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Former Bernalillo County treasurer and ex-state senator faces former party chairman in June 3 Democratic primary
Amputation evolves into viable option Advanced prosthetics, spurred in part by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, help amputees lead more active lifestyles. LIfe & ScIence, A-9
High-risk wells go unchecked in N.M. Report: BLM skipped inspections, failed to coordinate with state regulators By Hope Yen
The Associated press
WASHINGTON — The government has failed to inspect thousands of oil and gas wells it considers potentially high risks for water contamination and other environmental damage, congressional investigators say. The report, obtained by The Associated Press before its public release, highlights substantial gaps in oversight by the agency that manages oil and gas development on federal and Indian lands. Investigators said weak control by the Interior Department’s Bureau of Land Management resulted from policies based on outdated science and from incomplete monitoring data. The findings from the Government Accountability Office come amid an energy boom in the country and the increasing
Obituaries
use of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. That process involves pumping huge volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground to split open rocks to allow oil and gas to flow. It has produced major economic benefits, but also raised fears that the chemicals could spread to water supplies. The audit also said the BLM did not coordinate effectively with state regulators in New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Utah. The bureau has become a symbol of federal overreach to industry groups opposed to government regulations related to oil and gas drilling. Environmental groups say the Obama administration needs to do more to guard against environmental damage. In the coming months, the administration is expected to issue rules on fracking and methane gas emissions. The report said the agency “cannot accurately and efficiently identify whether federal and Indian resources are properly protected or that federal
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Gilbert Raymond Ortiz, Nambé, May 4 Steven J. Torrez, 81, Chama, May 7
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By Milan Simonich The New Mexican
Tim Eichenberg was just 22 when he was elected treasurer of New Mexico’s most populous county. Forty years later, Eichenberg is making a political comeback of sorts by running for state treasurer. His opponent in the Democratic
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N
ot many panhandlers pass out business cards. Bohdan Sywanyk is the exception. “Bodie The Handyman” is the name on his card. It contains the number to his mobile phone and a black-and-gray caricature of a rawboned, bespectacled man holding a hammer. Sywanyk has no luxuries in his life, and that includes his cellphone. He gets around Santa Fe on his bicycle, spends his nights in shelMilan ters or on friends’ Simonich couches, and stores Ringside Seat his tools with a buddy. He signed away his red pickup to the city in 2012 after he was convicted of drunken driving and could not pay the fees to retrieve it from an impound lot. Losing his truck made it harder to find work, another setback in a long run of problems, many of them self-inflicted. Having a cellphone and business cards gives him a chance to land work. But Bodie the Handyman spends more time begging for change or “singles” than he does fixing bathroom tile or paneling in family rooms. “I’m embarrassed to be doing what I’m doing,” he said. But he does it. Bad choices contributed to his downfall. Bad economic times have made it harder to recover. He said he was laid off from his last full-time job when the recession killed construction projects. He collected unemployment for more than a year before it ran out. Sywanyk admits to leading a life in
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Democratic Party of New Mexico at age 36. State treasurer may seem like a less glamorous job than the other offices Wertheim has sought, but he says it is the right fit for him because of his abiding interest in improving the state’s economy.
Bad choices, tough economy make life hard for handyman
Pasapick Today
primary election on June 3 is John Wertheim, who also jumped into competitive politics at an early age. Wertheim was 24 when he served as New Mexico director of Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign. Wertheim ran for Congress four years later. He lost the race but went on to become chairman of the
A passerby gives Bohdan ‘Bodie’ Sywanyk money Friday in a parking lot on the south side of town. Sywanyk, a handyman and mason who is looking for work, has been panhandling for several years. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
which he used illegal drugs and drank to excess. That is part of the reason he turned into something he never expected to be — a 61-year-old panhandler. Still, he has the thick, worn hands of a working man, and he says he takes pride in doing a good job. He wants to work and occasionally finds some. “A lick,” he calls it when he lands a short-term job, as he did last Friday. Sywanyk says most panhandlers, like most homeless people, have alcohol or drug problems, or are mentally ill. Sywanyk knows that panhandlers have been blamed for creating a menacing climate on the Santa Fe Plaza. But, he says, he learned long ago to stay away from the historic
Featuring the Santa Fe University of Art and Design Rock Ensemble and Funk/ R&B Ensemble, 8 p.m., O’Shaughnessy patio, Benildus Hall, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive, no charge.
square, as have many others who beg for money. “You don’t hang there for long before someone calls the cops or the management,” he said. But Mayor Javier Gonzales, who took office two months ago, heard from plenty of people who said panhandlers were hurting the Plaza and making Santa Fe a less desirable place. “It has been a problem,” the mayor said in an interview. In an unscientific online poll in March by The New Mexican, “removing panhandlers and nuisances from the Plaza and downtown” received the most votes for what Gonzales’ priority should be. A total of 398 people, nearly a quarter of those who responded, said rousting panhandlers was the most important
Please see RIngSIDe, Page A-4
Having a cellphone and business cards gives him a chance to land work. But Sywanyk spends more time begging for change or ‘singles’ than he does fixing bathroom tile or paneling in family rooms.
Across U.S., traditional and charter schools seek ways to collaborate 20 years after movement began, few alternative approaches have made it to regular classrooms By Javier C. Hernández
The New York Times
NEW YORK — When Neil J. McNeill Jr., principal of the Middle School for Art and Philosophy in Brooklyn, learned that fewer than 4 percent of his students had passed state exams in math last year, he was frustrated. It so happened that he shared a building with one of the top-performing schools in the Brownsville neighborhood, Kings Collegiate Charter School, where 37 percent of the stu-
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dents had passed, well above the New York City middle-school average of 27 percent. McNeill had long been curious about the charter school’s strategies: It, too, served large numbers of lowincome black students, many from the same neighborhoods. But the two schools operated in their own bubbles, with separate public-address systems and different textbooks. And as a matter of practice, they did not talk about academics. “We are kind of two ships in the night,” McNeill, 39, said recently.
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A primary rationale for the creation of charter schools, which are publicly financed and privately run, was to develop test kitchens for practices that could be exported into the traditional schools. President Barack Obama, in recently proclaiming National Charter Schools Week, said they “can provide effective approaches for the broader public education system.” But two decades since they began to appear, educators from both systems concede that very little of what has worked for charter schools has found its way into regular classrooms. Testy political battles over space and money have inhibited attempts at collaboration. The sharing of
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school buildings, which in theory should foster communication, has more frequently led to conflict. And some charter schools have veered so sharply from the traditional model — with longer school years, armies of nonunion workers and flashy enrichment opportunities like trips to the Galápagos Islands — that their ideas are viewed as unworkable in regular schools. In recent years, educational leaders, concerned about hostilities between the two types of schools, have worked to foster warmer relations. In Tulsa, Okla., charter schools and district schools are working together to
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
NATION&WORLD YEMEN
By Ahmed Al-Haj
The Associated Press
Monthslong fighting in Iraq’s Anbar province hits business Sgt. Andres Wells of the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety in Michigan, who successfully used text messaging to negotiate with a suicidal robbery suspect during a 2011 standoff, texts on his phone Tuesday. MARK BUGNASKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Officers add texting to crisis negotiation arsenal the FBI, but it’s something that they are incorporating into any new training.” Red Bank, Tenn., Police Chief Tim Christol The suspect in a gas station robbery and includes texting in his sessions and has pub100 mph chase kept pointing his handgun to his lished articles on the topic. head, and police negotiator Andres Wells was Besides adrenaline rendering negotiators all doing all he could to keep the man from comthumbs on a miniature keypad, Christol said, mitting suicide. But he kept cutting Wells’ phone many of the typical skills officers employ to get calls short. people talking don’t always translate, things like Then, about 10 minutes after the last hang up, emotional labeling — telling someone “I hear Wells’ cellphone chimed. It was a text — from sadness” or “You sound angry.” the suspect. “We’re losing those verbal cues that we want “Please call Amie,” the message said, followed to listen to to help us decide where this person is by the number of the man’s girlfriend. — if they’re manic at the time, if they’re in a state Wells was taken aback. In three years as a of depression,” Christol said. “Words are only negotiator with the Kalamazoo, Mich., police, 7 percent of communication.” he’d always relied on spoken give-and-take, In Kalamazoo, Wells used Cook’s text about taking cues from a person’s tone of voice, the telling his girlfriend the truth as a way to show inflections, emotions. He’d never thought about empathy and build trust. He texted that he negotiating via text. understood the unemployed veteran was trying “It had never even been brought up at one of to provide for his girlfriend and daughter when our trainings,” Wells recalled of the 2011 case. he robbed the gas station. With 6 billion text messages exchanged daily There was no response. in the U.S. alone, law enforcement officers are A minute later, Wells typed again, determined increasingly being called upon to defuse violent, unpredictable situations through the typed word. to keep the communication going. “This doesn’t have to go down like this.” Experts say it’s happened enough in the past five Again, nothing. years to warrant new, specialized training. “Do you need anything? Water? Food?” Wells But in Wells’ case, he had to adapt on the fly. tried after another minute. “What do you want me to tell her?” he texted Finally, a reply. back. “Water,” Cook wrote. “The truth,” suspect Jesse Cook wrote. “As soon as he wrote water, I thought, ‘OK, I While Wells ordinarily would rely on a skill called “active listening,” he couldn’t hear Cook’s can work with this,’ ” Wells recalled later. “We’ll get something figured out.” voice. Cook couldn’t hear his. Was he yelling? Wells asked Cook to roll down his window Crying? so an officer could toss a bottle of water into his “It’s not the preferred method of communicaSUV, which was disabled by tire-popping spikes tion in a crisis, but if it’s the only way that we laid by police. have, then we’ll engage,” said New York State “This guy throws like a girl,” Wells texted, fishPolice spokeswoman Darcy Wells. ing for Cook’s state of mind. Outside Buffalo, N.Y., in March, a suspect “Thanks. He does throw like a girl,” Cook who’d shot at Erie County Sheriff’s deputies wrote afterward. responding to a domestic call was carrying on Then a smiley face. text exchanges with several relatives when law It was the cue Wells had been waiting for, enforcement negotiators got involved in the electronic conversations, eventually persuading him proof Cook had relaxed enough to perhaps resume talking by phone, which had been the to surrender. goal all along. “He didn’t want to talk as much as he wanted “Can I call u?” Wells then asked Cook. to text,” Sheriff’s Capt. Gregory Savage said. “It “OK,” Cook replied. He surrendered 15 minwasn’t part of the training I got when I went through the crisis negotiator school put on by utes later. By Carolyn Thompson The Associated Press
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BAGHDAD — Fighting in Iraq’s western Anbar province, now in its fifth month, appears to have bogged down, with government forces unable to drive out Islamic militants who took over one of the area’s main cities. But the impact is being felt much further, with the repercussions rippling through the country’s economy to hit consumers and businesses. The large, desert province is a major crossroads. The main highways linking Baghdad and other parts of Iraq to Syria and Jordan run through it. So fighting has not only dislodged thousands of residents from their homes and forced shutdowns of their businesses. It has also disrupted shipping, inflating prices of goods in Baghdad and elsewhere. Fears of the road have gotten so bad Iraq has had to stop shipments of oil to Jordan.
Gunmen storm Iraqi military barracks, killing 20 troops BAGHDAD — Militants in Iraq launched an audacious attack on a military barracks in a remote area in the country’s north and killed 20 troops overnight, including some who had been bound and shot at close range, authorities said Sunday. The killings at the military barracks in the village of Ayn al-Jahish outside of Mosul mirrored two previous assaults earlier this year in the area targeting security forces. It also represents the latest blow to the government’s efforts to achieve stability in restive Sunnidominated areas. Gunmen staged the assault late Saturday night, two police officers said, shooting some at short range while others died fighting the insurgents when they stormed the barracks. A medical official, who confirmed the causality number, said 11 troops had their hands tied behind their backs and suffered closerange gunshots to the head.
Hagel: Military should review ban on transgender people WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel says the military should continually review its policy barring transgender individuals from serving in the military. Hagel did not indicate whether he believes the policy should be overturned. However, Hagel says every qualified American who wants to serve the country should have that opportunity if they fit the qualifications and can do the job. Transgender individuals have a sexual identity that is not clearly male or female. A panel convened by a think tank at San Francisco State University recently estimated that about 15,450 transgender personnel serve in the military and in the National Guard and Reserves. In 2010, Congress passed legislation allowing gays to serve openly. Hagel said the issue of transgender serving in the military is more complicated. The Associated Press
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Abducted Nigerian teenager afraid to return to school
BAUCHI, Nigeria — One of the teenagers who escaped from Islamic extremists who abducted more than 300 schoolgirls says the kidnapping was “too terrifying for words,” and she’s scared to go back to school. Nineteen-year-old science student Sarah Lawan tells The Associated Press that more girls could have escaped but they were frightened by threats to shoot them. She says they were driven in a truck for hours after the gunmen took them from their school in the predawn hours of April 15 before the truck stopped. They were asked to get down, and she and a friend bolted into the bushes. Lawan spoke in a phone interview from Chibok, the site of the mass abduction in northeast Nigeria. She is among 53 students who escaped, while 276 remain captive.
Americans in shooting were at barbershop
SANAA, Yemen — One of the two officers at the U.S. Embassy in Yemen who shot and killed a pair of suspected al-Qaida gunmen was getting a haircut at a barbershop when the attempted abduction took place, Yemeni security officials said Sunday. The attempted kidnapping April 24 is the latest evidence of al-Qaida’s expanding presence in the capital, a serious challenge to the authority of the already weak central government. It also could strain ties between Yemen and the U.S., which has launched an aggressive campaign of drone strikes against suspected alQaida fighters in the country. The barbershop, owned by a longtime Indian resident, is on Heda Street, a commercial road in the southern part of the city where some of Sanaa’s best restaurants, supermarkets and highend boutiques are located. The Yemeni officials said the armed militants arrived in a battered SUV and burst into the shop shouting: “Police! Police!” The officials said one of the two Americans was having his hair cut, while the second waited for his turn. They said one of the Americans killed both militants before the pair jumped into their waiting SUV and drove off. Owners of nearby stores rushed to the barbershop on hearing the gunshots, but the Americans already had left, the officials said. Yemeni authorities questioned the two Americans and later gave them permission to leave the country, the officials said. The two fully cooperated with the Yemeni government investigation, they said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief journalists. Late Friday, the U.S. State Department said the two Americans, whom it did not identify, were at a Sanaa business at the time of the attack and have since left Yemen. Citing unidentified U.S. officials, The New York Times has reported that the Americans were a CIA officer and a lieutenant colonel with the elite Joint Special Operations Command. Yemeni authorities merely identified the two as “American security personnel” and said the two who tried to kidnap them hailed from the province of Maarib east of Sanaa, an al-Qaida stronghold.
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Monday, May 12 JOHN SANDFORD: The novelist discusses Field of Prey, 6 p.m., Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St. SPRING ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE: The Santa Fe University of Art and Design’s Rock ensemble and Funk/R&B Ensemble perform at 8 p.m. at the school, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. SOUTHWEST SEMINARS LECTURE: The series continues with “Cultural Context of Hopi Arts and Crafts” by Joe Day and Janice Day, 6 p.m., Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta. SWING DANCE: Weekly allages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road. CRAIG JOHNSON: The author discusses and signs copies of Any Other Name: A Longmire Mystery, 6 p.m., Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St. DROUGHT SOLUTIONS: CONNECTING THE DROPS FROM ROOFTOP TO RIVERBED: Reese Baker, Aaron Kauffman, Jeremiah Kidd and Craig Sponholtz, the co-founders of the Rainwater Resource Partnership, will share their collective experience on how households, neighborhoods
Corrections and the city can creatively and efficiently capture, store, treat and reuse our most precious resource. Visit the Rainwater Resource Partnership website for more information: /www. rainwaterpartnership.com, 6-8 p.m., the Santa Fe Woman’s Club, 1616 Old Pecos Trail. GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM WORKSHOP: Tropical still-life paintings for all levels; led by Annie O’Brien Gonzales, 6-8 p.m., 123 Grant Ave. THE CAVE SINGERS: Roots/ folk band, 7:30 p.m., 37 Fire Place, Santa Fe Sol Stage & Grill. Wednesday, May 14 CONNECTING PEOPLE AND PLACES: A LIVABLE AND WALKABLE SANTA FE: Public lecture and Q&A session with Dan Burden and Robert Ping of Walkable and Livable Communities Institute, 6 p.m., Santa Fe Community Convention Center, 201 W. Marcy St. COSTLY AND CUTE: HOW HELPLESS NEWBORNS MADE US HUMAN: Karen Rosenberg, Department of Anthropology at University of Delaware, and Wenda Trevathan, Departmentof Anthropology at New Mexico State University, will present this free lecture., noon-3 p.m., School for Advanced Research,
660 Garcia St. FREE DREAM WORKSHOP: At the Santa Fe Public Main Library, “Understanding the Language of Dreams” is offered by Jungian scholar Fabio Macchioni. Reservations required. Call 982-3214., 5:30 p.m., 145 Washington Ave. SANTA FE INSTITUTE 2014 COMMUNITY LECTURE: The series continues with “Is Free Will an Illusion?” by Daniel Dennett of Tufts University, 7:30 p.m., New Mexico School for the Deaf, 1060 Cerrillos Road. SANTA FE MASTER GERALD CASSIDY: The docent-led Artist of the Week series continues with a discussion of the late Santa Fe Art colony painter, 12:15 p.m., New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave. SPRING DANCE CONCERT: Santa Fe University of Art and Design tudent showcase with choreography by faculty and guest artists, 7 p.m., 1600 St. Michael’s Drive.
NIGHTLIFE Monday, May 12 COWGIRL BBQ: Karaoke night with Michele Leidig, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: David Castro Band, indie Americana rock, 7-9 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive.
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035.
EL FAROL: Tiho Dimitrov, R&B, 8:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road. LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LA FONDA: Blues/soul artist Zenobia, 7:30-11 p.m., 100 E. San Francisco St. MONDAY MUSIC AT JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA: Busy & The Crazy 88, including Busy McCarroll, Kevin Zoernig, Baird Banner and Justin Bransford, hipster pop, 7:30 p.m. at the theater, 418 Montezuma Ave. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Kathy Morrow, 6:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St.
For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www.santa fenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnew mexican.com.
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Front-runner in Afghan election forms coalition KABUL, Afghanistan — Abdullah Abdullah, the front-runner in Afghanistan’s presidential election campaign, announced Sunday that he had won the endorsement of Zalmai Rassoul, the third-place candidate, as part of his effort to gather enough support to win in the next round of voting. Together, the two men’s tickets took about 55 percent of the vote in the first round of voting April 5, but there is no guarantee that voters would vote the same way in a second round, tentatively set for June 14. Adding to the prospect that Rassoul may not bring all his first-round votes with him is that his team appears to have split, with one of his two vicepresidential running mates declining to support Abdullah’s campaign. Abdullah’s camp, as well as some analysts, worry that a runoff could be rife with fraud and that there is a considerable risk that it could be disrupted by the Taliban. The insurgents’ campaign of violence failed to have much effect in the first runoff. Abdullah won nearly 44 percent of the vote in the first round, followed by Ashraf Ghani with nearly 33 percent and Rassoul with 11 percent, according to the most recent count by the Independent Election Commission of Afghanistan. The final results for the first round are expected later this week. Ghani, who came in second, has repeatedly said that there needed to be a runoff as mandated by the constitution. Some commentators believe that a second round of voting would split along more ethnic lines, which could benefit Ghani, a Pashtun, since Pashtuns represent a plurality of the population. The New York Times Offering Summer Tutoring Grades 5-9* with SFGS Teachers
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Chaos in eastern Ukraine as separatists vote their counts late Sunday evening, but the results were a foregone conclusion. At polling staDONETSK, Ukraine — tions in Donetsk and Slovyansk, Snap referendums conducted another separatist-controlled by secessionists in eastern city, nearly all the ballots that Ukraine in hopes of legitimizcould be seen in the transparent ing their cause drew large ballot boxes were marked yes, crowds Sunday and unfolded in in favor of losing the province’s a carnival atmosphere that was ties to the national governcelebratory in some places and ment in Kiev. Many people who lethally violent in others. favored Ukrainian unity and In Donetsk, the capital of one opposed the separatists said of the two provinces where they would stay home rather pro-Russian separatists have than cast ballots. declared “people’s republics,” The referendums were there were balloons and loudroundly condemned from the speakers playing Soviet-era outset, both in Kiev and intersongs, and families came to nationally, as elections that vote with children in tow. But could not possibly be free and outside the provincial capitals, fair, given the political turmoil the voting took place in such a enveloping the region. But state of raw chaos that in one while the results were unlikely town a man was shot to death to be accepted by anyone but by pro-Ukrainian paramilitaries the organizers and their Ruson a sidewalk outside a polling sian patrons as reflecting the democratic will of the majority, station. the turnout Sunday appeared Separatist organizers of the voting say they would announce to at least demonstrate that By Andrew E. Kramer
The New York Times
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Pro-Russia militants arrive to vote at a polling station Sunday in Slovyansk, Ukraine. SERGEY PONOMAREV/THE NEW YORK TIMES
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the separatists had substantial popular support. The voting was run in an air of hurried improvisation.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
Ringside: City code on panhandling is abundant
Treasurer: Job includes heavy involvement on boards and committees Continued from Page A-1
Continued from Page A-1 undertaking for the new mayor. It outpolled economic development, reducing crime and working with schools to improve education. At Gonzales’ direction, the city on April 12 added another police detail to the Plaza and downtown area. “We’ve always had a police presence. What’s new is that we have a specialized unit downtown,” Gonzales said. The unit’s job is to build relationships with merchants, maintain safety and enforce city ordinances so that the Plaza is inviting, the mayor said. The city code regulating panhandling is abundant. It is outlawed at nighttime in the “Business-Capitol District.” Aggressive solicitations for money, blocking pathways to buildings or vehicles and following people are among the many restrictions on panhandlers. They also are barred by the city ordinance from working in groups. “I’ve received — I should say the city has received — letters of thanks for having more of a police presence in the downtown area,” Gonzales said. Sywanyk is as enthusiastic about Santa Fe as any merchants association or elected official. He has a 34-year-old son who is doing well in Cleveland, Ohio, but Sywanyk says he would rather stay in Santa Fe than impose on him. Sywanyk says he likes Santa Fe and also would be humiliated for his son to learn how far he has fallen. Raised in the Cleveland suburb of Parma, Sywanyk says he once spent his life working as hard as he partied. Sywanak graduated from high school in 1970. He had a lottery number favorable enough to keep him out of the war in Vietnam. Affable and skilled with his hands, he found work with ease in Ohio. His best job was repairing chimneys in the affluent town of Shaker Heights. Back then, he said, he could take home $300 a day after paying his crew. Some houses had half a dozen chimneys. Sywanyk admits to experimenting with every drug that exists. He had
Bohdan ‘Bodie’ Sywanyk unlocks his bicycle Friday evening. Sywanyk, who works as a handyman when he can, gets around town on his bicycle and spends nights in shelters or on friends’ couches. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
two convictions — but no prison time — for selling marijuana in Ohio after being caught with amounts ranging from 13 pounds to 50 pounds. By no stretch was he a model citizen, but he worked and even saved. “I had some dough,” he said. Then the woman he had been with for 13 years died suddenly and, in his words, “I kind of lost it.” His troubles worsened in 2009. “When the economy trashed, you couldn’t get a job,” Sywanyk said. Now he is one of the people that most of us look past and merchants view as bad for business. He and other panhandlers say a typical day of begging nets $20 to $30. An exceptional day brings $60. Sywanyk said the parking lots of Whole Foods, Starbucks and neighborhood cafes are the spots panhandlers prefer, not the Plaza, where vagrants attract immediate notice. “There’s kind of a science to it,” he said of panhandling. “If you’re shopping at Whole Foods, you have money. If you’re going to Starbucks, you have money, or at least a good job.” When asking for a handout, Sywanyk guesses he is turned down four of every five times. He still tries to pass along his business card to those he approaches, hoping somebody will need a handyman. Many other panhandlers make their pitch with implausible stories, whether they know it or not. One recent morn-
ing, a man who looked 60 but said he was 80 asked for money as he pushed a shopping cart outside a restaurant on Cerrillos Road. The man said he had served in Vietnam. What year? “I was there in ’53, in combat,” he said. Could it be that he meant Korea? “No, no. Vietnam,” he said. In contrast, what Sywanyk said was true, verified with public records. There was even a court file that mentioned the surrender of his red pickup after his drunken-driving arrest. Sywanyk said he worries the conviction might make him seem less employable and wondered if it could be omitted from this column. But he also recognized it’s part of the story of his descent. Sywanyk has lost nearly everything except for hope. He said he will become eligible later this year to collect a little Social Security, and he said he believes he can still find a regular job if the construction trades improve. He said he would like to leave panhandling behind. Bodie the Handyman had a lot of fun and made a lot of mistakes. Never, though, did he expect life at dusk to be this hard. 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.
Wells: BLM struggles with staff, funds Continued from Page A-1 and Indian resources are at risk of being extracted without agency approval.” In response to the report, Tommy Beaudreau, a principal deputy assistant interior secretary, wrote that he generally agreed with the recommendations for improved state coordination and updated regulations. The report makes clear in many instances that the BLM’s failure to inspect high-priority oil and gas wells is due to limited money and staff. BLM officials said they were in the process of updating several of its policies later this year. Investigators reviewed 14 states in full or part: Arkansas, California, Colorado, Louisiana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming. In Ohio, Pennsylvania and elsewhere, fracking has become increasingly prevalent. The report said the BLM had failed to conduct inspections on more than 2,100 of the 3,702 wells that it had speci-
fied as “high priority” and drilled from 2009 through 2012. The agency considers a well “high priority” based on a greater need to protect against possible water contamination and other environmental safety issues. The agency had yet to indicate whether another 1,784 wells were high priority or not. The BLM has developed agreements with some states, which also have jurisdiction over well inspections on federal lands. According to the GAO, it had reached agreements with regulators in California, Colorado, Nevada and Wyoming. The report said BLM has not reviewed or updated many of its oil and gas rules to reflect technological advances, as required by a 2011 executive order. They include guidance on spacing of wells, which the report said could help maximize oil and gas production. The bureau acknowledged it had not updated its guidance on oil and gas drainage since 1999 or its guidance on mineral trespass — interference of drilling or mining activity — since 2003.
Congressional investigators found the BLM did not monitor inspection activities at its state and field offices and thus could not provide “reasonable assurance” that those offices were completing the required inspections. In Pennsylvania, for instance, an Associated Press investigation found the state received 398 complaints in 2013 alleging that oil or natural gas drilling polluted or otherwise affected private water wells. More than 100 cases of pollution were confirmed over the past five years. “This report reaffirms our concern that the government needs to pay attention to the environment and protect public health and drinking sources from the risks of oil and gas development,” said Amy Mall of the Natural Resources Defense Council. But Kathleen Sgamma, vice president of government and public affairs at the Western Energy Alliance, a trade group representing energy companies, said the report’s findings show that states are better positioned to regulate oil and gas drilling.
“The treasurer is an enormously influential post in terms of policy,” said Wertheim, who grew up in Santa Fe and now lives in Albuquerque. Much of that influence comes from the 13 state boards and commissions on which that the treasurer serves. They include the state Board of Finance and State Investment Council, agencies the treasurer can help steer to create a broader vision and stronger economy for New Mexico, Wertheim said. The State Investment Council manages about $19 billion in state endowments. Wertheim favors tapping the largest one, the $13.5 million Land Grant Permanent Fund, to help finance early childhood education. “New Mexico is 50th in child well-being,” he said. “Early childhood education gives us the opportunity for a huge return on our investment.” The state treasurer, is wellpositioned to advocate for using 1 percent or so of the endowment for early childhood programs, Wertheim said, adding that the investment would lead to more high school and college graduates, more jobs and fewer people in prison and on welfare. Opponents of the early childhood initiative have looked for excuses not to fund it and have ignored overwhelming data, Wertheim said. “Nothing has been more scientifically tested than this idea,” he said of the early childhood initiative. Wertheim, now 46, said the state treasurer also could be an innovator for other changes to help the economy, such as targeting more of the land-grant endowment for investments in New Mexico. Little of the fund is used that way now, he said. An attorney who practices with his father and brother, Wertheim prides himself on having done legal work for what he calls progressive causes. One was defending the constitutionality of Santa Fe’s living wage ordinance. Now at $10.66 an hour, the city’s minimum wage is one of the highest in the country. Eichenberg, 62, of Albuquerque does not propose the same level of activism that Wertheim does for the treasurer’s office. But Eichenberg pledges work at the job full time, which he says is necessary to stay on top of the office and remain effectively involved on the 13 boards and commissions that come with the position. Eichenberg said he expects to move to Santa Fe if he wins the election. In Eichenberg’s view, one of the most important aspects of being state treasurer is offering a transparent operation. Another guiding principle, he said, is to make certain the office’s investments don’t lose any money. Practicality motivated Eichenberg to enter politics. As a young man, he landed a job at the Bernalillo County Treasurer’s Office. As the election of 1974 approached, he said he worried that another employee — one who had not impressed Eichenberg — would win election as treasurer. That led Eichenberg, just four years out of high school, to run, and he won. Bernalillo County voters re-elected him to another two-year term in 1976.
Tim Eichenberg Age: 62 Education: Bachelor’s in political science, The University of New Mexico Occupation: Real estate broker, appraiser, general contractor Experience: Former Bernalillo County treasurer and former state senator; served as director of state property tax division under former Gov. Bill Richardson; elected member of Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority Personal: He and his wife, Sandra, have two grown children Campaign information: www.eichenbergforstate treasurer.com
John Wertheim Age: 46 Education: Bachelor’s in history, Yale University; law degree, The University of New Mexico Occupation: Trial attorney focusing on plaintiffs’ side in financial cases Experience: State Democratic Party chairman for three years; two-time candidate for Congress; manager of political campaigns, including Bruce King’s 1994 run for governor; served on board of Conservation Voters New Mexico. Personal: Married to Bianca Ortiz Wertheim Campaign information: www.johnwertheim.com
Much of his working life has been in real estate, but he worked in state government during part of Democrat Bill Richardson’s two terms as governor. Eichenberg was state property tax director from 2004-07. He also held other elected offices after being a county treasurer. For most of the last 20 years, Eichenberg has been an elected member of the Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority. Eichenberg won election to the state Senate in 2008 and announced his re-election campaign four years after that. But he quit the Senate race to take care of his ailing mother. Still, one of Eichenberg’s campaign ads features old Senate colleagues endorsing him for treasurer because of his skill and his personal integrity. Three Democrats initially were in the race for state treasurer. Patrick Padilla of Albuquerque was knocked off the ballot after Wertheim challenged his nominating petitions. Angered by Wertheim’s tactics, Padilla is supporting Eichenberg for treasurer. The winner of the primary between Wertheim and Eichenberg will face Republican Rick J. Lopez of Santa Fe in the general election. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow his Ringside Seat column and blog at www.santafenewmexican.com.
Charter: Experts say competition complicates sharing of practices Continued from Page A-1 improve teaching quality. And in Spring Branch, Texas, charter school leaders are helping train district teachers and principals. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has helped finance some of those efforts, offering $25 million in grants over the past several years for educators interested in tackling common problems. In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio has promised a new era of collaboration after months of sparring with charter school leaders. The new contract the city and the teachers’ union agreed to this month gives educators in some schools the latitude to change work rules, in hopes of creating charterlike conditions. “The spreading of ideas and innovation clearly has been a very imperfect process,” de Blasio said this month in a radio interview. “What we’ve seen in too many cases is charters and traditional public schools disconnected rather than being mutually involved for innovation.”
The city’s Education Department also recently began a program to encourage schools across the system to share best practices. Even so, charter schools were not included in the initial group. Education experts said it might prove difficult to encourage the kind of sharing of ideas that charter schools were originally supposed to foster, given competitive dynamics. Charter schools serve about 5 percent of students nationwide, according to the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, up from about 1 percent in 2003. In some cities, like Detroit, New Orleans and Washington, D.C., the percentages are much higher. “It’s like putting a Burger King kittycorner to a McDonald’s and expecting — in the same location and competing for the same families — warm and fuzzy cooperation,” said Bruce Fuller, a professor of education and public policy at the University of California, Berkeley. Charter schools are known for aggressive recruiting campaigns, and at schools with dwindling enrollment,
every student counts. According to a recent National Aducation Association report, New Mexico spent just over $11,000 per student in the 2012-13 school year. Michael Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers in New York, said competition made partnerships unrealistic. “It’s like The Hunger Games,” he said. The first charter schools in the United States opened in the early 1990s, and were popular among advocates interested in radically overhauling the traditional model of schooling. The schools were given freedom from regulations about staffing, curriculum and scheduling in hopes that they could devise superior models. As their numbers grew rapidly over the past decade, tensions worsened in many cities. Labor groups have emerged as some of the most vehement critics of charter schools, which are typically not unionized, depriving them of members. This spring, a battle broke out in New York state as charter advocates pushed for access to free classroom space. They
spent millions of dollars on television advertisements, and with the help of Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, won some of the most generous protections in the country. Charter school leaders have defended their efforts, pointing to strong academic results in some of the poorest neighborhoods. But some also acknowledge that the tactics of the movement were partly to blame for the reluctance of district leaders to work with them. “I got into this to create R&D for regular schools,” said Steve Barr, founder of Green Dot Public Schools, which operates charter schools in Los Angeles. “But sometimes we come off as if we’ve invented everything.” Despite the backlash, some signature policies of charter schools have become standard practice in many school districts, including longer school days, smaller high schools and more autonomy for principals. In Brooklyn, the Middle School for Art and Philosophy and Kings Collegiate Charter School, which have been neighbors for seven years, have started talking about collaboration.
