Pope’s sex abuse panel pledges more accountability Page A-3
New log-home compound overlooks scenic Pecos River Valley Home, inside Santa Fe Real
Estate Guide
May 2014
Locally owned and independent
Sunday, May 4, 2014
www.santafenewmexican.com $1.25 Garrett ‘Castle
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Day laborers wait for work at De Vargas Park on April 24. The Great Recession caused construction-related jobs to dry up, but as the economy picks up, workers who gather at the park say jobs are slowly coming back. Luis Sánchez Saturno/The New Mexican
Day laborers see more work as economy creeps back Local demand for cheap labor has picked up since recession By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican
A gray truck drives slowly along De Vargas Street and stops in front of the park where day laborers congregate. About five men surround the vehicle, asking the driver, “How many do you need?” Two men climb into the truck and drive off with him. Luciano Flores, a 64-year-old immigrant from Mexico who is sitting on a nearby bench with a lunch bag strapped around his back, chuckles at their eagerness. “Oh, well,” he says in Spanish. The jostling is a hopeful sign for the small and often-overlooked community of day laborers, almost always men, who gather every day outside the state Department of Workforce Solutions building across from De Vargas Park. During the last recession, construction jobs were scarce in Santa Fe, and demand for day labor declined sharply. But in one of the few signals that the local economy may be picking up, the need for cheap labor to help in landscaping, construction and home improvements is growing again. Not as fast as the men would like, but any improvement is good. Many of the men who gather daily at the park are undocumented, but not all. Some are living here legally, but because of age or work-related injuries, they can’t find full-time jobs. The park is their next best option. On any given weekday, about 40 men of various ages gather at the park starting at 6 a.m., waiting to get picked up by either landscaping companies who need extra help or by Santa Fe residents who simply need a person to do some handiwork around the house. At about 8 a.m., Mara Taub, co-founder of Los Amigos del Parque, an immigrant advocacy organization, starts serving orange juice and coffee
Please see LABOR, Page A-5
No dropout solution here
Cyclists endure ‘Torture’
Harmful education cuts
“What was Santa Fe smoking when it was sold this bill of goods?” asks Dorothy Klopf about Engage Santa Fe. Opinions, B-1
Participants in annual mountain bike race revel in pain and terrain of challenging competition. Local News, C-1
A new report says lower per-student spending, rising tuition will hurt the state’s economy. Local News, C-1
Opera overhaul
In debate, Dems save attacks for governor Candidates promise to back primary victor in challenging Martinez
An artist’s rendering of the renovated entrance. Courtesy The Santa Fe Opera
By Steve Terrell The New Mexican
$23M project will expand, upgrade off-stage areas at SFO By Anne Constable The New Mexican
E
verything looks flawless on the stage of The Santa Fe Opera — the scenery, the props, the costumes. For music lovers, the whole experience, from the mountain views, occasional lightning displays and worldclass musical performances, is matchless. But off-stage and behind the scenes, things are far from perfect. Opera expansion Size of existing facilities: 36,066 square feet Size after overhaul: 64,325 square feet
The dressing rooms used by opera divas such as Susan Graham, Natalie Dessay and Joyce DiDonato are reminiscent of summer camp. There’s a grim communal shower and a minimum of privacy in the toilet area. Inside the scene shop, there isn’t room to assemble an entire set. That has to be done on the open stage, outdoors on the deck or sometimes in Stieren Hall. Because there’s no dedicated paint shop, crews have to improvise. In the costume shop, there’s not enough room
between the work tables to even roll a rack of clothes, and there are only two tiny fitting rooms. Bolts of stock fabric are stored outside in barrels covered with a blue tarp. During intermissions, long lines form outside the opera’s restrooms and bars. It’s a struggle to get to the cash register in the opera shop. In short, the SFO, one of the most successful companies in the United States, is in dire need of an overhaul — and it’s getting one starting at the end of this season.
Opera club: 4,000 now; 7,965 after
Entrance/Plaza: 4,716 now; 6,920 after
Number of women’s restrooms: 42 now; 63 after Number of men’s restrooms: 30 now; 46 after Prop/scene shops: 13,940 now; 25,540 after
Please see DEBATE, Page A-4
Officials say confronting phone thieves is a bad idea
A
B
By Ian Lovett
The New York Times
C
Dressing rooms, costume shop: 13,410 now; 23,900 after
Rendering courtesy The Santa Fe Opera
Obituaries
New apps transform old method of driving around to check out homes and neighborhoods.
Today Mostly sunny. High 82, low 45.
Katherine (Kay) Keros Hertz, 78, Santa Fe, May 1 George Richard Alexander Maitland, Rio Rancho, April 11 Barbara Townsend Meem, 97, Santa Fe, April 30 Julianna Mikhailovna Ossorgin, 83, May 1 Miguel Phillip Trujillo, 73, April 30
Real Estate, E-1
Page D-6
Page C-2
Calendar A-2 Classifieds E-9 Lotteries A-2 Neighbors C-7 Opinions B-1
ALBUQUERQUE — The five Democratic candidates for governor seemed to be adhering to a selfimposed “fireworks ban” at a forum Saturday, as they fastidiously avoided taking any shots at one another. In fact, at the end of the two-hour debate sponsored by the state Democratic Party, Attorney General Gary King, state Sens. Linda Lopez and Howie Morales, longtime government administrator Lawrence Rael and Santa Fe businessman Alan Webber all pledged to enthusiastically support whoever wins the June primary to take on incumbent Republican Gov. Susana Martinez. All five agreed on several issues, including raising the state’s minimum wage to $10.10 an hour, allowing
Please see SFO, Page A-4
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Contemporary Clay Fair Works by more than 30 potters and artists, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Santa Fe Women’s Club, 1616 Old Pecos Trail, contemporaryclayfair.com.
WEST COVINA, Calif. — After a boozy Saturday night, Sarah Maguire awoke the next morning to find that her iPhone was gone. Her roommate’s phone was gone, too. Were they at the bar, she wondered, or in the cab? Using the Find My iPhone app on her computer, she found that someone had taken the phones to a home in this Los Angeles exurb, 30 miles east of her West Hollywood apartment. So Maguire, a slight, 26-year-old yoga instructor, did what a growing number of phone theft victims have done: She went to confront the thieves — and, to her surprise, got the phones back. “When I told my mom what I did, she thought I was crazy,” Maguire said. With smartphone theft rampant, apps like Find My iPhone offer a new option for those desperate to recover their devices, allowing victims like
Please see PHONE, Page A-6
Real Estate E-1 Sports D-1
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
NATION&WORLD School ag programs flourish as farms dwindle The Associated Press
Police in Maryland announce prostitution busts on Twitter
Dr. Katherine Parkin on Friday shows one of her vintage postcards at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, N.J. Her postcards depict images ridiculing women who would propose as aggressive and unattractive. JULIO CORTEZ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
If it’s OK for women to propose, why don’t they? Young people say they find the practice ‘unacceptable’ By Connie Cass The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Steve Paska waited two weeks for Washington’s famously fickle cherry blossoms to emerge, then spent two hours searching for the perfect spot beneath the canopy of fluff. He lured his girlfriend there on the pretext of buying a painting of the blooms. Then he surprised her by dropping to one knee and proposing. She said “yes” so fast he forgot to pull out the ring. Go to any wedding celebration this nuptial season, whether in a ballroom or backyard or church basement, and it’s a good bet you can trace the big day to a similar start, with different flourishes. If a man is marrying a woman somewhere in America, odds are that he proposed to her. That may seem obvious, but consider this: Three-fourths of Americans say it would be fine for the woman to do the proposing, in theory. In practice, only about 5 percent of those currently married say the woman proposed, and the figure is no higher among couples wed within the past 10 years. Attitudes actually seem to be trending the other way, an Associated Press-WE tv poll shows. Young adults are more likely than their elders to consider it “unacceptable” for a woman to do the asking. More than one-third of those under age 30 disapprove. While Paska, 26, believes female proposals are OK — after all, one of his sisters proposed to her boyfriend — he wanted to declare his love and dedication the traditional way. “I think If she’d gotten down on one knee and asked me the question,” Paska said, “I would have called for a timeout.” In the survey, nearly half of single women who hope to get married someday say they would consider proposing. Paska and his fiancée, Jessica Deegan, who both live in Arlington, Va., already had decided together that they wanted to marry, she said. Still, Deegan was thrilled that he made it offi-
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cial with a grand romantic gesture on April 10. “It’s kind of like the moment you imagine your whole life,” she said. “I’ve seen that in movies. I’ve read that in books. You don’t want to miss out on that moment.” That traditional moment has survived radical changes in U.S. marriages over the past half-century. People are marrying older; brides are more likely to be already supporting themselves. It’s become commonplace to live together first, even to have children before marriage. Some men are proposing to men and women to women, now that one-third of U.S. states allow gay marriage. But the boy-asks-girl proposal still reigns, updated to a public art form in Facebook and YouTube videos that feature flash mobs or scavenger hunts or proposals while skydiving or swimming with dolphins. “Destination” proposals are trending, too, for men who want a California beach or the Eiffel Tower as the setting. There are even “proposal planners” who can help arrange flowers, musicians and a videographer. Ellie Pitts, a planner who works in Dallas for The Yes Girls, said the group has handled more than 350 proposals around the country and abroad, nearly all by men. A few clients were lesbians. Only one so far was a woman asking a man — a boyfriend whose proposal she had turned down previously. “I think it probably takes a woman with a lot of guts to be able to do it,” said Pitts, who is newly engaged herself, to a man who did the asking. “At least in my experience with my girlfriends, women tend to be a little more ready to get engaged and move forward than men are, so asking the question before he asks might tend to backfire.” A woman who proposes also risks criticism for her boldness, said Katherine Parkin, an associate professor of history at Monmouth University in New Jersey. Parkin researched the folk tradition that claimed women could propose only during a leap year. She found that the idea triggered mockery every four years for much of the 20th century. Postcards, ads and articles portrayed women who would propose as desperate, aggressive and unattractive. The leap year joke has faded, she said, but the stigma lingers.
WASHINGTON — In the coming week, say police in Prince George’s County, Md., vice officers will take to the streets to arrest people suspected of soliciting prostitutes. But in an unusual twist, they’re planning to give the public an inside look at the sting operation — detailing it live on Twitter. Police said on their blog that it’s a way to show how the department is “battling the oldest profession.” Tweeting “suspect photos and information,” they said, will serve as a warning and a deterrent. But the plan has provoked a backlash. Critics suggest that the tactic is no more helpful to protecting the public than watching an episode of “Cops.” They also worry that the posted photos could go viral, possibly destroying the reputation of those wrongly accused as well as punishing suspects before they are convicted of a crime. Despite the criticism, the department isn’t backing down, said chief spokeswoman Julie Parker.
2 adults, 3 kids found dead in Pennsylvania cabin ELIMSPORT, Pa. — Two adults and three children were found dead Saturday inside a small cabin in north-central Pennsylvania, authorities say. State Police Capt. David Young told the Williamsport Sun-Gazette the bodies were discovered by the owner of the 10- by 16-foot cabin just before noon in rural Washington Township in Lycoming County. Young said the preliminary investigation showed no signs of foul play and the cause of the deaths was not considered suspicious. But state police are looking at all possibilities, including carbon monoxide poisoning, he said. A propane heater was found inside the cabin. The two adults were identified as 23-year-old Jacqueline R. Stackhouse and 30-year-old Nathan L. Reece. Authorities did not release the names of the children — a 9-year-old girl, a 4-year-old girl, and Stackhouse’s 3-year-old son. Aside from the mother and son, police did not know how the victims were related.
Man with rare MERS illness improving, state officials say INDIANAPOLIS – A man hospitalized in Indiana with the first U.S. case of a mysterious virus that has sickened hundreds in the Middle East is improving, state health officials said Saturday. The Indiana Department of Health said in a statement late Saturday that the patient remains at Community Hospital in Munster in good condition and is “improving each day.” The statement also said that as of Saturday, no other cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS, have been identified. Representatives from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention arrived at the hospital Saturday morning. The man fell ill with Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS, after flying to the U.S. late last week from Saudi Arabia, where he was a health care worker. New Mexican wire reports
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3 dead in Arkansas shooting; gunman later found dead JONESBORO, Ark. — Arkansas police say a man suspected of fatally shooting two people inside a home and a worker at a business has been found dead inside a stopped car. Jonesboro Sgt. Doug Formon says a man and a 13-year-old girl were killed Saturday afternoon inside the residence in east Jonesboro. Four people — including two boys — were injured and were taken to hospitals in Memphis, Tennessee. Formon says it appeared a family was having a party or gathering. A few minutes later, authorities responded to a shooting at a business near a U.S. highway where a worker was found shot to death. The man Formon says is the suspected gunman was found in the driver’s seat of a stopped car. It wasn’t clear if the gunshot was self-inflicted.
By Jim Suhr
ST. LOUIS — High school agriculture programs sprouting across the nation’s Corn Belt are teaching teenagers, many of them in urban environments, that careers in the field often have nothing to do with cows and plows. The curriculums, taking hold as school budgets tighten and the numbers of farms in the U.S. decline, are rich in science and touted as stepping stones for college-bound students considering careers in everything from urban forestry to renewable natural resources and genetic engineering of crops, perhaps for agribusiness giants such as Monsanto, Dow, DuPont and Pioneer. Ag-minded students are in luck: Tens of thousands of jobs open up each year in the broader agriculture field, and roughly half are filled by college grads with actual ag-related degrees, observers say. “There’s a shortage of workers in a number of careers, and the numbers of those jobs are staggering,” said Harley Hepner, the Illinois State Board of Education’s chief consultant for ag education. “Schools that understand we can get students in the ag program know they’re going to be taxpaying citizens with good-paying jobs.” Along with school programs, membership in Future Farmers of America is up to about 580,000 — nearly double its ranks of the mid-1980s. That spike dispels the notion the national organization is merely a haven for farm kids, given that the number of U.S. farms are on a long-term downward trend, shrinking another 4 percent between 2007 and 2012, according to the latest federal figures available. Untold numbers of FFA members have scant to do with farms, as Rebecca Goodman illustrates. In Indiana, where corn is king, the 18-year-old junior is her school’s active FFA president but could never be confused for a country girl. Goodman, who’s lived in Indianapolis since she was 3, had never been on a farm, and her experience with animals is limited to cats and dogs. Yet Goodman aspires to be a conservation officer, crediting tiny Beech Grove schools’ fledgling agricultural sciences program with steering her that way.
In brief
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Sunday, May 4 WIND FESTIVAL: The Wildlife West Nature Park in Edgewood hosts its third annual event, with large kite-flying fields, wind gadgets, flags, vendors and kite-flying prizes. Learn about water harvesting and renewable energy, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., 87 N. Frontage Road. CONTEMPORARY CLAY FAIR: Works by more than 30 potters and artists will be on display at the Santa Fe Woman’s Club 10 a.m.-5 p.m., 1616 Old Pecos Trail. CINDERELLA CONFIDENTIAL: The Santa Fe Performing Arts Youth Program presents a “noholds-barred comic exposé of the timeless love story and what it means to find and tell the truth,” 2 p.m. at the Armory for the Arts Theater, 1050 Old Pecos Trail; tickets are $8. Call 984-1370. I LOVE YOU, YOU’RE PERFECT, NOW CHANGE: Jimmy Roberts’ musical on dating, love and marriage, 2 p.m., Los Alamos Little Theatre, 1670 Nectar St. in Los Alamos. SPRING AWAKENING: A musical based on Frank Wedekind’s once-controversial play, 2 p.m., the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. THE LILAC MINYAN: A play by Debora Seidman, presented
Lotteries by Metta Theatre, 2 p.m., Teatro Paraguas, 3205 Calle Marie, teatroparaguas.org. CINCO DE MAYO: A celebration will be held for Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families, 1-5 p.m. at El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe, 555 Camino de la Familia. BATTLEFIELD NEW MEXICO: El Rancho de las Golondrinas, the living history museum in La Cienega, will holds its 2014 Civil War weekend. Battle reenactments begin at 2 p.m. The event includes demonstrations, music, a presentation on the lives of women, a fashion show and a display of weapons. Tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and teens 13-18; free for children under 13. El Rancho de las Golondrinas is just south of Santa Fe at 334 Los Pinos Road. Visit www.golondrinas.org or call 471-2261. CANTICUM NOVUM: The chorus and chamber orchestra features a piano concerto by Hal Campbell in the final performance of its 10thanniversary season; also music of Bach, Leoncavallo and Yon; performers include soprano Cecilia Leitner, tenor Andre Garcia-Nuthmann, and pianist Peter Vinograde, 7 p.m., New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave. DIXON FIRE DEPARTMENT PANCAKE BREAKFAST & RAFFLE: Dixon Volunteer
Fire Department will hold its annual Pancake Breakfast and Raffle, with spring plant and veggies sale in parking lot, 8 a.m.-noon, 220 N.M. 75. EUROPE DAY IN SANTA FE: Council on International Relations and World Affairs Councils of America host a dinner and a screening of Philippe Lioret’s 2009 film Welcome, 5-9 p.m., Bishop’s Lodge, 1297 Bishops Lodge Road. JOURNEY SANTA FE PRESENTS: Update on Fracking in Mora County, a discussion with community organizer Kathleen Dudley, 11 a.m., Collected Works, 202 Galisteo St. LIFE DRAWING: Weekly figurative-drawing class with models, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Duel Brewing, 1228 Parkway Drive. MIKE BUTTERFIELD: The local author discusses and signs copies of his monograph New Mexico’s High Peaks: A Photographic Celebration, 3 p.m., Collected Works, 202 Galisteo St.
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Corrections
NIGHTLIFE
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035.
Sunday, May 4 COWGIRL BBQ: The Fallen Stars, Americana/rock, 8 p.m., 319 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Jazz pianist Glen Neff, 5-8 p.m., 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: Chanteuse Nacha Mendez, 7:30 p.m., 808 Canyon Road.
LA POSADA DE SANTA FE RESORT AND SPA: Guitarist Wily Jim, Western swingabilly, 7-10 p.m., 330 E. Palace Ave. VANESSIE: Pianist/vocalist Kathy Morrow, 6:30 p.m., 427 W. Water St.
WORLD
Observers held in Ukraine freed later, but the rest remained in custody until Saturday. The Associated Press The insurgents’ leader in Slovyansk, Vyacheslav PonoMOSCOW — European mili- marev, was quoted by Interfax tary observers who were held news agency as saying he more than a week by insurgents ordered the release because in eastern Ukraine walked free of increasing insecurity in the Saturday, with Kiev insisting the city. In recent days, at least release proves Russia is foment- four Ukrainian soldiers were ing unrest in Ukraine — as killed on the city’s outskirts — Moscow touted the insurgents two of them when helicopters as courageous humanists. were shot down — and at least The latest battling narratives 10 civilians have been killed, came a day after dozens of according to Ponomarev. protesters died while trapped He later told The Associated in a horrifying fire in Odessa, Press that the OSCE observers hundreds of miles away.Kremlin “are not being released — they spokesman Dmitry Peskov said are leaving us, as we promised the deaths show Ukraine’s actthem.” ing leaders are “are up to their One of the released observelbows in blood,” while authori- ers, German Col. Axel Schneities in Kiev blamed pro-Russia der, said that the 12 detainees provocateurs. held up well. Those held The incidents highlight the included three other Germans intractability of Ukraine’s crisis, and a soldier each from the in which pro-Russia insurgents Czech Republic, Denmark and have seized government buildPoland. ings in about a dozen cities and “They had a very good attitowns in the east and Ukraitude and that gave them the nian forces have tried to regain strength to stand the situation,” control in a limited military Schneider said of the observoffensive. Looming on the other ers. “According to the word of side of the border are tens of [Ponomarev], we have been thousands of Russian troops, treated as good as possible. This whom Kiev fears are waiting for is a miserable situation, but we a pretext to invade. were under his protection.” A pact struck between Russia, The non-Ukrainians were Ukraine, the European Union flown late Saturday to Berlin and the United States in midand reunited with their families. April aimed to resolve the crisis “We are all very happy,” emphasized the importance of Schneider said at Tegel Airport. an observer mission from the “We saw our families again — Organization for Security and that’s not something we would Cooperation in Europe. But the have imagined last night.” mission’s prospects became “Imagine that last night we clouded a week later, when were still under fire,” he said. eight of its military observers The release negotiations and five accompanying Ukraini- included Vladimir Lukin, a ans were detained by insurgents representative of Russian Presiin the city of Slovyansk, the cru- dent Vladimir Putin. Lukin was cible of unrest in the east. The brought in as part of an initiainsurgents alleged the observtive led by Thorbjorn Jagland, ers were spying for NATO and the head of the Council of carrying suspicious material; Europe, a European humanone from non-NATO member rights body, according to COE Sweden was released two days spokesman Daniel Hoeltgen. By Jim Heintz and Peter Leonard
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Pope’s sex-abuse panel pledges accountability The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — Members of Pope Francis’ sexual abuse advisory board said Saturday they will develop “clear and effective” protocols to hold bishops and other church authorities accountable if they fail to report suspected abuse or protect children from pedophile priests. Victims groups have long blasted the Vatican for refusing to sanction any bishop or superior who covered up for priests who raped and molested children. They have listed accountability as one of the core issues facing Francis and a key test for his new advisory board. Francis announced the creation of the commission in December and named its members in March after com-
ing under initial criticism for having ignored the sex abuse issue. The commission’s eight members — four of whom are women — met for the first time last week at the pope’s Vatican hotel to discuss the scope of their work and future members. Briefing reporters Saturday, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, said current church laws could hold bishops accountable if they
failed to protect children. But he said those laws hadn’t been sufficient to date and that new protocols were needed. “Obviously our concern is to make sure that there are clear and effective protocols to deal with the situations where superiors of the church have not fulfilled their obligations to protect children,” O’Malley said. Victims groups have long
cited the case of O’Malley’s predecessor in Boston, Cardinal Bernard Law, who resigned in disgrace as archbishop after the sex abuse scandal exploded publicly there in 2002 and Law was shown to have covered up for notorious child rapists. But Pope John Paul II then appointed Law to the plum assignment as archpriest of one of the Vatican’s four major basilicas in Rome.
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DID YOU KNOW? We are opening a health center on the Southside next year.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
SFO: Some suggestions came from patrons
Debate: Martinez campaign anticipated attacks
Continued from Page A-1 “Everything is just so cramped. There are a lot of deficiencies,” General Director Charles MacKay said as he surveyed the backstage areas last week. Some things haven’t changed in 46 years, he pointed out, but new productions are bigger and more complex than ever.
Continued from Page A-1
Tipping point The decision to embark on a massive expansion started with a remark MacKay made to Production Director Paul Horpedahl backstage in the summer of 2012 during a performance of The Pearl Fishers. “What we really need is more wing space,” MacKay said, referring to the areas on both sides of the open-air stage, which now are tight spaces, laden with obstacles and difficult for singers and crew members to navigate in the dark. MacKay didn’t think at the time that there was anything to be done because “the backstage is what it is.” But his comment was what both men described as a “tipping point.” Since MacKay arrived six years ago, they have been keeping a 20-year project list, aka “wish list.” A few weeks after MacKay’s comment, Horpedahl proposed an idea for expanding the wing space, and that morphed into a three-year, $23 million construction project that will renovate about 36,000 square feet and add more than 28,000 square feet to the current facilities. In the new master plan, the wing space will increase by about 14 feet on both sides of the stage. The two freight elevators on either side of the stage, which are enclosed in 50-foottall concrete shafts, and the back stair assembly will have to be moved. In addition to correcting shortcomings and improving efficiency, the project also will “enhance revenue possibilities,” MacKay pointed out, because the SFO will be better able to design and build props, scenery and costumes suitable for other opera enterprises to rent. To pay for the overhaul, the SFO launched a $35 million campaign that includes the money for construction as well as an $8 million reserve for maintenance and $4 million for programming. So far, nearly $24 million has been pledged. The overall project is huge and involves expansion in four major areas of the campus. Construction will begin on the first phase after the conclusion of the current season and is scheduled to finish in time for the 2017 season, the company’s 60th anniversary. Describing the details in Horpedahl’s crowded interior office last week, MacKay called the project “a big deal.” To design it, the opera chose a familiar partner, New York-based, Colombian-born architect Juan Matiz of Matiz Architecture & Design. Matiz joined Polshek & Partners for the tail end of the new theater construction in 1998 and was the project architect for Steiren Hall, a rehearsal space for the opera orchestra and a venue for the pre-opera Prelude Talks that was built in 2001. At the time, Richard Gaddes was in the process of taking over from founding director John Crosby. In 1993, Matiz worked on the initial plans for the opera’s cantina, with its signature canvas sail, and in 2009 on the renovation of the New York office of East 63rd Street in Manhattan. Still, the SFO gave him plenty of “marching orders,” Horpedahl said. “We didn’t want to change the character of the place,” he explained, or risk doing that by choosing someone who would “want to put their brand of art on it.” The original Polshek designs are admired for being simple but powerful — and definitely “not fussy.” Matiz said last week, “The vocabu-
Crews work Tuesday in the scene shop and prop shop at The Santa Fe Opera in preparation for the upcoming season. The opera’s planned expansion will nearly double the shop space, from 13,940 square feet to 25,540 square feet. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
SFO FACILITIES TIMELINE 1957: Opera founded 1968: New opera house built after fire destroys the original 1998: New theater built 1999: Seat titles installed 2001: Stieren Orchestra Hall constructed 2008: New cantina 2010: Gaddes Hall built 2011: Three new vocal studios and O’Shaughnessey Hall renovation
An artist’s rendering of the exterior of the production support area.
2013: 125 parking spaces added
COURTESY THE SANTA FE OPERA
lary that was introduced by the theater is being continued, and in the end, the goal is to have a beautifully cohesive series of buildings that will appear to be a uniform design. Similar to an opera, I see these as separate characters that together will form a single performance.” The construction management will be overseen by Santa Fe-based Harris Consultants, which also has a long relationship with the opera. Mike Harris said last week that as soon as staff vacate the buildings at the end of the season, construction on the first phase — the entrance, plaza area, dressing rooms and costume shop — will commence and continue at a “very rapid pace over the next seven months,” with a goal of finishing April 1, 2015.
Benefits to patrons Some of the improvements will directly affect operagoers, and many changes were prompted by a recent patron survey. One of the respondents advised the opera that at intermission, patrons can either “hydrate” or “rehydrate” (after using the restrooms) but not both. With that in mind, the number of restrooms will be increased substantially. Women’s restrooms will increase from 42 to 63, and men’s from 30 to 46. It also will be faster to buy a drink during intermission, with an increase in the number of bar stations. Expanding Tobin Terrace on the south side of the auditorium and relocating the bar will mean patrons won’t hear the clinking of bottles or the closing of shutters after the performance gets underway again. It also will be easier to pick up prepared food. To the left of the current plaza entrance, the opera will build a kiosk where operagoers can collect pre-ordered meals or buy sandwiches and a glass of wine. There will be more picnic tables with places for another 40 to 50 people set up nearby to accommodate those who prefer to watch the sun setting from the parking lot, and not from their own card tables and folding chairs.
Paul Horpedahl, production and facilities director at The Santa Fe Opera, describes expansion plans Tuesday. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
2013: Renovations of administration offices
The plans in detail A) Entrance/plaza: Besides the food kiosk, changes to the entrance and plaza area will improve traffic flow and reduce congestion, while maintaining what MacKay calls the “amazing, beckoning, welcoming pull” patrons experience as they stroll past the box office through Cibola Plaza. The popular gift shop is expanding and moving to the box office side of the plaza. The number of restrooms in the gift shop building will be increased, and the bar will move to the front of the shop space, where there will be three bartenders instead of two. The restrooms below the press office will become women-only, and a new men’s room will go under the expanded box office and gift shop. B) Opera club: The building that houses the opera club will get a third floor open on three sides that will provide views of the Tesuque Valley. A new bridge will connect it to the mezzanine of the auditorium. And a new elevator will be installed to accommodate people using wheelchairs and speed up the time it takes to exit after the end of the performance. Additional sound baffles will help mute highway noise. “Traffic on 285 is vastly different now than from 1957 or even 1968,” MacKay noted. The existing ladies room on the Stravinsky Terrace level will become all-men, and a new ladies room will be created around the corner of the club building on the same level. C) Prop/scene shops The building housing the prop and scene shops, which Harris said really hasn’t been touched since the late 1960s, when the theater was rebuilt after a fire, will almost double in size. A large loading dock will be constructed off the back, and the interior columns will be removed to open up the space. A new paint shop will be created. Currently, many operations take place outside on the deck or in Stieren Hall, causing a lot of wear and tear on that space, MacKay said. There also will be new air filtration and venting systems that will allow safe disposal of the toxic substances contained in paints, solvents and dyes used in building sets and props. The prop shop will gain its own furniture-building area so staff will no longer have to share with the scene shop. D) Dressing rooms/costume shop: More than 10,000 square feet will be added to the building that contains the costume and wig shops and the dressing rooms for the cast. The design calls for pushing out the walls on two sides. There will be new spaces for designers and craft and millinery workers, and a “step-out” space for principals so they don’t have to have their wigs and makeup done in the dressing rooms. The wig maker has already looked over the designs for new LED makeup lights. Dyeing and other nasty jobs will be moved to rooms along an outside wall for better ventilation. Everything will
be climate controlled. Although the dressing rooms will be gutted, the design strives to maintain the ensemble feel, which makes the SFO experience unique, but there will be more privacy. Both the men’s and women’s chorus dressing rooms will have auxiliary space for dancers and supernumeraries (those with nonsinging roles). Another addition is a green room for cast members who like to play cards or scrabble while waiting to go on stage. The plans call for a new audiovisual suite and a larger room for the conductor that will include an acoustically tuned space for a piano, where he or she can work on last-minute details with a cast member singing at full voice. Horpedahl, one of the opera’s most critical employees, will finally get to move out of his tiny, cramped quarters to a room with a window and a door to the outside. During the first phase, transformer and backup generators now adjoining the lower parking lot will be moved to a nearby hillside. The booths in the back of the theater for lighting, titles and video have already been expanded and new projection equipment added that, in theory, could lead to simulcasts from the SFO, just like at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. All these improvements will make it more feasible for the opera to participate in co-productions like next season’s Cold Mountain with Opera Philadelphia, MacKay said. “We might need to build additional elements [for use on different, inside stages]. And it’s not inconceivable that would we would take in contract work to do other building if we have the capacity,” he explained. The last upgrade will be to the parking lot, after it is no longer being used by the heavy equipment involved in the project. The opera is planning a traffic study as it looks for ways to make it easier for patrons to exit the site after the conclusion of the performance. It’s currently a bit of a scrum, albeit short-lived, as people jockey for position in the lanes going down the hill. Meanwhile, opening night — June 27, Bizet’s Carmen — is less than two months away. In the next month or so, the number of people on campus will grow from 70 to 700. New, less cumbersome and lighter-weight chairs have been delivered and will allow more seating at the cantina for the popular pre-opera buffets. Waves of 2014 apprentices are arriving. In the scene shop, crews are working on the bridge for the premiere of Dr. Sun Yat-sen. And prop shop staff are building chairs for Donizetti’s Don Pasquale. “I myself have attended many times, and strolling during intermission is such a pleasant experience that I hope many more visitors are encouraged to do so as a result of our designs,” Matiz said. Contact Anne Constable at 986-3022 or aconstable@sfnewmexican.com.
undocumented immigrants to continue to be issued driver’s licenses and adopting a comprehensive state water plan. And, to the delight of the 175 or so Democrats who attended the forum at the Nativo Lodge in Albuquerque, all five contenders happily tore into Martinez. Rael said Martinez “is bought and paid for out of state interests” and said “New Mexico cannot afford another four years of Susana Martinez and [her political consultant] Jay McCleskey.” Lopez said Martinez “does not have a heart or soul for this state.” King, gesturing to the audience, said, “Every one of you could do a better job as governor.” Morales, referring to controversial remarks made on recordings of private conversations between Martinez and aides released last month by Mother Jones magazine, said Martinez has tolerated aides who make racist remarks. Webber said three numbers sum up the current administration: 50th in job growth; 50th for the wellbeing of children; and zero, the rate of population growth for the state. The Martinez campaign anticipated the Democrats using the governor as a punching bag. In a statement emailed to The New Mexican on Saturday before the debate, campaign spokesman Chris Sanchez said, “Today, the Democratic candidates for governor will squabble over who can turn back the clock fastest to the days of Bill Richardson, when government spending was out of control and public confidence was at an all-time low. But New Mexicans will not be fooled by their attempts to take us back down a path of failed policies that made things harder and more expensive for families. “While these politicians will descend into negative attacks filled with finger pointing and absent of constructive ideas,” he continued, “Gov. Susana Martinez will remain focused on moving the state forward with meaningful and substantive reforms ensuring workers, students and parents have greater opportunities today than yesterday.” The spirit of unity was so pervasive that none of the Democrats took an opportunity to slam one of their primary election rivals when talking about the shake-up of the state’s mental health system. Last year, the Martinez administration, following an audit, said there was credible evidence of fraud on the part of the state’s 15 largest behavioral health providers and suspended Medicaid payments. The administration hired several Arizona providers, at least some of whom had been contacted before the audit began, to take over from the New Mexico companies. The Attorney General’s Office launched a criminal investigation, although none of the companies under investigation were told the specific allegations for which they are being investigated. At the forum, King was as harsh on the administration as the other candidates. “This was a good example of bad management,” he said, saying his office is trying to fix the problems caused by the shake-up. “The audit was flawed,” King said. “There were lots of mistakes in it. … The standard operating procedure of this administration is to shoot first, ask questions later.” But while King implied that the administration was wrong when officials said there was rampant corruption among the providers, King’s office has only exonerated one of the providers — and hasn’t filed charges against any. Several Democrats in the Legislature have blasted King for taking too much time on the investigation, which has lasted more than nine months so far, and for keeping most of the “flawed” audit secret. But none of his fellow candidates challenged him on it. King, after the forum, told a reporter, “It’s harder to clear someone than it is to charge him.” He said he can’t say how long it will be before the investigation is finished, though he said he expects two more providers will be exonerated in the near future. He said the evidence of fraud is “very thin,” although he added, “I anticipate that there will be some fraud found.” Contact Steve Terrell at sterrell@sfnewmexican.com. Read his political blog at roundhouseroundup.com.
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Labor: Men seek landscaping, building jobs that among the people he interviewed, there “was a sense of community and solidarity.” That seems to be the case here, as well. Artemio Murias, 29, from Tlaxcala, Mexico, moved to Santa Fe nine years ago and says he comes to the park to get work, but at times he is simply looking for the camaraderie. Since going to the park, Murias met 36-year-old Luis Morataya, a Guatemalan immigrant who moved to Santa Fe 10 years ago. Morataya, who usually works as a landscaper, says he only goes to the park for jobs during winter, when his regular job as a landscaper slows down. Morataya volunteers with a youth soccer league, whose message is, “Un deportivo más, un deliquente menos,” which translates to “one more athlete, one less criminal.” He recently invited some of the day laborers to create a soccer team to compete in an adult league. He says his purpose was to help them forget the struggles of being a day laborer — at least on Sundays in the summer. Luis Orozco, a 62-year-old U.S. citizen originally from Chihuahua, says he and other day laborers run the risk of working for an unscrupulous employer who won’t pay them. He says he recently worked for a man for a week doing yard work, but he never was paid the
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Day laborers approach a driver who came to find a worker at De Vargas Park on April 24. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
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along with some breakfast. She says she began providing breakfast in 2001, when there were about 70 park regulars. If she couldn’t find them jobs, she at least wanted to feed them so they had the energy to work. “We benefit [from the day laborers] because they are underpaid, they do not qualify for any of the safety net entitlement programs, they are a cheap source of labor,” she says. “So they get none of the privileges of residents and are forced to live and work in a substandard conditions, and because we don’t treat them fairly, we all benefit from their presence disproportionately.” Flores, who has been living here legally since 2000, says that before 2008, there were plenty of opportunities for jobs at the park. Now they are picking up again, he said, but “who knows if it’s ever going to get as good as it was before?” According the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, in March 2014 in Santa Fe, there were 3,100 jobs in mining, lodging and construction — the category that encompasses day labor construction work — compared with 2,600 in the same fields in March 2013. The latest estimate is still well below December 2007, just before the recession, when there were 4,700 employees in those industries. And economists warn it will be years before the numbers reach pre-recession highs. Nik Theodore, who was part of a team that conducted a national day laborer study in 2006, said the recession affected the residential construction market directly, which lowered the need for day laborers. “For many months … job opportunities were as low as they’ve ever been in decades for day laborers,” said Theodore, a professor of urban planning and policy at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “When we look across the country, it’s uneven as it always is, but it does seem like there has been a recovery within construction industry labor markets.” To survive, many of the day laborers say they go back to their native countries during the winters, when construction slows. Flores says that since he became a legal resident, he returns to Chihuahua, Mexico, during the winter to be with his family. He comes back to Santa Fe during the spring and summer, when construction-related jobs start to pick up again. José Nevares, who emigrated from Chihuahua to Santa Fe more than 30 years ago, says during the recession, many of the day laborers would be temporarily homeless or go back to their home countries because they didn’t work enough here to be able to pay rent. Terry Easton, who conducted a study from 2000 to 2005, titled “Geographies of Hope and Despair: Atlanta’s African American, Latino and White Day Laborers,” said during that time, most day laborers in Atlanta told him they were confident in get-
ting enough work. “If the men were getting work only one day a week or so, they felt that returning home might be necessary — getting work only one day a week was a dangerously low level of work,” Easton said, “because they were making roughly $10 per hour. So one day of work a week was not enough to support their housing, food, transportation [and] costs.” “There was a time we couldn’t bear it,” Nevares said. He became a U.S. citizen after a 1986 law allowing millions of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally to apply for citizenship. Nevares says he used to work for various companies doing cement work, but he hurt his back and got a hernia. Since then, he doesn’t do heavy work because he fears he’ll get hurt again. “I even have to wear a girdle all day,” he says, lifting his blue hoodie to show the garment. Baltazar Lopez, 69, says he moved from Sinaloa to Oregon when he was 10 years old and applied for citizenship when he married a U.S. citizen in Oregon. He has tapped into his Social Security benefits — about $700 a month — and receives about $40 a month in food stamps. But that’s not enough to survive, he says, so he goes to the park. “I don’t have an education,” he says. “But I know how to work.” Lopez, who lives alone after he separated from his wife many years ago, says he has family in Mexico, but he doesn’t keep in touch with them because he can’t offer to help. “I can’t even maintain myself,” he says. “How am I supposed to help them?” In past years, immigration officials sometimes patrolled the De Vargas Park area, and some businesses complained about littering and traffic. But lately, immigration officials have not been seen and complaints have subsided, in part because some of the men make it a point to rake up the trash. If they haven’t been hired by noon, the men cross the street to Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, which serves a free lunch. After lunch, they return to the park, still hoping to get a job. By then it is usually too late, so they gather around the park to talk. On a recent afternoon, they discussed Michoacán’s drug cartel known as the Knights Templar. They talked about how many innocent civilians have been killed in the drug wars and about people they have met in the U.S. who are trying to escape the violence. They quickly move on to the subject of immigration reform, but most are cynical, saying that President Barack Obama will never get it done. Some say they have permanently injured their backs doing manual labor but can’t get compensation, in part because they don’t know how to contact their employers. This happened to Jose Alfredo Quezada, 50, who now wears a back brace. Easton, an associate English professor at the University of North Georgia who conducted the Atlanta day-labor study, said
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Phone: GPS tracking apps enable victims to take action themselves Continued from Page A-1 Maguire to act when the police will not. But the emergence of this kind of do-it-yourself justice — an unintended result of the proliferation of GPS tracking apps — has stirred worries among law enforcement officials that people are putting themselves in danger, taking disproportionate risks for the sake of an easily replaced item. “This is a new phenomenon — it’s not simply running after the person to grab the phone,” said George Gascón, the San Francisco district attorney and a former police chief. “It opens up the opportunity for people to take the law into their own hands, and they can get themselves into really deep water if they go to a location where they shouldn’t go.” “Some have been successful,” Gascón said. “Others have gotten hurt.” Smartphones have become irresistibly delectable morsels for thieves. More than 3 million were stolen last year, according to a survey by Consumer Reports. Since 2011, cellphone thefts have risen more than 26 percent in Los Angeles; robberies involving phones were up 23 percent in San Francisco just last year. In New York City, more than 18 percent of all grand larcenies last year involved Apple products. Victims are often desperate to recover their stolen phones, which, as home to their texts, photos and friends’ phone numbers, can feel less like devices than like extensions of their hands. While iPhones may be the most popular with thieves, apps that can track stolen phones using GPS are now available for most smartphones. And although pursuing a thief can occasionally end in triumph, it can also lead to violence, particularly because some people arm themselves — hammers are popular — while hunting for their stolen phones. In San Diego, a construction worker who said his iPhone had been stolen at a reggae concert chased the pilferer and wound up in a fistfight on the beach that a police officer had to break up. A New Jersey man ended up in custody himself after he used GPS technology to track
Sarah Maguire used the Find My iPhone app to track her phone to a house 30 miles from her apartment in California. More people are taking the law into their own hands to recover stolen smartphones, a trend that has law enforcement officials concerned. MONICA ALMEIDA/THE NEW YORK TIMES
his lost iPhone and attacked the wrong man, mistaking him for the thief. Even an off-duty Los Angeles police detective pursued his son’s phone, which had been stolen at a soccer game. The officer, who asked that his name not be used for fear that civilians would follow his example, and his son used GPS to track the phone leaving the field. They got in the car and followed it — first to a mall, then to a nearby home. The officer knocked on the door, and then his son called the phone, which went off inside the bag of the boy who had taken it from the field. The officer urged anyone whose phone is stolen to call the police, noting that he had had three other off-duty officers with him. “What if these were gang members?” he said. “Somebody can get killed doing this.” Cmdr. Andrew Smith, a
spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Department, called the trend “a big concern.” “It’s just a phone — it’s not worth losing your life over,” he said. “Let police officers take care of it. We have backup, guns, radio, jackets — all that stuff civilians don’t have.” Still, although police departments have devoted more resources to combating smartphone theft, most cannot chase every stolen device right away, especially if the phone was left idly on a bar rather than seized in an armed robbery. And despite the obvious risks, the lost phone’s location — blinking on a GPS app — is a siren song many find too alluring to ignore. After Nadav Nirenberg lost his iPhone on New Year’s Eve in 2012, he realized someone was sending messages from his OkCupid account. He lured the thief to his Brooklyn apartment building by posing as a woman
and flirting with him on the dating service. When the thief arrived with a bottle of wine, expecting to meet “Jennifer,” Nirenberg went up behind him, hammer at his side. He slapped a $20 bill on the thief, to mollify him and compensate him for his time and wine, and demanded the phone. The thief handed it over and slunk away. “I was trying to avoid conflict,” Nirenberg said. But he added that, if robbed again, he would go to the police. Police chiefs have advocated another solution that they say could end smartphone thefts altogether: a mandatory “kill switch” that would render stolen phones inoperable and therefore unattractive to thieves. “This would all be moot if we had an industrywide kill switch,” Gascón said. After years of pressure, phone makers, including Apple, have
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begun offering this feature. But a bill that would require a kill switch on all smartphones sold in California has stalled in the state Legislature amid opposition from the telecommunications industry. In the meantime, the thefts continue to outpace the ability of the police to handle them. When Maguire and her roommate called the Los Angeles police, she said, they were told they could go to West Covina themselves and call 911 if they felt threatened. Smith said West Covina had probably been too far afield for detectives to go that day. Maguire debated for hours before deciding to go after her phone. “We looked at the area on Google Maps, and it wasn’t that sketchy,” she said. “It wasn’t Compton. It was West Covina.” The house where her phone had been taken was on a quiet residential street, with a well-
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
‘Honor killings’ persist despite law By Rod Nordland The New York Times
Survivors sit on a hillside Saturday as others watch the rescue effort near the site of Friday’s landslide that buried AbiBarik village in Badakhshan province, Afghanistan. AMIR SHAH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buried village to be deemed mass grave site governor of Badakhshan. “Even the advance machinery cannot operate usefully in taking out the bodies from some of the By Azam Ahmed areas.” The New York Times The possibility that yet another chunk of earth might KABUL, Afghanistan — A cleave from the nearby mounday after landslides buried tain kept rescue workers on much of a village in northeasthigh alert. ern Afghanistan, local officials The fear was not idle. Among said they feared that more the houses buried beneath the than 2,000 people were dead, mud on Friday was one where entombed in a blanket of earth a young couple had just been nearly 30 feet deep. married, local officials told Officials are expected to des- television news stations. When ignate the site, in the remote vil- neighbors rushed to help, a lage of Abi Barak in Badakhshan second landslide trapped them province, a mass grave. as well. “There is no hope for those “It buried so many families, buried under the mud to be res- including the house where the cued,” said Mohammad Zikeria wedding party was going on,” Sawda, a member of Parliament said Hajji Sayedi, the district from Badakhshan, who visited governor of Argo, where the the area Saturday. village is. “When others rushed President Hamid Karzai to rescue those trapped under declared Sunday a national the mud, another landslide went day of mourning and ordered through the village, burying all all flags flown at half-staff. He those who came to help.” also asked that Afghans and Thousands of area residents aid groups come to the assishave been evacuated from tance of those affected by the their homes. Aid agencies were landslides, calling the episode a mobilizing assistance Saturday, “human tragedy.” with U.N. staff members coordiOn Friday, the United Nations nating the distribution of food, said that the death toll was at water and blankets and arrangleast 350. But a day after the ini- ing for emergency shelter. tial landslides, the exact number Officials said about 500 vilof dead remained unknown. lagers from the surrounding Whole portions of Abi Barak area were handed shovels and have been buried by landslides, pickaxes to work alongside solfreezing entire families in place diers and others to unearth the beneath the earth and debris bodies. and thwarting efforts to claw A shipment of 60 tons of food people out. It appeared that arrived Saturday from neighboralmost half of the mountain ing Kunduz province. A delegahad simply fallen on top of Abi tion of Afghan officials also flew Barak. to the affected region Saturday. “It is very difficult for rescue Along with tents, the delegation teams to operate and take out delivered blankets and cash — the bodies from the mud,” said up to $1,000 for each dead famGul Ahmad Bedar, the deputy ily member, officials said.
