9 million gallons of crude oil derailed and burned in a west Alabama swamp in early November amid a string of North American oil train crashes. So why is dark, smelly crude oil still oozing into the water four months later? The isolated wetland smelled like a garage when a reporter from The Associated Press visited last week, and the charred skeletons of burned trees rose out of water covered with an iridescent sheen and swirling, weathered oil. A snake and a few minnows were some of the few signs of life. An environmental group now says it has found ominous traces of oil moving downstream along an unnamed tributary toward a big creek and the Tombigbee River, less than three miles away. And the mayor of a North Dakota town where a similar crash occurred in December fears ongoing oil pollution problems in his community, too. As the nation considers new means of transporting fuel over long distances, critics of crude oil trains have cited the Alabama derailment as an example of what can go wrong when tanker cars carrying millions of gallons of so-called Bakken crude leave the tracks. Questions about the effectiveness of the Alabama cleanup come as the National Transportation Safety Board considers tighter rules for the rail transportation of Bakken oil, which is produced mainly by the fracking process in the Bakken region of North Dakota and Montana. Oil production is increasing there, boosting the amount of oil being transported

John Wathen, an environmentalist with the Waterkeeper Alliance, speaks about a train derailment and oil spill near Aliceville, Ala. Critics contend the accident and others show the danger of transporting large amounts of oil in tanker trains. JAY REEVES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

across the country. Environmentalist John Wathen, who has conducted tests and monitored the Alabama site for months for Waterkeeper Alliance, said Genesee & Wyoming railroad and regulators did the bare minimum to spruce up an isolated, rural site and left once the tracks were repaired so trains could run again. “I believe they really thought that because it’s out of sight, out of mind, out in the middle of a swamp, that nobody was going to pay attention,” Wathen said. Regulators and the company deny any such thing occurred, however. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Alabama Department of Environmental Management, which oversaw the cleanup, say more than 10,700 gallons of oil were skimmed from the water after the derailment, and workers collected about 203,000 gallons of oil from damaged rail cars using pumps. Another 290 cubic yards of oily dirt was excavated with heavy equipment, or enough to cover a basketball court with soil nearly 2 feet deep. Yet four months later, officials still say no one knows exactly how much oil was spilled. That’s mainly because an unknown amount of oil burned in a series of explosions and a huge fire. About a month after the crash, the head of Alabama’s

environmental agency, Lance LeFleur, promised “aggressive recovery operations” in a written assessment for a state oversight commission. Michael Williams, a spokesman for the Connecticut-based Genesee & Wyoming, which owns the short-line Alabama & Gulf Coast Railway line where the crash occurred, said the company is still monitoring the site closely and maintaining a system of barriers. But regulators and the railroad confirm one of Wathen’s worst fears: that environmental agencies let the railroad repair the badly damaged rail bed and lay new tracks before all the spilled oil was removed. Ed Overton, an environmental sciences professor at Louisiana State University, said spilled crude can linger at a site indefinitely if it’s buried in the ground. Depending on the amount of oil that remains, he said, containment devices may be needed in the swamp for at least a couple of years. But Bakken crude evaporates quickly once exposed to air because of its composition, Overton said, so the fact that oil remains in the swamp isn’t “the end of the world. It’s going to look bad for awhile. It’s amazing how quickly Mother Nature can handle such things, but it will take time.”

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

NEIGHBORS

Find out who’s getting married. Celebrations, C-7

[For] someone “ like me — with no

YOUR NEIGHBORS: PATRICIO SERNA

Off the bench but still serving

heritage or social position — to have gone to college, to law school, been an attorney, then a District Court judge, Supreme Court justice and chief justice demonstrates so well that the American dream is alive.” — Patricio Serna

Retired chief justice mentors law student, volunteers at Food Depot and still has time to paint and pen a novel By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

P

atricio Serna recently visited the building where he had spent 16 years — the New Mexico Supreme Court Building. It was just a few days before Santa Fe Mayor Javier Gonzales was sworn in. The retired chief justice had to go by the court to pick up the paperwork that allowed him to administer the oath of office. It’s obvious that Serna, 74, still has a lot of awe for the building — built in 1937 by the Works Progress Administration, a New Deal program. Going to the law library, Serna, out of habit, spoke in whispers, even though the library had been closed for the past several weeks to replace the floor. He proudly showed a reporter a second-floor hall where the walls are covered by portraits of retired justices, including himself. “These tiles came from Italy,” he said, pointing to the floor. “I loved working here.” But Serna, who retired in August 2012, has been too busy to spend much time fixating on the past. He was named a Santa Fe Living Treasure, and he seems determined to be just that. He is mentoring a first-year law student who is at The University of New Mexico on a scholarship named for him, which was established after he retired. The student is a single mother from Santa Fe. “Every two weeks, I go and I review everything she’s doing, and her writing. And I answer questions on the topics. She’s coming along very well. She’s a very hard worker.” Serna has an exhibit of his paintings of New Mexico landscapes (four acrylics and a watercolor) at the UNM School of Law. He said he doesn’t want to sell the paintings, but he’s looking into having prints made for sale. Painting, he said, is something he did as a young man but put aside for many years to focus on his family and his judicial career. And he’s starting to work on a nonfiction book about an interesting chapter in recent New Mexico history — which he doesn’t want to discuss publicly until publication is closer. And yet he still has time to volunteer at The Food Depot every Wednesday. “I even bought a belt for my lower back,” he said. “Lifting those 50 pound bags of potatoes, my back was starting to get sore.” Last year, after being tapped by then-Mayor David Coss, Serna headed the commission that hammered out suggested changes in the city charter. These resulted in nine proposed charter amendments, all of which were approved by voters in the recent city election. During the campaign, Serna chaired a political action committee that worked to pass the most controversial of the amendments, which made the Santa Fe mayor a full-time position. That goes into effect in 2018. Serna’s career is nothing short of a Horatio Algiers story. He was born in Reserve, N.M., in Catron County, one of eight children of Pablo Fajardo Serna. His mother died before he was 2 years old. When he was a child, his house didn’t have indoor plumbing or electricity. Serna said he did well in high school and, in fact, was the first member of his family to graduate from high school. But he said he didn’t plan to go to college until a local priest helped get him into the old College of St. Joseph on the Rio Grande in Albuquerque. After he graduated, he got drafted into the U.S. Army for a two-year hitch. Serna then got law degree at

STILL IN AWE OF THE HIGH COURT BUILDING Retired Supreme Court Justice Patricio Serna beneath portraits of several retired justices, including himself, at the New Mexico Supreme Court Building. STEVE TERRELL/THE NEW MEXICAN

RENEWED FOCUS ON THE ARTS Serna has an exhibit of his paintings of New Mexico landscapes at the UNM School of Law. Painting is something he did as a young man but put aside for many years to focus on his family and his judicial career. COURTESY IMAGE

the University of Denver and a master’s in law at Harvard. He worked at the Equal Opportunity Commission in Washington, D.C., then returned to New Mexico in the 1970s to work for then Attorney General Toney Anaya. He was elected as a state District Court judge in Santa Fe in 1984. In 1996, he successfully ran for Supreme Court. Serna said when he speaks to young people, he says, “If this poor little country boy from

El mitote According to the Japan Daily Press, Charlotte Kate Fox, a former Santa Fean and alum of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, was recently cast in a Japanese mini-drama. Massan chronicles the life of Masataka Taketsuru, founder of one of Japan’s largest alcohol distilleries, Nikka Whiskey. Japanese actor Tetsuji Tamayama will play Taketsuru. Fox will play Masataka’s Scottish love interest, Rita, and the show, according to the Japan Daily Press, is scheduled to start airing in September. Back in her Santa Fe days, Fox starred in a number of local theater productions at venues

such as the Greer Garson Theatre and the Santa Fe Playhouse, and she was also an actress in a few of the Fiesta Melodramas. uuu

Reserve can become chief justice, think of what you can do. … [For] someone like me — with no heritage or social position — to have gone to college, to law school, been an attorney, then a District Court judge, Supreme Court justice and chief justice, demonstrates so well that the American dream is alive.” Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@ sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.

including New Mexico, in September. It also hits Utah, Colorado and Arizona. The deadline for early bird submissions is March 31, so get to work. http://sfnm.co/1iKMdJY uuu

Charlotte Video gamers familiar with geek Kate Fox Sharon Jones is headed for a lore may dig Alamogordo. Literally. sure-to-be-sold-out show at the LenDocumentary filmmakers talked sic on Tuesday, and Pasatiempo has an excelat this week’s South by Southwest Festival lent interview with the woman behind that about plans to come on over to New Mexico soulful voice. http://sfnm.co/1oUNY4L. to film a documentary about the legend of an Atari game so bad, so unplayable, that the uuu company just threw up its hands and buried all the unsold copies of the game in a landfill in Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, which was Alamogordo. http://sfnm.co/1kRO6Ew. partly filmed at the Santa Fe Studios, premiered last Sunday across 10 networks, and, accorduuu ing to TV by the Numbers, the first part of the 13-episode saga snagged 8.5 million viewers. Calling all filmmakers. The Filmstock film festival is accepting submissions for short The show has been billed as a reboot of Carl Sagan’s Cosmos: A Personal Voyage, which films. The festival stretches across four states,

Section editor: Cynthia Miller, 986-3095, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Social media dos & don’ts for tweens

W

hen I was asked to teach 10- to 14-year-olds at a local school, I was excited to prepare a curriculum I thought would be stimulating and valuable. When my contact asked me to include texting and social media etiquette, I was reminded just how far into the millennium we are. Entire generations are being raised with cellphones and social media as if they have always existed. Talk about fingers doing the walking. Those thumbs move at the speed of light, and messages are sent into the world faster than they Bizia Greene are typed. Etiquette Rules! And like generations before me, I worry for our youth. First, I worry about the health risks associated with constant physical contact with a device emitting radiation and Wi-Fi. Or simply being near it for hours, days and years on end. Advocates advise that no child under 12 use mobile technology, and yet retailers are pushing baby-oriented games on tablets. What about the exposure to instant gratification? We are raising a culture of impatient people. Almost anything can be had at the push of a button — even human contact albeit in words and pictures. As for the contact, technology is doing a disservice to our youth, whose social development is practically aborted. How does one learn to converse, make eye contact and move about in the world with ease and confidence if they spend hours on end at the computer and cellphone? The irony is that through technology, we are all connected while in total isolation. Yet with all the information on the Web, our youth aren’t learning social skills required for face-to-face contact. As a result, etiquette and behavior have evolved. Mobile devices have no boundaries — they’re portable, instant and completely private. No wonder texting is the most popular form of communication for teens. It gives one freedom of privacy, even in the most public of settings — no family members to eavesdrop on a phone conversation in the living room. Here is an abbreviated sample of my etiquette tips for tech savvy tweens and young teens: u Texting and social media come with great responsibility. It is important to remember that everything sent over the Internet or a cellphone can be shared with the entire world, so use good judgment in sending messages and pictures. When you press send, it cannot be taken back. u Never send mean messages or gossip on a cellphone or over the Internet, especially when other people will see it. When you write something, ask yourself: “Would I say this in person?” or “How would I feel if someone said this about me?” Texting and social media, like Facebook, sometimes make us feel like we can share hurtful things because we don’t see the reaction of the person receiving the message. If you have a disagreement with a friend, you should talk and work things out together. It is better to save a friendship than to end it with the push of a button. u The abbreviations you use in a text or online are not correct for homework assignments or writing notes to friends and family. Spell out words when not communicating via technology. u There are certain places where texting or using a cellphone would not be right, like the movies, a classroom, walking on a sidewalk, the dinner table and especially behind the wheel of a car. You can always wait or ask permission and excuse yourself if you have an important call or text. u When hanging out with friends and family, limit calls and texts. When you are visiting with people in person — be there in person. u When using social media, make sure your privacy settings are in place so only close friends and family can see your profile. u Set a daily time limit for technology with your parents, like how much time you can be online. That way you can make sure to spend the majority of your time outside playing, visiting friends, eating at the right time and sleeping long hours. u Turn your phone off at night and charge it outside your bedroom like in the kitchen. Bizia Greene is an etiquette consultant and owner of the Etiquette School of Santa Fe. Send your comments and conundrums to 988-2070 or hello@etiquettesantafe.com.

was released in 1980. The show’s new host is Neil deGrasse Tyson, a scientist who previously hosted NOVA Sciencenow on PBS. As mentioned before, actor, director and writer Seth MacFarlane and an original Cosmos writer, Ann Druyan, helmed the project. The show will continue to air on Sunday nights on Fox in addition to several other affiliates. You can catch President Barack Obama’s introduction to the series and the first episode online at cosmosontv.com. Send your celebrity sightings to elmitote@sfnewmexican.com.

ON OUR WEBSITE

Neil deGrasse Tyson

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CELEBRATIONS

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Faces & places

Weddings & engagements

Lawrence Martinez, purchasing agent for the New Mexico Department of Transportation, District 4, was the January Supervisor of the Month. Martinez is responsible for the largest inventory — $814,000 — among all Lawrence Martinez districts. Martinez’s knowledge of the business support unit is impressive, his nominators say, and he continues to demonstrate a positive attitude along with professionalism.

International Criminal Court mock trials in Europe. The MICC is a simulation of the International Criminal Court. The participants were selected by New Mexico

Human Rights Projects. Other New Mexico teens who returned from this two-week judicial opportunity were: John Chappell (Albuquerque Academy), Mollie Baland (V. Sue Cleveland High), Neil Sparks (Sandia High), Madeline Cunnings (Bosque Prep), Max Bernstein (Albuquerque Academy), Prestin Nikolai (Cleveland High) and Annelise Van Buren (Cleveland High). The MICC trials took place from Feb. 16 to 21 at the International Youth Center in Krzyzowa, Poland. About 210 miles southeast of Berlin, the Krzyzowa International Youth Center is a historical site where a German resistance group against the Nazi regime, the “Kreisau Circle,” developed the plans for a democratic rebuilding of post-World War II Germany. Working in international teams with high school students from Germany, Poland and Israel, the students took on the roles of judges, prosecutors, defenders and observing journalists in three historical war crime cases from the Nuremberg Tribunals, the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal and the Rwanda Tribunal. Real journalists and real attorneys with expertise in international justice provided guidance and training. In further recognition of NMHRP’s MICC delegation, officials with the FBI held a special ceremony March 10 for the group at the Albuquerque Field Office. They also received certificates of recognition from state Speaker of the House Kenny Martinez.

Chiara DiPalma, a 2000 graduate of Santa Fe High School and the daughter of Dwight and Diana Capshaw and Kevin DiPalma, has been awarded first prize for the Wayne Grace Memorial Student Design Competition. Chiara’s architectural project, titled “Spoil Islands,” was top among competitors from the leading American universities. After completing a study of public spaces and parks in Berlin

as a as part of a fellowship, she won the Spitzer Award for the top landscape architecture graduate of 2012 at New York City College. Chiara Chiara now DiPalma is working as a landscape architect in Berlin. Her project “Spoil Islands” has been entered into an international competition.

uuu Jason Vigil, the son of Ben and Rosina Vigil of Santa Fe and the grandson of Dulcenea Martinez and the late Minnie Bigil of Chimayó, has been named to the Dean’s List at The University Jason Vigil of New Mexico School of Law. Jason will graduate from law school in May. He is a 2007 graduate of St. Michael’s High School.

uuu

The New Mexico Environment Department, Hazardous Waste Bureau, has issued its fourth-quarter employee recognition awards to: u Violet Miera at the Surface Water Quality Bureau, Santa Fe and Albuquerque u Gary King at the Surface Water Quality Bureau, Santa Fe u Jodey Kougioulis at the Surface Water Quality Bureau, Santa Fe and Albuquerque u Marwia Medina at the Drinking Water Bureau, Santa Fe u Valerie Montoya-Ortiz at the Radiation Control Bureau, Santa Fe u The group award was issued to the Drinking Water Bureau Sampling Team of Don Clark (Clovis), Angel Flores (Santa Fe), Valerie Horner (Raton), Daniel Ramirez (Albuquerque), Antonio Romero (Las Cruces), Vernon Trujillo (Española).

On the steps of the castle of Nazi resister James Von Moltke in Krzyzowa, Poland, are: top row, from left, Max Bernstein, John Chappell, Neil Sparks, Campbell Galon. Bottom row, from left, Annelise Van Buren, Mollie Baland, Prestin Nikolai, Madeline Cunnings. COURTESY PHOTO

ATC student participates in Mock International Criminal Court Campbell Galon, a student at the Academy for Technology and the Classics in Santa Fe, was among eight high-schoolers from New Mexico who participated in the recent Model

imba, Las Cueva High School, Albuquerque; Oceana Vasquez, Public Academy for Performing Arts, Albuquerque; Alex Wiesel, Southwest Secondary Learning Center, Albuquerque; Cheyenne Bilbrey, Bloomfield High School, Bloomfield; Lester Voorhies, Deming High School, Deming; Rachel Patty, Raton High School, Raton; and Seth Wilson Gray, V. Sue Cleveland High School, Rio Rancho. uuu

Andrea Carrejo and Carlos Sanchez are planning a midSeptember wedding at St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church in Albuquerque. COURTESY PHOTO

Carrejo/Sanchez Patricio and Carmen Carrejo of Socorro announce the engagement of their daughter, Andrea Carrejo, to Carlos Sanchez, son of Mary and Robert Sanchez of Albuquerque. The bride-tobe is the granddaughter of the late Delia and Ignacio Romero. Andrea works for Wendy Buckels and Associates and Lovelace Hospital as a speech-language pathologist in Albuquerque. Carlos is a constituent service representative for U.S. Sen. Tom Udall. Both Carlos and Andrea are graduates of The University of New Mexico. They are planning a mid-September wedding at St. Jude Thaddeus Catholic Church in Albuquerque.

SEND US YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS Celebrations: The New Mexican welcomes your announcements of births, nd weddings, engagements and milestone anniversaries. Faces and places: We also welcome news of graduations, awards and other achievements. Send us your announcement, along with a photo, to service@sfnewmexican.. com.

uuu Pedro L. Martinez was selected March 5 as the provost and vice president for academic affairs for Northern New Mexico College. The provost serves as the chief academic officer for the institution, responsible to the president for the creation and implementation of academic priorities for the college, and for the allocation of resources to support those priorities. Martinez will replace Anthony Sena, who now serves as Northern’s dean for the college of arts and sciences.

Taught by Donna Howell

Swing Dancee - 2:00 pm to 3:15 pm $35.00 Two-Step - 3:30 pm to 4:45 pm $35.00 Classes run from March 30th thru May 18th No Class Easter Sunday Thesearenotdrop-inclasses.Pleaseregisternowtosecureyourspot!

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Santa Fe County New Mexico Edge graduates enrolled in the New Mexico Certified Public Official Program include Katherine Miller, Lisa Griego, Elsa Ornelas-Segura, Theresa Romero, Gary Perez and Deborah Garcia. uuu Zoe Webb-Sagarin, a freshman at Bosque School in Albuquerque, will represent New Mexico in the national finals of Poetry Out Loud: National Recitation Contest April 28-30 in Washington, D.C. WebbSagarin, 14, beat out eight other finalists on March 9 in the ninth annual New Mexico State Finals of Poetry Out Loud, sponsored by New Mexico Arts, the state arts agency and a division of the Department of Cultural Affairs. Webb-Sagarin receives $200 and an all-expense paid trip with chaperone to Washington for the national finals. Her school will receive a $500 stipend to purchase poetry books for the school library. Other finalists who participated included runner-up Jordan Martin, Oñate High School, Las Cruces; Akunnaya Ezenyil-

lfgulotta@santafenm.gov 505-955-4009 www.chavezcenter.com S

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SFCC put me on a path to career advancement. There wasn’t one class that wasn’t useful. The college was there to welcome me and help me pick my path. Everyone, from staff to professors to deans — all helped me succeed.

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The Santa Fe County Adult Detention Facility received accreditation from the New Mexico Local Government Accreditation Program Adult Detention Professional Standards Council. There are 209 New Mexico Association of County Standards that must be complied with for the accreditation. The accreditation is a three-year award.

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Marcos Zubia Manager, 1st National Bank SFCC Class of 2008 A.A. in Business Administration/Banking Since 1983, Santa Fe Community College has empowered students and strengthened community.

sfcc.edu | 505-428-1000 Empower Students, Strengthen Community.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

TIME OUT

No Voice for Gene

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Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, March 16, 2014: This year you often focus on relationships. The issue for you might be how much you need to give. You will deal with guilt and resentment in learning where the correct boundaries lie for you. If you are single, you will want your potential sweetie to reveal more of him- or herself. Don’t rush the development of this bond; let a relationship build. If you are attached, the two of you often see situations differently. Use the many opinions you can come up with as a couple to add to the strength of your decisions. Virgo can test your patience! The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH The Full Moon tugs at others’ emotions. You will be smart enough to not get involved in one of these highly dramatic situations; instead, you might opt to do your taxes or start some yard work. Say little and listen more. Tonight: Ready for some fun! This Week: Excess marks Monday, Tuesday and maybe even Wednesday.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You might feel as if you are being pulled like saltwater taffy as you listen to both sides of a story. Clearly, you can’t merge the two divergent opinions. Encourage the parties involved to respect each other’s differences. Tonight: Make it early. This Week: Once more, distractions roll into your life. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH You might want to stay away from crowds and duck someone’s moodiness. Do what you want, but know that you probably need some R and R. You will want to be up to snuff as you go till the wee hours. Tonight: Add some mischief and fun to a relationship. This Week: Take some time off. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH The Full Moon today affects you more than it does any other sign. Don’t sit back any longer, and go for what you want. Make calls and reach out to your loved ones. Throw a spontaneous party. Everyone is likely to relax and have fun. Tonight: Speak your mind. This Week: Work from home.

Last week’s answers

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You will be coming from a very secure spot with a loved one. You could be questioning what you want and seeking more information that will give you some insight into a particular person. You might feel awkward when dealing with a child. Tonight: Your treat. This Week: You speak your mind, and you will get a reaction by Friday. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You could not be better, as you reach out to a loved one. Make special plans together. You could feel torn, should today’s Full Moon affect your relationship. Know that you can honor your differences. A serious talk will open a door. Tonight: Indulge a loved one. This Week: A project demands your attention. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might feel a bit out of sorts. You could decide to stay close to home and relax. Take a serious look at your finances. Some of you might be doing your taxes, while others could be checking out an investment. Recharge your batteries. Tonight: Out for dinner. This Week: You hit your power days Monday and Tuesday. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Use the daylight hours to meet friends for a movie or brunch. You could be concerned that you will say the wrong thing around a roommate or

Chess quiz

WHITE GAINS A PAWN Hint: Key is a “skewer.” Solution: 1. Nxd6ch. If … Kxd6, 2. Qb4ch! (the skewer) Kc7 3. Qxf8.

New York Times Sunday Crossword

loved one. Try to relax. You might disagree, but that does not mean you need to fight. Tonight: Head home. Make it early. This Week: You feel out of sorts until Wednesday. The change will be radical. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21) HHHH Make time for a friend today. You might be more irritated than you think about a personal matter. Your comments could indicate a brewing issue. Discuss it or let it go. Tonight: A meeting could turn into a fun happening. This Week: Get as much done as you can before dealing with others Monday. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Keep reaching out to someone at a distance. This person could be far more demanding than you had anticipated. Be kind, but maintain your boundaries. Your sense of humor will help everyone relax. Avoid being controlled, even if it is second nature to you. Tonight: Out late. This Week: All eyes look to you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Others clamor for your time and attention. Make it your pleasure. Allow greater giveand-take between you and a key loved one. Someone from a distance could be frustrated when trying to reach you. Tonight: Where there is great music. This Week: Detach from difficult situations until you are sure you have the right answers. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH The Full Moon emphasizes your friendships and major ties in general. You’ll have an opportunity to iron out a problem with a loved one before it gets worse. Understand where this person is coming from. A conversation could be awkward. Tonight: Ease up and relax. This Week: Discussions need to be one-on-one in order to succeed.

Scratch pad

year ago, I wrote about how dreadfully pathetic Google Voice is. That is the app that listens to your voice mail and then emails you a supposed transcript. To test the system, I had left a series of urgentsounding voice mails for my editor, Tom the Butcher, and they all came in too garbled to understand. For example, when I left this message: “I have cut the brake cable in your Prius because I want to have your wife all to myself. It was wrong, and I regret it. Don’t get in that car.” It became: “Cut the briefcase came on your previous, so I wanna ask you wife all to myself with long and I regret hello just crazy. We was that call.” Gene In the intervening year, much has Weingarten improved in the world. The stock The Washington market has continued its recovery. Post The odious Defense of Marriage Act is dead. Congress raised the debt ceiling, like adults. So I thought I’d check back with Google Voice to see if my shaming had prompted it to improve its system. Nope! Message to Tom: “My head’s in the oven. I can’t live with what a meanspirited personally obnoxious hack I am, an intellectual fraud with a withered soul and ridiculous hair. If only someone were around to call and reassure me.” Message as delivered by Google Voice: “Hey it’s me and I can’t live with what I mean spirited. Personally, I’m not sure if you’re planning to collect full Forbes with. It’s so ridiculous here. If only somewhere around and we usually on office awful thing hi.” Message to Tom: “Hey, Tom, in the story I just handed in I accidentally wrote that Alan Dershowitz was arrested for money laundering, cannibalism and crimes against humanity. Actually his clients were. Make sure to correct that so old Dersh doesn’t own The Washington Post.” Message as delivered by Google Voice: “Hey Tom, As we are interested in it so that we were open. Alan for. What’s with the rest of the for money wondering, cannibalism in crimes against humanity. Actually clients. 4. Make sure the correct that folder working on the washable.” Message to Tom: “Barack Obama and Edward Snowden have agreed to an exclusive simultaneous interview with me, but you need to call the White House right away to confirm I work for The Post.” Message as delivered by Google Voice: “Hello. K. Bravo on it, which sucks don’t have a great one. Exclusive simultaneous interview with me. Give me a call whenever right away to confirm that I work for the boat.” Message to Tom: “Lisa, my darling, tonight’s the night we escape and I take you to heights of ecstasy Tom can’t even imagine. ... Uh-oh. Uh. Is this Lisa’s phone? Crap. ... “ Message as delivered by Google Voice: “Hey Lisa, McCarlen tonight. Please keep an eye teacher paid for that, cos he talked. Take care the next few. Yo all this is we should phone. Hi!” (Actually, I guess there are those rare times when Google Voice’s incompetence works to your advantage.)


