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EDUCATION
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THE NEW MEXICAN
Viewpoints on education
s — together Finding solution
expect In short time, we structive criticism. presence by including seem to and personalities to expand our Web and others. Santa Fe Politics, policies news these days. but the blogs from educators Joel Boyd session this year, se — dominate education Superintendent chool is back in blog out? Starting today schoolhou Public Schools d to contributing How to sort it all ds old-fashioned, one-room — The New has already committe are most blackboar Monday, Sept. 15 g a weekly is long gone. So material, for instance. Bruce Krasnow will Mexican is publishinplan local students taking We and the idea of Assistant City Editor education page. page. Contact and paper. But by national colum- oversee the content of this tests with pencil — some say too m or articles features, @sfnewmexican.coThe New by educators, they still take tests their teachers him at bkrasnow for nists, opinion pieces and even and As education reporter lar conmany. And they administrators ever986-3034. to parents, semi-regu adapt and a to to be listing of briefs and parents have , statutes and Mexican, I expect students, and a e the weekly “Smarteducation. Are changing mandates Contact tributor and coordinat events related to has figured out Child Left Behind of briefs and events. 986-3021. transitions as No or Board” column you a teacher who exciting and the Top and then ewmexican.com becomes Race to next year … me at rnott@sfn your page. how to make algebra and on it, but it’s still to learn? Tell us Common Core Our names are us. Maybe Robert Nott fun for students Contribute. Help doublean expert at writwell, who knows? d Read it. Respond. about it. Are you for a school around the Commentary all this convolute Increasingly, schools Mexico) we can figure out ing grant proposalscommentary g New a nation (includin speak together. schoolproject? Send us grades. The push there tell us those one-room out for as teacher and are receiving A-F a past, but Oh, has led to new piece on it. Can are a thing of the secend the various meafor accountability systems that rely heavhouses, they really whether you understanvaluation score and oneroomschoolhou hold teacher evaluation I urge you to visit a neat historical resource data. Some states sures in your teacher-e It is for you? Let us know. ily on student test who can not read to their everyter.weebly.com. s, eduhow that’s working of the days when ers this parents, supporter back third-grad featuring memoriesschooling — seemed so y level. Others fight to leaders. This is a page for more expected proficienc and yes, political thing — including it hurts the student ACT, ESS, cators, students — attention and feed us notion, arguing much simpler. you to pay s — AP, SAT, want conWe and Acronym into an stay behind. articles, ideas — turn the system with information, IDEA, BOE, PED misunderstanding. alphabet soup of
S
the Dais A system that’s failing students
educational syswho fail; it is the t is not children tem that fails children. to flail away at poor results Educators continue children. Excoes of public school have gained of large percentag colleges and teachers ing methodoloriating teachers Applying wide-rang leave many them no traction. materials obviously gies and teaching d. d, perhaps students uninspire uninspire For those the fault discouraged students,ce, not MY VIEW utterly intelligen their with not interest in learning, EDWARD lies with their lack of methM. JONES not with colleges or teachingtally with , but more fundamen a odologies or materials y from which they stem, philosoph g education. the underlyin permeates public ator and conphilosophy that as teacher, administr destructive the During 34 years it painful to observeTeachers teach, sultant, I found philosophy: nature of this apparenthave I been able to engage Never ts, parents students learn. ators, other consultan teachers, administr officials or teachers’ college and state education n to consider the possibility themselves professors in discussio g assumptions mayfailure of the that those underlyin what they see as ly individual be responsible for learning is a particularclearly not students. For me, of “teaching,” and matter, not the resultmatter irrelevant to the learner. experienced in the result of subject to the teaching I the My personal reaction to conclude that me, in later years, was: “Don’t tell public school led teachers to have given message I should you and expect that it should matto me what matters in terms of my willme evaluate ter to me. And don’t to your demands.” I have always ingness to capitulatefeel fortunate to have escaped with and that had loved learning, from the very institution me. that passion intact in the business of “educating” be to educaitself the declared fail to live up to A great many students ns, not because they lack years, they tional system’s expectatio Rather, during early interest in learning. “teaching” that does not respect of tune out because spark within every person that that opportunity to flourindividuality — valued and given so many stuneeds only to be their hands because it as possible. In fact, ish. Educators wring schools as soon grade, who dents leave public tune out in third drop out who students either is those same y turned off, and later become completel and self-doubt or leave. Some ement them in another in total discourag what matters to of their selfknow they can pursue so completely divested the for settle setting; some are they ence that joy esteem and self-confid find, rather than realizing the may scraps of life they own potential. of exploring their of ignorance, intransigence or Whether because appear unwilling to evaluate learn or to look arrogance, educators in about how children they Communities their assumptions of individuality within which coordinator forlunch together to Crumpler, site 10, have closely at the natureanswers to their ongoing inability Karen Deras, Martinez, 9; Elizabeth Aguilar, 9; and intractable. From left, Maria may find profound E NEW MEXICAN Mexico; Fernanda they to date find CLYDE MUELLER/TH problem School. the ry Schools New solve Elementa attenTuesday at Salazar three siblings, their In the case of the
I
ents A lifeline for stud
s of poverty, other to alleviate effect Nonprofit works By Robert Nott The New Mexican
at Salazar Elemenast year, a teacher that three stutary School noticed chronically missdents, siblings, were they did attend, when ing school. And wore smelled and often they sometimes clothes. The teacher the same, unwashed to Elizabeth Crumpler. reported the problem d the children were Crumpler discovere in a small apartment sharing a tiny bathroommembers. Crumpler family to with nine other ty organizations worked with communi housing and new expanded family She also find the for the children. school uniforms with older youth menup hooked the kids Big Sisters program daily tors in the Big Brothers of the children’s on who stayed on top them at school attendance by meeting in with them during Mondays and checking . the week. a teacher or a counselor ities in Crumpler is not or for Commun She is a site coordinat The nonprofit grassnumSchools New Mexico. part of a growing is ion in roots organizat ty groups stepping ber of outside communideal with issues like to help school districts
L
COMMUNITIES
issues at nine public
schools
Education matters
Who’s guarding student data?
Local filmmaker dies at age 84
The New Mexican presents a new weekly page devoted to coverage of issues and opinions related to the classroom. In today’s edition, learn more about a nonprofit’s work to alleviate the effects of student poverty. PAGE A-8
There are few controls as technology companies collect a vast amount of information. PAGE A-12
Theodore J. Flicker was perhaps best known for directing and writing The President’s Analyst. PAGE A-10
IN SCHOOLS
Residents: Carriers delivering more panic than mail
Arab City plans to revisit, redraw council districts nations
offer to join fight from air
I
t was the kind of day at Santa Fe’s upscale Zocalo condominiums that gives new meaning to the term “going postal.” A debit card landed in the wrong mailbox, misplaced by a postal carrier. The high school student who was expecting the card couldn’t process and pay for his online college applications. The same student, Martin Soto, also lost an allexpense-paid trip to New York UniMilan versity because Simonich the time-sensitive travel documents Ringside Seat mailed to him were delivered to the wrong address, said his mother, Meriam Jawhar. Even in a high-tech world, where email long ago displaced the art of writing letters, the U.S. Postal Service can still be a critical part of people’s daily lives. It’s easy to forget that as you pay the cable company or the Internal Revenue Service with a few key strokes from your computer. Numerous residents of the Zocalo condominiums say they would like to forget the Postal Service altogether. In their case, it’s delivering more panic than packages. “Several years ago, I had a $1,400 check that sat in someone’s mailbox for eight or nine months. Fortunately, I was still able to cash it,” resident Alma Cassel said in recounting delivery errors. Another member of her family waited three months for a passport, unaware that it had been delivered to the wrong box. The Zocalo complex has 191 units. More than half of them are second
Please see RINGSIDE, Page A-4
Today Afternoon thunderstorms. High 80, low 53.
U.S. seeks more support, commitment on ground By David E. Sanger, Michael R. Gordon and Eric Schmitt The New York Times
District 3 City Councilor Carmichael Dominguez stands Friday in the vicinity of Airport and South Meadows roads. Dominguez, whose district includes at least 49 percent more residents than any other district, is leading the city’s latest redistricting effort. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN
Citizens’ panel to help establish new boundaries after recent annexation By Daniel J. Chacón The New Mexican
hree years after redrawing election district boundaries, the city of Santa Fe is once again taking on the politically thorny issue of redistricting. The addition of about 13,250 new residents in January as part of an annexation on the southern and western sides of the city is driving the effort. The City Council on Wednesday approved a resolution that calls for redistricting Santa Fe’s four council districts before the next municipal election in March 2016. The goal is to complete the redistricting by June 2015 before council candidates take out papers to run for office. The resolution also calls for establishing a citizens’ redistricting commission, a requirement under a charter change approved by voters during the last municipal election in March.
T
During Wednesday’s council meeting, City Councilor Patti Bushee emphasized the importance of creating an independent commission, saying “pure politics” was at play when the city redrew district boundaries in 2011. “I want complete assurances that we’re going to come up with a process that follows our new charter, that requests and requires that we [the mayor and city councilors] are completely independent from this commission,” she said. “I can just tell you that may have been one of my least favorite experiences ever serving on this council, the way we went about redistricting the last time,” Bushee added.
In the 2011 redistricting, former City Councilor Miguel Chavez was moved out of District 3, which he had represented for more than a
Please see REDRAW, Page A-5
Please see FIGHT, Page A-4
1 2
Dolores Griego, 63, Santa Fe, Sept. 11 John M. Noedel, Sept. 4 PAGE A-10
The New York Times
3
Current Santa Fe City Council districts
wrote the report. “It presents a very significant set of challenges for the policymakers.” Stagnant pay for most people has compounded the pressure on states to preserve funding for education, highways and social programs such as Medicaid. Their investments in education and infrastructure have also fueled economic growth. Yet they’re at risk without a strong flow of tax revenue. The prospect of having to raise taxes to balance a state budget is a politically delicate one. The allure of low taxes has been used by
LONDON — Following an emergency meeting Sunday with Britain’s top security and military officials to form a response to the beheading of a British aid worker by the Islamic State, Prime Minister David Cameron laid out a plan to support U.S. military action in those two countries but made no commitment to a more vigorous military role. “This is not about British combat troops on the ground,” Cameron said. “It is about working with others to extinguish this terrorist threat.” He said British Tornadoes and surveillance aircraft had been helping with logistics and intelligence-gathering in the region. Britain and the United States are among the only nations in the world that have held to a hard-line, noconcessions policy when dealing with kidnappings by terrorist groups. The execution of the aid worker, David Cawthorne Haines, was announced by the Islamic State in a video released Saturday night. It was a clear message to Britain, a vital ally of the United States as it builds an international coalition to target the Islamic State. The militant group has made
Pasapick www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Please see WEALTH, Page A-5
Please see RESPONSE, Page A-4
All-ages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road, dance $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955. More events in Calendar, A-2 and Fridays in Pasatiempo
Calendar A-2
By Josh Boak The Associated Press
Swing dance
Index
Widening wealth gap in U.S. puts squeeze on some states S&P report says rising income disparity brings fiscal policy challenges
Classifieds B-6
WASHINGTON — Income inequality is taking a toll on state governments. The widening gap between the wealthiest Americans and everyone else has been matched by a slowdown in state tax revenue, according to a report being released Monday by Standard & Poor’s.
Comics B-12
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Even as income for the affluent has accelerated, it’s barely kept pace with inflation for most other people. That trend can mean a doublewhammy for states: The wealthy often manage to shield much of their income from taxes. And they tend to spend less of it than others do, thereby limiting sales tax revenue. As the growth of tax revenue has slowed, states have faced tensions over whether to raise taxes or cut spending to balance their budgets as required by law. “Rising income inequality is not just a social issue,” said Gabriel Petek, the S&P credit analyst who
Education A-8
Life & Science A-9
Cameron announces response to beheading By Jenny Anderson and Rukmini Callimachi
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PAGE A-12
Obituaries
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Sunday that “several” Arab nations had offered to join in airstrikes against the Islamic State, but any sustained military campaign does not appear imminent, and likely will require an even more significant commitment from other nations and fighting forces in the region. In interviews and public statements, administration and military officials described a battle plan that would not accelerate in earnest until disparate groups of Iraqi forces, Kurds and Syrian rebels stepped up to provide the fighting forces on the ground. Equipping, training and coordinating that effort is a lengthy process, officials cautioned. U.S. officials have made it clear they do not want the airstrikes to get ahead of the ground action against the Islamic State, which they said would take time to mass.
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Two sections, 24 pages 165th year, No. 258 Publication No. 596-440
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
NATION&WORLD E-books welcome e-poems
By Wilson Ring The Associated Press
Stanza breaks, formatting issues fixed on e-readers By Alexandra Alter The New York Times
When John Ashbery, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, first learned that the digital editions of his poetry looked nothing like the print version, he was stunned. There were no line breaks, and the stanzas had been jammed together into a block of text that looked like prose. The careful architecture of his poems had been leveled. He complained to his publisher, Ecco, and those four e-books were immediately withdrawn. That was three years ago, and digital publishing has evolved a lot since then. Publishers can now create e-books that better preserve a poet’s meticulous formatting. So when Open Road Media, a digital publishing company, approached Ashbery about creating electronic versions of his books, he decided to give it another chance. Last week, Open Road published 17 digital collections of Ashbery’s work, the first time the bulk of his poetry will be available in e-book form. This time, he hasn’t asked for a recall. “It’s very faithful to the original formatting,” said Ashbery, 87. More than a decade into the e-book revolution, poetry publishers are scrambling to carve out a place in the digital market. In 2013, publishers released about 2,050 poetry e-books, up from about 200 in 2007, the year the first Kindle came out, according to Bowker, which tracks releases. Last year, e-books accounted for roughly 20 percent of the nearly 10,000 poetry books published, compared with around 10 percent in 2012. Of all the literary genres, poetry has proved the most resistant to digital technology, not for stodgy cultural reasons but for tricky mechanical ones. Most e-readers mangle the line breaks and stanzas that are so crucial to the appearance and rhythm of poetry. As a result, many publishers have held back on digitizing poetry, and works by some major poets still are not available as e-books, including Ezra Pound’s The Cantos and poems by Jorie Graham, Tracy K. Smith, Elizabeth Bishop and Czeslaw Milosz. “The line is the unit in which poetry is communicated, and the technology of most e-books is unfriendly to that unit,” said Jeff Shotts, executive editor of Graywolf Press.
MISS NEW YORK CHOSEN AS MISS AMERICA 2015 Miss America 2014 Nina Davuluri crowns Miss New York Kira Kazantsev as Miss America 2015 during the Miss America pageant Sunday in Atlantic City, N.J. This is the third year in a row that a contestant from New York has walked away with the crown. For her talent performance, Kazantsev sang Pharrell Williams’ ‘Happy’ while sitting cross-legged on the stage and banging a red plastic cup on the floor. She named combating sexual assault in the military as the issue about which she would want female U.S. senators to press their male counterparts. The first runner-up was Miss Virginia Courtney Paige Garrett. MEL EVANS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
In brief
Dutch stage tomato fight against Russian sanctions
Queen to Scots: Think carefully about future
AMSTERDAM — Hundreds of young Dutch men and women turned Amsterdam’s central Dam square into a blizzard of red goop on Sunday, as they pelted each other mercilessly with overripe tomatoes. In theory, the event was set up as a protest against Russian sanctions blocking imports of European fresh produce. In practice, most participants turned out to experience the joy of smacking a loved one — or total stranger — with tomato pulp at close range. The idea was lifted from Spain’s famed annual “La Tomatina” festival in Bunol. “It was hard in there. It was mean. But it was fun,” said a beaming Lois Bloedjes, who came with her sister Sil. “Everything became one big pile of mush. There were people swimming in it on the ground.”
LONDON — Queen Elizabeth II has made her first comments about this week’s Scottish independence vote, urging Scots to “think very carefully about the future.” But the popular British monarch didn’t indicate a preference on how Scots should vote, carefully maintaining the neutrality that is her constitutional obligation. Still, some may interpret her comments as a suggestion that Scots looking to embrace independence should be cautious about severing Scotland’s long ties to the United Kingdom, which date back more than 300 years. Buckingham Palace recently issued a statement indicating her plans to remain neutral before Thursday’s vote.
Officials beg pastor, strip club owner to end feud COSHOCTON, Ohio — Officials are pleading for a pastor and an Ohio strip club owner to stop weekly protesting of each other’s establishments over a yearslong feud. The Coshocton Tribune reports the letter to New Beginnings Ministries Pastor Bill Dunfee and strip club owner Thomas George was signed by the city law director, the county prosecutor and the sheriff. Dunfee and men from the Warsaw church have protested outside the Foxhole North strip club in New Castle. The business has responded with Sunday morning protests outside the church, including a recent one by topless dancers. The letter says the feud is straining local law enforcement and hurting the community but acknowledges they can’t legally be stopped. Each man has made allegations against the other, but authorities haven’t prosecuted those cases.
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The lawyer for a Massachusetts woman arrested after the bodies of three infants were found in her home says he’s optimistic that forensic testing will show the babies weren’t born alive, and therefore weren’t harmed or killed by his client. Thirty-one-year-old Erika Murray was charged Friday with fetal death concealment and other counts after authorities found their bodies in her squalid, vermin-infested Blackstone home. A medical examiner is determining whether the remains were newborns or fetuses. State officials took custody of Murray’s four children, ages 6 months to 13 years. Attorney Keith Halpern said Sunday Murray was scared of giving birth because her longtime boyfriend didn’t want more children. Halpern says he expects DNA testing to show Murray and her boyfriend were the parents of the three dead infants.
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BURLINGTON, Vt. — Vermont’s largest city has a new success to add to its list of socially conscious achievements: 100 percent of its electricity now comes from renewable sources such as wind, water and biomass. With little fanfare, the Burlington Electric Department crossed the threshold this month with the purchase of the 7.4-megawatt Winooski 1 hydroelectric project on the Winooski River at the city’s edge. When it did, Burlington joined the Washington Electric Co-operative, which has about 11,000 customers across central and northern Vermont, which reached 100 percent earlier this year. “It shows that we’re able to do it, and we’re able to do it cost effectively in a way that makes Vermonters really positioned well for the future,” said Christopher Recchia, the commissioner of the Vermont Department of Public Service. It’s part of a broader movement that includes a statewide goal of getting 90 percent of Vermont’s energy from renewable resources by 2050, including electricity, heating and transportation. Across the state, Vermonters are urging their electric utilities to provide them with renewable sources of power, and the utilities are listening, Recchia said. It’s also a growing movement across the country, as governments and businesses seek to liberate themselves from using power produced by environmentally harmful fossil fuels. Diane Moss, the founding director of the Southern California-based Renewables 100 Policy Institute, said that she wasn’t sure if any other communities as large as Burlington — a city of 42,000 — have reached 100 percent, but that many are working on it. “It’s these front-runners that are showing that it’s possible,” Moss said. Nearly 1,000 businesses both large and small and many communities have also committed to 100 percent, she said. Greensburg, Kansas, almost wiped out by a 2007 tornado, rebuilt with energy efficiency in mind. A 12.5-megawatt wind farm went online in 2009, producing electricity in excess of that consumed by the community of 850, said Administrator Ed Truelove. “We’re trying to be as sustainable a community as we can be,” Truelove said. For both Burlington and Washington Electric, reaching 100 percent was the result of a yearslong strategy to wean themselves from traditional sources of power in favor of renewables. Utility officials in the lakefront city known for its liberal politics and extensive social service network first began discussing becoming 100 percent renewable a decade ago. Four years later they realized it could be done. “The transition in thought from 2004 to 2008 was ‘We want to do this’ to ‘This actually makes economic sense for us to do this,’ ” said Ken Nolan, the manager of power resources for Burlington Electric. Neither utility claims that each of their customers’ lights comes from renewable sources all the time. When the wind isn’t blowing and the rivers are low, they will buy power from traditional sources that include electricity generated from fossil fuels. When the resources are right, though, they get more than they can use, and the difference is sold to other utilities. Over time, they sell more than they buy. Another caveat that, to some, minimizes the 100 percent achievement is that both Burlington and Washington Electric sell renewable energy credits for the renewable power they produce to utilities in southern New England where their value is highest. In turn, they buy less expensive credits from other sources to offset the credits they have sold. Taylor Ricketts, the director of the Gund Institute for Ecological Economics, an interdisciplinary research center that works on sustainability issues at the University of Vermont, a Burlington Electric customer, said reaching 100 percent was a big achievement. “It definitely makes me feel better here at UVM to know that every time I turn on a light switch or fire up my computer or anything else, to know that it’s 100 percent renewable,” he said.
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In Vermont, a milestone for green energy
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Monday, Sept. 15, 2014 SWING DANCE: Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road. Weekly all-ages informal swing dance, lessons 7-8 p.m., dance 8-10 p.m., dance $3, lesson and dance $8, 473-0955. STATE FAIR AT EXPO NEW MEXICO: The fair opens at 10 a.m. Tickets are $10 for adults; $7 for seniors 65 and older and children ages 6-11; children 5 and under are admitted free. Visit exponm. com/state-fair. Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2014 NATIONAL THEATRE IN HD: ‘A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE’: at the Lensic Performing Arts Center. The broadcast series continues; 7 p.m., $22, ticketssantafe.org, 988-1234. JULIE POWELL: O’Shaughnessy Performance Space, Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. The author reads from Julie & Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen and Cleaving, 7 p.m.; a Q&A and signing follow. MIRIAM SAGAN: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. The poet reads from Swimming to Reykjavik, with a slide presentation by Isabel Winson-Sagan,
Corrections 6 p.m. YOUR CREATIVE PASSION & THE IRS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE HOBBY LOSS RULE: 501 Halona St., 988-9715. A Santa Fe Community Foundation presentation for artists, donors, and professional advisers, 5:30 p.m., no charge. CONTOUR LINE DRAWING AND OTHER SKETCHING TECHNIQUES: Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Education Annex, 123 Grant Ave., 946-1000. A workshop led by Robert Carr, 6-8 p.m., $8, to register call 946-1039 or visit okeeffemuseum.org. CRAFTS FOR KIDS: Children ages 5 to 12 are invited to make cool crafts at the La Farge Branch Library, 1730 Llano St., or the Southside Branch Library, 6599 Jaguar Drive, from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Call 955-4860. STATE FAIR AT EXPO NEW MEXICO: The fair opens at 10 a.m. Tickets are $10 for adults; $7 for seniors 65 and older and children ages 6-11; children 5 and under are admitted free. Visit exponm.com/ state-fair for more information. Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014 FILMMAKER AS ENTREPRENEUR: New Mexico Lawyers for the Arts, 460 St. Michael’s Drive, Suite 703. A panel discussion held in collaboration
with New Mexico Film Foundation, no charge, nmlawyersforthearts.org. GIVE MY REGARDS TO BROADWAY: GRAND OPERA EMBRACES GREAT MUSICALS: Eldorado Hotel and Spa, 309 W. San Francisco St. A discussion with Santa Fe Opera Guild lecturer Tom Franks and pianist David Geist, 5:30 p.m., $10, 629-1410, ext. 109. LANNAN FOUNDATION: IN PURSUIT OF CULTURAL FREEDOM: The Lensic. The series continues with Alfredo Corchado, Dallas Morning News Mexico bureau chief, discussing immigration, drug violence and U.S./Mexico foreign policy, 7 p.m., followed by a talk with Melissa del Bosque, $6, discounts available, 988-1234, ticketssantafe.org. Thursday, Sept. 18, 2014 SANTA FE COMMUNITY COLLEGE: Visual Arts Gallery, 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1501. “Precognition/Recognition: Examining the Reciprocal Gaze in Godfrey Reggio’s film Visitors,” still photographs, reception 5-7 p.m., through Oct. 8; screening of the film follows at 8 p.m., no charge. GLORIA ABELLA BALLEN: Collected Works Bookstore, 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226. The author discusses The Power of the Hebrew Alphabet, 6 p.m.
The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 986-3035.
WHENCE LANGUAGE? THE ROLE OF MOTHERS AND INFANTS: New Mexico History Museum Auditorium, 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5200. A lecture presented by the School for Advanced Research, with evolutionary anthropologist Dean Falk, 6:30 p.m., $10, sarweb. org.
NIGHTLIFE Monday, Sept. 8, 2014 COWGIRL BBQ: Karaoke with Michele Leidig, 9 p.m., no cover. 19 S. Guadalupe St. EL FAROL: Mondays with Hilary Smith and Company, 8 p.m., call for cover. 808 Canyon Road. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, 6:30 p.m., call for cover. 434 W. San Francisco St., 982-9966. For more events, see Pasatiempo in Friday’s edition, or view the community calendar on our website, www.santafenewmexican.com. To submit an events listing, send an email to service@sfnewmexican.com.
WORLD
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
A-3
Fighting in eastern Ukraine city kills at least 6 Violence among most serious since cease-fire pact By Carlotta Gall The New York Times
DONETSK, Ukraine — Heavy fighting broke out Sunday between Ukrainian and rebel forces on the north side of Donetsk, killing at least six people in one of the most serious clashes since the 10-day-old cease-fire came into force. The airport, where Ukrainian troops are almost surrounded, was on fire, billowing black smoke, and a house and a city market burned just off the main boulevard inside the city. “It’s not a cease-fire, it’s fullon fighting,” a rebel fighter said. Tanks were out on the streets
mid-afternoon, and pro-Russian rebel fighters raced reinforcements along the main boulevard in civilian cars toward their positions on the approaches to the airport. In a residential area just off the main boulevard, hospital workers collected bodies from the sidewalks and homes hit hours earlier. They took at least six, most of them elderly people who appeared to have been walking home from the market, and a rebel policeman who had been trying to guide people to cover when he was hit. Artillery fire resounded for hours through Saturday night and much of the day Sunday as Ukrainian forces at the airport and areas northwest of the city traded fire with the separatist forces that control the city and most of the surrounding territory.
It was unclear who instigated the fighting or why, but the sound of rifle fire at the airport mid-afternoon indicated the two sides were engaged in close combat. The two sides have shelled each other almost daily since the cease-fire agreement was signed Sept. 5, each blaming the other for violations, but generally the intense, large-scale battles of recent months have ceased. Sunday’s action was, however, a marked escalation, suggesting that one side or the other was on the attack. Rebel fighters who brought one of their wounded to the city hospital said fighting was underway in the contested village of Pesky, on the outskirts of the city, where both sides have a foothold, they said. Ukrainian troops had been strengthening their positions in the village in recent days and were firing on
rebel positions, they said. Tanks and multiple rocket launchers also repeatedly sounded from rebel bases inside the city. Representatives of the Ukrainian military could not immediately be reached for comment. Agence France-Presse quoted one official as blaming the fighting on the rebels, who he said had launched a broad offensive at the airport. The shelling inside the city at midday shocked residents, most of whom have been venturing out shopping and fetching necessities since the cease-fire came into effect. An elderly woman in white plastic sandals lay dead on the sidewalk covered by a military blanket, her arms outstretched and her walking stick beside her. Another woman was killed on a path leading toward the nearby school, which took a
N. Korea sentences U.S. man for ‘hostile acts’ looking pale and wearing a black turtleneck despite it being summer, in a courtroom By Anna Fifield decorated The Washington Post with a North Korean flag. TOKYO — North Korea has Matthew Although the Miller sentenced Matthew Miller to setup resemsix years of hard labor for combled a courtmitting “hostile acts,” after the American reportedly ripped up room in democratic countries, very little is known about North his tourist visa upon arrival at the Pyongyang airport in April. Korea’s justice system, except During a show trial that lasted that it is neither independent nor transparent. 90 minutes, the Supreme Court North Korea has three Amerifound that Miller — who had no legal representation — had com- cans in custody: Miller; Jeffrey mitted “acts hostile to the DPRK Fowle, a 56-year-old from Ohio who was arrested in May after while entering … under the leaving a Bible in a seamen’s guise of a tourist,” the state-run club and who is awaiting trial; Korean Central News Agency and Kenneth Bae, a Koreanreported, using the official American missionary who is abbreviation for North Korea. Analysts say that Pyongyang is two years into a 15-year hardlabor sentence for “hostile acts using Miller and two other men as bargaining chips in its dispute to bring down the government.” In North Korea, where the with Washington over its nuclear only religion is devotion to the program — but that the United ruling Kim family, proselytizing States is preoccupied with the is considered treasonous and turmoil in the Middle East, carries heavy penalties, and ethwhere Islamic State extremists are not just capturing Westerners nic Koreans face harsher treatment than Caucasian or other but also beheading them. KCNA photos showed Miller, Americans.
American reportedly ‘prepared to violate the law’ of country
Miller and Fowle are being held separately in hotel rooms in Pyongyang — they apparently have not seen each other — while North Korea has created what amounts to a oneman prison camp for Bae, who is working eight hours a day, six days a week in the fields. But Kim Jong Un’s regime apparently wants to cut a deal with the United States. Other Americans detained in North Korea have been released after visits by former U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. Pyongyang used the diplomats’ arrivals for internal propaganda. The State Department has offered to send Robert King, its point man on North Korean human rights, to Pyongyang, but nothing has come of it. The regime apparently wants someone with a higher profile. Even for North Korea, the Miller case is unusual. Initial reports said that when he arrived April 10 in Pyongyang, he tore up his tourist visa and shouted that he wanted asylum. “He came to the DPRK after choosing it as a shelter,” the KCNA reported. In an interview with CNN this month, during which Miller
was monitored by North Korean officials, he said he “prepared to violate the law of DPRK before coming here, and I deliberately committed my crime.” During Sunday’s trial, Miller said he tore up his tourist visa at the Pyongyang airport because he had the “wild ambition” of experiencing prison life in North Korea so he could write about human rights in the country, reported the Associated Press. The asylum stunt was just a trick by Miller to get himself into a jail, the prosecution said. It also said that he falsely claimed to have secret information about the U.S. military in South Korea on his iPad and iPod, the AP reported.
By Isabel Kershner The New York Times
JERUSALEM — The Israeli military on Sunday threatened disciplinary action against a group of veterans and active reservists of a secretive military intelligence unit who declared that they would no longer participate in surveillance activities against the Palestinians. But dozens of other veterans and reservists came out in defense of their unit, outraged by their colleagues’ public act of refusal. The protest and counterprotest exposed some of the complexities of life in Israel, where most 18-year-olds are conscripted for up to three years of compulsory service, and the episode set off an impassioned debate that had far more to do with army service and the refusal to serve than with the concerns raised by the wouldbe whistle-blowers about the treatment of the Palestinians under occupation. Officials and politicians from the right and the left harshly criticized the 43 veterans of the elite Unit 8200 who lodged their protest in a letter sent Thursday night to their commanders as well as to Israel’s prime minister and army chief. The letter was made public Friday. In it, they wrote that they refused to continue to be “tools” of Israel’s military rule in the occupied territories, that the surveillance work they had been required to perform made “no distinction between Palestinians who are and are not involved in violence” and that information collected “harms innocent people” and “is used for political persecution.” Brig. Gen. Moti Almoz, the chief military spokesman, said in a statement that the Israeli army constituted “one common camp — perhaps the widest in all of Israeli society — and
we think sevenfold before we express political positions in forums not meant for such expression.” Accusing the protesters of exploiting their army service for political ends, Almoz said that the army’s top brass viewed the act with the “utmost severity” and that disciplinary measures would be “sharp and clear,” without elaborating about whether they would face criminal prosecution. He added that only 10 of the 43 who signed the protest letter
were actively involved in intelligence gathering. Some commentators said that despite the contentiousness of the idea of soldiers’ refusing orders, the substantive points raised by the protesters should be examined. But many of them noted the danger of selective refusal, pointing to the right-wing supporters of Israeli settlements in the occupied territories who serve in the army and might one day be required to dismantle West Bank settlements, as they did in 2005 in Gaza.
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direct hit. A third died in her yard, her front gate ripped off its hinges by the shell blast. The hospital workers were driving a battered gray van to collect the bodies. They wrapped them in plastic and carried them on a canvas stretcher to the van, sweating from the strain. At each stop the van would barely start, and at one stop residents helped push the vehicle to get it going. Ambulance workers arrived to tend to a pensioner who had been stuck by shrapnel at the entrance to his apartment block. People had dragged him inside the entrance, but he had bled to death in the three hours it took for the ambulance to arrive, they said. His brother arrived at the same time as the ambulance and crumpled against the door weeping. “We don’t know what war
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
Fight: U.S. not planning ‘shock and awe’ Continued from Page A-1
Zocalo resident Meriam Jawhar checks her mail Thursday. She and numerous neighbors say they have experienced mail delivery problems for years. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN
Ringside: Gaps in staffing hurt delivery Continued from Page A-1 homes or investment properties, meaning lots of residents live in other cities for part of the year. That circumstance makes a mail carrier’s accuracy all the more important. Bills, college applications and immigration papers that a carrier deposits in the wrong box can go undetected for months. Yvette Tapp said a check for just under $1,000 was issued to her in May 2013, but it never reached her mailbox. She recently received notice that the money would be turned over to the state government as unclaimed property. As for Jawhar, her problems with mail delivery are especially burdensome. She has a brain injury and worries about her memory failing. She says it’s hard enough to keep track of her schedule and bills without the added worry of lost mail, a regular occurrence for eight years. Her anxiety has worsened in the last several weeks because of a series of botched deliveries, as when a mail carrier placed the renewal policy for her car insurance in the wrong box. Jawhar said her coverage was canceled because she didn’t pay the bill, never having received it. The insurance company later reinstated her policy, but her rates spiked by about $200 every six months because of the missed payment. “It’s imposition after imposition,” she said. Jawhar, an advocate for disabled people, also works as a personal assistant. Under the company’s payroll system, her checks were sent to her home, but the last one didn’t arrive in the mail. Her distrust of the Postal Service has reached the point where she had her latest check routed to another address. Picking it up will be an inconvenience, but at least she will know where her check is, she said. Jawhar has spent the summer documenting the high error rate in postal deliveries. She says at least 24 pieces of her mail were misplaced by carriers. Her son’s debit card, plus Jawhar’s bills for auto insurance and health insurance, did not reach her home until Aug. 13, more than a month after they were postmarked. How did mail delivery get this bad? Mike Flores, operations manager of Postal Service in this region, said in an interview that he knew Jawhar had been frustrated by delivery problems. But, he said, he did not realize the trouble extended beyond her. Jawhar says otherwise. Flores, various postmasters, the Office of the Inspector General and even members of Congress from New Mexico have been made aware of the problem and how widespread it is, she said.
When it comes to mail delivery, the condo residents agree with Flores on one point only. He says the Postal Service has a first-rate carrier working the complex. His name is Buzz Nichols, and residents think highly of him. One called him a problem solver, skilled in fixing messes left by other carriers. Jawhar agreed. “Buzz Nichols knows 90 percent of the people on his route personally, and that’s out of 940 addresses,” she said. But when he’s off or sick, mail is routinely misfiled, Zocalo residents say. Flores acknowledges delivery failings because of reliance on backup carriers, not just at the complex, but everywhere. The problem, he said, is that the Postal Service has to hire non-career carriers to help fill gaps in staffing. Mail is delivered six days a week, but most carriers don’t work every day, he said. Carriers hired to help cover shifts make $13 to $15 an hour, but they’re not going to take the job if it’s only one or two days a week, Flores said. So the inexperienced carriers may help cover four or five different routes in a week. This may slow employee turnover because they get more hours and more pay. But the public gets lessreliable carriers. The fallout is obvious at Zocalo. People expecting important documents in the mail are less likely to receive them on time. Flores wants carriers who are letter perfect. He says he gains nothing but headaches and angry customers when mistakes are made. He has promised more careful attention to deliveries at the Zocalo complex. Most of us know the Postal Service is less relevant than it used to be. Worse, it’s not profitable. It lost $2 billion from April to June and another $1.9 billion from January to March. Carriers as able as Buzz Nichols will be harder to find — and probably impossible to retain — in this downward spiral. Given its abundance of errors at Zocalo and other places, the Postal Service might reconsider the motto it had set in stone: “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.” Swift coverage is certainly possible. After all, coyotes could be trained as watchdogs. But Jawhar and her neighbors say speed doesn’t count for much when mail ends up in the wrong box, important documents never arrive and the bills aren’t paid. Ringside Seat is a column about New Mexico’s people, politics and news. Follow the Ringside Seat blog at www. santafenewmexican.com. Contact Milan Simonich at 986-3080 or msimonich@ sfnewmexican.com.
Jawhar on Thursday holds up a special notice that was mistakenly placed in her mailbox.
“This isn’t going to be ‘shock and awe’ with hundreds of airstrikes,” one official said, referring to the initial attack on Baghdad at the opening of the Iraq War in March 2003. “We don’t want this to look like an American war.” Iraqi and Kurdish officials are pressing their view of what the next step should be, even as the United States already has carried out more than 150 airstrikes since President Barack Obama announced the campaign to destroy the Islamic State on Sept. 10. Specifically, senior Iraqi and Kurdish officials asked the United States as recently as this weekend to take action along the Iraqi-Syrian border to deprive the Islamic State of the safe havens it enjoys in that area. “The Iraqis have asked for assistance in the border regions, and that’s something we’re looking at,” one State Department official said. The description of a calibrated military buildup by coalition forces, combined with a steady effort led by the U.S. Treasury Department to choke off the Islamic State’s ability to reap $1 million or more a day from oil sales, has emerged as the administration has tried to define what Obama meant when he said the U.S. goal is to “degrade and ultimately destroy” the Sunni extremist group. The president’s chief of staff, Denis McDonough, provided the most current definition of White House thinking Sunday during an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press. Using an abbreviation for another translation of the Islamic State, he said that “success looks like an ISIL that no longer threatens our friends in the region, no longer threatens the United States, an ISIL that can’t accumulate followers or threaten Muslims in Syria, Iraq or otherwise.” That definition falls short of the classic understanding of what it means to destroy an opposing force. But the administration is betting that it has tailored the goals to appeal to the oftentimes reluctant partners it is trying to assemble, many of whom are deeply suspicious of each other. Secretary of State John Kerry, speaking from Paris, declined to say which states had offered to contribute air power, an announcement White House officials said could await his return to testify in Congress early this week. State Department officials, who asked not to be identified under the agency’s
protocol for briefing reporters, said there are other ways Arab nations could participate in an air campaign against the Islamic State without dropping bombs, such as flying arms to Iraqi or Kurdish forces, conducting reconnaissance flights or providing logistical support and refueling. “I don’t want to leave you with the impression that these Arab members haven’t offered to do airstrikes because several of them have,” said one State Department official. “The Iraqis would have to be a major participant in that decision,” the official added. “It has to be well structured and organized.” The United Arab Emirates, which provided some air power in the 2011 attacks on Libya, seemed at the top of the list, with Qatar hosting a U.S. military headquarters. U.S. officials cautioned that all strikes would have to be approved by the newly assembled government in Iraq, as well as by U.S. military planners. That could prove just one challenge to the offer by Arab nations to participate in airstrikes: While Iraq’s struggling military forces have experience operating with the United States, its Shiite-dominated government has never worked with the Sunni states of the Gulf. The United States has identified Islamic State targets in Iraq during the past several weeks. But officials said they were waiting, in part, to match the allied commitments with actual contributions: warplanes, support aircraft that can refuel or provide intelligence, more basing agreements to carry out strikes, and the insertion of trainers from other Western countries. Tellingly, there are no plans, as of now, to increase the number of U.S. attack planes in the region. The aircraft carrier Carl Vinson is scheduled to relieve the carrier George H.W. Bush in the Persian Gulf sometime next month; if the Pentagon changes its plans and keeps two carriers in the Gulf, it could double carrierbased firepower over Iraq and Syria. But for now, there is no plan to do so, officials said. Nor are there any plans to increase American ground-based strike aircraft at facilities around the region, in hopes that Persian Gulf and European allies would make up the difference. Another striking feature of the U.S. plan, officials say, is the deliberate exclusion of coordination with two other players with an interest — and some ability — to take on the Islamic State: The government of
Iran, and the forces of President Bashar Assad, who Obama declared three years ago was a brutal dictator who had to leave office. Kerry has ruled out cooperative efforts with Iranians, who a senior administration official said last week are “looking for whatever leverage they can get” in the conflict in hopes of using it to lift pressure on their nuclear program. Iranian backed militias were on the ground in the Iraqi town, Amerli, recently, and provided the muscle that Iraqi forces could not in ending a siege by the Islamic State. While the administration insisted it would not be working alongside Assad’s forces, they were clearly working toward the same goal — leading to fears that the United States could essentially become Assad’s air force, at least temporarily, if it begins attacking Islamic State emplacements inside Syria. As described by U.S. officials, the battle strategy called for assembling a force in Iraq first, where the Iraqi army would be guided by 12-man teams of American “advisers” that were expected to begin operating within days, and new arms and other assistance for the Kurdish forces. Only later would the effort expand to Syria, and the administration is pressing for a Congressional vote this week on a $500 million arms package for “moderate” members of the Syrian opposition, now aimed at the Islamic State rather than the Assad government. Officials acknowledged that the socalled moderate rebel forces were fractured, and far weaker than the Islamic State. Even so, administration officials struggled to explain whether the United States was at war with the Islamic State, as both the White House and Pentagon spokesman said it was last week, or whether it was engaged in a more traditional counterterrorism action. That was how Kerry characterized the strategy in an effort to make it easier for Sunni states to explain to their own populations why they would be contributing forces against Sunni extremists. “Originally this is not a war,” Kerry said on CBS’ Face the Nation, trying to separate it from the action in 2003 that he had opposed as a senator. “This is not combat troops on the ground. It’s not hundreds of thousands of people.” He went on to compare it to “war with alQaida and its affiliates,” and said that “in the same context” the United States was “at war with ISIL.” The Islamic State has become a selfsustaining financial juggernaut, earning more than $3 million a day from oil smuggling, human trafficking, theft and extortion, according to U.S. intelligence officials and private experts. The group, which has taken over large sections of Syria and Iraq, controls as many as 11 oil fields in both countries, analysts say.