2,000 missing; 350 bodies recovered
KABUL, Afghanistan — An 18-year-old runaway named Amina agreed two weeks ago to leave the women’s shelter in which she had taken refuge in northern Afghanistan and go home with her brother and her uncle. What happened next is a cautionary tale for two young people from Bamian province who eloped and are still in hiding, even as some activists are trying to persuade them to turn themselves in. She had run away to avoid marrying a man her family had forcibly betrothed her to, and agreed to return only after her family had signed guarantees that she would not be harmed. For good measure, her father and brother repeated their vows on video camera at the Ministry of Women’s Affairs in Baghlan province, and she left with them. She never reached home. Hours after she got into her family’s car, a gang of gunmen dragged her out of the vehicle and shot her to death, her brother and uncle later claimed. Everyone else was left unharmed. Whoever was responsible — the police blame the jilted fiancée’s family, but women’s
Zakia and Mohammad Ali eloped in Afghanistan and fear that her family will kill them. DIEGO IBARRA SANCHEZ THE NEW YORK TIMES
activists accuse Amina’s family of staging her killing — Amina became yet another victim of an “honor killing” to absolve some sort of family shame. Rubina Hamdard, a lawyer at a coalition of women’s advocacy groups, the Afghan Women’s Network, estimates that 150 cases of honor killing occur every year in Afghanistan. Fewer than half of them are formally reported, and very few end in convictions. It was just such a possible fate that prompted Zakia, 18, and Mohammad Ali, 21, to flee into hiding after they eloped in March, fearing that Zakia’s family would kill them both because she had refused her father’s choice of a husband. Neither Amina nor Zakia and Mohammad Ali did anything against the law — or, more specifically, against two of the legal systems in effect in Afghani-
stan: the body of civil law enacted over the past decade with Western assistance, or the classic Islamic code of Shariah that is also enshrined in law. Both protect the rights of women not to be forced into marriage against their will. But in Afghanistan, an unwritten, unofficial third legal system has remained pervasive: customary law, the tribal codes that have stubbornly persisted despite efforts at reform. “In Afghanistan judges stick to customary law, forget Shariah law, let alone civil law,” said Shala Fareed, a professor of law at Kabul University. Under customary practices widely prevalent here, fathers have absolute power over their daughters until they marry, when such power passes to their husbands. They can marry girls off at birth, or any age, often making them bar-
tered goods to settle debts. An often-invoked customary offense that does not exist in written Afghan law is that of running away from home. Even if the runaway girl is 18, legally an adult, courts frequently still impose a jail term of one year, based entirely on customary law. In fact, Afghanistan’s Elimination of Violence Against Women Act specifically forbids prosecuting runaways. “There is no such crime as running away from home,” said Shukria Khaliqi, a lawyer and legal program director at Women for Afghan Women, an aid group that runs shelters. “In some cases the judges don’t even pay attention to Shariah law; they ignore that and they will say to the girl, ‘It’s not Europe or the West here, it’s not up to you, it doesn’t matter if you’re an adult or not.’ ” Despite the problems with the courts, Khaliqi said it was possible, particularly in Kabul, where judges were better educated, to win cases like those of Zakia and Mohammad Ali. She has been in touch with them by telephone to persuade Zakia to let her take her case to court — which would mean she would have to return to a shelter while the case was decided. Reached by telephone, Mohammad Ali said the couple were unpersuaded.
Nigeria orders probe into girls’ kidnapping Islamic law, in Africa’s biggest oil producer and largest econBloomberg News omy. Leader Abubakar Shekau warned in a video released in ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigerian March that all students should President Goodluck Jonathan leave university and girls drop ordered an investigation into out of school to get married. efforts to rescue more than “In Islam, it is allowed to 200 schoolgirls abducted in the take infidel women as slaves,” town of Chibok by suspected Shekau said. “In due course, we Boko Haram Islamists following will start taking women away.” a late-night raid April 14. About 200 protesters The probe by a 26-member marched through Abuja on panel, due to begin Tuesday, Wednesday to the parliament to will also investigate why the demand action by the governschool remained open while ment to rescue the hostages. others in Borno state were The insurgency in the north closed after recent attacks on and the security operations by schools in the northeast, the Jonathan’s administration to end Abuja-based presidency said in it have left at least 1,500 people a statement emailed late Friday. dead this year, Amnesty InterThe inquiry will also ascertain national said on March 31. the exact number of girls missThe probe panel, headed by ing and their identities followformer Army General Ibrahim ing discrepancies in the number Sabo, will include members of students seized. from government and security A total of 276 girls were kidagencies, such as the State Secunapped, Principal Asabe Kwam- rity police, Borno state governbura said by phone on Friday. ment and the Economic ComWhile 53 escaped their captors, munity of West African States. 223 remain missing. “Right now, Jonathan also on Saturday we are going to publish the approved the shutdown of names and photographs of the schools, government offices missing girls so that henceforth and private firms with large there won’t be any conflicting workforce in Abuja, the capital, figures,” she said. to ease traffic ahead of the May Borno is the birthplace of the 7-9 World Economic Forum to Islamist militant group Boko be held in the city. The closing Haram, whose name means follows a blast in the Nyanya “western education is a sin” in district, the second in a month, the Hausa language. The group that killed more than 90 and wounded at least 200. wants to impose Shariah, or By Elisha Bala-Gbogbo and Gbenga Akingbule
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SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
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Faulty logistics of BuRRT’s Amnesty Day. Page B-3
Dropout solution? Curmudgeon doesn’t think so
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contributes about $6,700 for every enrolled stuhy is New Mexico rated at the bottom of the nation’s educational barrel? Why dent. Does that mean Engage Santa Fe could cost is the Santa Fe school system ranked in roughly $670,000 a year? Moreover, it appears to the bottom 10 of New Mexico’s public school dis- have few, if any, requirements for each student. Can a 15-year-old dropout enroll and tricts? If the newest program in Santa take as little as one course per semester, Fe to improve high school graduation working at his own pace, for the entire rates is what passes for educational $6,700? We trust the taxpayers’ share reform in our city, the real question is: will be prorated, since the dropout can How low can we go? stay in school until 21. Engage Santa Fe, as the new program Gee whiz! A degree, or maybe not, at is titled, will hunt down/locate 75 to a cost of thousands. But wait! There’s 100 recent high school dropouts and more! Each student who enrolls will encourage them to re-enlist. If they join receive a free Amazon Kindle! this program, they are promised a genDorothy uine diploma instead of a mere GED In a last pitch to our gullibility, taxKlopf degree. This newspaper described one payers are told that only an out-of-state Commentary potential student: He first left school private company, Atlantic Education at age 15 and, returning two years later, Partners, is qualified to run this prodropped out a second time “because, by his own gram. After one member of our school board, admission, he did not apply himself and was Glenn Wikle, questioned the program, it appears smoking too much marijuana.” he is being viewed as a “bully” for his efforts. Why is there so much concern for 100 students Fortunately for taxpayers, Reps. Luciano “Lucky” Varela and Jim Trujillo are questioning the conout of a few thousand? Progressives in the city stitutionality of sending public money to a priare raising a collective hand with the answer — vate business. because Santa Fe cares for the underachieving student! A more cynical person (yeah, well, me) There is a more pertinent question: Are we wonders whether the new superintendent of to believe there is no one among licensed New schools wants to polish his résumé by showing Mexico teachers qualified to organize and supera shiny new statistical improvement, no matter vise an extra-help and intervention project? how meager, in graduation rates. Really? Has anyone asked the teachers of Santa Fe what would help their students stay engaged? According to Superintendent Joel Boyd, the school budget won’t be strained because the pro- Has anyone consulted the principal at Capitol High, where there has been a steady improvegram will be a “neutral” item. What that exactly ment in graduation rates? means is that the superintendent gets his shiny improved statistic and the taxpayer picks up the Wait, wait! There’s still more! Superintendent Boyd previously worked with the founder of tab from state funds. In New Mexico, the state
Atlantic Education Partners, Joseph Wise, in Florida and asked Mr. Wise to work on his transition team when he moved to Santa Fe. Insisting there is no conflict of interest in this deal with the Florida firm, Boyd asserts he kept his distance throughout the selection process. It takes a cynical mind to suspect that personal advantage and next-job preparedness might underpin this program. Oh, no! The sales pitch “Only the best for our children” explains why our struggling dropouts must be served by the expertise of Joseph Wise and Atlantic Education Partners. According to Mr. Wise, “When [dropouts] come back and educators say, ‘Here’s seven courses, here’s all the books, get going,’ a lot of students can’t chew that.” Imagine, if you will, our future graduate, age 21, having spent five or six years in Mr. Wise’s program, as he faces his first interview for a job: Employer: “I need my new hire to begin tomorrow.” Graduate: “Tomorrow? So soon?” Employer: “See those seven flats of goods. I need invoices checked; goods, organized and shelved; and current prices, posted.” Graduate: “Chill, man. I am not sure I can chew that.” Employer: “Well, could you come in Saturday to help me catch up on my inventory?” Graduate: “Whoa. Saturday is just not your day. And Monday’s not looking too good either.” What was Santa Fe smoking when it was sold this bill of goods? Dorothy Klopf, a curmudgeonly conservative, is back writing her column after taking some time off.
MY VIEW: STEPHEN FOX
Cruising the Plaza isn’t ‘vital’
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n 2002, after speaking with Native vendors under the portal, I recognized classic symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning, such as headaches, occurring with them. I wrote a petition to the governor and the mayor asking that the north side of the Plaza be blocked off, so that these people wouldn’t be afflicted so badly. Two-hundredthirty-two out of 244 Plaza vendors signed the petition, but the request was ignored. One response to this effort was former City Councilor Frank Montaño’s maintaining that “cruising the Plaza” was part of his teenage memories and was thus a vital part of Northern New Mexico Hispanic culture. Not long after, a driver smashed into a woman who stepped off the corner by the Palace of the Governors. Dr. Jane Sewell was English and a professor at Johns Hopkins University, and was on vacation with her husband, Hopkins history professor Louis Galambos. She died at 42. Her husband later was quoted in the Baltimore Sun: “That still breaks me up … I had to help my daughters right away. You don’t sit around and grieve, you get busy. You have one day, maybe two days [to grieve], you have got a new life to deal with.” Dr. Galambos is still a professor at Johns Hopkins at 83. Had the authorities listened to the petition I had presented earlier to them, instead of listening to such idiotic malarkey as “cruising the Plaza is a vital part of Hispanic culture,” Dr. Sewell might still be alive. This reminds me of Sen. Phil Griego’s maintaining that cockfighting was a vital part of New Mexico Hispanic culture when he was chairman of the Conservation Committee, thus killing the chance that the vote would come to the Senate floor, thus keeping cockfighting legal 18 years after Sen. Mary Jane Garcia first sponsored a bill making it illegal. Finally, Griego turned around on his opposition, but only after the archbishop came down against cockfighting. Then, and only then, was it made illegal! I encourage Mayor Javier Gonzales in his efforts to close the Plaza. I am a downtown merchant, and I’m sure all of the other merchants could make do with a limited access delivery schedule opening the Plaza to trucks between 6 and 10 a.m. Stephen Fox is the founder of New Millennium Fine Art in Santa Fe.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Chaining off bandstand won’t solve Plaza problems I nstead of chaining off the gazebo on the Plaza and wondering about whether and which streets should be closed, why doesn’t the city tackle the real problem on and around our wonderful Plaza? That would be, namely, dirty, drunken, aggressive panhandlers; buskers who are pushing more than their own product/entertainment; the pungent smell of pot; high school kids hassling visitors; beggars using their poor dogs to try to gain donations; and other totally tourist-unfriendly activities. The Plaza is our most important tourist attraction and is terribly important to to those of us who live in this wonderful place. There are times when my husband and I have felt forced to leave because it feels threatening. Somewhat worse is Cathedral Park, where there is open drinking and selling and consuming of drugs. Beggars and homeless people bring in dogs even though they are not permitted, according to the signage. The real issue here is the need for a police presence. We don’t need chains around our Plaza — we need police — and not just during the few summer months. The police must be permanent fixtures there and must be given the authority to protect our important meeting places.
Maureen McCarthy
Santa Fe
Fond memories
Reading of Bell Mondragon’s death brings back fond memories of a special meal among the many I enjoyed at Maria Isabel’s on Agua Fría (“In recipe for life, restaurateur turned to conversation, cuisine,” April 17). It was the summer of 1983, and I had come down from Ghost Ranch to join my friend, Josiah Beeman, who had flown out from Washington, D.C., to have lunch there. “Joe,” a native of California and politically connected from his teen years, was on a special mission. He was in charge of arrangements for the program at the 1984 Democratic National Convention in San Francisco and wanted to talk with Bell’s husband, Roberto Mondragon, about singing the national anthem at the convention. We had a delicious lunch, of course, and Roberto joined us with his guitar and forthwith demonstrated why he would be an excellent choice for the assignment. Unfortunately, it never happened. Joe was later bounced from his assignment in favor of a wealthy woman from California who had better connections than he had! Too bad; Roberto would have been a smash hit. I don’t remember who sang the national anthem at the convention, but Jennifer Holliday did a memorable rendering of the Battle Hymn of the Republic to close it. Joe recovered and later became the longtime
ambassador to New Zealand.
Rev. Dean H. Lewis
Medanales
Open to all The Santa Fe City Council is considering the closing of the Plaza. This is the only real connection we have to the downtown area. Are you willing to give up the last thing we own downtown? The bicyclists have bicycle trails all over this town. People who like to walk have trails all over this town. Even the dogs have their own place to enjoy. People who like to cruise should be able to enjoy their Plaza. Disabled people should be able to park and go enjoy the Plaza. This Plaza is for everyone, even cruisers, not just for people who want a European flair. Stand up and say basta to change about the Plaza. At a recent meeting, I was mocked at the meeting by some young men. I was disrespected and my comments deleted on Facebook. I was told, “why should it matter to me?” that people my age are “dropping off like flies in the winter,” and the younger generation has the “power” now. Let’s show them that we have the right to oppose anything in a tactful, respectful way and that only those who can agree to disagree have the power.
Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
Gloria Mendoza
Santa Fe
Ukraine’s crisis and its fateful decision T
here’s an old, unfortunate adage all too often repeated when it comes to the Middle East: It can always get worse. Sadly, Ukrainians are learning that phrase is quickly applying them. In the space of two months, they’ve seen Russia’s Vladimir Putin — acting like a bully shaking down a kid in a schoolyard for his lunch money — grab the Crimean Peninsula. Losing its warm-water port was bad enough, but now, Ukraine’s very existence is in doubt. Earlier this week, the mayor of an eastern Ukrainian city was shot in the back and, as of this writing, remains in critical condition as pro-Russian forces threaten to swallow large chunks of the country, if not the entire thing. Rob An old Cold War Nikolewski truth is merging with today’s cold, hard Commentary truth: A belligerent Russia may well succeed in annexing Ukraine. It’s clear that words won’t deter Putin, who is determined to take back territory that was lost after the Soviet Union collapsed 23 years ago. And what’s happening in Ukraine is putting leaders on edge in countries with large Russian-speaking minorities such as Georgia, Moldova and Estonia. Estonia is crucial, because it’s a member of NATO, and Article 5 of the NATO agreement stipulates an attack on one member is an attack on all of its members. Another cold truth? Don’t count on the U.S. and Western European nations going there. Now, nobody’s talking about NATO/ American boots on the ground in Eastern Europe, but the Obama White House has been slow on the uptake ever since this crisis began. It still has not even offered to share military intelligence with Ukraine and has repeatedly said it will not supply the Ukrainians light military weaponry in the face of a potential Russian assault. (The Russians have an estimated 40,000 to 50,000 troops lined up on Ukraine’s border.) Instead, the administration hopes that economic sanctions will do the trick. Yet President Barack Obama still has not countered Putin by hitting the Russian economy where it would hurt the most: in its energy sector. A threat of exporting liquefied natural gas to Europe could compel Putin to at least think twice about the economic wisdom of intrusion. Earlier this week, Secretary of State John Kerry called on Europe to end its dependence on Russian oil and gas but didn’t offer any specifics. But the Obama administration looks like zealots compared to European leaders. Fearful of Russia shutting off their oil and gas supplies, it took unmistakable signs of aggression — such as pro-Russian forces holding European monitors hostage — to get EU leaders to find some spine. Near the end of World War II, upon being asked about Catholics in Poland, Josef Stalin famously asked. “How many divisions does the pope have?” In 2014, Europe may have NATO divisions at its disposal, but if Putin reckons they’ll never be used, he has no reason not to take whatever he wants. In these existential times for Ukraine, one can only imagine the enormous regret its people must have looking back at 1994. That year, in the optimism of a postCold War world, Ukrainian leaders went to Budapest for an international meeting. Under the Soviet regime, nuclear missiles were still deployed in Ukraine. The U.S. and Western European urged Ukraine to allow those missiles to be dismantled. The Ukrainians agreed after getting assurances that their borders would never be violated and would be defended if they were. So much for that promise. But a sobering geopolitical lesson may extend beyond Ukraine. In a post-post-Cold War world, leaders in vulnerable countries may very well conclude — with logic that’s hard to argue with — that having their own nuclear arsenal equals protection. And that figures to make the world a much more combustible — and deadly — place. Contact Rob Nikolewski through the website he edits, www.newmexicowatchdog. org.
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
COMMENTARY: AYANA BYRD AND LORI L. THARPS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849
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Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
The war against black hair
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Kill humanely? It can’t happen
T
he United States should stop using the death penalty to punish criminals — for our sakes, not theirs. What happened last week in Oklahoma, a botched execution carried out with suspect drugs in experimental doses, is just the latest argument for halting the death penalty. New Mexico, thankfully, under former Gov. Bill Richardson’s leadership, no longer uses the power of the state to kill. By continuing the death penalty, the United States has more in common with such countries as Iraq or North Korea or China than its natural allies in Europe or Australia. With once-stalwart support for the death penalty falling among U.S. citizens, now is the time to stop. A Gallup poll last year found U.S. support for the death penalty at 60 percent, down from a high of 80 percent in 1984. Only 52 percent believe the death penalty is applied fairly. Currently, some 18 states do not allow the death penalty while others are stopping it by moratorium. The end of capital punishment does not have to happen by Supreme Court decree, although given the events in Oklahoma, there surely is a case to be made that “cruel and unusual punishment” occurred. Killer Clayton Lockett, put to death last week, writhed and struggled on the gurney. The drugs were not working properly. Incredibly, Oklahoma halted the execution, only to watch Lockett die of a heart attack. The question is whether, given other recent executions gone wrong, lethal injections can be administered in a way to meet the Eighth Amendment standard that punishments must be neither cruel nor unusual. Even without the Supreme Court, governors can stay executions or issue moratoriums. State legislatures can eliminate the death penalty and make sure that life in prison means life in prison. Prosecutors can seek less lethal penalties. The United States has the means to stop the death penalty in practice, if not the will to stop it in law. As a society, all can agree that some crimes are so horrible that they deserve the death penalty. But citizens can also stipulate that as a society, we will not use the power of the state to kill. To protect the rest of society, yes. To punish, definitely, and to seek and carry out justice. But not to commit state-sanctioned murder or to attempt vengeance. Especially now, when the drugs for lethal injection are hard to find (European suppliers won’t ship them), the idea that prison workers in states around the country are mixing death cocktails, not knowing whether the killing will go easy or hard, is horrible. (The original protocol was developed by an Oklahoma doctor as an alternative to the cruelty of the electric chair or the firing squad. He said if he had to do it over, he’d just use one — a barbiturate, and not include a drug to paralyze and one to stop the heart.) The search to find a humane way to kill, it seems, continues. It should stop. None of this is to say that the killers — those who we know, 100 percent, are guilty — have not committed horrific crimes. (We know that not all who die are guilty, though, and it’s estimated that 1 in 25 sentenced to death is innocent.) Lockett watched 19-year-old Stephanie Neiman be buried alive back in 1999. She was shot but wasn’t dead. She was smothered. That his manner of passing has created sympathy and led to people forgetting her is another reason the death penalty should be halted. She was two weeks out of high school in Perry, Okla., played the saxophone and was unlucky enough to interrupt thugs at work while giving a friend a ride home. She deserves to be mourned and remembered, not her killer. The incompetence of Oklahoma has made her killer seem a victim. At the very least, until the state can kill with competence, the United States should halt state-sanctioned murder.
The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: May 4, 1914: El Paso — The 3,000 men of the Mexican federal army, accompanied by 1,900 women and children, which have been interned at Fort Bliss since they crossed the international border after suffering defeat by the constitutionalists at Ojinaga and were taken in charge by United States troops, were entrained today for Fort Wingate, New Mexico. Three 10-car sections carrying approximately 2,000 federal soldiers left today and four more sections will depart tomorrow. May 4, 1964: A 20-year-old Edgewood youth said he fired six shots at one of New Mexico’s unidentified flying objects. This is another account of several such reports that have kept New Mexico and military authorities busy since Friday. Reports have come in from points following a line from near Caballo Reservoir south of Truth or Consequences, north to an area near Española. All the reports are similar in that they describe oval or egg-shaped objects with size estimates ranging from the size of a car to about 30 feet or longer. May 4, 1989: City councilors want the city to buy new biodegradable garbage bags for their constituents’ trash. During budget hearings on Tuesday, Councilor Bernice Beenhouwer said the residents; issued free bags with refuse pick-up service, want bags that decompose when buried underground. Finance Director David Sena said that when the city advertises for bids on the bags, he will include a specification for biodegradability.
merica has always had trouble with black hair. The United States Army is only the latest in a long line of institutions, corporations and schools to restrict it. On March 31, the Army released an updated appearance and grooming policy, known as AR 670-1. It applies to all Army personnel, including students at West Point and those serving in the ROTC and the National Guard. No distinctions are made for race or ethnicity, only gender, in that the regulations regarding hair are divided between women and men. But it’s not hard to infer that certain sections pertain specifically to black women, since they refer to hairstyles like cornrows, braids, twists and dreadlocks, severely limiting or banning them outright. While the Army certainly isn’t the first to impose these kinds of prohibitions, it may be the most egregious example, considering that the 26,000 black women affected by AR 670-1 are willing to die for their country. On Tuesday, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel ordered the entire military to review its hairstyle rules, after the women of the Congressional Black Caucus sent him a letter saying that the Army policy’s language was “offensive” and “biased” and strongly urging him to reconsider it. More than 17,000 people signed a petition submitted to WhiteHouse.gov asking the Obama administration to review the policy. The bias against black hair is as old as America itself. In the 18th century, British colonists classified African hair as closer to sheep wool than human hair. Enslaved and free blacks who had less kinky, more European-textured hair and lighter skin — often a result of plantation rape — received better treatment than those with more typically African features. After Emancipation, straight hair continued to be the required look for access to social and professional opportunities. Most black people internalized the idea that their natural hair was unacceptable, and by the early 20th century wore it in straightened styles often achieved with dangerous chemical processes or hot combs, or they wore wigs. It wasn’t until the 1960s that the Black Power movement declared that “black is beautiful” — and not least unstraightened natural black hair. Soon the Afro became a popular style, first at protests and political rallies and eventually on celebrities from Pam Grier to Michael Jackson. But in many settings, black hair was still
KAROLIN SCHNOOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
a battleground. In the 1980s, civil rights groups led boycotts against the Hyatt hotel chain after it terminated a black female employee for wearing cornrows. In 1999, couriers for Federal Express were fired for wearing dreadlocks. And this past fall, 7-year-old Tiana Parker was told her dreadlocks violated her elementary school’s dress code in Tulsa, Okla., and 12-year-old Vanessa VanDyke was threatened with expulsion from her private school in Orlando, Fla., because her natural hair was deemed a “distraction.” If a person doesn’t have black hair, isn’t married to someone with black hair or isn’t raising a child with black hair, this issue may seem like a whole lot of something about nothing. But what these women are demanding is a policy that reflects a basic understanding of black hair. For most black people, hair naturally grows up and out — think of the shape of an Afro — not down. But the Army’s regulations assume that all hair not only grows the same way but can be styled the same way. For example, one permitted hairstyle is a bun. Yet because of the thickness of a lot of black women’s hair, a bun is not always possible unless the hair is put into twists first. But twists and dreadlocks, no matter how narrow and
neat, are banned in the policy and labeled “faddish” and “exaggerated.” The argument isn’t that the Army does not have the right to enforce a conservative code — this is the Army, after all — but that it must consider the diversity of hair textures. The current policy is the equivalent of a black majority military telling its thousands of white soldiers that they are required to have dreadlocks or Afros. At a time when the military is trying to attract more women to its ranks — this week, the military’s newspaper, Stars and Stripes, ran a cover story about West Point’s attempt to draw more female cadets — it can’t afford policies that punish those same women for their ethnic features. Hagel says the military has three months for its review “to ensure standards are fair and respectful.” Here’s an idea: Why not take a survey of active and retired black servicewomen? Let the courageous women serving our nation contribute to an understanding of what conservative, safe and professional means when it comes to their own hair. Ayana Byrd and Lori L. Tharps are the authors of Hair Story: Untangling the Roots of Black Hair in America. This first appeared in The New York Times.
Regulations: Job crushers or life savers?
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ouse Speaker John Boehner blasts more women smoked, so they engineered a feminist-sounding campaign to get “job-crushing regulations.” The females hooked: “Women! Light another House majority leader, Eric Cantorch of freedom! Fight another sex taboo!” tor, prefers a variant: “job-destroying In effect, tobacco companies regulations.” That mantra has manufactured not only cigabeen repeated so much that we rettes but also demand. might think that all regulations In recent years, with fewer do is crush, destroy, annihilate, cigarettes being sold in the maim, gut, crucify and extirpate United States, tobacco compajobs. nies seem to have been targetYet think about Amber Rose, ing women and young people a 16-year-old girl in Maryland abroad. Philip Morris acquired who was driving a General an Indonesia tobacco company Motors car (way too fast, while Nicholas in 2005 and began marketing drunk) with an ignition switch Kristof cigarettes as young, cool and the company knew was faulty. trendy. This has been very sucShe struck a tree and, because The New York cessful, in part because Indothe ignition fault had switched Times nesia does not much regulate off the electrical system, the air tobacco and, in practice, even bag didn’t deploy. Amber was children can easily buy cigarettes. killed. While GM says that 13 people died in One 2-year-old Indonesian boy, Ardi connection with the faulty switches, a Rizal, appeared in news reports a few consumer group called the Center for years ago, puffing away and going Auto Safety says it has found 303 such through 40 cigarettes a day. His mom deaths. GM has said it knew about this said he was addicted. Embarrassed at the problem for a decade. It even devised a fix reporting, officials intervened and helped but chose not to implement it because of Ardi quit, but plenty of other Indonesian the cost, which would have been about children still smoke. 57 cents per car, according to congressioAll this makes Indonesia a lucrative nal hearings. As an internal GM memomarket for Philip Morris. Meanwhile, randum put it, there was no “business 400,000 Indonesians die annually from case” for preventing crashes. tobacco-related illness. And that’s why we need regulation: In the United States, industry is turning Company executives can’t be trusted to its own new market: electronic cigato police themselves. They sometimes rettes. These were originally conceived of blindly pursue a “business case” as it kills as a way to help people quit smoking. As us. a result, they have largely avoided reguI’m sure those GM executives were lation, and even children can often buy good people who helped out their neighthem in the United States. bors and donated to churches and charities, but they also had a moral blind spot. That has been the history of business. Companies have achieved staggering productivity and vastly raised global living standards, but they have also repeatedly privatized profits while socializing risks. In this century, it is estimated that 1 billion people will die prematurely because of tobacco use, according to Lethal but Legal, a smart new book about corporate irresponsibility by Nicholas Freudenberg, a professor of public health at City University of New York. Put that 1 billion in perspective. That’s more than five times as many people as died in all wars of the 20th century. Freudenberg notes that smoking grew in part because of deliberate manipulation of the public by tobacco companies. For example, tobacco executives realized that they could expand their profits if
Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
But companies seem to be marketing e-cigarettes to young people in hopes of establishing new addicts. E-cigarettes are sold as e-hookahs, hookah pens or vape pipes, and they often have flavors like bubble gum, blueberry, grape apple or even strawberry margarita. Overall, sales in 2013 were double those of 2012. As my Times colleague Matt Richtel has reported in his terrific coverage of the issue, the liquids in e-cigarettes are powerful neurotoxins, and poisoning cases tripled in 2013 from a year earlier. The Food and Drug Administration recently proposed rules for e-cigarettes, including a ban on sales to children. Is that “job-crushing regulation”? Critics are right that regulators are sometimes too zealous and bureaucratic. Sometimes regulations do curb profits and undermine job creation. But, on the whole, we need regulations to guard against human nature. The truth is that bad things usually aren’t done by evil people but rather by essentially decent people who go to work and get so wrapped up in the “business case” that they sometimes lose their moral compass. So the next time you hear people denouncing “job-killing regulations,” remember that if there had been tighter regulations, smokers might not be dying every 6 seconds, and Amber Rose might still be alive. Wouldn’t that be worth 57 cents? Contact Kristof at Facebook.com/Kristof, Twitter.com/NickKristof or by mail at The New York Times, 620 Eighth Ave., New York, NY 10018.
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OPINIONS MY VIEW: AL LUCERO
THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS
Plaza is for everyone, just as in Spain
Sunday, May 4, 2014
THE NEW MEXICAN
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MY VIEW: CONOR L. SANCHEZ
Seeking impact: Leaving D.C. for Central America F
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would like to respond to Orlando Romero’s column (“Plaza is for the people of Santa Fe,” April 27) published in The New Mexican. I wonder if Mr. Romero reads his own column. In one paragraph, he raves about the great time he and his wife have experienced at Plaza Santa Ana in Madrid, Spain (among others) — how it’s their favorite place to stay in Madrid, and then in his closing paragraph, he says (in reference to the Santa Fe Plaza closing to motor vehicles), “No one solution is going to please everyone, but whatever the choice, it is wise to remember that it is the people’s Plaza. It doesn’t belong to bureaucrats or the tourists.” I have no problem with his idea set forth in the first sentence of that comment. I don’t even have a problem with him saying the Plaza doesn’t belong to bureaucrats — but I have a serious problem with him saying that the Plaza does not belong to tourists.
ive years ago, I moved to Washington, D.C. Inspired by a candidate, the 2008 election was a call to service for me. I saw his candidacy as a rallying cry for young Millennials like myself not only to use our newly inherited voting power to elect a transformative leader, but to also embody that spirit by pursuing meaningful and serviceoriented careers. I tried to walk the walk. After graduation, I bought a one-way ticket to Washington to intern on Capitol Hill with former U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman. In June 2009, I arrived and joined a cadre of selfimportant and overly idealistic young professionals. After five weeks I landed a position as an assistant in Sen. Bingaman’s office. I even convinced my then-girlfriend, Michaela, to turn down a job offer in Albuquerque to pursue her interests in public policy and human rights in D.C. Two years flew by, and Michaela and I were engaged. Then, Sen. Bingaman announced he was retiring, and I jumped on an opportunity to work at Peace Corps Headquarters, serving as an appointee in the Obama administration. This was it, I told myself. My chance to serve the candidate who inspired me to be the change I wished to see. At the same time, Michaela got hired at a nonprofit that promotes human rights worldwide. We were ecstatic. We were two lucky outsiders from a small town in the Southwest who had cracked the inner sanctum. More importantly, we were witnessing remarkable progress. Although there were shortcomings and barriers to what we once considered possible, Obama’s presidency was having an impact. From the unprecedented advancement of gay rights to the expansion of health care insurance, I felt lucky to be playing a small part by serving in an administration that was delivering on many of the things I had voted for back in 2008. But there was still something missing. Two years in, my impact was intangible, indirect and ancillary to the agency’s mission. Then, I made a work trip to West Africa, saw Peace Corps volunteers serving in remote villages and working hand in hand with their communities to increase literacy rates, reduce malaria casualties and implement a myriad of other development initiatives. My spirits were lifted, but the trip also confirmed what I secretly knew. If my job in D.C. was my public service, it was pathetically detached. I can’t remember who suggested it first, perhaps because
Let’s share this gem with whomever has taken the time to come visit us. I don’t know Mr. Romero, but I’m assuming that he does not live in Madrid. So, when he visits Madrid, is he not a “tourist”? Is he saying that it’s OK for us to visit other cities and enjoy the reasons we go there as tourists, but if you come to Santa Fe, our Plaza is not for you, if you happen to be a tourist? When my ancestors came to Santa Fe four centuries ago, were they not, in a manner of speaking, tourists? We have got to change our attitude toward tourists and tourism if we are to prosper as a community and live up to our reputation of being warm, hospitable, cultural and historical — of just being Santa Fe. I’m very proud of Santa Fe’s wealth of history and culture, and think that we should be eager to share this blessing with the world. The Plaza is the nucleus of our history, culture and community. Let’s share this gem with whomever has taken the time to come visit us. The Plaza is, most definitely, for the people of Santa Fe, but it’s also for everyone else, even the tourists. After all, while they’re visiting us, tourists should be considered “people of Santa Fe” that just happen to be living somewhere else. Mr. Romero, how would you feel if the Santa Ana Plaza in Madrid were to one day say, “Our plaza is for the people of Madrid and not for tourists?” For both our sakes, I hope that never happens!
Conor Sanchez and his wife, Michaela. COURTESY PHOTO
it initially sounded so absurd, but Michaela and I eventually found ourselves discussing what it would be like to serve as volunteers in the Peace Corps. To be sure, we considered alternatives that would place us in a community working directly with people, but time and time again, we kept returning to volunteer service with the Peace Corps. As a married couple, we were guaranteed to be placed together with individual assignments. We wouldn’t have to pay our own money and would even receive a readjustment allowance upon our return to the United States. We applied. One year later, Michaela and I are preparing to depart as teachers in Nicaragua — not as a pair of romantics hoping to change the world, but rather, as two practical idealists who know that, with a little patience and determination, individuals can and often do make a difference. We just need to figure out how our own unique skills and talents can take us there. Peace Corps service may not be a panacea to our frustrations, but at least it will bring us face to face with the issues we seek to address. It will challenge us to be innovative and to discover if there is such a thing as “true impact.” It will inform us, challenge us, perhaps even temper our idealism, but most importantly, it will teach us what is achievable on an individual scale. And if it sounds as quixotic as when we moved to D.C., so be it. It’s time to turn in the BlackBerry, hang up the suit and embark on one of the greatest adventures of our lives. We hope you’ll follow us by checking out our blog from time to time at TheNicadventure.com. Conor L. Sanchez is a graduate of Santa Fe High School and Occidental College. Currently, he is special assistant to the director of the Peace Corps.
Peace Corps service may not be a panacea to our frustrations, but at least it will bring us face to face with the issues we seek to address.
Al Lucero of Santa Fe is a retired restaurateur and a former chairman of the New Mexico State Tourism Commission.
MY VIEW: STEPHEN KLINGER
Rethink logistics of trash Amnesty Day
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ccording to the city’s public information office, the Santa Fe Solid Waste Management Agency’s Spring 2014 Amnesty Day at the Buckman Road Recycling & Transfer Station (BuRRT) was “a great success.” A total of 742 vehicles came to the transfer station on April 26, more than twice the usual volume, to drop off everything from hazardous household waste to tires to electronic scrap and green waste, in conjunction with the Keep Santa Fe Beautiful Great American Cleanup. I beg to differ about the description of success. We were among the hundreds of drivers queued up on Buckman Road, and the process took us a full two hours. There were no signs or attendants anywhere outside the facility, so it was impossible to have any idea how long the wait would be, or to see until coming over the rise, late in the
process, that another line of vehicles was entering from the north. Many drivers, probably hundreds, gave up and turned around, or else just kept driving with their load. I saw dozens do so. I wonder how many of them dumped their wastes illegally. At the transfer station facility, attendants were allowing five or six vehicles, many with trailers, to enter at a time, causing all sorts of problems with drivers needing to maneuver trailers close to the edge to unload their various solid waste items. This slowed the process down greatly. It might work on a normal day, but with twice the turnout, it was woefully inefficient. Much more sensible would have been to allow vehicles to enter one or two at a time and to have had enough attendants to offload them or assist drivers in doing so, parallel to the dumping area. This would have
eliminated requiring drivers to back up and maneuver trailers and others having to wait while they did so. Instead of the city crowing about success, the Waste Management Agency, a local nonprofit that serves the city and county, needs to rethink the planning and logistics of this event. Despite its good intentions, having more than 700 vehicles burning fossil fuels sitting in line for an hour or two shows shameful indifference to adding more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere and should be embarrassing for a city like Santa Fe, which promotes itself as environmentally conscious and proactive. Although it might require a little extra staffing, if waste management is serious about serving the community effectively, it would offer a few additional days of amnesty each year and publicize the process effectively with
More than 700 vehicles turned out to the Buckman Road Recycling & Transfer Station for Amnesty Day last weekend. BRIAN BARKER/THE NEW MEXICAN
maps and directions, so hundreds of vehicles wouldn’t be sitting for hours pouring fossil fuels into the atmosphere.
Stephen Klinger is a Santa Fe resident who understands the importance of limiting greenhouse gas emissions.
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OPINIONS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
MY VIEW: ERIK SCHLENKER-GOODRICH
MY VIEW: LISA SHIN
A triple win for energy, the Too much government is bad economy and the climate for state’s small businesses
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hen it comes to natural gas, there is no shortage of debate. Some tout natural gas as a “bridge fuel” from coal to clean, renewable solar and wind energy. Others warn that natural gas is a “gangplank” to a destabilized climate. But no matter your perspective, there is one facet of this debate where talk should end and action begin: the urgent need to prevent the unnecessary waste of methane into the atmosphere. Methane is the primary ingredient of natural gas, and keeping methane from leaking into the atmosphere presents a “triple win” opportunity: first, less methane in the atmosphere means more natural gas to heat our homes, cook our food and generate electricity; second, more natural gas means more royalties from natural gas sales for cash-strapped governments and landowners; and third, by keeping methane — a climatealtering pollutant 86 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20-year time period — from leaking into our Western skies, we better safeguard our climate and public health. The need for strong, national methane waste standards for our public lands is clear. The Government Accountability Office concluded in 2010 that poor, outdated BLM policies facilitate the tremendous waste of natural gas. The GAO also estimated that BLM could economically eliminate up to 40 percent of the natural gas currently wasted from drilling and other oil and gas operations on BLM-managed lands. More recent studies suggest that reductions in the neighborhood of 80 percent or even higher are feasible. In a welcome move, the federal Bureau of Land Management has begun to craft new rules to prevent this colossal waste of natural gas and unnecessary pollution of our increasingly shaky climate. This is a big deal: BLM manages more
than 700 million acres of subsurface oil and gas resources — with 40 million acres in New Mexico alone — held Erik in trust for Schlenkerthe American Goodrich people. New Mexico is thus on the front lines of the battle to stop methane pollution and waste. In northeastern New Mexico, proposed development of the San Juan Basin’s Mancos Shale, absent methane controls, risks the massive waste of methane, potentially on par with North Dakota’s notorious Bakken region. In southeastern New Mexico, the fracking boom in the Permian Basin is burning — and thus wasting — huge amounts of methane in flares. The BLM is hosting a public forum on May 7 in Albuquerque to hear how New Mexicans feel about methane pollution and waste. We encourage all to attend. If BLM puts in place strong, national standards for our public lands, we could help safeguard the climate by eliminating — roughly — climate pollution equivalent to the annual emissions of more than 27 million passenger vehicles, all while increasing natural gas production and public royalties. That’s action. To seize this “triple win,” BLM should require the use of proven, often profitable (because they increase the amount of energy sold) natural gas conservation technologies as a condition of leasing and drilling for oil and gas on federal public lands, with a goal of zero methane waste. BLM should also develop plans before leasing and drilling begins to ensure that oil and gas companies build the necessary infrastructure to get captured gas to market. And finally, BLM should ensure that
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New Mexico is on the front lines of the battle to stop methane pollution and waste. preventing methane leaks to protect the climate does not obviate the need to protect special places, healthy wildlife, productive farms and ranches, and clean water. Fundamentally, the debate about the role of natural gas in the nation’s energy future must not obscure the “triple win” now at our fingertips: conserved domestic energy resources, increased royalties for landowners and the public, and a better-protected climate and public health for our communities. Erik Schlenker-Goodrich, based in Taos, is the executive director of the Western Environmental Law Center and is leading a national campaign to secure new federal rules to curb the venting, flaring and leaking of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, by the oil and gas industry.
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here’s an argument to made that businesses in Los Alamos would not be here without the government, the “900-pound Federal Gorilla.” Indeed, my 17-year-old small business and optometry practice would not have existed or grown without it. However, many times the government becomes a sort of King Kong that pounds on small businesses with overregulation, excessive taxation and wage control. Over-regulation. One example is the required International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision (ICD-10) codes for medical insurance billing. Currently, there are 14,000 diagnosis codes and 4,000 procedure codes. ICD10 will replace these, with 70,000 diagnosis codes and 87,000 procedure codes. For every medical practice, this means outrageously expensive software and computer upgrades, more IT support and staff training, and more work for the doctors, with no improvement on patient care. No wonder policy experts predict a decline in the number of medical private practices over the next decade. Excessive taxation. There should be reasonable taxation to pay for the infrastructure necessary for success. However, excessive taxation blocks small businesses from renovation and improvement. It also creates a disincentive to expand and create new jobs. In 2012, Gov. Susana Martinez supported legislation
that decreased my unemployment tax rate from 1.8 percent to 0.6 percent, which was a significant measure of tax relief. In 2014, the governor announced a reduction in unemployment insurance fraud, which helps to keep unemployment taxes low. Please, let’s see more of this! Wage control. We need to give small businesses the ability to make smart payroll choices specific to their economic situation. Minimum-wage increases above what the governor proposed would have the most negative impact on smaller restaurants, which are already struggling in a weak economy and cannot absorb higher labor costs. Equally impacted would be newer small businesses as well as teenagers and adults without job experience and skills. If there is to be an increase in minimum wage, we ought to exempt those small businesses grossing less
than $150,000 per year. Further, we should offer tax incentives to those businesses that offer higher wages. Lastly, we need to strengthen programs for skills and apprenticeship training and create more opportunities for higher paying jobs. We need legislators who are willing to reach across the aisle to write policies agreeable both to the public and to small businesses. Skew this to one side, and both are hurt in the end. When small businesses thrive, not only are there more jobs but also better choices in products and services. Increased gross receipts revenue means more money for public service programs. Personally, I am thankful for Gov. Martinez’s support of my small business. Lisa Shin is an optometrist in Los Alamos.
PUBLIC NOTICE The Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act (QHWRA) of 1998 require that the Santa Fe County Housing Authority prepare a 5 Year and Annual Plan covering operations of the Housing Authority’s Programs. The draft 5-Year and Annual Plans and all supporting documentation will be available for review May 1, 2014 at the Santa Fe County Housing Authority’s Administration Building located at 52 Camino de Jacobo in Santa Fe, Monday thru Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. During the Board of Commissioner’s meeting on May 27, 2014, a public hearing will be held to receive public comment on the Housing Authority’s 5-Year and Annual Plan. Legal #96905 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on May 4, 2014
community
CALENDAR
Featured events in and around Santa Fe
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UNITED WE RUN! Sunday, May 4. 5K Fun Run/Walk to benefit three Santa Fe Shelters (St. Elizabeth, Interfaith, and Esperanza) sponsored by the United Church of Santa Fe. Sunday, May 4 at 12:30 (immediately after 11:00 worship service). 1 K walk/run for children, too. Sign up to run, walk or sponsor! All proceeds go to the three agencies. For more information, please call 505-988-3295 or email unitedchurchsf@gmail.com. Love God, Neighbor, Creation! The United Church of Santa Fe. 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). Check us out on Facebook, too! You can also donate online at unitedchurchofsantafe.org. (Designate “united we run.”) Thank you! MAY
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INTRODUCTION TO INSIGHT MEDITATION. A series of four classes meeting Tuesdays May 6, 13, 20, 27 from 5:45 pm - 7:00 pm at Mountain Cloud Zen Center, 7241 Old Santa Fe Trail. Meditation on the Breath, Mindfulness, Meditation on Mind States, and Loving-kindness. A $20 fee, which can be waived if someone cannot otherwise attend, covers rent and administrative costs for the four weeks. Sponsored by the Santa Fe Vipassana Sangha, the class will be taught by Stefan Dobusyznski. For more information, and Stefan’s bio, check the sangha’s webpage. www.santafevipassana. org. To register contact Stefan stefand@cybermesa.com, 505-470-5097. THE SANTA FE RAILYARD Community Corporation will have its monthly Board of Directors’ Meeting on Tuesday, May 6th, 2014 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Railyard Park Community Room between SITE Santa Fe (1606 Paseo de Peralta) and the Railyard Park Performance Green. The public, neighbors, tenants, and all interested persons are encouraged to attend. Agenda will be available 24 hours in advance of the meeting at the office at 332 Read Street (982-3373) and posted at www.sfrailyardcc.org http://www. sfrailyardcc.org/.
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THE SANTA FE SYMPHONY & CHORUS and the Center for Contempo-
rary Arts present Director Kerry Candaele’s “FOLLOWING THE NINTH: In The Footsteps of Beethoven’s Final Symphony” at 4:30 pm & 7:30 pm on Wednesday, May 7 at CCA (1050 Old Pecos Trail), plus live skype with the director. This cinematic journey across five continents explores the heart and soul of one of the world’s greatest works of art. $20 supports The Symphony (advance tickets recommended) call 505.982.1338 or visit www.ccasantafe.org.
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Plans, and Manage Your Estate Distribution. The workshop will be held on Saturday, May 10th, from 9am to 5pm at the Holiday Inn Express, 60 Entrada Drive, Los Alamos. Seating is limited and registration is required. RSVP: LoisGolden@1APG.com / 505-216-0838.
ONGOING or UPCOMING LESSONS FROM GEORGIA O’KEEFFEE’S ART, LIFE, LANDSCAPE. June 23-29, 2014 Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center.
SANTA FE DOORWAYS END-OF- GhostRanch.org, 505-685-1001. Learn about LIFE Care Coalition. Dying Wish. Thursday Georgia O’Keeffe’s art and her life Anna May 8 11:45 - 1 pm. Ponce de Leon, 640 Alta Vista. Presentation: Dying Wish Film and Group Discussion. Dying Wish is an extraordinary, beautifully made film of a the journey of a courageous dying doctor’s decision to stop eating and drinking to ease his suffering and die with grace. He faces his final days with the help of a loving family and supportive hospice team. It is thought-provoking and reassuring. Please join us for the film and for the deepening discussion to follow. All welcome. Brown Bag lunch. Denys Cope 474-8383.
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THE ANNUAL KINDRED SPIRITS SPRING OPEN HOUSE Saturday and Sunday May 10th and 11th 11am - 4pm. Come visit with the animals, enjoy our Sanctuary setting. Sit in on our free talks about the care of senior animals from our dedicated healthcare providers on Wellness Care, Nutrition, Massage and much more. Bring your family and friends and get to know and enjoy our peaceful sanctuary. Free and open to the public. Refreshments provided. At Kindred Spirits Animal Sanctuary 3749-A Highway 14, Santa Fe, NM 87508. For more info please go to our website; www.kindredspiritsnm.org or call 505-471-5366 PASSPORT TO RETIREMENT Educational Workshop - presented by Peter Murphy. This complimentary, full day seminar will take you step-by-step through the important areas of retirement. You will learn how to: Define and Create Your Retirement, Assess the Costs, Evaluate Your Sources of Income, Invest for the Future, Protect Your Health and Wealth, Receive Funds from Your Retirement
Koster who served as O’Keeffe’s weekend companion. Formal art lessons for beginners focus on composition, color and perspective, starting with an exercise prescribed by O’Keeffe herself. Take home your own art inspired by O’Keeffe’s favorite landscape, her art, and her artistic philosophy, but reflecting your aesthetic and spirit. No previous art experience necessary but a desire to make art is required. Participants should be able to walk at least two miles over uneven terrain.