Scoreboard D-2 Prep scores D-3 Prep basketball D-4 Weather D-6

SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

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WAC tournament: NMSU Aggies trample Idaho 77-55 for third title. Page D-3

UNM MEN’S BASKETBALL

Lobos get revenge on SDSU, take Mountain West crown Trailing by one with a little more SDSU 58 than a minute left, Cameron Bairstow By W.G. Ramirez scored five of the Lobos’ last eight points The Associated Press to help 20th-ranked New Mexico win its LAS VEGAS, Nev. — New Mexico won third consecutive tournament title, with a 64-58 victory over No. 8 San Diego the Mountain West Conference Tournament the past two seasons, and the Lobos State in Saturday’s championship game. weren’t prepared to let the title go. Bairstow finished with 17 points, and

Bairstow named tourney MVP with 20-point average

UNM

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Volcano Vista pulls off win over Mayfield In a nail-biter finish, the Lady Hawks edge the Lady Trojans 54-53 in Saturday’s Class AAAAA championship. PAGE D-4

the victory gives the Lobos the automatic berth into the NCAA tournament. The 6-foot-9 senior forward was named tournament MVP after averaging 20.3 points per game and 9.0 rebounds per game. “In the regular season, San Diego State was the best team,” Bairstow said. “I think in this tournament, we were the best team. [The MVP trophy] could have

Please see LOBOS, Page D-3

New Mexico head coach Craig Neal celebrates with his players, from left, Cullen Neal, Merv Lindsay and Kendall Williams after winning Saturday’s Mountain West Tournament championship in Las Vegas, Nev. ISAAC BREKKEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT CLASS AAA BOYS

Devastating déjà vu Missed chances, turnovers cost Horsemen title in rematch against Hope Christian

STATE BASKETBALL TOURNEY CLASS A BOYS

Bobcats vanquish Escalante for trophy

By Will Webber The New Mexican

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No. 3 Hagerman earns 2nd state title in 4 years By James Barron The New Mexican

ALBUQUERQUE – The back of the T-shirts the Hagerman Bobcats wore said everything about their approach this week for the Class A State Boys Basketball Tournament. “Unfinished business.” “We rest now,” said Jessie RodriHagerman 56 guez, the senior Escalante 41 wing said. Rest easy, Bobcats. They took the Class A championship by storm on Saturday night by dominating the Escalante Lobos to the tune of a 56-41 score. It was the second blue trophy in four years for the No. 3 Bobcats (26-4), but what mattered was removing the foul taste of last year’s A loss to Cliff from their mouths. A late technical Bill Russom foul in that game Escalante coach broke a 44-all tie and led to the Cowboys’ title. Hagerman was determined to make up for that. While Cliff was knocked out by the fifthseeded Lobos in the A semifinals on Thursday, the Bobcats didn’t stick their noses up at their opponents. “Well, that team beat Cliff, and we beat [the Lobos] by [15],” said Alejandro Ramos. The trick to winning an 11th straight game was for Hagerman to maintain its focus. It was there when the Bobcats went on a 15-3 finish in the second quarter to stake themselves to a 30-15 halftime lead. Escalante (24-4) turned the ball over five times in the second quarter and went 3-for-14 from the field as Hagerman’s defense stifled the Lobos’ inside attack. “I think early on, and throughout the game, turnovers and stuff we had and not rebounding all came out to be turning points in the game,” said Bill Russom, Escalante head coach. “We just never could get a rhythm going.” The Lobos had one for a brief moment to open the third quarter, when an 8-0 run trimmed a 32-15 deficit to 32-23 on Adam Edwards’

When “ you make

a mistake against a Hagerman team like that, they will make you pay for it.”

Please see TROPHY, Page D-4

ALBUQUERQUE t’s a frustrating fact of life in the current state of Class AAA boys basketball. Stand face to face with mighty Albuquerque Hope Christian, play perhaps the perfect game at both ends of the floor — and still lose by 20 points. St. Michael’s was far from perfect in Saturday morning’s state championship rematch with the Huskies in The Pit, making 55 the final outcome Hope a mere formalSt. Mike’s 34 ity by halftime as Hope rolled to its second straight state title, fifth in six years and ninth since 2002. Behind 17 points from Austen Drake and a suffocating defensive effort from the entire team, the Huskies routed the Horsemen 55-34 in The Pit. They spotted St. Michael’s leads of 2-0 and 4-3, but never trailed again after Dedrick Milford rattled home a shot off the glass in the low post three minutes into the first quarter. The Horsemen (24-8) had just 10 points at halftime and went the final 7 minutes, 44 seconds of the second quarter without scoring. That span stretched another two minutes into the third quarter, ending only when Marcus PincheiraSandoval bounced in an uncontested layup in the lane. The drought started with Hope (28-3) holding a 14-10 lead, a time when the Horsemen crowd was still very much into it. It ended with Pincheira-Sandoval’s bucket cutting into what was a 20-point cushion. By then, the partisan Pit crowd was mostly silent. When the final buzzer sounded, Hope head coach Jim Murphy walked off the court as a state champion for the 12th time. That equaled the state record held by

Bradley Vaughan of St. Michael’s goes up for two points while Hope Christian’s Ben Spangler defends during the first quarter of the Class AAA championship game Saturday in The Pit. For more photos of the game, go to tinyurl.com/04wjulq. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Big scorers put up small numbers for St. Mike’s Hope keeps Dominguez, Flores scoreless in first three quarters By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican

ALBUQUERQUE — What was giving opposing teams nightmares for the duration of the Class AAA State Tournament ended up being nonexistent for the St. Michael’s boys basketball team on Saturday morning. After using senior post players Justin Flores (6-foot-4) and Isaiah Dominguez (6-foot-3) to put points on the board and spark comebacks, the two big men combined

for just eight points in a 55-34 loss to topseeded Albuquerque Hope Christian in the Class AAA championship game in The Pit. The two were kept scoreless in the first three quarters and were held to three combined shot attempts in that span. The inactivity by the posts cost the No. 2 Horsemen (24-8) to fall behind early as they faced a 14-7 deficit at the end of the first quarter. By halftime, they were trailing 24-10. The problem for the Horsemen began to grow exponentially. Once the Hope lead got bigger and bigger, St. Michael’s was forced to use Flores and Dominguez even less.

Please see SCORERS, Page D-4

Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com

Please see DEVASTATING, Page D-4

Isaiah Dominguez of St. Michael’s shoots for two points while Hope Christian’s Geoff Schermerhorn loses his balance during the second quarter of the Class AAA championship game Saturday in the Pit. JANE PHILLIPS THE NEW MEXICAN

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 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 27 22 15 W 44 35 32 29 19 W 49 37 26 25 13

L 27 31 40 44 51 L 19 31 34 35 48 L 17 29 40 41 53

Pct .578 .516 .403 .333 .227 Pct .698 .530 .485 .453 .284 Pct .742 .561 .394 .379 .197

GB — 4 11½ 16 23 GB — 10½ 13½ 15½ 27 GB — 12 23 24 36

Western Conference Southwest W L Pct GB San Antonio 49 16 .754 — Houston 44 21 .677 5 Dallas 39 27 .591 10½ Memphis 39 27 .591 10½ New Orleans 26 39 .400 23 Northwest W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 48 17 .738 — Portland 43 23 .652 5½ Minnesota 32 32 .500 15½ Denver 29 37 .439 19½ Utah 22 44 .333 26½ Pacific W L Pct GB L.A. Clippers 47 20 .701 — Golden State 41 26 .612 6 Phoenix 37 28 .569 9 Sacramento 23 43 .348 23½ L.A. Lakers 22 44 .333 24½ x-clinched playoff spot Saturday’s Games New York 115, Milwaukee 94 Washington 101, Brooklyn 94 Memphis 103, Philadelphia 77 Atlanta 97, Denver 92 Indiana 112, Detroit 104, OT Chicago 94, Sacramento 87 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 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. Monday’s Games Philadelphia at Indiana, 7 p.m. Atlanta at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Phoenix at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Chicago, 8 p.m. Utah at Houston, 8 p.m. Boston at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Denver, 10:30 p.m.

Grizzlies 103, 76ers 77 MEMPHIS (103) Prince 3-4 1-2 7, Randolph 5-11 4-5 14, Gasol 3-6 5-6 11, Conley 5-9 7-8 19, Lee 3-6 0-1 6, Calathes 3-6 0-1 6, Davis 3-4 0-2 6, Allen 4-6 0-0 9, Miller 1-3 0-0 2, Koufos 4-7 0-0 8, Johnson 2-4 2-2 7, Leuer 2-3 2-3 6, Udrih 0-1 2-2 2. Totals 38-70 23-32 103. PHILADELPHIA (77) Thompson 0-5 0-0 0, Young 8-19 0-0 20, Sims 1-4 2-4 4, Carter-Williams 10-16 2-3 23, Anderson 2-11 0-0 4, Wroten 6-11 1-2 13, Varnado 1-1 2-4 4, Mullens 0-3 0-0 0, Williams 3-8 1-2 8, Johnson-Odom 0-5 0-2 0, Davies 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 31-83 9-19 77. Memphis 22 23 29 29—103 21 15 21 20—77 Philadelphia 3-Point Goals—Memphis 4-15 (Conley 2-5, Allen 1-1, Johnson 1-3, Leuer 0-1, Prince 0-1, Lee 0-2, Calathes 0-2), Philadelphia 6-23 (Young 4-5, Williams 1-3, Carter-Williams 1-3, Thompson 0-1, Wroten 0-1, JohnsonOdom 0-2, Mullens 0-2, Anderson 0-6). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Memphis 51 (Davis 11), Philadelphia 52 (Carter-Williams 8). Assists— Memphis 27 (Gasol, Calathes 6), Philadelphia 16 (Young, CarterWilliams 3). Total Fouls—Memphis 24, Philadelphia 24. A—15,164.

Knicks 115, Bucks 94 MILWAUKEE (94) Ilyasova 3-10 2-2 8, Middleton 3-10 0-0 6, Pachulia 2-3 0-0 4, Knight 5-13 4-5 14, Wolters 5-7 3-4 15, Henson 4-8 1-4 9, Antetokounmpo 2-5 2-2 7, Sessions 4-9 5-6 14, Adrien 5-10 0-0 10, Udoh 2-4 0-0 4, Wright 0-2 3-4 3. Totals 35-81 20-27 94. NEW YORK (115) Anthony 8-16 6-6 23, Stoudemire 6-13 3-4 15, Chandler 1-2 0-0 2, Felton 4-6 0-0 9, Smith 5-7 3-3 15, Shumpert 5-12 2-2 14, Hardaway Jr. 8-12 2-3 20, Prigioni 0-1 0-0 0, Tyler 1-2 4-6 6, Aldrich 1-1 2-2 4, Murry 1-2 1-2 3, Brown 1-1 0-0 2, Clark 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 42-76 23-28 115. Milwaukee 23 19 24 28—94 New York 30 30 28 27—115 3-Point Goals—Milwaukee 4-10 (Wolters 2-2, Sessions 1-1, Antetokounmpo 1-1, Knight 0-1, Ilyasova 0-2, Middleton 0-3), New York 8-20 (Smith 2-3, Shumpert 2-3, Hardaway Jr. 2-6, Felton 1-2, Anthony 1-5, Prigioni 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 44 (Adrien 7), New York 48 (Smith 8). Assists— Milwaukee 17 (Pachulia, Sessions 4), New York 14 (Smith, Shumpert 4). Total Fouls—Milwaukee 21, New York 23. A—19,812.

Wizards 101, Nets 94 BROOKLYN (94) Johnson 7-12 0-0 16, Pierce 4-9 5-6 15, Plumlee 4-5 0-0 8, Williams 4-14 4-4 14, Livingston 2-5 2-4 6, Blatche 3-7 3-4 9, Thornton 7-11 0-0 19, Kirilenko 2-4 1-4 5, Teletovic 0-2 0-0 0, Anderson 1-2 0-0 2. Totals 34-71 15-22 94. WASHINGTON (101) Ariza 3-8 3-3 9, Booker 3-7 0-1 6, Gortat 1-8 0-0 2, Wall 10-15 9-10 33, Beal 6-14 1-3 15, Webster 2-6 2-2 7, Harrington 3-7 0-0 6, Gooden 8-11 4-4 21, Miller 0-1 2-2 2. Totals 36-77 21-25 101. Brooklyn 26 31 22 15—94 Washington 19 29 24 29—101 3-Point Goals—Brooklyn 11-21 (Thornton 5-6, Johnson 2-3, Pierce 2-4, Williams 2-7, Teletovic 0-1), Washington 8-26 (Wall 4-6, Beal 2-6, Gooden 1-2, Webster 1-5, Harrington 0-2, Ariza 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Brooklyn 43 (Johnson, Williams 7), Washington 46 (Gooden 9). Assists— Brooklyn 20 (Williams 7), Washington 21 (Wall 6). Total Fouls—Brooklyn 25, Washington 14. A—20,356.

Hawks 97, Nuggets 92 DENVER (92) Chandler 5-10 0-0 12, Faried 9-13 7-13 25, Mozgov 3-5 0-0 6, Lawson 0-12 2-4 2, Foye 2-6 2-2 8, Hickson 4-8 3-4 11, Arthur 3-7 2-2 9, Fournier 4-10 0-0 10, Miller 1-3 0-0 2, Brooks 3-9 0-0 7, Vesely 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-83 16-25 92.

ATLANTA (97) Carroll 4-13 0-0 11, Millsap 6-17 11-16 24, Antic 6-12 1-2 16, Teague 6-13 2-3 15, Korver 6-8 2-2 18, Brand 1-3 1-2 3, Mack 1-2 0-0 3, Schroder 2-7 0-2 5, Scott 1-3 0-2 2, Martin 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 33-81 17-29 97. Denver 15 22 34 21—92 Atlanta 28 25 24 20—97 3-Point Goals—Denver 8-25 (Foye 2-3, Chandler 2-5, Fournier 2-7, Arthur 1-2, Brooks 1-4, Miller 0-1, Lawson 0-3), Atlanta 14-32 (Korver 4-4, Carroll 3-8, Antic 3-8, Schroder 1-1, Mack 1-1, Teague 1-3, Millsap 1-4, Martin 0-3). Fouled Out—Chandler. Rebounds— Denver 66 (Hickson 10), Atlanta 52 (Millsap 11). Assists—Denver 27 (Lawson 11), Atlanta 25 (Teague 10). Total Fouls—Denver 24, Atlanta 17. A—16,921.

Pacers 112, Pistons 104, OT INDIANA (112) George 9-19 10-10 30, West 6-13 3-4 15, Hibbert 4-10 4-4 12, G.Hill 1-7 0-0 2, Stephenson 5-15 0-0 13, Turner 8-15 3-3 20, Scola 1-6 0-0 2, A.Bynum 6-18 3-4 15, Butler 1-1 0-0 3, S.Hill 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 41-104 23-25 112. DETROIT (104) Smith 10-23 2-3 23, Monroe 6-12 5-6 17, Drummond 2-4 0-0 4, Jennings 3-13 2-3 10, Singler 3-7 6-6 14, Stuckey 6-17 7-9 19, Jerebko 2-5 0-0 4, W.Bynum 2-4 0-1 4, Villanueva 3-5 1-2 9, Caldwell-Pope 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-91 23-30 104. Indiana 20 21 32 27 12—112 Detroit 29 31 19 21 4—104 3-Point Goals—Indiana 7-24 (Stephenson 3-8, George 2-10, Butler 1-1, Turner 1-2, G.Hill 0-3), Detroit 7-23 (Villanueva 2-3, Singler 2-5, Jennings 2-7, Smith 1-3, Caldwell-Pope 0-1, Stuckey 0-2, Jerebko 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Indiana 72 (A.Bynum, Stephenson 9), Detroit 54 (Monroe 13). Assists—Indiana 24 (George 7), Detroit 24 (Jennings 12). Total Fouls—Indiana 24, Detroit 21. Technicals—Scola, Indiana defensive three second, Monroe. A—17,440.

Bulls 94, Kings 87 SACRAMENTO (87) Gay 5-12 3-4 13, Evans 2-4 1-2 5, Cousins 10-21 5-7 25, Thomas 7-18 10-13 26, McLemore 3-12 0-0 6, Thompson 2-8 1-4 5, Williams 1-3 1-3 3, Outlaw 0-3 0-0 0, Acy 1-2 1-2 3, McCallum 0-2 1-2 1. Totals 31-85 23-37 87. CHICAGO (94) Dunleavy 4-11 5-5 16, Boozer 4-10 1-2 9, Noah 9-15 5-6 23, Hinrich 4-11 1-2 10, Butler 1-11 3-4 5, Augustin 3-10 4-5 12, Gibson 6-9 7-9 19, Mohammed 0-0 0-0 0, Snell 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-78 26-33 94. Sacramento 23 20 20 24—87 Chicago 23 25 16 30—94 3-Point Goals—Sacramento 2-14 (Thomas 2-5, Outlaw 0-1, Gay 0-1, McLemore 0-7), Chicago 6-20 (Dunleavy 3-6, Augustin 2-5, Hinrich 1-4, Snell 0-1, Butler 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Sacramento 71 (Cousins 14), Chicago 51 (Noah 11). Assists— Sacramento 12 (Thomas 5), Chicago 21 (Noah 8). Total Fouls—Sacramento 22, Chicago 26. Technicals—Evans. A—22,012.

NCAA BASKETBALL Men’s Top 25 Schedule Saturday’s Games No. 1 Florida 56, Tennessee 49 UCLA 75, No. 4 Arizona 71 No. 5 Louisville 71, No. 21 UConn 61 No. 6 Virginia 51, Pittsburgh 48 No. 7 Duke 75, N.C. State 67 No. 8 Michigan 72, No. 24 Ohio St. 69 Providence 65, No. 14 Creighton 58 No. 16 Iowa State 74, Baylor 65 No. 20 New Mexico 64, No. 8 San Diego State 58 No. 22 Michigan State 83, No. 12 Wisconsin 75 No. 23 VCU 74, George Washington 55 Sunday’s Games No. 1 Florida vs. Kentucky, 3:15 p.m. No. 6 Virginia vs. No. 7 Duke, 1 p.m.h No. 8 Michigan vs. No. 22 Michigan State, 3:30 p.m. No. 23 VCU vs. Saint Joseph’s, 1 p.m.

Men’s Division 1 Saturday’s Games Tournament America East Conference Championship Albany (NY) 69, Stony Brook 60 American Athletic Conference Championship Louisville 71, UConn 61 Atlantic 10 Conference Semifinals Saint Joseph’s 67, St. Bonaventure 48 VCU 74, George Washington 55 Atlantic Coast Conference Semifinals Duke 75, NC State 67 Virginia 51, Pittsburgh 48 Big 12 Conference Championship Iowa St. 74, Baylor 65 Big East Conference Championship Providence 65, Creighton 58 Big Sky Conference Championship Weber St. 88, North Dakota 67 Big Ten Conference Semifinals Michigan 72, Ohio St. 69 Michigan St. 83, Wisconsin 75 Big West Conference Championship Cal Poly 61, CS Northridge 58 Conference USA Championship Tulsa 69, Louisiana Tech 60 Mid-American Conference Championship W. Michigan 98, Toledo 77 MEAC Championship NC Central 71, Morgan St. 62 Mountain West Conference Championship New Mexico 64, San Diego St. 58 Pacific-12 Conference Championship UCLA 75, Arizona 71 Southeastern Conference Semifinals Florida 56, Tennessee 49 Kentucky 70, Georgia 58 Southland Conference Championship Stephen F. Austin 68, Sam Houston St. 49 SWAC Championship Texas Southern 78, Prairie View 73 Sun Belt Conference Semifinals Georgia St. 72, Arkansas St. 45 Louisiana-Lafayette 73, W. Kentucky 72 Western Athletic Conference Championship New Mexico State 77, Idaho 55

Women’s AP Top 25 Saturday’s Game No. 22 Middle Tennessee 84, Southern Miss. 55

Women’s Division I Saturday’s Games Tournament Atlantic Sun Conference Semifinals Florida Gulf Coast 64, Mercer 47 Stetson 90, SC-Upstate 60 Big West Conference Championship CS Northridge 73, Cal Poly 58

Colonial Ath. Association Semifinals Delaware 60, Coll. of Charleston 52 James Madison 55, Drexel 43 Conference USA Championship Middle Tenn 84, Southern Miss. 55 Mid-American Conf. Championship Akron 79, Ball St. 68 MEAC Championship Hampton 50, Coppin St. 47 Missouri Valley Conf. Semifinals Drake 66, Indiana St. 58 Wichita St. 66, Illinois St. 50 Mountain West Conf. Championship Fresno St. 77, Colorado St. 68 Patriot League Championship Army 68, Holy Cross 58 Southland Conference Semifinals Northwestern St. 61, Lamar 60 Stephen F. Austin 80, McNeese St. 54 SWAC Championship Prairie View 63, Texas Southern 58 Sun Belt Conference Championship W. Kentucky 61, Arkansas St. 60 Western Athletic Conf. Championship Idaho 75, Seattle 67

GOLF GOLF PGA TOUR Valspar Championship Saturday at Palm Harbor, Fla. Purse: $5.7 million Yardage: 7,340; Par: 71 Third Round Robert Garrigus 69-66-70—205 Kevin Na 70-68-68—206 John Senden 72-71-64—207 Justin Rose 71-68-69—208 Retief Goosen 72-73-64—209 Charley Hoffman 70-72-67—209 Scott Langley 71-69-69—209 Luke Donald 71-72-67—210 Jason Kokrak 74-68-68—210 Matteo Manassero 69-70-71—210 George McNeill 73-71-67—211 Ted Potter, Jr. 73-71-67—211 Will MacKenzie 73-70-68—211 James Driscoll 73-70-68—211 Freddie Jacobson 70-71-70—211 David Hearn 71-70-70—211 Jim Furyk 71-69-71—211 Matt Every 68-71-72—211 Chesson Hadley 75-70-67—212 Jordan Spieth 71-70-71—212 Carl Pettersson 71-70-71—212 John Merrick 70-70-72—212 Greg Chalmers 68-72-72—212 Jason Dufner 72-73-68—213 Chad Collins 73-71-69—213 Matt Kuchar 73-71-69—213 K.J. Choi 72-72-69—213 Russell Knox 70-73-70—213 Gary Woodland 72-71-70—213 Josh Teater 73-70-70—213 Jonathan Byrd 70-73-70—213 James Hahn 69-74-70—213 Ben Crane 70-72-71—213 Kevin Streelman 73-69-71—213 Justin Leonard 71-71-71—213 Michael Thompson 72-69-72—213 Tommy Gainey 69-72-72—213 Peter Hanson 75-70-69—214 Nicholas Thompson 76-69-69—214 Justin Hicks 72-72-70—214 Robert Allenby 73-71-70—214 D.H. Lee 74-70-70—214 Graham DeLaet 75-68-71—214 Morgan Hoffmann 74-69-71—214 Stephen Ames 72-70-72—214 Rory Sabbatini 70-72-72—214 Bill Haas 69-73-72—214 Brian Harman 71-70-73—214 Y.E. Yang 73-72-70—215 Cameron Tringale 74-71-70—215 Brendon Todd 70-75-70—215 Davis Love III 74-70-71—215 Jerry Kelly 76-68-71—215 Ben Curtis 70-74-71—215 Michael Putnam 69-72-74—215 Charles Howell III 71-70-74—215 Harris English 72-69-74—215 Daniel Summerhays 77-68-71—216 J.B. Holmes 71-74-71—216 Brandt Snedeker 72-73-71—216 Sang-Moon Bae 72-73-71—216 David Lingmerth 73-72-71—216 Woody Austin 71-71-74—216 Pat Perez 68-71-77—216 Erik Compton 72-73-72—217 Ryo Ishikawa 73-72-72—217 Padraig Harrington 75-70-72—217 Mark Calcavecchia 73-71-73—217 Paul Goydos 75-69-73—217 Darren Clarke 71-74-73—218 Jason Bohn 71-74-73—218 Sean O’Hair 73-71-74—218 Marc Leishman 75-69-74—218 Stuart Appleby 71-73-74—218 John Mallinger 71-73-74—218 Nicolas Colsaerts 69-73-76—218

CHAMPIONS TOUR Toshiba Classic Saturday at Newport Beach, Calif. Purse: $1.75 million Yardage: 6,584; Par 71 Second Round Bernhard Langer 63-66—129 Kenny Perry 66-65—131 Chien Soon Lu 65-66—131 Scott Dunlap 68-64—132 Esteban Toledo 67-65—132 Fred Couples 65-67—132 Jeff Hart 65-67—132 Peter Senior 70-63—133 Steve Pate 68-65—133 Michael Allen 66-67—133 Kirk Triplett 66-67—133 Dan Forsman 69-65—134 Tom Watson 71-63—134 Tom Byrum 68-66—134 Duffy Waldorf 66-68—134 Wes Short, Jr. 70-65—135 Loren Roberts 69-66—135 Hale Irwin 69-66—135 Jay Haas 68-67—135 Fred Funk 67-68—135 Kohki Idoki 67-68—135 Russ Cochran 70-66—136 Tom Pernice Jr. 69-67—136 Mark O’Meara 71-65—136 Mike Goodes 69-67—136 Jay Don Blake 68-68—136 Jim Carter 68-68—136 Joey Sindelar 68-68—136 Bill Glasson 67-69—136 Scott Simpson 66-70—136 Corey Pavin 69-68—137 Scott Hoch 69-68—137 Roger Chapman 70-67—137 Bobby Wadkins 69-68—137 Tommy Armour III 69-68—137 Colin Montgomerie 67-70—137

EUROPEAN PGA TOUR Trophee Hassan II Saturday at Agadir, Morocco Purse: $2.08 million Yardage: 6,951; Par: 72 Third Round Alej. Canizares, Esp 62-68-69—199 Seve Benson, Eng 63-68-74—205 R-Jan Derksen, Ned 69-70-67—206 M.A. Carlsson, Swe 65-71-72—208 David Horsey, Eng 72-64-72—208 Shiv Kapur, Ind 70-71-67—208 Robert Karlsson, Swe 71-67-70—208 Paul Waring, Eng 72-69-67—208 Richard Bland, Eng 69-70-70—209 Wade Ormsby, Aus 68-71-70—209 Marc Warren, Sco 66-73-70—209 R. Cabrera-Bello, Esp 68-67-75—210 Jorge Campillo, Esp 71-69-70—210 Robert Rock, Eng 71-68-71—210 Gregory Bourdy, Fra 68-69-74—211 Tommy Fleetwood, Eng 66-72-73—211 Alexander Levy, Fra 70-72-69—211 Richie Ramsay, Sco 72-71-68—211 Andy Sullivan, Eng 66-73-72—211

HOCKEY HOCKEY NHL Eastern Conference Atlantic GP Boston 67 Toronto 68 Tampa Bay 67 Montreal 68 Detroit 66 Ottawa 66 Florida 67 Buffalo 67 Metro GP Pittsburgh 66 Columbus 67 N.Y. Rangers 68 Philadelphia 66 Washington 68 New Jersey 68 Carolina 67 N.Y. Islanders69

W 45 36 36 36 30 28 25 19 W 44 35 36 34 31 29 29 26

L 17 24 24 25 23 25 35 40 L 18 26 28 25 27 26 29 34

OL Pts GF 5 95 215 8 80 201 7 79 194 7 79 172 13 73 174 13 69 189 7 57 166 8 46 132 OL Pts GF 4 92 206 6 76 195 4 76 177 7 75 188 10 72 197 13 71 166 9 67 168 9 61 195

GA 146 207 175 174 184 218 217 200 GA 163 184 169 190 205 176 192 233

Second Period—3, Ottawa, Smith 11 (E.Karlsson), 17:10. Third Period—4, Ottawa, Hemsky 10 (Spezza), 1:54. 5, Ottawa, MacArthur 20 (Turris, Ryan), 5:08. 6, Montreal, Eller 11 (Gionta, Subban), 16:38. 7, Montreal, Gionta 14 (Subban, Eller), 17:56. 8, Montreal, Desharnais 13 (Subban, Markov), 19:59 (pp). Overtime—9, Montreal, Bouillon 1 (Pacioretty, Desharnais), 1:26. Penalties—Ryan, Ott, game misconduct, 1:26. Shots on Goal—Ottawa 4-16-13-1—34. Montreal 17-9-19-3—48. Power-play opportunities—Ottawa 0 of 3; Montreal 1 of 6. Goalies—Ottawa, Lehner 7-11-5 (48 shots-43 saves). Montreal, Price 2717-5 (34-30). A—21,273. T—2:47. Referees—Eric Furlatt, Dean Morton. Linesmen—Bryan Pancich, Brian Murphy.

Western Conference

Blues 4, Predators 1

Central GP W L OL Pts GF GA St. Louis 67 46 14 7 99 223 151 Colorado 67 43 19 5 91 206 180 Chicago 67 38 15 14 90 227 178 Minnesota 67 35 22 10 80 164 164 Dallas 66 32 23 11 75 191 185 Winnipeg 68 30 29 9 69 186 199 Nashville 68 29 29 10 68 164 201 Pacific GP W L OL Pts GF GA Anaheim 68 45 16 7 97 218 172 San Jose 68 44 17 7 95 213 165 Los Angeles 68 38 24 6 82 165 144 Phoenix 68 32 25 11 75 188 193 Vancouver 69 30 29 10 70 163 187 Calgary 68 27 34 7 61 165 202 Edmonton 68 23 36 9 55 169 223 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Saturday’s Games Boston 5, Carolina 1 Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 0 Tampa Bay 3, New Jersey 0 N.Y. Islanders 4, Buffalo 1 Montreal 5, Ottawa 4, OT St. Louis 4, Nashville 1 Columbus 2, Minnesota 1, SO Phoenix 3, Calgary 2 Anaheim 2, Los Angeles 1 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 Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, 12:30 p.m. Vancouver at Florida, 3 p.m. Toronto at Washington, 3 p.m. Edmonton at Carolina, 3 p.m. San Jose at N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Colorado at Ottawa, 5 p.m. Montreal at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Monday’s Games Minnesota at Boston, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. Winnipeg at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

St. Louis 1 2 1—4 Nashville 0 1 0—1 First Period—1, St. Louis, Berglund 13, 11:32. Second Period—2, St. Louis, Berglund 14 (Ott, Polak), 2:02. 3, St. Louis, Tarasenko 21 (Oshie, Pietrangelo), 7:21. 4, Nashville, Nystrom 13 (Sissons, Gaustad), 16:50. Third Period—5, St. Louis, Steen 30 (Schwartz, Backes), 8:05. Shots on Goal—St. Louis 8-14-4—26. Nashville 9-12-10—31. Power-play opportunities—St. Louis 0 of 1; Nashville 0 of 3. Goalies—St. Louis, Miller 21-22-4 (31 shots-30 saves). Nashville, Rinne 6-8-1 (26-22). A—17,113. T—2:28. Referees—Jean Hebert, Chris Lee. Linesmen—Scott Cherrey, Michel Cormier.

NHL SUMMARIES Flyers 4, Penguins 0 Pittsburgh 0 0 0—0 Philadelphia 2 2 0—4 First Period—1, Philadelphia, Hartnell 16 (Giroux, Simmonds), 3:50 (pp). 2, Philadelphia, Read 17 (Couturier), 8:12 (sh). Second Period—3, Philadelphia, Lecavalier 15 (L.Schenn, Grossmann), 14:00. 4, Philadelphia, Read 18 (Couturier, Giroux), 19:43. Third Period—None. Shots on Goal—Pittsburgh 7-11-7—25. Philadelphia 12-17-11—40. Power-play opportunities—Pittsburgh 0 of 5; Philadelphia 1 of 4. Goalies—Pittsburgh, Fleury 34-15-3 (40 shots-36 saves). Philadelphia, Mason 27-16-6 (25-25). A—19,993. T—2:23. Referees—Francois St. Laurent, Frederick L’Ecuyer. Linesmen—Mark Shewchyk, Scott Driscoll.

Lightning 3, Devils 0 New Jersey 0 0 0—0 Tampa Bay 0 2 1—3 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Tampa Bay, Crombeen 3 (Kostka, Filppula), 12:26. 2, Tampa Bay, Kostka 4 (Palat, Filppula), 16:58. Third Period—3, Tampa Bay, Thompson 9 (Brown), 16:41. Missed Penalty Shot—Brown, TB, 11:19 second. Shots on Goal—New Jersey 6-9-8—23. Tampa Bay 9-14-9—32. Power-play opportunities—New Jersey 0 of 2; Tampa Bay 0 of 1. Goalies—New Jersey, Brodeur 17-12-4 (32 shots-29 saves). Tampa Bay, Bishop 31-11-6 (23-23). A—19,204. T—2:24. Referees—Tim Peel, Ian Walsh. Linesmen—Ryan Galloway, Brad Kovachik.

Bruins 5, Hurricanes 1 Carolina 0 0 1—1 Boston 1 1 3—5 First Period—1, Boston, Lucic 21 (Krejci), 15:28. Second Period—2, Boston, Iginla 22 (Lucic, Krejci), 17:24. Third Period—3, Carolina, Semin 19 (Jo.Staal), 3:53. 4, Boston, Kelly 7 (Krejci, Hamilton), 12:49. 5, Boston, Iginla 23 (Miller, Lucic), 13:02. 6, Boston, Krug 14 (Soderberg, Campbell), 19:50. Shots on Goal—Carolina 9-13-8—30. Boston 16-14-11—41. Power-play opportunities—Carolina 0 of 3; Boston 0 of 2. Goalies—Carolina, Ward 8-11-5 (41 shots-36 saves). Boston, C.Johnson 14-3-1 (30-29). A—17,565. T—2:30. Referees—Brad Meier, Chris Rooney. Linesmen—Darren Gibbs, Jonny Murray.

Islanders 4, Sabres 1 Buffalo 0 0 1—1 N.Y. Islanders 2 0 2—4 First Period—1, N.Y. Islanders, Nielsen 22 (Lee, Okposo), 3:31. 2, N.Y. Islanders, Okposo 27 (Nelson, Visnovsky), 17:24 (pp). Second Period—None. Third Period—3, Buffalo, Ennis 18 (Stafford, Ehrhoff), :56 (pp). 4, N.Y. Islanders, Strome 4 (Martin, Visnovsky), 1:35. 5, N.Y. Islanders, Clutterbuck 9 (Visnovsky, Hickey), 17:47 (en). Shots on Goal—Buffalo 14-10-10—34. N.Y. Islanders 10-14-14—38. Power-play opportunities—Buffalo 1 of 6; N.Y. Islanders 1 of 3. Goalies—Buffalo, Enroth 4-16-5 (37 shots-34 saves). N.Y. Islanders, Nilsson 3-4-2 (34-33). A—14,388. T—2:34. Referees—Dennis LaRue, Dan O’Halloran. Linesmen—Andy McElman, Anthony Sericolo.

Canadiens 5, Senators 4, OT Ottawa 1 1 2 0—4 Montreal 1 0 3 1—5 First Period—1, Montreal, Briere 12, :38. 2, Ottawa, Spezza 18 (MacArthur, E.Karlsson), 3:08.

Blue Jackets 2, Wild 1, SO Columbus 0 1 0 0—2 Minnesota 0 0 1 0—1 Columbus won shootout 3-2 First Period—None. Second Period—1, Columbus, Prout 2 (Johnson, Calvert), 19:38. Third Period—2, Minnesota, Pominville 25 (Parise, Suter), 3:12. Overtime—None. Shootout—Columbus 3 (Atkinson NG, Anisimov G, Letestu G, Johansen G), Minnesota 2 (Parise G, Koivu G, Pominville NG, Moulson NG). Shots on Goal—Columbus 11-11-61—29. Minnesota 12-12-8-1—33. Power-play opportunities—Columbus 0 of 0; Minnesota 0 of 1. Goalies—Columbus, Bobrovsky 2616-4 (33 shots-32 saves). Minnesota, Kuemper 12-4-4 (29-28). A—19,042. T—2:39. Referees—Greg Kimmerly, Kelly Sutherland. Linesmen—Brad Lazarowich, Brian Mach.

Coyotes 3, Flames 2 Calgary 0 2 0—2 Phoenix 2 0 1—3 First Period—1, Phoenix, Summers 1 (Korpikoski, Moss), 4:35. 2, Phoenix, Klinkhammer 10 (Bissonnette, Yandle), 9:43. Second Period—3, Calgary, Glencross 7 (Cammalleri, Giordano), 7:46 (pp). 4, Calgary, Backlund 17 (Cammalleri, Monahan), 15:37 (pp). Third Period—5, Phoenix, Doan 19 (Yandle, Vermette), 8:49 (pp). Shots on Goal—Calgary 8-18-6—32. Phoenix 11-6-8—25. Power-play opportunities—Calgary 2 of 4; Phoenix 1 of 8. Goalies—Calgary, Ortio 3-4-0 (25 shots-22 saves). Phoenix, M.Smith 25-20-10 (32-30). A—16,373. T—2:28. Referees—Justin St. Pierre, Brad Watson. Linesmen—Pierre Racicot, Jay Sharrers.

NHL LEADERS Through March 14 Scoring GP Sidney Crosby, Pit 65 Phil Kessel, Tor 68 Ryan Getzlaf, Anh 63 Alex Ovechkin, Was64 Tyler Seguin, Dal 64

G 31 34 29 45 29

A PTS 57 88 39 73 44 73 23 68 39 68

AUTO RACING AUTO RACING NASCAR NATIONWIDE Drive To Stop Diabetes 300 Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tenn.; Lap length: .533 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 300 laps, 136.7 rating, 0 points, $47,325. 2. (1) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 300, 116.7, 0, $44,100. 3. (6) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 300, 118.8, 0, $29,100. 4. (5) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 300, 109.9, 0, $31,825. 5. (3) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 300, 141.3, 0, $27,775. 6. (9) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 300, 98.2, 38, $29,200. 7. (20) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 300, 97.4, 37, $27,635. 8. (14) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 300, 89.9, 36, $29,595. 9. (15) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 300, 101.9, 35, $27,275. 10. (7) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 300, 101.5, 34, $29,275. 11. (12) Cale Conley, Chevrolet, 300, 87.1, 0, $26,725. 12. (26) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 300, 81.1, 32, $26,625. 13. (8) James Buescher, Toyota, 299, 85.5, 31, $26,525. 14. (4) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, 299, 90.8, 30, $26,475. 15. (11) Dylan Kwasniewski, Chevrolet, 298, 66.6, 29, $27,050. 16. (13) Chris Buescher, Ford, 298, 72.7, 28, $26,550. 17. (18) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 297, 80.5, 27, $26,300. 18. (30) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 297, 70.2, 26, $26,250. 19. (34) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 297, 67.9, 0, $26,150. 20. (19) Ryan Sieg, Chevrolet, 296, 62.8, 0, $26,800. 21. (25) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 296, 63.7, 0, $26,025. 22. (22) Will Kimmel, Toyota, 294, 57, 22, $25,970. 23. (37) Jamie Dick, Chevrolet, 294, 52.9, 21, $25,920. 24. (29) Dakoda Armstrong, Ford, 294, 52.7, 20, $25,845. 25. (28) Mike Wallace, Dodge, 294, 60.7, 19, $26,295. Race Statistics Avg Speed of Race Winner: 87.165 mph. Time of Race: 1 hr, 50 mins, 4 sec. Margin of Victory: 1.441 seconds. Caution Flags: 7 for 47 laps. Lead Changes: 7 among 3 drivers. Lap Leaders: K.Larson 1-2; K.Busch 3-29; M.Kenseth 30-96; K.Busch 97; M.Kenseth 98-137; K.Busch 138; M.Kenseth 139-209; K.Busch 210-300. Top 10 in Points 1. R.Smith, 151; 2. T.Bayne, 150; 3. T.Dillon, 143; 4. C.Elliott, 138; 5. E.Sadler, 135; 6. B.Gaughan, 131; 7. B.Scott, 127; 8. J.Buescher, 117; 9. D.Kwasniewski, 116; 10. L.Cassill, 105.

TENNIS TENNIS ATP-WTA TOUR BNP Paribas Open Saturday At The Indian Wells Tennis Garden Indian Wells, Calif. Purse: Men: $6.17 million (Masters 1000) Women: $5.95 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals Roger Federer (7), Switzerland, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (28), Ukraine, 6-3, 6-1. Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. John Isner (12), United States, 7-5, 6-7 (2), 6-1. Doubles Men Championship Bob Bryan, United States, and Mike Bryan (1), United States, def. Alexander Peya, Austria, and Bruno Soares (2), Brazil, 6-4, 6-3. Women Championship Su-Wei Hsieh, Taiwan, and Peng Shuai (1), China, def. Cara Black, Zimbabwe, and Sania Mirza (5), India, 7-6 (5), 6-2.

BASEBALL BASEBALL MLB Spring Training AL W L Pct Cleveland 12 3 .800 Seattle 13 5 .722 Tampa Bay 10 4 .714 Baltimore 10 5 .667 Detroit 9 7 .563 Oakland 8 7 .533 Los Angeles 8 8 .500 New York 8 9 .471 Houston 7 8 .467 Kansas City 7 8 .467 Chicago 6 7 .462 Minnesota 6 7 .462 Boston 7 9 .438 Toronto 6 10 .375 Texas 4 10 .286 NL W L Pct Miami 11 5 .688 San Francisco 11 6 .647 Pittsburgh 9 7 .563 Washington 9 8 .529 Arizona 10 9 .526 Chicago 8 9 .471 New York 7 8 .467 St. Louis 6 7 .462 Colorado 8 10 .444 Milwaukee 8 10 .444 San Diego 6 9 .400 Atlanta 7 11 .389 Los Angeles 6 10 .375 Cincinnati 7 12 .368 Philadelphia 5 11 .313 Note: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. Saturday’s Games Detroit 14, Houston 3 Tampa Bay (ss) 6, Toronto 3 Washington 2, Miami (ss) 1 St. Louis 6, Atlanta 2 Baltimore 2, N.Y. Yankees (ss) 1 Tampa Bay (ss) 6, Pittsburgh 3 N.Y. Mets (ss) 3, Minnesota 3, tie Texas 16, Oakland (ss) 15 L.A. Dodgers (ss) 5, San Diego 4 Chicago Cubs (ss) 6, Kansas City 5 San Francisco (ss) 13, Seattle 6 N.Y. Mets (ss) 9, Chicago Cubs (ss) 4 Cincinnati 16, Milwaukee 4 Arizona 4, Cleveland 2 Colorado 4, L.A. Angels 4, tie, 10 innings Oakland (ss) 8, San Francisco (ss) 1 Philadelphia 4, Boston 1 Miami (ss) 5, N.Y. Yankees (ss) 0 Chicago White Sox 5, L.A. Dodgers (ss) 4 Sunday’s Games Atlanta vs. N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Boston vs. Tampa Bay, 1:05 p.m. Miami vs. Minnesota, 1:05 p.m. Washington (ss) vs. Houston, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. St. Louis, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore vs. Toronto, 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh vs. Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m. Detroit vs. Washington (ss), 1:05 p.m. Miami vs. N.Y. Yankees, 2:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Chicago Cubs, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. Chicago Cubs, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Texas, 4:05 p.m. Seattle vs. L.A. Angels, 4:05 p.m. Oakland vs. Cincinnati, 4:05 p.m. Kansas City vs. San Diego, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Colorado vs. L.A. Dodgers, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Arizona, 4:10 p.m.

SOCCER SOCCER NORTH AMERICA Major League Soccer East W L T Pts GF GA Houston 2 0 0 6 5 0 Philadelphia 1 0 1 4 2 1 Columbus 1 0 0 3 3 0 Toronto 1 0 0 3 2 1 New York 0 1 1 1 2 5 Kansas City 0 1 1 1 1 2 Chicago 0 1 0 0 2 3 Montreal 0 2 0 0 2 4 D.C. United 0 1 0 0 0 3 New England 0 2 0 0 0 5 West W L T Pts GF GA Salt Lake 1 0 1 4 4 3 Dallas 1 0 1 4 4 3 Vancouver 1 0 0 3 4 1 Chivas USA 1 0 0 3 3 2 Seattle 1 1 0 3 2 2 San Jose 0 0 1 1 3 3 Portland 0 0 1 1 1 1 Colorado 0 0 1 1 1 1 Los Angeles 0 1 0 0 0 1 Note: 3 points for win and 1 for a tie. Saturday’s Games New York 1, Colorado 1, tie Philadelphia 1, New England 0 Toronto 2, Seattle 1 Houston 1, Montreal 0 Kansas City 1, Dallas 1, tie San Jose 3, Salt Lake 3, tie Sunday’s Games Chicago at Portland, 3 p.m. Vancouver at Chivas USA, 7 p.m. Saturday, March 22 Vancouver at New England, 2 p.m. Los Angeles at Salt Lake, 4 p.m. Seattle at Montreal, 4 p.m. D.C. United at Toronto, 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Columbus, 6 p.m. Portland at Colorado, 6 p.m. Chivas USA at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. San Jose at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, March 23 New York at Chicago, 3 p.m.

THIS DATE ONON THIS DATE March 16 2009 — Kevin Durant scores 25 points and Oklahoma City spoils Gregg Popovich’s 1,000th game as San Antonio’s coach with a 78-76 victory over the Spurs. Popovich becomes the 24th coach to reach 1,000 games and only the seventh to do it with one team.


SPORTS

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-3

WESTERN ATHLETIC CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT

NMSU beats Vandals for 3rd title By John Marshall The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — New Mexico State coach Marvin Menzies walked into the postgame news conference with a net around his neck, the latest trophy from a run of titles. No matter how many times the Aggies have earned a spot in the NCAA tournament, it never gets old. Daniel Mullings scored 18 points, Sim Bhullar added 14 and NMSU 77 New Mexico State won Idaho 55 its third straight Western Athletic Conference Tournament title by routing Idaho 77-55 Saturday night. “Making the [NCAA] tournament is obviously a goal we had,” Menzies said. “I’m very excited about getting back and hopefully making some noise when we get there.” New Mexico State (26-9) often worked its offense through Bhullar, and the Vandals were unable to stop the Aggies’ 7-foot-5, 355-pound center around the rim or rotate fast enough when he kicked it out. The second-seeded Aggies jumped to a big early lead and never gave Idaho a chance, shooting 56 percent while outscoring the Vandals 46-16 inside. Bhullar was named tournament MVP. Tshilidzi Nephawe added 12 points for New Mexico State, which had a 38-21 advantage in rebounds to earn an automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament instead of having to sweat out Selection Sunday. “This year’s been a roller coaster ride,” Mullings said. “Like coach always says at the beginning of the season, all the teams in the NCAA, every team has its trials and tribulations just like we had ours. We had a couple highs, good games and good wins in nonconference and we had a couple of lows in conference play, but the good thing about us is we stick together.” Idaho (16-18) beat New Mexico State in

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 11 a.m. on FOX — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Food City 500, in Bristol, Tenn. 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, Gatornationals, in Gainesville, Fla. (same-day tape) GOLF 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Valspar Championship, final round, in Palm Harbor, Fla. 1 p.m. on NBC — PGA Tour, Valspar Championship, final round, in Palm Harbor, Fla. 5 p.m. on TGC — Champions Tour, Toshiba Classic, final round, in Newport Beach, Calif. 11:30 p.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Trophee Hassan II, final round, in Agadir, Morocco (delayed tape) MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

New Mexico State’s Sim Bhullar, right, grabs a rebound against Idaho’s Bira Seck during the first half of Saturday’s championship game of the Western Athletic Conference Tournament in Las Vegas, Nev. DAVID BECKER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the teams’ last meeting this season, but was no match for the Aggies in its first conference title game since 1993. Stephen Madison scored 17 points, and Mike Scott had 14 for the Vandals, who haven’t made the NCAA Tournament since 1990. “Our team battled. There was a point in the season where we could have given up and we didn’t,” Idaho coach Don Verlin said. “The last month of the season, we were playing as well as anyone in the Western Athletic Conference. I thought we played well in this tournament, but New Mexico State played better.” The Vandals were the surprise of the bracket, the plucky underdogs with the los-

ing record who had won one WAC Tournament game in eight years before this season. After going 7-9 in the WAC and 14-17 overall, Idaho opened the conference tournament by rallying in the second half to beat Missouri-Kansas City and followed that by knocking off top-seeded and regular-season champion Utah Valley. New Mexico State had to survive a lastsecond shot to hold off Seattle in its tournament opener and rallied in the second half to knock off Cal State Bakersfield in the semifinals. These teams split two games during the regular season; New Mexico blew out Idaho by 24 in Las Cruces, and the Vandals pulled out a six-point win on their home court.

11 a.m. on CBS — Atlantic 10 Conference, championship, Saint Joseph’s in. VCU, at Brooklyn, N.Y. 11 a.m. on ESPN — Atlantic Coast Conference, championship, Virginia vs. Duke, in Greensboro, N.C. 11 a.m. on ESPN2 — Sun Belt Conference, championship, Georgia St. vs. Louisiana-Lafayette, in New Orleans 1 p.m. on ESPN — Southeastern Conference, championship, Florida vs. Kentucky, in Atlanta 1:30 p.m. on CBS — Big Ten Conference, championship, Michigan vs. Michigan St., in Indianapolis 4 p.m. on CBS — NCAA Division I tournament, Selection Show, in Indianapolis 6:30 p.m. on ESPNU — NIT Selection Show, in Charlotte, N.C. NBA 1:30 p.m. on ABC — Houston at Miami NHL 10 a.m. on NBC — Philadelphia at Pittsburgh 5:30 p.m.on NBCSN — Detroit at Chicago SOCCER 7:25 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Liverpool at Manchester United 9:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Arsenal at Tottenham TENNIS 1 p.m. on ESPN2 — ATP World Tour/WTA, BNP Paribas Open, men’s and women’s championship matches, in Indian Wells, Calif. WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

Florida rallies for win over Tennessee

11 a.m. on ESPNU -- Horizon League championship game, Wright State at Green Bay 1 p.m. on ESPNU -- Northeast Conference championship game, Robert Morris at St. Francis (Pa.)