McNeill said there were aspects of the charter school that appealed to him, including its smaller class sizes and aggressive outreach to parents. But he said that despite the school’s test scores, it would be a mistake to assume it had all the solutions. The school serves a much smaller percentage of students with disabilities, for example. And some of its practices, such as a strict code of discipline, might be difficult to put in place in a traditional public school. McNeill said the schools would have to work to overcome tensions between some charter school families and those who attend the traditional program. Still, he said, more collaboration was important, pointing to a mural at the entrance of the school, which depicts a handshake, a symbol of solidarity between the two schools. “There’s no reason why there shouldn’t be that type of cooperation and collegiality,” he said. “It will give our kids an opportunity to show they are certainly no different from the kids upstairs, that they have the same promise and the same potential.”
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Lunes, el 12 de mayo, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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EL NUEVO MEXICANO Memorial Day ‘con la familia’
Los perros y los policías guerreros S
i Radley Balko está en lo correcto, quizás hayan sido los amantes de los perros de Estados Unidos los que desencadenaron un movimiento para frenar las tácticas de mano dura, que han acompañado a la militarización de las fuerzas policiales del país. Balko, que escribe el blog sobre asuntos de justicia penal “The Watch,” en el Washington Post, dice que la policía muy a menudo dispara contra las mascotas, cuando van en una redada y la gente está empezando a hartarse. Recientemente leí el libro de Balko, Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America’s Police Forces, tras pasar algún tiempo en una clase de armas de fuego. En esa clase había un Esther policía retirado, que tenía la Cepeda mentalidad de “nosotros contra Comentario ellos” que Balko describe tan vívidamente. Comenzando con una historia de las fuerzas policiales, Balko sigue su tenue coqueteo con las normas y prácticas de las fuerzas armadas hasta la proliferación actual de departamentos de policía locales al estilo de los S.W.A.T. Balko proporciona una dolorosa historia progresiva desde la Guerra contra la Droga del presidente Richard Nixon, pasando por la erosión, durante décadas, del derecho de los ciudadanos a que su casa sea tratada como santuario contra la violencia, hasta los incidentes demasiado comunes de “daños colaterales” que vemos hoy en las noticias. Ningún individuo, ni ningún partido político, se salvan de la dura crítica de convertir a nuestros oficiales de policía en soldados y de llevar a cabo batidas sumamente militarizadas cotidianamente. Es notable que las fuentes de Balko sean menos a menudo las víctimas inocentes de redadas fracasadas, de tiroteos accidentales, de allanamientos en medio de la noche en domicilios incorrectos y de tomas con granadas aturdidoras — ni sus defensores — aunque sus historias nos han llegado claramente. Las voces que hablan sobre los peligros de fuerzas policiales abocadas a invadir y conquistar son, principalmente, las de profesionales en ese campo, que o bien llevaron a cabo ellos mismos programas de militarización o que trataron, en vano, de impedir que la fuerza bruta — y la mentalidad que la acompaña — se apoderen de su amada profesión. Balko proporciona ejemplos aparentemente interminables de violencia sancionada por el estado y de prácticas policiales al estilo paramilitar, aún cuando describe con imparcialidad los peligros que los oficiales de policía deben enfrentar en su exigente trabajo. Hay que recalcar enfáticamente que “Rise of the Warrior Cop” no es en forma alguna una larga perorata partidista, demasiado emotiva, pacifista o anti-policial — pero enterarme de lo insensibles que nos hemos vuelto a este tipo de procedimientos me dejó fría. Balko cita pruebas anecdóticas provenientes de su red de investigadores de las fuerzas policiales, que muestran que muy a menudo la gente acepta con calma las violaciones injustificadas de la privacidad y las tácticas violentas para “los malos,” los asesinos y los narcotraficantes, hasta para sus esposas e hijos. Pero se enoja mucho cuando oye que, habitualmente, se hiere y mata a las mascotas. “Al principio, eso parece indicar que la gente insensiblemente valora la vida de las mascotas más que la de los individuos,” escribe Balko. “Pero el hecho de que matar al perro en estas redadas se haya convertido en algo rutinario en muchas agencias de policía demuestra con qué tranquilidad han aceptado esas agencias los daños colaterales de la guerra antidroga. Cuando empecé a anotar en mi blog episodios de policías que matan perros [bajo el término probablemente sensacionalista de “canicidio”] la gente comenzó a enviarme nuevas historias a medida que ocurrían. Los policías disparan ahora contra perros ante la menor provocación. Mientras escribo esta columna, recibo incidentes de ese tipo semanalmente.” La indignación pública ante la consideración de las mascotas como daños colaterales ha hecho que varios departamentos de policía ordenen entrenamiento, escribe Balko. Cita a Russ Jones, ex oficial de narcóticos con el Departamento de Policía de San José y la Administración para el Control de Drogas: “No lo comprendo plenamente. Supongo que en algún momento un policía disparó contra un perro bajo circunstancias cuestionables y no fue amonestado. Se corrió la voz y ahora parece que algunos policías están buscando motivos para disparar contra un perro. Quizás se reduzca a eso — podemos hacerlo sin consecuencias, por lo tanto lo hacemos.” Lo que Balko deja en claro es que los días en que las fuerzas de seguridad de mano dura y tácticas a menudo mortales en nombre de mantener la seguridad y el orden están llegando a su fin. La proliferación de teléfonos móviles, cámaras y videos que pueden ser alimentados directamente a Internet y la diseminación de todo ello vía los medios sociales, permiten que las pruebas de las extralimitaciones de las fuerzas de seguridad puedan preservarse. Pero primero, debemos tener conciencia de que estas instancias de tácticas excesivamente duras afectan a ciudadanos inocentes y respetuosos de la ley —no sólo a la raza canina— y ya no podemos darnos el lujo de aceptar la despreocupada violación de nuestros derechos civiles.
La dirección electrónica de Esther Cepeda es estherjcepeda@washpost.com. Sígala en Twitter @estherjcepeda.
E El ahora jubilado carnicero Max Romero conversa con la clienta de años Aonna Lecia Phares en Kaune’s Neighborhood Market el pasado 29 de abril, su ultimo día de trabajo después de ocho años en la tienda y 50 años en el negocio de abarrotes. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
El último corte
Realmente se necesita de una habilidad para cortar algunos de los cortes que los clientes solicitan. Su labor ha sido muy importante para nosotros.” taviado en un mandil rojo brillante y con Traducir terminología regional de los diversos una sonrisa amable, Max Romero hace cortes de carne (Delmonico en el este en comuso de su mano con una destreza de paración con el rib-eye del oeste, el filete Kansas cirujano, su conocimiento de cazador en City en el este y el sirloin en el oeste) y buscar anatomía animal y su paladar de gastrónomo. El referencias secretas en algunos libros de cocina 29 de abril, Romero, 66, llevó a casa su mandil y de sus clientes, emocionan a Romero. su experiencia acumulada durante los últimos “Sobre todo para las celebraciones, la gente 50 años en el negocio de abarrotes. El carnicero se llega buscando cortes especiales, carnes al horno, jubiló de Kaune’s Neighborhood Market en Santa turducken o algunas viejas recetas con nombres Fe, donde ha trabajado por los últimos ocho años. diferentes para los cortes,” comenta Romero. Como lo ha hecho por innumerables ocasiones “Algunas veces no sé de lo que están hablando, desde su primer trabajo en 1964 en el supermerpero si lo obtienes de una receta, traes tu libro cado Berry’s Supermarket cerca de su hogar de la de cocina y juntos lo averiguamos. Siempre me niñez en Baca Street, Romero recibe a los clientes ha funcionado. Los clientes siempre se van satiscon entusiasmo en su último día de trabajo. “Lo fechos y eso me hace feliz.” suficiente para cuatro bistecs,” la clienta frecuente Como un destino a nivel mundial, Santa Fe atrae Kathy Harris ordena de manera cortés a Romero a visitantes internaciones — y su libros de cocina en su último día. fuera de lo común — a las puertas de Kaune’s. Eso fue suficiente para que Romero rápidamente “Tenemos gente de Alemania y de todas parhiciera cuatro cortes de igual tamaño como cualtes,” dice Romero. “Les pregunto, ‘¿Cómo cocina quier máquina lo hubiera hecho. Mientras tanto, esto?’ luego me cuentan como su madre o abuela Harris preguntaba a otro carnicero, “Disculpe, ¿él cocinaba la receta en esos días. Tomaba ideas para es Max?” Cuando el colega se lo confirmó, Harris le cocinar diferentes recetas.” dijo, “¿Se jubilará pronto? Lo vamos a extrañar.” Romero dice que extrañará su trato con los cliHarris ha comprado en Kaune’s desde que se entes. “Tengo emociones encontradas,” comenta mudó a Santa Fe hace siete años. Ella comenta Romero. “Va a ser agradable estar jubilado, pero que la experiencia en el supermercado y sobre como siempre he trabajado, no se cómo voy a todo el trato de Romero en particular, la remonta adaptarme.” a un tiempo en que todo era mucho más personal. Pasando más tiempo con sus dos hijos y siete “Este es un lugar único,” menciona Harris. “Mi nietos y visitando a la familia en Taos le ayudarán trato con Max siempre ha sido muy bueno. Siem- con el cambio. pre es servicial y alegre.” Romero está agradecido de haber trabajo sus Cheryl Sommer, dueña de Kaune’s, reconoce últimos años en Kaune’s, donde la cultura refleja todo lo que se ha perdido a través del tiempo en los mercados de su niñez. la relación de los clientes con las tiendas de abar“En las grandes tiendas, te tienen en el calrotes, en particular con los carniceros. Comenta abozo,” dice Romero. “Lo llamo el calabozo, pero que Romero es el “embajador consagrado de esa en realidad es el cuarto de cortes. Está al fondo y si tradición de antaño.” alguien necesita tu ayuda, suenan la campanita. No “Es una persona muy amigable que realmente es como aquí, donde puedes ver al cliente, converdisfruta del contacto con los clientes y ha desarrol- sas con ellos. Seguro voy a extrañar todo eso.” lado ese contacto a través de los años,” dice Sommer. Ese oficio es un arte casi olvidado con toda la Traducción de Patricia De Dios para The New carne empaquetada que viene de los proveedores. Mexican.
Por Patrick Malone The New Mexican
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O 10592 Crucigrama No. CRUCIGRAMA N10592 Horizontales 1. Cuerda con que se izan y arrían las velas, banderas, etc. 6. Onomatopeya de la voz del perro. 10. Sentirás una cosa con llanto u otra manifestación del dolor. 11. Onomatopeya de la voz del gato. 12. Rey de los amalecitas, vencido por Saúl. 14. Monje del Tíbet. 16. Relativo a la voz o al sonido. 18. Piedra consagrada del altar cristiano. 19. Abreviatura de “horsepower”, caballo fuerza. 20. Tela que a modo de manteo rodean a la cintura indias del Ecuador y Perú. 21. Pimiento. 22. Asegura que otro cumplirá lo que promete, obligándose, en caso de que no lo haga. 23. Nombre de la primera consonante. 24. Mover las orejas los animales. 27. Símbolo del neodimio. 28. Piojo de las gallinas. 29. Mamífero plantígrado carnicero. 30. Que no sabe lo que podía o debía saber. 32. Dativo del pronombre de tercera persona. 33. Abreviatura de trinitrotolueno. 34. Estudio del pintor o escultor. 35. Roturar la tierra con el arado. 36. Pez marino teleósteo perciforme. 37. Baño con oro. 39. Aprobación, aplauso. 41. Canal de desagüe de la bomba de un buque. 42. Acredita o califica de bueno.
Verticales 1. Dragante. 2. Que carece de lógica. 3. Voz usada en algunas partes para espantar a las aves. 4. Género de plantas compuestas, de flores grandes, azules y con el centro amarillo. 5. Fondeadero. 6. Tercera letra del alfabeto griego. 7. Sufijo “orina”. 8. Símbolo de la amalgama, en la alquimia antigua. 9. Que usurpa (fem.). 12. Calidad de afable. 13. Antigua medida de longitud. 15. Nacida bajo el signo de Aries. 17. Círculo de metal precioso que se ciñe a la cabeza. 19. Antiguamente, ventana. 21. Planta liliácea cuyos bulbos se usan como condimento.
www.angelfreire.com www.angelfreire.com O 10592 Solución No.N10592 SOLUCION del DEL O
SOLUCION DEL N
10591
25. Canaladuras. 26. Material con que se llena algo. 31. En números romanos, “151”. 33. Gente militar. 34. Tilo. 35. Especie de criba para el grano. 38. Ansar, ave palmípeda. 40. Preposición inseparable “en virtud de”.
ra unos cuantos días before Memorial Day, y toda la familia went out to the cemetery a limpiar the gravesites de los muertos. They raked and removed las coronas viejas, cut down the weeds and threw those hierbas en un trash bag. Entonces they would poner flores nuevas en la sepulturas and pray sudarios para las personas whose bones were lying there. Canutito was helping a sus grampitos Larry Torres con el trabajo tamGrowing up bién. As he Spanglish pulled out hierbas and listened to grama’s oraciones, his mind wandered off. He turned to Grampo Caralampio and asked him, “Grampo, remember la semana pasada when you told me que ‘un real’ was worth twelve cents? “Como puede un coin ser equal to twelve cents?” “That’s como el old dinero used to be organized back in Spain y México, m’hijo,” grampo replied. “Cuando New Mexico se hizo un State, we had to get used to dinero americano. ‘One cent,’ por ejemplo, is called ‘un centavo.’ ” “Can I call a nickel ‘un nicle’ and a dime ‘un daime’, grampo?” Canutito asked him. “Sí,” grampo replied, “As long as you remember que en otras partes del mundo hispánico se llaman ‘un cinco’ or ‘un diez’ en español.” “Can I call a quarter ‘un cuara?’ “ Canutito asked grampo. “You can in this parte del mundo, but when I was little, we used to call it ‘dos reales’ or ‘two royals,’ ” grampo said. “I believe que en inglés they might have called it ‘two crowns’ o ‘two bits.’ ” “I’ve heard de eso!” Canutito exclamó todo excited. “En la escuela, las cheerleaders estaban haciendo un cheer que decía ‘Two bits, four bits, six bits, a dollar. Todos por St. Mike’s, stand up and holler.” “Now you’re getting what those porristas estaban yelling,” grampo said todo proud del muchito. “Two bits son un cuara, four bits son dos cuaras, six bits son seis cuaras and un dólar es un peso.” Then grampo paused por un momento. “I’m afraid que ‘un peso’ isn’t worth a dollar ya más. It had become devaluado, pero in my time, cuando una persona wanted a dollar they would ask por un peso.” Canutito went back to helping Grama Cuca arreglar las flores on the grave. He kept pensando, and then grama saw him snicker. “¿Por qué estás sonriendo?” she asked Canutito. “I was just remembering a mi amigo Filimotas who used to decir “dos stars, cuatro stars, seis stars y un comet, todos por Canutito stand up y hagan vomit.” “Eso no era very nice,” Grama Cuca said, twisting her lips into a dengue. “Okay, come and get it!” Grampo Caralampio yelled at grama y Canutito derepente. Cuando they turned a mirar, he was standing arriba de una sepultura donde he had spread out un picnic de sangwiches de bologna y botellas de root beer. “Are we really vamos a comer aquí among the dead?” asked Canutito todo impressed. “Sí,” said grampo. “And then tu grama is going to hacernos walk de sepultura a sepultura and tell us las historias de todas las personas que están lying aquí. Don’t forget to drop unos poquitos de crumbs en la grave para los muertos. I’m sure que they want to comer y beber así como nosotros los living.” “La comida de los muertos are prayers,” Grama Cuca corrected him sharply. Still Cuando grama wasn’t looking Canutito sneakily dropped unos cuantos potato chips y un sour pickle arriba de una grave.
A-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
TECH
REVIEW
It’s eyeballs vs. gadgets as competitive birding debates how much it should embrace technology
Clash of the bird watchers
A group uses cameras and binoculars to spot birds Thursday in Prospect Park, N.Y. There is a push to require photographic evidence at birding competitions, but it is meeting much disagreement with opponents, saying that it will ruin the nature of birding. MICHAEL NAGLE/THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Corey Kilgannon and Emily S. Rueb
especially for rare sightings, and for newer birders who have yet The New York Times to establish reputations of being rock-solid in their identifications. ete Dunne and Benjamin “I hear young birders joking Van Doren are devout around saying, ‘Photos or it didn’t birders who share a pashappen,’ ” he said. “The expectasion for identifying rare tion is that if you report somespecies, recording their sightings thing rare, you’re going to need a and competing in birding events photograph. And I only see that known as Big Days. increasing.” But as they prepared for the Pete Dunne The association created a new biggest Big Day of all, this past category of competition: Photo Professional birder Saturday’s World Series of BirdBig Days. Last month, Whittle ing in New Jersey, their technoand Tom Stephenson, a Brooklynlogical approaches could hardly based birder, organized a Photo be more disparate. Big Day in Texas and competed Van Doren, 20, a sophomore as well, photographing 209 birds at Cornell, had a $2,500 camera in 24 hours, which the birding setup and an iPhone stocked with association has recognized as a digital field guides, apps that play record for North America. recordings of bird songs and help Even purists like Dunne, a New him, with GPS, home in on where Jersey Audubon Society official he might find certain species. Dunne, 62, prepared a bit difwho founded the World Series, ferently. He refused to bring a said any tool that made birding camera and kept his cellphone more accessible was welcome. turned off. He eschewed birding But introducing them to comapps and digital libraries in favor petitions goes against the trust of the handwritten journal he has implicit in birding, the purists kept since he was 7. The proliferasaid, and turns what should be a tion of digital photography and contest of devotion and skill into other technology alters the whole a free-for-all where tech wizardry dynamic of birding, he said, “getand expensive cameras become ting away from the art of field the de facto entry requirements. identification.” “We’re at a pivotal time,” It was all leading to a regrettaDunne said, acknowledging that ble mindset, he added, of “Shoot technology was “going to change first and identify later.” birding dramatically and probably Not long after professional permanently.” baseball came around to instant Pete Dunne, a professional birder, is skeptical of the effect techDrew Weber, who writes a blog replay, the booming world of nology will have on birding. RYAN COLLERD/THE NEW YORK TIMES about birding and technology competitive birding, once seen at NemesisBird.com and helps as a refuge from the clatter of the develop birding apps, said he had enced, overeager or simply cheatbirds can expect to be questioned modern world, is debating how ing birders — are two of birding’s heard some resentment among much it should embrace technol- by other teams about details. old guard birders toward techThe rules do not allow the use of most pressing issues and form ogy. It is as close as birding, long the main argument for the use of savvy ones who have gained vast digital gadgets in the spotting or proud of its honor system, has birding knowledge with comparaphotos. come to an identity crisis, partic- hearing of birds. Recorded calls bly little time spent in the field. Birding’s popularity, fueled cannot be played in the open, ularly over the issue of whether in part by the recent films The where they could inadvertently “A lot of traditional birders, photography should be required Big Year and A Birder’s Guide to — or intentionally — induce honing their skills for decades, to prove a spotting. In debates among birders, the encroachment birds to respond, for example. But Everything, is approaching an had to put all this time in, and extreme-sport level, with adrenbirders are permitted to refresh of smartphones and digital camthey might see technology as a aline-pumped teams putting in eras has become inseparable from themselves — in their cars, only shortcut,” he said. sleepless days. — with recorded bird calls. another touchy issue, the matter Teams in the World Series The American Birding AssoThe pro-tech camp argues of questionable sightings, known recruit members who can idenciation has begun discussions that it is silly to prohibit tools as stringing. tify bird calls and can scout to revise portions of its code of The World Series is held every that educate birders, make birdwhere targeted species are likely ethics, said Jeffrey Gordon, the ing more welcoming for novices May throughout New Jersey, a to be seen. To prepare for the and build support for saving bird association’s president. The code event, Van Doren’s Cornell team major migration stop for birds serves as a guideline for birders, heading north, and the event rou- habitats. has spent a week driving around although competition organiz“It is bringing a new breath of tinely attracts roughly 1,000 of the New Jersey using apps to log ers are free to make their own world’s top birders, who will race air into the competitions,” said where specific birds have been around the state from midnight to Scott Whittle, a commercial pho- rules. Gordon said that what little spotted. They are not allowed to there was in the code regarding tographer from Cape May, N.J., midnight, often in four-member use apps to acquire new informatechnology — there is a mention, teams, trying to identify as many who has a $10,000 photo setup. tion during the event, but they for example, of curbing the use He is helping develop an app species as they can by sight or can use them to refer to previcalled Bird Genie that recognizes of tape recorders — has likely sound. Their reward is bragging ously gathered information. gone unchanged since being and identifies bird calls in the rights and the Urner-Stone Cup, Van Doren acknowledged that established a decade ago, “before field. which resembles a miniature people were walking around with technology should have its limits. He said he began birding six version of hockey’s Stanley Cup, The day will come, he predicted, libraries of bird songs in their years ago and photographed although there are no cash prizes. when binoculars themselves will pocket.” his sightings “because I knew I The competition, which also be able to identify birds. While the honor system wasn’t a good enough birder for raises money for conservation, “That would be lame from remains paramount, Gordon does not require photo evidence, people to trust me.” said, photographs, provided they a birding perspective,” he said, The verification of sightings and scoring remains on the honor “because it would take the skill have not been altered, can offer system, although contestants who and the fight against stringing out of it.” — arguable sightings by inexperi- “a higher standard of evidence,” claim to have seen or heard rare
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[Photography and “ technology are] getting
away from the art of field identification.”
Pregnancy apps track progress of baby, mother
By Bree Fowler
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — When I became pregnant with my daughter, now 4, I didn’t even own a smartphone. I did most of my pregnancy research with my desktop computer and those pregnancy books that nearly every first-time mom reads. Now, baby No. 2 is on the way, and times have changed. With the rise of smartphones, tablets and wearable devices, there’s no shortage of pregnancyrelated high-tech products on the market. I get weekly updates explaining what’s going on with my body and my baby’s development, which show up as notifications from my various iPhone apps. The first time around, I got emails from pregnancy websites. There are also apps to track how much weight you’ve gained, how often your baby kicks and eventually how far apart your contractions are. There are even smartphone-enabled devices that let you listen to your baby’s heartbeat at home. Like a lot of second-time moms, I didn’t feel the need to gorge myself on pregnancy information this time around. But I did download some of the more popular apps. I stuck largely to free apps, though I also tested a $129 fetal heart monitor that attaches to a smartphone. Although the apps don’t cover everything an expectant mom needs to know, they offer enough that I’ve barely dusted off my pregnancy books this time around. u BabyBump (free, or $4 for ad-free version with additional features; for Apple and Android devices): Like the other pregnancy apps I tried, you start by entering your due date, weight and other information. The app creates a chart tracking your progress and showing the number of days left. BabyBump also encourages you to upload a photo of your expanding belly each week to create a timelapsed series of your growth, but I didn’t bother with that. There are daily tips and a weekly update explaining what’s going on with your body and baby. You can play slideshows of you and your baby’s week-byweek development. These are in the form of drawings showing an expanding belly and what’s inside. You can also join online pregnancy groups and use the app to keep a journal. The free version has advertising on the bottom. The $4 pro version doesn’t. The pro version also has a kick counter and contraction tracker, along with planning tools for shopping, name selection and birth announcements. I didn’t feel the need to pay. u WebMD Pregnancy (free, for Apple devices only): I like this app the most. Like the BabyBump app, there’s a pregnancy calendar and weekly illustrations showing development. But WebMD’s pictures are more vibrant and less cartoonish, though a bit more graphic. There are daily tips and suggested questions to ask your doctor at your next appointment. You can keep track of your doctor’s appointments and log your weight and blood pressure. Although I used the app to track how much weight I was gaining, I didn’t bother with the blood pressure and found my Google calendar to be more useful in logging appointments. The app includes a kick counter and contraction timer for free, whereas I had to pay for those features with BabyBump. I found this app easier and more fun to use than BabyBump. u Bellabeat (free app, but heart monitor costs $129; app for Apple and Android devices): At-home fetal heart listening systems aren’t new. There are a handful of products of varying prices and quality, but many people have complained that they don’t work well and aren’t easy to use, especially in the early stages of pregnancy. You plug the Bellabeat heart monitor into your smartphone’s headphone port, and then plug a set of earbuds into the device. It runs on two AAA batteries. The companion smartphone app detects the baby’s heart rate and lets you record the sound. You can even share the audio clip through Facebook, Twitter or email. Like the devices used by doctors, the Bellabeat uses high-frequency sound waves to pick up the heartbeat. But this isn’t nearly as advanced as the one at my doctor’s office. I had a mixed experience with it. The first time I tried the Bellabeat, I was 37-weeks pregnant and pretty huge. I managed to pick up my baby’s heartbeat after a few tries. But a few days later, after the baby had moved into a new position, I couldn’t seem to find it at all. I just got a lot of whooshing noises from the device. Eventually, I picked up a faint heartbeat. I wasn’t worried, but I can see why some doctors don’t like these gadgets. They can cause unnecessary distress.
With the Bellabeat fetal heart listening system, a heart monitor device, available for $129, is plugged into your smartphone’s headphone port, then a set of earbuds is plugged into the device. BELLABEAT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
LIFE&SCIENCE ‘I never missed them’ Health Science Environment
In pain and forced to use a wheelchair, woman opts to amputate her clubfeet especially below the knee.” Many of those advances have since trickled out into the civilian marketplace, where they benefit patients such as Phipps.
By Caitlin Dewey
The Washington Post
F
or most of her teens, Lacey Phipps couldn’t get out of her wheelchair, afflicted by twisted, deformed clubfeet so severe that 11 surgeries failed to fix them. She saw orthopedist after orthopedist. She downed pain pills and went under the knife for corrective surgeries that never helped. Then, in July 2012, she made a radical decision that would scandalize her family and change her life. “Chop them off!” Phipps said of her feet. “I got tired of sitting in a wheelchair — really, really tired, ” she says of that moment, in the slight lilt of rural Ireland where she was grew up. “I got tired of watching everyone else go out and not be able to do anything myself.” Now fitted with two belowthe-knee prostheses, Phipps, 24, bikes to school, goes rock climbing on weekends and plays forward in the intramural soccer league at Texas Tech University, where she is a senior. She Irish dances with a local troupe and hits the gym three times a week. Far from an anomaly, Phipps is one of what doctors and other experts say is a growing number of young, active patients who are changing the way medicine sees amputation. Historically, doctors have sought to preserve limbs at any cost. But as prosthetics have advanced, spurred on in part by injuries incurred in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and as young patients demand treatments that will allow them busier, more athletic lives, the emphasis has shifted. Where elective amputation would have been anathema 10 or 15 years ago, it’s now seen as a viable option for a range of birth defects and traumas. “The way we look at it now is more about function,” says Chris Attinger, a plastic surgeon and specialist in limb salvage at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital in Washington. “We ask the patient: What do you want to do?”
uuu
Lacey Phipps walks back to a van after a recent paddling trip. Phipps, who had her legs and feet amputated in 2012, is one of what doctors and other experts say is a growing number of young, active patients who are changing the way medicine sees amputation. ‘I am setting out to defy what society thinks about what is possible,’ she says. ERICH SCHLEGEL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Left with no ankle bones Before she elected to amputate both of her feet, Lacey Phipps had to use a wheelchair and was incapacitated with painkillers. Eleven failed surgeries had left her with no ankle bones. PHIPPS’ FOOT
An X-ray of her left ankle reveals her tibia resting directly on her heel bone, the calcaneus. A metal screw penetrates a cuneiform bone and the calcaneus.
Tibia Metatarsal bones
Calcaneus
NORMAL FOOT
The talus bone, absent in the X-ray above, distributes the weight of the body onto the foot.
Tibia
Navicular Talus
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By all accounts, Phipps’ case shouldn’t even have gotten that far. Clubfoot, a common, congenital birth defect that twists the feet out of position and makes it difficult to walk, affects roughly one of every 1,000 newborns. In the United States, more than 95 percent of cases are cured in infancy without surgery, using a series of plaster casts called the Ponseti Method that gradually realigns the foot. But Phipps, who was born in Fort Worth, Texas, but grew up in a remote, Gaelic-speaking region of Ireland, endured repeated surgeries by doctors who either didn’t know about the casting method or didn’t believe it would work. On one occasion, a surgeon operated on her without anesthesia, giving her a flourfilled medical glove to squeeze for the pain. On another, a doctor joked to Phipps that he’d just cut her legs off while she was knocked out — causing Phipps, then just a small girl, to cry so hard the surgery had to be postponed. Each failed operation only made Phipps’ condition worse, further deforming her feet and forcing her, little by little, from crutches to a wheelchair, where she says she spent 99 percent of her time. By the time she, her mother and a twin sister moved to the United States in 2006, Phipps had no bones left in her ankles. Her tibia sat directly on her heel bones, grinding together whenever she moved. The pain was excruciating. At age 13, Phipps began a daily dose of morphine that would make her sleep for 13 hours a night and force her to nod off in class. That was only the first in a long, ever-rotating line of medications: baclofen to relax
Cuneiform bones
Calcaneus
NORMAL X-RAY COURTESY OF ANDREW MAGILL
her muscles, Lyrica to dull nerve pain, metoprolol and gabapentin to counteract the various side effects and complications she developed. “If you [had gone] to my house, it [looked] like a dispensary,” she quips, with “20 bottles [of different medicines]. Bottles everywhere.” uuu
Amputation isn’t as simple as lopping off a leg and putting a prosthetic in its place, explains Attinger, the MedStar Georgetown surgeon. A huge range of factors, including the length of the stub left after the surgery and the structure of its bones, affects how a prosthesis will fit. Once a patient receives one, it requires lifelong adjustment as the stub changes size and shape. Fortunately, both amputation and prostheses have come a long way in the past 10 years. Phipps says recent advances in the field didn’t influence her decision to amputate, but there’s no doubt they affected her treatment and how doctors responded to her request. Before the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, amputations primarily were performed on the old and infirm, frequently diabetes patients. But the soldiers who had lost legs to roadside bombs or other injuries were young,
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com
Cuneiform bones Metatarsal bones
THE WASHINGTON POST
and they wanted more from their prosthetics than traditional patients did: the ability to walk. To run. Even to ski and snowboard, as Zach Harvey, formerly the chief prosthetist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, discovered when he moved to Breckenridge, Colo. (“We’ve had [prosthetic] legs fall off on the ski lift,” he jokes.) At his private practice in Colorado, he counts five Paralympians among his patients. “It’s really interesting how the military pushed the limits” of prosthetic technology, Harvey said. “We were constantly pushed at Walter Reed. They [injured soldiers] just didn’t want to accept any limitations.” The pushing paid off. Research and development conducted at Walter Reed, as well as at other government-funded facilities and private companies, made huge advances in prostheses: stronger socket materials that didn’t become brittle or break with use; gel liners to sculpt to uneven bone; sophisticated knees and ankles loaded with microprocessors and gyroscopes to mimic the action of natural joints. “The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan left a lot of soldiers with lost limbs,” said Attinger, the Georgetown specialist. “The progress in prosthetics since then has been astounding,
Phipps had her right foot and lower right leg amputated in July 2012, then the left in mid-December of that year. Performed at a hospital in Texas, the surgeries were relatively uncomplicated and sparked no last-minute hesitation: two clean cuts, a week in the hospital (visited often by college friends) and a month in a rehab center getting used to her prostheses. But her new legs weighed too much and fit too loosely, tripping Phipps whenever she tried to get out of her wheelchair. Phipps had heard about a Leesburg, Virginia-based prosthetist named John Hattingh, who — like TV’s Dr. House — specializes in difficult cases, and she got in touch with him. On Facebook, he was promising free prostheses if a patient had run out of options elsewhere. Phipps discussed her situation with him — the repeat surgeries, her continuing struggle to walk — and soon she was selected for the prostheses. In July of last year, Hattingh and his wife flew Phipps up from Texas and installed her in their guest room. Hattingh, who has made a point of donating his services throughout his career, describes it as an act of “humanitarianism.” Hattingh then went to work on crafting a device that would allow Phipps the mobility and activity level of a non-amputee. He measured Phipps’ stumps, which extend just below her knees, and made a mold to fit them. He filled it with plaster in his tile-floored office workshop, where pegboards of tools lined the walls and pop music played from a digital radio. Then he molded a test socket from clear plastic, later replacing it with a carbon frame and a silicon insert, using materials and methods that came on the market only in the past few years. The finished socket connects each of Phipps’ stumps to a prosthetic lower leg, ankle and foot. It took Phipps more than 37 days to recuperate after her amputations. But in Hattingh’s clinic, she learned to walk again in three. From there, it was only a few months until she was scrambling up a rock wall at Texas Tech. In late February, she tackled Palo Duro Canyon’s most difficult trail with her twin sister and older brother, who also live in Texas. They made the 300-foot descent in just over two hours. “I am setting out to defy what society thinks about what is possible” is how Phipps put it on her “Feet Are Overrated” adventure blog, which is filled with updates on her mountain biking and trail hiking. “If she didn’t have the determination, it never would have worked,” Hattingh said. “It’s a joint effort.” Phipps was back in Leesburg last December for adjustments to her prostheses. She’s so active that she keeps breaking them. Sitting in a wheelchair in Hattingh’s workshop, her stumps slung nonchalantly over the edge of a work table, Phipps watches Hattingh disassemble her leg and chatters easily about the things she’s excited to return to in Texas. Soccer. Irish dance. Her studies. She plans to become a pediatric orthopedist, so she can help children like the one she once was. So she can show them, in effect, that there is hope — even if the best solution is counterintuitive. “Everyone is so hung up on having the perfect child,” Phipps said. “All 10 toes, all 10 fingers. It’s better to be without them than be in pain. “I never missed them.”
A-9
Drug-resistant bacteria thriving around the world The New York Times
The Lechuguilla Cave in New Mexico is a network of chambers stretching 1,600 feet underground. The bacteria that grow on the walls of its recesses have been living in total isolation for more than 4 million years. In 2010, Gerry Wright, a microbiologist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, ran an experiment on those long-lost bacteria. He and his colleagues doused them with antibiotics, the drugs that doctors have used for the past 70 years to wipe out bacterial infections. But many of the Lechuguilla bacteria would not die Some strains, he and his colleagues found, could resist 14 commercially available antibiotics, which didn’t fit the conventional story of antibiotics. Antibiotics were introduced in the mid-1900s. Each time a new drug was introduced, it would take years before bacteria that could resist it became common. In the decades since, this trend has turned into a crisis. Last week, the World Health Organization reported that antibiotic resistance is now a major threat to public health across the entire planet. The resistance of the Lechuguilla Cave bacteria hinted that antibiotic-resistance genes were not just the product of modern medicine, but an ancient part of nature, and a new study from Joseph Nesme, a microbiologist at the University of Lyon in France, and his colleagues reveals just how widespread resistance is. To carry out their study, Nesme and his colleagues studied DNA from all over the world — everywhere from Antarctic ice to the bottom of the ocean. They looked for genes that were similar to the ones that disease-causing bacteria use to resist antibiotics. As the authors report in the journal Current Biology, they hit the jackpot. “We find them in all environments,” Nesme said.
Food-service inspections For the period ending May 7. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 827-1820. SECOND STREET BREWERY, 1814 Second St. Previous violations corrected. SANTA FE BBQ, various locations. Cited for moderaterisk violation for scratched cutting board. TODOS SANTOS, 125 E. Palace Ave. #31. Cited for moderate-risk violations for lack of thermometers for refrigeration units, refrigeration services smeared with chocolate. SANTA FE FARMERS MARKET, 1607 Paseo de Peralta. Cited for moderate-risk violation for lack of QAT test strips. QUAIL RUN RESTAURANT, 3101 Old Pecos Trail. Cited for high-risk violations for employee touching salad with bare hands, out-of-date food in walk-in refrigerator, grime buildup on ice machine (corrected), ice in hand-wash sink, wet washcloth out of sanitizer bucket, dishwashing machine not sanitizing, potential for cross contamination of food, lack of paper towels at hand-wash station, problem with sanitizer solution. Cited for moderate-risk violations for grease buildup on equipment. Cited for low-risk violation for unsanitary design of toilet paper dispenser. KEVA JUICE, 3522 Zafarano Drive, Suite C. Cited for high-risk violations for water leaking onto floor under three-compartment sink (corrected), wet washcloth out of sanitizer bucket (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violations for mold and dust buildup on shelves and fans in walk-in refrigerator. Cited for lowrisk violations for unsanitary design of toilet paper dispenser, heavy buildup of bird waste around trash area. MCDONALD’S, 4001 Calle Lucia. No violations. GARDUÑO’S RESTAURANT AT THE LODGE AT SANTA FE, 744 Calle Mejia. Cited for moderate-risk violations for stained cutting board, lack of chlorine test strips. TOKYO CAFE, 1847 Cerrillos Road. Cited for moderate-risk violation for gap under back door. Cited for low-risk violations for burned-out light bulb, employee jacket hanging on shelf (corrected). MINE SHAFT TAVERN, 2846 N.M. 14. Cited for highrisk violation for sewage problem. Cited for low-risk violation for expired permit posted. BLAKE’S LOTABURGER, 2004 St. Michael’s Drive. Cited for high-risk violations for problem with food temperatures in walk-in refrigerator, improper defrosting of chile, raw beef stored over cheese, no label on chemical spray bottle, broken soap dispenser. SWISS BAKERY PASTRIES & BISTRO, 401 South Guadalupe St. Cited for high-risk violations for mixing home-canned jams with dry storage items, lack of dates on cold food, problem with temperatures in walk-in refrigeration unit, dented can mixed with dry storage, old food buildup on can opener, lack of paper towels and soap at hand-wash station, employee touching food with bare hands, wet rag out of sanitizer bucket, lack of label on chemical spray bottle. Cited for moderate-risk violations for exposed insulation over food in chest freezer, open back door, first-aid supplies stored over prep sink. Cited for low-risk violation for employee toothpaste over food prep area, restroom opening to dining area with no self-closing door, unsanitary design of toilet paper dispenser, boxes stored on floor. TACO BELL, 3029 Cerrillos Road. No violations. NEW MEXICO SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, 1060 Cerrillos Road. Cited for low-risk violation for dirt on air vents. BLAKE’S LOTABURGER, 404 N. Guadalupe St. Cited for high-risk violations for lack of paper towels at hand sink, food temperature in danger zone, ice pooling onto food product, lack of toilet paper, problem with freezer drain line. Cited for moderate-risk violations for grease and dust buildup on and around food equipment, trash buildup outside of building. Cited for low-risk violations for unsanitary design of toilet paper dispenser, flaking ceilings. HYATT PLACE, 4320 Cerrillos Road. Cited for high-risk violations for milk temperature in danger zone, lack of test strips and thermal labels for high-temperature dishwasher. Cited for moderate-risk violation for buildup on can opener. Cited for low-risk violation for unsanitary design of toilet paper dispenser. WHOLE HOG CAFE, 320 S. Guadalupe St. Cited for moderate-risk violation for rusting shelves. Cited for low-risk violation for unshielded light bulb. TIA SOPHIA’S, 210 W. San Francisco St. Cited for highrisk violation for cold water turned off due to leak (corrected). Cited for low-risk violation for dusty vent fans.
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
Energy adviser: Shift in production has big implications for N.M. By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
In half a dozen years, North America has gone from importing natural gas to exporting it, thanks to technology that allows companies to drill shale. The shift has major implications for Unites States communities, energy and global politics, according to James C. Clad, an energy adviser to the Center for Naval Analysis and Cambridge Energy Research Associates who will speak in Albuquerque this week about the changing global energy landscape and implications for the U.S. and New Mexico, an oil- and gas-rich state. Clad’s talk at the next meeting of the Albuquerque Committee on Foreign Relations will take place at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Tanoan Country Club, 10801 Academy Blvd. NE. Clad has written three books about energy, capitalism and Southeast Asia. In 2007, he said, the U.S. was expected to remain one of the largest importers of liquid natural gas in the world, and companies built gas processing terminals for importing. But new hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling techniques used to break open rock and tap trapped hydrocarbons have since proved an economically viable method for reaching once marginal gas and oil supplies in shale. Those same companies are rushing now to re-engineer their terminals to export the natural gas, Clad said. The new technology was a game changer. Setting aside the potential environmental harm to communities and water from a boom in drilling and fracking, increased production has put North America in the driver’s seat for energy. Producing more domestic supplies of oil and gas makes the United States less vulnerable to price swings and
politics in other countries. “It’s one of those things that is changing before our eyes,” Clad said. Northeast Asia, China, Japan and South Korea are eyeing North America’s natural gas supplies. Meanwhile, the United States also is ramping up its domestic market for natural gas to supply electricity and take the place of coal-fired power plants headed for retirement, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. By 2016, the U.S. will retire more than 120 coal-fired plants. Closing the plants is good news to people who see emissions from coal-fired plants as a primary cause of climate change and haze in some regions of the country. But the power has to be replaced. Natural gas offers a steady bridge fuel for producing electricity while the country shifts to renewable energy. But the industry will have to fix methane leaks from the pipelines and facilities, a problem the federal government is working on currently with industry. Methane is considered a more powerful greenhouse gas linked to climate change than the carbon dioxide from coal plants. Clad said that shale oil and gas now are big topics among energy companies, even in Saudi Arabia. Some experts estimate that the known reserves could keep producing into the next century. “Already, Texas is producing more oil and gas than Iran,” he said. “It seems inevitable that we will become a larger oil producer than Saudi Arabia.” Find out more about the latest in energy production by country and type at www.eia. gov. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Someone stole a JBL Bluetooth speaker worth $180 and a Samsung cellphone worth $400 from a residence in the 1500 block of Moki Lane between midnight and 8:30 a.m. Saturday. u A resident of the 1000 block of Camino de Cruz Blanca said someone stole an Apple laptop worth $1,000 and its charger sometime between Friday night and 1:35 p.m. Saturday. u A resident of the 4500 block of Paseo del Sol on Saturday said someone entered her apartment and stole electronic devices worth $150. u A man reported that he returned to his apartment in the 2800 block of Cerrillos Road at about 8 p.m. Friday and discovered three women inside. One of them threw an object at him, striking him in the head, and then they fled out the back door. The man said the women stole $200 and a credit card. u A police officer in civilian clothes observed a drug sale in the 300 block of De Vargas Street at about 6 p.m. Saturday. Meliton Benavides, 21, of San Jose, N.M., and Martin Flores, 31, of Santa Fe were arrested on charges of possession of a controlled substance and drug paraphernalia. u Amanda Martinez, 24, of Española was arrested on charges of jaywalking and concealing identity at about 7:05 p.m. Friday in the 3000 block of Cerrillos Road. Police also discovered Martinez had an outstanding District Court warrant out for her arrest. u Police arrested Jose Beltran, 29, of Santa Fe at about 8:25 p.m. Saturday in the 3200 block of Rufina Street after responding to a report of a burglary in progress. He was arrested “after a short strug-
gle” and charged with breaking and entering, criminal damage and resisting/obstructing an officer. u Police arrested Carlos Coroy-Taguith, 42, of La Cueva at about 10 p.m. Saturday on Airport Road and charged him with having an open container and driving with a revoked or suspended license. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u A Sunset Trail resident reported Saturday that someone took a two-stall horse trailer from his property between 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. u A woman reported Saturday that she had been sexually assaulted by a man in the Hyde Park area in August 2005. u Deputies responded to a report of a domestic dispute at about 1:11 a.m. Sunday in the 1200 block of Calle Inez. A 37-year-old woman told deputies that, following a verbal altercation, a man grabbed a piece of metal pipe and swung it at her before pushing her against a parked vehicle, at which time she received minor lacerations on her arm. The suspect, Wilmer J. AlvaradoOrdonez, 35, of Santa Fe left the scene but then returned while deputies were still conducting their investigation. They arrested him on charges of assault and battery on a household member.
DWI arrest u Sheriff’s deputies arrested Juanito Valdez, 20, of Santa Fe at about 12:47 a.m. Sunday and charged him with aggravated drunken driving, careless driving, possession of an open container and possession of marijuana after his vehicle became stuck along Evergreen Lane while he tried to drive it off the road.
Funeral services and memorials GILBERT RAYMOND ORTIZ Gilbert Raymond Ortiz passed away on Sunday, May 04, 2014 surrounded by his loving family at his home in Nambe. He was preceded in death by his wife of 48 years, Emilie Jane Barrone Ortiz; parents, Henry and Sarah Ortiz; mother-in-law, Christina Fresenius Barrone; sisters, baby Bertha Ortiz and Angie Hayes and brother-in-law, Herman Rowlison. Mr. Ortiz is survived by his siblings and their families; Jennie Rowlison, Eddie Ortiz and wife Teri, Sylvia and husband Austin Hoover and Linda and husband Frankie Trujillo; brothers-in-law, Dan Barrone and wife Cece and Lenny Barrone. Gilbert was born and raised in Nambe, New Mexico, and considered it to be "the most beautiful place to be". He attended elementary school across the street from his house and in 7th grade went on to St. Michael’s College (as it was called in those days). He graduated from St. Michael’s High School in 1950 and shortly thereafter joined the United States Air Force, spending four years as a Cryptograph Operator in the Korean War earning the rank of Staff Sergeant. Upon returning home he entered the work force at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in the mail room and eventually became a Division Leader for Communications and Records Management (CRMO), as well as Lobbyist. He was a loyal, diligent and compassionate employee and loved every minute of his 40 + career with LANL. In 1964 he married the love of his life, Emilie Jane Barrone; raised three daughters, Cynthia Christianna, Deana Gilberta and Bianca Camille. Along with Emilie he was instrumental in the upbringing of their three grandchildren whom they considered their Dad, Christopher, Chrisianita "Tia" and Orion "Kiki". Loving, spoiling, and guiding them every step of the way. Gilbert was a dedicated, loving and funny son, grandson, brother, husband, father, cousin and friend. He cherished his days with his Papa Abel, Mama Teodora, Mama Bersa and all his many cousins, nephews, nieces, son-in-law, John Vincent Wertheim and his family and friends through the years. Gilbert also served as a Santa Fe County Commissioner, was a Great Democrat and a part time farmer, even raising with Emilie 5,000 chile plants in one season. He had a special devotion to the "Virgin Mother" and was a devout Roman Catholic. He found sanctuary in the Holy Rosary and in the recent years to EWTN. A proud New Mexican and American, Gilbert cherished and respected the land, acequias, rivers and "los pajaritos de Tata Dios". In his younger days he was an avid hunter and loved going on horseback to the wilderness. Public visitation will begin on Monday, May 12, 2014 at 6:00 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Nambe with a rosary to be recited at 7:00 p.m. Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated on Tuesday, May 13, 2014 at 11:00 a.m. at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Pojoaque. Burial to follow at 12:45 p.m. at the Santa Fe National Cemetery with the following serving as pallbearers: Kiki Ortiz, Christopher Ortiz - Petty Officer 3rd class US Navy, Henry Ortiz, Kenneth Rowlison (his Ahijado) and Robert Garcia. Donations can be made to: Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Parish in Pojoaque Building Fund and/or to the Talking Books Library: NMLBH at 1209 Camino Carlos Rey, Santa Fe, NM 87507-5166/ 1-800-456-5515. Special Thank you to his brother Eddie for their talks and care on the way to and from dialysis, Dr. Paul Kovnat, Fresenius Dialysis Center in Española, to Bella, Pat and Aimee at Talking Books Library and to Rosa Ortiz. He will be greatly missed; may he rest in peace in God’s Loving Arms. The family of Gilbert Ortiz has entrusted the care of their loved one to the DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Espanola Valley. 505-747-7477 - www.devargasfuneral.com JOE R. BACA Joe R. Baca, 91, passed away peacefully at his home (Kingston Residence) on May 6, 2014, after a long illness. Joe was a life-long resident of Santa Fe. He is survived by his sister, Dolores Baca Gonzales; nephew/caregiver, Joseph Dwight Gonzales, and wife Louise Gonzales; as well as many nephews and nieces. He was preceded in death by his loving wife, Isabel Vigil Baca; parents, Eloy Baca and Trinidad Delgado Baca; brothers, Eloy Baca, Gene Baca and Tony Baca; and sister, Amelia Baca Martinez. Joe was a tail gunner with Crew 11 from the 461st Bomb Group, 764th Bombardment Squadron. When their brand new B-24 bomber was shot down over the AustrianHungarian border by German Fighters, the crew bailed out and Joe landed in Austria. The German Home Guard captured him, and thus began Joe’s long ordeal of 357 days. He was held as a prisoner of war in Eastern Prussia at a camp known as POW Stalag Luft IV. On February 6, 1945, they began their Death March of 86 days and 488 miles, which ended in Halle, Germany, on May 2, 1945, when they were liberated by the American 104th Infantry Division. Upon returning from World War II, Joe married Isabel Vigil and worked as a bookkeeper in Los Alamos, NM, for Robert E. McKee, the General Contractor from El Paso, TX, who was in charge of constructing many government buildings for the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Joe kept their business accounts for 21 years. He also worked for the New Mexico State Highway Department as an Electronic Supervisor for 14 years. Even while working fulltime and maintaining family obligations, Joe was able to also build 2 houses himself. Our deepest gratitude goes out to the many staff members who cared for our brother/uncle at Kingston Residence. We would also like to thank the doctors, nurses, aids, case managers and chaplains from Ambercare Hospice, especially Helen Dumond, RN. We are also grateful to the Carmelite Monastery Sisters, Father Russo, the community of friends from the early morning mass at the Carmelite Monastery, the Saturday 3:45 mass at Christus St. Vincent Hospital, Eucharistic Ministers - Mary Karshis, Linde Chambles and Patrick, and all of Joe’s many friends for their prayers and dedication during this difficult time. Visitation will be Wednesday, May 14, 2014 at 5 p.m. at Berardinelli Family Funeral Service, with rosary following at 7 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Thursday, May 15, 2014 at 10 a.m. at Cristo Rey Catholic Church. Burial will follow at 11:15 a.m. at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, Joe requested that donations be made to the Carmelite Monastery. Berardinelli Family Funeral Service, 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505. (505) 984-8600. Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com
MANUEL LUJAN Manuel "Felix" Lujan joined our lord on Tuesday, May 6th, after a lengthy illness. His was surrounded by his loving family at the time of his death. Felix was born in Espanola on April 10, 1943 to Sevedeo and Ascencion Lujan. He is preceded in death by his parents, sisters, Cordelia Long and Martha Lujan, brothers, Jose Noe, Benny, Toby Wilfred, baby Lujan, and one son baby Shaun. He is survived by his wife, Carla, sons, Ryan (Dora Marquez), Anthony Joseph (wife, Angel), Patrick "Trico" (fiancée, Erica Martinez), daughter, Marie (husband, Daniel Jaramillo) and Sharon Kilkenny, the mother of his children. He is also survived by brothers, Sevedeo "Goofy" (wife, Jackie), Antonio Jose (wife, Rose), Tobias James (wife, Elizabeth), and sister-in-law Florence Lujan. He is also survived by his brotherin-law, William Long, who raised Felix and Toby, as his own, after their father’s death. He has ten grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. He is also survived by his in-laws, Vincent and Grace Padilla, sister-in-law Debbie Lopez and husband Edward, and brother in-law Vincent Padilla Jr. Felix was a member of the St. Michael’s High School legendary "Mighty Midgets". He served in the United States Army and fought in the Vietnam War where he served as Artillery Sargent. He was a recipient of the Bronze Star medal for bravery. He was an avid Pittsburgh Steeler fan, loved Elvis Presley and enjoyed outdoor activities with his family and best friends John Smith and compadre, Carlos Segura. His most memorable times were spent with his wife in Las Vegas, Nevada. Public viewing will take place on Monday, May 12th at 4:30 pm at Berardinelli Funeral Home. The Rosary will follow on Monday, May 12th at the Sacred Heart Church in Espanola at 7 pm. Doors will open at 6:30 pm. Catholic services will be held at Cristo Rey Catholic Church (Canyon Road) in Santa Fe at 12:30 pm on Tuesday, May 13th , followed by burial at the Santa Fe National Cemetery. Berardinelli Family Funeral Service, 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505. (505) 984-8600. Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com JOHN J. GREENWOOD John’s journey to the Lord began March 26th. He was preceded in death by parents, John and Alice Greenwood, survived by his sister Maryalice Rios and niece Nicole Donahue. John was born in Philadelphia on September 21st, 1957. He grew up and graduated in Levittown, Pennsylvania. He joined the US Marine Corps in 1978. A leave was granted so he could care for his mother. After her death, he lived and worked in New Jersey. When John moved to Santa Fe, he quickly embraced the culture and harmonized with the community. He was enlightened by all genres of music and had a huge affection for sports. John was an easy going man and loved life to the fullest. Those of us who had the luck to "touch base" with him can be sure he is "safe at home." Service Memorial will be held Friday, May 16th at 12:45 at the Santa Fe National Cemetery.
STEVEN J. TORREZ
STEVEN J. TORREZ, 81, born December 13, 1932, a lifelong resident and rancher of Chama left this earthly realm and his loving family in the early morning hours on Wednesday, May 7, 2014 at his home in Los Alamos. Mr. Torrez is survived by his daughter, Silvia Vigil and husband Larkin; grandchildren, Javier, Jayme, Jerard and Dora Luz; sons, Chris and Steve Jr.; grandchildren, Santana and Sebestian and numerous other relatives and friends. He was always quick to lighten the spirits of others with his humorous anecdotes and stories both his humor and kindness will be greatly missed. Vaya con dios Caballero! In keeping with his wishes there will be no formal services. The family of Steven J. Torrez has entrusted their loved one to DeVargas Funeral Home & Crematory of the Española Valley. 505-7477477 www.devargasfuneral.com
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Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
A-11
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Ideas for the Plaza? Tonight’s the night
B LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Corporations plundering Earth T he United Personhood Corporations of Earth will soon dominate us and increasingly plunder our rapidly demising environment. Our legacy for innocent future generations, children and grandchildren, is indubitably perilous. If 98 doctors diagnose malignant cancer and two declare it benign, who should you believe? The same analogy exists with climatologists’ findings. Reprehensibly, unfettered profit religion justifies these deceitful traitors trashing our planet via self-regulation, propaganda-media ownership and corporate welfare subsidies. We see astounding concentrated wealth for the insatiable, narcissistic oligarchs whose money-speech power tragically can purchase entire governments. Drought and temperature amplifications imperil our overpopulated world, Gaia. We will soon experience expensive shortages of coffee,
meats, fish, fruits, vegetables and dairy. Spraying pesticides on bee-pollinating angiosperms will cause consequential extinction of produce, even of our beloved chile. Why subsidize corn crops for ethanol production? Dirtyenergy cabals pollute endangered, precious and indispensable clean water. Chicken Little was a prophet.
At the time we chose her as our lawyer, we did not know that she trained probate judges and their staff nor that she had contributed to a new edition of Life Planning in New Mexico, but her expertise was clearly apparent to us. Her knowledge and experience make her an excellent choice for probate judge.
Gary Reynolds
Santa Fe
Santa Fe
Best choice We strongly endorse Shannon Bulman for probate judge. When we needed help concerning a will, Bulman was recommended to us, and we were delighted with the thoughtful and friendly help we received from her. Shannon not only simplified the cumbrous document that had been drawn up by a previous lawyer, but she pointed out several new important matters we should think about.
Wendell and Harriett Harris
Shocking stories It’s rare when two separate stories shock as well as two in the recent news. One was regarding how young mice’s blood can rejuvenate old mice with a hint toward bloodletting our grandchildren to add a few years of spice to the decrepit. The other, a letter requiring extreme actions but without any cannibalism. Apparently, along with so many other celebrations of the month and possibly less lucrative than Mother’s Day,
is “International Respect for Chickens Month” in May. According to a British animal welfare professor, chickens are so smart they outperform any toddler under 4. Of course by 5, Mozart and Mendelssohn caught up with their sonatas while the wee peckers continued their “chirp, chirp.” The letter suggests we do not ingest what makes up more than half of everything sold at Trader Joe’s, my favorite market. No more chicken salads, Kievs, Marsalas, a la Italian or Greek or legs, thighs, breasts, organic or pre-cooked or barbecued, much less cog a vin. Enough to make a Tyson stock owner commit suicide. Well, maybe the Brit professor is right. Carbons in the atmosphere are changing our climates. Or as Chicken Little said, “the sky is falling.” Gerald Hotchkiss
Tesuque
COMMENTARY: JOSHUA KEATING
Polio makes a comeback worldwide
T
he near eradication of polio is one of the great global public health success stories of the last few decades. Thanks to concerted vaccination campaigns, the number of cases was cut from around 350,000 in 1988 to just 187 in 2012. Today, however, the World Health Organization warns that the crippling disease could be making a comeback. At the end of last month, there were 68 confirmed polio cases worldwide, compared to just 24 at the same time last year: The agency described current polio outbreaks across at least 10 countries in Asia, Africa and the Middle East as an “extraordinary event” that required a coordinated international response. It identified Pakistan, Syria and Cameroon as having allowed the virus to spread beyond their borders, and recommended that those three governments require citizens to obtain a certificate proving they have been vaccinated for polio before traveling abroad. The disease has also been identified in
Nigeria, Ethiopia, Somalia and Kenya. It has spread from Cameroon to Equatorial Guinea and from Syria to Iraq. Polio returned to Syria last year for the first time since 1999. The collapse of the country’s health care system and the displacement of much of its population caused the country’s immunization rate to plummet. In Cameroon, a lack of public health infrastructure, fears about vaccines and the disruption caused by refugees fleeing violence in neighboring Nigeria and the Central African Republic have been identified as the primary factors behind the disease’s resurgence. In Pakistan, efforts to combat polio have been hampered by the Taliban’s targeting of vaccination workers in the country’s restive northwest. More than 30 of these workers have been killed in the last two years. Just a few weeks ago, vaccinator Salma Farooqi was tortured and killed after being abducted from her home in Peshawar. The Taliban portrays vaccination
MALLArd FiLLMore
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
drives as a Western plot to sterilize Muslim children or as a cover for spies. The CIA unfortunately lent credence to the latter claim by using a phony vaccination campaign as a ruse to collect DNA evidence from Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad. The WHO’s warning is a good reminder of the obvious fact that vaccines only work if you can get them into people. Considering the immense risks that health workers undergo to immunize children in some of the world’s most dangerous war zones, dictatorships and failed states, the fact that here in the United States, preventable diseases like measles are making a comeback — in part because parents are being scared away from immunizing their children by normally respectable media outlets — seems particularly galling. Joshua Keating is a staff writer at Slate, focusing on international news, social science and related topics. He was previously an editor at Foreign Policy magazine.
rakes on the notion to close the Plaza to vehicle traffic? After what seemed a fast track to approval (two committees said yes), a decidedly disapproving Public Works Committee has Mayor Javier Gonzales refiguring his idea to turn the Plaza over to pedestrians. This doesn’t mean the mayor still wouldn’t like to see less traffic on the historic square, he’s just come face to face with Santa Fe’s political realities: People here don’t like change — after all, what’s history without remembering the good old days? Anything new or different immediately causes a ruckus. And Gonzales did spring the proposed closure of the Plaza out of the blue. It wasn’t one of his campaign planks and came to him after walking around downtown and talking to people. He didn’t talk to enough people, evidently, because he now has realized the proposal needs more development. On Monday, Mayor Gonzales is hosting a forum from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in the Coronado Room of the Santa Fe Convention and Visitors Bureau, 201 W. Marcy St. The meeting will discuss programs and partnerships to bring people back to the Plaza. This isn’t a place to discuss closing the Plaza, according to a city news release. This is for folks to show up with ideas to make the Plaza more fun and attractive. (Email ideas to Frank Cordero at fxcordero@santa fenm.gov or call 955-6342 through Friday.) Here’s what we like about this process, though, despite its bumps. As the discussion has continued, Gonzales is not defensive. He doesn’t tell people who disagree with him they are wrong. He listens and tries to find a way to incorporate their thoughts and improve the plan so everyone wins. Already, he is talking about closing the Plaza for the summer months, rather than year-round. Now, he wants to put programming in place so that a Plaza closed to traffic is a place brimming with people and activity. We said before that focusing on the Plaza is a good place to start. Whether traffic is stalled for the summer could be less important than the discussion — especially if people feel included and that their voice matters. If he still wants to close the Plaza to traffic, though, Gonzales still needs to be more specific about parking and access, especially for the disabled. He needs to let operators of touring services understand they can still run their businesses. He needs to let shops and restaurants, etc., feel comfortable that customers will be able to get to their businesses. The Plaza — despite the growth in south Santa Fe — is still the heart of the city. Properly done, keeping cars and trucks away from the square at certain times could revitalize downtown in a way that helps tourists, locals, shops and restaurants. No car fumes wafting out to tickle the noses of diners at rooftop cafés. No near-miss accidents as confused pedestrians step in front of cars. No lost drivers wandering aimlessly. We can see many advantages to fewer cars and trucks around the Plaza — but we can’t wait to hear more about what citizens think and what they want to see on and around their beloved Plaza.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: May 12, 1914: Lordsburg — The other night, some of the natives at the 85 camp had a supply of liquor and were celebrating the coming of the Fifth of May. Some of them got quarrelsome, and Estanislao Loera took a shot at Constancio Terrazas, hitting him between the brows. The county physician operated on him, removing the bullet and broken bones, finding the brain practically uninjured. After the operation, Terrazas got up, walked out to a buggy and rode to his home in the 85 camp. The doctor thinks that Terrazas will recover. Loera has remained in jail, awaiting the final result of his shooting, for if Terrazas recovers it will be a case of assault, while if he dies it will be a case of murder. May 12, 1964: Washington — Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall announced the gates at Glen Canyon Dam were closed Monday morning so as to resume storage of Colorado River water in Lake Powell. The action was designed to permit initiation of power generation at Glen Canyon this summer, as originally scheduled.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
The weather
For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/
7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today
Partly sunny and cooler
Tonight
Mainly cloudy with a shower or two
Tuesday
Wednesday
Sunny to partly cloudy
Thursday
Plenty of sunshine
Friday
Sunny and pleasant
Saturday
Sunny
Sunday
Mostly sunny
Times of clouds and sun
55
35
57/35
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
34%
53%
40%
26%
18%
18%
16%
18%
wind: SSW 8-16 mph
wind: SE 8-16 mph
wind: S 6-12 mph
wind: WSW 6-12 mph
wind: W 7-14 mph
wind: WNW 8-16 mph
wind: WNW 8-16 mph
wind: WSW 6-12 mph
Almanac
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 75°/51° Normal high/low ............................ 74°/42° Record high ............................... 88° in 1996 Record low ................................. 26° in 2003 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.01”/0.84” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.33”/2.99” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.03”/1.02”
The following water statistics of May 8 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 6.384 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 3.360 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 9.744 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.325 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 30.8 percent of capacity; daily inflow 4.78 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation
80/46
64
285
64
Farmington 57/35
Española 60/40 Los Alamos 50/31 40
Santa Fe 55/35 Pecos 49/28
25
Albuquerque 61/41
25
56
Clayton 52/31
Pollen index
Las Vegas 47/28
54
40
40
285
Clovis 63/36
54
Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
Roswell 74/50
Ruidoso 58/34
25
70
Truth or Consequences 70/43 70
180
Las Cruces 74/49
54
70
70
380
380
Hobbs 77/44
285
Alamogordo 71/49
Carlsbad 80/51
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 96 ................................. Carlsbad Sun. Low 29 ................................ 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 86/55 r 80/52 r 59/29 pc 91/63 s 96/58 s 53/40 c 67/39 pc 84/55 s 65/46 s 89/56 s 61/47 pc 86/57 s 79/51 r 65/50 c 86/61 s 63/52 pc 66/42 s 93/63 s 86/57 s
Hi/Lo W 71/49 s 61/41 pc 40/22 pc 78/54 s 80/51 s 45/23 sh 49/31 sh 52/31 pc 54/27 s 63/36 s 53/30 pc 75/47 s 60/40 pc 57/35 sh 66/43 pc 54/29 sh 56/33 pc 77/44 s 74/49 s
Hi/Lo W 69/40 s 63/44 s 45/24 s 70/47 pc 73/48 pc 53/23 s 56/28 s 60/36 pc 52/22 pc 61/37 pc 60/29 s 75/47 s 62/43 s 64/35 s 67/37 pc 61/28 s 58/32 s 70/43 pc 74/50 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 73/47 82/59 66/52 79/56 89/60 76/42 72/43 80/56 93/57 72/55 83/55 77/54 85/57 66/37 83/63 92/57 87/66 66/51 59/52
W pc s pc pc s r sh pc s s pc s s pc s s s pc pc
Hi/Lo W 47/28 pc 76/49 s 50/31 sh 64/40 pc 66/39 s 49/33 sh 40/19 pc 60/39 pc 74/50 s 58/34 s 59/37 pc 71/41 s 67/40 s 50/28 sh 70/43 s 62/37 pc 76/51 s 53/33 sh 55/29 sh
Hi/Lo W 50/31 s 76/47 s 53/30 s 67/45 s 64/37 pc 54/30 s 44/22 s 64/38 s 69/43 pc 55/37 pc 63/36 pc 71/42 s 72/46 s 52/25 s 70/46 s 65/35 pc 76/52 s 56/33 s 61/28 s
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for May 12
Sunrise today ............................... 6:02 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:00 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 6:05 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 4:38 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:01 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 8:01 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 7:08 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 5:17 a.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:00 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 8:01 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................... 8:12 p.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 6:00 a.m. Full
Last
New
First
May 14
May 21
May 28
June 5
The planets
Yesterday Today Tomorrow Hi/Lo 69/40 84/63 80/56 50/33 47/44 67/41 80/62 88/72 86/58 81/52 83/55 79/51 89/74 46/33 77/49 69/35 48/40 85/72 87/75 81/57 86/62 76/56 86/58
W s pc pc c c s pc pc pc t t c pc sn c s pc sh c c pc pc s
Hi/Lo 65/47 87/68 89/64 53/36 55/35 66/46 80/54 88/68 89/64 84/60 86/67 82/64 82/57 40/26 82/66 75/46 56/35 83/72 85/70 84/66 71/46 79/65 89/63
W s pc s pc pc pc pc t s t pc pc t sn t s s sh t c t s s
Hi/Lo 64/44 84/66 91/62 63/40 61/35 73/49 56/46 87/65 88/62 64/44 84/57 84/57 66/51 50/34 78/52 64/36 62/38 82/71 80/59 76/50 63/42 84/68 93/64
W pc s t c sh s c s s sh t t sh pc t sh s sh t t s s s
Rise 6:55 a.m. 4:15 a.m. 4:26 p.m. 9:42 a.m. 7:40 p.m. 4:20 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 9:31 p.m. 4:37 p.m. 4:16 a.m. 12:08 a.m. 6:15 a.m. 4:56 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles
Humidity (Noon)
As of 5/9/2014 Grass.................................................... 3 Low Cottonwood ......................................... 1 Low Chinese Elm......................................... 1 Low ...................................................................... Total.............................................................5
25
60 60
87
412
82/50
Sunday’s rating ................................... Good Today’s forecast .......................... Moderate 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 50/28
84
666
Gallup 54/29
Raton 49/33
64
83/48
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
10
Water statistics
75/44
New Mexico weather
Area rainfall
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.41” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.04”/0.68” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.82” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.11”/3.57” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.89”
66/40
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 83/61 88/70 87/78 80/49 68/48 82/73 82/60 86/71 90/74 78/60 82/70 75/55 67/45 84/60 88/63 52/41 93/72 74/60 75/51 66/47 62/47 79/59 81/62
W t pc pc c c pc s pc c pc s pc pc pc pc c pc s s pc r s pc
Hi/Lo 88/70 86/70 87/77 75/55 66/42 85/70 84/66 72/45 89/71 88/66 86/65 85/64 79/50 90/68 85/59 57/38 87/67 89/62 75/55 75/50 52/36 85/65 89/70
W pc pc pc t r pc pc t pc pc s pc pc s t pc t s s pc r pc s
Hi/Lo 86/59 77/55 87/77 60/42 56/42 84/67 67/54 69/41 90/69 80/56 94/68 87/62 84/54 90/67 66/50 65/48 73/55 89/64 84/60 78/51 58/37 71/57 91/67
W t t pc pc pc pc c s pc t s t s pc c s t s s s pc c pc
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: 102 ............................ Pecos, TX Sun. Low: 15 .......................... Wisdom, MT
A drought helped to cause major dust storms in the Midwest during the 1930s. On May 12, 1934, wind-blown dust darkened the sky as far east as the Atlantic coast.
Weather trivia™
What month in the U.S. averages the Q: most tornadoes?
A: May and June are just about even
Weather history
Newsmakers NEW YORK — Hugh Jackman has had another cancerous growth removed. The 45-year-old actor attended the premiere of his latest film, X-Men: Days of Future Past Saturday night with a bandage over his nose. He told The Associated Press he had a basal-cell carcinoma removed two nights earlier. Jackman said he learned the results of a recent biopsy earlier on Thursday, and had it removed right after.
Spears adds shows to Las Vegas, Nev., residency
Britney Spears
Hi/Lo 54/50 81/54 98/72 95/75 75/63 58/53 59/50 63/52 63/57 81/63 88/71 90/64 57/50 54/46 63/54 77/64 90/72 87/78 69/56 74/66
W Hi/Lo W sh 55/45 sh s 81/63 pc pc 102/72 pc pc 95/80 t c 65/56 pc r 87/58 s sh 59/46 sh r 64/50 t sh 68/52 pc pc 81/62 pc pc 88/73 t s 78/50 s r 57/49 r sh 57/44 r r 58/46 c pc 72/60 t pc 89/71 pc t 88/80 t s 65/53 pc pc 75/62 c
Hi/Lo 57/43 82/65 96/71 97/80 62/53 87/60 59/39 64/50 72/55 85/65 88/73 71/50 57/47 59/43 54/37 72/60 87/70 88/80 67/55 76/62
W c c s t s c c r pc s pc s c pc sh t t t 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 75/59 57/49 84/57 83/58 68/54 63/46 98/77 59/48 59/52 77/66 72/61 59/54 75/61 91/81 52/45 68/59 75/63 61/50 63/57 63/52
W pc sh pc t pc pc pc sh pc pc pc c r t r pc pc pc r r
Hi/Lo 75/54 61/43 83/52 78/54 68/48 73/58 98/75 59/45 59/43 78/66 72/54 70/48 70/51 89/79 55/43 67/55 72/64 66/52 63/48 59/39
W s r s t pc pc t sh pc s pc pc s t c sh pc c s sh
Hi/Lo 75/55 62/45 79/48 80/53 66/52 70/46 98/73 61/44 59/42 81/68 66/50 72/46 77/51 90/80 59/42 70/54 73/64 70/50 60/48 52/37
W s sh s t pc sh t sh sh s sh pc s t r pc r pc sh sh
Today’s talk shows
Hugh Jackman has skin cancer growth removed
Hugh Jackman
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
NEW YORK — Britney Spears is going to hit you one more time, Las Vegas. A bunch more times actually. Caesars Entertainment said Sunday that the singer is adding more than 30 dates to her Las Vegas residency. Britney: Piece of Me will now play shows in October through December and February. Shows have also been added in August and September. Tickets to the new shows go on sale Friday. The Associated Press
3:00 p.m. KoAT The Ellen DeGeneres Show Eric Stonestreet; Raphaël Dubé; Yohann Trépanier; Ludacris. KRQE Dr. Phil KWBQ The Bill Cunningham Show Lovers confess to their partners. KLUZ El Gordo y la Flaca KASY Jerry Springer Lonnie has a big secret to reveal, and he does so through song. 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 James’ fiancee says her 51-year-old neighbor may have fathered their child. 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 CNN Anderson Cooper 360 FNC The O’Reilly Factor TBS Conan 9:30 p.m. KCHF Life Today With James Robison James and Betty Robison. HBo Last Week Tonight With John Oliver 10:00 p.m. KASA The Arsenio Hall Show E! E! News MSNBC The Rachel Maddow Show TBS The Pete Holmes Show Actor Ben Schwartz. 10:30 p.m. TBS Conan 10:34 p.m. KoB The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Comic Louis C.K. 10:35 p.m. KRQE Late Show With David Letterman Actor
Harry Connick Jr.; actor Jesse Eisenberg. 11:00 p.m. KNME Charlie Rose KoAT Jimmy Kimmel Live FNC Hannity 11:30 p.m. KASA Dish Nation TBS The Pete Holmes Show Actor Ben Schwartz. 11:37 p.m. KRQE The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson Angela Kinsey; Samantha Shannon; Dan Boulger. 12:00 a.m. CNN Anderson Cooper 360 E! Chelsea Lately Basketball player Magic Johnson. FNC On the Record With Greta Van Susteren 12:02 a.m. KoAT Nightline 12:06 a.m. KoB Late Night With Seth Meyers Actor Chris o’Dowd; actress Emma Roberts. 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
Katherine Heigl portrays CIA agent Charleston Tucker in NBC’s new series State of Affairs. AP PHoTo/NBC
Rebounding NBC adding 12 new series next season nal court judge, which will air Thursdays, and Mission Control, with Krysten Ritter as an aeroNEW YORK — NBC, which space engineer in the 1960s. It’s rebounded this season from a planned for midseason. stubborn ratings slump, will The drama Constantine, try to build on its gains with a based on the DC Comics series dozen new series that include Hellblazer, is set for a fall debut dramas starring Debra Messing and will air on Friday nights. and Katherine Heigl and comDuchovny, last seen on netedies produced by Will Ferrell. work series TV on Fox’s The In the 2014-15 schedule X Files, will star in the limitedannounced Sunday before run series Aquarius as a Los its New York presentation to Angeles police sergeant who’s advertisers, NBC also said it on the trail of future killer will move its freshman series Charles Manson in 1967. The The Blacklist to Thursday start- air date was not announced. ing in February — surrenderNBC was the first major ing for now its effort to bring a broadcast network to “must-see TV” comedy block announce its schedule for next back to the night that once season. NBC will present its housed Friends and other hits. new shows to Madison Avenue Messing will star as a homi- on Monday, followed by the cide detective and working other networks. mom in The Mysteries of Laura Here are NBC’s other new on Wednesdays this fall, while shows, with scheduling yet to former Grey’s Anatomy star be announced for those withHeigl will return to the small out listed debuts: screen as a CIA agent in State u A to Z, a romantic comedy of Affairs on Mondays starting starring Ben Feldman of Mad in November. Men and Cristin Milioti of Alfre Woodard will play How I Met Your Mother, schedthe president opposite Heigl. uled to air Thursdays starting Other familiar TV faces starthis fall. ring in new NBC series or u Marry Me, with Casey miniseries this coming season Wilson of Happy Endings and will include David Duchovny, Ken Marino of Eastbound & Kate Walsh and Craig RobinDown as two lovers on the son of The Office. brink of engagement. The fall NBC decided to cancel show will air Tuesdays. Dracula, Community, Revou Mr. Robinson, a sitcom lution, Growing Up Fisher, about a rock band frontman Believe, Crisis, Ironside, The (Robinson) who daylights as a Michael J. Fox Show, Sean substitute teacher and crosses Saves the World and Welcome swords with a principal played to the Family. by Jean Smart. Parenthood will air its final u One Big Happy, an Ellen season starting this fall. The DeGeneres-produced comedy Amy Poehler comedy Parks about a gay woman (Elisha and Recreation will get its final Cuthbert) and a straight man run in a midseason slot, the (Nick Zano) who are having network said. a child together but run into The Blacklist, one of the complications. reasons NBC is poised to finu Unbreakable Kimmy ish the season as No. 1 among Schmidt, produced by Tina Fey advertiser-favored young adult and starring Ellie Kemper (The viewers for the first time in a Office) as a woman rescued after decade, is being rewarded with 15 years of cult life and rediscovthe January 2015 post-Super ering the world with help from a Bowl spot before the James friend, a wannabe actor. Spader drama moves from u Allegiance, a drama about a Monday to Thursday. CIA analyst (Gavin Stenhouse) In a statement, NBC Enterwho discovers his parents tainment Chairman Bob (Scott Cohen, Hope Davis) are Greenblatt said reinvigorating former Russian spies being Thursday was a top priority called back to work. for the network. He also said u Emerald City, a drama the network is introducing an about a young woman’s search unprecedented number of new for her roots that leads her to a reimagined Land of Oz. original series after a “stellar u Odyssey, about strangers year” in scripted programming fighting an international condevelopment. spiracy involving the military, Other series for next season corporate interests and Middle include the Ferrell-produced Eastern terrorists, starring sitcoms Bad Judge starring Walsh as an unorthodox crimi- Anna Friel and Peter Facinelli. By Lynn Elber
The Associated Press
TV
1
top picks
7 p.m. on FOX Bones While Booth (David Boreanaz) is preparing to testify before a congressional subcommittee, Brennan (Emily Deschanel) works with Sweets (John Francis Daley) on the case of a community college’s swim coach whose body is found in a well. Hints that the victim might have been having an affair lead to the discovery of a secret life. A new intern (Laura Spencer) at the Jeffersonian catches Sweets’ eye in the new episode “The Drama in the Queen.” 7 p.m. on The CW Star-Crossed Emery (Aimee Teegarden) finds an unlikely ally to help her after Roman (Matt Lanter) is seriously injured. Grayson, Drake, Sophia and Lukas (Grey Damon, Greg Finley, Brina Palencia, Titus Makin Jr.) try to track down the stolen Suvek before it can be activated, but they’re too late. Vega (Merle Dandridge) has set it off in the middle of a Mardi Gras parade. Chelsea Gilligan also stars in the season finale, “Passion Lends Them Power.” 8 p.m. on FOX 24: Live Another Day President Heller (William Devane) prepares to speak to Parliament in the wake of a devastating attack, while Kate Morgan (Yvonne Strahovski) continues trying to track down Jack (Kiefer Suther-
land). Margot Al-Harazi (Michelle Fairley) shows how far she’s willing to go for revenge in the new episode “Day 9: 1:00 P.M.-2:00 P.M.” 9 p.m. on NBC The Blacklist The crash of the prisoner transport plane has the city in lockdown as the authorities try to track down all the escapees. Red (James Spader) would be a big help with this, but he’s in custody. Liz (Megan Boone) does what she can to get him released so he can help her locate a key figure in the season finale, “Berlin: Conclusion.”
4
2
3
5
9 p.m. on NBC Castle Castle and Beckett’s (Nathan Fillion, Stana Katic, pictured) wedding day is finally here, but it’s not going to go smoothly. A shocking surprise sends them on a mission involving masked men, angry bikers and a fellow from Beckett’s past. Eddie McClintock (Warehouse 13) guest stars in the season finale, “For Better or Worse.”
MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-4 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
SPORTS
B
NHL: Toews helps Blackhawks beat Wild in Game 5. Page B-5
NFL COMMENTARY
Michael Sam unafraid to rise or fall on his terms By Jim Litke
In this image taken from video, Missouri defensive end Michael Sam, left, gets a kiss at a draft party Saturday in San Diego before he was selected in the seventh round, 249th overall, by the St. Louis Rams in the NFL draft. The Southeastern Conference defensive player of the year last season came out as gay in media interviews this year.
The Associated Press
W
e’ll know what kind of football player the St. Louis Rams got with the 249th pick in the draft soon enough. We already know what kind of man they got in Michael Sam. Anyone who watched him break into tears getting the phone call and expected only gratitude to spill out was in for a surprise. Because a few minutes later, breaking what amounted to a months-long silence, one of the first things Sam set out to do Saturday night was vaporize any lingering doubts that he wasn’t macho enough for the NFL. “Let me tell you something,” he said. “If we were
AP PHOTO/ESPN
playing the Vikings right now, I’ll probably have three sacks the first game.” That was the message the league’s first openly gay player sent to the Vikings and every other team that passed him over. He was less interested in why they did then when they were going to meet up next. Asked whether he thought being frank about his sexuality hurt his chances of getting picked sooner, Sam began: “You know what, who knows? Who knows? Only the people who sit in the war room know.” He coolly repeated his promise to return the favor. “They saw Michael Sam, day after day they
Please see sam, Page B-3
NBA PLAYOFFS
BASEBALL
clippers stun thunder Los Angeles rallies past Oklahoma City, ties semifinal series 2-2
Giants top Dodgers after Romo blows save By Joe Resnick
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Pablo Sandoval moved into the cleanup spot and broke out of his slump. Sandoval and Hector Sanchez hit RBI singles in the Giants 7 10th inning, and Dodgers 4 the San Francisco Giants recovered to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-4 Sunday after closer Sergio Romo gave up a tying homer to Hanley Ramirez. “I’m happy, but I’m not satisfied. I just want to do better for my teammates and the team,” Sandoval said. “You’ve got to keep focused and keep working hard, because everything is going to come back. So I don’t worry too much about it. I just try to stay positive and keep fighting and have the faith that I can do it.” Sandoval, who began the day hitting .173, was 3 for 5 with two RBIs.
Please see Giants, Page B-4
inside u Roundup of Sunday’s American and National League games. PaGe B-4
Clippers forward Blake Griffin, center, celebrates along with members of his team while Thunder forward Serge Ibaka, left, and center Ryan Hollins look on as Los Angeles wins Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinal playoff series Sunday in Los Angeles. MARK J. TERRILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
inside
By Beth Harris
The Associated Press
u George’s 39 lead Pacers past Wizards. PaGe B-3
LOS ANGELES fter being thoroughly outplayed for over 40 minutes, the Los Angeles Clippers fought back. Leading the way was a player not known for coming up big in the clutch. Darren Collison scored eight of his 18 points in the final 2:58, rallying the ClipClippers 101 pers past the Oklahoma City Thunder 101-99 on Sunday to Thunder 99 tie the Western Conference semifinal series 2-2. “Even though we didn’t play well throughout the game, we were able to get a win,” Collison said. “That feels more impressive than anything we did.”
a
Russell Westbrook, who scored 27 points, missed a 3-pointer and Serge Ibaka’s tip attempt was too late at the buzzer, allowing the Clippers to salvage a game they trailed until the final 1:23. “It was a good look,” Westbrook said. “Just didn’t go in.” Blake Griffin led Los Angeles with 25 points, making 9 of 11 free throws. Jamal Crawford added 18 points. DeAndre Jordan had 14 rebounds, helping the Clippers win the boards, 45-43 — the first time in 11 playoff games the Thunder were outrebounded. “We just willed this one. We found a way,” said Chris Paul, who had 23 points and 10 assists. Kevin Durant scored 40 points, hitting 15 of
18 free throws, for the Thunder. “We let this one slip away,” he said. “We could have took control of the series.” Game 5 is Tuesday night in Oklahoma City. “We were almost on the mat and we got off of it. We didn’t get pinned,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “They’re seething right now. They had an opportunity to go up 3-1 and now it’s an even series.” It was the 14th comeback — and largest yet — by the Clippers this season after trailing by double digits. They rallied from 12 points down in the second quarter of Game 7 to oust Golden State in the first round. “This is one of the best ones yet,” Paul said. “Darren Collison was amazing. You just got to love a guy like that who plays with so much heart and
Please see cLiPPeRs, Page B-3
COLLEGE WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Ginny Doyle
Natalie Lewis
Coaches, pilot honored after fatal balloon crash By Hank Kurz Jr., Alan Suderman and Larry O’Dell The Associated Press
COLLEGE BASEBALL
Highlands heads to Division II tournament The New Mexican
Despite its abbreviated stay at the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference postseason tournament, the New Mexico Highlands University baseball team still had enough on its résumé to land a berth in the NCAA Division II Tournament. The Cowboys were one of six teams named to the South Central regional, scheduled for later this week in Grand Junction, Colo. Highlands (32-20) will face regional host and RMAC rival Colorado Mesa (40-10) in the opening round at 11 a.m. Thursday. The double-elimination regional wraps up either Saturday or Sunday.
The Cowboys and Mavericks were the only two teams from the RMAC to make the postseason. Mesa is the No. 1 seed; Highlands is the No. 6. Second-seeded West Texas A&M (35-19) will face No. 5 Tarleton State (29-22) while No. 3 Texas A&MKingsville (34-18) meets No. 4 St. Edward’s (39-14). There are eight regionals in the 48-team Division II Tournament. The eight winners advance to the D-II World Series next week in Cary, N.C., the site of the Team USA training facility. Three South Central teams hail from the Lone Star Conference. Tarleton State won the Lone Star tournament title over the weekend, joining
conference rivals West Texas A&M and A&M-Kingsville. St. Edwards is the Heartland Conference champion. The tournament’s top overall seed is Tampa (47-2), the defending national champion whose remarkable run this year set the record for highest single-season winning percentage (.959) in Division II history. The regional brackets are determined by a computerized ranking system that sends the top six teams to the postseason. Highlands was the fourth-rated team in the South Central prior to the RMAC Tournament, but an early exit put the Cowboys’ postseason hopes in jeopardy. NMHU was eliminated in the
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Eric J. Hedlund, ehedlund@sfnewmexican.com
conference tournament after losses to Colorado State-Pueblo in the first round, then again in the semifinals on Friday night. The Cowboys did not learn of their fate until the NCAA announced the field of 48 in a live webcast Sunday night. CSU-Pueblo did not make the field after losing to Colorado Mesa in the RMAC title game Saturday. This is the sixth time Highlands head coach Steve Jones has led the Cowboys to the Division II regionals, having done so in 2001, 2005, 2009, 2010 and 2012. The program also won the 1967 NAIA national championship. It has never advanced to the D-II World Series.
RICHMOND, Va. — One was the constant in Richmond women’s basketball, the beloved assistant coach who had been on staff for 15 seasons, remaining through two coaching changes. The other was hardly out of college, always cheerful and willing to help. Associate head coach Ginny Doyle and director of basketball operations Natalie Lewis were killed Friday in a fiery hot-air balloon crash along with the pilot, Daniel T. Kirk, who had 20 years of flying experience and was affectionately known as “Capt. Kirk.” The three were mourned Sunday by friends, family and colleagues alike. “There’s not a person in this business that doesn’t see Ginny as just a light,” Joanne Boyle, now the coach at Virginia, said of Doyle, who was on her staff with the Spiders from 2002-05. “She was just a light for
Please see cRasH, Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
BASKETBALL basketball
Nba Playoffs Conference semifinals (best-of-7; x-if necessary) easteRN CoNfeReNCe
Miami 2, brooklyn 1 saturday, May 10 Brooklyn 104, Miami 90 Monday, May 12 Miami at Brooklyn, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 14 Brooklyn at Miami, 5 or 6 p.m. x-friday, May 16 Miami at Brooklyn, TBA Previous Results Miami 107, Brooklyn 86 Miami 94, Brooklyn 82 Indiana 2, Washington 1 sunday, May 11 Indiana 95, Washington 92 tuesday, May 13 Washington at Indiana, 5 p.m. x-thursday, May 15 Indiana at Washington, TBA Previous Results Washington 102, Indiana 96 Indiana 86, Washington 82 Indiana 85, Washington 63
aVG 13.7 13.0 12.8 11.4 10.9 10.5 9.7 9.5 9.3 9.1 aVG 10.0 8.4 8.3 7.9 7.1 6.3 6.0 5.9 5.8 5.8
HOCKEY HoCkey
NHl Playoffs seCoND RoUND
(best-of-7; x-if necessary)
WesteRN CoNfeReNCe
san antonio 3, Portland 0 saturday, May 10 San Antonio 118, Portland 103 Monday, May 12 at San Antonio at Portland, 8:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 14 Portland at San Antonio, 6:30 or 7:30 p.m. x-friday, May 16 San Antonio at Portland, TBA Previous Results San Antonio 116, Portland 92 San Antonio 114, Portland 97 oklahoma City 2, l.a. Clippers 2 sunday, May 11 L.A. Clippers 101, Oklahoma City 99 tuesday, May 13 L.A. Clippers at Okla. City, 7:30 p.m. thursday, May 15 Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, TBA Previous Results L.A. Clippers 122, Oklahoma City 105 Oklahoma City 112, L.A. Clippers 101 Oklahoma City 118, L.A. Clippers 112
Nba boxsCoRes Clippers 101, thunder 99
oklaHoMa CIty (99) Durant 12-24 15-18 40, Ibaka 2-5 2-2 8, Perkins 0-2 1-2 1, Westbrook 10-22 6-6 27, Sefolosha 2-4 0-0 4, Jackson 4-8 0-0 10, Butler 2-7 1-2 6, Adams 0-0 1-4 1, N.Collison 1-3 0-0 2, Fisher 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-75 26-34 99. l.a. ClIPPeRs (101) Barnes 0-6 0-0 0, Griffin 8-19 9-11 25, Jordan 3-5 1-7 7, Paul 10-23 3-4 23, Redick 2-8 1-1 6, Crawford 7-16 2-2 18, Davis 2-3 0-0 4, D.Collison 7-12 4-4 18, Granger 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 39-93 20-29 101. oklahoma City 32 25 18 24—99 l.a. Clippers 15 31 17 38—101 3-Point Goals—Oklahoma City 7-24 (Ibaka 2-2, Jackson 2-3, Westbrook 1-4, Butler 1-5, Durant 1-7, N.Collison 0-1, Sefolosha 0-2), L.A. Clippers 3-21 (Crawford 2-8, Redick 1-3, Granger 0-1, D.Collison 0-1, Paul 0-4, Barnes 0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Oklahoma City 58 (Durant 7), L.A. Clippers 55 (Jordan 14). Assists— Oklahoma City 17 (Westbrook 8), L.A. Clippers 23 (Paul 10). Total Fouls— Oklahoma City 27, L.A. Clippers 24. Technicals—Perkins, Westbrook, Oklahoma City defensive three second, Jordan. A—19,365 (19,060).
Pacers 95, Wizards 92
INDIaNa (95) George 12-20 8-10 39, West 5-12 4-6 14, Hibbert 6-12 5-7 17, G.Hill 6-12 2-4 15, Stephenson 3-8 0-0 8, Mahinmi 0-2 0-0 0, Turner 0-2 0-0 0, Watson 1-4 0-0 2, Scola 0-1 0-2 0. Totals 33-73 19-29 95. WasHINGtoN (92) Ariza 6-11 2-2 16, Nene 5-14 0-0 10, Gortat 1-3 0-0 2, Wall 4-11 3-4 12, Beal 7-14 4-6 20, Gooden 5-10 0-0 10, Webster 2-3 0-0 4, Harrington 4-7 3-4 11, Miller 2-6 3-3 7, Temple 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-79 15-19 92. Indiana 27 11 33 24—95 Washington 26 29 17 20—92 3-Point Goals—Indiana 10-22 (George 7-10, Stephenson 2-4, G.Hill 1-5, Watson 0-3), Washington 5-15 (Ariza 2-4, Beal 2-4, Wall 1-3, Webster 0-1, Gooden 0-1, Harrington 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Indiana 55 (George 12), Washington 42 (Ariza 9). Assists—Indiana 20 (West 8), Washington 22 (Wall 7). Total Fouls— Indiana 19, Washington 23. A—20,356 (20,308).
late saturday spurs 118, trail blazers 103
saN aNtoNIo (118) K.Leonard 4-10 7-7 16, Duncan 8-18 3-3 19, Splitter 4-4 1-1 9, Parker 12-20 3-3 29, Green 2-7 0-0 5, Ginobili 2-8 10-10 14, Diaw 4-6 1-1 9, Belinelli 2-5 0-0 5, Baynes 0-1 0-0 0, Mills 4-8 0-0 10, Ayres 1-1 0-0 2, Bonner 0-0 0-0 0, Joseph 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 43-89 25-25 118. PoRtlaND (103) Batum 8-13 0-0 20, Aldridge 9-23 3-4 21, Lopez 4-5 5-7 13, Lillard 7-21 7-7 21, Matthews 6-14 6-7 22, Robinson 0-3 0-0 0, Barton 0-2 0-0 0, Watson 0-0 0-0 0, Wright 1-2 0-0 2, Claver 0-0 0-4 0, M.Leonard 0-0 0-0 0, Freeland 0-0 0-0 0, McCollum 1-1 2-2 4. Totals 36-84 23-31 103. san antonio 28 32 23 35—118 Portland 18 22 29 34—103 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 7-21 (Parker 2-3, Mills 2-4, K.Leonard 1-3, Belinelli 1-3, Green 1-5, Ginobili 0-3), Portland 8-23 (Batum 4-7, Matthews 4-10, Lillard 0-6). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—San Antonio 46 (K.Leonard 10), Portland 56 (Aldridge 12). Assists—San Antonio 23 (Parker 6), Portland 23 (Lillard 9). Total Fouls—San Antonio 25, Portland 20. A—20,321 (19,980).
Nba leaders
Playoffs / through May 10 scoring G fG ft Pts Durant, OKC 10 106 67 302 Aldridge, POR 9 95 56 248 James, MIA 7 66 50 192 Harden, HOU 6 50 45 161 Wstbrook, OKC10 92 62 262 Howard, HOU 6 58 40 156 DeRozan, TOR 7 45 71 167 Griffin, LAC 10 91 53 235 Lillard, POR 9 65 56 210 Curry, GOL 7 51 37 161 George, IND 10 70 57 219 Parker, SAN 10 91 29 217 Lowry, TOR 7 44 43 148 Ellis, DAL 7 52 27 143 Johnson, Bro 10 78 29 202 Beal, WAS 8 54 33 157 Walker, CHA 4 26 14 78 Millsap, ATL 7 41 45 136 Parsons, HOU 6 46 11 116 Teague, ATL 7 44 38 135 fG Percentage fG fGa Jordan, LAC 39 52 Johnson, TOR 34 52 Ibaka, OKC 60 94 Valanciunas, TOR 31 49 Splitter, SAN 37 62 Gibson, CHI 32 57
Rebounds G off Def tot Howard, HOU 6 27 55 82 Jordan, LAC 10 34 96 130 Noah, CHI 5 15 49 64 Aldridge, POR 9 29 74 103 Millsap, ATL 7 21 55 76 Gortat, WAS 8 26 58 84 Valancns, TOR 7 19 49 68 George, IND 10 8 87 95 Jefferson, CHA 3 6 22 28 Lee, GOL 7 24 40 64 assists G ast Paul, LAC 10 100 Curry, GOL 7 59 Westbrook, OKC 10 83 Conley, MEM 7 55 Wall, WAS 8 57 Lillard, POR 9 57 Walker, CHA 4 24 Williams, Bro 10 59 Harden, HOU 6 35 Parker, SAN 10 58
aVG 30.2 27.6 27.4 26.8 26.2 26.0 23.9 23.5 23.3 23.0 21.9 21.7 21.1 20.4 20.2 19.6 19.5 19.4 19.3 19.3 PCt .750 .654 .638 .633 .597 .561
easteRN CoNfeReNCe
boston 3, Montreal 2 saturday, May 10 Boston 4, Montreal 2 Monday, May 12 Boston at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 14 Montreal at Boston, TBA Previous Results Montreal 4, Boston 3, 2OT Boston 5, Montreal 3 Montreal 4, Boston 2 Boston 1, Montreal 0, OT Pittsburgh 3, N.y. Rangers 3 sunday, May 11 N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 1 tuesday, May 13 N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. Previous Results N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Rangers 0 Pittsburgh 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 2 N.Y. Rangers 5, Pittsburgh 1
WesteRN CoNfeReNCe
Chicago 3, Minnesota 2 sunday, May 11 Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 tuesday, May 13 Chicago at Minnesota, 7 p.m. x-thursday, May 15 Minnesota at Chicago, TBA Previous Results Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Chicago 4, Minnesota 1 Minnesota 4, Chicago 0 Minnesota 4, Chicago 2 los angeles 2, anaheim 2 saturday, May 10 Anaheim 2, Los Angeles 0 Monday, May 12 Los Angeles at Anaheim, 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 14 Anaheim at Los Angeles, TBA x-friday, May 16 Los Angeles at Anaheim, TBA Previous Results Los Angeles 3, Anaheim 2, OT Los Angeles 3, Anaheim 1 Anaheim 3, Los Angeles 2
NHl sUMMaRIes Rangers 3, Penguins 1
Pittsburgh 1 0 0—1 N.y. Rangers 2 1 0—3 first Period—1, N.Y. Rangers, St. Louis 3 (Stepan, Stralman), 3:34. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Hagelin 4 (unassisted), 6:25. 3, Pittsburgh, Sutter 5 (Niskanen, Maatta), 16:56. Penalties—Jokinen, Pit (roughing), 9:00; Kreider, NYR (roughing), 11:20. second Period—4, N.Y. Rangers, Brassard 4 (Pouliot, Klein), 15:30. Penalties—Bennett, Pit (too many men on the ice), 4:49; Kreider, NYR (goalie interference), 5:55; Bennett, Pit (interference), 8:42; Zuccarello, NYR (tripping), 13:05; Kunitz, Pit (roughing), 20:00; Crosby, Pit (crosschecking), 20:00; Boyle, NYR (crosschecking), 20:00. third Period—None. Penalties—Neal, Pit (tripping), 2:40; Zuccarello, NYR (hooking), 3:37; Bennett, Pit (highsticking), 11:36; Neal, Pit (misconduct) 19:50. shots on Goal—Pittsburgh 15-1111—37. N.Y. Rangers 14-11-4—29. Power-play opportunities—Pittsburgh 0 of 4; N.Y. Rangers 0 of 6. Goalies—Pittsburgh, Fleury 7-4-0 (29 shots-26 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 6-6-0 (37-36). a—18,006 (18,006). t—2:26. Referees—Marc Joanette, Kevin Pollock. linesmen—Scott Driscoll, Steve Miller.
blackhawks 2, Wild 1
Minnesota 1 0 0—1 Chicago 0 1 1—2 first Period—1, Minnesota, Haula 3 (Spurgeon), 16:33. Penalties—Seabrook, Chi (tripping), :29; Stoner, Min (hooking), 12:34. second Period—2, Chicago, Bickell 6 (Kane, Sharp), 9:18 (pp). Penalties— Brodin, Min (hooking), 8:35. third Period—3, Chicago, Toews 5 (Hossa, Sharp), 4:33. Penalties— Niederreiter, Min (unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00; Oduya, Chi (unsportsmanlike conduct), 20:00. shots on Goal—Minnesota 8-6-14—28. Chicago 6-15-7—28. Power-play opportunities—Minnesota 0 of 1; Chicago 1 of 2. Goalies—Minnesota, Bryzgalov 3-5-0 (28 shots-26 saves). Chicago, Crawford 7-4-0 (28-27). a—22,016 (19,717). t—2:32. Referees—Chris Rooney, Tim Peel. linesmen—Jonny Murray, Brian Murphy.
NHl leaDeRs
Playoffs / through May 10 scoring GP G a Pts Anze Kopitar, LA 11 4 11 15 Zach Parise, Min 11 4 10 14 Evgeni Malkin, Pit 11 6 7 13 Ryan Getzlaf, Anh 9 4 9 13 P.K. Subban, Mon 9 4 8 12 Marian Gaborik, LA 11 6 4 10 Paul Stastny, Col 7 5 5 10 Corey Perry, Anh 10 3 7 10 Nathan MacKinnon, Col 7 2 8 10 Brent Seabrook, Chi 7 2 8 10 Marian Hossa, Chi 10 2 8 10 6 tied with 9 pts.
NHl Calendar
May 25-31 — NHL combine, Toronto. June 18 — Last possible day for Stanley Cup finals. June 25 — NHL awards, Las Vegas. June 27-28 — NHL draft, Philadelphia. July 1 — Free agency begins. July 5 — Deadline for player-elected salary arbitration notification. July 6 — Deadline for club-elected salary arbitration notification. July 20-Aug. 6 — Salary arbitration hearings held. Aug. 8 — Deadline for salary arbitration decisions.
AUTO RACING aUto RaCING
NasCaR sPRINt CUP 5-HoUR eNeRGy 400
saturday at kansas speedway kansas City, kan. lap length: 1.5 miles (start position in parentheses) 1. (13) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 267 laps, 119.4 rating, 47 points, $241,026. 2. (1) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 267, 137.7, 44, $233,758. 3. (17) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 267, 115.5, 42, $157,725. 4. (2) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 128.7, 41, $161,341. 5. (22) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 109, 40, $129,775. 6. (4) Carl Edwards, Ford, 267, 103, 39, $127,715. 7. (9) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 267, 101.4, 37, $109,365. 8. (12) Aric Almirola, Ford, 267, 90.4, 36, $133,551. 9. (14) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 267, 100.2, 36, $144,551. 10. (28) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267, 81.3, 35, $140,301. 11. (7) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 267, 92.7, 33, $101,365. 12. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 267, 89.4, 32, $119,660. 13. (3) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267, 89.9, 32, $131,423. 14. (15) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 267, 82.9, 30, $120,765. 15. (24) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267, 75.3, 30, $133,131. 16. (10) Greg Biffle, Ford, 267, 79, 28, $127,740. 17. (16) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 266, 70.4, 27, $114,279. 18. (30) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 266, 70.6, 26, $94,765. 19. (19) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 266, 68.5, 25, $131,301. 20. (8) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 266, 94.9, 24, $121,523. 21. (26) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 266, 59, 23, $113,748. 22. (20) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 265, 62.1, 22, $121,315. 23. (23) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 264, 59.9, 21, $120,181. 24. (25) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 264, 58.2, 20, $111,210. 25. (34) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 264, 49.1, 19, $103,398. 26. (27) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 264, 52, 18, $108,373. 27. (21) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 263, 60.8, 0, $80,815. 28. (36) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 263, 42.2, 16, $80,615. 29. (6) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 263, 66.9, 15, $80,415. 30. (29) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 262, 50, 14, $97,923. 31. (43) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 262, 32.6, 0, $90,965. 32. (37) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 261, 32.1, 12, $95,398. 33. (32) Josh Wise, Ford, 261, 29, 11, $79,540. 34. (41) Travis Kvapil, Ford, 258, 41.7, 10, $91,362. 35. (33) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 257, 35.8, 9, $79,120. 36. (18) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, accident, 186, 64.5, 8, $86,915. 37. (39) David Gilliland, Ford, accident, 184, 40.9, 7, $86,700. 38. (38) David Ragan, Ford, 171, 31.5, 6, $81,530. 39. (11) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, accident, 149, 86.2, 5, $106,744. 40. (42) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, engine, 137, 32.9, 4, $65,530. Race statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 128.149 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 7 minutes, 31 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.112 seconds. Caution Flags: 8 for 47 laps. Lead Changes: 25 among 10 drivers.
BASEBALL baseball
MINoR baseball Pacific Coast league
american North W l Pct. Gb Iowa (Cubs) 19 15 .559 — Okla. City (Astros) 20 18 .526 1 Col. Springs (Rckies)18 18 .500 2 Omaha (Royals) 15 20 .429 4½ american south W l Pct. Gb Nashville (Brewers) 20 17 .541 — Round Rock (Rangrs)18 18 .500 1½ Memphis (Cards) 18 19 .486 2 N.Orleans (Marlins) 17 20 .459 3 Pacific North W l Pct. Gb Tacoma (Mariners) 18 16 .529 — Reno (D’backs) 20 18 .526 — Sacramento (A’s) 19 18 .514 ½ Fresno (Giants) 18 20 .474 2 Pacific south W l Pct. Gb Las Vegas (Mets) 26 11 .703 — Albuq’rque (Dodgrs) 18 19 .486 8 El Paso (Padres) 16 21 .432 10 Salt Lake (Angels) 13 25 .342 13½ sunday’s Games Iowa 12, Nashville 11 Memphis 5, Round Rock 1 Las Vegas 8, Tacoma 3 El Paso 11, Albuquerque 0 New Orleans 10, Omaha 4 Colorado Springs 3, Oklahoma City 2 Tacoma 6, Las Vegas 5, comp. of susp. game Sacramento 6, Salt Lake 5 Reno 6, Fresno 2 saturday’s Games Memphis 13, Round Rock 1 Nashville 10, Iowa 1 New Orleans 4, Omaha 3, 10 innings Colorado Springs 8, Oklahoma City 2 Albuquerque 8, El Paso 4 Reno 8, Fresno 6 Sacramento 4, Salt Lake 3, 11 innings Tacoma 6, Las Vegas 5, comp. of susp. game Monday’s Games Nashville at Iowa, 5:35 p.m. New Orleans at Omaha, 5:35 p.m. Round Rock at Memphis, 6:05 p.m. Colorado Springs at Oklahoma City, 6:05 p.m. Albuquerque at El Paso, 6:35 p.m. Fresno at Reno, 7:35 p.m. Tacoma at Las Vegas, 8:05 p.m. Salt Lake at Sacramento, 8:05 p.m. tuesday’s Games Round Rock at Memphis, 10:02 a.m. Colorado Springs at Oklahoma City, 10:05 a.m. New Orleans at Omaha, 10:05 a.m. Nashville at Iowa, 11:05 a.m. Albuquerque at El Paso, 11:05 a.m. Tacoma at Las Vegas, 11:35 a.m. Fresno at Reno, 12:35 p.m. Salt Lake at Sacramento, 1:05 p.m.
ONDate THIS DATE tHIs May 12
1924 — Walter Hagen wins the PGA championship with a 2-up victory over Jim Barnes. 1970 — Ernie Banks hits his 500th career home run off Pat Jarvis in the Chicago Cubs’ 4-3 victory over Atlanta at Wrigley Field. 1974 — The Boston Celtics beat the Milwaukee Bucks 102-87 to win the NBA championship in seven games.
FOOTBALL football
2014 Nfl DRaft seleCtIoNs
at New york (x-compensatory selection) thursday, May 8 first Round 1. Houston, Jadeveon Clowney, de, South Carolina. 2. St. Louis (from Washington), Greg Robinson, ot, Auburn. 3. Jacksonville, Blake Bortles, qb, UCF. 4. Buffalo (from Cleveland), Sammy Watkins, wr, Clemson. 5. Oakland, Khalil Mack, lb, Buffalo. 6. Atlanta, Jake Matthews, ot, Texas A&M. 7. Tampa Bay, Mike Evans, wr, Texas A&M. 8. Cleveland (from Minnesota), Justin Gilbert, db, Oklahoma State. 9. Minnesota (from Buffalo through Cleveland), Anthony Barr, lb, UCLA. 10. Detroit, Eric Ebron, te, North Carolina. 11. Tennessee, Taylor Lewan, ot, Michigan. 12. New York Giants, Odell Beckham, wr, LSU. 13. St. Louis, Aaron Donald, dt, Pittsburgh. 14. Chicago, Kyle Fuller, db, Virginia Tech. 15. Pittsburgh, Ryan Shazier, lb, Ohio State. 16. Dallas, Zach Martin, g, Notre Dame. 17. Baltimore, C.J. Mosley, lb, Alabama. 18. New York Jets, Calvin Pryor, db, Louisville. 19. Miami, Ja’Wuan James, ot, Tennessee. 20. New Orleans (from Arizona), Brandin Cooks, wr, Oregon State. 21. Green Bay, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, db, Alabama. 22. Cleveland (from Philadelphia), Johnny Manziel, qb, Texas A&M. 23. Kansas City, Dee Ford, de, Auburn. 24. Cincinnati, Darqueze Dennard, db, Michigan State. 25. San Diego, Jason Verrett, db, TCU. 26. Philadelphia (from Indianapolis through Cleveland), Marcus Smith, lb, Louisville. 27. Arizona (from New Orleans), Deone Bucannon, db, Washington State. 28. Carolina, Kelvin Benjamin, wr, Florida State. 29. New England, Dominique Easley, de, Florida. 30. San Francisco, Jimmie Ward, db, Northern Illinois. 31. Denver, Bradley Roby, db, Ohio State. 32. Minnesota (from Seattle), Teddy Bridgewater, qb, Louisville. friday, May 9 second Round 33. Houston, Xavier Su’a-Filo, g, UCLA. 34. Dallas (from Washington), Demarcus Lawrence, de, Boise State. 35. Cleveland, Joel Bitonio, g, Nevada. 36. Oakland, Derek Carr, qb. Fresno State. 37. Atlanta, Ra’Shede Hageman, de, Minnesota. 38. Tampa Bay, Austin SeferianJenkins, te, Washington. 39. Jacksonville, Marqise Lee, wr, Southern Cal. 40. Detroit (from Minnesota through Seattle), Kyle Van Noy, lb, BYU. 41. St. Louis (from Buffalo), Lamarcus Joyner, db, Florida State. 42. Philadelphia (from Tennessee), Jordan Matthews, wr, Vandrbilt. 43. New York Giants, Weston Richburg, c, Colorado State. 44. Buffalo (from St. Louis), Cyrus Kouandjio, ot, Alabama. 45. Seattle (from Detroit), Paul Richardson, wr, Colorado. 46. Pittsburgh, Stephon Tuitt, de, Notre Dame. 47. Washington (from Dallas), Trent Murphy, lb, Stanford. 48. Baltimore, Timmy Jernigan, dt, Florida State. 49. New York Jets, Jace Amaro, te, Texas Tech. 50. San Diego (from Miami), Jeremiah Attaochu, te, Georgia Tech. 51. Chicago, Ego Ferguson, dt, LSU. 52. Arizona, Troy Niklas, te, Notre Dame. 53. Green Bay, Davante Adams, wr, Fresno State. 54. Tennessee (from Philadelphia), Bishop Sankey, rb, Washington. 55. Cincinnati, Jeremy Hill, rb, LSU. 56. Denver (from Kansas City through San Francisco), Cody Latimer, wr, Indiana. 57. San Francisco (from San Diego through Miami), Carlos Hyde, rb, Ohio State. 58. New Orleans, Stanley Jean-Baptiste, db, Nebraska. 59. Indianapolis, Jack Mewhort, g, Ohio State. 60. Carolina, Kony Ealy, de, Missouri. 61. Jacksonville (from San Francisco), Allen Robinson, wr, Penn State. 62. New England, Jimmy Garoppolo, qb, Eastern Illinois. 63. Miami (from Denver through San Francisco), Jarvis Landry, wr, LSU. 64. Seattle, Justin Britt, ot, Missouri. third Round 65. Houston, C.J. Fiedorowicz, te, Iowa. 66. Washington, Morgan Moses, ot, Virginia. 67. Miami (from Oakland), Billy Turner, ot, North Dakota State. 68. Atlanta, Dezmen Southward, db, Wisconsin. 69. Tampa Bay, Charles Sims, rb, West Virginia. 70. San Francisco (from Jacksonville), Marcus Martin, c, Southern Cal. 71. Cleveland, Christian Kirksey, lb, Iowa. 72. Minnesota, Scott Crichton, de, Oregon State. 73. Buffalo, Preston Brown, lb, Louisville. 74. New York Giants, Jay Bromley, dt, Syracuse. 75. St. Louis, Tre Mason, rb, Auburn. 76. Detroit, Travis Swanson, c, Arkansas. 77. San Francisco (from Tennessee), Chris Borland, lb, Wisconsin. 78. Washington (from Dallas), Spencer Long, g, Nebraska. 79. Baltimore, Terrence Brooks, db, Florida State. 80. New York Jets, Dexter McDougle, db, Maryland. 81. Oakland (from Miami), Gabe Jackson, g, Mississippi State 82. Chicago, Will Sutton, dt, Arizona State. 83. Houston (from Pittsburgh through Cleveland and Philadlephia), Louis Nix, dt, Notre Dame. 84. Arizona, Kareem Martin, de, North Carolina. 85. Green Bay, Khyri Thornton, de, Southern Mississippi. 86. Philadelphia, Josh Huff, wr, Oregon. 87. Kansas City, Phillip Gaines, db, Rice. 88. Cincinnati, Will Clarke, de, West Virginia.
89. San Diego, Chris Watt, g, Notre Dame. 90. Indianapolis, Donte Moncrief, wr, Mississippi. 91. Arizona (from New Orleans), John Brown, wr, Pittsburg State. 92. Carolina, Trai Turner, g, LSU. 93. Jacksonville (from New England), Brandon Linder, g, Miami. 94. Clevland (from San Francisco), Terrance West, rb, Towson. 95. Denver, Michael Schofield, ot, Michigan. 96. Minnesota (from Seattle), Jerick McKinnon, rb, Georgia Southern. 97. x-Pittsburgh, Dri Archer, rb, Kent State. 98. x-Green Bay, Richard Rodgers, te, California. 99. x-Baltimore, Crockett Gillmore, te, Colorado State. 100. x-San Francisco, Brandon Thomas, g, Clemson.
Golf GOLF
PGa toUR the Players Championship
sunday at tPC sawgrass, Players stadium Course Ponte Vedra beach, fla. Purse: $10 million yardage: 7,215; Par 72 final M Kaymer (600), $1,800,000 63-69-72-71—275 J Furyk (330), $1,080,000 70-68-72-66—276 Sergio Garcia (210), $680,000 67-71-69-70—277 Justin Rose (135), $440,000 67-71-71-69—278 Jordan Spieth (135), $440,000 67-66-71-74—278 David Hearn (95), $313,000 70-71-68-70—279 Rory McIlroy (95), $313,000 70-74-69-66—279 Francesco Molinari, $313,000 72-70-67-70—279 Jimmy Walker (95), $313,000 75-68-71-65—279 Lee Westwood (95), $313,000 67-71-71-70—279 Brian Davis (75), $240,000 72-67-73-68—280 Gary Woodland (75), $240,000 67-71-70-72—280 K.J. Choi (63), $187,500 74-70-72-65—281 Chris Kirk (63), $187,500 71-73-70-67—281 George McNeill (63), $187,500 71-68-69-73—281 Steve Stricker (63), $187,500 71-70-71-69—281 Russell Henley (53), $135,333 65-71-80-66—282 Justin Hicks (53), $135,333 73-70-71-68—282 Morgan Hoffmann (53), $135,333 71-70-70-71—282 Matt Jones (53), $135,333 70-69-69-74—282 Matt Kuchar (53), $135,333 71-71-69-71—282 Brian Stuard (53), $135,333 67-76-69-70—282 Marc Leishman (47), $96,000 70-72-74-67—283 Hideki Matsuyama (47), $96,000 70-71-72-70—283 Daniel Summerhays (47), $96,000 74-68-69-72—283 Kevin Chappell (42), $69,500 72-68-75-69—284 Bill Haas (42), $69,500 68-71-72-73—284 Billy Horschel (42), $69,500 72-70-75-67—284 Zach Johnson (42), $69,500 69-71-72-72—284 Ryan Moore (42), $69,500 70-74-67-73—284 John Senden (42), $69,500 70-69-68-77—284 Brendan Steele (42), $69,500 69-73-75-67—284 Bo Van Pelt (42), $69,500 71-70-70-73—284 Erik Compton (36), $52,750 72-70-74-69—285 Russell Knox (36), $52,750 72-72-73-68—285 Scott Langley (36), $52,750 71-72-72-70—285 Henrik Stenson (36), $52,750 71-70-70-74—285 Angel Cabrera (29), $38,000 70-74-71-71—286 Stewart Cink (29), $38,000 70-70-70-76—286 Jamie Donaldson, $38,000 74-67-74-71—286 Luke Donald (29), $38,000 73-69-75-69—286 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano (29), $38,000 67-77-72-70—286 Charley Hoffman (29), $38,000 77-67-71-71—286 Justin Leonard (29), $38,000 68-73-70-75—286 Kevin Na (29), $38,000 70-69-76-71—286 Rory Sabbatini (29), $38,000 71-73-69-73—286 Adam Scott (29), $38,000 77-67-69-73—286 Charlie Beljan (18), $24,073 73-69-73-72—287 Jason Dufner (18), $24,073 69-74-72-72—287 Martin Flores (18), $24,073 70-71-74-72—287 Retief Goosen (18), $24,073 72-70-75-70—287 J.J. Henry (18), $24,073 74-70-72-71—287 Jeff Maggert (18), $24,073 72-71-74-70—287 Pat Perez (18), $24,073 68-73-75-71—287 Charl Schwartzel (18), $24,073 72-67-77-71—287 Steven Bowditch (18), $24,073 72-72-71-72—287 Brandt Snedeker (18), $24,073 75-69-67-76—287 Bubba Watson (18), $24,073 69-72-70-76—287 Dustin Johnson (11), $22,000 68-74-72-74—288 Ryan Palmer (11), $22,000 71-73-71-73—288 John Peterson (11), $22,000 73-69-72-74—288 Scott Brown (9), $21,500 68-71-77-73—289 Graeme McDowell (9), $21,500 69-71-77-72—289 Freddie Jacobson (7), $21,200 70-70-75-75—290 Richard H. Lee (5), $20,800 71-71-76-73—291 Ian Poulter (5), $20,800 74-69-72-76—291 Scott Stallings (5), $20,800 67-77-71-76—291 Sang-Moon Bae (3), $20,400 66-73-79-74—292 Geoff Ogilvy (2), $20,200 69-70-76-78—293 Brendon de Jonge (1), $20,000 69-74-75-76—294 Kyle Stanley (1), $19,800 73-69-76-77—295
TENNIS teNNIs
atP-Wta toUR Mutua Madrid open
sunday at Caja Magica Madrid, spain Purse: Men, $5.1 million (Masters 1000); Women, $5.1 million (Premier) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Men Championship Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Kei Nishikori (10), Japan, 2-6, 6-4, 3-0, retired. Women Championship Maria Sharapova (8), Russia, def. Simona Halep (4), Romania, 1-6, 6-2, 6-3. Doubles Men Championship Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic (6), Serbia, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 6-4, 6-2.
Internazionali bNl d’Italia
sunday at foro Italico Rome Purse: Men, $4.77 million (Masters 1000); Women, $3.63 million (Premier) surface: Clay-outdoor singles Men first Round Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Robin Haase, Netherlands, 6-4, 6-4. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Pablo Andujar, Spain, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, def. Joao Sousa, Portugal, 6-3, 6-7 (1), 6-3. Jurgen Melzer, Austria, def. John Isner (9), United States, 7-6 (7), 6-3. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. Jerzy Janowicz, Poland, 4-6, 7-6 (6), 6-2. Tommy Robredo (16), Spain, def. Juan Monaco, Argentina, 7-6 (3), 6-4.
TRANSACTIONS tRaNsaCtIoNs baseball american league
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed C Matt Wieters on the 15-day DL. Reinstated 1B Chris Davis from the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP T.J. McFarland to Norfolk (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed LHP CC Sabathia on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Matt Daley from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). TAMPA BAY RAYS — Released RHP Heath Bell. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Designated 2B Chris Getz for assignment. Reinstated RHP Casey Janssen from the 15-day DL.
National league
MIAMI MARLINS — Designated RHP Carlos Marmol for assignment. Recalled RHP Henry Rodriguez from New Orleans (PCL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned INF Brent Morel to Indianapolis (IL). Recalled OF Jaff Decker from Indianapolis. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Optioned RHP Kevin Quackenbush to El Paso (PCL). Assigned RHP Hector Ambriz outright to El Paso. Reinstated 3B Chase Headley from the 15-day DL. Announced OF Xavier Nady declined outright assignment and elected free agency. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Placed 1B Adam LaRoche on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Saturday. Recalled OF Tyler Moore from Syracuse (IL).
american association
AMARILLO SOX — Released OF Justin Pearson. FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Released OF Tre-Von Johnson.
Can-am league
QUEBEC CAPITALES — Released RHP Jeff Duda and LHP Ryan Rogers. ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Released RHP Amalio Diaz. Signed OF Jerod Edmondson. TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES — Released C Kyle Nisson.
frontier league
GATEWAY GRIZZLIES — Released LHP Alex Bos, C Whitt Dorsey, LHP Jacob Liedka, 3B Colt Loehrs, RHP Seth McWilliams, 1B Hunter Ridge, RHP Matt Sergey, RHP Cody Stiles, INF Glenn Walker and OF Brett Williams. SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS — Released RHP Kayvon Bahramzadeh, C Cody Coffman, RHP Joe Karlik, RHP Matt LaMothe and RHP Erik Shannahan. WINDY CITY THUNDERBOLTS — Traded RHP Colin O’Connell to Sonoma (PA) for a player to be named. Released RHP Tyler Claburn.
football National football league
CHICAGO BEARS — Agreed to terms with RB Jordan Lynch, T Cody Booth, Gs Ryan Groy and James Dunbar, DTs Brandon Dunn and Lee Pegues and LBs Tana Patrick, Christian Jones and Devekeyan Lattimore. NEW YORK JETS — Agreed to terms with FB Chad Young, TE Terrence Miller, DE Anthony Grady, DL Kerry Hyder, OTs Tevon Conrad and Brent Qvale, and LBs Steele Divitto and Zach Thompson. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Agreed to terms with TEs Blake Annen and Trey Burton, WRs Kadron Boone and Quron Pratt, RBs David Fluellen and Henry Josey, CB John Fulton, T Kevin Graf, DT Wade Keliikipi, S Daytawion Lowe, DE Frank Mays, K Carey Spear and Gs Josh Andrews, Karim Barton and Donald Hawkins. PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Agreed to terms with DEs Ethan Hemer and Josh Mauro, QB Brendon Kay, DB Devon Carrington, OL Chris Elkins, G Will Simmons, OT Kaycee Ike, LB Howard Jones, DT Roy Philon and TE Eric Waters. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Agreed to terms with TE A.C. Leonard, QB Kain Coulter, C Zac Kerin, Gs Austin Wentworth and Conor Boffeli, NT Isame Faciane, HB Dominique Williams, DEs Jake Snyder, Tyler Scott and Rakim Cox, WRs Erik Lora and Donte Foster and OTs Antonio Richardson, Pierce Burton and Matt Hall. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Agreed to terms with CBs Chris Davis and Greg Ducre, DL Tenny Palepoi and Ricky Tjong-A-Tjoe, LBs Colton Underwood and Alvin Scioneaux, RB D.J. Adams, S Alden Darby, TE Michael Flacco, G D.J. Johnson, OT Jeremiah Sirles, P Chase Tenpenny, OT Ian White and WRs Torrence Allen, Brelan Chancellor, Micah Hatfield and Javontee Herndon.
HoCkey National Hockey league
NHL — Fined Boston F Shawn Thornton $2,820.52 for unsportsmanlike conduct during Saturday’s game.
sPoRts NBA PLAYOFFS
George’s 39 lead Pacers past Wizards
By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Paul George had a career playoff-high 39 points and added 12 rebounds to lead the Indiana Pacers back from a 19-point Pacers 95 deficit and past the Wizards 92 Washington Wizards 95-92 on Sunday night to move one victory away from returning to the Eastern Conference finals. The Pacers lead the second-round series 3-1 and can close it out Tuesday night, hosting Game 5. George played 46 minutes and scored 28 points after halftime Sunday, including making six of his franchise playoff-recordtying seven 3-pointers. Roy Hibbert had 17 points and nine rebounds, continuing his recent surge after a poor-as-can-be start to the series. He helped Indiana overcome Washington’s 32-2 advantage in bench scoring. That was thanks mainly to 30-some-
things Al Harrington, Drew Gooden and Andre Miller, who combined for 28 points, 13 rebounds and six assists. Wizards coach Randy Wittman likes to call that trio of not-yet-retired, best-days-behind-them guys — Miller, 38; Harrington, 34; Gooden, 32 — the “AARP group,” but they momentarily turned the game Washington’s way with quite a second quarter and a key stretch of the fourth. There even were chants of “An-dre Miller!” when he made two free throws in the fourth quarter to make it 85-76. But George willed the Pacers back. His 3 with 5½ minutes left made it 85-79, and another 30 seconds later made it 85-82, giving him seven from beyond the arc, matching a mark held by Reggie Miller and Chuck Person. John Wall (12 points, seven assists) gave Washington what turned out to be its last lead at 91-90 with about 2 minutes to go. George pushed Indiana back in front with two foul shots, and the Pacers then made a key defensive stand, forcing a shot-
clock violation. At the other end, Hibbert made a 12-foot turnaround hook shot with 1:02 remaining to put the Pacers up 94-91, the ball bouncing on the rim before dropping through. The 7-foot-2 All-Star center sprinted down the court, his arms spread apart and his smile as wide as can be. Indiana’s next possession ended with George Hill throwing the ball out of bounds for his team’s 19th of 20 turnovers, but Harrington missed a shot at the other end. Yet another Pacers turnover gave the Wizards a second chance, and Bradley Beal was fouled. He made 1 of 2, and George — who else? — grabbed the rebound. Hill was fouled, and went 1 for 2 at the line. So the Wizards trailed by three with 6.1 seconds left. They couldn’t get the ball inbounds cleanly, though, thanks to more strong defense from the Pacers, and George corralled the ball. The Pacers now head home knowing only eight teams in NBA history have ever blown a 3-1 lead in a playoff series.
Clippers: Thunder outscored in 1st quarter Continued from Page B-1 never gives up.” The Clippers had no answer for Durant and Westbrook until midway through the fourth quarter. That dynamic duo drove the lane with abandon, drew fouls and made free throws in leading the Thunder to an early 22-point lead. Durant’s three-point play early in the fourth extended the Thunder’s lead to 15 points, and they were still up by 10 with 7:44 to go. But the comeback Clippers were not to be denied. “Everybody kept telling each other, ‘Chip away, chip away,’ ” Griffin said. “That was kind of our mentality for the rest of the game. We just kept fighting.” The Clippers stole a page
out of the Thunder’s playbook, switching to a smaller lineup that included Collison and Danny Granger, who helped disrupt the Thunder’s rebounding late. Paul willed his team back into it, scoring six straight points to get the Clippers within six. Griffin, who was saddled with five fouls, made three of four free throws before Collison got hot. “The whole time I’m thinking, ‘We can’t be down 3-1, we just can’t be down 3-1 going to Oklahoma,” Collison said. With the game tied at 97, Collison scored the Clippers’ final four points on layups. Crawford passed to a streaking Collison for a fast-break conversion on the second one for a 101-97 lead with 32 sec-
onds left. Westbrook scored for the Thunder, but after Griffin missed, Westbrook did too to end the game. “Did that really just happen?” a still stunned Crawford said. Paul missed all five of his shots in the third, when Griffin picked up three fouls to give him five, and Crawford and Jordan each got their third. Ibaka, who shot 9 of 10 in the Thunder’s Game 3 win, got his fourth foul, along with Westbrook in the third. The Clippers came as close as eight points before Reggie Jackson’s 3-pointer beat the shot clock to keep the Thunder ahead 75-63 going into the fourth. The Thunder had the Clippers on their heels from the opening tip, with Oklahoma City shooting 65 percent in
building a 22-point lead. Oklahoma City outscored the Clippers 32-15 in the first, the fewest points they’ve allowed in a quarter of a playoff game. Notes u NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, who banned Clippers owner Donald Sterling for life and fined him $2.5 million after recordings of him making racist comments surfaced, attended the game, sitting next to Magic Johnson. Johnson tweeted on April 26 that he would never go to a Clippers game again while Sterling remains the owner. u Johnson and boxer Floyd Mayweather have each made noises about being interested in owning the Clippers. u Dick Parsons, whom Silver appointed as interim CEO of the Clippers, will be in town Monday.
sam: Already looks like a good fit for NFL Continued from Page B-1 scratched it off the board.” That, Sam said, “was their loss.” He may not have the size and speed his competition did for a spot on an NFL roster, but he has the bravado. In a league of outsized personalities, Sam already looks like a good fit. He’s not afraid to speak his mind in a business that pretends to hate “distractions,” but doesn’t hesitate to promote them when they’re good for the bottom line. Besides, there are dozens of players who could charitably be labeled “distractions” in the NFL right now, ranging from prima donnas to real criminals, and likely another dozen or so in the incoming draft class. If commissioner Roger Goodell and his owners are half as smart as they think they are, Sam is the kind of “distraction” they’ll welcome. He’ll be that rare player drawing attention for the right reason — at least most of the time. As for the rest, Sam sounds more than capable of taking care of himself.
“You know what, I knew what I was coming into. I’m not afraid to answer questions. Are there going to be idiots out there that say some stupid stuff? Yeah,” he said, without waiting for an answer. “I’m not worried about that. I’m worrying about the guy next to me, the guy in front of me. I have to prove myself.” The other knock on Sam was that he’d have to learn to play a new position in the NFL, shifting from defensive end, where he played at Missouri, to a pass-rushing linebacker. He didn’t minimize how tough the transition would be, and he’s logged a few hundred hours in gyms and weight rooms since the Tigers season ended getting prepared. He also knows only too well what happens to guys who don’t fit the mold. Most get pushed out after a few unsuccessful tries; a few are committed enough to try hard enough to break the mold. Sam left little doubt about which camp he fit in. “I am a pass rusher. I sack quarterbacks,” he said. “That’s my main job.”
Sam will get a better-than-even chance to prove that in St. Louis, a team with a young, fast-improving defense and a coach, Jeff Fisher, who likes to take risks. He’ll also benefit from the goodwill earned playing his college ball just down the road in Columbia. But the fact is Sam got this far because his own expectations long ago surpassed those that everybody else laid in his path. Getting the chance to rise or fall on his terms is all he ever asked. Anyone who thinks Sam is going to let go of that without a fight hasn’t been listening. “From last season alone, I should have been a high [draft pick], first three rounds, you know. SEC defensive player of the year, unanimous All-American. I should have gone in the top three rounds easily,” he said. “It is what it is. I’m happy to be a St. Louis Ram. Everything else,” he added a moment later, “is history.” Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press.
Crash: Balloon drifted into a power line Continued from Page B-1 other people, and when you talk about this business and the genuineness and caring about the kids and what’s best for the student-athletes, she epitomized that.” Doyle, 44, was hired by Bob Foley at Richmond in 1999. When Boyle got her first head coaching job, replacing Foley at Richmond, Doyle “just rose to the top” in an interview, and Boyle decided to keep her on staff. She also tried to get Doyle to come along when she left for California, but with no luck. Instead, Doyle stayed on when Michael Shafer took over, and rose three years ago to associate head coach. Lewis, 24, was a four-year letter-winner in swimming who just completed her second season with the basketball program. Her job required great organization skills as she made travel, hotel and bus arrangements for the team, planned for meals and handled day-to-day basketball business. In the grind of a season, broadcaster Matt Smith said, she was a shining light, too.
“Sometimes when you work in sports, coaches can be so high strung and so focused on the next game or what’s going on that you feel almost uncomfortable when you go into the office, but her being the first one that you would see, she always had a smile on her face,” Smith said. Smith met Doyle as a junior in the 1990-91 season, her first with the Spiders after transferring from George Washington. She became a star and later figured in one of the most revered moments in the program’s history. As a senior, she set an NCAA record — for men or women — by making 66 consecutive free throws, an accomplishment that earned her dubious recognition from CBS college basketball analyst Billy Packer. Packer, an 81.9 percent freethrow shooter at Wake Forest, scoffed at the record on air and noted that women use a slightly smaller ball, which in his mind made it less impressive. Hearing that Packer was going to be in Richmond on another matter, the school invited him to come shoot
against Doyle, and about 1,200 fans watched the duel at the Robins Center on Feb. 2, 1992. It was no contest: Doyle, using a men’s ball, made 20 of 20, with only two of them touching the rim. Packer, to the delight of the crowd, missed eight of his 20 attempts. Her record has since been broken, but years later, her foul shooting, as well as her love of the game and her players, remained on display, according to Robert Fish, a Richmond alum who also has called women’s games on radio. “When I would go to practice to do an interview with [Shafer], Ginny would be in there playing one-on-one with somebody or challenging somebody to a free throw shooting contest,” Fish said. “The kids loved her.” Kirk, the balloon pilot from Delaware, was known by fellow pilots as “Capt. Kirk,” the commander of the USS Enterprise on the TV series Star Trek. Steve Hoffmann, who said he taught Kirk to fly and built the balloon he was piloting, called him “one of the nicest guys in the world” and a consummate
professional. “He was not a hot dog, not a risk taker,” Hoffmann said. “It’s so unbelievable that everyone’s in shock.” The balloon was among 13 that lifted off Friday on a preview night for the Mid-Atlantic Balloon Festival when it drifted into a power line, burst into flames and fell into a heavily wooded area about 25 miles north of Richmond. On the ground, “it was complete silence,” spectator Nancy Johnson said. “There were people praying. It was horrible.” State police spokeswoman Corinne Geller said another pilot interviewed by investigators described how the pilot tried to open vents to release extra-hot air in an attempt to keep the balloon from rising faster. “Based on witness accounts, he did everything he could to try to save the passengers’ lives,” Geller said. The remains of the third victim were found Sunday. The other victims were discovered earlier. The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating.
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
today on tV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. CoLLeGe BAseBALL 4 p.m. on ESPNU — Wake Forest at NC State CYCLING 3 p.m. on NBCSN — Tour of California, Stage 2, in Folsom, Calif. HoCKeY 11:30 a.m. on NBCSN — IIHF, World Championship, Russia vs. United States, in Minsk, Belarus MAJoR LeAGUe BAseBALL 6 p.m. on ESPN — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis NBA 6 p.m. on TNT — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 4, Miami at Brooklyn 8:30 p.m. on TNT — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 4, San Antonio at Portland NHL 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Boston at Montreal 8 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Los Angeles at Anaheim
PREP SCHEDULE This week’s schedule of high school varsity sporting events. For changes or additions, contact us at sports@sfnewmexican.com:
today Golf — Class A-AAA State Tournament, first round, 8:30 a.m. shotgun start (at NMSU Golf Course, Las Cruces) Class AAAA State Tournament, first round, 8:30 a.m. shotgun start (at UNM Championship Course, Albuquerque)
tuesday Golf — Class A-AAA State Tournament, second round, 8:30 a.m. shotgun start (at NMSU Golf Course, Las Cruces) Class AAAA State Tournament, second round, 8:30 a.m. shotgun start (at UNM Championship Course, Albuquerque)
Wednesday Baseball — Class A State Tournament, semifinals, in Albuquerque: Questa vs. Magdalena, 4 p.m. (at Lobo Field) Softball — Class A-AA State Tournament, opening rounds, at Rio Rancho H.S.: McCurdy vs. Estancia, 11 a.m.; Pecos vs. Capitan, 1 p.m.; second round starts at 3 p.m.
thursday Baseball — Class A State Tournament, championship, 1 p.m. (Isotopes Park) AAA State Tournament, quarterfinals, in Rio Rancho: St. Michael’s vs. Raton, 3 p.m. (at Rio Rancho H.S.) AAAA State Tournament, quarterfinals, in Rio Rancho: Los Alamos vs. Roswell Goddard, 1 p.m. (at Cleveland H.S.) Softball — Class A-AA State Tournament, middle rounds at Rio Rancho H.S.: pairings TBD AAA State Tournament, first rounds, at Cleveland H.S.: St. Michael’s vs. Silver, 9 a.m.; Pojoaque Valley vs. Portales, 9 a.m.; quarterfinals at 1 p.m.
Friday Track and Field — Class AAA-AAAAA State Meet, field events at 8 a.m.; running events at 10 a.m. (at UNM Track & Soccer Complex, Albuquerque) Baseball — AAA State Tournament, semifinals, in Albuquerque: St. Michael’sRaton winner vs. Sandia Prep-Bloomfield winner, 3 p.m. (at Lobo Field) AAAA State Tournament, semifinals in Rio Rancho: Los Alamos-Goddard winner vs. St. Pius-Farmington winner, 4 p.m. (at Cleveland) Softball — Class A-AA State Tournament, final rounds at Rio Rancho H.S. and UNM Lobo Field: pairings TBD AAA State Tournament, semifinals, at Cleveland H.S., 1 p.m.; consolation round at 2 p.m.
saturday Track and Field — Class AAA-AAAAA State Meet, field events at 8 a.m.; running events at 11 a.m. (at UNM Track & Soccer Complex, Albuquerque) Baseball — AAA State Tournament, championship, 12:30 p.m. (Isotopes Park) AAAA State Tournament, championship, 3:30 p.m. (Isotopes Park) Softball — Class AAA State Tournament, final rounds, at UNM Lobo Field, pairings TBD
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Basketball u The Genoveva Chavez Community Center will be holding a women’s summer league with an eight-game schedule, plus a postseason tournament. Registration continues until May 23 at the Chavez Center, and cost is $320 per team. For more information, call James Rivera at 955-4075, or Mike Olguin at 955-4064. u The Genoveva Chavez Community Center will have a youth summer league. The league format offers an eight-game schedule, plus a postseason tournament. Divisions include elementary, middle school and high school for boys and girls. Registration continues until May 23 at the Chavez Center, and cost is $320 per team. For more information, call James Rivera at 955-4075, or Dax Roybal at 955-4074. u The Fort Marcy Recreation Complex is holding a summer league that begins May 19 with four divisions. The season lasts 10 games and includes a single-elimination tournament. Cost is $400 per team, with a limit of 10 players per roster and an additional $30 for every player after that. For more information, contact Phillip Montaño at 955-2508 or pgmontano@santafenm.gov, or Gregory Fernandez at 955-2509 or grfernandez@santafenm.gov. u The St. Michael’s Horsemen fundamental camps are scheduled for June 9-12 and July 14-17 in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium. Both camps are from 8 a.m.-4 p.m., and open to boys and girls between grades 1-9. Cost is $40 for first- and second-graders and $75 for third through ninth graders. For more information, go to www.stmichaelssf.org, or call 983-7353 and ask for head coach Ron Geyer. u The St. Michael’s Horsemen shooting camp is June 16-17, and is open to boys and girls between grades 1-9. Both camps are from 9 a.m.-4 p.m., and open to boys and girls between grades 3-9. Cost is $40 for all grades. For more information, go to www. stmichaelssf.org, or call 983-7353 and ask for head coach Ron Geyer.
Football u St. Michael’s High School is holding its 10th annual Horsemen Football Camp from June 2-5 from 8 a.m.-noon. The camp is open to boys and girls from grades 1-8, and cost is $75. All participants will receive a T-shirt. For more information, call Joey Fernandez at 699-4749.
Running u Registration is ongoing for the 36th annual Santa Fe Run Around 5-kilometer and 10-K races on May 17. It can be done online or in person at The Running Hub. Cost is $25 for adults, and $5 for students who are 19-and-under. For more information, go to santaferunaround.blogspot.com, or call race director Jim Owens at 231-6166.
submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican.com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.
NeW MeXICAN sPoRts
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
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BASEBALL
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Red Sox back above .500 with win the game and allowed Pinto to reach second.
The Associated Press
ARLINGTON, Texas — A.J. Pierzynski and Mike Napoli had run-producing hits in the first inning Red Sox 5 against their former Rangers 2 team, and the Boston Red Sox got above .500 for the first time since three games into the season with a series-clinching 5-2 victory at Texas on Sunday. Napoli put the Red Sox ahead to stay with an RBI double, two batters before Pierzynski’s tworun single. Both went to Boston as free agents after being in Texas — Pierzynski was the Rangers primary catcher last season, and Napoli was there the previous two years. ROYALS 9, MARINERS 7 In Seattle, Alcides Escobar hit a grand slam, and Johnny Giavotella added a three-run shot to give the Royals a comeback victory over the Mariners. Escobar had provided a 4-0 lead for the Royals in the second with his first career home run off starter Roenis Elias. But the Mariners rallied behind two homers from Dustin Ackley and another from Kyle Seager before Kansas City took the lead in the seventh, scoring four runs off reliever Danny Farquhar (1-1). Louis Coleman (1-0), who worked a scoreless sixth, earned the victory. INDIANS 6, RAYS 5 In St. Petersburg, Fla., Josh Tomlin won his second straight start, Nyjer Morgan and Michael Bourn both drove in two runs, and the Indians beat the Rays. Tomlin (2-0), who pitched just once in the big leagues last season after right elbow surgery in 2012, allowed two runs
INTERLEAGUE
Fans watch as the Red Sox’s Mike Napoli grabs a pop-out down the first base line during Sunday’s game in Arlington, Texas. TONY GUTIERREZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
and six hits over six innings in his second outing this year. Morgan hit his first major league homer since July 30, 2012, an eighth-inning solo shot. ASTROS 5, ORIOLES 2 In Baltimore, Jason Castro and Marc Krauss homered to account for all of Houston’s runs, and the Astros beat the Orioles to avoid a three-game sweep. Jarred Cosart (2-3) allowed two runs and eight hits over six innings for the Astros, who had lost seven of eight before ending Baltimore’s five-game winning streak. Castro hit a three-run homer off Chris Tillman (3-2) in the first inning and Krauss connected against T.J. McFarland with a runner on in the seventh. Houston is 11-11 when it hits a home run and 1-15 when it doesn’t. ANGELS 9, BLUE JAYS 3 In Toronto, Jered Weaver won his fourth straight decision, Hank Conger hit a three-run
homer and had a career-high five RBIs, and the Angels beat Toronto for their seventh straight win over the Blue Jays. Conger went 3 for 4 with a walk. He hit an RBI double in the fourth, homered in the sixth and added an RBI single in the ninth. Howie Kendrick had three hits, two stolen bases and scored three times as the Angels won their third straight. TWINS 4, TIGERS 3 In Detroit, Eduardo Nunez hit a tiebreaking single in the eighth inning, and Minnesota rallied for a victory over the Tigers. The Twins took advantage of poor defense by the Tigers in the late innings. Minnesota scored three runs in the eighth, spoiling another fine start by Detroit rookie Robbie Ray. The Tigers led 3-1 with two outs in the eighth when Josmil Pinto singled to left field off Joba Chamberlain (1-2) with runners on first and second. One run scored on the hit, but the ball skipped past left fielder Rajai Davis for an error that tied
ATHLETICS 9, NATIONALS 1 In Oakland, Calif., Derek Norris hit a pair of three-run home runs to back Scott Kazmir’s fifth win, and the Athletics beat the Nationals to complete a series sweep. Both of Norris’ home runs came on identical two-out, 3-0 pitches from Washington starter and former Oakland pitcher Gio Gonzalez (3-3). Nick Punto added two hits and three RBIs while Brandon Moss singled twice and doubled. DIAMONDBACKS 5, WHITE SOX 1 In Chicago, Chase Anderson won his major league debut, Gerardo Parra and Miguel Montero homered, and the Diamondbacks beat the White Sox. Recalled Tuesday from Double-A Mobile, Anderson (1-0) hadn’t seen any action until Sunday and he excelled in his first big league appearance, at one point retiring 12 consecutive batters. He allowed one run and only two hits in 5⅓ innings while striking out six, helping Arizona win for the fourth time in five games and secure its third consecutive series for the first time since June 2012. BREWERS 6, YANKEES 5 In Milwaukee, Mark Reynolds hit a game-ending single with two outs in the ninth inning, and the Brewers overcame Francisco Rodriguez’s first blown save of the season to beat New York. Rickie Weeks doubled just inside first base with one out before going to third on a wild pitch by reliever Adam Warren (1-2).
Giants: Mets beat Phillies in 11 innings Continued from Page B-1 His other six RBIs this season came when he was batting third. BRAVES 5, CUBS 2 In Atlanta, Evan Gattis hit a tiebreaking homer, Jason Heyward added a two-run shot, and the Braves beat Chicago to complete a three-game sweep. Gattis gave the Braves a 3-2 advantage with his homer off Edwin Jackson in the fourth inning. Heyward added to the lead with his first home run since April 9. Aaron Harang (4-3) gave up two runs in six innings with nine strikeouts. David Carpenter pitched the ninth for his second save as closer Craig Kimbrel was rested after pitching two straight days. REDS 4, ROCKIES 1 In Cincinnati, Aroldis Chapman made his first major league appearance since being hit above the eye by a line drive during
spring training, striking out the side in the ninth inning with his 100 mph fastball to close out Cincinnati’s victory over Colorado. Todd Frazier hit his second 400-foot home run in three days to back Homer Bailey (3-2) as the Reds won the rubber match of the three-game series. Chapman was greeted by a standing ovation from the crowd of 33,143. He reached 100 mph with his first pitch and topped out at 102 mph in earning the save. Chapman had been out since a frightening injury March 19. METS 5, PHILLIES 4 (11 INNINGS) In New York, Daniel Murphy and the Mets suddenly rallied for three runs in the ninth inning against Philadelphia’s improvised bullpen, then ended a five-game skid on Ruben Tejada’s single in the 11th. Down 4-1, the punchless Mets fought back in the ninth, sparked by Murphy’s two-run homer off Antonio Bastardo. Chris
Young ended his 0-for-18 slump with a double, and Juan Lagares drove in the tying run with a slow grounder against Roberto Hernandez — who started Friday night and threw 99 pitches. Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said closer Jonathan Papelbon was sore and unavailable to pitch in a third straight game. PADRES 5, MARLINS 4 In San Diego, Will Venable hit a leadoff homer, and San Diego beat Miami for its first three-game winning streak of the season. The resurgent Padres offense, which has scored 24 runs in three games, also got two hits and two RBIs from Chris Denorfia. Robbie Erlin (2-4) scattered five hits over 6⅓ scoreless innings before giving way to three relievers. Huston Street pitched around a hit and two walks in the ninth to earn his 11th save.
Fla. police finish probe into theft of A-Rod docs Fischer told a Boca Raton police detective that MLB invesBOCA RATON, Fla. — A tigators aggressively pursued Florida police department has him for Biogenesis evidence. completed its investigation into An MLB attorney offered him the theft of documents related $125,000 for the records, accordto baseball’s probe into whether ing to the police report. Fischer Alex Rodriguez used perfordeclined, saying “it was not mance enhancing drugs. enough to start a new life.” The investigation ended April However, MLB investigators 11 with charges filed against found another South Florida only a tanning salon employee, source willing to sell them the who was arrested after police records. Gary L. Jones sold MLB said his DNA was found on a a batch of documents on four car the documents were stolen USB flash drives in exchange out of. for $100,000, according to the However, the police report police report. Jones told a Boca said Major League Baseball Raton detective that MLB knew was given repeated warnings the documents were stolen. that the records they sought Boca Raton Police Departhad been stolen and that they ment spokeswoman Sandra were not to purchase them. Still, Boonenberg said an investigator they did so anyway, the report “warned MLB not to purchase said. Baseball officials have the documents” before they denied knowingly buying stolen were bought. Boonenberg conrecords. firmed that information Sunday Newsday first reported the to The Associated Press. results of the probe. Baseball officials said they did The documents were stolen not knowingly buy stolen Biofrom Porter Fischer’s car. He genesis records. took them from Biogenesis, the “We have stated repeatedly Miami clinic where he worked. that we had no knowledge that The clinic and its owner, Tony the documents we purchased Bosch, reportedly provided were stolen,” MLB senior vice drugs to Rodriguez and other president of public relations Pat major league players. Courtney told Newsday. The Biogenesis scandal led Fischer, meanwhile, had to 14 suspensions last sumagreed to help the Florida mer. Rodriguez, a three-time Department of Health build a MVP, was suspended for the case against Bosch. He was on entire 2014 season. He filed two his way to deliver the doculawsuits against MLB over its ments to a health department investigation but later withdrew investigator when Jones urged them. He has denied using per- him to stop at a Boca Raton tanning salon to try a new spray. formance-enhancing drugs. The Associated Press
Chihuahuas blank Isotopes 11-0
Chihuahuas third baseman Brooks Conrad hit two home runs, including a solo shot in the bottom of the first inning to The struggling Albuquerque start the downward spiral for Isotopes managed just four hits Albuquerque starting pitcher in an ugly 11-0 loss at El Paso Red Patterson (2-2). He lasted in Pacific Coast League action just four innings, giving up Sunday afternoon at Southwest seven hits and six earned runs. University Park. El Paso had four home runs The Topes (18-19) have lost in the game. In the first eight nine of their last 13 games and games of the team’s new downhave fallen eight games behind town stadium, only seven home Las Vegas in the PCL’s Pacific runs had been hit. The Isotopes Southern Division. On Sunday and Chihuahuas have combined they gave up four home runs as to hit 11 in the first two games of the Chihuahuas scored in four this four-game series. of the first five innings. The Isotopes are in the midst All four of Albuquerque’s hits of a 13-day, 12-game road swing were singles. They never had that continues later this week a hit with a runner in scoring at Fresno, then winds up at Salt position, and they had two run- Lake. The next home game isn’t ners caught stealing. until May 23 against Reno. Both runners were nailed Matt Magill (2-1, 4.94 ERA) in a strikeout-thrown out will get the start for Albuquerdouble play during the first two que in Tuesday’s game. First innings. pitch is scheduled for 6:35 p.m. It was the first loss of the sea- El Paso will counter with Keyvison to El Paso. The Isotopes had ous Sampson (1-3, 4.05). won the previous five meetings The New Mexican by a combined 14 runs.
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SPORTS NHL PLAYOFFS
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
WORLD CUP
Toews helps Blackhawks Brazilians hit by sticker fever defeat Wild in Game 5 By Tales Azzoni
The Associated Press
SAO PAULO — World Cup sticker frenzy has swept Brazil like never before. Brazilians have long been avid fans of World Cup sticker albums. This year, however, there’s added motivation with soccer’s showcase event starting at home on June 12. Everybody is talking stickers, from kids to adults, students to doctors. Even Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. Fans have set up trading places in front of stadiums, plazas and bookstores to swap their stickers in hopes of completing their sets. Some are hardcore collectors. Others are helping their kids or are just there for the thrill of it. Brazil led all countries in sales during the 2010 World Cup and this time numbers are already better than they were four years ago, according
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Jonathan Toews had a rebound goal early in the third period, and the Chicago Blackhawks 2 Blackhawks beat the Wild 1 Minnesota Wild 2-1 on Sunday night to take a 3-2 series lead in the Western Conference semifinals. Bryan Bickell also scored and Corey Crawford made 27 saves as Chicago bounced back from consecutive losses in Minnesota that handed the momentum to the Wild heading into Game 5. But the Blackhawks were back at the United Center, where they improved to 6-0 in this postseason and 17-2 over the past two playoffs. Erik Haula scored in the first period for the Wild, and Ilya Bryzgalov had 26 stops. Minnesota became the first team to score first in the second round of the NHL playoffs and lose, dropping that record to 19-1, according to STATS. Game 6 is Tuesday night in Minnesota, where the Wild are undefeated in this postseason. Minnesota had a chance to grab the lead in the third but Crawford made a nice kick save on Cody McCormick about 2½ minutes into the period. He also had a solid glove stop on Ryan Suter with the Blackhawks clinging to a 2-1 lead with 4:38 to go. Toews, Marian Hossa and Patrick Sharp combined to put Chicago in front 4½ minutes into the third. Hossa sent the puck in front to Toews at the right post. The captain was stopped by Bryzgalov, but he managed to slam home a backhand for his fifth of the playoffs. Toews also had a big hit on Wild forward Mikael Granlund right before he scored the winning goal. The first period looked similar to much of the past two games in Minnesota, with the
The Blackhawks’ Jonathan Toews, right, controls the puck against the Wild’s Matt Cooke during the first period in Game 5 of Sunday’s second-round playoff series in Chicago. NAM Y. HUH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wild using their speed and checking ability to shut down Chicago’s high-powered attack. The Wild also outworked the defending Stanley Cup champions early on as Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville tried several line combinations looking for a spark. RangeRS 3, PenguinS 1 In New York, Martin St. Louis and Carl Hagelin scored 2:51 apart in the first period, and Henrik Lundqvist made 36 saves and the New York Rangers avoided elimination again with a victory over Pittsburgh. The matchup between the Metropolitan Division rivals will be decided in Game 7 at Pittsburgh on Tuesday night. The Penguins, who led the series 3-1, failed in their first attempt to advance to the Eastern Conference finals with a 5-1 home loss on Friday. Derick Brassard pushed the Rangers’ lead to 3-1 in the second period. Brandon Sutter scored the lone goal for the Penguins, who got 26 saves from Marc-Andre Fleury. This was a far cry from New York’s disheartening 4-2 home
loss in Game 4. The Rangers are 9-2 in their past 11 games when facing elimination, dating to Game 6 of the first round in 2012 at Ottawa. New York has never won a series it trailed 3-1. New York scored the allimportant first goal, St. Louis’ third of the playoffs that had Madison Square Garden rocking just 3:34 in. New York had just withstood an extended period of time in its own end when Pittsburgh’s crisp passing and forechecking kept the Rangers under pressure. They got the puck up ice, and defenseman Anton Stralman ripped a hard drive from the high slot that caromed off Fleury. Derek Stepan swiped at the puck in traffic and knocked it off St. Louis’ right leg and into the net. The team that scored first has won all six games. St. Louis capped off an emotional Mother’s Day with his father and sister in attendance, just three days after his mother died suddenly. His return to the team Friday night, without missing a game, provided a lift to his teammates as they kept their season alive.
INDYCAR
Hinchcliffe to miss more time with concussion By Michael Marot
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — James Hinchcliffe’s tough IndyCar start is getting more clouded. E.J. Viso replaced the injured Canadian on Sunday in the opening practice for the Indianapolis 500, and it’s still unclear when the popular Hinchcliffe will turn his first laps on the famed 2.5-mile oval. Hinchcliffe was injured Saturday in the inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis when debris from Justin Wilson’s car flew into the cockpit, striking Hinchcliffe in the head. He was taken away from the track on a stretcher, transported to a hospital and diagnosed with a concussion. He was hoping to be re-examined Sunday, but that never happened and now he’s out until at least Tuesday. “We’ll have a better feeling then,” team owner Michael Andretti said. “They just said rest and they don’t want to see him again until Tuesday.” Later, the team issued a state-
ment saying that exam date has been scheduled. Traditionally, IndyCar drivers with concussions have missed a miniJames mum of seven Hinchcliffe days off before being cleared to race. But series officials issued a statement Sunday night, saying concussions are handled on a case-by-case basis and that drivers with head injuries must pass an ImPACT test before they’re cleared to compete by series medical director Dr. Michael Olinger. If Olinger adheres to the strict timeline, though, Hinchcliffe would miss the only full week of Indy practice and might not be back in the No. 27 Honda until next weekend when the only two qualifying sessions will be held. Andretti brought in Viso, who hadn’t even been in an IndyCar this season until com-
pleting 28 laps Sunday. Even Viso isn’t sure what to expect next. He finished sixth on the speed charts with a fast lap of 222.105 mph. Twenty-four cars made it onto the track. Australia’s Will Power, who drives for Roger Penske, was the fastest of the 24 cars at 223.057 mph. Viso said he is prepared to do whatever Andretti’s team needs — even if that means replacing Hinchcliffe for qualifying or in the May 25 race. “It’s too early to know. It just happened yesterday and nobody knows how he’s going to recover. It 100 percent comes down to his recovery,” the Venezuelan said. “First of all, I just wish James a quick recovery. If he takes a little bit longer and I’m able to drive and do the job for him I’m, of course, not disappointed with that. But for me, the most important thing is to understand that he’s recovering fast.” He has made six straight starts in the 500, including a career best fourth last year.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD ON THE
DRAFT AMENDMENT TO THE TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM Federal Fiscal Years 2014–2017
Public Comment Period 05/12/14 – 05/26/14 The Santa Fe MPO’s Public Participation Process satisfies the Public Participation Process for Santa Fe Trails’ Program of Projects
For more information please go to:
www.santafempo.org/tip
or email: kpwilson@santafenm.gov, or call: 505-955-6706
City of Santa Fe
to the FIFA-picked company in charge of the album, Italy-based Panini. The stickers are sold in more than 100 nations, with South America being the top market. Germany and Switzerland were the top countries in sales after Brazil in 2010, Panini said. Hundreds of people have been going to the Pacaembu every weekend, as well as to other trading places across Brazil’s largest city, including supermarkets, cafes and malls. The city’s main art museum, MASP, is one of the most popular places for enthusiasts, attracting groups of teenagers, couples and entire families looking to swap their stickers. There are many Internet groups devoted to people wanting to swap their stickers, and countless apps are at the disposal of fans looking for those hard-to-come-by stickers. There’s even a virtual album created by Panini. President Rousseff told journalists she is helping her 3-year-old grandson complete his set.
“Promoting Interconnected Transportation Options”
MEETING LIST WEEK OF MAY 12, 2014 THROUGH MAY 16, 2014
Santa Fe MPO Transportation Policy Board
MONDAY, MAY 12, 2014 5:00 PM PUBLIC WORKS/CIP & LAND USE COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall, 200 Lincoln Avenue 5:00 PM ARTS COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall TUESDAY, MAY 13, 2014 12:00 PM HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD FIELD TRIP –Historic Preservation Division, 2nd Floor, City Hall 2:00 PM SANTA FE AUDIT COMMITTEE - City Councilors’ Conference Room 4:00 PM SANTA FE WATER CONSERVATION COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room 5:30 PM HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD HEARING – City Council Chambers
Thursday, May 15th, 2014 @ 7:00 PM City of Santa Fe Offices @ Market Station 500 Market Street, Suite 200, Santa Fe, NM (Map: http://tinyurl.com/l6kejeq)
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 11:00 AM CITY BUSINESS & QUALITY OF LIFE COMMITTEE – Round House Conference Room, Market Station, 500 Market Street, Suite 200 4:00 PM SANTA FE SISTER CITIES COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room 5:00 PM CITY COUNCIL – City Council Chambers 7:00 PM CITY COUNCIL – City Council Chambers THURSDAY, MAY 15, 2014 10:00 AM MAYOR’S COMMITTEE ON DISABILTY – Genoveva Chavez Community Center, Classroom 1, 3221 Rodeo Road 10:30 AM PARK BOND AUDIT TASK FORCE - City Councilors’ Conference Room 11:00 AM SUMMARY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers 3:00 AM 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 500 PM SANTA FE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT AGENCY JOINT POWERS BOARD - Santa Fe County Administration Building, Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Avenue 5:15 PM SANTA FE REGIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD – CYFD Offices, 1920 Fifth Street 6:00 PM PLANNING COMMISSION – City Council Chambers 7:00 PM SANTA FE MPO TRANSPORTATION POLICY BOARD - Market Station, 500 Market Street, Suite 200
*Special Meeting* AGENDA The meeting will be a Presentation and Discussion with Dan Burden and Robert Ping of the Walkable and Livable Communities Institute. A quorum of Transportation Policy Board members may be present. No action will be taken.
FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2014 NO MEETINGS SCHEDULED
Persons with disabilities in need of accommodations, contact the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520, five (5) working days prior to the meeting date.
SUBJECT TO CHANGE For more information call the City Clerk’s office at 955-6520
Congratulate your graduate
GRADGram!✮ with a
in
The New Mexican’s special keepsake publication for local grads!
2014 SALUTE TO LOCAL GRADS On June 8 the Santa Fe New Mexican will publish a keepsake special section devoted to the local high school classes of 2014. Including:
• Memorable Moments • School Accomplishments • Student Comments • List of Graduates • Ceremony Photos • Personalized GRADGram!✮ Featured High Schools: Academy at Larragoite Academy for Technology and the Classics Capital High School Desert Academy Monte del Sol Charter School NM School for the Arts NM School for the Deaf Santa Fe High Santa Fe Indian School Santa Fe Prep Secondary Learning Center St. Michael’s High School Tierra Encantada Charter School at Alvord Santa Fe Waldorf High School Pojoaque Valley High School MASTERS Program-SFCC
• Actual Size •
Alejandro Mendez SANTA FE HIGH
Congratulations Ale! We are so proud of you! We love you! Mom, Kat, Nina, Tito and Jasmine
25
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includes one color photo of your grad plus your
personal message (75 characters max).
Visit santafenewmexican.com/gradgrams or fill out a form at The Santa Fe New Mexican, 202 E. Marcy St., to create your custom GRADGram!✮!
Deadline: May 28, 5pm You turn to us.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
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Price
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COMMERCIAL SPACE 805 EARLY STREET. CLOSE TO RAILYARD & WHOLE FOODS. 1700 SQ.FT. ARCHITECTURALLY DESIGNED SPACE, high ceilings, open floor plan along with conventional space. Good for hair salon, art or yoga studio, retail, or office. Call Phillip, 505-9847343 Owner NMREB.
5 ACRE LOTS- 25 acres total. Tall pines, Santa Fe views. Gated. Behind St. John’s College. No trailers. $150,000 each, Terms. Jim, 505-2318302.
TESUQUE LAND .75 acre 5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Welll water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.
YOU RECOGNIZE THE BEST AND CAN AFFORD IT.
Santa Fe’s best estate site. 542 acres, 18 minutes from town, 360 degree views, bordering BLM, 6 minutes from Las Campanas. Call Mike Baker only! 505-690-1051. $6,750,000. Also tracts from 160 to 640 acres. SantaFeLandEmpire.com. Sotheby’s International Realty 505-955-7993
MANUFACTURED HOMES RE 1979 14X70 SINGLEWIDE. Must be moved. Has axles and hitch. Located at 1115 Ocate Rd space #88 at Hacienda MHP. $2,000. Call Tim, 505699-2955.
RAILYARD AREA, CORNER GUADALUPE & MONTEZUMA. 1 BLOCK FROM NEW COUNTY COURTHOUSE. 1400 SQ.FT. PLUMBED FOR HAIR SALON, OFFICE, RETAIL, STUDIO SPACE. Good lighting. Limited off-street parking. NMREB Owner, (505)9831116.
2 Story
House on 1 Acre . Boarders the highway and the Pecos River. Business, Live or Work. 5 0 5 699-0639. 3 BEDROOM 2.5 BATH. 1840 sqft, Fenced backyard borders Golf Course, AC, Washer, Dryer, 2 Car Garage. 6434 Paseo Del Sol. $1400 plus utilities. Marty 505-469-2573
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH in Pecos, $900 monthly. Security Deposit. References. No drugs, no pets. 505-470-5568.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 Bath, Washer, Dryer, WoodStove, Enclosed Yard. Property on 3 acres. Dogs okay. $1,400 (Inc.Water) Available 5/3/2014 Call 951-836-6223 for property.
3 LARGE Bedrooms off Rabbit Road. 2 Bath, Courtyard, fireplace. $1375 Plus utilities. 1st, last, $1000 deposit. 505-471-4409
P O J O A Q U E : 2 story Guesthouse with panoramic views. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. A/C. No Pets, non-smoking. $750 monthly, lease, deposit. 505-455-3158
SOUTH OF CAPITOL NEIGHBORH O O D , 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Large backyard, washer, dryer. NO PETS, Non-smoking. $1,950, First, Last, Deposit. 208-870-5002.
PERSONALS SEEKING MAINTENANCE Worker for garden upkeep. Maintenance work in return for produce payment. Call for more information. References Needed. 505-455-7186.
PUBLIC NOTICES PLEASE TO inform that Santa Fe County, New Mexico resident Bruce Kevin Horton was ordained as Priest in the Holy Catholic Church of the East in Brazil; Vicariate of the Nevis and Ecuador: Sacred Medical Order of The Church of Hope Ordination of the Priest: in the name of the Father and the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. To all the Faithful in Christ: Peace, Health and Divine Grace. By the Grace of God, we inform that in accordance to the canonical laws that governs our Ecclesiastical Community Ecclesiastical Sovereign Principality) and in accordance with the traditions and laws of the Ancient and Holy Church of Christ, we certify through thisinstrument, the Ordination of the Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton according to the Ancient Rites of the Catholic Church of the East in Brazil. We sign and confirm with our hand and seal with our arms Decree of the Ordination Number 2013/013. Let it be known that from this day of November 17, 2013 and henceforth the Official Title Bestowed shall read: Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton. This title and ordination was bestowed to Reverend Father Bruce Kevin Horton by Dr. of Medicine Charles McWilliams; Vicar Bishop and Grand Master and Mar Bacillus Adao Pereira, Metropolitan Archbishop of the Holy Catholic Church of the East in Brazil. November 17, 2013
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.
LIVE-IN STUDIOS
S kylights, overhead doors, 2500 square feet, $975. 4100 square feet, 3 phase electric, $1175. La Mesilla. No dogs. 505-753-5906.
2 BD. 1.5 Bath Rosario neighborhood. Fenced yard, fireplace, garage, pool, Sandia view. Small dog OK. 1275, mo. plus utilities. 505-9838549
DOWNTOWN AREA MOVE-IN SPECIAL 2 Bedroom, 1 full bath. Wood floors, fenced yard. Pet considered. Non-smoking . $895 plus utilities.
Taylor Properties 505-470-0818
BARBER BEAUTY EXPERIENCED NAIL TECH NEEDED for busy downtown salon. Established clientele. Apply in person: Holiday Salon, 202 Galisteo.
DOMESTIC JOBS HOUSEKEEPER LIVE-ON PROPERTY
$30 ,000 salary with paid vacation
505-660-6440 DRIVERS
ANIMAL TRANSPORTER\ COMMUNITY MOBILIZER wanted at the Santa Fe Animal Shelter. Must speak fluent English, Spanish, lift 50 pounds, be good with dogs and people. Email eviechec@sfhumanesociety.org.
EDUCATION
Full-time 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 ACCOUNTING CONTROLLER POSITION available in Santa Fe, NM for Tinsley Hospitality Group, franchisor of K-BOB’S Steakhouses. Must have restaurant experience, college degree. Send resumes to joyce@thg-llc.com LAW FIRM seeks full-charge bookkeeper. Knowledge of time and billing software, Quickbooks, and Excel required. Excellent benefits. Send resume, list of references and a cover letter to PO box 669, Santa Fe, NM 87504 or to pcook@cmtisantafe.com
OFFICES
TEACHER I Excellent benefits. Apply on-line 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.
Year round positions HOME VISITOR Full-time working with families to provide case management, advocacy and education.
2000 SQ.FT. MEDICAL OFFICE, on Luisa Street a few blocks from Hospital. 505-988-8059
COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
LARGE, CLEAN one bed room furnished guest house, $1,400 monthly includes utilities. 2 acres in SF Community College District. 505-901-7415.
THE LOS ALAMOS MONITOR
seeks a 40-HOUR CLASSIFIED SALES ASSOCIATE for its office in Los Alamos. Position includes competitive hourly wage, commission, health insurance, matching 401k and other perks. Email resumes to Publisher Ben Carlson at bcarlson@lamonitor.com.
ADMINISTRATIVE
2 private offices, reception area, 3/4 bath with shower. Asking $795 monthly plus utilities. Call Bob, 505470-0002.
1 bedroom, 1 bath Los Arroyos. Small Pet ok. Washer, dryer. $950 water, gas included. 505-603-1111, 505-9840011, stormymiller@msn.com NO SMOKING.
Join our growing, dynamic management team making a difference in non-medical homecare for seniors in Santa Fe, NM. This problem-solving position would require the candidate to be an organized and outgoing person who would coordinate the staffing required for our clients and CAREGivers as well as assisting with HR responsibilities. Please submit your resume and cover letter to Chico Marquez @ chico.marquez@homeinstead.com
»jobs«
WESTSIDE small 3 bedroom duplex. Quiet neighborhood. Washer, dryer. Large backyard. Off-street parking. $920 monthly, plus utilities. Non-smoking. 505-438-3356
GREAT LOCATION OFFICE CONDO.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES
LUXURY CONDO AT THE ALAMEDA. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, washer, dryer. It’s beautiful! $950 monthly plus utilities. 505-982-8223
GREEN-GOLD Fountain Pen, John Dear Talk, Unitarian Church, May 7. Sentimental Value, Reward. 505-9833906. LOST PRESCRIPTION GLASSES. Plastic frames. Bishops Lodge & Circle Drive areas, on May 2nd. Call 505-501-1151. Reward offered.
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
3 BEDROOM 2 FULL BATH HOME. KIVA FIREPLACE, WOOD FLOORING. NS, NP. 1250 MO. 505-5773611.
CANYON ROAD Gallery space for lease, share. Current tenant, artist (Abbate Fine Art) wishes to share with one painter and one sculptor. Share expenses (approximately $3,500 month each). Non-smokers only. Contact Anthony, 820-6868.
LOST
LIVE IN STUDIOS
3 BEDROOM 2 BATH. Kachina Loop, Gated community. Cooler, radiant, fireplace. 2-car garage. washer, dryer, fenced yard. Shed. $1,325. 505424-3735
(3) 2.5 Acre Lots, Senda Artemisia, Old Galisteo Road, Close to town. Easy building sites. Views, utilities, shared well. Owner financing. No Mobile homes. $119,700- $129,700 each. Greg. 505-690-8503, Equity Real Estate.
ELDORADO New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603 NICE 2 BEDROOM, $1050 monthly Kiva, 2 baths. Bus service close. Also, 1 BEDROOM, $750 monthly. No pets. Utilites paid. 505-204-6160
Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299
PECOS RIVER FRONTAGE. 509 feet. San Jose, NM Compound. 3 structures. 3.9+/- acres irrigated pasture. Water rights included. MLS #201400721. $199,000 James Congdon, 505-490-2800 SantaFe Properties, 505-982-4466
DOWNTOWN CASITA 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH Hardwood floors, washer, dryer. $925 monthly plus gas, electric. Nonsmoking. Near Plaza. First, last, $600 deposit. 505-930-2211
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on R u fin a Lane , balcony, fire place, laundry facility on site. $629 monthly. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Mann Street, front end of a duplex, near K-Mart. $750 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rancho Siringo Road, Fenced yard, separate dining room, laundry facility on site. $729 monthly. 1 BEDROM, 1 BATH with study, single story complex, fenced yard, laundry facility on site. Off of Galisteo Road and Rodeo Road. $745 monthly.
2 story, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, gas fireplace, pergo & tile flooring, new kitchen appliances, washer/dryer hook-up, 2 car garage, fenced backyard. NO A/C.
ADMINISTRATIVE
Staffing, Human Resource Coordinator
Newly Remodeled
FUR N ISH ED STUDIO, $675. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839
DOS SANTOS
Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
2 bedrooms, 1 bath 800 sq. ft., on site laundry, $600 plus utilities.
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
»announcements«
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com
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
4133 WHISPERING Wing, Nava Ade, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, yard, garage, vigas, fireplace, all appliances included. Ready to move in. $225,000. Call 505-466-8136. 5,600 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE in mostly residential area. 3 rental areas with month-to-month tenants, paying 2100 plus utilities. 1 acre. $295,000. 505-470-5877
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
Great location and parking! $500 monthly includes utilities, cleaning, taxes and amenities. Move in incentives!
Please call (505)983-9646. STORAGE SPACE 10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com
CHILDREN’S SERVICES MANAGER Responsible for overall operations of programs serving young children (0-5 years) and their families in Santa Fe County. See PMS website for specific position requirements. Excellent benefits. Apply on-line 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. THE LOS ALAMOS MONITOR
seeks a 40-HOUR CIRCULATION C O O R D IN A T O R for its office in Los Alamos. Position includes competitive hourly wage, commission, health insurance, matching 401k & other perks. E-mail resumes to Publisher Ben Carlson at bcarlson@lamonitor.com.
TEACHER I Part-time with Early Head Start (children 0 to 3) and full-time with Head Start (children 3 to 5). See website for job requirements. Benefits eligible. 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. GALLERIES EXPERIENCED SALES ASSOCIATE for luxury art jewelry gallery. Must be sophisticated, energetic, and organized. See classified ad @ santafenewmexican.com
FOR RELEASE MAYMonday, 12, 2014 May 12, 2014
sfnm«classifieds HOSPITALITY
MEDICAL DENTAL
HaveCrossword a product or service to offer? Los Angeles Times Daily Puzzle
to place your ad, call
»merchandise«
Alliance Audio Visual
SEEKING AV Techs full-time and parttime. Audio Visual, Hospitality experience a plus! Pay DOE. Email resume to hr@allianceav.com.
IN HOME CARE CAREGIVERS NEEDED in Santa Fe! YOU MUST BE AVAILABLE Tuesdays 2pm-10pm & Weekends. Caregivers must be physically mentally capable of transfer assistance. Our clients require a HIGH level of care - Applicants seeking ONLY homemaker duties need not apply. Complete online application @ https://micasa.clearcareonline.com/ apply1 Ability to lift at least 60 pounds. PERSONAL ASSISTANT. Bathe, dress, feed, medical care, house clean, disabled 155 lb. man, communication skills, responsible, PC skills. $18 hourly. pajobapp1@gmail.com.
MANAGEMENT CORNERSTONES A 501c3 non-profit seeks Executive Director. Cornerstones is dedicated to preserving historic structures. Application at Cstones.org only.
HELP-NEW MEXICO, Inc. seeks a Regional Manager in Espanola. Manage regional programs, initiatives, and supervise personnel in the region. Secure additional funds within 12 months of employment. Bachelor’s Degree is required, preferably a Master’s Degree and 5+ years work experience management of community and/or workforce initiatives; minimum 3+ years supervisory experience. Successful experience responding to RFP’s - grant writing is required. Analytical & computer skills required. Strong organizational and administrative skills. Exempt position, excellent benefits. Must have a valid New Mexico driver’s license. E-mail resume with concise cover letter responding to the requirements to miriam@helpnm.com. We are an EOE and a Drug Free workplace. www.helpnm.com LONG-STANDING LOCAL BUSINESS seeking a dynamic and experienced GENERAL MANAGER with experience in selling fine jewelry, track record in sales generation, flexibility to work in various roles and superior communication skills. Completion of GIA courses is a plus! Email resume to santafegman@aol.com
Pendaries Village Community Association is seeking a General Manager to oversee community operations, golf and other resort business, water system, marketing and financial compliance. For responsibilities, qualifications, compensation and application requirements go to Pendaries.net. Application deadline is May 31st. THE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS is seeking a full-time Court Manager 3 position in Santa Fe, NM. For more information go to: w w w .n m c o u rts .g o v under Job Opportunities. EOE
MEDICAL DENTAL DBT THERAPIST needed to join private practice in Los Alamos. Experience with both adolescence and adults preferred. Part-time. 505-9822470 DENTAL ASSISTANT. Part-time position. Great office! Experience required. 505-983-1312
Front Desk Position
Needed for busy dental practice. Dental Experience A Must! Some Saturday’s and later hours. Excellent pay. Fax resume to 505424-8535.
Mental Health Therapist Full-time position at Valley Community Health Center in Espanola. Must have independent license. 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 MORA VALLEY COMMUNITY HEALTH SERVICES, INC. Job Opportunities: Medical Director-Physician (Full-Time) Physician (PRN) Nurse Practitioner (Part-T ime and, or PRN) RN-Case Manager (Full-Time) LISW or LMFT or LMSW (Full-Time) PLEASE MAIL you application and, or resume to: MVCHS HR DEPARTMENT PO BOX 209 MORA, NM 87732 OR VIA EMAIL TO: svigil@mvchs.org MVCHS IS A FEDERALLY QUALIFIED HEALTH CENTER & AN EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.APPLICATION DEADLINES: UNTIL FILLED. PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AT www.mvchs.org
Excellent benefits. Apply on-line 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.
LPN/ RN
WE HAVE SEVERAL OPENING FOR NURSES. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON @505-982-2574 OR COME BY THE FACILITY TO FILL OUT AN APPLICATION. ALSO PRN AND PARTTIME SHIFTS AVALIABLE
ATTN: CNA’S
WE HAVE SEVERAL CNA POSITIONS AVALIABLE. IF INTERESTED PLEASE CONTACT RAYE HIGHLAND RN/DON, or CRAIG SHAFFER, ADMINISTRATOR, 505-982-2574. OR COME BY THE FACILITY AND FILL OUT AN APPLICATION.
DIRECTOR OF NURSES (SANTA FE CARE CENTER)
Responsible for effective overall management of the Nursing Department and coordination with other disciplines to provide quality care to all patients & residents. This position is significant in facility leadership If interested in the position. Please come see Craig Shaffer Admin, or stop by our facility, and fill out a application. 635 Harkle RD Santa Fe NM 87505 PART-TIME MEDICAL Receptionist needed for busy private practice in Santa Fe. Looking for someone with medical experience and knowledge of Health Plans (Insurances) Willing to cover and cross-train. Serious inquiries only. No Phone Calls. Fax Resume: Attn: Office Manager 505-9837643
MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! Please visit www.sfnmclassifieds.com for photos. BY APPT 505-699-9222.
APPLIANCES BREADMAN PLUS, makes bread, bagels, pizza dough and more. $25. 505-982-6438.
FRIGIDAIRE 12 cu.ft. upright freezer $150. TiVo Series 2 digital video recorder (Model TCD-24004A) $20. Conair Metropolis retro telephone (Model SW2504) $15. Call 505-5774967. WASHER, $125. ELECTRIC DRYER $150. Like new. 505-438-6297
ART A PAIR OF NUMBERED (11418 OF 13238) SIGNED BY BEV DOOLITTLE "GUARDIAN SPIRITS" PAINTINGS. Beautifully framed in inlaid wood and indian arrowheads. Painting size is 21x19" Price is $1500.00 (Set) Call to see or buy (505) 270-5526 BEAUTIFULLY FRAMED Shonto Begay original painting $2250.00 "Don’t Follow Me" 505-471-4316 or colavs19@comcast.net Indian Market Blue Ribbon Navajo Artist and Museum Collected $5000.00 retail, Must Sell.
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES
NEW VISTAS Early Intervention Specialist - bilingual candidates highly preferred. Please refer to www.newvistas.org for details. EOE
SEWING MACHINE. SINGER FEATHERWEIGHT, TABLE MODEL. 1930S. All accessories, with case. Good condition. $400. 505-466-6205
Part-time Experienced HOUSECLEANER FOR LUXURY HOMES. Call for appointment. 505-982-4891
BUILDING MATERIALS
Warehouse The Food Depot.
Seeks dedicated employee for shipping & receiving at warehouse. Full-time, $13-20 hourly + benefits. Computer experience a MUST. Clean driving record required. Commitment to mission of ending hunger. Deadline May 16. Apply 1222 A Siler in SF or info@thefooddepot.org. Drug-free workplace.
BUILDING M A T E R I A L S Gre en House, Flea Market kits, Landscaping, Fencing, Vehicles, Trailer. Contact Michael at 505-310-2866, 505310-9382 or Jackalope 505-4718539. RECYLCLED ASPHALT (millings). $18 per cubic yard. Free deliver with 11 yard purchase. 505-316-2999
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT BEAUTIFUL REFRIGERATED DISPLAY 60". Very good condition. Purchased new and used only for 15 months. $2,200. 505-471-3265.
PART TIME EXPERIENCE COOK wanted at Pecos Monastery for Saturday, Sunday, & Monday. Call 505-757-6415 for information. No prior applicants need apply.
Part-time MAINTENANCE position at Upaya Zen Center. Responsible for daily operations of campus. Includes benefits. Cover letter, resume: resumes@upaya.org by 5/16. No phone calls please.
CLOTHING
seeks highly motivated individual for on-site membership sales in our four museums. Seasonal, flexible schedule. museumfoundation.org/employm ent/ for more information. SANTA FEAN & NOW MAGAZINES seek experienced full-time advertising sales pro for print & online products. Send resume to badams@santafean.com
TECHNICAL THE NEW MEXICO BUREAU OF GEOLOGY AND MINERAL RESOURCES, a research and service division at New Mexico Tech in Socorro, NM, invites applications for the position of ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR FOR HYDROGEOLOGY PROGRAMS, SENIOR HYDROGEOLOGIST. For details and how to apply, view the full posting at http://geoinfo.nmt.edu/news/annou ncements.cfml and at http://www.nmt.edu/hr-jobs-at-nmt E-mail applications NOT accepted. THE SANTA Fe Playhouse is seeking a Technical Director to oversee lighting, sound, set design and construction maintenance. Visit www.santafeplayhouse.org/news
TRADES EXPERIENCED BENCH Jeweler, must do excellent work. High-karat gold, gems, Native jewelry repair. Reliable, responsible, mature. Part-time. Hourly wage DOE. References required. 820-1080. FRAMERS & Helpers wanted for Los Alamos Area for stucco removal and for window installs. Please call 505220-4450.
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.
ACROSS 1 Big-eyed birds 5 Spanish house 9 Witchy woman 14 Toy in the sand 15 For whom the memo is intended: Abbr. 16 Window sticker 17 Frozen breakfast brand 18 *Pre-performance audio test 20 Zap, as leftovers 22 Carnival city 23 Bunny features 24 Gallery display 25 *Area marked with police tape 28 New England whitefish 30 Pipe joint 31 “Huzzah!” 33 Singer Ronstadt 36 Puddle-bottom earth 39 Objects of worship 40 Historic timespan 41 Theater platform 43 Bench for flock members 44 Zapped while resisting arrest, say 46 Turbaned Punjabis 47 Quick hellos 48 Concur 50 *Disturbing potential, as of a gory film scene 54 Lbs. and ozs. 57 “All __ Jazz” 58 Crew blade 59 Spread out ungracefully 61 *Best possible poker hand 64 Athletic shoe brand 65 Many a lowbudget flick 66 Bassoon cousin 67 Steam outlet 68 Horror or romance, e.g. 69 Sunbeams 70 “Understood” DOWN 1 La Scala production 2 Put money (on) 3 *Lasers at a rock concert, e.g.
5/12/14
By Jennifer Nutt
4 Gin flavoring 5 Fidel or Raúl of Cuba 6 From __ Z 7 __ und Drang 8 Sharpshooter Oakley 9 Atlanta-based health org. 10 Fix, as a shoe 11 Humpback whale’s home 12 Mother-of-pearl 13 Lodge fellows 19 Supplied medicine to 21 Word puzzle that involves a quotation 26 Waits at a light, say 27 School reunion organizer 29 Swindle 31 Shrill bark 32 Star pitcher 34 Wrath 35 Eight-time French Open champ Rafael 36 Cause a sensation, or what the first words of the answers to starred entries may do
Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
37 “Blech!” 38 __ Moines 42 Bit of business attire 45 Demand from 47 Windbag’s bagful? 49 Overdoes the praise 50 Glistened 51 “Surprise Symphony” composer
5/12/14
52 Heroic behavior 53 Vacation island off Venezuela 55 Packagefastening rope 56 Fine-grained rock 57 Math course with sines and tans 60 Sitarist Shankar 62 “Do the Right Thing” director Spike 63 __ milk
LA Times Crossword Puzzle Brought to you by:
FIREWOOD-FUEL
2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507
505-473-2886
www.FurrysBuickgMC.com
Customer Service Rep. - Full time. See our ad on sfnmclassifieds.com and indeed.com. Email: hrdept343@cableone.net.
Museum of New Mexico Foundation
986-3000 our small experts today! Edited by RichCall Norris and Joycebusiness Lewis
DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down baseball jersey. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205
SALES MARKETING
LOOKING FOR energetic person for sales position in arroyo secco, salary plus commission great hours position available now! Fax resume to 505-242-9555.
INTAKE COORDINATOR Behavioral Health Full-time position at Santa Fe Community Guidance Center providing initial assessment, triage and referral services for children. Independent license required.
ANTIQUES
OFFICE MANAGER, BOOKKEEPER, INSURANCE Coordinator needed for extremely busy Dental Office. Mail to: 202 E. Marcy Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501. Attn: Blind Box #5005.
THE SANTA Fe Playhouse is seeking an Artistic Director to develop, fulfill the Theatre vision. For more information: www.santafeplayhouse.org/news
B-7
THE NEW MEXICAN
2014 GMC TERRAIN SLE-1 ULTRA LOW-MILEAGE LEASE FOR WELL-QUALIFIED VETERANS, ACTIVE DUTY AND RESERVISTS
KIVA FIREPLACE Inserts. Custom built to fit the fireplace. 25 years experience. Rusty Dobkins 575-535-2905.
STOP IN FOR PRICING INFORMATION! USAA MEMBERS RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL $750 PRIVATE OFFER5
FURNITURE
SEE ALL SPECIAL MILITARY DISCOUNTS 6’ DIning Table. Tropical Wood, with carving along apron, very beautiful. Matching chairs available. $500. 505231-9133.
AT GMMILITARYDISCOUNT.COM
Not available with some other offers. Take delivery by 6/2/14. See dealer for details.
5
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
sfnm«classifieds FURNITURE
HORSES
to place your ad, call DOMESTIC
986-3000
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
DOMESTIC
4X4s
DOMESTIC
2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek - ANOTHER Lexus trade! AWD, sunroof, just 14k miles, single owner, clean CarFax, Why buy new? Buy preowned only $22,981. 505-216-3800.
Come visit our new "Décor & More" section offering decorative items, paintings, kitchen & bath accessories, and more. 2414 Cerrillos Rd.
HANDSOME BAY Quarter Type gelding, 14 year old, 15 hands, has been on cattle and spent extensive time on trails in the mountains. Sound, a willing attitude and walks out. $2000.00 call 432-294-1250
2008 BUICK ENCLAVE WITH ALL THE GOODIES, VERY SHARP RIDE, $18,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
2002 ELDORADO CADILLAC SLR CONVERTABLE 31,000 miles. New Tires. Super Clean. Leather Interior. Power windows, seats, locks. Heated Seats. BOSE Sound System. $20,000 OBO 505-310-3652 .
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
CALL 986-3000
PETS SUPPLIES HANDMADE SPANISH Colonial Style red oak with carved rosettes: Large desk, Credenza, Bookcase, 2 chairs. $9,750. Call 505-982-0778 for appointment.
4X4s
ADORABLE, HEALTHLY multigeneration labradoodle puppies. Born 3/5/14. White- cream and chocolate. First shots. Parents on premises. $500. Located in Roswell. 575317-1237. AKC REGISTERED IMPERIAL SHIH TZU MALE. 8 weeks old, 2.7 pounds, vet checked, shots, mostly white with light brown spots. $500. 505-4244363, 505-501-1729.
CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, Teacup size. Male & Female, 6 weeks. Grey, brown, and black. Negotiable price. 505-216-8278 after 5 p.m. CHIHUAHUAS & POMERANIANS. Very affordable, playful, loving. 505-5700705 or 505-920-2319
2010 FORD FOCUS- $8000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. Call today 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2004 AUDI-A6-S QUATTRO-AWD
2008 CHEV MALIBU- NICE CAR! $11000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
Another Local Owner, Records, Manuals, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo WELL KEPT $9,950
HOOPBACK WINDSOR CHAIRS. Handmade. Rubbed black stain finish. Turned legs. Set of 4. Perfect. $500. (paid $1700). 505-690-6528
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, Carfax:
LARGE ENTERTAINMENT CENTER. Space for tv, stereo, and storage. Smokey glass doors. $100. 505-2319133. QUALITY, SOLID PATIO BENCHES. 38"Hx35.5"L or 39"Hx38.5"L. $200 300. 505-982-4926 Set of 6 Dining chairs, tropical wood with carving. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
POMERANIAN puppies. Quality double coats, registered and UTD shots. Beautiful tiny Chihuahua female, chocolate, first shots, $450. 505-9012094 or 505-753-0000. RACING PIGEONS for sale, some with pedigrees, some white or red. $5-$15 each. No dogs or hawk trainers. 505-954-4252
SUNDANCE MAJESTA 880 LUXURY SPA. Excellent condition. 35 jets. Seats 5. $2,900. 505-466-3802, 6704170.
F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $14,900. 505-470-2536
»finance«
2008 HONDA RIDGELINE 4WD$14000 Record Sales= Great Trades! - Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
2003 LINCOLN TOWNCAREXECUTIVE- $8000 Record Sales= Great Trades! - Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-9204078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com 2014 CHEVROLET CRUZE 2 LT. 16,791 miles. Just one owner, who treated this vehicle like a member of the family. $16, 989.
KIDS STUFF
2006 CHEV 1500 4WD - $9000. Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. C a l l 5 0 5 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . www.furrysbuickgmc.com
CHERRYWOOD CONVERTIBLE CRIB with mattress. $250. Matching Chest of drawers, $300. Matching glider rocking chair, $100. New Carseat, $50. 505-795-8884
2001 JEEP CHEROKEESPORT 4X4
Another One Owner, Local, Every Record, Manuals, X-Keys,NonSmoker, Garaged, Loaded Pristine, Soooo CLASSIC $9,250
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, CarFax:
LAWN & GARDEN TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT HOVEROUND MPV5 Wheelchair great condition, like new 2795.00 new, will sell for 1,000.00 call 204-2309.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY for the animal lover. Full-service pet boarding business, crematory, residence, rental units. $950,000. Sam Goldenberg & Associates, 505-8200163.
OBRIEN EXCELLERATOR 320 WINDSURFER. Excellent condition, includes board, mast, & sail. $175. 505490-2285
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, CarFax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
GET NOTICED!
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
WESTON MANDOLINE V e ge ta b l e Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-466-6205
HOIST MULTI-PURPOSE Weight Lifting Bench. Asking $100, cost $300. 505-231-9133.
2006 CHEVROLET HHR. A RARE TREASURE. $8,488. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
1997 CHEV SUBURBAN 4WD- $4000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
»cars & trucks«
OLDER MODEL ok, looking for a large piano accordion and amp. 505-5701385.
BACKPACKS: OSPREY ECLIPES 42 & DANA DESIGN ARCLIGHT HARDCORE. Both like new, $80 each. 505-490-2285
505-983-4945
Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 7 Passenger, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo RARE, $21,450
505-983-4945
MISCELLANEOUS
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
santafeautoshowcase.com
2006 MERCEDES-E350 WAGON AWD
2005 DODGE RAM 1500 4WD $15000. Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade TodayCall 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com.
CALL 986-3000
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
1989 MERCURY Grand Marquis, V8, 4 door, new tires, excellent condition. $1,800 OBO, will consider trade. Se habla Espanol. 505-280-2722
18" FACTORY Chrome Wheels, with Michelin Tires. Fits Chrysler 300. all 4 at $500. Espanola, 505-490-4158.
2003 NISSAN XTERRA 4WD- $7000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today.505-920-407 8. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
So can you with a classified ad WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
CLASSIC CARS Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
2006 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER $7000 Record Sales = Great Trades!- Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
SLEEPING PADS: Therm-A-Rest & Pacific Outdoor (used once), $60 each. 505-490-2285
Part-time GraPhic DesiGner
WANT TO BUY VACUUM TUBES, Testers, amps speakers turntables 1960s or older Ill pay cash I buy large groups of tubes. 505-570-1385
»animals«
The Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, an award-winning weekly newspaper in the mountain resort town of Angel Fire, New Mexico, has an immediate opening for a Graphic Designer to work 30 hours a week. Selected candidate will produce ads for the newspaper and special sections, tone photographs, flightcheck PDFs and assist sales staff and clients with PDF settings/mechanical specs/color profiles.
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
DOMESTIC 2012 DODGE CHARGER HEMI R/T $28000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today Call 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
HORSES
2011 BMW 328XI - ONLY 20k MILES - $29000- 2 @ THIS PRICE Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
1994 BUICK REGAL- 58K MILES! $5000. Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com BREEDING SERVICE Triple Registered, gaited, homozygous tobiano stallion. Live spotted foal guaranteed. $350-$300. TBeckmon@SkiesRBlue.com www.SkiesRBlue.com 505-470-6345
Qualifications: High school diploma, BA in graphic design or related field or equivalent work experience, plus two years of experience in publishing, newspaper production and/or advertising design. Must have ability to multitask and be deadline oriented. Excellent composition skills with strong understanding of black and white and four-color design and production, ability to format/fix PDFs, and knowledge of Mac platform and of industry-standard design applications including Adobe (CS3 or higher), InDesign, PhotoShop, Illustrator, Acrobat required. apply with cover letter and resume by 5 p.m. on Friday, may 16, 2014, to:
2009 DODGE AVENGER. 100,841 miles. Don’t let the miles fool you! What a price for an ’09! $9,155. Call today.
Lisa morales General manager sangre de cristo chronicle 3403 mountain View Blvd. angel Fire, nm 87710 or e-mail lmorales@sangrechronicle.com. Equal Opportunity Employer
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds 4X4s
IMPORTS
2004 PONTIAC GTO- 5.7L V8$11000, Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2004 AUDI-A6-S QUATTRO-AWD
Another Local Owner, Records, Manuals, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo WELL KEPT $9,950
to place your ad, call IMPORTS
1987 JAGUAR XJ6 - WOW! only 48k miles! a TRUE classic, try to find a nicer one, accident free, amazing condition, drives great $10,931. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000
B-9
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
IMPORTS
IMPORTS
2008 Mercedes ML350 - another Lexus trade! AWD, good miles, well-maintained, truly excellent condition, Luxury for less at $20,997. Call 505-216-3800.
2012 TOYOTA COROLLA. DON’T PAY MORE. LOW, LOW MILES. $13,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
SUVs
2012 FORD EXPLORER XLT. 38,768 MILES. ARE YOU STILL DRIVING AROUND THAT OLD THING? COME ON DOWN TODAY! $28,881.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, Carfax:
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945
2008 SATURN Sky Red Line - ANOTHER Lexus trade! Low miles, just ONE local owner, clean CarFax, new tires, just in time for summer! $15,981. Call 505-2163800.
1999 Jeep Wrangler Sahara - recent trade-in! Don’t miss this rare opportunity, ONLY 83k miles, 4WD, auto, M/T tires, recently serviced, NICE! $11,971. Call 505-216-3800.
2006 MERCEDES-E350 WAGON AWD
GET NOTICED!
Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, 7 Passenger, New Tires, Pristine, Soooo RARE, $21,450
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
CALL 986-3000
2007 TOYOTA FJ CRUZIER. VERY CLEAN WELL KEPT VEHICLE. ONLY $16,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
View vehicle, CarFax:
2013 Lexus CT200h - Receive over 40mpg, recent local trade-ins, low miles, all one owner clean CarFax, with original MSRP ranging from $33k-$37k, 4-to-choose, starting at $27,931. Call 505-216-3800.
santafeautoshowcase.com
505-983-4945 PICKUP TRUCKS
2012 TOYOTA Tundra DCab Rock Warrio - 4WD, single owner clean CarFax, just 30k miles, looks impressive, new tires, immaculate $29,897. Call 505-216-3800. 2009 BMW 335Ci xDrive. WOW! Merely 43k miles, just 1 owner, Premium & Cold Weather Packages, clean CarFax $24,841. Call 505-216-3800.
2006 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE - $11000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2002 DODGE DAKOTA CREW- $6000 Record Sales= Great Trades! - Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade T o d a y 5 0 5 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . www.furrysbuickgmc.com .
2013 Lexus RX350 - the AWD vehicle you know you deserve! recent trade-ins and former Lexus loaners, all well-equipped with clean CarFax, 8 to choose, starting at $41,871. Call 505-216-3800
2008 MINI Cooper Clubman. ANOTHER Lexus trade! low miles, clean CarFax, well-equipped, immaculate! $13,871.Call 505-2163800 2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Yup, another 1 owner from Lexus! NEW tires, NEW brakes, clean CarFax, low miles, the search is over! $18,611. Call 505-216-3800.
1998 DODGE Ram 1500. Automatic, A/C, new transmission, good condition. $4,000 OBO. 505-685-0800.
2004 VW PASSAT WAGON 4MOTION - $8000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today 505-920-4078. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2002 FORD F250 CREW 4WD LARIAT- 7.3L POWERSTROKE! $11000. Record Sales= Great Trades! Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
TRUCKS & TRAILERS 2006 BMW-X5 AWD AUTOMATIC Local Owner, Clean Carfax, All Service Records, Non-Smoker, Garaged, Manuals, Xkeys, New Tires, Panoramic Roof, Leather, Loaded, Soooo Afford-ably Luxurious, Pristine $14,450. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
2007 LEXUS GX470 4WD - capable and luxurious, new tires & brakes, well maintained, NAV & rear DVD, beautiful condition, clean CarFax, the RIGHT one! $22,831. Call 505-216-3800.
VIEW VEHICLE santafeautoshowcase.com Paul 505-983-4945
GOOSE NECK FLAT BED TRAILER FOR SALE. New tires, Beaver loading ramps, $3,500. Also 18’ FLAT BED TRAILER, $1,500. 505490-1809
2004 MINI COOPER-S MANUAL
Another One Owner, Local, Records, Manuals, X-Keys, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo CUTE, $10,650.
1992 TOYOTA Land Cruiser FJ80. Excellent condition. 190k miles. No rust. NO lockers. Text for information and pictures. 505-660-4117 $7,000
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, CarFax:
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
2002 FORD F250 CREW 4WD LARIAT7.3L POWERSTROKE! $11000. Record Sales= Great Trades! Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
santafeautoshowcase.com 2006 LEXUS SC430 - UNREAL! Merely 35k miles, still smells new, collector quality & condition, new tires, all services complete, pristine & just absolutely PERFECT, don’t miss it $32,871. Call 505216-3800.
CAT MOTOR grader 112 F series, 1969, clean tight machine. 12’ mow board, 4 cylinder, 3304 cat engine, roll bar, new radiator, 1,200 hours. Call Ron, 505-577-4008.
2008 GMC ENVOY SLE- $11000 Record Sales= Great Trades! Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today. Call 505-321-3920. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
505-983-4945
SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT...
TOYOTA TACOMA 2006 Excellent Condition, 1 Owner, Only 46K miles, Dealer Maintained, Custom Camper Shell, 2WD, Air Conditioning, Bed Liner. The truck will be dependable for another 10-12 years. Please Call James at 505-920-0521.
KENWORTH SEMI truck 1991 6 cylinders, 300 Cummins L-10, 9 speed, 411 Gear Ratio, 1200 lb. Front Axel, 275,000 miles. In good condition. $12,500.00 Call Ron, 505-577-4008.
»recreational«
SPORTS CARS
Using
Larger Type
Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!
IMPORTS 2004 LEXUS RX-330 AWD
Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, Manuals, X-keys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo BEAUTIFUL $14,950
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
will help your ad 986-3000 get noticed
Call Classifieds For Details Today!
986-3000
View vehicle, CarFax:
2005 ACURA TSX - $9000 Record Sales= Great Trades! - Get Your Deal on a Fresh Trade Today 5 0 5 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 . www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2011 HONDA CR-V EX-L - another 1owner Lexus trade-in, AWD, leather, moonroof, clean CarFax, don’t miss this one! $19,897. 505-2163800.
santafeautoshowcase.com
CAMPERS & RVs
2012 SRT-8 DODGE CHALLENGER. FASTEST CAR IN SANTA FE, SAVE THOUSANDS $36,999 SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
505-983-4945 2004 FLEETWOOD TOY HAULER. 26’, Sleeps 6, Generator, Gas tanks, A/C, Propane grill, Air compressor, TV, fridge, Shower, Bathtub. 505-471-2399
. .
2014 NISSAN VERSA. 16,603 miles. Don’t pay too much for the stunning car you want. $14,774. Call us today!
ACURA 3.2 TL. WELL CARED FOR. RECENT TIMING BELT, TIRES. ELECTRICAL AND BRAKES OKAY. 129,882 K MILES. $3100. CALL 474-5304.
2011 HONDA Odyssey Touring Elite - recent Lexus trade-in! Low miles, single owner, every option, mini-van LUXURY, the one to own! Clean CarFax $32,871. Call 505-216-3800.
2002 Lexus SC430- ready for the season! Hardtop convertible, only 75k miles, well-maintained, fun AND elegant, don’t miss this one for $18,721. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 AUDI A3 TDI - DIESEL, 40+mpg, one owner, clean CarFax, this is your chance $22,341. Call 505-2163800.
NISSAN MAXIMA 2002 GLE 4-door Sedan. 116,500 miles. Leather interior, sunroof, 4 snow tires. Clean Carfax. $4950. Kris @ 988-8060.
SUVs
2008 INFINITI M35 - great tires, new brakes, just serviced, fully loaded with nav, heated, cooled leather, and Bose sterio, clean CarFax, luxury for less $18,721. Call 505-216-3800.
2013 TOYOTA Camry SE - just traded!, low miles, excellent upgrades, 1-owner, clean CarFax . Why would you buy new? $21,481. Call 505-216-3800.
2012 CHEVROLET CAPTIVA. 34,991 miles. Your lucky day! Don’t pay too much for the SUV you want. $15,974. Call today!
2010 SUBARU Impreza 2.5i Premium - AWD, heated seats, low miles, new battery, new belts, new tires, recently serviced, one owner, NICE $15,921. CALL 505216-3800.
1999 FOREST RIVER CAMPER. Bumper Pull 21’, duel axles, self-contained. Excellent condition. $6,000 OBO. 505660-4079
2007 Hitch Hiker, $29,900. KING SIZE Bed, A/C, heater, electric and LP water heater, wood flooring, installed slide out drawers, auto roof vent, HDTV with stereo system. Good tires. 3200 watt generator. Perfect condition. 505-982-1479. ROCKWOOD CAMPER Pop-up Trailer Model-2302, 2004, very good condition. Fully loaded with many options $4,500. 575-758-4086, pilarnmpeteson@gmail.com
RAV4 2001 01 Toyota Rav4 4x4, 4cyl, auto, silver, gray, 70k mi. 2L engine gasoline, no rust, excellent condition mechanically and electrical $3500 phone # 518-620-6355
1986 TOYOTA CONQUEST RV, Great Shape! 4 cylinder. Very Clean! Call Dan to check it for yourself. Cell 310980-9013
B-10
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
sfnm«classifieds LEGALS LEGAL # 96892 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 00035
D-101-PB-2014-
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MYRNA NEEFF WHEELER, DECEASED
LEGALS
LEGALS
p y es will be rehabilitated in the following counties: Bernalillo, Sandoval, Socorro, Taos, Rio Arriba, Dona Ana, Hidalgo, Grant, Chaves, Luna, Sierra, Catron, Lea, Eddy, Otero and Curry, including Tribal Land, but excluding properties located within the incorporated city limits of Albuquerque and Las Cruces.
( omitted a step or failed to make a decision or finding required by HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 58; (c) the grant recipient or other participants in the project have committed funds or incurred costs not authorized by 24 CFR Part 58 before approval of a release of funds by HUD; or (d) another Federal agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR Part 1504 has submitted a written finding that the project is unsatisfactory from the standpoint of environmental quality. Objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with the required procedures (24 CFR Part 58) and shall be addressed to CPD Environmental Review Officer, 500 Gold Avenue SW. 7th Floor, Suite 7301, PO Box 906, Albuquerque, NM 87103-0906. Potential objectors should contact HUD at (505) 346.7345 to verify the actual last day of the objection period.
The activities proCRED- posed are categorically excluded under HUD regulations at 24 NOTICE IS HEREBY CFR Part 58 from NaGIVEN that the under- tional Environmental signed has been ap- Policy Act requirepointed Personal ments. The activities satisfy Representative of proposed this estate. All per- HUD’s 24 CFR Part 58 sons having claims regulations and the against this estate National Environmenare required to pres- tal Policy Act. In acwith § ent their claims with- cordance in two (2) months af- 58.15, a tiered environmental review ter the date of the has been first publication of process this Notice or the performed. A Tiered claims will be forever review is a two-step barred. Claims must environmental review be presented either process. Target areas to the undersigned have been identified the following Personal Representa- and tive, c/o Gerber & Ba- laws and authorities teman, P.A., P.O. Box have been complied 2325, Santa Fe, New with pertaining to: Mexico 87504, or filed Wetlands, Farmlands, with the First Judicial Sole Source Aquifers, District Court of San- Wild and Scenic Rivta Fe County, Post Of- ers, Coastal Barriers Coastal Zone fice Box 2268, Santa and CompliFe, New Mexico 87504. protection. Dated this 30th day of ance with the following laws and authoriApril, 2014. ties will take place / s / A l l a n during the second step once properties Jepson Wheeler within the target area ALL have been identified: Floodplains, Historic AN JEPSON WHEELER Properties, Airport P e r Clear Zones, Explosonal Representative sive and Flammable Operations, Toxic Maand Lead GERBER & BATEMAN, terials Based Paint. P.A. Attorney for the Personal Representative An Environmental Review Record (ERR) By: /s/Frank Kenneth that documents the environmental addiBateman FRANK KEN- tional project information is contained NETH BATEMAN in the Environmental Post Office Box 2325 Santa Fe, New Mexico Review Record (ERR) on file at the MFA, 344 87504 (505) 988-9646 / (505) Fourth Street, SW, Albuquerque, NM 87102 989-7335 (Fax) and may be examPublished in The San- ined or copied weekta Fe New Mexican days 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. May 5, 12, 2014. NOTICE ITORS
TO
PUBLIC COMMENTS LEGAL # 96899
Any individual, group, NOTICE OF INTENT TO or agency may subwritten comREQUEST THE RE- mit ments on the ERR to LEASE OF FUNDS MFA. All comments received by June 2, May 16, 2014 New Mexico Mort- 2014 will be considgage Finance Author- ered by the MFA prior to authorizing subity 344 Fourth Street, SW mission of a request Albuquerque, NM for release of funds. 87102 RELEASE OF FUNDS 505-767-2260 This notice shall satisfy procedural requirements for activities to be undertaken by the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority (MFA). REQUEST FOR THE RELEASE OF FUNDS On or about June 2, 2014, the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority (MFA) will submit a request to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the release of funds under Title II of the CranstonGonzales National Affordable Housing Act (NAHA) of 1990, as amended, for the HOME Investment Partnership Program (24 CFR Part 92) in the amount of $3,200,000 to undertake a project known as the House by House Reservation Rehabilitation Program for the purpose of rehabilitating single family homes owned and occupied by low income families. Approximately 63 hous-
Continued...
SUSANA MARTINEZ GOVERNOR
The MFA certifies that Jay Czar in his capacity as the Certifying Environmental Official consents to accept the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts if an action is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to the environmental review process and that these responsibilities have been satisfied. HUD’s approval of the certification satisfies its responsibilities under NEPA and related laws and authorities, and allows the MFA to use Program funds.
Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican May 12, 2014. Legal #96921 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. May 14, 2014. To obtain a copy of the Request for Proposal please contact the RFP procurement manager: Joseph Miano RFP Procurement Manager New Mexico Department of Game and Fish One Wildlife Way Santa Fe, NM 87507 Telephone #: (505) 476-8086 Fax #: 476-8137 E m a i l : joseph.miano@state. nm.us
OBJECTIONS TO THE RELEASE OF FUNDS HUD will accept objections to its release of funds and MFA’s certification for a period of fifteen days following the anticipated submission date or its actual receipt of the request (whichever is later) only if it is on one of the following bases: (a) the certification was not executed by the Certifying Officer of MFA; (b) MFA has
Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on April 30 and May 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13, 2014.
Continued...
Continued...
Legal #96925 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT IN THE MATTER OF A PETITION FOR
RETTA WARD CABINET SECRETARY
New Mexico Department of Health Public Health Division/Maternal & Child Health Program Legal Notice - Request for Providers The New Mexico Department of Health Maternal & Child Health Program is inviting healthcare providers to participate in the Department’s High Risk Prenatal Care Program, beginning July 1, 2014. Interested Medical Doctors/ Certified Nurse Midwives that offer specific health care services to eligible
986-3000
to place legals call toll free: 800.873.3362 LEGALS CHANGE OF NAME OF CESAR ANTONIO AGUILAR RAMIREZ Case No. D-101-CV2014-00809
LEGALS LEGAL # 96991 NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST THE RELEASE OF FUNDS
email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com LEGALS
Any individual, group, or agency may submit written comments on the ERR to MFA. All comments received by June 2, 2014 will be considered by the MFA prior to authorizing submission of a request for release of funds.
May 16, 2014 New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority 344 Fourth Street, SW TAKE NOTICE that in Albuquerque, NM accordance with the 87102 RELEASE OF FUNDS provisions of Sec. 40- 505-767-2260 8-1 through Sec 40-8-3 The MFA certifies that NMSA 1978, et seq. the Petitioner Cesar This notice shall sat- Jay Czar in his caAntonio Aguilar Ram- isfy procedural re- pacity as the Certifyirez will apply to the quirements for activi- ing Environmental OfHonorable Francis J. ties to be undertaken ficial consents to acMathew, District by the New Mexico cept the jurisdiction Judge of the First Ju- Mortgage Finance of the Federal Courts if an action is brought dicial District at the Authority (MFA). to enforce responsiSanta Fe Judicial Complex in Santa Fe, REQUEST FOR THE RE- bilities in relation to the environmental reNew Mexico, at 11:00 LEASE OF FUNDS view process and a.m. on the 16th day of May, 2014 for an On or about June 2, that these responsiORDER FOR CHANGE 2014, the New Mexico bilities have been OF NAME from Cesar Mortgage Finance satisfied. HUD’s apAntonio Aguilar Ram- Authority (MFA) will proval of the certifiirez to Shyahm Agui- submit a request to cation satisfies its reunder lar Sifuentez. the Department of sponsibilities and related Housing and Urban NEPA Stephen T. Pacheco, Development (HUD) laws and authorities, District Court Clerk for the release of and allows the MFA to By: Jessie Garcia funds under Title II of use Program funds. Deputy Court Clerk the CranstonGonzales National AfSubmitted by: fordable Housing Act Petitioner, Pro se (NAHA) of 1990, as OBJECTIONS TO THE amended, for the RELEASE OF FUNDS Published in Santa Fe HOME Investment HUD will accept obNew Mexican on May Partnership Program jections to its release 5 and 12, 2014. (24 CFR Part 92) in the of funds and MFA’s amount of $3,200,000 certification for a peto undertake a proj- riod of fifteen days LEGAL # 96944 ect known as the following the anticisubmission House by House Res- pated REQUEST FOR PRO- ervation Rehabilita- date or its actual rePOSALS tion Program for the ceipt of the request purpose of rehabili- (whichever is later) P R O P O S A L tating single family only if it is on one of NUMBER ’14/44/P homes owned and the following bases: occupied by low in- (a) the certification Proposals will be re- come families. Ap- was not executed by ceived by the City of proximately 63 hous- the Certifying Officer Santa Fe and shall be es will be rehabilitat- of MFA; (b) MFA has delivered to the City ed in the following omitted a step or of Santa Fe Purchas- counties: Bernalillo, failed to make a deciing Office, 2651 Sandoval, Socorro, sion or finding reSiringo Road Building Taos, Rio Arriba, Do- quired by HUD regu"H" Santa Fe, New na Ana, Hidalgo, lations at 24 CFR Part Mexico 87505 until Grant, Chaves, Luna, 58; (c) the grant re2:00 P.M. local pre- Sierra, Catron, Lea, cipient or other parvailing time, June 6, Eddy, Otero and Cur- ticipants in the proj2014. Any proposal ry, including Tribal ect have committed received after this Land, but excluding funds or incurred deadline will not be properties located costs not authorized considered. This pro- within the incorporat- by 24 CFR Part 58 beposal is for the pur- ed city limits of Albu- fore approval of a repose of procuring querque and Las Cru- lease of funds by professional services ces. HUD; or (d) another for the following: Federal agency actThe activities pro- ing pursuant to 40 H O M E O W N E R S H I P posed are categori- CFR Part 1504 has SUPPORT PROGRAMS cally excluded under submitted a written HUD regulations at 24 finding that the projThe proponent’s at- CFR Part 58 from Na- ect is unsatisfactory tention is directed to tional Environmental from the standpoint the fact that all appli- Policy Act require- of environmental cable Federal Laws, ments. The activities quality. Objections State Laws, Municipal proposed satisfy must be prepared Ordinances, and the HUD’s 24 CFR Part 58 and submitted in acrules and regulations regulations and the cordance with the reof all authorities hav- National Environmen- quired procedures ing jurisdiction over tal Policy Act. In ac- (24 CFR Part 58) and said item shall apply cordance shall be addressed to with § to the proposal 58.15, a tiered envi- CPD Environmental throughout, and they ronmental review Review Officer, 500 will be deemed to be process has been Gold Avenue SW. 7th included in the pro- performed. A Tiered Floor, Suite 7301, PO posal document the review is a two-step Box 906, Albuquersame as though here- environmental review que, NM 87103-0906. in written out in full. objectors process. Target areas Potential have been identified should contact HUD The City of Santa Fe is and at (505) 346.7345 to the following an Equal Opportunity laws and authorities verify the actual last Employer and all have been complied day of the objection qualified applicants with pertaining to: period. will receive consider- Wetlands, Farmlands, ation for employment Sole Source Aquifers, Published in The Sanwithout regard to Wild and Scenic Riv- ta Fe new Mexican race, color, religion, ers, Coastal Barriers May 12, 2014. sex, sexual orienta- and Coastal Zone tion or national ori- protection. Compligin. The successful ance with the followproponent will be re- ing laws and authori- LEGAL # 96994 quired to conform to ties will take place the Equal Opportuni- during the second Notice is hereby givty Employment regu- step once properties en that on March 11, lations. Mr. Stuart within the target area 2014, have been identified: Tallmon, 2255 Paseo Proposals may be Floodplains, Historic de Los Chamisos, held for sixty (60) Properties, Airport Santa Fe, NM 87505 days subject to ac- Clear Zones, Explo- filed Application No. tion by the City. The sive and Flammable RG-94451, with the City reserves the Operations, Toxic Ma- OFFICE OF THE STATE right to reject any of terials and Lead ENGINEER for Permit all proposals in part Based Paint. to Change Location of or in whole. Proposal Well and Add a packets are available An Environmental Re- Groundwater Point of by contacting: Shir- view Record (ERR) Diversion. The appliley Rodriguez, City of that documents the cant seeks to disconSanta Fe, Purchasing environmental addi- tinue use of well RGOffice, 2651 Siringo tional project infor- 94451, a declared preRoad, Building "H" mation is contained basin well, located at Santa Fe, New Mexi- in the Environmental a point where co, 87505, (505) 955- Review Record (ERR) X=1,721,437 feet and 5711. Y=1,690,516 feet, on file at the MFA, 344 Fourth Street, SW, Al- NMCS, NAD 83 Central Robert Rodarte, Pur- buquerque, NM 87102 Zone for the diverchasing Officer and may be exam- sion of 1.05 acre-feet ined or copied week- of water per annum Published in The San- days 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 used for domestic ta Fe New Mexican P.M. and irrigation purMay 12, 2014. poses, on 0.35 acres described as within PUBLIC COMMENTS NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME
To place a Legal ad Call 986-3000
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women will need to submit required paperwork seeking reimbursement for care delivered. Services are outlined under the agreement and delivered under contract with the Department of Health. Contracted services may include: prenatal and delivery services, assessment, management and/or referral services, medical or obstetrical procedures deemed appropriate to high risk pregnancy related conditions. Agreements may include diagnostic, non-routine laboratory testing, ultrasounds and non-stress tests and referral of clients to appropriate providers for indicated services the contracting provider is not equipped to supply. Reimbursement is based on a monthly capitated rate, the availability of funding, and the accurate and complete submission of required reporting forms. Contracted provider responsibilities include, but are not limited to, the following: determining eligibility and enrolling participants; making timely referrals to contracted secondary providers for the provision of appropriate follow up care. Enrollment is limited to women who do not have health insurance coverage of pregnancy care, fall outside of Medicaid-covered Legal #96840 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on May 12, 2014
LEGALS the SW1/4, SE1/4, NW1/4, of Sections 3, Township 16 North, Range 9 East, NMPM, and move this water right to existing well RG-00613, located at a point where X=1,721,387 feet and Y=1,690,406 feet, NMCS, NAD 83 Central Zone. In addition the applicant seeks to drill well RG94451(POD2) as a Supplemental Well, approximately 130 feet from the old well, at a proposed location of X=1,721,403 feet and Y=1,690,386 feet, NMCS, NAD 83 Central Zone. The old well, RG-94451, shall be plugged. The wells are located on land owned by the applicant at the residence 2255 Paseo De Los Chamisos, located east of Camino Carlos Rey, north of West Zia Road, west of St. Francis Drive, within Santa Fe City limits, New Mexico. 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) Public 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 the Office of the State Engineer, Water Rights Division, P.O. Box 25102, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 875045102 within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (faxes) 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 Office of the State Engineer, 505/8276682. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in the most appropriate and timely manner. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican May 12,19,26, 2014. LEGAL # 96996 PUBLIC NOTICE The New Mexico Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (NMDVR) is holding public hearings to receive comments on proposed changes to the NMDVR State Plan Preprints and Attachments. Friday - May 23, 2014 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM San Juan Center for Independence 1204 San Juan Blvd Farmington, NM 87401 Thursday - May 22, 2014 10:00 AM to 12 Noon Executive Conference Room 5301 Central, NE, 201 Albuquerque, NM 87108 Thursday - May 22, 2014 10:00 AM to 12 Noon NMDVR Roswell Office Conference Room 1014 S. Atkinson Ave. Roswell, NM 88203 Thursday - May 22,
LEGALS y y 2014 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM NMDVR Las Cruces Office Conference Room 3381 Del Rey Blvd. Las Cruces, NM 88012 Thursday - May 22, 2014 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM NMDVR Administrative Office Conference Room 435 St. Michaels Dr., Bldg. D Santa Fe, NM 87505 All are welcome to attend and provide comments on the proposed changes. The proposed changes to the State Plan may be viewed a t www.dvrgetsjobs.co m in the "Hot Topics" section. Individuals may speak, ask questions, or submit written comments during the hearings. Comments regarding the State Plan may be submitted at any time; those received after June 27, 2014 will be reserved for future hearings. Submit to: Rich Smith, PIO Division of Vocational Rehabilitation Office of the Director 435 St. Michael’s Drive, Building D Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 505-954-8571 Fax: 505-954-8562 E - m a i l : Richard.Smith@state. nm.us If you need a language interpreter or any other type of accommodation to attend, call Tracy Alcaraz at 800-2247005 no later than May 14, 2014. Last minute requests may not be possible to arrange. Published in The Santa Fe new Mexican My 9,12, 2014.
LEGALS NE, Albuquerque, NM 87107, Phone: (505) 884 1752, Fax: (505) 883-1627. Construction Reporter, 1609 Second Street NW, Albuquerque, NM 87102, Phone: (505) 243 9793, Fax: (505) 242-4758. Dodge Reports, http://construction.c om/dodge/. Bids shall be presented in the form of a total Base Bid proposal under a Lump Sum Contract plus any additive or deductive alternates that are selected by the Owner. A bid must be submitted on all bid items and alternates; segregated bids will not be accepted. In submitting this bid, each Bidder must satisfy all terms and conditions of the Bidding Documents. All work covered by this Invitation to Bid shall be in accordance with applicable state laws and is subject to the minimum wage rate determination issued by the office of the Labor Commissioner for this project. A 100% Performance Bond executed by a surety company authorized to do business in the State of New Mexico shall be required from the successful Bidder prior to award of contract. The Owner intends to award this Project to the lowest responsible Bidder. The Owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive technical irregularities, and to award the contract to the Bidder whose bid it deems to be in the best interest of the Owner. A PreBid Conference will be held as follows: DATE: Wednesday, May 14, 2014; TIME: 10:00 am. LOCATION: East Rio Arriba SWCD, 424-H South Riverside Drive, Suite H, Espanola, NM. END OF INVITATION TO BID.
Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on May 8, 9, 12, 13, 14, 15 INVITATION TO BID. and 16, 2014. EAST RIO ARRIBA SOIL & WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT Legl# 96976 NEW OFFICE BUILDING. SEALED BIDS The New Mexico EnviWILL BE RECEIVED ronment Department, Storage UNTIL WEDNESDAY, Petroleum JUNE 4, 2014, 2:00 PM, Tank Bureau will hold THEN PRIVATELY a Storage Tank ComOPENED. THIS BID IS mittee meeting on SUBJECT TO THE RE- Wednesday, May 14, QUIREMENTS OF THE 2014 at 10:00 AM. The will take BIDDING DOCUMENTS meeting AS DEFINED IN THE place at the Harold Building, "INSTRUCTIONS TO Runnels Auditorium BIDDERS," SECTION Runnels 00100. THE BID PRO- 1190 S St Francis Dr., POSAL FORM MUST Santa Fe, NM 87505. BE ACCOMPANIED BY The meeting agenda A SURETY BOND, SUB- is available on the at CONTRACTOR LIST- Web ING FORM, AND http://www.nmenv.st DOCUMENTS SPECI- ate.nm.us/ust/ustco FIED IN THE "IN- m . h t m l or from the Storage STRUCTIONS TO BID- Petroleum DERS." Plans and Tank Committee AdTrina specifications will be ministrator: distributed by Albu- Page, Petroleum Storage Tank Bureau, NM q u e r q u e Reprographics, 884- Environment Depart2905 Rodeo 0862, upon payment ment, of $50.00 for each Park Bldg. 1, Santa Fe, complete set. NM 87507, (505) 476CHECKS SHOULD BE 4397. MADE PAYABLE TO "EAST RIO ARRIBA Persons having a disSOIL & WATER CON- ability and requiring of any SERVATION DIS- assistance aid, e.g., TRICT." Incomplete auxiliary sets will not be is- Sign Language Intersued. The successful preter, etc. in being a Bidder will receive re- part of this meeting fund of his deposit, process should conand any unsuccessful tact the Human ReBureau as Bidder who returns source the Bidding Docu- soon as possible at ments in good and the New Mexico Envicomplete condition ronment Department, Services within fifteen (15) Personnel P.O. Box days of the Bid Open- Bureau, ing will also receive 26110, 1190 St. Francis refund of this depos- Drive, Santa Fe, NM, telephone it. No deposits will be 87502, returned after the fif- (505) 827-9872. TDY teen day period. BID- users please access DING DOCUMENTS number via the New MAY BE REVIEWED AT Mexico Relay NetTHE FOLLOWING LO- work at 1-800-659CATIONS: Builder’s 8331. News and Plan Room, Published in The San3435 Princeton Drive ta Fe New Mexican May 5-May 14, 2014. Legal #96999
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pregnancy care parameters and who have, or are suspected of having, a high-risk medical or obstetrical condition during pregnancy. poverty at or below 200% of the federal poverty guidelines, who are not eligible for Medicaid coverage other than Medicaid Category 85, and who have or are suspected of having a high-risk medical or obstetrical condition during pregnancy. Interested healthcare providers must show required licensure and certification, and must complete an application packet by May 12, 2014. Eligible entities interested in becoming contracted providers should contact the following person to obtain a provider packet, or to address questions concerning this request: Amber Montoya New Mexico Department of Health 2040 S. Pacheco Street Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 (505) 476-8907 amber.montoya@state.nm.us
TIME OUT
ACROSS 5 Spider’s production
41 Small fight 42 Letter after pi 43 One minus one
12 ___ Domini
44 Stainless ___
13 “Hell if I know”
45 One of a couple
gesture 15 Initial money for the pot
person 20 ___ Canals, Michigan/Ontario
in a 767 48 “You are so-o-o funny” 49 A sleeve covers it 52 Droop 55 By way of 57 Impossible to
separator 21 Overly
see through 59 Boeing 767, for one
22 ___ out a living
63 Encourage
23 Kimono, e.g.
64 Canis, for dogs
26 Medical
65 Wading bird
practitioners:
66 Couple
Abbr.
67 Used a chair
28 See 68-Across
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, May 12, 2014: This year you often feel uncomfortable in what normally are easy situations; you could feel awkward at work or at the dentist’s office. Take good care of yourself.
47 Jabber
16 High-stakes wager 19 Simple country
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
in rapture
8 Having a couple of elements
Horoscope
40 Fainted, as
1 Couple
68 One of a couple for
29 Gossipy sort
the Roman god
32 Arkansas town
28-Across
where Bill Clinton was born 35 Female deer 36 Traveling performers 38 Complete lawlessness
DOWN 1 San Diego baseballer 2 Actress Aimée 3 Occupied, as a restroom
4 Gen. ___ E. Lee
17 Old Italian money
40 Actor LaBeouf
5 First of
18 Matador
42 Stadium cheer
24 Floating
46 Northern
a journalist’s five W’s
marker
6 Flub 7 Hot dog holders
Scandinavian
for a sailor
49 Jordanian port
25 WNW’s opposite
50 Like Old Norse
27 Nap
8 “Zip-a-Dee-
28 Article of sports
Doo-___”
writing 51 Reagan attorney
attire with
9 The “U” of B.T.U.
a number
10 “… ___ cost
30 Something
to you!”
to whistle
general Edwin 52 Macho guy 53 Wonky 54 Prefix with watt
11 Toy brick maker
31 Mimic
56 Puts on years
13 More, at a meal
32 Broadbrim, for one
58 First Arabic letter
33 Burden
60 Beatty of
14 Someone who’s so nice you almost
34 Future’s opposite
“Superman”
want to smack
37 Old name for Tokyo
61 All ___ day’s work
him
39 Split with an ax
62 Pecan or cashew
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes. com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscroptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
Chess quiz WHITE WINS A PIECE Hint: Just take it. Solution: 1. Bxc5! does it. If ... dxc5, 2. Qg2! (threatens both Qxg7 mate and 2. Rxd8).
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:BUILDINGSANDSTRUCTURES (e.g., This structure is on Salisbury Plain. Answer: Stonehenge.) FRESHMAN LEVEL 1. It is the meeting place of the U.S. Congress. Answer________ 2. At this site, President Ronald Reagan demanded the razing of the Berlin Wall. Answer________ 3. This palace and fortress complex is located in Granada, Spain. Answer________ GRADUATE LEVEL 4. This palace in Istanbul was the primary residence of the Ottoman sultans. Answer________ 5. This temple on the Athenian Acropolis is dedicated to the goddess Athena. Answer________ 6. It contains the Hall of Mirrors. Answer________ PH.D. LEVEL 7. This cathedral is on the eastern half of the Ile de la Cite. Answer________ 8. It is also known as the Flavian Amphitheatre. Answer________ 9. It is formally titled the Collegiate Church of St Peter at Westminster. Answer________ ANSWERS: ANSWERS: 1. The U.S. Capitol. 2. The Brandenburg Gate. 3. The Alhambra. 4. Topkapi Palace. 5. The Parthenon. 6. Palace of Versailles. 7. Notre-Dame Cathedral. 8. The Colosseum. 9. Westminster Abbey.
Jumble
Monday, May 12, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher
Today in history Today is Monday, May 12, the 132nd day of 2014. There are 233 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On May 12, 1949, the Soviet Union lifted the Berlin Blockade, which the Western powers had succeeded in circumventing with their Berlin Airlift.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You might be uncomfortable with what an associate and/or friend verbalizes. You understand that this person is not seeing the big picture. Tonight: Visit over dinner. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH You might be deferring to someone else more than you need to be. You could feel as if this person has a better grasp on a situation. Tonight: Say “yes” to an offer. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Curbing your playfulness could be difficult, or even impossible. You’ll want to see the big picture. Prepare accordingly. Tonight: Use your ingenuity! CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Be more playful and forthright about a situation. Know what you want, and investigate a problem more fully. Tonight: Nap, then decide. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You might want to encourage a discussion. You have many ideas, as do those around you. Be wise, air out your differences and go for the best solution. Tonight: Make it easy. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Listen to news with an eye to change. The impact could be financial. You might want to step back and observe more. Tonight: Time for a twoway talk. Confirm what you hear.
B-11
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Grandparent can’t afford teens’ visits
Dear Annie: I have twin teenage granddaughters who visit me every year for a week. They also bring along a friend (just one, thank goodness). I love having them, but I end up spending a fortune entertaining them. I pay for every meal, including restaurants, and we eat out a lot. I love to take them places, but I’m on a fixed income and would like to make it less expensive. Do you think if I were to give each of my granddaughters a set amount of money they would be more frugal? They earn a lot of money babysitting, but I feel funny asking them to spend their own money on things when they visit me. Any suggestions? — Going Broke in Florida Dear Going Broke: You should not have to foot the entire bill for two teenagers and their friend. You are already giving them a free place to stay and any meals eaten at home. But please don’t demand payment from the girls. Instead, ask the parents to help you with the cost of entertaining these young people for a week. They also could give the girls an allowance for personal expenses (movies with the friend, trips to a restaurant, mall purchases). The extra girl’s parents should similarly send her with personal money so she does not become a burden. Taking the girls for a week is a lovely way to bond with your granddaughters, but it is also a favor to the parents. Explain the situation and ask them to help remedy the problem. Dear Annie: Our nephew recently announced his engagement and wedding date. His fiancee’s older sister is getting married two weeks before. The sister’s future husband called my nephew and flat-out stated that it is inappropriate that they have chosen a date so close to theirs, as it will take away from their special day. He suggested my nephew move his wedding to December at the earliest.
However, the sister has not mentioned a word of this to my nephew’s fiancee. We can’t help but think that she, too, is upset about this and asked her fiance to handle it. We are disappointed that what could be the happiest time of our nephew’s life is filled with stress. What is the wedding protocol in this instance? — Aunt and Uncle from Wisconsin Dear Aunt and Uncle: It was very inconsiderate of your nephew and his bride to schedule their wedding two weeks after her sister’s already-chosen date. It does indeed take away from their special day, and more importantly, it puts a terrible burden on family and friends in terms of gifts and travel expenses. It also appears to others as though your nephew’s bride resents her older sister. We hope you can convince your nephew to give his guests a few months to recover from the first wedding before attending the next. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Blue-Collar Grandparents,” whose grandchildren are pulling out their hair. I’d like to suggest that they bring up the possibility of PANDAS (pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorders associated with strep). If either of these kids has had numerous strep infections, perhaps they should be tested and assessed. I realize now that my son must have had this when he was 4, but I’d never heard of it then. He had seven strep infections in a row. He began displaying OCD behavior, which included pulling out nearly half of the hair on his head. If your child has multiple strep infections, it might be worthwhile to check for PANDAS, if only to rule it out. — A Sympathetic Grandmother Dear Sympathetic: Thank you for mentioning PANDAS. There is currently no test for PANDAS, but doctors look for a sudden onset of OCD and/or tic disorders following multiple strep infections.
Sheinwold’s bridge
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might be less grounded than someone you’re working with, but your creativity and intellectual resourcefulness are likely to point to the correct path. Tonight: As you like it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Assume a low profile in how you deal with a personal matter. You also might not want to lie low in other areas. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You’ll want to zero in on the real issue behind a problem; otherwise, the group will not come to a consensus. Tonight: Stop and visit with a friend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Take charge of a problem in order to prevent a significant fallout from happening. Allow your creativity to flow. Tonight: Join some friends for a fun adventure.
Cryptoquip
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You might be more stuck on a professional matter than you realize. Remain sensitive to a friend or loved one at a distance. Tonight: Consider taking a trip. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might want to revise your thinking about an investment. A discussion with a partner could be difficult. Tonight: Return calls, and catch up on a friend’s news. Jacqueline Bigar
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, May 12, 2014
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
B-12
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER