NCAA Tournament: Lobos receive No. 7 seed, will face Stanford Sports, B-1
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LIfe & SCIeNCe, A-9
Timing of last words adds to suspicions When someone at the controls calmly said the last words heard from the missing Malaysian jetliner — “All right, good night” — one of the plane’s communications systems had already been disabled, authorities said Sunday, adding to suspicions that one or both of the pilots were involved in disappearance of the flight. PAge A-3
Crimeans choose to secede
Feds turn to N.M. to fill several positions By Staci Matlock
Voters overwhelmingly support breaking away from Ukraine; Kiev, Western leaders condemn choice
The New Mexican
From the Bureau of Reclamation to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Obama administration is tapping New Mexicans to hold important posts. Many of those positions deal with water, science or Indian Affairs — areas in which the individuals in the state have particular expertise. New Mexico’s current Interstate Stream Commission director, Estevàn R. Lopez, was nominated recently to head the Bureau of Reclamation. Lopez rose from Santa Fe County manager to deal with contentious water issues along the state’s major interstate waterways. If he is confirmed by the Senate, Lopez will replace another native New Mexican, Mike L. Connor, who resigned after he was nominated to become deputy secretary of the Department of Interior, one of the most far-reaching agencies in the nation. The Department of Interior oversees the Indian Affairs, Reclamation, Land Management, Ocean Energy and Surface Mining bureaus,
By John-Thor Dahlburg and Mike Eckel Bullets and cartridges litter the ground around a stock pond on the Caja del Rio mesa where shooters target practice. Lead shot that ends up in the seasonal pond can poison migratory birds and animals. STACI MATLOCK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lead that’s left behind threatens local wildlife Eagles’ deaths tied to metal; hunters encouraged to use alternate ammo By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
Please see fILL, Page A-10
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wo thin bald eagles brought to The Wildlife Center near Española in January died despite efforts by staff to save them. The culprit was lead poisoning, according to blood tests and necropsies performed on both birds. Lead ammunition is a deadly problem for animals and birds, even when they haven’t been shot with it, according to Katherine Eagleson, executive director of The Wildlife Center. In the case of the two eagles, they likely scavenged carcasses of animals that had been shot with lead bullets. Lead ammunition in carcasses left behind by hunters is one source of lead that can poison wildlife. Lead shot and bullets used for target practice in rural areas like a stock pond on the Caja del Rio mesa is another source of lead poisoning. A third is lead
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Swing dance Weekly all-ages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road, dance only $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
From left, Wildlife Center rehabilitation staff members Alissa Mundt and Danielle Wantuck hold bald eagles that were brought to the facility within a day of each other in January. Both birds died later, and blood tests showed they suffered from lead poisoning. COURTESY DR. ANDY CAMERON
sinkers anglers use to weigh down fishing line. Waterfowl accidentally consume abandoned line weighted with the sinkers or eat fish that have ingested the tiny lead sinkers. Eagleson said there are plenty of other ammunition choices.
“We’re not saying don’t hunt. There are alternatives that work. Go buy them. It is a simple fix,” Eagleson said. While steel shot is more expensive and some gun enthusiasts say it isn’t as
Please see LeAD, Page A-10
The Associated Press
SIMFEROPOL, Ukraine — Just two weeks after Russian troops seized their peninsula, Crimeans voted Sunday to leave Ukraine and join Russia, overwhelmingly approving a referendum that sought to unite the strategically important Black Sea region with the country it was part of for some 250 years. The vote was widely condemned by Western leaders, who planned to move swiftly to punish Russia with economic sanctions. As the votes were counted, a jubilant crowd gathered around a statue of Vladimir Lenin in the center of Simferopol to celebrate with song and dance. Many held Russian flags, and some unfurled a handwritten banner reading “We’re Russian and proud of it.” Fireworks exploded in the skies above. “We want to go back home, and today we are going back home,” said Viktoria Chernyshova, a 38-year-old businesswoman. “We needed to save ourselves from those unprincipled clowns who have taken power in Kiev.” Ukraine’s new government in Kiev called the referendum a “circus” directed at gunpoint by Moscow, referring to the thousands of troops that now occupy the peninsula, which has traded hands repeatedly since ancient times. The referendum offered voters the choice of seeking annexation by Russia or remaining in Ukraine with greater autonomy. After 50 percent of the ballots were counted, more than 95 percent of voters had approved splitting off and joining Russia, according to Mikhail Malishev, head of the referendum committee. Final results were not expected until Monday. Opponents of secession appeared to have stayed away Sunday, denouncing the vote as a cynical power play and land grab by Russia. Putin insisted the referendum was conducted in “full accordance with international law and the U.N. charter.” Russia was expected to face strong sanctions Monday from the U.S. and Europe for going forward with the vote, which could also encourage rising pro-Russian sentiment in Ukraine’s east and lead to further divisions in this nation of 46 million. Residents in western Ukraine and the capital, Kiev, are strongly pro-West and Ukrainian nationalist. Andrew Weiss, vice president for Russian and East European studies at the Carnegie Endowment for
Please see SeCeDe, Page A-4
INSIDe u U.S. warns Russia about annexing Crimea. PAge A-4
For former St. Michael’s hoops star, key to success is attitude
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he Men’s NCAA Tournament starts this week, and it is sure to fuel the myth that size matters. In truth, the basketball tournament is a shining example of the all-American work ethic. Nobody Milan knows this better than Simonich Nick Pino, who owns an Ringside Seat insurance agency near the Santa Fe Plaza. Pino was always the big man on campus. Nearly 7 feet tall as a 16-yearold high school junior, he didn’t start for the St. Michael’s basketball team. He wasn’t good enough.
Index
Calendar A-2
Classifieds B-6
St. Michael’s top five players were all more than a foot shorter than Pino, but they were skilled and relentless, pressing the entire game if necessary. With an enrollment of about 200, St. Michael’s advanced to the big-school state championship game in 1962 with a starting lineup that carried the politically incorrect nickname “Mighty Midgets.” Pino didn’t play at all in the state final, a game the Horsemen lost to Sandia. All the St. Michael’s starters graduated the spring after the title game. Pino, about to be a senior, had reached a crossroads. “I knew it was my last hurrah,” he said one recent day. Actually, it was the beginning of many more hurrahs.
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Enticed by the opportunity to crack the starting lineup, Pino worked hard to reach the standard set by his old teammates. Then he soared beyond them, to the stratosphere of New Mexico high school basketball. He scored 1,033 points as a senior, a state record that stood for 50 years. Pino went from benchwarmer to shooting star in a matter of months. During his senior season in 1962-63, more than 100 colleges recruited him. “I was getting offers under the table. I don’t know, maybe I shouldn’t mention that,” he said. He visited seven schools, including The University of New Mexico, New York University and Seattle University, the latter two being bas-
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El Nuevo A-7
Opinions A-11
Sports B-1
Tech A-8
Nick Pino went from benchwarmer to shooting star in a matter of months at St. Michael’s High School. He went on to play college basketball and work in insurance. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Time Out B-11
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A-2
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
NATION&WORLD Community short on money for providing mental health services By Pat Eaton-Robb
The Associated Press
Crackdown in Egypt sees abuse, 16,000 detained New York Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks during Sunday services at the Church of God of Third Avenue as the congregation welcomed members of the Spanish Christian Church that was destroyed by Wednesday’s explosion in the East Harlem neighborhood Sunday. PHOTOS BY JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Church services mourn those lost in NYC blast Mayor Bill de Blasio: ‘We will not let you fall’ By Leanne Italie and Verena Dobnik The Associated Press
NEW YORK s workers tried to clear away the last of the rubble that once was two New York City apartment buildings, a pair of congregations gathered to mourn Sunday — one for its lost church and one for two members who lost their lives in the massive explosion. At Bethel Gospel Assembly, tears mixed with the sounds of gospel music as the church remembered Griselde Camacho and Carmen Tanco, two of the eight people killed in the massive East Harlem explosion that leveled a pair of five-story buildings on Wednesday. “We feel the void,” said Michelle Robinson, the church’s business administrator. “Both women were very active members.” Tanco often served as an usher at services and would greet her fellow congregants at the door, Robinson said. “We are a family and we’re all just missing the big hugs she used to give,” she said. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the women “were examples to all of us” because of the faith and spirit they demonstrated. He spoke at a podium with a screen above him displaying photos of
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the women. “We will not let you fall,” de Blasio said, speaking at a podium with a screen above him displaying photos of the women. “We are all a family in the end.” His wife, Chirlane McCray, told the crowd about the launch of a fundraising drive to help those affected by the explosion. The money would support a relief plan that includes a victims’ assistance fund, which would cover costs connected to funeral arrangements, as well as rent and household expenses. The plan also includes counseling and outreach to immigrant communities. De Blasio also visited the house of worship where members of the Spanish Christian Church, which had been located on the first floor of one of the destroyed buildings, were spending Sunday. On Saturday a crew at the blast site found a large Bible in the rubble and
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returned it to the church’s pastor. After the three-hour service at the Church of God a few blocks from the blast site, several dozen members of the destroyed church, including young families with children, fell into each other’s arms amid tears and faint smiles. For some, it was the first encounter since Wednesday’s catastrophe. “We don’t know where we will worship, we don’t know what we’ll do,” said Carmen Vargas Rosa, who led a meeting of Spanish Christian Church members. At the scene of the explosion on Park Avenue at 116th Street, there were signs the initial cleanup was ending while the investigation into the cause of the blast could begin. The blast erupted about 15 minutes after someone from a neighboring building reported smelling gas, authorities said.
ABUJA, Nigeria — At least 16 people were killed in stampedes for government jobs in Nigeria when hundreds of thousands were invited to apply for fewer than 5,000 positions, officials and activists said Sunday. Interior Minister Abba Moro held the applicants responsible, saying they “lost their lives through their impatience.” Activists blamed his ministry and called for him to be fired. Emergency officials said the death toll could rise. Nigerians are desperate for work, with official statistics putting the number of unemployed at nearly 41 million of the 170 million population. Unemployment among young people aged under-24 is even higher — 38 percent according to official statistics and nearer 80 percent, according to the World Bank.
Study to test ‘chocolate pills’ for maintaining heart health It won’t be nearly as much fun as eating candy bars, but a big study is being launched to see if pills containing the nutrients in dark chocolate can help prevent heart attacks and strokes. The pills are so packed with nutrients that you’d have to eat a gazillion candy bars to get the amount being tested in this study, which will enroll 18,000 men and women nationwide. “People eat chocolate because they enjoy it,” not because they think it’s good for them, and the idea of the study is to see whether there are health benefits from chocolate’s ingredients minus the sugar and fat, said Dr. JoAnn Manson, preventive medicine chief at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. The Associated Press
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CAIRO — Egypt’s crackdown on Islamists has jailed 16,000 people over the past eight months in the country’s biggest round-up in nearly two decades, according to previously unreleased figures from security officials. Rights activists say reports of abuses in prisons are mounting, with prisoners describing systematic beatings and miserable conditions for dozens packed into tiny cells. The Egyptian government has not released official numbers for those arrested in the sweeps since the military ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in July. But four senior officials — two from the Interior Ministry and two from the military — gave The Associated Press a count of 16,000, including about 3,000 topor mid-level members of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood. The count, which is consistent with recent estimates by human rights groups, was based on a tally kept by the Interior Ministry to which the military also has access. It includes hundreds of women and minors, though the officials could not give exact figures. The officials gave the figures to the AP on condition of anonymity because the government has not released them.
16 killed in stampedes for government jobs in Nigeria
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U.S. censors, denies access to records more than ever WASHINGTON — The Obama administration more often than ever censored government files or outright denied access to them last year under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, according to a new analysis of federal data by The Associated Press. The administration cited more legal exceptions it said justified withholding materials and refused a record number of times to turn over files quickly that might be especially newsworthy. Most agencies also took longer to answer records requests, the analysis found. The government’s own figures from 99 federal agencies covering six years show that half way through its second term, the administration has made few meaningful improvements in the way it releases records despite its promises from Day 1 to become the most transparent administration in history. In category after category — except for reducing numbers of old requests and a slight increase in how often it waived copying fees — the government’s efforts to be more open about its activities last year were their worst since President Barack Obama took office.
Newtown struggles for funding
HARTFORD, Conn. — Some of the charities paying for mental health care for children and families affected by the Sandy Hook massacre are running short of money, and officials don’t know how much they’ll need — and for how long — to repair the psychological scars from the shooting. Newtown officials are applying for a federal grant, and charities are pooling their resources in an attempt to ensure that free longterm mental health care remains available following the December 2012 shooting that left 20 first graders and six educators dead. “We hear in the media, ‘Well Sandy Hook was 14 months ago, isn’t everything fine?’ ” said Candice Bohr, executive director of the Newtown Youth and Family Services. “Well, no it’s not, and we get calls every day from the school wanting to address an issue. I would love to say that in 10 years, we’re going to see a huge drop and everyone’s better and we’ve moved on, but that’s not the case.” Three of the charities that have been providing funds for services have started working together, while the charity that has raised the most money — the NewtownSandy Hook Community Foundation — says that it will likely join the alliance soon. The Newtown Lions Club, which raised $350,000 for mentalhealth services in the wake of the shooting, has told the 250 people it served that it could no longer directly pay their mental health bills because fundraising was being outpaced by demand. “The demand was well beyond anything we could have predicted,” said Peter McNulty, president of the Lions Club. Other charities are picking up the slack. The town’s Rotary Club and the Newtown Memorial Fund, which had been spending a combined $30,000 a month on mental health care for 150 families, partnered with the Lions Club, said Brian Mauriello, founder of the Newtown Memorial Fund. Those who need help are being steered to the state’s Office of Victim Services, which processes applications for money from a pool created by all three charities. So far, nobody has been turned down. “I don’t think anybody has a crystal ball to say whether there’s going to be enough money or not,” said Linda Cimino, the director of the state Office of Victim’s Services. “I do know that the plan is for a 15-year horizon.”
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Monday, March 17 ‘GAME OF THRONES’: Free weekly screenings of the HBO series at 7 p.m., Jean Cocteau Cinema, 418 Montezuma Ave. SANTA FE PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKSHOPS INSTRUCTOR IMAGE PRESENTATIONS: At 8 p.m. at Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat and Conference Center, an open conversation and slide presentation of works by Jeff Lipsky, Jay Dickman, Carlan Tapp and Deanne Fitzmaurice. 50 Mount Carmel Road.
NIGHTLIFE Monday, March 17 SWING DANCE: Weekly all-ages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m. at Odd Fellows Hall, 7-10 p.m., 1125 Cerrillos Road. TINY’S: Great Big Jazz Band, 7-9 p.m., 1005 St. Francis Drive, Suite 117. VANESSIE: American JEM, Jay Cawley, Ellie Dendahl and Michael Umphrey, guitars and vocals, 6-8 p.m., 427 W. Water St.
VOLUNTEER VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: On April 26 and April 27, there will be an AERC 2-Day Endurance Ride in the Caja del Rio area of the Santa Fe National For-
Corrections est to support Listening Horse Therapeutic Riding, a nonprofit organization in Santa Fe. Each day will offer a 50-mile, 25-mile and introductory ride. A variety of volunteer assignments also will be available for which previous horse experience is not necessary. Volunteer to support this therapeutic riding program that assists active military, veterans and their families, and anyone facing special challenges. For more information visit: www. ridecaja2014.weebly.com, send an email to laurie@listening horse.org or call 670-3577. DOG WALKERS WANTED: The Santa Fe animal shelter needs volunteer dog walkers for all shifts, but especially the Coffee & Canines morning shift from 7 to 9 a.m. For more information, send an email to krodriguez@sfhumanesociety. org or call Katherine at 983-4309, ext. 128. NMCTR: The New Mexico Center for Therapeutic Riding needs volunteers to spend time around horses and special needs children. Call Ashley at 471-2000. FOOD FOR SANTA FE: A nonprofit, tax-exempt, all volunteer organization provides supplemental food on a weekly, year-round basis to hungry families, individuals and those facing food insecurity-no forms to fill out, no questions
asked. Volunteers are needed to pack and distribute bags of groceries from 6 to 8 a.m. on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Visit ww.foodforsantafe.org or call 471-1187 or 603-6600. PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECOSYSTEMS: Volunteers are needed to join the feeding team for the endangered prairie dog colonies in Santa Fe. If you can give two to three hours a week to help, call Pat Carlton at 988-1596. KITCHEN ANGELS: Join the crew by volunteering two hours a week. It will make a real difference in the lives of homebound neighbors. Kitchen Angels is looking for drivers to deliver food between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visit www. kitchenangels.org or call 471-7780 to learn more. THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: Volunteers are needed to support the Cancer Resource Center at the Christus St. Vincent Cancer Center. Training is for the various shifts that are worked during business hours Monday through Friday. Call Geraldine Esquivel with the American Cancer Society at 463-0308. BIENVENIDOS: Volunteers are needed at the tourist information window on the Plaza. Join Bienvenidos, the volunteer division of the Santa Fe chamber of Commerce. Call Marilyn O’Brien, the membership chair-
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. woman, at 989-1701. MANY MOTHERS: Babies are on the way and you can help by volunteering a few hours a week with Many Mothers, the local nonprofit that strengthens families through supportive services — offering free, in-home, friendly mentoring care to all new parents. Orientation will offer training. For more information, visit www. manymothers.org or call Pat 983-5984 for an interview. ST. ELIZABETH SHELTER: Five separate resident facilities — two emergency shelters and three supportive housing programs — are operating by St. Elizabeth Shelter. Volunteers are needed to help prepare meals at the emergency shelters and perform other duties. Send an email to volunteer@ steshelter.org or call Rosario at 505-982-6611, ext. 108. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@ sfnewmexican.com.
NATION & WORLD
Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-3
Defense: General’s Last words came after systems shut down plea deal drops sex assault charge MALAYSIA AIRLINES FLIGHT 370
Around 14 minutes later, the transponder that identifies the The Associated Press plane to commercial radar systems was also shut down. The KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia fact that both systems went — When someone at the condark separately offered strong trols calmly said the last words evidence that the plane’s disapheard from the missing Malay- pearance was deliberate. On Sunday, Malaysian sian jetliner, one of the Boeing 777’s communications systems Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said at a had already been disabled, authorities said Sunday, adding news conference that that the final, reassuring words from to suspicions that one or both the cockpit — “All right, good of the pilots were involved in night” — were spoken to air disappearance of the flight. traffic controllers after the Investigators also examined ACARS system was shut off. a flight simulator confiscated Whoever spoke did not menfrom the home of one of the tion any trouble on board. pilots and dug through the Air force Maj. Gen. Affendi backgrounds of all 239 people on board, as well as the ground Buang told reporters he did not know whether it was the pilot crew that serviced the plane. or co-pilot who spoke to air The Malaysia Airlines jet took traffic controllers. off from Kuala Lumpur in the Given the expanse of land wee hours of March 8, headed to and water that might need to be Beijing. On Saturday, the Malaysearched, finding the wreckage sian government announced findings that strongly suggested could take months or longer. Or it might never be located. the plane was deliberately Establishing what happened diverted and may have flown with any degree of certainty as far north as Central Asia or will probably require evidence south into the vast reaches of from cockpit voice recordthe Indian Ocean. ings and the plane’s flight-data Authorities have said somerecorders. one on board the plane first The search area now disabled one of its communica- includes 11 countries the tions systems — the Aircraft plane might have flown over, and Communications Address- Hishammuddin said, adding ing and Reporting System, or that the number of countries ACARS — about 40 minutes involved in the operation had after takeoff. The ACARS increased from 14 to 25. equipment sends information about the jet’s engines and other data to the airline. By Chris Brummitt and Jim Gomez
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MEETING LIST WEEK OF MARCH 17, 2014 THROUGH MARCH 21, 2014 MONDAY, MARCH 17, 2014 5:00 PM ARTS COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue 5:00 PM FINANCE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall
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THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 2014 10:00 AM MAYOR’S COMMITTEE ON DISABILITY – Genoveva Chavez Community Center, Classroom 1, 3221 Rodeo Road 12:00 PM SANTA FE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT AGENCY JOINT POWERS BOARD – Santa Fe County Administration Building, Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Avenue 3:00 PM MARTY SANCHEZ LINKS DE SANTA FE ADVISORY COMMITTEE – Marty Sanchez Links de Santa Fe Administration Building, 205 Caja Del Rio 4:30 PM ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 4:45 PM MAYOR’S YOUTH ADVISORY BOARD – Santa Fe Prep, 1101 Camino De Cruz Blanca 5:15 PM SANTA FE REGIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD – CYFD Offices, 1920 Fifth Street 5:30 PM HUMAN SERVICES COMMITTEE – Market Station, Round House Conference Room, 500 Market Station, Suite 200
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 2014 9:30 AM DIVISION OF SENIOR SERVICES SENIOR ADVISORY BOARD OF DIRECTORS – Mary Esther Gonzales Senior Center, 1121 Alto Street 5:30 PM BICYCLE AND TRAIL ADVISORY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers 6:00 PM SANTA FE CIVIC HOUSING BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS – 664 Alta Vista Street
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TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 2014 1:00 PM MUNICIPAL TREE BOARD – The Barn at Frenchy’s Field, Corner of Osage and Agua Fria Streets 2:30 PM SUSTAINABLE SANTA FE COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room 3:00 PM PARKS AND OPEN SPACE ADVISORY COMMISSION – The Barn at Frenchy’s Field, Corner of Osage and Agua Fria Streets 4:00 PM PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers 4:30 PM SANTA FE PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD – Main Library, Pick Room, 145 Washington Avenue 6:00 PM BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT – City Council Chambers
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RALEIGH, N.C. — Defense attorneys said Sunday that the Army will drop sexual assault charges against a general under a plea deal that marks the end of a closely watched case that unfolded as the military grapples with sex crimes within the ranks. Lawyers representing Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Sinclair said he will plead to lesser charges in exchange for the dropping of the sexual assault charges and two other counts that might have required Sinclair to register as a sex offender. Sinclair, 51, had been accused of twice forcing a female captain under his command to perform oral sex during a threeyear extramarital affair. But the Army’s case against Sinclair crumbled in recent weeks as questions arose about whether the woman had lied in a pretrial hearing. The defense provided a copy of the plea agreement approved and signed by a high-ranking general overseeing the case. Sinclair is expected to enter the new pleas when his court martial reconvenes Monday morning at Fort Bragg. The married 27-year Army veteran pleaded guilty earlier this month to having improper relationships with three subordinate officers, including the female captain who accused him of assault. He also pleaded guilty to adultery, which is a crime in the military. Under the plea deal reached over the weekend, Sinclair will also admit abusing a government credit card he used while traveling to visit his mistress. Defense attorney Richard Scheff said that Sinclair is admitting to his mistakes, but added that the general is pleading guilty to behavior that likely wouldn’t be criminal in the civilian world. “After wasting millions of taxpayer dollars, the Army finally
admitted what it’s known for many months: General Sinclair is innocent of sexual assault,” Scheff said. “Brigadier General Jeffrey Sinclair has Sinclair admitted to mistakes that are normally a matter between husbands and wives, or employees and HR departments. It’s time to put this matter to rest.” The former deputy commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, Sinclair is believed to be the highest-ranking U.S. military officer to ever face court martial on sexual assault charges. A spokesman for Fort Bragg commander Maj. Gen. Clarence K.K. Chinn, who approved Sinclair’s plea deal, could not immediately be reached for comment. According to the defense, a separate agreement reached with Chinn will dictate what punishments Sinclair will receive. He could face more than 15 years in prison and dismissal from the Army, though the plea agreement is likely to call for a punishment much lower than the maximum penalties. That part of the agreement will remain secret until after the judge overseeing the case, Col. James Pohl, conducts a sentencing hearing later this week. That process will include testimony from about 20 witnesses.
movements. With more information, he said, the search zone could be narrowed “to an area that is more feasible.” Malaysia is leading the search for the plane and the investigation into its disappearance. In the United States, Dan Pfeiffer, senior adviser to President Barack Obama, told NBC’s Meet the Press that the FBI was supporting the criminal probe.
VI
The Associated Press
EXP
By Michael Biesecker
“The search was already a highly complex, multinational effort,” he said. “It has now become even more difficult.” The search effort initially focused on the relatively shallow waters of the South China Sea and the Strait of Malacca, where the plane was first thought to be. Hishammuddin said he had asked governments to hand over sensitive radar and satellite data to try to get a better idea of the plane’s final
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
U.S. warns Russia against annexing Crimea By Karen DeYoung The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Having failed to prevent a Russian-sponsored referendum in Crimea, the Obama administration and its European allies refocused their efforts Sunday on keeping Moscow from annexing the autonomous Ukrainian region and expanding its military moves into other parts of Ukraine. In a telephone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin — his third in two weeks — President Barack Obama said that the referendum “would never be recognized by the United States and the international community” and that “we are prepared to impose additional costs on Russia for its actions,” the White House said. An earlier White House statement, issued as Crimean polls
were closing on an overwhelming vote by residents to become part of Russia, called Moscow’s actions “dangerous and destabilizing” and said that “military intervention and violation of international law will bring increasing costs for Russia.” European Union officials are due to meet Monday to consider measures — including an asset freeze and a travel ban on as-yetunnamed Russian individuals deemed responsible for military aggression and corruption in Ukraine — that British Foreign Secretary William Hague said “must be adopted.” But how far the West is prepared to go in punishing Russia for the referendum, and how much further Putin intends to take his quest for control over part, if not all, of Ukraine, remain uncertain. Obama administration prom-
ises last week to exact a cost if the vote were held — even before new Russian military exercises on Ukraine’s eastern and southern borders and Saturday’s seizure of a Ukrainian gas plant just beyond Crimea’s northern boundary — would seem to make the imposition of at least some sanctions this week a foregone conclusion. The question for the West is whether harsh retribution now will make Putin more or less likely to desist from further action. Although he has so far been impervious to American and European threats, U.S. officials think that the cost the upheaval has already imposed on the Russian economy will become unbearable if Putin does not yield. The West could also suffer costs if Russia cuts off energy supplies to Europe and further
squeezes the Ukrainian economy. But Western officials say that is a price they are willing to pay and have pledged economic support to Ukraine. At the same time, the Obama administration wants to hold more severe punishment in reserve, to unleash in response to annexation or further Russian attempts to destabilize Ukraine. “In this century, we are long past the days when the international community will stand quietly by while one country forcibly seizes the territory of another,” the White House statement said. “We call on all members of the international community to continue to condemn such actions, to take concrete steps to impose costs, and to stand together in support of the Ukrainian people and Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.”
Short of immediate Russian annexation, U.S. officials said, post-referendum Crimea is likely to continue in a sort of limbo status — while both Russia and the West decide what to do about it. As he has since the Ukraine crisis began last month, Obama urged Putin to take advantage of “a clear path for resolving this crisis diplomatically” that would allow international monitors to investigate alleged abuses against the ethnic Russians in Crimea whom Moscow says it is protecting. The West, along with numerous reporters in the region, has said the abuses are largely nonexistent. The Kremlin also reported on the call, saying Putin told Obama that the referendum was “fully consistent with the norms of international law and the U.N. charter” and comparing the Crimea situation to the West’s
recognition of a legal framework for the breakup of the former Yugoslavia. Ukraine’s interim government, under close guidance from the United States and Europe, has offered constitutional reforms and consultation with Russia on a new arrangement for increased Crimean autonomy. Presidential elections scheduled for May 25 in Ukraine will “provide a legitimate opportunity for all Ukrainians to make their voices heard on the future of their country,” the White House repeated Sunday. But Obama, the White House said, “reiterated that a diplomatic resolution cannot be achieved while Russian military forces continue their incursions into Ukrainian territory and that the large-scale Russian military exercises on Ukraine’s borders only exacerbate the tension.”
Secede: Final results due Monday; Kiev calls referendum a ‘circus’ Continued from Page A-1 International Peace, suggested the confrontation could intensify. Russia “is really turning its back on the outside world and is basically going to say to the West, ‘Now, go ahead. Show us how tough you are.’ And the West, I think, is struggling to come with an adequate response.” The Crimean parliament planned to meet Monday to formally ask Moscow to be annexed, and Crimean lawmakers were to fly to Moscow later in the day for talks, Crimea’s pro-Russia prime minister said on Twitter. Russian lawmaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky said the annexation could take “from three days to three months,” according to the Interfax news agency. Some residents in Crimea said they feared the new Ukrainian government that took over when President Viktor Yanukovych fled to Russia last month would oppress them. “It’s like they’re crazy Texans in western Ukraine. Imagine if the Texans suddenly took over power [in Washington] and told everyone they should speak Texan,” said Ilya Khlebanov, a voter in Simferopol. Ukraine’s new prime minister insisted that neither Ukraine nor the
Pro-Russian residents celebrate in Lenin Square, in Simferopol, Ukraine on Sunday. Crimean voters overwhelmingly supported a contentious referendum on seceding from Ukraine and seeking annexation by Russia. VADIM GHIRDA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
West would recognize the vote. “Under the stage direction of the Russian Federation, a circus performance is underway: the so-called referendum,” Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said Sunday. “Also taking part in the performance are 21,000
Russian troops, who with their guns are trying to prove the legality of the referendum.” As soon as the polls closed, the White House again denounced the vote. “The international community will
not recognize the results of a poll administered under threats of violence,” it said in a statement. “Russia’s actions are dangerous and destabilizing.” Russia raised the stakes Saturday when its forces, backed by helicopter gunships and armored vehicles, took control of the Ukrainian village of Strilkove and a key natural gas distribution plant nearby — the first Russian military move into Ukraine beyond the Crimean peninsula of 2 million people. The Russian forces later returned the village but kept control of the gas plant. On Sunday, Ukrainian soldiers were digging trenches and erecting barricades between the village and the gas plant. “We will not let them advance further into Ukrainian territory,” said Serhiy Kuz, commander of a Ukrainian paratrooper battalion. Despite the threat of sanctions, Putin has vigorously resisted calls to pull back in Crimea. At the United Nations on Saturday, Russia vetoed a Security Council resolution declaring the referendum illegal. However, Putin spoke with President Barack Obama and supported a proposal from Germany to expand an international observer mission in Ukraine, the Kremlin said Sunday in a statement after the vote.
“The heads of state noted that despite the differences in their assessments, it was necessary to work together to find a way to stabilize the situation in Ukraine,” the statement said. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who also spoke with Putin on Sunday, wants more observers sent to tense areas, particularly in eastern Ukraine, her spokesman said. Putin told Obama that such a mission would be welcome but would need to be extended to all regions in Ukraine, the Kremlin said. In Donetsk, one of the main cities in eastern Ukraine, pro-Russia demonstrators called Sunday for a referendum similar to the one in Crimea. In the streets of Sevastopol, the Crimean port where Russia now leases a major naval base from Ukraine for $98 million a year, speakers blared the city anthem, but the military threat was not far away — a Russian naval warship still blocked the port’s outlet to the Black Sea, trapping Ukrainian boats. At a polling station inside a historic school, tears came to Vladimir Lozovoy, a 75-year-old retired Soviet naval officer, as he talked about his vote. “I want to cry. I have finally returned to my motherland. It is an incredible feeling. This is the thing I have been waiting for, for 23 years,” he said.
Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
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Lunes, el 17 de Marzo, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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EL NUEVO MEXICANO Charlas que vale la pena tener
M
ucho gusto, Santa Fe. Mi nombre es Esther J. Cepeda y mis columnas figurarán en sus páginas, con la esperanza de aumentar, así, su información y hasta de provocar su inspiración. Tiendo a citar muchos estudios de investigación — recorro publicaciones académicas para que ustedes no tengan que hacerlo — pues escribo sobre educación, especialmente sobre el movimiento reformista en la educación; sobre temas de salud, como la obesidad y la diabetes; sobre la crianza de los hijos y el bienestar general y sobre temas de actualidad de política e inmigración. Esther Por ser una ávida lectora, trato de Cepeda compartir lo que leo e incorporar mis hallazgos en columnas sobre las exigencias del trabajo, los logros, el equilibrio necesario en la vida y la comprensión del mundo en que vivimos. La pequeña parte del mundo donde me muevo es Chicago, Ill., donde vivo con mis dos hijos adolescentes, mi esposo, que es profesor de escuela secundaria, y mi perro. Con mucho gusto espero que me cuenten lo que es importante en su región.
CHICAGO — Hablar con los hijos puede ser difícil. Realmente difícil. Hasta aquellos niños que nunca dejan de charlar sobre todos los detalles imaginables de sus dibujos animados preferidos se quedan totalmente mudos cuando se les pregunta: “¿Cómo te fue hoy?” “¿Qué aprendiste en la escuela?” o “¿Qué novedades hay?” “No me gusta que me pregunten qué hay de nuevo,” declaró mi hijo de 12 años en el desayuno, el otro día. Bueno, por lo menos fueron 10 palabras más de las que obtengo generalmente. Mis preguntas parecen tener la misma respuesta, de una palabra, todos los días: “Bien” o “Nada.” Sin causar sorpresa a todo el que haya estado en un restaurante familiar el pasado año, un nuevo estudio de la publicación Pediatrics confirmó que, cada vez más, las familias van a comer juntas y después sus miembros se ignoran mutuamente, prestando atención a iPads, iPhones, videojuegos portátiles y cualquier otra manera de pasar el tiempo, mientras mamá y papá examinan su correo electrónico o navegan por Internet. Los investigadores observaron a 55 adultos que comían con uno o más niños pequeños en restaurantes al paso, en una única zona metropolitana. Identificaron después patrones comunes de utilización de aparatos. Cuarenta usaron sus aparatos portátiles durante las comidas y demostraron diversos grados de absorción con sus teléfonos, en lugar de con sus hijos. Los niños reaccionaron entreteniéndose solos o escalando sus llamados de atención. Los investigadores notaron que los adultos muy absortos a menudo respondieron duramente a la mala conducta de los niños. ¿Quién sabe si esos individuos son idiotas despistados o simplemente se encontraron con paredes de “Nada” o el habitual “No lo sé” tantas veces que se dieron por vencidos? De cualquier manera, no es necesario ser científico y estar al tanto de las últimas investigaciones sobre el impacto de las interacciones padres-hijos sobre el vocabulario, el control de la impulsividad y las relaciones interpersonales, para saber que este fenómeno no es positivo. Pero, ¿cómo logra uno que sus hijos, especialmente los adolescentes, hablen? Tal como pueden ver por mi “conversación” del desayuno, no soy ninguna experta. Pero sí tengo dos maneras probadas de entablar una conversación amplia y concienzuda con los niños, en la cena. No. 1: Preséntense con noticias. Durante el mes pasado mi familia ha conversado sobre la opinión de un columnista acerca de cómo tratar a individuos que han pasado por una tragedia o que están haciendo el duelo de una muerte cercana; y sobre la noticia de 10,4 millones de hombres, en la flor de la vida laboral, que no tienen puestos de trabajo y muchos que no los buscan. (Resulta que mi hijo de 15 años tiene la idea de ser un papá que se queda en casa. ¿Quién lo hubiera pensado?) Esta semana hablaremos de la crítica de A.O. Scott sobre el nuevo film de Wes Anderson “The Grand Budapest Hotel.” Hemos visto todas las películas de Anderson múltiples veces y realmente las “comprendemos,” pero no hará daño aclarar un par de cosas sobre la cultura europea del siglo XX y la Cortina de Hierro. Hablar de los acontecimientos del día es perfecto para los niños, porque practican una destreza fundamentalmente adulta, sin la presión de hablar sobre sí mismos. No.2: Preséntense con preguntas preparadas, una mente amplia y un toque suave. Esa técnica es especialmente adecuada para los que no hablan fácilmente. Obtengan el libro All About Me de Phillipp Keel, y simplemente larguen preguntas para que todos los de la mesa contesten. “[Describe] uno de tus momentos más pacíficos” o “[Describe] un país que te daría miedo explorar.” O prueben también The Game of Scruples. No jugamos ese juego de mesa durante las comidas; pero nos turnamos en leer las tarjetas del juego y en contestar honestamente. “Tu jefe se presenta en el trabajo con un horrible peinado y pregunta si te gusta. ¿Mientes y dices que ‘sí?’ ” “El cajero te dio un billete de 20 dólares de más. ¿Le dices a él o ella que cometió un error?” Algunas preguntas son delicadas — y algunas respuestas requieren mantener las emociones bajo control — pero definitivamente vale la pena hacerlas. Acabamos de comprar Would You Rather …? que presenta preguntas como: “¿Preferirías enterarte de que tus padres son en secreto espías o extraterrestres?” y “¿Preferirías que siete samuráis juraran protegerte o 500 hamsters?” Escogidas al azar, las preguntas que no son personales brindan a los niños la libertad de abrirse, sin sentir que arriesgan algo. Además se enteran de todo tipo de cosas sobre sus padres, también, haciendo que la conversación sea suficientemente entretenida para que participen hasta a los más devotos usuarios de teléfonos (y con la esperanza de que Mamá y Papá sean espías). La dirección electrónica de Esther Cepeda es estherjcepeda@washpost.com. Sígala en Twitter @estherjcepeda.
Hombre de la corte
Por Steve Terrell The New Mexican
P
atricio Serna recientemente visitó el edificio donde pasó 16 años — La Suprema Corte de Justicia de Nuevo México. Es obvio que Serna, 74, todavía ve con asombro el edificio — construido en 1937 por la agencia gubernamental de Administración para el Progreso de Obras del New Deal. De paso por la biblioteca de leyes, Serna, por hábito, susurra, aunque la biblioteca ha estado cerrada por varias semanas para renovar el piso. Él mostró con orgullo al reportero el segundo piso donde las paredes están cubiertas de retratos de jueces jubilados, incluyendo la suya. “Los azulejos vinieron de Italia,” comenta, apuntando al piso. “Me encantaba trabajar aquí.” Pero Serna, jubilado en agosto de 2012, ha estado muy ocupado como para pasar su tiempo viviendo en el pasado. Fue nombrado Santa Fe Living Treasure y al parecer está determinado a vivir como tal. Es mentor de una estudiante de leyes en su primer año, quien asiste a la Universidad de Nuevo México bajo una beca que lleva su nombre, establecida después de su retiro. La estudiante es una madre soltera de Santa Fe. “Cada dos semanas, voy y reviso como va todo con la estudiante y su trabajo escrito. Respondo a sus preguntas sobre diversos temas. Su avance es muy bueno. Es muy trabajadora.” Serna tiene una exposición de sus pinturas de paisajes de Nuevo México (cuatro acrílicos y una acuarela) en la Escuela de Leyes de UNM. Menciona que no tiene interés en vender las pinturas, pero está buscando tener impresiones para poner a la venta. La pintura, dice, fue algo que hizo de joven pero dejo de lado por muchos años para enfocarse en su familia y su carrera. Ahora está empezando una obra de no ficción sobre un capítulo reciente en la historia de Nuevo México – que no quiere discutir por el momento hasta que se acerque la fecha de publicación.
Y
El Presidente del Tribunal Patricio Serna se muestra en el segundo piso del edificio de la Suprema Corte de Justicia, donde las paredes están cubiertas de los retratos de jueces jubilados, incluyendo la suya. STEVE TERRELL/THE NEW MEXICAN
Aún es voluntario de The Food Depot cada miércoles. “Hasta adquirí un cinturón para mi espalda,” comenta. “Cargar los costales de papas de 50 libras, me deja la espalda adolorida.” La carrera de Serna parece salida de una historia de Horacio Alger. Nació en Reserve, N.M. en el Condado de Catron, uno de ocho hijos de Pablo Fajardo Serna. Su madre murió antes de que él tuviera 2 años. Cuando era niño, su casa no tenía drenaje o electricidad. Serna dice que le fue bien en la preparatoria y de hecho, fue el primer miembro de su familia en terminarla. Pero dijo que no tenía planeado asistir a la universidad hasta que el padre local lo ayudó a entrar al antiguo College of St. Joseph on the Rio Grande en Albuquerque. Después de graduarse, fue reclutado en el ejército de Estados Unidos por un término de dos años. Serna entonces obtuvo un título en leyes de la Universi-
dad de Denver y una maestría en leyes de Harvard. Trabajó en la Comisión de Igualdad de Oportunidades en Washington, D.C., luego regresó a Nuevo México en los 1970s para trabajar para el entonces Procurador General Toney Anaya. Fue elegido como Juez del Tribunal del Distrito en Santa Fe en 1984. En 1996, se postulo con éxito para la Suprema Corte. Serna comenta que al hablar con los jóvenes, dice, “Si este pobre muchacho de Reserve pudo llegar a ser Presidente del Tribunal del Distrito, piense lo que ustedes podrían llegar a ser. … Alguien como yo, sin linaje o posición social, pudo ir a la universidad, estudiar leyes, convertirse en abogado, para luego ser Juez de la Corte del Distrito, de la Suprema Corte de Justicia y Presidente del Tribunal, entonces el sueño americano si es posible.” Traducción de Patricia De Dios para The New Mexican.
Crucigrama No. 10583 CRUCIGRAMA NO 10583 Horizontales 2. Untar con aceite. 11. Nieto de Cam. 13. Estado independiente africano, con costa en el mar Rojo. 14. Otorga, dona. 15. Fracción de tropa regular marroquí. 17. Manchas del cutis. 18. Tejido de mallas. 19. Hueco abierto desde el suelo, en la pared exterior de una habitación, con barandilla generalmente saliente. 21. Combinación de silicio con oxígeno. 23. Ponen algo al viento para refrescarlo. 25. Tubo encorvado para trasegar líquidos. 26. Expresen alegría con el rostro. 27. (Tío) Personificación de los EE.UU. 29. Liebre de la Patagonia. 30. Especulará con valores. 34. Farfalloso. 36. Opus. 38. Símbolo del cobalto. 39. Rescata, saca de esclavitud al cautivo. 41. (Rudolf, 1858-1913) Ingeniero alemán, que inventó el motor que lleva su nombre. 43. Prefijo “vida”. 45. Piedra consagrada del altar. 46. Poner entre comillas una o varias palabras. 47. Descantilla menudamente con los dientes. 48. Decimotercera letra de nuestro alfabeto. Verticales 1. Instrumento músico de percusión. 3. Símbolo del neón. 4. Astil de madera armado con una punta de hierro para herir y otras dos para hacer presa. 5. Diez veces diez. 6. Abreviatura usual de “etcétera” 7. Te dirigirás. 8. Proposición mantenida
Canutito learns of ‘las ánimas en penas’
9. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18. 20. 22. 24. 27. 28.
31. 32.
33.
con razonamientos. (... en Hunze) Ciudad de Países Bajos. Conjunto de muchos eslabones enlazados entre sí por los extremos. Correspondiente a todos los días. Hermosea un sitio. Mezcla metales fundiéndolos. Sorteo. Embarcación ligera, de proa muy aguda y popa recta. Desgastad con la lima. (Jean Paul, 1743-1793) Médico y revolucionario francés. Tercer hijo de Adán y Eva. Pueblo indígena del grupo mayance que habita en el occidente del altiplano de Guatemala. Primer ministro británico. Elemento químico del grupo de los alcalinos, metal de color blanco, de propiedades parecidas al potasio. Beber aspirando.
www.angelfreire.com
O 10583 Solución del No.N10583 SOLUCION DEL 10582
35. Pavimentaré. 37. Desenredo o compongo el cabello. 38. Isla del este de Indonesia, en las Molucas. 40. Conjunto de bienes que la mujer aporta al matrimonio. 42. Pasa hacia afuera. 44. Elemento que se desprende de la descomposición electrolítica.
a casi era el Thursday de Holy Week. Canutito y Grama Cuca estaban sitting cerca de la mesa just talking. Grampo Caralampio came into la cocina todo hungry. “¡Ay, cómo tengo hambre!” he exclaimed. “I could eat un bonche de panqueques and ocho o nueves pedazos de bacon. And while you are preparándolos,” he said to Grama Cuca, “¿Por qué no me haces fry tres Larry Torres huevos also?” Growing up “¡Grampo!” Spanglish Canutito exclaimed. “Today is el Jueves Santo and on Holy Thursday we are supposed to fast de too much comida.” “That’s true,” Grama Cuca added. “En los días santos como Holy Thursday even los pajaritos ayunan.” “Really?” Canutito asked, todo impressed. “Do the little birds really fast en los holy days? They don’t even eat lombrices, maíz nor nada?” “That’s right,” Grama Cuca said. “No comen ni worms, ni corn ni nothing. People used to hacer believe que si no hacías fast en los holy days, when you died you would go pa’l Purgatorio.” “What is ‘el Purgatorio,’ grama?” Canutito asked her todo curious. “Purgatory is a place que no es Heaven y no es Hell. Pero es un place de purificación y los spirits que are there se llaman ánimas. Have you ever seen esa foto de una burning lady in chains que tengo en el bedroom? She is called ‘La Ánima Sóla.’ ” “I’ve always thought que la burning lady era un poco scary,” Canutito said. “Pero. ¿Por qué tiene chains en sus brazos?” “Las cadenas on her arms son her sins que la tienen weighed down,” grama said. “I wonder what kinds of pecados the lady commited que la tienen toda weighed down?” Canutito wondered out loud. “I bet que la lady probably went pa’l Purgatorio porque she washed her hair on Holy Thursday,” Grampo Caralampio threw in. That’s probably why she was penando.” “Was she really atoning for her sin porque she washed her cabello on Jueves Santo?” Canutito asked. “I didn’t know que era un sin for people to lavarse el cabello on Holy Thursday.” “It isn’t!” Grama Cuca exclamó. “That is just an old creencia que people used to have. Era una silly superstition.” “Entonces la Ánima Sóla is probably in chains porque she crossed her legs in church,” grampo said con convicción. “That is a sin.” “Es una otra silly tontera,” grama said. “Oh, thank God,” Canutito said, “Por qué the other day yo hize cross mis legs en la iglesia cuando one of them fell asleep.” “Entonces,” continued Grampo Caralampio, “La Ánima Sóla is probably en el Purgatorio porque she chewed gum in church. Now, I know que when you chew chíquite en la iglesia you are really chewing on the bones of dead people.” “Ésa es otra silly superstition,” grama said. “Es un sin porque no es respectful y porque people sometimes stick their gum under los asientos.” On the following day, que era Good Friday, Grampo Caralampio was hablando when a housefly flew into his open mouth and he swallowed it. “Ah, now you are going to become una ánima en penas,” Grama Cuca teased. “By swallowing ese mosco, you have eaten carne on Good Friday. Es una mortal sin to eat meat en el Viernes Santo. That will land you en el Infierno.” Grampo got todo scared. Maybe he should have washed his cabello on Jueves Santo instead …
A-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
TECH REVIEW
Google Glass takes uneasy first steps
Technology is groundbreaking, but also pricey, bulky and at times embarrassing
The Washington Post
The Associated Press
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Academy of Television Arts and Sciences member Meg Mimura, right, tries on Google Glass at the YouTube Space L.A. Tour and Happy Hour on March 7 in Los Angeles. CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION
ables yet,” he says. “[But] I’m ready. Others are ready.” Nevermind implants, I’m not sure I’m even ready for Google Glass. Specs in place for the first time, I walked out of Google’s Manhattan showroom on a recent Friday afternoon with a sense of unease. A wave of questions washed over me. Why is everyone looking at me? Should I be looking at them? Should I have chosen the orange Glass instead of charcoal? Ideally, Google Glass lets you do many of the things we now do with our smartphones, such as taking photos, reading news headlines or talking to our mothers on Sunday evenings — handsfree. But it comes with a bit of baggage. Glass feels heavier when I’m out in public or in a group where I’m the only person wearing it. If I think about it long enough my face starts burning from embarrassment. The device has been described to me as “the scarlet letter of technology” by a friend. The most frequent response I get from my husband when I try to slip Glass on in his presence is “please take that off.” This is the same husband who encouraged me to buy a sweater covered in googly-eyed cats. Instead of looking at the world through a new lens on a crowded rush-hour sidewalk, I felt as if the whole world was looking at me. That’s no small feat in New York, where even celebrities are afforded a sense of privacy and where making eye contact with strangers can amount to an entire conversation. But that’s just one side of wearing Google Glass. The other side is exhilarating. Glass is getting some bad press
In this Jan. 31 photo taken using Google Glass, vehicles stop at a traffic light in New York. BARBARA ORTUTAY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
lately. Some bars and coffee shops in Silicon Valley and Seattle have banned Google Glass, for example, and federal authorities in Ohio interrogated a man earlier this year after he was suspected of recording a movie with the device. Last month, Google put out a Glass etiquette guide that includes the appeal “don’t be creepy or rude.” But the truth is that it’s a groundbreaking device, even if it doesn’t take off, even if it evolves into something completely different, even if we laugh at it 10 years from now while driving our flying cars in the skies of Manhattan. I strolled around for a few hours with the cyborg glasses, happily snapping photos. With a mere wink, I captured snowy Lower Manhattan streetscapes and my reflection in the grimy subway-car windows. There were some whispers (“Did you see? Google Glass!”). There were some comments as
Experts say there is no proof that children’s apps are educational By Cecilia Kang
By Barbara Ortutay
NEW YORK haped like a lopsided headband, Google Glass is an unassuming piece of technology when you’re holding it in your hands. You feel as if you can almost break it, testing its flexibility. Putting it on, though, is another story. Once you do, this Internet-connected eyewear takes on a life of its own. You become “the person wearing Google Glass” and all the assumptions that brings with it — about your wealth, boorishness or curiosity. Such is the fate of early adopters of new technologies, whether it’s the Sony Walkman, the first iPod with its conspicuous white earbuds or the Segway scooter. Google calls the people who wear Glass “explorers,” because the device is not yet available to the general public. With its $1,500 price tag, the device is far from having mass appeal. At the South By Southwest Interactive tech jamboree in Austin this week, I counted fewer than a dozen people wearing it, including technology blogger Robert Scoble, who isn’t shy about posting pictures of himself in the shower, red-faced, water running, wearing the device. Google, like most successful technology companies, dreamers and inventors, likes to take a long view on things. It calls some of its most outlandish projects “moonshots.” Besides Glass, these include its driverless car, balloons that deliver Internet service to remote parts of the world and contact lenses that monitor glucose levels in diabetics. There’s an inherent risk in moonshots, however: What if you never reach the moon? Ten years from now, we may look back at Google Glass as one of those shortlived bridges that takes us from one technological breakthrough to the next, just as pagers, MP3 players and personal digital assistants paved the way for the era of the smartphone. Fitness bands, too, may fit into this category. In its current, early version, Google Glass feels bulky on my face, and when I look in the mirror, I see a futuristic telemarketer looking back at me. Wearing it on the subway while a homeless man shuffled through the car begging for change made me feel as if I was sporting a diamond tiara. I sank lower in my seat as he passed. If Google is aiming for mass appeal, the next versions of Glass have to be much smaller and less conspicuous. Though no one knows for sure where wearable devices will lead us, Rodrigo Martinez, life sciences chief strategist at the Silicon Valley design firm IDEO, has some ideas. “The reason we are talking about wearables is because we are not at implant-
No, an iPad won’t turn your baby into Einstein
I squeezed into the subway with my fellow commuters — comparisons to the Segway scooter, and a warning that it will prove to be a huge battery drainer if I use my iPhone to connect Glass to the Internet. For more human interaction, I walked into a small macaroon shop to buy a friend some birthday sweets. Alone but for the store clerks, I fumbled to take them off, find a place to put them on the small counter and get my wallet out of my bag. “Sorry. You’re the first people I’m interacting with wearing these. I don’t mean to be a jerk,” I told the man and woman at the counter. I took off Glass for the same reason that I take out my earbuds when I am talking to people. I don’t want to appear like I am not paying attention to them. It was fine, though. The woman thought Glass was cool. The man, he might not have, but he didn’t say anything.
Can mobile apps help babies learn their A, B, Cs and 1, 2, 3s? Doubtful, say several child development and educational experts from Harvard, Columbia and other universities in opinions that could hobble the breakneck growth of the online “baby genius” market. A slew of applications, some among the most popular on the iTunes and Android marketplaces, have captured the aspirations of parents hoping to give their babies — as young as newborns — an early start on education. But despite claims by Fisher-Price and other creators of the baby genius apps, there has never been conclusive research to prove that putting a baby in front of an app is educational. On Thursday, the consumer advocacy group Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, or CCFC, submitted the opinions of six experts on early childhood development and education to the Federal Trade Commission. The group was following up on a complaint last summer against Fisher Price for allegedly deceiving parents about the educational value of their Laugh & Learn apps for infants and small children. “Based on scientific evidence on how infants learn, I believe that claims that a two-dimensional touch screen app can teach alphabet letters, numbers and counting from 1 to 10 to babies [including those as young as 6 months] are inaccurate, seriously misleading to parents and potentially detrimental to infant development,” said Laura Berk, a professor of psychology at Illinois State University. “Advertising claims that touch screen devices can successfully teach number concepts and counting to babies as young as 6 months are deceptive,” wrote Herbert Ginsburg, a professor of psychology and education at Columbia University’s Teacher’s College. He added that very young children aren’t capable of learning numbers in the way Fisher-Price promises. “Existing research suggests that infants and very young children are not cognitively ready to learn key abstract ideas about numbers. Although some children at the upper bounds of this age range might learn to parrot some number words they are highly unlikely to learn important concepts of numbers.” Fisher-Price didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The FTC didn’t confirm whether it was investigating the CCFC’s claim against the toy maker. FTC staff met with CCFC director Susan Linn in September and asked the group if concerns arose from the use of mobile devices as educational tools or from claims the apps were capable of teaching reading and math concepts. Linn said the opinions by six experts show both the use of devices by infants and educational claims about the apps were troubling. “In addition to persuading parents to waste money on useless products, marketing products for babies as teaching numbers and letters sends a troubling and potentially harmful message to parents about learning and how babies should spend their time,” Linn said. Instead of parking babies in front of devices, she said, parents should be encouraged to engage in “hands-on creative play, active play, and active engagement with the adults who love them.” The thoughts echo those of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which says that any screen media should be discouraged for children under the age of 2. The AAP suggests more research should be done on the potential benefits or harms of mobile devices for young children. On Apple’s iTunes store, Fisher-Price notes that it sells a stuffed toy monkey to be used with its Laugh & Learn app. “Place your Apple device in the Monkey and press his paws to interact with the content on screen,” the instructions read. When a child taps on a letter, the monkey dances and sings the numbers aloud. At the center of the CCFC’s complaint filed to the FTC last summer is Fisher-Price’s claim that its suite of Laugh & Learn apps “teaches letters A-Z, numbers & counting 1-10, shapes, colors and action/reaction.”