The Associated Press

LOCAL TV LISTINGS

ATLANTA — Patric Young scored 16 points and No. 1 Florida turned up the defensive pressure in the second half, rallying for a 56-49 victory over Tennessee in the semifinals of the Southeastern Conference tournament Saturday. Florida (31-2) extended its school-record winning streak to 25 in a row after trailing by 10 in the first half. The Gators were down 35-28 at the break, but they wore down the Volunteers (21-12) over the final 20 minutes. After shooting 54 percent in the opening period, Tennessee made just 5 of 20 shots and turned the ball over 11 times, leaving its fate in the hands of the NCAA selection committee. The Gators, improving to 20-0 against SEC opponents, will face Kentucky or Georgia in the championship game Sunday. UCLA 75, NO. 4 ARIZONA 71 In Las Vegas, Nev., Kyle Anderson had 21 points and 15 rebounds, Jordan Adams hit a huge 3-pointer in the final minute, and the Bruins outlasted the Wildcats in a spirited Pac-12 championship game.

NO. 5 LOUISVILLE 71, NO. 21 UCONN 61 In Memphis, Tenn., Montrezl Harrell had 22 points, 11 rebounds and three blocks, and the Cardinals beat the Huskies for the inaugural American Athletic Conference tournament title in the Cardinals’ lone season in the league. NO. 6 VIRGINIA 51, PITTSBURGH 48 In Greensboro, N.C., Anthony Gill hit two free throws with 8.5 seconds left to help Virginia hold off Pittsburgh in the semifinals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament.

PROVIDENCE 65, NO. 14 CREIGHTON 58 In New York, Bryce Cotton scored 23 points and Providence won its first Big East tournament title since 1994 with a great defensive effort against Doug McDermott and Creighton. NO. 16 IOWA STATE 74, BAYLOR 65 In Kansas City, Mo., DeAndre Kane scored 17 points, Georges Niang added 13 and Iowa State won its first Big 12 tournament title since 2000.

NO. 23 VCU 74, GEORGE WASHINGTON 55 NO. 7 DUKE 75, N.C. STATE 67 In New York, Treveon Graham scored 22 In Greensboro, N.C., Jabari Parker scored points and VCU pressed and pressured its 20 points and Duke advanced to the Atlantic way into another conference tournament Coast Conference tournament championship. championship game, beating George WashNO. 8 MICHIGAN 72, NO. 24 OHIO STATE 69 ington in the Atlantic 10 semifinals. In Indianapolis, Michigan blew a 12-point WOMEN second-half lead, then finished the game on a 7-1 run to advance to the Big Ten tournaNO. 22 MIDDLE TENNESSEE STATE 84, ment title game. SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI 55 NO. 22 MICHIGAN STATE 83, In El Paso, Texas, Ebony Rowe scored 23 NO. 12 WISCONSIN 75 points to help No. 22 Middle Tennessee cruise to an 84-55 victory over Southern In Indianapolis, Adreian Payne scored 18 Mississippi in the Conference USA title points, Branden Dawson had 14 and Michigame Saturday night, earning the league’s gan State beat Wisconsin to reach the Big automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Ten tournament championship.

Lobos: Williams No. 5 scorer in UNM history stow, San Diego State outscored the Lobos in the paint, 24-18. gone to a number of players, the The Aztecs also outscored New guys sitting next to me. It wasn’t Mexico off turnovers, 21-8, and about proving a point. You just with bench points, 16-4. got to understand it’s all about In a game that featured team success. That’s what it is. 10 ties and 12 lead changes, New All the accolades that come off Mexico’s seven point advantage that are a bonus. At the end of at the 2:34 mark was the largest the day, it’s all based on team lead of the game. success.” “This was a tremendously The No. 2 seed in the Mounhard-fought game between two tain West tournament is now very good basketball teams,” 6-0 all-time when playing the San Diego State coach Steve No. 1 seed. Fisher said. “We’re disappointed “I got terrific kids, a terrific that we didn’t get the opportuteam that’s believed in me, taknity to cut the nets down. But ing over a team that won backwe’re proud of what we’ve done to-back regular season and tour- New Mexico’s Kendall Williams reacts to a foul during the first and how we’ve done it. half of Saturday’s Mountain West Conference Tournament nament championships,” said “We competed from wire to championship in Las Vegas, Nev. ISAAC BREKKEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS first-year New Mexico coach wire, and we just didn’t quite Craig Neal. “This is our third have enough to finish. But if we one. It’s very special to me.” shifted, Bairstow took over, more fortunate for us this time,” continue to play that way, we’ll It didn’t come easy against driving on Josh Adams for a Williams said. “Last game, they have a chance to be playing the conference’s No. 1 defense, lay-in while drawing the foul. timed it just right and we didn’t after the first weekend of the as New Mexico (27-6) had its NCAA tournament. That’s our Bairstow converted the threehave an answer for it. This five-point halftime lead disapgoal now.” point play to give the Lobos the time they punched us in the pear when the Aztecs opened San Diego State (29-4) got a the second half on an 8-0 run to lead again. Polee’s layup attempt mouth to start [the second half], team-high 15 points from Xavier at the other end didn’t fall, Bair- and we were able to respond take a 30-27 lead. Thames, the league’s regularstow rebounded with 51 seconds throughout the half. That was Trailing 56-49 with 2:34 left season player of the year. in the game, the Aztecs went on left and Kendall Williams made the big difference.” Thames also had three assists a 3-pointer 30 seconds later to After shooting 34.8 percent an 8-0 run to go up one with while once again committing (8 of 23) from the field in the 1:21 remaining. The run was cul- seal the win. just one turnover. For the tourWilliams added 16 points first half, the Lobos were 10 of minated when Winston Shepard nament, Thames had 16 assists for the Lobos and moved up to 21 from the floor in the second stole an inbounds pass, dished versus a mere three turnovers. No. 5 all-time on New Mexico’s half, including 4 of 9 from longto Dwayne Polee II for a slam Joining Bairstow, Williams, range. And despite having one dunk. Polee was fouled and con- career scoring list with 1,794 Polee, and Thames on the 2014 points, while Greenwood had 12. of the more formidable frontverted the three-point play. all-tournament team was New With momentum seemingly “I think the timing of it was courts in the nation, led by Bair- Mexico’s Alex Kirk.

Continued from Page D-1

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

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

PREP SCORES

Boys basketball

District 2A Championship Dexter 61, Texico 51

Class 5A Championship Valley 56, Atrisco Heritage 42 Class 4A Championship Roswell 56, Los Lunas 41 Class 3A Championship Hope Christian 55, St. Michael's 34 Class A Championship Hagerman 56, Escalante 41

Girls basketball Class 5A Championship Volcano Vista 54, Mayfield 53 Class A Championship Tatum 50, Cliff 48

TRACK Santa Fe High results from the Bernalillo Invitational track and field meet, held on Saturday at Bernalillo High School. Race distances are in meters: Boys Team scores — 1. Taos, 114; 2. Alb. Hope Christian, 98; 3. Capital, 63; 4. Santa Fe High, 59.5; 5. Pojoaque Valley, 38; 6. Las Vegas Robertson, 33.5; 7. Grants, 26; 8. Bernalillo, 24. Individual results 200 — Robert Corriz, 3rd, 24.84 seconds. 400 — Adrian Blea, 4th, 57.76 1600 — Zack Grand, 2nd, 4:47.62; Chris Vigil, 3rd, 5:02.10 3200 — Grand, 1st, 9:56.94 (state qualifier) 110 hurdles — Preston Robinson, 6th, 19.13 400 relay — Santa Fe High, (Christian Gonzales, Isaiah Taylor, Mario Holladay, Preston Robinson), 4th, 46.18 Medley relay — Santa Fe High (Robinson, Matt Vigil, Silas Harris, Mateo Martinez), 3rd, 4:12.84 1,600 relay — Santa Fe High (Amani Muller, Chris Vigil, Blea, Gonzales), 4th, 3:51.60 High jump — Morgan Dunlap, 3rd 5 feet, 2 inches Pole vault — Morgan Dunlap, 5th 9-6 Triple jump — Mario Holladay, 3rd, 37-7 Shot put — Isaiah Taylor, 4th, 36-10; Antonio Castillo, 5th, 36-9 Discus — Isaiah Taylor, 4th, 101-8 Girls Team scores — 1. Hope Christian, 122; 2. Santa Fe High, 112.5; 3. Taos, 88; 4. Pojaoque Valley, 38; 5. Grants, 30.5; 6. Robertson, 30; 7. Bernalillo, Capital, 14. Individual results 100 — Akeisha Ayanniyi, 1st, 12.76; Samantha Woodman, 2nd, 12.82. 200 — Shantal Roybal, 5th, 28.88 400 — Tiffany Garcia, 1st, 1:00.62 (SQ); Emma Thompson, 3rd, 1:05.73. 800 — Abigail Aragon, 4th, 2:43.89 1600 — Noel Prandoni, 1st, 5:33.40 (SQ); Camille Sam-

meth, 2nd, 5:49.62. 3200 — Prandoni, 1st, 11:50.87 (SQ); Victoria Quintana, 4th, 12:41.22. 100 hurdles — Maddie Wiebe, 1st, 17.85; Eider Artaraz, 6th, 20.70 300 hurdles — Wiebe, 1st, 50.42; Alicia Pacheco, 5th, 53.03 800 relay — Santa Fe High (Garcia, Woodman, Roybal, Ayanniyi), 1st, 1:47.48 (SQ) 1,600 relay — Santa Fe High (Garcia, Wiebe, Thompson, Alicia Pacheco), 1st, 4:21.28 Medley relay — Santa Fe High (Celeste Gomez, Ryann Tanuz, Victoria Quintana, Sierra Sweeney), 4th, 5:10.53 Pole Vault — Wiebe and Thompson, 5th, 6-6. Long Jump — Ayanniyi, 1st, 16-3 1/2; Wiebe 6th 13’ 08.5” Triple jump — Alicia Pacheco, 1st, 30-4; Ivana Romero, 4th, 27-9. Shot put — Makala Shermerhorn, 5th, 27-4. Discus — Makala Shermerhorn, 3rd, 82-10. Jemez Valley Invite Results from the Jemez Valley Invitational track and field meet, held on Saturday Jemez Valley High School. Race distances are in meters. Boys Santa Fe Prep results 100 — Konrad Asprodites, 1st, 11.75 seconds; Wyatt Trevathan, 3rd, 11.84 200 — Konrad Asprodites, 1st, 25.07 400 — Wyatt Trevathan, 1st, 52.74 (State qualifier) 110 hurdles — M.C. Miller, 3rd, 19.19 300 hurdles — Ian Andersson, 2nd, 47.89; M.C. Miller, 3rd, 48.67 Medley relay — Prep (K. Asprodites; W. Trevathan; T. Dorjee; I. Andersson), 1st, 4:05.88 1600 relay — Prep (K. Evaldson; T. Olrik; M. Soto; W. Trevathan), 2nd, (did not get the time) High jump — Ian Andersson, 5th, 5 feet, 4 inches. Girls 100 — Annika Birk, 3rd, 13.99 200 — Annika Birk, 5th, 31.10 100 hurdles — Courtney Timlen, 1st, 17.84

300 hurdles — Courtney Timlen, 1st, 54.34 1600 relay — Prep (K. Ceccarelli; C. Timlen; A. Birk; D Anderson), 6th, 5:11.13 Triple jump — Desiray Anderson, 1st, 29-8 Javelin — Desiray Anderson, 6th, 81-7 Discus — Gressia Burrola, 2nd, 74-1 1/2 Shot put — Gressia Burrola, 5th, 25-9 Academy for Technology and the Classics results Boys Discus — Jordan Grow, 1st, 105-1 1/2 Shot put — Grow, 3rd, 34-5 1/2 High jump — Mauricio Saenz, 1st, 5-7 400 relay — ATC (Sean Delica, Johnny Tibbetts, Cyrus Kirkman, Diego Aguayo), 3rd, no time. 1,600 relay — ATC (Cyrus Kirkman, Diego Aguayo, Johnny Tibbetts, Robert Lovitt), 4th, no time. 400 — Cyus Kirkman, 3rd, 55.84 Girls 400 relay — ATC (Carly Bonwell, Angelika Lucero, Kelly Barrows, Veronica Hutchison), 1st, no time. 400 — Carly Bonwell, 3rd, 1:06.54 Triple jump — Grace Graham, 6th, no distance Medley relay — ATC (Carly Bonwell, Veronica Hutchison, Grace Graham, Julianna Tibbetts), 4th, no time. 800 — Alizabeth Williams, 6th, 2:45 Desert Academy results Boys High Jump — Dylan Madri Renfro, 3rd, 5-4 Girls 100 — Isabel Pearson Kramer, 4th, 14.02 400 — Zoe Castro, 2nd, 1:05.49 400 relay — Desert Academy (Isabel Pearson Kramer, Chloe Clemens, Zoe Castro, Mikaela McCray), 2nd, 56.84 800 relay — Desert Academy (Maggie Gerber, Mikaela McCray, Lileigh Thomas, Sophie Le Bron), 5th, 2:18.57 100 hurdles — Mikaela McCray, 4th, 22.94

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D-4

PREP BASKETBALL

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

STATE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT CLASS AAAAA GIRLS

Volcano Vista edges Lady Trojans in championship ils and Capital who is the architect of the rapidly rising program. But this one had Villareal ALBUQUERQUE — Stunin knots — much like everybody ning was the only way to else on both sidelines. describe the last 4 minutes. Mainly because of the seasonStunning that the Albuquerlong problem of making free que Volcano Vista Lady Hawks throws — especially in the final couldn’t put the appropriate minutes. The Lady Hawks finish on a Class AAAAA cham(24-6) missed all five of their pionship. free throws in the final 1:58 of Stunning to George Maya the game as Mayfield tried to that his Las Cruces Mayfield rally from a 54-49 deficit. Lady Trojans couldn’t make “It was hard to watch conVolcano Vista pay for leaving the door wide open for another sidering all the time and effort these girls have put in in trying comeback win. All that led to a to fix the free-throw precentage stunning finish to fifth-seeded Volcano Vista’s run through the that we struggled with all season,” Villareal said. AAAAA bracket for its second That was nothing compared title in three years that culmito the turnover-fest by the Lady nated with a 54-53 win in The Trojans (27-4) down the stretch. Pit on Saturday afternoon. They gave the ball back three It also becomes the second times on their final five possestitle for Lisa Villareal, the Española Valley graduate and former sions as Volcano Vista did what head coach of the Lady Sundev- it did best — press. By James Barron The New Mexican

“The bottom line is they To add insult to injury, she made plays and we didn’t,” said missed the layup. Maya, Mayfield’s head coach. “It hurts,” McCants said. “We “We had posseshad the chance sions. We had to catch up, but four possessions, we didn’t.” and three of Mayfield spent them were turnthe entire game overs until the playing catch up, last shot.” much like Hobbs Perhaps the and Clovis did in most shocking the quarterfinals was Daeshianna and semifinals, George Maya McCant’s travel respectively. Mayfield’s head coach after grabbing Volcano Vista a Hannah Fenshot out to a 10-4 ske missed free lead thanks to a pair of 3s from throw with :09.6 left. She had no Fenske, then upped the margin one on her when she staggered to 24-11 in the first quarter when forward. Fenske dropped in her third Still, McCants had a chance triple of the quarter. to redeem herself after Volcano That was a part of a 10-for-15 Vista guard Melissa Mancha effort from the field to start the turned the ball over with :04.5 game. left. However, her drive to the “I don’t know, we were just basket couldn’t beat the buzzer. feeling it,” said Lady Hawks

The bottom “ line is they made plays and we didn’t.”

guard Deezha Battle. It couldn’t last, though. Volcano Vista went 11 for 32 the rest of the way, which helped the Lady Trojans chip away at the margin. They had an 11-3 run that included a pair of 3s, with McCants baking in the last triple for a 31-27 margin with 2:24. Still, the Lady Hawks made enough shots to hold off Mayfield. Battle hit a 3 during a 6-0 run to open the third quarter to make it 38-27. When the Lady Trojans hit two more 3s during a 9-0 run, the margin tightened to 38-36. Volcano Vista answered with a 7-3 burst to up the lead to 47-39, and Mancha had the play of the night when she fired a behind-the-back pass to Battle for a layup and a 45-36 lead to end the third. Still, Mayfield answered. An 8-0 run was capped by Melissa

Lucero’s 3, but Fenske, as she had all season, had an answer. She buried an open 3 from the top of the key for a 50-47 lead the Lady Hawks never lost. “Deezha passed the ball to me, and I think they lost where I was at that point in the game,” Fenske said. “I just knew the whole time I was going to take that shot. And right when I took it, I could feel it right off my hands that it was going in.” She wasn’t the only one who knew. Maya turned away from the scene before she shot, knowing what the outcome would be. “I don’t think it was the kids’ fault; it was my fault,” Maya said. “We really didn’t have any strategy there. We were just talking about, ‘How in the world do we leave her open?’ ” Stunning, isn’t it?

Scorers: Hope had significant size advantage Continued from Page D-1 “We didn’t do a good job of entering the ball into our offense,” St. Michael’s head coach Ron Geyer said. “When you’re behind by double digits, then you have to push the ball up a little more. That’s one of the reasons Justin didn’t get as many touches. We were trying to come down and trying to make a quick shot.” Adding more salt to the Horsemen’s wounds was the fact that Hope (28-3) had a significant size advantage. The shortest Huskie guard is 5-foot-11, whereas St. Michael’s guards Bradley Vaughan and Marcus Pincheira-Sandoval are 5-foot-7 and 5-foot-9, respectively. Those long arms along with a very smothering defense from Hope kept the guards from feeding the ball to the posts. “It was hard to get the ball inside to Justin or to Isaiah,” Pincheira-Sandoval said. “It’s just hard to get the ball when they’re up in your face. They’re wide too, they have length.” It was strange for the Horsemen to not have valuable play from their posts since they have been the team’s saviors during the tournament. In the quarterfinals against Shiprock, Flores scored eight of the team’s first 10 points in the third quarter. In the process, he drew a lot of fouls from the Chieftains and helped St. Michael’s hit 11 free throws in the third period. At the end of the third quarter, Dominguez hit a shot that gave the Horsemen a 34-33 lead after they had been trailing the whole game. Dominguez finished the game with 11 points and 10 rebounds with Flores scoring a game-high 17 points. Against Lovington in the semifinals, the pair combined for 23 points and 17 rebounds and kept 6-foot-8 Wildcat center Stephen Lennox to 15 points and 10 rebounds. Hope head coach Jim Murphy saw what the Horsemen’s inside game did to those teams, so he made it a point to 6-foot-5 center Austen Drake — who finished with 17 points to lead Hope — to shut it down. “I challenged Austen to do a job,” Murphy said. “They want to run things through Flores. Their inside game really hurt Shiprock and I thought it hurt against Lovington. I thought Austen did a really good job tonight.” Hope stuck to the game plan, and in doing so kept the Horsemen from executing theirs. By shutting down the St. Michael’s posts, Hope was able to take over everything else. “They beat us in every category,” Geyer said.

Continued from Page D-1

St. Michael’s was far from perfect in Saturday morning’s state championship rematch with the Huskies in The Pit. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

Devastating: Horsemen committed 20 turnovers Continued from Page D-1 Ralph Tasker — and set a new standard for a coach with one school. Tasker had 11 at Hobbs, one with Lovington. While the Huskies’ overwhelming depth and athleticism allows them to light up the scoreboard, it was their defensive intensity that ruled the roost on Saturday. Entering the fourth quarter, St. Michael’s post players Justin Flores and Isaiah Dominguez were scoreless and Flores, the team’s leading scorer, had attempted only one shot. Dominguez got his first points 30 seconds into the final period while Flores got his 19 seconds later on a putback off a Bradley Vaughan miss. It was the first time all game the Horsemen had scored on consecutive possessions. “They just were pressuring the guards and their posts were doing a good job fronting me,” Flores said. “I was getting ground but they kept battling inside.” “They’re lockdown defenders,” Vaughan said. “They’re good. You just have to handle it, use your teammates as help. You can beat this team. We just didn’t today.” Drake said the Huskies almost prefer to win games by squeezing the life out of an opponent’s offense. “We work on [defense] almost every day in practice,” he said. “Very defensive-minded, coach Murphy is. … At the end of the season, it

becomes just kind of habit to work harder on defense than on offense.” In contrast to their earlier wins in the tournament, in which they averaged more than 80 points per game, the Huskies were more than willing to shed the fireworks in favor of grinding one out. “We wanted an up-tempo game and score a lot of points, but I told them if we were going to win this game, we needed to play defense,” Murphy said. St. Michael’s head coach Ron Geyer said it was a combination of turnovers and missed opportunities that cost his club. The Horsemen doubled the Huskies’ miscue total with 20 turnovers to their 10. They were also outrebounded 34-28 and shot just 31 percent (13 of 42) from the floor compared to 48 percent (21 of 44) for Hope. “I think if everybody played in the state tournament, I think they could very easily win the whole thing regardless of class,” Geyer said. He said perfection against Hope would be nice, but the secret is not turning the ball over, blocking them out on rebounds and cutting off their penetration in the half-court and transition offensive sets. That, and make free throws when given the chance. Once back in the locker room, Murphy was given something of a surprise by his players.

Under their game jerseys, every player wore a shirt with the number 12 on it, a tribute to their coach joining the late Tasker in the record books. “We hadn’t said anything about it, so I didn’t think they even knew,” Murphy said. Now with 699 career wins — 18 coming in his one year as the Hope girls coach when he was 23 years old, the rest coming with the boys — Murphy is steadily climbing the all-time wins list. He sits in fifth place, one win behind Russ Gilmore and 421 behind Tasker. If he averaged 27 wins a season over the next 15 years, he would become the state’s winningest coach. “I guess it’s neat for the history books and it’s kind of a nice record,” Murphy said. “Coach Tasker’s a legend himself, and I don’t know if I see myself in that kind of category.”

Game notes u Pincheira-Sandoval had a team-high 12 points for the Horsemen, going 5-for-8 from the field and 2-for-2 from the foul line. Vaughan had eight points while Flores had six with a team-high five rebounds. u St. Michael’s had 17 points through the first three quarters and 17 in the final period. u In five championship game matchups with the Horsemen — all of them since 2007 — Hope is now 3-2. St. Michael’s is the only AAA team to beat the Huskies in more than four years.

Trophy: 9-1 run gave Bobcats edge after third Continued from Page D-1

Marcus Pincheira-Sandoval of St. Michael’s, right, goes up for two points while Hope Christian’s Chris Roland, center, and Austen Drake defend during the first quarter of Saturday’s game. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

pair of free throws with 3:20 left. Hagerman head coach Anthony Mestas said an attitude adjustment was needed. “We were getting a little bit complacent,” Mestas said. “We were up, had the lead and just came together, regrouped and got into our set, and our guys took over.” For some reason, though, the Lobos were intent on giving gifts to Hagerman. Consecutive turnovers — both on bounce passes to the wing that Ramos easily anticipated

— turned into transition baskets and a 36-23 margin. Even Ramos was perplexed by Escalante’s guards determination to pass the ball his way. “They kept going to the right and wouldn’t go to the left,” Ramos said. “His player wouldn’t back door and wouldn’t help him out.” That was a part of a crucial 9-1 run that gave the Bobcats a 41-24 edge after the third quarter. “Any time you get here [to The Pit], the teams that are here are good,” Russom said. “Very good. When you make a mistake against a

Hagerman team like that, they will make you pay for it. Every mistake we made, they capitalized on.” Those mistakes offset a 17-point, 14 rebound, eight-block effort by Edwards, who has grown tremendously over the season into a vital part of the Lobos offense. “I went to a lot of summer camps,” Edwards said. “And I grew a couple of inches.” He will become the senior leader replacing the trio of Reynaldo Atencio, Norman Salazar and Cody Casados. Sophomores

Dominic Montano and William Hurd plus his brother, Joe Hurd (who broke his ankle in the quarterfinal win over Dora), will make up the nucleus of a team that will take on a loaded district next year that includes Mora, Penasco, McCurdy and Questa. “I am really looking forward to playing these teams and to playing bigger, better competition,” Russom said. And perhaps a slogan like Hagerman’s might help Escalante find motivation for next season.


SPORTS

Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-5

MLB

2-game series set to spur baseball Down Under Dodgers, Diamondbacks will play in Sydney on Saturday to open season By Dennis Passa The Associated Press

Former Boston Red Sox coach Jon Deeble, who’s been around Australian baseball for more than 30 years, figures next weekend’s season-opening, twogame series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Arizona Diamondbacks in Sydney will have a “massive impact” on the sport Down Under. Certainly there’s plenty of room for growth. Baseball is not among the top 10 or 15 participation sports in Australia, well behind Australian Rules Football, rugby league, rugby union and cricket. Add to that list, among others, tennis, golf, basketball, the women’s sport of netball and, according to government figures, recreational skiing. Deeble manages the Southern Thunder Australian all-star team that will face the Dodgers on Thursday and the Diamondbacks the following day ahead of regular-season games on March 22-23 at the Sydney Cricket Ground. He says having “the best in the world” in Australia will translate into much-needed exposure. “It will help the Australian Baseball League, kids who play the game, and that will convert hopefully into registrations,” Deeble, who is a Pacific Rim scout for the Red Sox, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. “It’s also an opportunity for the players

to see where they are really at, and something to ascribe to.” The Dodgers and Diamondbacks arrive in Sydney on separate charters Tuesday. They’ll hold workouts at the cricket ground over the following two days before the pair of exhibition games against Team Australia. The opening series figures to feature Clayton Kershaw’s fourth consecutive opening-day start for the Dodgers next Saturday, with Patrick Corbin on the mound for Arizona. The Dodgers’ Hyun-Jin Ryu is slated to start the second game against Trevor Cahill. The series marks the first regularseason games in Australia. Previous MLB season openers were held in Monterrey, Mexico (1999), San Juan, Puerto Rico (2001) and Tokyo (2000, ‘04, ‘08 and ‘12). And while baseball may be not have the interest or participation level of other sports in Australia, it has longevity. Next weekend’s games will mark the 100th anniversary of an exhibition game played by the Chicago White Sox and the New York Giants at the Sydney Cricket Ground, won 5-4 by the White Sox before 10,000 fans on Jan. 3, 1914. Ben Foster, general manager of the six-team Australian Baseball League that has MLB financial backing, said he noticed a number of positive spinoffs after the series was announced in June. “We saw an immediate increase in traffic on websites, interest in our players, and that translated into a 20 percent increase in our attendance in the 2013-14 season,” Foster said from Arizona, where he was concluding an eight-day spring training visit to all 30 MLB teams.

this country.” Pickett says there are about 60 Australian players under contract this season with major league organizations, and that there’s a good chance four or five of them might be in the majors when the season starts — Grant Balfour (Tampa Bay), Peter Moylan (Houston) and Ryan Rowland-Smith (Diamondbacks) among them. Rowland-Smith is on the Team Australia roster, meaning the left-hander could pitch against the Dodgers in the Thursday night exhibition game, then appear against the Australians on the Friday night when he’ll be on the Diamondbacks roster for the second preseason game. Pickett defends the cost of ticket prices for the two regular-season games between the Dodgers and DiaLos Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw throws during spring train- mondbacks — they start at $450 for platinum seats and scale down to $62 ing practice Feb. 11 in Glendale, Ariz. PAUL SANCYA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS for seats in the outfield grandstand. “The promoters have had to fly out Foster said the league’s fourth season of Australia, folded in 2002. two baseball teams on chartered 747s Brett Pickett, the chief executive of saw average attendance increase to 1,400 and build a baseball stadium to major Baseball Australia, is taking a prag— “remember, we are going forward league standards at the SCG,” Pickett matic approach to what the series from nothing four years ago” — but said. might provide. more importantly is seeing more interThe SCG field will have an 8-foot“There’s no question it’s going to est in the ABL from major league teams. high outfield fence and it’ll be 328 feet be huge, but I’m not suggesting for “Our first season, we had four or down the foul lines and 400 to straightone minute that the series will help us away center field. five clubs send players over,” Foster overtake the AFL [Australian Football said of the overseas contingent in the More than 35,000 square feet of turf League] or National Rugby League,” ABL. “This past season it was 13 clubs will be temporarily removed to consending 34 players. So it’s getting better Pickett said. “These two games will struct the clay infield, base paths and not be a panacea for all things baseball. warning track. And it wasn’t just any every year.” But it will provide a level of exposure The old ABL folded in 1999 amid dirt — the soil-clay mixture used for for the sport we have never been able mounting debt and was purchased by the infield and pitcher’s mound was to achieve previously. If nothing else, former Milwaukee Brewers catcher imported in 14 shipping containers it will put the sport into the minds of David Nilsson, an Australian. The from the U.S. West Coast. The new competition created in the wake of the some of the sporting public, who, sadly, expanded replay system for umpires won’t be used. ABL, the International Baseball League don’t even know we play baseball in

NBA ROUNDUP

TENNIS INDIAN WELLS

Grizzlies trounce 76ers Djokovic, Federer to face off The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — The 76ers had a loss for the record book. Mike Conley scored 19 points, and Zach Randolph had 14 to lead the Memphis Grizzlies to a 103-77 win Saturday night, sending the 76ers to a franchise-tying 20th straight loss. The Sixers can set the team mark with a loss Monday night at Indiana. The Sixers also lost 20 straight games from Jan. 9, 1973 to Feb. 11, 1973, in a 9-73 season. The NBA record for consecutive losses in a season is 26 set by the 2010-11 Cleveland Cavaliers. That mark just may be next: The Sixers (15-51) play only one team over the next six games with a losing record — the Knicks on Friday — and they are on a six-game winning streak. Michael Carter-Williams led the Sixers with 23 points and Thaddeus Young had 20. “This is not slit-your-wrist time. This is not even close to that,” Philadelphia coach Brett Brown said before the game. “This is about building a program and understanding the short-term pain for a lot of long-term gain.

PACERS 112, PISTONS 104, (OT) In Auburn Hills, Mich., Paul George scored 30 points, and Indiana rallied from a 25-point second-quarter deficit to defeat Detroit. Evan Turner added 20 points for the Pacers, and David West scored six of his 15 points in overtime. Indiana leads Miami by 3½ games in the race for the top seed in the Eastern Conference. BULLS 94, KINGS 87 In Chicago, Joakim Noah had 23 points and 11 rebounds, Taj Gibson scored seven of his 19 points in the fourth quarter, and Chicago held off Sacramento. Mike Dunleavy added 16 and DJ Augustin 12 for the Bulls. Isaiah Thomas led the Kings with 26 and DeMarcus Cousins had 25. Both teams struggled on offense, with the Bulls shooting 40 percent and the Kings 37 percent. WIZARDS 101, NETS 94 In Washington, John Wall scored 33 points, Drew Gooden got 11 of his 21 in the final quarter, and Washington overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat Brooklyn and move past the Nets for fifth place in the Eastern Conference. Gooden’s 3-pointer broke a

94-94 tie with 2:37 left. Trevor Ariza then scored off an offensive rebound with 44 seconds left and Wall capped it with dunk. The Nets, who went the final 6:22 without a field goal, were led by Marcus Thornton’s 19 points. Joe Johnson added 16 and Paul Pierce had 15. KNICKS 115, BUCKS 94 In New York, Carmelo Anthony scored 23 points, Tim Hardaway Jr. had 20, and New York beat Milwaukee for its season-high sixth straight victory as the team prepares to welcome Phil Jackson back to the franchise. Amare Stoudemire and J.R. Smith each scored 15 for the Knicks, who easily ended their daytime woes by pounding the team with the NBA’s worst record. HAWKS 97, NUGGETS 92 In Atlanta, Paul Millsap had 24 points and 11 rebounds, Jeff Teague added 15 points and 10 assists, and Atlanta rallied to beat Denver and earn its third straight win. Kenneth Faried finished with 25 points and Wilson Chandler scored 12 for the Nuggets. Kyle Korver, who hit a pair of free throws in the closing seconds to make it 96-92, scored 18 points and Pero Antic added 16 for Atlanta.

By Beth Harris The Associated Press

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Novak Djokovic beat John Isner 7-5, 6-7 (2), 6-1 on Saturday to reach the final of the BNP Paribas Open, where he’ll resume his longtime rivalry with Roger Federer in a matchup of former top-ranked players. Federer had a much easier time in the semifinals, beating Alexandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine 6-3, 6-1 and putting himself in position to win a fifth career title at Indian Wells. Djokovic is a two-time winner here. Federer leads their rivalry 17-15, having beaten Djokovic two weeks ago in the semifinals at Dubai. Before that, Djokovic had won three straight times over the Swiss star. “It’s always tense. It’s always emotional. It’s always close,” Djokovic said. “I look forward to it.” No. 2 seed Agnieszka Radwanska will play Flavia Pennetta in the women’s final Sunday before the men’s title is decided. Playing for 2½ hours in near 90-degree heat, Djokovic struggled with the big-serving Isner, who beat the Serb in the semis two years ago before losing to Federer in the final.

Garrigus’ lead down to 1 shot time — a first for Garrigus, but not for PALM HARBOR, Fla. — RobNa — and one ert Garrigus missed two short more would par putts over the last seven have meant a holes Saturday, and just like one-shot penthat, his four-shot lead dwindled alty. to one in the Valspar Champi“I’m not used Robert onship. to being put Garrigus That’s about the only thing on the clock,” that went quickly. said Garrigus, one of the fastest On a gorgeous afternoon at players in golf. “That’s the first Innisbrook, pace of play on the time in nine years — actually PGA Tour reared its ugly head the first time in 17 years as a proagain. fessional — I’ve ever got a bad Garrigus had to settle for time on the golf course. I started a 1-under 70 when he missed laughing.” short par putts on the 12th and They were on the clock when 18th holes, giving him a oneGarrigus had a nasty lie in the shot lead over Kevin Na, who rough on the side of the hill on labored and fidgeted his way the par-5 14th. He walked some around the Copperhead course 30 yards up to the green to study to a 68. his shot, and by the time he The final group turned into a walked back to hit it, he was went threesome for most of the back beyond his allotted 40 seconds. nine — Garrigus, Kevin Na and Na was given a bad time on a rules official with his hand the par-3 13th hole when he was on a stopwatch. Even though first to play. they finished in just under four “Over water, tough to judge hours, they were as many as the wind and corner pin is obvitwo holes behind the group ously brutal, and probably just ahead of them. took some extra time because it Both players were given a bad was probably a hard golf shot,” By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

Na said. “Unfortunately, I was past the time. I know how to play. I don’t know what people were saying, but I don’t feel like I should be criticized for my play today because I’m the first one to admit if I play slow. But I really didn’t feel like I played slow today.” A traffic jam is likely for the final round. Garrigus was at 8-under 205, and the final seven holes brought several players back into the mix — most of them needing a win to get into the Masters. John Senden of Australia made a 30-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to cap off a 64, moving up 32 spots on the leaderboard into third place, just two shots behind. Justin Rose, at No. 7 the highest-ranked player in the field, made bogey from a wild tee shot on the 18th for a 69 and was three shots behind. Retief Goosen finished his bogey-free 64 some 2½ hours before the leaders began the third round. He made the cut on the number, and suddenly finds himself within four shots of the lead on a course where he has won before.

“With that serve, obviously, he can win against anybody on a good day,” Djokovic said. “I thought I returned really well today and allowed myself to have a bunch of opportunities on his service games.” Djokovic had a chance to win in two sets, breaking Isner to go up 5-4 and then again at 6-5. But the American broke back at love for a 6-all tie, and then dominated in the tiebreaker. Isner won four straight points and served his sixth ace to win it 7-2 and force the decisive third set.

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KIDS SUMMER 2013

GOLF VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP

Novak Djokovic returns a shot to John Isner during their semifinal at the BNP Paribas Open tournament Saturday in Indian Wells, Calif. MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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D-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

The weather

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

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Tonight

Today

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

LASTING IMAGES ARTIST VISIT While on a trip in Morocco, Keith Anderson and his wife, Barbara Lenssen, drove to the town of Sefro to visit Amina Yabis, a Santa Fe International Folk Art Market artist.

Saturday

PHOTO COURTESY KEITH ANDERSON

Mostly sunny

Clear

55

Warmer with plenty of sunshine

30

Partly sunny and breezy

65/32

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

20%

36%

19%

wind: NNW 8-16 mph

wind: NE 4-8 mph

wind: W 8-16 mph

Almanac

Mostly sunny

Mostly sunny

Plenty of sunshine

60/26

61/31

65/33

65/31

64/29

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

14%

22%

wind: WNW 10-20 mph wind: WSW 7-14 mph

18%

16%

27%

wind: W 7-14 mph

wind: WNW 8-16 mph

wind: SW 4-8 mph

New Mexico weather

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 50°/28° Normal high/low ............................ 58°/27° Record high ............................... 76° in 2013 Record low .................................. 9° in 2005 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.56”/0.67” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.39”/1.52” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.64”/0.73”

Air quality index

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64

285

64

Farmington 59/29

Española 57/36 Los Alamos 53/31 40

Santa Fe 55/30 Pecos 52/28

25

Albuquerque 58/37

25

87

56 412

Clayton 51/33

Pollen index

54

40

40

Source:

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

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 58/33

Ruidoso 48/33

25

70

380

Hobbs 55/31

285

Alamogordo 60/37

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

70

180

Water statistics

70

380

70

Truth or Consequences 61/38

10

The following water statistics of March 13 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.334 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 4.980 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 0.013 Total water produced by water system: 6.327 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

Clovis 52/32

54 60 60

As of 3/14/2014 Juniper...................................... 86 Moderate Elm ...................................................... 4 Low Other ................................................... 1 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................91

25

Las Vegas 50/29

285

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.14” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/0.40” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.01”/0.10” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.09” Month/year to date .................. 0.40”/0.45” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.02” Month/year to date .................. 1.11”/2.60” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.44”/0.64”

Saturday’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 53/23

84

Area rainfall

Raton 52/23

64

666

Gallup 56/22

Times of clouds and sun

Las Cruces 61/38

54

Carlsbad 60/33

285

10

Sun and moon

State extremes Sat. High: 76 ................................. Carlsbad Sat. Low 19 ................................. Angel Fire

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

Hi/Lo W 63/45 t 57/37 r 41/19 pc 72/43 pc 76/47 r 42/26 r 51/30 pc 62/34 pc 39/29 sh 63/36 t 50/28 pc 68/36 pc 56/36 r 54/29 pc 63/39 pc 52/25 pc 52/19 pc 72/46 pc 65/41 pc

Hi/Lo W 60/37 pc 58/37 s 46/21 s 56/34 pc 60/33 pc 50/24 s 53/24 s 51/33 s 42/26 pc 52/32 pc 54/22 s 62/32 s 57/36 s 59/29 s 57/34 pc 56/22 s 54/26 s 55/31 pc 61/38 s

Hi/Lo W 69/45 s 70/41 s 54/28 s 75/56 s 77/56 s 55/27 s 66/29 s 73/36 s 56/24 s 72/41 s 65/30 s 73/42 s 68/40 s 68/30 s 75/41 s 66/29 s 67/33 s 75/43 s 71/47 s

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

Hi/Lo 57/25 69/38 47/33 58/38 66/39 58/22 52/26 57/37 73/42 52/36 63/38 61/36 62/38 48/30 64/45 70/38 69/47 50/33 53/28

W sn pc t pc sh pc pc pc r pc t r pc pc pc pc pc t pc

Hi/Lo W 50/29 s 65/43 s 53/31 s 60/35 s 54/34 pc 52/23 s 44/25 s 58/34 s 58/33 pc 48/33 s 57/34 s 58/35 s 61/37 s 53/23 s 61/38 s 56/34 s 63/40 s 55/32 s 56/22 s

Hi/Lo W 67/36 s 74/46 s 61/29 s 72/42 s 72/41 s 72/30 s 51/24 s 69/33 s 76/45 s 63/44 s 74/39 s 68/44 s 73/44 s 61/28 s 72/45 s 76/39 s 73/49 s 64/31 s 66/29 s

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

Sunrise today ............................... 7:14 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:12 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 7:32 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 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. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 7:11 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 7:14 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 9:29 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 8:07 a.m. Full

Last

New

First

Mar 16

Mar 23

Mar 30

Apr 7

The planets Rise 6:07 a.m. 4:55 a.m. 9:29 p.m. 1:01 p.m. 11:40 p.m. 7:56 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 4:57 p.m. 3:31 p.m. 8:51 a.m. 3:31 a.m. 10:10 a.m. 8:25 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

National cities

Weather for March 16

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

Hi/Lo 25/19 68/50 66/42 50/36 29/19 59/30 57/38 73/47 73/48 40/29 60/39 44/36 68/58 48/35 40/35 21/15 56/27 80/71 68/61 55/32 73/35 79/61 81/54

W pc c pc c sn s pc c c pc s c t c pc pc s sh t pc s s s

Hi/Lo 25/22 64/50 43/27 65/41 48/32 67/43 32/14 72/58 54/35 28/12 36/22 24/14 52/33 60/37 23/10 18/-4 57/26 78/69 69/43 33/18 35/21 76/59 89/58

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

Hi/Lo 34/24 50/41 33/25 53/31 55/27 53/30 28/19 63/52 38/35 37/30 46/32 34/26 59/46 73/31 30/21 25/4 61/32 78/70 61/43 43/32 55/34 80/56 75/55

W sn r sn r c sh pc r r pc s pc s s s pc s pc pc s pc s s

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

Hi/Lo 65/38 68/45 80/64 36/30 31/21 70/60 58/41 64/48 80/50 63/43 86/55 50/38 65/40 73/50 72/36 56/43 82/65 74/57 76/51 76/44 34/29 59/39 70/50

W s c pc sn c c pc t s pc s c c s pc pc sh s s r i pc pc

Hi/Lo 41/27 64/34 82/75 22/12 21/16 76/57 37/24 42/27 84/67 42/24 81/58 33/20 61/42 47/29 36/19 63/43 63/39 82/57 71/52 51/37 35/28 39/22 46/27

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

Hi/Lo 49/37 49/38 85/75 32/25 38/27 58/46 33/25 63/40 82/65 33/25 84/60 40/24 51/39 37/31 43/32 60/28 71/42 71/59 65/51 49/37 59/35 35/25 36/32

W s pc t pc c pc sn s t sn s pc sh sn s c pc s pc sh c sn sn

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

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

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Stationary front

Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Ice

Warm front

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 92 .................... Death Valley, CA Sat. Low: -15 ..................... Crane Lake, MN

Weather history

Weather trivia™

A giant storm on March 16, 1843, dumped heavy snow from the Mississippi Valley to New England. Little Rock, Ark., had 10 inches. New York City received more than 12 inches.

is most of the world’s ice Q: Where stored?

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 52/43 64/39 70/52 95/81 68/46 73/38 54/41 64/54 79/61 70/47 90/73 72/52 48/43 57/45 61/37 81/57 84/63 68/61 54/42 77/70

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

Hi/Lo 54/45 67/50 73/53 95/81 68/55 55/41 52/43 63/49 82/61 82/68 90/74 63/41 51/43 57/42 63/39 72/55 86/67 73/66 64/55 82/69

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

Hi/Lo 52/44 69/50 77/59 95/80 69/53 69/41 51/39 69/46 75/54 82/59 89/75 71/48 50/40 51/42 67/41 74/56 88/68 75/67 71/53 82/69

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

The Associated Press

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — This gem of a city tucked in the Blue Ridge foothills of western North Carolina attracts artists, musicians, foodies, outdoor enthusiasts and a fair share of modern-day hippies, all lured by the beautiful setting and open-minded vibe. Its gorgeous historic buildings downtown, free music venues, Appalachian art center and lofty nearby peaks are all perfect for travelers looking to please their senses without spending a dime.

Downtown The vibrant, compact town center, filled with boutiques, galleries, cafes and cultural attractions, is walkable and perfect for sightseeing. Especially in warm weather, downtown sidewalks are themselves an attraction — filled with street musicians, performance artists and gawkers. Asheville was once dubbed the “Paris of the South” in part because of the stylish flair of its historic city center. You can’t miss the towering eightstory City Hall.

Hi/Lo 70/46 64/45 70/36 83/54 39/30 46/32 85/54 59/45 50/41 91/75 61/43 79/52 57/27 90/79 39/32 81/70 52/41 48/45 61/43 54/37

W s s s s sn pc pc pc r s s pc pc pc sn sh pc r sh pc

Hi/Lo 72/52 62/43 70/41 79/49 14/6 39/27 90/62 63/42 53/43 92/77 65/46 82/54 61/37 88/78 38/27 79/57 63/43 48/39 57/49 58/36

W s s s pc pc sf s s r s s s pc c s sh s r pc pc

Hi/Lo 70/52 57/45 73/41 74/47 20/13 33/26 92/66 59/42 53/39 92/77 64/46 82/55 64/46 88/77 37/27 83/60 57/47 48/33 63/47 64/37

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or they’ve inducted people who have been in the band for seven years as opposed to … 25 years or 20 years — whatever their criteria of this week is.” A representative for the Rock Hall didn’t immediately return an email seeking comment. Acts become eligible for induction 25 years after the release of ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO their first record. Kiss wrote on its website last month that it would not “In the Grateful Dead’s case, perform at the Rock Hall induc[they] also inducted a writer tion. who never played an instrument,” said Stanley, referring to The original members from Robert Hunter’s inclusion when 1973 — Stanley, Gene Simmons, the band was inducted in 1994. Peter Criss and Ace Frehley — “Or they’ve inducted rap artists, are scheduled for induction.

Music Music is a mainstay of the Asheville scene and not to miss is the Friday night drum circle in Pritchard Park, at Patton Avenue and College Street. Starting around 5 p.m., the triangular-shaped park fills with all manner of musicians, from kids on toy drums to grandpas on bongos. Everyone’s welcome to play and watch, and the scene is exhilaratingly communal. For more free sounds, head down Patton to Jack of the Wood, a Celtic-style pub that features jam sessions several

nights a week. Asheville’s most famous free music event is the annual Shindig on the Green, on Saturday evenings from late June through August in Pack Square Park.

Folk Art Center Along the Blue Ridge Parkway, about 7 miles east of downtown, is a showcase for the rich cultural traditions and contemporary crafting of southern Appalachia. The Folk Art Center houses wares from the Southern Highland Craft Guild, a nine-state group of artisans. Their works are displayed year-round, but from March to December, you’re liable to catch live demonstrations of old-time broom-making, intricate wood-carving and quilting from felted wool.

Blue Ridge Parkway Some of the prettiest stretches of this National Park System roadway rim Asheville and are perfect for leisurely driving or hearty cycling. For hikers, plenty of trails are nearby. A good introduction starts at milepost 389, south of downtown, where the parkway meets Hendersonville Road-U.S. 25.

Max Patch Save part of a day for a trip to Max Patch, a lofty bald meadow along the Appalachian Trail. From this 4,600-foot summit, you’ll see an awe-inspiring 360-degree view of the Blue Ridge mountains, layers of crests unfolding in every direction. It’s 40 miles from Asheville, but worth the drive. From the Max Patch parking area it’s a fairly easy hike, a little over a mile to the summit.

90 percent is stored in the Antarctic A: ice cap

Kiss members, from left, Paul Stanley, Eric Singer, Gene Simmons and Tommy Thayer, in 2008. Not all members will be inducted in the Rock Hall of Fame.

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Paul Stanley of Kiss wants to shout it out loud: The band is miffed at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for not inducting members Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer along with the original lineup. Kiss is scheduled to be inducted into the Rock Hall on April 10 in New York City. But Stanley said in an interview Friday with The Associated Press that he doesn’t think the Rock Hall is being fair and that the organization has altered their rules for other acts.

By Mesfin Fekadu

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

Kiss band members miffed at Rock Hall of Fame By Mesfin Fekadu

Find the right vibe in Asheville, N.C.

“We have continuing issues with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, starting with the fact that they chose to only induct the original lineup when that’s hardly the case with other bands,” he said.

2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507

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Folks gather for the weekly drum circle at Pritchard Park in Asheville, N.C., one of the many free things to do in this artsy town. EXPLORE ASHEVILLE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Open houses E-6 Classifieds E-8 Jobs E-9 Soduko E-11

SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

REAL ESTATE

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EMPLOYMENT ES OPPORTUNITI S COUNCIL, INC. RN INDIAN PUEBLO ENCE EIGHT NORTHE ER OF EXCELL - A LOCAL EMPLOY

and compliance – MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head

the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and serded approval of the current grant Human and Disability structure. Maintain the review and recommen Administration, in supervisory/ Work oversee and Social experience Education, (5) years of application process in Early Childhood Minimum of five Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme Elementary vices, services position in human administration provided nt and services manageme cal OR – TAOS appropriate clinical will provide direct psychologi Director will assure CLINICAL DIRECT , and training to The Clinical Director Center Clinical Healing Center. leadership, supervision Health, D.O.J. The Butterfly Healing Butterfly clinical Inc.’s settings, Optum of ENIPC, to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have New Must of participatio n. State requires in the organizatio Work. Licensed delivered by the network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed LPCC, or Ph.D. health/subESPANOLA ERQUE AND substance abuse counseling, mental apy, IST – ALBUQU Mus FAMILY THERAP and family therapy, group, psychother or social work. nseling psychology Will provide individual

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s Director of Athletic u.edu/jobs n see: www.nmh Athletics. The Director of Athletjob descriptio a Director of For a complete personnel activitiess. application for l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education experiNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE ative Balance . Preferred: Administr experience. that it offers. MINIMUM DII Life in the coaching e in those sports coaching experience to be competitiv e: Five (5) years fund raising. Collegiate Sports Science. field. Experienc ated success with al Leadership, or Exercise and Degree in any Demonstr athletics. Education iate 2) resume; 3) University ation, Business, ence in intercolleg a letter of interest; e numbers of 3 in Sports Administr must submit 1) Names/address/phon official Master’s degree PROCEDURE: Candidates transcripts; 5) s interviews and degree TION on-campu advanced with APPLICA n; 4) Copies of in conjunction s interview. Employment Applicatio References will be contacted acceptance of the on-campu professional references. should be requested upon transcripts University New Mexico Highlands Human Resources Search Athletic Director Box 9000 87701 Las Vegas, NM jobs@nmhu.edu ns will be accepted: 242 or TDD 505-454-3003. Email applicatio R 505-454-3 or services call IS AN EEO EMPLOYE UNIVERSITY For disabled access HIGHLANDS NEW MEXICO

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PERMACULTURE IN PRACTICE NATE DOWNEY

In water-starved California, homeowners are learning what many in New Mexico already know: A lawn isn’t feasible

On water, time’s running out for Texas T

Brown is the new green

of last month — many Californians are facing the reality that in the arid West the well-manicured lawn is no longer realistic, or even possible. Some cities have tightly restricted water use; others have raised usage rates to levels that make grass a luxury item. As for what constitutes a suitable alternative to the lawn, opinions abound. The Seaside Garden Center, on the Monterey Peninsula, recently held a workshop on artificial turf. Chuck Ingels, a horticulture adviser at the University of California Cooperative Extension in Sacramento, has experimented with meadow-like buffalo grass and dune sedge. And one Oakland couple is starting a neighborhood competition next month to promote replacing the lawn with vegetable gardens and native plants. Lorena Gonzalez, an assemblywoman

he water situation in Santa Fe is so grim that when it rains people dance naked in the streets. OK, that’s not all bad — especially given such an attractive populace fully capable of salsas and tangos — but is it wrong to feel encouraged when a neighbor has it much worse? It’s true that our state’s “use it or lose it” legal system makes no sense in an age when water conservation is so important, but at least in New Mexico, water-rights owners are limited to using a specified amount. Texas adheres to an even dumber doctrine called the “right of capture,” which lets landowners pump as much water as possible. The Lone Star State owns its surface water — its rivers, lakes, reservoirs, estuaries and coastal waters — but all underground water belongs to the landowner. It comes with the deed, like trees and switchgrass. The problem is that in most cases, aquifers are slow to recharge, so neighbors pump against neighbors in La Fon rary gem an ugly race to the bottom. Contempo For this reason and others, the official 2012 Texas Water Plan, which looks 50 years ahead, depends MORE HOME on the construction of 26 major reservoirs. The This column appears regularly in Home: Santa problem is that a broad Fe Real Estate Guide, consensus of intelligent inside The New Mexican experts (who I recently every first Sunday of had the good fortune of the month. Read more meeting at the annual proHome stories at www. gram of the Philosophical santafenewmexican. Society of Texas) believes com/life/home. that most of those reservoirs won’t be built within that time frame, if ever. First, there’s no dam money, as in the days of LBJ. Second, the remaining waters of Texas often provide significant local economic benefits, and since many of the reservoirs would be created to provide water to distant urban areas, the selected dam sites are often unpopular at a local level. Third, the Endangered Species Act has the power to stop many of these projects before they start. Apart from the fact that existing reservoirs are extremely low and many may soon be of little use if the drought continues, the most serious economic, legal and political challenges for the would-be Texas dam-builders come from the fact that 95 percent of Texas real estate is privately owned, and Texans aren’t known for giving up their property to the government. (In New Mexico, real estate is split about 50/50 public to private.) The ultimate irony is that Texas is currently suing New Mexico because it says some of our private landowners are pumping too much water from below Elephant Butte. That’s right. They are suing us for exercising our own version of a much more limited right of capture.

Please see BROWN, Page E-5

Please see TEXAS, Page E-4

4 Mar ch 201

Yolanda Muñoz at her Monterey, Calif., home, where she replaced her lawn with drought-resistant plants — including the South African daisies at the top — to help save water. Many people in California are facing the reality that in the arid West, a water-gobbling swath of lawn is no longer realistic. WINNI WINTERMEYER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

By Steven Kurutz The New York Times

Y

olanda Muñoz was leading a double life, water-wise. As an accountant for the Monterey Peninsula Water Management District, in Monterey, Calif., Muñoz heard grim predictions of water shortages and rationing as the state’s continuing drought intensified. But each night, she returned to her home in an older neighborhood on the peninsula, which had a lawn so large and lush she and her husband, Ed, put in a bench. “We had a beautiful parklike setting,” Muñoz said. “It had a lot of curb appeal. I hated to give up the lawn.” Still, it seemed like the only responsible thing to do. How could she continue to justify this profligate use of water in the face of such widespread shortages?

Contemplating life without a lawn, she moved through the stages of grief, from anger (“I want this lawn!”) to bargaining (“We thought about doing a design where half the lawn would be saved and half ripped out, like a kidney shape”) to depression (“I felt it was kind of hypocritical of me”) and finally to acceptance (“We contacted Hill and Dale,” a local landscape architecture firm). Four months ago, Muñoz replaced her guilty pasture with a mix of drought-tolerant plants and non-thirsty boulders and gravel. In place of the daily sprinkler rinse, she now has a water-conserving drip irrigation system. She is slowly adjusting to the native look, she said, scattering wildflower seeds that will sprout this spring. With rainfall at below-normal levels for several years, and streams dry and reservoirs critically low, particularly in northern areas — even after the storms at the end

Murphy beds make a comeback Space-saving sleepers offer more comfortable option for guest rooms By Melissa Kossler Dutton The Associated Press

The clients came to interior designer Laura Casey with a space dilemma: They did not want to give up the guest room in their suburban home, yet they needed a place for their child to play. Casey came up with a solution often used in small urban apartments: a Murphy bed. It takes up less space than a sofa sleeper or futon and — unlike many of those — uses a

standard mattress, so guests, including elderly grandparents, have a more comfortable stay. “They did not want to compromise the quality of the mattress,” said Casey, owner of Laura Casey Interiors in Charlotte, N.C. The Murphy bed — which tucks into cabinetry when not in use — is enjoying new popularity as a stylish space-saver in many kinds of homes, not just studio apartments. “It’s an interesting trend,” said Chris Fahy, vice president of The Bedder Way Co. in Indianapolis, which makes Murphy beds and has seen sales rise in recent years. He says many customers are baby boomers, empty nesters, and other homeowners who want to turn a bedroom into a hobby room or

exercise room but still need a place for grown children, grandchildren or other guests to sleep. Fahy’s Murphy beds range in price from $1,300 to $3,100. California Closets, which also makes custom wall beds, has seen the same upward trend, said Ginny Snook Scott, vice president for sales and marketing. Customers still buy Murphy beds for studio apartments and vacation homes, she said, but many others are looking to get more use out of an extra room. The company designs vertical and horizontal Murphy beds, often incorporating them into cabinetry units for home offices or craft rooms.

Please see MURPHY, Page E-4

A multifunctional horizontal wall bed and home office combination by California Closets. The piece allows guests to feel comfortable when they visit and provides a workable space throughout the year, with additional wardrobe and large storage for added benefit. AP/CALIFORNIA CLOSETS

OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 3

SANTA FE | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088

920 OLD SANTA FE TRAIL | $620,000 Location! Territorial-style home set on a generous lot catty-corner from Amelia White Park. #201304047 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335

81 BLUESTEM | $1,075,000 NEW PRICE. Views! Gated community! Main house has fabulous outdoor spaces. #201204510 Brunson and Schroeder Team | 505.690.7885

Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.

Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

CE NTRAL LO CATIO N

1200 CALLEJON ARIAS | $1,100,000 In-town Sangre de Cristo Mountain views on the Northside. 3BR, 3BA main house. #201305660 Darlene Streit | 505.920.8001

to see more extraordinary homes, turn to page E-3

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

SANTA FE

®

PROPERTIES P

LOCALLY OWNED! INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED!® LO

RANCHES ROCIADA SPRINGS RANCH This impeccable ranch, blanketed with aspen and alpine meadows, is a truly special retreat. The completely renovated property blends modern amenities with old world charm; it includes a main house, guesthouse, studio, garages, a barn, stables, and various outbuildings. There are multiple spring-fed ponds and a mill house on the babbling Rio de Rociada. The Gascon trail borders the eastern property line, allowing for world-class outdoor trails and horseback riding for miles into the National Forest. 4 br, 7 ba, 3,914 sq.ft., 4-car garage, 495.7 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201400601 Kevin Bobolsky 505.470.6263 Don DeVito 505.690.1866 $3,800,000

FLYWHEEL RANCH The Flywheel Ranch in the Galisteo Basin Preserve is an extraordinary 5,280-acre property overlooking Santa Fe County's incomparable beauty. It is the centerpiece of a nationally-acclaimed conservation initiative. The Flywheel Ranch adjoins 9,000-acres of rugged escarpments, sculpted canyons and rich grasslands. The property is framed by gentle hills and forested mountains. Located just 25 minutes from downtown Santa Fe, the Flywheel Ranch is a refuge of unparalleled beauty. SantaFeProperties.com/201205485 Don DeVito & Matt Desmond 505.670.1289 Leslie Gallatin-Giorgetti 505.670.7578 $12,000,000

APACHE MESA RANCH In the vicinity of Abiquiu, this stunning ranch represents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to own a piece of iconic northern New Mexico. Spanning an impressive 1,060 acres, Apache Mesa Ranch includes a nearly 5,000 sq.ft. adobe hacienda-style main residence and separate carriage house, studio workshop, guesthouse and caretaker's gate house. The owners have created a modern masterpiece with the look and feel of haciendas of old. The extensive horse facilities include a dressage arena. 8 br, 7 ba. SantaFeProperties.com/201400518 Kevin Bobolsky 505.470.6263 Don DeVito & Matt Desmond 505.670.1289 $8,750,000

UNDER CONTRACT

LA JARA RANCH This authentic New Mexico ranch is a hidden treasure, with mountain vistas and the privacy afforded by over a thousand acres of deeded and leased state land. A short distance from Galisteo and close to the amenities of Santa Fe, the main house has been beautifully renovated. La Jara Ranch offers a total of three homes and extensive equestrian facilities including a main barn; stud, hay and equipment barns; a workshop and an oversized arena. The Galisteo River runs through it, and there is a rare seven-acre lake. 6 br, 6 ba, 1,040 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201303498 Kevin Bobolsky 505.470.6263 Gabrielle Burke 505.690.4147 $7,300,000

APACHE CREEK RANCH Apache Creek Ranch shelters at the base of Shaggy Peak. Comprising a significant portion of the Apache Creek watershed, the ranch borders National Forest. Privacy, natural abundance, diverse wildlife, multiple water features, dramatic geological formations, edible permaculture and valley farming landscape. A significant abobe house, guest houses, greenhouse, shops, studios, and stables make for a complete compound. All of this, only 20 minutes from the Santa Fe Plaza. 8 br, 7 ba, 302 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201203287 Don DeVito 505.690.1866 $5,900,000

STARVATION PEAK GHOST RANCH Just completed in 2011, this is a ranch compound like no other. Step back to the year 1860 while still enjoying robust infrastructure, high speed connectivity and modern green high performance construction. The compound includes a main house, guest casitas and a huge media/recreation house. Hand-crafted of the finest materials over the last three years, every detail will amaze you. Additional contiguous acreage totaling over 2,000 acres is available. 5 br, 6 ba, 520 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201304418 Don DeVito & Matt Desmond 505.670.1289 Mike Perraglio 505.660.9999 $4,950,000

MILAGRO SPRINGS RANCH Enjoy rare vast acreage close to town with a luxury home built by Sunsmiths Ltd and Michael Spiller. The home is built into the side of a hill providing elevation and spectacular views. This custom home is enhanced with southwestern features, south-facing solar porch, rock wall landscaping, seclusion, three car garage, shop, RV storage, stables and a private paved highway entrance. There is a gourmet kitchen with food preparation island, granite countertops, and a breakfast bar. 2 br, 3 ba, 1,065 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201303783 Rick Green 505.470.5422 $2,500,000

RANCHO ACEQUIAS This working ranch, horse property and fly fishing retreat on the Chama River has water rights and a stocked trout pond. Other contiguous parcels are available; this property has six legal contiguous lots and access from highway 84. Underground electric, telephone (high-speed internet) and a domestic well are in place. This property has surface irrigation rights from Acequia de Los Gonzales, and beautiful acreage with fertile grazing pastures. 2 br, 2 ba, 81 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201302599 Gabrielle Burke 505.690.4147 Don DeVito 505.690.1866 $2,395,000

1000 Paseo de Peralta . 216 Washington Ave . Santa Fe, NM 87501 • 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com . FaceBook.com/SantaFeProperties . LuxuryPortfolio.com All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act and Equal Opportunities Act. Santa Fe Properties (“SFP”) strives to confirm as reasonably practical all advertising information herein is correct but assumes no legal responsibility for accuracy and should be verified by Purchaser. SFP is not responsible for misinformation provided by its clients, misprints, or typographical errors. Prices herein are subject to change. Square footage amounts and lot sizes are approximates.

BE•THINK•BUY

LOCAL


Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Global Presence In a time of global communications and global markets, there is only one true international real estate brand. Helping our clients navigate the world of real estate is what truly helps set us apart. Another differentiator is our ability to connect buyers and sellers globally. The Sotheby’s International Realty brand was established to connect the finest real estate companies to the most prestigious clientele in the world. Today our network boasts more than 14,000 sales associates, located in approximately 700 offices, in 49 countries and territories, sharing many thousand referrals around the world. Our referral system boasts hundreds of “connections” per month coming from two channels – realty and auction. With a dedicated liaison stationed at the Sotheby’s Auction House and the realty corporate headquarters, we are able to help unite thousands of buyers with the properties our network represents.

NEW LISTING

1402 CERRO GORDO $3,900,000 An incredible historic Eastside adobe, beautiful Wolf Bros. remodel with impeccable taste! A wonderful house for entertaining or genteel living with gracious dining and living room. Landscaped, fenced 1.2 acre lot. Bob Cardinale 505.984.5114 #201400959

NEW PRICE

417 LOS ALTOS WAY $1,895,000 Ideal for fabulous indoor-outdoor entertaining, this distinctive estate includes an open living-dining room, a gourmet kitchen, a master wing, guest suites, a guesthouse, a portal, and a roof deck. Ray Rush &TimVan Camp 505.984.5117 #201303603

NEW L ISTING

3101 OLD PECOS TRAIL, #671 $985,000 This is a Pinon F model which features a flexible 4 bedroom, 4 bath floor plan. Located beside the 1st fairway overlooking the pond, this stand out home features awardwinning Quail Run southwestern contemporary design. Pam Wickiser & Bob Dunn 505.438.6763 #201401000

NEW L ISTING

N EW P RIC E

54 HEADQUARTERS TRAIL $3,250,000 This magnificent Pueblo-style hacienda has the perfect balance of elegance and luxury, and is situated on 14+ acres offering panoramic views. The outdoor entertaining/living area features a large free-form pool. Team Lehrer & Earley 505.490.9565 #201104063

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1024 MANSION RIDGE ROAD $3,000,000 This beautiful estate celebrates sweeping Sangre de Cristo vistas and city lights, from its expansive three acre hilltop setting. It includes lovely gardens and multiple outdoor living areas. Stedman Kehoe Group 505.501.8002 #201301903

2964 ASPEN VIEW $2,250,000 One of Monte Sereno’s premier homes comes to life with this Prull/Hoopes Santa Fe Contemporary-style design. The 3BR, 2 office configuration is adaptable, and offers views from almost every window. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201305086

28 TRES LAGUNAS $1,099,000 Beautiful log cabin in the riverfront community of Tres Lagunas, with private fly fishing, almost 1/2 mile of Pecos River, 3 stocked ponds, and on-site security. Updated 3BR, 3BA cabin nestled in the pines.

312 EAST BERGER STREET $1,095,000 Designed by the legendary John Gaw Meem in 1935, this historic home sits on .35 acres in the Wood Gormley district in South Capitol. Walk everywhere! Great bones and ready for your thoughtful updates! Ashley Margetson 505.984.5186 #201305991

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66 THREE ROCK ROAD $1,295,000 Perfectly sited on a ridgetop to capture expansive views of multiple mountain ranges, this 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath residence is located on the northern side of Tesuque Village. Pre-moratorium private well. Neil Lyon, CRB, CRS, GRI 505.954.5505 #201400781

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BOBCAT INN $985,000 Classic Bed and Breakfast lifestyle, with modern twists! The Bobcat Inn is as unique as Santa Fe with its 9.5 acres that have been restored to its original glory. All-inclusive 9 bedroom, 6 bath B&B. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201304250

N EW P RIC E

MichaelMorgner&SusanShields505.954.5510#201304545

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100 AMBERWOOD LOOP $950,000 This traditional 3BR home plus study and kitchen with adjacent den in Las Campanas backs up to a spacious greenbelt and offers spectacular mountain views, spacious portal, and back courtyard. JohnnieGillespie&MarionSkubi505.660.8722#201302137

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48 CERRO ALTO ROAD $945,000 This incredible horse property is only 20 minutes from Santa Fe. This 40 acre offering is a fully functional and working equestrian facility. There is a current commercial license. Barn features 15 stalls. Ricky Allen 505.946.2855 #201306022

“All Things Real Estate” 12 - 2 pm on 1260-AM & 101.5-FM Streaming on ATREradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. O P E N SUNDAY 3 - 5

94 THREE ROCK ROAD $865,000 A delightful compound consisting of an open and chic Pueblo-style home with relaxed country feeling, a guest house, and separate studio building snuggled into a 5.65 acre site with western Jemez views. The Santa Fe Team 505.988.2533 #201400797

1105 MANSION RIDGE ROAD $845,000 This elegant Mansion Ridge estate, just minutes to the Plaza, combines the pleasure of quiet living with the convenience of location. Entertain all summer long with a luxurious heated in-ground pool. Wendi Odai 505.699.8823 #201303819

SANTA FE BROKERAGES | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.

6 SENDERO DE LA VIDA $739,000 Beautiful custom home on 3 acres with a lovely entry courtyard and an inviting portal. The 3BR interior includes large glass doors, a chef’s kitchen and open dining area, and a spacious living room. 2-car garage. David & Bonnie Sorenson 505.954.07354 #201302794

2713 VENTOSO $565,000 Views and wonderful seclusion from this 2BR home. Katherine Blagden 505.955.7980 #201302794

Visit onlywithus.com to discover the benefits available through us alone.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

Featured Listings Homes in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/gZVaTZhiViZ

OPEN 1-3 ME O H N W O T ALDEA

OPEN 1-3 URE! FORECLOS

14 Centaurus Ranch Road This classy townhome is where quality meets comfort. Beautifully updated, the home offers 1,800 sq.ft. of light-filled space on two levels with 3 bedrooms and 2.5 baths. The easy-flowing floor plan is great for entertaining and living alike, with an open living and dining room, as well as a spacious upstairs master suite with sitting/office area and balcony with views.

1 Montoya Circle Eastside condo with authentic Santa Fe style and

ADISE R A P N E D GAR PM OPEN 1-4

2118 Plazuela Vista Light and bright 2300 sf home on large lot

next to open space. Over 600 sf of portal space with fabulous garden and bird lover’s paradise. There’s even a large, fenced, shady space for Fido. Minutes to Plaza and easy access to I25. This is the best house on the best lot in this subdivision! Hosted by Linda Gammon. $760,000

appeal. This private condo includes a kiva fireplace, T&G ceilings, brick & wood floors, exposed adobe, and private outdoor entertaining areas. $315,900 MLS# 201305861

MLS# 201303370

MARIA MARTINEZ (505) 660-7949 • maria@santafelogic.com Logic Real Estate • (505) 820-7000 228 S. St Francis Dr A-1, Santa Fe, NM www.SantaFeLogic.com

$344,500 MLS# 201304103

RACHEL ROSEBERY (505) 570-9365 • rachel.santafe@gmail.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM www.coldwellbankersantafe.com

TEAM CONNECT (505) 699-3260 • LindaSantaFe@kw.com Keller Williams Realty • (505) 983-5151 130 Lincoln Avenue Suite K, Santa Fe, NM LuxuryHomeInSantaFe.com

Murphy: New twist includes beds built into faux walls

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ADO HISTORIC

wrote about the project on her design blog, at www. lauracaseyinteriors.com, and the post drew inquiries from around the country, she said. She’s not the only one to think of a new twist on the Murphy bed. Some manufacturers also have designed beds that, like hers, are hidden in a faux wall rather than a traditional cabinet. Resource Furniture in New York sells a wall bed that flips down over the top of a couch attached to a fake wall, said interior designer Nicole Sassman of Century City, Calif. “The whole bed comes down over the couch, and it’s a proper bed,” she said. “It’s pretty amazing.” Sassman recently designed a room that she and the client nicknamed the “jackknife room” because it served so many purposes, including guest room, meeting room and home office. It included a Murphy bed; they’re just more versatile and comfortable than sofa beds, she said. “People are far more design-savvy, and they need multipurpose rooms,” Sassman said. “There are so many reasons why the Murphy bed works in so many places.”

Continued from Page E-1

801 Old Santa Fe Trail Thick adobe walls provide a QUIET

ELEGANCE within this Historic Home. The comfortable entertaining spaces feature stately original windows, hardwood floors and an inviting fireplace. A free standng artist studio with storage, electricity, water and heat, carport and expansive gardens for outdoor entertaining are additional features of this property. $896,000 MLS# 201400327

K AREN WALKER (505) 670-2909 • walkerre@aol.com Karen Walker Real Estate • (505) 982-0118 205 Delgado St., Santa Fe, New Mexico karenwalkerrealestate.com

Texas: Wirth’s bill well-received so far Continued from Page E-1 Meanwhile, both states have mostly ignored our “responsibility to capture” stormwater. Harvesting precipitation is not a panacea, but it is currently missing from either state’s water portfolio. Fortunately, state Sen. Peter Wirth’s Senate Bill 16, the tax credits for water harvesting bill, did better than expected for a first attempt at the Legislature in 2014. Unfortunately, the Senate Finance Committee refused to consider it.

No one is dancing in the streets yet, but partly we have Texas to thank for our relative success. The city of Austin already has a successful program similar to the one proposed by SB 16. I imagine their street-dancing is among the hottest in all of Texas. Nate Downey is the author of Harvest the Rain (Sunstone Press, 2010) and the president of Santa Fe Permaculture Inc. You can contact him through his new company website, www.perma design.com.

Laura Casey designed this Murphy bed for clients who wanted comfortable guest accommodations and a place for their child to play in the basement of their home in Charlotte, N.C. Casey, an interior designer, worked with a local carpenter to construct the piece. COURTESY OF LAURA CASEY INTERIORS, CHRIS EDWARDS

Prices range from $3,000 for a simple wall bed and desk to $20,000 for a custom project with extensive cabinetry. Support pieces vary by manufacturer, but generally the mattress is encased in a frame that pulls out from a cabinet adhered to the wall. Today’s improved mechanism for lowering and raising the bed makes the process an easy job for one person, Fahy said. The bed Casey designed for her client does not include a piston or spring mechanism, which most manufacturers use to lower the bed onto the floor. “It just slowly drops down,” she said. Her design, which she had a carpenter build, does not look like cabinetry. The bed is encased in a faux wall. When not in use, the bed looks like a couch with a shelf over it. In order to reveal the bed, the homeowner removes the couch cushions and pulls on the shelf, which causes the faux wall to drop to the floor. The wall is really a platform for the queen-size mattress. The shelf becomes the support for the foot of the bed. It was the first time Casey ever recommended a Murphy bed to a client. She

Building permits Building permits issued by the CITY OF SANTA FE during the month of January included the following: Patricia Kushlis, 1820 Cristobal Ln. $578,222.

Familia. $250,000. Homewise Inc., 7275 Avenida El Nido. $188,000. — 4409 Lumbre Del Sol. $229,000. Pulte Development of NM, 4215 Luz De Estrella. $225,714. — 5901 Violeta Virtuoso St. $109,662.

Recent Home & Land Sales Sales data for the period Jan. 19-Feb. 18 from Santa Fe Association of Realtors MLS reports. Not all sales are reported.

140,000 140,000 160,000 160,100 165,000

174,000 178,550 197,000 205,000 207,500

Bruce Wollens, 152 Avenida Frijoles. $220,000. George Goettel, 59 Cloudstone

Gordon Lawrie, 508 Camino De La

Homes 92,500 115,000 115,000 133,000

SANTA FE COUNTY building permits issued from mid-January to midFebruary included the following:

214,900 228,000 230,000 237,000 245,000

253,750 258,000 275,000 295,000 302,772

304,500 308,500 315,000 350,000 356,037

Homes 360,000 444,000 550,000 580,000

Land (None)

Homes 179,000 220,000 227,900

660,000 680,000 835,000 Land 35,000 Homes 250,000 395,000 450,000 505,000

Drive $225,000. Douglas Patrick, 3 Old San Marcos Trl. $76,000. Craig Locklear, 60 Paseo Del Conejo. $444,000. Sivage Community Development, No. 3 Ave. Malaquena. $258,050. Duane Cogburn, 86C Martin Lane

265,000 534,272 840,000 975,000

1,130,000 Land 1,150,000 30,000 1,500,000 63,000

Univest Rancho Viejo, 11 Cibolita Peak $140,574. — 56 Via Punto Nueva. $108,170. Gardner Associates, 37 Caballo Viejo. $124,978. — 28 Bosquecillo. $127,704.

Homes 215,000 365,250 402,500 456,000

Homes 55,000 125,000 195,000 253,000 280,000 295,000 330,000

Land (None)

$185,000.