Response: Hails Haines as British hero Continued from Page A-1 major advances across Syria and northern Iraq in recent months. In addition to supporting the U.S., Cameron said Sunday, Britain would support the Iraqi government and continue to aid the Kurdish regional government, which he described as holding the front line against the Islamic State. Britain would also work through the United Nations to bolster international efforts against the Islamic State, and reinforce domestic counterterrorism efforts aimed at preventing attacks and identifying and rooting out those planning them. Like President Barack Obama, Cameron tried to highlight the direct national security threat that would come from not acting. He said the Islamic State and its recruits have planned “and continue to plan attacks across Europe and in our country.” He pledged that the British government would do “whatever it takes” to stamp out the extremist group and keep Britain safe. Calling Haines a hero, Cameron denounced Islamic State members as “monsters,” not Muslims. The Islamic State video shows Haines kneeling on a bare hill in a landscape that appears identical to the one where two American journalists were killed by the group in back-to-back executions in the past month. In the moments before his death, Haines, 44, is forced to read a script, in which he blames his country’s leaders for his killing. “I would like to declare that I hold you, David Cameron, entirely responsible for my execution,” he said. “You entered voluntarily into a coalition with the United States against the Islamic State.” He added: “Unfortunately, it is we the British public that in the end will pay the price for our Parliament’s selfish decisions.” The video ends with the black-clad executioner, speaking in English with what sounded like a British accent, identifying the Islamic State’s next victim as Alan Henning, another British citizen held by the group. Two American aid workers are also being held by the Islamic State. SITE Intelligence, which tracks jihadist groups, said the executioner appeared to be the same man who killed the American hostages, James Foley and Steven J. Sotloff. Britain is one of a “core coalition” of nations announced as NATO leaders met in Wales this month and sought to devise a strategy to address the Islamic State’s growing threat, including plans to strengthen allies in Iraq and Syria and conduct airstrikes against the militants. Obama last week announced a major expansion of the military campaign against the Islamic State, including airstrikes in Syria.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
Islamic State group’s war chest is growing By Ken Dilanian The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Islamic State militants, who once relied on wealthy Persian Gulf donors for money, have become a self-sustaining financial juggernaut, earning more than $3 million a day from oil smuggling, human trafficking, theft and extortion, according to U.S. intelligence officials and private experts. The extremist group’s resources exceed that “of any other terrorist group in history,” said a U.S. intelligence official who, like others interviewed, spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss classified assessments. Such riches are one reason that American officials are so concerned about the group even while acknowledging they have no evidence it is plotting attacks against the United States. The Islamic State group has taken over large sections of Syria and Iraq, and controls as many as 11 oil fields in both countries, analysts say. It is selling oil and other goods through generations-old smuggling networks under the noses of some of the same governments it is fighting: Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, Turkey and Jordan. While U.S. intelligence does not assess that those governments are complicit in the smuggling, the Obama administration is pressing them do to more to crack down. The illicit oil is generally transported on tanker trucks, analysts said. “There’s a lot of money to be made,” said Denise Natali, who worked in Kurdistan as an American aid official and is now a senior research fellow at National Defense University. “The Kurds say they have made an attempt to close it down, but you pay off a bor-
der guard you pay off somebody else and you get stuff through.” The price the Islamic State group fetches for its smuggled oil is discounted — $25 to $60 for a barrel of oil that normally sells for more than $100 — but its total profits from oil are exceeding $3 million a day, said Luay al-Khatteeb, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution’s Doha Center in Qatar. The group also has earned hundreds of millions of dollars from smuggling antiquities out of Iraq to be sold in Turkey, al-Khatteeb said, and millions more from human trafficking by selling women and children as sex slaves. Other revenue comes from extortion payments, ransom from kidnapped hostages, and outright theft of all manner of materials from the towns the Islamic State group has seized, analysts say. “It’s cash-raising activities resemble those of a mafia-like organization,” a second U.S. intelligence official said, reflecting the assessment of his agency. “They are well-organized, systematic and enforced through intimidation and violence.” Even prior to seizing Mosul in June, for example, the group began to impose “taxes” on nearly every facet of economic activity, threatening death for those unwilling to pay, U.S. intelligence officials say. An analysis by the Council on Foreign Relations estimated the group was reaping $8 million a month from extortion in Mosul alone. Once the group took over Mosul, in northern Iraq, and other areas, it grabbed millions of dollars in cash from banks, though not the hundreds of millions initially reported, U.S. intelligence officials say.
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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Wealth: Some states scrambling to create new sources of revenue Some states are scrambling for new revenue sources. Pennsylstates to spur job creation, by vania has raised fees for vanity attracting factories, businesses license plates and other auto and corporate headquarters. expenses. Colorado and Wash“If you’ve got political pressure ington legalized recreational to spend more money and presmarijuana, in part on the promsure against raising taxes, then ise that the proceeds would be you’re in a pickle,” said David taxed. Brunori, a public policy professor Adjusted for inflation, governat George Washington Univerment data show that median sity.” household income rose by a few Income inequality isn’t the thousand dollars since 1979 to only factor slowing state tax $51,017 in 2012 and remains below revenue. Online retailers account its level before the recession for a rising chunk of consumer began in late 2007. By contrast, the spending. Yet they often manage top 1 percent has thrived. Their to avoid sales taxes. Consumers incomes averaged $1.26 million are spending more on untaxed in 2012, up from $466,302 in 1979, services, too. according IRS data. S&P’s analysis builds on a preThe combination of an vious report this year in which it increasingly global economy, said the widening gap between greater productivity from techthe wealthiest Americans and nology and outsize investment everyone else has slowed the returns has shifted a rising share U.S. economy’s recovery from of money to the wealthy. Of all the Great Recession. Because the dollars earned in 2012, more consumer spending fuels about than 22 percent went to the top 70 percent of the economy, weak 1 percent. That share has more pay growth typically slows ecothan doubled since 1979. Before income inequality nomic growth.
Continued from Page A-1
began to rise consistently, state tax revenue grew an average of 9.97 percent a year from 1950 to 1979. That average steadily fell with each subsequent decade, dipping to 3.62 percent between 2000 and 2009. State tax revenue growth has risen slightly since then as the economy has recovered and some states — California, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, for example — have adopted higher top marginal income tax rates, according to S&P. In 2012, California voters backed a ballot measure to raise taxes. That measure boosted California’s sales tax to 7.5 percent for four years and income taxes rates to between 10.3 and 12.3 percent for seven years on income over $250,000. Plus, there’s an additional 1 percent tax on millionaires. More than half the income tax the state collected in 2012 came from the top 1 percent, compared with 33 percent in 1993. And in 2013, state tax revenue in Califor-
Redraw: Councilman says the current districts are unbalanced is for it to be as independent as possible.” decade, and into District 1. At Dominguez said the additional the time, Chavez, who is now a residents have increased his county commissioner, said the workload. He and City Councilor change occurred as a result of a Chris Rivera, a former Santa Fe “movida.” fire chief who was elected to the District 3 City Councilor City Council in 2011, represent Carmichael Dominguez, whose District 3. district includes at least 49 per“We’re in violation of our concent more residents than any stitution, which guarantees equal other district because of the representation, and the fact that annexation, is leading the latest District 3 has upwards of 20,000 redistricting effort. He said the more people in its district,” he intent is to create a commission that’s completely independent of said. “Right now, the districts are unbalanced.” politicians. Dominguez said district “There’s lots of questions, of boundaries could change dracourse, that I have and that other people are going to have in terms matically. “Just based off of my cartograof the process. But one of the phy experience, there could be a questions that I thought about significant shift in the boundaries. is once the commission is done But where exactly those lines will with their work, I do not believe that it will go to the City Council be drawn I have no idea,” he said. Questions remain about who for approval,” he said. “The intent
Continued from Page A-1
will serve on the commission or how the members will be selected. “I’m sure that based on the charter amendments that the redistricting commission will do its due diligence and it’s important that the redistricting commission be representative of the city and that they understand the dynamics that our community has,” he said. “That’s the most important thing in terms of the makeup of the commission.”
nia surged 15.6 percent. Seven other states have also raised top marginal rates since 2009. This marks a reversal of the trend from 1985 to 2009, when average top marginal tax rates across all states fell slightly. The most affluent Americans typically receive most of their income from profits in stocks and other investments, rather than wages. This means that swings in financial markets can cause state revenue to gyrate from year to year. Some states — including Arizona, Florida, Nevada, Texas and Washington — rely primarily on sales taxes for funding. They’re more dependent on consumer spending and don’t benefit much from the gains that have flowed mainly to the wealthiest Americans.
MEETING LIST WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 15, 2014 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 19, 2014
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014 2:00 PM PARKS AND OPEN SPACE ADVISORY COMMISSION – The Barn at Frenchy’s Field, Corner of Osage and Agua Fria Streets 2:30 PM SUSTAINABLE SANTA FE COMMISSION – City Councilors’ Conference Room, City Hall 4:00 PM PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers, City Hall 4:30 PM SANTA FE PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD – Main Library, Pick Room, 145 Washington Avenue WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2014 4:00 PM SANTA FE SISTER CITIES COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room 5:30 PM BICYCLE AND TRAIL ADVISORY COMMITTEE – City Council Chambers 6:00 PM SANTA FE CIVIC HOUSING BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS – 664 Alta Vista Street
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by the fact that we’re moving to a services economy, and people are buying far more on the Internet,” she said. Research by Lucy Dadayan, a senior policy analyst at the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, notes that income tax collections have become more volatile from year to year, making it harder for states to plan budgets, provide services and launch programs. She endorses an overhaul of state tax codes to produce a more balanced revenue flow. But S&P says its findings suggest that the wealth gap derives from many factors and that state tax-code revisions don’t fully address the consequences. “Changes to state fiscal policy alone won’t likely fix what’s wrong,” S&P concludes.
City of Santa Fe
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2014 10:00 AM MAYOR’S COMMITTEE ON DISABILITY – Genoveva Chavez Community Center, Classroom 1, 3221 Rodeo Road 3:00 PM MARTY SANCHEZ LINKS DE SANTA FE ADVISORY COMMITTEE – Marty Sanchez Links de Santa Fe Administration Building, 205 Caja del Rio 4:30 PM ARCHAEOLOGICAL REVIEW COMMITTEE – City Councilors’ Conference Room 5:00 PM SANTA FE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT AGENCYY JOINT POWERS BOARD – Santa Fe County Administration Building, Legal Conference Room, 102 Grant Avenue 5:15 PM SANTA FE REGIONAL JUVENILE JUSTICE BOARD – CYFD Offices, 1920 Fifth Street
Contact Daniel J. Chacón at 986-3089 or dchacon@ sfnewmexican.com.
Across all states, sales taxes account for 30.1 percent of all state revenue, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Personal income taxes make up 36.6 percent. The rest comes from other sources, such as taxes on fuel, alcohol and cigarettes. As consumers have spent more online and on untaxed services, many states have tried to tax items like Netflix subscriptions and iTunes downloads. Washington state now taxes services at dating centers, tanning salons and Turkish baths. Kim Rueben, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, said the rise of untaxed purchases might have squeezed state revenue even if income inequality hadn’t widened. “Sales taxes are being eroded
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
Clinton stirs speculation in Iowa By Ken Thomas The Associated Press
INDIANOLA, Iowa — Hillary Rodham Clinton, making her return to Iowa for the first time since the 2008 presidential campaign, implored Democrats on Sunday to choose shared economic opportunity over “the guardians of gridlock” in an highprofile appearance that drove speculation about another White House bid into overdrive. “Hello, Iowa. I’m back!” Clinton declared as she took the podium at retiring Sen. Tom Harkin’s annual steak fry fundraiser, a fixture on the political calendar in the home of the nation’s first presidential caucus. Clinton joined her husband, former President Bill Clinton, in a tribute to Harkin that brought them before about 10,000 party activists who form the backbone of Iowa’s presidential campaigns every four years. The former New York senator and first lady did not directly address a potential campaign but said she was “thinking about it” and joked she was “here for the steak.” She later said that “too many people only get excited about presidential campaigns. Look — I get excited about presidential campaigns, too.” But she said the upcoming midterm elections would be pivotal. Following a summertime book tour, Clinton was making her biggest campaign splash in 2014 so far, opening a fall of fundraising and campaigning for Democrats who are trying to maintain a Senate majority during President
Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks Sunday during U.S. Sen. Tom Harkin’s annual steak fry fundraiser in Indianola, Iowa. CHARLIE NEIBERGALL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barack Obama’s final two years. The event also served as a farewell for Harkin, a liberal stalwart and former presidential candidate who is retiring after four decades in Congress. Obama defeated Clinton in the state’s leadoff presidential caucuses in January 2008 — Clinton finished third behind the future president and then-North Carolina Sen. John Edwards — and the visit marked the former secretary of state’s first appearance in Iowa since the campaign. Hillary Clinton, who would become the first female president if she runs and wins, used her speech to strike a chord on women’s issues, citing the need to elect candidates who would allow women to make their “own
health care decisions” and promote equal pay for equal work. She also lauded Obama’s economic record, noting the increase in exports for the state’s farmers, Iowa’s low unemployment rate and a boost in the production of renewable energy. Her address also offered references to her husband’s economic mantra of helping people who “work hard and play by the rules.” Attending Harkin’s final bash, party activists streamed onto a hot-air balloon field lined with colorful signs thanking the Harkins and promoting state candidates. Ready for Hillary, a super PAC supporting a potential Clinton candidacy, posted light blue “Ready” signs. “I honestly believe she will be
the next president,” said Cindy Sturtz, a union member from Fort Dodge, who caucused for Obama in 2008 but plans to support Clinton if she runs again. Before taking the stage, the Clintons took turns flipping steaks at a grill before a large media contingent. “I’m just flipping for other people now,” joked Bill Clinton in a nod to his wife’s headliner status. The couple spoke briefly to reporters, remaining coy about her future plans. Hillary Clinton, asked if she planned to run for president, said, “There are a lot of people running right now.” She pointed to the need to help Democrats in 2014. “We’re going to be doing a lot. And we’ve already started. There’s so much at stake.”
Pope Francis marries 20 ‘real life’ couples By Frances D’Emilio The Associated Press
VATICAN CITY — Forty “I do’s” — or “Si” in Italian — were pronounced in St. Peter’s Basilica Sunday as Pope Francis married 20 couples, with one bride already a mother. Francis in his homily likened families to the “bricks that build society.” Among the couples, all from the Rome area, is one in which the groom’s first marriage was annulled by the church and the bride has a daughter from an earlier relationship. Some of the other couples already were living together. The Vatican views sex outside marriage as sin, but Francis stresses the church should be a forgiving one. He said marriage was “real life, not some TV show.” He told the couples love of Jesus can help whenever their love “becomes lost, wounded or worn out.”
Sara Pisano and Danilo Spagnoli, just married by Pope Francis, smile during the ceremony Sunday in St. Peter’s Basilica. Francis married 20 couples, including some who already live together and those with children, which is technically a sin in the eyes of the church. ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Many rank-and-file Catholics have pressed the Vatican to allow divorced faithful who remarry to receive Communion. The
Vatican has stood firm, contending only if remarried Catholics forsake sex can they receive Communion. Catholics can only
remarry in the Church if their first marriage is annulled, essentially a declaration the initial union never existed. Some hope a major Vatican meeting next month on family concerns might lead to permission for divorced Catholics who remarry to receive Communion. Francis has reportedly told a woman in his Argentine homeland whose husband’s first marriage wasn’t annulled she was free of sin and should take Communion anyway. The Vatican quickly clarified that the pope’s private conversations don’t reflect church policy. Sunday’s weddings performed by Francis could also be seen by status-quo defenders as the Vatican’s way of stressing that marriage, because it is a sacrament, should endure. One by one, the 20 couples were called by name by Francis, who asked if they’d be faithful for the rest of their lives.
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Lunes, 15 de septiembre, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
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EL NUEVO MEXICANO La fanática feminina del fútbol americano
¿Q
Canutito ‘aprende a jugar a Los Jacks’
CHICAGO ué tienen en común una pedicura y sandalias brillantes con la salida poco ceremoniosa de Ray Rice del fútbol americano?
Todo. La mayoría de los observadores atribuyen el nuevo castigo al video que se filtró de Rice dándole un puñetazo a la que era por entonces su prometida Janay Palmer. Pero esta teoría no toma en cuenta el poder creciente de una hinchada cada vez más femenina — y más a muerte. El día anterior a que el video se expandiera como un virus por Internet, yo estaba en la hilera de la tienda detrás de una mujer joven que vestía ropa de la Liga Nacional de Fútbol Americano (NFL, por sus siglas en inglés). Desde una camiseta y llavero de los Chicago Bears de la NFL hasta las sandalias brillantes con diamantes de imitación color azul oscuro y las uñas pintadas Esther con precisión a lo fanicure con Cepeda los colores y el logo del equipo. Una fanicure, aprendí ese día, Comentario es una expresión de arte a través de pintarse las uñas de las manos y de los pies con el color y el logo del equipo de la NFL para demostrar apoyo de un modo que sólo las mujeres femeninas pueden imaginar. En 2013 la línea de cosméticos Cover Girl presentó … bueno, no puedo ser tan emocionante como la bloguera amante de la moda Nora Crotty, así que voy a dejar que ella les cuente. “¿Arte y … fútbol americano? Se entiende. Bueno, ahora es más fácil que nunca apoyar a tu equipo favorito de la NFL a través del arte con las uñas: Justo a tiempo para la temporada de fútbol americano … CoverGirl, el flamante patrocinador de belleza de la NFL, ofrecerá paquetes del esmalte de la marca seleccionados a medida con el logotipo de tu equipo favorito. La colaboración llega como una de las recientes series de tentativas de hacer que la NFL apele a un mercado prácticamente sin explotar de mujeres fanáticas de la moda y del fútbol americano. ¿Se acuerdan de la colaboración Marchesa?” La colaboración a la que ella se refiere fue reportada por Fashionista en el otoño de 2012, cuando las camisetas de los New York Jets fueron adornadas con cristales Swaroski. En su momento, la bloguera Cheryl Wischhover preguntó: “¿Esta cosa femenina del fútbol americano captará a las mujeres fanáticas del fútbol americano?” Oh, sí. Mucho. Las mujeres fanáticas del fútbol americano son grandes en números, en su pasión por los equipos y son súper grandes en gastos de hinchadas. No estoy segura de cuándo exactamente la NFL atrapó a mi madre, pero en algún momento de la última década ella se volvió tan entendida, apasionada y rábida de los Dallas Cowboys como mi padre. Mis hijos y yo somos dueños de una amplia selección de chaquetas, sudaderas e incluso joyas oficiales y costosas de los Cowboys. Este botín azul y plateado nos es entregado a la conclusión de cada uno de los viajes que realizan mis padres a las ciudades donde juega el equipo o a la meca de la hinchada de los Cowboys, el estadio AT&T en Arlington, Texas. Si viviéramos en una zona en que los supermercados locales vendieran pasteles, galletas, bandejas con bocadillos y pizzas en forma de pelotas de balón de fútbol americano todos los sábados y domingos como nuestras tiendas lo hacen con los Bears, estoy segura que también comprarían esas. Ya sea que hablemos de niños pequeños con ropa oficial de juego, niñas que visten prendas y accesorios de la línea de Juniors de la NFL para adolescentes, manicuras y pedicuras especiales o mercancías sobre la concientización del cáncer de mamas, las mujeres ya no están sólo en los márgenes del poder de compra del fútbol americano profesional. Cuando Rice fue acusado de agresión en marzo por lastimar a Palmer, su actual mujer, la suspensión de dos partidos tuvo repercusión pero quedó predominantemente dentro de la prensa deportiva. El hecho de que la semana pasada el video haya saltado de la sección de deportes a las noticias de Facebook y Twitter de muchas de las mismas mujeres que ayudan a hacer del fútbol americano uno de los eventos más vistos y escuchados por televisión y radio no es una pequeña parte de lo que llevó al despido de Rice. Todo el mal manejo de esta saga, desde cuando ocurrió el incidente hasta las actuales consecuencias, está cayendo a los pies del presidente de la NFL Roger Goodell, a quien la Organización Nacional de Mujeres le está pidiendo que renuncie para poder “restablecer el honor y la integridad del pasatiempo más lucrativo y popular del país.” Este tipo de respuesta liderada por mujeres era impensable a mediados de la década de 1980 cuando yo era una niña y el sonido de la canción de la noche de fútbol americano del lunes me ponía triste porque los muchachos de la NFL evitaban que pasaran mis programas de televisión favoritos. La última vez que me fijé, el hashtag #ResignGoodell (GoodellRenuncia) estaba dominando varias plataformas de las redes sociales tanto en cuentas de mujeres como de hombres. Tiene todo el sentido del mundo: Un 35 por ciento de los televidentes de fútbol americano profesional son mujeres y, con ellas, intentar hacer la vista gorda al tema de violencia doméstica no va a dar buen resultado. Nota del traductor: El término hace referencia a un juego de palabras con las palabras “fan” (hincha) y “pedicure” (pedicura). La dirección electrónica de Esther Cepeda es estherjcepeda@washpost.com. Sígala en Twitter, @estherjcepeda.
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De izquierda a derecha, María Martínez, 9; Elizabeth Crumpler, coordinadora en sitio de Communities in Schools New Mexico; Fernanda Aguilar, 9; y Karen Deras, 10, comiendo juntas el martes en la escuela Salazar Elementary. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
Una mano amiga para los estudiantes Por Robert Nott The New Mexican
l año pasado, una maestra de Salazar Elementary School notó que tres estudiantes, hermanos, faltaban frecuentemente a clases. Y cuando asistían, olían mal y usaban la misma ropa sucia. La maestra lo mencionó a Elizabeth Crumpler. Crumpler descubrió que los pequeños compartían un baño diminuto de un departamento pequeño con otros nueve miembros de su familia. Crumpler trabajó a la par con otras organizaciones de la comunidad para encontrar una manera de ofrecerles una vivienda más grande y uniformes nuevos para los niños. También los contacto con mentores jóvenes del programa Big Brothers Big Sisters que se mantuvieron al tanto de la asistencia de los niños reuniéndose con ellos los lunes y dando seguimiento el resto de la semana. Cumpler no es una maestra o consejera. Ella es una coordinadora en sitio para Communities in Schools New Mexico. La organización local sin fines de lucro es parte de numerosos grupos de fuera que se involucran con los distritos escolares para manejar problemas como abuso, pobreza y comportamiento en las escuelas que comúnmente no cuentan con los recursos para atenderlos. En Santa Fe, uno de los problemas más graves es la pobreza. El nivel de pobreza del distrito es del 70 porciento basado en estadísticas federales de las comidas gratis o con descuento. En Salazar, 100 porciento de los casi 400 alumnos están bajo un programa de comidas gratis o con descuento. “La pobreza no es una excusa,” comenta Crumpler. “Pero cuando la comunidad le falla a los niños en este aspecto, añade una carga extra para el director o el maestro. Es difícil enseñar a niños con hambre o con falta de sueño.” La organización local tuvo un humilde inicio. Fue fundada en 1998 por Bill y Georgia Carson para ofrecer apoyo médico, social, académico
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y extracurricular a estudiantes de Salazar Elementary. La Salazar Partnership, como se llamaba, se expandió a Agua Fría Elementary (ahora El Camino Real Academy) en 2001, cambiando de nombre a Santa Fe For Students. En 2012, trabajó en conjunto con la organización nacional Communities in Schools para convertir a Santa Fe For Students en una organización local y regional afiliada a esta entidad de mayor tamaño. Bajo la dirección de Julia Bergen, Communities in Schools New Mexico ahora sirve a nueve escuelas que el distrito identifica con necesidades de apoyo adicional debido a bajo aprovechamiento académico y altos índices de pobreza. El programa opera bajo un presupuesto de $950,000 incluyendo $200,000 que obtiene del distrito escolar. El programa asigna coordinadores como Crumpler a las escuelas. Los coordinadores trabajan con maestros, consejeros, enfermeras y personal administrativo para identificar a estudiantes que enfrentan problemas y así poder encontrarles ayuda. En algunos casos, el apoyo puede ofrecerse a través de un tutor para el estudiante o el invitarlos a una comida informar para hablar de sus problemas como hostigamiento o acoso de compañeros. En muchos casos, sin embargo, los problemas son más complejos. Para estos estudiantes, la organización abre un archivo para proveer los servicios necesarios y monitorear su progreso. El año pasado, 80 estudiantes de Salazar recibieron este apoyo. En otros casos, Crumpler, se ha enfrentado con niños de bajo rendimiento en clase y ha descubierto que están preocupados porque un miembro de su familia fue deportado. En otros casos, el padre del estudiante fue asesinado después de regresar a México. Crumpler ayudó a los niños a recibir consejería. “Lo que pasa afuera en la vida diaria del estudiante no está separado de lo que sucede dentro de la escuela,” dice Bergen. “Están interconectados.”
Crucigrama No.10611 10612 used CRUCIGRAMA NO Horizontales 1. Que tiene gula o se entrega a ella. 6. Muchedumbre que se mueve en desorden ruidoso. 10. Seca, estéril. 11. Aféresis de ahora. 12. Símbolo del lutecio. 13. Que posee elasticidad. 15. Rémora (pez). 17. Divisible por dos. 19. En números romanos, “2.” 20. Abreviatura usual de “señora.” 21. Nota musical. 22. Ciudad y mercado situado al sur de Irak, en la gobernación del mismo nombre. 24. Calor intenso. 26. Atalaye, registre desde lugar alto. 27. Elevo por medio de cuerdas. 28. Nombre sueco de Turku. 29. Hombre que en ciertas regiones de Asia cuida, guía y doma un elefante. 31. Estatus, jerarquía, condición. 33. Preposición. 34. Río que sirve de límite entre Paraguay y Brasil. 35. Nota musical. 36. Une, lía. 38. Ceñirán con los brazos. 41. Poner precio a las cosas vendibles. 42. Preposición “debajo de.” 43. Voz del verbo auxiliar haber. 44. (Isaac, 1922-1995) Militar y político israelí, quien murió asesinado. 46. Acongojen. 47. Perteneciente o relativo al juego. Verticales 1. Danza húngara. 2. De una tribu que habita alrededor de los lagos Titicaca y Poopó. 3. Símbolo del litio. 4. Aborrece. 5. Especie de violoncelo siamés. 6. Transmutar una cosa en otra. 7. Igualaré con el rasero. 8. Territorio, región. 9. Persona que cuida de los leones que están en la leo-
www.angelfreire.com 11. 13. 14. 15. 16. 18.
21. 23. 25. 26. 30.
32. 37. 38. 39.
nera. Onda en el mar. Construirían un edificio. Remolcarán la nave. Transportar uno mismo una cosa al lugar donde se halla. Tipo de costa común en Galicia. (Cochinilla de San ...) Crustáceo isópodo terrestre, de figura aovada, que cuando se lo toca se hace una bola. Autómata. Mostaza. Están ociosos, sin oficio ni beneficio. Que tiene ocelos (fem.). Individuo de una tribu de indios norteamericanos, antiguamente muy fieros y sanguinarios, que vivían en diversos parajes de Texas, Nuevo México y Arizona. Macizo montañoso de Níger. Que carece de acento prosódico. Indoiranio. Nombre de dos constela-
Solución DEL del No.N10612 O 10611 SOLUCION
ciones, una boreal y otra austral. 40. Coced directamente a las brasas. 42. Adverbio latino, “textualmente.” 44. Símbolo del rutenio. 45. Prefijo “dos.”
na tarde Canutito came into the room donde Grama Cuca estaba sentada mending a pair of grampo’s old calzoncillos. She looked up at him and said, “I don’t know por qué tu grampo has me mending sus old pairs de underwear. They are en una condición tan miserable que es más easy just to throw them away y comprar unos pares nuevos. Ya not even las moths try to eat them porque no tienen nada to munch on.” Canutito smiled thinking about las polillas starving porque los calzoncillos de su grampo had nothing worth nibbling on. As he was mirando Larry Torres a Grama Cuca mending, she Growing up heard she whisSpanglish per, “¡Oh, chite!” “¿Qué pasa, grama?” Canutito asked her todo concerned. “I broke la needle nomás en cuanto que I was finishing este par. Why don’t you reach into that cajoncito in the sewing machine and bring me otra needle?” Canutito went off to search por una aguja in the drawer de la Singer sewing machine. As he was looking por una, he started flipping cosas around and he came upon una old rubber ball and something que parecían big Xs made out of metal. “What are estas cosas, grama?” Canutito asked grama. “Oh look!” Grama Cuca exclamó, putting down su needle and thread. “You found mi pelota y mis jacks.” “¿Qué son ‘jacks’, grama?” Canutito asked her. “They are parte de un game que I used to play cuando yo era una little girl.” She twirled unos de los jacks around and watched it spin. “Nosotros used to have tournaments de puros jacks en la escuela,” she recalled. “¿Cómo se hacían play, grama?” Canutito asked her. “Let me see,” Grama Cuca said, taking la pelota and bouncing it. “Ah, sí. Primero you have to bouncear la pelota once and pick up los jacks uno a la vez. The second time you pick up dos jacks at a time, y luego three at a time and so forth hasta que you can pick up todos los ten jacks at a time.” “Y ¿qué pasa if dos jacks are touching and I miss?” Canutito asked her. “Entonces eso is called ‘kissies’ and, si misteas, then it is my turn,” grama replied. Después de que grama and Canutito both got over sus onesies, twosies, threesies, etc., Canutito asked her, “¿Ahora qué, grama?” “Ahora we let la pelota bouncear una vez and catch it antes que haga bounce the second time while picking up los jacks. Esta parte se llama ‘bounce, no-bounce’. Y luego the next time haces bounce la pelota twice. That is called ‘double bounce’.” Canutito tried it otra vez pero this time era un poco más hard. Al fin he got it right and he asked grama, “¿Ahora qué, grama?” “Ahora instead de hacer pick up los jacks, you make una little cave con tu left hand en la mesa and you slide los jacks into esa cuevita. That is called ‘pigs in a pen’. Después de eso haces un little fence con tu left hand en la mesa and jump los jacks from este lão to the other side. Esto se llama ‘pigs over the fence’.” Canutito tried this y después de que le hizo el trai, he was ready por algo más hard. “Ahora ¿qué, grama?” he asked her, spitting en sus manos. “This is mucho fon.” “Ahora bounceas la pelota and you twirl it around the ball antes que haga bounce on the table la second time. Esto se llama ‘aroundthe-world’.” “Esto está un poco más complicated, grama,” the little boy said. “Practice makes perfect,” Grama Cuca replied pero antes que Canutito could say algo, Grampo Caralampio came out del shower con su skinny body wrapped en una toalla. “Are my shortes all remendãos, Cuca?” he asked pulling his towel closer. “¡Oh chite!” Grama Cuca exclamó. “I got so busy enseñándole a Canutito cómo play jacks que I forgot.” “Pues, I didn’t forget,’ dijo Grampo Caralampio, dropping su toalla …
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THE NEW MEXICAN
Monday, September 15, 2014
EDUCATION
Contribute on education: Send calendar and other school happening items to Robert Nott at rnott@sfnewmexican.com
Finding solutions — together S
Politics, policies and personalities seem to chool is back in session this year, but the old-fashioned, one-room schoolhouse dominate education news these days. is long gone. So are most blackboards How to sort it all out? Starting today — and the idea of students taking Monday, Sept. 15 — The New tests with pencil and paper. But Mexican is publishing a weekly they still take tests — some say too education page. We plan local many. And they and their teachers features, articles by national columand parents have to adapt to evernists, opinion pieces by educators, changing mandates, statutes and parents, administrators and even transitions as No Child Left Behind students, and a listing of briefs and becomes Race to the Top and then events related to education. Are Common Core and next year … you a teacher who has figured out well, who knows? how to make algebra exciting and Robert Nott fun for students to learn? Tell us Increasingly, schools around the Commentary about it. Are you an expert at writnation (including New Mexico) ing grant proposals for a school are receiving A-F grades. The push project? Send us a commentary for accountability has led to new piece on it. Can a teacher out there tell us teacher evaluation systems that rely heavwhether you understand the various meaily on student test data. Some states hold sures in your teacher-evaluation score and back third-graders who can not read to their how that’s working for you? Let us know. expected proficiency level. Others fight this notion, arguing it hurts the student more to This is a page for parents, supporters, edustay behind. Acronyms — AP, SAT, ACT, ESS, cators, students — and yes, political leaders. IDEA, BOE, PED — turn the system into an We want you to pay attention and feed us alphabet soup of misunderstanding. with information, articles, ideas and con-
structive criticism. In short time, we expect to expand our Web presence by including blogs from educators and others. Santa Fe Public Schools Superintendent Joel Boyd has already committed to contributing blog material, for instance. Assistant City Editor Bruce Krasnow will oversee the content of this page. Contact him at bkrasnow@sfnewmexican.com or 986-3034. As education reporter for The New Mexican, I expect to be a semi-regular contributor and coordinate the weekly “SmartBoard” column of briefs and events. Contact me at rnott@sfnewmexican.com or 986-3021. Our names are on it, but it’s still your page. Read it. Respond. Contribute. Help us. Maybe we can figure out all this convoluted doublespeak together. Oh, and as for those one-room schoolhouses, they really are a thing of the past, but I urge you to visit oneroomschoolhousecenter.weebly.com. It is a neat historical resource featuring memories of the days when everything — including schooling — seemed so much simpler.
A lifeline for students Nonprofit works to alleviate effects of poverty, other issues at nine public schools By Robert Nott The New Mexican
ast year, a teacher at Salazar Elementary School noticed that three students, siblings, were chronically missing school. And when they did attend, they sometimes smelled and often wore the same, unwashed clothes. The teacher reported the problem to Elizabeth Crumpler. Crumpler discovered the children were sharing a tiny bathroom in a small apartment with nine other family members. Crumpler worked with community organizations to find the family expanded housing and new school uniforms for the children. She also hooked the kids up with older youth mentors in the Big Brothers Big Sisters program who stayed on top of the children’s daily attendance by meeting them at school on Mondays and checking in with them during the week. Crumpler is not a teacher or a counselor. She is a site coordinator for Communities in Schools New Mexico. The nonprofit grassroots organization is part of a growing number of outside community groups stepping in to help school districts deal with issues like abuse, poverty and behavioral problems with which schools are often unequipped to deal. In Santa Fe, one of the more persistent issues is poverty. The school district’s poverty level is 70 percent based on federal free and reduced lunch figures. At Salazar, 100 percent of the roughly 400 children are on a free or reduced lunch plan. “Poverty is not an excuse,” Crumpler said. “But when the broader community fails kids in this way, it adds to the burden of the principal and teacher. It’s hard to teach when the kids are hungry or hiding or falling asleep.” The grass-roots organization started small. It was founded in 1998 by Bill and Georgia Carson to offer medical, social, academic and extracurricular support to students at Salazar Elementary. The Salazar Partnership, as it was then called, was expanded to Agua Fría Elementary School (now El Camino Real Academy) in 2001, changing the title to Santa Fe For Students. In 2012, it worked with the national Communities in Schools to turn Santa Fe For Students into the local and regional affiliate for the larger organization. Under the direction of Julia Bergen, Communities in Schools New Mexico now serves nine schools that the district sees as needing additional support because of low academic achievement and high poverty rates.
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SmartBoard CANDIDATE GARY KING TO TALK EDUCATION IN SANTA FE Gubernatorial candidate and Attorney General Gary King, a Democrat, brings his “Education Vision and Listening Tour” to Santa Fe at 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 15, at NEA-Santa Fe headquarters, 2007 Butolph Road. This is one of nine such stops King plans to promote his educational policies and listen to educators, teachers and students about their concerns. The event is free and open to the public. FORMER AMBASSADOR TO MARK NEW MAGNET SCHOOL Former U.S. Ambassador to South Africa Delano Lewis will speak at 10 a.m. Friday, Sept. 19, at the Santa Fe Community Convention Center in honor of the opening of the new Mandela International Magnet School — the dis-
From left, Maria Martinez, 9; Elizabeth Crumpler, site coordinator for Communities in Schools New Mexico; Fernanda Aguilar, 9; and Karen Deras, 10, have lunch together Tuesday at Salazar Elementary School. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN
COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS u For more information or to learn about volunteer opportunities within Communities in Schools New Mexico, visit cisnm.org or call 954-1880. u Communities in Schools operates in César Chávez Community School, Kearny and Nava elementary schools; El Camino Real Academy, Aspen Magnet Community School, Ortiz Middle School, De Vargas Middle School and Capital High School as well as the district’s Engage Santa Fe dropout recovery program.
The program operates on a budget of $950,000, including $200,000 that comes from the school district. The program places site coordinators such as Crumpler at each school. The coordinators work with teachers, counselors, nurses and administrators to identify students who are having problems and get them help. In some instances, that may mean simply finding the student a tutor, or inviting them in for an informal lunch to talk about issues like bullying or peer pressure. In many cases, though, the problems are much more complex. For these students, the organization opens a case file to provide sustained services, monitoring their progress along the way. Last year, 80 students at Salazar received such attention.
Education news and events
trict’s first International Baccalaureate public school. Lewis served in South Africa from 1999 to 2001 during the leadership transition from President Nelson Mandela to Thabo Mbeki. On Friday afternoon, Lewis will meet with Mandela school students for a question and answer session on the school’s campus on Llano Street. The school has 100 students enrolled — 50 in seventh grade and 50 in eighth grade. The first IB school was established in the late 1960s in Geneva, Switzerland, to develop inquiry skills while fostering communication and peace among nations. As of 2014, there are more than 3,700 IB schools in 147 countries. More than 90 percent of those schools are public schools. New Mexico has seven, including the private Desert Academy in Santa Fe.
In the case of the three siblings, their attendance shot up after the Crumpler’s intervention. In other instances, Crumpler has run across children whose schoolwork was suffering, only to discover they were stressed because a family member was being deported. In one case, the father of a student was killed after returning to Mexico. Crumpler helped the child get grief counseling. “What happens outside in a student’s dayto-day life is not separate from what goes on in school,” Bergen said. “They are connected.” Communities in Schools New Mexico is only now beginning to track the success of its work. Last year, it provided some level of support to about 4,000 students. Of those, 320 received sustained services. The organization estimated that 95 percent of those students went on to the next grade — a preliminary measure of success. The group is looking to build its base of volunteers to act as academic tutors, primarily in reading and math, in many of the schools. “Poverty is complex,” Andrea Slatopolsky, program director for the group, said. “It causes many symptoms. And it takes many, many people to alleviate those symptoms.” Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@ sfnewmexican.com.
LEARN ‘HOW TO COOK A BOOK’ The youth-driven Alliance for Literacy’s 12th contest — “How to Cook a Book” — is up and running. Participants can win such prizes as ice cream cakes, pizza parties, popcorn machines and concert tickets. The contest is open to students of all ages. Here’s how it works: Read a book, then write a recipe and cooking directions filled with details or ingredients you found in the book on an 8.5-by-11-inch piece of paper or card stock. You can type it or write it in either English or Spanish. The recipe must include illustrations for at least half of the ingredients. Grades K-2 need at least five ingredients. Grades 3-5 need at least 10 ingredients. Grades 6-12 need at least 15 ingredients. You must write the book title and author on the front of the recipe. Include your name, home address, phone number, school, grade and teacher’s name. The deadline is Nov. 1. Deliver or mail your entry to the
Alliance for Literacy, 5912 Jaguar Drive, Santa Fe, NM 87507. SUMMIT ON KEEPING KIDS SAFE Parents and educators are increasingly concerned about student safety in schools. Santa Fe Public Schools is hosting a School Safety Summit to inform parents about what the district is doing to keep kids safe and provide guidance on what to do if a school is in trouble. The forum takes place from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23, and includes a question-andanswer period. Dinner and child care will be provided. To register (RSVP is required), contact MariaLisa Dilda, emergency management specialist for the district, at 467-2526 or mdilda@sfps.info.
Got education-related briefs or announcements? Send them by Monday — a week before the week you want them to run — to rnott@sfnewmexican.com. For more listings, go to www. santafenewmexican.com/ education.
If you would like to write articles or an education blog, contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com
the Dais A system that’s failing students Viewpoints on education
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t is not children who fail; it is the educational system that fails children. Educators continue to flail away at poor results of large percentages of public school children. Excoriating teachers colleges and teachers have gained them no traction. Applying wide-ranging methodologies and teaching materials obviously leave many students uninspired. For those uninspired, perhaps MY VIEW utterly discouraged students, the fault EDWARD lies not with their intelligence, not M. JONES with their lack of interest in learning, not with colleges or teaching methodologies or materials, but more fundamentally with the underlying philosophy from which they stem, a philosophy that permeates public education. During 34 years as teacher, administrator and consultant, I found it painful to observe the destructive nature of this apparent philosophy: Teachers teach, students learn. Never have I been able to engage teachers, administrators, other consultants, parents and state education officials or teachers’ college professors in discussion to consider the possibility that those underlying assumptions may themselves be responsible for what they see as the failure of students. For me, learning is a particularly individual matter, not the result of “teaching,” and clearly not the result of subject matter irrelevant to the learner. My personal reaction to the teaching I experienced in public school led me, in later years, to conclude that the message I should have given to teachers was: “Don’t tell me what matters to you and expect that it should matter to me. And don’t evaluate me in terms of my willingness to capitulate to your demands.” I have always loved learning, and feel fortunate to have escaped with that passion intact from the very institution that had declared itself to be in the business of “educating” me. A great many students fail to live up to the educational system’s expectations, not because they lack interest in learning. Rather, during early years, they tune out because of “teaching” that does not respect individuality — that spark within every person that needs only to be valued and given opportunity to flourish. Educators wring their hands because so many students leave public schools as soon as possible. In fact, it is those same students who tune out in third grade, who later become completely turned off, and either drop out in total discouragement and self-doubt or leave. Some know they can pursue what matters to them in another setting; some are so completely divested of their selfesteem and self-confidence that they settle for the scraps of life they may find, rather than realizing the joy of exploring their own potential. Whether because of ignorance, intransigence or arrogance, educators appear unwilling to evaluate their assumptions about how children learn or to look closely at the nature of individuality within which they may find profound answers to their ongoing inability to solve the problem they to date find intractable. Edward M. Jones is a retired education consultant with the New Mexico Public Education Department. He also was the Head Start regional training officer for Alaska.
Billions spent on testing is a scam
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he contract that the state Public Education Department approved for the Common Core Standards computer testing, which will be in place next year, will bring Pearson Education more than $1 billion in tax dollars over the next eight years. Opponents of the standards have decried the exorbitant cost associated with Common Core testing, especially since the design requires school districts to purchase new MY VIEW and operating systems. PRISCILLA hardware Why is it that already cash-strapped SHANNON schools, under the guise of accountGUTIÉRREZ ability, are being forced to shell out millions in testing to a company whose practices and motives are questionable? Over the past several years, Pearson has been under fire and fined by a number of states because of numerous statistical errors that have caused students to miss graduation or for schools to be labeled as failing. The errors should come as no surprise to anyone with a lick of sense, given that Pearson advertises for test readers on Craigslist. No experience is needed. The tests are being scored by unqualified temps on the cheap. Todd Farley wrote a scathing expose of his experiences as a test scorer in his book, Making the Grades. And yet, the Public Education Department just handed over a billion in tax dollars. These temp-scored tests are what PED is using to determine the efficacy of teachers as well as to determine the academic outcomes of students. What a joke, except there is nothing funny about it. The assessments will require 8-year-old children to sit for 15 hours through testing on a computer. Ironically, the GRE, used to determine if literate adults are accepted into a university, only requires 3.5 hours of testing. What’s more, teachers will be unable to use any sort of real data from these tests to identify strengths or areas of need to guide instruction. The push for children to expend four times as much of their school day in testing has little to do with accountability and everything to do with corporate profit. The whole thing reeks of a scam once again to funnel billions out of state when we can hardly afford it. Moreover, New Mexico will receive very little reliable or valuable return on such an exorbitant investment. Where is the outrage over this educational debacle? Priscilla Shannon Gutiérrez is a longtime educator who lives in Santa Fe.
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
LIFE&SCIENCE
Health Science Environment
Food-service inspections For the period ending Sept. 9. To file a complaint, call the state Environment Department at 820-1840. BAMBINI’S STEAKS AND HOAGIES, various locations. Cited for high-risk violations for lack of date labels on cooked food held over 24 hours (corrected), bare-hand contact with ready-to-eat food. Cited for moderate-risk violations for lack of ammonium test strips, window lacking proper screen. CÉSAR CHÁVEZ COMMUNITY SCHOOL, 6251 Jaguar Drive. No violations. SANTA FE BAKING CO., 504 W. Cordova Road. Investigation of customer complaint of illness supported by findings of violations including employee failed to wash hands after returning to work, employee touched food with bare hands. Also cited for high-risk violations for refrigerator not holding cold temperatures, ice from customer’s drink in hand sink, no date or time on preparation of food, wet rag out of sanitizer bucket, raw meat stored over vegetables in walk-in refrigerator, improper cooling of food, lack of sanitizer in dishwasher, lack of soap at hand sink (corrected). ELKS LODGE, 1615 Old Pecos Trail. Cited for high-risk violation for ice buildup in walk-in refrigerator. E.J. MARTINEZ ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, 410 W. San Mateo Drive. Cited for high-risk violations for problems with with soap and towels at hand-wash station, problem with sanitation buckets (corrected), problem with dish machine pressure gauge. Cited for low-risk violations for lack of thermal test strips for dish machine, risk of drain line water dripping on foods in walk-in cooler, problem with back door. BACK ROAD PIZZA, 1807 Second St. No violations. ALLSUP’S, 2007 Calle Lorca. Cited for high-risk violations for employee eating in food prep area (corrected), paint stored on top of sink (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violations for failure to sanitize surfaces (corrected), lack of chlorine test strips, particle accumulation and pooling water in three-compartment sink, particulate and mold buildup on floor drain, heavy ice buildup in display freezers, mold on ice machine. Cited for low-risk violation for storing food on floor in walk-in refrigerator. CHOW’S, 720 St. Michael’s Drive. Cited for high-risk violations or problem with sanitizer solution (corrected), lack of soap at hand sink (corrected), raw chicken and eggs stored above vegetables in refrigerator (corrected), improper storage of paint, toilet drain solution and wood calk (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violation or propped-open door. Cited for low-risk violation for restroom door not self-closing. TRIBES COFFEE HOUSE, 3470 Zafarano Drive. No violations. CAFE DES ARTISTS, 223 Canyon Road. Cited for low-risk violations for storing cases of soda on floor. VINO DE CORAZON WINE ROOM, 235 Don Gaspar Ave. Cited for moderaterisk violation for lack of thermometer in reach-in unit, scratched cutting board. BAMBOO ASIAN RESTAURANT, 2400 Cerrillos Road. Cited for high-risk violations for lack of time and date labels on any food in refrigerators, improper food temperatures (corrected by disposal), inadequate cooling of rice (corrected by disposal), uncovered food in storage area, prep table not protected from splash from hand-wash area, raw chicken stored above beef and vegetables, food container stored in trash can. Cited for moderate-risk violations for food and grime on storage racks in walk-in refrigerator, food residue on prep refrigerator, roach in dry storage area, mold on ice machine, back screen door left open, problem with rice for sushi rolls. Cited for low-risk violations for storing food on floor, unshielded lights. APPLEBEE’S, 4246 Cerrillos Road. Cited for high-risk violation for beef in temperature danger zone, pesticide stored next to cleaning agent, mold on ice machine, lack of paper towels at hand sink, lack of dispenser for paper towels at bar. Cited for moderate-risk violations for signs of pest activity in liquor closet, watersoftner room, grim and dust on and near food equipment, dumpster lids left open. JINJA, 510 N. Guadalupe St. Cited for high-risk violations for ambient air and food temperatures in danger zone, heavy grime buildup on ice scoop, improper thawing of beef. KEARNY ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, 901 Alvenida De Las Campanas. Cited for high-risk violations for problem with drain line, improper QUAT sanitizer mixture (corrected). Cited for moderate-risk violation for dust on food equipment. CAPSHAW MIDDLE SCHOOL, 351 W. Zia Road. Cited for high-risk violation for hand sink paper towels not in dispenser. Cited for moderate-risk violation for dust on food equipment. WALTER BURKE CATERING, 1209 Calle Comercio. Cited for high-risk violations for improper storage of pesticides, exposed insulation over storage area. Cited for moderate-risk violations for grime and dust on and near food equipment, dust/mold on vent fans and shelves, unapproved microwave oven, signs of pests in outside storage building. Cited for low-risk violation for lack of hair restraints.
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Disability placard issues go unsolved
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Jose Luis Romero, a fisherman and advocate for protecting the snub-nosed porpoise, at his home in San Felipe, Mexico, on Aug. 30. Romero is dismayed that the government has failed to deliver on promises to crack down on poachers whose pursuit of another fish has almost incidentally driven the snub-nosed porpoises to extinction. ADRIANA ZEHBRAUSKAS/THE NEW YORK TIMES
Endangered porpoises ensnared by criminals By Elisabeth Malkin The New York Times
SAN FELIPE, Mexico t is a rare moment when scientists can point to an animal at the edge of extinction and predict when it might disappear forever. But it is happening, under the golden waters of the desert-rimmed sea, where a small porpoise has almost vanished. Nobody imagined that the end would approach so quickly. What changed was the appearance of a new threat to the snub-nosed porpoise known as the vaquita: organized crime. The vaquita, a shy marine mammal, is simply collateral damage as poachers here sweep up another endangered species, a giant fish called the totoaba, to please consumers in China. The vaquitas become entangled and die in the nets set for totoaba. Like the Chinese demand for other rare animal parts, including shark fins, the market for totoaba is driven by customers who pay generously, in this case, for the totoaba’s swim bladder. Dried and served in soup, it is believed to have medicinal qualities. With each kilogram of swim bladder fetching as much as $10,000 here, its sale is more lucrative than that of marijuana. The effect of the totoaba poaching on the vaquita came as a shock to conservationists. A study released in July concluded that half of the population, which inhabits the northern reaches of the Gulf of California, had been killed in two years, leaving just 97 vaquitas. The numbers prompted a group of Mexican and international vaquita experts to issue a dramatic warning. Without drastic steps to save the world’s smallest marine mammal, the group said, it would disappear within four years. “It’s definitely the last call for this species,” said Barbara Taylor, a marine mammal expert who is part of the scientists’ group, the International Committee for the Recovery of the Vaquita. The only way to restore the vaquita, the experts said, would be to shut down the illegal totoaba trade and impose severe new restrictions on the shrimp fisheries here when the season begins Saturday. “We’re encouraging them to reinvent the northern gulf,” said Taylor, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “I don’t trivialize how difficult it will be. These guys making millions of dollars trafficking in endangered species are not going to go quietly.” Nor will the local shrimp fishermen. Until now, the shrimp fishermen have been the focus of the effort to protect the vaquita in the northern Gulf of California. Their long gillnets sway like curtains in the current and have been lethal to the porpoise. But it may be the fishermen, not the poachers, who feel the rule of law first. Pacchiano said the authorities would also start enforcing regulations on the length of fishing nets: 200 meters, or about 220 yards. Fishermen
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acknowledge that they typically set them five times as long. The prospect of new limits on how and where shrimp can be caught has caused anxiety in the gulf’s northern fishing villages. Carlos Alberto Tirado, leader of one of the fishing federations in the small town of El Golfo de Santa Clara, on the northeastern tip of the gulf, said that scientists’ recommendation to ban all gillnets across a wide area of the northern gulf would wipe out the industry. “They deal with conservation, but they do not deal with how the communities will remain communities,” he said. “They would become ghost towns.” Conservationists argue that there is a way for fishermen to continue working without harming the vaquita, by switching to baglike trawl nets that do not snare the porpoise. But Antonio García Orozco, a fisherman who has been working with environmental groups on the trawl net’s design, said it could not work when miles of gillnets are stretched out across the fishing grounds. “We need time and space to demonstrate that we can get 100 percent” of the catch. The government had planned to phase in the new nets by 2016. But even the fishermen who made the switch voluntarily say they cannot provide for their families. “We are considered the heroes of the vaquita because we were the first to change,” said Javier Valverde, 66, one of the few fishermen to have seen the elusive animal. “But we are losing a lot.” The jolt of urgency now comes after the government has spent about $55 million since 2007 to protect the vaquita. It began paying compensation to fishermen for the loss of fishing grounds after an area of 486 square miles was declared off-limits as a vaquita refuge in 2005. There was another subsidy to change to trawl nets. Then there was a payout to encourage the fishermen to switch to tourism, but few could make it work. Still, there was progress. The population decline fell to 4.5 percent a year by 2010, about half of what it was in earlier years. The totoaba trade reversed that, speeding up the loss to 18.5 percent a year. The distinction between legal fishermen and totoaba poachers is fuzzier than many here would like to admit. Indebted fishermen may find it hard to resist the temptation to solve their problems by catching one totoaba — and then another. As they wait for the promised government action to materialize, many fishermen are skeptical it will do much good. “Every year it’s the same,” José Luis Romero said. The promise is, “‘This time, really, we will put security in place.’ They go out one day, two days, and that’s it.” Romero, with a bushy gray beard, cuts an eccentric figure in this town of cowboy boots and pickup trucks. He is different in another way. He believes the vaquita is worth saving. “It would be a shame if it were lost through our negligence,” he said, “ours, the fishermen.”
octors hand them out like candy,” said Jim Parker, the former head of New Mexico Governor’s Commission on Disability. And no, he was not talking about prescription painkillers. He was referring to doctor approved applications for New Mexico’s designated license plates and accessible parking placards for people who need accessible parking spaces because of a disability. The minimum disability for a placard is not being able to walk 100 feet without a good rest along the way. Individuals who use portable oxygen, prosthetics, or a wheelchair are also included. Not all disabilities are visible. It’s not easy to tell if someone has congestive heart failure, diabetic neuropathy, cancer, emphysema or other conditions limiting movement. It is up to the doctor to verify if the condiAndy tion is permanent or tempoWinnegar rary. Understanding Doctors approving appliDisability cations without corroborating patients’ mobility limits face the possibility of receiving a $1,000 fine for fraudulently signing off for someone to receive a placard. However, careless doctors and crafty patients aren’t the only concerns to be dealt with. “Each year our agency receives hundreds of instances from people complaining about problems with accessible parking spaces and placards,” said Parker. A story that aired on KOAT-TV in 1994 found problems with the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Department issuing placards. “Abuse of the system was rampant. As part of our investigation we sent in an application for my cat ‘Scooter’ and the MVD then issued him his own handicapped placard. Following our report, the MVD revamped the application process and put in place a number of safeguards,” said Larry Barker, an investigative reporter who now reports for KRQE-TV. New Mexico’s designated license plates and parking placards are quite valuable, especially where parking is a premium, such as by the Santa Fe Plaza. You can park free of charge and for unlimited periods of time at any public parking lot or space belonging to the state or its political subdivisions, if you have a parking placard or a designated license plate. This is not limited to designated accessible parking spaces. One Santa Fe businessman, asking to remain anonymous, complained that someone who has a fraudulent placard parks in front of his store every day. He can’t get the police or city to do anything about it. Another instance at the Albuquerque International Sunport involved someone storing vehicles for months in the public parking. Now airport parking facilities may charge long-term parking fees for periods of time exceeding 24 hours as stated in state and city statutes. The right to park close to shopping and government services is often critical for people with limited mobility. “I have used accessible parking for the last 30 years, and a number of times it has saved me from the freezing rain, snow, and wind and overheating in the sun. Conversely, a number of times, I have been stuck outside my vehicle, unable to get in or out because someone is parked so close to my van,” said Jim Parker, who uses a power wheelchair and an adaptive van. Many businesses may not realize that both the Americans with Disabilities Act and New Mexico’s building code require at least one accessible parking space. When only one accessible parking space is provided, it must be an 8-foot-wide vanaccessible space with an 8-foot access aisle. There are tax credits for business to install designating accessible parking. It is considered a top priority by the U.S. Department of Justice, as it enables many people with disabilities to “get in the door.” Federal tax incentives are available to businesses for removing barriers. See this link at the U.S. Department of Justice ADA website, www. ada.gov/taxincent.htm. Andy Winnegar has spent his career in rehabilitation and is based in Santa Fe as a training associate for the Southwest ADA Center, a program of TIRR Memorial Hermann Rehabilitation. He can be reached at andy@ winnegar.com.
Fracking may cause health issues, study suggests against an Arkansas-based energy company that drills land a quartermile from her property. Southwestern Stephanie Tiongco says she knew Energy, she said, moved in two years something was wrong when her ago and swiftly destroyed her livelilong, chestnut hair started falling hood: the alpaca farm and the dolls out. Around the same time, she says, she handcrafts from alpaca fleece. seven alpacas on her small farm mysSouthwestern Energy spokesteriously died. person Christina Fowler would not The New Milford, Pa., resident comment on the lawsuit but said the blames both problems on one thing, company “meets or exceeds” federal an industry that’s contentious in her standards. rural town and in Washington: frackThe National Institutes of Health ing. “I used to sit on my front porch on Wednesday unveiled the largest and look out at all this beautiful independent study to investigate country. Now all I see is a gas pad.” the impact of fracking on nearby Tiongco, 57, recently filed a lawsuit residents. America’s mixed views By Danielle Paquette The Washington Post
Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, brucek@sfnewmexican.com
on fracking aside, the survey of residents of southern Pennsylvania found that people with ground-fed water wells living near hydraulic fracturing sites are twice as likely to report skin and respiratory problems. The survey does not establish causation — it’s not clear that fracking is leading to the effects reported by respondents in the NIH survey. Among the most common complaints in these areas: unexplained hair loss, persistent rashes, sore throats and nose bleeds. Fracking proponents call the Yaleled study baseless. Katie Brown, spokesperson for the pro-oil and gas-
drilling group Energy in Depth, said it was “just a poll” that contradicts evidence from “direct measurements.” Fracking sites are closely monitored for possible pollutants, she said. To say the least, fracking has become a politically fraught issue. Environmentalists argue this practice of pumping fluids into underground rock to extract oil and natural gas contaminates drinking water. The Department of Energy, however, tracked chemicals injected into eight western Pennsylvania wells and found no contamination in the local water supply.
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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LOCAL & REGION
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
Police notes The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u A Santa Fe woman was found dead in her Camino de Jacobo residence around 4 p.m. Friday. u Police arrested Jhenna Salas, 28, of Santa Fe and charged her with possession of a controlled substance (heroin) and drug paraphernalia at 4:20 p.m. Friday on Cerrillos Road. u Police responded to a report of larceny at Comfort Doctor Heating Cooling and Plumbing, 3205 Mercantile Court, at 11:09 a.m. Friday and discovered a 50-gallon water heater worth $500 had been stolen. u Janelle Pacheco, 42, of Santa Fe was arrested and charged with three counts of child abuse after officers responded to a report of disorderly conduct Saturday afternoon at her residence in the 6800 block of Cerrillos Road. u Ann Lara of Rio Rancho was arrested and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia after police stopped the vehicle she was driving Saturday afternoon in the 2000 block of Cerrillos Road. Police also arrested passenger Lauren Herrera, 30, for possession of drug paraphernalia and providing a false name. Herrera had a Magistrate Court warrant out for her arrest for failure to appear on a shoplifting charge. u Anthony Quintana, 29, of Santa Fe was arrested at 7:30 p.m. Saturday near Cerrillos Road and Lujan Street. He is accused of stealing merchandise from Wal-Mart. u Matthew Lopez, 31, of Albuquerque was arrested at 5:04 p.m. Saturday and charged with shoplifting a pair of Wrangler jeans worth $100 and an NFL sweatshirt worth $35 from Wal-Mart, 3151 Cerrillos Road. Lopez admitted to stealing the items, the report stated. Lopez, who had two arrest warrants out of Colorado, also was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia. u Police arrested Jade Wilson, 31, of Santa Fe on three outstanding Municipal Court warrants as she was walking near Cerrillos and Airport roads at 3:41 a.m. Sunday. u Someone entered the laundromat at Dakota Canyon Apartments, 501 W. Zia Road, and caused $500 in damage to a white washing machine at about 2:30 a.m. Sunday. The Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following reports: u Deputies arrested a male suspect following the theft of a man’s wallet and credit cards Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino. The suspect, who was not named in the report and who had an active warrant for his arrest, allegedly attempted to destroy the evidence and was found with narcotics in his possession. While detained, the man damaged a security door, the report stated. u Someone broke into an RV storage unit Sunday on A Van Nu Po Road, but nothing was taken. u Deputies conducting a welfare check on a 78-year-old man on Sombra De Luna in Española found him dead Saturday. There were no signs of foul play. u Deputies responding Friday to a report of an unresponsive 84-year-old male on Tano Road found the man dead. The victim had a long history of medical issues, and there were no signs of foul play.
DWI arrests u Police arrested Kim Redfearn, 33, of Santa Fe in the 1000 block of St. Francis Drive at 2:14 a.m. Sunday and charged her with aggravated driving while intoxicated and reckless driving. u Police arrested David Becerra-Garcia of Santa Fe near the intersection of Interstate 25 and N.M. 599 at 2 a.m. Sunday and charged him with reckless driving, driving with a revoked license and driving while intoxicated. u Deputies arrested Daniel Bishop, 43, of Santa Fe at 10:15 p.m. Frdiay and charged him with aggravated driving while intoxicated, careless driving and aggravated fleeing after the car he was driving stuck another vehicle on West Gutierrez Street near U.S. 84/285.
THEODORE J. FLICKER, 1930-2014
Santa Fe filmmaker wanted to see vision through to end By Robert Nott The New Mexican
Theodore J. Flicker, perhaps best known for directing and writing the 1967 cult film The President’s Analyst, died in his sleep at his Santa Fe home Saturday morning. He was 84. “He went to sleep and didn’t wake up,” said his wife, Barbara. “He was lying on his back, I swear to God, smiling.” Longtime friend and artistic collaborator Joan Darling, who first met Flicker when the two worked in improvisational theater in New York, said, “I loved him. I hope he is in the great improvisational theater in the sky waiting for me.” Flicker was born in Freehold, N.J., in June 1930. In a 1995 interview, he said his introduction to theater came after he played Jiminy Cricket in a children’s production of Pinocchio. When the audience applauded, he said, “It was the fastest addiction in human history. I loved that clapping of the hands. And it carried me through to making a career.” In the early 1950s, Flicker served in the U.S. Army and attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where one of his classmates was Joan Collins, an actress he would later direct in the 1970 movie Up in the Cellar, shot in New Mexico. He worked with various improvisational groups and acted in theater shows before joining the Compass Theater — the antecedent of The Second City troupe — in Chicago and later in St. Louis. In New York, he founded The Premise Theater to mount satirical and
Theodore J. Flicker in his studio. COURTESY BARBARA FLICKER
spoof-ridden improvisational skits, where he worked with other comic notables including Buck Henry, George Segal and Darling. Flicker’s efforts to open and run a New York theater without paying off corrupt officials led him to direct his first film, the autobiographical satire The Troublemaker, co-written with Henry, in 1964. Darling, who acted in the film, recalled that it was not a success. “This was in the early days of independent cinema, and there were no film festivals or outlets for it; it had a very limited release,” she said. “It had an exuberance about it that I
How they voted By Targeted News Service
WASHINGTON — Here’s a look at how area members of Congress voted recently.
House votes House vote 1 Idaho wilderness lodge: The House has passed a bill (HR 4283), sponsored by Rep. Michael K. Simpson, R-Idaho, that would amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act to authorize the maintenance and replacement of electrical power and other facilities at a lodge at Smith Gulch in the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness in Idaho. The vote, on Sept. 8, was 398 yeas to 1 nay. Yeas: Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M.; Rep. Ben Ray Luján D-N.M.; Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M.
House vote 2 Condemning release of Taliban detainees: The House has passed a resolution (H Res 644), sponsored by Rep. E. Scott Rigell, R-Pa., to condemn and disapprove of the Obama administration’s failure in May to comply with a legal requirement to notify Congress before it released five Taliban leaders detained at the U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and express national security concerns over their release. The vote, on Sept. 9, was 249 yeas to 163 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján
House vote 3 EPA and water quality: The House has rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Timothy H. Bishop, D-N.Y., to the Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act (HR 5078). The amendment would have stated that the bill did not apply if the Environmental Protection Agency administrator found the bill was likely to harm water quality. The vote, on Sept. 9, was 170 yeas to 240 nays. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján Nays: Pearce
House vote 4 Federal water regulation: The House has passed the Waters of the United States Regulatory Overreach Protection Act (HR 5078), sponsored by Rep. Steve Southerland II, R-Fla. The bill would bar the Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers from adopting a proposed rule for defining a wide variety of bodies of water as eligible for federal regulation under the Clean Water Act. The vote, on Sept. 9, was 262 yeas to 152 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján
House vote 5 “Obamacare” coverage requirements: The House has passed the Employee Health Care Protection Act (HR 3522), sponsored by Rep. Bill Cassidy, R-La. The bill would declare that health insurance providers that offered group insurance plans during 2013 are considered as meeting the health care reform law’s minimum essential coverage requirement, and providers
thought was quite wonderful.” Of his early days at The Premise, Flicker recalled theater critic Walter Kerr writing, “The hissing from the coffee machine was far more interesting than anything he had seen on stage.” But the company remained a success, and Flicker later said it was a high point of his career. After directing some episodes of The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Andy Griffith Show, Flicker got a chance to direct a major motion picture with The President’s Analyst. James Coburn played the title role, a man who finds himself being chased by the FBI, the CIA, the Russian
can continue to offer such plans through 2018. The vote, on Sept. 11, was 247 yeas to 167 nays. Yeas: Pearce Nays: Lujan Grisham, Luján
secret service and pretty much everyone else as they come to realize he knows all the secrets of the most powerful man in the world. “It is one of the funniest movies of the year, ranking with The Graduate and Bedazzled in the sharp edge of its satire,” wrote critic Roger Ebert of the film. Good reviews didn’t save the anti-authoritative satire at the box office, and Flicker later said it incurred the wrath of J. Edgar Hoover, then head of the FBI, as well as other government officials. He said he was blacklisted in Hollywood, though he continued to direct television episodes
Senate votes Senate vote 1 Confirming appeals court judge: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Jill A. Pryor to serve as a judge on the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The vote, on Sept. 8, was unanimous with 97 yeas. Yeas: Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.
Senate vote 2 Social Security Advisory Board: The Senate has confirmed the nomination of Henry J. Aaron to serve on the Social Security Advisory Board for a term ending at the close of September. The Senate also, by voice vote, confirmed Aaron’s nomination for a subsequent term ending at the close of September 2020. The vote, on Sept. 8, was 54 yeas to 43 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall
DOLORES GRIEGO Dolores Griego 63, resident of Santa Fe passed away September 11, 2014 following a lengthy illness. Her love for God, the church, her family, and her husband were an important part of her life. She brought happiness to all that knew her. She was an extraordinary, remarkable person, with her laughter and love for everyone. One of her main goals was to learn Spanish with the help of her RosettaStone, to gain the confidence to master basic conversation skills. She is remembered as a loving and caring wife of 34 years, hard working, assuring everyone else was number one. She is preceded in death by her husband Larry Griego, parents, Alex and Lucy Armijo of Santa Fe. She is survived by two brothers, Anthony Armijo and wife Carolyn, Robert Armour and wife Kay of Michigan, three sisters, Raquel Lopez and husband Arturo, Camilla Armijo and husband Jim, Cecilia Tafoya and husband Charles, Aunts, Uncles, Nieces, Nephews, and cousins. She loved God, her family, and the Griego family with all her heart, especially Paul. a celebration of her life will be held at Vineyard Christian Fellowship Church (Behind the old Tecolote Restaurant), 1352 San Juan Drive, Santa Fe, on Wednesday, September 17 at 10:00 a.m. JOE VELA April 26, 1939 September 16, 2013
Senate vote 3 Restricting campaign financing: The Senate has agreed to a motion to end debate on the motion to consider a joint resolution (S J Res 19), sponsored by Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo. The resolution would propose a constitutional amendment to allow the federal government and state governments to restrict funding of federal political campaigns, while stipulating that any such restrictions could not limit freedom of the press. A supporter of the resolution, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said there has been an alarming spike in spending on campaigns following recent Supreme Court rulings that overturned spending limits, with the result that “radical billionaires are attempting to buy our democracy.” Reid said the amendment would solve that problem. The vote to end debate, on Sept. 8, was 79 yeas to 18 nays. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall
Senate vote 4 Debating limits on campaign financing: The Senate has rejected a motion to end debate on a joint resolution (S J Res 19), sponsored by Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo. The resolution would propose a constitutional amendment to allow the government to restrict funding of federal political campaigns, while stipulating that any such restrictions could not limit freedom of the press. The vote to end debate, on Sept. 10, was 54 yeas to 42 nays, with a three-fifths majority required for approval. Yeas: Heinrich, Udall
Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021 or rnott@sfnewmexican.com.
Funeral services and memorials
House vote 6 Labeling requirements for electronics: The House has passed the Enhance Labeling, Accessing, and Branding of Electronic Licenses Act (HR 5161), sponsored by Rep. Robert E. Latta, R-Ohio. The bill would require the Federal Communications Commission to, within nine months, issue regulations that allow manufacturers of devices that use radio frequencies to display electronic labeling on their equipment instead of physical labels. The vote, on Sept. 10, was unanimous with 402 yeas. Yeas: Lujan Grisham, Luján, Pearce
and made-for-TV features before creating, with Danny Arnold, the long-running sitcom The Barney Miller Show. According to Darling, Flicker expressed bitterness over the way Hollywood treated him. “Ted worked the best when he owned the store, so dealing with stupid authority was a real problem for him,” she said. Barbara Flicker said, “I don’t think Ted really liked making movies. There were too many people on the committee. He had a vision and wanted to see it through from beginning to end, and it kept getting warped by 200 other people.” Flicker occasionally acted in films, playing a victim of the Blob in 1972’s Beware The Blob! and Buffalo Bill Cody in the 1981 western Legend of the Lone Ranger, shot in New Mexico. According to Barbara Flicker, that’s when the two fell in love with Santa Fe. They moved here in 1986. In later years, Flicker wrote a novel, The Good American — one of the first to be published and marketed on the Internet — and turned to sculpting. Flicker married Barbara in 1966. He is survived by two brothers and many nieces and nephews. According to Barbara Flicker, she will plan a memorial service later this autumn. “I will miss him. I am glad I had him for 48 years,” she said. When they first met, Barbara told him, “I don’t want to be bored.” “Boy, did he live up to that,” she said.
DARLENE MANZANARES Darlene left her journey in life to join her lord and savior. Please join us to celebrate her life. A visitation will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 at 5:30 p.m. followed by a Rosary at 6:30 p.m. at Rosario Chapel Located at 499 N Guadalupe St, Santa Fe, NM 87501 A Mass will be celebrated on Wednesday, September 17, 2014 at 10 a.m. at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church.
1 year Anniversary mass St. Anne’s Church 7:00 a.m. on 9/16/2014 You are always in our thoughts, in our hearts and in our prayers. We miss you more than words can say. We love you, The Vela Family
Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com
JOHN M. NOEDEL 9/12/1973-9/04/2014 Survived by wife Jessica, daughter Alice, son Bobby, sister, Theresa. Preceded in death by his mother Alice Noedel. Rosary on September 16th at 9 a.m., Mass at 10 a.m. at Cristo Rey Church.
Celebrate thememoryofyourlovedonewith amemorialin TheSanta FeNewMexican
Call 986-3000
PUBLIC NOTICE Santa Fe Memorial Gardens is currently updating our cemetery and cremation records. If your family owns cemetery or cremation arrangements please contact us at. 989-7032
SANTA FE MEMORIAL GARDENS 417 E. RODEO ROAD, SANTA FE
505.989.7032
WWW.RIVERAFUNERALHOME.COM
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
OPINIONS
The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Hospital needs to survey public I have been reading and observing the issues regarding staffing at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center and wonder where the administration derives its information regarding safe staffing levels or customer satisfaction. Perhaps a revealing exercise would be for administrators to employ an independent auditing company to survey the public. Place people at Santa Fe food stores and ask the people entering the stores two questions: 1) If you were recommended by your physician to undergo a surgical process, would you choose Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center to receive the medical services? 2) If yes, for what reason? If no, for what reason? The answers should be made public. I am also concerned about the continual corporate creep of Christus into our community, buying medical practice after medical practice. It seems to me that it is very close to approaching a violation of the Federal Trade Commission’s rules against monopolies. (Oh yes, I forgot. Those rules do not apply to health care.)
Paul Cook
Santa Fe
Operas top-drawer In contrast to the column from Duane W. Roller regarding The Santa Fe Opera (“Operas straying off course,” My View, Aug. 31), I am eagerly anticipating next season at the Crosby Theatre. I am thrilled to live in a city that is home to this renowned company, which manages to
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Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor
Ray Rivera Editor
OUR VIEW
Qualifications too low to be sheriff
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run in the black, a remarkable feat in this financially challenging era. While one director’s inspiration and vision might not satisfy each opera lover’s individual taste, it was admirable that SFO presented five new productions, including one premiere, to fulfill its stated mission of presenting new works. The targeted-to-New Mexico Carmen was the perfect introduction to opera for my teenager, and Dr. Sun Yatsen fascinated my companion, a 30-year-old Santa Fe Opera first-timer. I was gratified to finally see Fidelio fully staged and delighted to hear Stravinsky’s music return to the SFO stage. I found this summer’s singing and orchestral performances to be top-drawer, and that is precisely why I attend — and why I will enthusiastically return next year for yet
another season of glorious Santa Fe Opera performances. Judith Moir
Santa Fe
Not us The latest Gov. Susana Martinez ad is a joke, right? “Gary King stands for the powerful few, not us.” I assume “us” is meant to include Martinez, who flits around the country in corporate jets, hustling campaign money from the Koch brothers and their fat cat friends. Who do you think owns her? Not “us.” “Us” actually includes New Mexicans suffering from mental illness, whose health care system was eviscerated by the Martinez administration in collusion with out-of-state auditors and health care providers.
It includes those of us who can’t feed our children and are now forced to seek nonexistent jobs to receive inadequate supplemental nutrition funding in one of two states that lost jobs in the last year. It includes our schoolchildren, who stumble in a daze from one “evaluation” to another, not learning how to think, only to fill in little dots and to become underpaid drudges for the governor’s corporate sponsors. It includes the 50 percent of us who were deemed unimportant when the New Mexico Commission on the Status of Women was unfunded by Martinez. She’s not one of us. She’s not our governor. Please tell her that Nov. 4. Adele E. Zimmermann
Embudo
COMMENTARY: JACOB BROGAN
ust about anyone can be elected sheriff in New Mexico. According to the state constitution, a candidate simply must be at least 18 years old, New Mexico resident and a U.S. citizen. Elected sheriffs don’t even have to be certified peace officers. That’s too low a bar. The New Mexico Sheriffs’ Association has announced it will ask the state Legislature to pass legislation that would increase requirements to ensure sheriffs are qualified to be a county’s top law enforcement officer. The association would like — at a minimum — to require that candidates have at least five years of law enforcement experience. Should the Legislature agree, voters would then have to amend the New Mexico Constitution. The association is on the right track. It makes sense that the boss of an organization should have at least the same qualifications as the men and women he or she supervises; deputies have to pass a 26-week law enforcement certification course, while sheriffs don’t. A sheriff lacking certification can’t even arrest people. The sheriffs association also wants to close loopholes in the law to ensure that sheriffs can’t have felony convictions before taking office. That’s also a common-sense requirement. But we think consideration of qualifications for sheriff could go further. A requirement for post-high school education, for example, college or military training, could help ensure better candidates. We’d even support a higher age requirement, believing that with age comes wisdom that can help a person who wants to run a sheriff’s office. It should be spelled out, too, that a sheriff must be a certified peace officer — experience is great, but if certification has lapsed, the wrong person could be elected. New Mexico isn’t unusual in its lack of requirements for the office of sheriff. But other states, like New Mexico, are realizing that tightening eligibility is a way to ensure a better quality officer becomes sheriff. We should join this growing trend.
For workers’ sake, don’t buy faded jeans
The past 100 years
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From The Santa Fe New Mexican: Sept. 15, 1914: Classified Ads: Wanted — Salesmen — We desire a forceful and aggressive salesman for a high-class calendar, leather and novelty line to represent us in Santa Fe as well as several counties in New Mexico. Will consider applications only from men of reliable character and real selling ability. J. Beckman Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Wanted — Saleswomen — Sell guaranteed hosiery to friends, neighbors and general wearers; 70 percent profit, make $10 daily; experience unnecessary. International Mills, West Philadelphia, Pa. Sept. 15, 1964: The New Mexico Child Welfare Service Division of the Department of Public Welfare is a major segment of the state welfare department headed by Leo T. Murphy. Though ordinarily little publicized, the child welfare agency operates in every county. It directly affects the lives and development of thousands of youngsters, ranging from infants to boys and girls 18 years of age. The New Mexico CWS currently has court-authorized custody of some 950 children, orphaned or from broken homes. This division also administers a foster home program extending into every populous section of the state. Sept. 15, 1989: Los Alamos — A Los Alamos National Laboratory researcher has come up with a new way to lift elusive fingerprints from plastic, paper, metal and glass surfaces. The Secret Service and the FBI are using the technique, and the method has been called one of the biggest developments in fingerprinting, the lab said in a news release. It works on just about anything. In fact, one of the few surfaces it doesn’t work on is real money. A patent application has been submitted for the fingerprint technique.
hen Bruce Springsteen’s denim-clad butt appeared on the cover of his 1984 album Born in the USA, the image evoked more than his Americanness or his sexiness. It established his working-class bona fides. Springsteen, Annie Leibovitz’s photograph tells us, is American and sexy because he works hard. And we know he works hard because he’s wearing denim. Specifically, denim that’s frayed in all the right places. For almost a century, blue jeans have been a quintessential item of work wear because labor leaves its mark on the fabric. Because denim loses color fastest at spots where we apply the most pressure, authentic fade patterns can reveal a great deal about what we do while we wear our pants. Bend and straighten your knees as you swing a pickaxe above your head, and a telltale “honeycomb” pattern will begin to form behind your legs. Sit in front of a computer all day, and your behind itself will grow pale. Tellingly, the indigo on Springsteen’s backside remains largely intact; only his wallet has left a significant mark. Whatever he does, this detail suggests, he does on his feet. But since the 1980s, many have adopted this aesthetic, clothing themselves in jeans faded in the factory rather than on their bodies. This may be precisely because they allow us to fantasize about increasingly distant forms of manual labor. Whether they realize it or not, for those who wear pre-distressed denim, every day is Halloween. Here’s the problem: Artificially weathered jeans perpetuate myths about work that obscures the real toils of those who make our clothes. When we casually pretend to be a cowboy or a car mechanic, manual labor starts to seem a
The distressed jeans made popular by Bruce Springsteen, shown singing ‘Born in the USA’ in 1985, are a symbol of working-class labor. But as we don our articificially weathered jeans out of nostalgia for the days of manual labor, real workers are dying from the toxic fading process. LENNOX MCLENDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO
little less real, and a little less substantial. To be sure, this problem is not limited to apparel: Seth Perlow, a cultural critic at Oklahoma State University, argues that initial fascination with the iPhone’s gestural interface helped to hide the real gestures of the workers who built the devices. But fake fades retain a special importance: They may be literally killing the mostly invisible workers who manufacture them for us. Traditionally, garment factories have used sandblasters to selectively strip layers of dye from denim. In 2005, a Turk-
MALLARD FILLMORE
Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell
ish physician definitively demonstrated that textile workers who operated these machines were developing silicosis at alarming rates. An incurable and often fatal respiratory disease, silicosis had long been associated with professions like mining. But where silicosis had previously taken decades to set in, workers in textile sand blasting facilities sometimes contract it in mere months. The irony of this situation should not escape us. The laborers who make our pants for us are dying of the very illness that once afflicted the workers our pants resemble. Despite efforts to ban or otherwise restrict sandblasting, it has yet to disappear completely. A 2013 study of six Chinese textile factories found that sandblasting is still widely practiced. The machinery has merely been pushed out of the public eye, meaning that there are fewer safety precautions than ever. What’s more, the report suggests that other methods of distressing denim may be similarly dangerous. For example, workers rarely receive proper safety training before they are assigned to handle potassium permanganate and other chemicals used to degrade indigo pigments. In other facilities, workers now sand jeans by hand, a practice whose risks have not been properly evaluated. Banning dangerous practices like sandblasting might help, but there’s a simpler solution: Let’s save the costumes for trick or treating and stop wearing pre-faded clothing. Next time you go to buy a pair of pants, be a little more like Springsteen: Let your butt make its own mark. Jacob Brogan is an essayist and academic living in Washington. He is researching a book on denim and labor. He wrote this commentary as a special to The Washington Post.
We welcome your letters Letters to the editor are among the best-read features of The New Mexican. We do our best to get every opinion in the paper. It doesn’t have to agree with ours. In fact, the wider the variety of ideas on the Opinion page, the better our readers are served. We try to run them in their turn. They’re all edited — for language, spelling and length. To give all readers a chance to speak out, we limit letter submissions per individual to once a month. Please limit letters to 150 words. Please print or type your name, and give us your address and telephone numbers — home and work — for verification. We keep numbers and addresses confidential. Email letters to: letters@sfnewmexican.com.
LA CUCARACHA
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 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
Tuesday
A t-storm around this A thunderstorm afternoon around this evening
80
Wednesday
Times of clouds and sun
53
Thursday
Partly sunny and humid
80/54
Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
A shower or thunder- A shower or thunder- A shower or thunder- A shower or thunderstorm around storm in spots storm around storm in spots
82/54
82/55
80/53
77/53
76/48
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
Humidity (Noon)
39%
73%
48%
41%
39%
46%
42%
47%
wind: W 4-8 mph
wind: ESE 4-8 mph
wind: WSW 4-8 mph
wind: SW 4-8 mph
wind: SW 6-12 mph
wind: WSW 7-14 mph
wind: NW 4-8 mph
wind: E 7-14 mph
New Mexico weather
Almanac Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Sunday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 82°/46° Normal high/low ............................ 80°/49° Record high ............................... 90° in 2010 Record low ................................. 35° in 1909 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/8.05” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.69”/9.76” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. Trace/7.55”
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64
285
64
Farmington 85/56
Española 83/60 Los Alamos 77/54 40
Santa Fe 80/53 Pecos 74/48
25
Albuquerque 84/61
Area rainfall
64 87
Taos 80/48
84
666
Gallup 81/51
Raton 71/48
64
25
56 412
Clayton 70/53
Las Vegas 74/48
54
40
40 285
Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.02”/6.08” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.05” Month/year to date .................. 0.48”/9.65” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.30”/7.86” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date ................ 0.33”/10.52” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.23”/5.13”
60 60
The following water statistics of September 11 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 1.929 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 8.177 City Wells: 1.433 Buckman Wells: 0.000 Total water produced by water system: 11.539 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.320 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 12.9 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.62 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
By Natasha Singer The New York Times
As of 9/11/2014 Chenopods........................................... 4 Low Grasses ................................................ 1 Low Ragweed.............................................. 2 Low ...................................................................... Total.............................................................7 Source:
60
25
Today’s UV index
54 285 380
180
Roswell 81/63
Ruidoso 70/54
25
Truth or Consequences 83/64
70
70
380
380
70
Hobbs 79/62
285
Alamogordo 83/64
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 10
Water statistics
Air quality index
Clovis 80/57
54
Las Cruces 82/63
Carlsbad 82/65
54
285
10
Sun and moon
State extremes Sun. High 86 ............................. Farmington Sun. Low 30 ................................ Angel Fire
State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces
Hi/Lo W 77/59 t 82/61 t 74/30 t 67/55 c 66/55 c 74/44 pc 82/38 t 79/51 s 57/46 t 74/54 pc 81/51 s 81/59 pc 81/60 t 86/55 s 73/54 r 84/54 t 81/48 t 64/54 c 78/59 pc
Hi/Lo W 83/64 pc 84/61 t 70/42 t 81/63 pc 82/65 t 76/44 t 75/47 t 70/53 pc 66/47 pc 80/57 t 79/55 t 83/63 pc 83/60 t 85/56 t 84/61 t 81/51 t 79/51 t 79/62 t 82/63 pc
Hi/Lo W 78/61 pc 83/62 pc 70/42 pc 81/64 pc 81/66 pc 75/44 pc 79/46 pc 81/59 pc 64/47 pc 79/59 pc 77/53 pc 77/60 pc 82/61 pc 85/54 pc 83/62 pc 80/48 pc 79/48 pc 79/62 pc 76/62 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 77/46 82/60 77/54 82/56 75/56 84/43 56/38 82/61 69/54 64/50 81/55 75/55 81/58 76/36 78/60 81/55 80/61 80/52 82/54
W t r t pc r t r r t t r t r pc t pc r pc t
Hi/Lo W 74/48 t 86/67 pc 77/54 t 86/59 t 82/60 t 71/48 t 69/42 t 85/56 t 81/63 t 70/54 t 82/57 t 79/60 pc 84/60 t 80/48 t 83/64 pc 83/58 t 86/65 pc 79/54 t 81/53 t
Hi/Lo W 75/48 pc 79/65 pc 77/54 pc 84/60 pc 80/61 pc 79/46 pc 70/41 pc 83/57 pc 80/62 pc 67/54 pc 81/58 pc 73/59 pc 81/61 pc 79/47 pc 78/61 pc 85/61 pc 82/64 pc 79/54 pc 79/50 pc
Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Sunrise today ............................... 6:47 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 7:12 p.m. Moonrise today ................................... none Moonset today ............................. 1:37 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 6:48 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 7:10 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ...................... 12:08 a.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 2:27 p.m. Sunrise Wednesday ...................... 6:48 a.m. Sunset Wednesday ....................... 7:09 p.m. Moonrise Wednesday ................. 12:59 a.m. Moonset Wednesday .................... 3:12 p.m. Last
New
First
Full
Sep 15
Sep 23
Oct 1
Oct 8
The planets Rise 8:54 a.m. 5:57 a.m. 12:24 p.m. 3:34 a.m. 11:18 a.m. 8:07 p.m.
Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
Set 8:07 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 10:17 p.m. 5:24 p.m. 9:52 p.m. 8:44 a.m.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014
National cities
Weather for September 15
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Anchorage 61/46 pc 58/49 sh 60/47 sh Atlanta 77/67 c 80/69 t 82/66 pc Baltimore 70/49 pc 75/61 s 76/52 pc Billings 64/36 s 74/48 s 84/55 s Bismarck 62/36 pc 66/38 s 71/43 s Boise 86/53 s 90/62 s 92/63 s Boston 66/53 pc 67/55 s 67/54 r Charleston, SC 87/75 r 85/73 t 86/71 r Charlotte 70/62 c 80/66 t 84/63 pc Chicago 65/42 pc 61/45 r 66/46 s Cincinnati 70/50 pc 74/54 pc 69/47 s Cleveland 65/42 pc 68/52 r 64/47 pc Dallas 79/63 pc 88/72 pc 88/72 t Denver 86/46 pc 72/51 s 84/54 s Detroit 64/43 c 64/46 r 66/46 pc Fairbanks 76/51 pc 69/43 pc 64/38 sh Flagstaff 78/48 t 75/48 t 75/49 t Honolulu 89/74 s 89/75 s 90/75 s Houston 77/65 c 90/74 t 90/73 t Indianapolis 68/46 pc 69/49 pc 66/46 s Kansas City 72/52 pc 68/47 t 69/54 s Las Vegas 102/75 s 100/76 s 101/75 pc Los Angeles 98/71 s 94/72 s 96/74 s
Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 73/48 pc 76/60 s 79/58 pc 83/66 pc 89/75 pc 89/77 pc 64/45 pc 57/45 r 65/50 pc 61/44 pc 90/74 pc 87/75 t 71/53 pc 73/62 s 79/54 sh 83/62 c 91/73 pc 91/72 t 69/53 pc 77/63 s 102/82 s 104/83 pc 65/42 pc 70/52 pc 89/52 pc 94/60 s 74/56 pc 80/66 pc 73/47 s 77/53 t 88/60 pc 88/64 s 86/66 pc 92/75 t 85/73 pc 85/74 s 74/59 pc 74/59 pc 86/53 s 87/58 s 67/41 pc 63/42 pc 69/49 s 73/58 s 74/56 pc 79/66 s
Hi/Lo 71/52 80/62 89/76 63/46 67/50 86/74 74/57 83/66 90/72 75/55 98/76 66/44 82/59 81/58 69/50 89/66 93/75 86/76 73/59 78/59 68/53 73/50 79/59
W s pc t s s t r pc t pc t pc pc pc s s t s pc pc s pc 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 Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries
Ice
Warm front
National extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states) Sun. High: 117 ................. Death Valley, CA Sun. Low: 18 .......................... Wisdom, MT
Weather history
Weather trivia™
On Sept. 15, 1991, a cold northerly wind brought 5 inches of snow to Rand, Colo., while Cleveland, Ohio, passed 90 degrees.
average, how many gallons of Q: On water does the air hold in summer?
A: 40 trillion
Newsmakers Statue of singer Amy Winehouse unveiled
Depiction of Amy Winehouse
LONDON — Late singer Amy Winehouse has been honored on what would have been her 31st birthday with a life-size statue in her beloved Camden Town neighborhood of north London. Winehouse’s many fans will have no problem recognizing the singer, who is portrayed sporting her distinctive beehive hairdo. Winehouse’s father Mitch said Sunday it was “incredibly emotional” to see the statue. Winehouse died three years ago after battling drug and alcohol abuse.
Police detain ‘Django Unchained’ actress in LA
Daniele Watts
LOS ANGELES — An actress who appeared in Django Unchained was handcuffed by police responding to a report of indecent exposure. The Los Angeles Police Department said Sunday that officers detained Daniele Watts and her companion last week after a complaint that two people were “involved in indecent exposure” in a silver Mercedes. Watts was detained until police determined no crime was committed. On a Facebook page that appears to be associated with the actress, Watts says she was guilty only of showing affection in public. The Associated Press
City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima
Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 68/57 pc 70/56 pc 73/57 t 86/70 s 82/70 t 80/65 pc 104/81 s 106/76 s 104/75 s 93/80 c 92/79 t 92/79 t 81/72 pc 80/70 t 79/71 t 75/65 c 81/56 s 77/55 pc 70/59 pc 75/58 pc 74/56 pc 66/52 sh 65/45 c 66/46 c 63/57 r 68/47 s 67/52 c 91/74 s 94/75 s 96/75 s 88/77 pc 87/75 t 88/74 t 81/61 t 82/68 t 79/65 pc 66/59 pc 67/57 pc 67/56 pc 63/54 pc 61/49 pc 64/52 pc 70/55 pc 75/55 pc 77/57 pc 75/63 pc 71/60 t 71/60 t 88/70 pc 89/73 pc 89/71 pc 91/83 c 93/82 sh 88/82 t 79/62 s 78/62 s 80/64 s 66/59 c 68/59 s 66/58 pc
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 77/68 70/54 84/59 70/57 52/45 50/44 96/77 72/59 63/59 81/68 79/57 70/43 81/65 88/81 66/43 75/50 79/68 72/52 66/57 70/54
W pc pc s t c sh t pc t s s s pc c pc t pc s t pc
Hi/Lo 76/67 70/55 80/58 73/54 63/51 59/44 94/76 75/55 70/52 87/71 78/60 77/47 81/60 89/78 65/46 71/57 76/68 74/55 70/56 72/52
W t c c t pc s t pc pc s pc s pc t pc pc pc s pc pc
Hi/Lo 75/67 72/58 84/60 72/56 64/45 57/36 95/78 78/59 71/51 77/69 80/61 70/46 77/60 88/78 63/47 75/54 81/67 69/54 70/55 75/51
W t pc c t pc s t pc pc t pc pc c t s pc pc c pc pc
TV
top picks
7 p.m. on NBC American Ninja Warrior It’s a matter of national pride — as well as of the usual, essential agility and endurance — for the two teams pitted against each other in a special, threehour “USA vs. the World” edition of the competition. Five American contenders go up against Japanese and European counterparts in all four stages of the finals course in Las Vegas. Hosts Matt Iseman and Akbar Gbaja Biamila keep their eyes on the action. Jenn Brown co-hosts. 7 p.m. on ABC Dancing With the Stars Season 19 of the competition begins with a new group of celebrity dancers including actors Antonio Sabato Jr. and Lea Thompson, two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip, Olympian Lolo Jones, comic Tommy Chong and talk-show host Tavis Smiley. Co-hosts Tom Bergeron and Erin Andrews return, and someone else also is back: Julianne Hough, formerly a dancer on the show — but now a permanent fourth judge. The results show is now separate again, airing on Tuesdays. 8 p.m. on CW America’s Next Top Model All it takes is the title “The Guy Who Starts a Fight” to know there won’t be
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Few controls on how companies use collected student data
Sunday’s rating ................................... Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA
Pollen index
25
Technology in the classroom creates privacy concerns
total peace and harmony among the contestants in this new episode. Indeed, a house party takes unexpected and tense turns, particularly when one of the models ignores a certain rule. Host Tyra Banks offers advice during a photo shoot that’s meant to portray intimate moments, but the models are on their own during a challenge that involves stilts. 8 p.m. on A&E Love Prison After dating exclusively online for two years, Rosie, a party girl from Los Angeles, and Iowa computer nerd Chris finally decide to put their relationship to the “Love Prison” acid test and spend a week together on a remote island. Before their time together is out, several secrets and revelations come to light in this new episode. 9 p.m. on CBS Under the Dome The Dome has yielded fresh problem after fresh problem for the residents of Chester’s Mill lately, and yet another presents itself in the new episode “Turn,” the penultimate episode of the show’s season (with the finale airing next week). Death by crushing becomes the latest peril for all of the citizens, while Melanie (Grace Victoria Cox) takes a turn for the worse in terms of health. Mike Vogel, Rachelle Lefevre, Dean Norris and Eddie Cahill also star.
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At a New York state elementary school, teachers can use a behavior-monitoring app to compile information on which children have positive attitudes and which act out. In Georgia, some high school cafeterias are using a biometric identification system to let students pay for lunch by scanning the palms of their hands at the checkout line. And across the country, school sports teams are using social media sites for athletes to exchange contact information and game locations. Technology companies are collecting a vast amount of data about students, touching every corner of their educational lives — with few controls on how those details are used. Now California is poised to become the first state to comprehensively restrict how such information is exploited by the growing education technology industry. Lawmakers in the state passed a law last month banning educational sites, apps and cloud services used by schools from selling or disclosing personal information about students from kindergarten through high school; from using the children’s data to market to them; and from compiling dossiers on them. The law is a response to growing parental concern that sensitive information about children — like data about learning disabilities, disciplinary problems or family trauma — might be disseminated and disclosed, potentially hampering college or career prospects. Although other states have enacted limited restrictions on such data, California’s law is the most wide-ranging. “It’s a landmark bill in that it’s the first of its kind in the country to put the onus on Internet companies to do the right thing,” said Sen. Darrell Steinberg, a Democrat who wrote the bill. Gov. Jerry Brown has not taken a public position on the measure, or on a companion student privacy bill regulating school contracts with education technology vendors. If he does not act, the bills will become law at the end of this month. Steinberg said the bills had broad bipartisan support and were likely to be enacted. James P. Steyer, chief executive of Common Sense Media, a children’s advocacy and media ratings group in San Francisco, said the bills were ultimately intended to shore up parents’ trust in online learning. “You can’t have an education technology revolution without strong privacy protections for students,” said Steyer, whose group spearheaded the passage of Steinberg’s bill. “Parents, teachers and kids can now feel confident that students’ personal information can be used only for educational achievement.” In a sign of the rapid growth of the education technology industry, even Steyer’s group has partnerships with Google, Apple and other software vendors, who distribute the group’s ratings of apps and videos for children. The California effort comes at a pivotal time for the industry. Schools nationwide have been rushing to introduce everything from sophisticated online portals, which allow students to see course assignments and send messages to teachers, to reading apps that can record and assess a child’s every click. These datadriven products are designed to adapt to the abilities and pace of each child, holding out the promise of improved academic achievement. Last year, sales of education technology software for prekindergarten through 12th grade reached an estimated $7.9 billion, according
to the Software and Information Industry Association. As schools embrace these personalized learning tools, however, parents across the country have started challenging the industry’s information privacy and security practices. “Different websites collect different kinds of information that could be aggregated to create a profile of a student, starting in elementary school,” said Tony Porterfield, a software engineer and father of two pre-teenage sons in Los Altos, Calif. “Can you imagine a college-admissions officer being able to access behavioral tracking information about a student, or how they did on a math app, all the way back to grade school?” Last year, parent groups and privacy advocates raised those kinds of concerns about inBloom, a student data warehouse that offered to streamline how educators and apps retrieved student information; inBloom withered in the face of that opposition, closing down in April. A federal law, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, limits the disclosures of student education records by schools that receive public funding. But critics have long complained that the 40-year-old law, written for the file-cabinet era when student records were kept on paper, has not kept pace with digital data-mining. Privacy advocates say many of the details now collected by education sites and apps are not covered by the law because they do not form part of the institutional student education records maintained by schools. A recent study by researchers at Fordham Law School in New York reported that some public schools in the United States did not limit the kinds of information their education technology vendors collected from students or how the companies used those details. Among other things, the California bill prohibits companies from selling, disclosing or using for marketing purposes students’ online searches, text messages, photos, voice recordings, biometric data, location information, food purchases, political or religious information, digital documents or any kind of student identification code. The idea is to prevent companies from using information about students for any activity not intended by their schools. “The California statute is filling the void,” said Joel R. Reidenberg, a professor at Fordham Law School who is an expert in education privacy law. “They are modernizing the protection of student privacy for the computer era in schools.” California lawmakers did make some concessions to industry. An exception in the legislation, for instance, allows companies to use student data for “legitimate research purposes.” Last year, Steinberg sponsored an “eraser button” law that gives minors in California the right to delete their digital footprints. Subsequently, other states introduced their own eraser button bills, and the senator predicted that legislators elsewhere would now sponsor their own comprehensive student privacy measures. In Washington, D.C., this summer, two senators introduced a national student data privacy bill. But Steinberg said he thought his current effort had implications beyond education. The California student privacy measure would essentially advance a fundamental principle of data rights for everyone: that a person who agrees to let a company collect personal details about them for a specific purpose has the right to decide whether that company may subsequently use that same information for unrelated activities. “The bill sets a standard that is applicable to the larger privacy debate,” Steinberg said. “Personal information should only be used for other purposes with the permission of the individual.”
National scoreboard B-2 Baseball B-3 NFL B-4, 5 Classifieds B-6 Time Out B-11 Comics B-12
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
SPORTS TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP
Dodgers: Los Angeles beats San Francisco, opening a 3 game lead in NL West. Page B-3
B
NFL
Broncos need goal-line stand to stop Chiefs By Arnie Stapleton
INSIDE
The Associated Press
Billy Horschel collected $11.4 million in one day with an incomparable run through the playoffs. JOHN AMIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Horschel’s hot hands storm way to victory
DENVER — It took the Denver Broncos three tries to put away the Kansas City Chiefs. Terrance Knighton batted away Alex Smith’s fourth-andgoal pass to Dwayne Denver 24 Bowe with 15 secKansas City 17 onds left, preserving the Broncos’ 24-17 win over the scrappy Chiefs on Sunday. The Broncos (2-0) thought they had sealed the win twice earlier on the drive. Aqib Talib’s pick-6 was negated by Quanterus Smith’s hold. Then, Nate Irving’s fumble recovery following DeMarcus Ware’s sack and strip was ruled an incomplete pass after a review.
u The Cowboys’ defense helps the team avoid a 0-2 start. PAGE B-4
TONIGHT’S GAME 6:15 p.m. on ESPN — Philadelphia at Indianapolis
The Chiefs (0-2), without All-Pro running back Jamaal Charles for much of the game, converted 11 of 16 third-down opportunities overall. They just couldn’t capitalize in the biggest moments as the Broncos mustered two goal-line stands for the second straight week. Peyton Manning was 21 of 26 for 242 yards and three TDs, but the Broncos
Please see BRONCOS, Page B-4
Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning throws under pressure from Kansas City Chiefs defensive end Allen Bailey on Sunday in Denver. JACK DEMPSEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SANTA FE THUNDER HALF MARATHON
Kenyans finish in top two spots
By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Billy Horschel capped off the best three weeks of his career with the biggest payoff in golf. Horschel pulled away from a selfdestructing Rory McIlroy early, and then holed two clutch putts that felt like $10 million to hold off Jim Furyk on the back nine at East Lake. He closed with a 2-under 68 for a threeshot victory in the Tour Championship to capture the FedEx Cup. Horschel’s career earnings were just over $4.5 million coming into the year. He collected $11.4 million in one day — most of that the $10 million FedEx Cup bonus — with an incomparable run through the playoffs. The 27-year-old from Florida was runner-up in Boston, a winner in Denver and he cashed in big in Atlanta. Horschel was No. 69 when the playoffs began a month ago. No one had ever won the FedEx Cup starting lower than No. 19. He epitomized what these playoffs offered — one month for anyone to get a hot hand. Horschel shot in the 60s his last 12 rounds. “He was clutch when he needed to be,” McIlroy said. “He played the best golf this week and I’m happy for him.” The only boos Horschel heard all day was doing the Gator chomp walking off the 18th green before a host of Georgia fans. The timing was great for Horschel — not so much for the American team going over to the Ryder Cup in two weeks. U.S. captain Tom Watson made his three picks after Horschel’s runner-up finish in the Deutsche Bank Championship. Now the hottest hand in golf — he should move up to No. 14 in the world — will be watching from home. Horschel figures to be plenty occupied. His wife is expecting their first child, a girl, in two weeks. Furyk closed with two bogeys for a 69 and his fourth runner-up finish this year. He has not won since the Tour Championship four years ago. McIlroy never recovered from three straight bogeys around the turn, and
Please see GOLF, Page B-3
Jacob Chemtai, left, a Kenyan who trains in Santa Fe along with fellow countryman Nelson Oyugi, crosses the finish line of Sunday’s Santa Fe Thunder Half Marathon. Chemtai’s time of 1:02:54 was tops in the 13.1-mile race. PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN The New Mexican
INSIDE
ne of the fastest growing races in the Southwest went off without a hitch on Sunday afternoon on the road heading north out of Santa Fe. The annual Santa Fe Thunder Half Marathon and 5K Race drew a record number of entrants this year, once again attracting some of the most talented distance runners who travel to the Rio Grande corridor to train in Northern New Mexico’s dry, high-desert climate. The marquee event was once again the halfmarathon, a 13.1-mile road race that began at Fort Marcy Ballpark, rose 300 feet on the highway toward the Santa Fe Opera, then dropped 1,300 feet over the course of the final 10 miles toward the Buffalo Thunder Casino and Resort in Pojoaque. Last year’s men’s champion, Kenyan Nelson Oyugi, finished second on Sunday to countryman Jacob Chemtai. Both men train in Santa Fe, along with fellow Kenyan men Benard Langat and Stanley Boen, all of whom finished in the top eight.
u See top 20 results in each race. PAGE B-3
O
Oyugi set the course record last year, but his time of 1 hour, 3 minutes and 3 seconds was nine seconds slower than Chemtai’s winning time. Ethiopian Simeg Yeshanbel won the women’s race, dominating the field with a time of 1:11:30. She averaged 5 minutes, 27 seconds per mile, 18 seconds faster than anyone else. Sarah Kiptoo was runner-up for the second straight year. The Kenyan who trains in Santa Fe ran at a 5:45 rate, but was still nearly four minutes slower than her Yeshanbel’s blistering pace. Los Alamos resident Nikol Strother was the women’s 5K champion in a time of 20 minutes, 41 seconds. She was 9 seconds faster than Santa Fe’s Esperanza Cortez, who finished second. The men’s 5K champion was Trevor Merhege in 16:46. Albuquerque’s Patrick Ortiz was second, 15 seconds off the pace.
Simeg Yeshanbel won the women’s race Sunday. An Ethiopian who trains in Albuquerque, Yeshanbel finished in 1:11:30, nearly 4 minutes faster than Sarah Kiptoo.
BASKETBALL WORLD CUP
USA cruises in final game, makes Olympics United States’ DeMarcus Cousins, right, scores during the final Basketball World Cup match Sunday in Madrid. MANU FERNANDEZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press
MADRID — Kyrie Irving made all six 3-pointers and scored 26 USA 129 points, and the U.S. Serbia 92 repeated as world champion for the first time by crushing Serbia 129-92 on Sunday in the Basketball World Cup. James Harden added 23 for the Americans, who made 11 of 16 3-pointers in a sensational-
shooting first half, adding one final romp to a tournament full of them. This depleted team that was supposedly weak enough to lose was too good to be touched. The Americans were supposed to have All-Star forwards Kevin Durant, Kevin Love and Blake Griffin, who all informed USA Basketball not long before the tournament that they would be unavailable. But Irving — the tournament MVP — and Harden stuck around, and despite sending the
Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Richard Olmsted, rolmsted@sfnewmexican.com
youngest U.S. team since NBA players debuted in 1992, the Americans remained as dominant as ever. They have won 63 straight games — 45 in official FIBA events and 18 in exhibition play — and are automatically qualified for the 2016 Olympics in Brazil. LeBron James, Durant, Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul might want to return for that. But the Americans will have to leave room for some players from this team, which has loads
of young talent that figures to get even better from the time it spent together. It was the fifth world title for the Americans, tying Yugoslavia for the most all-time. And the second for Derrick Rose, who used this tournament as his return after missing most of the last two seasons following a pair of knee surgeries, along with Stephen Curry and Rudy Gay. It was the first medal for Serbia, which had been a part
Please see USA, Page B-3
BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM
B-2
NATIONAL SCOREBOARD
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
Angels 5, Astros 2
BASEBALL BASEBALL
Houston
MLB American League East W L Pct GB Baltimore 89 60 .597 — Toronto 77 71 .520 11½ New York 76 72 .514 12½ Tampa Bay 72 78 .480 17½ Boston 66 84 .440 23½ Central W L Pct GB Detroit 83 66 .557 — Kansas City 81 67 .547 1½ Cleveland 76 72 .514 6½ Chicago 68 81 .456 15 Minnesota 63 86 .423 20 West W L Pct GB Los Angeles 93 56 .624 — Oakland 83 66 .557 10 Seattle 80 68 .541 12½ Houston 66 83 .443 27 Texas 57 92 .383 36 Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay 6, Toronto 5, 10 innings Detroit 6, Cleveland 4 Boston 8, Kansas City 4 Minnesota 6, Chicago White Sox 4 Texas 10, Atlanta 3 Houston 6, L.A. Angels 1 Oakland 4, Seattle 0 Baltimore 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Monday’s Games Toronto (Stroman 10-5) at Baltimore (W.Chen 15-4), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Capuano 2-3) at Tampa Bay (Colome 1-0), 7:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 9-11) at Kansas City (Shields 14-7), 8:10 p.m. Cleveland (McAllister 3-6) at Houston (McHugh 9-9), 8:10 p.m. Detroit (Scherzer 16-5) at Minnesota (Swarzak 3-1), 8:10 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 14-7) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 15-4), 10:05 p.m.
National League East W L Pct GB Washington 85 63 .574 — Atlanta 75 74 .503 10½ Miami 72 76 .486 13 New York 72 78 .480 14 Philadelphia 69 80 .463 16½ Central W L Pct GB St. Louis 83 67 .553 — Pittsburgh 79 70 .530 3½ Milwaukee 78 72 .520 5 Cincinnati 71 79 .473 12 Chicago 65 84 .436 17½ West W L Pct GB Los Angeles 85 64 .570 — San Francisco 82 67 .550 3 San Diego 68 80 .459 16½ Arizona 61 88 .409 24 Colorado 59 90 .396 26 Sunday’s Games Washington 3, N.Y. Mets 0 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago Cubs 3 Miami 5, Philadelphia 4 Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 2 St. Louis 4, Colorado 1 Texas 10, Atlanta 3 L.A. Dodgers 4, San Francisco 2 Arizona 8, San Diego 6 Monday’s Games Miami (Cosart 4-2) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 8-6), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 11-11) at Atlanta (E.Santana 14-8), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Simon 14-10) at Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 8-12), 8:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (R.Hernandez 8-11) at Colorado (Bergman 2-3), 8:40 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 8-10) at Arizona (Miley 7-11), 9:40 p.m. Philadelphia (Je.Williams 3-1) at San Diego (Cashner 3-7), 10:10 p.m.
Orioles 3, Yankees 2 New York ab r Ellsury cf 4 0 Jeter ss 4 0 Gardnr lf 4 0 Prado 3b 4 1 BMcCn c 4 1 Teixeir 1b 4 0 CYoung dh 2 0 Drew 2b 4 0 Rchrds rf 2 0 Beltran ph 1 0 ISuzuki rf 0 0 Totals
hbi 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Baltimore ab r Markks rf 4 0 De Aza lf 4 1 A.Jones cf 4 0 N.Cruz dh 4 0 QBerry pr 0 1 Pearce 1b 4 1 JHardy ss 4 0 KJhnsn 3b 4 0 Hundly c 3 0 Schoop 2b 3 0
33 2 6 2 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 0
34 3 9 3
New York 010 000 001—2 Baltimore 000 001 002—3 One out when winning run scored. E—De Aza (3). LOB—New York 6, Baltimore 6. 2B—A.Jones (30), N.Cruz (29), Pearce (25), J.Hardy (27). HR— Prado (7), B.McCann (20). New York IP H R ER BB SO Kuroda 7 6 1 1 0 5 Betances 1 0 0 0 0 2 Dav.Robrtsn L, BS 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Baltimore Tillman 6 2-3 5 1 1 1 6 A.Miller 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 3 O’Day W,5-1 1 1 1 1 1 1 WP—Tillman. Umpires—Home, Ed Hickox; First, Todd Tichenor; Second, Clint Fagan; Third, Tim Welke. T—3:04. A—43,947 (45,971).
Dodgers 17, Giants 0 Los Angeles ab r DGordn 2b 7 3 YGarci p 0 0 Puig cf 5 3 Elbert p 0 0 C.Perez p 0 0 Barney 2b 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 5 1 VnSlyk 1b 2 1 Kemp rf 4 2 Pedrsn cf 1 1 HRmrz ss 5 1 Arrrrn ss 2 0 Crwfrd lf 4 1 Guerrr lf 1 0 Uribe 3b 4 1 Rojas 3b 1 0 A.Ellis c 5 1 Fdrwcz c 1 0 Greink p 3 2 Berndn rf 0 0 Totals
hbi 2 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 3 3 0 0 4 2 0 0 2 3 1 0 2 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 2 2 0 0
San Francisco ab r Pagan cf 2 0 J.Perezrf 2 0 Panik 2b 4 0 Posey c 1 0 Quiroz c 3 0 Sandovl 3b2 0 Kickhm p 0 0 Bochy p 0 0 Duvall 3b 2 0 Pence rf 2 0 GBrwn cf 1 0 GBlanc lf 3 0 Cordier p 0 0 Heston p 0 0 Ishikaw 1b 3 0 BCrwfr ss 2 0 MDuffy ss 1 0 THudsn p 0 0 Linccm p 1 0 CDmng lf 2 0
51 172417 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
31 0 5 0
Los Angeles 441 204 200—17 San Francisco 000 000 000—0 E—Arruebarrena (2), Panik (7), M.Duffy (2). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Los Angeles 15, San Francisco 4. 2B—Puig (34), Kemp 2 (36), H.Ramirez (31), Greinke (5), Pagan (21), J.Perez (7). HR—Van Slyke (11), Uribe (9), Greinke (1). SB—D.Gordon (60). SF—C. Crawford. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO Greinke W,15-8 6 4 0 0 0 5 Elbert 1 1 0 0 0 0 C.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Y.Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco T.Hudson L,9-11 1 8 6 6 0 2 Lincecum 3 7 5 5 1 1 Kickham 1 2-3 6 4 4 1 1 Bochy 1 1-3 1 2 2 1 1 Cordier 1 2 0 0 0 2 Heston 1 0 0 0 1 2 T.Hudson pitched to 2 batters in the 2nd. HBP—by Cordier (Bernadina), by Lincecum (Puig), by Bochy (Bernadina). WP—Greinke. Umpires—Home, Adam Hamari; First, Doug Eddings; Second, D.J. Reyburn; Third, Cory Blaser. T—3:15. A—41,533 (41,915).
hbi 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Los Angeles ab r Calhon rf 4 1 Trout cf 3 3 Pujols 1b 3 0 HKndrc 2b 4 0 Aybar ss 4 0 Freese dh 4 0 GBckh 3b 4 0 Conger c 3 0 Cowgill lf 3 1
Grssmn lf Altuve 2b Carter dh JCastro c Presley cf Mrsnck rf MGnzlz ss Singltn 1b G.Petit 3b Fowler ph MDmn 3b
ab r 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 4 1 4 0 2 0 1 1 0 0
Totals
33 2 7 2 Totals
hbi 0 0 3 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0
32 5 11 5
Houston 001 000 010—2 Los Angeles 101 000 30x—5 DP—Houston 1. LOB—Houston 6, Los Angeles 8. 2B—Altuve (42), Fowler (18), Trout (39), Aybar (29). HR—Trout 2 (34). SB—Ma.Gonzalez (2), Cowgill (4). CS—Conger (2). S—Marisnick, Conger. Houston IP H R ER BB SO Feldman L,8-11 6 8 2 2 1 5 Foltynewicz 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 D.Downs 0 0 2 2 2 0 Veras 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 K.Chapman 1 1 0 0 0 2 Los Angeles Weaver W,17-8 7 4 1 1 1 12 Jepsen 1 2 1 1 0 2 Street S,14-16 1 1 0 0 0 1 D.Downs pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP—D.Downs. Umpires—Home, Lance Barrett; First, Dana DeMuth; Second, Tom Woodring; Third, Ron Kulpa. T—3:19. A—38,041 (45,483).
Athletics 3, Mariners 2, 10 innings, Oakland
Seattle
ab r Crisp cf 4 1 Fuld lf 4 0 Dnldsn 3b 3 1 A.Dunn dh 3 0 JGoms dh 1 0 Callasp dh 0 0 Moss 1b 4 0 Lowrie ss 4 0 Reddck rf 5 1 DeNrrs c 4 0 Sogard 2b 4 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 3 1
ab r AJcksn cf 4 0 EnChvz lf 4 0 Cano 2b 4 1 KMorls dh 3 0 Seager 3b 4 0 Morrsn 1b 2 0 Hart ph 1 0 Zunino c 4 0 J.Jones rf 3 1 CTaylr ss 3 0
36 3 8 3 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 1
32 2 5 2
Oakland 000 001 100 1—3 Seattle 001 000 100 0—2 E—Gray (3). DP—Oakland 3. LOB— Oakland 10, Seattle 2. 2B—Reddick (14). 3B—J.Jones (5). HR—Donaldson (27), Cano (14). SB—Sogard (11). CS— Sogard (3). S—Fuld. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO Gray 8 5 2 2 2 7 Gregerson W,5-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Doolittle S,21-24 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle F.Hernandez 7 7 2 2 0 8 Beimel 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen 0 0 0 0 1 0 Furbush 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Farquhar 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Rodney L,1-6 1 0 1 1 4 1 Wilhelmsen pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. WP—F.Hernandez 2. Umpires—Home, Mike Muchlinski; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Brian Gorman; Third, David Rackley. T—3:20. A—43,913 (47,476).
Nationals 3, Mets 0 Washington ab r Span cf 4 0 Rendon 3b 4 0 Werth rf 4 0 LaRoch 1b 4 0 Dsmnd ss 4 2 Harper lf 3 0 WRams c 4 1 Espinos 2b 3 0 Zmrmn p 2 0 Thrntn p 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 Frndsn ph 0 0 Storen p 0 0 Totals
New York hbi 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ab r EYong lf 3 0 dnDkkr ph 1 0 Lagars cf 5 0 DnMrp 3b 4 0 Duda 1b 3 0 Flores 2b 4 0 Grndrs rf 4 0 Recker c 3 0 Tejada ss 3 0 BAreu ph 1 0 DHerrr pr 0 0 Niese p 3 0 CTorrs p 0 0 Niwnhs ph 1 0
32 3 8 2 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
35 0 8 0
Washington 000 000 201—3 New York 000 000 000—0 E—Flores (5). LOB—Washington 5, New York 11. 2B—Rendon (38), Desmond (23), Lagares (24). 3B—Flores (1). HR—W.Ramos (10). S—Harper, Zimmermann. Washington IP H R ER BB SO Zimmrmnn W 6 2-3 6 0 0 1 5 Thornton H,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Clippard H,35 1 0 0 0 0 0 Storen S,5-8 1 2 0 0 0 0 New York Niese L,8-11 7 6 2 2 0 7 C.Torres 2 2 1 0 1 0 HBP—by Zimmermann (E.Young, Duda). Umpires—Home, James Hoye; First, John Tumpane; Second, Paul Emmel; Third, Bill Welke. T—2:53. A—31,553 (41,922).
Pirates 7, Cubs 3 Chicago ab r Alcantr cf 4 0 J.Baez ss 3 1 Coghln lf 3 0 Valuen 3b 3 1 Valaika 2b 3 0 Kalish ph 1 0 Olt 1b 2 1 Szczur rf 3 0 JoBakr c 1 0 JaTrnr p 2 0 Jokisch p 1 0 Vizcain p 0 0
Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pittsburgh ab r JHrrsn 3b 5 1 Snider lf 4 1 SMarte lf 1 0 AMcCt cf 5 1 NWalkr 2b 4 2 RMartn c 3 0 Lambo 1b 2 0 GSnchz 1b 2 0 Mercer ss 3 1 GPolnc rf 3 1 Volquez p 2 0 TSnchz ph 1 0 Watson p 0 0 Melncn p 0 0
26 3 4 2 Totals
hbi 2 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
35 7 12 7
Chicago 021 000 000—3 Pittsburgh 000 160 00x—7 E—R.Martin (4), Volquez (2). DP— Pittsburgh 1. TP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB— Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 8. 2B—Coghlan (24), Valaika (3), J.Harrison (35), Snider (11), N.Walker (24), R.Martin (19). HR—N.Walker (20). SB—J. Baez (4). S—Volquez. SF—Coghlan, Jo.Baker. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO Ja.Turner L,5-10 4 1-3 7 7 7 3 1 Jokisch 2 2-3 5 0 0 0 2 Vizcaino 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh Volquez W,12-7 7 4 3 1 5 5 Watson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Melancon 1 0 0 0 0 2 Umpires—Home, Mark Ripperger; First, Ted Barrett; Second, Paul Schrieber; Third, Alfonso Marquez. T—2:53. A—37,655 (38,362).
Rays 6, Blue Jays 5, 10 innings, Tampa Bay ab r Zobrist dh 5 1 Guyer lf 5 0 Longori 3b 5 1 Myers rf 4 2 Forsyth 2b 5 0 YEscor ss 4 1 SRdrgz 1b 4 1 Hanign c 5 0 Kiermr cf 5 0
Totals
Toronto hbi 1 1 3 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 0 1
ab r Reyes ss 4 1 Bautist rf 4 1 Lind 1b 4 1 Pillar ph 1 0 Encrnc dh 4 1 DNavrr c 3 0 ClRsms cf 4 0 Valenci 3b 4 0 Goins 2b 2 0 DJhnsn ph 1 0 Kawsk 2b 0 0 Mayrry lf 1 1 Gose lf 3 0 StTllsn 2b 1 0
42 6 14 6 Totals
hbi 2 0 1 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
36 5 7 5
Tampa Bay 002 200 010 1—6 Toronto 000 000 131 0—5 DP—Tampa Bay 1. LOB—Tampa Bay 9, Toronto 4. 2B—Guyer 2 (13), Myers (13), Y.Escobar (18), S.Rodriguez (12). HR—Zobrist (10), Y.Escobar (7), Lind (6), Encarnacion (32), Mayberry (1). SB—Forsythe (2), Hanigan (1). SF—S. Rodriguez. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Archer 7 3 1 1 3 9 Balfour 2-3 3 3 3 0 0 Jo.Peralta H,16 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 McGee W,5-2 BS,4-211 1 1 1 0 1 B.Gomes H,3 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Beliveau S,1-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Toronto Buehrle 6 9 4 4 0 1 McGowan 1 2 0 0 0 0 Redmond 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Loup 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Morrow L,1-3 1 1 1 1 1 0 Cecil 1 0 0 0 1 1 Morrow pitched to 2 batters in the 10th. Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, Tripp Gibson; Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Paul Nauert. T—3:26. A—28,633 (49,282).
Twins 6, White Sox 4 Minnesota ab r DaSntn ss 5 1 KSuzuk c 4 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 Plouffe 3b 4 1 Arcia rf 3 1 Pinto dh 4 0 Hrmnn lf 4 0 A.Hicks lf 0 0 EdEscr 2b 3 1 JSchafr cf 4 2 Totals
Chicago hbi 2 0 1 2 2 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 2
ab r Eaton cf 4 1 AlRmrz ss 4 1 JAreu 1b 4 1 Gillaspi 3b 3 0 Semien ph 1 0 AGarci rf 4 0 Wilkins dh 3 0 MTaylr ph 1 0 Viciedo lf 4 0 CSnchz 2b 3 0 Nieto c 3 1
35 6 12 6 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
34 4 7 4
Minnesota 020 200 101—6 Chicago 000 210 001—4 DP—Chicago 2. LOB—Minnesota 8, Chicago 3. 2B—Da.Santana (21), K.Suzuki (29), Al.Ramirez (32). HR— Plouffe (14), J.Schafer (1), J.Abreu (35), Nieto (2). SB—J.Schafer 2 (14). SF—K.Suzuki, Edu.Escobar. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO May W,3-4 6 5 3 3 0 10 Burton H,14 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fien H,26 1 0 0 0 0 1 Perkins S,34-40 1 2 1 1 0 1 Chicago Noesi L,8-10 6 2-3 8 5 5 2 3 Belisario 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Cleto 1 0 0 0 1 1 Lindstrom 1 3 1 1 0 0 WP—Noesi. Umpires—Home, Vic Carapazza; First, Larry Vanover; Second, Angel Hernandez; Third, Eric Cooper. T—2:43. A—17,044 (40,615).
Marlins 5, Phillies 4 Miami ab r Yelich lf 4 1 RJhnsn rf 4 0 Bour 1b 1 0 McGeh 3b 5 0 Ozuna cf 5 0 GJones rf 4 0 Sltlmch c 4 0 Realmt pr 0 1 Mathis c 0 0 KHrndz 2b 3 2 Hchvrr ss 4 1 Koehler p 2 0 Lucas ph 1 0 Capps p 0 0 DJnngs p 0 0 DeSclfn p 0 0 Vldspn ph 1 0 Cishek p 0 0 Totals
hbi 2 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
Philadelphia ab r Revere cf 5 1 Franco 1b 5 0 Utley 2b 5 1 Howard 1b 3 1 GwynJ lf 0 0 GSizmr rf 4 0 DBrwn lf 3 0 Papeln p 0 0 Ruiz c 4 0 Galvis ss 3 1 DBchn p 2 0 Bastrd p 0 0 Ruf ph 1 0 DeFrts p 0 0 Asche 3b 1 0
38 5 9 4 Totals
hbi 2 0 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
36 4 10 3
Miami 000 100 004—5 Philadelphia 001 200 010—4 E—G.Jones (13), Saltalamacchia (15), Galvis (1), D.Buchanan (3). DP—Miami 1. LOB—Miami 8, Philadelphia 8. 2B—Saltalamacchia (20), Utley (32). HR—K.Hernandez (1). SB—Revere 2 (45). Miami IP H R ER BB SO Koehler 6 7 3 2 1 2 Capps 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 2 Da.Jennings 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 DeSclafani W,2-2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cishek S,35-39 1 1 0 0 1 3 Philadelphia D.Buchanan 6 1-3 5 1 1 1 2 Bastardo H,10 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 De Fratus H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Papelbon L,2-3 BS,4-41 1 4 4 4 1 1 WP—Papelbon. PB—Saltalamacchia. Umpires—Home, Sean Barber; First, Marty Foster; Second, Joe West; Third, Alan Porter. T—3:20. A—30,201 (43,651).
Tigers 6, Indians 4 Cleveland
Detroit
ab r Bourn cf 3 1 JRmrz ss 4 0 Brantly lf 4 1 CSantn 1b 3 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 YGoms dh 4 1 DvMrp rf 3 0 T.Holt rf 1 0 Giambi ph 1 0 Chsnhll 3b 4 0 RPerez c 3 1 Shuck ph 1 0 Gimenz c 0 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 1 1 2 1 1 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
ab r Kinsler 2b 3 1 TrHntr rf 5 0 MiCarr dh 3 1 VMrtnz 1b 5 0 JMrtnz lf 3 1 Carrer cf 0 0 Avila c 3 0 Holady c 0 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 D.Kelly 3b 0 1 AnRmn ss 2 0 Moya ph 1 0 Suarez ss 0 1 RDavis cf-lf3 1
35 4 10 4 Totals
hbi 1 2 2 1 2 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
32 6 11 5
Cleveland 000 012 001—4 Detroit 000 101 22x—6 E—C.Santana (11). DP—Cleveland 2, Detroit 1. LOB—Cleveland 12, Detroit 10. 2B—C.Santana (24). HR—Kinsler (14), J.Martinez (22). SB—Brantley (21), R.Davis (33). S—R.Davis. SF—C. Santana. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO Bauer 5 6 2 1 1 3 Crockett H,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Atchison H,13 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Shaw L,5-5 BS,7-9 2-3 3 2 2 2 0 Rzepczynski 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 C.Lee 1-3 1 2 2 2 0 Allen 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Detroit Verlander 5 2-3 6 3 3 3 6 B.Hardy 0 1 0 0 1 0 E.Reed 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Coke W,5-2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Chamberlain H,26 1 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan S,32-38 1 2 1 1 1 0 B.Hardy pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Bauer pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. HBP—by Bauer (Mi.Cabrera, Kinsler), by Verlander (Y.Gomes), by B.Hardy (Brantley). WP—Shaw, C.Lee 2, B.Hardy. Umpires—Home, Jerry Layne; First, Hunter Wendelstedt; Second, Mike Estabrook; Third, Rob Drake. T—3:56. A—39,395 (41,681).
Cardinals 4, Rockies 1 Colorado ab r Rutledg ss 4 0 Stubbs cf 3 0 Flande p 0 0 Scahill p 0 0 Brothrs p 0 0 Arenad 3b 2 0 Ynoa 3b 2 0 Cuddyr 1b 4 0 McKnr c 3 0 McBrid rf 3 1
BBarns lf 4 Culersn 2b 1 CDckrs ph 1 LeMahi 2b 1 Lyles p 2 Blckmn cf 2
Totals
ab r MCrpnt 3b 4 0 Jay cf-rf 3 1 Grichk rf 1 0 Hollidy lf 4 1 JhPerlt ss 4 1 Tavers rf 3 0 Maness p 0 0 Choate p 0 0 CMrtnz p 0 0 Neshek p 0 0
hbi 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 0 0
Przyns ph 1 GGarci pr 0 Rosnthl p 0 YMolin c 4 Wong 2b 3 M.Ellis 2b 1 Descals 1b 3 Gonzals p 2 Bourjos cf 2
32 1 5 1 Totals
0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
1 0 0 3 0 0 2 1 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
35 4 13 3
Colorado 010 000 000—1 St. Louis 003 000 01x—4 E—Lyles (1). DP—Colorado 2. LOB— Colorado 8, St. Louis 9. 2B—B.Barnes (15), Holliday 2 (35), Y.Molina (18), Gonzales (2). 3B—Stubbs (4). HR—Jh. Peralta (21). Colorado IP H R ER BB SO Lyles L,6-3 6 9 3 3 2 4 Flande 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Scahill 2-3 3 0 0 0 1 Brothers 1 1 1 1 0 0 St. Louis Gonzales W,3-2 5 2-3 4 1 1 4 9 Maness H,9 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Choate H,8 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 C.Martinez H,16 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Neshek H,24 1 0 0 0 0 2 Rosenthal S,44-49 1 0 0 0 0 3 Scahill pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. WP—Brothers. PB—McKenry. Umpires—Home, Jeff Nelson; First, Pat Hoberg; Second, Scott Barry; Third, Mark Carlson. T—3:03. A—44,598 (45,399).
Brewers 9, Reds 2 Cincinnati ab r BHmltn cf 3 0 Negron 3b 3 0 Frazier 1b 4 1 Mesorc c 3 0 YRdrgz ph 1 1 Phillips 2b 3 0 Elmore 2b 1 0 Bruce rf 3 0 Lutz ph 1 0 Ludwck lf 3 0 Cozart ss 3 0 RSantg ph 1 0 Leake p 2 0 Hannhn ph 1 0 Ondrsk p 0 0 Contrrs p 0 0 Hoover p 0 0 Bourgs ph 1 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Milwaukee ab r CGomz cf 3 1 Gennett 2b5 1 EHerrr 2b 0 0 Lucroy c 4 0 Braun rf 3 1 LSchfr rf 0 0 KDavis lf 4 1 Estrad p 0 0 Wooten p 0 0 Clark 1b 5 1 HGomz 3b 0 0 MrRynl 1b 4 2 Segura ss 5 0 Garza p 2 1 Jeffrss p 0 0 GParra lf 2 1
33 2 7 2 Totals
hbi 2 1 2 1 0 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
37 9 15 9
Cincinnati 000 001 001—2 Milwaukee 010 200 51x—9 DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 12. 2B—R.Santiago (8). HR—Frazier (26), Clark (3), Mar. Reynolds (22). SB—B.Hamilton (56), C.Gomez (31). S—Garza. SF—C. Gomez. Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO Leake L,11-12 6 8 3 3 3 3 Ondrusek 2-3 5 5 5 0 0 Contreras 1-3 1 0 0 2 0 Hoover 1 1 1 1 0 2 Milwaukee Garza W,8-8 6 4 1 1 3 6 Jeffress H,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Estrada 1 0 0 0 0 2 Wooten 1 3 1 1 0 0 Garza pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP—by Leake (K.Davis). Umpires—Home, Quinn Wolcott; First, CB Bucknor; Second, Dan Iassogna; Third, Dale Scott. T—3:08. A—41,870 (41,900).
Red Sox 8, Royals 4 Boston ab r Betts 2b 4 2 Bogarts ss 4 2 D.Ortiz dh 3 0 Vazquz dh 2 0 Cespds lf 2 1 Craig 1b 4 0 Nava rf 4 1 Mdlrks 3b 4 0 D.Ross c 2 2 BrdlyJr cf 4 0 Totals
hbi 2 0 3 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 1 0
Kansas City ab r AEscor ss 5 0 Aoki dh 4 0 L.Cain rf 5 0 AGordn lf 4 1 S.Perez c 4 1 Hosmer 1b2 1 Infante 2b 4 1 Mostks 3b 3 0 JDyson cf 4 0
33 8 8 8 Totals
hbi 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 1 3 2 0 1 0 0 1
35 4 9 4
Boston 003 004 100—8 Kansas City 040 000 000—4 DP—Boston 1, Kansas City 1. LOB— Boston 4, Kansas City 8. 2B—A.Gordon (31). HR—Bogaerts (12), Nava (4), Hosmer (8). SF—Bogaerts. Boston IP H R ER BB SO J.Kelly W,2-2 6 5 4 4 2 3 Layne 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Badenhop 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Breslow 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Mujica 1 2 0 0 1 1 Kansas City J.Vargas L,11-9 5 1-3 4 5 5 1 8 Crow BS,3-6 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 L.Coleman 1 1 1 1 1 1 Frasor 1 1 0 0 1 1 C.Coleman 1 1 0 0 1 0 Umpires—Home, Fieldin Culbreth; First, Brian Knight; Second, Manny Gonzalez; Third, Jim Reynolds. T—3:23. A—19,065 (37,903).
Rangers 10, Braves 3 Atlanta
Texas
ab r Bonifac cf 5 1 Gosseln 3b 4 1 FFrmn 1b 3 0 J.Upton lf 3 0 Trdslvc rf 1 0 Heywrd rf 3 0 Constnz lf 1 0 Bthncrt c 4 0 Doumit dh 4 1 ASmns ss 4 0 R.Pena 2b 4 0 Totals
hbi 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 1 0
ab r LMartn cf 5 1 Andrus ss 4 0 Arencii dh 4 0 ABeltre 3b 3 0 GRdrgz 3b 1 0 Rua lf 5 2 Chirins c 5 2 Rosales 1b 3 2 Sardins 2b 5 2 Choice rf 3 0 DnRrts rf 1 1
36 3 10 3 Totals
hbi 3 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 1 2 0 3 4 2 3 0 0
39 101810
Atlanta 000 000 120—3 Texas 010 162 00x—10 E—Chirinos (4). DP—Atlanta 2, Texas 1. LOB—Atlanta 7, Texas 10. 2B—Gosselin (4), F.Freeman (41), Terdoslavich (1), Andrus (33), Rua (4), Sardinas 2 (4), Choice (6). 3B—Choice (1). HR— Doumit (5). SB—Heyward (19). Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO Minor L,6-11 4 2-3 8 5 5 3 1 Hale 1-3 4 3 3 0 1 Russell 1 3 2 2 0 1 Shreve 1 1 0 0 0 1 Schlosser 1 2 0 0 0 0 Texas Lewis W,10-13 7 5 1 1 1 2 Claudio 1 3 2 2 0 0 Edwards 1 2 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Minor (A.Beltre, Arencibia). Umpires—Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Adrian Johnson; Second, Mike Everitt; Third, Bill Miller. T—3:00. A—25,449 (48,114).
SB—Marisnick (4). CS—Marisnick (2). Houston IP H R ER BB SO Keuchel W,11-9 7 3 1 1 1 4 Veras 1 0 0 0 0 2 Sipp 1 0 0 0 1 1 Los Angeles H.Santiago L,5-8 2 5 3 3 5 4 Pestano 1 0 0 0 0 1 Y.Herrera 1 1 0 0 1 1 Bedrosian 1 2 2 2 1 0 Ja.Diaz 1 2 1 1 0 1 LeBlanc 2 2-3 2 0 0 0 2 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 H.Santiago pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. Keuchel pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Umpires—Home, Dana DeMuth; First, Tom Woodring; Second, Ron Kulpa; Third, Lance Barrett. T—3:20. A—35,364 (45,483).
Dodgers 4, Giants 2 Los Angeles ab r DGordn 2b 4 0 Puig cf 4 0 AdGnzl 1b 3 1 Kemp rf 4 1 HRmrz ss 3 1 Rojas ss 1 0 Crwfrd lf 4 0 Uribe 3b 4 1 A.Ellis c 3 0 Kershw p 3 0 Jansen p 0 0
Totals
hbi 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0
San Francisco ab r Pagan cf 4 0 Panik 2b 4 0 Posey 1b 4 0 Pence rf 4 0 Sandovl 3b4 0 Susac c 4 1 Arias ss 4 0 GBlanc lf 3 0 Y.Petit p 1 1 MDuffy ph 1 0 Affeldt p 0 0 Machi p 0 0 Strckln p 0 0
33 4 9 3 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
33 2 7 2
Los Angeles 020 002 000—4 San Francisco 001 000 100—2 E—Y.Petit (2), Pence (5). DP—San Francisco 1. LOB—Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 5. 2B—Ad.Gonzalez (37), C.Crawford (13), Susac (6). HR—Kemp (20). SB—D.Gordon (61). SF—A.Ellis. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Kershaw W,19-3 8 7 2 2 1 9 Jansen S,42-47 1 0 0 0 0 2 San Francisco Y.Petit L,5-4 7 8 4 3 0 8 Affeldt 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Machi 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Strickland 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Affeldt (Ad.Gonzalez). Umpires—Home, Doug Eddings; First, D.J. Reyburn; Second, Cory Blaser; Third, Adam Hamari. T—2:53. A—41,932 (41,915).
Athletics 4, Mariners 0 Oakland
Seattle
ab r Crisp cf 4 1 Fuld lf 3 2 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 A.Dunn dh 4 0 Moss 1b 4 1 Lowrie ss 4 0 Reddck rf 3 0 DeNrrs c 3 0 Sogard 2b 4 0
Totals
hbi 2 0 2 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ab r AJcksn cf 5 0 Denorfi rf 3 0 MSndrs rf 2 0 Cano 2b 2 0 KMorls dh 3 0 Hart lf 4 0 Seager 3b 4 0 Smoak 1b 3 0 CTaylr ss 1 0 EnChvz ph 1 0 Zunino c 1 0 Sucre c 2 0 Morrsn ph 1 0 J.Jones pr 0 0 BMiller ss 1 0
33 4 7 4 Totals
hbi 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
33 0 7 0
Oakland 100 000 120—4 Seattle 000 000 000—0 E—De.Norris (4), Hart (1), Cano (6). DP—Oakland 1, Seattle 1. LOB— Oakland 5, Seattle 11. 2B—Crisp (21). HR—Fuld (4), Moss (24). SB—A. Jackson 2 (18), Denorfia (1), C.Taylor (3). S—Fuld. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO Lester W,15-10 6 4 0 0 4 7 Otero H,12 1 2 0 0 1 1 Gregerson 1 1 0 0 0 3 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 2 Seattle C.Young L,12-8 6 4 2 2 2 5 Luetge 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Maurer 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 T.Walker 2 3 2 1 0 1 C.Young pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP—Otero, Gregerson. Umpires—Home, Jim Wolf; First, Brian Gorman; Second, David Rackley; Third, Mike Muchlinski. T—2:58. A—28,925 (47,476).
Diamondbacks 8, Padres 6 San Diego ab r Spngnr lf 4 0 Stauffr p 0 0 Medica lf 1 0 Solarte 3b 5 2 Gyorko 2b 4 1 Grandl c-1b4 1 S.Smith lf 3 0 AAlmnt ph 1 0 Vincent p 0 0 ATorrs p 0 0 RAlvrz p 0 0 AMoore ph 1 0 Amarst ss 4 0 Goeert 1b 3 1 Rivera c 1 0 Venale pr 0 0 Maybin cf 4 1 Despgn p 1 0 Garces p 0 0 RLirian rf 2 0 Totals
Arizona hbi 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
ab r Inciart lf 4 0 Owings 2b 5 1 Pollock cf 4 1 Trumo 1b 3 1 MMntr c 3 1 A.Hill 3b 3 1 C.Ross rf 4 1 Gregrs ss 4 2 Cahill p 0 0 BJcksn ph 1 0 Spruill p 1 0 OPerez p 0 0 Harris p 0 0 Pachec ph 1 0 A.Reed p 0 0
38 6 12 5 Totals
hbi 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0
33 8 10 5
San Diego 011 200 002—6 Arizona 005 000 03x—8 E—Spangenberg (4), Spruill (1). DP—San Diego 1. LOB—San Diego 11, Arizona 7. 2B—Grandal (16), A.Moore (1), Goebbert (1), Inciarte (15), Spruill (1). SB—Owings (8), A.Hill (3). CS— Owings (1). S—Despaigne, Cahill. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO Despaigne L,3-7 5 2-3 6 5 3 3 2 Garces 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Stauffer 1 1 0 0 0 1 Vincent 1-3 3 3 3 1 0 A.Torres 0 0 0 0 1 0 R.Alvarez 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Arizona Cahill 4 5 4 4 2 7 Spruill W,1-1 3 1 0 0 1 1 O.Perez H,15 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Harris H,2 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 A.Reed 1 4 2 2 0 1 A.Torres pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. HBP—by Cahill (Maybin), by Harris (Rivera). WP—A.Torres, Cahill 2. Umpires—Home, Dan Bellino; First, Jeff Kellogg; Second, Angel Campos; Third, Will Little. T—3:16. A—26,075 (48,633).
Astros 6, Angels 1 Houston ab r Grssmn lf 5 0 Altuve 2b 4 0 Fowler cf 5 1 Carter dh 4 0 Mrsnck rf 4 0 Corprn c 2 2 Guzmn 1b 5 0 MDmn 3b 4 1 G.Petit ss 4 2
St. Louis hbi 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals
hbi 2 2 2 0 2 0 1 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3
Los Angeles ab r Calhon rf 3 0 Trout cf 3 0 Campn cf 0 0 OMally ph 1 0 Pujols dh 4 0 HKndrc 2b 2 0 GBckh ss 1 1 Freese 3b 3 0 LJimnz 3b 0 0 Aybar ss 2 0 Green 2b 1 0 Iannett c 2 0 Cron 1b 3 0 Cowgill lf 3 0
37 6 12 6 Totals
hbi 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
28 1 3 1
Houston 030 021 000—6 Los Angeles 000 000 010—1 DP—Houston 2, Los Angeles 1. LOB—Houston 11, Los Angeles 2. 2B— Grossman (12), Fowler 2 (20), G.Petit (6), G.Beckham (26). HR—G.Petit (2).
GOLF GOLF PGA TOUR TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday At East Lake Golf Club Atlanta Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,307; Par: 70 Final B Hrschl, $1,440,000 66-66-69-68—269 Jim Furyk, $708,000 67-69-67-69—272 R McIlroy, $708,000 69-65-67-71—272 Chris Kirk, $343,333 66-68-71-68—273 Jason Day, $343,333 67-67-70-69—273 J Rose, $343,333 72-66-66-69—273 R Palmer, $275,000 69-67-69-69—274 R Fowler, $260,000 69-68-67-71—275 S Garcia, $231,667 69-71-70-66—276 GWdlnd, $231,667 71-75-63-67—276 A Scott, $231,667 69-72-65-70—276 R Henley, $210,000 70-68-67-72—277
M Kuchar, $200,000 68-71-69-70—278 B Watson, $190,000 67-73-67-73—280 C Tringale, $180,000 68-68-74-71—281 B Haas, $175,000 68-71-73-70—282 B Todd, $168,000 70-75-72-66—283 J Walker, $168,000 73-69-69-72—283 K Na, $160,000 70-66-75-73—284 P Reed, $160,000 67-74-74-69—284 Z Johnson, $154,000 68-74-72-71—285 HMtsyma, $150,000 71-71-71-73—286 M Kaymer, $143,000 73-69-73-73—288 H Mahan, $143,000 74-72-71-71—288 W Simpson, $143,00074-72-72-70—288 J Senden, $138,000 72-75-69-74—290 M Hffmnn, $135,000 70-73-73-76—292 J Spieth, $135,000 71-70-80-71—292 G Ogilvy, $132,000 77-77-73-73—300
LPGA TOUR The Evian Championship Sunday At Evian Resort Golf Club Evian-les-Bains, France Purse: $3.25 million Yardage: 6,453; Par: 71 Final H J Kim, $487,500 61-72-72-68—273 K Webb, $303,188 65-71-70-68—274 H N Jang, $195,042 70-71-68-66—275 M J Hur, $195,042 66-69-72-68—275 N Y Choi, $136,946 70-72-67-67—276 S Pettrsn, $112,046 67-69-74-67—277 P Creamer, $93,787 69-71-72-66—278 L Ko, $78,018 69-68-72-71—280 B Lincicme, $78,018 67-65-77-71—280 S Feng, $56,880 70-70-73-69—282 M Jutangrn, $56,880 69-68-75-70—282 L Thmpson, $56,880 70-70-71-71—282 I Park, $56,880 69-72-69-72—282 A Nordqvist, $56,880 71-67-70-74—282 M Uribe, $56,880 68-70-70-74—282 J Y Oh, $42,329 73-71-71-68—283 L Salas, $42,329 69-75-71-68—283 M Lee, $42,329 72-67-73-71—283 S Lewis, $42,329 70-67-73-73—283 J E Shadoff, $36,850 72-72-74-66—284 J Shin, $36,850 71-76-69-68—284 a-J Yan 71-75-69-69—284 HY Park, $36,850 72-70-72-70—284 M Harigae, $32,923 69-71-75-70—285 A Munoz, $32,923 70-72-72-71—285 J Park, $32,923 74-72-67-72—285 K Icher, $29,962 68-73-72-73—286 I.K. Kim, $29,962 69-69-73-75—286 a-C Boutier 71-72-76-68—287 S Yokomine, $27,638 71-71-75-70—287 M Alex, $27,638 71-74-70-72—287 S Gal, $24,567 72-73-73-70—288 I Lee, $24,567 69-74-72-73—288 J Granada, $24,567 68-72-73-75—288 A Uehara, $24,567 69-73-70-76—288 B Recari, $20,417 72-71-76-70—289 K Kirk, $20,417 71-70-77-71—289 M Miyazato, $20,417 69-72-76-72—289 A Lewis, $20,417 70-76-68-75—289 S Y Yoo, $20,417 76-68-70-75—289 P Lindberg, $16,267 73-74-72-71—290 J M Green, $16,267 69-78-71-72—290 J Song, $16,267 71-73-74-72—290
AUTO RACING AUTO RACING NASCAR SPRINT CUP MyAFibStory.com 400 Sunday At Chicagoland Speedway Joliet, Ill. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (25) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267 laps, 123.2 rating, 47 points, $364,473. 2. (8) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 267, 129.5, 43, $263,641. 3. (10) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 267, 110.1, 42, $219,750. 4. (28) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 94.6, 40, $182,346. 5. (12) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 267, 127.5, 41, $180,538. 6. (24) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 267, 93.9, 38, $131,045. 7. (1) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267, 111.8, 38, $172,611. 8. (14) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 267, 89.1, 36, $114,070. 9. (11) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 267, 113.5, 36, $144,284. 10. (5) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267, 98.9, 34, $155,681. 11. (13) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 104.9, 33, $116,685. 12. (7) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 267, 101.6, 32, $156,721. 13. (19) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 267, 77.4, 31, $120,685. 14. (27) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 267, 69.5, 30, $132,818. 15. (2) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 267, 91.7, 29, $113,510. 16. (15) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 267, 77, 28, $148,046. 17. (4) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 267, 81.5, 27, $139,135. 18. (22) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 267, 67.1, 26, $136,268. 19. (18) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 267, 69.2, 25, $109,310. 20. (3) Carl Edwards, Ford, 266, 75.4, 24, $117,110. 21. (9) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 266, 68.3, 23, $127,224. 22. (17) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 265, 63.2, 22, $117,468. 23. (20) Greg Biffle, Ford, 265, 59.8, 21, $139,660. 24. (16) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 265, 70.3, 20, $130,060. 25. (21) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 265, 57.2, 19, $124,230. 26. (29) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 264, 52.1, 18, $120,718. 27. (26) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 264, 54, 17, $118,018. 28. (38) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 263, 41.7, 0, $95,160. 29. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 262, 47, 15, $106,518. 30. (33) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 262, 47.7, 14, $96,110. 31. (39) David Ragan, Ford, 262, 40.1, 13, $111,457. 32. (32) Michael McDowell, Ford, 262, 40, 12, $91,210. 33. (34) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 262, 40.6, 11, $91,010. 34. (30) David Gilliland, Ford, 261, 34.3, 10, $98,810. 35. (37) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 261, 42.9, 9, $90,575. 36. (41) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 258, 29.5, 0, $98,385. 37. (43) Joey Gase, Ford, 257, 27.4, 0, $90,156. 38. (42) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 256, 30, 6, $84,465. 39. (6) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, accident, 244, 73.5, 5, $115,456. 40. (35) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 233, 47.1, 4, $76,465. 41. (23) Aric Almirola, Ford, engine, 230, 66.2, 4, $109,401. 42. (31) Ryan Truex, Toyota, brakes, 184, 30.4, 2, $68,465. 43. (40) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, vibration, 13, 28.3, 0, $64,965. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 142.330 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 48 min., 50 sec. Margin of Victory: 1.759 seconds. Caution Flags: 6 for 28 laps. Lead Changes: 18 among 7 drivers. Top 10 in Points: 1. B.Keselowski, 2,059; 2. J.Gordon, 2,052; 3. J.Logano, 2,049; 4. K.Harvick, 2,047; 5. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,042; 6. J.Johnson, 2,041; 7. Ky.Busch, 2,041; 8. D.Hamlin, 2,041; 9. Ku.Busch, 2,039; 10. K.Kahne, 2,034
SPORTS
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
B-3
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Win puts Dodgers 3 games up The Associated Press
MARLINS 5, PHILLIES 4 In Philadelphia, Phillies closer Jonathan Papelbon made a lewd gesture to fans and was ejected after giving up four runs in the ninth inning during the Phillies’ 5-4 loss to the Miami Marlins. Papelbon grabbed his crotch as he walked to the dugout and was ejected by crew chief Joe West. He jogged out of the dugout and got into a face-to-face argument with West, who grasped the pitcher’s jersey to hold him off, and Papelbon then argued with first base umpire Marty Foster. Papelbon threw a cup of liquid on the field before leaving the dugout. Papelbon (2-3) had converted 14 straight save chances since July 22 when he entered with a 4-1 lead in the ninth. Papelbon gave up Jarrod Saltalamacchia’s double, Kike Hernandez’s walk, Adeiny Hechavarria’s infield single, Jordany Valdespin’s RBI groundout, Christian Yelich’s run-scoring infield single and pinch-hitter Justin Bour’s tying single. After Casey McGehee struck out, Papelbon bounced a wild pitch past catcher Carlos Ruiz as Yelich scored the go-ahead run. Anthony DeSclafani (2-2) got the final out of the eighth. Steve Cishek allowed his first to batters to reach in the ninth, then struck out Ben Revere, Maikel Franco and Chase Utley for his 35th save. NATIONALS 3, METS 0 In New York, Wilson Ramos hit a tiebreaking, two-run homer in the seventh off Jonathon Niese (8-11), and the Nationals won their ninth straight start with Jordan Zimmermann (11-5), who allowed six hits and a walk in 6⅔ innings. Washington reduced its magic number for winning a second division title in three years to four and eliminated the Mets from the division race. Zimmermann (11-5) hit Eric Young Jr. and Lucas Duda; nine batters were hit in the four-game series, one shy of the record set
ON THE AIR
Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. BASKETBALL 5 p.m. on ESPN2 — Women’s national teams, exhibition, Canada vs. United States, at Bridgeport, Conn.
Los Angeles Dodgers’ Kenley Jansen pitched a perfect ninth for his 42nd save to beat the Giants on Sunday in San Francisco. Los Angeles moved three games ahead of secondplace San Francisco in the NL West. GEORGE NIKITIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
last year in a Pirates-Reds series, according to STATS. PIRATES 7, CUBS 3 In Pittsburgh, third baseman Josh Harrison started the Pirate’s first triple play at home in 21 years and hit a tying tworun double in a six-run fifth against Jacob Turner (5-10). Chicago led 3-0 and put runners on first and second in the fourth when Matt Szczur grounded to third. Harrison began an around-the-horn 5-4-3 triple play, throwing to second baseman Neil Walker, who relayed to first baseman Andrew Lambo. Edinson Volquez (12-7) allowed three runs — one earned — four hits and five walks in seven innings. The Pirates maintained a 1½-game lead over Milwaukee for the NL’s second wild card. Chicago, which last won the World Series in 1908, was eliminated from postseason contention. CARDINALS 4, ROCKIES 1 In St. Louis, Rookie Marco Gonzales (3-2)
struck out nine in 5⅔ innings and Jhonny Peralta homered as the Cardinals remained 3½ games ahead of second-place Pittsburgh in the NL Central. Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side in the ninth for his NL-leading 44th save, giving St. Louis pitchers 16 strikeouts. Jordan Lyles (6-3) was the loser. BREWERS 9, REDS 2 In Milwaukee, Matt Clark hit a three-run homer in a five-run seventh inning, and Mark Reynolds added a solo shot in the eighth. Matt Garza (8-8) allowed one run and four hits in six-plus innings to beat Mike Leake (11-12). DIAMONDBACKS 8, PADRES 6 In Phoenix, Zeke Spruill (1-1) allowed one hit in three shutout innings of long relief, and Will Harris escaped a bases-loaded jam in the eighth, striking out Rymer Liriano and pinch-hitter Tommy Medica to preserve Arizona’s 5-4 lead. Odrisamer Despaigne (3-7) was hurt by a pair of Padres misplays in a five-run third.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
2-run homer helps Tigers open lead The Associated Press
the top of the ninth. Nelson Cruz opened the botDETROIT — Ian Kinsler hit a tom half with double off David go-ahead, two-run homer in the Roberson (2-5). Pinch-runner seventh inning, and the Detroit Quintin Berry scored on Pearce’s liner into the left-field corner, Tigers reopened a 1½-game and one out later, Johnson — a AL Central lead by beating the former Yankee — delivered the Cleveland game-winner into the gap in Tigers 6 Indians 6-4 right-center. Sunday for a Indians 4 Baltimore celebrated its three-game seventh win in eight games by sweep. crowding around Johnson at Kinsler’s homer off Bryan second base. Shaw (5-5), his first since Aug. 30, followed Rajai Davis’ infield RED SOX 8, ROYALS 4 In Kansas City, Mo., Daniel single and put the Tigers ahead Nava hit a grand slam and Xan4-3. der Bogaerts added a three-run Phil Coke (5-2) pitched a drive as Boston overcame a 4-0, scoreless seventh for Detroit, third-inning deficit. The Royals, which won for the sixth time in which lost three of four to the seven games and has its largest last-place Red Sox, maintained a division lead since before play one-game lead over Seattle for on Aug. 10. the second AL wild card. Joe Nathan gave up his Carlos Jason Vargas (11-9) allowed Santana’s RBI double in the five runs and four hits in 5⅓ innings, while Joe Kelly gave ninth before getting his 32nd up four runs and five hits in six save. innings. ORIOLES 3, YANKEES 2 Eric Hosmer hit a three-run In Baltimore, Steve Pearce homer in a four-run second off doubled in a ninth-inning run Joe Kelly (2-2) that included and scored the game-winner on Omar Infante’s run-scoring a double by Kelly Johnson as the grounder. Orioles beat the Yankees to inch ASTROS 6, ANGELS 1 closer to the AL East title. In Anaheim, Calif., Dallas Any number of Orioles wins Keuchel (11-9) didn’t allow a hit and Toronto losses totaling three will give Baltimore its first until Mike Trout’s one-out single in the seventh, and Houston division title since 1997. ended the Angels’ 10-game winThe winning rally came after ning streak, one shy of the team Brian McCann hit a tiebreaking record set in 1964. homer off Darren O’Day (5-1) in
Keuchel (11-9) wound up giving up one run and three hits in seven innings. Hector Santiago (5-8) allowed three runs, five hits and five walks in two-plus innings and lost for the first time in 13 starts and three relief appearances since June 15. The Angels’ AL West lead was cut to 10 games over secondplace Oakland. ATHLETICS 4, MARINERS 0 In Seattle, Sam Fuld and Brandon Moss hit solo home runs, and Jon Lester (15-10) combined with three relievers on a sevenhitter to improve to 5-3 with the A’s. Oakland won consecutive games for the first time since Aug. 22-23 and opened a 1½-game lead over Kansas City for the first AL wild card. Chris Young (12-8) pitched six innings for the first time since Aug. 17, but allowed two homers. RANGERS 10, BRAVES 3 In Arlington, Texas, Colby Lewis (10-13) allowed one run and five hits in seven innings, Luis Sardinas doubled his career total with four RBIs and Texas completed a three-game sweep — the Rangers’ first sweep since April 21-23 in a threegame set at Oakland. Atlanta completed a 2-7 trip and dropped four games behind Pittsburgh for the NL’s second wild card with 13 games left.
Mike Minor (6-11) lost his third consecutive September start, allowing five runs and eight hits while throwing 107 pitches in 4⅔ innings. RAYS 6, BLUE JAYS 5 In Toronto, Yunel Escobar riled up the crowd with an exaggerated display after a home run in the eighth and Sean Rodriguez hit a sacrifice fly in the 10th. A frequent target of boos in Toronto after being suspended by the Blue Jays for writing an anti-gay slur on his eye-black in 2012, Escobar homered off the facing of the fourth deck against Todd Redmond. Escobar drew more jeers by facing the crowd and making an elaborate safe sign as he crossed home plate. Toronto pinch-hitter John Mayberry Jr. connected for a tying, solo home run with two outs in the ninth off Jake McGee (5-2). Brandon Morrow (1-3) walked Wil Myers leading off the 10th. TWINS 6, WHITE SOX 4 In Chicago, Staked to an early 4-0 lead, rookie Trevor May (3-4) struck out a season-high 10 in six innings and Minnesota overcame Jose Abreu’s 35th homer to end a four-game losing streak. Trevor Plouffe and Jordan Schafer homered for the Twins. Hector Noesi (8-10) allowed five runs and eight hits in 6⅔ innings.
USA: Serbia started strong, but faded fast of Yugoslavia when it won five. The Yugoslavians had been the last repeat champions, winning in 1998 and 2002. The Serbians were only 2-3 in the group stage but then routed previously unbeaten Greece and Brazil before building a big lead and holding on for a 90-85 semifinal victory over France, which had beat then in the group stage and knocked out
SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules
SAN FRANCISCO — Clayton Kershaw (19-3) allowed two runs and seven hits in seven innings and struck out nine, taking over the big league lead in wins and lowering Dodgers 4 his majors-best ERA to Giants 2 1.70. Los Angeles moved three games ahead of the second-place Giants on Sunday in the NL West. Kenley Jansen pitched a perfect ninth for his 42nd save. Matt Kemp hit his 20th homer. Yusmeiro Petit (5-4) gave up four runs — three earned — and eight hits in seven innings. He struck out eight and walked none.
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Northern New Mexico
tournament co-favorite Spain in the quarters. Serbia carried that momentum into the early moments of this one and was running a fluid offense that produced layups and dunks, and opened the biggest lead any team had against the U.S. in this tournament when Miroslav Raduljica’s three-point play made it 15-7. That was wiped out in a minute, and Serbia’s hopes of winning didn’t last much longer.
Harden had a three-point play and 3-pointer, DeMarcus Cousins tied it with a pair of free throws, and then Irving had a jumper, 3-pointer and layup to cap a 15-0 burst that made it 22-15. Irving hit a couple more 3s in an 11-0 run later in the quarter that provided a 35-19 cushion, and the Americans poured it on midway through the second in making it 56-30 after back-toback 3s by Irving and Harden.
France beat Lithuania 95-93 on Saturday for the bronze. The Americans came in winning by 32.5 points per game and their closest victory in the tournament was by 21 points over Turkey. They thought they would get a tough game Sunday, but were simply too good to let that happen. They finished at 58 percent from the field, made 15 of 30 3-pointers and put eight of their 12 players in double figures.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 5 p.m. on MLB — Washington at Atlanta or N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay NFL 6:15 p.m. on ESPN — Philadelphia at Indianapolis SOCCER 12:55 p.m. on NBCSN — Premier League, West Ham at Hull City
LOCAL SCORES SANTA FE THUNDER Results of Sunday’s Santa Fe Thunder Half and 5K race, which began at Fort Marcy Ballpark and ended at the Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino in Pojoaque. For complete results, log onto www. chasing3.com: Half Marathon (13.1 miles) 5 Kilometer (3.1 miles) Women’s top 20 Women’s top 20 1. Simeg Yeshanbel, Ethiopia, 1:11:30 1. Nikol Strother, Los Alamos, 20:41 2. Sarah Kiptoo, Kenya, 1:15:19 2. Esperanza Cortez, Santa Fe, 22:50 3. Semehar Tesfaye, Ethiopia, 1:16:09 3. Amanda Martinez, Alcalde, 23:28 4. Yuko Watanabe, Japan, 1:16:46 4. Lesley Tharpe, Laguna, 23:58 5. Magdalena Donahue, Albuquerque, 1:18:45 5. Nicole Wilson, 24:11 6. Florence Magoma, 1:19:39 6. Consuelo Quintana, Espanola, 24:19 7. Alvina Begay, Flagstaff, 1:23:23 7. Tania Sanchez, Espanola, 24:30 8. Adrian Neal, Colorado Springs, 1:23:57 9. Abby Depperschmidt, Ft. Collins, Colo., 8. Louisa Fitts, Santa Fe, 24:46 9. Nicole Marjon, Albuquerque, 24:52 1:24:28 10. Jannell Lang, Santa Fe, 25:13 10. Mari Hirata, Albuquerque, 1:26:11 11. Kathryne Feng, Santa Fe, 25:20 11. Whitney Dreier, 1:31:11 12. Malika Camacho Medjoub, Morocco, 12. Stacy Brossy, Santa Fe, 25:34 13. Maia Snelson, Cuba, 25:39 1:32:47 14. Anne Probst, Santa Fe, 25:47 13. Madeleine Carey, Santa Fe, 1:33:57 15. Lucia Herera, 26:03 14. Roxann Hughte, Zuni, 1:34:40 16. Suzanna Jones, Santa Fe, 26:08 15. Alyssa Jojola, Bosque Farms, 1:34:59 17. Cecilia Duenas, Los Alamos, 26:21 16. Elizabeth Lopez, Santa Fe, 1:36:17 18. Natalie Yevoli, Albuquerque, 26:26 17. Caryn MacOni, Colorado Springs, 1:36:23 19. Ophelia Neskahi, Rio Rancho, 26:30 18. Leanne Smith, Los Alamos, 1:36:44 20. Sandy Knoll, Los Alamos, 26:32 19. Marlene Armijo, Rio Rancho, 1:37:34 Men’s top 20 20. Alicia Littlebear, Santa Ana Pueblo, 1:37:36 1. Trevor Merhege, 16:46 Men’s top 20 2. Patrick Ortiz, Albuquerque, 17:01 1. Jacob Chemtai, Kenya, 1:02:54 3. Scott Valdez, Dixon, 17:48 2. Nelson Oyugi, Kenya, 1:03:03 4. Daniel Santiago, Santa Cruz, 18:06 3. Lamech Mokono Mosoti, Colorado Springs, 5. Jevon Montoya, San Juan, 18:58 1:05:55 6. Matthew Herrera, Espanola, 20:14 4. Timothy Eisenga, Zuni, 1:07:38 7. Jacy Suina, Santa Fe, 20:37 5. Karim El Mabchour, Morocco, 1:09:24 8. Elvis Bitsilly, Albuquerque, 20:38 6. Habtamu Arga, Ethiopia, 1:10:00 9. Joshua Adair, Albuquerque, 21:31 7. Bernard Lagat, Kenya, 1:10:10 10. Kristopher Cornejo, Albuquerque, 21:55 8. Stanley Boen, Kenya, 1:11:07 11. Justin Vigil, Santa Fe, 22:28 9. Campbell Ilfrey, Louisville, Colo., 1:16:31 12. Tino Pacheco, Pena Blanca, 22:57 10. Kenta Oshima, Japan, 1:16:45 13. Marcus Platero, Santa Fe, 22:59 11. Martin Huber, Santa Fe, 1:17:38 14. Arthur Rodriguez, Espanola, 23:08 12. Joel Scholz, Wheat Ridge, Colo., 1:20:10 15. Pavel Vakhlamov, Santa Fe, 23:15 13. Timothy Vigil, Santa Fe, 1:21:35 16. Matthew Biggs, Albuquerque, 23:36 14. Andres Santiago, Sedona, Ariz., 1:22:31 17. Peter Hvidsten, Santa Fe, 23:37 15. Eric Biedermann, Albuquerque, 1:23:37 18. Brent Platero, 23:55 16. Matthew Gallegos, Albuquerque, 1:23:45 19. Victor Ortiz, Rowe, 24:01 17. Michael Buttram, Santa Fe, 1:24:11 20. Loren Serna, Santa Fe, 24:11 18. Anthony Vincent, San Diego, 1:26:25 19. Manassah Endwarrior, Rio Rancho, 1:26:42 20. Aaron Martin, Albuquerque, 1:27:53
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico high schools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.
Monday
Thursday
Boys Soccer – Monte del Sol at Capital, 4 p.m. Girls soccer – S.F. Indian at Desert Academy (at Alto Park), 4:30 p.m. Monte del Sol at Capital, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer – Desert Academy at St. Michael’s, 4 p.m. Los Lunas at Capital, 6 p.m. Girls Soccer – Santa Fe High at Abq. Highland, 6 p.m. Rio Rancho at Los Alamos, 6 p.m.
Tuesday Boys Soccer – Las Vegas Robertson at St. Michael’s, 3:30 p.m. Santa Fe Prep at Bernalillo, 4 p.m. Abq. Academy at Los Alamos, 6 p.m. Girls Soccer – Taos at Santa Fe High, 6 p.m. Los Alamos at Abq. Academy, 4:30 p.m. Volleyball – Vaughn at N.M. School for Deaf, 5 p.m. Capital at Moriarty, 6 p.m. Victory Christian at Coronado, 6 p.m. Desert Academy at McCurdy, 7 p.m. St. Michael’s at Pojoaque Valley, 7 p.m. West Las Vegas at Santa Fe Prep, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Boys Soccer – Monte del Sol at Santa Fe High, 4 p.m. Girls Soccer – East Mountain at Las Vegas Robertson, 3 p.m. Volleyball – Los Alamos at Santa Fe High, 7 p.m. Taos at Penasco, 7 p.m.
NEW MEXICAN SPORTS
Friday Football – St. Michael’s at Las Vegas Robertson, 7 p.m. Santa Fe High at Gallup, 7 p.m. Taos at Bloomfield, 7 p.m. Pojoaque Valley at Ruidoso, 7 p.m. Escalante at Raton, 7 p.m. Capital at West Las Vegas, 7 p.m. Kirtland Central at Los Alamos, 7 p.m. Espanola Valley at Questa, 7 p.m. Boys Soccer — Los Alamos at Rio Rancho, 6 p.m. Girls Soccer – Moreno Valley at Desert Academy, 4 p.m. Saturday Football – Fort Sumner at McCurdy, 1 p.m. Dulce at Santa Fe Indian School, 1 p.m. Boys Soccer – Capital at Valencia, 11 a.m. Las Vegas Robertson at Socorro, 11 a.m. Girls Soccer – Santa Fe High at Capital, 1 p.m. Desert Academy at Santa Fe Prep, 4 p.m.
Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.
James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com
Golf: Rory McIlroy remains top player hole, he blasted his drive so far right that it wound up a three late birdies only helped foot away from the out-ofhim pick up some FedEx Cup bounds fence of the practice cash. He closed with a 71 and range. There was no way out. wound up No. 3 in the FedEx With his caddie and a rules Cup, which is worth an addiofficial ducking in the holly tional $2 million. bushes, McIlroy slashed out Chris Kirk, who started the with a wedge over the bushes Tour Championship atop the and through a gap in the FedEx Cup standings, closed trees that only he saw. Next, with a 68 and tied for fourth he had a mobile TV truck with Justin Rose (69) and lowered to ground level to Jason Day (69). Kirk wound get his third into the fairway. up second in the FedEx Cup But his wedge came up short, and earned a $3 million and he made bogey. bonus. Two more bogeys later, Horschel finished at including another three-putt 11-under 269. McIlroy will have to settle at the 10th, he was five shots for a season worth more than behind and out of the mix. By then, it was a two-man $10 million — two major race between Horschel championships and the and Furyk. Horschel raced undisputed No. 1 player in golf. Whatever hopes he had a 50-foot putt nearly 8 feet of his first FedEx Cup ended by the hole on the 13th, and early. He hooked his tee shot calmly sank the par putt to keep a one-shot lead. Furyk, into the water on the par-3 fifth and made double bogey playing in the group ahead of Horschel, got up-and-down to fall three shots behind. Needing to start picking up for birdie on the par-5 15th to ground on the 600-yard ninth tie for the lead.
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SPORTS
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
NFL
Defense helps Cowboys defeat Titans, avoid 0-2 By Teresa M. Walker The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Dallas Cowboys avoided an 0-2 start by bouncing back in a big way thanks to a dominating Cowboys 26 performance from Titans 10 DeMarco Murray and their beleaguered defense. Murray ran for 167 yards and a touchdown, Dan Bailey kicked four field goals, and the Dallas Cowboys beat the Tennessee Titans 26-10 Sunday. “DeMarco ran really well,” Dallas coach Jason Garrett said. “He ran hard and he ran downhill. When you can do that, drive the football again, again and again and control the football and control the game it gives you a great chance to win.” The loss spoiled Tennessee first-year coach Ken Whisenhunt’s home debut. The Cowboys haven’t started 0-2 since 2010 when Wade Phillips was fired midway through the season and Jason Garrett was promoted to head coach. They didn’t come close to staying winless Sunday, jumping ahead 16-0 in the first half to kick off a twogame road swing strong. “Starting 0-2 is a very, very big hole you don’t want to be in,” Tony Romo said.
Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo is sacked by Tennessee Titans defensive end Jurrell Casey for a 12-yard loss Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. MARK ZALESKI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Dallas defense had two sacks and two interceptions that led to 10 points. Romo easily shook off his three interceptions in the season-opening loss to San Francisco. With Murray running so well, Romo was 19 of 29 for 176 yards and a TD. The Titans (1-1) struggled in all areas after winning their opener at Kansas
City and missed on their first 2-0 start since 2008. “We missed tackles,” Whisenhunt said. “They ran the football well. Give them credit. They did to us what we did to Kansas City last week.” Dez Bryant had a 3-yard TD catch in a game where he went to the locker room after the opening drive to get his shoulder checked out. Murray lost
a fumble for a second straight game but he topped 100 yards in the second quarter. He wound up averaging 5.8 yards a carry for the game. “It’s still early,” Murray said. “We still have a lot of work to do. … We’re headed in the right way, though.” Little slowed down the Cowboys. They held the ball for 41 minutes, 11 seconds and finished with a 368-314 edge in total offense, delighting their many fans who at one point chanted “Let’s Go Cowboys” as Dallas ran out the clock. Even with linebacker Justin Durant out with an injured groin and cornerback Orlando Scandrick suspended, the Cowboys got some big stops in the second half. Rolando McClain, who starred in college at Alabama, ended one Tennessee drive slipping his hand just underneath a Locker pass for an interception early in the fourth. He might have had a touchdown if not for an official whistling the play dead as an incompletion, which was overturned after a review. The Cowboys also forced the Titans to turn it over on downs after facing first-and-goal at the Dallas 6 with 6:22 left. Whisenhunt is the Titans’ third head coach since their last playoff berth in 2008, and hope was high for a team coming off a big win at Kansas City. It didn’t last long as the Titans could
not have looked much worse for the first 30 minutes. The only highlights were Jurrell Casey coming up with two of three sacks. Jake Locker, who had a 111.4 passer rating in the opener, struggled missing receivers both too short and too high. He had only 26 yards with a passer rating of 7.6 at halftime. After Barry Church intercepted a Locker pass, Murray ran four times and ran 40 yards and capped the drive by shoving the ball over the goal line on a 3-yard TD run for a 10-0 lead early in the second quarter. Bailey added field goals of 48, 44 and 51 for a 16-0 halftime lead. Tennessee finally got going scoring 10 points in the third quarter, including a 61-yard TD pass from Locker to Delanie Walker. The tight end bounced off Cowboys cornerback Morris Claiborne and outran defenders to the end zone for a 61-yard TD with 7:45 left. Locker finished 18 of 34 for 234 yards. “We just dug ourselves too big a hole,” Locker said. Notes: Romo extended his streak with at least one TD pass to 30 straight games. … Murray had his ninth 100yard rushing game of his career and second straight to start this season. … Titans CB Jason McCourty hurt his groin and missed the second half. … Dallas now has won three of four in this series. … Titans fall to 9-7 in home openers since 1999.
Browns get first win for rookie coach
Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III injured his left ankle against the Jacksonville Jaguars. NICK WASS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
RG3, Charles among big names injured 11-yard gain. “It’s an excruciating pain,” After a tough week off Griffin said. “Anytime you the field, the NFL got back look at your ankle and it’s to playing — and the focus going in a strange direction, turned to big-name players you don’t want to get up.” who were injured all over Jackson also left the game the league. after he sprained the AC Robert Griffin III, Jamaal joint in his left shoulder in Charles, DeSean Jackson, the first quarter. He hoped A.J. Green and Knowshon to be able to play next week Moreno all left their games against Philadelphia. on a busy Sunday for team Other Redskins players trainers and medical staffs. injured included running Griffin dislocated his left back Roy Helu (strained ankle in the first quarter of quadriceps), guard Shawn Washington’s 41-10 victory Lauvao (sprained right knee) over Jacksonville, putting and fullback Darrel Young his season in jeopardy. The (sprained back). Jaguars Redskins quarterback was tight end Marcedes Lewis scheduled for X-rays and was carted off after leaving an MRI to determine more with a high left ankle sprain. about the injury. He and Rookie receiver Allen Hurns coach Jay Gruden did not injured his left ankle. offer a timetable for a return, In Denver, Charles left but the injury typically side- with a left ankle injury after lines NFL players for at least being brought down in the two months. first quarter against the “Moments like this,” Grif- Broncos, and did not return. fin said, “you just have to Charles was stopped on a keep the faith.” run up the middle by BronIf there is also a fracture, cos safety T.J. Ward and then Griffin will need surgery and hobbled to the bench. will almost certainly be done Chiefs safety Eric Berry for the year. He was hurt also sprained an ankle. when he landed awkwardly Green aggravated an on his ankle as he finished injured toe during the Cinthe throw and then tumbled cinnati Bengals’ opening out of bounds. The pass was series and sat out the rest of caught by Jackson for an the game. The Associated Press
NFL Week 2
By Benjamn Hoffman
EAGLES (1-0) AT COLTS (0-1)
lis should not be much of a challenge in that regard because the Colts are without Robert Mathis, the defensive end who accounted for 19½ of the team’s 42 sacks last season. Mathis, who was suspended for the first four games of the season, is now expected to miss the entire season with a torn Achilles’ tendon, and the Colts do not have someone to fill his role in a meaningful way. If the Eagles’ patchwork offensive line can keep Foles on his feet, the Colts, who were expected to be contenders, could open the season 0-2. PICK: EAGLES.
Line: Colts by 3. Time: 6:30 p.m., ESPN In Week 1, it appeared as if the league had found an answer for Nick Foles, who had a breakout season for Philadelphia in 2013. The Eagles fell behind, 17-0, in the first half against Jacksonville, but Foles again showed why they cut ties with Michael Vick by leading them to 34 straight secondhalf points. The offensive line is a major question mark for Philadelphia, but Indianapo-
The New York Times
The Associated Press
first half.
CLEVELAND — Billy Cundiff kicked a 29-yard field goal with 3 seconds left Sunday. Cundiff’s kick helped the Browns (1-1) snap a nine-game Browns 26 losing streak Saints 24 in home openers and gave rookie coach Mike Pettine his first NFL win. Brian Hoyer drove the Browns 85 yards in 14 plays in the final 2:46 to set up Cundiff’s winner. Hoyer completed several big passes, none more crucial than his 28-yarder to Andrew Hawkins with 13 seconds to go. The Saints (0-2) rallied from a 13-point deficit to take the lead on Mark Ingram’s 1-yard TD run with 12:12 left. Drew Brees threw two touchdown passes to Jimmy Graham and moved into fourth place on the NFL’s career passing list. Down 24-23, Cleveland took over at its 4. Missing suspended receiver Josh Gordon and without injured Pro Bowl tight end Jordan Cameron and running back Ben Tate, Hoyer calmly took the Browns down the field.
CHARGERS 30, SEAHAWKS 21 In San Diego, Antonio Gates had three touchdown catches and the Chargers controlled the tempo to keep Seattle’s offense off the field. Gates’ 21-yard catch late in the third quarter was epic, as the star tight end split two defenders and extended for Philip Rivers’ pass, reaching out with his left hand to gather it in. Flat on his back, he held up the ball to show the officials he made the catch that gave San Diego a 27-14.
REDSKINS 41, JACKSONVILLE 10 In Landover, Md., Robert Griffin III dislocated his left ankle and DeSean Jackson sprained his left shoulder in the first quarter, then Kirk Cousins stepped in. He completed 22 of 33 passes for 250 yards and a pair of touchdowns in Washington’s 41-10 romp of Jacksonville. Cousins subbed for Griffin and completed his first 12 passes. Ryan Kerrigan had four of the Redskins’ 10 sacks, and Washington’s defense didn’t allow Jacksonville (0-2) past midfield until the final two minutes of the
PACKERS 31, JETS 24 In Green Bay, Wis., Aaron Rodgers threw for three touchdowns, Jordy Nelson had a career-high 209 yards receiving and the Packers rallied from an 18-point deficit. New York appeared to tie it with 5 minutes left on a 37-yard catch by Jeremy Kerley on fourth down — but it was negated because the Jets (1-1) called a timeout from the sideline just before the snap. The Packers (1-1) held on from there to avoid their first 0-2 start since 2006. BENGALS 24, FALCONS 10 In Cincinnati, one Bengals player after another hobbled off and headed to the locker room. They still had more than enough to stay unbeaten with a win over Atlanta (1-1). Running back Giovani Bernard picked up the depleted offense by running for 90 yards. Cincinnati’s defense held down Matt Ryan and the Bengals won their home opener. BILLS 29, DOLPHINS 10 In Orchard Park, N.Y., C.J. Spiller scored on a 102-yard kickoff return, and rookie receiver Sammy Watkins had a 12-yard touchdown catch. The Dolphins (1-1) also lost a key offseason addition when
running back Knowshon Moreno did not return after hurting his left elbow 11 minutes in. Spiller and Watkins, the Clemson connection, both scored in the third quarter, putting Buffalo (2-0) ahead 23-10. PATRIOTS 30, VIKINGS 7 In Minneapolis, Tom Brady and the Patriots took advantage of Adrian Peterson’s absence and Matt Cassel’s four interceptions. Chandler Jones returned a field goal he blocked for a touchdown right before halftime. Brady went 15 for 22 for 149 yards, one touchdown and no turnovers, and Cassel’s first start against his close friend and former mentor was a dud. Devin McCourty, Darrelle Revis, Logan Ryan and Dominique Easley all picked him off, setting up 17 points for the Patriots. PANTHERS 24, LIONS 7 In Charlotte, N.C., Cam Newton made a successful return to the field, throwing for 281 yards and a touchdown. Newton, who missed the season opener with a rib injury, was 22 of 34 and overcame five sacks. Carolina started 2-0 for the first time since 2008. Trailing 7-6 in the third quarter, the Panthers took advantage of back-to-back Detroit turnovers and scored on three straight possessions. RAMS 19, BUCCANEERS 17 In Tampa, Fla., Greg Zuerlein’s fourth field goal, a 38-yarder with 38 seconds remaining, gave third-string quarterback Austin Davis and the Rams a tight win. Davis completed 22 of 29 passes for 235 yards with no interceptions in his first NFL start. Zac Stacy had a 2-yard touchdown run in the first quarter, and Zuerlein also delivered field goals of 36, 35 and 46 yards to help the Rams (1-1) rebound from a lopsided open-
ing loss to Minnesota. CARDINALS 25, GIANTS 14 In East Rutherford, N.J., Ted Ginn Jr. ran 71 yards on a punt return for a go-ahead fourthquarter touchdown. Playing in a regular-season game for the first time since 2010, Drew Stanton replaced the scratched Carson Palmer and led the Cardinals (2-0) on three long scoring drives. Arizona won for the ninth time in 11 games. BEARS 28, 49ERS 20 In Santa Clara, Calif., Down big, Jay Cutler kept his poise on the road while Colin Kaepernick struggled in prime time. Cutler passed for three fourthquarter touchdowns after much of Chicago’s starting defense went down, and the Bears beat the San Francisco 49ers 28-20 to spoil their Levi’s Stadium debut. Cutler threw three TD passes to Brandon Marshall, two in the wild fourth quarter, as Chicago erased a 13-point deficit and quieted the sellout crowd. Cutler threw for two scores in a 27-second span early in the final period, aided by the gutsy play of a backup cornerback. Kyle Fuller made two late interceptions for the depleted Chicago secondary, and the first set up the go-ahead score. Kaepernick threw three interceptions, lost a fumble and his cool. TEXANS 30, RAIDERS 14 In Oakland, Calif., J.J. Watt caught a 1-yard touchdown pass, Arian Foster ran for 138 yards and a score and the Texans won their second straight game. Instead of controlling the game from his usual defensive end position, Watt made his biggest impact on the opening drive when he lined up as a tight end. He caught a pass from Ryan Fitzpatrick to get Houston (2-0) started.
Broncos: Manning again targets tight ends Continued from Page B-1 had the ball for less than 10 minutes in the second half. Smith was 26 of 42 for 255 yards, and Knile Davis ran 22 times for 79 yards and two touchdowns for Kansas City. Charles left with an ankle injury in the first half, as did safety Eric Berry. These ailments came one week after three Chiefs suffered seasonending injuries. Without Wes Welker for the second straight game and facing a defense that lost Pro Bowl linebacker Derrick Johnson and tackle Mike DeVito to torn Achilles tendons last week, Manning targeted his tight ends again. He found Julius Thomas and Jacob Tamme for 4-yard TDs in the first half. Thomas became the first tight end in franchise history to catch four TD passes
in the first two games. Manning also threw a 12-yarder to Demaryius Thomas, who pinned the football on his left shoulder blade with cornerback Chris Owens draping him. Emmanuel Sanders led the Broncos with eight catches for 108 yards, the first 100-yard game of his career. The Broncos head to Seattle next week with a 2-0 record, if not exactly a head of steam, to face the Seahawks, who handed them a Super Bowl shellacking and then talked trash about them in the offseason. Denver GM John Elway retooled his ground game and embarked on a defensive makeover after that 43-8 Super Bowl loss. Yet, the Broncos have been unable to salt away big leads or get off the field consistently. They have come up big when
backed up near their goal line, though. Smith led the Chiefs on a 19-play drive that ate up 10 minutes coming out of halftime. They came up empty after getting to the Denver 4 on the strength of five third-down conversions. An offensive holding call and linebacker Brandon Marshall’s sack dropped them back to the 19. Cairo Santos was wide right on a 37-yard field goal attempt. Santos, who beat out incumbent veteran Ryan Succop with a strong leg in training camp, also failed to kick a touchback later in the game, and Bubba Caldwell returned it 54 yards, setting up a score. The Chiefs got it right the next time, however, converting all three third downs on a 14-play drive that covered 90 yards and chewed up nearly
eight minutes. The key was Anthony Fasano’s bobbling 22-yard grab to the Broncos 25. Davis trotted in from 4 yards, pulling Kansas City to 21-17 with 7:11 left. He also had a 2-yard TD run in the first half. Caldwell’s big kickoff return set up Brandon McManus’ 20-yard field goal that put Denver ahead by seven with 3:27 remaining. Charles left after running just twice for 4 yards and catching one pass for 8 yards. Kansas City was trying to get him more involved after giving him just seven carries against Tennessee in the opener. Charles rushed for 1,287 yards a season ago, which was third most in the NFL. Demaryius Thomas had an 80-yard TD catch negated when right tackle Chris Clark was whistled for being downfield.
SPORTS 2-21, D.Harris 1-10, Charles 1-8. Denver, Sanders 8-108, D.Thomas 5-62, J.Thomas 4-39, Ball 3-29, Tamme 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Kansas City, Santos 37 (WR).
FOOTBALL FOOTBALL NFL American Conference East Buffalo Miami N.Y. Jets New England South Houston Tennessee Indianapolis Jacksonville North Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland West Denver San Diego Oakland Kansas City
W 2 1 1 1 W 2 1 0 0 W 2 1 1 1 W 2 1 0 0
L 0 1 1 1 L 0 1 1 2 L 0 1 1 1 L 0 1 2 2
T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0
Pct 1.000 .500 .500 .500 Pct 1.000 .500 .000 .000 Pct 1.000 .500 .500 .500 Pct 1.000 .500 .000 .000
PF 52 43 43 50 PF 47 36 24 27 PF 47 42 36 53 PF 55 47 28 27
PA 30 49 45 40 PA 20 36 31 75 PA 26 29 53 54 PA 41 39 49 50
National Conference East Philadelphia Washington Dallas N.Y. Giants South Carolina Atlanta New Orleans Tampa Bay North Minnesota Chicago Detroit Green Bay West Arizona Seattle San Francisco St. Louis
W 1 1 1 0 W 2 1 0 0 W 1 1 1 1 W 2 1 1 1
L 0 1 1 2 L 0 1 2 2 L 1 1 1 1 L 0 1 1 1
T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 34 17 0 .500 47 27 0 .500 43 38 0 .000 28 60 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 44 21 0 .500 47 58 0 .000 58 63 0 .000 31 39 T Pct PF PA 0 .500 41 36 0 .500 48 43 0 .500 42 38 0 .500 47 60 T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 43 31 0 .500 57 46 0 .500 48 45 0 .500 25 51
Week Two Sunday’s Games Dallas 26, Tennessee 10 New England 30, Minnesota 7 Buffalo 29, Miami 10 Washington 41, Jacksonville 10 Arizona 25, N.Y. Giants 14 Cleveland 26, New Orleans 24 Cincinnati 24, Atlanta 10 Carolina 24, Detroit 7 San Diego 30, Seattle 21 St. Louis 19, Tampa Bay 17 Houston 30, Oakland 14 Denver 24, Kansas City 17 Green Bay 31, N.Y. Jets 24 Chicago 28, San Francisco 20 Thursday’s Game Baltimore 26, Pittsburgh 6 Monday’s Game Philadelphia at Indianapolis, 6:30 p.m.
Week Three Thursday, Sept. 18 Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 21 Dallas at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Minnesota at New Orleans, 11 a.m. San Diego at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Houston at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Green Bay at Detroit, 11 a.m. Indianapolis at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Oakland at New England, 11 a.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 2:05 p.m. Denver at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. Kansas City at Miami, 2:25 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 22 Chicago at N.Y. Jets, 6:30 p.m.
Bears 28, 49ers 20 Chicago 0 7 0 21—28 San Francisco 10 7 3 0—20 First Quarter SF—Crabtree 3 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 12:42. SF—FG Dawson 27, 2:48. Second Quarter SF—Gore 8 run (Dawson kick), 2:22. Chi—Marshall 17 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), :13. Third Quarter SF—FG Dawson 24, 5:56. Fourth Quarter Chi—Marshall 5 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 13:35. Chi—Bennett 3 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 13:14. Chi—Marshall 3 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 6:55. A—70,799. Chi SF First downs 19 19 Total Net Yards 216 361 Rushes-yards 17-46 27-129 Passing 170 232 Punt Returns 1-1 4-24 Kickoff Returns 1-21 3-57 Interceptions Ret. 3-39 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 23-34-0 21-34-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-6 4-16 Punts 6-39.7 1-54.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 10-58 16-118 Time of Possession 26:09 33:51 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Chicago, Cutler 5-25, Forte 12-21. San Francisco, Kaepernick 9-66, Gore 13-63, Hyde 4-0, Miller 1-0. PASSING—Chicago, Cutler 23-340-176. San Francisco, Kaepernick 21-34-3-248. RECEIVING—Chicago, Bennett 7-37, Marshall 5-48, Forte 5-15, Jeffery 3-47, Holmes 2-20, Rosario 1-9. San Francisco, Crabtree 7-82, Carrier 3-41, V.Davis 3-39, Boldin 2-34, S.Johnson 2-26, Gore 2-12, V.McDonald 1-9, Hyde 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Broncos 24, Chiefs 17 Kansas City 3 7 0 7—17 Denver 7 14 0 3—24 First Quarter Den—J.Thomas 4 pass from Manning (McManus kick), 11:19. KC—FG Santos 45, 2:02. Second Quarter KC—Davis 2 run (Santos kick), 10:32. Den—Tamme 4 pass from Manning (McManus kick), 7:19. Den—D.Thomas 12 pass from Manning (McManus kick), 1:09. Fourth Quarter KC—Davis 4 run (Santos kick), 7:11. Den—FG McManus 20, 3:27. A—76,900. KC Den First downs 28 19 Total Net Yards 380 325 Rushes-yards 31-133 19-88 Passing 247 237 Punt Returns 2-2 0-0 Kickoff Returns 1-37 1-54 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 26-42-0 21-26-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-8 1-5 Punts 2-40.0 3-44.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-62 11-71 Time of Possession 36:14 23:46 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Kansas City, Davis 22-79, A.Smith 5-42, Gray 2-8, Charles 2-4. Denver, Ball 12-60, Anderson 5-31, Manning 1-(minus 1), Sanders 1-(minus 2). PASSING—Kansas City, A.Smith 26-420-255. Denver, Manning 21-26-0-242. RECEIVING—Kansas City, Davis 6-26, Kelce 4-81, Bowe 3-40, Fasano 3-39, Jenkins 3-16, Avery 3-14, Hemingway
Cardinals 25, Giants 14 Arizona 10 0 0 15—25 N.Y. Giants 0 7 7 0—14 First Quarter Ari—Dwyer 1 run (Catanzaro kick), 10:18. Ari—FG Catanzaro 49, 1:31. Second Quarter NYG—Randle 7 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), :37. Third Quarter NYG—Fells 1 pass from Manning (J.Brown kick), 2:03. Fourth Quarter Ari—FG Catanzaro 37, 11:38. Ari—Ginn Jr. 71 punt return (run failed), 10:10. Ari—FG Catanzaro 32, 9:11. Ari—FG Catanzaro 33, 1:13. A—78,344. Ari NYG First downs 21 24 Total Net Yards 266 341 Rushes-yards 28-124 27-81 Passing 142 260 Punt Returns 2-76 2-0 Kickoff Returns 2-28 6-143 Interceptions Ret. 2-3 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 14-29-0 26-39-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-25 2-17 Punts 4-41.0 4-44.3 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-2 Penalties-Yards 7-71 9-70 Time of Possession 27:31 32:29 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Arizona, Ellington 15-91, Dwyer 9-31, Jo.Brown 1-2, Hughes 1-2, Stanton 2-(minus 2). N.Y. Giants, Jennings 18-64, A.Williams 8-12, Manning 1-5. PASSING—Arizona, Stanton 14-29-0167. N.Y. Giants, Manning 26-39-2-277. RECEIVING—Arizona, Fitzgerald 6-51, Jo.Brown 3-28, Carlson 2-43, Floyd 1-19, Niklas 1-16, Ellington 1-10. N.Y. Giants, Donnell 7-81, Cruz 5-60, Jennings 4-45, Randle 4-39, Jernigan 2-15, A.Williams 2-7, Parker 1-29, Fells 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Packers 31, Jets 24 N.Y. Jets 14 7 3 0—24 Green Bay 3 13 15 0—31 First Quarter NYJ—Smith 1 run (Folk kick), 13:01. NYJ—Decker 29 pass from Smith (Folk kick), 8:24. GB—FG Crosby 31, 4:06. Second Quarter NYJ—Ivory 4 run (Folk kick), 10:38. GB—FG Crosby 20, 5:43. GB—FG Crosby 55, 3:12. GB—Cobb 6 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), :08. Third Quarter GB—Cobb 1 pass from A.Rodgers (Cobb pass from A.Rodgers), 5:45. NYJ—FG Folk 52, 2:21. GB—Nelson 80 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 2:08. A—78,041. NYJ GB First downs 19 25 Total Net Yards 312 390 Rushes-yards 37-146 22-80 Passing 166 310 Punt Returns 3-11 3-15 Kickoff Returns 3-29 2-58 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 16-32-1 25-42-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-10 4-36 Punts 5-46.6 4-49.3 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-1 Penalties-Yards 7-82 3-35 Time of Possession 30:26 29:34 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—N.Y. Jets, Ivory 13-43, Kerley 0-37, Smith 7-26, Johnson 1221, B.Powell 4-16, Bohanon 1-3. Green Bay, Lacy 13-43, A.Rodgers 6-28, Cobb 2-6, Kuhn 1-3. PASSING—N.Y. Jets, Smith 16-32-1176. Green Bay, A.Rodgers 25-42-0346. RECEIVING—N.Y. Jets, Decker 4-63, Kerley 3-22, B.Powell 2-32, Bohanon 2-30, Cumberland 1-14, Amaro 1-6, Nelson 1-6, Ivory 1-3, Johnson 1-0. Green Bay, Nelson 9-209, D.Adams 5-50, Cobb 5-39, Lacy 2-18, Harris 1-11, Quarless 1-8, Boykin 1-6, Kuhn 1-5. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Panthers 24, Lions 7 Detroit 0 0 7 0—7 Carolina 0 6 7 11—24 Second Quarter Car—FG Gano 29, 7:58. Car—FG Gano 53, 1:11. Third Quarter Det—Collins 1 pass from Stafford (Freese kick), 9:28. Car—Avant 14 pass from Newton (Gano kick), 2:30. Fourth Quarter Car—Stewart 2 run (Cotchery pass from Newton), 7:26. Car—FG Gano 38, 4:45. A—73,586. Det Car First downs 21 20 Total Net Yards 323 313 Rushes-yards 18-70 24-62 Passing 253 251 Punt Returns 3-52 2-8 Kickoff Returns 1-33 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-23 Comp-Att-Int 27-48-1 22-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-38 5-30 Punts 5-46.6 6-44.8 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5-33 4-45 Time of Possession 30:41 29:19 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Detroit, Bell 10-36, Bush 6-26, Stafford 1-8, Riddick 1-0. Carolina, Stewart 15-37, Newton 4-19, Brown 1-11, Tolbert 4-(minus 5). PASSING—Detroit, Stafford 27-48-1291. Carolina, Newton 22-34-0-281. RECEIVING—Detroit, C.Johnson 6-83, Bell 6-61, Tate 5-57, Ebron 3-38, Ross 2-23, Bush 2-6, Collins 2-3, Fauria 1-20. Carolina, Olsen 6-72, Avant 5-54, Cotchery 4-46, Tolbert 3-33, Benjamin 2-46, Stewart 1-22, Bersin 1-8. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Detroit, Freese 49 (WR), 49 (WR).
Browns 26, Saints 24 New Orleans 0 10 7 7—24 Cleveland 10 6 7 3—26 First Quarter Cle—Austin 3 pass from Hoyer (Cundiff kick), 5:59. Cle—FG Cundiff 32, :00. Second Quarter NO—FG S.Graham 27, 5:16. Cle—Gipson 62 interception return (run failed), 3:25. NO—J.Graham 9 pass from Brees (S.Graham kick), :03. Third Quarter NO—J.Graham 1 pass from Brees (S.Graham kick), 9:32. Cle—West 9 run (Cundiff kick), 3:19. Fourth Quarter NO—Ingram 1 run (S.Graham kick), 12:12. Cle—FG Cundiff 29, :03. A—67,407.
NO Cle First downs 26 23 Total Net Yards 397 324 Rushes-yards 27-174 30-122 Passing 223 202 Punt Returns 1-(-2) 1-2 Kickoff Returns 3-63 2-37 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-62 Comp-Att-Int 27-40-1 24-41-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-14 1-2 Punts 5-41.2 5-41.6 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5-39 4-30 Time of Possession 31:50 28:10 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Orleans, Ingram 11-83, K.Robinson 8-31, Cooks 2-31, Thomas 3-16, Johnson 2-10, Brees 1-3. Cleveland, West 19-68, Crowell 11-54. PASSING—New Orleans, Brees 27-401-237. Cleveland, Hoyer 24-40-0-204, Manziel 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING—New Orleans, J.Graham 10-118, Meachem 3-37, Stills 3-25, Ingram 3-21, Cooks 3-17, Thomas 3-16, Watson 1-4, Hill 1-(minus 1). Cleveland, Hawkins 6-70, Austin 6-44, Barnidge 4-41, Gabriel 3-13, West 2-22, Benjamin 1-6, Dray 1-5, Crowell 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Bengals 24, Falcons 10 Atlanta 3 0 0 7—10 Cincinnati 3 7 14 0—24 First Quarter Cin—FG Nugent 31, 5:19. Atl—FG Bryant 46, 1:08. Second Quarter Cin—Bernard 4 run (Nugent kick), 2:11. Third Quarter Cin—Sanu 76 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 10:58. Cin—Hill 1 run (Nugent kick), 6:28. Fourth Quarter Atl—Jones 14 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 8:35. A—58,574. Atl Cin First downs 19 21 Total Net Yards 309 472 Rushes-yards 19-97 45-170 Passing 212 302 Punt Returns 1-7 3-26 Kickoff Returns 4-118 1-29 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 3-39 Comp-Att-Int 24-44-3 16-24-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-19 0-0 Punts 6-44.3 4-42.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-56 7-55 Time of Possession 27:01 32:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Atlanta, S.Jackson 11-46, Ryan 3-28, Rodgers 5-23. Cincinnati, Bernard 27-90, Hill 15-74, Dalton 3-6. PASSING—Atlanta, Ryan 24-44-3-231. Cincinnati, Dalton 15-23-0-252, Sanu 1-1-0-50. RECEIVING—Atlanta, Jones 7-88, White 5-42, Douglas 4-38, Freeman 2-22, Smith 2-19, Toilolo 2-13, S.Jackson 1-7, Hester 1-2. Cincinnati, Bernard 5-79, Sanu 3-84, Gresham 3-25, Sanzenbacher 2-42, Hill 2-22, Tate 1-50. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Cincinnati, Nugent 38 (WR), 49 (WL), 55 (SH).
Patriots 30, Vikings 7 New England 10 14 3 3—30 Minnesota 7 0 0 0—7 First Quarter Min—Asiata 25 pass from Cassel (Walsh kick), 10:54. NE—Ridley 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 6:14. NE—FG Gostkowski 48, :32. Second Quarter NE—Edelman 9 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 9:30. NE—Cha.Jones 58 blocked field goal return (Gostkowski kick), :09. Third Quarter NE—FG Gostkowski 47, 8:32. Fourth Quarter NE—FG Gostkowski 27, 14:57. A—52,350. NE Min First downs 16 17 Total Net Yards 292 217 Rushes-yards 37-150 19-54 Passing 142 163 Punt Returns 4-66 1-11 Kickoff Returns 0-0 3-49 Interceptions Ret. 4-60 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 15-22-0 19-36-4 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-7 6-39 Punts 5-42.2 5-45.6 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 15-163 7-58 Time of Possession 31:34 28:26 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New England, Ridley 25-101, Vereen 6-40, Edelman 1-9, Bolden 4-0, Brady 1-0. Minnesota, Asiata 13-36, Cassel 3-16, McKinnon 2-7, Wright 1-(minus 5). PASSING—New England, Brady 15-22-0149. Minnesota, Cassel 19-36-4-202. RECEIVING—New England, Edelman 6-81, Gronkowski 4-32, Develin 2-17, Dobson 1-13, Hoomanawanui 1-6, Vereen 1-0. Minnesota, Rudolph 5-53, Asiata 5-48, Patterson 4-56, McKinnon 2-5, Ellison 1-24, Wright 1-12, Jennings 1-4.
MISSED FIELD GOALS—Minnesota, Walsh 48 (BK).
Cowboys 26, Titans 10 Dallas 3 13 7 3—26 Tennessee 0 0 10 0—10 First Quarter Dal—FG Bailey 48, :13. Second Quarter Dal—Murray 3 run (Bailey kick), 12:54. Dal—FG Bailey 44, 1:02. Dal—FG Bailey 51, :04. Third Quarter Ten—FG Succop 47, 10:57. Ten—Walker 61 pass from Locker (Succop kick), 7:45. Dal—Bryant 3 pass from Romo (Bailey kick), 2:09. Fourth Quarter Dal—FG Bailey 48, 8:15. A—69,143. Dal Ten First downs 26 13 Total Net Yards 368 314 Rushes-yards 43-220 13-82 Passing 148 232 Punt Returns 1-15 0-0 Kickoff Returns 0-0 5-68 Interceptions Ret. 2-4 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 19-29-0 18-34-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-28 2-2 Punts 4-55.0 5-45.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 4-25 5-35 Time of Possession 41:11 18:49 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Dallas, Murray 29-167, Dunbar 11-27, Randle 3-26. Tennessee, Greene 5-40, McCluster 4-30, Locker 2-9, Sankey 2-3. PASSING—Dallas, Romo 19-29-0-176. Tennessee, Locker 18-34-2-234. RECEIVING—Dallas, Bryant 10-103, Witten 4-32, Williams 2-20, Beasley 1-10, Murray 1-6, Escobar 1-5. Tennessee, Walker 10-142, Wright 3-31, Hunter 2-26, Hagan 1-25, McCluster 1-9, N.Washington 1-1. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
B-5
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Bills 29, Dolphins 10 Miami 0 0 10 0—10 Buffalo 6 3 14 6—29 First Quarter Buf—FG Carpenter 27, 4:47. Buf—FG Carpenter 27, :22. Second Quarter Buf—FG Carpenter 31, 10:22. Third Quarter Mia—FG Sturgis 34, 9:35. Buf—Spiller 102 kickoff return (Carpenter kick), 9:23. Mia—M.Wallace 7 pass from Tannehill (Sturgis kick), 3:15. Buf—Watkins 12 pass from Manuel (Carpenter kick), :13. Fourth Quarter Buf—FG Carpenter 32, 10:32. Buf—FG Carpenter 38, 1:54. A—69,954. Mia Buf First downs 23 13 Total Net Yards 290 315 Rushes-yards 21-80 33-113 Passing 210 202 Punt Returns 2-7 2-16 Kickoff Returns 3-57 3-136 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-1 Comp-Att-Int 31-49-1 16-26-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-31 0-0 Punts 6-33.2 4-33.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 3-20 6-40 Time of Possession 31:17 28:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Miami, Miller 11-46, Williams 5-19, Tannehill 4-11, Moreno 1-4. Buffalo, Spiller 12-69, Jackson 12-24, Summers 2-7, Manuel 4-6, Goodwin 1-4, Dixon 2-3. PASSING—Miami, Tannehill 31-49-1241. Buffalo, Manuel 16-26-0-202. RECEIVING—Miami, Clay 7-31, M.Wallace 5-56, Landry 5-49, Hartline 5-36, Darkwa 3-31, Gibson 3-27, Miller 2-7, Matthews 1-4. Buffalo, Watkins 8-117, Chandler 2-27, Jackson 2-27, Gragg 1-14, Spiller 1-9, Woods 1-5, Mi.Williams 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Buffalo, Carpenter 31 (WL).
Redskins 41, Jaguars 10 Jacksonville 0 7 0 3—10 Washington 7 14 3 17—41 First Quarter Was—Young 20 pass from Cousins (Forbath kick), 8:12. Second Quarter Was—Morris 1 run (Forbath kick), 14:18. Was—Morris 1 run (Forbath kick), 7:28. Jax—Lewis 63 pass from Henne (Scobee kick), 1:40. Third Quarter Was—FG Forbath 36, 8:30. Fourth Quarter Was—Paul 2 pass from Cousins (Forbath kick), 14:12. Was—FG Forbath 42, 10:40. Jax—FG Scobee 36, 6:50. Was—Redd Jr. 14 run (Forbath kick), 1:52. A—80,037. Jax Was First downs 8 32 Total Net Yards 148 449 Rushes-yards 10-25 42-191 Passing 123 258 Punt Returns 2-9 7-59 Kickoff Returns 5-137 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-14 Comp-Att-Int 14-28-1 24-36-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 10-70 3-30 Punts 8-47.9 4-49.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-44 11-98 Time of Possession 20:59 39:01 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Jacksonville, Henne 3-17, Gerhart 7-8. Washington, Morris 22-85, Redd Jr. 8-41, Helu Jr. 8-25, Griffin III 2-22, Roberts 1-19, Cousins 1-(minus 1). PASSING—Jacksonville, Henne 14-281-193. Washington, Cousins 22-33-0250, Griffin III 2-3-0-38. RECEIVING—Jacksonville, A.Robinson 4-75, Lewis 2-71, D.Robinson 2-14, Hurns 2-13, Lee 2-11, Gerhart 2-9. Washington, Paul 8-99, Grant 5-57, Roberts 4-57, Young 2-27, Helu Jr. 2-11, Jackson 1-19, Garcon 1-12, A.Robinson 1-6. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Rams 19, Buccaneers 17 St. Louis 7 3 3 6—19 Tampa Bay 7 0 7 3—17 First Quarter TB—McCown 5 run (Murray kick), 8:56. StL—Stacy 2 run (Zuerlein kick), 3:07. Second Quarter StL—FG Zuerlein 36, :39. Third Quarter TB—McCown 1 run (Murray kick), 9:18. StL—FG Zuerlein 35, 2:41. Fourth Quarter StL—FG Zuerlein 46, 9:10. TB—FG Murray 36, 5:15. StL—FG Zuerlein 38, :38. A—59,923. StL TB First downs 20 18 Total Net Yards 339 332 Rushes-yards 29-119 30-157 Passing 220 175 Punt Returns 1-(-1) 1-0 Kickoff Returns 2-22 4-116 Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 22-29-0 16-21-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-15 1-4 Punts 2-49.0 2-27.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 5-65 4-30 Time of Possession 32:05 27:55 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—St. Louis, Stacy 19-71, Austin 2-21, Cunningham 6-15, Britt 1-12, A.Davis 1-0. Tampa Bay, Rainey 22-144, James 6-7, McCown 2-6. PASSING—St. Louis, A.Davis 22-29-0235. Tampa Bay, McCown 16-21-1-179. RECEIVING—St. Louis, Quick 7-74, Cook 4-46, Pettis 3-46, Kendricks 3-25, Harkey 2-8, Britt 1-17, Givens 1-15, Cunningham 1-4. Tampa Bay, Jackson 4-51, Evans 4-49, Rainey 3-30, Myers 2-33, Herron 2-13, Lane 1-3. MISSED FIELD GOALS—Tampa Bay, Murray 24 (BK).
Texans 30, Raiders 14 Houston 14 3 10 3—30 Oakland 0 0 0 14—14 First Quarter Hou—Watt 1 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bullock kick), 9:37. Hou—Foster 5 run (Bullock kick), :05. Second Quarter Hou—FG Bullock 33, 10:31. Third Quarter Hou—Hopkins 12 pass from Fitzpatrick (Bullock kick), 8:29. Hou—FG Bullock 39, 3:14. Fourth Quarter Oak—McFadden 1 run (Janikowski kick), 14:07. Hou—FG Bullock 46, 4:46. Oak—J.Jones 9 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), :13. A—54,063. Hou Oak First downs 20 22 Total Net Yards 327 364 Rushes-yards 46-188 17-101 Passing 139 263 Punt Returns 2-9 1-3 Kickoff Returns 1-0 4-103
Interceptions Ret. 2-69 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 14-19-0 27-42-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 0-0 Punts 2-50.0 3-40.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 7-85 5-24 Time of Possession 38:36 21:24 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Houston, Foster 28-138, Blue 11-40, Grimes 3-9, R.Brown 3-2, Mallett 1-(minus 1). Oakland, Carr 4-58, McFadden 12-37, Murray 1-6. PASSING—Houston, Fitzpatrick 14-190-139. Oakland, Carr 27-42-2-263. RECEIVING—Houston, A.Johnson 6-74, Hopkins 3-22, Foster 2-12, Graham 1-26, D.Johnson 1-4, Watt 1-1. Oakland, J.Jones 9-112, Holmes 5-45, Rivera 5-31, D.Moore 3-29, McFadden 2-31, Reece 1-11, Streater 1-6, Butler 1-(minus 2). MISSED FIELD GOALS—Houston, Bullock 27 (BK).
Chargers 30, Seahawks 21 Seattle 7 7 7 0—21 San Diego 3 17 7 3—30 First Quarter SD—FG Novak 50, 2:52. Sea—Harvin 51 run (Hauschka kick), 1:27. Second Quarter SD—Gates 8 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 12:05. SD—FG Novak 43, 4:40. SD—Gates 8 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 1:04. Sea—Turbin 3 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), :12. Third Quarter SD—Gates 21 pass from Rivers (Novak kick), 3:01. Sea—Lynch 14 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), :03. Fourth Quarter SD—FG Novak 28, :16. A—67,916. Sea SD First downs 14 26 Total Net Yards 288 377 Rushes-yards 13-108 37-101 Passing 180 276 Punt Returns 0-0 1-6 Kickoff Returns 6-94 1-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int 17-25-0 28-37-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-22 1-8 Punts 4-53.3 3-41.3 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-0 Penalties-Yards 8-53 6-53 Time of Possession 17:45 42:15 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Harvin 2-45, Lynch 6-36, Wilson 2-18, Turbin 2-7, Lockette 1-2. San Diego, Woodhead 8-32, Ry.Mathews 11-31, Brown 7-21, Rivers 11-17. PASSING—Seattle, Wilson 17-25-0202. San Diego, Rivers 28-37-0-284. RECEIVING—Seattle, Kearse 4-61, Lynch 4-27, Baldwin 3-35, Turbin 2-35, Walters 2-17, Miller 1-22, Harvin 1-5. San Diego, Gates 7-96, Royal 7-69, Allen 5-55, Woodhead 4-28, Brown 3-10, Ry.Mathews 2-26. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
Thursday’s Baoxscore Steelers-Ravens Pittsburgh 0 3 3 0—6 Baltimore 7 3 7 9—26 First Quarter Bal—Daniels 2 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), :27. Second Quarter Bal—FG Tucker 30, 8:01. Pit—FG Suisham 25, 2:50. Third Quarter Pit—FG Suisham 43, 10:30. Bal—Daniels 1 pass from Flacco (Tucker kick), 3:58. Fourth Quarter Bal—FG Tucker 23, 14:11. Bal—FG Tucker 22, 11:14. Bal—FG Tucker 20, 4:31. A—71,181. Pit Bal First downs 17 25 Total Net Yards 301 323 Rushes-yards 18-99 36-157 Passing 202 166 Punt Returns 2-13 2-47 Kickoff Returns 1-11 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0-0 1-13 Comp-Att-Int 22-37-1 21-29-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-15 0-0 Punts 4-45.8 2-55.0 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-75 4-35 Time of Possession 24:52 35:08 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Pittsburgh, Bell 11-59, Wheaton 2-22, A.Brown 2-10, Blount 3-8. Baltimore, Pierce 22-96, Forsett 8-56, Flacco 5-3, Jones 1-2. PASSING—Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 22-37-1-217. Baltimore, Flacco 2129-0-166. RECEIVING—Pittsburgh, A.Brown 7-90, Bell 5-48, Wheaton 5-38, Miller 4-35, J.Brown 1-6. Baltimore, Smith Sr. 6-71, Daniels 5-28, Forsett 4-16, Pitta 3-30, T.Smith 1-10, Pierce 1-7, Jones 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
NFL Weekly Leaders (not including Sunday night game) Passing Leaders Name, Team CompAtt Rodgers, GB 25 42 Stafford, DET 27 48 Rivers, SD 28 37 Newton, CAR 22 34 Manning, NYG 26 39 Carr, OAK 27 42 Smith, KC 26 42 Dalton, CIN 15 23 Cousins, WAS 22 33 Manning, DEN 21 26
Yds TD 346 3 291 1 284 3 281 1 277 2 263 1 255 0 252 1 250 2 242 3
Int 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0
Rushing Leaders Name, Team Murray, DAL Rainey, TB Foster, HOU Ridley, NE Pierce, BAL Ellington, ARI Bernard, CIN Morris, WAS Ingram, NO Davis, KC
Att 29 22 28 25 22 15 27 22 11 22
Yds 167 144 138 101 96 91 90 85 83 79
Avg 5.8 6.5 4.9 4.0 4.4 6.1 3.3 3.9 7.5 3.6
TD 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 2
Receiving Leaders Name, Team Nelson, GB Walker, TEN Graham, NO Watkins, BUF Jones, OAK Sanders, DEN Bryant, DAL Paul, WAS Gates, SD Brown, PIT
Rec 9 10 10 8 9 8 10 8 7 7
Yds 209 142 118 117 112 108 103 99 96 90
Avg 23.2 14.2 11.8 14.6 12.4 13.5 10.3 12.4 13.7 12.9
TD 1 1 2 1 1 0 1 1 3 0
Kicking Leaders Name, Team Carpenter, BUF Bailey, DAL Tucker, BAL Catanzaro, ARI Zuerlein, STL Bullock, HOU Gostkowski, NE Novak, SD Crosby, GB Forbath, WAS
M-AttXPM-XPAttPts 5-6 2-2 17 4-4 2-2 14 4-4 2-2 14 4-4 1-1 13 4-4 1-1 13 3-4 3-3 12 3-3 3-3 12 3-3 3-3 12 3-3 2-2 11 2-2
5-5
11
Sacks Leaders Name, Team Kerrigan, WAS Addison, CAR Casey, TEN Davis, NYJ Dumervil, BAL
Sk Sk YdsQB Ht Tkl 4.0 23.0 4 4 2.5 25.5 4 2 2.0 20.0 2 2 2.0 22.0 3 5 2.0 15.0 2 2
Punting Leaders Name, Team Jones, DAL Koch, BAL Koenen, TB Lee, SF
No. 4 2 1 1
Yds 220 110 54 54
Net 45.0 48.5 27.5 53.0
NCAA The AP Top 25 Poll The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 13, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Rec Pts Pv 1. Florida St. (37) 2-0 1,466 1 2. Oregon (17) 3-0 1,424 2 3. Alabama (1) 3-0 1,346 3 4. Oklahoma (2) 3-0 1,325 4 5. Auburn 2-0 1,252 5 6. Texas A&M (3) 3-0 1,195 7 7. Baylor 3-0 1,134 8 8. LSU 3-0 1,114 10 9. Notre Dame 3-0 917 11 10. Mississippi 3-0 840 14 11. Michigan St. 1-1 832 13 12. UCLA 3-0 807 12 13. Georgia 1-1 729 6 14. South Carolina 2-1 718 24 15. Arizona St. 3-0 680 16 16. Stanford 2-1 560 15 17. Southern Cal 2-1 459 9 18. Missouri 3-0 446 20 19. Wisconsin 1-1 414 18 20. Kansas St. 2-0 326 19 21. BYU 3-0 246 25 22. Clemson 1-1 209 23 23. Ohio St. 2-1 204 22 24. Nebraska 3-0 172 NR 25. Oklahoma St. 2-1 126 NR Others receiving votes: North Carolina 82, Duke 55, Mississippi St. 55, Virginia Tech 54, Penn St. 51, East Carolina 44, TCU 42, Pittsburgh 40, Florida 31, Marshall 28, Boston College 22, Washington 14, West Virginia 14, Cincinnati 10, Virginia 6, Arizona 3, Arkansas 3, N. Dakota St. 3, Louisville 2.
Amway Top 25 Poll The Amway Top 25 football coaches poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 13, total points based on 25 points for first place through one point for 25th, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Florida State (50)2-0 1502 1 2. Alabama (1) 3-0 1408 2 3. Oregon (6) 3-0 1399 4 4. Oklahoma (4) 3-0 1390 3 5. Auburn 2-0 1297 5 6. Baylor 3-0 1179 7 7. Texas A&M 3-0 1159 8 8. Louisiana State 3-0 1107 9 9. Notre Dame 3-0 966 11 10. UCLA 3-0 861 12 11. Michigan State 1-1 776 13 12. Mississippi 3-0 769 15 13. Arizona State 3-0 732 14 14. Georgia 1-1 693 6 15. Stanford 2-1 561 16 16. South Carolina 2-1 529 23 17. Wisconsin 1-1 436 17 18. Ohio State 2-1 402 18 19. Missouri 3-0 382 22 20. Kansas State 2-0 381 20 21. Southern Cal 2-1 338 10 22. Nebraska 3-0 325 21 23. Brigham Young 3-0 222 NR 24. Clemson 1-1 207 24 25. North Carolina 2-0 128 25 Others receiving votes: Duke 100; Mississippi State 92; Oklahoma State 83; Florida 72; TCU 50; Virginia Tech 47; Washington 44; East Carolina 35; Penn State 26; Marshall 25; West Virginia 19; Arizona 18; Cincinnati 15; Northern Illinois 10; Louisville 8; Oregon State 8; Arkansas 7; Pittsburgh 5; Boston College 4; North Carolina State 4; Memphis 2; Boise State 1; Virginia 1.
The AP Top 25 Saturday No. 2 Oregon 48, Wyoming 14 No. 3 Alabama 52, Southern Miss. 12 No. 4 Oklahoma 34, Tennessee 10 No. 24 South Carolina 38, No. 6 Georgia 35 No. 7 Texas A&M 38, Rice 10 Boston College 37, No. 9 USC 31 No. 10 LSU 31, Louisiana-Monroe 0 No. 11 Notre Dame 30, Purdue 14 at Indianapolis No. 12 UCLA 20, Texas 17 No. 14 Mississippi 56, Louisiana 15 No. 15 Stanford 35, Army 0 No. 16 Arizona State 38, Colorado 24 East Carolina 28, No. 17 Virginia Tech 21 No. 20 Missouri 30, UCF 10 Virginia 23, No. 21 Louisville 21 No. 22 Ohio State 66, Kent State 0 Friday No. 8 Baylor 63, Buffalo 21
Late Saturday UTEP 42, NEW MEXICO ST. 24 New Mexico St. 7 3 0 14—24 UTEP 7 14 0 21—42 First Quarter NMSU—Matthews 17 pass from Rogers (M.Johnson kick), 11:46. UTEP—Aa.Jones 1 run (Mattox kick), 6:51. Second Quarter NMSU—FG M.Johnson 28, 13:17. UTEP—D.Laufasa 2 pass from Showers (Mattox kick), 8:31. UTEP—D.Laufasa 1 run (Mattox kick), 1:04. Fourth Quarter UTEP—Showers 7 run (Mattox kick), 14:54. NMSU—Morgan 57 pass from Rogers (M.Johnson kick), 13:56. UTEP—Aa.Jones 1 run (Mattox kick), 6:25. UTEP—Simpson 1 run (Mattox kick), 4:25. NMSU—Rogers 1 run (M.Johnson kick), 1:34. A—32,979. NMSU UTEP First downs 20 26 Rushes-yards 21-90 58-344 Passing 335 126 Comp-Att-Int 23-41-2 13-16-1 Return Yards 1 34 Punts-Avg. 3-34.0 1-47.0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-17 5-43 Time of Possession 20:34 39:26 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—New Mexico St., Hall 10-44, Betancourt 8-35, Rogers 2-6, A.Allen 1-5. UTEP, Aa.Jones 25-168, Jeffery 12-79, Showers 6-41, Hamm 5-19, J.Laufasa 2-15, Golden 4-11, Moss 1-6, D.Laufasa 2-4, Simpson 1-1. PASSING—New Mexico St., Rogers 22-40-2-324, A.Allen 1-1-0-11. UTEP, Showers 13-16-1-126. RECEIVING—New Mexico St., Morgan 8-202, Matthews 5-78, Hogan 4-18, J.Brown 2-21, Shapiro 2-13, Rogers 1-11, Betancourt 1-(minus 8). UTEP, Golden 4-35, Hamilton 3-45, Shaw 3-23, Jeffery 1-11, Ford 1-10, D.Laufasa 1-2.
B-6
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
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A-8
50¢
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out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in
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The New
»rentals«
2 BEDROOM $880 PLUS UTILITIES Tile floors, washer dryer hook-up. Quiet & private, fenced yard. Pet negotiable. 505-471-1270, make appointment.
813 CAMINO DE MONTE REY : Livein studio. Full bath, kitchen, small back yard. $680 gas, water paid. 1616 BRAE STREET: 1 bedroom 1 bath, kitchen, living room. $670 with water paid. NO PETS! 505-471-4405 .
3.3 ACRES WITH SHARED WELL IN PLACE. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenants. $149,000. Owner finance, 20% down. 505-470-5877
BRIGHT, BEAUTIFUL STUDIO now available. Tons of space in a convenient location at an affordable price! Call 888-482-8216 today for a tour of your new home! L a s Palomas Apartments , Hopewell St. You’ll be surprised. We promise. Hablamos Espanol!
EASTSIDE GRACIOUS UPDATED ADOBE. Santa Fe style, 1/2 acre, mature trees, secluded, organic gardens, 3-2, casita, studio, 3015 ft2. Judith 206-954-7800, $815,000.
4 bedroom, 2 bath, 2,700 sq.ft. home in the College Heights. Fully landscaped large backyard on halfacre lot, radiant heat, kiva fireplace, dog run, 2-car garage. Walk to SFCC, Amy Biehl, Santa Maria, $429,000, brokers welcome. 505-424-3932 or email sumac3b@comcast.net
APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED
OUT OF TOWN
APARTMENTS FURNISHED
CLASSIFIEDS
SANTA FE Private Real Estate Loans.
Commercial and Residential Investment properties, from $50k. 505-670-0051
WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000
Where treasures are found daily
5 Acre Lot, 11 Roy Crawford at Old Santa Fe Trail, $195,000. (2) 2.5 acre lots, Senda Artemisia at Old Galisteo, $119-124,000. Rural setting near town. Equity RE. 505-690-8503
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
CORONADO CONDO 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH.
2 BEDROOM, $800. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839
New A/C. Super clean. $700 monthly, $300 deposit. References required. No Credit Check. Available Now. 505470-5188
CHARMING, FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO, $750. Utilities paid. Wood, Saltillo floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard, Plaza. Sorry, No Pets. 505471-0839
SMALL EFFICIENCY CLOSE TO TOWN & DEVARGAS MALL. $550 monthly, $300 deposit, plus utilities. 505-6904753
business & service exploresantafetcom
Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!
BUSINESS
CLEANING
OUR BEAUTIFUL, made in Santa Fe FIBERSPAN CONCRETE VIGAS are the permanent solution to rotting wood. Visit ConcreteVigas.com or call 505278-0464.
HOUSECLEANING. 6 years experience. Responsible, dependable. References. Very flexible. Work with you to meet your housekeeping needs. Call Olga 505-423-9935.
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE
Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062.
CONSTRUCTION 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!
CLEANING
BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS
Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, plumbing, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-3107552.
HANDYMAN
AVAILABLE FOR HOUSEWORK. Many years experience. One time, or, as needed. 505-753-8967, 505-670-8467.
AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR
Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile, Roofing. Greg, Nina, 920-0493.
Clean Houses Inside and out. Windows, carpets. $18 per hour. Sylvia 505-920-4138. Handyman, Landscaping, Roofing. FREE estimates, BNS. 505-316-6449.
REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877
HANDYMAN
directory« PAINTING
LANDSCAPING
ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING
Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.
TRASH, BRUSH and other hauling available. Yard, gravel work available. Call 505-316-2936, 505-204-3186.
HOUSE SITTING ATTENTION: FREE HOUSE-SITTING FOR REDUCED RENT. Retired administrator, radio journalist. Aspiring screenwriter LOVES dogs. 1st Class References. Call Helen: 505-570-9138
JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112. WEED CLEAN-UP VETERAN PRUNER. LOVE MY JOB! GORGEOUS LANDSCAPES, NO TWO ALIKE, PLANTS, STONE, CLEAN-UPS, HAULING. DANNY, 505-501-1331.
Yanez Landscaping Flagstone, gravel and Rock specialist. Eruption prevention. Drainage system install. Winterizing. Coyote fencing. Maintenance. FREE ESTIMATES! 505-907-2600, 505-289-9398.
LANDSCAPING
MOVERS
Irrigation SystemsNew installations & Repairs. Patios - Brick, Flagstone, Concrete. Retaining Walls- block & Rock. Metal Work- Gates, Railings. Tree Pruning. Landscape designs & Installations. Get it done right the first time! Have a woman do it. 505-310-0045, 505-995-0318 Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock www.greencardlandscaping.com
A A R D V A R K DISCOUNT M O V E R S Most moving services; old-fashioned respect and care since 1976. Jo h n , 505-473-4881.
PAINTING HOMECRAFT PAINTING
INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.
ROOFING ALL-IN-ONE ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & MAINTENANCE. Complete Landscaping. Yard Cleaning, Maintenance. Gravel Driveway. Painting. Torch Down, Stucco. References Available. 505-603-3182.
ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.
HOUSE SITTING JOB WANTED: Musiscian & Weaver. Santa Fe & North. October-May (flexible). Can care for animal large, small. 716-3613618
GREENCARD LANDSCAPING
Tractor & Yard Work, Industrial Welding, Garage Cleanout, Trash Removal. Repairs for Small Engines, Motorcycles, Hitches. FREE Pick-up Non-working Lawnmowers & Motorcycles. Santa Fe Area. 505-577-7491
PAVING
TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.
HAULING OR YARD WORK
REPAIR SERVICE
ASPHALT REPAIR & SEAL COATING Hot Rubber Crack Sealing. Striping. Commercial, Residential. Licensed, Bonded. References if needed. FREE estimate. 505-350-7709
PERSONAL SERVICES PERSONAL ASSISTANT. Compassionate, intelligent. Available for organizing, bookkeeping, household management. Event Planning. Pet Care. Specialize in working with seniors. 505-204-2210.
PLASTERING 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.
PLASTERING RESTORATIONS Re-Stuccos, Parapet Repairs, Patching Interior & Exterior. Call for estimates, 505-310-7552.
ROOFING- ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Maintenance. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.
YARD MAINTENANCE YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. We Move Furniture. Any work you need done I can do! Call George, 505-316-1599.
YARD MAINTENANCE
Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.
Berry Clean - 505-501-3395
Look for these businesses on exploresantafetcom Call us today for your FREE BUSINESS CARDS!*
986-3000
*With your paid Business and Service Directory advertising program.
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds COMMERCIAL SPACE
HOUSES UNFURNISHED
OFFICE SPACE WITH HIGH VISIBILITY, HIGH EXPOSURE
CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $2595. Year lease. 505-7953734
on Cerrillos Road. Retail space. Central location in Kiva Center. 505438-8166 TWO ROOM OFFICE SPACE; 500 sq.ft on second floor with deck and mountain views. Shared reception, kitchenette and bathroom, outdoor patio; great parking. Near new Courthouse and Railyard. 505-989-8616
to place your ad, call WAREHOUSES WAREHOUSE- OFFICE ST. MICHAEL’S AREA.
Office front, large space, high ceilings in back. Ideal for dance groups, art studio. 505-989-7266
»announcements«
CONDOSTOWNHOMES FURNISHED, $1,400 plus utilities. Six month lease minimum. 950 sq.ft. 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Fireplace. 814 Camino de Monte Rey, "La Remuda". 505-795-1024
Near Trader Joe’s, 2 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 story Townhouse, wood floors, all appliances, no pets. $950, W ESTERN EQUITIES, 505-982-4201.
FOUND
PARK PLAZAS- Available 10/1. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH TOWNHOUSE. Fireplace, tile, fridge, dishwasher, washer dryer, 2 car garage. $1250 monthly plus utiltities. 505-983-3594
FOUND: BAG OF CUSHIONS. Friday, near Elks club. 505-471-6005 505-4716005
GUESTHOUSES
FOUND. MAN’S SILVER RING. In Vinaigrette’s parking lot late August. Call to identify. 505-699-0451.
6 MONTHS FURNISHED GUESTHOUSE. $1400 monthly. Walk to Canyon Road. Near hiking trails. Visit thegardencompound.com or call 505603-8831.
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
FOUND: SET OF KEYS with jeep key and others. Friday, near Elks club. Call to identify. 505-471-6005
ELDORADO- LOVELY 2 bedroom solar home, all appliances, fireplace, wood stoves, extra large patio. $1,100 monthly. Viewing starts 14/14. 505-699-4144
ELDORADO LOVELY 2 BEDROOM
1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on 12.5 ACRES, near Lamy. Spacious, modern, antiques, french doors high ceilings. 1600 sq.ft. with 2,500 sq.ft. portal. Private, gated. $2,300, references. 505231-4747 2 BEDROOM HOME ON nearly 3 Acres. 180 degree views, 1 mile from Museum Hill. Available 5-6 months beginning in November. $3,500 monthly includes utilities, cable, internet. 505-310-0309.
HOUSES UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, LAMY, Roomy! Small yard. Wood heat. Washer dryer hook-up. $700 plus deposit. Nonsmoking, no pets. 505-466-3022
2 BEDROOM MID-CENTURY SANTA FE CLASSIC 1 acre, Museum Hill. 2.5 bath, A/C, fireplace, hardwood floors, laundry. 2 car garage, portal to private courtyard. $2300 monthly. Pets negotiable. 505-629-7619 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH, 1 car garage home for lease in Turquoise Trail Subdivision. Corner lot; views. $1,375 monthly plus utilities. Call Jill, 505991-0562.
3 bedroom, 2 bath at Tapia Estates. Open Concept, large rooms, washer dryer hookups. Private, parking, yard. $1100 plus deposit, Lease. 505-471-8413.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME on 1 acre. in Pojoaque Valley. Lots of extras. 1 pet negotiable. Non-smoker. $1200 monthly plus deposit. Available now. 505-690-4428 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH very nice home on edge of Canyon overlook in southwest Santa Fe. 20 minutes to Plaza. Portal with view of mountains and backing, walking, bike trails. A/C, radiant heat, skylights, kiva fireplace, 2-car garage. $1450 monthly. 505-6034262 4 Be d r o o m , 2 Bath, 1-car garage, washer, dryer hookups, hardwood floors. $1150 monthly plus utilities. $500 deposit, 1 year lease, no pets. Call 505-471-7017 or 505-699-1043 for appointment. 5 CAMINO PEQUENO, EASTSIDE RIVERFRONT PARADISE. Split-level, freshly painted, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2car carport. 16’ x 30’ attached space with separate entrance. $2800 monthly. Year lease. References. Dogs possible. 505-470-0719. See photos Craigslist.
LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH
Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271
MANUFACTURED HOMES
RETURNED!! THANK YOU SO MUCH! REWARD $1000 NO QUESTIONS ASKED
1985 WINDSOR, 16X75, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Propannel Roof, Storage Building, Large Awnings/Carport, Porches, Skirting. (FURNISHED). Nice. $18,000. Call 505-920-5359.
$625, 2 BEDROOM mobile home. On quiet, private land off Agua Fria. Gas heating, AC, all utilities paid, no pets. 505-473-0278. CLEAN 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH, Tesuque area. 12 minutes from downtown Santa Fe. $850 monthly. Deposit. Non-smoking, no pets. Credit check & references. 505-220-7254. 505-3212402.
OFFICES
Please help bring Teo home. Long hair Chihuahua. Black with white. Seen Saturday, August 30, in beatup maroon van. CA license starting: 7CT. Call 505-699-9222.
»jobs«
COLAB AT 2ND STREET A CO-WORK OFFICE
ACROSS 1 Story 5 Gauge on a dash 9 Lowest opera voice 14 Landed on the runway 15 Sunburn soother 16 Starting squad 17 Window material 19 Beauty at the ball 20 French friend 21 Rapture 23 Marshland 24 Legendary skater Henie 26 “If it only could be” 28 “The Autobiography of Alice B.Toklas” author 34 Indian or Chinese, e.g. 35 Nametag greeting 36 Harbinger 39 Hindu guru 42 Imitated 43 Images on a desktop 45 Bride’s beloved 47 One coming in from the bullpen 51 Thigh bone 52 Feel around in the dark 55 N.C. State’s conference 57 Early metalworking period 61 Hush-hush fed. org. 62 Centrally managed store group 64 Explosive situation 66 Metamorphosis stage 67 Scat legend Fitzgerald 68 “__ upon a time ...” 69 Speak 70 Optimistic 71 Brew found in increasing quantities in the ends of 17-, 28-, 47- and 64Across DOWN 1 Spanish appetizers 2 Texas mission
Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765 square feet, 3 offices, reception area. Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266
ADMINISTRATIVE ADMISSIONS COORDINATOR
GALLERY SPACE. 822 CANYON ROAD. 3930 sq.ft. 10 rooms, 1.5 baths. Vigas, wood floors, workable live-in space. auntemily@outlook.com 505-8675623, 505-699-6878.
SHARED KITCHEN. $525. Shared bath, utilities. Month-to2 miles north of Pla-
STORAGE SPACE 10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com
1 CAR GARAGE- WORK STUDIO. 10X27 AVAILABLE FOR RENT, $225 monthto-month. Old Taos Hwy. Drive-thru & walk- thru doors. 505-470-5877
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 stacked 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. Shift times will vary based on availability, but open shifts 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 to: Brenda Shaffer Bshaffer@sfnewmexican.com 1 New Mexican Plaza, off the 1-25 frontage road. Or you may apply online at http://sfnm.co/1eUKCcD. No Phone Calls please. Successful completion of a drug test will be required prior to employment offer. EOE
3 Every cloud’s silver feature? 4 Somme summer 5 Soft mineral 6 “Ah, me!” 7 What you pay 8 Half a guy-gal argument 9 Infantile 10 Had dinner 11 “For Dummies” bookstore section 12 Reduced-price event 13 Harbinger 18 Drive and reverse 22 Stockholm’s land: Abbr. 25 Lady in the 1965 sitcom pilot episode “The Lady in the Bottle” 27 Pot for clams 29 “__ better to have loved ...”: Tennyson 30 How half-shell clams are eaten 31 Eel, at sushi bars 32 Land in la mer 33 Silent agreement 36 Knight’s title 37 Cubes in a bucket 38 Wheels on the links
9/15/14 Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
40 Mohawk-sporting actor 41 Biennial games gp. 44 Advanced college course 46 “Golly” 48 Cat’s coat 49 Like capitalized nouns 50 Legendary football coach Knute
9/15/14
53 Cake serving 54 Like the idiomatic beaver 55 Civil rights org. 56 Online dialogue 58 __ contendere: court plea 59 Leatherworking tools 60 Down Under greeting 63 “__ got it!” 65 Director Reiner
nt
Test drive any vehicle on our lot and Furry’s will donate $5 cash to your school or the nonprofit organization of your choice!
SECOND STREET STUDIOS
RETAIL SPACE
By Don Rosenthal
2nd Anniversary Celebration 11 am – 2 pm Free W he Saturday, September 20th AAssliegsnsmmeenet l
GREAT LOCATION! OFFICE SPACE
675 squ.ft. Reception area with 2 private offices, or one large. Handicap bath. $750. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
LA TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE BROUGHT TO YOU BY:
Desks and private offices, complete facilities, conference room, $275 monthly. Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.
PRIVATE BATH, Washer, dryer. $425. Includes month. Deposit. za. 505-470-5877
PECOS PALATIAL PALACE RUSTIC AFRAME HOUSE on 1 1/2 acre, 1250 SQ FT, 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, FIREPLACE, ETC, PETS, HORSES OK, MONTHLYYEARLY $1,177.00, MEL 505-228-2533.
LOST CAT, Domestic Short Hair, Tabby Orange and white. Please help. Lost August 25 in the Eldorado Area. 646-584-8771.
Solar home, all appliances, fireplace, wood stoves, extra large patio. $1,100 monthly. Viewing starts 9/14. 505-699-4144
ROOMMATE WANTED
BEAUTIFUL 3,000 s q . f t CUSTOM HOME, unfurnished. Open living- dining with chef’s kitchen. TWO MASTER SUITES PLUS 2 GUEST BEDROOMS- office. Sangre Mountain views, Portal with fire pit. 2.5 acres. NW quadrant. $3,200 monthly. WesternSage, 505-690-3067.
LOST
986-3000
B-7
Santa Fe Care Center has an immediate opening for an exp. Admissions Coordinator. Must have nursing home admissions experience. If you would like to join our team come in and fill out an application and speak to our Administrator. Santa Fe Care Center 635 Harkle Rd Santa Fe 87505 (505)982-2574 EOE/AA/VETS Receptionist. Answer phones, new patient intakes, check insurance benefits. Detail oriented and good people skills. $12-$15 hourly. E-mail resume to leolin789@gmail.com
CASH PRIZES ON THE HOUR $100
CELEBRATE WITH US! Food
or
&
$250
Music
or
&
$500
Fun
Must be present to win
Locally Owned, Locally Operated, & Locally Committed
505-473-2886 | 2721 Cerrillos Rd. | Santa Fe, NM 87507
B-8
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
sfnm«classifieds COMPUTERS IT
MEDICAL DENTAL Dental Assistant
Network & Systems Senior Technician Full-time position in Santa Fe. See website for job 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. CONSTRUCTION LABORERS AND, OR PIPELAYERS needed for Santa Fe Underground Utility Contractor. Apply at 27A Paseo de River or call 505-690-9727. Laborers, pays more than minimum wage. Guarantees raise after 60 days. We care about our employees. Apply in person at 39 Bisbee Court, #7. SOL LUNA SOLAR seeks experienced solar installers to join their elite team. Email resume to info@sollunasolar.com. No phone calls.
GRAPHIC DESIGN EXPERIENCED GRAPHIC DESIGNER for established gallery. Must be creative, dynamic, and organized. See classified ad at santafenewmexican.com. Please, no phone calls or drop-in.
HOSPITALITY DOMINO’S PIZZA @ 3530 Zafarano Drive. HIRING DRIVERS! Are you friendly and outgoing? Are you at least 18 with a good driving record minimum of 2 years driving history, a reliable vehicle with proof of insurance? No experience needed but knowledge of Santa Fe streets helpful. Apply in person at 3530 Zafarano Drive. LINE COOKS P.M. Some experience required. Apply in person at TUNE-UP CAFE, 1115 Hickox St. between 2 p.m.- 5 p m. Ask for Jesùs.
Are you reliable and honest with a desire to learn and challenge yourself? NEW OFFICE with digital charts and radiology. Coronal polishing and radiology certification required. Monday thu Thursday 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Email resume: dr@childs2thdr.com GALLUP QUICK Care Clinic is hiring Nurse Practitioners to provide care to a diverse group of patients in a clinical setting. The benefits and salary are very competitive in the current market. Send resume: ginger@sjenm.net.
MISCELLANEOUS JOBS PROOFREADERS FULL-TIME PROOFREADERS needed in Santa Fe from early November 2014 through mid-March 2015. $14.95 hourly. Must be willing to work significant overtime, on day or night shift, from mid-January through midMarch. Test required. Send resume to: BOX # 5002 c/o The New Mexican, PO Box 2048, Santa Fe, NM 87504. Resumes must be received by Friday, September 26, 2014.
SALES PROFESSIONALS TECHNICIANS Applicant will have prior experience in a customer service-based field. Competitive compensation package. Email Resume to : mbecker@garciacars.com or call 505-913-2900
PART TIME SMALL BUSINESS looking for Part Time person to do product setup. Computer skills required. Please fax resume, 505-473-0336.
to place your ad, call
986-3000
ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES
FURNITURE
GOBS OF fabric. $450 OBO. (Casa Rufina apartments, Building 2, (behind Home Depot) 505-473-3037.
HANDMADE PINE FOUR POSTER QUEEN BED with mattress. Not quite rustic. 4 large draws beneath bed. Great condition. $495. 505-986-8367
Lots of Christmas stuff. $100 OBO 505-473-3037.
AUCTIONS New Mexico DOT & Others Vehicle & Equipment Auction Saturday, September 20th, 9:30am NM DOT District 5 Yard 7315 Cerrillos Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 Terms: Cash, Cashier Checks or Check with Bank Letter! Viewing & Inspection: Thursday, 9/18, 9am-4pm Friday, 9/19, 9am-4pm VEHICLES * PICK-UPS * VANS TRUCKS * DUMP TRUCKS * SNOW PLOWS * SALT SPREADERS TRACTORS * MOWERS * LOADERS For More Info 800-841-4087, Ext 103 www.bentleysauction.com
King-size bedroom suite. Contemporary, Scandinavian style. Dresser, desk and night stand. Honeycolored wood. Curved leather and wood headboard. $995. 505-3793750.
CLOTHING
»merchandise«
VINTAGE OAK WOOD POKER TABLE with chip racks, beverage holder slots, removable table top, custom design base, newer cover on game board, 48" x 48" wide, accommodates eight players, great condition. $400. 520-906-9399 or 505-6039696
TEEN CLOTHES and Jackets. Size Small & Medium. $1-$5. 505-471-7894.
YOUNG LOOKING & ACTING 20 year old THOROUGHBRED GELDING. Could be trained for anything! Very Good disposition & very willing. Black. Height 16.1 hands. Must go to good home. $1,000. 575-427-0002, ask for Rudi.
PETS SUPPLIES
COMPUTERS
1950s round game table. With 4 upholstered cane-backed arm chairs. Light-colored wood. $250. 505-3793750. 2 BEAUTIFUL MAPLE BUNK BEDS. Complete with mattresses. Excellent condition. $250 each. 505-983-7003
APPLIANCES
BED: OAK EXPRESS TWIN BOOKCASE BED. 3-drawer, excellent condition. 45"Wx72"L. $350 OBO. 505-466-6205
PUBLISHER
FOLK ART COLLECTORS Rare 1950s folk art carving by Felipe Archulete. Photo available. 802-238-1465.
You can view your Legal Notice online at sfnmclassifieds.com
FREE CAT. Sweetest, affectionate female Tabby, 6 years old. Needs quiet loving home. Not good with other pets. Terminally ill mother can’t keep any longer. 505-358-4026
»cars & trucks«
OUR 4 year old, female Basset is in need of a new home due to our sons allergies to dogs. Wendy, our lovable Basset is of the sweetest nature. She is very gentle with young children, gets along with all dogs and cats. She is a perfect family dog! She loves her walks, loves to root around outside. She is not a digger and is well behaved. She loves belly rubs! Please call 505-896-3285 to schedule a time to meet her.
AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
MISCELLANEOUS 2 CEMETERY PLOTS FOR SALE at Memorial Gardens in Santa Fe. Near tree, side-by-side. Priced to sell! 505690-4589
POODLE PUPPIES: Male, $300; Females, $450. QUALITY POMERANIAN PUPPIES $700 & Teeny, Tiny TEACUPS, $950. Registered, First Shots. 505-901-2094, 505-753-0000. SHIHTZUS - RARE WHITE, CREAM. Black, white. Gray, white. Show Coat. Papers, shots.Health Guarantee, POTTYPAD trained. Great PAYMENT plan. PAYPAL, DEBIT, CREDIT card.. Non-Shedding Hypo-Allergenic. $650. $100 will hold 575-910-1818 cingard1@hotmail.com TXT4PICS
Cowboy Hats & Boots New & Used The Flea at the Downs Saturdays and Sundays in September 8 am to 3 pm www.santafeflea.com walt@sfflea.com 505-280-9261
WATERLESS TOILET FOR SHOP. Incinolet, like new. Durable, stainless steel, uses 110 outlet. $250. 505-2646016.
AWARD WINNING Indian Market Artist .. CLIFF FRAGUA ..2003 marble sculpture 30" High.. retail value $10,000 Will sell for $3,950. If you were at Indian Market you have seen his prices and quality.. Must sell.
T-CUP & TOY POODLES Prettiest POODLES in NEW MEXICO. 575-910-1818 txt4more pics. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained and GROOMED. Non-shedding. Hypoallergenic. $800 and up. cingard1@hotmail.com GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. We take CREDIT, DEBIT cards. PAYPAL. USDA licensed. FREE delivery.
GOGO ELITE Traveler in good condition includes Harmar electric scooter lift. Runs great. YOU GET both for only $500. 505-603-4116.
METAL WHEELBARROW. Good condition. Tire needs air. $25. Leave message 505-982-0136.
Gently Used Furniture, Appliances and Building Materials. All Donations and Purchases. Support Santa Fe Habitat! Open Monday - Friday, 9 to 5.
T-CUP AND TOY Yorkie pups. Papers, Shots and Health Guarantee. POTTY PAD trained & GREAT PAYMENT Plan. PAYPAL, DEBIT, CREDIT cards. Nonshedding. Hypo-allergenic. $100. Deposit will hold. $1000-$1800. 575-9101818. TXT4PICS cingard1@hotmail.com
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
MARCREST BROWN POTTERY STONEWARE MUGS. Daisy Dot Pattern. 6 for $25. 505-466-6205
ALI LAUNER Beaded Impala Skull Org. $1,500.00 OBO. Price was $3,500.00. Cash Only. 505-690-7429
NEW MEXICO MAGAZINE is seeking a PUBLISHER who will drive revenues; manage the budget, sales, circulation, marketing, digital assets and products departments; and represent the brand in the marketplace. Proven, seriously qualified applicants only. Send a letter detailing qualifications and interest, a resume, and references to Phyllis.tonika@state.nm.us.
SANTA FE dental office is looking for a dental assistant to work 3 days per week. Experience required. We are looking for someone enthusiastic and driven. Please email resume to morgandentistry@gmail.com
17" electric hedge trimmer, plus 1 pair of garden shears. $40. 505-9821174.
ART
FINANCE DIRECTOR
MEDICAL DENTAL
UNIQUE, OLD, Zuni Squash Blossom. $3,000. Zuni Turquoise Fetish Necklace. Initials R.U. $400. Both are GORGEOUS! 505-988-5028
Front loading LG washing machine. White. Excellent working condition. $195. Call 505-379-3750.
4-PIECE SECTIONAL including ottoman. White-on-white fabric with subtle pattern. With Center section 84"w. Each arm section is 57"Wx34"D. Excellent condition. See online ad. $1000 (CASH) Call or Text 843-817-6846 (SF)
SWEET GIRL NEEDS FOREVER HOME! 9 months, 57 lbs, Lab, golden, shepherd mix. Unable to keep due to Owner’s Allergies. 505-428-0711
ENGLISH BULLDOG Puppies. AKC, 15 weeks. 3 males. $2000. 505-918-0641. www.honeymoonbulldogs.com VS/MC accepted. Serious inquiries only please.
LAWN & GARDEN
FURNITURE
EARLY 1900’S Dentzel jumper antique carousel horse in perfect condition. Professionally restored by one of the best. Others available. 505-250-7464
AAA T-CUP & TOY pups 4 SALE! 575910-1818 or txt4more pics. $300-$1800 Hypo-allergenic,non-shedding. Reg, shots, guarantee, POTTYPAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN. MC/Visa/ Disc/Am Ex accepted. Debit/Credit/PAYPAL. YORKIES, YORKIE-POOS, CHIHUAHUAS, SHIHTZUS, MORKIES, RAT TERRIER, WHITE MALTESE, MALTYPOOS, RED MINI DACHSHUNDS and POODLES. Quality puppies. USDA licensed. cingard1@hotmail.com CHIHUAHUAS T-CUP and TOY. Papers, shots, health guarantee, POTTY PAD trained. $500-650. 575-910-1818 cingard1@hotmail.com txt4more pics. GREAT PAYMENT PLAN. Now accepting CREDIT/DEBIT cards. PAYPAL too. USDA license/ FREE delivery.
EGGS FOR SALE, Serving Santa Fe Area for 10 years. I deliver to your home. $5, dozen. Text, call 505-5074350.
Noon to 4 p.m. Visit sfhumanesociety.org
SMALL DOG RESCUE OF SANTA FE has many small dogs ready for adoption, pure breeds and mixes. For information call 505-438-3749.
VINTAGE NAVAJO RUGS Vintage and contemporary $200 to $10k. GUARANTEED GENUINE. See my online ad! 801-703-4527
1934 2 HORSE WAGON, great condition, $2,500. Two rustic W O O D E N LUGGAGE also available on separate sale, $100 each. 505-310-3819. Please leave message if no answer.
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 14 PetSmart 3561 Zafarano Drive
BARREL RACING SADDLE, 15" seat. Maverick, made by Longhorn. $399. Excellent condition. 575-427-0002 Ask for Ruddy.
1977 HESSTON NFR RODEO BUCKLE with Tony Lama matching belt, size 34 waist, $125. More COLLECTIBLE BUCKLES from 1976-1984. 505-4666205
BERRIDGE FARMS HATCH GREEN CHILE AVAILABLE NOW! Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Through September Until It’s GONE! (Located behind Taco Bell on Cerrillos Road.)
Meet Adoptable Animals Saturday, Sept. 13 Woofstock in Edgewood
HORSE TRAILER EQUIPMENT
HORSES
ANTIQUES
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
HENRY VALENCIA INC. IN ESPANOLA NEW MEXICO. SEEKING A QUALIFIED FINANCE DIRECTOR. INDIVIDUAL MUST HAVE EXPERIENCE AND REFERENCES. HIGHLY DETAILED AND MOTIVATED IS A MUST. BENEFITS AVAILABLE. SEND RESUME TO henryvalencia@henryvalencia.net FOR REVIEW. EOM. MUST BE ABLE TO PASS BACKGROUND CHECK AND DRUG SCREENING.
SMALL GRASS bales, horse quality and certified weed-free available. Large or small lots. Monte Vista, CO. Please call Eddy 719-852-3069.
COLLECTIBLES
FOOD FRUIT
NEW MEXICO MAGAZINE is seeking a versatile writer, editor, journalist to assist in coverage of the state’s travel, culture, and recreation assets. To apply, visit the Job Opportunities page at www.spo.state.nm.us.
TAOS PUEBLO ENTERPRISES, INC (TPEI) is seeking applications for an Economic Development Planner to facilitate economic development planning and initiatives; identify and foster economic development prospects and secure funding for economic development opportunities for Taos Pueblo. Experience working with Native American tribes is essential. Serious applicants only, relocation is required. For a detailed job description or to submit an application contact: Bernadette Lujan, TPEI Administrator blujan@taospuebloecd.com Taos Pueblo Enterprises, Inc. 575-758-7100 Closing Date: September 19, 2014
Santa Fe Animal Shelter PET ADOPTION EVENTS
ENGLISH SADDLE, 15" SEAT. Prix de Salute. Made in France. With 2 girths. $399. 575-427-0002, ask for Rudi.
HP 20" MONITOR with VGA and DVI connections. $90 OBO. 505-503-3140
AIRPORT MANAGER - LOS ALAMOS COUNTY $62,316 to $96,451 annually + excellent benefits.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PLANNER
REGISTERED YORKIE Puppies. First shots, 1 male, 3 females. $800. 719588-1126.
Women’s Blouses and Pants. Sizes XXL, 1 and 2. $100 OBO. 505-473-3037
NURTURING, DEPENDABLE NONSMOKER NEEDED FOR IN-HOME CHILD CARE (ages 4 & 7), approximately 23 hours per week. Reliable transportation, clean driving record. Call 505603-2445.
County application required. Application and full job info available at www.losalamosnm.us or by calling 505-661-4554. Apply by 9-30-14 at 5 pm MDT. EOE
»animals«
FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES
JEWELRY
IN HOME CARE
Requires a Bachelor’s in Airport Management, Public Administration, Civil Engineering or related or an equivalent combination of education and work experience; 5 years managing a general aviation airport; and AAAE Basic Safety and Operation Specialist School or AAAE Certified Member.
SNOOKER TABLE. Brunswick Gold Crown, 5’x10’, commercial grade. Retails for $10,000, make offer. 505660-4079.
Stickley-style wood occasional chair. Brown leather cushion. Looks great. $135. 505-379-3750.
Full-Time Furniture Mover, Sales Associate
wanted for Santa Fe Animal Shelter resale store. Visit sfhumanesociety.org for details.
PETS SUPPLIES
LADIES KOFLACH SKI BOOTS. Size 6. $50. 505-983-7003
RETAIL
TORTILLA FLATS FULL-TIME SERVERS PART-TIME BARTENDER APPLY IN PERSON
MANAGEMENT
SPORTS EQUIPMENT
SOUTHWESTERN STYLE DINING ROOM SET including 6 foot table with two leaves that open it to 9 feet. The set has 6 matching chairs including 2 Captain’s chairs. It also has a matching custom made hutch. Call 505-6031779. $2000.
BUILDING MATERIALS SHOP LIGHTS: 5 working condition garage- shop lights with bulbs. $50. TRACK LIGHTS- 2 units, $20 both. 505379-3750
Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS SCHAFER & SONS VS-52 UPRIGHT PIANO. Beautiful upright piano in exquisite condition. Original leather piano stool included. $2000. 505-603-1779
SPORTS EQUIPMENT LADIES JACKSON MYSTIQUE CANADA FIGURE SKATES. Never used. Size 6. $50. 505-983-7003
BED COVER WITH CARPET. 73"Wide x 80"Long, Outside to Outside. 66" Wide x 79"Long, Inside Seal to Seal. $200. 505-471-7428 17" DODGE Laramie Wheels. Polished Aluminum. Excellent Condition. $500. $2,400 value. 505-501-5484.
Hi, my name is: Dani is a 12 weeks old female tabby. She is great with other kittens and cats. Her previous owners had too many cats and that’s why she ended here at the shelter. So this precious kitty is spayed and ready for you to take her home. evalleyshelter.org or petango.com/espanola For more information contact the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 108 Hamm Pkwy, Española or call (505) 753-8662. More animals are available on the website at evalleyshelter.org.
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
sfnm«classifieds AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES
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986-3000
Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
’KARGO MASTER’ Pro 2 Heavy duty steel lumber rack. Fits Short Bed Trucks Used, Good condition. $375. Justin 323-791-2972
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
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2011 FORD FOCUS, SD GOOD ON GAS, PRICED TO SELL $10,800. CALL 505-473-1234.
2007 LEXUS RX350 80k $20,871. 505-216-3800.
2011 TOYOTA Camry LE just 33k miles, local one owner clean CarFax, pristine condition $15,871. Call 505-216-3800.
ONLY2007 HYUNDAISANTA-FE-AWD LIMITED Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo AFFORDABLE $10,950
Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY
PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!
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TRAILER HITCH. 44" hole-to-hole center. 46.5" outside to outside. Asking $50. 505-471-7428
WE GET RESULTS! So can you with a classified ad
505-983-4945 2011 MINI CountryMan auto, prem pkg, roof, prem sound, super fun. $23,871. Call 505-216-3800.
Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com
2010 TOYOTA Prius II 34k $18,841. Call 505-216-3800.
CALL 986-3000
AUTOS WANTED
DOMESTIC 2012 TOYOTA Corolla S with navigation,auto, bluetooth, rear spoiler, low miles. $15,981 . Call 505216-3800.
CLASSIFIEDS Where treasures are found daily
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
Donate used cars, trucks, boats, RV, motorcycles in any condition to help support Santa Fe Habitat. Call: 1-877-277-4344 or www.carsforhomes.org Local: 505986-5880.
1999 CHEVY CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE
1990 CHEVY KODIAC, with 91,000 miles. V8 gas engine, 5 yard Dump Truck. $90,000, OBO. 505-469-8408
2012 Nissan Juke SL AWD only 14k miles, fully loaded navigation & leather, single owner clean CarFax $21,831. Call 505-216-3800.
2010 SUBARU Impreza..auto, premium pkg, heated seats, super nice and 1 owner. $14,987. Call 505-216-3800.
Place an ad Today!
CALL 986-3000
Another One Owner, Local, Every Service Record, Garaged, NonSmoker, Documented Miles 55,484 Loaded, Pristine, Soooo CLASSIC AMERICAN BUILD $17,950
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle & Carfax:
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505-983-4945
97 FORD E-350 with 12’ Box 118,000 miles. $4300. 505-989-9028. 2011 NISSAN Juke AWD-SV..auto,VDC, prem sound, XM. real clean. $19,821. Call 505-216-3800.
CLASSIFIEDS WE WILL BUY YOUR USED CAR REGARDLESS IF YOU BUY A CAR FROM US! COME SEE US TODAY! 505-216-3800
Where treasures are found daily
1958 CADILLAC Eldorado Seville. Just painted. Looks great. Inside and out. Runs as great as it looks. 52K miles. $29,500 firm. 505-670-6662. 1991 MERCURY CAPRI XR2 CONVERTIBLE. FWD 4-cylinder. Factory turbo 5speed. Red with white top & red hardtop. Cold A/C. 67k miles. $5,500. Call 505-204-4848.
2010 TOYOTA Prius II, •ELECTRONIC THROTTLE control system w/intelligence (ETCS-i) -inc: Eco, EV & power driving modes $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.
2011 MINI COOPER Countryman-S. WOW- Just 24k miles! Turbocharged,, single owner, clean CarFax. Perfect! Don’t miss it! $23,871. Call 505-2163800. 2013 TOYOTA Avalon XLE Touring WOW just 3k miles, orig MSRP over $36k, loaded w/ navigation, clean CarFax $29,831. CALL 505-216-3800.
Place an ad Today!
CLASSIC CARS
TOYOTA PRIUS, 43,025 one owner miles, pine green, tan interior, always dealer serviced since new in 2006, $14,900. Dave, 660-8868.
IMPORTS
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2013 FORD MUSTANG,DARK BLUE CUSTOM FOR YOU,$21400. # T1729 CALL 505-473-1234.
2009 Toyota Venza AWD V6 fully loaded, leather, JBL sound, single owner clean CarFax $23,851 . Call 505-216-3800.
2011 NISSAN Maxima S. Local trade! New tires, single owner clean CarFax. NICE! $17,821. Call 505-2163800.
2011 Jeep Patriot Latitude edition, auto, locks, windows, low miles. 1 owner. $16,881. 505-216-3800.
2007 VOLVO XC90 3.2 AWD. Great car! New tires, struts, control arms. 6-CD changer, mats, trailer hitch, heated leather, power everything, moon roof. Strong! No leaks. $8000. 505780-1996
2013 TOYOTA Camry SE..NEW BODY...auto, bluetooth, moon roof, loaded and 1 owner. $19,797. Call 505-2163800. 2007 Toyota 4 runner Limited Sport 4wd..auto, dual pwr seats,prem sound, very nice. $20,881. Call 505216-3800.
2014 RAV4 Limited only 3k and 1 owner. loaded and PRICE way below new...COME SEE IT!. CALL 505-2163800. 2008 VOLVO C-30. Zippy turbo engine. 2-door hatchback. Chameleon blue. 30,000 miles. Immaculate. $16,000. 505-986-3904
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THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
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2007 TOYOTA CAMRY CE 5-speed. 85,213 miles. Exceptional condition. Extras include: tint, dash and floor mats. Top of the line Goodyear tires. $8,500. To see, email pabassmon@yahoo.com with phone number for a callback.
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Another Local Owner ,Service Records,Garaged,Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo RARE , TOYOTA TACOMA DEPENDABLE $16,250
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7 DAYS A WEEK IN THE SANTA FE NEW MEXICAN and on sfnmclassifieds.com 2001 TOYOTA PRIUS HYBRID-FWD
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email: legalnotice@sfnewmexican.com Now offering a self-service legal platform: www.sfnmclassifieds.com
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2007 PORCHE CAYMAN. Blue. Rare color matching wheels. Only 35k miles. Senior owner. Garage pampered. Excellent condition. $29,600. 505-629-6161
LEGALS LEGAL # 97406
SUVs 2012 FORD ESCAPE. Sunroof, 48k miles, dark grey with black leather interior. Great condition. $16,500. 505-231-5359
TRUCKS & TRAILERS
2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505-216-3800.
2014 BRAND NEW!! Never used Elite 30’X8’ Dual Tandem Axle Gooseneck, Dove Tail loading Ramps. 22,500lbs. GVW. $8,999. John, 808-346-3635.
2013 VW CC Panorama pwr tilting sunroof, Leatherette seat trim Heated 12-way pwr front sport bucket seats, $25,871. Call 505-216-3800.
PICKUP TRUCKS
2006 CHevy Avalanche Cruise control, electronic with set and resume speed, includes telltale in instrument panel cluster $17,981. Call 505-2163800.
Sell Your Stuff! Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!
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»recreational«
CAMPERS & RVs AL’S RV CENTER Need someone to work on your RV? Call Al, over 42 years of experience. 505-203-6313, 505-5771938.
1992 CHEVY Silver & Blue 200 VAN MOTORHOME. Kitchen area, mood lighting, sleeps 2. 101k miles. $2,600. Call 505-501-2238.
2005 Motor Home (31ft),
The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is accepting proposals from qualified environmental consultants and environmental consulting firms to provide professional environmental services including National Environmental Policy Act, natural resource, and cultural resource services to support the Department’s compliance with multiple federal laws and regulations including, but not limited to, NEPA, Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, and Clean Water Act compliance including Environmental Protection Agency Section 401 certification and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers section 404 permitting. This request for proposals will result in a multiple source award through which contracts may be awarded to one or more environmental consultants and/or environmental consulting firms in one or more of the practice areas. Submission of the proposal must be sent to the Department of Game and Fish no later than 3:00 PM October 2, 2014. To obtain a copy of the Request for Proposal please contact the RFP procurement manager: Joseph Miano, RFP Procurement Manager New Mexico Department of Game and Fish PO Box 25112 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 Telephone Number (505) 476-8086 Fax: (505) 476-8137 E - m a i l : joseph.miano@state. nm.us Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on S e p t e m b e r 2,3,4,5,8,9,10,11,12,15, and 16, 2014
2010 FORD K I N G R A N C H , 4 X 4 LOADED,ONLY41K MILES SAVE THOUSANDS,TOWS ANYTHING IN STYLE $39,600. Call 505-473-1234.
LEGAL # 97420
43,000 miles. new tires, new batteries, awning, stove, refrigerator. Asking $30,000. 505-690-163 5.
MOTORCYCLES 2008 HONDA CRF 150 RB. Excellent condition. Losts of extras. New tires. Well-maintained and garage-kept. $2800 OBO. 505-470-5311.
1986 FORD RANGER. Extended cab. 4X4. High miles, runs great. New clutch & flywheel. With Camper Shell. $1800 OBO. 505-507-4350
NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF GAME AND FISH IS ACCEPTING PROPOSALS FOR: PROFESSIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES
2001 Honda Shadow, VLX/Deluxe. Harley Look-A-Like. 10,000 miles. New seat & battery. Excellent Condition. $3,300, OBO. 505-660-4079.
The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish is accepting proposal for Endangered Species Legal Services The Department is accepting proposals (RFP #15 516 2101 00001) from qualified lawyers and law firms to provide professional legal services, specifically in the role as endangered species counsel, in matters per-
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LEGALS p taining to endangered species law. The Department seeks a lawyer or law firm with substantial background with Endangered Species Act (ESA) issues; Commenting on Federal Rules pertaining to the ESA; and other issues related to candidate, threatened, or endangered species. The selected Offeror/s would be expected to provide specialized nonlitigation and litigation expertise and have the requisite ability to perform assignments and act as Department counsel in connection with complex contractual and transactional matters; the ESA; and related laws and regulations pertaining to candidate, threatened or endangered species. To obtain a copy of this Request for Proposal please v i s i t http://wildlife.state.n m.us/ or contact Joseph Miano at (505) 476-8086 or joseph.miano@state. nm.us.
LEGALS LEGAL # 97438 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF No. D-101-CV-201400130 PATRICIA A. McFATE, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either by delivery or mail to the undersigned at P.O. Box 9570, Santa Fe, New Mexico 875049570, or by filing with the First Judicial District Court for the County of Santa Fe, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501.
Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 15-19, 2226, 29-30, October 1-3, 6-10, 13-17, 20-24, 2731, November 3-7, and Dated: 10-14, 2014. 2014.
LEGAL # 97421 LEGAL NOTICE TAOS MUNICIPAL SCHOOLS TAOS, NEW MEXICO GENERAL CONDITIONS Bid # 2014-2015 Facilities Management Services 1. Prices are to be quoted FOB Taos Municipal Schools 2. The bid price must be affective from October 2014 to October 1, 2014. 3. All bidders must bid on Specification and Bid Requirements 4. Turn in bid documents by September 19th, 2014 no later than 2:00. Opened at 3:00 pm September 19th, 2014. Taos Municipal Schools is requesting sealed bids. If you desire to submit a proposal, please pick up bid packed from person and address below and return the bid in a sealed envelope addressed to Dr. Lillian Torrez TMS Superintendent, Taos Municipal Schools, 310 Camino de la Placitas, Taos, New Mexico 87571. Your sealed envelope or packet must be properly identified of its contents on the outside as follows. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 1, 8, and 15, 2014.
To place a Legal Notice Call 986-3000
LEGALS
August
29,
/s/ Ralph H. Scheuer, Personal Representative of the Estate of Patricia A. McFate, Deceased P.O. Box 9570 Santa Fe NM 875049570 (505) 982-9911 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 8 and 15, 2014. LEGAL # 97481 REQUEST FOR QUOTES TO CONDUCT WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT PLANNING Purpose The Surface Water Quality Bureau (Bureau) of the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) requests quotes from regional public comprehensive planning organizations to conduct water quality management planning as defined under sections 205(j) and 303(e) of the Clean Water Act (CWA). These funds are made available through a Request for Quotes (RFQ) as, given the duration and amount of an award, this is the appropriate approach through the State of New Mexico Procurement Code. In response to this RFQ NMED seeks detailed quotes (i.e. proposals) to conduct water quality management planning. While all quotes focused on water quality man-
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q y agement planning are welcomed, those which will fund activities that clearly address the State’s water quality goals to preserve, protect and improve the water quality in New Mexico are likely to be rated highest. In this respect, NMED encourages quotes focused on Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs), Use Attainability Analysis (UAA) or other water quality management planning activities that will directly address identified water quality impairments but do not overlap with development of watershed based plans that are eligible for funding through NMED’s 319(h) program. Funding for the work program is dependent on the receipt of federal grants authorized under Section 604(b) of the federal Clean Water Act. The New Mexico Environment Department anticipates having funds available for award in early 2015.
LEGALS accepted.
REJECTED BY SANTA FE COUNTY. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on Santa Fe County September 15, 2014. Purchasing Division Publish: September 14, 2014 LEGAL # 97483 VOLUNTEER FIREFIGHTER PHYSICALS RFP# 2015-0055-FD/IC Santa Fe County is soliciting proposals from licensed physicians for the purpose of procuring firefighter physicals for the Volunteer Firefighter of Santa Fe County Fire Department. All proposals submitted shall be valid for ninety (90) days subject to action by the County. Santa Fe County reserves the right to reject any and all proposals in part or in whole. A completed proposal shall be submitted in a sealed container indicating the proposal title and number along with the Offeror’s name and address clearly marked on the outside of the container. All proposals must be received by 2:00 PM (MDT) on Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at the Santa Fe County Purchasing Division, 142 W. Palace Avenue (Second Floor), Santa Fe, NM 87501 . By submitting a proposal for the requested services each Offeror is certifying that their proposal complies with regulations and requirements stated within the Request for Proposals.
Contact Person The contact person for this request for quotes is: Heidi Henderson, Monitoring, Assessment and Standards Section, Surface Water Quality Bureau, N.M. Environment Department, Harold Runnels Building - 1190 St. Francis Drive, N2109, P.O. Box 5469, Santa Fe, NM 87502. Telephone: 505-827-2901. E-mail A d d r e s s : A Pre-Proposal Conheidi.henderson@sta ference will be held te.nm.us. on Wednesday, September 24, 2014 at A complete copy of 9:00 AM (MDT) at the the RFQ can be re- Santa Fe County Fire quested from the Department confercontact person or ence room located at downloaded from the 35 Camino Justica, Bureau website: Santa Fe, N.M. 87505. http://www.nmenv.st ate.nm.us/swqb/swq EQUAL OPPORTUNITY b.html . All inquiries EMPLOYMENT: All regarding the RFQ or qualified Offerors will its supporting docu- receive consideration mentation must be of contract(s) withmade to the contact out regard to race, person. color, religion, sex, national origin, anSubmission of cestry, age, physical Quotes and mental handicap, Offerors may submit serious mental condiany questions regard- tion, disability, ing the RFQ to Heidi spousal affiliation, Henderson by Octo- sexual orientation or ber 3, 2014. The Bu- gender identity. reau will prepare a response to any Request for proposquestions received als will be available and will post the re- by contacting Iris sponses to the Bu- Cordova, Procurereau website for re- ment Specialist, Seview by all offerors nior, 142 W. Palace before the final sub- Avenue (Second mission of quotes is Floor), Santa Fe, New due. An original and Mexico 87501, by telethree copies of the phone at (505) 986quote must be sub- 6337 or by email at mitted by registered icordova@santafecou mail or delivered in ntynm.gov or on our person for review to website at the contact person at http://www.santafec the above address by ounty.org/services/c 4:30 PM, MDT on Oc- urrent solicitations tober 17, 2014. E l e c tronically mailed PROPOSALS REquotes and hard- CEIVED AFTER THE copy quotes re- DATE AND TIME ceived after this SPECIFIED ABOVE deadline will not be WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED AND WILL BE
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LEGALS
Continued...
PROPOSALS RECEIVED AFTER THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED ABOVE WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED AND WILL BE REJECTED BY SANTA FE COUNTY. Santa Fe County Purchasing Division Publish: September 14, 2014 Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 15, 2014. LEGAL # 97487 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF SANTA FE STATE OF NEW MEXICO Case No. D-0101-PB2014-00139 IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF RUTH NELSON PENNYCOOK, Deceased NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that Susan P e n n y c o o k Owczarczak, whose address is c/o Catron, Catron, Pottow & Glassman, P.A., has been appointed Personal Representative of Ruth Nelson Pennycook, deceased. Creditors of decedent must present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this notice or be forever barred. CATRON, CATRON, POTTOW & GLASSMAN, P.A. Attorneys for Personal Representative Post Office Box 788 Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504 (505) 982-1947 By Julia D. Catron Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 15, and 22, 2014. LEGAL # 97489 LEGAL NOTICE The Eastern New Mexico University Board of Regents will meet on Friday, September 26 at 9:30 a.m. on the ENMU-Portales Regents Room. Regents will act upon business so presented and may meet in the executive session. Agenda for the meeting is available at the President’s Office located in the ENMU-Portales campus Administration Building. The public is invited to attend the regular meeting. Eastern New Mexico University is an EEO/AA institution. Published in The Santa Fe New Mexican on September 15, 2014.
TIME OUT
Monday, September 15, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN
Horoscope ACROSS 1 Give for free, as a ticket 5 Quite a ways off 9 Off-the-cuff remark 14 French girlfriend 15 “Buy two, get one free” event 16 Bowling score component 17 Top scores in Olympic diving 18 “Thank God Almighty!” 20 Dress 22 With ice cream 23 Of an ancient Greek period 26 Meadow 27 Mammal with webbed paws 28 Scheduled to arrive 29 Skidded 30 Phone-tapping org. 31 Gas in advertising lights 33 Food fight sounds 35 Jed Clampett, e.g. 37 Difficult experience 40 Cajun cooking pod 41 Cambridge sch. from which I. M. Pei graduated
44 Apt rhyme of “crude” 45 Feeling of reverence 46 Nonsensical 48 Dr. ___, Eminem mentor 49 Sauce made with butter, egg yolks and lemon juice 52 Comedy Central’s “The ___ Report” 54 Stage whispers 55 Uproar 58 Polish hero Walesa 59 Swallowed a loss 60 500 sheets of paper 61 “Do ___ others as …” 62 Mug shot subjects, informally 63 iPhone assistant who says that “42” is the meaning of life 64 Test cheater’s sound DOWN 1 Grow in popularity 2 Folded breakfast dishes
The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monday, Sept. 15, 2014: This year you often send out mixed messages. Be aware of this tendency, as it could make others crazy. Listen carefully if someone gives you feedback. ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You’ll speak your mind as you typically do, yet your tone could motivate others to take action. Make sure your information is correct. Tonight: Don’t hold back. 3 Longtime Nikon competitor 4 Mortar’s partner 5 Pale-faced 6 Air traffic watchdog, for short 7 The whole shebang 8 Give an account of 9 Insurance company with a “spokesduck” 10 Snare or tom-tom 11 Home of U.C. San Diego 12 Cry after reaching the summit 13 Guillotines
19 Wallach of “The Magnificent Seven” 21 Result of overstrain, maybe 24 Fox’s “American ___” 25 Annual El Paso football event 29 Cagey 32 Building addition 33 Camera letters 34 Patterns used for kilts 35 “___ give you the shirt off his back” 36 Company said to use about 1% of the world’s wood supply
37 British buddy 38 Change the direction of, as traffic 39 Inhabitant 41 Cinderella and Rapunzel 42 Bees and butterflies 43 Start of a hole 45 Places to say “I do” 47 Seal, as a shipping crate 49 Sticks in the oven 50 Space ball 51 Supermodel Campbell 53 Radar screen point 56 Hawaiian gift 57 Regatta implement
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Chess quiz BLACK MATES IN 2 Hint: Divert the bishop. Solution: 1. ... Rd2ch! 2. Bxd2 N(4)f2 mate! [Xu Sheng Jun-Zambo 1999].
Super Quiz Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.
Subject: TV SERIES Each answer is a one-word title of a TV series. Unscramble the anagram. (e.g.,
Hocus Focus
Cleats. Answer: Castle.)
FRESHMAN LEVEL
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Be aware of what is going on within you. You will gain a new perspective if you slow down. Follow your instincts. Tonight: Keep stress levels low. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH You’ll flourish despite someone else’s attempt to put you down. You understand the relevance of this behavior and how to bypass it. Tonight: Do what would make you most happy. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Take your time in how you deal with someone and the choices you make. Decide if taking action is necessary. Tonight: Keep an easy pace. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You’ll be able to visualize a good idea and then make it a reality. Resist a tendency to be fussy. Tonight: Let it all hang out, even if it is Monday! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You’ll have a tendency to feel overconfident — that is, until you have a discussion with someone you look up to. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.
B-11
ANNIE’S MAILBOX
Generous man is not a great catch Dear Annie: I met the man of my dreams at the workplace. At the time, I was in an abusive marriage and had given up all hope, and then I met “Howard.” Here’s the problem: Howard is 45, still lives in his parents’ basement and works from home. He doesn’t pay rent or utilities, although when he gets a paycheck, he gives his mother some money. On the other hand, my daughter and I have our own place. We make ends meet. Howard bought me a laptop for my birthday and a bedroom set for my apartment, has fixed my car and recently put new tires on it. He has done so much for me, and I am grateful. But because he still lives with his parents, it limits what we can do. He says he is obligated to his mother, daughter and grandchildren. His job sends him on extended trips to other countries where he sometimes spends four months at a time. He says this job looks good on his resume. I am also aware that Howard has a drug addiction, and I hate it with a passion. We drink together, and it’s all a fun thing, but then he gets forgetful and confuses me with some of the other women he’s been with. When I ask whom he’s talking about, he starts yelling that it was before we dated. I trust him, but I don’t know how to do things by degrees. All of my heart belongs to him. Am I being selfish, or is this man so comfortable where he is that I come in second? — Need Your Opinion Dear Need: We were ready to overlook the fact that Howard still lives with his parents and doesn’t pay rent, but then we got to “drug addiction.” And he gets drunk and yells at you, not to mention he’s away from home for months at a time. Please don’t go from the frying pan into the fire. Howard has been generous, but that doesn’t make him such a great catch. Please take some time to be on your own and learn to navigate life without a man’s help. You need to develop a better
guidance system. Dear Annie: You printed a letter about those who cannot have gluten. What about those of us who prepare a dinner only to have a seated guest request something other than what’s available because they want a gluten-free meal? In this particular case, the guest was staying with us for an additional two days, so we needed to do more shopping to accommodate her. My grandson has a severe peanut allergy. My daughter always announced the problem when he was invited out, and now that he is 20, he has no problem asking for information regarding food before it is placed in front of him. Why don’t people tell the hosts these things at the time they accept the invitation? — Joan in California Dear Joan: No one should wait until the last second. It’s inconsiderate. Those with a food issue, whether allergies, gluten intolerance, vegan, etc., should not expect their hosts to jump through hoops for them. If they wish to be accommodated, they should mention the issue in advance. Otherwise, they need to deal with whatever is served. Of course, these days, a careful host should inquire whether the guests have any food requirements at the time of the invitation so there are no surprises. Dear Annie: Your reply to “The Old Fool,” about his wife’s lack of interest in lovemaking due to hormonal changes, was right on the mark. But he’s not a fool. He deserves a pat on the back for not accusing his wife of having an affair. I wish my husband were that sensible. — Wife of a Fool Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
Sheinwold’s bridge
1. Lots Answer________ 2. More Answer________ 3. Torso Answer________
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Use your ability to stay above the fray. Take a complete overview of an event that might have caused a difficult situation. Tonight: Opt to make a change.
GRADUATE LEVEL 4. Finders Answer________ 5. File Answer________ 6. Sham Answer________
PH.D. LEVEL 7. Sewed Answer________ 8. Glean Answer________ 9. Finger Answer________
ANSWERS: 1. Lost. 2. Rome. 3. Roots. 4. Friends. 5. Life. 6. M*A*S*H. 7. Weeds. 8. Angel. 9. Fringe.
Jumble
ANSWERS:
SCORING: 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you? (c) 2014 Ken Fisher
Today in history Today is Monday, September 15, the 258th day of 2014. There are 107 days left in the year. Today’s highlight in history: On September 15, 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the Department of State. Author James Fenimore Cooper was born in Burlington, New Jersey.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might want to listen to news with a bit of cynicism. Just because someone says a situation is a certain way does not mean it is. Tonight: Togetherness works. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might want to ease some of today’s tension. Detach from an immediate situation, rather than add to your stress level. Tonight: Share with a dear friend or loved one. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Keep an even pace, and attempt to see how you can delegate certain tasks, or find a shortcut. Use your leadership skills and efficiency to head down a new path. Tonight: Happy at home.
Cryptoquip
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Your playfulness might not work with friend who has a solemn attitude. Be smart, and try to avoid this situation. Tonight: Let loose! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Relate to others directly, and avoid getting involved in any gossip. Your personal touch will make all the difference in your dealings. Tonight: Enjoy being home. Jacqueline Bigar
The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, it will equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words and words using an apostrophe give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error. © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
B-12
THE NEW MEXICAN Monday, September 15, 2014
TUNDRA
PEANUTS
WITHOUT RESERVATIONS
NON SEQUITUR
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
MUTTS
RETAIL
ZITS
PICKLES
LUANN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
THE ARGYLE SWEATER