YOU ARE INVITED TO EXPERIENCE the magic of The Prayerful Harp: A Celtic Harp Adventure, led by Linda Larkin, at Ghost Ranch Education & Retreat Center the week of July 21-27. Whether you wish to relax through your music or would enjoy playing with a group, you will be introduced to basic techniques, sound healing practice and simple ways to create instant beauty on the harp. No music experience necessary. Rental harps available by reservation with the instructor. Visit www.GhostRanch.org for more information or call Ghost Ranch at 505-685-1000 to register.
FROM GRIEF TO LAUGHTER. Wednesdays; May 14 to June 18; 1:30 to 3:30 A free six-week class for people with disabilities or chronic illnesses, this series covers a variety of topics including feelings of loss related to disability or chronic illness, change in family roles, attitude awareness, positive coping strategies, dealing with difficult emotions, the importance of self-care and connecting with others for resource sharing and support. Location: New Vistas; 1205 Parkway Drive Suite A; Santa Fe. For more information and to register contact: Ken Searby at 471-1001 x118 email: kmsearby@newvistas.org
Promote your event here: call 986-3000 or email events@sfnewmexican.com FOR A COMPLETE CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS, VISIT:
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OPINIONS
Sunday, May 4, 2014
THE NEW MEXICAN
B-5
MY VIEW: BOB LANDERS
Placitas is being robbed of treasured wild horses I n 1999, my wife and I moved to New Mexico from New Hampshire. It was Placitas that called our names. Everything about Placitas was perfect in our eyes, especially the rural nature of the area: developments on acre-plus lots, open landscapes, beautiful views and horse property for our horses from New Hampshire. We knew nothing about the wild horses of Placitas, which existed even back then. We encountered our first Placitas free-roaming horse the first winter here. Outside, we saw a magnificent gray stallion followed by his mares and foals. It was exciting to stand within yards of these wild horses. No skinny horses here. Getting too close meant that they moved away not running nor terrified by people, just not interested in close
contact. We saw this herd more frequently and nearly year-round in Cedar Creek. Years later, during the severe drought, that herd was purchased by a neighbor from the New Mexico Livestock Board to save them from death. They somehow later escaped, roaming the area for another year or more. As the drought worsened, this herd was recaptured and reluctantly sent to a rescue site in Chama. There exists a group in Placitas whose members lure horses onto private property by baiting them with hay, then have them removed by contacting the New Mexico Livestock Board and applying the “estray” rules. These people have taken the law into their own hands, and public officials are ignoring the fact that they are ille-
MY VIEW: ALICE GIOVINCO
Opera is a little heaven on Earth I n the movie Moonstruck, Nicholas Cage takes Cher to a performance of La Bohème telling her: “I love two things. I love you, and I love the opera. If I can have the two things that I love together for one night, I will be satisfied to give up the rest of my life.” In Pretty Woman, Richard Gere takes Julia Roberts to a performance of La Traviata and remarks: “People’s reaction to opera the first time they hear it is extreme … They either love it or they hate it. If they love it, they will always love it. If they don’t, they may learn to love it, but it will never become part of their soul.” These quotes describe opera beautifully. After love, it is the most important thing! I have few memories of childhood that do not include opera. Specifically, the Metropolitan Opera, where my father was chief music librarian for 30 years. I became an opera lover “in utero” as my mother stood through a performance of Parsifal (five hours, 15 minutes) while pregnant with me. As a child, I experienced the “goose bumps” feeling that sublime music can give you and later learned that there is actually a name for it: “frisson.” Years later, when I worked for James Levine, music director of the Metropolitan Opera, he would describe this phenomenon as “a moment that was touched by the hand of God.” I have always felt sorry for people who don’t have such a passion as opera in their lives. Throughout my childhood, I attended historic performances that are encased in my heart and soul forever. My father spent each evening at our kitchen table writing musical scores with an old-fashioned ink bottle, dipping pen and blotter. When a camera panned the orchestra pit recently for one of the Metropolitan Opera
My Views We are happy to consider publication of My Views, commentaries of up to 600 words, from writers who live within our reporting area. Provide verification information: full name, home address and telephone number, along with a sentence about yourself for the tagline. All copy is subject to editing for length, grammar, spelling, language and obvious errors. We encourage writers to include a photo of themselves. We do not return edited copy for writer’s approval. However, we try to respect the writer’s voice and edit as lightly as possible. We run My Views on Sundays — and no, we cannot guarantee a publication date. Please note: There’s a three-month waiting period between the publication of a My View and submission of another one. However, we accept letters of up to 150 words in the interim, about once a month. Send your My Views to letters@sfnewmexican. com.
high definition simulcasts, I recognized my father’s distinctive penmanship on a flautist’s music stand. When I was 8 years old, my father put me on an empty stage and insisted I sing, “My Country ’Tis of Thee,” so I could tell people I sang at the Metropolitan Opera. This memory always brings a smile to my face. My father still resonates in my heart, and memories of him and the Met bring feelings of warmth, pride and amusement. They are that “safe” place we all need to go to when there is stress in our life. After college, I worked at the Met myself as an assistant to Maestro James Levine, the 32-year-old newly announced music director, or “Jimmy,” as he was called. I still remember a comment that Jimmy made to the effect that mankind is never higher than when collectively performing a great work of art, and that everyone, conductor included, was in service to the composer. Opera has changed since the golden years of my childhood. Occasionally, I wonder if it’s just me getting older, but most of the time I know that is not true. Opera productions have become more gimmicky, and singers have become more attractive. While these alone are not bad things, the caliber of artistry and singing has been compromised. I know this is true because it’s been years since I have cried at the opera or experienced a true “frisson.” However, opera is still better than doing anything else on the planet. Opera is as close to heaven as we will get on this Earth. It is the breath of life. Alice Schumer Giovinco is a counselor with Santa Fe Public Schools and a docent at The Santa Fe Opera.
gally trapping horses within the same fences constructed to keep them out. New Mexico is a legal fence-out state. How is it that horse baiters are allowed to capture horses and have them removed? It will soon be too late to save the Placitas horses. On April 11, another herd was captured by this group, who lured them onto private property on Camino de La Rosa using hay as their weapon of choice. Was it just coincidence that this happened on the same day that Karen McCalpin, CEO of the Corolla Wilderness Horses located on the North Carolina Outer Banks area, was here to address Placitans at a meeting sponsored by Placitas Citizens for Open Discussion of Wild Horse Management?
Though the horse baiters didn’t shoot these horses (which happened to the Corolla Wild Horses in the 1930s), they simply called the New Mexico Livestock Board and falsely claimed these horses to be “estray.” The board rounded up the horses, loaded them on a trailer and penned them for auction. It was tragic to watch. These Placitas horses will never be free again. Color them gone. Today’s contentious political issues over the Placitas horses can be resolved, but not by actions of any specific group of individuals who believe they have the only resolution. The Placitas Horse Baiters seek total eradication, not reduction in numbers. They seem happy to see the horses sold to Mexico as horse meat.
A Sandoval County task force, recently formed, is seeking to solve this horse issue, and will soon have nothing to discuss. No discussion will be needed, because the issue will have been eliminated. There were more than 120 horses free roaming in Placitas just last summer, and the current estimate is fewer than 40. In the near future, Placitans may never again see a wild horse. Do you wish to have this shameful and senseless crime happening in Placitas? Placitas, you are being robbed while you sleep! Bob Landers grew up on the New Hampshire/Vermont border. He is the owner of a company here in New Mexico.
Helping kids make the grade
Newspapers wspapers in the
classroom are a teaching opportunity that educators and students alike value and use. That’s why the Newspaper In Education (NIE) program is so important to our schools. Teachers say that newspapers give them learning opportunities in a variety of subjects. Not just current events and social studies, as you would expect, but newspapers are also used in history, math, English and science classes.
The businesses listed here are sponsors of NIE here in Northern New Mexico. Their contribution to the NIE program is helping to create better students in the classroom today and better citizens in our communities tomorrow.
Advanced Janitorial Supply Allan Houser, Inc. Anderson Air Conditioning Auto Care 2000 Baskin-Robbins, Cerrillos Rd. Big Jo True Value Hardware Bookworks Centinela Traditional Arts Chopstix City of Santa Fe Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Santa Fe Community Bank Crystal Springs David J. Ortega, DDS Design Enginuity LLC Denman & Assoc., Inc. Dressman’s Gifts El Rey Inn Elevate Media Eldorado Animal Clinic Eldorado Hotel & Spa Fitness Plus GEN-TECH GMB Construction Gorman Lightning Protection High Desert Guitars James Kallas Jewelers
If you would like to sponsor your child or grandchild’s classroom or to contribute to NIE, please call Michelle Chavez at The New Mexican: 505-428-7620
‘
John G, Rehders, General Contractor La Guardia Self Storage LANL Foundation Las Acequias Farm Lee’s Towing Linda Krull Los Pueblos Apartments Lyon Enterprises Mary Munoz-Nunez, Farmers Insurance Matthew’s Office Supply McDowell Construction Co. Medicap Pharmacy Mesa Steel, Inc. Montecristi Custom Hat Works Nat Owings Gallery PNM Sign of the Pampered Maiden Salazar & Sons Mortuary Santa Fe BMW Santa Fe Ole Food Co. Santa Fe Railyard Santa Fe School of Cooking William D. Parker, DDS, MS Wolf Corp. Wood Metal Concrete Architecture
nie
newspapers in education
R E G I ST E R N OW F O R S U M M E R A N D FA L L C L AS S E S
SFCC prepared me and helped make my dream come true — to be a nurse and give back to my community! I never lacked advice or a person to turn to. Everyone was very supportive, especially my professors. Charlene Rodriquez Labor & Delivery Nurse CHRISTUS St. Vincent Regional Medical Center SFCC Class of 2013 A.A.S. in Nursing Charlene is just one success story out of thousands. Since 1983, Santa Fe Community College has empowered students and strengthened community.
LEARN MORE. www.sfcc.edu 505-428-1000
Empower Students, Strengthen Community.
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050414_ROP_SF
SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-2 Neighbors C-7 Faces & Places C-8
LOCAL NEWS
A lifetime of memories: Santa Fe man reflects on World War II service, love and family. Neighbors, C-7
C
Report: Higher ed cuts will hurt economy Rising tuition likely to deter some students from attending college, cutting future earning potential By Patrick Malone The New Mexican
Between the start of the national economic downturn in 2008 and the present, only two states have decreased per-student spending on higher education more than New Mexico — and the cuts here have resulted in higher tuition and reduced
programs and faculty at state colleges. During the past six years, perstudent spending by the state of New Mexico has fallen by $4,588 when adjusted for inflation, according to a report released Thursday by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities based in Washington, D.C. Over the same time span, tuition at fouryear universities in New Mexico has
risen by more than 25 percent, the study says. “This is not the direction a state with one of the highest poverty rates should be taking — not if we want New Mexicans to have the opportunity to raise their standards of living for themselves and their families,” said Amber Wallin, a policy analyst with New Mexico Voices for Children. “These deep cuts have led to the depletion of the state’s lottery scholarship fund, which is in real jeopardy if lawmakers fail to come up with a substantial fix.”
Although the percentage growth of tuition since 2008 in New Mexico is high, the average increase in tuition at a public four-year college here ranks 15th lowest, at $1,214 more per year than it was six years ago. New Mexico is not alone in cutting funding to colleges during the Great Recession. According to the national study, only Alaska and North Dakota contribute more to higher education now than they did before the downturn. “It’s absolutely true that higher education faced cuts across the nation,
La Tierra Torture racers say mountain biking is all about pain
including in New Mexico,” said Glenn Walters, Gov. Susana Martinez’s deputy Cabinet secretary for higher education. But so did other state-funded programs, he said. “Those cuts were across the board, not just to higher education, but to all of state government,” Walters said. “Pretty much all state programs were hit proportionally, although there may be certain sectors of the higher education system that feel like they took a
Please see CUTS, Page C-5
FOUR CORNERS
Public will have say on plan to cut plant’s haze Renewable energy advocates want coal-powered station replaced By Staci Matlock The New Mexican
From left, Silvio Lopez, 40, congratulates Clark Smith, 24, after they completed the Senior Category 2 race during the eighth annual La Tierra Torture mountain bike race on Saturday. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
‘Self-inflicted torture’ By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican
I
t was torture, and they liked it. Most of the more than 200 participants in the annual La Tierra Torture mountain bike race smiled broadly as they finished the course Saturday, high-fiving one another and collapsing in pockets of shade to gulp liquids, refuel with snacks and discuss the terrain and the pain of the race. The event — which was started by the city of Santa Fe more than 20 years ago and then fell dormant for about a decade before being revived in 2006 — draws a variety of participants, ranging from pro-cyclists with $10,000 bikes to little girls with flower baskets strapped to their handle bars. Participants compete in three main categories, which include several age divisions. Racers ride anywhere from less than a quarter-mile (the kids’ race) to more than 30 miles (the Category 1 racers) along a 10.8-mile loop that is part of the La Tierra system of trails northwest of the city. The course includes hairpin turns and steep hills. The event is organized by the all-volunteer La Tierra Torture Mountain Bike Race Committee, and proceeds from entry fees are doled out by the
Please see TORTURE, Page C-4
About 210 racers competed in the eighth annual La Tierra Torture mountain bike race on Saturday at La Tierra Trails. The race started at La Cuchara Trailhead on N.M. 599 and Camino de los Montoyas.
A plan by New Mexico’s largest power producer to reduce a dark haze, which for decades has hung over the Four Corners region of northwestern New Mexico and spills into other states, will be ready for public comment as early as next week. Some environmental groups think the plan is still flawed and will cost more than it needs to. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is requiring Public Service Company of New Mexico to clean up the pollution, which the agency largely ties to emissions from the coal-fired San Juan Generating Station near Shiprock. PNM’s plan for reducing the haze includes retiring two of the generating station’s four coal-fired units and replacing the power source with a combination natural gas, nuclear power and solar energy. PNM also will install a system to clean up nitrogen oxides produced at the other two coal-fired units. The plan was crafted by the state and PNM to forestall the federal government from mandating an air-quality cleanup plan. The federal agency announced Wednesday that it has approved publishing the New Mexico Haze Reduction plan in the Federal Register. The public will have 30 days to comment on the plan once it is published. “We are committed to working with our state partners to improve visibility and reduce pollution,” said EPA Regional Administrator Ron Curry, former head of the New Mexico Environment Department, in a statement. “Pollution, especially air pollution, has no geographical boundaries. We are pleased to propose approval of the State of New Mexico’s plan.” While the EPA will decide if the utility company’s plan will reduce emissions enough to meet federal standards by 2064, it is up to the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission to decide if the plan is one that PNM customers can afford. PNM will ask for a rate increase to recover costs of replacing the coalfired power with a natural gas plant and new solar facilities. State regulators will hear the rate case in August. Renewable energy advocates would like to see the 40-year-old San Juan Generating Station replaced completely by solar, wind and geothermal, but they realize it will take time. “I agree that closing two units is a superior financial and environmental outcome than putting expensive pollution controls on all four units and extending the life of the plant,” said Mariel Nanasi, executive director of the Santa Fe-based New Energy Economy. Nanasi also thinks PNM should not put any new
Please see HAZE, Page C-4
Dixon community pools efforts to make new library a reality By Uriel J. Garcia The New Mexican
DIXON — The Embudo Valley Community Library started in 1992 in a rented room with two volunteer librarians and a collection of donated books. On Saturday, the community celebrated the opening of a new $600,000, 3,000-square-foot library, across the street from the Dixon Elementary School on N.M. 75, with live music and a reading from local author Paulette Atencio. The new facility, with brightly colored walls, has been open since
February. It serves the Northern New Mexico communities between Velarde and Vadito, which have a combined population of about 8,000. The library carries about 12,000 items, including books, CDs and DVDs, and is a popular meeting place for local residents, who raised money for the new building by holding bake sales and other fundraisers. The library a good example of a successful grass-roots community effort. The idea originated in the kitchen of one of the eight original founders in 1990. “We just felt that there was a need for it,” said Shel Neymark, the library
Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com
board president and one of the eight founders. The first library in the community was immediately successful. It spawned early childhood education programs and served as a site for community events. But it quickly outgrew its rented space, and board members began looking for a permanent home. Then a 1.5-acre property that included the old general store and a small house was up for sale. A donor offered $200,000 if the board could raise the other $50,000. People were “enthused,” Neymark said, and they
Debbie Wade organizes books Wednesday at the Embudo Valley Community Library. Wade is one of the many volunteers at the library.
Please see LIBRARY, Page C-5
URIEL J. GARCIA THE NEW MEXICAN
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
C-2
LOCAL
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department is investigating the following reports: u Police responded to a report of an auto burglary Wednesday in the 1500 block of Luisa Street, where the victim reportedly forced the suspect to stop and return the vehicle. There were few details in the report, but a Santa Fe police spokesman said a suspect was identified. u Police responded to the unattended death of a 62-yearold man in the 400 block of Camino de las Animas on Thursday. The man appeared to have died from natural causes, according to a police report. u Jose Cintas, 51, of Questa was arrested Friday on Cerrillos Road on charges of driving on a revoked license and failure to stop. u About $10,000 worth of gold jewelry was stolen from a home in the 600 block of Don Gaspar Avenue sometime between 6 and 9 a.m. Friday. According to a police report, a witness reported seeing a man “in blue” leaving through the front door of the residence around 9 a.m. An image of the suspect was captured on the home’s video surveillance camera. u A vehicle parked in the 300 block of Camino de Lora was broken into Friday afternoon. A male suspect was seen leaving the area in a tan or gold BMW, according to a police report. u Jewelry, cameras, computers and medications were stolen from a home in the 1100 block of Paseo Barranca sometime between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Friday. u Marcus Griffin, 27, of Santa Fe was arrested on charges of battery on a household member, embezzlement, resisting or obstructing an officer, breaking and entering, and criminal damage to property Friday in the 6300 block of Entrada de Milagro. u A woman reported that her purse was stolen out of a golf cart at the Country Club Golf Course Friday evening. The bag contained about $800 in cash, credit cards and some jewelry, according to a report. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the following reports: u Darrell Trujillo, 41, of Chimayó was arrested on charges of driving on a revoked license and careless driving in the 800 block of N.M. 503 near Nambé on Saturday. According to a report, Trujillo crashed into a fence, mailbox and tree after he began making adjustments to his vehicle’s hydraulic suspension system while driving. u Deputies responding to a request for a welfare check on Santa Fe County Road 84A and found a 37-year-old man dead on
Saturday. No signs of foul play were discovered. u Eric Thorpe, 22, of Santa Fe was arrested on a charge of battery on a household member Friday after deputies responded to a report of a domestic dispute in the 3200 block of Jemez Road. u Electronics, jewelery, checks, tools and an unspecified amount of cash were stolen from a home on Shady Lane in Española between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Friday.
DWI arrests u Randon Romero, 27, of Santa Fe was arrested on charges of aggravated DWI and open container Friday afternoon after he allegedly was found sleeping in his vehicle at a traffic light at the intersection of St. Francis Drive and Agua Fría Street. u William Donohue, 58, of Santa Fe was arrested on charges of aggravated DWI, careless driving, no insurance and possession of a controlled substance (marijuana) Friday night after crashing into a guardrail at Interstate 25 and St. Francis Drive, according to a police report. u Yvonne Montoya, 36, of Santa Fe was arrested on charges of DWI and failing to maintain a single lane of travel around 10 p.m. Friday. Montoya allegedly was observed crossing the center line on Tesuque Village Road, according to a report. u Henry Milligan, 46, of Clines Corners was arrested on charges of DWI, possession of a controlled substance, negligent use of a deadly weapon and having an open container of alcohol on Interstate 40 near Edgewood on Friday. Milligan’s breath alcohol content was found to be 0.12, according to the report. The legal threshold for intoxication in New Mexico is 0.08.
GEORGE RICHARD ALEXANDER MAITLAND On April 11, 2014 George Richard Alexander Maitland passed peacefully in his sleep at his residence in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. Richard was a professional dancer for 50 years and later a teacher and choreographer. He appeared at the age of six wearing a tuxedo to tap dance with Spanky Alfalfa and Darla as part of the Our Gang Comedies. He appeared in cabaret, television and in several movies before his run on Broadway in Call Me Madame, Brigadoon, The Red Mill, Song of Norway and Lil Abner. Richard toured the world, South America, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Italy, France, Greece, England, and India. He fell in love with Bombay and Calcutta and settled in New Delhi, India where he lived for six years. The Children’s Dance Theater he organized there brought him to the attention of Prime Minister Nehru and Mother Teresa. He served to generate funds for their many charities through his dance performances and later his art exhibits. During one of the exhibits of his paintings, collages and mobiles he met Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy. He cherished a personal letter from her thanking him for his expression of sorrow at the death of her husband, President John Kennedy. Upon his return to the U.S. from India he made residence in Santa Fe New Mexico where he operated his own gallery for over 25 years. In addition, during his residence in Santa Fe he performed at the Armory for the Arts and taught dance at the College of Santa Fe. He showed his work in over 30 galleries from coast to coast where he was the featured artist. In 1993 he moved to Rio Rancho and built a gallery addition to his home where he showed his work and as the consummate entertainer, welcomed his admirers and friends to lavish ethnic dinners he himself prepared . His art is represented in many private collections including Jacqueline Kennedy, Ambassador and Mrs. Bunker, Prime Minister Nehru, Ralph Bellamy, Blake Edwards, Phyllis Diller, Jack Lemmon, Jerry Lewis, R.C. Gorman, Johnny Mercer, Martha Ray, Harpo Marx and the John Panitz’s to name only a few. He continued a lifelong correspondence with Chita Rivera, Kay Ballard and many other show business "Gypsys" around the world. During his lifetime he received many honors. Most recently he was granted the designation of Local Treasure 2013 by the Albuquerque Art Business Association. His vast collection of theater memorabilia will be housed in the Performing Arts Museum in San Francisco while his Maitland Clan genealogical records, photos and family artifacts have been included in the files of the Clan in the U.S. and in England. His vast music collection will be housed at the University of Arizona. His paintings are a part of the permanent collections of the Albuquerque Fine Arts Museum and the Santa Fe Museum of Fine Arts. He is survived by his sister Cathleen Orr of Albuquerque, his brother Michael Bailey of Washington, his nephew Christian Orr, niece Leigh Alvarado both of California, his nieces Kelly Jurgens, Shelly Hastings and nephew Michael Bailey Jr. of Washington. A private service will be held in Albuquerque, New Mexico. HERTZ, KATHERINE (KAY) KEROS
Speed SUVs u Mobile speed-enforcement vehicles are not in use while the city seeks a new photo-enforcement contractor.
Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, woman and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelters: 438-0502 Police and Fire Emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-CALL (2255)
HERTZ, Katherine (Kay) Keros, 78 - A lifelong resident of Santa Fe, died at her home on Monday, May 1st. Katherine was preceded in death by her husband, Jack Hertz and her mother, Dorothy Berardinelli Keros. She is survived by her father, Thee Keros of Santa Fe, nephews: Jeff Livingston and wife Lisa of Albuquerque, Mark Livingston and wife Heather of Edmond, Okla, and Kenneth Patterson and wife Monica of Tulsa, Okla.; sister, Pat Assimakis of Santa Fe and numerous cousins and other relatives. A memorial mass will be celebrated at the Blessed Sacrament Chapel at the Basilica Cathedral of St. Francis at 12:00 noon on Tuesday, May 6th. Memorials in her honor may be directed to the Carmelites, 49 Mt. Carmel Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505.
Death notice MIGUEL PHILLIP TRUJILLO Miguel P. Trujillo died April 30, 2014, from pancreatic cancer at the age of 73. He was born Dec. 13, 1940, in Santa Fe. He was a graduate of Santa Fe High School and The University of New Mexico, and held master’s degrees from Arizona State University and Stanford. He spent more than 40 years in California before returning to Santa Fe in 2006. He leaves behind his wife, Mary Beth Patterson; daughters Lori Trujillo of Bella Vista, Calif., and Lisa Trujillo of Berkeley, Calif.; grandchildren Zachary and Ava Golden and son-in-law Ricky Golden, also of Berkeley; sister Valerie Trujillo of Tallahassee; brother Steven Trujillo of Washington, D.C., and Santa Fe; beloved Aunt Bernice Adams of Albuquerque and many loving cousins and dear friends, all of whom miss him immensely. He was preceded in death by his parents, Miguel E. Trujillo and Ruth Aragon Trujillo Gutierrez, and stepmother Gloria Herrera Trujillo. Miguel was an educator, trainer, consultant and manager; he retired after 20 years as an educator and nearly 20 years at Hewlett-Packard. He was a gentle presence loved by children and
kitties; he had deep friendships with both men and women. He was a world traveler, fluent in Spanish; a fierce competitor on the tennis Miguel P. courts, poker Trujillo table and cribbage board; an active participant in Senior Olympics, and a volunteer and board member at Bienvenidos Outreach before illness took his strength. Miguel had an easy laugh and a great personal warmth that makes his loss all the greater. An impromptu celebration of Miguel’s life took place a few days before his death, and he experienced an outpouring of love from a multitude of friends and family. There will be no formal service, in keeping with his beliefs, but another celebration may be planned at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to Bienvenidos Outreach or the Cancer Foundation. We are grateful for the gentle care he received at the Cancer Center, from Ambercare Hospice and his caregiver collective.
CALENDAR LISTING: To get an item on the calendar, deliver your listing to The New Mexican newsroom at 202 E. Marcy St., or mail it to P.O. Box 2048, Santa
Fe, N.M. 87504. You can send an e-mail to service@sfnewmexican.com or send a fax to 986-9147. The deadline for listings is 5 p.m. Tuesday.
RIVERA FAMILY MORTUARIES ~SANTA FE ~ ESPAÑOLA ~ TAOS Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhom e.com
Edith Croney, 97, Los Alamos, April 27, 2014
ODE TO JOY JOY MARTINDILL
Betty Lilienthal, 94, Santa Fe, April 27, 2014
Fabiola Benavidez, 91, Pecos, April 25, 2014 David Montoya, 34, Santa Fe, April 26, 2014
BARBARA TOWNSEND MEEM Barbara Townsend Meem of Santa Fe died April 30 at the age of 97. She was born in LaGrange, IL in 1916, the youngest of five children of William and Alberta Baker Townsend. She attended Lyons Township High School and Junior College, where she was a top student, a gifted dancer, and a self-described class clown. After graduating from Wellesley College in 1937 with a major in history and a minor in economics, Barbara moved to Santa Fe to teach at the Brownmoor School (refer to New Mexican article from 9/29/13 entitled "A Wonderful Life"). Here she met James Meem, younger brother of noted Santa Fe architect John Gaw Meem. Barbara and Jim Meem were married in 1942, and soon moved to Washington DC for his career at the State Department. Barbara worked as a nurse’s aide at DC Children’s Hospital during World War II. During their years in the east, Barbara was a homemaker raising their daughter. She also taught history for many years at the Florence Crittenton Home in Washington. The Meems moved back to Santa Fe in 1973 after Jim’s retirement; he died in 1999. During her decades in Santa Fe, Barbara served on the board of the Old Santa Fe Association, tutored at Capshaw Middle School, and played bridge with friends. An avid reader and a lifelong learner, Barbara surrounded herself with books, which were valued companions in her later years. Barbara Meem leaves with loving memories her daughter Deb Meem and partner Michelle Gibson, grandson Christopher Johnson and wife April, granddaughter Rebecca Johnson and partner Cole Hundley, great grandchildren Annabelle and Max Johnson, nieces Nancy Meem Wirth and Jane Lake Birt, and a host of other relatives, friends, and faithful helpers. A memorial gathering will be held in the summer. Meanwhile, in lieu of flowers, please consider donating in Barbara Meem’s name to the National MS Society, PO Box 4527, NY, NY 10163, or online at www.nationalmssociety.org, or to Girls Inc., 301 Hillside St., Santa Fe 87501, or online at girlsincofsantafe.org/. IN LOVING MEMORY OF JULIANNA MIKHAILOVNA OSSORGIN Julianna (our Baba), age 83, passed away peacefully on May 1, 2014. She was called by many loving names: Baba, Tsotsie, Oula, sister, and friend. Her personality was as multifaceted as her many names. She was a true citizen of the world - born in Paris to parents who fled Russia during the 1917 Revolution. She came to Santa Fe in December 1971 to start a new American life after her mother died to be with her brother, Michael, her sister-in-law, Lillian, and her niece and nephews - Lydia, Michael, and Nicholas. She has always been young in spirit, enjoying and caring for multiple babies and children starting with the Ossorgin family, then Jessica Gerber, the Salganek children, and the Whitman children Chris, Kate, Lorri, and Ben, making accessible to all of them life’s celebrations deeply rooted in family and church traditions. Julianna has lived with the Whitman’s for the past 38 years. Julianna loved stuffed animals - making them come alive in her hands to the fascination of the children. Music was her constant companion. She could identify any classical composition after hearing a few bars. Some of her favorite things were going out to lunch for burgers or soup with family and friends, shopping for gifts of silver jewelry, toys, and snacks like French cheeses, biscuits, and sweets. Most of all she loved family, be they close or countries away. Her superb intellect was evident in being multilingual (Russian, Slavonic, French, Italian, and English) and having exceptional mathematical skills. She had a story or anecdote to fit most situations which kept everyone in good humor. She was an excellent cook. All enjoyed her Russian hamburgers, borscht, spaghetti, veal stew, green chili stew, and of course her blini, and Pascha and kulich for Russian Easter. She will join in death her parents, Yelena and Michael, her brothers Michael and Sergei and her many other deceased relatives in Russia, Switzerland and Paris and her pets, Poodik and Azure. Survivors are her extended Ossorgin and Whitman families and many friends and families in Santa Fe and around the world who will greatly miss her. Julianna was the bridge which started the ongoing friendships between the Ossorgin and Whitman families. Special thanks to her loving caregiver, Frances, the St. Vincent’s ICU doctors and staff and PMS Hospice. In lieu of flowers please send donations to St. Juliana of Lazarevo Russian Orthodox Church in Santa Fe or Santa Fe Children’s Museum. Funeral services will be held Monday, May 5th, at 10:00 a.m. at St. Juliana of Lazarevo Russian Orthodox Church, 3877 W. Alameda St., Santa Fe, New Mexico, with burial to follow at Rivera Memorial Gardens. ANTHONY LUJAN - ORTEGA 10/09/2012 ~ 05/04/2013
Doni Helen Rivera, 50, Santa Fe, April 27, 2014 Helen Rivera, 79, Santa Fe, April 28, 2014 Leslie Shuck, 69, Glorieta, April 28, 2014 James Taylor, 69, Santa Fe, April 29, 2014 Jeanne Doino, 80, Santa Fe, April 30, 2014 Come celebrate the life of Joy Martindill at a Manhattan Reception, May 9, 2014. Please bring your own Manhattan glass and an hors d’oeuvre to share. Dress as you think Joy would have wanted you to. Please feel free to invite Joy’s other friends Donations in Joy’s memory gratefully accepted by Kitchen Angels, The Lensic and Bienvenidos RSVP and directions at infomang@aol.com
Richard Lemieux, 77, Santa Fe, May 1, 2014 Julianna Ossurgin, 83, Santa Fe, May 1, 2014 Cooper O’ Connor Beacom, 23, Taos/Santa Fe, April 29, 2014 Robert Bowyer, 82, White Rock, April 24, 2014 Gerald Harrington, 76, Santa Fe, April 25, 2014
There is a special angel in heaven that is a part of me. It is not where I wanted him but where god wanted him to be. He was here but just a moment like a night shooting star. And though he is in heaven he isn’t very far. He touched the heart of many like only an angel can do. So I send this special message to the heaven up above. Please take care of my angel and send him all my love. My baby we love and miss you more with each passing day not a second goes by that you are not thought of. A 1 year anniversary mass will be held at St. John’s Church on Monday, May 5th at 9:00 a.m. Love, Mommy, Daddy, Sister and Family.
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LOCAL & REGION
In brief Police: Man was packaging coke The Rio Arriba County sheriff said deputies on Thursday arrested a man who was found cutting and packaging cocaine in his home in west Española. Larry Gallegos, 56, of Española has been charged with trafficking a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of marijuana. Rio Arriba Sheriff Tommy Rodella said Gallegos was found with about 56 grams of cocaine, a “minimal amount of heroin” and more than $2,000 in cash. Rodella said deputies had to break down the door to his home in the 600 block of Fairview Lane after Gallegos refused to answer. Rodella said the arrest was made thanks to Deputy Jimmy Vigil and a confidential informant. Rodella said surveillance of the home had revealed a heavy amount of foot traffic.
Scout official on game board The ranching superintendent at the Philmont Scout Ranch has been appointed to the State Game Commission by Gov. Susana Martinez. Robert Ricklefs of Cimarron is the ranching and farming superintendent at the 137,000-acre Philmont property operated by the Boy Scouts of America in Northern New Mexico. The seven-member commission sets hunting and fishing policies and oversees the state Game and Fish Department. Ricklefs holds a bachelor’s degree in farm and ranch management from the University of Wyoming. He fills a vacancy on the commission, and his appointment is subject to Senate confirmation. Former commission chairman Scott Bidegain resigned in February because of allegations he was an accessory to the unlawful killing of a cougar.
Officer arrested in choking case ALBUQUERQUE — A New Mexico State Police officer is facing charges after authorities accuse him of choking a man attempting to repossess his vehicle, then trying to run from other officers. Los Lunas police said Charles Vernier was arrested Thursday at an apartment complex after officers found him restraining a tow truck operator in a chokehold. Vernier was on leave from the police force at the time of the incident. Authorities say Los Lunas officers ordered Vernier to release the man. Vernier fled and was taken into custody when he slipped and fell. He was arrested and charged with aggravated battery and interference with a police officer.
Man stabbed at yard sale ALBUQUERQUE — Albuquerque police say a man was stabbed while stopping to check out a yard sale. Police say the victim is in stable condition at University Hospital after sustaining multiple stab wounds. Authorities say the man and his girlfriend stopped at a yard sale on Mesilla Street near Zuni, and another man approached the victim as he was getting out of his car. According to police, the suspect and the victim got into an argument, although the victim repeatedly said he did not know the man. Officers say the suspect allegedly then stabbed the victim, causing lacerations in his wrist, abdomen and pelvic area.
Los Lunas man shot by police LOS LUNAS — Authorities say a man has been shot
by police after a barricade situation in a Los Lunas home. New Mexico State Police say they were called in to assist Los Lunas police around 9:30 p.m. Friday with an armed man was holed up inside a residence. State police Lt. Emmanuel Gutierrez said officers attempted to negotiate with the man, who may have been under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Gutierrez said the suspect then came out of the home wielding a weapon, and shots were fired by officers.
Duke City banks hit by robbers ALBUQUERQUE — Federal and local authorities are investigating if two bank robberies in Albuquerque are related. FBI spokesman Frank Fisher says a branch of Wells Fargo and one of Bank of America were robbed Saturday morning. Fisher says a 5-foot-6 man in his early 40s allegedly robbed Bank of America on 4th Street near Osuna Road. Authorities say he wore a leather hat, a long black coat and sunglasses. Fisher says authorities received another report of a bank robbery at Wells Fargo on Juan Tabo Boulevard near Central Avenue. Fisher says a preliminary description says that suspect is described as about 6 feet tall and also was wearing brown pants and a dark jacket.
Trial fugitive back in custody ALBUQUERQUE — A man who has been a fugitive since leaving an Albuquerque courthouse during a lunch break in his trial in mid-April is back in custody. The U.S. Marshals Service says its fugitive team apprehended 25-year-old Derek Malkhassian in northeast Albuquerque on Thursday. Malkhassian was on trial last month in state District Court on charges of possessing a meth lab, possessing meth and harboring a fugitive. The Marshals Service says its officers and Albuquerque police detectives arrested Malkhassian in an apartment without incident. According to the Marshals Service, Malkhassian now awaits a new trial in his 2011 case. He also faces new charges.
Man says police injured testicle ALBUQUERQUE — A lawyer for a University of New Mexico law student says his client was kneed in the groin so hard by an Albuquerque police officer that it shattered a testicle. Sam Bregman, attorney for 24-year-old Jeremy Martin, said Friday the law student had to have emergency surgery to remove the injured testicle following his arrest for aggravated driving under the influence and possession of marijuana. According to a criminal complaint, Martin was pulled over April 25 by Officer P. Padilla after he was seen running a stop sign.
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Kansas fights prairie chicken status Bill aims to derail federal efforts to protect bird By John Hanna The Associated Press
TOPEKA, Kan. — Kansas legislators approved a bill Friday night declaring that the federal government has no authority to regulate prairie chickens in the state as a protest against potential federal oversight of efforts to reverse a steep decline in the population of one species. But the measure sent by the Republican-dominated Legislature to GOP Gov. Sam Brownback is not as strong as some state officials wanted because it wouldn’t subject federal employees attempting
to regulate prairie chickens or their habitats to felony charges or fines. Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who advocated an aggressive response, called it “more symbolism than substance.” The bill is designed to trigger lawsuits against federal efforts to regulate prairie chickens and their habitats by giving the attorney general or county prosecutors the authority to file them. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in March listed the lesser prairie chicken as a threatened species, but the bill also covers its larger, darker and more abundant cousin, the greater prairie chicken. The listing allows federal oversight of efforts to revive the lesser prairie chicken population, and it affects five
states with habitats for the bird — Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Kansas officials fear that federal officials could impose limits on agricultural and oil and natural gas industry activities, such as ordering farmers not to spray certain fields or directing ranchers to avoid grazing cattle in certain areas during the lesser prairie chickens’ nesting season. “I just talk about my ancestry and your ancestry. They came to America for freedom,” said Rep. Sharon Schwartz, a Washington Republican and chairwoman of the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee. “Our property should be ours. We should be able to control our property, not the federal government.” The federal government said
those five states had fewer than 18,000 lesser prairie chickens in 2013, down almost 50 percent from 2012. Kansas officials contend drought is the primary reason for the decline and say that the population will rebound. Brownback has not said publicly whether he’ll sign the bill, but he’s been a strong critic of the federal listing. Kansas also has joined Oklahoma in a federal lawsuit challenging the process that led to the listing. The final text of the Kansas bill emerged from negotiations between senators and House members. Republican senators pushed first to make it a felony for federal employees to attempt to regulate prairie chickens and then, as a compromise, to fine them up to $1,000.
Lawmakers stand by death penalty Botched execution unlikely to change minds about capital punishment By Shawn Pogatchnik The Associated Press
DALLAS — A bungled execution in Oklahoma in which the condemned prisoner writhed and moaned as he received a lethal injection outraged death-penalty opponents, invited court challenges and attracted worldwide attention. But the inmate’s agony alone is highly unlikely to change minds about capital punishment in the nation’s most active death-penalty states, where lawmakers say there is little political will to move against lethal injections — and a single execution gone wrong won’t change that. Oklahoma Rep. Mike Christian, a Republican lawmaker who pushed to have state Supreme Court justices impeached for briefly halting Tuesday’s execution, was unsparing. “I realize this may sound harsh,” Christian said, “but as a father and former lawman, I really don’t care if it’s by lethal injection, by the electric chair, firing squad, hanging, the guillotine or being fed to the lions.” Attorneys for death-row inmates hope Tuesday’s spectacle provides new evidence to argue that the injections are inhumane and illegal. But beyond the courtroom, support for capital punishment is undeterred in the states that perform the greatest number of executions — Texas, Oklahoma, Florida, Missouri, Alabama, Georgia and Ohio. And nowhere in those places are any elected officials of either political party talking seriously about using the incident to seek an end to executions. Missouri Rep. Paul Fitzwater, a Republican who chairs the state House’s corrections committee, called the botched execution “horrible” and “definitely not humane” but said it had not sparked any calls for reform. Oklahoma prison officials say Tuesday’s execution of Clayton Lockett went awry when an intravenous line of deadly drugs became dislodged. He later died from an apparent heart attack. Lockett had been condemned for shooting a 19-year-old girl with a sawed-off shotgun and watching as two accomplices buried her alive. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin has stayed an upcoming execution as prison officials investigate, but she too reaffirmed her support for capital punishment. On Friday, President Barack Obama said the Oklahoma event highlighted problems with the death penalty and he’s asking his attorney general for a review. National surveys by Gallup indicate that support for the death penalty remains
Then-New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson signs the repeal of the death penalty in his Santa Fe office in March 2009, while Rep. Gail Chasey, D-Albuquerque, looks on. Richardson has since campaigned against the death penalty in other states. He described meeting with several exonerated death row inmates. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO
strong, though it has declined over the past 20 years, from 80 percent in favor of capital punishment in 1992 to 60 percent two years ago. There are signs of a shift, primarily in the West and Northeast, after Clayton almost four decades in Lockett which no state legislatures voted to end executions. Five states — New Jersey, New Mexico, Illinois, Connecticut and Maryland — have formally abolished the death penalty in the last seven years, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment. New York’s death penalty was abolished by a court, and several other states have placed executions on hold. An anti-death penalty bill in New Hampshire fell one vote short of passage. Lawmakers in those states most often cited factors besides problems with lethal injection. Several governors cited the risk that an innocent person could be executed or the skyrocketing costs of fighting appeals in death-row cases. “The main factor was the miscarriage of justice,” former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said Friday in an interview. “I was aware of the serious problems with lethal injections, but it was not at the top.” Richardson signed his state’s abolition bill in 2009 and has since campaigned against the death penalty in other states. He described meeting with several exonerated death row inmates — there are more than 140 nationwide — as well as families of victims and law enforcement officials. He predicted that the botched execution
would weigh on other governors considering the death penalty. Texas has executed 515 inmates since reinstating the death penalty in 1982, by far more than any other state. Gov. Rick Perry and both the Republican and Democratic candidates for governor have repeated their support for capital punishment and their confidence in Texas’ system. Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment, predicted the execution’s biggest effect would be in the courts, where Oklahoma, Texas and other states are being challenged to name execution drug suppliers. The states argue they must keep the names secret to protect suppliers and ensure they can get the hardto-obtain drugs. Juries in Texas are already giving fewer death sentences, suggesting a larger shift, said Kristin Houle, executive director of the Texas Coalition to End the Death Penalty. “It’s not going to be just one thing that pushes the issue over the edge,” she said. One of the men wrongfully sentenced to death predicted that it would take more. Anthony Graves was sent to death row for killing six people in South Texas based on a co-defendant’s false testimony. He was freed in 2010 after 18 years in prison. Graves blamed lawmakers who follow polls that show enduring support for the death penalty. “What has to happen is someone famous, someone that they admire, has to be falsely accused or has to be convicted, to where they say, ‘Oh my God, this has become an epidemic,’ because now they can relate,” he said in an interview.
More time to report wolf loss
GOP hopeful finds tribal tie cuts both ways
ALBUQUERQUE — Federal wildlife officials say the deadline has been extended for ranchers to apply for payments under a program meant to ease conflicts between Mexican gray wolves and livestock. Ranchers in parts of New Mexico and Arizona now have until June 2 to apply for the payments. Officials say the deadline was extended another month. The chairman of the coexistence council, Sisto Hernandez, says the goal is to increase the number of ranchers who receive financial compensation to offset management costs that result from the presence of wolves.
By Jonathan Martin
Staff and wire reports
The New York Times
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. — T.W. Shannon will be Oklahoma’s first black senator if he wins the Republican nomination and is elected in November, but the quiet campaign stirring here about Shannon’s racial loyalties is not aimed at the African American branch of his family tree. Shannon, whose first name is Tahrohon, is a member of the Chickasaw Nation, the most influential tribe in a state where Native Americans are not merely the inheritors of a poignant history but also the state’s largest nongovernment employer outside of Wal-Mart. Most of those jobs are connected to Oklahoma’s 110-and-counting casinos. Yet
the gambling revenue that has showered millions on some of the state’s Native Americans has also bred resentment over the tribes’ expanding footprint. Beyond Oklahoma, Shannon, 36, a former state House speaker, has the potential to become a sensation in a party desperate to shed its old-andwhite image. Shannon, whose father is Chickasaw and mother is black, has received tens of thousands of dollars directly from Chickasaws and other tribes. And an independent group, Oklahomans for a Conservative Future, has spent more than $435,000 on his behalf since March. The group has received contributions from Indians, according to Republicans familiar with the donors. As he has emerged as a
formidable candidate to win the seat held by retiring Sen. Tom Coburn, Shannon also has prompted a revival of old grudges. “Btw, the Indians aren’t Oklahomans,” Robert Dan Robbins, a rancher and prominent supporter of Shannon’s chief primary opponent, Rep. James Lankford, wrote on his own Facebook page. “They are a member of their own nation and are suing the state of Oklahoma over water rights and other things as well.” Oklahoma before statehood was made up of Indian territories, and members of its tribes are culturally integrated and do not live on reservations. Still, tensions that stem from the tribes’ unique status are evident. “When someone says that Indians aren’t real Oklaho-
mans I guess they forgot that Oklahoma is Choctaw for ‘red people,’ ” said Rep. Tom Cole, a fellow Chickasaw. Shannon is more cautious when discussing his background. “I’m an American first, and that’s the most important thing,” Shannon said. Yet the statement that Shannon’s election would make is very much on the minds of Oklahoma Republicans. “We need people that can relate to the average American, and the average American is not the average American from 1955,” said state Sen. David Holt, a Republican. “You’ve got to project a face from your party that reflects America, and America is changing.”
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Haze: The public Torture: Event draws some 212 participants will have 30 days to comment on plan Continued from Page C-1
Continued from Page C-1 pollution controls on Unit 1 at the generating station, but instead plan to close it by 2018. New pollution controls on Unit 4 should be depreciated only through 2023, and then the unit should be closed, she said. PNM will be seeking to more quickly recover the money already invested in the San Juan Generating Station, since it originally was going to spread out the costs to ratepayers until 2053. The Rio Grande Chapter of the Sierra Club is also pushing PNM to rethink its plan for replacing the coal-fired power. “The plan currently relies heavily on sending New Mexicans’ money out of state to Palo Verde nuclear plant [in Arizona] and buying back increasingly expensive coal from remaining San Juan units,” said Camilla Feibelman, executive director of the chapter. “The price of renewable energy is plummeting, and several analysts believe PNM could replace most of the power it’s retiring at San Juan with renewable energy — at a lower cost than the current plan.” PNM’s plan to retire the two San Juan Generating Station units by Dec. 31, 2017, combined with new controls on the remaining units, will reduce nitrogen oxides by an estimated 62 percent. It also will reduce the amount of carbon dioxide
NEW MEXICO HAZE REDUCTION PLAN The current agreement between the EPA, state Environment Department and Public Service Company of New Mexico calls for: u Closing two units at the San Juan Generating Station. u Replacing 340 megawatts of coal-fired power with 177 megawatts of power from natural gas; 134 megawatts of nuclear energy from the Palo Verde Nuclear Power Plant and 40 megawatts of solar power. u Installing technology to reduce nitrous oxide emissions on remaining two units. To comment on the plan: u Email comments to Michael Feldman, feldman.michael@epa.gov. u Send comments online by visiting regulations. gov and following the instructions. u Mail comments to: Att. Guy Donaldson, Chief, air planning section (6PDL), EPA, 1445 Ross Ave., Suite 1200, Dallas, TX 75202-2733.
emitted from the plant, a greenhouse gas linked to climate change. Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@ sfnewmexican.com.
group to community organizations that promote biking and the outdoors. Saturday’s event drew 212 participants between the ages of 10 and 76 and included a number of families who had more than one member racing. “The best part is having fun and trying your best on the trail,” said 11-year-old Michael Gomez Jr. of Albuquerque, whose father and two younger brothers, ages 7 and 4, also rode in the race. “It’s fun going downhill, and it’s hard going up on the loose rocks.” Gomez — who rode the 10.8-mile loop once as part of the Category 3 competition— said he was “a little bit happy” with his time of 1 hour and 13 minutes. His tips for those interested in competing: “Practice the course, train a lot and eat healthy.” Ryan Szabo, a 23-year-old who moved to Albuquerque from Florida last week, entered the competition on a whim after hearing about it only two days before, borrowing a bike and doing one lap on the course to train before the event. “The altitude was torture,” he said after the race Saturday. “My legs gave out about 15 minutes before the finish, but I suffered through it. I don’t like to suffer, but I guess mountain biking is all about suffering.” Szabo said he normally rides a road bike but is excited to tackle some of the area’s excellent mountain biking terrain. Even professional mountain biker Damian Calvert, who won the professional category with a time of 42 minutes 5 seconds — which means he rode about 31 miles and climbed about half a vertical mile worth of hills at an average speed of 14 miles on the dirt course — said he suf-
Damian Calvert 41, placed first in the pro men’s race during the eighth annual La Tierra Torture mountain bike race on Saturday. Calvert, who has competed in the race in other years, said the course was more challenging this year. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
fered during the race. “The third lap, I was in the torture rack,” he said. “Selfinflicted torture.” For the gear-heads among you, Calvert rides a Specialized S-Works Epic 29er. Shonny Vanlandingham, the only female professional to compete in the race — she finished in 48 minutes and
33 seconds — said the track was similar to others she’s ridden in Durango, where she lives, but she enjoyed the ride, which was her first La Tierra Torture. Vanlandingham said her goal Saturday had been to use the event as the basis for a “a good, hard training day.” The triathlete was preparing to take a run shortly after she finished the
bike race. With all the categories and age divisions, a total 164 awards were given out at the conclusion of the event. For a complete list of winners and their times, visit www.chasing3.com. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@ sfnewmexican.com.
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Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Cuts: Tuition hikes help fill revenue gap Continued from Page C-1 harder hit.” State tax revenue across the country fell dramatically during the recession, particularly between 2007 and 2009. Meanwhile, enrollment of full-time students in public colleges nationwide grew by about 1 million — 10 percent — between the beginning of the economic downturn and the 2012-13 academic year, which is the last year for which data are available, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. These pressures forced states to hold back funding to higher education and rely more on tuition to fill the revenue gap, according to the study. New Mexico’s circumstances mirror the national picture, Walters said. “The institutions themselves have had to cut costs, usually through elimination of staff or programs,” he said. “If you lose one revenue source, then you need to gain another revenue source — in this case, raising tuition.” The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities study predicts dire long-term economic consequences nationally if the trend of decreasing education funding continues. Access to college and graduation rates could be suppressed by rising out-of-pocket costs, the report projects. With young college graduates earning an average of $12,000 more per year than others their age without college degrees, individual wealth could be limited for many who don’t seek higher education. The report also notes that wages of workers from all education levels are higher in areas with greater concentrations of college-educated residents. Rising tuition is likely to deter some students — particularly those from low-income households — from going to college, and low-income students are likely to attend less selective institutions, which could limit their future earning potential, the report found. The cost of college has become increas-
Library: Playground, stage next on the list Continued from Page C-1
The Martinez administration favors a funding model that links state support to colleges’ graduation rates. ingly difficult to bear since the recession hit, as median family incomes dipped and the price of tuition rose, according to the report. Despite years of cuts, New Mexico and most other states have begun to increase higher education funding in recent years, the report found. Only eight states have continued to reduce spending on higher education. In New Mexico, spending on higher education has grown by about $20 million per year over the past three years, Walters said. The Martinez administration favors a funding model that links state support to colleges’ graduation rates. “We’ve been on a three-year upward trend,” Walters said. “Will that continue? I would say that depends on the performance of the institutions.” The report concluded that increased revenue through taxes and spending on higher education is the only way out of the rut that was dug during the recession. “Tax cuts are often sold as a recipe for economic growth,” the report said. “But to the extent that tax cuts prevent investments in higher education that would increase access to college, improve graduation rates and reduce student debt, their net effect could be a drag on the economy.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.
raised the money in three weeks. “There was just a lot of excitement for the library,” he said. The library group rented the general store building to the Dixon Co-op Market and set up the library in the house. People began congregating there, especially after a local bar closed down. It was quickly apparent, however, that the space couldn’t handle the volume of visitors who were coming to the library, and the board soon began planning and raising money for a new purpose-built facility. So again, the community held bake sales and other benefits. Shelves and books were donated as the library’s popularity grew. “We do a lot without a lot [of resources],” Neymark explained. Three part-time staffers now run the library, and it depends heavily on the 40 volunteers
Shel Neymark, left, the library’s board president and one of the eight people who came up with the idea of starting a library in Dixon, speaks with Library Director Felicity Fonseca on Wednesday. URIEL J. GARCIA/THE NEW MEXICAN
who come throughout the week, said Felicity Fonseca, the library’s director. It offers an after-school program and free Internet service, and sponsors a seasonal farmers market as well as annual
community fiestas. The old library is being remodeled to become a community center, radio station and early childhood education center. The low-power FM station will air about 10 locally
produced shows, Fonseca said. Gabriel Palley, 35, a University of New Mexico student who lives part-time in Dixon, said he’s proud the community was able to do so much with so few resources. “This [new building] matches the spirit and energy of this community,” Palley said. The board hopes to build a playground next to the library and set up a permanent stage behind the building for live performances, Fonseca said. “Without a doubt, it’s a dream come true,” said Marcia Brenden, another of the original founders. Brenden, who is also a member of the library’s board, said the group’s hard work was worth it. When she drives by the new building, she said, she still can’t believe it “sits there so beautifully.” Contact Uriel J. Garcia at 9863062 or ugarcia@sfnewmexican. com. Follow him on Twitter @ ujohnnyg.
Arkansas AG to defend gay marriage ban LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel said Saturday he supports allowing same-sex couples to wed but will continue defending his state’s 2004 ban on gay marriages in court. McDaniel, a Democrat serving his final year as the state’s top attorney, became the first statewide official in Arkansas to back same-sex marriage. “I want to tell you I do support marriage equality and I do believe Arkansans should have the right to be equal in the eyes of the law,” said McDaniel, speaking at the Associated Press Managing Editors convention. Voters overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman, but that ban and others nationwide are facing legal challenges.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
NEIGHBORS
St. Michael’s grad to appear on chef showdown. Faces & places, C-8
El mitote Jack Nicholson is clearly enjoying his retirement from film. El Mitotero spotted the Oscarwinning actor Friday lounging in the sunshine outside Burrito Company downtown. Nicholson has been retired since 2010 after starring in the star-studded James L. Brooks comedy How Do Jack You Know alongside Owen Wilson Nicholson and Paul Rudd. Robert Downey Jr. recently made headlines calling for Nicholson to come out of retirement to fill a role in the next Sherlock Holmes film, but there’s no word yet on whether he’ll take the role.
YOUR NEIGHBOR: CLARK COOLEY
Recollections of love and war As a newly married young soldier, Santa Fe man survived grisly combat in World War II
Betty and Clark Cooley at their Santa Fe home on Christmas in 1994. COURTESY PHOTO
By Staci Matlock
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The New Mexican
H
e cradles her framed photograph in his hands. Lightly, he touches the glass covering her cheek. She has a narrow face and crystal blue eyes, with the distant look of a mind slipped away. It has been two years and four months since Betty died. Clark Cooley keeps track. Her absence, after almost 69 years of marriage, still hurts. They had met in Elmira, N.Y., as World War II engulfed Europe. Clark was 18 and working in construction. Betty, a year older, was working as a press operator at the Eclipse Machine factory. Clark had fled his family’s Pennsylvania dairy farm as soon as he could. His father had died when he was a baby. His mother, a tough brick of a woman, had raised six children — he was the youngest — and ran the farm. “I knew I didn’t want to be a farmer,” Clark says during a recent interview at his Santa Fe home. Betty had fled her own family in Bath, N.Y. The first time Clark saw her — a beautiful girl with a mass of auburn hair — Betty was getting off a train. He and a buddy offered her a ride. He called on her the next day, dapperly dressed. Betty was engaged to someone else, but Clark figured he could steal her away. Asked by a friend later which of the two men she thought she would marry, Betty said she would pick the little guy with the sense of humor, the one that reminded her of Bing Crosby. That was Clark.
A determined young wife In 1943, as soon as he had turned 18, Clark signed up for the Army. He wanted to see a little of the world. His construction boss told him he was crazy and offered to help get him out of the draft. And later, as Clark watched friends die on distant European shores, he thought maybe his boss was right. Clark was sent first to Fort Hood, Texas, for basic training. He had warned Betty that Fort Hood was no place for a girl. But Betty, a determined woman, took the train to meet him with $40 in her pocket. “I told her, it’s Saturday, we can’t get married,” he recalls, chuckling. “She said, ‘We’re getting married.’ ” They took a bus to the closest town and bought a ring. The jeweler knew a justice of the peace who was a little drunk but willing to write out the wedding certificate on a Saturday. He knew a minister in a nearby church willing to perform the ceremony on short notice. Someone poured Clark a big shot of 100-proof Old Crow before they exchanged brief vows. “I shouldn’t have had it. I was about half-looped by the time I got ready for the ceremony,” he says of the bourbon. The next day, Clark left for a weeklong training, and Betty had to fend for herself. When he returned, he discovered that she had found a job and a small apartment. “She had everything under control,” he says. “I thought, ‘That’s a pretty good girl.’ ” By the time he shipped out for Europe a few months later, Betty was pregnant. Their first son, Craig, was born while Clark was fighting overseas. Betty moved back with her father in New York. “He was a miserable old cuss. She hated him,” Clark says. “But she had no choice.”
Ordinary men giving their lives Clark was part of the 113th Cavalry Reconnaissance Mechanized, the men who used tanks instead of horses. He was part of a team of 80 soldiers who scouted several landing sites along the Normandy beaches on the edge of the English Channel in preparation for D-Day. Near dawn on June 6, 1944, the main American force landed at Omaha Beach. The Germans were waiting. “The beach turned out to be a deathtrap. They killed more than 1,500 of us. They shot us from the cliffs,” Clark recalls. “First thing I noticed was dead guys floating in the water.” Men fell around him, he says, men he had befriended. The next day, a bulldozer buried the dead in mass graves. After the war, they were reburied properly at the Normandy American Cemetery overlooking the beach. The losses continued. Every day, ordinary men gave their lives to save others. Clark recalls one battle in which a German gunner on a hill in the trees kept knocking out Allied tanks. “The guy in the first tank that was knocked out couldn’t get out,” Clark says. “He was trapped under the turret, and the driver of the tank was dead. He kept firing and killed three people on that German gun. He saved the rest of us.” The man, who’s name Clark couldn’t remember, died that day. Until then, Clark says, “I never thought of him as anything special. He was just an ordinary guy.” Clark’s platoon joined the force crossing France, fighting the Germans as they went. Clark remembers it as “a grim time.” But he says, “The
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Fox is casting for a new reality series called Utopia in New Mexico. The show takes 15 contestants from around the world and plucks them out of their lives for an entire year. The contestants then build a “whole new world,” deciding what kind of society they want to live in. The series is looking for people from all different backgrounds and skill sets who are passionate and creative. Does that sound like you? Do you have a year to spare? You can get more information on the casting at http://utopiatv casting.com/. You can also watch a trailer for the show here: http:// sfnm.co/1rNuxvT. uuu
Clark Cooley, 90, is shown in April in his Santa Fe home, which his wife designed and had built 35 years ago. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
French dug up all the old wine they had hid from the Germans and gave it to us along the way.” Clark was among the Allied troops who endured the bloody German offensive that became known as the Battle of the Bulge, lasting from mid-December 1944 to mid-January 1945. “I got to where I could sleep through the bombs,” he says. On the day the war ended, Clark was sitting across from another soldier in a half-track military vehicle. The soldier was messing around with a pistol and accidentally fired it; the bullet passed through the seat next to Clark’s head. He had seen plenty of men killed by friendly fire, he says; he was glad to escape becoming one of them.
A family’s joys and heartbreaks Clark returned home to Betty and his new son. It had been two years since he had seen her. He had nightmares about the war, but he didn’t dwell on them. “It all disappears after awhile,” Clark says. Like many World War II veterans, he didn’t talk about the war for decades. Back home, he needed to make a living for his young family. On a counselor’s advice, he attended New Mexico Highlands University in Las Vegas, N.M., with help from the GI Bill, to prepare for a teaching career. College money from the bill stretched further in New Mexico, and living expenses were cheaper here than in New York. While in college, he landed a job as an inspector for the State Seed Lab. The job paid $400 a month — a lot of money back then. Clark was in charge of inspecting seeds for the northern half of the state. It was a big territory, and the Cooleys saw all of it — from Farmington to Taos to Raton and down to Albuquerque. Early on Saturday mornings, Clark and Betty would load up Craig and some food in their Chevy. They would drive to a feed store or other business offering commercial seed. Clark’s job was to take samples and send them to the state lab at the New Mexico Department of Agriculture to check purity and germination. The couple enjoyed touring New Mexico’s rural villages and towns. Betty fell in love with the mountains. After he earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education at Highlands, Clark taught
The Cooleys shortly after they were married in March 1944. COURTESY PHOTO
Section editor: Cynthia Miller, 986-3095, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com
at the Las Vegas middle school for a year. Then he spent a year in Texas teaching new Army recruits before landing a job at the GM Institute in Flint, Mich. He taught social studies, history and economics to GM employees for years. Eventually, he became personnel director. Betty was busy with the couple’s two sons and two daughters. She taught her daughters to sew and hiked with the children. Every summer, the whole family took a long road trip, usually out West. Betty missed New Mexico. After their youngest son graduated from high school, Betty moved back to set up their dream home. Clark still had five years to go before retirement. In Santa Fe, Betty designed a solid, passive-solar house and had it built on property off Old Pecos Trail. And when Clark reunited with her here, all seemed right. They each volunteered with different Santa Fe groups and enjoyed local music. They attended museum lectures and school performances. Clark loved poetry, and at night sometimes, he recited poems to Betty. They took a five-mile walk together every day. The couple began traveling around the world — Europe, India, Australia, New Zealand. They traveled to Glacier National Park, their favorite, and made several trips to Alaska, camping in an old Chevy van. They took the van down to Mexico. Sometimes Betty went off on her own to Nepal or to Tierra del Fuego. Wherever they went, they made friends. Then they were hit with heartbreak. The couple’s youngest son, Bruce, who had developed diabetes as a child, collapsed in their home at age 41. For eight minutes, family members took turns giving him CPR until the ambulance arrived, but Bruce had slipped into a coma. He would never come out of it. Eventually, the family took Bruce off life support. “I’d never seen my dad cry until that day,” said the couple’s youngest daughter, Sheila Barnett. The couple forged on. They kept traveling. And Clark was an active volunteer with the Santa Fe Lion’s Club. A few years ago, Betty began to show signs of dementia. Their lively conversations diminished. She began to forget things. “As my mom’s dementia got worse, my dad counted heavily on Craig to help keep my mom at home,” Sheila said. The couple’s oldest son had moved back to New Mexico, and was helping to care for them and their home. But Craig’s heart began to fail. On Sept. 2, 2010, Craig passed away in the middle of the night. Clark could no longer care for Betty. He took her to a nursing home. He says it was the hardest thing he had ever done. Clark found himself alone, in the house Betty had designed. He forged on. He rose each morning at 4 a.m., had a bowl of oatmeal and went to the Fort Marcy gym to work out. Then he would go see his Betty. He would visit with her for hours almost every day. “I couldn’t tell what she knew, how much she knew,” he says. “I asked her a few weeks before she died if she knew who I was,” he recalls. “ ‘Of course,’ she said. ‘You are my husband.’ ” On Jan. 2, 2012, Betty died. Clark forges on. He still rises each morning at 4 a.m., eats breakfast and goes to the gym. In January, he turned 90, and his friends at Fort Marcy threw him a party. But without her, it isn’t the same.
Hollywood is making yet another adaptation of Lew Wallace’s 1880 novel Ben-Hur. Seemingly attempting to cash in on the recent faith-based film revival (Heaven Is For Real, Noah), the latest version of Ben-Hur is set for a 2016 release, with Mark Burnett and Roma Downey as producers. Burnett and Downey scored a huge hit with the miniseries The Bible, and followed Mark Burnett it up with the movie Son of God. Wallace served as governor for the New Mexico territory. His novel has been adapted as a film four times, including a 2003 animated version and a 2010 TV miniseries. The most famous version was released in 1959 and starred Charlton Heston. It won 11 Oscars, including Best Picture. uuu
Indie rock darlings The Hold Steady are headed to Santa Fe in August. The band will play Santa Fe Sol Stage & Grill on Aug. 6 as part of its “Nights Go On Forever” tour in support of its new album, Teeth Dreams. Teeth Dreams is The Hold Steady’s sixth studio album and its first since 2010’s Heaven Is Whenever. Since debuting in 2004, the group has gained a solid following, thanks in part to vocalist Craig Finn’s lyricism as well as the band’s classic rock style that sometimes draws comparisons to Bruce Springsteen. Teeth Dreams has received generally favorable reviews from critics since its release last month. The A.V. Club notes, “The Hold Steady as a whole has at last jelled into a rock band — nothing more, nothing less, and nothing held back.” The Hold Steady has played Santa Fe before. Back in 2010, the band brought down the house at The Santa Fe Brewing Co. And it has another Santa Fe connection, too. It recorded a version of “The Bear and the Maiden Fair” for an episode of Game of Thrones last season. Tickets for the August show have not gone on sale yet. uuu
Send your celebrity sightings to elmitote@sfnewmexican.com.
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FACES & PLACES
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Education standouts
encourage students to excel in mathematics and science and to pursue careers in these fields.
Six sixth-graders Angel Lopez, Dennis Drew, Diana Hernandez, Luis Lopez, Nohemy Santana and Pablo Santana at Tony E. Quintana Elementary School in Española entered the 2014 LANL STEM Challenge with guidance from teacher Renee Vigil and support from their principal, Yanira Vazquez. The creative students won a $300 award for their school in the category of Best Video. Watch the video on The Santa Fe New Mexican website, www.santafenewmexican.com. Students from Taos High School won the Best Poster category; McCurdy Charter School’s team won the Best App Design; and West Las Vegas High students took the award for Best Essay.
Century Link Inc. awarded a $4,125 grant to Santa Fe High School teacher Richard Pittman’s class to buy a microscope attachment for an iPad that allows students to observe and document even the tiniest of organisms. The grant will also help the school order Vernier equipment to collect data and interRichard act with measurement Pittman probes that connect to the iPad. More than 70 New Mexico teachers applied for the Clarke M. Williams Foundation’s Teachers and Technology grant, for which 12 were selected. Pittman submitted the grant proposal on behalf of his school.
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A team of students from Los Alamos Middle School advanced to the Sweet 16 in the Department of Energy’s National Science Bowl in Washington, D.C., on April 26. More than 9,300 high school students and 5,200 middle school students from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico participated in this year’s regional competitions, and 48 teams faced off for the final event. The top eight middle school teams in the academic competition received $1,000 for their schools’ science departments, and the top three teams received trophies and individual medals. The Department of Energy created the National Science Bowl in 1991 to
From left, Los Alamos Middle School’s David Gao, Presley Gao, Phillip Martin and Sonyia Williams think over responses to a question during the academic tournament at the 2014 National Science Bowl competition April 26 in Washington, D.C. COURTESY JACK DEMPSEY/U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY, OFFICE OF SCIENCE
STEPPIN’ OUT FIESTA ROYALTY CROWNED
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From left, Thomas Baca as Don Diego de Vargas, Carmelita Roybal as La Reina de la Fiesta de Santa Fe and Jannica Atencio, Stu-wah-goo-yah, as the Native American princess. The 2014 Fiesta court was announced at Saturday night’s Baile de Mayo at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center. The 302nd annual Fiesta will take place Sept. 5 through Sept. 7. For more information, visit www.santafefiesta.org. COURTESY PHOTO
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The Academy for Technology and the Classics, Santa Fe High School, Desert Academy, New Mexico School for the Arts and Capital High School all had teams participate in this year’s Supercomputing Challenge in April in Los Alamos. The Supercomputing Challenge is sponsored by Los Alamos National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Security LLC. Eli Echt-Wilson and Albert Zuo from La Cueva High in Albuquerque took first place in the competition with a project called “Modeling Tree Growth and Resource Use with Applications.” The second-place winner and a fourtime finalist, Cole Kendrick from Los Alamos High, developed a computer model to investigate the formation and life cycle of classical novae. His project is called “3D Hydrodynamic Simulation of Classical Nova Explosions.” The third-place winners were Ian Rankin, Ahmed Muhyi and Sophia Sanchez-Maes from Las Cruces, who created a computational model of the growth dynamics and neutral lipid synthesis of green microalgae. The ATC/Santa Fe High team of Noah Caulfield and Dmitri MalyginVoorhees were finalists in the competition. The New Mexico School for the Arts team of Kendra Carmona, Mohit Dubey, Erin Ice-Johnson and Lauren Sarkissian were also finalists. More than $40,700 in individual
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scholarships were awarded at the Super- living or dead, from any genre explaining how that author’s work changed the computing Challenge Awards Expo. student’s worldview. uuu All the state champion letters can be Columbia College Chicago has named read on the New Mexico State Library Daniel Cron of Santa Fe to the fall 2013 website, www.nmstatelibrary.org. Dean’s List. Cron is a theater major and uuu has maintained a 3.75 grade-point averCornell College, a private liberal arts age for the semester. For further inforcollege in Mount Vernon, Iowa, has mation, visit www.colum.edu. announced the students it has accepted uuu for admission: Emily Krepps of Los Alamos was Bennett Campbell, Leslie Rascon awarded an honorable mention in the and Micheal O’Duffy (Aesir) of Santa New Mexico State Library’s 2014 Letters Fe, who were awarded the Dean’s ScholAbout Literature competition. arship. The contest, sponsored by the New Adriana Erives Gonzalez of Santa Mexico State Library and the Center for Fe, who was also awarded the Founders the Book at the Library of Congress, is Scholarship. a national reading and writing promoTristan Goodwin of Los Alamos, tion program for readers in grades 4-12 who was also awarded the King Scholarwho write a personal letter to an author, ship.
St. Mike’s alum on ‘Cutthroat Kitchen’ today Santa Fean and St. Michael’s High School alum Chris “Gerber” Mathie will put his culinary skills to the test on an episode of Food Network’s Cutthroat Kitchen airing Sunday, May 4. Cutthroat Kitchen features four chefs challenged to cook gourmet dishes to be Chris judged by a guest celebrity; Mathie however, contestants can purchase opportunities to sabotage each other or benefit themselves. Mathie’s episode, titled “Ladelayheehoo,” will chronicle one chef using ladles to cook French onion soup, the debut of the Cutthroat Kitchen Wheel of Heat for a Blackened Fish challenge and the pulverizing of one chef’s bananas in the midst of preparing a banana split. “It was a great experience,” Mathie said in a news release. “I met some interesting people and spent a few days in the California sunshine away from the snow. Besides, it was much easier than the work I do every day.” Mathie is the morning sous chef for Element 47 in The Little Nell Hotel in Aspen, Colo. Born in Anchorage, Alaska, and raised in New York, Mathie moved to Santa Fe when he was 12. As a student of St. Michael’s High, Class of 1994, Mathie says he considers Santa Fe as his hometown, according to the news release. After a brief stint at New Mexico State University, Mathie returned to Santa Fe and met chef Lane Warner, executive chef of the La Fonda, and embarked on an apprenticeship that lasted seven years. Mathie then attended the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y. The New Mexican
Attention High School Journalism Students: Get hands-on newspaper experience this summer at the New Mexico High School Journalism Workshop June 8 -11, UNM Campus Albuquerque Open to all Juniors and Seniors. Register Now! Deadline is May 23rd Contact your Journalism teacher or visit www.nmpress.org for details.
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The Santa Fe Prep Athletic Booster Club invites you to honor the
Scholar Athletes of the Class of 2014 T
he Scholar/Athlete Award goes to seniors who have pursued knowledge through discipline, creativity, and excellence in both academic and athletic endeavors. These students have learned in the broadest and most dynamic sense of the word, and we are pleased to honor the extra commitment and work they have invested and the success they have achieved. During their junior and senior years, these graduates maintained a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher and made significant contributions to at least two school sports.
505.982.1829 • www.sfprep.org
ALEX ARCHULETA
JIMMY BUCHANAN
DJ CASADOS
LIAM DALY
JACKSON DOOLING
Volleyball, Basketball
Cross Country, Track
Basketball, Baseball, Track
Soccer, Swim/Dive
Basketball, Baseball
MK ENGLISH
WILLIAM LENFEST Y
BEN MARAN
MC MILLER
DIEGO PEREA
Soccer, Lacrosse
Basketball, Baseball
Dance, Tennis
Fencing, Track
Soccer, Basketball
BRIGID QUINN
AARON STEVENS
MEGGIE STONE
Soccer, Lacrosse
Soccer, Baseball
Soccer, Basketball, Lacrosse
Scoreboard D-2 TV schedule D-3 Weather D-6
SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS
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MLB: National League and American League roundups. Page D-4
PREP TENNIS
Santa Fe High School’s Brandee Fulgenzi serves in her doubles match against Los Alamos’ Hannah Cunningham and Astrid Gartner during the finals for the District 2AAAA tennis tournament Saturday at Capital High School.
Los Alamos wins 15th straight title Lady Hilltoppers edge SFHS in 2AAAA district championship By Edmundo Carrillo The New Mexican
As the sun was setting on Saturday evening, the weight of the world rested on the unlikeliest of heroes. Long after the Santa Fe High boys tennis team beat Los Alamos 5-0 for the District 2AAAA district championship for the third year in a row at Capital, the Demonettes and
LUKE E. MONTAVON FOR THE NEW MEXICAN
NBA
the Lady Hilltoppers were still battling for district bragging rights. Santa Fe High’s Dakota Haraden fell to Hannah Cunningham in a hard fought, threeset match 1-6, 6-3, 6-4 to tie the dual at 4-4 — meaning the fate on the district was to be decided on the No. 6 match between Krystl Debruyn of Santa Fe High and Lauren Fugate of Los Alamos. That match also went to three sets, with Fugate coming out on top 6-4, 5-7, 6-3 to give the Lady Hilltoppers their 15th consecutive district title. The dual didn’t look like it was going to end
this way early on. Santa Fe High won two of the three doubles matches to take a 2-1 lead. In the singles portion, eighth grader Brandee Fulgenzi defeated Sidra Hsieh-Ratliff 6-1, 6-0 and senior Greta Miller beat Laura Whicker 6-1, 6-1 to give two more points to the Demonettes for a 4-1 advantage. All Santa Fe High had to do was win one more match to give Los Alamos its first district tournament loss of the new millennium, but that’s not as easy as it sounds. Astrid Hengartner defeated Tara Varnum 6-1,
Please see 15TH, Page D-5
PREP LACROSSE STATE CHAMPIONSHIP SANTA FE PREP 11, RIO RANCHO 10
Pacers find their stride, top Atlanta
S.F. Prep caps unbeaten season with first trophy
Indiana to face Wizards at home court Monday By Michael Marot The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana salvaged its season Saturday by reverting to form: its first-half form. Paul George scored a career playoff-high 30 points, Lance Stephenson added 19 and Roy Hibbert finally came up big against the more nimble Atlanta Hawks as the Pacers survived a first-round scare with a 92-80 victory in the decisive seventh game. Two days after staving off elimination in Atlanta, the top-seeded Pacers did it again and advanced to a second-round series against Washington that starts Monday in Indiana. “We know what we want to get to and we know what our journey is,”
Please see PACERS, Page D-3
INSIDE u NBA playoffs roundup. PAGE D-3
Victor Espinoza rides California Chrome to victory during the Kentucky Derby on Saturday. DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
KENTUCKY DERBY
California Chrome shines on Race favorite wins 140th Derby, extends streak to 5
Santa Fe Prep’s Hewitt Farr, center, scrimmages in the second quarter of Saturday’s game against Rio Rancho at Balloon Fiesta Park in Albuquerque. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Team hopes to bring recognition to sport in New Mexico
On Saturday at Balloon Fiesta Park, it all came together. Santa Fe Preparatory’s lacrosse team ALBUQUERQUE capped an unbeaten season with an 11-10 o achieve perfection, all it took win over Rio Rancho in the annual state was a yeller, a couple of commuters, a handful of players from championship game. The Blue Griffins (11-0) overcame a 6-5 halftime deficit to all over the City Different and a win their first title. cerebral coach who kickstarted a grassroots feeder program several years ago. The players celebrated with the requiBy Will Webber The New Mexican
T
site trophy presentation and ice-bucket dousing of the coach. In the aftermath, head coach Sid Monroe talked about the journey that he — the cerebral — and outspoken assistant Bruce McKenna — the yeller — had taken with the group of players in the years preceding Saturday’s game.
Please see TROPHY, Page D-5
By Beth Harris The Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A horse with a humble pedigree. A couple of working stiff owners. A 77-year-old trainer with his first Kentucky Derby horse. Even Hollywood couldn’t have made this up. California Chrome made it look easy on Saturday, pulling away down the stretch to win the Derby by 1¾ lengths. In a sport dominated by wealthy owners and regally bred horses from Kentucky’s bluegrass country, this was a victory for the little guys. Owners Perry Martin and Steve Coburn bred an $8,000 mare to a $2,500 stallion to produce the winner of the
Please see SHINES, Page D-3
BOXING
Mayweather wins tough fight By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Marcos Maidana did everything but beat Floyd Mayweather Jr., taking him 12 tough rounds before losing a majority decision. Mayweather remained unbeaten Saturday night, but not by much. Maidana swarmed all over him from the opening bell and gave him perhaps his toughest fight in a 16-year professional career. In the end, though, Mayweather got the win — just as he did in his previous 45 fights. He retained his welterweight title by winning 117-111 on one scorecard and 116-112 on another.
A third judge had it even at 114-114. The Associated Press scored it for Mayweather 115-113. Maidana threw far more punches, but Mayweather was more accurate with his as the two battled into the late rounds with the fight still very much in doubt. Cheered on by a large contingent of Argentine fans, Maidana took the fight to Mayweather, who was cut by the right eye in the fourth round by an accidental head butt. “It was a tough, competitive fight,” Mayweather said. “I normally like to go out there and box and move. But he put pressure on me.
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Stephanie Proffer, sproffer@sfnewmexican.com
Please see TOUGH, Page D-3
Floyd Mayweather Jr., right, trades punches with Marcos Maidana of Argentina in their WBC-WBA welterweight title fight Saturday in Las Vegas, Nev. ERIC JAMISON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
D-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
BASEBALL MLB American League East W L Pct GB New York 16 13 .552 — Baltimore 15 13 .536 ½ Boston 15 16 .484 2 Tampa Bay 14 17 .452 3 Toronto 13 17 .433 3½ Central W L Pct GB Detroit 16 9 .640 — Kansas City 14 15 .483 4 Minnesota 13 15 .464 4½ Chicago 14 17 .452 5 Cleveland 13 17 .433 5½ West W L Pct GB Oakland 18 12 .600 — Texas 16 14 .533 2 Los Angeles 15 14 .517 2½ Seattle 13 15 .464 4 Houston 10 20 .333 8 Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 9, Tampa Bay 3 Boston 6, Oakland 3 Minnesota 6, Baltimore 1 Seattle 9, Houston 8 Cleveland 2, Chicago White Sox 0 Detroit 9, Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels 5, Texas 3 Sunday’s Games Chicago White Sox (Rienzo 2-0) at Cleveland (Kluber 2-3), 11:05 a.m. Tampa Bay (Bedard 0-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 3-3), 11:05 a.m. Oakland (Gray 4-1) at Boston (Lackey 4-2), 11:35 a.m. Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 1-2) at Minnesota (P.Hughes 2-1), 12:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 3-1) at Kansas City (Vargas 2-0), 12:10 p.m. Seattle (Maurer 0-0) at Houston (McHugh 2-0), 12:10 p.m. Texas (Darvish 1-1) at L.A. Angels (Skaggs 2-0), 1:35 p.m.
National League East W L Pct GB Atlanta 17 12 .586 — Washington 17 13 .567 ½ New York 15 14 .517 2 Miami 15 15 .500 2½ Philadelphia 14 14 .500 2½ Central W L Pct GB Milwaukee 21 10 .677 — St. Louis 15 16 .484 6 Cincinnati 14 16 .467 6½ Pittsburgh 12 18 .400 8½ Chicago 11 17 .393 8½ West W L Pct GB San Francisco 19 11 .633 — Colorado 19 13 .594 1 Los Angeles 18 13 .581 1½ San Diego 13 18 .419 6½ Arizona 11 22 .333 9½ Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 3, St. Louis 0 Pittsburgh 8, Toronto 6 Philadelphia 7, Washington 2 L.A. Dodgers 9, Miami 7, 11 innings Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 2 San Francisco 3, Atlanta 1 Colorado 11, N.Y. Mets 10 Arizona 4, San Diego 3 Sunday’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Undecided) at Miami (Fernandez 4-1), 11:10 a.m. San Francisco (Bumgarner 2-3) at Atlanta (A.Wood 2-4), 11:35 a.m. Toronto (McGowan 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Volquez 1-2), 11:35 a.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-1) at Philadelphia (R.Hernandez 1-1), 1:05 p.m. Arizona (Miley 2-3) at San Diego (T.Ross 3-3), 2:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse 4-1) at Cincinnati (Simon 4-1), 2:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Gee 2-1) at Colorado (Undecided), 2:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 4-1) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 4-1), 6:05 p.m.
Phillies 7, Nationals 2 Washington ab r Span cf 4 0 Rendon 3b 4 0 Werth rf 4 0 SouzJr rf 0 0 LaRoch 1b 2 1 TMoore 1b 1 0 Dsmnd ss 3 0 Espinos 2b 4 0 McLoth lf 4 0 Loaton c 1 0 Leon ph-c 2 0 Roark p 1 0 Matths p 0 0 Walters ph 1 1 Stmmn p 0 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0
Philadelphia ab r GwynJ cf 4 1 Rollins ss 5 2 Utley 2b 3 1 Howard 1b 4 1 Byrd rf 4 0 DBrwn lf 4 1 Ruiz c 4 0 Asche 3b 4 1 ABrntt p 3 0 Hollnds p 0 0 MAdms p 0 0 Revere ph 1 0 Bastrd p 0 0
31 2 4 2 Totals
hbi 2 0 4 0 0 0 1 3 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
36 7 12 7
Washington 000 001 100—2 Philadelphia 310 120 00x—7 E—Asche (3). LOB—Washington 6, Philadelphia 8. 2B—LaRoche (6), Byrd (7), D.Brown (4), Ruiz (9). HR— LaRoche (5), Walters (3), Howard (6), Asche (2). SB—Rollins (5). S—Roark. Washington IP H R ER BB SO Roark L,2-1 4 7 7 7 1 5 Mattheus 2 3 0 0 1 1 Stammen 2 2 0 0 1 0 Philadelphia A.Burnett W,2-1 6 3 1 1 2 7 Hollands 1 1 1 1 0 1 Mi.Adams 1 0 0 0 0 2 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 3 Roark pitched to 2 batters in the 5th. HBP—by A.Burnett (Lobaton). T—2:57 (Rain delay: 0:24). A—33,441 (43,651).
Yankees 9, Rays 3 Tampa Bay ab r Zobrist ss 4 0 DJnngs dh 4 1 Joyce lf 4 0 Longori 3b 4 0 Loney 1b 4 1 Myers rf 4 1 DeJess cf 4 0 SRdrgz 2b 4 0 Hanign c 4 0 Totals
New York hbi 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 1
Ellsury cf Gardnr lf Teixeir 1b McCnn c ASorin dh KJhnsn 3b BRorts 2b ISuzuki rf Solarte ss
36 3 9 3 Totals
ab r 4 2 5 2 4 1 5 0 3 0 3 1 4 1 4 2 3 0
hbi 3 1 2 2 2 3 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0
35 9 12 9
Tampa Bay 110 100 000—3 New York 000 211 23x—9 LOB—Tampa Bay 6, New York 7. 2B— Loney (11), Ellsbury (10), McCann (3), I.Suzuki 2 (4). HR—De.Jennings (4), Myers (3), Teixeira (5), Ke.Johnson (4). SB—Ellsbury (10). SF—A.Soriano. IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Odorizzi 4 5 3 3 2 4 C.Ramos 1 0 0 0 1 2 Lueke L,0-2 2 4 3 3 0 0 H.Bell 1 3 3 3 1 0 New York IP H R ER BB SO Tanaka W,4-0 7 8 3 3 0 5 Betances H,3 1 1 0 0 0 2 Claiborne 1 0 0 0 0 1 Odorizzi pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. T—3:31. A—43,325 (49,642).
Reds 6, Brewers 2 Milwaukee ab r CGomz cf 4 0 Gennett 2b4 0 Lucroy c 4 0 ArRmr 3b 4 1 MrRynl 1b 3 1 Gindl rf 3 0 Segura ss 3 0 LSchfr lf 3 0 Gallard p 2 0 Thrnrg p 0 0 Overay ph 0 0 Wooten p 0 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Cincinnati ab r Heisey cf 4 0 Votto 1b 5 0 Phillips 2b 4 2 Bruce rf 4 1 Frazier 3b 3 2 Ludwck lf 3 0 Schmkr lf 0 0 B.Pena c 4 1 Cozart ss 4 0 Cueto p 3 0 N.Soto ph 1 0 LeCure p 0 0
30 2 3 2 Totals
BASKETBALL BASKETBALL
BASEBALL
hbi 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 2 1 2 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
35 6 11 5
Milwaukee 010 010 000—2 Cincinnati 000 301 20x—6 E—Ar.Ramirez (3). LOB—Milwaukee 2, Cincinnati 8. 2B—Phillips (5), Frazier (8). HR—Ar.Ramirez (4), Mar.Reynolds (7). Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO Gallardo L,2-1 6 9 4 4 1 1 Thornburg 1 2 2 2 1 1 Wooten 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Cueto W,3-2 8 3 2 2 1 10 LeCure 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Gallardo (Frazier). WP— Thornburg 2. T—2:30. A—38,243 (42,319).
Indians 2, White Sox 0 Chicago ab r De Aza lf 4 0 GBckh 2b 4 0 JAreu 1b 4 0 A.Dunn dh 4 0 Viciedo rf 4 0 AlRmrz ss 4 0 JrDnks cf 2 0 Flowrs c 2 0 Semien 3b 3 0
Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Cleveland ab r Bourn cf 2 0 Aviles lf 1 0 Swisher 1b2 0 Brantly cf 4 0 CSantn c 4 0 Chsnhll 3b 3 1 ACarer ss 2 0 Giambi dh 2 0 Raburn dh 1 0 DvMrp rf 3 0 JRmrz 2b 3 1
31 0 5 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
27 2 5 1
Chicago 000 000 000—0 Cleveland 010 010 00x—2 E—Flowers (3), Semien (6), A.Cabrera (4), Chisenhall (3). DP—Chicago 1, Cleveland 2. LOB—Chicago 6, Cleveland 5. 2B—G.Beckham (2), A.Dunn (5), Chisenhall (7). CS—Flowers (1). S—Aviles. SF—Swisher. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO Carroll L,1-1 6 5 2 0 1 0 Downs 1 0 0 0 0 0 Petricka 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Masterson W,1-17 1-3 4 0 0 1 6 Allen H,7 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Axford S,9-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Carroll (A.Cabrera), by Masterson (Flowers). WP—Masterson. T—2:38. A—15,834 (42,487).
Twins 6, Orioles 1 Baltimore ab r Markks rf 4 0 Machd 3b 4 0 N.Cruz dh 4 0 A.Jones cf 4 1 Clevngr c 4 0 Hardy ss 4 0 Pearce 1b 4 0 Lough lf 3 0 Schoop 2b 3 0 Totals
hbi 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0
Minnesota ab r Dozier 2b 4 3 Mauer 1b 4 2 Plouffe 3b 4 0 Colaell rf 4 0 Hrmnn rf 0 0 Kubel lf 3 0 Pinto dh 4 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 Fuld cf 4 0 Flormn ss 4 1
34 1 7 1 Totals
hbi 3 1 3 4 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0
35 6 12 6
Baltimore 010 000 000—1 Minnesota 101 010 30x—6 E—Hardy (1), Machado (1). DP— Baltimore 1, Minnesota 1. LOB—Baltimore 6, Minnesota 6. 2B—Markakis (5), Hardy (4), Plouffe (13), K.Suzuki (5). HR—Dozier (8), Mauer (2). SB—A. Jones (3), Florimon (5). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO W.Chen L,3-2 5 6 3 2 1 5 Brach 1 1-3 4 3 3 0 2 Patton 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Correia W,1-3 7 5 1 1 0 3 Fien 1 1 0 0 0 0 Burton 1 1 0 0 0 1 W.Chen pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. WP—Correia. T—2:51. A—25,318 (39,021).
Red Sox 6, Athletics 3 Oakland
Boston
Crisp cf Lowrie ss Dnldsn 3b Cespds dh DNorrs c Callasp 1b Gentry lf Moss ph Reddck rf Punto 2b
ab r 4 1 4 0 3 1 3 0 2 0 4 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 3 1
hbi 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
ab r Pedroia 2b 3 1 Bogarts ss 4 1 D.Ortiz dh 3 2 Napoli 1b 3 0 JGoms lf 4 1 GSizmr cf 3 0 Mdlrks 3b 4 0 BrdlyJr rf 3 0 D.Ross c 3 1
Totals
30 3 4 1 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1
30 6 6 6
Oakland 000 000 003—3 Boston 401 100 00x—6 E—D.Ross (3), J.Gomes (2). DP— Boston 1. LOB—Oakland 4, Boston 4. 2B—Lowrie (9), Punto (2), Pedroia (11). HR—D.Ortiz (6), J.Gomes (3), D.Ross (2). SB—Gentry (5). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO Milone L,0-3 4 6 6 6 4 5 Otero 2 0 0 0 0 1 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 2 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston IP H R ER BB SO Lester W,3-4 8 1 0 0 2 15 Capuano 0 3 3 2 0 0 Uehara S,7-7 1 0 0 0 1 1 Capuano pitched to 4 batters in the 9th. Milone pitched to 1 batter in the 5th. HBP—by Capuano (Donaldson). T—2:44. A—37,042 (37,071).
Cubs 3, Cardinals 0 St. Louis
Chicago
ab r MCrpnt 3b 4 0 Craig rf 4 0 Hollidy lf 3 0 MAdms 1b 4 0 YMolin c 4 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 Jay cf 3 0 GGarci 2b 2 0 M.Ellis 2b 2 0 Wacha p 2 0 Grichk ph 1 0 CMrtnz p 0 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ab r Bonifac 2b 4 0 Valuen 3b 3 0 Rizzo 1b 3 1 SCastro ss 4 1 Schrhlt rf 4 0 Castillo c 4 0 Lake lf-cf 3 1 Olt 3b 2 0 NRmrz p 0 0 Strop p 0 0 HRndn p 0 0 Arrieta p 2 0 Kalish lf 1 0
33 0 7 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30 3 6 3
St. Louis 000 000 000—0 Chicago 000 002 01x—3 DP—Chicago 1. LOB—St. Louis 8, Chicago 6. 2B—S.Castro (6), Lake (4). HR—Rizzo (6), Lake (3). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO Wacha L,2-3 6 5 2 2 3 6 C.Martinez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Choate 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 Neshek 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago Arrieta 5 1-3 4 0 0 2 7 Schlitter W,1-0 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Russell H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 N.Ramirez H,2 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Strop H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 H.Rondon S,3-3 1 2 0 0 0 1 T—2:43. A—37,874 (41,072).
Mariners 9, Astros 8 Seattle
Houston
MSndrs cf Romer rf Cano 2b Hart dh Seager 3b Smoak 1b Gillespi lf BMiller ss Zunino c
ab r 5 1 5 1 5 1 5 0 5 1 3 2 3 1 2 1 2 1
hbi 2 2 2 1 2 2 0 0 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1
Totals
35 9 9 9 Totals
Altuve 2b Fowler cf JCastro c MDmn 3b Krauss 1b Carter dh Presley rf MGnzlz lf Villar ss
ab r 3 1 4 0 5 0 4 1 5 0 4 2 4 0 3 2 3 2
hbi 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 3 0 2 3
35 8 11 7
Seattle 000 001 800—9 Houston 002 000 420—8 E—B.Miller (3), J.Castro (2), Villar (4). DP—Seattle 1. LOB—Seattle 5, Houston 6. 2B—M.Saunders (3), Seager (6), Smoak (7), M.Dominguez (5), Ma.Gonzalez (1). 3B—Romero (1), Carter (1), Villar (2). HR—Smoak (4), Carter (4), Villar (4). SB—Altuve (11). CS—Fowler (2). SF—Altuve. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO Iwakuma W,1-0 6 2-3 6 4 4 1 3 Leone 0 2 2 1 1 0 Beimel H,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Medina H,6 1-3 3 2 2 1 0 Rodney S,7-8 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Houston Keuchel L,2-2 6 4 4 4 3 3 Cisnero BS,1-1 2-3 3 3 3 1 0 Valdes 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Fields 1 0 0 0 1 1 Williams 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Rodney (Fowler), by Medina (Ma.Gonzalez). T—3:24. A—15,798.
Tigers 9, Royals 2 Detroit ab r RDavis lf 5 1 Kinsler 2b 4 0 D.Kelly 1b 0 0 MiCarr 1b 4 3 AnRmn ss 0 0 VMrtnz dh 3 2 TrHntr rf 4 1 JMrtnz rf 0 0 AJcksn cf 4 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 Holady c 3 1 Worth ss-2b 4 Totals
hbi 1 0 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 3 1 0 1 1
Kansas City ab r Aoki rf 4 1 Infante 2b 4 0 Hosmer 1b4 1 BButler dh 2 0 AGordn lf 3 0 Valenci 3b 4 0 AEscor ss 3 0 Maxwll cf 3 0 Hayes c 3 0
hbi 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1
35 9 12 9 Totals
30 2 5 2
Detroit 000 102 006—9 Kansas City 000 000 002—2 LOB—Detroit 7, Kansas City 4. 2B— Kinsler (7), Mi.Cabrera (9), V.Martinez (6), A.Jackson (7), Castellanos (4), Worth (1), Hosmer 2 (12), A.Gordon (12). HR—Tor.Hunter (4). SB—R.Davis (9). SF—Kinsler, Castellanos, B.Butler. Detroit IP H R ER BB SO Smyly W,2-1 7 2 0 0 2 6 Chamberlain H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Coke 1 3 2 2 0 0 Kansas City Duffy L,1-2 4 2 1 1 4 2 Coleman 1 1-3 2 2 2 1 1 K.Herrera 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Crow 1 0 0 0 0 0 Brooks 2 7 6 6 0 2 WP—Smyly, Duffy. T—2:55. A—29,200 (37,903).
Giants 3, Braves 1 San Francisco ab r Pagan cf 4 0 Pence rf 4 0 Posey c 4 1 Morse lf 3 1 Arias 3b 1 0 Belt 1b 4 1 Sandovl 3b 3 0 Affeldt p 0 0 Machi p 0 0 Romo p 0 0 BCrwfr ss 3 0 B.Hicks 2b 3 0 Vglsng p 2 0 Blanco lf 0 0 Totals
Atlanta hbi 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ab r Heywrd rf 3 1 BUpton cf 3 0 Fremn 1b 3 0 J.Upton lf 4 0 Gattis c 4 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 Uggla 2b 3 0 Smmns ss 3 0 Tehern p 2 0 Pstrnck ph 1 0 DCrpnt p 0 0 Hale p 0 0
31 3 4 3 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30 1 5 1
San Francisco 010 100 100—3 Atlanta 001 000 000—1 E—B.Crawford (2). DP—San Francisco 3. LOB—San Francisco 2, Atlanta 7. 2B—Heyward (6), B.Upton (4). HR— Posey (7), Morse (8), Belt (8). SB— Heyward (5). CS—Freeman (1). San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO Vogelsong W,1-1 6 5 1 1 4 6 Affeldt H,4 1 0 0 0 1 0 Machi H,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Romo S,9-9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Atlanta Teheran L,2-2 7 4 3 3 0 7 D.Carpenter 1 0 0 0 1 1 Hale 1 0 0 0 0 0 Affeldt pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—2:51. A—34,648 (49,586).
Pirates 8, Blue Jays 6 Toronto Reyes ss MeCarr lf Bautist rf Encrnc 1b Lawrie 3b Rasms cf StTllsn 2b Loup p Thole c Dickey p Getz 2b
Totals
ab r 4 0 4 0 5 2 4 1 5 1 5 0 3 0 0 0 3 2 3 0 0 0
hbi 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
Pittsburgh ab r JHrrsn rf 5 2 NWalkr 2b 4 1 AMcCt cf 4 1 PAlvrz 3b 3 1 GSnchz 1b 1 1 JGomz p 0 0 Mercer ph 1 0 Morris p 0 0 SMarte lf 5 0 TSnchz c 4 0 Barmes ss 4 1 Liriano p 1 0 Tabata ph 1 0 I.Davis 1b 2 1
36 6 9 5 Totals
hbi 2 1 2 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0
35 8 12 7
Diamondbacks 4, Padres 3 ab r GParra rf 5 0 Prado 3b 5 0 Gldsch 1b 5 0 Monter c 5 2 Hill 2b 3 1 Owings ss 5 1 AMarte lf 4 0 Inciart cf 4 0 McCrth p 3 0 Pnngtn ph 1 0 Thtchr p 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 Putz p 0 0 A.Reed p 0 0
hbi 1 0 1 0 2 0 3 1 1 0 3 1 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
San Diego ab r ECarer ss 4 0 Denorfi rf 4 0 S.Smith lf 4 1 Grandl c 4 1 Gyorko 2b 4 1 Alonso 3b 4 0 Maybin cf 3 0 Petersn 3b 2 0 Roach p 0 0 Benoit p 0 0 Hundly ph 1 0 ATorrs p 0 0 Venale ph 0 0 Kenndy p 1 0 Amarst 3b 1 0 Nady ph-1b2 0
Rockies 11, Mets 10 New York
Colorado
ab r Lagars cf 6 0 DnMrp 2b 6 3 DWrght 3b 5 2 CYoung lf 5 2 Frnswr p 0 0 Grndrs rf 4 1 Recker c 5 1 Duda 1b 5 0 Tejada ss 3 0 BAreu ph 1 0 EYong pr-lf 0 1 Mejia p 3 0 Matszk p 1 0 Rice p 0 0 Satin ph 1 0 Quntnll ss 0 0 Totals
hbi 1 1 4 0 3 1 2 2 0 0 2 2 2 2 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
hbi 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 1 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
ab r Blckmn rf 5 1 Stubbs cf 3 1 CGnzlz lf 5 1 Tlwtzk ss 4 3 Arenad 3b 5 1 RWhelr 1b 3 1 Brothrs p 0 0 Dickrsn ph 0 0 Ottavin p 0 0 Logan p 0 0 Hwkns p 0 0 Culersn ph 1 1 Pachec c 3 1 LeMahi 2b 3 0 Morals p 1 0 Barnes ph 1 1 Mornea 1b 2 0
45 1017 9 Totals
hbi 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 0 2 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
36 111311
New York 303 002 011—10 Colorado 000 080 102—11 One out when winning run scored. E—D.Wright (2), Morales (1), Arenado (5). DP—New York 2. LOB—New York 12, Colorado 6. 2B—Dan.Murphy 2 (7), D.Wright (4), C.Young (3), Recker (2), B.Abreu (2), Arenado (8). 3B—Dan.Murphy (1). HR—Arenado (5), R.Wheeler (1), Culberson (1). SB—D.Wright (2). SF—Pacheco. New York IP H R ER BB SO Mejia 4 1-3 9 8 8 2 3 Matsuzaka 2 2-3 2 1 1 1 2 Rice 1 0 0 0 1 1 Farnsworth L,0-2 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Colorado Morales 5 9 6 5 1 5 C.Martin H,2 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 Brothers BS,4-4 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 3 Ottavino BS,1-1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 Logan 1 0 0 0 0 2 Hawkins W,1-0 2-3 3 1 1 1 0 HBP—by Mejia (Tulowitzki), by Morales (Granderson). WP—Morales. T—3:47. A—38,688 (50,480).
Angels 5, Rangers 3 Texas
Toronto 001 401 000—6 Pittsburgh 000 200 42x—8 E—Barmes (2), P.Alvarez 2 (7), T.Sanchez (3). DP—Toronto 1, Pittsburgh 2. LOB—Toronto 9, Pittsburgh 10. 2B—Reyes (4), Lawrie (3), J.Harrison (2), N.Walker (5), Mercer (2), Barmes (1). HR—Bautista (9). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO Dickey 6 5 3 3 4 3 Loup 1 4 3 3 1 1 Redmond L,0-3 2-3 3 2 2 2 1 Jenkins 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Liriano 3 2-3 6 5 4 3 3 J.Hughes 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Mazzaro 2 2 1 1 2 0 J.Gomez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Morris W,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Melancon S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Morris (Getz). WP—Dickey. PB—Thole. T—3:19. A—31,439 (38,362). Arizona
Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO Maholm 6 9 3 3 2 3 B.Wilson 2-3 1 3 3 1 0 Howell H,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Withrow H,5 1 1 0 0 2 1 C.Perez BS,1-2 1 2 1 1 2 1 League W,1-1 2 1 0 0 1 2 Miami Ja.Turner 4 9 6 6 1 3 Slowey 2 3 1 1 0 1 Capps 2 0 0 0 0 3 Hand 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cishek 1 1 0 0 0 2 Marmol L,0-2 1 2 2 2 1 3 HBP—by B.Wilson (Hechavarria). T—4:07. A—24,104 (37,442).
ab r Choo lf 3 0 Andrus ss 5 0 ABeltre 3b 4 0 Fielder 1b 4 1 Rios rf 4 0 Morlnd dh 4 1 DMrph 2b 4 1 LMartn cf 4 0 Chirins c 4 0 Totals
hbi 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 1
Los Angeles ab r Cowgill rf 5 2 Trout cf 3 1 Pujols dh 4 0 IStewrt dh 0 0 HKndrc 2b 5 2 Cron 1b 5 0 Aybar ss 5 0 Iannett c 3 0 LJimnz 3b 3 0 Green lf 4 0
36 3 10 3 Totals
hbi 3 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 4 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0
37 5 14 5
Texas 000 300 000—3 Los Angeles 101 101 01x—5 E—Chirinos (2), Cowgill (1). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Texas 8, Los Angeles 13. 2B—Chirinos (2), H.Kendrick 2 (7), Cron (1), Aybar (6). SB—Choo (2). S—L. Jimenez. Texas IP H R ER BB SO M.Harrison 4 1-3 10 3 3 3 3 Sh.Tolleson L,0-1 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 3 Frasor 1 0 0 0 0 0 Ogando 1 2 1 1 1 1 Los Angeles Richards W,3-0 6 9 3 3 2 9 Salas H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Frieri H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 J.Smith S,3-4 1 1 0 0 0 0 T—3:24. A—39,107 (45,483).
GOLF GOLF PGA TOUR Wells Fargo
Saturday At Quail Hollow Club Course Charlotte, N.C.; Purse: $6.9 million; Yardage: 7,562; Par: 72; Third Round J.B. Holmes 70-67-66—203 Martin Flores 67-68-69—204 Phil Mickelson 67-75-63—205 Kevin Kisner 72-66-68—206 Jason Bohn 73-67-67—207 Justin Rose 69-67-71—207 Martin Kaymer 69-69-70—208 Jonathan Byrd 68-71-70—209 Michael Thompson 71-69-69—209 Geoff Ogilvy 72-67-70—209 Rory McIlroy 69-76-65—210 Mark Wilson 72-72-66—210 Pat Perez 73-71-66—210 Ernie Els 76-67-67—210 Totals 40 4 14 4 Totals 34 3 9 3 Brendon de Jonge 80-62-68—210 Arizona 020 010 100—4 Kevin Na 69-72-69—210 San Diego 000 000 003—3 Zach Johnson 71-70-69—210 DP—Arizona 2, San Diego 1. LOB— Roberto Castro 71-70-69—210 Arizona 11, San Diego 6. 2B—Owings Jim Furyk 72-69-69—210 (6), A.Marte (1), S.Smith 2 (6), Grandal Charles Howell III 69-71-70—210 (5), Maybin (4). HR—Montero (4), Angel Cabrera 66-69-75—210 Gyorko (2). Gary Woodland 71-72-68—211 IP H R ER BB SO Wes Roach 71-71-69—211 Arizona John Merrick 71-70-70—211 McCarthy W,1-5 7 3 0 0 1 6 Derek Ernst 73-68-70—211 Thatcher 0 2 0 0 0 0 Webb Simpson 68-73-70—211 Ziegler H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Robert Streb 71-69-71—211 Putz 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 LPGA TOUR A.Reed S,8-9 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 North Texas Shootout San Diego Kennedy L,2-4 5 11 3 3 1 7 Saturday At Las Colinas Country Club Roach 2 2 1 1 1 3 Course, Irving, Texas; Purse: $1.3 Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 1 million; Yardage: 6,410; Par: 71; Third A.Torres 1 1 0 0 0 2 Round Stacy Lewis 71-64-69—204 Thatcher pitched to 2 batters in the Meena Lee 70-64-70—204 8th. 67-70-68—205 Dori Carter Umpires—Home, Jim Wolf; First, David Julieta Granada 71-66-68—205 Rackley; Second, Bill Welke; Third, Suzann Pettersen 66-71-68—205 Brian Gorman. Jennifer Johnson 71-70-65—206 T—3:11. A—35,213 (42,302). Kim Kaufman 72-66-68—206 Dodgers 9, Marlins 7, 11, Jenny Shin 69-69-68—206 Los Angeles Miami Thidapa Suwannapura 70-68-68—206 ab r hbi ab r hbi Cristie Kerr 67-70-69—206 DGordn 2b 6 2 5 2 RJhnsn lf 5 0 1 0 Christina Kim 67-69-70—206 Puig rf 6 1 2 3 Hand p 0 0 0 0 Natalie Gulbis 70-65-71—206 HRmrz ss 6 0 1 1 Dietrch ph 1 0 0 0 Na Yeon Choi 72-69-66—207 AdGnzl 1b 4 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Inbee Park 71-68-68—207 Kemp cf 5 1 3 0 Marml p 0 0 0 0 Lexi Thompson 70-71-67—208 Ethier lf 5 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 4 2 2 0 Michelle Wie 67-73-68—208 League p 0 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 1 2 0 Sarah Kemp 71-68-69—208 Uribe 3b 4 2 2 1 McGeh 3b 5 1 2 1 Alena Sharp 73-70-66—209 Olivo c 5 2 2 0 Ozuna cf 6 1 2 3 Pat Hurst 72-70-67—209 Mahlm p 1 0 0 0 GJones 1b 4 0 0 0 Lorie Kane 69-73-67—209 BWilsn p 0 0 0 0 JeBakr 2b 6 1 2 1 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 69-72-68—209 70-70-69—209 Howell p 0 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 1 2 1 Haru Nomura 70-68-71—209 Withrw p 0 0 0 0 Sltlmch c 1 0 0 1 Pornanong Phatlum Figgins ph 1 0 0 0 JaTrnr p 1 0 0 0 Dewi Claire Schreefel 71-66-72—209 67-67-75—209 C.Perez p 0 0 0 0 Solano ph 1 0 1 0 Caroline Masson Crwfrd lf 1 1 1 2 Slowey p 0 0 0 0 CHAMPIONS TOUR Lucas ph 1 0 0 0 Insperity Invitational Capps p 0 0 0 0 Saturday At The Woodlands CC, The Yelich ph-lf2 0 0 0 Woodlands, Texas; Purse: $2 million Totals
44 9 16 9 Totals
44 7 14 7
Los Angeles 011 401 000 02—9 Miami 011 001 301 00—7 E—D.Gordon (4). DP—Los Angeles 2, Miami 2. LOB—Los Angeles 6, Miami 13. 2B—Kemp (9), R.Johnson (3), Stanton (9), McGehee 2 (9). HR—Puig (4), C.Crawford (1), Ozuna (5), Je.Baker (1), Mathis (1). SB—D.Gordon 3 (19). CS—Puig (2), Kemp (1). S—Maholm 2.
Yardage: 7,002; Par: 72; Second Round Bernhard Langer 66-68—134 Colin Montgomerie 71-66—137 Gary Hallberg 71-67—138 Bart Bryant 66-72—138 Esteban Toledo 67-71—138 Tom Pernice Jr. 72-67—139 Mark O’Meara 69-70—139 Fred Couples 69-70—139 Steve Pate 69-70—139
NBA PLAYOFFS First Round (Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
EASTERN CONFERENCE Indiana 4, Atlanta 3 Saturday, May 3 Indiana 92, Atlanta 80 Previous Results Atlanta 101, Indiana 93 Indiana 101, Atlanta 85 Atlanta 98, Indiana 85 Indiana 91, Atlanta 88 Atlanta 107, Indiana 97 Indiana 95, Atlanta 88 Miami 4, Charlotte 0 Previous Results Miami 99, Charlotte 88 Miami 101, Charlotte 97 Miami 98, Charlotte 85 Miami 109, Charlotte 98 Toronto 3, Brooklyn 3 Friday, May 2 Brooklyn 97, Toronto 83 Sunday, May 4 Brooklyn at Toronto, 11 a.m. Previous Results Brooklyn 94, Toronto 87 Toronto 100, Brooklyn 95 Brooklyn 102, Toronto 98 Toronto 87, Brooklyn 79 Toronto 115, Brooklyn 113 Washington 4, Chicago 1 Previous Results Washington 102, Chicago 93 Washington 101, Chicago 99, OT Chicago 100, Washington 97 Washington 98, Chicago 89 Washington 75, Chicago 69
WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 3, Dallas 3 Friday, May 2 Dallas 113, San Antonio 111 Sunday, May 4 Dallas at San Antonio, 1:30 p.m. Previous Results San Antonio 90, Dallas 85 Dallas 113, San Antonio 92 Dallas 109, San Antonio 108 San Antonio 93, Dallas 89 San Antonio 109, Dallas 103 Oklahoma City 4, Memphis 3 Saturday, May 3 Oklahoma City 120, Memphis 109 Thursday, May 1 Oklahoma City 104, Memphis 84 Previous Results Oklahoma City 100, Memphis 86 Memphis 111, Oklahoma City 105, OT Memphis 98, Oklahoma City 95, OT Oklahoma City 92, Memphis 89, OT Memphis 100, Oklahoma City 99, OT L.A. Clippers 3, Golden State 3 Saturday, May 3 Golden State at L.A. Clippers Thursday, May 1 Golden State 100, L.A. Clippers 99 Previous Results Golden State 109, L.A. Clippers 105 L.A. Clippers 138, Golden State 98 L.A. Clippers 98, Golden State 96 Golden State 118, L.A. Clippers 97 L.A. Clippers 113, Golden State 103 Portland 3, Houston 2 Friday, May 2 Portland 99, Houston 98 Previous Results Portland 122, Houston 120, OT Portland 112, Houston 105 Houston 121, Portland 116, OT Portland 123, Houston 120, OT Houston 108, Portland 98
NBA CALENDAR May 20 — Draft lottery. June 5 — NBA Finals begin. June 16 — Draft early entry withdrawal deadline.
NBA BOXSCORES Pacers 92, Hawks 80 ATLANTA (80) Carroll 1-7 0-0 2, Millsap 6-21 3-5 15, Antic 0-5 0-0 0, Teague 5-16 6-6 16, Korver 6-13 2-3 19, Scott 5-14 2-2 15, Williams 0-3 0-0 0, Mack 5-12 0-0 13, Brand 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 28-92 13-16 80. INDIANA (92) George 11-23 7-8 30, West 1-7 2-2 4, Hibbert 6-10 1-2 13, G.Hill 3-10 9-9 15, Stephenson 8-12 2-4 19, Copeland 1-2 0-0 3, Watson 3-6 1-2 7, Mahinmi 0-0 1-2 1. Totals 33-70 23-29 92. Atlanta 23 13 27 17—80 Indiana 24 23 24 21—92 3-Point Goals—Atlanta 11-44 (Korver 5-10, Mack 3-8, Scott 3-10, Williams 0-1, Teague 0-2, Antic 0-3, Carroll 0-5, Millsap 0-5), Indiana 3-18 (Copeland 1-1, Stephenson 1-3, George 1-8, Watson 0-1, G.Hill 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Atlanta 46 (Millsap 17), Indiana 64 (Stephenson 14). Assists— Atlanta 16 (Mack 7), Indiana 17 (Stephenson 5). Total Fouls—Atlanta 24, Indiana 19. Technicals—Stephenson, West. A—18,165 (18,165).
Thunder 120, Grizzlies 109 MEMPHIS (109) Allen 4-11 7-8 15, Miller 1-3 0-0 3, Gasol 7-20 10-11 24, Conley 8-14 4-5 20, Lee 5-10 4-5 16, Prince 3-6 0-0 6, Koufos 2-3 0-0 4, Udrih 4-8 3-3 12, Leuer 3-5 2-2 9, Davis 0-1 0-0 0, Franklin 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 37-83 30-34 109. OKLAHOMA CITY (120) Durant 12-18 4-6 33, Ibaka 6-8 0-0 12, Perkins 2-2 0-0 4, Westbrook 10-16 5-6 27, Butler 3-10 8-9 15, Adams 3-3 2-3 8, Jackson 5-6 4-4 16, Fisher 1-4 2-2 5, Lamb 0-2 0-0 0, Jones 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-69 25-30 120. Memphis 36 22 23 28—109 Oklahoma City 27 34 33 26—120 3-Point Goals—Memphis 5-17 (Lee 2-5, Udrih 1-2, Leuer 1-2, Miller 1-3, Gasol 0-1, Allen 0-1, Prince 0-1, Conley 0-2), Oklahoma City 11-19 (Durant 5-5, Westbrook 2-2, Jackson 2-3, Fisher 1-3, Butler 1-5, Lamb 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Memphis 37 (Leuer 7), Oklahoma City 45 (Westbrook 10). Assists—Memphis 22 (Conley 9), Oklahoma City 22 (Westbrook 16). Total Fouls—Memphis 22, Oklahoma City 28. Technicals— Adams. A—18,203 (18,203).
Friday
Mavericks 113, Spurs 111 SAN ANTONIO (111) Leonard 4-9 3-4 12, Duncan 7-9 2-2 16, Splitter 4-7 11-12 19, Parker 10-23 1-2 22, Green 7-7 1-2 17, Diaw 3-5 2-2 9, Ginobili 1-8 4-4 6, Mills 4-6 0-0 10, Belinelli 0-1 0-0 0, Bonner 0-0 0-0 0, Ayres 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-75 24-28 111. DALLAS (113) Marion 3-6 1-3 7, Nowitzki 11-20 0-0 22, Dalembert 3-4 0-0 6, Calderon 5-9 0-0 12, Ellis 11-22 4-6 29, Carter 4-6 3-4 13, Blair 3-10 4-7 10, Harris 4-8 3-4 11, Crowder 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 45-87 15-24 113. San Antonio 26 26 29 30—111 Dallas 34 24 18 37—113 3-Point Goals—San Antonio 7-16 (Green 2-2, Mills 2-2, Diaw 1-2, Leonard 1-2, Parker 1-2, Splitter 0-1, Ginobili 0-5), Dallas 8-18 (Ellis 3-6, Calderon 2-3, Carter 2-4, Crowder 1-1, Marion 0-1, Nowitzki 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—San Antonio 45 (Duncan 9), Dallas 45 (Blair 14). Assists—San Antonio 21 (Parker 6), Dallas 18 (Calderon 6). Total Fouls— San Antonio 26, Dallas 20. A—20,799 (19,200).
HOCKEY HOCKEY NHL PLAYOFFS Second Round Best of 7; x-if necessary
EASTERN CONFERENCE Montreal 1, Boston 1 Saturday, May 3 Boston 5, Montreal 3 Thursday, May 1 Montreal 4, Boston 3, 2OT Tuesday, May 6 Boston at Montreal, 5 p.m. Thursday, May 8 Boston at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers 1, Pittsburgh 0 Friday, May 2 N.Y. Rangers 3, Pittsburgh 2, OT Sunday, May 4 N.Y. Rangers at Pittsburgh, 5:30 p.m. Monday, May 5 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 7 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Rangers, 5:30 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 1, Minnesota 0 Friday, May 2 Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Sunday, May 4 Minnesota at Chicago, 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 6 Chicago at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Friday, May 9 Chicago at Minnesota, TBD Anaheim 1, Los Angeles 0 Saturday, May 3 Anaheim 3, Los Angeles 2, OT Monday, May 5 Los Angeles at Anaheim, 8 p.m. Thursday, May 8 Anaheim at Los Angeles, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 10 Anaheim at Los Angeles, TBD
NHL SUMMARIES Bruins 5, Canadiens 3 Montreal 0 2 1—3 Boston 1 0 4—5 First Period—1, Boston, Paille 1 (Soderberg, Meszaros), 13:02. Second Period—2, Montreal, Weaver 1 (Plekanec, Gallagher), 1:09. 3, Montreal, Vanek 2 (P.Subban, Pacioretty), 18:09 (pp). Third Period—4, Montreal, Vanek 3 (P.Subban, Desharnais), 6:30 (pp). 5, Boston, Hamilton 2 (Marchand, Bergeron), 10:56. 6, Boston, Bergeron 2 (Marchand), 14:17. 7, Boston, Smith 3 (Krug, Chara), 16:28. 8, Boston, Lucic 4 (Krejci, Miller), 18:54 (en). Shots on Goal—Montreal 6-15-7—28. Boston 13-13-9—35. Power-play—Mtl 2 of 6; Bos 0 of 3. Goalies—Montreal, Price 5-1-0 (34 shots-30 saves). Boston, Rask 5-2-0 (28-25). A—17,565 (17,565). T—2:43.
Ducks 3, Kings 2, OT Los Angeles 1 0 1 1—3 Anaheim 1 0 1 0—2 First Period—1, Los Angeles, Martinez 1 (Gaborik, Kopitar), 9:04 (pp). 2, Anaheim, Beleskey 2 (Getzlaf, Fowler), 11:41. Second Period—None. Third Period—3, Anaheim, Selanne 1 (Maroon, Getzlaf), 8:08. 4, Los Angeles, Gaborik 4 (Richards, Kopitar), 19:53. First Overtime—5, Los Angeles, Gaborik 5 (Kopitar, Doughty), 12:07. Shots on Goal—Los Angeles 5-10-174—36. Anaheim 7-10-11-7—35. Power-play—LA 1 of 4; Ana 0 of 4. Goalies—Los Angeles, Quick 5-3-0 (35 shots-33 saves). Anaheim, Hiller 1-1-0 (36-33). A—17,393 (17,174). T—3:08.
TENNIS TENNIS BMW Open Saturday At MTTC Iphitos, Munich Singles Semifinals Fabio Fognini (1), Italy, def. JanLennard Struff, Germany, 6-3, 6-1. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, def. Tommy Haas (2), Germany, 6-3, 6-2. Doubles Semifinals Colin Fleming and Ross Hutchins, Britain, def. Dustin Brown, Germany, and Julian Knowle, Austria, 6-3, 6-2.
ATP-WTA TOUR Mutua Madrid Open Saturday At Caja Magica, Madrid, Spain Singles Women First Round Garbine Muguruza, Spain, def. Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, 6-7 (4), 6-3, 7-6 (2); Christina McHale, United States, def. Lauren Davis, United States, 7-6 (2), 6-3; Alison Riske, United States, def. Kaia Kanepi, Estonia, 6-7 (7), 6-1, 6-2; Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, def. Karin Knapp, Italy, 6-1, 6-1; Magdalena Rybatikova, Slovakia, def. Annika Beck, Germany, 6-2, 7-5; Sara Errani (10), Italy, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 7-5, 6-1; Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, def. Tzvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria, 6-3, 6-4.
ATP-WTA TOUR Portugal Open Saturday At Estadio Nacional, Oeiras, Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals Tomas Berdych (1), Czech Republic, def. Victor Hanescu, Romania, 6-2, 6-2. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina, def. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, 7-6 (6), 6-2. Women Championship Carla Suarez Navarro (1), Spain, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova (7), Russia, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4.
HORSE RACING HORSE RACING Kentucky Derby Louisville, KY — Results from the 140th running of the Kentucky Derby, held Saturday at Churchill Downs: Win Place Show California Chrome7.00 5.60 4.20 Commanding Curve 31.80 15.40 Danza 6.00 Time of race: 2:03.66 Daily Double (1-5) $9.00; $1 Daily Double OAKS/DERBY (13-5) $5.70; Exacta (5-17) $340.00; Future Wager (EXACTA POOL 1 24-18) $203.00; Future Wager (EXACTA POOL 2 3-24) $358.60; Future Wager (EXACTA POOL 3 4-24) $828.20; Future Wager (EXACTA POOL 4 5-24) $138.00; Future Wager (POOL 1 - 24) $3.60; Future Wager (POOL 2 - 3) $63.40; Future Wager (POOL 3 - 4) $67.60; Future Wager (POOL 4 - 5) $20.80; Superfecta (5-174-20) $15,383.80; $1 Super High Five (5-17-4-20-6) $149,764.70; Trifecta (5-17-4) $3,424.60; Pick 3 (9-1-5) (3 correct) $180.60; $0.50 Pick 3 OAKS/ WDFRD/DERBY 13-1-5 (3 correct) $4.25; Pick 4 5-9-1-5/11/21 (4 correct) $1,577.80; $0.50 Pick 5 8-5-9-1-5/11/21 (5 correct) $694.95; $0.50 Pick 6 2-8-59-1-5/11/21 (5 correct) $47.40; $0.50 Pick 6 2-8-5-9-1-5/11/21 (6 correct) $5,574.10; Trainer: Art Sherman; Winner: CH C, 3, by Lucky Pulpit-Love the Chase; Scratched: Pablo Del Monte, Hoppertunity.
SPORTS
Pacers: Series win a 1st in Indiana’s history times early in the second quarter, and then the Pacers’ defense got stingy. It didn’t allow Atlanta to make a basket over the final 6:12 of the first half, using a 14-2 run to take control with a 47-36 halftime lead that ended with Ian Mahinmi’s clean block as Teague drove in for a dunk at the buzzer. The Pacers opened the second half on a 10-4 spurt and took a 57-40 lead with 8:10 to go when George Hill completed a three-point play. Atlanta never recovered from the 24-6 run. “We just couldn’t score for a good, long stretch,” Korver said. “In the second half, we had the mindset that we would go out guns blazing. I think we got a little too 3-happy and shot maybe a few too many. When you don’t make them, it creates long rebounds and they took those and got out and ran.” The Hawks twice cut the deficit to eight late in the third, but George opened the fourth with six straight points in a 9-1 run. Atlanta never got closer than 10 again. “We’re happy to get over this hump,” George said, “and get ready for the next task.”
Continued from Page D-1 George said. Though they have a quick turnaround, at least the Pacers get a brief respite from the problems and distractions that lingered during the series. Indiana, the NBA’s best home team during the regular season, twice gave away home-court advantage by losing Games 1 and 5. Those losses sparked public debate about what needed to change in the offseason and whether coach Frank Vogel would even return if the Pacers became the sixth No. 1 seed to lose in the first round since the league went to its current 16-team playoff format. Atlanta’s spread offense and 3-point shooters had Indiana’s normally stout defense scrambling for answers after the Hawks took a 3-2 lead Monday night. Hibbert, an All-Star center, was a non-factor with just 20 points in the first six games combined. George spent the week dealing with a burglary at his home and the possibility of a Game 7 suspension. None of it mattered Saturday. George sparked the two biggest runs of the game, finished 11 of 23 from the field and grabbed 11 rebounds for a league-leading sixth doubledouble in the playoffs. Stephenson added nine rebounds and five assists, and wiggled his hips after a gameclinching dunk with 80 seconds to go. Hibbert awoke from his recent slumber with 13 points, seven rebounds and five blocks. Indiana’s regular starters won back-to-back games for the first time since mid-March, rallying from a 3-2 deficit to win a series for the first time in franchise history. “We know that when he is locked in offensively, his defense is off the charts. That’s when he becomes special,” George said of Hibbert. “I thought he was very special for us.”
Atlanta Hawks guard Louis Williams, right, shoots around the defense of Indiana Pacers guard Lance Stephenson during Game 7 on Saturday. AJ MAST/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Pacers got back to using their size advantage, beating Atlanta 55-38 on the glass, yet still found a way to limit the Hawks to 11 of 44 from 3-point range. The 44 attempts broke the NBA’s single-game playoff record (42) set by Dallas in a double-overtime game in May 2003. George also managed to slow down the shifty Jeff Teague. Kyle Korver led the Hawks with 19 points and Teague had 16. Paul Millsap added 15 points and 17 rebounds — not enough
for Atlanta to become the team with the fewest regular-season wins (38) to reach the second round since Detroit’s 36-win team in 1976. “We had a good number of very good looks, good opportunities, and that’s a big part of the game,” Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer said. “You have to make some shots, and tonight we weren’t able to do it at the rate that we needed to.” For the first time in the series, Indiana made it look easy. The teams traded leads seven
THUNDER 120, GRIZZLIES 109 In Oklahoma City, Kevin Durant scored 33 points, Russell Westbrook had a triple-double, and the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Memphis Grizzlies in Game 7 of their first-round Western Conference playoff series. Westbrook had 27 points, 16 assists and 10 rebounds. His assist total tied the franchise record for a playoff game set in 1987 by Nate McMillan when the team was still in Seattle. The gritty Grizzlies, playing without leading scorer Zach Randolph because of a suspension, led by 11 points in the first half before the Thunder overwhelmed them and shot 66 percent after the break. Marc Gasol led Memphis with 24 points. Grizzlies point guard Mike Conley had 20 points and nine assists while playing with a strained right hamstring.
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
D-3
Northern New Mexico
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. ARENA FOOTBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — Spokane at Los Angeles AUTO RACING 11 a.m. on FOX — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Aaron’s 499, in Talladega, Ala. 11 a.m. on FS1 — USCC, Prototype Challenge/GT Daytona, Monterey Grand Prix, in Monterey, Calif. 3:30 p.m. on FS1 — USCC, Prototype/GT Le Mans, Monterey Grand Prix, in Monterey, Calif. COLLEGE BASEBALL Noon on ESPNU — LSU at Texas A&M COLLEGE SOFTBALL 11 a.m. on ESPN — Florida at Arkansas 1 p.m. on ESPN — Stanford at UCLA GOLF 4:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, The Championship at Laguna National, final round, in Singapore (same-day tape) 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, Wells Fargo Championship, final round, in Charlotte, N.C. 1 p.m. on CBS — PGA Tour, Wells Fargo Championship, final round, in Charlotte, N.C. 1 p.m. on TGC — LPGA, North Texas Shootout, final round, in Irving, Texas 5 p.m. on TGC — Champions Tour, Insperity Invitational, final round, in The Woodlands, Texas (same-day tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11:30 a.m. on MLB — Regional coverage, San Francisco at Atlanta or Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees 6 p.m. on ESPN — St. Louis at Chicago Cubs MOTORSPORTS 5 a.m. on FS1 — MotoGP World Championship, Grand Prix of Spain, in Jerez, Spain NBA 11 a.m. on ABC — Playoffs, first round, game 7, Brooklyn at Toronto 1:30 p.m. on ABC — Playoffs, first round, game 7, Dallas at San Antonio, Texas NHL 1 p.m. on NBC — Playoffs, conference semifinals, game 2, Minnesota at Chicago 5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, game 2, N.Y Rangers at Pittsburgh SOCCER
Shines: Winner ran 1¼ miles in 2:03:66 border near Reno, running a laboratory that tests high-reliability equipment, like car air world’s most famous race with their onebags and medical equipment. horse stable. Coburn and Martin’s partnership is based “This is just a dream come true and a on a handshake, and their wives are friends great birthday present,’” said Coburn, who who enjoy the sport, too. The group came turned 61 on Saturday. up with California Chrome’s name by drawCalifornia Chrome ran 1¼ miles in ing it out of a hat. The horse hadn’t even 2:03.66 and paid $7, $5.60 and $4.20. The been out of his home state until this week. chestnut colt was sent off as the 5-2 favorite “Sometimes you don’t get a lot of by the crowd of 164,906, the second-largest respect,” Sherman said. “We’re in Kentucky in the Derby’s 140-year history. and you know most of the Derby winners His trainer, Art Sherman, became the old- are bred here and few outside of Kentucky.” est trainer to win the Derby, 57 years after Sherman visited Swaps’ grave near the he traveled from California as an exercise Derby museum earlier in the week and rider for Derby winner Swaps. He watched whispered a prayer: “I hope he’s another that race from the barn area; this time he Swaps.” smelled red roses in the winner’s circle. He sure was. Sherman was all smiles after the race. California Chrome extended his winning “He gave me the biggest thrill I ever had in streak to five races, won by a combined my life,” he said. 26 lengths. It was the second Derby win for California Chrome has the unlikeliEspinoza, who rode War Emblem to victory est pedigree for a Derby champion. His in 2002. mother, named Love the Chase, won just “I thought he rode him perfect,” said one race. She was purchased by Coburn Sherman, a former jockey. “I was riding the and Martin, a move that prompted a trainer last 70 yards with Victor, so I think he was to call them “dumb asses” for getting riding two. He had a lot of weight on him, I involved in racing. can tell you that.” Feeling inspired, they named their operaEspinoza had California Chrome sitting tion DAP Racing, which stands for Dumb comfortably in third in the 19-horse field as Ass Partners. Their silks include an image Uncle Sigh and Chitu set the early pace. of a donkey. California Chrome made his move on the Coburn lives near Reno, Nev., rising at final turn in tandem with Samraat. It looked 4:30 a.m. for his job as a press operator at a like those two would decide the outcome, 13-employee company that makes magnetic until California Chrome sped away to strips for credit cards and driver licenses. become the first California-bred to win the Derby since Decidedly in 1962. Martin lives on the California side of the
Continued from Page D-1
“This horse has so much talent,” Espinoza said. “By the three-eighths pole I knew that was it. I could see other horses struggling a little bit, and he was just smooth.” Commanding Curve, a 37-1 shot, rallied for second, with Danza third. Wicked Strong was fourth, and Samraat finished fifth. Commanding Curve returned $31.80 and $15.40, giving trainer Dallas Stewart his second straight runner-up finish with a double-digit longshot. Danza, named for actor Tony Danza of Who’s the Boss? fame, paid $6 to show as the 8-1 third choice. Trainer Todd Pletcher came up empty with his four starters, finishing third with Danza, 10th with We Miss Artie, 12th with Intense Holiday, and 17th with Vinceremos. Wicked Strong, the 6-1 second choice, was fourth. Samraat was fifth, followed by Dance With Fate, Ride On Curlin, Medal Count, Chitu, We Miss Artie, General a Rod, Intense Holiday, Candy Boy, Uncle Sigh, Tapiture, Harry’s Holiday, Vinceremos and Wildcat Red. Vicar’s In Trouble, ridden by Rosie Napravnik, finished last. Before the Derby, Coburn had told anyone who would listen that California Chrome “would go down in history.” He remains just as unabashed. “I believe this horse will win the Triple Crown,” he said, something that hasn’t been done since 1978, when Affirmed swept the Derby, Preakness and Belmont in a fiveweek span. “That’s where we’re going.”
Tough: Mayweather lands 230 of 426 punches Continued from Page D-1 Marcos Maidana, center, knocks Floyd Mayweather Jr. through the ropes in their match Saturday. At left is referee Tony Weeks. ERIC JAMISON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
I wanted to give the fans what they wanted to see, so I stood and fought him. Maidana raised his arms in victory when the final bell sounded, and Mayweather watched pensively from his corner as the scorecards were added up before he was declared the winner. “I think I won the fight,” Maidana said. “He didn’t fight like a man.” Punch stats by Compubox showed Mayweather landing 230 of 426 punches to 221 of 858 for Maidana. It was the most punches landed by any fighter against Mayweather in 38 fights where punch stats were compiled. “I couldn’t see for two rounds after the head butt,” Mayweather said. “After I could see again, it didn’t both me. That’s what champions do, they survive and adjust.”
6:25 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, West Bromwich at Arsenal 8:55 a.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, Norwich at Chelsea 2 p.m. on NBCSN — MLS, Columbus at Kansas City
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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.st michaelssf.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 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
D-4
SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
NHL
Bruins rally to overcome Canadiens in Game 2 through this a lot the last few years helps a lot,” forward Shawn Thornton said. BOSTON — The Boston BruThe Bruins trailed 3-1 with ins rallied from two goals down just over nine minutes remainto avoid another two-game defi- ing before Dougie Hamilton cit against the archrival Monscored, then Patrice Bergeron treal Canadiens. tied it with 5:43 remaining. Reilly Smith scored the goReilly then wristed a cross-ice ahead goal with 3:32 left, and pass from Krug past Carey Price Boston scored four times in to give Boston the lead. Milan eight minutes to beat the Cana- Lucic added an empty-net goal diens 5-3 on Saturday and even with 66 seconds left. the Eastern Conference semifi“We weren’t expecting to nals at one game apiece. come in here and sweep two “It was a fun last part of the games,” said Price, who stopped third period,” said Torey Krug, 30 shots. “They poured it on who set up Smith’s goal. “We’re a little, and they were a little very excited with how things lucky, I thought. They were turned out, but we’ve got to playing desperate at the end. move along from it pretty soon.” We’ve just got to regroup and Games 3 and 4 are on Tuesrealize what situation we’re in. day and Thursday in Montreal, We’re in a good spot.” where in 2011, Boston won twice Tuukka Rask had 25 saves in its first-round series after los- for Boston — the first time in ing the first two at home. The 10 tries in his career that he has Bruins won the series in seven beaten the Bruins’ Original Six games and went on to win their rival at the TD Garden. Monfirst Stanley Cup title in 39 treal won Game 1 in double years. overtime. Last year, the Bruins trailed “The feeling of winning is a Toronto by three goals with 11 lot better,” Rask said. “I’m happy minutes left in Game 7 of their how we bounced back after we first-round series before winwere down 3-1.” ning in overtime — scoring Thomas Vanek twice tipped twice in the last 82 seconds of P.K. Subban’s slap shots into regulation. the net, and Mike Weaver also Even though they know it can scored for the Canadiens, who be done, they’re glad they won’t lost for the first time in this year’s playoffs. have to stage a similar come“We’ve got to find ways, when back this year. we have the lead, to finish it off,” “The experience of going By Jimmy Golen
The Associated Press
Boston Bruins right wing Reilly Smith, center, celebrates his goal against the Montreal Canadiens with fans during the third period of Saturday’s game. CHARLES KRUPA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Montreal captain Brian Gionta said. “Come playoff time, that’s a huge key to wins.” Subban scored twice in Game 1, including a double-overtime goal that unleashed a series of racial slurs on social media. The Bruins distanced themselves from what team President Cam Neely called “the racist, classless views expressed by an ignorant group of individuals,”
and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman joined in on Saturday. “We condemn bias and hatred,” he said before the game. “It has no place in our game and it’s not acceptable.” KINGS 3, DUCKS 2 (OT) In Anaheim, Marian Gaborik scored with seven seconds left in regulation to force overtime, then scored 12:07 into the extra period to lift the Los Angeles
Kings to a 3-2 win Saturday night against the Anaheim Ducks in the opener of the first playoff series between the Southern California teams. Gaborik redirected Anze Kopitar’s shot past Jonas Hiller for the winner before being mobbed in the corner by his teammates. Gaborik also had an assist on L.A.’s first goal of the night. The Ducks and their fans — who got to chant “Beat L.A.!” for
the first time in the postseason — appeared poised for a win after 43-year-old Teemu Selanne beat Jonathan Quick between the pads for a go-ahead goal with 11:52 to play in regulation. It was the first goal and fourth point of the playoffs for the Finnish Flash, who plans to retire at season’s end. But the Kings pulled Quick for a sixth attacker with 1:22 left. In the closing seconds, Mike Richards took a shot from along the left boards, and Gaborik wristed the rebound past Hiller, who slumped in the net after giving up the tying goal. The Ducks and Kings had waited 20 years to meet in the playoffs, and the teams responded with a thrilling series opener. Quick came up big several times in overtime. Even when he didn’t, the Kings held off the Ducks. Quick got out of position during one wild scramble and defenseman Alec Martinez jumped into the net until Quick recovered. Their rinks just 30 miles apart, the Kings and Ducks have played each other 117 times in the regular season since Anaheim entered the NHL as a Disney-backed expansion franchise in 1993. They even met at Dodger Stadium in January, with the Ducks winning 3-0. But never in the playoffs, until Saturday night in Orange County. Game 2 is Monday night at Anaheim.
MLB NATIONAL LEAGUE
MLB AMERICAN LEAGUE
Giants hit 3 home runs, defeat slumping Braves
Yankees rally to beat Rays
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Brandon Belt, Buster Posey and Michael Morse led off innings with home runs, and the streaking San Francisco Giants beat the slumping Atlanta Braves 3-1 on Saturday night in a matchup of first-place teams. The NL West-leading Giants have won four straight and eight of nine. The Braves, who lead the NL East, have lost five straight for the first time since May 21-28, 2012. PHILLIES 7, NATIONALS 2 In Philadelphia, Ryan Howard and Cody Asche homered, and A.J. Burnett (2-1) allowed one run and three hits in six innings. Jimmy Rollins had four hits and Marlon Byrd doubled and drove in a pair of runs for Philadelphia, which won for just the third time in 11 games against the Nationals. REDS 6, BREWERS 2 In Cincinnati, Johnny Cueto (3-2) gave up three hits over eight innings, including solo homers by by Aramis Ramirez and Mark Reynolds, and singled in a run. Cueto, who walked one and struck out 10, is the first Reds pitcher to throw at least seven innings in each of his first seven starts in a season since Bucky Walters in 1944 CUBS 3, CARDINALS 0 In Chicago, Jake Arrieta struck out seven and allowed four hits over 5⅓ innings in his season debut, helping the Cubs to their first three-game winning streak this season. Arrieta, slowed by shoulder stiffness this spring, walked two and threw 82 pitches. Chicago’s bullpen finished a seven-hitter. Brian Schlitter (1-0) got two outs for the win,
San Francisco Giants celebrate as first baseman Brandon Belt approaches the dugout after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning of Saturday’s game. JOHN AMIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
and Hector Rondon worked around a pair of leadoff singles in the ninth for his third save. INTERLEAGUE PIRATES 8, BLUE JAYS 6 In Pittsburgh, Neil Walker hit a tiebreaking, two-run double in the eighth against Todd Redmond (0-3), capping a comeback from a 5-0 deficit. A night after wasting a 5-3, ninth-inning lead in a 6-5 loss, Toronto led 6-2 in the seventh but the the Pirates tied the score against Aaron Loup on Josh Harrison’s RBI double, Pedro Alvarez’s run-scoring groundout and pinch-hitter Jordy Mercer’s two-run double. Bryan Morris (3-0) pitched a perfect eighth, and Mark Melancon earned his first save of the season in place of injured closer Jason Grilli, retiring Colby Ramus on a game-ending groundout with two on. Pittsburgh, which overcame four errors, won consecutive games for the first time since beating St. Louis and the Chicago Cubs on April 6 and 8.
ROCKIES 11, METS 10 In Denver, Pinch-hitter Charlie Culberson hit a two-run homer in the ninth inning off Kyle Farnsworth, and the Colorado Rockies, down by six runs early, rallied again to beat the New York Mets in a wild affair. DIAMONDBACKS 4, PADRES 3 In San Diego, Brandon McCarthy threw seven superb innings and Alfredo Marte drove in two runs as the Diamondbacks survived a ninth-inning rally for a win over the Padres. The Diamondbacks handed San Diego its fourth straight loss as the major-leagues’ worst offensive team avoided its third shutout in four game with three runs in the ninth. DODGERS 9, MARLINS 7 In Miami, pinch-hitter Carl Crawford hit a two-run homer in the 11th inning, and the Dodgers escaped several lateinning jams to beat the Marlins. The Marlins lost even though they tied a franchise record at Marlins Park with three home runs.
Every one of his runs, however, came across as the result of Isotopes miscues. Four of them scored in the fourth inning as Fresno (14-16) picked up its second straight win over Albuquerque (15-14). The Isotopes were down 5-0 in the fifth before finally scorFive unearned runs charged ing their first run, a solo homer to Albuquerque starting pitcher from Jamie Romak. It was 6-1 Henry Sosa led to the predictbefore a rally cut Fresno’s lead able result of a 6-4 loss to the to 6-4. The game ended with Fresno Grizzlies in Pacific Coast the tying run at the plate as League action on Saturday night Grizzlies closer Heath Hembree at Isotopes Park. earned his sixth save of the Sosa (1-1) worked five innings, season. giving up 10 hits while striking Albuquerque had 10 hits in out six as 66 of the 88 pitches the game, two apiece from Carhe threw found the strike zone. los Triunfel and Miguel Rojas.
In brief Isotopes fall to Fresno 6-4
As a team, the ‘Topes had just two hits with runners in scoring position while stranding seven runners against three Grizzlies pitchers. Jason Berken (4-1) got the win for Fresno, working seven innings while allowing just the Romak homer. He struck out five, walked two and gave up seven hits. Albuquerque slipped another half game behind Las Vegas (209) in the PCL’s Pacific Southern Division. The 51’s were rained out at Tacoma on Saturday night, Tacoma’s seventh rainout of the season. Las Vegas has a five-game edge in the division over the second-place Isotopes.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Masahiro Tanaka extended his regularseason unbeaten streak to 40 starts, and Mark Teixeira homered and drove in three runs to help the Yankees rally past the Tampa Bay Rays 9-3 Saturday and end a seasonhigh, three-game losing streak. Tanaka (4-0) gave up solo homers to Desmond Jennings and Wil Myers around an RBI single by Ryan Hanigan, falling behind 3-0 by the fourth. He is 32-0 in the regular season for Japan’s Rakuten Golden Eagles and the Yankees since losing to Seibu on Aug. 19, 2012. Kelly Johnson hit a tiebreaking solo homer in the sixth off Josh Lueke (0-2). RED SOX 6, ATHLETICS 3 In Boston, Jon Lester (3-4) struck out a career-high 15, allowing one hit over eight scoreless innings — Craig Gentry’s leadoff bloop single in the third over the head of second baseman Dustin Pedroia. Jonny Gomes hit a grand slam in the first off Tommy Milone (0-3), and David Ortiz and David Ross added solo homers in Boston’s second straight win after losing a daynight doubleheader to Tampa Bay.
starts since winning at Texas on Sept. 1. MARINERS 9, ASTROS 8 In Houston, Justin Smoak hit a two-run homer off Raul Valdes that capped an eight-run seventh inning that built a 9-2 lead. Dallas Keuchel (2-2) left after walking the first three batters of the seventh, and Jose Cisneros forced in the run that made it 2-2 when he walked Mike Zunino. Michael Saunders followed with a two-run double. INDIANS 2, WHITE SOX 0 In Cleveland, Justin Masterson (1-1) held the AL’s highestscoring offense in check, allowing four hits and striking out six in 7⅓ innings to win for the first time in nine starts since Aug. 21. John Axford pitched the ninth for his ninth save, sending Chicago to its fourth straight loss. Chicago rookie first baseman Jose Abreu, who leads the majors in homers and RBIs, fielded Lonnie Chisenhall’s sixth-inning grounder and, unable to get the ball out of his mitt, flipped the glove about
10 feet to pitcher Scott Carroll (1-1) covering the bag for the out. TIGERS 9, ROYALS 2 In Kansas City, Mo., Drew Smyly (2-1) picked up where fellow Tigers starter Rick Porcello left off, allowing two hits in seven shutout innings. Joba Chamberlain hrew a perfect eighth and Phil Coke allowed two runs in the ninth. Nick Castellanos drove in three runs the Tigers, the first off spot starter Danny Duffy (1-2) and two more off the bullpen. Torri Hunter hit a three-run homer in a six-run ninth as Detroit beat Kansas City for the fifth straight time. ANGELS 5, RANGERS 3 In Anaheim, Calif., C.J. Cron hit an RBI single on the first pitch he saw in the major leagues, doubled his second time up and hit a tiebreaking RBI single in the sixth inning to lead the Los Angeles Angels to a victory over the Texas Ranger. Howie Kendrick capped his first four-hit game of the season with an RBI double in the ninth and scored two runs.
TWINS 6, ORIOLES 1 In Minneapolis, Joe Mauer and Brian Dozier homered, Kevin Correia earned his first win of the season and Minnesota ended its four-game losing streak. Mauer had three hits and four RBIs, including a three-run homer off Brad Brach in the seventh that broke open the game. Dozier’s eighth homer, a solo shot off Wei-Yin Chen (3-2) in the third, gave the Twins the lead for good. Correia (1-3) gave up one run and five hits in seven innings, New York Yankees starting pitcher Masahiro Tanaka retiring 13 of his final 14 batattempts to pick off a runner at first base during the third inning of Saturday’s game. FRANK FRANKLIN II/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ters. He had been 0-6 in nine
Saturday’s game was played before 13,717 fans on the second straight fireworks night at Isotopes Park. More than 25,000 fans have attended the first two games of the series, which resumes Sunday afternoon.
a doubleheader from visiting Metropolitan State. NMHU took the opener 11-10 and then got the finale 6-2. Cowboys senior Jordan Goliat recorded his first two triples of the year in the first game, a walkoff win in the bottom of the ninth. Cole Davis tripled his double tally of the season in game two and Tyler Hayes made spectacular defensive The New Mexico Highplays for nine assists at shortlands University baseball team stop. wrapped up its regular season “I am just very proud that in style on Saturday afternoon these seniors got to enjoy sucat Brandt Field. cess in their final games at The Cowboys (31-18 overall home and extremely pleased and 28-11 in the Rocky Mountain they will get into the postseason,” said Highlands head coach Athletic Conference) swept
NMHU sweeps Metropolitan St.
Steve Jones. The Cowboys capitalized on a critical miscue in the bottom of the ninth when a single and sacrifice bunt was followed by a throwing error by Metro pitcher Eli Ford. As the ball bounced around in foul territory, the winning run scored from second base. Highlands returns to action Thursday at 3:30 p.m. when it travels to Grand Junction, Colo., to play CSU-Pueblo. The Cowboys are the second seed, while CSU-Pueblo is the third seed in the RMAC Tournament. The New Mexican
SPORTS
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
D-5
PREP SOFTBALL
McCurdy sweeps twin bill against Rehoboth iana Santos and Elena Gonzales, both went 3-for-4. Message sent. Alana Sanchez, Karla Santos Entering Saturday’s nondisand Eliana Griego all had two trict doubleheader in Española hits as McCurdy shook off an with the best record of any team early 2-0 deficit. in Class A-AA, the Rehoboth In the second game, Sanchez softball team was dealt a harsh got the nod as the starting blow of reality in losing two pitcher. She went the distance, games to host McCurdy. striking out seven while going “Our girls were not intimi4-for-4 at the plate. She had a dated at all,” said Lady Bobcats double, triple and scored a pair head coach Nathan Velasquez. of runs. “They knew Rehoboth had the Both she and Velasquez came record, and they knew they within a home run of hitting for were good, but they stood in the cycle. Velasquez was 3-for-3 there and played hard.” with a single, double and triple. McCurdy won the opener The game was tied at 8-8 10-4 and got a walk-off win in heading into the bottom of the the final inning of a 9-8 victory seventh inning when M.E. Renin Game 2. don doubled home Velasquez Tenisha Velasquez stuck out eight to get the win as the start- from second base for the walkoff win. Velasquez led off the ing pitcher in Game 1. She also frame with a double. had three hits, two of which “Our defense was outstanding were doubles. Two others, MarThe New Mexican
both games,” Nathan Velasquez said, referring to a diving catch in the outfield in the top of the seventh in Game 2 by Griego, a catch that preserved the tie score. Santos was also solid behind the plate, throwing out a pair of baserunners. Now 13-11 overall, McCurdy sets its sights on Pecos. The teams will meet Tuesday afternoon in Espanola. At stake is the District 4A-AA championship. The Lady Panthers lead the race with a 4-0 league mark while the Lady Bobcats are one game behind at 3-1. The only blemish on McCurdy’s record is a loss to Pecos in April. “The wins over [Rehoboth] were big because they send a message, I think,” Velaquez said, “but the games against Pecos will say even more.”
Santa Fe Prep’s Jake Schmidt runs toward the goal in the second quarter of their game against Rio Rancho on Saturday at Balloon Fiesta Park in Albuquerque. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Trophy: NMAA doesn’t recognize lacrosse as a sanctioned sport Continued from Page D-1
Santa Fe High School’s Warren Fulgenzi plays in his singles match against Los Alamos’ Nikita Beloousov during the District 2AAAA tennis tournament Saturday at Capital High School. PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN
15th: Type 1 Diabetes affected Debruyn’s performance in duel Continued from Page D-1
close to reality. Leading 11-8 in the final 90 seconds, the Griffins nearly let it slip away as Rio Rancho scored a pair of goals — the last coming with 17 seconds left — to make the final segment fairly tense. Along the way, goalkeeper Danny Laposata stopped 10 of the Raptors’ shots to preserve the win. When it was over, the players rushed the field, Monroe and McKenna addressed the team and the players made off with the 30-inch trophy that symbolizes the work that began so many years ago. Of all the starters in Saturday’s game, not one was a senior. “You know, I came here hoping to get my own son involved in it because, in college [Hobart], I had a chance to see the best lacrosse in the country,” Monroe said. “It all kind of started from there. I volunteered to help the coach, then I kind of got involved in the youth teams and it went on from there.” And where it wound up was a perfect season.
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6-0 and Lauryn Anaya swept Megan Varnum 6-1, 6-0 to pull the Lady Hilltoppers within 4-3. After Cunningham won her match, it came down to the two players at the bottom of the rosters. While other players on their teams were raised on the tennis court, both Fugate and Debruyn started playing tennis just last year, and this year is Fugate’s first on varsity. “Just to be able to say that I helped win the district title is a really great feeling,” said Fugate, a sophomore. Debruyn decided to give tennis a try as a junior, and the now-senior spent a lot of time working on her game outside of formal practices in order to make an impact on the team. “I’ve improved so much,” Debruyn said. “I couldn’t even do a backhand last year, and now that’s my favorite swing. I just love the sport, and I have great coaches that really help me out.” Debruyn is also inflicted with Type 1 Diabetes, and it reared its ugly head in the final match. Her blood sugar dipped in the first set, and she had to drink a lot of juice in the second to bring it back up. She also wears a device on her hip that monitors her blood sugar, but she decided to ditch it midway through the match because it kept falling off and became a distraction. “I had to play low for some games, and I was sweaty and shaky and weak in my legs, but I pulled through it,” Debruyn said. “I live through that. I’m not going to say I lost because I’m a diabetic. I lost because [Fugate] played a good game. I don’t have any excuses. She did really good today, and I give her kudos for that.” It was fitting that Debruyn and Fugate settled their final match of the season in this fashion. Much like the first two sets of this match, the two split in the two regular-season duels. The rubber match, however, not only had district championship implications, but also state tour-
“On the bus ride down here, I did a head count of all the players Bruce and I coached in clubs going back as far as when they were 8 or 9 years old,” Monroe said. “It was quite a bit. It shows the dedication a lot of these kids, these players, their families, have shown to this sport.” Not recognized as a sanctioned sport by the governing body of high school athletics, the New Mexico Activities Association, lacrosse does seem to be gaining a foothold in most western states besides this one. From California to Arizona, Colorado to Washington, lacrosse’s popularity is picking up steam as a viable spring-sport option to the more traditional sports. “Well, I’m from New York City and went to school in Connecticut where lacrosse is huge, but I’ve seen the sport explode in states all around the West,” Monroe said. “My hope is that one day, it will get to be a popular high school sport right here. We’ve got a while before we see that, but it is growing.” Only six teams played in the state’s lacrosse league this season. All of them were a mix of players from several schools, only compounding the situation when trying to get the NMAA’s attention. To reach the status of a recognized sport, at least 20 schools must field teams. Those schools must have rosters filled with players from those schools only.
Prep’s team was made up of players all around Santa Fe and Los Alamos. Affiliated with Santa Fe Prep by name association only, the team simply wouldn’t exist without the influx of talent from other schools. In Saturday’s game, Hudson Davenhall and Hewitt Farr each scored four goals to help the Griffins beat Rio Rancho for the third time this season. Davenhall is a student at Los Alamos High, while Farr is from Santa Fe High. “I come down to Santa Fe every day for practice because this is lacrosse and I love it,” Davenhall said. “One of the things that makes this team great is the guys all basically come from different schools, but we’re here for the same reason,” Farr said. “This is what we’re all here for: to have fun and win games like this.” Saturday’s game was close throughout, but it wasn’t until the final moments that Prep’s bench began to feel the excitement of winning a title that, in years past, seemed nowhere
2014 International Folk Art Market Magazine
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Los Alamos High School’s Nikita Beloousov plays against Santa Fe’s Warren Fulgenzi in their singles match in Saturday’s tournament.
nament seeding implications. Los Alamos lost to Santa Fe High twice earlier in the season by the same count of 5-4, but the Lady Hilltoppers are used to overcoming adversity when there is a lot on the line. “Last year we lost to Farmington four times and then beat them the fifth time in the state championship,” Los Alamos girls tennis coach Bruce Cottrell said. “Our team is sort of used to this. They never quit.” Cottrell predicts a 3- or 4-seed in the state tournament, while Santa Fe High head coach Bill Ellsworth predicts a 5- or 6-seed for his team. Where Los Alamos is placed affects where Santa Fe High is placed because district oppo-
nents aren’t allowed to play each other in the first round of the state tournament. If Los Alamos gets the 3-seed, Santa Fe High will get the 5-seed, for example. While both teams recognize that seeding is important, what really mattered on Saturday was bragging rights. “I really wanted to win districts, but I guess they just wanted it more,” Debruyn said. The championship may have went to the team with more desire, but it was decided by the least-expected. “You just never know what flight number it’s going to come down to,” Ellsworth said. “I guess it’s really hard to beat any team three times in a row.”
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D-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
The weather
For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/
7-day forecast for Santa Fe Today
Tonight
Monday
Mostly sunny; breezy Mainly clear this afternoon
82
Tuesday
Partly sunny and windy
45
Wednesday
Increasingly windy
79/45
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Mostly sunny and windy
Thursday
Friday
Partly sunny
Mostly sunny; breezy Sunny in the p.m.
76/41
69/38
67/40
70/42
73/48
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
10%
16%
10%
14%
13%
14%
14%
25%
wind: NW 4-8 mph
wind: W 12-25 mph
wind: WSW 10-20 mph
wind: SW 12-25 mph
wind: WSW 7-14 mph
wind: WNW 8-16 mph
wind: W 8-16 mph
Almanac
New Mexico weather
Air quality index
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
285
64
Farmington 82/48
Española 84/55 Los Alamos 76/47 40
Santa Fe 82/45 Pecos 77/44
25
Albuquerque 85/56
25
87
56 412
Clayton 91/53
Pollen index
54
40
40
The following water statistics of May 1 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 6.328 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 3.670 City Wells: 0.002 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 10.000 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.271 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 35.3 percent of capacity; daily inflow 3.88 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation
Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
Roswell 95/58
Ruidoso 79/57
25
Truth or Consequences 88/60
70
70
380
380
70
Hobbs 94/56
285
Alamogordo 90/60
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
70
180
Las Cruces 89/63
10
Water statistics
Clovis 93/54
54 60 60
As of 5/1/2014 Cottonwood ......................................... 1 Low Grass.................................................... 1 Low Unidentified......................................... 2 Low ...................................................................... Total.............................................................4
25
Las Vegas 81/46
285
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/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. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.82” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/3.46” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.89”
Saturday’s rating ................................ Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
64
Taos 77/37
84
Area rainfall
Raton 85/40
64
666
Gallup 77/43
Sally Blakemore of Santa Fe visited southwestern China in April with colleague Colette Fu, a Yi minority Chinese artist who was born in the United States. The Miao Minority People from Guizhou, China, celebrated the Sister’s Rice Festival by performing their circle dances with the drum. The silver is mined in the region and they produce ornate and silver costumes.
Saturday
wind: W 8-16 mph
Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 79°/36° Normal high/low ............................ 72°/39° Record high ............................... 87° in 1947 Record low ................................. 21° in 2011 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.83” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.10”/2.76” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/0.99”
54
Carlsbad 96/59
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes Sat. High 91 .................................. Carlsbad Sat. Low 17 ................................ Eagle Nest
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Hi/Lo W 84/48 r 81/46 s 67/22 s 90/52 s 91/48 s 69/31 s 78/34 s 85/49 s 65/29 s 86/48 s 77/34 s 84/42 s 80/45 s 80/37 s 89/52 s 77/29 s 77/27 s 89/50 s 83/45 s
Hi/Lo W 90/60 s 85/56 s 69/35 s 94/61 s 96/59 s 71/37 s 82/40 s 91/53 s 70/42 s 93/54 s 77/44 s 90/55 s 84/55 s 82/48 s 94/56 s 77/43 s 79/42 s 94/56 s 89/63 s
Hi/Lo W 87/58 pc 82/55 pc 67/35 pc 95/63 pc 97/64 pc 69/32 pc 80/39 pc 88/51 pc 70/31 pc 90/53 pc 74/40 pc 88/55 pc 81/54 pc 79/45 pc 92/53 pc 74/42 pc 75/40 pc 97/57 pc 89/62 pc
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 78/38 86/48 74/48 84/46 87/48 80/36 64/27 82/45 89/44 74/46 86/52 80/43 85/46 74/30 83/47 89/49 84/47 77/46 77/33
W s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s
Hi/Lo W 81/46 s 89/61 s 76/47 s 88/54 s 92/54 s 85/40 s 67/38 s 85/51 s 95/58 s 79/57 s 90/52 s 85/55 s 89/56 s 77/37 s 88/60 s 95/57 s 91/63 s 79/48 s 77/43 s
Hi/Lo W 78/45 pc 88/56 pc 75/40 pc 86/56 pc 92/53 pc 82/41 pc 65/31 pc 83/48 pc 96/58 pc 78/54 pc 87/52 pc 83/53 pc 87/58 pc 75/35 pc 87/59 pc 93/51 pc 90/64 pc 78/43 pc 75/42 pc
Sunrise today ............................... 6:09 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:53 p.m. Moonrise today .......................... 10:37 a.m. Moonset today ........................... 12:00 a.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 6:08 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 7:54 p.m. Moonrise Monday ....................... 11:30 a.m. Moonset Monday ........................ 12:41 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:07 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 7:55 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ...................... 12:24 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 1:19 a.m. First
Full
Last
New
May 6
May 14
May 21
May 28
Rise 6:37 a.m. 4:22 a.m. 5:03 p.m. 10:07 a.m. 8:15 p.m. 4:50 a.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 8:44 p.m. 4:25 p.m. 4:52 a.m. 12:34 a.m. 6:49 a.m. 5:25 p.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles
Hi/Lo 68/45 74/49 72/51 59/41 56/36 77/51 67/50 77/61 75/46 64/46 69/42 59/49 92/52 82/48 59/47 70/43 74/31 88/72 87/61 66/44 77/50 98/69 85/63
W s s sh c pc pc c pc pc pc c t s pc sh pc s pc s pc pc s s
Hi/Lo 63/45 83/60 74/45 65/45 56/37 70/47 66/45 86/60 85/55 57/39 72/49 57/38 94/66 86/49 57/39 67/41 72/41 87/72 87/61 66/45 81/56 95/74 78/60
W s s pc c pc pc sh s s c t pc s pc pc pc s pc s t pc s pc
Hi/Lo 61/45 86/61 65/48 68/44 66/45 66/46 64/47 89/64 86/57 57/44 69/49 58/40 94/67 83/48 61/41 54/37 69/43 86/72 86/63 68/49 83/56 89/69 70/56
W s s pc t pc t sh s s pc pc pc s pc pc c pc pc s pc pc pc pc
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC
Hi/Lo W 74/47 pc 80/50 s 87/74 t 60/46 pc 59/43 c 81/57 s 67/54 pc 91/46 s 77/69 t 72/51 c 100/68 s 62/48 t 63/50 sh 77/51 pc 77/57 pc 81/55 pc 92/50 s 79/65 s 65/55 pc 60/48 sh 62/38 pc 71/46 pc 73/57 pc
Hi/Lo 80/55 88/63 84/71 54/37 58/41 84/63 67/48 97/65 85/61 70/47 98/74 63/38 61/50 82/52 84/55 80/53 91/61 72/60 64/53 60/47 60/37 68/43 76/48
W pc s pc c pc s sh s s sh s pc sh s pc pc s pc pc sh pc sh pc
Hi/Lo 79/58 86/64 86/73 52/38 61/45 83/64 68/47 98/65 88/65 68/48 96/71 63/43 62/49 72/54 84/56 78/49 91/65 67/60 61/50 60/46 66/44 70/45 70/53
W pc s pc c pc s s s s pc pc pc t t pc pc s pc pc r pc s 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 Stationary front
Cold front Ice
Warm front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 112 .................. Death Valley, CA Sat. Low: 17 ...................... Eagle Nest, NM
Weather history
Weather trivia™
Frost occurred as far south as Baton Rouge, La., on May 4, 1812, while snow accumulated from Philadelphia to Boston. Snow fell in northern Texas on May 4, 1917.
inches is a world rainfall record Q: 7.8 for: 1 min, 15 min or 1 hr?
Hi/Lo 55/39 70/57 96/70 97/81 75/54 73/49 55/37 72/48 70/62 99/72 88/73 88/50 55/37 55/46 55/50 75/63 90/72 82/75 83/57 77/66
W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W pc 55/41 c 63/52 c pc 75/56 sh 73/58 c s 95/70 s 100/75 s pc 96/80 t 96/79 t s 66/55 pc 67/53 s pc 67/46 s 70/47 s s 53/36 pc 59/44 c c 66/50 t 64/49 sh pc 72/57 pc 72/57 c s 101/79 c 97/73 c pc 88/73 s 88/73 s s 92/65 s 90/64 s pc 56/40 pc 55/46 r r 57/47 sh 56/46 r pc 62/34 pc 71/47 pc c 68/58 t 73/59 t pc 87/67 t 87/66 t c 84/73 c 76/71 t s 88/71 pc 87/68 c pc 74/62 c 75/62 c
Women break hiking barriers in Nepal
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 82/64 s 82/59 pc 77/55 s 57/37 pc 61/46 c 64/52 pc 73/45 s 80/50 pc 84/57 s 74/52 pc 76/51 t 79/53 pc 61/46 pc 52/43 sh 57/39 c 50/30 pc 52/39 c 49/34 c 104/82 pc 106/82 pc 104/81 s 59/43 s 62/42 pc 68/55 pc 45/37 c 57/36 pc 58/42 c 81/70 pc 84/71 s 85/73 s 63/52 sh 68/45 pc 70/46 s 73/52 r 68/48 pc 66/46 pc 63/46 s 63/44 t 62/42 pc 93/82 sh 90/78 t 89/78 t 50/27 r 49/27 pc 50/27 pc 59/55 sh 66/45 pc 67/48 pc 77/63 pc 69/56 pc 68/57 sh 57/50 sh 57/49 r 59/47 r 52/50 sh 60/41 pc 61/42 pc 46/46 sh 60/33 pc 68/45 pc
By Binaj Gurubacharya The Associated Press
POKHARA, Nepal — When Lucky, Dicky and Nicky Chettri tried to break into Nepal’s male-dominated trekking industry 20 years ago, competitors tried to run them out of business. They say men threatened them, harassed them — even filed bogus police reports against them. “The men said this is a business for the men and we should leave it alone,” said Lucky, the eldest Chettri sister in the 3 Sisters Adventure Trekking Co. “They would even accuse us of trying to take away food from their table.” Now the sisters have a booming business and a waiting list of Nepalese women who want to join their sixmonth training program for mountain guides. The rise of the Chettri sisters’ business in many ways reflects the increasing clout of women in Nepal, which remains in most ways a deeply patriarchal country. Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay first climbed Mount Everest in 1953, but it was another 40 years before the first Nepali woman reached the peak. Since then, women have made progress in politics, education and business.
About 5 percent of Nepali politicians were female in 1990, but women won a third of the seats in the 2008 parliamentary election. Some discriminatory laws have been changed, including one that allowed only sons to inherit parental property. Shailee Basnet, who led a 10-member Nepali women’s team to Everest in 2008, said the number of women in trekking and mountaineering has risen as well, and she gave credit to the Chettri sisters. “They have started a trend for women to take up this profession. Women guiding foreign trekkers in the region has become a normal thing now,” she said. The Chettris came up with the idea of opening a woman-run trekking agency when they heard from foreign female travelers who were harassed, even sexually assaulted and threatened by their own male guides. “These girls were really afraid and felt insecure,” said Lucky, 48. The sisters once led trips themselves, but had trouble finding more women who knew trekking, spoke English and were willing to spend days walking with the foreigners away from home. Their solution was to bring the women to Pokhara and train them for months.
15 minutes; Plumb Point, Jamaica, A: May 12, 1915
Springsteen rocks New Orleans jazz festival
Newsmakers Royals in Memphis for wedding, tour Graceland
Prince Wiliam
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
Share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@ sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed twice a week as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.
The planets
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather for May 4
Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
LASTING IMAGES CHINA
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — British royals Prince William and Prince Harry toured the home of the King — Elvis, that is — and then went to a friend’s wedding on Saturday during their trip to Tennessee. Their visit inspired dozens of fans, paparazzi and news media to patiently wait hours outside the Memphis Hunt and Polo Club for the chance to see royalty. Instead, they saw police and several black sport utility vehicles pull into the club. For 15-year-old Danny Harp, that was enough. Just being within feet of a future king was like a dream come true, he said. The Associated Press
The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band returned to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival on Saturday, giving thousands of fans the show they hoped for, but some left wanting more. He kicked off his three-hour set with High Hopes, the title track of his latest album, before launching into some of his more popular songs including Hungry Heart, Mary Don’t You Weep, Wrecking Ball, Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out, Pay Me My
Money Down, and a cover of the folk song Jesse James. He also got a little help from his wife, Patti Scialfa, for When The Saints Go Marching In. The music was upbeat, energetic and passionate but Jazz Fest veteran Alison Michel, of New Orleans, noted that he didn’t play Born in the U.S.A. and Glory Days. “I wanted to hear more of his older stuff. I love his older songs,” she said. Springsteen surprised the crowd on at least three occasions with a visit into the mass of people in front of the stage,
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slapping hands with fans and, at one time, accepting a beer from someone drinking nearby. He chugged the 12-ounce beverage within minutes to rousing applause and then threw the empty can back into the crowd to their approval once again. In another instance, he pulled a fan from the crowd to boogie with him on stage for Dancing in the Dark. Former Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello, who has been playing gigs with Springsteen since last year, sang a duet with him on The Ghost of Tom Joad.
Exterior Color: Carbon Black Interior: Cashmere Drive Wheels: FWD Engine: L4, 2.4L; FFV; DOHC Transmission: Automatic
Bruce Springsteen, left, performs Saturday with guitarist Nils Lofgren. GERALD HERBERT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
2013BuickVerano LeatherGroup
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Open houses E-6 Classifieds E-9 Jobs E-10 Sudoku E-13 Time Out E-16
SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
REAL ESTATE
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EMPLOYMENT ES OPPORTUNITI S COUNCIL, INC. RN INDIAN PUEBLO ENCE EIGHT NORTHE ER OF EXCELL - A LOCAL EMPLOY
– MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head and compliance
the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and Disability serded approval of the current grant tion, Human and structure. Maintain review and recommen in supervisory/ Work Administra and oversee the Education, Social years of experience (5) application process five of Childhood in Early Minimum Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme vices, Elementary services human in position administration provided nt and services cal clinical manageme – TAOS OR psychologi appropriate direct DIRECT assure Director will to CLINICAL Director will provide Center Clinical Center. The Clinical leadership, supervision, and training The Butterfly Healing Butterfly Healing D.O.J. settings, clinical Optum Health, of ENIPC, Inc.’s to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have requires participatio in the State of New organization. Must the by Licensed Work. delivered network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed Ph.D. or LPCC, health/subESPANOLA ERQUE AND substance abuse counseling, mental apy, IST – ALBUQU Mus FAMILY THERAP and family therapy, group, psychother or social work. nseling psychology Will provide individual
– Children’s Social Worker ices Medical Serv la) (DOH-Espano
Family –centered
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NEWS FROM SFAR PACO ARGUELLO
New rules for Santa Fe remodels set for Aug. 1
T
The mobile way to find or renovate a house Special to The Washington Post
he old-fashioned method of driving around to check out homes and neighborhoods hasn’t entirely disappeared, but it’s definitely received a 21st-century makeover with the introduction of mobile apps. A variety of apps are available to help potential buyers look for a home, check out the neighborhood and local schools and connect with a Realtor from their mobile devices. In addition, homebuyers and homeowners who intend to upgrade their dwellings can rely on apps to help their renovation plans. “What I like about this app is that it gives you all the nearby [properties] based on your location,” says Sheena Price, 29. Price and her husband, Frank, have been searching for properties to either rent or buy. “Once you click on nearby sales, you get a list of properties, photos and it tells you how much they are,” Price adds. According to “The Digital House Hunt: Consumer and Market Trends in Real Estate,” a 2013 study by the National Association of Realtors and Google, 89 percent of homebuyers use a mobile search engine and 68 percent use a mobile app at the onset and throughout their home search. If you’re a buyer, it can be tough to decide which app to download onto your smartphone, but here are a few that are useful at different points during the homebuying process:
T
Homesnap: Users take a photo of a home with their smartphone, and the app instantly generates a variety of data, including the most recent sale price, number of bedrooms and bathrooms, a tax assessment and school boundaries. The data available vary according to how recently the home sold or whether it’s listed for sale. WASHINGTON POST PHOTO
•
Doorsteps Swipe: If you’re uncertain about whether you’re ready to buy a home or just want to get a feel for your local market, Doorsteps Swipe, a mobile app introduced this spring, offers an entertaining way for renters to learn about homes, says Michele Serro, founder of Doorsteps.com. “The goal of Doorsteps overall is to turn a curious buyer into a confident buyer,” Serro says. Many apps for buyers can be overwhelming, so Swipes is geared to people early in the process who want to look at homes in their location or in a specific area. They only get the photo and address and then swipe left or right to show whether they like the house. After
Local apps: In Santa Fe, buyers can find a selection of apps. Barker Realty (search for Santa Fe Real Estate Mobile) pictured at far left, Santa Fe Properties, left, Keller Williams and Sotheby’s, among others, have apps available for iPhones and Android.
NEW MEXICAN PHOTOS
Please see APPS, Page E-5
Worth the trip: Great Craigslist couch for a song Special to The Washington Post
If you’ve been around the decorating world as long as I have, then you may have heard about people going on antique-buying trips to the Marché aux Puces in Paris, on furniture hunts in Brimfield, Mass., and to pick over the showroom samples in High Point, N.C., but the other day I heard about an unusual furniturebuying trip that I could imagine as the next road-trip reality show. My cousin’s 30-year-old daughter, Suzanne Nussbaum, is the quintessential crafter and thrifty do-it-yourselfer. She trolls websites looking
he Santa Fe Association of Realtors recently hosted a presentation by Katherine Mortimer, sustainability programs manager in the city’s Environmental Services Division, to learn more about the newly adopted City Residential Addition and Remodel Green Building Code. The new code is part of an effort by the city to meet the 2030 Challenge, a U.S. Conference of Mayors agreement on climate change. The revisions were tailored to the climate of Northern New Mexico and designed to provide a number of benefits to homeowners, including lower operating costs, increased comfort, improved environmental quality, enhanced durability and less maintenance. Two new chapters were added to the city’s Land Use Code: Chapter 11 on large remodels and additions, and Chapter 12 coverarket Whe astle’on m Garrett ‘C ing small additions and complete kitchen, bathroom or basement MORE HOME remodels. The new This column runs chapters will go regularly in Home, into effect Aug. 1. Santa Fe Real Chapter 11 Estate Guide. Look applies to remodels for the May of affecting 50 percent Home issue inside or more of the floor today’s New area and additions Mexican and at greater than 400 www.santafenew square feet. There mexican.com/life/ home. are mandates in addition to points from sections similar to the point system required by the city’s Green Building Code. Chapter 12 applies to small additions less than 400 square feet, complete bathroom, kitchen and basement remodels, and will add mandates for building thermal envelope, air sealing and insulation, recessed lighting, high-efficiency lighting, boiler supply piping, appliances, gas-fired equipment, solid-fuel-burning appliances, HVAC system protection, duct insulation, recycling, universal design elements, showerheads, faucets, water closets, radon control, flashing, ice barrier and architectural features. At a public hearing, the Santa Fe Association of Realtors requested that the proposed Green Remodeling Code be postponed to allow for more time to engage homeowners and prepare a cost analysis. The association was concerned with the scope of the code. While SFAR believes the principles behind the Green Remodeling Code are worthy, the housing market and our local economy in Santa Fe are still recovering. These new mandates might add financial burdens to homeowners already struggling to make ends meet when renovating their homes. We remain concerned that homeowners have not had the appropriate opportunity to weigh in on these new mandates to go into effect in less than three months. During the debate, several councilors acknowledged Realtor concerns and asked staff to provide an analysis on 10 remodeling projects before the code goes into effect. The association looks forward to seeing the analysis and encourages city homeowners to learn more about the new code by visiting www.santafenm.gov/ greenbuildingcode. May 2014
Apps for buyers
By Elizabeth Mayhew
Searching? Browse our job classifieds. Page E-10
ination; cal care coord
Home info at buyers’ fingertips By Michele Lerner
E
s Director of Athletic u.edu/jobs n see: www.nmh Athletics. The Director of Athletjob descriptio a Director of For a complete personnel activities application for s. l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education experiNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE ative Balance it offers. MINIMUM . Preferred: Administr experience. DII Life in the those sports that (5) years coaching experience coaching in e to be competitiv e: Five fund raising. Collegiate and Sports Science. field. Experienc ated success with , or Exercise Degree in any iate athletics. DemonstrBusiness, Educational Leadership 2) resume; 3) University intercolleg interest; in of ation, ence a letter e numbers of 3 in Sports Administr must submit 1) Names/address/phon official Master’s degree PROCEDURE: Candidates transcripts; 5) s interviews and advanced degree with on-campu APPLICATION n; 4) Copies of in conjunction s interview. Employment Applicatio References will be contacted acceptance of the on-campu professional references. should be requested upon transcripts University New Mexico Highlands Human Resources Search Athletic Director Box 9000 87701 u.edu Las Vegas, NM jobs@nmh ns will be accepted: 242 or TDD 505-454-3003. Email applicatio R 505-454-3 or services call IS AN EEO EMPLOYE UNIVERSITY For disabled access HIGHLANDS NEW MEXICO
for just the right items to give her small apartment in New York’s Hell’s Kitchen character and style. Last year she set out to find a sofa, the one piece of furniture — and arguably the most important piece — that was missing in her home. Suzanne, a television programmer, spent a couple of months searching Craigslist, Etsy, Krrb and various other used-furniture websites for a model that suited her style and her budget. She kept finding “gems,” as she calls them, but they were mostly in places she could not get to without a car, and renting one each time she wanted to check out a piece was financially unrealistic. She figured
INSIDE u Tips for Craigslist hunts. PAGE E-5
the best thing to do was to borrow her parents’ SUV and go on a big road trip, check out as many sofas as she could, and hopefully come home with one. Suzanne began mapping out her trip by narrowing her search to one website, Craigslist. She quickly found that when searching for a specific item over a large geographic area, it was better to use the cPro Craigslist app rather than the site because the app allows you to search multiple cities at once. “Con-
sidering I was searching across eight or nine states, this was a huge timesaver,” she says. She also got smart about the keywords she used in her searches. For example, a search for a “vintage sofa” will result in something more expensive and probably better quality than a search for a “blue sofa” or an “old couch.” Part of the reason Suzanne cast a wide geographic net for her search was that she found prices differed from city to city, with the general rule of thumb that items in bigger cities such as New York and Chicago tended to be more expensive,
Please see TRIP, Page E-5
Paco Arguello is chief executive of the Santa Fe Association of Realtors. Contact him at 9828385 or paco@sfar.com.
NEW LISTING
SANTA FE | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088
113 CAMINO ESCONDIDO #2 | $339,000 Private open-plan studio home with combined living, dining, and sleeping areas. #201401115 Bob Cardinale | 505.577.8418
3 TANO VIDA | $675,000 Outstanding value on beautiful Tano Road—classic Santa Fe touches and plenty of room. #201305900 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335
Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
Design and headlines: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com
112 CAMINO ESCONDIDO #4 | $895,000 Sophisticated Historic Eastside living: Impeccably remodeled, expanded 3BR, 3BA condo. #201401770 Penelope Vasquez | 505.690.3751
to see more extraordinary homes, turn to page E-3
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
SANTA FE
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Santa Fe Real Estate
MARKET REPORT First Quarter 2014
SANTA FE
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Market Report
PROPERTIES P
A Quarterly Market Report From Santa Fe’s Largest Locally Owned and Managed Real Estate Brokerage
I
t’s spring again and it’s fabulous to be in Santa Fe. Lilacs have leafed out despite the winter drought. Farmers in the villages of northern New Mexico will turn and plant the fields, clean the acequias, and the traditional cycle of life continues, attending more to the season than to the clock. The ski basin got snow both early and late in the season, making it a good winter on the mountain. The Santa Fe area residential market was in a funk as usual in the first quarter. The national economy, going forward, is hard to read. The fed says the overall economy is slowing a little but healthy, and they have gotten pretty good at keeping growth around 2% per year. Nationally the housing market recovery, still well short of pre-recession levels, is slower than the overall economy. But home sales in some areas, including Santa Fe, are recovering more quickly. Home sales averaged about 840 sales each quarter at the top of the boom in 20052006. They fell to about 420 sales, and have now recovered
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to about 520 homes quarterly. The average sale price peaked a year later at about $465,000, then fell to around $380,000, where it has stayed for four years. A new upward trend in home sales has formed over the last two years and it looks promising. First quarter sales numbers rose from 394 two years ago to 427 last year, and accelerated to 500 sales in the first quarter of 2014. This increasing growth rate is encouraging for two reasons: the accelerating trend, and the fact that first quarter sales have been the steadiest (and most conservative) harbinger of future sales trends. We expect the average quarterly home sales to break above 600, perhaps in the second quarter, but most likely in the third quarter this year. The increase in sales is expected for the upcoming few years, with quarterly sales stronger than the previous year. The market is active and the inventory is seasonally low. Environmental building codes have pushed building costs up considerably. Last quarter we identified the supportive “double bottom” pattern in the average price Quarterly Residential Sales in Santa Fe MLS chart which supports a new price uptrend. Blue Quarterly Home Sales Red Trendline We expect to see prices to begin rising. A little improvement in the national economy would help too. The average sale price for the first quarter fell to $372,000, down from the preceding 3 quarters but up nicely from the first quarter of 2013, when it was $342,000. For almost five years the average home price has fluctuated around its current level of approximately $385,000. Going out on the limb a bit, we expect it to rise above $400,000 in the second quarter, with a more robust increase in the third quarter. By this time next year we expect to see prices rising at maybe 10% per year, then moderating as a new trend is set. Normally, the inventory of homes rises during 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 the second and third quarters and drops in the Santa Fe Properties Inc. by Ed Reid ed@edreid.com (505)577-6259 winter months, and this year is no exception. There were 1,646 residential active listings and 352 Average Home Price contracts pending at the end of March compared navy - Average sale price red - trend line green - median sale price to 1,843 active listings and 196 contracts pending on January 1. This represents 12.2 months of houses on the market at current overall sales rates. At the low end of the price spectrum, homes up to $150,000, there is only four months’ supply on the market. At the high end – over $1 million – we have over a one year’s inventory for sale. In the middle price ranges there is between a five-to-sixand-a-half month’s supply of houses actively listed or with contracts pending. During 1999, 2000, and 2001 the number of first-quarter home sales in Santa Fe was fairly constant averaging around 585 sales. At the end of the boom and bust cycle (January 2002 through
Santa Fe Properties Inc. by Ed Reid ed@edreid.com (505)577-6259
(continued on back page)
THE BEST OF CASAS DE SAN JUAN
PERFECT NORTHERN NEW MEXICAN CASA
111 Avenida De Las Casas - This private, free-standing condo is great for entertaining with a large open living and great outdoor spaces. There are huge unobstructed views of northern New Mexico and the Sangre de Cristos. There is also a separate one-bedroom guesthouse. 2-car garage, 3 br, 3 ba, 2515 sq.ft., 2-car garage. SantaFeProperties.com/201204179 David W dard 505.920.2000 $1,025,000
5 Vista Del Mundo - This northern New Mexico home is charming and designed to be environmentally safe. Enjoy huge views from both screened-in portals and covered open air portals. There is a chef's kitchen with granite. 3 br, 2 ba, 3,100 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 6.47 acres. Directions: Tano W to Sundance to Vista Del Mundo. SantaFeProperties.com/201305685 Deb rah B dels n 505.660.4442 $885,000 Cary Spier 505.690.2856
HOUSE & GUESTHOUSE, LUXURY & BEAUTY
SWEEPING VIEWS!
9 Rabbitbrush Road - La Serena - This is one of few properties in the subdivision allowing horses, and the extra deep acreage abuts to a green belt. Tucked away with sense of serenity and maximum privacy, this home features quality finishes and is thoughtfully laid out. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,760 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 2.5 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201302993 Georgette R mer 505.603.1494 $639,000
117 Thundercloud, Lot 561 - Las Campanas - Come build your dream home on this beautiful golf course lot located on the Sunset 9th Fairway. You will enjoy sweeping views from the Jemez and Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the beautiful New Mexico sunsets. This is an easy building site, one of the best in Las Campanas. 1.97 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201301186 Derm t M nks 505.470.0639 $189,000
OPEN 1:00 To 3:30
IMAGINE ALL YOU’VE EVER DREAMED OF…
DISCOVER ENJOYABLE SANTA FE LIVING HERE
53 Avenida de Las Nubes - This elegant estate quality property is waiting for you. Set on approximately 6.24 acres with mountain views and gorgeous sunsets, this is one of the most beautiful properties in the area. 3 br, 3 ba, 6,308 sq.ft., 4-car garage. Directions: Avenida Eldorado to railroad tracks. Left on Tren Via to house, one mile. SantaFeProperties.com/201401549 Marg & Annie Veneklasen 505.670.5202 $1,200,000
309 Armij /Rodriguez D - Nestled into a view-filled ridge above Palace Avenue is a beautiful Zachery designed home. Fine detailing and superior finishes include wood cabinets, granite surfaces, and elegant fireplaces. 3 br, 3 ba, 1,742 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Hillside North, bear right and east to top of hill, on Rodriguez on right. SantaFeProperties.com/201301510 David W dard 505.920.2000 $695,000
OPEN 1:00 To 3:00
OPEN 1:00 To 3:00
OPEN HOUSES a n d m o r e OPEN 1:00 To 3:00
PRICE REDUCED
TUSCANY MEETS SANTA FE IN THIS HOME
OASIS WITH GUESTHOUSE - HORSES ALLOWED
A SANTA FE CLASSIC, NEWLY PRICED!
BEAUTIFUL SUNSET MOUNTAIN VIEWS
3178 Viale Tresana - El Matador - Tuscany meets Santa Fe in this gorgeous view home built by Roger Hunter in 2008. Quality construction and design show in the details. 4 br, 3 ba, 2,358 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: From Rodeo Road, south on Camino Carlos Rey, left onto Gov. Miles at dead end, right into gates at Villas di Toscana. SantaFeProperties.com/201401409 Jeanne Hertz 505.660.6345 $569,000
1 Camino Caballos Spur - Tierra De Casta - Horses allowed on this private and lush property in the Highway 285 corridor, with Ortiz Mountain views. A classic pueblo style home offers detached studio/guesthouse with bath on 5 acres. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,633 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: 285 South, right on Camino Caballos Spur, property on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201300671 Cindy Sheff 505.470.6114 $459,000 Amber Haskell 505.470.0923
108 Jimenez - A Santa Fe classic behind adobe walls, with fantastic renovations and restoration, this home features thick adobe walls, two private patios, saltillo tile and flagstone floors with warm patina. There are three kivas, skylights, vigas and more. 2 br, 2 ba, 1,300 sq.ft. Directions: West San Francisco to Jimenez. SantaFeProperties.com/201305633 Amber Haskell 505.470.0923 $430,000
3 Ladera Place - High on a park-like, almost two-acre setting sits this lovely custom designed home built by Marsh Homes. There are high ceilings and Santa Fe details throughout, a large private master suite features a separate patio door to a portal. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,236 sq.ft., 3-car garage, 1.96 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201304930 Sue Garfitt 505.577.2007 $425,000 Fred Raznick 505.577.0143
OPEN SATURDAYS 1:00 To 4:00, SUNDAYS 12:00-3:00
OPEN 1:00 To 3:00
LOVELY SINGLE-LEVEL HOME WITH SANDIA VIEWS
CONVENIENT TO SHOPPING, SCHOOLS AND I-25
NEW LISTING! PASSIVE SOLAR ON A GREENBELT
CERRILLOS VILLAGE CHARMER
16 Ensenada Drive - This lovely custom home in Eldorado has Santa Fe style and elements including vigas, nichos, corbels, lintels, high ceilings in the main living area and tile floors throughout. There are three bedrooms plus a den, with an open floor plan and great separation of bedrooms. 2 ba, 2,049 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 1.2 acres. SantaFeProperties.com/201305830 Kate Prusack 505.670.1409 $379,000
19 Caball Viej - La Pradera Model Home - The Sunflower, with its 13-foot living room ceiling, is aptly named for its bright sunny and open design with formal dining, gourmet kitchen and kiva fireplace. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,856 sq.ft., 3-car garage. Directions: Richards to Dinosaur Trail, right into La Pradera subdivision (3 entrances). SantaFeProperties.com/201304128 B b Lee Trujill 505.470.0002 $369,900 Host: Ernie Zapata 505.470.7314
1 Encantado Loop - Eldorado - Recent upgrades to this passive solar home include a new kitchen, roof and stucco. There is a large fenced area is perfect for pets, great natural light and bedroom separation, and brick floors 2 br, 2 ba, 1,254 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 2.04 acres. Directions: First Left Encantado loop, First house on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201401662 Georgette R mer 505.603.1494 $249,000
3 River Road - This charming part-adobe detached home in the Historic Village of Cerrillos is located just behind the historic Cerrillos Church. The home has been completely restored and remodeled, with a modern kitchen, brick and wood-like laminate floors, new light fixtures and a washer/ dryer area. 1 br, 1 ba. SantaFeProperties.com/201400337 Cindy Sheff 505.470.6114 $149,000
1000 Pase de Peralta . 216 Washingt n Ave . Santa Fe, NM 87501 • 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com . FaceBook.com/SantaFeProperties . LuxuryPortfolio.com All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act and Equal Opportunities Act. Santa Fe Properties (“SFP”) strives to confirm as reasonably practical all advertising information herein is correct but assumes no legal responsibility for accuracy and should be verified by Purchaser. SFP is not responsible for misinformation provided by its clients, misprints, or typographical errors. Prices herein are subject to change. Square footage amounts and lot sizes are approximates.
BE•THINK•BUY
LOCAL
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
NEW LISTING
N EW P RIC E
47 VIOLET CIRCLE $2,495,000 This superlative Pueblo-style home is the epitome of distinctive, modern Southwestern style. The 2.6-acre property offers sweeping panoramas that encompass both the Sangre de Cristo and Jemez Mountains. Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117 #201304361
23 VISTA REDONDA $2,500,000 This rare property enjoys sweeping views and privacy. It includes living and dining rooms, an expertly outfitted kitchen, a den, a library, three luxurious bedrooms, portales, and patios. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201401808
N EW P RICE
WEST GOLDEN EAGLE $1,599,000 Stately, elegant, yet flowing and comfortable, this home is the epitome of lofty country living. Every room has been carefully designed to maximize majestic views of all 5 surrounding mountain ranges. Brunson & Schroeder Team 505.690.7885 #201305698
3324 MONTE SERENO $1,499,000 Classic Sharon Woods Territorial-style home on the coveted top ridge of Monte Sereno, with enormous Badlands and Jemez Mountain views. Spectacular outdoor entertaining spaces, plaster walls throughout. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201303646
145 GENERAL GOODWIN $1,550,000 A rare opportunity: A true equestrian oasis or an impeccable residence that lends itself to many additional uses. If horses or other livestock are your pleasure, let them live, work and thrive in this amazing Galisteo Basin setting. Maureen Mestas 505.984.5130 #201304522 NEW P RICE
OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 4
21 RIDGETOP CIRCLE $1,550,000 Exceptional 5,155 sq.ft. Pueblo-style home with incredible sunset vistas, impeccable finishes, an open plan, a large dining area opening to expansive entertaining portales, and a spacious gourmet kitchen. Johnnie Gillespie & Marion Skubi 505.660.8722 #201203674
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954 SANTO NINO PLACE $1,395,000 Amazing mountain views, fabulous in-town location. Gorgeous 1 level adobe home and studio on an acre. Sumptuous great room, fantastic kitchen, lavish master suite, delightful outdoor entertaining areas. Shane Cronenweth 505.984.5158 #201303440
1267 SPANISH HILL $1,395,000 This adobe home has been meticulously maintained with many upgrades. Nicely sited on a 1.29+/- acre lot with awesome front and back views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and of the city. Ricky Allen 505.946.2855 #201304330
WHAT SETS US APART
Local Experts. Extraordinary Results. Firm 3 9%
Santa Fe Luxury Real Estate Market
Firm 2 12%
Firm 4 4% All Others 5%
2014 RESIDENTIAL SALES $1,000,000 AND ABOVE
71% Residential sales by dollar volume, January 1 through April 28, 2014. Obtained from the Santa Fe Association of Realtors Multiple Listing Service. Deemed reliable but not guaranteed and subject to change.
NEW LISTING
13 INDIGO COURT $1,385,000 Superior quality and attention to detail define this three-bedroom, four-bath adobe home with travertine floors, alder woodwork, plaster walls, Anasazistyle stone, and views from every window. Caroline D. Russell, CRS 505.954.5530 #201401689
600 LOS ALTOS NORTE $1,345,000 Absolutely gorgeous Northside home, just minutes from the Plaza, perched on a hillside and hand-crafted by John LeMaster. 3BR, 3BA, approx. 2,796 sq.ft. residence is on .65 acre and features exception design. K.C. Martin 505.954.5549 #201305989
NEW L ISTING
12 HOLLYHOCK CIRCLE $1,185,000 This Las Campanas beauty offers spacious entertaining areas, three or four bedrooms, an eat-in kitchen, a family room, portales with sunrise and sunset views, a guesthouse, and an artist’s studio. Mike Baker 505.955.7993 #201401542
41 WEST GOLDEN EAGLE $1,195,000 Overlooking the Sunrise Golf Course, this home offers three bedrooms, a library, a studio, a cook’s kitchen, a great room, a wraparound deck, an outdoor kitchen, portales, and a one-bedroom casita. Team Burbic Yoder 505.670.9399 #201401454 N EW P RICE
2101 SENDA DE DANIEL $1,150,000 Soft contemporary-style home in the hills above the Plaza. Open living concept with a fabulous kitchen, several options for indoor entertaining, and multiple private outdoor spaces. Oversized 2-car garage, curved kitchen layout. David Fries 505.954.5541 #201304338 N EW P RIC E
178 CHISHOLM TRAIL $1,150,000 This extraordinary view property in La Tierra Nueva consists of a magnificent, welcoming John Midyettedesigned adobe mansion on 18 acres. Horses are welcome. Also offered on 32 acres at $1,500,000. Penelope Vasquez 505.954.5551 #201401275 OP EN SU NDAY 1 - 4
1264 NORTH SUMMIT DRIVE $1,195,000 Custom designed, 3,857 sq. ft. home with amazing views, a heated driveway, 3-car garage, media room, plastered and hand waxed interior walls, 4 Anasazistyle fireplaces, many skylights, and lighted nichos. Susan Kline & Lynden Galloway 505.501.1111 #201204034 NEW P RICE
CANYON ROAD $1,100,000 Grand front courtyard with mature trees is a gracious portal to this classic Eastside home. Five fireplaces plus the contemporary comforts of in-floor radiant heating and refrigerated air-conditioning. #201305284 Santa Fe Real Estate Consultants 505.231.4046
“All Things Real Estate” 12-2pm on 1260-AM & 101.5-FM Streaming on ATREradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 3
65-A COYOTE CROSSING $1,050,000 Sited on a knoll with unobstructed panoramas, this gated 7.4-acre property includes a three-bedroom, 3,134-square-footresidenceandacharming464-squarefoot casita, both with view-filled portales. #201401168 David Rosen & Christopher Rocca 505.954.0789
748 CAMINO MIRADA $999,000 Stunning single-level Los Miradores condo. Light and bright throughout, with an abundance of windows and soaring ceilings in living and dining rooms. 3BR, 3BA. Private gardens, security, and views. Chris Webster 505.780.9500 #201400581
1145 EAST ALAMEDA $948,000 Charming 3BR, 2.75BA Eastside hideaway with a spacious living/dining room with high ceilings and tall French doors looking out to large courtyard. Cozy country-style kitchen with sitting area and kiva fireplace. The Santa Fe Team 505.988.2533 #201205178
1 CERRO GORDO, #B $695,000 This 2BR/2BA home has location and divine finishes. Ashley Margetson 505.984.5186 #201400755
SANTA FE | sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
NAS A P M A C S LA OPEN 1-4
ANAS LAS CAMP -4:30 OPEN 1:30
OPEN 1-4 ATION! C I T S I H P O S GRACIOUS
41 Violet Circle Classic Santa Fe-style main house/charming
15 Painted Horse Panoramic Jemez Views - 2.9 Acres
644 Canyon Rd 10 This is one of the most magical, gracious
detached guest house; approx. 6,560 sq.ft. Antique wood doors, 200-year-old beams, brick floors, white plaster walls, air conditioning. Panoramic views, 2 acres. 4-car garage. $1,795,000 MLS# 201305736
Master-crafted by renowned builder Bill Kramer, this exquisite 4-bedroom home in gated Las Campanas features 4 private portals, generous living and bedrooms plus gourmet kitchen with sunny eating nook and walk-in pantry. Directions: Las Campanas Drive, right at Wildhorse, dial 0555 for gate access, left at Painted Horse. $1,150,000 MLS# 201401259
NANCY LEHRER (505) 490-9565 • nancy.lehrer@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 982-6207 417 East Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
EWS! I V E L B A V UNBELIE M OPEN 1-3P
22 Vista Redonda Extensive patios all around the house let you experience the amazing New Mexico views. This gorgeous home plus guesthouse has 3 bedrooms, a large master suite which includes a fireplace, study and exercise/sunroom, plus steam shower in the master bath. Additional office with views. There is a pool with waterfall; tile floors, vigas, and 3 car garage. $950,000 MLS# 201400488
JANE HILTBRAND (505) 946-8475 • JHiltbrand@SantaFeRealEstate.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-9836 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 janehiltbrand.santaferealestate.com
NG! NEW LISTI M OPEN 1-3P
TIM GALVIN (505) 795-5990 • tim@galvinsantafe.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OPEN 1-4 URES S A E R T E U TESUQ
191 B&C Tesuque Village Road Two separately deeded, contiguous condos each with a personality of its own. Both units feature open floor plans - one contemporary and one traditional. Unit B is 1,029 Sq/Ft with 1 Bedroom and 1 Bath. Unit C is 1,569 Sq/ Ft with 2 Bedrooms and 2 Baths. Purchase together or separately Unit B $265,000 / Unit C $445,000. $660,000 MLS# 201304181
JENNIFER TOMES (505) 690-6477 • jentomes@me.com Dougherty Real Estate Co., LLC • (505) 989-7741 433 W. San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://dresf.com
OPEN 1-4
24C Paseo Encantado The property has two bedrooms and a 400 sq. ft Studio, which could be used as a third bedroom. There is a formal dining room, and lovely outside portals. The impressive living room with fireplace, has tall windows, showcasing the views, and remote controlled shades and portal screens. There are French doors out to the wrap-around portal. $680,000 MLS# 201401766
Heaven on Cerro Gordo Searching for Seclusion? Exquisite home located at the end of a private lane with unobstructed views of Atalaya Mountain. Plaster walls and colored concrete floors invite you into this peaceful space. This is a home for the body, mind and soul. $650,000 MLS# 201305248
TONY ALLEGRET TI (505) 690-6287 • TonyAllegretti@aol.com Barker Realty • (505) (505) 982-9836 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com
CLAIRE LANGE (505) 670-1420 • claire@clairelange.com Claire Lange Real Estate • (505) 670-1420 1120 Don Juan Street , Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://clairelange.com
SE OPEN HOU 12PM-2PM
OPEN 2-4 HOUSE T S E U G & HOUSE
1631 Villa Strada Wonderfully maintained home with great
1225 Vitalia Outstanding property! Remodeled Stamm with guest
landscaping. Front Courtyard features flagstone deck and beautiful
house. Main house has 3 bedrooms / 2 baths with new kitchen, new bath, oak floors, and private yard. Separate guest house has bath and kitchen. 1,485 square feet. $275,000 MLS# 201400817
fountain. MBR down, second BR, Den and Deck area upstairs. Good views, lots of privacy. $549,000 MLS# 201401417
DEE HALL (505) 660-1125 • dhall@brisf.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-0936 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com
CHARLES WEBER (505) 670-9377 • charles.weber@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
and sophisticated homes on the market today, located in the Heart of the Historic Eastside in the Atwill Compound. 2 br, 2 ba, 2,052 sq.ft. Directions: Up Canyon Road. Turn into driveway just past Brad Smith Gallery between Acosta Strong. Just before Martha Keats gallery... go to the back of the compound. $997,000 MLS# 201401156
LINDA MURPHY (505) 780-7711 • linda@lindamurphy.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 216 Washington • Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com
WEL E J E D I S T EAS OPEN 1-3
803-B Acequia Madre Priced at appraisal! This is the property you’ve been waiting for: Charming 2-bedroom / 2-bath property on Acequia Madre in the heart of the Historic Eastside enchants upon entry. $695,000 MLS# 201400642
K.C. MARTIN (505) 690-7192 • kc.martin@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
OPEN 1-4 GANCE E L E Y R T N COU
2324 Calle Pava Romantic hacienda style courtyard welcomes you to this charming, enhanced Stamm built home. At 2906 square feet, with 4 bedrooms, 2 remodeled bathrooms, multiple live/ work spaces & a 2 car garage, there’s breathing room for all! Sited privately on a one acre lot and conveniently in Sol y Lomas. Upgraded windows & flooring mesh well with the home’s classic quality. $582,500 MLS# 201401103 LYNNE EINLEGER (505) 660-9074 • leinleger@earthlink.net Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM www.coldwellbankersantafe.com
SE OPEN HOU PM 1:00-4:00
17 Victoria Peak, Rancho Viejo Beautiful town home. 2 Bedrooms, 2.5 Bathrooms plus loft for media/office/study. Two Car garage. Faces open garden space. Views of Jemez and Sangre De Cristo mountains. Two story with large deck off master bedroom and smaller deck off Loft. The home is in move in condition. Gas forced air heat and refrigerated air conditioning. $239,000 MLS# 201401748
JOHN E. GROVER (505) 690-8100 • johngroversf@gmail.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com
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Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
SE OPEN HOU 1PM-2PM
Feature d
To feature your listing please call Wendy Ortega at 995-3892
MLS# 201401015
realestate@sfnewmexican.com by Wednesday at 3 pm
OPEN 1:30-4
they save five listings, they receive a summary of information about what they have said they liked. “It’s designed to be fun yet educational, like wrapping a textbook in a piece of chocolate cake,” Serro says. After two months or so, Serro says, Swipe customers are ready to graduate to the Realtor.com app for more information. Homesnap: Homesnap works as easily for inexperienced buyers as it does for those further along in the buying process. Users take a photo of a home with their smartphone and the app instantly generates a variety of data, including the most recent sale price, number of bedrooms and bathrooms, a tax assessment and school boundaries. The data available vary according to how recently the home sold or whether it’s listed for sale. “You can use it for something as casual as snapping a photo of a friend’s house to see what he paid for his new home or more seriously when you’re looking for a home,” says Guy Wolcott, chief executive of Homesnap. “You can use it collaboratively and send the photo and data with your mobile device to your brother, your wife or your real estate agent.” Wolcott says real estate agents are also using the app to interact with their buyers or to get information on a property. Buyers can see the same information as agents, such as photos; how long a property has been on the market; and school information, including ratings. Matthew Rathbun, a Realtor and executive vice president with Coldwell Banker Elite in Fredericksburg, Va., uses Homesnap to find out the history of homes. Agent-branded buyers’ app: Rathbun recommends that buyers ask their agents about apps they are using, including those providing third-party information about schools and neighborhoods. He says MRIShomes or an agent-branded app with MRIS information will typically provide the most up-to-date listing information. In Santa Fe, buyers can find a good selection of apps. Santa Fe Properties, Barker Realty (search for Santa Fe Real Estate Mobile), Keller Williams and Sotheby’s, among others, have apps available for iPhones and Android. These apps, like most mobile apps, function with your smartphone’s GPS navigator so you can find properties at any time near where you’re driving or walking. Buyers can use the apps for regular property searches when they’re at home. Sitegeist: “My favorite app for questions I’m not allowed to answer for clients because of laws or because they’re subjective discussions is ‘Sitegeist,’ ” Rathbun says. “It tells you the average income, education level and even the average donation to charity in a neighborhood. You can find out the average number of males and females, demographics about whether people are single or married and even the average number of kids per household.” iPMT: Rathbun recommends the iPMT app for financing questions
303944 Sotheb 216- 6106 • jef HA RA K AL y’s Inter f.hara 326 Gr national Re kal@sothebysh ant Av alt y omes sothebys e., Sant a Fe• (505) 988- .com 2533 , NM 87 homes.c 501 om/san ta fe
OPEN 1-4
5 Choc
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te Flowe Sangre de r Las Camp home in Cristo and San anas “Te dia gat for entert ed Las Campana Mountain views e-Off Tour” – Sw ain eeping from this (4-way sto ing. Direction s. Fabulous che s: Ca f’s kitchen 4 + office/4.5 bat p), left at Chocolate h the Sunflow mino la Tierra, and but ler’ left Flower. $1,095,00 er gate. Dial 055 at West Wildflo s pantry 0 MLS# wer 5 for acc 201401 ess . Lef t at 632 TI
Houzz: The Houzz app is consistently mentioned by real estate agents as one of the best sources for information about home-improvement projects. “Houzz has a variety of articles on projects, and it’s easy to look at and understand, with great photos,” Rathbun says. “It’s really user-friendly.” iScape: If you’re looking to ramp up your curb appeal, Rathbun recommends the iScape app to create virtual landscaping. You take a photo of your house and then use the app to see what it will look like with trees, shrubs and lawn. HomeZada: The app provides a library of information about home improvements that can be used to create a list of materials, a timeline and a budget for your project. You can also use it as an organizational tool to remind yourself of home-maintenance chores and to create a home inventory. EasyMeasure: It allows you to use your smartphone to instantly take measurements of rooms, doors and windows that you can use when making your remodeling plans, Rathbun says. MagicPlan: Rathbun says that the app works better on a tablet than on a smartphone, but that buyers can use it to take photos of a room and instantly create a floor plan. The app shows you the dimensions of each room and the location of the doors and windows. The floor plan can be used for estimating the materials you will need for a project and for furniture placement decisions. Handy Man DIY: The Handy Man DIY app, similar to HomeZada, provides information on home-improvement projects through written and video lessons and lets you create a file with the data you need, such as room measurements and a list of materials. Whether you’re a buyer or a homeowner, your mobile device can provide the information you need to make smarter decisions.
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OPEN 1-4: 1-4:00 REDUCED $50,000
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LAS CAMPANAS OPEN 1:30-4
Craigslist hunting tips
because you can include property taxes and homeowner association fees in the mortgage calculator. “The app can help you decide to rent or buy and can demonstrate the tax savings if you buy and bring up a 30-year amortization schedule,” Rathbun says. “It’s great, too, because if you make an offer and the sellers want you to counter with $10,000 more, you can instantly use the calculator to see how little difference that may make in your monthly payment.” Close It!: This app “is like Turbo Tax for real estate transactions,” says Todd Ewing, president of Federal Title & Escrow in Washington. “The app immediately produces a cash-to-close estimate along with an estimated mortgage payment and a shareable HUD-1 Settlement Statement similar to what the buyer will see on the day of the closing. All the buyer has to do is enter a purchase price and a property jurisdiction.” Sellers can use the app, too, to calculate their net proceeds based on the sales price and the property jurisdiction. The app allows users to modify the details of each transaction for individual accuracy.
Apps for renovations
Santa F e Area.
OPE HOUSE OPEN 1PM-3PM
ny
Apps: Houzz consistently recommended by agents for those renovating Continued from Page E-1
2014 TH E NEW
602A Ca
on Road home (su three bedblime idea), this Used as a gal lery casita fea rooms and thr exquisite, light-fil (current use ee ) conditionetures a bedroo bathrooms. Theled proper ty feaor as a m, and kitc d. In the Doug bathroom and historic attach tures hen hav e also bee Atwill-designe kitchen--all upd ed studio fixtures, d ma appliances ate n ele and mater gantly update in structure, the d and air d with top bat ials. $1, 795,000 -of-the-li hrooms (505) MLS# 201 ne JEFF
HL EY (505) 92 M ARGE 0-2300 TSON • ashley Sotheb .margets y’s Inter on@soth nationa 231 Wa ebyshom l Realt y shingto es.com • (505 n Aven ) 988-80 ue, Sant sothebys 88 a Fe, NM homes.c 87501 om/san ta fe
ANDREA LUCERO / LAURIE DEDOMENICO (505) 780-0311 • andrealucero1@gmail.com Barker Realty • (505) 982-0936 530 S. Guadalupe, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://www.SantaFeRealEstate.com
Listings in the
LAS CAMPANAS LA
1674 Calle de Oriente Norte Move-in Ready! BEAUTIFUL 2-story, 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse in a convenient central location! New flooring, new stove, new water heater, triple stage reverse osmosis. Gorgeous-HUGE yard! A MUST SEE! $118,000
, April 27,
Homes
Online: www.san tafenew mexican .com/life /real_es tate
OPEN 2-4
Sunday
When New Yorker Suzanne Nussbaum told her parents she wanted to go on a multi-state quest for the perfect Craigslist sofa, they decided to join her and make a roadtrip out of the search. Suzanne found the sofa she wanted in Chicago. FAMILY PHOTO
Trip: Search neighboring states for rare items Continued from Page E-1 and more rural areas were less expensive. The biggest differences in pricing tended to be between those sellers who knew what they had and what good vintage furniture was worth, and those who were moving, downsizing or just trying to get rid of their grandmother’s old couch. The cities tended to have higher concentrations of antique dealers and furniture aficionados. Suzanne planned her road trip over Labor Day weekend, tacking on a couple of extra vacation days. Scheduling all of the appointments wasn’t easy. She had to remain flexible, and every so often she had to reschedule or cancel a meeting. She had planned on starting her trip in the Washington area (Suzanne grew up in Annandale, Va., where her parents, Barry Nussbaum and Debbie Rachlin, still live) so that she could borrow her parents’ SUV and then work her way as far as Chicago, before stopping at home with her prize. Yet when she mentioned the trip to her parents, they said they wanted to join her and that the trip and sofa (if found) would be her birthday present. The three, in true roadtrip fashion, set out not just to find her a sofa, but also to have fun. They planned on seeing and staying with friends and family along the way, plus they made sure they hit important stops like Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams in Columbus, Ohio, and Walker Bros. Pancake House in Wilmette, Ill. Suzanne’s parents picked her up in Allentown, Pa., where she had sched-
uled their first sofa-viewing. That sofa, she said in an email, “was an absolute steal at $80, especially considering the cushions had all just been re-foamed (by an amateur, so not the best quality workmanship, but still a great deal) and the slipcovers recently dry-cleaned.” The sofa was priced low because the seller just needed to get it out of his house. Suzanne was tempted, especially because she knew she would never see a price like that in New York, but she ended up passing on it because it wasn’t exactly what she was looking for (an important lesson when bargain/ thrift shopping: $80 spent on something you don’t like is just like flushing $80 down the drain). The trio continued on, making overnight stops in Dayton, Cincinnati and finally Chicago. It was there that Suzanne finally struck gold, checking out a sofa she had been tracking earlier in the summer. The first time she saw it, it was bought before she had the chance to inquire about it. But about a week before her trip, the listing popped up again with a note from the seller saying that he had bought it, but his girlfriend hated it, so he was now selling it again to get “out of the doghouse.” After making sure the sofa would fit up the stairs and through her apartment’s front door, Suzanne happily helped save the seller’s relationship and ended up with exactly the sofa she wanted. Elizabeth Mayhew, a Today show style expert and former magazine editor, is the author of Flip! for Decorating.
Online classifieds sites such as Craigslist are basically virtual yard sales; they both require some shopping savvy. Elizabeth Mayhew and Suzanne Nussbaum offer their lessons learned. X Only search online when you are on the hunt for something specific — you don’t want to buy just to buy. When there’s something you want, search once a day. Any less and you will worry about missing out on things; any more and you might make yourself crazy. Bookmark furniture sites that you check every few days and check the Craigslist app daily. X Do your homework. Study competing sites, including www.krrb.com and www.etsy.com as well as curated sites like www.1stdibs.com, www. chairish.com, and www. chairloom.com. The curated sites are very particular about what they sell (usually the items are more expensive and better quality), so you won’t typically find bargains, but the more you see, the more educated you will be. X Always take a tape measure with you when viewing furniture; people don’t always post dimensions, and even if they do, they might not be accurate. Measure your door frames, stairwell and/or elevator to make sure you can get your purchases inside your home. X Be open to bargaining. Some sellers add on a pre-bargaining markup because they know that for many buyers, bargaining is part of the game. But not everyone is comfortable with haggling. Suzanne says that she “doesn’t have that skill set.” Instead she looks only at items offered at a price she would be willing to pay in full. “I know a lot of people consider bargaining part of the game, but I find it so much more pleasant when everyone is just upfront to begin with.” X Act quickly. Craigslist is about striking while the iron is hot. Chances are if you are interested in an item, so are a lot of other people. Plus, many sellers want to sell their stuff quickly — for them it’s less about making money than it is just getting the items out of their house. X Unless you’re buying from a dealer, be prepared to pay in cash, and ideally with exact change. For a big purchase like a sofa, you should know your ATM’s daily withdrawal limits and either take out money ahead of time or going to the bank. The Washington Post
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Open Houses
Listings for today.
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Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/home/
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Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
E-7
Open Houses NORTH WEST
H-35 1:00P.M. - 3:30p.m. - 405 Greg Avenue - Pre-inspected 3-bedroom, 2-bath home in a close-in location near the Ortiz dog park. Extra large lot, great view, quiet neighborhood, arroyo behind house, wonderful back portal, and mature landscaping $349,000. MLS 201401024. (84/St. Francis to Alamo Drive, left to Rio Vista Place, left on Greg Avenue.) Ricky Allen 505-470-8233 Sotheby’s International Realty.
I-38 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 3324 Monte Sereno - Classic Sharon Woods Territorial-style home on the coveted top ridge of Monte Sereno, with enormous Badlands and Jemez mountain views. Spectacular outdoor entertaining spaces, plaster walls throughout $1,499,000. MLS 201303646. (Avenida Monte Sereno, left on Monte Sereno Drive to upper ridge of Monte Sereno Drive. House is on the left.) Paul McDonald 505-780-1008 Sotheby’s International Realty.
L-25 12:00P.M. - 2:00p.m. - Las Katrinas - Surrounded by 5 acres. Located in Santa Fe’s esteemed NW quadrant, this custom-built 4000 sqft estate is perfect for entertaining with it’s own tavern! Gourmet kitchen, plaster walls and much more! $865,000. MLS 201401077. (Fin del Sendaro to end, curve left on Paseo del Paisana, right on Paseo del Pajaro, right on Camino Hasta Manana, right on Las Katrinas and immediate left into drive. Open gate manually) Michael Estrada 505-514-7817 Barker Realty.
L-28 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 3 White Bear Court, Sundance E s t a t e s - Luxury Home in Sundance Estates. Nearly new and ready to move in. Wonderful floorplan with 3 ensuite bedrooms plus a casita. Almost 3500 sf of gracious living space. $895,000. MLS 201400986. (Camino La Tierra, R on Fin del Sendero, R on Lluvio de Oro, L on Palentine, R on Sundance, L on Stardancer, Rt on White Bear and R again on White Bear Court) Coleen Dearing/Vince Scaccia 505-930-9102 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty Ltd.
L-29 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 5 Vista Del Mundo - New Price! This northern NM home is charming & designed to be environmentally safe. Enjoy huge views from both screened in portals and covered open air portals. There is a chef’s kitchen with granite $885,000. MLS 201305685. (3 br, 2 ba, Tano W to Sundance to Vista Del Mundo) Cary Spier 505-690-2856 Santa Fe Properties.
M-23 1:00P.M . - 4:00p.m. - 41 Violet Circle - Classic Santa Fe style main house/charming det. guest house; approx. 6,560 sq.ft. Antique wood doors, 200 yr. old beams, brick floors, white plaster walls, A/C. Panoramic views/2 acres. 4-car garage. $1,795,000. MLS 201305736. (Camino La Tierra right on Parkside drive, left on Violet Circle #41 on right.) Nancy Lehrer 505-490-9565 Sotheby’s International Realty.
T-23 1:00P.M. - 3:30p.m. - 9 Calle Festiva - Well cared for 2bd, 1,1/2 bath town home in move-in condition. Conveniently located in desirable Aldea De Santa Fe 10 minutes to downtown. Across the street from a private park. This territorial style $237,000. MLS 201401627. (599 to Camino La Tierra rght to frontage road left, to Avenida Aldea right to Camino Botanica ,left to Calle Festiva right. TH on the left.) Val Brier 505-690-0553 Keller Williams.
T-24 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 23 Centaurus Ranch - Desirable walled courtyard home in Aldea all on 1 level. 2BR, 2BA in the main house plus a separate entrance guest casita with a kitchenette. The courtyard boasts a lovely stone fountain. $495,000. MLS 201400551. (NM599 to Camino la Tierra, L on Frontage Rd, R on Avenida Aldea, R on E Via Plaza Nueva, L on Centaurus Ranch) Diane Harrison 505412-9918 Sotheby’s International Realty.
NORTH EAST
C-43 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 22 Vista Redonda - This gorgeous home plus guesthouse has 3 bedrooms, a large master suite with a fireplace, study and exercise room. A wonderful outdoor space with pool and waterfall for entertaining! Come by today! $950,000. MLS 201400488. (3.1 miles east on 592 and left onto Vista Redonda. Home is second one on left after stop sign) Jane Hiltbrand 505946-8475 Barker Realty.
N-43 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 226 & 229 Camino Del Norte Two great homes open! 226 Cam Del Norte offers 2900 sf, 4bed/3baths, mostly single level with great views! 229 Del Norte offers 4bed/3baths, 3500 sf, studio/garage, 2.5 acres privacy & views. $789,000. MLS 201400323. (Old Bishops Lodge Road to Camino Encantado to Camino Del Norte. Homes are across the street from each other.) Roger Carson 505-699-8759 Carson & Carson at Keller Williams.
T-41 1:30P.M. - 3:30p.m. - 265 Camino De La Sierra - Great floorplan and natural light are features of this single level home nestled in Valle del Sol just minutes from the Plaza. Nearby trails and community center with tennis & swimming. Owner/Broker. $339,900. MLS 201401878. (2 br, 2 ba, Old Taos Hwy, right Murales, left Cuesta del Norte, right Camino de la Sierra.) Kristin Rowley for Susan Bennett 505-670-1980 Santa Fe Properties.
T-43
NN-15
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1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 850 Camino Chamisa Unit E This single-level contemporary condominium home in a cul-de-sac location close to downtown has three bedrooms and bath, great outdoor spaces, a wonderful sense of privacy, plentiful upgrades. $775,000. MLS 201401256. (No sign on property. Gonzales to Vallecita to Camino Chamisa or Valley Drive to Vallecita to Camino Chamisa.) Susan Shields 505-470-3286 Sotheby’s International Realty.
2:00P.M. - 4:00p .m . - 6753 Camino Rojo - Beautiful, well-situated home offers great location and excellent value. North facing views of the golf course, along with south facing views of the mountains and quick access to Hwy 599 and I-25. $289,000. MLS 201400564. (Airport Rd to Country Club Rd. Right on Camino Rojo.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams Santa Fe.
1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 161 Calle Ojo Feliz # I - Los Arroyos Condo,2nd Level. 2 bedrooms,balcony,1 bath, refrigerated A/C - Clean and functional. Close to hospital, shopping. Rental potential. Complex includes pool, club house. www.161ojofeliz.com $109,000. MLS 201401126. (St Michaels Drive to Botulph Rd. Take the 1st left onto Calle Ojo Feliz to 161. Upstairs condo, Unit I. Follow my Keller Williams signs) Tom Trujillo 505-6994954 Keller Williams Realty.
U-41 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 206 Valle Del Sol - Fabulous views of city lights and two mountain ranges from this close-in, spacious, light-filled Valle Del Sol townhome. Open plan living downstairs and large enclosed patio with huge Sangre views. $538,000. MLS 201401910. (Bishops Lodge Road, left on Murales, right on Valle Del Sol, left on first turn after La Marta to #206.) MaryJoy Ford 505-577-0177 Sotheby’s International Realty.
V-37 12:00P.M. - 2:00p.m. - 832 Dunlap UNIT D - This exquisite home has 2 bedrooms with a bonus room that can be used as an office/den/guestroom. The location is central to the Railyard neighborhood, and is less than one mile from the Plaza. $474,000. MLS 201401841. (Guadalupe to Agua Fria, veer right onto Dunlap, 832 is on the left. Entrance to Assisi compound is gated. Please park on the street and use the pedestrian gated entrance.) Laurie DeDomenico 505-660-8216 Barker Realty.
X-43 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 331 Sanchez Street - This twobedroom Eastside charmer has high ceilings with latillas and skylights, four fireplaces, brick floors, radiant heat, a courtyard with portal and patio, and two parking spaces. $575,000. MLS 201401372. (Old Santa Fe Trail to Sanchez) K.C. Martin 505-690-7192 Sotheby’s International Realty.
X-45 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 1 Cerro Gordo, #B - Built in 2007 by international award winning architect Michael Mahaffey, this 2 bed 2 bth home has location and divine finishes! Brick floors, glassy plaster; hi beamed ceilings, marble baths and AC. $695,000. MLS 201400755. (Corner East Palace and Cerro Gordo) Ashley Margetson 505920-2300 Sotheby’s International Realty.
SOUTH WEST
VV-35 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m . - 244 Maynard #2 - 1135 two story condo, plaster, fireplace, all stainless appliances, washer and dryer, carport fountain, granite, vigas, walking distance to downtown. $325,000. (St. Francis to Agua Fria, to Closson to Maynard. Follow Chapman realty Signs.) Chapman Realty.
X-35 11:30A.M. - 2:00p.m. - 1032 Hickox Street - Beautifully renovated 75-year-old home with new hard wood and tile floors, new thermal windows, a new kitchen, and new baths. Gated and is walled for privacy. Two contiguous city lots are available. $340,000. MLS 201304728. Beth Stephens 505-501-3088 Sotheby’s International Realty.
CC-30 2:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 1225 Vitalia - Outstanding Property! Remodeled Stamm with guest house. Main house has 3 BR/ 2 BA with new kitchen, new bath, oak floors and private yard. Separate guest house has bath and kitchen. 1485 sf. $275,000. MLS 201400817. (From Cerrillos turn west on Vitalia. 3 blocks to house on right.) Charles Weber 505-670-9377 Sotheby’s International Realty.
FF-27 1:00P.M. - 3 : 0 0 p . m . - 3428 San Luis C, Santa Fe Great open floor plan. Kitchen has generous oversized island. Master bath has dual vanity sinks and a garden tub. Come view the Jemez Mtn from the balcony. $129,000. MLS 201400061. (Rufina to San Luis) Katrina Caswell 505-490-9646 Keller Williams Realty Santa Fe.
KK-21 1:30P.M. - 4:00p.m.- 3174 Jemez Road - Total redo on a city 1/2 acre lot. Enjoy new kitchen,diamond plastered walls, 2 large beds , 2 full baths and so much more. $220,000. MLS 201401161. (Airport Rd, turn N on Jemez Rd, property on left.) Carol Hawkins 505-660-6008 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty, ltd.
LL-22 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 4229 Rock Castle Lane - Nava Ade | Single Level | 3 car garage | 3 bedrooms, 2 bath | refrigerated A/C - Picture perfect with upgrades. Landscaped and tucked away from the main streets of Santa Fe. www.4229rockcastle.com $339,900. MLS 201301722. (West on Rodeo Rd., Left on Richards Ave, Right on Gov. Miles, Right on Dancing Ground, Right on Big Sky allthe way around toward the back, left on Rock Castle Ln. Follow my Keller Williams Signs) Tom Trujillo 505-699-4954 Keller Williams.
LL-33
NN-33 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 39 Calle Cascabela - Over 3100 sf main and guest house, almost a 900 sf garage, radiant heat, plaster, granite, gourmet kitchen, a must see with must see views. $639,000. (Old Santa Fe trail to Rabbit Road, over I25 follow the Chapman Realty Signs.) Chapman Realty.
OO-13 12:00PM - 4:30PM - 7364 Avenida El Nido - Brand-new home in Las Palomas development of Tierra Contenta. Stop in to find out how Homewise can help you buy the perfect resale or new home for you. New home plans starting at $212,900. (From Airport Road, turn onto Paseo del Sol WEST. Turn right on Jaguar Road to the dead end, then turn right on Avenida El Nido. Model homes are on the right on Avenida El Nido.) Patrice Von Eschen 505690-1811 Homewise, Inc.
SS-28 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m . - 16 Victoria Peak - Excellent condition town home. 2bdrs,2.5bths, loft for media room, study, office. 2 car garage. Refrigerated AC, GFA. Front opens to large garden/open area. .Decks on loft and master bedroom. $239,000. MLS 201401748. (South on Richards Avenue past SFCC to first 4-way stop, proceed south to second 4-way stop. Coninue to split rail fence, turn left on Dalton Pas and left on Johnson Mesa. Follow Signs.) John E. Grover 505-690-8100 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty, Ltd. 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 6595 S. Richards Avenue - Rare four bedroom home in Rancho Viejo. Pecos floor plan. Located in greenbelt. Great views! Great find! $272,000. MLS 201401149. (Richards south all the way to the south end of Rancho Viejo. Left side of road.) Tai Bixby 505946-2121 Tai Bixby and Associates.
WW-28 12:30P.M. - 2:30p.m . - 16 Reeds Peak - Windmill Ridge at Rancho Viejo. Single level 2 bedroom, 2 bath home with a 2-car garage. Plus a great yard and beautiful landscaping on one of the nicest tree-lined streets in the neighborhood. $225,000. MLS 201400997. (Richards Ave South past Chili Line Road, left on Dalton Pass, right on Johnson Mesa, right on Reeds Peak.) Bob Burbic 505670-9399 Sotheby’s International Realty.
SOUTH EAST
VV-42 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 5 S Vista Estrella - Extraordinary 9 year young home with 3 Bedroom, 3 Bathrooms + Office, oversize garage and amazing views. Professionally landscaped with 800 sq. ft. of portals & porch. Approx 600 sq. ft. garage space. $465,000. MLS 201401925. (I-25 N, 285 S, Right on Spur Ranch Road, Right on Avenida De La Paz, Left on Vista Estrella, 1st house on the Right.) Team R & L 505-465-9597 Keller Williams Santa Fe.
X-39 2:30P.M. - 4:30p.m. - 604 1/2 Galisteo - Walk to everywhere from this 2BR, 2BA, 1,465 sq ft adobe on Galisteo Street. Updated with plaster walls, wood doors, radiant heat, double pane windows, and maple floors. Quiet; Wood Gormley district. $343,000. MLS 201204802. (West side of Galisteo Street at W. Santa Fe Avenue/Paseo de Peralta.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.
X-42 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. -1145 E Alameda - Charming 3BR, 2.75BA Eastside hideaway with a spacious living /dining room with high ceilings and tall French doors looking out to a large courtyard. Cozy Country-style kitchen with sitting area. $948,000. MLS 201205178. (East Alameda, past Patrick Smith Park. Turn left at Camino Pequeno turn off, go up dirt lane. House down lane on left.) Jeffrey Harakal 505-216-6106 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Y-42 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 644 Canyon Rd 10 - This property is one of the most magical, gracious and sophisticated homes on the market today and is located right in the Heart of the Historic Eastside in the Atwill Compound. $997,000. MLS 201401156. (2 br, 2 ba, Up Canyon Rd. Turn into driveway just past Brad Smith Gallery between Acosta Strong. Just before Martha Keats gallery...go to the back of the compound.) Linda Murphy 505-780-7711 Santa Fe Properties.
Y-44 2:00P.M. - 4:00p .m . - 1020 Canyon Road B - A brand new adobe residence at Canyon Road’s premier Alma del Canon. 2 BR / 2 BA, radiant floor heat, hard trowel plaster walls, high end appliances, off street parking, and energy efficient! $799,500. MLS 201305472. (Paseo de Peralta to Canyon Road.) Stan Jones 505-310-2426 Sotheby’s International Realty.
Z-39
1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 2710 Via Caballero del Sur Come see this striking home in a convenient southside neighborhood. A versatile 4 bedroom home with office, it has many SW features, with vigas, kiva, remodeled kitchen, 3-car, great views, lg lot. $435,000. MLS 201401777. (Rodeo Rd. South On Yucca, Rt on Vista Caballero, left on Via Caballero del Sur) Tom Shaw 512755-5270 Bell Tower Keller Williams.
2:00P.M. - 4 :0 0 p .m . - 712 Don Gaspar Ave. - In the heart of South Capitol, this 2025 sq. ft. Craftsman-style house w/ 425 sq. ft. studio has been completed renovated. 4bed/2bth mainhouse. Beautifully landscaped with Sangre views. $699,000. MLS 201401867. (Paseo De Peralta. Turn South onto Don Gaspar. 712 is on the right.) Stephanie Duran 505-204-2491 Barker Realty.
MM-31
DD-37
1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 3178 Viale Tresana - Tuscany meets Santa Fe in this gorgeous home built by Roger Hunter in 2008. Quality construction and design show in the details. Views of both sunsets and rises over the mountains from upstairs. $569,000. MLS 201401409. (4 br, 3 ba, From Rodeo Rd, S on Camino Carlos Rey, L onto Gov. Miles at dead end, R into gates at Villas di Toscana (gates open 9 - 4 daily) Jeanne Hertz 505-660-6345 Santa Fe Properties.
12:00PM - 4:00PM - 493 Calle Volver - This contemporary home has clean lines, rich wood finishes, modern details of stainless steel & natural stone. Make this your home or design your own at Plaza Bonita Subdivision plazabonitasantafe.com Homes starting in the low $400’s. MLS 201305329. (St. Francis, east on San Mateo, right on Calle De La Vuelta, left on Calle Redondo, first house on the left.) Aaron Borrego 505-577-0740 Logic Real Estate.
FF-37 2:30P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 2210 Miguel Chavez No.1115 Stunning 1st flr 2 Bd/2 Ba totally upgraded condo (929sf) Wood & tile flooring, gorgeous tile work, fireplace, designer finishes, detailing and upgraded cabinets, lighting, fixtures & appliances. $135,900. MLS 201400653. (Washer/Dryer&fenced yard. St. Francis, east on Siringo (light), right on Miguel Chavez to 1st gate. Push 345 on keypad to call me to open the gate. Then, turn left & follow drive around to 1115.) Richard Anderson 505-6709293 Keller Williams Realty Santa Fe.
JJ-39 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 2326 Calle Pava - Sol y Lomas! Remodeled Stamm! Fabulous Kitchen! Re-done baths. All the bells and whistles! Single Level! All tile! No Carpet! Light and bright. Adorable Detached Guest House! Convenient Location! $574,000. MLS 201401356. (Rodeo Road West to Calle Pava. Home is on Left.) Bernadette Parnell 505-629-5126 Keller Williams Santa Fe Realty.
UU-45 12:30P.M. - 2:00p .m . - 52A Paseo Del Pinon - Quiet, peaceful setting in a small gated community, spectacular mountain views & less than 7 miles from the Plaza! Just listed & great price! Gorgeous adobe & frame 3+BD/3BA main + Guest house. $629,000. MLS 201401814. (5+ acres, horses OK, gated cul-de sac. Old Las Vegas HiWay, right on Seton Village Rd, to 1st left onto Paseo Del Pinon then 2nd left, Camino Brisa - 1st home on right.) Richard Anderson 505-670-9293 Keller Williams Realty Santa Fe.
ELDORADO WEST
R-60 12:30P.M. - 2:00p.m. - 132 Mejor Lado - Newly completed by Aram Farber! Lit pilaster entry to lovely openplan, split bedroom design, coved viga ceilings, large study. Sweeping mountain views, paved cul-de-sac, nat. gas & community water. $559,000. MLS 201305092. (3 br, 2 ba, West on Avenida Eldorado, left on Ave de Compadres, right on paved Mejor Lado, right into the cul-de-sac.) Fred Raznick 505-577-0143 Santa Fe Properties.
ELDORADO EAST
I-69 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m . - 2 Avalon Place - Wonderful sunny and open 3 bedroom floor plan conveniently located near all Eldorado amenities. Saltillo tile floors, two kiva fireplaces, great room w/ soaring ceilings and extra den with built-ins. $412,000. MLS 201400575. (Hwy. 285 to Rt. on Avenida Vista Grande. Turn left on Avenida Torreon near school. Left to Avalon Road, Rt. on Avalon Place.) Jill Averill 505-577-5789 Maria Borden Concierge Real Estate Services.
I-70 12:30P.M. - 2:00p.m. - 6 Avalon Road - Lovely energyefficient passive solar custom design built by Leil Bache. Dramatic high viga ceiling and brick floors. Walled patios and portals with mountain views. Close to Eldorado amenities. $320,000. MLS 201401877. (3 br, 2 ba, West on Avenida Vista Grande, left on Avalon Road.) Sue Garfitt 505-577-2007 Santa Fe Properties.
N-78 1:00P.M. - 4:00p.m. - 22 Immanuel - This classic home features a country kitchen, living and dining rooms, a media room, two garages, a deck and portal, and a lightfilled master suite. The owner is a New Mexico Real Estate Broker. $645,000. MLS 201401605. (Hwy 285 South/Left on Alma Drive/up Alma aka Principe de Paz to Agua Viviendo/Left on Agua Viviendo/1st Left on Immanuel/to last property on left at cul de sac.) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.
OTHER 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 4454 Mesa del Oro Court Views! Amazing Value! Cul de sac! Spacious,upgraded kitchen, baths.Fabulous 2 story! Family room, separate dining, eat in kitchen, bonus room, office, More! Balcony ,Trex deck. Huge easy care yard! $289,000. MLS 201401740. (Airport RD to Paseo del Sol West. At roundabout turn Left. Then Left to Mesa del Oro Court. Center of cu de sac.) Hannah Levbarg for Bernadette Parnell 505-780-0338 Keller Williams Santa Fe Realty. 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 45 Sunset - Over 3,800 sf all plaster walls 3 fireplaces, 3 bed 2 bath, 1.5 acre tennis courts, 2 car garage, 2 living rooms, private dining room, great kitchen views views views. $499,999. MLS 2013059430. (Frontage road going towards the Downs turn on Los Pinos Road follow Chapman Realty Signs.) Chapman Realty. 1:00P.M. - 3:00p.m. - 7 Camino Caballos Spur - Big Price Reduction! Glorious views, 2-horse stable (possible studio), direct trail access. All brick floors, great room w/kiva fireplace, master bedroom w/FP, updated bathrooms & large guestrooms. $419,000. MLS 201303543. (3 br, 2 ba, Hwy 285- right on Camino Caballos Spur- property on left) Peter Van Ness 505-6606409 Santa Fe Properties. 1:00P.M. - 4 : 0 0 p . m . - 43 Cerro Blanco Road - Designed for entertaining and worry-free living, this openconcept contemporary home offers fabulous living spaces, a superior kitchen, a luxurious owner’s suite, a large portal, and a guesthouse. $875,000. MLS 201401637. (Hwy 285 South just past railroad tracks turn left on Cerro Alto Road then left on Cerro Blanco Road.) Alan Vorenberg 505-470-3118 Sotheby’s International Realty.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
Showcase Properties Specialties in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate
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IMPRESSIVE LUXURY RANCH 12 AVENIDA DE REY
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This fabulous luxury ranch offers every imaginable amenity and breathtaking mountain views. The adobe main house offers three bedrooms, a spacious living room, a country kitchen, a formal dining room, a library media room, a gracious master suite, an office, guest bedrooms, a studio, and a vault. The estate also includes a guesthouse, a television production studio or gymnasium, a bowling alley and shooting range, stables, multiple garages, a workshop, a greenhouse, and a caretaker’s office. MLS# 201401257 Offered at $14,700,000 BOB CARDINALE 505.577.8418 bob.cardinale@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 505.988.8088 sothebyshomes.com/santafe
1 N E P O
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IMAGINE ALL YOU’VE EVER DREAMED OF… 53 Avenida de Las Nubes Las Nubes – This home is built of Rastra construction with soaring 16-foot ceilings, African mahogany doors, Italian tile throughout, plaster walls and lots of picture windows. This three- to four-bedroom house has all you’re ever imagined for yourself: three bathrooms; a grand master suite with a steam shower, walk-in closet and a separate room for office, exercise or meditation; an incredible cook’s kitchen with granite counters, high-end appliances, and a Sub-Zero refrigerator, all flanked by two dining areas; a family room and a large living room with a 16-foot stacked flagstone fireplace; plus a study and a light-filled studio. A flexible floor plan highlights this stunning setting. 6,308 sq.ft., 4-car garage, 6.24 acres. Directions: Avenida Eldorado to RR tracks, left on Tren Via to house, one mile. MLS #201401549 Offered At $1,200,000 MARG & ANNIE VENEKLASEN · 505.670.5202 annievk@newmexico.com SANTA FE PROPERTIES · 505.982.4466 · SantaFeProperties.com
Bring spring indoors with floral furniture and accessories florals because they’re kind of precious — but there’s a new age of florals,” Welch says. Try adding one floral item When everything is coming up roses for some softness, such as this handoutside, it shouldn’t still feel like the beaded peacock-and-floral Cream Peadead of winter inside. With spring on cock Bench, a traditional piece updated our doorstep, we went searching for with crisp teal, lime and fuchsia. It expert advice on decorating with pop- would add a flourish to an otherwise pies, magnolia branches, wisteria, roses streamlined interior ($1,499, www. and more in prints and patterns. horchow.com). “We love our gardens in Britain, our u To avoid seeming dated and stuffy, English classic country gardens, and Imre suggests finding patterns that the weather doesn’t always allow us to are gritty or unexpected (for instance, sit in them,” says Suzanne Imre, editor flowers that are realistic, bugs and all). of the design magazine Livingetc. But She likes the “edgy” “Unlikely Garden what’s ephemeral in nature becomes Print” by Renee Garner ($30, www. enduring indoors. “Bringing them littlepaperplanes.com). “The coolinto the house means we can enjoy est thing is, the flowers are actually that country feel no matter what the weeds,” she says. weather is.” Imre reports that floral u “Modern homes can look quite prints are being given a grittiness minimal and sleek and very restful on with bugs and weeds, and modernthe eye, but sometimes they do need ized through digital printing, oversize a little bit of personality and pattern, blooms, creative cropping, bold colors and that’s where florals can come in,” and, conversely, tone-on-tone colors. Imre says. For a fresh spring update Plus, there’s a renewed interest in Brit- that requires little commitment, there’s ain’s storied archives of Liberty of Lon- Rifle Paper Co.’s Botanical Coaster Set don fabrics and botanical drawings. ($16, www.riflepaperco.com). In For Americans with modern tastes peach, rose, vintage blue and peacock and aversions to feminine furnishings, blue backgrounds, the set of eight Washington-area designers David pulp-board coasters features designs Mitchell and Celia Welch suggest add- reminiscent of the folk art found on the ing a touch of softness. narrow boats that travel the English u To warm up a modern interior canals. with floral prints without going granny, u Both Welch and Mitchell like Welch recommends concentrating using tone-on-tone floral patterns. “A your efforts on one statement. Try lot of times you see two-tone florals an accent wall of floral wallpaper, for and they’re black-and-white; they have example, or a bold floral print on a this graphicness,” Mitchell says. But pillow or chair, as on the Lotus Blosthere’s a lot of beautiful florals that som Wingback Chair ($1,398, www. have a tone-on-tone effect” that aren’t anthropologie.com). black-and-white. For a dramatic stateu “I think people shy away from ment, Welch likes the Charlottenberg By Lindsey M. Roberts
Special to The Washington Post
Porcelain duvet cover from Designers Guild, a company that Imre also loves ($300-$325, www.designersguild. com). u Mixing floral prints can be tricky. “There’s a fine line between good and what starts to get a little crazy,” Welch says. “Sometimes we say, ‘Here’s the trend, and here’s what you can do, and here’s how to do it,’ but it’s really about what you can live with.” But Farrow & Ball, she says, always gets floral wallpaper right. She suggests the classic English pattern in the company’s Wisteria paper, drawn from 19th-century jacquards ($260 for a 10-meter roll, www. farrowandball.com). Imre is considering a similar monochrome wallpaper from Designers Guild for her bedroom. u Another way of modernizing a floral print, Imre says, is by finding one that zooms in on the flower, showing only parts. Also, “there’s a big trend at the moment in oversized florals,” she says. Vivienne Westwood, a British design icon, created a cropped, oversize Magnolia Ice Wool & Silk hand-knotted Tibetan rug for the Rug Company ($218 per square foot, www. therugcompany.com). It’s a showstopping splurge. “I love the super scale of the flowers and the flash of green against the elegant cream,” Imre says. The rug design is also available with a black background (wool only) and available for custom orders. u After years of black-and-white photography dominating artwork in homes, Imre says we’re ready for something with more life. British designers, especially, are tapping into their rich history of botanical drawings for inspiration. C. Wonder’s gicleé Botanical
The Charlottenberg Porcelain duvet cover from Designers Guild features tone-on-tone floral patterns. DESIGNERS GUILD
Wall Art ($118, www.cwonder.com) would lend a natural touch to a salonstyle arrangement. u Thomas Paul’s Botanical Pillow gives a vintage drawing a modern twist. “I like the reference to Victorian botanical drawings reinterpreted in a digitally printed fabric,” Imre says. ($104, www.yliving.com). If a painterly, watercolor floral is more your thing, Imre says to find it in a digitally printed pattern for an update on tradition. “It’s still the techniques and fabrics that [the pattern] is presented on that will make it feel quite new.” u “Fresh flowers are my favorite way to go,” Welch says. She suggests buying lots of one flower, such as roses or tulips, instead of a mixed arrangement. Four-packs of tulips will make “a large impact,” she says. To make the look even more contemporary, cut the flowers down to fit in a low vase, using
stones to anchor the stems in place. For something that lasts a bit longer than a bouquet, Welch likes the Tulip Magnolia Branches from Terrain ($58, www.shopterrain.com). u Janus et Cie is a source that Welch turns to time and again for accent pieces that are beautiful but “unusual” — especially the company’s pots and vases. She likes the Ambition vases for its double dose of spring: They displays flowers in sculptural form on the outside, even they’re not holding live flowers on the inside ($84-$568, www. janusetcie.com). “If there’s a pretty masculine space and you want to soften it a little bit, this is a great way to do it,” she says. u For a delicate touch on a dresser, nightstand or end table, New Yorker John Derian’s decoupage is a must. Artisans take antique and vintage prints and affix them to handblown glass. The Papaver Pair tray ($145, www.johnderian.com) “showcases florals at their prettiest,” Imre says. “The glass emphasizes the delicate details of the blooms, and the colors are soft and feminine.” u Wisteria’s sexotic bone-inlaid Jaipur Mirror in black “is modern, but it’s also traditional,” Mitchell says. “You could put it in an all-beige room and it would add edge to it.” As with fashion, it’s hard to go wrong with decorating in black and white — but if you already have a vibrant home, there’s no need to gild the lily. “You could put [the mirror] in a colorful room and make all your lampshades black, and that would look great, too,” Mitchell says ($499, also available in gray, www.wisteria. com).
Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com
sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 SANTA FE 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.
FSBO STAMM. 1232 Osage Avenue. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 1,263 sq.ft. $232,900. Open House 5/04, 1-4 p.m. 505-9300119.
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
DELIGHT YOURSELF AT LAS PALOMAS APARTMENTS! Our bright, spacious studios will impress you and our new management team is ready to treat you right. Call for a tour today! 888482-8216 Hablamos Espanol!
2 BEDROOM 1 bath adobe casita on East Palace. Quiet, private location. Big yard, private parking. $850 + utilities. No pets, No smokers. 505438-7011.
REMODEL!!! sq.ft., Santa 350-0570.
2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, Tesuque. 5 acres, views, patios. $1,500 monthly plus utilities. Short term possible. Jim 505-470-0932.
1 Bed,1 Bath, 800 Fe, $parking, 505-
FREE WASHER / DRYER IN
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
Every Apt. Home 1, 2 & 3 bedroom Apts. Available plus No deposit required for Utilities Ask me how! Call Today!
SAN MIGUEL COURT APARTMENTS 2029 CALLE LORCA
House on 1 Acre . Boarders the highway and the Pecos River. Business, Live or Work. 5 0 5 699-0639.
COMMERCIAL SPACE
3 BEDROOM 2 FULL BATH HOME. KIVA FIREPLACE, WOOD FLOORING, NEW APPLIANCES. NS, NP. 1250 MO. 505-974-6339.
VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY
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.
TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818 LOTS & ACREAGE 2 acres of irrigated land and 2.5 acres of irrigated land in Anton Chico. Please call 575-799-0890 for more information.
(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.
OUT OF TOWN NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME FOR SALE! Sits on one acre of land next to the Rio Grand. 505-995-0318 DETAILS: www.northernnewmexicohome.com
»rentals«
STORAGE SPACE
Lovely, Professional Office in Railyard, beautiful shared suite, with conference space, kitchen, bath, parking, cleaning, internet utilities included. $475 monthly. 505-690-5092
Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter
RETAIL OR OFFICE 2 Great Locations
992-6123 or 690-4498
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
STORAGE SPACE
when you buy a
2014 Pet Calendar for $5! 100% of sales donated to SFAS.
10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com
986-3000
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
858 AGUA FRIA FOR LEASE:
Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $219,900.
OFFICES
SHARED OFFICE, 1-2 rooms. Includes conference room. Opportunity; mutually keep overhead down. Suited for professionals, near Hospital. $400 monthly. 505-982-0191.
2 Story
3 BEDROOM 2 BATH. Kachina Loop, Gated community. Cooler, radiant, fireplace. 2-car garage. washer, dryer, fenced yard. Shed. $1,325. 505424-3735
Price
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.
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $300 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
STUDIO APARTMENT. Unfurnished. Ready to move-in! No Pets. $600 monthly, all utilities paid. CALL 505920-2648.
3000 sq.ft. ample parking. negotiabe. 505-699-0639.
Live- Work. Studio. Gallery, or Office. High ceilings, 2-story. Handicap bath. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
505- 471-8325
For Sale or Lease. 4000 sq.ft. Open space. Ample parking.
FRONTING ON 2ND STREET 2160 sq.ft on 2nd Street.
OFFICES
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. 2748 Calle Serena. Fireplace, new tile and carpet. No-smoking, No Pets. $1,200 plus utilities. 505-670-9853, 505-670-9867.
RETAIL SPACE 1607 ST. MICHAELS DRIVE
LIVE IN STUDIOS
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.
A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122 Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
this live- work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities
Old Adobe Office Located On the North Side of Town
Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fire places, private bathroom, ample parking 1300 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1320. plus water and CAM or combined with the adjoining unit; total of 2100 square for $2100. Plus water and CAM 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.
CONDOSTOWNHOMES 2 BD. 1.5 Bath Rosario neighborhood. Fenced yard, fireplace, garage, pool, Sandia view. Small dog OK. 1275, mo. plus utilities. 505-9838549
TOWNHOUSE, 2 STORIES. 2 Bedroom, 2 bath. Enclosed backyard. Carport parking. No pets. $950 monthy plus deposit & utilites. 505-490-1553
GUESTHOUSES EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936.
HOUSES FURNISHED
505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com Lovely TOWNHOME
2 bedrooms and 1 bath, granite counter tops, washer, dryer, kiva fireplace, vigas, tile, carpet flooring, conveniently located. $850 plus utilities.
Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos
This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $1000 plus utilities
Cozy Condo
1 bedroom, 1 bath, kiva fireplace, radiant heat, washer, dryer, large balcony. $775. Plus utilities
Lovely Town Home
This lovely town home features a loft with attached deck, wood burning fireplace, carpet, tile floors one bedroom and one bathroom. Includes washer, dryer hookups, small fenced back yard. Available May 1st. $850. Plus utilities.
Beautiful Views
Cabin style home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood stove, carpet and tile flooring, washer, dryer, lovely deck. Country living just 15 minutes from town. $1050. Plus utilities. East Side, 367 1/2 Hillside Avenue. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, 2 blocks Plaza. $1,500 plus utilities. 505-982-2738.
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EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS, EAST ALAMEDA. Walk to Plaza. Pueblo-style. Washer, dryer. Kiva, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1500 sq.ft. Garage. Nonsmoking, no pets. $1900 monthly. 505-982-3907
ELDORADO New, Large 3 bedroom, 3 bath, Highend contemporary home: Super Energy efficient, hilltop views, 12.5 acres, paved access. 505-660-5603 RECENTLY REMODELED. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Hardwood & tile floors. Laundry hook-ups. Fenced yard. No pets. Lease. References. $825. 505-412-0197
flock to the ball.
APARTMENTS FURNISHED CHARMING, CLEAN 2 BEDROOM, $800
Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
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.
FUR N ISH ED STUDIO, $675. Utilities paid, charming, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, clean, fresh paint. Walking distance to shopping. Non-smoking, No pets. $695 plus utilities. 505-670-9853, 505-670-9867.
LIVE IN STUDIOS Chic European Decor, 1 Bedroom with Den, Guesthouse. Views, walking trails, private courtyards. Pets on Approval. Quiet Neighborhood near Harry’s Roadhouse. $1,550 month. 505-6996161.
2nd Street LIVE, WORK, OFFICE
1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET. 800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500 square foot living area upstairs. Skylights, high ceilings. Wayne Nichols, 505-6997280.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
www.sfnmclassifieds.com NEW MEXICO FARM AND LIVESTOCK BUREAU Position Announcement • Northwest Regional Director
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
The New Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau (NMFLB) is a nonprofit membership organization that protects and promotes agriculture. We serve the needs of our state’s agriculture constituency, representing our members in the public realm from political advocacy to legal representation. We are currently seeking a highly qualified individual to serve as the Northwest Regional Director that is centrally located in the State. Bachelor’s degree or equivalent work experience, strong organizational skills, self-motivation and the ability to work unsupervised from a home office are required. Candidates must be able to communicate effectively through both verbal and written communication, should be computer literate including proficiency with email applications and Microsoft Office. Knowledge of the agriculture industry is a plus. You will work with a number of assigned county Farm Bureau organizations, so travel will be required. A complete job description may be requested at resumes@nmflb.org. To apply, please send resume and cover letter by May 24, 2014 to: New Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau, Attention: Chad Smith, 2220 N. Telshor Blvd., Las Cruces, NM 88011 Or by email to resumes@nmflb.org. COMPUTER SCIENCE EDUCATION AND OUTREACH SPECIALIST Are you passionate about computer science and education? The Santa Fe Institute seeks a contractor who is willing to plan and implement computer science events at schools throughout the State, recruit participants for research on learning computer science, collect data on participation in the events, and organize and lead professional development for the Learning Lab’s facilitators. Some travel throughout the state is required. This position reports to the Director, Learning Lab. Billable rate of $22 to $30 per hour, dependent upon experience and skills, flexible hours depending on events and activities ranging from 10 to 40 hours per week. Must be a self-starter with a BS or equivalent in Computer Science (CS), familiarity with CS education literature and tools, workshop leadership experience, and excellent communication skills. For a complete list of job requirements, the job description, and instructions on how to apply, see our web site at http://www. santafe.edu/about/jobs/. No phone calls please. Application deadline is May 15, 2014. Position available immediately.
EIGHT NORTHERN INDIAN PUEBLOS COUNCIL, INC. - A LOCAL EMPLOYER OF EXCELLENCE CIRCLE OF LIFE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NETWORK DIRECTOR OF CLINICAL SERVICES – COLBHN CLINICAL DIRECTOR – Butterfly Healing Center - Taos DIRECTOR OF QUALITY ASSURANCE/QUALITY IMPROVEMENT - Butterfly Healing Center located in Taos CLINCIAL SUPERVISOR FAMILY SERVICES – COLBHN Albuquerque INPATIENT THERAPISTS – Butterfly Healing Center –Taos FAMILY SERVICE THERAPIST – Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos SUBSTANCE ABUSE CO9UNSELOR/LADAC - Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHS – Albuquerque – Espanola – Taos DIRECTOR OF HEAD START – NAMBE - SAN ILDEFONSO Responsible for the overall administration and management of the ENIPC’s Head Start Program located in the Pueblos of Nambe and San Ildefonso. Carry out day- to-day administration, management, and supervision of the Head Start Program. Supervise Lead Teachers and any administrative staff. Maintain the current grant and budget and aggressively search for additional funding. Director will work in conjunction with the Executive Director and Governors of both Pueblos to grow the program. Bachelor’s Degree with Master’s preferred in Early Childhood Education, Social Work Administration, Human and Disability services, Elementary Education, or Business Administration. Minimum of 3 (three) years of experience in a director role for a Head Start or similar program Grant management is a requirement. Generous Benefits Package: All Employee Medical Premiums Paid, Employer Match 401k, PTO, and Much Much More! Employment with ENIPC requires a valid NM State Driver License and must be insurable under ENIPC’s auto insurance. All required certificates and licensures must be valid and current prior to employment. Positions close when filled, unless otherwise noted. Send resume to: RCata@enipc.org or 505.747.1599 (fax) 505.747.1593 (office) ENIPC ensures Native American Preference. ENIPC, Inc. is a Drug Free Workplace. *Drug testing and criminal background check completed prior to employment*
Network Engineer Del Norte Credit Union in Santa Fe, NM is looking for a Network Engineer to join their Information Technology department. Ideal candidates will have a BS degree or equivalent experience in networking and 5 years’ experience working in the Information Technology field. The candidate must also demonstrate great customer relation skills, including excellent written and oral communication. Experience with Cisco networking equipment, LAN/WAN troubleshooting and connectivity required. Knowledge of troubleshooting in a Windows environment, including Microsoft Server and Exchange as well as proficiency with VoIP, Disaster Recovery configurations and techniques preferred. Candidate must work well in a team environment and demonstrate excellent analytical skills. DNCU offers a great work environment, competitive salaries and excellent benefits. For immediate consideration, qualified candidates should submit a confidential cover letter and resume by completing an online application at dncu.org.
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sfnm«classifieds ACCOUNTING
Administrative AssistantInvestment Teams Thornburg Investment Management has an excellent opportunity for an entry level Administrative Assistant available. Responsibilities include a variety of duties related to expense reports, scanning paper files into an electronic filing system, monitoring department databases, as well as departmental support. Qualified candidates will offer prior administrative experience in a corporate setting. Proficiency with MS Word, Excel, and Outlook are required. Apply through our website www.thornburginvestments.com Customer Service Rep. - Full time. See our ad on sfnmclassifieds.com and indeed.com. Email: hrdept343@cableone.net.
Have an empty house or apartment you need to rent? Read the WANT TO RENT column for prospective tenants.
Excellent Employment Opportunity DeVargas Office Espanola Personal Banker/Teller - This is a customer service position that meets the public in a friendly, courteous and professional manner. Must have the ability to handle detailed transactions involving math, basic computer skills, and perform well under pressure. Responsible for opening new accounts, cross sales, certificates of deposits, IRA’s, file maintenance, and handling customer’s financial needs. Must be friendly and conduct yourself in a professional manner, communicate effectively, accurate and pay attention to details. Must be organized and able to multitask under daily deadlines. Sales experience is a plus. Century Bank offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. Please apply online at www.centurynetbank.com. We are an EEO/ AA employer.
DRIVERS Drivers Needed to drive Executive. Excellent salary plus commission. Cash Daily. 310-281-1159, 817-595-6936. EDUCATION
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. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR for Hoy Recovery Program (Non-Profit) Submit Resume and/or for a job description email: hoyrecovery@windstream.net
THE SCHOOL for Advanced Research seeks a full-time scholar programs assistant. Visit our website for full position description. www.sarweb.org
986-3000
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BANKING
Year round positions HOME VISITOR Full-time working with families to provide case management, advocacy and education. 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. for activists rally Immigrants,
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May Center for Learning seeks experienced teachers for the following part-time positions. Special Education experience desirable. Willingness to train in multi-sensory methodology required.
Science Reading/ Writing/ Math Music/ Theater Teaching Assistant
Send resume and cover letter to pattymaycenter@gmail.com
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The New
GALLERIES EXPERIENCED SALES ASSOCIATE for luxury art jewelry gallery. Must be sophisticated, energetic, and organized. See classified ad @ santafenewmexican.com
HOSPITALITY THE ELDORADO Supermarket Deli is looking for experienced, reliable, dependable Kitchen and Counter Help. Ask for Guy or Corey, 505-466-2602.
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
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 NM Department of Health Family Planning Program is looking for a Full-time nurse and a full-time nurse practitioner to join a hardworking state employee team to reduce teen, unintended pregnancies in NM. Please contact Dr. Wanicha Burapa (505) 476-8870 or wanicha.burapa@state.nm.us for details.
PART TIME CUSTOMER SERVICE Rep. A R Medical Supply. Part-Time 12 p.m. - 5 p.m. Retail or medical clerical history preferred. Computer literate. Multitasker, motivated, great communication skills. Apply in-person @ 720 St. Michael’s Dr., fax (505) 9820439, email: hanaya@armedical.com
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Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! PART TIME
»merchandise«
Part-time MAINTENANCE position at Upaya Zen Center. Responsible for daily operations of campus. Includes benefits. Cover letter, resume: resumes@upaya.org by 5/9. No phone calls please.
Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.
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ANTIQUES
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. Thanks Todd. Please call - 505-203-6355
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.
Museum of New Mexico Foundation
seeks highly motivated individual for on-site membership sales in our four museums. Seasonal, flexible schedule. museumfoundation.org/employm ent/ for more information.
APPLIANCES 2013 LIKE new, Kenmore, 25.4 cubic feet Refrigerator. Stainless Steel Ice Maker. $600. 505-204-8440.
Assistant Director of Communications For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.stjohnscollege.edu. Go to the bottom of the home page and Click on — “Administrative Offices” under Santa Fe “Employment.” This is an exempt, full-time, 35 hours per week position. Send resume, letter of intent, salary history and names, addresses and phone numbers of three professional references to santafe.jobs@sjc.edu. Resume packets will be accepted until interviews begin. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
TECHNICIAN TRAINEE Santa Fe Clinic
OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN REGISTERED NURSE / PACU-Holding Area
VACANCY NOTICE SANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A HEAD GIRLS’ BASKETBALL COACH, HEAD GIRLS’ SOCCER COACH AND A HEAD BASEBALL COACH. IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT AN APPLICATION, A LETTER OF INTEREST, RESUME, AND TWO REFERENCES TO THE HUMAN RESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340, SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 9896353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO: pguardiola@sfis.k12.nm.us. Website for application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.
Director of Admissions
Santa Fe Surgery Center Casual/prn
For a complete description of the job and compensation, visit our website: www.sjc.edu. Go to the bottom of the home page and Click on — “Administrative Offices” under Santa Fe “Employment.” This is a full-time, 35 hours per week, exempt position.
Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions open at our Santa Fe Clinic and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com.
Send resume, letter of intent, salary history and names, addresses and phone numbers of three professional references to santafe.jobs@sjc.edu. Resume packets will be accepted until interviews begin.
Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
Direct Sales Representative Santa Fe
Bring Innovation Home
Opportunity awaits you at the intersection of media and technology. From our innovative X1 Entertainment Operating System® to our suite of XFINITY® products, you can bring the the latest in home entertainment to new customers. Join us now and sell the future. PREFERRED QUALIFICATIONS > A high school diploma or equivalent is required > Prior related experience is strongly preferred
PERKS > Competitive base salary plus commission > Great benefits including free XFINITY cable & Internet in your home* > Flexible schedules
FAST FORWARD TO TOMORROW’S NEXT BIG IDEA.
WWW.COMCAST.JOBS/2411 *Must live in XFINITY service area. Comcast is an Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action/Drug-Free workplace employer.
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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
sfnm«classifieds ART
FURNITURE
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.
Set of 6 Dining chairs, tropical wood with carving. $400 for all. Matching table available. 505-231-9133.
»announcements«
BUILDING MATERIALS 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.
FOUND PLAID BACKPACK found Plaza Verde. CD player, sling, CDs. ID colors of backpack or name a CD to claim. 505424-8060
RECYLCLED ASPHALT (millings). $18 per cubic yard. Free deliver with 11 yard purchase. 505-316-2999
Stearns and Foster TWIN MATTRESS and box springs with Hollywood frame, very comfortable. $75. 505231-9133. TALL SHELVES, constructied with 1/2" bamboo. 5 shelves, 3’ wide. $30, OBO. 505-231-9133.
LOST DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down baseball jersey. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205
TOP SOIL, COMPOST BLEND. Great fro rraised beds, gardens, lawns and trees. $38 per cubic yard. Free delivery with 8 yard purchase. 505-3162999
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
Sell your car in a hurry! HI, MY name’s Sydney! I’m a 2 1/2 year old spayed female American Staffordshire Terrier who’s especially sweet and loves to snuggle. I’m good with other dogs and cats and I dearly love all humans, big and small. I’m a loveable, very calm, quiet, gentle house/lap dog who would so love to have my very own human family.
AKC AKITAS FOR SALE. $600. White, black, black and white, brindle. 8 weeks old, first shots. 505-315-7736 or 505-490-3523.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT HOVEROUND MPV5 Wheelchair great condition, like new 2795.00 new, will sell for 1,000.00 call 204-2309.
FURNITURE
MISCELLANEOUS OLDER MODEL ok, looking for a large piano accordion and amp. 505-5701385.
SEWING MACHINE. SINGER FEATHERWEIGHT, TABLE MODEL. 1930S. All accessories, with case. Good condition. $400. 505-466-6205 WESTON MANDOLINE V e ge ta b l e Slicer. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-466-6205
SPORTS EQUIPMENT DAHON MUP8 ELECTRIC FOLDING BIKE. Brand new - never used Electric folding bike. Speed up to 20 mph, tires are Schwalb marathon racer 20 inch tires-- A beautiful bike! Was purchased for twice as much, but was never used. $1000.00 OBO. 505466-3747
»garage sale«
ADORABLE, HEALTHLY multigeneration labradoodle puppies. Born 3/5/14. White- cream and chocolate. First shots. Parents on premises. $500. Located in Roswell. 575317-1237.
LAWN & GARDEN
27" iM A C 3.4GHz Intel core i7 processor. 4GB memory. Graphics processor. Wireless keyboard, mouse. Excellent condition. In warranty. $1200. 505-890-2836
6’ DIning Table. Tropical Wood, with carving along apron, very beautiful. Matching chairs available. $500. 505231-9133.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! PETS SUPPLIES
PETS SUPPLIES
SUNDANCE MAJESTA 880 LUXURY SPA. Excellent condition. 35 jets. Seats 5. $2,900. 505-466-3802, 6704170.
COMPUTERS
LOST WHITE AND GRAY CAT with dark gray stripes. Missing since 4/2/14. Please call 719-510-3367.
986-3000
Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000
CLOTHING
PUBLIC NOTICES
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Hi, my name’s Rupert or Ruppie for short! I’m a 16 month old American Bully with Mastiff back stock. I would be absolutely dedicated to pleasing my new owner. I’m great with children and other dogs. I’m well behaved indoors and out and very intelligent. Please be my soul mate.
AKC DOBERMANS. Excellent bloodlines, tempermants. Tails, Dewclaws, shots. Puppies Raised with love, 9 weeks. Jozette 719-5882328. Check online ad pics.
Large group furniture: Mitchellgold sofa + ottoman, ACC Dining table, Bertola Diamond chair, shelves, grande Mexican + Guatemalan jars, adobe-color building blocks from Colony, new BBQ, yard tools, frames, collectibles, umbrella table, garden chairs + pots, good clothes? YES, good handbags? YES, limestone floor tile, glass tile, good dishware, Native American + fine Art books.
GET NOTICED!
If you’re interested in adopting Sydney or Rupert contact Mare Israel at 505-316-2089. Or you can email at gim m eahom e505@ gm ail.com or visit the website at Petabulls.com.
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.
Add an Attention Getter to make your ad stand out. Call our helpfull Consultants for details
CALL 986-3000 ESTATE SALES 2008, 2016 CALLE Lejano- Neighborhood yard, garage sale. Santa Fe, May 3, Saturday, one day only 9:00 am - 5:00 pm. A vast array of items will be for sale - stained glass windows; quilts, art, household goods, beding, rugs, books, dishes, servicing pieces and much more.
BARK COLLAR, Sportdog Brand, rechargable, perfect condition, $75. 505-989-4409.
CHARMING PAIR of Adult Female Beagles, need a loving home. FREE. Please Call 516-524-0388 (in Santa Fe). CHIHUAHUAS & POMERANIANS. Very affordable, playful, loving. 505-5700705 or 505-920-2319
LAS DOS AMIGAS!! 830 East Zia Road Saturday 5/3 & Sunday 5/4 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
POMERANIAN PUPPY-ADORABLE! (male) 9 weeks. Black With Brown and White Markings! 1st Shots, Papers- $500.00 505-867-2726 or 505331-4195.
»cars & trucks«
Thule Parkway bike rack. Holds 2 bikes. Heavy-duty. $100, 505-2319133.
AMERICAN COUNTRY COLLECTION designer down-blend sofa and Asia Minor kilim wing-back chair. Both excellent condition. $800 each. Smokefree. 505-473-2656
WANT TO BUY
BEAUTIFUL MAPLE hardwood bed frame. California King sized. $200. 505-982-9420
ANTLER BUYER COMING SOON! Top Grades and Prices! Call for information 435-340-0334.
VACUUM TUBES, Testers, amps speakers turntables 1960s or older Ill pay cash I buy large groups of tubes. 505-570-1385
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. $5-1$5 each. No dogs or hawk trainers. 505954-4252
PUG PUPPIES FOR SALE. Fawn. 1 girl, 3 boys. 8 weeks. Vaccinated. Healthy, Playful. Well socialized for dogs, children. $850. 505-795-6420
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
2010 TOYOTA TACOMA front bumper. Good condition. $100. 505-471-8817.
»animals«
THE LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA SOCIETY (LLS) has joined forces with PALLIATIVE CARE OF SANTA FE (PCS) to offer a BLOOD CANCER SUPPORT GROUP. The group meets the 2nd & 4th Tues from 2:00-3:30pm and is facilitated by Eileen Joyce, Grief Recovery Specialist and Director of Outreach for PCS. For location or more information, contact Eileen at 505428-0670. PCS is a nonprofit community-based volunteer organization providing free at-home services for people with life-threatening illnesses. More information at palliativecaresantafe.org. LLS is dedicated to funding blood cancer research and providing education and patient services. Join us for our Light The Night Walk Oct 26th at The Pit-UNM. Register as an individual walker, create or join a family & friends team or corporate team at www.lightthenight.org/nm. Contact LLS at 505-872-0141.
APPLIANCES Washers & Dryers, New & Used. New $150, Used $50. Delivered & installed, $50 (new), $25 (used) within 5 miles. 505-920-2319, 505-570-0705.
Upholstered Church Pews in Good Condition (8) 14 ft. to 18 ft. long. Price Negotiable. Call: 505-4731114.
HORSES
CUPBOARD, 77"X28.5"X10.5". PIne, Stained. $450. BOOKCASE(Glass) 3 Shelves, 60"x"27". $200. 2 CD CABINETS, Pine, 49"x10". $35 each. SMALL CABINET 19"x37"x8.5". Carved Kokopelli, lots of color. $250. 505-982-4926. EASY CHAIR, very comfortable, good quality, swivels, rocks. Off-white linen fabric. $40, OBO. 505-231-9133. HANDMADE SPANISH Colonial Style red oak with carved rosettes: Large desk, Credenza, Bookcase, 2 chairs. $9,750. Call 505-982-0778 for appointment.
PINE DESK, 7 drawers with brass drawer pulls. $50, OBO. 505-231-9133. QUALITY, SOLID PATIO BENCHES. 38"Hx35.5"L or 39"Hx38.5"L. $200 300. 505-982-4926
BREEDING SERVICE Triple Registered, gaited, homozygous tobiano stallion. Live spotted foal guaranteed. $350-$300. TBeckmon@SkiesRBlue.com www.SkiesRBlue.com 505-470-6345
santafenewmexican.com
PART-TIME TO FULL-TIME MACHINE ATTENDANT No Prior Machine Experience Required Attendant duties include; gathering, stacking down and palletizing of press, bindery, and inserted papers. Responsible for keeping all production equipment stalked with the correct materials to keep machine running at maximum efficiency. Perform cleaning of production equipment and basic maintenance. Must be able to communicate well with coworkers and stand for prolonged periods with repetitive bending and lifting of 20 pounds and the ability to occasionally lift up to 75 pounds. This is an entry level position with opportunities to advance to full time employment with benefits, as well as advancing to other positions in the production department. Shifts times will vary based on availability, but open shits include evening or night positions. Other full-time positions include a Machine Operator and Supervisor position available in the department for qualified candidates with a supervisory, mechanical or manufacturing background. Submit application or email resume by Monday, May 5th, to: Brenda Shaffer Bshaffer@sfnewmexican.com 1 New Mexican Plaza (off I-25 frontage road) Or access an online job application at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No Phone Calls please. Successful completion of a drug test will be required prior to employment offer. 202 East Marcy St | P.O. Box 2048 | Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048 | 505-983-3303
At Verizon, our technology allows machines to communicate vital information to one another, making businesses and individuals more informed, agile and adaptive. That’s the kind of work we do. And you can be a part of it.
Join Us for a Hiring Event Wednesday, May 7th • 10am - 2:30pm Santa Fe Workforce Connection 301 W De Vargas Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 Enjoy benefits worthy of the name Total Rewards including: • Medical, dental and vision from day one • Award-winning training • Generous tuition assistance program
• Company matching 401(k) • Paid vacation and holidays
Visit verizon.com/jobs to apply today. Verizon is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer M/F/Disability/Vet.
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Sunday, May 4, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
DOMESTIC
to place your ad, call DOMESTIC
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
986-3000
Classifieds
4X4s
Get Results! PARTS FOR 1998 CHEVY SILVERADO. Looking for extended cab window parts, scissor jack, and tool to drop the spare tire down. Please call 602-8211585.
Call 986-3000 to place your ad!
2008 BUICK ENCLAVE WITH ALL THE GOODIES, VERY SHARP RIDE, $18,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
2007 Chrysler 300-Series 4 door Sedan 300 Touring RWD. $14,000. Call now to view: 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2010 Chrysler Town & Country 4 door Wagon Touring, $12,000. Call now to test drive: 505-920-4078 www.furrysbuickgmc.com
CLASSIC CARS
Fall in love with pets like Gandolf, Marvin and Oscar at the biggest adoption event of the season!
GET NOTICED! 1997 JEEP CJ-5, 4X4 runs good, rebuilt engine, V8, high rise and headers $3,800. Please call 505-660-1674
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DOMESTIC
National Adoption Weekend
2008 Hummer H2 SUT - REALLY! ONLY 38k miles, totally loaded with leather, NAV and chrome brush guard, clean CarFax, this one’s HOT $44,897. 505-216-3800. F150, 4X4, Ford pickup, 2004 XLT supercab, new tires, battery, pristine condition, 80k miles, $14,900. 505-470-2536
2006 CHEVROLET HHR. A RARE TREASURE. $8,488. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
4X4s
2004 TAURUS SES Flex Fuel. V-6, Auto, Loaded, Leather, Detailed, Serviced. Carfax. 106,375 miles. $4,800 Great condition! 505 927-7364
2005 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER. Asking $7,200 OBO. New Kenwood stereo, headrest TVs. 124,031 miles. Runs good. 4WD. Paul, 505-204-4704.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday 3561 Zafarano Drive, Santa Fe c Free pet food!
c
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CATS • DOGS • PUPPIES • KITTENS • BUNNIES y
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CLEANING
Dog Training Obedience, Problem Solving. 30 Years Experience. In Your Home Convenience. Guaranteed Results. 505-713-2113 CARETAKING EXPERIENCED CAREGIVER, in-home care, medication assistance, personal care, light housekeeping, shopping. Excellent References. 505-3105790. NEED CARETAKER to care for elderly lady. 6 days, nights a week. Call 505474-4776, 505-310-0325.
HANDYMAN
HOMECRAFT PAINTING
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile.. Greg, Nina, 920-0493.
So can you with a classified ad
Office & Home cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman. (Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows) Licensed, bonded, insured. References available, 505-795-9062. CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared!
CONSTRUCTION LCH CONSTRUCTION insured and bonded. Roof, Plaster, Drywall, Plumbing, Concrete, Electric... Full Service, Remodeling and construction. 505-930-0084
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
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MENDOZA’S & FLORES PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE
ROOFING
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.
Clean Houses
HOUSEKEEPER: GREEN & ME T IC ULOUS. English. Licensed and insured. Windows, move-in, move-out. Excellent references. Adriana, 505-5015856.
PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
A+ Cleaning
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CHIMNEY SWEEPING
LANDSCAPING
Homes, Office Apartments, post construction. House and Pet sitting. Senior care. References available, $18 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677. In and out. Windows, carpets. $18 an hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
directory«
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
BE READY, PLAN NOW * Irrigation: New installs, rennovations, brick, flagstone, planting, design. Take a look. We do it all. 505-3 1 0 - 0 0 4 5 . www.greencardlandscaping .com BRUSH, WEED & Trash Hauling! Call 505-316-2936.
HAULING OR YARD WORK
COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING
FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898
Full Landscaping Designs, Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 15% off! 505-9072600, 505-990-0955.
SELL YOUR PROPERTY! with a classified ad. Get Results!
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JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (inside, outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.
MAC’S OLD MILL RESTORATIONS. Specialize in all painting and decorating needs since 1984. Call James McFeely at 505-204-1022.
ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
PLASTERING
TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 473-4129
40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
ROOFING ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Gravel Driveway. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182. ALL TYPES of roofing and constuction with 15 years of experience. WE ARE THE BEST! Free Estimates. Josue Garcia, 505-490-1601.
YARD MAINTENANCE YARD MAINTENANCE
Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.
Berry Clean - 505-501-3395
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E-14
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
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E-15
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! PICKUP TRUCKS
»recreational«
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.
SPORTS CARS 2006 HONDA Element LX 4WD - recent local trade, freshly serviced, nice condition, clean CarFax, priced to go $9,471. Call 505-2163800.
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.
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.
2008 MINI Cooper Clubman. ANOTHER Lexus trade! low miles, clean CarFax, well-equipped, immaculate! $13,871.Call 505-2163800
ATVs 2009 POLARIS Sportman 500. Electric winch and receiver for snow plow, 743 miles. excellent condition. $4,500 firm. List price $5,300. 505-757-2323, 505-231-3823.
Sell Your Stuff!
2012 SRT-8 DODGE CHALLENGER. FASTEST CAR IN SANTA FE, SAVE THOUSANDS $36,999 SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-4731234.
Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
BOATS & MOTORS
986-3000 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.
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.
2008 SMART fortwo Cabriolet. Spring is here! Fun & practical, well-equipped, red interior, pristine condition, clean CarFax, $8,541. Call 505-216-3800.
WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD!
CAMPERS & RVs
We always get results!
2010 Honda Odyssey EX. $17,000. Call 505-473-288. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
1976 CHRYSLER Bowrider. 35 horsepower Johnson. Startes easy, runs great! Includes Trailer. $3,000. 505577-4692.
2011 FLAGSTAFF TENT CAMPER (POPUP). Excellent conditon. Crank-up lift system. Refrigerator, heater, sleeps 6. $3,400. 575-770-7300 (in Santa Fe).
986-3000 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.
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.
2012 Infiniti M37x AWD - Just traded! Gorgeous and loaded, good miles, navigation & technology packages, local one owner, clean CarFax $32,897. Call 505-216-3800.
1999 FOREST RIVER CAMPER. 21’, duel axles, self-contained. Excellent condition. $6,500 OBO. 505-660-4079
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.
ROCKWOOD CAMPER Pop-up Trailer Model-2302, 2004, very good condition. Fully loaded with many options $4,500. 575-758-4086, pilarnmpeteson@gmail.com
SUVs
2008 SILVERBACK CEDAR C R E E K . Model #30LSTS. 3 Slides, excellent condition, A/C, power awning, auto front jacks, non-smoker. Call Debbie or Paul 505-771-3623 in Bernalillo.
Sell your car in a hurry! Place an ad in the Classifieds 986-3000 2008 GMC Envoy 2WD 4 door SLE1 Call $11,000. 505-473-2886. www.furrysbuickgmc.com
2012 TOYOTA COROLLA. DON’T PAY MORE. LOW, LOW MILES. $13,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
1992 TOYOTA Land Cruiser FJ80. Excellent condition. 190k miles. No rust. NO lockers. Text for information and pictures. 505-660-4117 $7,000
Add a pic and sell it quick!
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.
2009 MERCEDES GL450 - AWD, perfectly maintained, fully loaded w/ navigation, DVDs, third row, clean CarFax in prisine condition, BELOW WHOLESALE @ $26,797. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 AUDI A3 TDI - DIESEL, 40+mpg, one owner, clean CarFax, this is your chance $22,341. Call 505-2163800.
1993 VOLVO GLT 850. FWD. Clean. $1500 cash. 505-490-3686, or 505-4709262.
2007 Lexus ES350 - fresh Lexus trade! good miles, heated & cooled leather seats, excellent condition, truly affordable & reliable luxury $15,981. Call 505-216-3800
2010 BMW 335Xi - Another Lexus trade! Low miles, AWD, completely loaded with Navigation, still under warranty! clean CarFax $26,717. Call 505-216-3800.
986-3000
2008 Mercedes ML350 - another Lexus trade! AWD, good miles, well-maintained, truly excellent condition, Luxury for less at $20,997. Call 505-216-3800.
2007 TOYOTA FJ CRUZIER. VERY CLEAN WELL KEPT VEHICLE. ONLY $16,999. SCHEDULE A TEST DRIVE TODAY! CALL 505-473-1234.
TRUCKS & TRAILERS
2004 VW CONVERTIBLE. Manual control. Excellent condition. Top like new. Recent tune-up. Tires excellent condition. $5,200 (below Blue Book). 505-466-3580
GOOSE NECK FLAT BED TRAILER FOR SALE. New tires, Beaver loading ramps, $3,500. Also 18’ FLAT BED TRAILER, $1,500. 505490-1809
QUICK. SAFE. EASY. CHEAP! Auto Classifieds 2 weeks in print and online for only
2010 BMW 535Xi AWD. Recent trade-in, factory CERTIFIED with warranty & maintenance until 3/2016, fully loaded, clean CarFax $21,927. 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.
2009 TOYOTA Matrix, Standard transmission. 75,000 miles, excellent condition. Asking $12,500, OBO. Call for questions, 505-982-2286.
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E-16
THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, May 4, 2014
TIME OUT
Robot marketing
T
Horoscope HHHHH Listen to news more carefully. You might note others’ reactions. A sudden insight could be clouding your vision at the moment. Go off to a ballgame or a movie. You will notice that you can gain yet another perspective. Tonight: Hang out with friends. This Week: Solutions reveal themselves Wednesday.
You’ll want to keep a lowprofile. You could opt for a lazy day at home and decide not to answer the phone. Watch movies, read the paper and return a call if you want. You won’t be able to imagine how much better you’ll feel by tomorrow. Tonight: Order in. This Week: You hit your power days Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Make a new purchase, but be sure to do some price comparison first. A friend could surprise you by joining you on an adventure. Take the time to enjoy this person. Stop for a meal together and catch up on news. Tonight: Discuss the pros and cons of your expenditure. This Week: Return calls. An interesting scenario unfolds.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH A close loved one might express his or her surprise at a turn of events. Make a point to follow the crowds and hook up with mutual friends. Whether you are watching or participating in a sport or activity, you’ll express a sense of enthusiasm. Tonight: Where the gang is. This Week: Be quiet until Thursday, when you have a receptive audience.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Others might be taken aback as you continue your jog down the path of surprises. You always have acted quickly, but not unpredictably. You keep life exciting. A family member will express his or her caring. Invite others over for a late brunch. Tonight: Close to home. This Week: No one can resist your enthusiasm. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You know that you have a situation more under control than you originally thought you did. Relish the unexpected comment from someone you look up to. This person certainly adds a lot of excitement to your life, even if you do complain! Tonight: A must appearance. This Week: Take a hard look at your budget, then act. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Don’t assume that you won’t run into anyone, even if you are just going into the office to clear out some excess paperwork. The unexpected could occur when someone suddenly decides to veer in a new direction. Be careful with your spending. Tonight: Out and about. This Week: Friends surround you and cheer you on.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, May 4, 2014: This year you often find someone challenging an idea or way of life. The discussions will be animated. As a result, you will open up. If you are single, you will have your share of adoring admirers. However, as a relationship evolves and you become more serious, you could find the person in question is too distant. If you are attached, the two of you have been on a seesaw of who is in control and who gets the final say. Toss the control games aside, and enjoy the positives that you share as a couple. CANCER could become highly reactive.
Last week’s answer
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You naturally might want to resist someone’s efforts to take control. Still, it might be easier to turn away and just let this person run the show. Go off for
Chess quiz
BLACK TO PLAY Hint: Vacate the f2-square Solution: 1. ... Nh1ch! 2. Rxh1 R(d2)f2! (threatens ... R(f8)f3 mate) [from Dietrich-Bauer ’67].
New York Times Sunday Crossword
a visit to a friend in a nearby city, or accept an invitation to an offbeat event. Tonight: Return a long-distance call. This Week: Others assume much more than they should. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Dec.21) HHHH A loved one could be pushing his or her agenda hard. You easily might decide to venture in a new direction, as you could dislike the possibilities of continuing as you have been. Check in with a loved one before firming up a decision. Tonight: Love the one you are with. This Week: Detach and gain a broader perspective, then act. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Realize that you are not particularly vested in plans, and defer to others. Friends will be delighted to see you, and they might extend new invitations. Resist being controlling with a difficult associate, as it is not the worth the frustration. Tonight: Go along for the ride. This Week: Others make the first move. Take your time responding. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH You’ll want to slow down, but you have a lot to do. Call a family member to see how he or she is doing. You might want to squeeze a late lunch into your plans. You have more energy than you realize. Tonight: Avoid a difficult person. This Week: Others are very popular. Don’t get jealous. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH When your imagination gets going, it will be difficult to stay grounded. You might decide to indulge a loved one. Someone might be more vested in getting together with you than you realize. Tonight: Ignore the fact that Monday is around the corner. This Week: Forget about all the socializing, and buckle down to do some work.
Scratch pad
he other day, my phone told me I had missed a call, but there was no voice mail. So I called the number back, only to be informed it was not a working number. This seemed strange, but not as strange as what happened the following day when I got a call from the same number and answered it. Perky Woman’s Voice: I have great news from DirectBuy. You are a finalist for a grand prize of a $50,000 home makeover! Me: Really? PWV: Yes! Congratulations! Me: OK, but how many finalists are there? I don’t want to look a gift horse in the mouth, but there’s a difGene ference between being in the Final Weingarten Four and being in the Round of 64, The Washington which includes obscure play-in schools Post like the Elmer S. Mednick College of Applied Dentistry. (Suspiciously long pause.) PWV: It is true you are a finalist. We also have free vacation getaways to Las Vegas and other top destinations. Me: Uh. Why the ... big ... pause? Are you a bear? Ha-ha. (Suspiciously long pause) PWV: I am with DirectBuy. Are you a DirectBuy driveby member? Me: OK, wait a minute. You are a robot, aren’t you? PWV: I am a real person. Me: This is an interesting ontological question. I am thinking you were once a real person when you recited the dictionary into a computer, ergo the “you” I am speaking to can truthfully affirm her realness at the time she uttered the words, but that I am actually speaking to a sophisticated sound-packet analysis and retrieval unit. Are you sure you are not a robot? (Lo-o-o-ong pause.) PWV: I am a real person, speaking to you remotely. Me: What the heck does that even mean? OK, which president freed the slaves? PWV: Sir, that is irrelevant. Me: Ooh, you are good! PWV: Thank you. Me: I’m thinking you are a robot who is programmed to make the initial approach in a voice that is comfortable and familiar to Americans, not one that arouses suspicions and even triggers latent, ugly xenophobia. Once you have qualified me by establishing that I am an adult with discretionary income, you will switch me to a current human who will speak in a perfectly intelligent and cordial way, but also with telltale melodic intonation, like that Malaysian transport minister who everyone now hates. AmIrightoramIright? PWV: Sir, that is irrelevant. Me: OK, here’s the deal. I promise I will buy six of anything and everything you are selling, but first you have to answer a question of mine, OK? PWV: I’ll be happy to help you if I can. Me: Complete this very simple phrase: “Who put the bomp in the bomp sh-bomp sh-bomp, who put the ram in the ... ” (Very, very, very long pause.) PWV: That’s irrelevant, sir. Me: I think my work here is done. (Click.)
THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN u SUNDAY, MAY 4, 2014
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