595,000 650,000 651,136 798,000 849,000

338,600 360,000 375,160 440,500 490,000 527,000 575,000 810,000

975,000 1,285,000 1,300,000 Land 339,378

815,000 985,500 1,350,000 1,525,000 Land (None)

county

Homes 212,730 225,000 259,773

259,773 275,501 285,000 290,000

310,000 380,000 614,000

Land 87,500 Homes 182,000 290,000

387,500 410,000 424,000

484,000 Land (None)

Homes 223,000 367,500 405,000 475,000 509,500

561,100 590,000 593,880 Land 105,000 110,000


Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-5

Home Showcase Specialties in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate 824.5 Manhattan Avenue A Private Railyard Pied-à-terre Down a private lane with its own parking on the property, located in the heart of the Railyard area, you will find this incredible surprise. This home is true Santa Fe in its flow and use of the outdoor areas. The home is completely walled with access through traditional antique double wood doors. Outside features include a stucco kiva, a covered eating area, a stone fountain/water feature, professional lighting and dedicated flower/garden areas with drip system already installed. There is also a basement and two offstreet parking spaces. 2 br, 1 ba, 880 sq.ft., 0.1 acre. MLS # 201305351

Offered At $305,000 STEVE RIZIKA · 505.577.8240 Steve.Rizika@sfprops.com SANTA FE PROPERTIES • 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com

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ALMA DEL CANON – Canyon Road’s Sustainable Community 1020 B Canyon Road

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One of the premier residences of historic Canyon Road’s Alma del Cañon, this home features the very best Santa Fe’s newest community has to offer. Beautiful indoor finishes of hard-troweled plaster walls, quality reclaimed wood beams, high-end kitchen and bath fixtures, radiant floor heat, off-street guest parking and beautiful outdoor spaces compliment this one-of-a-kind property. This adobe home is also seeking a coveted “Gold” certification for its high-efficiency construction and energy conservation. MLS# 201305472

OP

Offered at $799,500 STAN JONES 505.310.2426 stan.jones@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 505.988.2533 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

Brown: In future, lawns might not be an option in California Continued from Page E-1 whose district includes southern San Diego, believes “brown is beautiful,” as she put it, and has proposed a bill to allow residents of homeowners’ associations to put in drought landscaping or artificial turf or stop watering their grass without incurring fines. Meanwhile, in Beverly Hills and other affluent Southern California communities, bright-green, golfcourse-plush, triple-fescue lawns remain as ubiquitous as the teams of gardeners required to tend them. In true California fashion, the garden hose (or, more precisely, what comes out of it) has lately taken on a mystical bent. This weekend, Paola Berthoin, an artist, will be a leader of a retreat to explore the sacred nature of water. Participants will visit the Hastings Natural History Reserve in Carmel Valley, with its brittle, moisture-starved underbrush, and, among other activities, explore in a journal humankind’s connection to water. “We thought this was the best way to push the message out there that we are water,” Berthoin said. At her home in Carmel Valley, Berthoin’s water concerns are more practical. Though she has installed drought-tolerant and native-plant landscaping and seven tanks to collect rainwater, she worries about the two ponds on her 7-acre property. “I don’t know what’s going to happen with the ponds,” she said. “They’re not getting what they need.” The recent storms across the state aren’t likely to squelch the soulsearching over proper drought landscaping, said Mitsugu Mori, the owner of the Seaside Garden Center. “Even if

it rained every single day until April,” Mori said, “we don’t have enough water.” Grass has slowly been disappearing from California yards for several years, especially in cities that offer rebates to encourage homeowners to uproot (Muñoz paid for part of her lawn conversion this way). Menlo Park, for instance, has a Lawn Be Gone program that gives homeowners up to $3,000 if they convert their grass lawns to water-efficient landscapes. But the drought has sped up changes to the landscape, as homeowners opt for more eco-friendly, cost-saving options. Kathleen Brenzel, the garden editor of Sunset magazine, who lives in Menlo Park, said several of her neighbors have recently pulled up their lawns, planting meadows or succulents instead. “I’ve seen blends of shrubs that bloom in spring and ornamental grasses,” Brenzel said. “They catch the sunlight in their wispy blades.” Brenzel, who has a native plant garden at her house, featured a section on drought landscaping in the Sunset Western Garden Book of Landscaping, out last month, which she edited. “Streamscaping,” one of the techniques the book spotlights, is a favorite of Christine Watten, a designer at Hill and Dale Landscapes, the firm that converted Muñoz’s yard. “We do a lot of dry stream beds with rock,” Watten said. “It’s like an Arroyo Seco look. It gives dimensionality to the garden, focal points.” Watten also likes native ground covers like coast buckwheats and lowgrowing manzanitas, which have an expansive green look. What’s happening as a result of the water shortage, Brenzel said, “is that

front lawns are getting more interesting, and saving water at the same time.” How interesting front yards become, however, depends largely on what is seen as acceptable landscaping. And even in the midst of a drought of biblical proportions, longstanding ideas hold sway. When Cory Wechsler and her partner, Alicia Gilbreath, decided to start a water-saving competition in their Oakland neighborhood, announcing in an email last month that “a brown lawn is the new cool,” they were surprised by the reaction. The couple had led by example: In the front yard of their duplex they planted a vegetable garden and fruit trees, and added another vegetable patch and a chicken coop in the back. What grass remained had gone unwatered for more than a year. “You just have this brown piece of land,” Wechsler said. “With a little rain, it’s almost as green as anyone else’s lawn.” But their neighbors showed little enthusiasm for letting their own lawns go brown, she said. “Instead of getting excited, people felt like we were attacking their green lawns,” she said. “I do think people place value in the idea that something is healthy when it’s green, and when it’s brown, it’s not so.” The couple have since reframed the competition, downplaying the brownlawn aspect and focusing instead on other ways of decreasing water use, from installing a gray-water system to planting drought-tolerant flowers and herbs like rosemary. “There’s no judgment,” Wechsler said. “Let’s just talk about the decisions each of us are willing to make.” Soon homeowners with a traditional green lawn may not have a choice. An

Drought-resistant agave weberi at Tine Nilsen’s home in Los Angeles. STEPHANIE DIANI/THE NEW YORK TIMES

average of 50 to 60 percent of a household’s water consumption goes to outdoor use, which includes the landscape, said Ingels, the horticulture adviser. He envisions a future in which lawns go dormant in winter, and possibly even in summer, if watering is not allowed. “The water bills are going up,” Ingels said. “I think we’re going to start seeing more and more people opt for a brown lawn. I think it could become more traditional.” In Southern California, where water reserves are in (marginally) greater supply than in the northern part of the state, many homeowners have not yet reached a lawn reckoning, said Peter Eberhard, a designer with the Los Angeles firm GDS Designs. “We’re not at that point in the ’70s when people are draining their pools and in panic mode,” Eberhard said. “The trend here is about reducing the size of the lawn.” He has torn up plenty of grass in the

last few years, but that was motivated less by his clients’ desire to conserve water, he said, than their requests for “outdoor rooms” focused around barbecue pits, kitchens and entertaining areas. “People want to use their outside areas as an exterior house,” he said. “That’s a huge feature in almost every house we do now.” Tine Nilsen wanted a similar kind of hardscape at her house in the Mar Vista section of Los Angeles, and over a year ago hired Eberhard’s firm. But she was concerned that removing the grass would create a barren-looking landscape. “I wanted a modern feel and low maintenance,” Nilsen said. “What I didn’t want was for it to feel very desert-y.” Eberhard used granite and mulch with new hedging and minimal low-water plants in the backyard, and in the front yard planted beds of succulents that are hand-watered periodically and native low-water shrubs, along with a few trees. “The little bushes are very lush and green,” Nilsen said. “But not so heavy that they cover everything.” And her new landscaping, which is fed by a drip irrigation system, consumes a quarter of the water her lawn did, she said. Despite the drought, few people in Nilsen’s neighborhood have followed suit. Not yet, anyway. Californians have a complicated, ambivalent relationship with water and, like much of the rest of the United States, a deep-seated allegiance to their grass lawns. If Nilsen needs any proof of that, all she has to do is step outside in the morning and look up and down her street, where the sprinklers are all working furiously at keeping her neighbors’ grass green.


THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

Open Houses

Listings for today.

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Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/home/

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Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-7

Open Houses NORTH WEST

NORTH EAST

H-35

A-43

1 2 : 0 0 P M - 2 : 0 0 P M - 2584 Camino Chueco - Lovely Stamm remodel. Open concept that’s warm and inviting. Fully fenced, private back yard. Large master bedroom with walk--in closet, en suite bathroom and even a roomy sitting/library/tv area. $275,000. MLS 201304444. (Cerrillos Road south to Camino Carlos Rey., then east on Camino Chueco. Home is on right side of street.) Ginger Clarke 505-670-3645 Barker Realty.

2:00PM-4:00PM - 2 Camino Chupadero - Welcome to the Gateway to Chupadero! Beautiful views of the Sangres and the Jemez mountains! Plus views of Chupadero Valley off the deck. This contemporary home has an amazing open floor plan. $389,000. MLS 201400949. (285/84 North to NM 592, Stay on NM 592 past Encantado, turn left at stop sign at top of hill to go down into valley and jaunt past fire station on right will be Camino Chupadero on left. 1st house.) Ricky Allen 505-4708233 Sotheby’s International Realty.

M-39 1:00PM-3:00PM - 1767 Ridge Pointe Loop - New Price! Magical mountain views and the serenity of single-level living, with gardening potential or the promise of relaxing. Enjoy the privacy of Las Estrellas from your front portal! $449,000. MLS 201302020. (3 br, 2 ba, 599 to Ridgetop exit, go north, follow around to Ridge Pointe Loop) Julia Gelbart 505-699-2507 Santa Fe Properties.

N-23 1:00PM -4:00PM - 41 Violet Circle - Family compound in Las Campanas w/ incredible views. Antique beams & doors, brick floors, private portales & outdoor kitchen. Grand Sala for entertaining. 3 bedrooms in main residence. 3-car garage. $1,795,000. MLS 201305736. (Camino La Tierra right on Parkside drive, left on Violet Circle #41 on right.) Nancy Lehrer 505-490-9565 Sotheby’s International Realty.

N-24 1:00PM-3:00PM - 81 Bluestem Drive - Custom-built main house and guesthouse with mountain views in gated community. Fabulous outdoor spaces including portales and courtyard, gourmet kitchen, high beamed ceilings, formal dining room. $1,075,000. MLS 201204510. (599 to Camino La Tierra to Parkside Drive...go right on Parkside and buzz LC security and tell them you are going to 81 Bluestem. Go through gateto third stop sign, go left on BlueStem; house on left.) Ann Brunson 505-6907885 Sotheby’s International Realty.

N-40 1:00PM-3:00PM - 14 Tano Rd - Impressive architecture, custom woodwork, and tasteful styling abound in this luxury home and guest house with 360-degree views of Santa Fe’s surrounding mountain ranges. $1,250,000. MLS 201400114. (Take Bishop’s Lodge Rd north. Left on Camino Encantado. Road veers right onto Circle Dr. Turn left over bridge. Turn left onto Tano Rd.) Team R & L 505465-9597 Keller Williams Realty.

P-17 12:00PM-2:00PM - 100 Amberwood Loop - This traditional 3BR home plus study and kitchen with adjacent den in Las Campanas home backs up to a spacious greenbelt and offers spectacular mountain views, a spacious portal, and a back courtyard. $950,000. MLS 201302137. (Las Campanas Drive to Pojoaque Drive to Amberwood Loop.) Marion Skubi/Johnnie Gillespie 505660-8722 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Q-10 1 : 0 0 P M - 3 : 0 0 P M - 10 hacienda Caballero - Sneak Preview- Located in The Estancias subdivision of Las Campanas, Built in 2004 by Award winning builder/designer SharonWoods, 4 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, 5,237 sqft, 2.850 acres $2,950,000. Christopher Harris 505-603-2212 Barker Realty.

R-28 3:00PM-5:00PM - 62 E Wildflower Drive - Views and wonderful seclusion from this sweet two bedroom Tierra Del Oro home while just minutes from town. High ceilings with vigas and latillas, brick floors and open concept living/dining areas. $525,000. MLS 201201444. (599 to Camino La Tierra, right at 4-way stop onto E. Wildflower.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

S-42 1 :0 0 P M -3 :0 0 P M - 1024 Mansion Ridge Road - This beautiful estate celebrates sweeping Sangre de Cristo vistas and city lights, from its expansive three acre hilltop setting. It includes lovely gardens and multiple outdoor living areas. $3,000,000. MLS 201301903. (Bishops Lodge Road, left on Mansion Drive, right on Mansion Ridge Road.) Tara Bloom 505-699-6773 Sotheby’s International Realty.

T-40 1:00PM-4:00PM - 349 Calle Loma Norte - Beautiful single level, end unit condo in the North Hills Compound. Only unit with a portal. Western views on quiet cul-desac. Two Master suites each with full bath & walk in closet. Light & bright. $450,000. MLS 201400865. (Paseo de Peralta, N on Old Taos Hwy, L on Calle Loma Norte, L into Placita Mirasol, first home on Left) Diane Harrison 505-412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.

T-41 1:00PM-3:00PM - 659 A Bishops Lodge Rd - 2 bed / 2 bath Tastefully appointed Condo is a perfect investment or second home opportunity. Open concept living and dining and kitchen area lead to a large fenced yard. High end finishes throughout. $449,000. MLS 201400693. (Paseo de Peralta to Bishops Lodge RD/ Washington Ave. House is about 1/2 mile on the right. Just before El Matador condos.) Valerie Brier 505-690-0553 Keller Williams.

V-43 1:00PM-3:00PM - 1414 Hyde Park Road - The quintessential, historic Santa Fe property - a turn-of-the century - double adobe with Views in all directions, and 21st century amenities. A magical and unique property. $1,595,000. MLS 201400768. (Hyde Park Road to Dempsey Water Line, cross bridge and stay left. House is on the left heading up.) Numi Hirsch 505-603-1973 Sotheby’s International Realty.

W-42 12:30PM-3:00PM - 309 Armijo/Rodriguez D - Nestled into a view-filled ridge above Palace Avenue is a beautiful Zachery designed home. Fine detailing and superior finishes, wood cabinets, granite surfaces, and elegant fireplaces. $695,000. MLS 201301510. (3 br, 3 ba, Follow Hillside North, bear right and East to top of hill on Rodriguez on right.) David Woodard 505-920-2000 Santa Fe Properties. 3:00PM-5:00PM - 606 East Palace Avenue - Casa Palacio: Casual, elegant living. Impeccably restored c. 1905 Victorian treasure w/beautiful natural light, hardwood floors, rock & brick construction. In the heart of Santa Fe’s historic eastside $865,000. MLS 201200798. (4 br, 2 ba, Historic Plaza to East Palace. Call Efrain Prieto of The Efrain Prieto Group at 505.470.6909.) The Efrain Prieto Group 505-470-6909 Santa Fe Properties.

W-43 1:00PM-3:00PM - 1 Montoya Circle - Eastside condo with authentic Santa Fe style appeal. This private condo includes a kiva fireplace, T&G ceilings, brick & wood floors, exposed adobe, and private outdoor entertaining areas. $315,900. MLS 201305861. (Gonzales Road to Montoya Circle.) Maria Martinez 505-660-7949 Logic Real Estate.

SOUTH WEST

V-25 1:00PM-3:00PM - 14 Centaurus Ranch Road - This classy Aldea townhome is where quality meets comfort. Beautifully updated, the home offers approximately 1,800 sq.ft. of light-filled space on two levels with 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and views! $334,500. MLS 201304103. (599 Bypass to Aldea Avenida Aldea right at 4 way stop sign on Camino Botanica just left on E via Plaza Nueva on Centaurus Ranch Rd) Rachel Rosebery 505-988-7285 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

Y-36

Z-40

2:00PM-4:30PM - 321 Palomino - 3 bedroom 2 bath 2100 sqft -Adobe remodel minutes from downtown, water feature, private, 2 car garage, gated and plenty of space to enjoy the outdoors. $399,000. MLS 201400788. (Agua Fria north to Palomino (just past Larragoite Elementary)) Anthony Marquez 505-348-6640 Keller Williams - Santa Fe.

1:30PM-4:00PM - 447 1/2 Camino Monte Vista A Authentic (1930s) adobe condo remodeled in 2012. Romantic pied-a-terre loaded with SF style. Office/studio/2nd bed option. Lush communal gardens. On a little lane off OSFT convenient to downtown. $400,000. MLS 201302821. (1 br, 2 ba, Going South (up) OSFT turn left just after the fork at OPT.) Gavin Sayers 505-690-3070 Santa Fe Properties.

GG-28

CC-39

1 0 : 0 0 A M - 1 2 :0 0 P M - 1025 Calle De Suenos - Sneak Preview Open House 3 bedroom, 1 Bathroom 927 sq. ft. Carport Great Location $159,000. (Cerrilos Rd to Calle Resolana and turn East. Turn North on Siringo Rd and then South onto Calle De Suenos.) Christopher Harris 505-603-2212 Barker Realty.

JJ-17 1:00PM-4:00PM - 3031 Prino Colores - Better than new 3BR/2BA home is mint condition, with deck, landscaping, drip irrigation, designer lighting and colors, walk in, live in ready for the new owners of this fantastic property $222,000. MLS 201400775. (Agua Fria OR Rufina to South Meadows, Talavera to Primo Colores) Coldwell Banker Trail West.

LL-13

1:00P M -3:00P M - 10 Shiprock Peak - Beautiful home on spacious lot over looking park and big mountain views. Added sunroom, tile, kiva fp, den/office with french doors, professionally landscaped, fully upgraded kitchen with granite. $319000. MLS 201400968. (Richards Avenue into Windmill Ridge at Rancho Viejo. Turn left on Chili Line and follow that up to Shiprock Peak.) Roger Carson 505-699-8759 Carson & Carson at Keller Williams.

EE-43 1:00PM -3:00PM - 1860 Forest Circle - Gracious home located in desirable Sun Mountain Estates. This 3bed/3bath, 4,300 sq ft home sits on 2 acres in a beautiful park like setting. Walking distance to museums and the botanical gardens. $959,900. MLS 201400962. (Old Santa Fe Trail to Sun Mountain Dr to Forest Circle) Melong Baldwin 505-603-2227 Barker Realty.

LL-39

1:00PM -3:00PM - 6753 Camino Rojo - Beautiful, wellsituated home offers great location and excellent value. North facing views of the golf course, along with south facing views of the mountains. $294,900. MLS 201400564. (Airport Rd to Country Club Rd. Right on Camino Rojo.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams Realty.

NN-15 **CANCELED OPEN HOUSE**- 6750 Camino Rojo Large Open-Floor plan 2594 SF. 4BR 3BA plus office. Wood floors throughout, plentiful windows with both eastern and western views. Close to schools, shopping, and golf course. $355,000. MLS 201400404. (From Airport Rd. Turn on Country Club Dr, go Right on Camino Rojo, property is on the left.) Rebekah Bransford 505-577-1059 Barker Realty.

OO-13 12:00PM-4:30PM - 7213 Rio del Luna - Come see our three move-in-ready new-construction homes, and find out why our homes rate high in quality performance and energy efficiency. Move-in ready from $249,900. Plans start at $214,900. (Located near the Santa Fe Country Club. From Airport Road, turn on Paseo del Sol WEST, then turn right at Plaza Central. Turn left on Contenta Ridge to the model home.) Patrice Von Eschen 505-6901811 Homewise, Inc. 12:00PM-4:30PM - 7364 Avenida El Nido - Brand-new home in Las Palomas development of Tierra Contenta. Stop in to find out how Homewise can help you buy the perfect resale or new home for you. New home plans starting at $212,900. (From Airport Road, turn onto Paseo del Sol WEST. Turn right on Jaguar Road to the dead end, then turn right on Avenida El Nido. Model homes are on the right on Avenida El Nido.) Patrice Von Eschen 505690-1811 Homewise, Inc.

UU-23 1:00PM -3:00PM - 2 Coyote Pass - Beautiful Luminaria model on corner lot. Spacious master suite with huge walk-in closet. High ceilings, light and bright. 4 bed/2bath, 2350 sq.ft. Family room, flagstone patio, 2 car garage. $359,900. MLS 201400516. (Richards Ave. to Right on Avenida del Sur. Pass Rancho Viejo Blvd., Left on Canada del Rancho, Left on Arroyo Ridge Rd. to corner of Coyote Pass Rd.) Nancy Clark 505-699-0171 Keller Williams Realty.

SOUTH EAST

W-37

VV-28

1:00PM-3:00PM - 123 W San Mateo - Right in the middle of town,this wonderful,expansive home offers a formal dining room,a den,an enclosed front porch, and a remodeled kitchen. Mature trees,circular driveway,a huge,landscaped backyard. $500,000. MLS 201202868. (St. Francis, east on San Mateo, house on north side.) Ed Schroeder 505-690-1007 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00PM-4:00PM - 814 1/2 Dunlap St Unit B - Immaculate Condo in the Railyard!! Close to Farmer’s Mkt, SFe River Trail. Built in 2006, 2bed/2bath, 1,171 sq ft. Radiant heat, diamond plaster, granite counter tops, and stunning old wooden beams! $398,000. MLS 201305814. (From Agua Fria turn North onto Irvine St then first left (West) onto Dunlap. Property is on your left (south) side of Dunlap. From St. Francis turn East onto Dunlap, look for open house signs.) Will Bussey 505-699-4008 Keller Williams.

X-35

Y-44

1:00PM-3:00PM - 409 Kathryn Place - This charming artist-owned home is convenient to downtown and the Railyard. This classic Stamm home has vigas, newer roof, stucco & windows. Hardwood floors and many artistic touches. $340,000. MLS 201400812. (3 br, 1 ba, St. Francis West on Agua Fria, right on Kathryn Place.) Peter Van Ness 505-660-6409 Santa Fe Properties.

1 :0 0 P M -3 :0 0 P M - 1020 Canyon Road B - One of the premier residences of historic Canyon Road’s Alma del Cañon, this home features the best Santa Fe’s newest community has to offer. Beautiful indoor finishes of hard trowel plaster walls. $799,500. MLS 201305472. (Paseo de Peralta to Canyon Road.) Stan Jones 505-310-2426 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00PM-3:00PM - 23 Calle Aguila - New Listing! Exquisite 4 bedroom home plus office on the edge of town, just minutes from the Plaza. The home is 3300 sqft on 1.42 acres, with inviting outdoor space, sensational views, 3 car garage. $649,000. MLS 201401009. (Old Pecos Trail South, cross over freeway. First right on Rabbit Rd. Left on Calle Cascabella, right on Calle Aguila.) Jack Welch 505-780-0994 Bell Tower Properties.

ELDORADO WEST

J-53 12:30PM -2:30PM - 18 Casa del Oro Loop - This newer and larger Adobeworks home has vista views of four mountain ranges. The gracious floorplan adds privacy, and the master and dining open to a walled courtyard. Library/den with fireplace. $435,000. MLS 201400474. (3 br, 2 ba, Avenida Vista Grande to Casa del Oro, turn left onto Casa del Oro, right on second entrance to Casa del Oro Loop. House is second on left.) Alex Stango 505-2314008 Santa Fe Properties.

R-60 12:30PM -2:00PM - 132 Mejor Lado - Newly completed by Aram Farber! Lit pilaster entry to lovely open-plan, split bedroom design, coved viga ceilings, large study. Sweeping mountain views, paved cul-de-sac, nat. gas & community water. $565,000. MLS 201305092. (3 br, 2 ba, West on Avenida Eldorado, left on Ave de Compadres, right on paved Mejor Lado, right into the cul-de-sac.) Sue Garfitt 505-577-2007 Santa Fe Properties.

R-64 1:00P M -3:00P M - 16 Camino San Lucas, Lamy NM Jenning’s newly built contemporary and green. Sophisticated design w/ Euro cabinets, stone counters, studio room, views & on green belt. 2030 sq ft, 3bed,2bath,2.7acres, natural gas, Eldorado water $459,000. MLS 201400394. (Take Hywy 285 and across from the Art Barns turn onto Spur Ranch Road, go 1 mile to Rancho San Lucas subdivision, 3rd house on the right.) Pamela Preston 505-577-7800 Barker Realty.

ELDORADO EAST

M-69 2:00PM-4:00PM - 16 Ensenada Drive - Lovely singlelevel custom home in Eldorado. Santa Fe style includes vigas, nichos, corbels, lintels, high ceilings in the main living area and tile floors throughout. Open floor plan with a den. $379,000. MLS 201305830. (3 br, 2 ba, Take Avenida Eldorado one street past Torreon, right on Ensenada.) Kate Prusack 505-670-1409 Santa Fe Properties.

N-75 1:00PM -3:00PM - 5 S Hijo de Dios - Impeccable home on a 2.87 +/- acre cul-de-sac lot offering great privacy. Well-planned, giving great feeling of spaciousness. Features include hardwood cabinetry, granite counter tops and storage. $409,000. MLS 201304485. (3 br, 2 ba, Alma Drive to South (right) Hijo de Dios) Georgette Romero 505-603-1494 Santa Fe Properties.

OTHER 1:00PM -3:00PM - 27 County Road 84D - Hacienda Las Barrancas, a former B&B and one time site of the famous Babbitt Trading Post, is an oasis of serenity on 4.3 acres. $778,500. MLS 201305557. (6 br, 5 ba, NM 285, west on 502, north on 84D. Property is one half mile on left on corner.) Paul Geoffrey 505-660-6009 Santa Fe Properties.

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

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

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

CONDO DOWTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $329,000. Jay, 505-4700351.

FARMS & RANCHES

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

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 .

LOTS & ACREAGE

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.

Reduced Price! 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

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«

VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY

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

$950. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, sunny, washer, dryer, woodstove, LP gas, brick floors. Pet ok. Hwy 14, Lone Butte. Steve 505-470-3238

Down Town Area Studio Apartment

GUESTHOUSES

1 bedroom, 1 bath, Fenced yard, Non-Smoking. Small pet may be considered. $680 includes utilities.

COUNTRY LIVING Pecos, sunny remodeled, 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, deck. Responsible People. $995 plus deposit. No Pets. 505-351-0063, 505920-7326.

EFFICIENCY APARTMENT IN CIENEGUILLA. $400 monthly, $200 cleaning deposit. No pets, nonsmoking, no drugs. Quiet. Long-term tenant. 505-424-3755

LUXURIOUS GUEST HOUSE. 1 Bedroom, 1 bath. Granite kitchen. Washer, dryer. Fireplace. Very bright, quiet. $950 monthly, partial utilities. 505629-3082

Down Town Area 3 Bedroom, 2 bath

INCREDIBLE SANGRE VIEWS! $935. ZIA VISTAS LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, large walk-in closets. Fireplace. Exceptional layout. Gated. Much more. 505-316-0986.

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

Taylor Properties 505-470-0818

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!

CHECK THIS OUT!! $420 MOVES YOU IN

A 1 Bedroom Apt. $0 Security Deposit For Qualified Applicants & No deposit required for Utilities, Ask me How!!

HOUSES FURNISHED ADOBE GUESTHOUSE East side, 1 bedroom, fully equipped, private. $1,250 including cable TV, DSL and utilities. Available Now. 505-988-4055.

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

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.

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, fireplace, wood and tile floors, washer and dryer. No pets. $750 monthly. 505-471-7587 or 505-690-5627.

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH DON DIEGO, close to town, nice complex $600/mo 1yr lease only. 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH DON DIEGO. G orgeous town house close to downtown. $750 monthly. Lease only.

Chamisa Management Corporation 988-5299

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.

A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 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.

Taylor Properties 505-470-0818

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.

OFFICES COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE

Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE

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

Please call (505)983-9646.

CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily

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.

Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

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

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 RECENTLY REMODELED. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Hardwood & tile floors. Laundry hook-ups. Fenced yard. No pets. Lease. References. $975. 505-412-0197

STUDIO, LA CIENEGA. Skylights, private. 490 sq.ft. $375 monthly plus utilities. Call Dan, 505-269-7410.

COMMERCIAL SPACE 1,800 SQU.FT Retail Space at GARCIA RETAIL CENTER. 5984 Airport Rd. $12 per squ.ft. 505-753-8303

plus an office, hard wood floors, 1 car garage, covered patio and fenced yard, Non-smoking. Pet may be considered. $1250 monthly plus utilities.

SOUTH OF SANTA FE, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath. Handicap access. Washer, dryer. First, last, plus deposit. Cat okay. $800 MONTHLY. 505-473-4186

STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Small patio. Ready to move-in! No Pets. All utilities paid. CALL 505-9202648.

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

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.

FURNISHED CASITA, utilities, television, internet included. fully equipped kitchen. 44 Arroyo Viejo. $950 monthly. www.santafecasita.info ABQ Properties LLC 505-717-3002 x702

505-471-8325

1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH T E S U Q U E D R I V E . Fenced yard, washer & dryer. $625 monthly.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

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

( 12 Mo. Lease, required for special )

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. RUFINA LANE. Fireplace, balcony, laundry facility on site. $745 monthly.

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.

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

2029 CALLE LORCA

RESULTS

988-5585

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS

REDUCED! Spacious single-level 3 bedroom, 2 bath. New paint. All appliances. Washer, dryer. 1,494 sq.ft. with 9’ ceilings, 2-car garage. FSBO, $238,750. 505-231-8405

For over 40 years Mares Realty has provided a proven track record of selling real estate. List with us for knowledgeable and experienced success in selling. Call today and see how we will work for you.

APARTMENTS 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

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 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.

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.

business & service exploresantafetcom ANIMALS Dog Training Obedience, Problem Solving. 30 Years Experience. In Your Home Convenience. Guaranteed Results. 505-713-2113

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

CLEANING MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE.

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

FIREWOOD

505-983-2872, 505-470-4117

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

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

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 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

ROOFING

PAINTING

HANDYMAN

HOUSE & PET SITTING. Reasonable, Mature, Responsible. Live in Sol y Lomas area. Former Owner of Grooming store in NYC. 505-982-6392

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

Dry Pinon & Cedar

Free Kindling, Delivery & Stack. 140.00 pick up load.

CARETAKING

CLEANING

HANDYMAN

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

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for more information, 505670-9867, 505-473-2119. HOMECRAFT PAINTING SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.

ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.

PLASTERING

STORAGE

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

NEED SOME STORAGE? Stars & Stripes Storage is having a special March move-in deal just for you! Call 505-473-2222.

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.

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


Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

E-9

www.sfnmclassifieds.com

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES EIGHT NORTHERN INDIAN PUEBLOS COUNCIL, INC. - A LOCAL EMPLOYER OF EXCELLENCE

VARIOUS POSITIONS ESPANOLA – ALBUQUERQUE - TAOS

Teacher Special Education at Santa Fe, NM

Santa Fe Public Schools

Please check www.sfps.info click on the jobs tab. Select the Special Education Teacher-RA2014. Santa Fe Public Schools. EOE

SUBSTANCE ABUSE COUNSELOR – ESPANOLA Provide weekly individual and group supervision for Family Services Staff. Conduct individual family therapy, group psychotherapy, substance abuse counseling, mental health evaluations, case management and other related therapeutic services for outpatient clientele. Conduct UAs, administer Addiction Severity Index and other assessments, and assist in community outreach. Minimum Master’s Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work, licensed in the State of New Mexico as an LSAA, LADAC, LMSW, LISW, LPCC, LPC LMHC, or Ph.d, SUPERVISOR OF FAMILY SERVICES – ALBUQUERQUE Provide weekly individual and group supervision for Family Services Staff. Conduct individual family therapy, group psychotherapy, substance abuse counseling, mental health evaluations, case management and other related therapeutic services for outpatient clientele. Assure program compliance. Maintains and ensures consistency of implementation of Circle of Life’s Native-based, cultural ideals, agency standards, and treatment philosophy. Recognizes that Circle of Life is a Native agency and must balance the Native culture with Western standards of treatment. Is sensitive to the diverse Native clientele needs the agency is here to serve. Minimum Master’s Degree in Counseling, Psychology or Social Work with an independent New Mexico mental health licensure. A minimum of 3 years successful supervisory experience of clinical staff. FAMILY THERAPIST – ALBUQUERQUE AND ESPANOLA Will provide individual and family therapy, group, psychotherapy, substance abuse counseling, mental health/substance abuse evals, case mgmt, etc. Mstrs in counseling, psychology or social work. Must be licensed in the State of NM as an LMSWM, LISW, LPCC, LMHC or Ph.D. DIRECTOR OF HEAD START – ESPANOLA Responsible for the overall administration and management of the ENIPC’s Head Start Program and compliance monitoring of ENIPC’s delegate agencies. Carry out day- to-day administration, management, and supervision of the Head Start Program. Supervise Lead Teachers and any administrative staff. Provide support for all other Head Start staff. Oversee the implementation of family assistance and social services to Head Start families in accordance with the Head Start Program Standards. Coordinate the activities of the Head Start Policy Council and fosters shared decision making in accordance with the Head Start Performance standards. Provide screening, assessment, evaluation and diagnosis of children with suspected disabilities. Oversee and maintain the program governance structure. Maintain the current grant and budget, search for additional funding. .Establish the Head Start grant application process and oversee the review and recommended approval of the application. Bachelor’s Degree with Master’s preferred in Early Childhood Education, Social Work Administration, Human and Disability services, Elementary Education, or Business Administration. Minimum of 3 (three) years of experience in a director role for a Head Start Program.

Teach elementary school students with various learning disabilities. Req. MS in Special Education or related field & valid New Mexico Special Education License.

HUMAN RESOURCES GENERALIST The NM Administrative Office of the Courts is recruiting for a Human Resources Generalist position in Santa Fe, NM. Incumbent may perform clerical or general Human Resources duties. See the Judicial Branch web page at www.nmcourts.gov under Job Opportunities for more information, or call 505-827-4801. Equal Opportunity Employer.

santafenewmexican.com

CLASSIFIED SALES CONSULTANT The Santa Fe New Mexican is looking to hire a motivated and enthusiastic individual with a passion for sales to fill an opening in the Classified Advertising Sales Department. Must have ability to multitask, provide excellent customer service, be proficient in basic computer and phone skills and work in a fast paced team environment. The Classified Sales Consultant position offers great benefits, and hourly wage plus commission based on a team sales structure. Please email resume, cover letter and references to: Amy Fleeson, Classified Advertising Manager at afleeson@sfnewmexican.com Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No phone calls please. Application deadline: 3/23/14 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303

HEAD START LEAD TEACHER - NAMBE Oversee all classroom activities, provide all teaching functions in accordance with Performance Standards and ENIPC policies. Implement Creative Curriculum and enrichment activities. Observe and assess individual needs and parent goals. Make home visits, attends conferences, Parent Meetings, etc. Administers diagnostic testing at child find. Assist in recruitment of students. Make referrals to appropriate personnel. Must have AD or BA in Early Childhood Education or related field. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHNICIAN – NIGHT SHIFT – TAOS The BHT is a member of the direct care staff who works overnight with our youth in the Butterfly Healing Center residential treatment center to ensure that their safety, therapeutic and physical needs are properly met as directed by the individual’s treatment plan, therapeutic goals and interventions determined by the clinic team. HS Diploma or equivalent, CPR and First Aid, certification, and a current valid NM driver’s license and able be insurable under the org. auto ins. WIC BREASTFEEDING PEER COUNSELOR – ESPANOLA Provide one-on-one and group breastfeeding support/classes to WIC mothers. Will make hospital visits and work with local health professionals. Some clerical duties. Must be a past or current breastfeeding mother. Can work a minimum 10 hours per week, and has reliable transportation.

Generous Benefits Package: All Employee Medical Premiums Paid, Employer Match 401k, PTO, and Much More! Employment with ENIPC requires a valid NM State Driver License and must be insurable under ENIPC’s auto insurance. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC ensures Native American Preference. ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment*

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SANTAFE NEWMEXICAN .COM/ NEWSLETTERS


E-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

sfnm«classifieds »announcements«

ADMINISTRATIVE

GALLERIES

CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATE

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.

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.

FOUND

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

FAMILY SERVICES ASSISTANT Full-time position working with families of Head Start students. Bilingual English, Spanish preferred.

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

COMPUTERS IT

Sr Business Systems Analyst and Sr Network & Systems Administrator Full-time positions. See website for specific position requirements. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Follow us on Facebook. EDUCATION CONTROLLER Full-time position reporting to Vice President of Finance. Provides oversight and supervision for accounting functions within the Corporate Office. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE- M- F- D- V- AA Follow us on Facebook. PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST & DATA EN T R Y . Quickbooks experience a plus, with excellent PR skills. Call 505-438-4773 for an interview.

ADMINISTRATIVE

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

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.

TEMPLE BETH SHALOM Preschool Director. BA, early childhood education. Knowledge of Judaism necessary. Job description at www.sftbs.org; resume to info@sftbs.org

TEACHER ASSISTANT Full-time with Head Start.

Send letter of interest, current resume, college transcripts and the name, address and telephone numbers of three references to: Northern New Mexico College, Office of Human Resources, Attn: Nicole Fresquez , 921 Paseo de Onate, Espanola, NM 87532 or email to: nicole.fresquez@nnmc.edu

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS

Full-Time or Part-Time RN

FULL-TIME HOUSEKEEPER’S ASSISTANT 505-660-6440

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!

TEACHER I Full-time with Head Start and Early Head Start or 20 hours per week with Early Head Start. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOEM- F- D- V- AA. Follow us on Facebook.

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.

GET NOTICED! Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details

CALL 986-3000

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

MANAGEMENT

INTAKE COORDINATOR Full-time position with behavioral health program at Valley Community Health Center in Espanola. Requires 3 years experience in mental health treatment with 1 year assessment and intake. Must have independent NM behavioral health professional license. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Toll-free hotline 1-866-661-5491 EOE/ M/ F/ D/ V/ AA Find us on Facebook.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

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 WESTON MANDOLINE Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-4666205

RETAIL

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

SALES ASSOCIATE. Full or parttime. Experience in high end apparel and jewelry. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. Resume emailed karenmalouf@ maloufontheplaza.com.

TRADES

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

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.

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!

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.

»merchandise«

LPN/RN

POLICE CHIEF

»animals«

CNA’S

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.

SERVING OUR COMMUNITIES Director of HIM Full-Time & PRN Cooks Full-Time & PRN ER RN, Nights Part-Time, PRN RN positions in ICU, OB, PACU, OR PRN Scrub Techs Full-Time Inpatient Coder, HIM PRN Speech Therapist Los Alamos Physician Services, LLC PRN Medical Assistants To apply please go to losalamosmedicalcenter.com

WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVAILABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE.

ANTIQUES

Mental Health Therapist (MST) Full-time position with Santa Fe Community Guidance Center working with delinquent and at-risk youth & their families in homebased and community settings in Santa Fe area. Has on-call responsibilities.

Merry Foss Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER m o v i n g . Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment, 505-7957222.

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES GRASS, ALFALFA MIX BALES. $9.50 each. 100 or more, $9 each. Barn stored in Ribera, NM. Please call 505-4735300.

APPLIANCES 2 Dryers, $140 each, 1 Washing Machine $150, 1 stainless steel Dishwasher $150, 1 stainless steel Gas Stove $225. 505-412-7327

ART

Hay for sale Barn-stored pasture grass. Bales average 60 lbs. $13 per bale. Load your own in Nambé. 505-455-2562.

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

PETS SUPPLIES

MEDICAL DENTAL

AKC REGISTERED German Shepherd Puppies (Eastern European Bloodline). 5 Females, $500 each. 4 Males, $600 each. Sable, Black, Black-Tan. Call 505-490-1748.

Health Care for the Homeless Case Manager Work independently to provide coordination of services, physical health, mental health and chemical dependency treatment for patients and address the problems and needs associated with the condition of homelessness. Part-time 8-12, Monday – Friday. Medical Assistant Provide patient care and other related clinical, laboratory, technical and support activities to providers. Part-time 8-12, Monday – Friday. Both positions prefer bilingual Spanish-English. Send resume by fax 505-982-8440 or email to mpopp@lfmctr.org

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

RN Works 20 hours per week (weekends) with The Hospice Center and Community Home Health Care. Social Worker Full-time or part-time position working 20 hours per week with The Hospice Center. Requires Master’s level Social Worker license and experience in healthcare setting. Excellent benefits. Apply online at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE- M- F- D- V- AA Follow us on Facebook. MISCELLANEOUS JOBS 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.

MAGNIFICENT STONE Cliff Fragua sculpture, 30"high, rare 2003, $4,000, must sell, Santa Fe, retail $10,500. 505-471-4316, colavs19@comcast.net

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.

ATTENTION DOG OWNERS!

Paws Plaza has $40 haircuts, dogs under 40 pounds. Full Service with teeth brushing. Fourth Street. 505820-7529.

FIREWOOD-FUEL

Firewood for sale A full measured cord for $150. Split and stacked. Mostly cottonwood. 505-455-2562. SEASONED FIREWOOD . P ONDEROSA $80.00 PER LOAD. Pinion or Cedar $120.00 per load. tel# 508-444-0087 delivery free

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.

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE 20% Sales Commission for Newspaper Advertising Sales

OPTICAL RECEPTIONIST OPTICIAN / Float

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.

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.

WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE

Santa Fe Clinic

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.

WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATES

Full-time Furniture Mover, Sales Associate wanted for Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s south-side resale store. Visit www.sfhumanesociety.org for details.

OPHTHALMIC TECHNICIAN TRAINEE

O N -C ALL S WITCHBOARD O PERATOR

FURNITURE

Resale Store Associate

Resumes may be emailed to: mdelao@citiesofgold.com. Applications may be picked up and dropped off at Cities of Gold Casino Hotel. EOE

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.

Year round positions with Head Start (children 3 to 5) or Early Head Start (children birth to 3). See website for job requirements.

Assistant RegistrarScheduling, Registration

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.

IN HOME CARE

»jobs«

ACCOUNTING

Downtown Santa Fe French Restaurant & Patisserie, with liquor license looking for Prep-Cook and Executive Chef. 505-216-1845 or email chezmamousf@gmail.com

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

MEDICAL DENTAL

IMMEDIATE OPENING

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

LOST

HOSPITALITY

986-3000

for Experienced Front Desk Clerk Reservationist

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

to place your ad, call

Santa Fe Optical

OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN REGISTERED NURSE / PACU-Holding Area Santa Fe Surgery Center Casual/prn

Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions open at our Santa Fe Clinic, Optical Shop and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com. Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.

Your performance determines your wage! Are you detail oriented? • Can you multi-task? Are you able to handle yourself in a professional manner? Do you handle stress with a positive attitude? Do you have good phone skills? Do you have good computer skills? Do you see the value of creating good customer relationships? Can you honor deadlines by staying ahead of them? If you answered “YES” to all these questions, please email: lmorales@sangrechronicle.com or send/drop off your resume to: Sangre de Cristo Chronicle Attn: General Manager PO Drawer 209, Angel Fire, NM 87710 EOE


Sunday, March 16, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds PETS SUPPLIES

QUALITY TINY POMERANIAN puppies. Sable male $600, sable female $800, rare chocolate male $800. Registered, 1st shots. 505-901-2094 or 505753-0000.

YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPPIES, 2 females, 2 males. Small, teddybear faces. Non-shedding, hypoallergenic, registered, shots, $800$1000. Call, or text, 505-577-4755.

986-3000

DOMESTIC

4X4s

4X4s

2005 MERCURY MONTEGO - Premium luxury. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-9204078.

2010 FORD F150 EXTRA CAB 4X4. LOW MILES, ZERO DOWN, WAC. CREAM OF THE CROP. $21,995. Please call 505-473-1234.

2012 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED. FULL LUXURY, ALWAYS IN FASHION. $31,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.

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

2009 Toyota 4Runner 4X4

IMPORTS

2006 BMW X5 4.4V8

Sweet 7 Passenger, Automatic V6, Power windows & locks, cruise, tilt, CD, alloys, immaculate, CarFax, warranty. $17,995. www.sweetmotorsales.com . 505954-1054.

Immaculate X5 with V8, Automatic, DVD, Satellite radio, chrome wheels, 71k miles, Carfax, Warranty. $16,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

2008 TOYOTA FJ Cruiser. Another Lexus trade-in! 60k miles, 4x4, lifted, super nice, clean CarFax, $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.

Sweet, mint condition, low mileage, panoramic moonroof, CD, alloys with new tires. Carfax, warranty. $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com .

www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2005 FORD Sport Trac Crew Cab, 4x4, automatic, 50,000 miles, fully loaded, XLT, $12,500. 505-471-2439

2007 PONTIAC G6 Coupe GT. One owner, no accidents! 89,331 miles. $9,999. Schedule a test drive today!

2001 FORD F150 4WD - You have to see this! $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-9204078.

2004 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE V8 LIMITIED. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call, 505-3213920.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

GET NOTICED! Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details

to place your ad, call

E-11

2004 BMW X3 AWD

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

4X4s

CALL 986-3000

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

»garage sale« 2003 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY HSE. Check this baby out! $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.

2001 CHEVROLET 1500 4WD - Trust worthy at a great price. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.

2006 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER HYBRID 4WD Limited. Fresh Lexus trade! Leather, moonroof, needs nothing, clean CarFax, pristine car! $15,881. Call 505-216-3800.

1994 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4WD $2,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.

2012 HONDA CIVIC. 26K MILES, ONE OWNER, STYLISH SPLENDER. $16,999. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com IMPORTS

GARAGE SALE WEST

www.furrysbuickgmc.com www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2006 PONTIAC G6 4 door Sedan with 1SV Brand new tires. Great price. Checked out well. $4,999. Schedule a test drive today!

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!

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!

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 .

2003 GMC SIERRA 4WD EXT CAB Great work truck! $8,000. Sxchedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.

2005 Honda Civic EX

Automatic, Moonroof, Sat Radio, tint, alloys, Carfax, Extended Warranty $8,695. 505-954-1054 www.sweetmotorsales.com

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

»cars & trucks«

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

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! .

DOMESTIC 1999 CADILLAC SEVILLE with 68,000 miles. Runs great. Sunroof, leather seats, fully loaded. A/C. $3,700. 505316-6409 CHEVROLET CHEVELLE 1970 SS unrestored 396, 350HP, blue, white with white stripes, $9600, M-21 MUNCIE 4SPD manual, huffyk9@outlook.com, 505-609-8587.

2007 DODGE RAM 1500 TX 4WD What a truck! $17,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505321-3920.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2005 CHEVY Impala, 87,000 miles, V-6, 4-door, in good condition. $6,000. 505-424-0233.

F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $15,500. 505-470-2536 2012 CHRYSLER 200, CERTIFIED, ONLY 1700 MILES, SAVE THOUSANDS, QUEEN OF ROAD $18,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.

2012 DODGE AVENGER, BLACK. LEAD THE PACK. CERTIFIED FOR $12,995. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.

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.

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. 2011 TOYOTA Tacoma Double Cab 4WD. Good miles, local vehicle, well maintained, TRD Off-Road, clean CarFax, NICE! $29,421. Call 505-216-3800.

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.

2007 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350. 64k miles, navigation, back-up camera, moonroof, heated seats, excellent! $18,000. Please call 505699-8339.


E-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, March 16, 2014

sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS

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.

VIEW VEHICLE:

santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

IMPORTS

2008 NISSAN SENTRA-S FWD

Another One Owner, Local, Carfax, 83,728 Miles Non-Smoker, Garaged, Manuals, Every Service Record, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo Affordably Dependable, $9,950. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

to place your ad, call IMPORTS

2008 TOYOTA CAMRY-SE

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!

PICKUP TRUCKS

PICKUP TRUCKS

SUVs

2004 CHEVROLET AVALANCHE Z71 4WD Crew Cab. ONLY $10,000! Please call 505-920-4078 .

2005 GMC 3500 CREWCAB DURAMAX 4WD. If you like trucks, this is the one! $22,000. 505-3213920.

2008 CHEVROLET EQUINOX 4WD LTZ - Room for the whole family. $13,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

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

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

986-3000

1994 CHEVROLET S10 - GAS SAVER! Check it out. Only $2,000! Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.

2009 HUMMER H3T ALPHA V8. $34,000. Schedule a test drive today! Call 505-321-3920.

CALL 986-3000

2004 LEXUS RX-330 AWD

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! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2006 NISSAN ALTIMA. $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

www.furrysbuickgmc.com www.furrysbuickgmc.com SPORTS CARS

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

2009 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN SE AWD, navigation, moonroof, turbo, clean CarFax, prisitine! $15,897. Call 505-216-3800.

2005 FORD F-150 4x4. Excellent condition. Extended cab; leather interior, 92,000 miles. New radio w/ bluetooth, new battery, shocks, & exhaust system. One owner, many extras! $15,500 OBO. 505-989-3431

2011 SUBARU OUTBACK LIMITED

2002 LEXUS RX300. Loaded & Very Good condition. Gold. Factory warranted transmission. Newer tires. Leather interior, sunroof. $6,800. 505660-6008

2004 GMC YUKON DENALI AWD WOW! Superstar status SUV. $10,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.

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! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

2008 Land Rover LR3 HSE

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! .

Fully loaded in showroom condition. Impeccable tan leather and wood, service history, Carfax, free extended warranty. $18,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com

2004 VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE. Automatic. Leather interior, excellent condition. 68,000 miles. $7,500 OBO. 505-577-1159. 2003 FORD F-150 2WD Regular Cab Flareside 6-1/2 Ft. Box XL. 99,602 miles. $7,999. Schedule a test drive today.

Have a product or service to offer?

2004 FORD Mustang Convertible. Excellent condition, automatic, 44,000 miles $9,500. 505-471-2439

Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

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.

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!

1999 Subaru GT Wagon AWD

2008 JEEP RUBICON 4 door. TWO TOPS - NICE! - $25,000. Schedule a test drive today! $6,000. 505-9204078.

VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945

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

2007 GMC SIERRA DURAMAX 4WD. NICE TRUCK!! - $26,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.

2006 MINI COOPER-S CONVERTIBLE MANUAL

Another One Owner, Local, Garaged, Non-Smoker, X-keys, Records, Manuals, 51,051 Miles, WDrive All Season, Great MPG, Pristine, Soooo Perfect $14,250 PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

NEW!! 2012 FLAT BED TRAILER. 14,000 pounds. GVW, 18’x8’ extra heavy duty. Bumper hitch. Loading ramps, tool box, spare. $4,499. 808-346-3635

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

VANS & BUSES

SUVs 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 2007 GMC Acadia Front wheel drive 66k, sunroof, 7 passenger, excellent condition, $13,500. 505-982-4609

VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945 2004 VOLVO XC-90 AWD - Sporty and luxurious. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505920-4078.

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

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

Sell Your Stuff! TOYOTA 2002 TACOMA TRUCK, 2door. Silver exterior, Grey interior. Auto, 2WD. 169,000 miles. Good cond. $4100. 830-719-4371.

2011 KIA SEDONA LX - This van is perfect for your family. $14,000 Please call 505-321-3920.

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

986-3000

www.furrysbuickgmc.com

find what you’re looking for with the

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 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

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.

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Call today for your 1998 TOYOTA 4-door Corolla. 124,000 miles, good condition. $2,800. Call to schedule a test drive, 505-231-5370.

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