Cars could be a step ahead of their drivers Mercedes works to develop sensors to predict preferences of those behind the wheel By Roy Furchgott
The New York Times
If a car already knows where you like your seat positioned, what radio stations you favor and how you want the air-conditioning set, would you be more likely to buy it? Mercedes-Benz thinks you might be. A project to develop what it calls the predictive user experience will observe how drivers and passengers use a car and analyze the data to anticipate their wants, from mirror positioning to GPS destinations. Those preferences could then be transferred among Mercedes — and only Mercedes — vehicles, adding a reason for customers to stay with the brand. “Today, when you purchase a car or lease a car, you need to spend a long time, sometimes weeks, before you set your car up the way you want it,” said Johann Jungwirth, chief
executive of Mercedes Research and Development North America. In the predictive technology project, created as a prototype for the Concept S-Class Coupé shown at the Frankfurt, Germany, motor show last year, all of a driver’s preferences and settings are transferable from car to car. The project is an offshoot of the development of so-called connected cars, a concept advancing rapidly with the drop in the price of sensors and processing power. It has become relatively inexpensive to measure anything from who is in the car to how a driver likes to shift gears — and analyze that input to predict the next action. What makes the Mercedes approach unusual is the degree to which it tunes its sensors in on the occupants. If the sensors
detect a child in the car at 7:30 a.m. on a weekday, it might automatically post a traffic report for the route to school on the navigation screen. No child on board? It could display traffic en route to the office. Jungwirth said no data would be shared without a driver’s permission. But there are advantages to sharing. Diagnostic monitoring would let dealers warn drivers of problems before they need roadside assistance. And as more cars are connected, broader benefits emerge: By monitoring cars’ suspensions to sense when a driver hits a pothole, the car could let authorities know where roadwork is needed. But first, people must be convinced that monitoring is in their interest, especially if they suspect that the information might be used to sell tires instead of fixing potholes.
If the sensors detect a child in the car at 7:30 a.m. on a weekday, it might automatically post a traffic report for the route to school on the navigation screen.
Frankie Thevenot, 3, plays with an iPad in 2011 at his home in Metairie, La. Despite all the mobile applications geared toward child development, some experts say using them could actually be detrimental to babies. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Monday, March 17, 2014
LIFE&SCIENCE
THE NEW MEXICAN
A-9
Health Science Environment
Joining the 3-D revolution
Chicago artist Joshua Harker’s creation Crania Anatomica Filigre, left, was made with 3-D printing technology that allowed him to sculpt the elaborate design.
Santa Fe science company at forefront of potentially game-changing technology
AP/JOSHUA HARKER
A new study has found that no region of the United States is allergy-free, but the kind of allergy people are likely to suffer from varies by region, race and socioeconomic status. TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES
Nowhere to hide: Allergies are everywhere By Nicholas Bakalar The New York Times
Brian Brown, associate director of CAD/CAM Laboratory at the National Institute for Aviation Research in Wichita, Kan., holds up a product that was made using a 3-D printer. 3-D printers are having a huge impact on prototyping and manufacturing. TRAVIS HEYING/THE WICHITA EAGLE
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n Charles Stross’ science fiction novel Hull’s patent identified “a system for Singularity Sky, published in 2003, an generating three-dimensional objects by steadvanced artificial intelligence makes reolithography.” Other variations followed, contact with inhabitants of a backwater according to a National Science Foundation planet by showering cellphones from a low time line, including one introduced in 1989 by orbit and speaking to anybody who a Massachusetts Institute of Techpicks one up to listen. The mesnology team led by Emanuel M. sage is that the visitors will provide Sachs. This one was called “threefood, cars, boats, clothing and dimensional printing techniques” almost anything in exchange for and detailed a process for binding local information. The goods are in specific areas, layer by layer, a made by something called a “corporous, powder-like material and nucopia machine” — “molecular then removing the unbonded powassemblers that can recreate objects der to produce a component in the from generic raw materials.” The desired shape. Roger scene is one of first attempts by a The various approaches to contemporary imagination to come Snodgrass 3-D printing are known collectively to grips with an emerging phenomas “additive manufacturing,” Science Matters enon known as three-dimensional which got a plug from President printing. Barrack Obama in his State of the Union address last month, when he Thirty years ago this month, Charles Hull referred to a new initiative by the National invented a version of 3-D printing, a technolAdditive Manufacturing Innovation Institute: ogy with a growing reputation as a global “3-D printing,” Obama said, “has the potential game-changer. The technology’s greatest to revolutionize the way we make almost promise may lie in manufacturing, according everything,” to Terry Wohlers, an expert analyst, who calculated that 28 percent of all money spent One of the small businesses recognized on 3-D printing last year was used to manuin the first round of funding by the institute facture industrial parts, up from 4 percent Obama mentioned was B6 Sigma, a subsid10 years ago. He predicts an overall 3-D print- iary of Sigma Labs Inc. in Santa Fe. B6 Sigma ing market of $6 billion by 2017. gets its name from a quality control concept that aims for a standard of manufacturing Custom-made items, including human perfection known as Six Sigma. The “B” cells and organs, shoes, toys and musical stands for “beyond” six sigma, or virtually instruments, as well all kinds of massbeyond perfection, according to Mark Cola, produced parts, fittings and souvenir swag, president and CEO of Sigma Labs. have impressed the community of business oracles. Consultants at McKinsey & ComThe company comes to 3-D printing with pany, among many other analysts, consider experience in processing and prototyping 3-D printing as a potentially transformative very high-end components, but also from force in the 21st-century economy. its dedicated experience in the area of “inThe Economist magazine said it might process quality control,” a manufacturing unleash the “third industrial revolution.” strategy that came out of the nuclear weap-
ons manufacturing process aimed at achieving “certified” products at critical levels of assurance. “Manufacturers are beginning to need to make and inspect their product, not in two steps, the way it is mostly done now and has been done for a long time,” Cola said about the drive for maximum efficiency. “We have patented a technique for making the production control knob and the inspection control knob one thing.” B6 Sigma uses a computerized analysis engine that takes raw data from sensors and mines it for features that tell all about the physics going in and the geometry coming out. “We’re measuring attributes of the process — heat, power, that the bed of powder is the right thickness. It’s not just data collection; it’s in-process monitoring,” he said. Now providing a variety of “in-process quality control” services for large manufacturers in the aerospace and defense industries, B6 Sigma is engaged in making superefficient joining components for Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner and is part of an ecosystem of additive manufacturing organized by General Electric Aviation for making a very large batch of super-efficient fuel nozzles for a new fleet of next-generation engines designed to use 15 percent less fuel. There are many challenges remaining on the way to perfecting the new 21st-century assembly line to get to one of the next goals, which Cola calls “lights-out manufacturing.” That’s where you have a room, let’s say, with a few hundred cornucopia machines working away, unattended, and you turn off the lights and go home with full confidence that everything will come out exactly right. Contact Roger Snodgrass at roger.sno@gmail.com.
People hoping to find an allergy-free haven may be out of luck. A new study has found that no region of the United States is allergy-free, but the kind of allergy people are likely to suffer from varies by region, race and socioeconomic status. Researchers gave blood tests to 8,124 people, 856 of them children under 6, to detect immunoglobulin E antibodies, or IgEs. The presence of an IgE antibody that reacts to a specific substance increases the risk of having an allergy-related illness like allergic asthma, hay fever or rash. The scientists tested people for antibodies to a range of potential allergens, including cats, dogs, milk, cockroaches, peanuts, grass, ragweed and shrimp. No matter where they lived, about 45 percent of people over 6 had positive tests for at least one allergen, and so did 36 percent of the children 1 to 5 years old. “To me, the biggest surprise is that the level of sensitivities didn’t differ region to region,” said the senior author, Dr. Darryl C. Zeldin, a scientific director at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. “This goes completely against what most people would have said. The bottom line is that sensitization patterns differ by region, but overall sensitization rates are high.” Grass and ragweed sensitivities were higher in the West, mold allergy more common in the East. Positive tests for indoor allergens were higher in the East than the West, but there were almost no regional differences for peanut, shrimp, egg, dog, cat, rat and mouse sensitivities. The most common positive tests among the adult group were for dust mites, grass and ragweed, with almost 20 percent of the population showing sensitivity to each. About 12 percent of people over 6 were sensitive to dogs or cats, and among the youngest children, milk and eggs were the most common positive tests. Inhalant allergies like ragweed and grass peaked in the teens and 20s, then decreased later in life. Race and socioeconomic status also made a difference. Non-Hispanic blacks had the highest sensitivity to all tested allergens except Russian thistle and egg. Sensitivity to cockroaches and shrimp were associated with lower economic status, and dog and cat allergies were more common in higher income groups. In large metropolitan areas, 50 percent of the population was sensitized to at least one allergen, but only 40 percent in rural areas. Outdoor allergens like grass and ragweed affected 37.8 percent of the urban population, but less than a quarter of people in nonmetropolitan areas, possibly because respiratory allergies are associated with air pollution. The study, published online in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, also found that allergies cluster in groups: people sensitive to dust mites are also likely to be sensitive to grass and tree pollen; sensitivity to peanuts, usually considered a food allergy, tends to cluster with plant allergies; cockroach and shrimp sensitivity are a common pair, probably because they contain a similar allergen, a protein called tropomyosin. Ganesa Wegienka, an epidemiologist at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit who was not involved in the research, said that the paper provided “a nice snapshot of what’s going on in the U.S.,” and she was especially impressed with the data on clusters of sensitivities. “This has implications for doctors and patients,” she said. “If a child is sensitized to one allergen in a cluster of allergens, maybe the doctor should be looking at other allergens in the cluster to think about treatment plans.”
Insomnia — there’s an app for that? By Molly Young
The New York Times
Insomnia is always a miserable experience, but at least it used to be an eclectic one. On long nights, a sleepless soul had options: toss and turn, pour a drink, smoke a cigarette, organize shoes, watch TV, count sheep, look out the window. Evelyn Waugh sipped a mixture of bromide and crème de menthe; William Styron stared straight ahead into the darkness. Now, the restless can reach for their smartphones and browse until the sun rises or sleep descends, mesmerized by something that provides stimulation without strain, distraction without effort. And it’s right there on the bedside table. In late 2012, the American Medical Association issued a policy stating that “exposure to excessive light at night, including extended use of various electronic media, can disrupt sleep or
exacerbate sleep disorders.” But even without the association’s corroboration, most of us understand intuitively that playing with our phones is about as sleep-conducive as bulldozing a plate of cookies. How, then, to explain the recent explosion of sleep-related apps? Browse the iTunes store or Google Play and you’ll find them by the dozen: offerings with names like SleepBot and eSleep, represented by icons of placid sheep or glowing moons. The offerings fall into two basic categories. One tracks sleep patterns through the smartphone’s accelerometer (the doodad that recognizes when your phone is upside-down), giving users a blueprint of their time in bed. The second promises to lull users to sleep with music, hypnosis or guided meditation. If you’re the data-driven type, a sleep-tracking app surely appeals. By placing the phone next to you in bed and tapping a button, you record
your movements and a sleep chart is created. But according to Dr. Clete Kushida, the medical director of the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center, these apps are hardly precise. “Without EEG — brain wave activity — it’s very hard to tell different stages of sleep apart,” Kushida said. “People can stay still and the device will think the person’s asleep.” Still, “the advantage of these devices is that they can help individuals become more aware of a potential sleep problem,” Kushida said. This is because we are not good at monitoring our own sleep habits, with or without a phone. “The reality of sleep is often at variance with the perception of sleep,” said Russell Sanna, executive director of the Harvard Medical School Division of Sleep Medicine. “When you ask people how well they slept after they’ve been in a sleep lab, they’ll give you an answer that’s often not a 1-to-1 correlation with
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
An explosion of sleep-related apps
ES I M TIM AD RK H S YO N RE EW KO E N TH
the results.” It doesn’t help that the pressure to maintain virtuous sleep habits has never been higher. A 2011 study published in Sleep, the journal of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, suggested that the annual cost in lost productivity from insomnia is $63.2 billion in the United States, while a more recent finding published in Science magazine suggests that sleep cleans the brain of toxic proteins “like a dishwasher,” as one of the study’s authors put it. A recent Fast Company article called “Secrets of the Most Pro-
ductive People” reported the long hours of slumber logged by Tory Burch, Pharrell Williams, Anthony Bourdain and other paragons of achievement. Those stressed out by such standards may want to download programs like Deep Sleep With Andrew Johnson, which combines tinkly music with meditation directed by the host, with a Sean Connery accent. Sleep Fan produces white noise, while Sleep Pillow Sounds offers a more comprehensive menu of noises, including “luxury car ride,” “mother’s heartbeat,” “cold drink with ice” and four varieties of wind chime. Tips offered by other apps include sniffing lavender oil, counting backward from 100, eating a banana, writing down problems, watching a slide show of nature-themed stock photos, replaying events from the day and pretending to float. When it comes to sedatives, there’s no one-size-fits-all.
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com
A-10
LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
Bagpiping brewer set to celebrate St. Paddy’s Ringside: Santa Fean marks holiday with his own tradition — a beer tasting for friends
cares about history? Hansen, who has lived in Santa Fe for 24 years and recently retired from his job as a hydrologist for the state, said he holds his annual St. Patrick’s Day parties in honor of his great grandBy Robert Nott mother, Mary McCarty, who married The New Mexican a Danish sailor named Hansen in the 1880s. Plus, his mother was of the ScotEdward Hansen still recalls the taste tish Clan MacMillan, he said. Mostly, of his first “real” beer — a Guinness however, Hansen enjoys making and stout on tap from a pub in Lancaster, tasting the beer. England, more than 40 years ago. Hansen started brewing his own beer “As a kid, I drank typical commercial about 35 years ago after years of tastbeers and wasn’t that crazy about them. ing unsatisfactory ales from stores and But tasting that first Guinness on tap bars. His brewery is located in his small was so smooth and creamy and flavor- kitchen; his primary tools are his oven, ful. It was very satisfying,” he said. stove and refrigerator. He had about On Monday, St. Patrick’s Day, Hansen 100 bottles of one of his beers in the will host his 34th annual Beer Tasting fridge on Sunday; the other two were in Gathering, a private event at his home tap kegs nearby. All told, he was set for in the Casa Solana neighborhood of his party with 15 gallons to serve. Santa Fe, during which he will unveil Around 4 p.m. Monday, he plans his three latest home-brewed beers. He to sit down and run two of his three will dress in green kilts and play a half- new beers through a taste test so he dozen tunes on his bagpipes. Though can name them before his shindig in many people associate kilts and bagthe evening. One of the three ales has pipes with Scottish culture, Hansen already been named by the bride of a pointed out that they are also traditions friend of Hansen’s who got married among the Irish. Of course, after imbib- several years ago. She called it Ball and ing several homemade beers, who Chain Ale.
Lead: N.M. has some limits on lead ammo widely in restricting lead ammunition. Colorado bans lead shot only accurate as lead bullets, Eagleson in the Alamosa/Monte Vista/Baca suggested hunters “get closer and National Wildlife Refuge Complex. hunt better.” But that still leaves plenty of land She said there are plenty of alter- where lead shot can be used. It is natives to lead sinkers that aren’t particularly popular for people who more expensive. shoot coyotes. Those carcasses are The link between lead and health eaten by a variety of other wildlife problems in humans and animals is that may eat the lead shot, Eagleson widely known. Lead accumulates said. in tissue over time. In people, it has Texas bans lead bullets for use on been linked to anemia and neurogame birds in wildlife management logical problems. Lead was federally areas and federal wildlife refuges. banned from paint in 1977 and from In 2013, California became the first pipes for drinking water in 1981. state to ban all ammunition containThe health impacts of lead shot ing lead. The ban will be phased in on waterfowl and scavengers have completely by 2019. been heavily studied in the past Not everyone agrees with few decades, but impacts on other restricting or banning lead ammuniwildlife have been studied less. A tion. 2011 study found high levels of lead The National Shooting Sports toxicity in a free-roaming cougar in Foundation trade group opposes Oregon. any bans or restrictions on “traThe federal government banned ditional ammunition” containing the use of lead shot for hunting lead cores unless “sound science” waterfowl over water bodies in 1991 proves lead bullets adversely affect after it was estimated that 2,700 wildlife, human or environmental tons of shot was ending up in wethealth. Hunters have used leadlands each year. More than 30 states, based ammo for centuries without including New Mexico, have some adverse health affects, according to restrictions on lead ammunition. a statement on the group’s website. New Mexico bans the use of lead Studies of lead toxicity in wildammunition when hunting comlife and birds are available from mon moorhens (marsh hens), soras The Journal of Wildlife Diseases, (marsh birds), Virginia rails, snipes, www.jwildlifedis.org. doves, band-tailed pigeons, upland game or migratory game birds on Contact Staci Matlock all lands owned or managed by the at 986-3055 or smatlock@ state Game Commission. sfnewmexican.com. Follow her New Mexico’s neighbors vary on Twitter @stacimatlock.
Continued from Page A-1
Boxes from lead ammunition, left behind by target shooters, sit around a pond on the Caja del Rio mesa. STACI MATLOCK/THE NEW MEXICAN
Santa Fe home-brewer Edward Hansen plays a medley of Irish tunes on his bagpipes in anticipation of his 34th annual St. Patrick’s Day celebration. ROBERT NOTT/THE NEW MEXICAN
“They’re still married,” Hansen said of the couple. Hansen, 62, began learning how to play the bagpipes about 10 years ago. He is now a member of the local Order
of the Thistle Pipe and Drums. “You learn for 10 years and you practice for 10 years and then you play for 10 years, and then you know how to play,” he said. “So I have a ways to go.” Although the pipes were loud as he played a medley of “The Wearing of the Green,” “The Minstrel Boy” and “Kelly, the Boy From Killane” in his living room, he said his next-door neighbor luckily likes the music. Hansen sports many official titles, including “The First Grand Duke of Big Rapids,” “Chieftain of the Clan MacMillan (Laird of the Black Moor),” “Baron de Santa Fe” and (most recently) “The First Ambassador to the Planet Vulcan.” He even has a working vintage Star Trek telephone that he pulls out for his annual beer-tasting party. How did he earn all these titles? “They’re self-appointed,” he said. And though he can recite a rudimentary history of St. Patrick, to Hansen the day is all about the ale itself. “For me, beer is a drink you can have anytime, anywhere,” he said. Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
Tracking alcohol abuse in Santa Fe County
DWI REPORT
Sheriff DWI arrests DWI/DUI crashes MUI/MIP* Seized vehicles
FEB. 21 5 1 7
2014 43 7 2 14
SFPD FEB. 21 0 3 28
2014 51 0 9 64
NMSP
FEB. 17 1 1 NA
2014 38 5 1 NA
TOTAL 132 12 12 78
MUI/MIP: MINORS UNDER THE INFLUENCE/MINORS IN POSSESSION OF ALCOHOL SOURCE: SANTA FE UNDERAGE DRINKING PREvENTION ALLIANCE
Police notes
Sunday at the intersection of Don Gaspar Avenue and Paseo de Peralta after he was stopped for running a red light. u Deputies arrested Jose Ortiz, 56, of The Santa Fe Police Department is Santa Fe at about 7:20 p.m. Saturday and investigating the following reports: u Michelle Renee Sprunk, 22, of Española charged him with aggravated DWI, posseswas arrested at about 4:30 p.m. Saturday sion of an open container and resisting or on shoplifting charges after she allegedly obstructing an officer after he was stopped was caught attempting to steal a Keurig for failure to maintain a single lane on N.M. coffeemaker worth $109 from Wal-Mart, 599. Deputies reported that Ortiz failed to 5701 Herrera Drive. obey visual commands to stop for about u Nick Armijo, 27, of Rio Rancho was a mile, and open containers of Budweiser arrested at about 2:40 p.m. Saturday after were found in his vehicle. he allegedly tried to forcibly take a womu Abdiel Lopez-Alvarado, 37, of Santa Fe an’s purse at McDonald’s, 3299 Cerrillos was arrested at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday Road. Witnesses said that as Armijo tried in the parking lot of Camel Rock Casino to flee in his car, he attempted to strike on charges of aggravated DWI, possesthe victim and others with his vehicle. sion of an open container and resisting While responding to this report, police also or obstructing an officer after another arrested Crystal Rosasco, 35, of Santa Fe driver made a 911 call to report his driving. and charged her with possession of a conWhen deputies caught up with the Lopeztrolled substance, possession of drug para- Alvarado at the casino, they asked him to phernalia and trafficking of a controlled step out of the vehicle, and he allegedly substance. attempted to walk away from them. When The Santa Fe Sheriff’s Office is inves- a deputy attempted to restrain Lopeztigating the following reports: Alvarado, he reportedly tried to pull away. u Deputies arrested Andrew Navariz, 25, Deputies said Lopez-Alvarado had a bloodof Santa Fe on Saturday after responding alcohol content of 0.16 or greater and there to a report of a domestic dispute on El Sol was an open can of Modelo beer in his Court. vehicle. u A Sierra Azul resident reported that someone stole a Bank of America debit Speed SUVs card and a wedding ring set valued at u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles $2,500 on an unknown date. Then, someare not in use as the city renegotiates its time Friday through Saturday, someone contract with Redflex Traffic Systems. used the stolen debit card to withdraw about $9,555 from the victim’s account. u On Saturday, a Bishops Lodge Road Help lines resident said someone used her identity in Esperanza Shelter for Battered an attempt at monetary gain. No further Families hotline: 800-473-5220 details were released. St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 DWI arrests Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 u Police arrested Michael Oman, 38, Youth Emergency Shelter/Youth of Santa Fe and charged him with driving while intoxicated at about 12:20 a.m. Shelters: 438-0502
Winter taught him life lessons Continued from Page A-1 ketball powerhouses of that era. Bob Cousy, an early legend of the NBA, tried to recruit Pino to Boston College, where Cousy was about to take over as basketball coach. In the end, Pino chose Kansas State for a simple reason. He loved the coach, Tex Winter, who made him only one promise: If Pino got hurt and could no longer play basketball, he would still keep his athletic scholarship. Pino appreciated that. It meant Winter had his interests at heart, and it made the prospect of a college degree seem more attainable than ever. Pino majored in business and minored in Spanish at Kansas State. He became fluent in a language he thought he knew as a boy in Santa Fe. College was all he had hoped for, and basketball with Winter was a joy. The coach taught the triangle offense, but he excelled at life lessons, the most important being attitude. “He would put his thumb and index finger an inch apart and say, ‘Nick, you’re this close to being an all-American.’ ” Winter’s exhortations made Pino work harder. Raised during the Great Depression, Winter treated life as a great adventure best navigated with encouragement. This was not to say that Winter was a pushover. “He got rid of several all-Americans,” Pino said. “He’d say, ‘I’m sending you home,’ though I should add that he didn’t exactly put it that way.” As a senior at Kansas State in 1968, Pino helped the Wildcats win the Big 8 Conference championship and qualify for the NCAA Tournament. Only 16 teams were invited back then. Kansas State was leading TCU by double digits in the first round of the tournament when Pino injured a knee and was sidelined. With Pino out, TCU rallied to win by 5 points. That troublesome left knee ended Pino’s chance to make the Los Angeles Lakers roster. He went into the insurance business, first in Kansas, then in Santa Fe. He moved back home in 1985 so he could be close to his parents in their twilight years. Pino is 69 now. He said he loves running a business, and he still believes that an upbeat attitude is the first ingredient of success, in basketball and in life. “I never liked the negative stuff. I could never have played for Bob Knight,” he said of the former Indiana and Texas Tech coach, who was famous for winning, but notorious for belittling his players. With the arrival of the NCAA Tournament, productivity will drop in every office in every town. Endless hours will be spent marking and erasing pages filled with teams and brackets. The irony is that the teams in the tournament have a work ethic second to none. Pino is still working hard, too. All those years ago, as a bony teenager they called “Nick the Stick,” he learned that being almost 7 feet tall was not nearly enough to succeed. Ringside Seat is a column about New Mexico’s people, politics and news. Follow the Ringside Seat blog at www.santafenewmexican.com. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@sfnewmexican.com.
Fill: New Mexicans selected for jobs in water, science, Indian Affairs ment at FERC since 2009 and was a law professor at The University of among others. Its offices manage the New Mexico for several years. nation’s waterways, mineral resources, He is awaiting confirmation to fish and wildlife, and national parks. the commission, which oversees the Connor, who served as a key staff agency that regulates interstate transmember for former Sen. Jeff Bingaman, mission of oil, natural gas and electricwas confirmed by the Senate in Febru- ity, in addition to licensing hydropower ary. plants. Norman C. Bay was nominated to France Córdova, a former Los Alachair the Federal Energy Regulatory mos National Laboratory astrophysiCommission in January. Bay has served cist and past president of Purdue Unias the director of the Office of Enforce- versity, was recently confirmed by the
Continued from Page A-1
Senate to direct the National Science Foundation. Approved by Congress in 1950, the foundation grants more than 20 percent of the federal funds for scientific research at American colleges and universities. Although Cordova doesn’t hail from New Mexico originally, she spent years at the national lab and currently lives in Santa Fe. Her term will last six years. Gloria Valencia-Weber is waiting for confirmation to the board of Legal Services Corporation, which manages
legal aide for those who can’t afford attorneys. If confirmed, her term would expire in 2017. Other New Mexicans appointed to positions by President Barack Obama in the past couple of years include Deborah K. Jones, confirmed by the Senate in 2013 as ambassador to Libya, and Richard G. Olson, ambassador to Pakistan. Kevin Washburn, former dean of The University of New Mexico’s School of Law was confirmed in 2012
as assistant secretary for Indian Affairs, replacing Larry Echo Hawk, who was from Farmington. Former New Mexico Environment Department Secretary Ron Curry was appointed by the president as administrator of EPA Region 6, a position that does not require Senate confirmation. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
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Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Nation needs pipeline for water S tupid question: With all the hand-wringing about the lack of water, why can’t we build a pipeline down from Canada? If they can build the Keystone, why not build something that actually benefits Americans? I imagine it comes down to money (and profit), as usual.
Shop smart, not local
Willard Morrow
Ray Rivera Editor
B SEND US yOUR lEttERS Send your letters of no more than 150 words to letters@sfnewmexican. com. Include your name, address and phone number for verification and questions.
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. Patricia Hopkins Lattin
Right to the road I hope the letter (Letters to the Editor, “Arrogant Riders,” March 11) was a joke. The writer complains that when he and his car are courteous to bike riders, the riders don’t acknowledge the courtesies with a nod or wave of appreciation. Although not a bike
Santa Fe
Walled off With regard to the March 12 story on the Historic Districts Review Board’s objections (“H-board delays El Castillo’s proposed memory center”) to El Castillo’s new memory center on East De Vargas Street: I fully agree with a board mem-
ber’s negative assessment that “all you see is a massive wall with no break in it and an institutional building that bears no resemblance to a historic structure.” The new exterior is deplorable aesthetically and historically, and in its visual symbolism of walling off patients whose failing memories have already put them into a kind of prison. However, the H-board must have reviewed accurate drawings of the street facade months ago; interested Santa Fe residents did. Why did members not act then? If the board wishes to have credibility, it needs to do its job in a timely fashion, not complain publicly when it might be too late. David Jenness
Santa Fe
COMMENTARY: CATHERINE RAMPELL
To women: More than grades matters
A
Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Bookstores: In transition
Santa Fe
Santa Fe County
Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001
OUR VIEW
Jenn Anderson
Santa Fe-area residents — take advantage of the stupidity of the City Council and the city bag ban and have a fun outing. Go to Albuquerque and do your chain store shopping — get your plastic bags — have lunch and get gas on your way home. Sure, the profits and sales tax go to Albuquerque or the pueblos and none to Santa Fe. But there is an alternative to the Shop Local, Get Screwed Local mindset of the Santa Fe City Council. By shopping smart, you will have bags for your bathroom trash and don’t have to buy the plastic bags. Fill ’em up and toss them in the trash just like the ones you buy. Too bad the Santa Fe merchants and workforce will take the loss on the profits and tips. If jobs are lost due to lost sales — the employees will have to pack their stuff in reusable bags and move on — maybe to Albuquerque.
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message to the nation’s women: Stop trying to be straight-A students. No, not because you might intimidate easily emasculated future husbands. Because, by focusing so much on grades, you might be limiting your earning and learning potential. The college majors that tend to lead to the most profitable professions are also the stingiest about awarding A’s. Science departments grade, on a four-point scale, an average of 0.4 points lower than humanities departments, according to a 2010 analysis of national grading data by Stuart Rojstaczer and Christopher Healy. And two new research studies suggest that women might be abandoning these lucrative disciplines precisely because they’re terrified of getting B’s. Claudia Goldin, an economics professor at Harvard, has been examining why so few women major in her field. The majority of new college grads are female, yet women receive only 29 percent of bachelor’s degrees in economics each year. Goldin looked at how grades awarded in an introductory economics class affected the chance that a student would ultimately major in the subject. She found that the likelihood a woman would major in economics dropped steadily as her grade fell: Women who received a B in Econ 101, for example, were about half as likely as women who received A’s to stick with the discipline. The same discouragement gradient didn’t exist for men. Of Econ 101 students, men who received A’s were about equally as likely as men who received B’s to concentrate in the dismal science. Another research project, led by Peter Arcidiacono at Duke University, is finding similar trends in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. These STEM majors, as with economics, begin with few women enrolling and end with even fewer graduating. This
“leaky pipeline” has been somewhat puzzling, Arcidiacono said, because women enter college just as prepared as men in math and science. On average, women more eagerly spend time studying than men do, a trait that should theoretically attract women to STEM fields, which generally assign more homework. Plenty has been written about whether hostility toward female students or a lack of female faculty members might be pushing women out of male-dominated majors such as computer science. Arcidiacono’s research, while preliminary, suggests women might also value high grades more than men do and sort themselves into fields where grading curves are more lenient. It’s not clear from the data why women might be more sensitive to grades than men are. “Maybe women just don’t want to get things wrong,” Goldin hypothesized. “They don’t want to walk around being a B-minus student in something. They want to find something they can be an A student in. They want something where the professor will pat them on the back and say, ‘You’re doing so well!’ ” Guys,” she added, “don’t seem to give two damns.” So maybe the better question is: Why aren’t men scared off by rigid grading curves? Male students could be more overconfident — effectively, college bros shrug off gentleman’s C’s (or, more often today, gentleman’s B’s) as unrepresentative of their true brilliance. Or maybe men have their “eyes on the prize,” in Goldin’s phrasing. U.S. college graduates with STEM and economics degrees have among the highest median salaries. Men might be more likely to see themselves as future breadwinners and persevere in studies that are likely to maximize their earnings — come hell or high water or B-minuses.
MAllARD FillMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
Of course earning potential isn’t the only — or even most — important factor in choosing a discipline. (Art History Mob, please don’t come after me, too!) Intellectual fulfillment and passion count a lot. But I fear that women are dropping out of fields such as math and computer science not because they’ve discovered passions elsewhere but because they fear delivering imperfection in the “hard” fields that they (and potential employers) genuinely love. Remember, on net, many more women enter college intending to major in STEM or economics than exit with a degree in those fields. If women were changing their majors because they discovered new intellectual appetites, you’d expect to see greater flows into STEM fields, too. Colleges have a role in helping women realize that quantitative fields are within their reach. Administrators might try to reduce the grading differential between humanities and STEM fields or provide better support systems for women who get discouraged. But women must also change their myopic attitudes about the significance of grades. Women, admirably, want to excel — and usually do, academically. We earn, on average, higher grades than men in almost every subject. (Partly, presumably, because women seem to disproportionately take classes we know we’ll do well in.) But if women want to compete with the big boys, in the disciplines and professions where men continue to dominate, we need to overcome our B-phobia. Rinse yourselves of the intoxicating waters of Lake Wobegon, ladies, and embrace meaningful mediocrity. Catherine Rampell, a former economics reporter for the New York Times, writes a twice-weekly column for The Washington Post.
emoaning the state of the independent bookstore and the future of publishing is commonplace these days. It’s no secret that the world of words is in transition from books on paper to e-books, with no one able to see the future. Best-selling author James Patterson, though, is doing more than moaning. He has decided to throw his lot with the independent sellers of books across the country, aiding them as they battle Amazon, chain stores and other online merchants. To do so, Patterson has pledged $1 million of his personal fortune. He is handing out grants so that bookstore owners can give raises, improve their stores and expand their literary outreach. Two independents in Albuquerque were among the first winners of his grants last month. Patterson believes words matter, that literature matters and that bookstores matter as a place to gather and celebrate writing. It’s been a tumultuous ride for books and publishing over the past few decades. First, big chains such as Borders (gone) and Barnes & Noble (wobbly) moved in, hurting the smaller stores with their something-for-everyone aisles and overwhelming choices. Amazon, the ubiquitous online seller, then moved in to undercut the chains with quick service, unlimited selection and cheap prices. Now, of course, books are turning into e-books, with the reader being able to buy cheaply, with less of a cut going both to publisher and to writer. Amazon is still in the mix, selling books for the Kindle app or its proprietary Kindle product; big chains are on the ropes, and it’s anyone’s guess what will happen not just to bookstores, but to actual books. Patterson believes the future of reading is strong — but he wonders, without publishers or agents, who will help find the next great American novel. Or, he muses, without bookstores, who will help expose readers to the book they need but might miss. In Santa Fe, of course, we are fortunate to have thriving independent bookstores — whether the iconic Collected Works, able to expand in a recession, or Garcia Street Books, The Ark Bookstore, Bee Hive children’s bookstore and so many others (like Moby Dickens in Taos). In this town, people still gather to browse on a Saturday or to attend a poetry reading and meet the author on a Sunday afternoon. Teens, even, enjoy coffee while reading magazines and chatting with friends. Bookstores — as well as our public libraries — are places where people become more intelligent and inquiring. Patterson is right to worry. Like many industries as the world shifts, the publishing business faces uncertainty. Traditionally, agents would read labored-over manuscripts, sorting through pounds of paper to find a touch of genius. That model is dying. We don’t know whether there will be a replacement or whether the Internet will end up sorting through books for readers. The best-selling Fifty Shades of Grey started as an e-book published by an independent publisher in Australia. In the meantime, thanks to Patterson for putting his money to helping bookstores weather these trying times. Alone, he cannot be the solution to maneuvering the transition. Still, a few thousands here, a few thousands there, and perhaps more bookstores can hang on until publishing shakes itself out.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: March 17, 1914: Judge Abbott this afternoon granted Mrs. Benito Romero a divorce from her husband on the grounds of abandonment. He is believed to have gone to Wagon Mound, N.M. March 17, 1989: The warm spring-like weather last weekend brought Lynda McGovern out of her house to plant flowers in her backyard. As she knelt on the ground to place a mum inside the hollow of an elm tree, out came a writhing mass of garter snakes. She recalls the snakes as being 2½ to 3 feet long, all 15 of them. Thoroughly frightened, McGovern called a county animal control officer who said snakes are not animals and he could not help her. “Oh stupid me,” she said. “They’re reptiles.” The officer suggested she call pest control. Using the sticky paper suggested by the pest control people seemed just too cruel and inhumane to McGovern. Finally Charles W. Painter, a herpetologist with the state Dept. of Game and Fish, said to “hang tough for a while.” And the snakes would disburse.
DOONESBURy
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
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MONDAY, MARCH 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 NCAA Tournament B-4 Weather B-5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
B
Fascination: Pistorius trial enters popular culture. Page B-3
TENNIS BNP PARIBAS OPEN
Djokovic beats Federer to win title tally strong and have that self-belief. That’s something that definitely makes this title very special to me.” INDIAN WELLS, Calif. — Novak Federer rallied from a break down and a Djokovic came into Indian Wells for the 5-3 deficit in the third set to force the tiefirst time in four years without a title. breaker, but he made a slew of mistakes to He left with a $1 million check and his lose the 33rd meeting between the rivals. first trophy of the year, beating Roger Federer still leads the series 17-16, having Federer 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3) on Sunday to win the beaten Djokovic in three sets in the semifiBNP Paribas Open for the third time. nals at Dubai two weeks ago. Djokovic will remain No. 2 in the world, while Federer “Not winning a title and coming here, there were certain doubts,” Djokovic said. “I will rise three spots to No. 5 on Monday in the ATP Tour rankings. had ups and downs in my concentration in opening rounds, but I managed to stay menFlavia Pennetta routed injured Agnieszka By Beth Harris
The Associated Press
Radwanska 6-2, 6-1 to win the women’s title, the biggest of her career. Federer was trying to win a record fifth title in the desert, and at 32, he would have been the oldest Masters 1000 winner since 34-year-old Andre Agassi won at Cincinnati in 2004. But Djokovic wouldn’t allow it. After Federer breezed to the first set in 31 minutes, Djokovic settled down and locked into the punishing rallies that marked most of the match. He earned the
Please see TiTLe, Page B-2
Novak Djokovic of Serbia kisses the trophy Sunday after beating Roger Federer of Switzerland 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 to win the final match of the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif. MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
MEN’S NCAA TOURNAMENT
NASCAR
The die is cast
Lobos get No. 7 seed in South; NMSU gets No. 13 seed in West
Edwards leads Ford sweep at wet Bristol By Jenna Fryer
The Associated Press
BRISTOL, Tenn. — After two rain delays lasting more than five hours, a slick race track wasn’t going to stop Carl Edwards from celebrating his first win of the season. He pulled his car to the start/finish line at Bristol Motor Speedway, climbed out to his window ledge and prepared for his celebratory backflip. Then, Edwards had a brief moment Carl Edwards of clarity. “Oh, man, I thought, ‘This is stupid. I shouldn’t do this. … It’s awfully glossy. It might be slick,’ ” he said. “I didn’t want to stick it perfectly and have my feet go that way and break my arm on the concrete. That would have been terrible. I was actually really nervous about that.” But on this rain-soaked Sunday night, Edwards was going for the big finish to another long day for NASCAR.
Please see BRisToL, Page B-2
BASEBALL
New Mexico’s Alex Kirk, center, hoists a trophy with his teammates after winning the Mountain West Conference championship against San Diego State on Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. New Mexico now faces No. 10 Stanford in the NCAA Tournament. ISAAC BREKKEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
By Eddie Pells
The Associated Press
T
he man in charge of the NCAA selection committee insists a win in November is worth the same as a win in March. Don’t believe him? Check out the seeds slapped beside these conference champions: u A 7 for New Mexico of the Mountain West. u A 4 for Louisville of the American Athletic.
u A 4 for Michigan State of the Big Ten. u Yet another 4 for UCLA of the Pac-12. Oh, and don’t forget that 8 for Kentucky, which had the ball and a chance to beat Florida, the NCAA Tournament’s top overall seed, in the waning seconds of the SEC title game. The Lobos received a surprising 7-seed in the South region and drew a first-round matchup Friday against Stanford in St. Louis. Opposite UNM in
inside u NCAA Tournament bracket. Page B-4
the round of 32 is a potential rematch with Kansas, the South’s No. 2 seed. The Jayhawks beat New Mexico in Kansas City back in December. New Mexico State landed the No. 13 seed in the
Please see ncaa, Page B-4
Surprises still possible without ‘Dunk City’ By Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press
Sam Houston State’s James Thomas, center, is fouled by Stephen F. Austin’s Nikola Gajic, right, as Jacob Parker assists on the defense during the first half of Saturday’s championship game of the Southland Conference in Katy, Texas. BOB LEVEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mercer has already been to “Dunk City” on the way to its first NCAA Tournament since 1985, grounding the darling team everyone got to know last March. Florida Gulf Coast, which last year became the first No. 15 seed to make it to the Sweet Sixteen, isn’t in this 68-team field after losing at home to Mercer in the Atlantic Sun Conference championship game. So can those Bears (26-8) from Macon, Ga., duplicate what their Atlantic Sun rival did last year? Will another double-digit seed step up in all the madness this year? Maybe it could be the team from deep in the heart of Texas with a 28-game winning streak. Or possibly some Fightin’ Blue Hens, Chanticleers or Jaspers. Mercer’s five senior starters are at least getting a chance they felt was missed last March. The Bears drew a No. 14 seed in the loaded Midwest Regional and play Duke on Friday in Raleigh, N.C. While watching FGCU’s captivating NCAA run last year, after the Eagles won at Mercer for the Atlantic Sun title, all that went through Bears guard Langston Hall’s mind was, “That could have been us.”
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
Stephen F. Austin (31-2), the Southland Conference team from Nacogdoches, Texas, hasn’t lost in nearly four months — only No. 1 Florida and No. 2 Wichita State have won more games. The Lumberjacks, a No. 12 seed facing VCU on Friday, were also motivated this season by a conference championship loss last March that left them out of the Big Dance then. “It was definitely disappointing but it’s definitely fueled our engines for this year. We’ve been playing with a chip on our shoulder,” said Jacob Parker, the floppy-haired junior forward who was the Southland Conference Player of the Year. “We always say one team, one dream. And coach’s big motto is dream big.” Ivy league champion Harvard (26-4) is in its third consecutive NCAA Tournament after a 66-year drought and is a No. 12 seed against Cincinnati. The Crimson got their first NCAA tourney win last year as a No. 14 seed, upsetting New Mexico 68-62. But Harvard’s lone victory last March was overshadowed by that No. 15 seed from “Dunk City.” One of the No. 15 seeds this season is Eastern Kentucky (24-9), an OVC team that is among the national leaders for made 3-pointers (9.2 per game) and steals (8.8). The Colo-
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Hall of Famer recovers from skin cancer Schmidt treated for stage 3 melanoma By Ben Walker
The Associated Press
CLEARWATER, Fla. — Mike Schmidt sat down at a picnic table beyond the left-field wall on a sunny morning at Bright House Field, then scooted over to seek the shade of some palm trees and a light tower. He wasn’t taking any chances. The 64-year-old Hall of Famer is recovering from an advanced form of skin cancer that kept him from being Mike Schmidt a guest instructor with the Philadelphia Phillies in spring training. Schmidt was in camp Sunday and publicly spoke for the first time about his illness — stage 3 melanoma, and the two operations, radiation and chemotherapy treatments that followed. “I feel fantastic right now,” he said. Looking fit and trim, the threetime NL MVP is scheduled for a scan Monday to see how far his recovery has progressed. He still plans to join
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inside u D-Backs, Dodgers off to Australia to open season. Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT www.sanTafenewmexican.com
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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
HOCKEY hockey
NhL eastern conference
Atlantic GP Boston 67 Montreal 69 Toronto 69 Tampa Bay 67 Detroit 67 Ottawa 67 Florida 68 Buffalo 68 Metro GP Pittsburgh 67 Philadelphia 67 Columbus 67 N.Y. Rangrs 69 Washingtn 69 New Jersey 68 Carolina 68 N.Y. Islanders 69
W 45 37 36 36 30 28 25 19 W 44 35 35 36 32 29 29 26
L 17 25 25 24 24 26 35 41 L 19 25 26 29 27 26 30 34
oL Pts GF 5 95 215 7 81 174 8 80 203 7 79 194 13 73 175 13 69 190 8 58 169 8 46 132 oL Pts GF 4 92 209 7 77 192 6 76 195 4 76 177 10 74 201 13 71 166 9 67 169 9 61 195
Western conference
BASEBALL bASebALL GA 146 174 211 175 188 221 221 202 GA 167 193 184 170 207 176 194 233
central GP W L oL Pts GF GA St. Louis 67 46 14 7 99 223 151 Colorado 68 44 19 5 93 209 181 Chicago 68 39 15 14 92 231 179 Minnesota 67 35 22 10 80 164 164 Dallas 67 32 24 11 75 193 192 Winnipeg 69 31 29 9 71 193 201 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 69 45 17 7 97 214 165 Los Angeles 68 38 24 6 82 165 144 Phoenix 68 32 25 11 75 188 193 Vancouver 70 31 29 10 72 167 190 Calgary 68 27 34 7 61 165 202 Edmonton 69 24 36 9 57 171 224 Note: Two points are awarded for a win; one point for an overtime or shootout loss. Sunday’s Games Vancouver 4, Florida 3, SO Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 3 Washington 4, Toronto 2 Edmonton 2, Carolina 1 San Jose 1, N.Y. Rangers 0 Colorado 3, Ottawa 1 Montreal 2, Buffalo 0 Chicago 4, Detroit 1 Winnipeg 7, Dallas 2 Saturday’s Games Columbus 2, Minnesota 1, SO Boston 5, Carolina 1 Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh 0 Montreal 5, Ottawa 4, OT Tampa Bay 3, New Jersey 0 N.Y. Islanders 4, Buffalo 1 St. Louis 4, Nashville 1 Phoenix 3, Calgary 2 Anaheim 2, Los Angeles 1 Monday’s Games Minnesota at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Vancouver at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m. Winnipeg at St. Louis, 6 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.
NhL cALeNdAr
April 13 — Last day of regular season. April 16 — Stanley Cup Playoffs begin. May 25-31 — NHL combine, Toronto.
Sunday Avalanche 3, Senators 1
colorado 0 1 2—3 ottawa 0 0 1—1 First Period—None. Penalties—Holden, Col (hooking), 1:24. Second Period—1, Colorado, Benoit 6 (Bordeleau, Duchene), 15:49. Penalties—Colorado bench, served by Malone (too many men), 5:04. Third Period—2, Colorado, Holden 7 (McGinn, Duchene), 3:10 (pp). 3, Colorado, Mitchell 9 (Landeskog, MacKinnon), 17:02. 4, Ottawa, Zibanejad 12 (E.Karlsson, Ryan), 19:54. Penalties—Neil, Ott (freezing the puck), 2:25. Shots on Goal—Colorado 4-8-10—22. Ottawa 4-20-15—39. Power-play opportunities—Colorado 1 of 1; Ottawa 0 of 2. Goalies—Colorado, Varlamov 34-13-5 (39 shots-38 saves). Ottawa, Lehner 7-12-5 (22-19). A—19,501. T—2:26.
MLb Spring Training
AL W L Pct Cleveland 14 3 .824 Seattle 14 5 .737 Tampa Bay 11 4 .733 Baltimore 10 6 .625 Detroit 10 7 .588 New York 10 9 .526 Kansas City 8 8 .500 Minnesota 7 7 .500 Oakland 8 8 .500 Los Angeles 8 9 .471 Houston 7 9 .438 Chicago 6 8 .429 Boston 7 10 .412 Toronto 7 10 .412 Texas 5 10 .333 NL W L Pct Miami 11 7 .611 San Francisco 11 7 .611 Pittsburgh 10 7 .588 Arizona 11 9 .550 Washington 10 9 .526 Chicago 9 10 .474 New York 8 9 .471 Colorado 8 10 .444 St. Louis 6 8 .429 Milwaukee 8 11 .421 Cincinnati 8 12 .400 Los Angeles 6 10 .375 San Diego 6 10 .375 Atlanta 7 12 .368 Philadelphia 5 12 .294 Note: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. Sunday’s Games Minnesota 4, Miami (ss) 2 N.Y. Mets (ss) 10, St. Louis 4 Tampa Bay 8, Boston 4 Toronto 4, Baltimore 3, 10 innings Washington (ss) 4, Houston 3 N.Y. Yankees (ss) 7, Atlanta 4 Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 0 Detroit 2, Washington (ss) 1 N.Y. Yankees (ss) 7, Miami (ss) 0 Cleveland (ss) 3, Chicago Cubs (ss) 2 Texas 14, Chicago White Sox 8 Cincinnati 7, Oakland 6 Chicago Cubs (ss) 6, N.Y. Mets (ss) 3 Seattle 5, L.A. Angels 3 Cleveland (ss) 5, San Francisco 1 L.A. Dodgers 3, Colorado 3, tie Kansas City 9, San Diego 6, 10 innings Arizona 6, Milwaukee 5 Monday’s Games N.Y. Yankees vs. Pittsburgh, 11:05 a.m. Washington vs. Detroit, 11:05 a.m. Atlanta vs. Houston, 11:05 a.m. St. Louis vs. Boston, 11:05 a.m. Baltimore (ss) vs. Philadelphia, 11:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Miami, 11:05 a.m. Chicago Cubs (ss) vs. Oakland, 2:05 p.m. San Fran. vs. L.A. Angels (ss) , 2:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. Cincinnati, 2:05 p.m. Chic. White Sox vs. Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m. Colorado vs. San Diego, 2:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (ss) vs. Cubs (ss), 2:05 p.m. Minnesota vs. Baltimore (ss) at, 5:05 p.m. Texas vs. Kansas City, 7:05 p.m.
TENNIS TeNNiS
ATP-WTA Tour bNP Paribas open
Sunday 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 - championship Novak Djokovic (2), Serbia, def. Roger Federer (7), Switzerland, 3-6, 6-3, 7-6 (3). Women - championship Flavia Pennetta (20), Italy, def. Agnieszka Radwanska (2), Poland, 6-2, 6-1.
GoLF GOLF
PGA Tour Valspar championship
Sunday at Palm harbor, Fla. Purse: $5.7 million yardage: 7,340; Par: 71 Final J. Senden, $1,026,000 72-71-64-70—277 Kevin Na, $615,600 70-68-68-72—278 S. Langley, $387,600 71-69-69-70—279 L. Donald, $235,600 71-72-67-70—280 R. Garrigus, $235,600 69-66-70-75—280 W. McKnzie, $235,600 73-70-68-69—280 G. McNeill, $190,950 73-71-67-70—281 G. DeLaet, $148,200 75-68-71-68—282 M. Every, $148,200 68-71-72-71—282 D. Hearn, $148,200 71-70-70-71—282 M. Mnssro, $148,200 69-70-71-72—282 J. Rose, $148,200 71-68-69-74—282 G. Woodland, $148,200 72-71-70-69—282 S.-Moon Bae, $94,050 72-73-71-67—283 J. Dufner, $94,050 72-73-68-70—283 Bill Haas, $94,050 69-73-72-69—283 C. Hadley, $94,050 75-70-67-71—283 C. Howell III, $94,050 71-70-74-68—283 J. Kokrak, $94,050 74-68-68-73—283 Jim Furyk, $64,068 71-69-71-73—284 F. Jacobson, $64,068 70-71-70-73—284 C. Pettrssn, $64,068 71-70-71-72—284 T. Potter, Jr., $64,068 73-71-67-73—284 J. Spieth, $64,068 71-70-71-72—284 R. Ishikawa, $42,587 73-72-72-68—285 C. Tringale, $42,587 74-71-70-70—285 B. Harman, $42,587 71-70-73-71—285 C. Hoffman, $42,587 70-72-67-76—285 M. Hoffmann, $42,587 74-69-71-71—285 R. Knox, $42,587 70-73-70-72—285 J. Teater, $42,587 73-70-70-72—285 R. Allenby, $31,540 73-71-70-72—286 J. Byrd, $31,540 70-73-70-73—286 E. Compton, $31,540 72-73-72-69—286 Ben Crane, $31,540 70-72-71-73—286 J. Hicks, $31,540 72-72-70-72—286 J. Merrick, $31,540 70-70-72-74—286 C. Collins, $23,940 73-71-69-74—287 H. English, $23,940 72-69-74-72—287 J. Hahn, $23,940 69-74-70-74—287 M. Kuchar, $23,940 73-71-69-74—287 K. Streelman, $23,940 73-69-71-74—287 Y.E. Yang, $23,940 73-72-70-72—287
euroPeAN Tour Trophee hassan ii
Sunday at Agadir, Morocco Purse: $2.08 million yardage: 6,951; Par: 72 Final A. Canizares, Esp 62-68-69-70—269 Andy Sullivan, Eng 66-73-72-63—274 Seve Benson, Eng 63-68-74-71—276 M. A. Carlsson, Swe 65-71-72-68—276 Richard Bland, Eng 69-70-70-68—277 R. Cabrera-Bello, Esp 68-67-75-67—277 Wade Ormsby, Aus 68-71-70-68—277 David Horsey, Eng 72-64-72-70—278 Tom Lewis, Eng 69-74-70-65—278 Paul Waring, Eng 72-69-67-70—278 L. Bjerregaard, Den 72-69-67-67—280 Jorge Campillo, Esp 71-69-70-70—280 G. Coetzee, SAf 71-69-70-68—280 Rob. Karlsson, Swe 71-67-70-72—280 Richie Ramsay, Sco 72-71-68-69—280 Brett Rumford, Aus 72-71-68-66—280
chAMPioNS Tour Toshiba classic
Sunday at Newport beach, calif. Purse: $1.75 million yardage: 6,584; Par 71 Final Fred Couples, $262,500 65-67-66—198 C. Montgomerie, $128,042 67-70-62—199 Steve Pate, $128,042 68-65-66—199 B. Langer, $128,042 63-66-70—199 Michael Allen, $64,225 66-67-67—200 Scott Dunlap, $64,225 68-64-68—200 Jeff Hart, $64,225 65-67-68—200 Mark O’Meara, $64,225 71-65-64—200 Kenny Perry, $64,225 66-65-69—200 Loren Roberts, $43,750 69-66-66—201 Kirk Triplett, $43,750 66-67-68—201 Fred Funk, $34,563 67-68-67—202 Jay Haas, $34,563 68-67-67—202 Tom Pernice Jr., $34,563 69-67-66—202 Duffy Waldorf, $34,563 66-68-68—202 Tom Byrum, $27,125 68-66-69—203 Russ Cochran, $27,125 70-66-67—203 Peter Senior, $27,125 70-63-70—203 Esteban Toledo, $27,125 67-65-71—203
Title: Pennetta wins women’s
AUTO RACING AuTo rAciNG
NAScAr SPriNT cuP Food city 500
Sunday At bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .533 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (12) Carl Edwards, Ford, 503 laps, 119.2 rating, 47 points, $234,225. 2. (21) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 503, 98.9, 42, $166,400. 3. (23) Aric Almirola, Ford, 503, 101.9, 41, $160,161. 4. (37) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 503, 87.1, 40, $148,083. 5. (5) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 503, 89, 39, $131,145. 6. (1) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 503, 97.8, 39, $116,865. 7. (6) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 503, 88.6, 37, $143,051. 8. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 503, 106.3, 37, $114,965. 9. (38) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 503, 83.3, 35, $131,440. 10. (20) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 503, 104.5, 34, $128,160. 11. (26) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 503, 67.4, 33, $143,176. 12. (8) Greg Biffle, Ford, 503, 74, 32, $139,240. 13. (3) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 503, 120.4, 33, $153,826. 14. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 503, 104, 31, $139,398. 15. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 503, 67.5, 30, $133,531. 16. (9) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 503, 76.6, 28, $104,865. 17. (30) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 502, 62.7, 27, $123,273. 18. (36) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 502, 55.6, 26, $104,340. 19. (11) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 501, 87.4, 26, $146,551. 20. (4) Joey Logano, Ford, 500, 92.3, 25, $138,231. 21. (28) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 500, 66.9, 23, $123,629. 22. (16) David Gilliland, Ford, 500, 65.6, 22, $119,598. 23. (32) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 499, 48.4, 21, $91,865. 24. (14) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 499, 74.8, 20, $102,990. 25. (22) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 498, 62.2, 19, $109,448. 26. (34) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 497, 44.3, 18, $106,123. 27. (25) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 497, 53.6, 17, $111,762. 28. (35) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 497, 44.9, 16, $94,065. 29. (7) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 496, 99.7, 16, $138,806. 30. (31) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 496, 34.5, 0, $92,115. 31. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 495, 43.6, 13, $100,315. 32. (33) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 493, 41.4, 12, $89,740. 33. (39) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 491, 35.2, 11, $89,690. 34. (41) Parker Kligerman, Toyota, 487, 31.8, 10, $89,640. 35. (13) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 473, 68.8, 10, $89,590. 36. (29) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 471, 52.2, 8, $117,448. 37. (24) Michael McDowell, Ford, 469, 40.8, 7, $89,479. 38. (17) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, accident, 453, 84.5, 7, $121,894. 39. (27) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, accident, 450, 99.2, 6, $121,713. 40. (18) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 430, 39, 4, $76,680. 41. (42) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, rear gear, 322, 27.6, 0, $80,680. 42. (40) Ryan Truex, Toyota, accident, 271, 30.4, 2, $68,680. 43. (43) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, accident, 160, 23.9, 1, $65,180. race Statistics Average Speed of Winner: 84.051 mph. Time of race: 3 hours, 11 mins, 23 sec. Margin of Victory: Under Caution. Caution Flags: 12 for 95 laps. Lead changes: 20 among 12 drivers.
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 45 35 33 29 19 W 49 37 26 25 13
Western conference
NbA boxScoreS Sunday Spurs 122, Jazz 104
NcAA bASkeTbALL Men’s AP Top 25
Sunday’s Games No. 1 Florida 61, Kentucky 60 No. 6 Virginia 72, No. 7 Duke 63 No. 22 Michigan St. 69, No. 8 Michigan 55 Saint Joseph’s 65, No. 23 VCU 61 Monday’s Games No games scheduled. Tournament Sunday’s Games Atlantic 10 conference championship Saint Joseph’s 65, VCU 61 Atlantic coast conference championship Virginia 72, Duke 63 big Ten conference championship Michigan St. 69, Michigan 55 ecAc division ii championship Lincoln (Pa.) 65, Caldwell 49 Southeastern conference championship Florida 61, Kentucky 60 Sun belt conference championship Louisiana-Lafayette 82, Georgia St. 81, OT
Women’s Top 25
Sunday’s Games No games scheduled. Saturday’s Game No. 22 Middle Tenn. 84, Southern Miss 55 Tournament Sunday’s Games Atlantic Sun conference championship Florida Gulf Coast 72, Stetson 70, OT colonial Athletic Association championship James Madison 70, Delaware 45 horizon League championship Wright St. 88, Green Bay 69 Missouri Valley conference championship Wichita St. 73, Drake 49 Northeast conference championship Robert Morris 78, St. Francis (Pa.) 64 Southland conference championship Northwestern St. 62, Stephen F. Austin 44
NbA cALeNdAr
April 16 — Last day of regular season. April 19 — Playoffs begin. May 20 — Draft lottery. June 5 — NBA Finals begin. June 16 — Draft early entry withdrawal deadline.
Bristol: Rain delayed Daytona
lone break of the second set to go up 5-3 after Federer pulled a forehand wide. “I know he always comes out confident, aggressive,” Djokovic said. “He doesn’t give you the victory; you have to earn it.” Djokovic got the early break in the third, again on one of Federer’s forehand errors, to lead 2-1. His 112-mph ace gave him a 4-2 lead, and he extended it to 5-3 with a backhand winner down the line. Federer served a love-game to trail 5-4. Djokovic served for the match in the next game, but his forehand error allowed Federer to tie it up, 5-all. “I was able to just keep the pressure on Novak and show him that if he slips up, I will be there and I will make it a very competitive match in the end for him,” Federer said. Federer held at love again and Djokovic gave up just one point on his serve for a 6-all tie. “I made my presence after that,” Djokovic said. “I stepped closer to the line and made him play an extra shot always and changing the pace of the ball. It paid off.” The Serb raced to a 5-1 lead in the tiebreaker, helped by four errors from Federer. Another of Federer’s forehand errors gave Djokovic a 6-2 lead before the Swiss star’s ace ensured Djokovic would have to win the match on his serve. He did, when Federer’s backhand landed in the net. “At the end, he made sure he kept the ball in play and I might have made a few too many errors when it really mattered,” Federer said. Djokovic’s victory evened their rivalry on hard courts at
The start was delayed by almost two hours, racing began and the field got to Lap 124 before the sky opened again, and the race was stropped for another 3 hours, 18 minutes. Much like the season-opening Daytona 500, which was stopped by rain for almost six hours, the threat of more bad weather bringing a sudden halt to the race forced the drivers to go hard every single lap. So when a caution with 77 laps remaining sent most of the field to pit road, Edwards’ crew chief, Jimmy Fennig, made the call to leave his driver on the track. The move gave Edwards the lead on the restart with 70 laps remaining. “I thought when Jimmy said we’re going to stay out, I thought, ‘Well, that’s a good idea,’ ” Edwards said. “And then nobody stayed out around us, and I thought, ‘Oh boy, that might not be the greatest thing.’ It turned out to be perfect.” He had no trouble pulling out to an easy lead and had victory in sight when the yellow caution lights came out right before the scheduled white flag lap. No one was sure what the caution was for and Fennig even wondered if water damage might have inadvertently caused the lights to turn on. Then the sky suddenly opened and NASCAR had no choice but to declare the race over. NASCAR said after the race that someone in the flag-stand accidentally leaned on a switch to trigger the lights. NASCAR was forced to issue a full caution “because operation of the lights was comprised.” “No harm, no foul, let’s act like it just didn’t happen,” Edwards told NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton. Edwards led Roush Fenway Racing teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. across the finish line. Aric Almirola from Richard Petty Motorsports was third as Ford drivers swept the top three spots — one day after a Ford team won the Twelve Hours of Sebring sports car race for the first time since 1969. It was Edwards’ 22nd career victory, third at Bristol, but first of the season — and the one that should clinch him a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship under NASCAR’s new qualifying format. “We’re in the Chase and we’re going to go
are strong. We have so many years on the tour, and we know how to handle the emotion and everything.” As the 20th seed, Pennetta became the lowest to win the title. She came in ranked 21st and is projected to rise to No. 12 in the world Monday in the WTA Tour rankings. She beat top-seeded Li Na in the semifinals on her way to winning the title worth $1 million. Radwanska, seeded second, was bothered with a left knee injury during the final. She twice called for the trainer in the second set and had her knee heavily taped. She was in tears apologizing to the sympathetic crowd afterward, saying she was unable to run. Pennetta threatened from the first game of the match, when she held two break points and had one more in the third game. She finally converted in the fifth game on Radwanska’s errant backhand, then broke again in the seventh game on the Pole’s forehand error.
Gb — 31/2 11 16 221/2 Gb — 11 131/2 16 271/2 Gb — 12 231/2 24 361/2
uTAh (104) Jefferson 3-9 0-0 8, Kanter 3-11 2-3 8, Favors 12-19 4-5 28, Burke 6-12 0-0 13, Hayward 7-13 3-4 17, Williams 3-7 1-1 8, Burks 5-11 2-4 12, Evans 2-2 0-0 4, Garrett 0-3 2-2 2, Rush 0-1 0-0 0, Gobert 0-0 0-0 0, Clark 1-2 0-0 3, Lucas III 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 42-91 15-21 104. SAN ANToNio (122) Leonard 4-8 1-2 11, Duncan 7-10 2-2 16, Splitter 6-7 2-4 14, Parker 7-11 4-4 18, Green 2-5 0-0 5, Ginobili 8-11 3-4 21, Mills 4-7 0-0 12, Belinelli 5-7 1-2 12, Diaw 3-5 0-0 6, Baynes 1-4 1-1 3, Joseph 1-2 0-0 2, Bonner 0-0 0-0 0, Ayres 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 49-78 14-19 122. utah 23 30 23 28—104 San Antonio 26 35 30 31—122 3-Point Goals—Utah 5-11 (Jefferson 2-3, Clark 1-1, Burke 1-2, Williams 1-3, Burks 0-1, Hayward 0-1), San Antonio 10-16 (Mills 4-5, Leonard 2-2, Ginobili 2-5, Belinelli 1-1, Green 1-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Utah 47 (Kanter 11), San Antonio 42 (Splitter 10). Assists—Utah 19 (Hayward 6), San Antonio 31 (Parker 7). Total Fouls—Utah 18, San Antonio 19. A—18,242.
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13 wins apiece. The Serb won his other Indian Wells titles in 2008 and 2011. A year ago, Pennetta was close to retiring from tennis. Her ranking plunged to 166th in the world in June, and she had struggled to rebuild her career after having right wrist surgery the previous August. Now she’s glad she stuck around. “After so many years, so much work and everything, this is the moment I always waited for,” she said. “And it’s coming when you don’t expect. It was something I was waiting since long time, and finally I have a good trophy in my hands.” Actually, the crystal trophy was so heavy, she didn’t hoist it for photographers. The 32-year-old Italian became the third-oldest winner of the desert tournament after Martina Navratilova, who won at age 33 and again at 34 in 1990-91. It was Pennetta’s first title since winning at Marbella in 2010. “We are old, but we still good athletes,” Pennetta said. “We
Pct .569 .516 .403 .328 .227 Pct .703 .530 .493 .453 .284 Pct .742 .561 .388 .379 .194
Southwest W L Pct Gb San Antonio 50 16 .758 — Houston 44 22 .667 6 Dallas 40 27 .597 101/2 Memphis 39 27 .591 11 New Orleans 27 39 .409 23 Northwest W L Pct Gb Oklahoma City 48 18 .727 — Portland 43 24 .642 51/2 Minnesota 33 32 .508 141/2 Denver 29 37 .439 19 Utah 22 45 .328 261/2 Pacific W L Pct Gb L.A. Clippers 48 20 .706 — Golden State 42 26 .618 6 Phoenix 38 28 .576 9 Sacramento 23 44 .343 241/2 L.A. Lakers 22 44 .333 25 x-clinched playoff spot Sunday’s Games Charlotte 101, Milwaukee 92 Phoenix 121, Toronto 113 Miami 113, Houston 104 New Orleans 121, Boston 120, OT Minnesota 104, Sacramento 102 Dallas 109, Oklahoma City 86 San Antonio 122, Utah 104 Golden State 113, Portland 112 L.A. Clippers 102, Cleveland 80 Monday’s Games Philadelphia at Indiana, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Phoenix at Brooklyn, 5:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Chicago, 6 p.m. Utah at Houston, 6 p.m. Boston at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Denver, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Miami at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Toronto at Atlanta, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Portland, 8 p.m. Washington at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Orlando at Golden State, 8:30 p.m.
Continued from Page B-1
Roger Federer of Switzerland hits to Novak Djokovic of Serbia in the final match of the BNP Paribas Open on Sunday in Indian Wells, Calif. MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
L 28 31 40 45 51 L 19 31 34 35 48 L 17 29 41 41 54
Suns 121, raptors 113
PhoeNix (121) Tucker 3-4 4-5 11, Frye 3-7 2-2 9, Plumlee 3-6 3-4 9, Bledsoe 2-5 10-10 14, Dragic 6-11 5-6 19, Mark.Morris 6-12 4-4 16, Green 9-18 5-6 28, Len 0-1 0-0 0, Marc.Morris 4-8 0-0 10, Smith 2-3 1-1 5. Totals 38-75 34-38 121. ToroNTo (113) Ross 7-13 4-4 22, Johnson 9-12 2-4 20, Valanciunas 7-11 1-1 15, Lowry 9-19 8-9 28, DeRozan 6-16 5-5 17, Hansbrough 1-1 0-0 2, Salmons 1-5 0-0 2, Vasquez 0-5 2-2 2, Novak 1-2 0-0 3, Hayes 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 42-85 22-25 113. Phoenix 37 24 35 25—121 Toronto 35 24 31 23—113 3-Point Goals—Phoenix 11-23 (Green 5-8, Marc.Morris 2-4, Dragic 2-4, Tucker 1-1, Frye 1-4, Mark.Morris 0-2), Toronto 7-23 (Ross 4-8, Lowry 2-8, Novak 1-2, Salmons 0-1, DeRozan 0-1, Vasquez 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Phoenix 53 (Mark.Morris 14), Toronto 34 (Lowry, Valanciunas 5). Assists— Phoenix 17 (Dragic 4), Toronto 27 (Lowry 13). Total Fouls—Phoenix 23, Toronto 27. Technicals—Green, Phoenix Coach Hornacek, Toronto Coach Casey, DeRozan. A—18,717.
Crew members cover the cars during a weather delay Sunday at the Sprint Cup series at Bristol Motor Speedway in Bristol, Tenn. WADE PAYNE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
win this championship,” said Edwards. Stenhouse was disappointed he didn’t get a shot to race his teammate for the win. “I was thinking that I would use the bumper if the opportunity was there,” he said. “If you get the win, you’re in the Chase and you can let the rest take care of itself later. That’s what I was really thinking if we went back green. I was thinking about doing whatever I could to win.” And Almirola also was having trouble accepting the final outcome. “It’s frustrating because I had one shot to race Carl for the lead, and these races are so hard to win,” he said. “It was a great day for us, I’m not disappointed at all with third, but when you see it and you can taste it and it’s that close, you wonder what could have went different.” Tony Stewart salvaged a horrific start to the weekend — he qualified 37th — by finishing a season-best fourth. “I’m pretty excited about that,” Stewart said. “Everybody just worked hard all weekend. We had a long way to go from Friday, when we weren’t very good and every day we just got better and better. So, I’m really proud of this team.” Marcos Ambrose was fifth as both of RPM’s drivers finished inside the top five. Pole-sitter Denny Hamlin was sixth in the highest-finishing Toyota and was followed by Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Kasey Kahne. Brian Vickers was ninth and rookie Kyle Larson rounded out the top 10.
SPORTS
Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
BASEBALL
D-Backs, Dodgers off to Australia to open season
Teams will play each other, Australian national squad at historic cricket grounds in Sydney By Bob Baum
The Associated Press
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — “G’donya” to the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers. They’re off to Australia to open the major league baseball season. Both teams played a spring training game Sunday, then were to board their chartered planes for a flight of 15 hours or so to Sydney. Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick, who never has been to Australia, called it “a great adventure.” The teams opened spring training early to get ready for the trip. When they return, they’ll have a handful of spring games before getting back to games that count. “There are some challenges, but I think guys like to play in different places,” Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said. “The important thing is that this is for the good of the game.”
The teams will have a few days to acclimate, then each team will play an exhibition game against an Australian national squad before opening their seasons with games Saturday and Sunday. The games will be played at Sydney’s historic cricket grounds, reconfigured to accommodate baseball. “I look forward to it as a cool opportunity, a cool experience,” Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. “The people from Australia, the cricket grounds, there’s a lot of history there and we’re looking to make history in a different fashion. The games that have been played globally have been very successful and we’re trying to get it out there that major league baseball is a quality environment. We promote the right things, we stand for the right things, and it’s good to get it out to the rest of the world.” The Diamondbacks got some significant bad news in the hours leading
up to their departure when left-hander Patrick Corbin, who was scheduled to start next Saturday’s season opener, was diagnosed with a partially torn ligament in his pitching arm. Corbin, an All-Star as a rookie last year, is getting a second opinion from noted surgeon Dr. James Andrews but could require season-ending surgery. Gibson chose lefty Wade Miley to take Corbin’s place. Miley hadn’t been scheduled to make the trip. “I was zero percent packed,” he said. “But you know what? It’s one of those things where it’s really not a decision. You just do it. It’s for the best, and we’ll see what happens.” Reigning NL Cy Young winner Clayton Kerhsaw will start for the Dodgers in the opener. “Anytime you get to start opening day, no matter what continent, it’s an honor,” Kershaw said. He was unsure how the travel would affect his performance. “I think everybody reacts to it differently,” Kershaw said. “I’ve flown to Africa. But I’ve never traveled that far to compete.”
Diamondbacks All-Star slugger Paul Goldschmidt, who made the trip in the offseason to promote the games, thinks the travel is “no big deal.” “You’ve got to kill 15 hours anyway,” he said. “You might as well do it in the air.” Dodgers’ right-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu has traveled a lot in international competition. Asked how the travel would affect the players, Ryu said through an interpreter, “it depends on the individual, but it usually takes about a week to get used to the change.” The opener will feature teams not particularly enamored with each other. The Diamondbacks and Dodgers engaged in a monumental brawl last June, resulting in eight suspensions. The incident has been credited with ignited the Dodgers’ stunning run that propelled them to the NL West title. Then when the Dodgers clinched the NL West crowd in Arizona, they drew the ire of many Diamondbacks by celebrating in the Chase Field swimming pool.
Cancer: Schmidt hit 548 career home runs Continued from Page B-1 the Phillies’ television crew to work 13 home Sunday games this season, and to return to camp next year to work with hitters. “I’m a very lucky man,” he said. Schmidt felt most fortunate that he got a “crusty little thing” on his hand checked out in August. A dermatologist decided to give him a full examination and found a mole on his back. A biopsy revealed the melanoma was more serious than stage 1, and Schmidt spent the following months shuttling between Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and his home in Jupiter, Fla. “I’ve done just about everything I can to destroy the cancer cells in my body,” he said. Along the way, his voice became raspy, he lost his taste buds and he had trouble concentrating. He said he also had surgery to remove 35 lymph nodes, wound up with an 8-inch scar and endured epi-
Hall of Famer and former Philadelphia Phillies third baseman Mike Schmidt speaks at a Sunday news conference at the Phillies’ spring training complex in Clearwater, Fla. MIKE CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
sodes of chills and restless leg syndrome. “He’d eat two bites of his meal, then get up and walk around the table,” said his wife, Donna. “He couldn’t sit still.” Said Schmidt: “It was kind of a rough road.” “Was it scary? If you sit and ponder the possibilities,” he said.
Schmidt said he is taking depression pills to help aid his recovery, and is feeling fine. “Hopefully, stay clean,” he said. “Hopefully, no issues.” The former third baseman said his grandfather had a bout of melanoma that cost him an ear. Schmidt spent much of his life in the sun — not using sunscreen, trying to get tan, as he
pointed out. Now, he takes a different approach. “I don’t like the sun,” he said. “It’s evil.” “You get scared of the sun,” he said. The Phillies had said Jan. 22 that Schmidt was dealing with an unspecified health issue and wouldn’t be at spring training so he could “remain near his doctors.” He had been in camp the previous 12 years, in uniform working with the team. Schmidt hit 548 home runs and led the Phillies to their first World Series crown in 1980, when he was the MVP of the six-game win over Kansas City. The 12-time All-Star and 10-time Gold Glover spent his whole career with Philadelphia, starting in 1972 and retiring in May 1989. Even after his career, he had avoided any major health problems. “The older you get … you still carry some sort of invincibility,” he said, later adding, “the moral of the story is everybody get checked.”
Arizona general manager Kevin Towers is glad for the early matchup with the Dodgers. “That’s the team we’re going to have to beat,” he said. “I don’t take anybody in our division lightly, but I’m sure most people are picking them to win, and we’ve got a chance to hopefully be two games up on them when we come back home.” It will be a homecoming for Arizona reliever Ryan Rowland-Smith, born and raised in Australia. He will play for the Australian team against the Dodgers, then switch to the Diamondbacks for their game against Australia. Baseball ranks far below rugby, cricket and Australian rules football in Australia, so this will be an unprecedented chance to showcase the sport there. “To go back to Australia and play in my own back yard is a special feeling,” Rowland-Smith said. “I think it will be an overwhelming experience for me, especially in front of a sellout crowd in Sydney, which is something I never would have imagined.”
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD
Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. BOXING 6:30 p.m. on FS1 — Lightweights, Jamie Kavanagh (15-1-1) vs. Andres Navarro (9-4-1); bantamweights, John Joe Nevin (0-0-0) vs. Alberto Candelaria (3-0-1); heavyweights, Alexis Santos (12-00) vs. Sylvester Barron (8-3-0); junior middleweights, Julian Williams (14-0-1) vs. Freddy Hernandez (30-6-0), in Boston MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11 a.m. on ESPN — Preseason, St. Louis vs. Boston, in Fort Myers, Fla. NBA 6 p.m. on ESPN — Oklahoma City at Chicago 8:30 p.m. on ESPN — L.A. Clippers at Denver NHL 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Minnesota at Boston
PREP SCHEDULE This week’s list of varsity high school sporting events. For additions or changes, email us at sports@sfnewmexican.com:
Today Baseball — Monte del Sol at West Las Vegas, 4 p.m. Softball — Española Valley at Abq. Academy, doubleheader, 3:30 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Santa Fe High, 4 p.m.
Tuesday
Pistorius trial enters popular culture By Christopher Torchia The Associated Press
PRETORIA, South Africa — Children chatter about the Oscar Pistorius murder trial at South African schools, startling parents with details about how the athlete fatally shot his girlfriend. Big audiences in South Africa are watching a 24-hour television channel dedicated to coverage of the sensational trial. Turns of phrase from the courtroom — the defense lawyer’s “I put it to you” challenge to prosecution witnesses — are creeping into popular culture. The rise and fall of the double-amputee runner, who competed in the London Olympics in 2012 and then killed model Reeva Steenkamp less than a year after that inspirational triumph, is a consuming saga for South Africans that has drawn sheepish comparisons to reality television shows. The more people hear, the hungrier they are for more. Was Oscar on his stumps or wearing prosthetic limbs when he battered the toilet door with a cricket bat? Does he scream like a woman, as the defense suggests, or did neighbors indeed hear a woman’s screams on the night of the killing? Will apparent missteps by police investigators muddy the prosecution’s case? Did Pistorius vomit during graphic testimony about Steenkamp’s wounds because of anguish, or was he trying to curry sympathy with the impassive judge? Some people turn up their noses at the spectacle, then dive into television or social media to soak up the latest, often extraordinary revelations. The parade of witnesses, some shown in the televised proceedings and some concealed
knees when I’m washing the dishes,” Vermeulen said to emphasize his point. “Maybe if you’re scared of your wife, you can do that,” Roux replied, briefly lightening the somber mood. Pistorius said he hit the door with the bat after realizing he had shot Steenkamp by mistake, fearing she was an intruder. Prosecutors say he killed her after an argument. South Africans are increasingly captivated by Roux’s relentless cross-examination. A producer at the Highveld Oscar Pistorius, center, walks out of the high court Friday in Stereo radio station recorded a Pretoria, South Africa. Pistorius is charged with murder for parody rap song. Lyrics include: the shooting death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, on “I put it to you/that it is true/ Valentine’s Day in 2013. THEMBA HADEBE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS everything you say/I will misconstrue/I’m Barry Roux/ defense’s suggestion that he from TV viewers to respect And I put it to you/Ten times in was wearing tracksuit pants in their privacy, gives a glimpse a row/Just to confuse you.” the middle of summer, rather into rich, diverse, flawed and The 2-week-old trial is accomplished lives, swept into a than shorts as he claims, durexpected to run into April. One single narrative from previously ing a 2012 incident in which a commentator said it is even gun went off in a Johannesburg anonymous routines. interfering with South African restaurant. Prof. Gert Saayman, the democracy ahead of elections “If It’s got Wheels or a Skirt pathologist, described Steenon May 7. kamp’s wounds and the general it’s Gonna Cost You Money,” “The trial will peak at the reads the caption on Fresco’s impact of gunshots on flesh same time as the election camand bone in metaphor-studded Twitter feed. Fast-living image paign swings into high gear, aside, he aptly summarized the which means political parties monologues so precise and intense media coverage, saying will have to take extraordinary structured that they were it seemed to be everywhere: “It measures to hold the voters’ almost lyrical, the macabre contents notwithstanding. Here doesn’t matter where you look, attention,” Ranjeni Munusamy was a man, clinical and courtly, where you turn, where you go, wrote in the Daily Maverick, an what you listen to, what you who had conducted between online news outlet. 10,000 and 15,000 autopsies over watch.” The role of Jaco van Vuuren, the decades. Later came the police investhe court sketch artist, seems tigators, cast by defense lawyer quaint alongside all the high“Death is effectively a proBarry Roux as bumblers remicess rather than an event, and tech scrutiny. Van Vuuren, who niscent of the “Keystone Cops” knew Pistorius before the killmay take some minutes for it characters from the old silent to come to its conclusion at a ing, said it was emotionally difmovies. Col. Johannes Vermeu- ficult at first. physiological level,” he said. len squatted awkwardly as he Saayman was followed by “I said to him before this sought to show that Pistorius witness Darren Fresco, who court session that I’m not there was not wearing prostheses dropped an expletive while to judge him. I’m just there to when he hit the toilet door recounting alleged gunplay do my job,” van Vuuren told involving Pistorius, his onetime with a cricket bat, based on the South Africa’s Eyewitness policeman’s analysis of marks in News. “He understands it. And friend, in the months before the wood. the runner shot his girlfriend. the first day, he just hugged me “I’m not standing on my Fresco seemed miffed at the and asked me for coffee.”
Baseball — Tucumcari at West Las Vegas, 3 p.m. Capital at Pojoaque Valley, 4 p.m. Santa Fe Indian School at Portales, doubleheader, 4 p.m. Questa at Peñasco, 4 p.m. Mora at Santa Rosa, doubleheader, 4 p.m. Los Alamos at Los Lunas, 6 p.m. Softball — Walatowa at Capital, doubleheader, 3 p.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Santa Fe Indian School, 3:30 p.m. Los Alamos at Pojoaque Valley, 4 p.m.
Wednesday Softball — Pecos at West Las Vegas, 4 p.m.
Thursday Baseball — Jim Pierce Memorial Tournament, first round, at St. Michael’s, pairings TBA (Santa Fe High, Cobre, Española Valley, Las Vegas Robertson, St. Michael’s) Los Alamos at Piedra Vista Tournament, first round (vs. Fruita Monument, 2 p.m.) Taos at Aztec Invitational, first round (vs. Moriarty, 4 p.m.) Pecos at Dexter Tournament, first round (vs. N.M. Military, 1 p.m.) West Las Vegas at Socorro Tournament, first round, pairings TBA Santa Fe Indian School at McCurdy, doubleheader, 3 p.m. Softball — St. Michael’s Tournament, first round, pairings TBA (Capital, Pojoaque Valley, Española Valley, St. Michael’s)
Friday Baseball — Dragon Invitational, first round, hosted by Monte del Sol (Santa Rosa vs. Santa Fe Preparatory, 3 p.m.; Monte del Sol vs. Mesa Vista, 4 p.m.) Jim Pierce Memorial Tournament, second round, at St. Michael’s, pairings TBA (Santa Fe High, Cobre, Española Valley, Las Vegas Robertson, St. Michael’s) Los Alamos at Piedra Vista Tournament, second round (pairings TBA) Taos at Aztec Invitational, second round (pairings TBA) Pecos at Dexter Tournament, second round (pairings TBA) West Las Vegas at Socorro Tournament, second round (pairings TBA) Cimarron at Mora, doubleleader, 3:30 p.m. Softball — St. Michael’s Tournament, second round, pairings TBA (Capital, Pojoaque Valley, Española Valley, St. Michael’s) Santa Fe High at Scorpion Invitational, first round, hosted by Farmington High (vs. Farmington, 4 p.m.)
Saturday Baseball — Dragon Invitational, final round, hosted by Monte del Sol (Santa Rosa, Mesa Vista, Santa Fe Prep, Monte del Sol) Jim Pierce Memorial Tournament, final round, at St. Michael’s, pairings TBA (Santa Fe High, Cobre, Española Valley, Las Vegas Robertson, St. Michael’s) Los Alamos at Piedra Vista Tournament, final round (pairings TBA) Taos at Aztec Invitational, final round (pairings TBA) Pecos at Dexter Tournament, final round (pairings TBA) West Las Vegas at Socorro Tournament, final round (pairings TBA) Softball — St. Michael’s Tournament, final round, pairings TBA (Capital, Pojoaque Valley, Española Valley, St. Michael’s) Santa Fe High at Scorpion Invitational, final round, hosted by Farmington High (pairings TBA)
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B-4
NCAA TOURNAMENT
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
Six teams slighted on Selection Sunday By John Marshall
The Associated Press
Colorado on their résumé, but also lost to last-place USC and UC Santa Barbara. Cal could have gotten a big boost by making some noise in the Pac-12 Tournament, but got bounced by fellow bubble team Colorado in the quarterfinals. Florida State: The Seminoles gave their bubble chances a boost with a last-second win over Maryland in the second round of the ACC Tournament. It apparently popped with a loss to Virginia in the quarterfinals. Florida State finished the season 19-13 overall and went 9-9 in the ACC, but it wasn’t good enough for the selection committee. The Seminoles missed a huge opportunity by losing to
Tuesday
12 NC State
16 Mt. St. Mary’s
12 Xavier
Second Round
Raleigh • Fri.
St. Louis • Fri.
Buffalo • Thurs.
San Diego • Fri.
Orlando • Thurs.
March 20-21
Third Round March 22-23
1 Florida 16 Albany/MSM
First Round March 18-19 Dayton, Ohio
Wednesday
Wednesday
16 Cal Poly
11 Iowa
16 Texas Southern
11 Tennessee
Men’s Division I Basketball Championship Sweet 16
Sweet 16
March 27-28
March 27-28
8 Colorado 9 Pittsburgh
ing losses killed the Razorbacks. Still on the bubble, Arkansas closed out the regular season with a 25-point loss to Alabama and opened the SEC Tournament by bowing out to South Carolina. That offset all the good the Razorbacks did in the weeks before, when they won six straight. Georgetown: The Hoyas entered the Big East Tournament on the bubble. They were blown off it with an opening loss to DePaul, a last-place team that hadn’t beaten Georgetown since 1994. Georgetown had some good wins on its weshould-go docket, including Michigan State and Kansas State.
Elite Eight
Elite Eight
March 29-30
March 29-30
Third Round March 22-23
Second Round March 20-21 1 Arizona 16 Weber State 8 Gonzaga 9 Oklahoma State 5 Oklahoma
5 VCU 12 Stephen F. Austin
12 North Dakota St.
Final Four
4 UCLA
Arlington, Texas
13 Tulsa
April 5
SOUTH
6 Ohio State
Memphis, Tenn.
4 San Diego State 13 New Mexico State
WEST
6 Baylor
Anaheim, Calif.
11 Dayton
11 Nebraska
3 Syracuse
3 Creighton 14 La-Lafayette
14 Western Michigan
10 Stanford
National Championship
2 Kansas
April 7
7 New Mexico
7 Oregon 10 BYU 2 Wisconsin
15 Eastern Kentucky
15 American
1 Virginia
1 Wichita State
16 Coastal Carolina
16 Cal Poly/TSU
8 Memphis
8 Kentucky
9 G. Washington
9 Kansas State
5 Cincinnati
5 St. Louis
12 Harvard
12 NCSU/Xavier
4 Michigan State
4 Louisville
13 Delaware
13 Manhattan
EAST
MIDWEST
New York
Indianapolis
6 Massachusetts 11 Iowa/Tennessee
3 Iowa State
3 Duke
14 N.C. Central
14 Mercer
7 UCONN
7 Texas
10 St. Joseph’s
10 Arizona State
2 Villanova
2 Michigan
15 Milwaukee
15 Wofford Source: AP
Continued from Page B-1
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Milwaukee • Thurs.
11 Providence
Raleigh • Fri.
6 North Carolina
Orlando • Thurs.
San Antonio • Fri. Spokane • Thurs.
Tuesday
16 Albany
stumbling Syracuse at home to end the regular season and have a loss to Miami on their résumé with no jump-out-at-you wins to boost their rating. Wisconsin-Green Bay: NCAA selection committee chair Ron Wellman called the decision to leave WisconsinGreen Bay out of the bracket a very difficult one. That’s not going to make the Phoenix feel any better after winning the Horizon League title and failing to get a bid. Wisconsin-Green Bay finished the season 24-6, but a loss to fifth-seeded Milwaukee in the conference tournament title game apparently killed its chances. Arkansas: Two image-bust-
St. Louis • Fri.
The Summit League champion Bison are the nation’s nels’ first NCAA Tournament best shooting team, making game since 2007 is Friday 51 percent of their field goals against Big 12 regular-season this season, and also are one of champion Kansas (24-9). only 13 teams with less than The other 15s are Patriot 10 turnovers a game. champion American playing The Blue Hens from DelaWisconsin; Southern Conferware (25-9) won the Colonial ence winner Wofford taking Athletic Association chamon Michigan, a Final Four team pionship game on a late field last year; and Horizon champ goal by 6-foot-9 forward Carl Milwaukee against Villanova. Baptiste, who finished with a MAAC champ Manhattan career-best 24 points. Devon (25-7) got in the field for the Saddler, the Blue Hens career first time since 2004, when as scoring leader, convinced his a No. 12 seed the Jaspers won coach to go inside to Baptiste a first-round game against instead of having him take a Florida. final shot like everyone else They also won as a No. 13 expected before Delaware’s seed against Oklahoma in the first NCAA berth since 1999. 1995 tourney. This time, they Big South tournament chamare a No. 13 again and take on pion Coastal Carolina (21-12) defending national champion is in the NCAA Tournament Louisville in the Midwest. for the first time since 1993, North Dakota State has won which was two years after they three consecutive FCS national became the first Big South team to make the field. football championships, but the Bison (25-6) are in the Seventh-year Chanticleers NCAA Tournament for only coach Cliff Ellis previously the second time — a No. 12 took South Alabama, Clemson seed facing Oklahoma (23-9) of and Auburn to the NCAA the Big 12. Tournament.
VERNON BRYANT/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS
San Antonio • Fri. Milwaukee • Thurs.
Surprises: Coastal Calif. in 1st tourney
From left, Southern Methodist Mustangs center Cannen Cunningham, guard Sterling Brown and Southern Methodist Mustangs guard Jonathan Wilfong sit dejected after the Southern Methodist Mustangs were not called to play in the NCAA Tournament during the SMU watch party Sunday in Moody Coliseum at Southern Methodist University in Dallas.
Spokane • Thurs.
Griping has been a part of the NCAA Tournament selection process pretty much since its inception. Didn’t matter if it was eight teams or the current field of 68, there have always been teams that felt slighted and left out after being left off the bracket. This season was no exception. When the NCAA’s selection committee unveiled the teams for this year’s tournament on Sunday, there were collective groans across the country from teams and their fans that didn’t get a golden ticket. Here’s a few: SMU: The Mustangs might have the best argument among the snubbed. They had a resurgence under 73-year-old Larry Brown in his return to college coaching, going 23-9 overall and 12-6 in the American Athletic Conference. On their résumé are two wins over Connecticut, and splits with Memphis and Cincinnati, both NCAA Tournament teams. The problem was SMU’s schedule. The Mustangs had a soft non-conference schedule and their overall strength of schedule was 129th — 38 higher than the worst team that made the field. California: The Bears got the Pac-12 season off to a great start, winning their first five games. A collapse at the end of the season cost them a spot in the dance. Cal lost nine of its last 14 games and went 3-7 to close out the home schedule. The Bears (19-13) have wins over Arizona, Stanford, Oregon and
Continued from Page B-1
San Diego • Fri.
the brackets are out. That’s why Warren Buffett had no West region by virtue of its problem paying the insurance Western Athletic Conference premium against a $1 billion Tournament title over the payoff for anyone who fills out weekend. The Aggies will face a perfect bracket. a familiar UNM foe, San Diego “There’s more good teams State. and less great teams,” said Despite its loss to the Lobos coach Bill Self of second— its second since late-Febru- seeded Kansas. “The differary — SDSU was given the ence between a 2 seed and a No. 4 seed. 7 or 8 seed is as narrow as it’s No other teams from the ever been.” Mountain West made the field The last four bubble teams of 68, which starts Wednesin this year’s draw were day in Dayton, Ohio. NMSU’s 12th-seeded North Carolina game will be Thursday night at State and Xavier, who play in 7:57 p.m. in Spokane, Wash., on the First Four on Tuesday, and truTV while the Lobos’ date 11th-seeded Iowa and Tenneswith the Cardinal will be Frisee, who play Wednesday. day at 11:40 a.m. on CBS. Left out of the tournament “Excited to back in the was SMU of the AAC — a NCAA Tournament, and team almost all the experts had excited to head to St. Louis,” securely in the bracket. said Craig Neal, New Mexico But not the folks in the conhead coach. “Stanford is a great ference room, who couldn’t program which has had a great overcome the Mustangs’ year in a very difficult league.” strength of schedule: 129. Only Virginia, which “When I saw Louisville, I wrapped up the ACC tournakind of figured that they didn’t ment Sunday to back up its have a lot of respect for our regular-season title, seemed conference,” said coach Larry to get a significant bump Brown. “But we only can from the conference tournablame ourselves, that’s the way ments that polish off resumes I look at it.” of teams before the start of The committee handed out America’s favorite office pool only seven at-large bids to mid— March Madness. majors after they took 11 in Ron Wellman, chair of the each of the last two seasons. NCAA selection committee, The Big 12 led all confersaid the Cavaliers, considered a ences with seven teams, 2 or 3 on most mock-ups, “con- though winning the confertinued to impress us throughence didn’t move Iowa State out the year.” past the ‘3’ line. Asked to explain the medioOther conference titles that cre seed for a team like Loudidn’t change much: isville, the defending national u St. Joe’s was the champion champion that has won of the six-bid Atlantic-10 and 12 of 13 and rolled through the got a 10 seed while the team AAC tournament, Wellstone the Hawks beat, VCU, was explained the committee looks seeded fifth. at the entire resume, not just u Providence went from the March. bubble to Big East champion “We look at the total body of and was seeded 11th. work, everything they did from Meanwhile, Kansas lost in November to March,” he said. the semifinals of the Big 12 but “Every time we scrubbed that remained a 2 seed because of seed, Louisville ended at the its ranking in the RPI — same place every time when No. 3. The Jayhawks have to compared to the people above get through the first weekend them.” without center Joel Embiid, The people above them in out with a back injury, but the Midwest region, which could face a third-round game shapes up as the toughest, against New Mexico, the include top-seeded and undeMWC tourney champ. feated Wichita State, No. 2 “Off the top of my head, I Michigan and No. 3 Duke. Yes, can’t remember exactly what that’s three of last year’s Final the conversation was about Four teams. The national semi- New Mexico,” Wellman said. “I finals are April 5 in Arlington, can tell you the conversations Texas. about New Mexico were very On the “1” line in the West positive.” was Arizona, which stayed In the West, Arizona’s secthere despite falling in the Pac- ond game could come against 12 title game to UCLA. The eighth-seeded Gonzaga, which Bruins are a “4,” same as Mich- lost its second game as a igan State and Louisville — No. 1 seed last year, or No. 9 their fellow power-conference Oklahoma State, which has one champions. of the nation’s best players in “They pass everyone’s ‘eye Marcus Smart. The nation’s test,’” Wellman said. “They’re top scorer, Doug McDermott playing as well right now as (26.9 points per game), is on anyone in the country. If you the other side of that bracket look at the last three or four with No. 3 Creighton. weeks, they probably would’ve On Virginia’s side of the East been seeded differently. When bracket is one team nobody you look at the entire season, wants to play come tournathen it’s a little bit different.” ment time — No. 4 Michigan Of course, the numbers are State, which hadn’t won backjust that — numbers. In an era to-back games since late Januof one-and-done, superstar ary, but strung three together coaches and unending parto win the nation’s secondity, the real drama starts after toughest conference.
Buffalo • Thurs.
NCAA: Two MWC teams made the cut
Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
The weather
For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/
7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today
Sunny, warmer; breezy in the p.m.
Tonight
Tuesday
Clear and breezy
Partly sunny and breezy
Wednesday
Thursday
Mostly sunny
Friday
Mostly sunny
Saturday
Partly sunny and breezy
Sunday
Mostly sunny
Sunny
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
65
29
56/26
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
18%
25%
16%
16%
13%
13%
26%
24%
wind: W 8-16 mph
wind: WSW 8-16 mph
wind: W 8-16 mph
wind: SSW 6-12 mph
wind: W 10-20 mph
57/27
65/33
wind: WNW 10-20 mph wind: WNW 10-20 mph wind: WSW 6-12 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 58°/24° Normal high/low ............................ 58°/28° Record high ............................... 73° in 2011 Record low .................................. 6° in 2005 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.56”/0.67” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.42”/1.55” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.64”/0.73”
63/33
New Mexico weather 64
285
64
Farmington 66/26
64
Española 68/37 Los Alamos 62/32 40
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” 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. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.40”/0.45” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” 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”
Santa Fe 65/29 Pecos 62/29
25
Albuquerque 70/38
25
56
Clayton 73/33
Pollen index
As of 3/14/2014 Juniper...................................... 86 Moderate Elm ...................................................... 4 Low Other ................................................... 1 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................91
25
Las Vegas 68/35
54
40
40
285
Clovis 72/39
54
60 60
87
412
Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180 25
70
Truth or Consequences 73/46 70
Water statistics
Las Cruces 72/46
54
70
70
380
380
Hobbs 72/43
285
Alamogordo 71/45
180 10
Roswell 76/48
Ruidoso 62/41
Carlsbad 75/57
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes
Sun. High: 65 ............................ Farmington Sun. Low 6 .................................. Angel Fire
State cities City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo W 61/37 s 60/33 s 49/6 s 57/37 s 62/43 s 51/20 s 56/19 s 54/28 s 50/18 s 55/35 s 56/22 s 63/38 s 59/32 s 65/19 s 57/36 s 61/21 s 59/8 s 57/37 s 61/38 s
Hi/Lo W 71/45 s 70/38 s 54/23 s 75/56 s 75/57 s 53/25 s 66/30 s 73/33 s 54/32 s 72/39 s 64/25 s 73/41 s 68/37 s 66/26 s 76/41 s 66/24 s 66/33 s 72/43 s 72/46 s
Hi/Lo W 72/40 s 59/35 s 47/18 c 81/48 s 81/50 s 45/12 c 53/17 c 53/22 pc 54/15 s 62/30 s 52/18 s 76/43 s 58/34 s 52/20 pc 69/30 s 51/16 s 55/23 s 77/37 s 74/48 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 54/17 62/37 53/28 61/33 55/33 59/23 45/19 61/33 61/40 48/28 59/27 57/28 63/29 55/16 60/35 61/32 62/44 57/28 59/25
W s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s
Hi/Lo W 68/35 s 74/53 s 62/32 s 72/38 s 73/40 s 72/27 s 50/22 s 69/36 s 76/48 s 62/41 s 74/41 s 69/45 s 73/43 s 60/24 s 73/46 s 76/39 s 73/50 s 64/33 s 66/24 s
Hi/Lo W 57/23 pc 75/45 s 54/22 pc 64/36 s 66/30 s 46/16 c 40/15 c 61/28 pc 78/41 s 60/39 s 65/30 pc 70/41 s 71/40 s 50/19 c 72/43 s 62/28 pc 77/50 s 55/24 pc 51/16 s
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for March 17
65/31
Sunday’s rating ................................... Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 60/24
84
666
Gallup 66/24
Raton 72/27
65/32
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Area rainfall
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
Sunrise today ............................... 7:13 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:13 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 8:30 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 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. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 7:10 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 7:15 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................. 10:30 p.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 8:44 a.m. Last
New
First
Full
Mar 23
Mar 30
Apr 7
Apr 15
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 34/24 50/40 33/27 53/28 55/26 49/29 26/13 56/50 40/33 34/26 46/29 34/24 60/44 74/32 30/21 26/-1 59/27 80/68 59/43 43/29 55/37 80/55 78/54
W sn r sn r sh sh pc r r pc s pc s s s c s s pc s s s s
Hi/Lo 35/24 53/43 41/32 44/26 38/22 49/35 34/23 55/47 46/39 50/32 56/43 50/37 75/45 50/22 43/34 27/10 52/21 79/67 76/52 55/39 61/32 68/49 74/54
W sf pc i sf sn pc pc r c c pc c s c c pc s s s pc c pc pc
Rise 6:07 a.m. 4:55 a.m. 9:24 p.m. 12:57 p.m. 11:36 p.m. 7:52 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 4:58 p.m. 3:31 p.m. 8:47 a.m. 3:27 a.m. 10:06 a.m. 8:21 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities City Hi/Lo W Anchorage 25/15 pc Atlanta 59/53 r Baltimore 45/34 r Billings 55/38 pc Bismarck 41/18 pc Boise 69/39 pc Boston 36/29 pc Charleston, SC 69/53 r Charlotte 54/46 r Chicago 28/19 sn Cincinnati 34/31 c Cleveland 23/20 sf Dallas 56/42 pc Denver 62/24 s Detroit 25/15 sn Fairbanks 23/-12 pc Flagstaff 61/35 s Honolulu 78/70 s Houston 69/54 t Indianapolis 32/28 c Kansas City 40/30 sn Las Vegas 79/51 s Los Angeles 90/56 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 39/38 59/40 81/71 22/17 25/11 79/67 38/30 48/36 86/58 42/34 82/56 29/24 61/53 50/42 36/35 67/37 71/61 87/59 68/51 52/44 36/15 39/31 48/36
W sn r pc sn s t pc c pc pc s pc r r sn pc pc s pc r pc pc sn
Hi/Lo 49/33 52/38 85/76 32/25 37/27 56/43 36/25 64/40 82/67 36/25 84/60 40/24 52/39 35/30 43/33 55/27 68/42 72/57 66/50 49/38 59/34 36/22 33/30
W s pc pc pc c pc sn s t sn s pc sh sn s c pc s pc c c sn sn
Hi/Lo 60/45 65/47 81/68 44/32 39/27 66/52 43/31 69/36 76/59 43/33 82/58 50/34 53/42 37/34 62/36 48/27 84/50 66/54 69/50 52/41 42/23 42/28 40/35
W s s t c sn s pc pc pc c s pc pc i s pc s s pc pc sn c i
World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Cold front
Warm front
Stationary front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 94 ................... Death Valley, CA Sun. Low: -27 .................... Crane Lake, MN
The St. Patrick’s Day snowstorm of 1956 occurred March 16-17 in New England, New York and Pennsylvania. Blue Hill observatory, outside of Boston, reported 12.6 inches.
Weather trivia™
Q: What is the vernal equinox? A: The moment spring begins
Weather history
Newsmakers WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Hollywood actor Chris Pine, known for playing Captain Kirk in the Star Trek movies, has pleaded guilty in a New Zealand court to drunken-driving charges. The 33-year-old was fined $79 and had his New Zealand driver’s license suspended for six months during a hearing Monday at the Ashburton District Court. Police pulled over Pine early March 1, and Fairfax Media reported that Pine told police he’d consumed four vodka drinks.
Oprah Winfrey to sell Harpo Studios in Chicago
Oprah Winfrey
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 54/48 66/43 73/50 95/81 66/55 58/38 52/43 66/52 82/62 82/57 88/73 63/43 48/43 52/43 63/43 75/63 84/66 71/64 64/42 77/67
W pc pc s pc s pc r t s pc s s sh sh pc pc pc pc pc pc
Hi/Lo 53/43 70/52 77/58 95/80 70/54 69/42 53/45 70/46 75/54 80/59 90/75 73/52 51/42 52/43 68/42 73/56 87/69 74/69 75/53 83/69
W c s pc pc s pc c t pc pc s s c c s t t c c c
Hi/Lo 53/46 70/50 81/61 96/81 66/49 57/37 52/43 70/47 68/55 73/55 89/76 77/52 48/43 52/46 67/44 75/58 82/66 76/69 63/51 82/69
W c s pc t c pc c pc c pc s s c pc pc pc t c pc pc
City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 72/50 66/46 75/37 80/55 18/7 36/35 89/61 66/41 54/41 93/75 61/41 81/52 63/37 82/79 36/27 81/72 64/39 48/46 57/45 63/45
W s s s s pc sn s s sh s s s pc t s t s r sh pc
Hi/Lo 70/52 55/45 72/45 76/48 19/7 36/23 92/67 61/43 53/41 91/77 68/46 82/52 64/45 88/78 39/28 82/63 57/51 46/38 62/44 65/37
W pc c s pc pc c pc c c s s s r t c s pc sh s s
Hi/Lo 64/48 55/43 73/48 78/49 25/18 31/21 88/61 54/40 54/44 91/77 66/47 81/48 57/46 88/78 39/30 84/66 65/49 47/42 65/52 64/40
W s pc pc s s c t c c s s s pc t sh s sh c c pc
Today’s talk shows
Chris Pine of ‘Star Trek’ pleads guilty to DUI
Chris Pine
B-5
CHICAGO — Oprah Winfrey is selling Harpo Studios in Chicago to developer Sterling Bay, but the studio will remain on the property for another two years. Winfrey filmed The Oprah Winfrey Show at the studio from 1990 to 2011, when she ended the talk show to start the Oprah Winfrey Network on cable. About 200 people work at the 3.5-acre campus, which will sell for about $32 million, Crain’s reported Sunday. The Associated Press
3:00 p.m. KOAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Howie Mandel; animal trainer Brandon McMillan; Olympians Meryl Davis and Charlie White. KRQE Dr. Phil KTFQ Laura KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer CNN The Situation Room FNC The Five MSNBC The Ed Show 4:00 p.m. KOAT The Dr. Oz Show KTEL Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste KASY The Steve Wilkos Show FNC Special Report With Bret Baier 5:00 p.m. KASA Steve Harvey KCHF The 700 Club KASY Maury FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 6:00 p.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor 7:00 p.m. MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show
8:00 p.m. E! E! News FNC Hannity 9:00 p.m. KCHF The Connection With Skip Heitzig FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan Benedict Cumberbatch; George Takei; John Legend. 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show TBS The Pete Holmes Show Film producer Judd Apatow; alpine skier Bode Miller. 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan Benedict Cumberbatch; George Takei; John Legend. 10:34 p.m. KOB The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Actor James Spader; Kermit the Frog; Black 47 performs. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Stupid human tricks; Simon Helberg; Young the Giant. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KOAT Jimmy Kimmel Live Actress Uma Thurman; actor Jai Courtney; Amos Lee performs.
FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS The Pete Holmes Show Film producer Judd Apatow; alpine skier Bode Miller. 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Actress Jane Lynch; author Salman Rushdie. 12:00 a.m. E! Chelsea Lately Comic Liza Treyger; comic Ryan Stout; actor Adam Carolla. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren MTV Wolf Watch J.R. Bourne and Christian Taylor discuss “Insatiable.” 12:02 a.m. KOAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KOB Late Night With Seth Meyers Anderson Cooper; Alessandra Ambrosio and Behati Prinsloo. 12:30 a.m. E! E! News 1:00 a.m. KASY The Trisha Goddard Show FNC Red Eye 1:07 a.m. KOB Last Call With Carson Daly
From left, Sherman, voiced by Max Charles, and Mr. Peabody, voiced by Ty Burell, in a scene from the animated film Mr. Peabody & Sherman. AP PHOTO/ DREAMWORKS ANIMATION
Fetching ‘Peabody & Sherman’ tops week’s box office By Jessica Herndon The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Street racers couldn’t catch a time-traveling dog and his son at the multiplex this weekend. Though Disney’s Need for Speed was expected to take the No. 1 position at the box office, DreamWorks’ Mr. Peabody & Sherman took the lead, with the action film in third place. The animated movie, about the adventures of a genius dog and the human son he adopted, earned $21.2 million, according to studio estimates released Sunday. Debuting last weekend at No. 2, the 3-D kiddie-jaunt features voices from Modern Family stars Ty Burrell and Ariel Winter. “Our midweek numbers were very strong, indicating good and positive word of mouth,” said Chris Aronson, president of domestic distribution at Twentieth Century Fox. “If anything, this is exceeding [expectations]. It’s a combination of likable characters and it’s a nostalgia play for those who are familiar with the show.” Mr. Peabody and Sherman first appeared in the 1950s and early 1960s on Peabody’s Improbable History, a segment within the animated television series Rocky and His Friends and later The Bullwinkle Show. “The family marketplace is giving every other genre a run for its money,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak. “But the St. Patrick’s Day effect could be at play here, where families had to exercise their options at the theater rather than the pub. That may have paid off for Mr. Peabody.” Meanwhile, analysts predicted that Need for Speed, based on the popular EA Entertainment video game and starring Breaking Bad alum Aaron Paul, would come in at No. 1 this weekend. But with $17.8 million, it arrived at No. 3 in the U.S. But the movie raced to the top of the international box office, bringing in $45.6 million. Warner Bros.’ warrior drama 300: Rise of an Empire, the 3-D sequel to 2007’s 300, dropped to second place, with $19.1 million, after debuting at No. 1 last weekend. Though its opening haul of $45.1 million pales in comparison to the original, which debuted with $70.9 million, Rise of an Empire has earned more than $78 million since its debut. Tyler Perry’s The Single Moms Club, starring Nia Long and Amy Smart, opened with $8.3 million at No. 5. “This is one of Tyler Perry’s lowest debuts ever, but he [has cranke out hits every year for almost a decade,” Dergarabedian said. “He’s allowed a couple of missteps every once in a while.” Leading the year’s early trend of films about religion, Fox’s Son of God grossed $5.4 million in its third weekend. After opening at No. 2 with $26.5 million, it dropped to No. 5 in its second week, earning $10 million. Its performance may indicate that religious stories aren’t holding up at box office. Plus Son of God, starring Diogo Morgado, lacks star power. However, other upcoming films with a biblical thread feature leading men who are more likely to get viewers to theaters. Noah, out March 28, stars Russell Crowe. And later this year, in the Ridley Scott-directed Exodus, we’ll see Christian Bale as Moses. Playing in only 66 theaters, Wes Anderson’s Grand Budapest Hotel landed at No. 8 with $3.6 million. When it opened last weekend, the stylish comedy showed on just four screens in New York and Los Angeles. Still, it impressed with $200,000. Rounding out the top 10 is the Kristen Bell-starring cult-TVshow-turned-feature Veronica Mars. Its $2 million debut was impressive considering the film’s funding came from a crowdsourcing campaign, the first high-profile project to do so. Also opening this weekend was Jason Bateman’s directorial debut Bad Words. Showing in only New York and Los Angeles, the comedy earned $120,000, one of the biggest per theater averages of the weekend, with $20,000 per movie house. Sci-fi action movie Divergent, based on the Veronica Roth’s young adult novel and starring Shailene Woodley, Theo James and Kate Winslet, stands to knock every other film a place or two down when it debuts next weekend.
TV
1
top picks
6 p.m. FAM Switched at Birth When the rivalry between the Carlton and Buckner field hockey teams intensifies, Bay (Vanessa Marano) asks Tank (Max Adler) to help her strike back. Nikki (Cassi Thomson) pays Toby (Lucas Grabeel) a surprise visit. Daphne (Katie Leclerc) finally chooses between Campbell and Jorge (RJ Mitte, David Castaneda). Regina’s (Constance Marie) connections in her old neighborhood prove helpful at work in the new episode “The Ambush.” 7 p.m. on NBC The Voice The competition moves to its next phase in this new episode. The Band Perry, Miranda Lambert, Aloe Blacc and Jill Scott are on hand to advise coaches Blake Shelton, Shakira, Adam Levine and Usher, respectively, as they prepare their contestants. After two members of each coach’s team face off in duets, the coaches pick their strongest contenders and have the option of stealing losing artists from the others in “The Battles, Round 1 Premiere.” 7 p.m. on ABC Dancing With the Stars Sportscaster Erin Andrews, who came in third in Season 10, replaces Brooke Burke-Charvet as Tom Bergeron’s new co-host as the hit dance competition launches its 18th season. This year’s
contestants include former hockey player Sean Avery, actress Candace Cameron Bure, Olympic champion ice dancers Meryl Davis and Charlie White, and actor Billy Dee Williams. Carrie Ann Inaba, Bruno Tonioli and Len Goodman return to judge their performances. 9 p.m. on NBC The Blacklist The next person on Red’s (James Spader) list is someone familiar: his former associate Mako Tanida (guest star Hoon Lee, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles), a crime lord who has escaped from prison with revenge on his mind. Rachel Brosnahan (House of Cards) also guest stars in the new episode “Mako Tanida.”
4
2 3
5
10 p.m. on HBO Paycheck to Paycheck: The Life & Times of Katrina Gilbert This new documentary produced by Maria Shriver tells one woman’s story, but her situation is one that’s all too familiar to many. Gilbert, who lives in Tennessee, is a single mother who struggles to raise her three children on a nursing assistant’s wages. She would like to get more education and improve her lot, but that’s far easier said than done.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
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»rentals« Reduced Price!
Chamisa Management Corporation 988-5299
LUXURIOUS GUEST HOUSE. 1 Bedroom, 1 bath. Granite kitchen. Washer, dryer. Fireplace. Very bright, quiet. $950 monthly, partial utilities. 505629-3082 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
HOUSES FURNISHED ADOBE GUESTHOUSE East side, 1 bedroom, fully equipped, private. $1,250 including cable TV, DSL and utilities. Available Now. 505-988-4055.
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.
Down Town Area Studio Apartment 1 bedroom, 1 bath, Fenced yard, Non-Smoking. Small pet may be considered. $680 includes utilities.
Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
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. COUNTRY LIVING Pecos, sunny remodeled, 3 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath, deck. Responsible People. $995 plus deposit. No Pets. 505-351-0063, 505920-7326.
plus an office, hard wood floors, 1 car garage, covered patio and fenced yard, Non-smoking. Pet may be considered. $1250 monthly plus utilities.
Taylor Properties 505-470-0818 ELDORADO New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603
INCREDIBLE SANGRE VIEWS! $935. ZIA VISTAS LARGEST 2 BEDROOM, 2 BATHROOM, large walk-in closets. Fireplace. Exceptional layout. Gated. Much more. 505-316-0986.
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
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.
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!
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
STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Small patio. Ready to move-in! No Pets. All utilities paid. CALL 505-9202648.
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
12X24 FOR ONLY $195.00. CALL TO RESERVE YOURS TODAY!!!
OLD ADOBE OFFICE
Brick floors, large vigas, fire places, ample parking 300, 800, or 2100 sq. ft. $12 per sq. ft. per month.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 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
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.
STUDIO, LA CIENEGA. Skylights, private. 490 sq.ft. $375 monthly plus utilities. Call Dan, 505-269-7410.
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.
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. ROOMMATE WANTED ROOM FOR RENT, LA CIENEGA. Separate entrance, share adobe farmhouse, bathroom, kitchen. Washer, dryer. $425 monthly plus utilities. 170 sq.ft. 505-269-7410
UNFURNISHED ROOM TO RENT 3 bedroom home. 2 adults live here- 1 female and 1 male and 2 dogs. Room has walk-in closet. Private bathroom but share the shower with one of other roommates. Common spaces including patios. Available immediately. First, last, $600 monthly. Credit check, references. Year lease. Please call Cia at 858-8298387.
10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744450. www.airportcerrillos.com
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT 505-204-1685
SOUTH OF SANTA FE, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath. Handicap access. Washer, dryer. First, last, plus deposit. Cat okay. $800 MONTHLY. 505-473-4186
LOVELY CONDO
COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
STORAGE SPACE
RECENTLY REMODELED. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Hardwood & tile floors. Laundry hook-ups. Fenced yard. No pets. Lease. References. $975. 505-412-0197
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
OFFICES
Down Town Area 3 Bedroom, 2 bath
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
$950. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, sunny, washer, dryer, woodstove, LP gas, brick floors. Pet ok. Hwy 14, Lone Butte. Steve 505-470-3238
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT IN CIENEGUILLA. $400 monthly, $200 cleaning deposit. No pets, nonsmoking, no drugs. Quiet. Long-term tenant. 505-424-3755
1,900 sq.ft. Warehouse, 600 sq.ft Office space, reception area, two offices, kitchen, security, fenced yard, On-site parking. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2511.
REDUCED! 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
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH DON DIEGO. G orgeous town house close to downtown. $750 monthly. Lease only.
FURNISHED CASITA, utilities, television, internet included. fully equipped kitchen. 44 Arroyo Viejo. $950 monthly. www.santafecasita.info ABQ Properties LLC 505-717-3002 x702
1,800 SQU.FT Retail Space at GARCIA RETAIL CENTER. 5984 Airport Rd. $12 per squ.ft. 505-753-8303
Santa Fe Executive Realtors, 505-670-9466
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.
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH DON DIEGO, close to town, nice complex $600/mo 1yr lease only.
COMMERCIAL SPACE
3100+/- sq.ft. main level and 2400+/sq.ft. daylight basement. 3 bedrooms, 4 baths, remodeled kitchen, 3 fireplaces, 2 car garage on 1.43 acres near Richards Ave. 2916 Calle Vera Cruz. NOW $424,000
VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH T E S U Q U E D R I V E . Fenced yard, washer & dryer. $625 monthly.
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
Get your property value today! www.SantaFeHomeValue.com
with a classified ad. Get Results!
2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. RUFINA LANE. Fireplace, balcony, laundry facility on site. $745 monthly.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
GUESTHOUSES
WAREHOUSES WAREHOUSE WORK SPACE. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. 2000 sq.ft. Workshop, art studio, light manuafacturing. Siler Road area. $1470 monthly, $1000 deposit. 505670-1733.
»announcements«
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
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.
FOUND FOUND KEYS: Nissan Car key + House key at San Isidro dog park area. 505204-2244 to identify. FOUND PURSE on street at Marcy and Otero Thursday March 13 10:00 am. Call 908-963-9337
business & service exploresantafe•com
Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!
CLEANING
ANIMALS Dog Training Obedience, Problem Solving. 30 Years Experience. In Your Home Convenience. Guaranteed Results. 505-713-2113
MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE.
Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062.
FIREWOOD
CLEANING 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
HANDYMAN
505-983-2872, 505-470-4117
PAINTING
HANDYMAN TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583
LANDSCAPING YOUR HEALTH MATTERS. We use natural products. 20 Years Experience, Residential & Offices. Reliable. Excellent references. Licensed & Bonded. Eva, 505-919-9230. Elena. 505-946-7655
CONSTRUCTION Genbuild Corporation Additions, Remodels, New Construction, Foundations, Garages, Roofing, and Block Walls. Licensed, Bonded, Insured. 505-401-1088 LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493. I CLEAN yards, gravel work, dig trenches. I also move furniture, haul trash. Call George, 505-316-1599.
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANEL ROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Consulting. Licensed. References. So can you with a classified ad Free estimates. 505-470-5877 WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
ROOFING
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 HOUSE & PET SITTING. Reasonable, Mature, Responsible. Live in Sol y Lomas area. Former Owner of Grooming store in NYC. 505-982-6392
directory« 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.
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.
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
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986-3000
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Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds FOUND
COMPUTERS IT
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Have a product or service to offer? 986-3000 Call our small experts today! FOR RELEASE MARCH 17, business 2014
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
FOUND PURSE on street at Marcy and Otero Thursday March 13 10:00 am. Call 908-963-9337.
POLICE CHIEF
FOUND RING OF KEYS, at Frontage Road and Avenida Aldea, March 6th. About 20 keys. Call to identify. 505989-3966
LOST LOST KEYS ANY CAR KEYS FOUND IN SANTA FE DURING LAST MONTH, PLEASE CALL 505-424-1420 ASK FOR LIBBY. REWARD REWARD FOR INFORMATION ON Mens grey-white, Rocky Mountain Bike taken on February 21st, evening, from Zia Vista Condos. 505-473-0326
»jobs«
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
The City of Santa Fe is seeking to fill the highly responsible law enforcement position which involves directing employees, functions, and operations of the Police Department and involves responsibility for control and coordination of police activities. The City offers competitive compensation and a generous benefit package including excellent retirement program, medical, dental, life insurance, paid holidays, generous vacation and sick leave. For detailed information, visit our website at www.santafenm.gov. Position closes 4/4/14.
MEDICAL DENTAL El Centro Family Health Behavioral Health Therapist LMSW or LISW (Preferred). Must travel to outlying clinics. Resumes & cover letter: hr@ecfh.org, or mailed to ECFH PO Box 158 Española, NM 87532 or www.ecfh.org
Full-Time or Part-Time RN
ACCOUNTING
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.
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.
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.
Rio Grande School does not discriminate on the basis of age, sex, race, color, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, and national or ethnic origin in its hiring practices. TEMPLE BETH SHALOM Preschool Director. BA, early childhood education. Knowledge of Judaism necessary. Job description at www.sftbs.org; resume to info@sftbs.org
Year round positions with Head Start (children 3 to 5) or Early Head Start (children birth to 3). See website for job requirements. TEACHER ASSISTANT Full-time with 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.
Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
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
GALLERIES SORREL SKY GALLERY IS HIRING staff for its new location on W. Palace Ave. Please email m a rg a re t@ s o rre ls k y .c o m for job descriptions.
HOSPITALITY CUSTOMER SERVICE ASSOCIATE Nambé, a 50+ year tabletop- giftware company, is looking for warehouse associates and quality control personnel for its busy Distribution Dept. in Espanola. Successful applicants have attention to detail, are organized, and have a positive attitude. Excellent communication and numerical skills are a must. Positions are non-clerical, applicants must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Must be able to pass both a background and drug test. Salary DOE. Benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com.
FAMILY SERVICES ASSISTANT Full-time position working with families of Head Start students. Bilingual English, Spanish preferred. 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.
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.
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. LPN/RN WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE
CNA’S TEACHER I Full-time with Head Start and Early Head Start or 20 hours per week with Early Head Start.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent?
Assistant RegistrarScheduling, Registration
Hospice Patient Care Manager Santa Fe
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
ADMINISTRATIVE
Assistant Marketing and Sales
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!
Downtown Santa Fe French Restaurant & Patisserie, with liquor license looking for Prep-Cook and Executive Chef. 505-216-1845 or email chezmamousf@gmail.com
IMMEDIATE OPENING
for Experienced Front Desk Clerk Reservationist Cities of Gold Casino Hotel, has an immediate opening for an experienced Hotel Front Desk Clerk Reservationist. Only candidates with experience will be considered. The position requires a flexible schedule including nights, 3 p.m. - 11 p.m., and weekends. Applicant must pass pre-employment drug screen. Resumes may be emailed to: mdelao@citiesofgold.com. Applications may be picked up and dropped off at Cities of Gold Casino Hotel. EOE
IN HOME CARE
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
WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVAILABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, 505-982-2574. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVAILABLE.
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. 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.
ACROSS 1 Bambi’s mom, e.g. 4 First grade lessons 8 Father-son actors Robert and Alan 13 Essence 14 Sodium hydroxide, in chem class 15 Deserve 16 Tricky situation to deal with 18 Chicago airport 19 Smitten 20 Piper’s son of rhyme 22 Radio switch letters 23 End 24 Salon styling stuff 26 Santa’s laugh sounds 27 Victrola corp. 29 Govt. intelligence gp. 30 Dr. of rap 31 Division word 33 Taiwanese-born director Lee 35 Asked God for guidance 37 Former NFLer with a season record 23 touchdown receptions 40 JFK’s vessel 43 Soft slip-on 44 Norse trickster 48 “I got it!” 49 “Norma __” 51 Approves 53 Flying Peter 54 Flying socialite 57 Start of a fitness motto 59 Curved foot part 60 Minor league rink org. 61 “Just watch me!” 62 “Politically Incorrect” host Bill 64 Hearty meal often made with mutton, and, in a way, what the ends of 16-, 24-, 37- and 54Across comprise 66 “Not __ out of you!” 67 Casino freebie 68 Chile’s Cape __ 69 Methods: Abbr. 70 “Ghost Hunters” channel 71 Two-time loser to DDE
3/17/14
By Charlie Riley
DOWN 1 Talk and talk and ... 2 Show more staying power than 3 Old Montreal team 4 Poker game starter 5 Sheep’s sound 6 Terra __: pottery clay 7 Surefire winner 8 Latin “I love” 9 “The Merry Widow” composer Franz 10 Serious-andfunny show 11 Orbitz quote 12 Originated (from) 13 Oh-so-stylish 17 Finished for good 21 Logical guy with pointy ears 24 Ranch worker 25 Auto dealer’s inventory 28 Bach composition 32 Gold, to Gomez 34 Workout place 36 Communication for the deaf: Abbr.
Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
38 Swiss river 39 Othello, for one 40 Pillow fight garb 41 Psychologist’s treatment 42 Cookie dough units 45 Summer shoe style 46 Former German leaders 47 Back home after traveling, say
3/17/14
50 Moral principles 52 For instance, with “as” 55 Piece of paper 56 “The Jetsons” boy 58 Malia Obama’s sister 61 Cosby/Culp TV series 63 Rotation meas. 65 Global currency org.
Classifieds
Get Results! Call 986-3000 to place your ad!
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL DENTAL
ART
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
to place your ad, call PETS SUPPLIES
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.
WAREHOUSE ASSOCIATES NAMBÉ, A 50+ year tabletop- giftware company, is looking for warehouse associates for its busy Distribution Dept. in Espanola. Successful applicants have attention to detail, are organized, and have a positive attitude. Excellent communication and numerical skills are a must. Positions are non-clerical, applicants must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. Must be able to pass both a background and drug test. Salary DOE. Benefits. Send resume to ana@nambe.com.
RETAIL Resale Store Associate
Full-time Furniture Mover, Sales Associate wanted for Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s south-side resale store. Visit www.sfhumanesociety.org for details. SALES ASSOCIATE. Full or parttime. Experience in high end apparel and jewelry. BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. Resume emailed karenmalouf@ maloufontheplaza.com.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
DOMESTIC
4X4s
4X4s
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.
2003 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY HSE. Check this baby out! $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
FIREWOOD-FUEL
4X4s
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
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
FURNITURE
2006 PONTIAC G6 4 door Sedan with 1SV Brand new tires. Great price. Checked out well. $4,999. Schedule a test drive today!
QUALITY TINY POMERANIAN puppies. Sable male $600, sable female $800, rare chocolate male $800. Registered, 1st shots. 505-901-2094 or 505753-0000.
FULL-TIME HOUSEKEEPER’S ASSISTANT 505-660-6440
SFSWMA Caja Del Rio Landfill Accepting applications for a Laborer (Temporary fulltime position at $10.66/hr.), announcement #2014-003, to perform constant labor work; including picking up litter and general maintenance. A NM Driver’s License is required. Applications will be accepted until position is filled. Call Rosalie at (505)424-1850 ext. 150 for application & job description or apply at 149 Wildlife Way, Santa Fe. EEO/AA
986-3000
2001 CHEVROLET 1500 4WD - Trust worthy at a great price. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
1994 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4WD $2,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
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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
YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPPIES, 2 females, 2 males. Small, teddybear faces. Non-shedding, hypoallergenic, registered, shots, $800$1000. Call, or text, 505-577-4755.
»cars & trucks«
2009 Toyota 4Runner 4X4
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!
2003 GMC SIERRA 4WD EXT CAB Great work truck! $8,000. Sxchedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.
Sweet 7 Passenger, Automatic V6, Power windows & locks, cruise, tilt, CD, alloys, immaculate, CarFax, warranty. $17,995. www.sweetmotorsales.com . 505954-1054.
WESTON MANDOLINE Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-4666205
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
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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
DOMESTIC
REMINGTON RAM Set 22 caliber, Brand new condition, with case and 12 boxes of charges and nails. $150.00. John 808-346-3635
1999 CADILLAC SEVILLE with 68,000 miles. Runs great. Sunroof, leather seats, fully loaded. A/C. $3,700. 505316-6409
TV RADIO STEREO SPEAKERS FOR SALE!! ALTEC Lansing BX1120, Computer Speakers, $25; Advent Wireless Speakers, AW820, with transmitter, $40. Bill, 505-466-2976.
CHEVROLET CHEVELLE 1970 SS unrestored 396, 350HP, blue, white with white stripes, $9600, M-21 MUNCIE 4SPD manual, huffyk9@outlook.com, 505-609-8587. 2005 CHEVY Impala, 87,000 miles, V-6, 4-door, in good condition. $6,000. 505-424-0233.
2007 DODGE RAM 1500 TX 4WD What a truck! $17,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505321-3920.
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! .
2008 TOYOTA FJ Cruiser. Another Lexus trade-in! 60k miles, 4x4, lifted, super nice, clean CarFax, $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.
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Sell Your Stuff!
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
2006 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER HYBRID 4WD Limited. Fresh Lexus trade! Leather, moonroof, needs nothing, clean CarFax, pristine car! $15,881. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000
»animals«
2012 CHRYSLER 200, CERTIFIED, ONLY 1700 MILES, SAVE THOUSANDS, QUEEN OF ROAD $18,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.
F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $15,500. 505-470-2536 2012 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED. FULL LUXURY, ALWAYS IN FASHION. $31,995. PLEASE CALL 505-473-1234.
IMPORTS
TRADES REPUTABLE RESTORATION & CLEANING COMPANY
is hiring Service Technician. Specializing in carpet, upholstery, rug, hard surface cleaning & water, fire, smoke and mold remediation. 24 hour emergency on call service. Experience, certification is a plus. 1 week PTO after 1 year of employment. Pay DOE. Call 505-4717711 for interview.
»merchandise«
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES GRASS, ALFALFA MIX BALES. $9.50 each. 100 or more, $9 each. Barn stored in Ribera, NM. Please call 505-4735300.
2005 Acura MDX AWD
2012 DODGE AVENGER, BLACK. LEAD THE PACK. CERTIFIED FOR $12,995. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.
Hay for sale Barn-stored pasture grass. Bales average 60 lbs. $13 per bale. Load your own in Nambé. 505-455-2562. ANTIQUES Merry Foss Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER m o v i n g . Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment, 505-7957222.
APPLIANCES 2 Dryers, $140 each, 1 Washing Machine $150, 1 stainless steel Dishwasher $150, 1 stainless steel Gas Stove $225. 505-412-7327
Sweet MDX loaded with leather, navigation, new tires, in excellent condition. No accidents, CarFax, warranty $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com . 2010 FORD F150 EXTRA CAB 4X4. LOW MILES, ZERO DOWN, WAC. CREAM OF THE CROP. $21,995. Please call 505-473-1234.
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.
2005 FORD Sport Trac Crew Cab, 4x4, automatic, 50,000 miles, fully loaded, XLT, $12,500. 505-471-2439
PETS SUPPLIES AKC REGISTERED German Shepherd Puppies (Eastern European Bloodline). 5 Females, $500 each. 4 Males, $600 each. Sable, Black, Black-Tan. Call 505-490-1748. 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.
2005 MERCURY MONTEGO - Premium luxury. $6,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-9204078. 2011 TOYOTA Tacoma Double Cab 4WD. Good miles, local vehicle, well maintained, TRD Off-Road, clean CarFax, NICE! $29,421. Call 505-216-3800.
ATTENTION DOG OWNERS!
Paws Plaza has $40 haircuts, dogs under 40 pounds. Full Service with teeth brushing. Fourth Street. 505820-7529.
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2004 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE V8 LIMITIED. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call, 505-3213920.
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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 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.
Monday, March 17, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds IMPORTS
2006 BMW X5 4.4V8
Immaculate X5 with V8, Automatic, DVD, Satellite radio, chrome wheels, 71k miles, Carfax, Warranty. $16,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
IMPORTS
2007 MERCEDES-BENZ ML350. 64k miles, navigation, back-up camera, moonroof, heated seats, excellent! $18,000. Please call 505699-8339.
to place your ad, call IMPORTS
2011 SUBARU OUTBACK LIMITED
Another One Owner, Local, 41,985 Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, XKeys, Manuals, Records, Factory Warranty, New Tires, Pristine. Soooo Perfect $23,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICE! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
986-3000
Another One Owner, Local, Garaged, Non-Smoker, X-Keys, Manuals, 36,974 Miles, Every Service Record, Press Button Convertible-Hardtop. Soooo Desirable $16,450 PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
WE GET RESULTS! 2004 BMW X3 AWD
Sweet, mint condition, low mileage, panoramic moonroof, CD, alloys with new tires. Carfax, warranty. $9,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com .
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.
So can you with a classified ad
CALL 986-3000
2004 VOLVO XC-90 AWD - Sporty and luxurious. $8,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505920-4078.
1999 Subaru GT Wagon AWD
2006 MINI COOPER-S CONVERTIBLE MANUAL
2012 HONDA CIVIC. 26K MILES, ONE OWNER, STYLISH SPLENDER. $16,999. PLEASE CALL 505-4731234.
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
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! PICKUP TRUCKS
SUVs
2007 GMC SIERRA DURAMAX 4WD. NICE TRUCK!! - $26,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
2008 CHEVROLET EQUINOX 4WD LTZ - Room for the whole family. $13,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
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2005 GMC 3500 CREWCAB DURAMAX 4WD. If you like trucks, this is the one! $22,000. 505-3213920.
2004 GMC YUKON DENALI AWD WOW! Superstar status SUV. $10,000. Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-321-3920.
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IMPORTS
2006 VOLVO-C70 CONVERTIBLE FWD
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2009 HUMMER H3T ALPHA V8. $34,000. Schedule a test drive today! Call 505-321-3920.
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! VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
B-9
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
2008 Land Rover LR3 HSE
Fully loaded in showroom condition. Impeccable tan leather and wood, service history, Carfax, free extended warranty. $18,995. 505-954-1054. www.sweetmotorsales.com
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TRUCKS & TRAILERS 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
PICKUP TRUCKS
2005 Honda Civic EX
Automatic, Moonroof, Sat Radio, tint, alloys, Carfax, Extended Warranty $8,695. 505-954-1054 www.sweetmotorsales.com
TOYOTA 2002 TACOMA TRUCK, 2door. Silver exterior, Grey interior. Auto, 2WD. 169,000 miles. Good cond. $4100. 830-719-4371.
Classifieds
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
Where treasures are found daily
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
VANS & BUSES 2004 CHEVROLET AVALANCHE Z71 4WD Crew Cab. ONLY $10,000! Please call 505-920-4078 .
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
SPORTS CARS www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2008 TOYOTA CAMRY-SE
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!
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!
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!
2011 KIA SEDONA LX - This van is perfect for your family. $14,000 Please call 505-321-3920.
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945 1994 CHEVROLET S10 - GAS SAVER! Check it out. Only $2,000! Schedule a test drive today! Please call 505-920-4078.
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!
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.
»recreational«
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2004 FORD Mustang Convertible. Excellent condition, automatic, 44,000 miles $9,500. 505-471-2439
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.
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!
2006 NISSAN ALTIMA. $7,000. Schedule a test drive today! 505920-4078.
VIEW VEHICLE & CARFAX AT: santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
CAMPERS & RVs 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
1998 TOYOTA 4-door Corolla. 124,000 miles, good condition. $2,800. Call to schedule a test drive, 505-231-5370.
DUTCHMEN CLASSIC 1999 Options: furnace heater, Porta Potti, Awning, Cooktop, Refrigerator, Bike, Boat Rack, Two oversized beds, Dinette. Plenty of storage. $2,000. 505-2319341 2008 JEEP RUBICON 4 door. TWO TOPS - NICE! - $25,000. Schedule a test drive today! $6,000. 505-9204078.
www.furrysbuickgmc.com www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2003 FORD F-150 2WD Regular Cab Flareside 6-1/2 Ft. Box XL. 99,602 miles. $7,999. Schedule a test drive today.
2002 LEXUS RX300. Loaded & Very Good condition. Gold. Factory warranted transmission. Newer tires. Leather interior, sunroof. $6,800. 505660-6008
2009 VOLKSWAGEN TIGUAN SE AWD, navigation, moonroof, turbo, clean CarFax, prisitine! $15,897. Call 505-216-3800. 2004 VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE. Automatic. Leather interior, excellent condition. 68,000 miles. $7,500 OBO. 505-577-1159.
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
SELL IT FOR $100 OR LESS AND PAY $10. Larger Using
Typeeasy! It’s that will help your ad get noticed
986-3000 Call Classifieds For Details Today!
986-3000
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE Case No: D-101-DM2014-00112 Joshua J. Forthmann, Petitioner/Plantiff, vs Guadalupe MartinezH e r n a n d e z , Respondent/Defenda nt NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF SUIT STATE OF NEW MEXICO to Guadalupe Martinez-Hernandez GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that Joshua J. Forthmann, the above-named P e t itio n e r / P la n t if f , has filed a civil action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, The general object thereof being: to dissolve the marriage between the Petitioner and yourself. Unless you enter your appearance in this cause within thirty (30) days of the date of the last publication of this Notice, judgement by default may be entered against you. Joshua J Forthmann 15 W. Wildflower Drive, Santa Fe, NM 87506 Witness this Honorable Sylvia LaMar, District Judge of the First Judicial District Court of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Santa Fe this 11th day of March 2014. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of the District Court. Legal #96633 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 17, 24, 31 2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR PROPOSAL Cooperative Educational Services, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109, will receive sealed proposals until 1:30 p.m. local time, Friday, April 18, 2014, for Category 1: Modular and Portable Factory ]Built Wood Buildings, Including Site Preparation, Delivery, Installation, Setup and Landscaping; Category 2: Pre ]Engineered Metal Buildings Including Site Preparation, Delivery, Installation, and Setup; Category 3: Pre ]Engineered Permanent and Re ]Locatable Shade Structures, Including Site Preparation, Delivery, Installation, and Setup; Category 4: Contractor for Site Preparation, Transportation, Setup, Renovating, and Repair of Portable, Modular and Pre ]Engineered Buildings Wood and Metal Buildings There will be a Non ]Required Pre ]Proposal Conference held on Tuesday, April 01, 2014, at 1:30 p.m. local time at the Cooperative Educational Services offices, 4216 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM. To participate in the Pre ]ProposalConference by phone, contact CES f Procurement office by phone at 505 ]344 ]5470. All proposals must be submitted in a sealed envelope marked gSEALED PROPOSAL . RFP 2014 ]010 h on the front of the envelope. A list of qualifications and specifications, instructions to bidders and RFP forms can be obtained upon request by fax (505 ]344 ]9343) mail, email (bids@ces.org) or by telephone (505 ]344 ]5470) from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday ]Friday, except holidays. Cooperative Educational Services reserves the express
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LEGALS
LEGALS
p right to accept or reject any or all bids. /s/ David Chavez, Executive Director Legal #96634 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 17, 24 2014
P.O. Box 909 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-0909 Telephone: (505) 9556967 Facsimile: (505) 9556748 Email: awalker@ci.santafe.nm.us Legal #96637 ADVERTISEMENT Published in The SanFOR PROPOSAL Cooperative Educa- ta Fe New Mexican on tional Services, 4216 March 17, 24, 31 2014 Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109, will receive FIRST JUDICIAL sealed proposals unDISTRICT COURT til 1:30 p.m. local STATE OF time, Friday, April 4, NEW MEXICO 2014, for RFP COUNTY OF 2014 ]008, Category 1, SANTA FE PARCC Assessment Devices, CITY OF SANTA FE ex Browsers and Tools to rel. include Desktop, Lap- SANTA FE POLICE DEtop, Netbook, and PARTMENT, Thin Client/VDI Computers, Tablets, Petitioner, Input Devices, Headphones/Earphon vs. es and Microphones, Accessories; Instruc- No. D-101-CV-2013tor 02610 and Student Tools/Accommodatio ONE (1) 1996 GREEN ns. TOYOTA TACOMA There will be a V . I . N . N o n ] R e q u i r e d 4TAVL52N6TZ121288, Pre ]Proposal Conference held on ThursRespondent, day, March 27, 2014 at 1:30 p.m. and local time at the Cooperative Educational ALAN M. DEEM, Services offices, 4216 Claimant. Balloon Park Road NE, Albuquerque, NOTICE NM. To participate in the Pre ]ProposalCon- TO ALAN M. DEEM: ference by phone, contact CES f Procure- The above-captioned ment office by phone action has been filed at 505 ]344 ]5470. to seek forfeiture of All proposals must be the above-described submitted in a sealed motor vehicle. If no envelope marked g- response is filed, deSEALED PROPOSAL . fault judgment may RFP 2014 ]008 h on be entered in favor of the front of the enve- the Petitioner. The lope. A list of qualifi- name, address and cations and specifi- telephone number of cations, instructions Petitioner’s attorney to Offerors and RFP are: forms can be ob- R. Alfred Walker tained upon request Assistant City Attorby fax (505 ]344 ]9343), ney mail, email City of Santa Fe (bids@ces.org) or by 200 Lincoln Avenue telephone P.O. Box 909 (505 ]344 ]5470) from Santa Fe, New Mexico 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., 87504-0909 Monday ]Friday, ex- Telephone: (505) 955cept holidays. 6967 Cooperative Educa- Facsimile: (505) 955tional Services re- 6748 serves the express E m a i l : right to accept or re- a w a l k e r @ c i . s a n t a ject any or all bids. fe.nm.us /s/ David Chavez, Legal #96638 Executive Director Published in The SanLegal #96636 ta Fe New Mexican on Published in The San- March 17, 24, 31 2014 ta Fe New Mexican on March 17, 24 2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE
Eldorado Area Water & Sanitation District 1 Caliente Road, Suite F Santa Fe, New Mexico 87106 CITY OF SANTA FE ex PROJECT NAME: rel. Well No. 2 Re-Drill and SANTA FE POLICE DE- Replacement PARTMENT, Separate sealed BIDS Petitioner, for EAWSD Well No. 2, which includes vs. drilling of a new well, installation of the reNo. D-101-CV-2013placement well cas02614 ing and pump, discharge piping, imONE (1) 1990 WHITE provements to the FORD VAN chemical feed sysV . I . N . tem, electrical im1FDEE14H6LHA30764 p r o v e m e n t s , NEW MEXICO LICENSE recoating of interior NO. 784 RRA, and exterior, and site fencing will be reRespondent, ceived by the Eldorado Area Water and & Sanitation District at 1 Caliente Road, ALICIA ROMERO, and Suite F, Santa Fe, NM NEW MEXICO TITLE 87508 LOANS, until 2:00 p.m. (local Claimants. time) April 16 , 20 14 , and then publicly NOTICE opened and read aloud at TO ALICIA ROMERO: 1 Caliente Road, Suite F, Santa Fe, NM The above-captioned 87508 . action has been filed to seek forfeiture of Pre-Bid Conference. the above-described A non-mandatory motor vehicle. If no Pre-Bid Conference response is filed, de- meeting will be held fault judgment may on March 27, 2014 at be entered in favor of 2:00 p.m. (local time) the Petitioner. The at 1 Caliente Road, name, address and Suite F, Santa Fe, NM telephone number of 87508 . A tour of the Petitioner’s attorney project site will folare: low after the meetR. Alfred Walker ing. Assistant City Attorney The CONTRACT City of Santa Fe DOCUMENTS may be 200 Lincoln Avenue examined at the fol-
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986-3000
to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS lowing locations: Molzen Corbin, 2701 Miles Road, SE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106 Construction Reporter, 1607 2nd St., Albuquerque, NM 87107 F.W. Dodge Corporation, 1615 University Ave., NE, Albuquerque, NM 87107 Builders News, 3435 Princeton Drive, NE, Albuquerque, NM 87107 Copies of the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS may be obtained at the Issuing Office of Molzen Corbin, located at 2701 Miles Road, SE, Albuquerque, New Mexico, upon payment of $ 200.00 as a deposit for the CONTRACT DOCUMENTS. All checks shall be made payable to the OWNER, as follows: Eldorado Area Water & Sanitation District . Cash will not be accepted.
LEGALS NMAC. GENERAL INFORMAT I O N : All questions about the contents of the RFP document shall be directed to: Name: Ms. Delia Flores, Procurement Manager Telephone: (505) 4765555 Fax: (505) 476-4374 E m a i l : Delia.flores@state.n m.us I S S U A N C E : The Request for Proposals will be issued on March 14, 2014. Firms interested in obtaining a copy may access and download the document from the Internet on at the following address: http://www.nmenv.st ate.nm.us/ust/ustbto p.html
PRE-PROPOSAL C O N F E R E N C E : March 18, 2014, 10:00 am Mountain StandThis deposit is fully ard Time. refundable to any DUE PLANHOLDER who re- PROPOSAL AND TIME : turns the CONTRACT DATE DOCUMENTS in good Proposals must be recondition within 10 ceived by the Procalendar days of the curement Manager Bid Opening. no later than April 15, 2014, 3:00 pm MounLegal#96725 tain Standard Time. Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican Proposals received on: March 17, 2014 after the due date and time will not be accepted. FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Legal #96563 COUNTY OF Published in The SanSANTA FE ta Fe New Mexican on STATE OF March 17, 2014. NEW MEXICO CASE NO. 2014-00023
D-101-PB-
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF NANCY L. HOLT, DECEASED NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that RICHARD SHEBAIRO has been appointed personal representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the personal representative at the address listed below (c/o Cuddy & McCarthy, LLP), or filed with the First Judicial District Court of Santa Fe County, New Mexico, located at the following address: 225 Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe NM 87501 (Mailing: P.O. Box 2268, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2268). CUDDY & McCARTHY, LLP By: /s/ Timothy W. Foster Timothy W. Foster Attorneys for Personal Representative Post Office Box 4160 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502-4160 Legal #96626 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 10, 17 2014 Request for Proposal Number: 14-667-00-0008 TIT L E : Remedial Action for Texaco Pit Stop State Lead Site P U R P O S E : This Procurement is to obtain professional environmental consulting services and engineering services to conduct remediation planning, design, remedial activities and other technical support activities at the Pit Stop Texaco leaking petroleum storage tank site in Gallup, New Mexico (Release ID #308), in accordance with 20.5
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LEGAL NOTICE New Mexico OffHighway Motor Vehicle Advisory Board Meeting On Thursday, March 27th, 2014, beginning at 5:30 p.m., at the Department of Game and Fish Albuquerque Office, at 3841 Midway Place NE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109, the New Mexico Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Advisory Board will meet in public session to hear and consider action as appropriate on the following: Election of advisory board chairman and vice-chair; advisory board role and responsibilities; State Land OHV park proposal update; OHV law enforcement update; OHV education update; travel plan comments, OHV grant application review committee, OHV Program budget, and future meeting dates and locations. A copy of the agenda or any of the affected rules can be obtained from the New Mexico Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Program, New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, 3841 Midway Place NE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109, or on the Department’s website. This agenda is subject to change up to 72 hours prior to the meeting. Please contact the New Mexico OffHighway Motor Vehicle Program office at (505) 222-4727 or visit the Department’s website at www.wildlife.state.n m.us or program website at www.B4uRide.com for updated information. If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact the Human Resources Division at (505) 4768029. Please contact the Human Resources Division at least 3 working days before the set meeting date.
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email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS g Public documents, including the agenda and minutes can be provided in various accessible forms. Please contact the Human Resources Division if a summary or other type of accessible form is needed.
LEGALS
p p tact the RFP procure- NOTICE ment manager: SALE
Joseph Miano RFP Procurement Manager New Mexico Department of Game and Fish One Wildlife Way Santa Fe, NM 87507 Telephone #: (505) 476-8086 Legal#96618 Published in the San- Fax #: 476-8137 ta Fe New Mexican E m a i l : joseph.miano@state. on: March 17, 2014 nm.us NAMBE PUEBLO Legal#96439 TRIBAL COURT Published in the SanCOUNTY OF SANTA ta Fe New Mexican FE STATE OF NEW March 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, MEXICO No. DM12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 2012-010 20, 21, 2014 REFERNCEING CASE No. JV-2005-005 IN THE MATTER OF S. N., A MINOR CHILD, Notice is hereby givAND CONCERNING en that on July 31, CHRISTINA R. 2013, Application No. HERRERA AND ARRG-8552 for a Permit ROW NASTEWAY, to Change an Existing NOTICE OF PETITION Water Right was filed FOR TERMINATION with the Office of the OF PARENTAL State Engineer by RIGHTS Ranch House Road P.O. You are hereby noti- Condominiums, fied that an action Box 87, Tesuque, NM has been filed 87574. against you in the said Court by the The applicant seeks Pueblo of Nambe in to replace existing which the Permanen- adjudicated well RGcy family has filed a 85552, at a point Petition for Termina- when X = 1,734,305 tion of Parental and Y = 1,733,922 Rights with respect NMSP (NAD 83 - Feet), to Sunrise Nasteway, on 1.71 acres owned born to you on by the applicant, for 8/2/2006. You are fur- the diversion of 3.0 ther notified that un- acre-feet of water per less you file a written year used for domesresponse to the Peti- tic and livestock purtion no later than poses at the Ranch Road twenty days after House this notice has been Condominiums, Secpublished for three tion 25, T18N, R9E weeks, in the above NMPM, in Tesuque, court, located at the Santa Fe Co., NM. Exadjudicated Nambe Pueblo Tribal isting Court, 16-ABC NP 102 well RG-85552 will be East, Nambe Pueblo, replaced and plugged New Mexico, judg- due to not producing ment will be entered enough water. Reagainst you and your placement well RGparental rights will be 85552 will be approxiterminated. WITNESS mately 200 feet in my hand and Seal of depth, with an outthe Nambe Pueblo side diameter of well Tribal Court of the casing of 4.5 inches, State of New Mexico. and be located within Kym E. Valencia Clerk 50 feet of existing well RG-85552. of the Tribal Court. /s/ Kym E. Valencia Court Clerk Pueblo of Nambe Tribal Court Route 1 Box 117-BB Santa Fe, New Mexico 87506 Phone: 505-455-0142 Fax: 505-455-9136 Legal# 96660 Pub;ished in the Santa Fe New Mexican March 10, 17, 24, 2014 NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF GAME AND FISH IS ACCEPTING PROPOSALS FOR: FINANCIAL AND COMPLIANCE AUDIT SERVICES The Department of Game and Fish is accepting proposals for qualified firms of certified public accountants to perform the annual financial and single audit compliance of the Agency for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2014. The audits are to be performed in accordance with Generally Accepted Auditing Standards (GAAS), the standards set forth for financial audits in the U.S General Accounting Office’s (GOA) Government Auditing Standards the provisions of the Federal Single Audit Act, amendments of the 1996 and Applicable Federal OMB Circulars, Audits of State and Local Governments. Audits must comply with the New Mexico State Auditors Rule 2.2.2 NMAC, governing the audits of agencies of the State of New Mexico. Submission of the proposal must be sent to the Department of Game and Fish no Later than 3:00p.m. April 22, 2014. To obtain a copy of the Request for Proposal please con-
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LEGALS
Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) P u b l i c Welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the State of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with Office of the State Engineer, Water Rights Division, Room 102, P.O. Box 25102, Santa Fe, NM 87504, within ten (10) days after the date of the last publication of this Notice. Facsimilies (fax) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to the Office of the State Engineer, 505-8276682. Of no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3. Legal#96723 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: March 17, 24, 31, 2014
You can view your legal ad online at sfnmclassifieds.com
OF
LEGALS p meeting will be held at the Los Lunas Community Programs office located at 445 Camino Del Rey, SW, suite A., Los Lunas, NM 87031 The Governing Board will receive committee reports, and discuss health facility policies and quality assurance/performance improvement activities and reports, as well as any other business that may regularly come before the Governing Board. A copy of the agenda for the meeting will be available on April 10, 2014 in the Office of the Secretary, located at: 1190 St. Francis Dr. Suite N-3050, Santa Fe, NM 87502. Webcast is available through the Department of Health link and is listed on the open meeting web page at: http://nmhealth.org/ope nmeeting/. The email address for questions is: nmdoh.openmeetings@ state.nm.us If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact the department at least one (1) week prior to the meeting or as soon as possible. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. Please contact Cathy Thompson at 505-8272701 if you have any questions. The public is welcome to attend this meeting.
PUBLIC This
Notice is hereby given that the following property shall be sold at Public Auction on the 26th day of March 2014 at 12 NOON at Aztec Self Storage, 7521 Old Airtport Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87507 in Satisfaction of lein in accordance with the New Mexico Self Storage Act. Name: Evelyn Castillo Address: 1716 Callejon Emilia Santa Fe, NM 87501 Unit: C-9 Contents: Couch, Love seat, Head board, Table & Chairs and numerous other items Name: Eliseo Arvidres Chavez Address: 46 Juniper Santa Fe, NM 87507 Unit: C-18 Contents: Wooden chair, Throw rug, Wood door, Queen mattress, Kid’s guitar, Misc. Bucket items Name: Marisela Gutierrez Address: 6151 Airport Rd. #247 Santa Fe, NM 87507 Unit D-48 Contents: 1 Large wood head board w/Mirror, 1 box spring, 1 twin mattress, 1 coffee end table Name: Martin L. Rivera Address: PO BOX 24272 Santa Fe, NM 87507 Unit: D49 Contents: 3 Door Upright dresser, Ski boots, Drun Sticks, Clothes and Other Misc. Items.
Legal#96726 Published in the Santa Fe New Mexican on: March 17, 2014
Request for Proposal Number: 14-667-00-0009
Legal#96606 Published in the San- TIT L E : Remedial Acta Fe New Mexican tion for S&L Service on: March 10, 17, 2014 Station State Lead Site NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS P U R P O S E : This ProFOR curement is to obtain FOR PROFESSIONAL provide professional SERVICES environmental conANNUAL AUDIT sulting services and engineering services Notice is hereby giv- to conduct remediaen that qualified per- tion operation and sons or firms are in- maintenance, other vited to submit pro- remedial activities as posals to the New warranted, well samMexico Public pling, and other techSchools Insurance nical support activiAuthority ("NMPSIA" ties at the S&L Servor the authority) of- ice Station Site Refice at 410 Old Taos lease ID (RID) # 1194, Highway, Santa Fe, in accordance with New Mexico 87501. 20.5 NMAC. NMPSIA solicits proposals to perform professional audit services for FY 2014 (July 1, 2013 - June 30, 2014).
GENERAL INFORMAT I O N : All questions about the contents of the RFP document shall be directed to:
A complete copy of the Request for Proposals may be secured from Don Gonzales, Jr., Comptroller, at NMPSIA, 410 Old Taos Highway, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501, (505) 988-2736.
Name: Ms. Delia Flores, Procurement Manager Telephone: (505) 4765555 Fax: (505) 476-4374 E m a i l : Delia.flores@state.n m.us
Deadline for receipt of proposals shall be 3:00 o’clock p.m. Mountain Daylight Saving Time on April 17, 2014.
I S S U A N C E : The Request for Proposals will be issued on March 17, 2014. Firms interested in obtaining a copy may acSubmitted by: cess and download New Mexico Public the document from Schools the Internet on at the Insurance Authority following address: 410 Old Taos Highway Santa Fe, New Mexico http://www.nmenv.st 87501 ate.nm.us/ust/ustbto (505) 988-2736 p.html Don Gonzales, Jr. Comptroller New Mexico Public Schools Insurance Authority Legal #96635 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 17, 21 2014
PRE-PROPOSAL C O N F E R E N C E : March 21, 2014, 9:00 am Mountain Daylight Time.
PROPOSAL DUE DATE AND TIME : Proposals must be received by the Procurement Manager PUBLIC MEETING no later than April 17, NOTICE 2014, 3:00 pm MounThe Governing Board of tain Daylight Time. the New Mexico Department of Health Facilities and Los Lunas Community Program will hold a regular meeting on Thursday, April 17, 2014 at 10:00am-12:00pm.
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Proposals received after the due date and time will not be accepted. Legal #96565 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on March 17, 2014.
TIME OUT
Monday, March 19, 17, 2014 Saturday, December 2009 THE THENEW NEWMEXICAN MEXICAN
ANNIE’S MAILBOX ACROSS 1 Period just before dark 5 Sprint 9 Barnyard brayers 14 “Do ___ others as …” 15 ___-bitty 16 Goes like a racecar 17 Item accompanying a pencil in miniature golf 19 Em and Jemima 20 Judging component at a beauty pageant 21 Face-to-face exams 23 Hurled weapon 24 Money available for nonessentials 28 Poet Ogden 30 Hawaiian medicine man 31 C.I.O.’s partner 34 Lifeguard areas 37 When flights are due in, for short 38 Food, warmth or a cozy bed 42 See 33-Down 43 Hotel robe material 44 Cloud’s place 45 Samantha’s mother on “Bewitched”
48 ___ of Sandwich 50 Stuffed figure in a cornfield 53 Make sport of 57 Native of 58-Across 58 The Last Frontier state 59 Beginning of a Flintstones cry 62 Gym locale … or feature of 17-, 24-, 38- and 50-Across 64 Premature 65 Elvis’s middle name 66 Many a new driver 67 High heels, e.g. 68 It’s often long at Disneyland 69 Dinner scraps
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
DOWN Does some light housework Take the lid off Embezzled, e.g. Like Hyundais or Kias Place to find wds. One thing ___ time Barber’s sharpener Nine-headed serpent of myth Red or pink bloom
Former cheater concerns woman
10 Second-incommand in a kitchen 11 Junior, to Senior 12 CPR expert 13 Leaky tire sound 18 Mesmerized 22 Noah’s construction 24 Position between second and third, informally 25 Hyundai and Kia 26 Cattiness 27 Quickly made, as a decision 29 Not worth a ___ 31 Symptoms of rheumatism 32 Swiss currency
33 With 42-Across, help out 35 “To Kill a Mockingbird” author Harper 36 Item in the hardware department with a “+” or “–” on its head 39 So darned cute 40 ___ pro nobis 41 ___ Beach, S.C. 46 Pass-the-baton events 47 Fortunate card to have with a queen or king in blackjack 49 Makeshift shelter
51 Out of town? 52 Cheri formerly of “S.N.L.” 54 Fall bloomer 55 Sport with clay pigeons 56 Makes, as wages 58 Proactiv target 59 “You betcha!” 60 Response to a massage 61 Preppy, party-loving, egotistical male, in modern lingo 63 Swindle
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes. com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscroptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
Hocus Focus
Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.
Subject: GEOGRAPHY (e.g., Which Great Lake has no Canadian shoreline? Answer: Lake Michigan.)
Dear Annie: After 35 years of marriage, my abusive husband asked for a divorce. I had stayed for the children’s sake, but now know that was a mistake. Children grow up thinking abuse is normal. Since the divorce, I have fallen in love with “Derek.” Derek and his ex-wife both engaged in affairs when the going got rough. Derek has been totally honest with me about this. He’s in counseling and is committed to being a better man. The problem is, I can’t kick the feeling that I can’t trust him. Early in our relationship, Derek attended a reunion, drank too much and ended up having sex with an ex-classmate who came to his room. He was forthright about it and very regretful. He swore it would never happen again. We were not having a “rough time” in our relationship, so I don’t know why this happened. Do you think he’s a sex addict? Does he just like the challenge of a conquest? Does he need the excitement of a new partner? Is it to boost his ego? It’s been four years, and he’s been faithful since. He has talked about marriage, but I’m not sure. I do love him. But the pain of being rejected by my husband was bad enough. It took a lot of counseling to regain my self-esteem. An affair in a second marriage would devastate me. How can I trust Derek so that I am secure when he’s not with me? Is this relationship too great a risk? We’ve had counseling together and separately and discussed this issue, but I’m still confused. — Want to Make the Right Decision Dear Want: One episode of cheating in four years does not constitute a sex addiction. We think it’s more a behavior pattern, and counseling plus motivation can change that. However, no marriage comes with a guarantee of fidelity. Derek is trying hard to prove himself trustworthy, but that doesn’t ensure he won’t cheat if your relationship takes a dive.
All relationships require a leap of faith, although you do not need to commit to marriage if you aren’t ready. Dear Annie: My sister put on an antique show at a nearby hall and asked whether I would provide refreshments as a favor. An elderly man bought a chocolate-chip cookie and broke a tooth. I apologized and explained that I freeze the cookies after they are baked to keep them fresh. But they had been sitting out for 45 minutes, so they should have been plenty soft. He told me that he has problems with his teeth and knew something like this would happen someday, but he’s on disability and wants me to pay for his dental bill. Am I liable? I am totally clueless. — Cookies No More Dear Cookies: We have no way of knowing exactly what happened or why, whether you are at fault or whether the man is trying to con you. If you are being threatened with a lawsuit, please talk to a lawyer immediately. If he is simply asking for money and you feel responsible, whether to offer him anything is up to you, but get a release from him in writing saying that this settles the matter and he will make no additional claim against you. Dear Annie: This is in response to “Pennsylvania,” the woman whose husband supposedly has been calling escorts. We have not heard his side. She could be a liar. If he is calling escorts, that means she is not doing her job as a wife. If she checks his cellphone bills, she cannot be trusted. If my wife ever pulled that stunt, we would no longer be married. Not that she could find anything. I keep my private matters well hidden. — S. Dear S.: You’re quite a guy. Your wife has our condolences.
Sheinwold’s bridge
FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. On which island did Napoleon die? Answer________ 2. Which country of South America is last alphabetically? Answer________ U.S. immigrant inspection station. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. On which island is Mount Etna? Answer________ 5. Which country uses the name HelveAnswer________ 6. Which island is directly north of the island of Sardinia? Answer________
7. On which island is Mount Fuji? Answer________ 8. What is considered to be the loudest sound ever heard in modern history? Answer________ 9. On which island is the Palace of Knossos? Answer________
Cryptoquip
ANSWERS: 1. Saint Helena. 2. Venezuela. 3. Ellis Island. 4. Sicily. 5. Switzerland. 6. Corsica. 7. Honshu. 8. Krakatoa explosion (1883). 9. Crete.
WHITE FORCES MATE Hint: Promote a pawn. Solution: 1. Bg7ch! Kxg7 2. f8=Q mate! [adapted from, Spraggett-Abdumalik ’14].
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher
Today in history Today is Monday, March 17, the 76th day of 2014. There are 289 days left in the year. This is St. Patrick’s Day. Today’s highlight in history: On March 17, 1776, British forces evacuated Boston during the Revolutionary War.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, March 17, 2014: This year you have to handle more than your share of demands, especially those that revolve around a special relationship. You often might not see eyeto-eye with this person, but you learn from each other. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Your instincts will help you understand a partner’s needs. Understand that you are capable of expressing unusual sensitivity. Tonight: Get into the St. Paddy’s Day mood. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH Speak your mind. You’ll sense a change in someone’s demeanor that could concern you. Your efforts count more than you realize. Tonight: Paint the town green. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You might not be in the right shape to do what is necessary. Your creativity will charge any interaction you have now. Tonight: Enjoy the moment. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Pressure builds, and there are many options. You have a strong intuitive sense today that you’ll put to good use. Try to eliminate as much as you can. Tonight: At home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You will receive a spontaneous invitation that you would like to say yes to, but it might force you to cancel other established plans. Tonight: Whatever makes you happy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You might feel uncomfortable when someone brings up your tendency to overindulge. A loved one might try to encourage this conversation. Tonight: Try to relax.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH You’ll want to network rather than be stuck in a meeting. Nothing makes you as happy as being the party animal you naturally are. Try to get started early. Tonight: With friends.
PH.D. LEVEL
Chess quiz
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HH If you want to let go of a tradition, make it OK. It is quite possible that you need a break. Tonight: Not to be found.
tia on its stamps and coins?
ANSWERS:
Horoscope
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH You might have made plans with someone, only to have a last-minute change occur. If you are unattached, the potential for meeting someone is high. Tonight: Party away.
3. Until 1954, this island was the busiest
Jumble
B-11 A-1
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH You naturally take the lead, whether you’re at work or out socializing. Take charge — be it at the office, at home or at a party. Tonight: A must appearance. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Your mind wanders today to distant places or people far away You might need to carefully rethink a decision involving a personal matter. Tonight: Try a new spot. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH One-on-one relating could take a new twist. Perhaps a discussion about longterm goals with a friend needs to happen. You also might find that you are changing your values. Tonight: Go with the flow. Jacqueline Bigar
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, March 17, 2014
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
B-12
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER