the santa fe new mexican, may 16, 2013

24
Two sections, 24 pages 164th year, No. 136 Publication No. 596-440 Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, [email protected] Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, [email protected] Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010 Calendar A-2 Classifieds B-6 Comics B-12 Lotteries A-2 Opinion A-11 Police notes A-10 Sports A-1 Time Out A-8 Scoop A-9 Index Carlos Gilbert teacher ends career with theatrical flair Local news, A-6 Locally owned and independent Thursday, May 16, 2013 www.santafenewmexican.com New Mexicans could have longer waits for a doctor or specialist as demand grows for medical services because of an aging population and expanded insurance coverage under the federal health care law, legislative auditors said Wednesday. A report released by the Legisla- tive Finance Committee said state residents could encounter growing problems of access to medical care due to the potential need of 2,000 physicians, 3,000 registered nurses and as many as 800 dentists. Up to 172,000 uninsured New Mexicans are expected to receive medical coverage next year, either P eter E. Lopez was introduced to the work of Edward O’Brien four years ago, when he visited the abandoned main building of the St. Catherine Indian School campus. Lopez, a santero who lives in Montezuma near Las Vegas, N.M., made arrangements to get inside the building at the behest of his sister, a home designer, who had a client request for a rendition of a mural inside the building. The electricity on the campus had been shut off, leaving the mural in darkness, so Barbara Tafoya, the real estate agent who led Lopez inside, agreed to remove the win- dow coverings. “When we returned to the room, sunlight was streaming through the windows onto the twenty by ten foot mural that stood before us,” Lopez writes in his new biography of O’Brien. “There was complete silence between Barbara and me as we gazed upon the mural. I was in awe of the mag- nificent work of art before me.” O’Brien’s mural, Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Love for the Indian Race, depicts the Virgin of Guadalupe surrounded by images of Native Americans — from ancient Maya masks to more modern images of Southwestern Indians at Roman Catholic services. Lopez said he had never heard of O’Brien before seeing the mural. After viewing the work, he searched the Internet for information on the artist, but found nothing. “He was off the map,” Lopez said. “I wanted to put him back on the map. New Mexicans should know about him.” That led to Lo Pasapick Fashion Showcase 2013 Santa Fe Community College’s student fashion show, 6:30 p.m., Jemez Room, SFCC, 6401 Richards Ave., $8 in advance, $10 at the door, 428-1358. Today Mostly sunny. High 83, low 48. PAGE A-12 Obituaries Lennon James McAdams, 92, May 10 Esequiel Lopez, 97, Pecos, May 13 Carlotta Clark-Van Brunt Luis E. Guzman, 62, Albuquerque, May 8 Dr. Richard Arellanes, 66, Las Vegas, N.M., May 12 PAGE A-10 McCurdy ousted in state semifinals Jemez Valley holds off Bobcats for shot at Class A title in game today against Capitan. SPORTS, B-1 www.pasatiempomagazine.com Edward O’Brien’s mural in the main building of the St. Catherine Indian School campus in Santa Fe is one of four murals he completed in New Mex- ico. Peter Lopez, a santero from Montezuma, published the first biography on O’Brien after being awestruck by the mural, Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Love for the Indian Race, in 2009. NATALIE GUILLÉN/NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO Medical care shortage in N.M. likely to increase Aging population, wider insurance coverage to strain health providers Gov. Susana Martinez’s finance chief admitted to legislators this week that he gave the state House of Representatives inaccurate information on the contro- versial tax bill that zipped through the Legislature amid confusion in the closing minutes of the session. Tom Clifford, secretary of the Depart- ment of Finance and Administration, admitted that estimates he gave of how much the major tax package would cost the state were wrong. He said the bill, which Martinez predicts will stimulate economic development, could cost more in future years than legislators were told before they passed it. Clifford had told the House that the bill, which includes a reduction of the state’s corporate income tax rate from 7.6 percent to 5.9 percent over a five-year period, would have a positive effect on state revenue over the next five years. However, a fiscal impact report pub- lished a few days after the legislation session ended said the state could end By Barry Massey The Associated Press Shedding light on a lost artist Buy the book Edward O’Brien, Mural Artist, 1910- 1975, by Peter E. Lopez, is avail- able at Collected Works Bookstore or Amazon.com for $25. Tax bill report over $70M short State finance chief says analysis of measure’s impact before rushed House vote used faulty figures TOM CLIFFORD Department of Fi- nance and Admin- istration secretary apologized for using the wrong figures to analyze a tax bill’s impact on the state before a House vote. By Steve Terrell The New Mexican Work of muralist featured in new biography hangs in darkened building on St. Catherine Indian School campus By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican Please see TAX, Page A-4 Please see ARTIST, Page A-4 Please see CARE, Page A-4 WASHINGTON — Under mount- ing pressure, President Barack Obama on Wednesday released a trove of documents related to the Benghazi attack and forced out the top official at the Internal Revenue Service following revelations that the agency targeted conservative politi- cal groups. The moves were aimed at halting a perception spreading among both White House opponents and allies that the president has been passive and disengaged as controver- sies consume his second term. In another action, the White House asked Congress to revive a media shield law that would protect Obama aims for damage control In flurry of actions, president fires IRS chief, tackles Benghazi attack and AP phone records By Julie Pace The Associated Press INSIDE u Holder faces tough questions in Congress. PAGE A-4 u Email shows Patraeus objected to CIA’s revision of talking points on Benghazi attack. PAGE A-5 Please see OBAMA, Page A-4 news, A-6 com ws, A-6 75¢

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Page 1: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

Two sections, 24 pages

164th year, No. 136Publication No. 596-440Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, [email protected] Design and headlines: Cynthia Miller, [email protected] Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010

Calendar A-2 Classifieds B-6 Comics B-12 Lotteries A-2 Opinion A-11 Police notes A-10 Sports A-1 Time Out A-8 Scoop A-9Index

Carlos Gilbert teacher ends career with theatrical flair Local news, A-6

Locally owned and independent Thursday, May 16, 2013 www.santafenewmexican.com

New Mexicans could have longerwaits for a doctor or specialist asdemand grows for medical servicesbecause of an aging population andexpanded insurance coverage underthe federal health care law, legislativeauditors said Wednesday.

A report released by the Legisla-tive Finance Committee said stateresidents could encounter growingproblems of access to medical caredue to the potential need of 2,000physicians, 3,000 registered nursesand as many as 800 dentists.

Up to 172,000 uninsured NewMexicans are expected to receivemedical coverage next year, either

Peter E. Lopez was introduced to the workof Edward O’Brien four years ago, when hevisited the abandoned main building of theSt. Catherine Indian School campus.

Lopez, a santero who lives in Montezuma nearLas Vegas, N.M., made arrangements to get insidethe building at the behest of his sister, a homedesigner, who had a client request for a renditionof a mural inside the building. The electricity on

the campus had been shut off, leaving the mural indarkness, so Barbara Tafoya, the real estate agentwho led Lopez inside, agreed to remove the win-dow coverings.

“When we returned to the room, sunlight wasstreaming through the windows onto the twentyby ten foot mural that stood before us,” Lopezwrites in his new biography of O’Brien. “Therewas complete silence between Barbara and me aswe gazed upon the mural. I was in awe of the mag-nificent work of art before me.”

O’Brien’s mural, Our Lady of Guadalupe’s Love

for the Indian Race, depicts the Virgin of Guadalupesurrounded by images of Native Americans — fromancient Maya masks to more modern images ofSouthwestern Indians at Roman Catholic services.

Lopez said he had never heard of O’Brien beforeseeing the mural. After viewing the work, hesearched the Internet for information on the artist,but found nothing. “He was off the map,” Lopezsaid. “I wanted to put him back on the map. NewMexicans should know about him.” That led to

Locally owned and independent

PasapickFashion Showcase 2013Santa Fe Community College’sstudent fashion show, 6:30p.m., Jemez Room, SFCC, 6401Richards Ave., $8 in advance,$10 at the door, 428-1358.

TodayMostly sunny.High 83,low 48.

PAge A-12

ObituariesLennon JamesMcAdams, 92, May 10Esequiel Lopez, 97,Pecos, May 13Carlotta Clark-VanBruntLuis E. Guzman, 62,Albuquerque, May 8Dr. Richard Arellanes,66, Las Vegas, N.M.,May 12

PAge A-10

McCurdy ousted in state semifinalsJemez Valley holds off Bobcats for shot at Class A title ingame today against Capitan. SPOrTS, B-1

www.pasatiempomagazine.com

Edward O’Brien’s mural in the main building of the St. Catherine Indian School campus in Santa Fe is one of four murals he completed in New Mex-ico. Peter Lopez, a santero from Montezuma, published the first biography on O’Brien after being awestruck by the mural, Our Lady of Guadalupe’sLove for the Indian Race, in 2009. NATALIE GUILLÉN/NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Medical careshortage inN.M. likelyto increaseAging population, widerinsurance coverage tostrain health providers

Gov. Susana Martinez’s finance chiefadmitted to legislators this week that hegave the state House of Representativesinaccurate information on the contro-versial tax bill that zipped through theLegislature amid confusion in the closingminutes of the session.

Tom Clifford, secretary of the Depart-ment of Finance and Administration,admitted that estimates he gave of howmuch the major tax package would costthe state were wrong. He said the bill,which Martinez predicts will stimulateeconomic development, could cost morein future years than legislators were toldbefore they passed it.

Clifford had told the House that the

bill, which includes a reduction of thestate’s corporate income tax rate from7.6 percent to 5.9 percent over a five-yearperiod, would have a positive effect onstate revenue over the next five years.However, a fiscal impact report pub-lished a few days after the legislationsession ended said the state could end

By Barry MasseyThe Associated Press

Shedding lighton a lost artist

Buy the bookEdward O’Brien,Mural Artist, 1910-1975, by Peter E.Lopez, is avail-able at CollectedWorks Bookstoreor Amazon.comfor $25.

Tax bill report over $70M shortState finance chiefsays analysis ofmeasure’s impactbefore rushedHouse vote usedfaulty figures

TOM ClIFFOrd

Department of Fi-nance and Admin-istration secretaryapologized forusing the wrong

figures to analyze a tax bill’s impacton the state before a House vote.

By Steve TerrellThe New Mexican

Work of muralist featured in new biography hangs indarkened building on St. Catherine Indian School campusBy Tom SharpeThe New Mexican

Please see TAX, Page A-4

Please see ArTIST, Page A-4

Please see CAre, Page A-4

WASHINGTON — Under mount-ing pressure, President BarackObama on Wednesday released atrove of documents related to theBenghazi attack and forced out thetop official at the Internal RevenueService following revelations that theagency targeted conservative politi-cal groups. The moves were aimedat halting a perception spreadingamong both White House opponentsand allies that the president has beenpassive and disengaged as controver-sies consume his second term.

In another action, the WhiteHouse asked Congress to revive amedia shield law that would protect

Obamaaims fordamagecontrolIn flurry of actions,president fires IRS chief,tackles Benghazi attackand AP phone recordsBy Julie PaceThe Associated Press

InSIdeu Holder faces tough questions inCongress. PAge A-4

u Email shows Patraeus objectedto CIA’s revision of talking points onBenghazi attack. PAge A-5

Please see OBAMA, Page A-4

Local news, A-6

www.santafenewmexican.com

Local news, A-6

www.santafenewmexican.com75¢

Page 2: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-2 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

MarketWatch

Home delivery986-3010 [email protected]

Daily and Sunday: $51.25, 3 months EZpay: $12.95per month Weekend paper: $41.55, 3 monthsIf your paper is not delivered by 6 a.m., please report by10 a.m. to Circulation at 986-3010 or 1-800-873-3372.

Classified line ads986-3000 [email protected]

Browse or place ads at sfnmclassifieds.comFax: 984-1785 Billing: 995-3869

Obituaries [email protected] 5 p.m. death notices: 986-3035

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Fax: 984-1785 Legal ads: 986-3000

Newsroom 986-3035News tips [email protected]

Letters to the editor986-3063 [email protected]. Box 2048, Santa Fe, N.M., 87504-2048

Online 986-3076

Business news: 986-3034Capitol Bureau: 986-3037City desk: 986-3035

Pasatiempo: 995-3839Sports: 986-3045,1-800-743-1186

The Santa FeNew MexicanLocally owned andindependent, servingNew Mexico for 164 years

To reach usThe Santa Fe New MexicanP.O. Box 2048Santa Fe, NM 87504-2048Main switchboard: 983-3303

PUBLICATION NO. 596-440PUBLISHED DAILY AND PERIODICALSPOSTAGE PAID AT ONE NEW MEXICANPLAZA, SANTA FE, NM.POSTMASTER: SEND ALL ADDRESSCHANGES TO CIRCULATION, P.O. BOX2048, SANTA FE, NM 87504

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CalendarUNIQUE THIS WEEKDEMETRIA MARTINEZ:The author reads from andsigns copies of The BlockCaptain’s Daughter, 6 p.m.Collected Works Bookstore,202 Galisteo St.FASHION SHOWCASE2013: Santa Fe CommunityCollege’s student fashionshow, 6:30 p.m., doors open at6, Jemez Room, $8 in advance,$10 at the door, youth dis-counts available, 428-1358.Santa Fe Community College,6401 Richards Ave.SOCIAL MEDIA FOR BEGIN-NERS: Workshop for anyonewho wants to learn aboutsocial media. The first halfhour of this two-hour work-shop addresses a basic over-view of what social media isand what it can deliver. Trainer:Amy Lahti, WESST/Albuquer-que. RSVP: [email protected]. WESST/SFBI, 3900 PaseoDel Sol.NATIONAL THEATRE OFLONDON IN HD: The broad-cast series continues withThis House, a play aboutParliament by James Graham,7 p.m., $22, student discountsavailable, ticketssantafe.org.Lensic Performing Arts Center,211 W. San Francisco St.

NIGHTLIFE¡CHISPA! AT EL MESÓN: Jazz

pianist Chris Ishee, 7-9 p.m., nocover. 213 Washington Ave.COWGIRL BBQ: Chava andPaid My Dues Rhythm & Blues,8 p.m., no cover. 319 S. Guada-lupe St.EVANGELO’S: Guitarist LittleLeroy with Mark Clark ondrums and Tone Forrest onbass, 9 p.m.-close, call forcover. 200 W. San Francisco St.LA BOCA: Nacha Mendez,pan-latin chanteuse, 7-9 p.m.,no cover. 72 W. Marcy St.LA FIESTA LOUNGE AT LAFONDA: Bill Hearne Trio, road-house honky-tonk, 7:30 p.m., nocover. 100 E. San Francisco St.LA POSADA DE SANTA FERESORT AND SPA: Pat MaloneJazz Trio, 6 p.m., no cover.330 E. Palace Ave.STEAKSMITH AT EL GAN-CHO: Mariachi Sonidos delMonte, 6:30-8 p.m., no cover.104-B Old Las Vegas Highway.THE MATADOR: DJ Inkyspinning soul/punk/ska,8:30 p.m.-close, call for cover.116 W. San Francisco St.VANESSIE: Bert Dalton Duo,jazz, 7 p.m.-close, call forcover. 427 W. Water St.

VOLUNTEERCOMMUNITY FARM: TheSanta Fe Community Farm inthe Village of Agua Fría, 1829San Ysidro Crossing, growsand gives fresh fruits and veg-etables to the homeless and

less fortunate. Volunteers ofany age and ability are neededto help out. Drop in and spendtime in the sunshine and freshair. The hours are 9 a.m. to4 p.m. daily, except Wednes-days and Sundays. For infor-mation, email [email protected] or visit www.santafecommunityfarm.org.PEOPLE FOR NATIVE ECO-SYSTEMS: Volunteers areneeded to join the feedingteam for the prairie dog colo-nies in Santa Fe. If you can givea few hours a week to help,call Pat Carlton at 988-1596.PET PROJECT: Do you love“thrifting?” Would you like tohelp the animals of NorthernNew Mexico? Combine yourpassions by joining the SantaFe Animal Shelter’s resaleteam. The stores, Look WhatThe Cat Dragged In 1 and 2,benefit homeless animals,and volunteers are needed tomaintain the sales floor, sortdonations and create displaysto showcase our unique mer-chandise. The stores are at2570-A Camino Entrada (nextto Outback Steakhouse) and541 W. Cordova Road, next toWells Fargo. No experiencenecessary. For more informa-tion, contact Katherine Rodri-guez at 983-4309, ext. 128,or [email protected], or Anne Greeneat 474-6300 or [email protected].

KITCHEN ANGELS: Join thecrew by volunteering twohours a week. It will makea real difference in the livesof homebound neighbors.Kitchen Angels is looking fordrivers to deliver food between4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Visitwww.kitchenangels.org or call471-7780 to learn more.

Lotteries

CorrectionsThe New Mexican will

correct factual errors inits news stories. Errorsshould be brought to theattention of the city editorat 986-3035.

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Robin MartinOwner

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In briefStormy Cannesgets underway

CANNES, France — TheCannes Film Festival got off toa blockbuster, if stormy start,as Baz Luhrmann’s The GreatGatsby opened on a soggyFrench Riviera.

Amid heavy rain, dancingflappers flocked down theCannes red carpet Wednesdaynight, bringing a touch of theJazz Age to the Croisette.Gatsby stars Leonardo DiCaprio,Carey Mulligan and TobeyMaguire helped give the festival’sopening day a strong dose ofstar power.

At the opening ceremony,DiCaprio, joined by his Gatsbyco-star, Bollywood actorAmitabh Bachchan, declared the66th Cannes officially begun.

Over the next 12 days,dozens of the world’s mostartistically ambitious filmswill premiere on Cannes’ globalstage. But Wednesday was aday for blockbusters — boththe big-budget Gatsby and Hol-lywood’s most accomplisheddirector of spectacle: StevenSpielberg.

Spielberg is serving as jurypresident at this year’s Cannes.His presence here is a rarity(he’s had films at Cannes before,including E.T. and SugarlandExpress, but never had a moviein competition), and he was

received like a visiting head ofstate, a king of cinema.

Pentagon underfire for sex abuse

WASHINGTON — One afteranother, the charges have tum-bled out — allegations of sexualassaults in the military that havetriggered outrage, from localcommanders to Capitol Hill andthe Oval Office.

But for a Pentagon underfire, there seem to be few clearsolutions beyond improvedtraining and possible adjust-ments in how the militaryprosecutes such crimes. Chang-ing the culture of a male-domi-nated, change-resistant militarythat for years has toleratedsexism and sexist behavior isproving to be a challenging task.

“We’re losing the confidenceof the women who serve that wecan solve this problem,” the topU.S. military officer, Gen. Mar-tin Dempsey, said in unusuallystrong terms Wednesday. “That’sa crisis.”

Dempsey, whose commentsduring a flight from Europe toWashington were reported by thePentagon’s internal news service,suggested that a deepening of thesexual assault problem may belinked to the strains of war.

“I tasked those around meto help me understand whata decade-plus of conflict mayhave done to the force,” he said.“Instinctively, I knew it had tohave some effect.”

The Associated Press

Pleaserecycle

FREED BY FRANCISAs Pope Francis toured St. Peter’s Square in his open-toppedpopemobile Wednesday during his audience with the public,someone at the edge of the crowd thrust a bird cage at him.Looking puzzled, his security detail took the cage, containing apair of doves, and handed it to Francis. Without hesitation, thepope opened the cage, extracted one bird and released it overthe square. L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — In the new psychiatric manualof mental disorders, grief soon after a lovedone’s death can be considered major depression.Extreme childhood temper tantrums get a fancyname. And certain “senior moments” are called“mild neurocognitive disorder.”

Those changes are just some of the reasonsprominent critics say the American PsychiatricAssociation is out of control, turning commonhuman problems into mental illnesses in a trendthey say will just make the “pop-a-pill” cultureworse.

Says a former leader of the group: “Normalneeds to be saved from powerful forces trying toconvince us that we are all sick.”

At issue is the fifth edition of the Diagnosticand Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, widelyknown as the DSM-5. The DSM has long beenconsidered the authoritative source for diagnosingmental problems.

The psychiatric association formally introducesthe nearly 1,000-page revised version this week-end in San Francisco. It’s the manual’s first majorupdate in nearly 20 years, and a backlash has takenshape in recent weeks.

The manual’s release comes at a time ofincreased scrutiny of health care costs and con-cern about drug company influence over doctors.Critics point to a landscape in which TV adsdescribe symptoms for mental disorders and pro-mote certain drugs to treat them.

Previous versions of the DSM were also loudlycriticized, but the latest one comes at a time ofsoaring diagnoses of illnesses listed in the manualand billions of dollars spent each year on psychiat-ric drugs.

The group’s 34,000 members are psychiatrists— medical doctors who specialize in treating men-tal illness. Unlike psychologists and other thera-pists without medical degrees, they can prescribemedication. While there has long been rivalrybetween the two groups, the DSM-5 revisions havestoked the tensions.

The most contentious changes include:uDiagnosing as major depression the extreme

sadness, weight loss, fatigue and trouble sleepingsome experience after a loved one’s death. Majordepression is often treated with antidepressants.uCalling frequent, extreme temper tantrums

“disruptive mood dysregulation disorder,” a newdiagnosis. The psychiatric association says thelabel is meant to apply to youngsters who in thepast might have been misdiagnosed as havingbipolar disorder. Critics say it turns normal tan-trums into mental illness.uDiagnosing mental decline that goes beyond

normal aging as “mild neurocognitive disorder.”Affected people may find it takes more effort topay bills or manage their medications. Critics ofthe term say it will stigmatize “senior moments.”uCalling excessive thoughts or feelings about

pain or other discomfort “somatic symptom dis-order,” something that could affect the healthy aswell as cancer patients. Critics say the term turnsnormal reactions to a disease into mental illness.uAdding binge eating as a new category for

overeating that occurs at least once a week for atleast three months. It could apply to people whosometimes gulp down a pint of ice cream whenthey’re alone and then feel guilty about it.uRemoving Asperger’s syndrome as a separate

diagnosis and putting it under the umbrella term“autism spectrum disorder.”

Dr. David Kupfer, chairman of the task force thatoversaw the DSM-5, said the changes are based onsolid research and will help make sure people getaccurate diagnoses and treatment.

Shrinks, criticsface off overDSM revisionsBy Lindsey TannerThe Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The regionalairliner was climbing past 9,000feet when its compasses went hay-wire, leading pilots several milesoff course until a flight attendantpersuaded a passenger in row 9 toswitch off an iPhone.

“The timing of the cellphonebeing turned off coincided with themoment where our heading prob-lem was solved,” the unidentifiedco-pilot told NASA’s Aviation SafetyReporting System about the 2011incident. The plane landed safely.

Public figures from Sen. ClaireMcCaskill to actor Alec Baldwinhave bristled at what they say areexcessive rules restricting use oftablets, smartphones, laptops andother devices during flights.

More than a decade of pilotreports and scientific studies tella different story. Government andairline reporting systems havelogged dozens of cases in whichpassenger electronics were sus-pected of interfering with naviga-tion, radios and other equipment.

The FAA in January appointedan advisory committee from theairline and technology industriesto recommend whether or how to

broaden electronics use in planes.The agency will consider the com-mittee’s recommendations, which itsaid are expected in July.

Lab tests have shown somedevices emit radio waves power-ful enough to interfere with airlineequipment, according to NASA,aircraft manufacturer Boeing andBritain’s Civil Aviation Authority.

Even Delta Air Lines, whichargued for relaxed rules, told theFederal Aviation Administration itspilots and mechanics reported27 suspected incidents of passengerelectronics causing aircraft mal-functions from 2010 to 2012. Deltasaid it couldn’t verify there wasinterference in any of those cases.

The FAA prohibits use of elec-tronics below 10,000 feet, with theexception of portable recordingdevices, hearing aids, heart pace-makers and electric shavers.

Once above that altitude, devicescan be used in “airplane mode,”which blocks their ability to broad-cast radio signals, according tothe FAA. There’s an exception fordevices that aircraft manufactur-ers or an airline demonstrates aresafe, such as laptops that connect toapproved Wi-Fi networks.

The potential risks from personalelectronic devices are increasing as

the aviation system transitions tosatellite-based navigation, accord-ing to the FAA. In order to improveefficiency, planes will fly closertogether using GPS technology.

As a result, interference fromelectronics “cannot be tolerated,”the agency said last year.

While sticking with its prohibi-tions on use during some phasesof flight, the FAA in 2010 issuedguidelines allowing broader use ofpersonal electronics.

Following techniques suggestedby RTCA, a Washington-basednonprofit that advises the FAA ontechnology, airlines have been ableto install Wi-Fi networks allowingpassengers to go online in flight.

Four in 10 airline passengerssurveyed in December by groupsincluding the Consumer Electron-ics Association said they want to beable to use electronic devices in allphases of flight. Thirty percent ofpassengers in that same study saidthey’d accidentally left on a deviceduring a flight.

McCaskill, D-Mo., has called forlifting restrictions on non-phonedevices such as the Kindle. In aninterview, she called the existingrules “ridiculous.”

Restrictions on U.S. commercialaircraft began in 1966 after research

found some portable radios inter-fered with navigation equipment,according to the FAA’s request lastyear for comments on whether itshould change existing rules.

In one 2004 test, a since-discontinued Samsung Electronicscellphone’s signal was powerfulenough to blot out global-position-ing satellites, according to NASA.The device, which met all govern-ment standards, was tested becausea corporate flight department haddiscovered the phone rendered aplane’s three GPS receivers useless,NASA’s researchers reported.

While such incidents are rareand difficult to re-create, they con-tinue to pile up. A log kept by theMontreal-based International AirTransport Association airline tradegroup recorded 75 cases of sus-pected interference from 2003 to2009, Perry Flint, a spokesman forthe group, said in an interview.

Peter Bernard Ladkin, a professorof computer networks at the Uni-versity of Bielefeld in Germany, saidhe has compiled similar accountsfrom pilots in Europe.

“These are serious, conscientiouspilots,” Ladkin said. “They knowwhat they’re doing. They don’t sub-scribe to theories about ghosts orsomething.”

‘Off’ button key to pilot interference reportsBy Alan LevinBloomberg News

Page 3: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

By Nicole WinfieldThe Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — TheVatican on Wednesday ordereda disgraced Scottish cardinalto leave Scotland for severalmonths to pray and atone forsexual misconduct, issuing arare public sanction against a“prince of the church” and thefirst such punishment metedout by Pope Francis.

Cardinal Keith O’Brienresigned as archbishop ofSt. Andrews and Edinburghand recused himself from theMarch conclave that electedFrancis pope after a newspaperreported unnamed priests’ alle-gations that he acted inappro-priately toward them.

O’Brien subsequentlyacknowledged he had engagedin unspecified sexual mis-behavior. He apologized andpromised to stay out of thechurch’s public life.

On Wednesday, the Vaticansaid O’Brien, once Britain’shighest-ranking Catholicleader, would leave Scotlandfor several months of “spiri-tual renewal, prayer and pen-ance” for the same reasons hedecided not to participate inthe conclave.

The statement didn’t specifythat the decision was imposed

on O’Brien by the Vatican aspunishment, and in fact wentout of its way to suggest thatthe decision was O’Brien’s. Butin the past, wayward priestshave been sanctioned by theVatican with punishments of“prayer and penance,” and thestatement made clear Francissupported the move and thatthe Holy See would decide hisfuture fate.

Such a sanction is very muchin keeping with the church’slegal tradition of making apublic reparation for a scandaldone to the church, said Aus-ten Ivereigh, director of theCatholic Voices, a British-basedCatholic advocacy group.

“Because there has been apublic scandal, there has to be apublic reparation in some way,and it is normal for somebodyto be sent away,” he said in aphone interview. “This is verymuch in that canonical tradi-tion of making public repara-tion.”

The issue is significantbecause victims of clericalabuse have long denounced thelack of accountability amongthe church hierarchy for hav-ing covered up the crimes ofpedophile priests. Bishops andcardinals have long been virtu-ally untouchable.

Even though O’Brien hasnot been accused of abus-ing minors, his case had beenwatched to see if Francis woulddare take any action againsta senior cardinal who hadstrayed. “For a church memberto be asked to leave the placeof his residence for a period ofpenance and prayer, it’s aboutas a strong a sanction as youcan get,” said Ivereigh.

The Vatican spokesmandeclined to provide furtherexplanation Wednesday andthe spokesman for the Scottishchurch declined to comment.

Deal reached in suitKANSAS CITY, Mo. — A law-

suit filed against the Dioceseof Kansas City-St. Joseph andBishop Robert Finn by a girl whowas 2 years old when KansasCity priest Shawn Ratigan tookpornographic photos of herhas tentatively been settled for$600,000, Minnesota attorneyGregg Meyers, representing thegirl, said Wednesday.

It was reached after a fullday of mediation between theparties Tuesday, soon after U.S.District Judge Gary Fenner inKansas City dismissed one oftwo counts in the suit.

Ratigan pleaded guilty inAugust to taking pornographicphotos of the girl, known asJane Doe 173 in the litigation,in May 2006 at a church inBuchanan County. He awaitssentencing.

The Associated Press

Researchers likely tostep up demand fordonated eggsBy Melissa HealyLos Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — For thefirst time, scientists have cre-ated human embryos that aregenetic copies of living peopleand used them to make stemcells — a feat that paves theway for treating a range of dis-eases with personalized bodytissues but also ignites fears ofhuman cloning.

If replicated in other labs,the methods detailed Wednes-day in the journal Cell wouldallow researchers to fashionhuman embryonic stem cellsthat are custom-made forpatients with Alzheimer’s dis-ease, diabetes and other healthproblems. Theoretically capa-ble of reproducing themselvesindefinitely, these stem cellscould be used to grow replace-ments for a wide variety ofdiseased cells — those of theblood, skin, heart, brain, mus-cles, nerves and more — thatwould not risk rejection by thepatient’s immune system.

The report also raises thespecter that, with a high-quality donor egg, a bit of skin,some careful tending in a laband the womb of a willing sur-rogate, humans have crackedthe biological secret to repro-ducing themselves. That is anobjective American scientistshave squarely renounced asunethical and scientificallyirresponsible. At the sametime, most acknowledge thatsuch “reproductive cloning”will one day prove too tempt-ing to resist.

In the hope that otherresearchers will validate andextend their results, the scien-tists at Oregon Health & Sci-ence University provided anexceptionally detailed accountof their techniques. But foranyone with a well-equippedfertility lab, the comprehensiveguide could be a useful hand-book for cloning a baby.

OHSU cell biologist Shoukh-rat Mitalipov led a team of23 scientists who methodi-cally culled the lessons learnedfrom stem cell research onamphibians, mice and rhesusmonkeys — as well as from

the abundant failures of oth-ers in the field. They deviseda welter of new techniques touse the DNA of a fully formedskin cell in its most primitiveembryonic form.

The approach they used— called somatic cell nucleartransfer — effectively stripsan egg of its chromosomesand packs it instead with DNAfrom a donor.

The researchers said theirmethods were so efficient thatthey could create at least oneembryonic stem cell line fromeach batch of eggs donated by10 female volunteers. In onecase, a single donor producedeight eggs of such exceptionalquality that researchers wereable to derive four embryonicstem cell lines.

The success of the experi-ments rekindled debate amongbioethicists, who have longanticipated that human clon-ing would become a reality.Though 13 states have passedlaws banning reproductivecloning, the United States isone of just a few industrializedcountries that has not prohib-ited the practice. Seven statesalso have banned therapeuticcloning. Oregon is not one ofthem.

The OHSU team’s successunderscores the urgent needfor federal rules that spell outconsistent national limits ontherapeutic cloning and put aclear ban on the technology’suse in fertility clinics, saidJohns Hopkins University bio-ethicist Jeffrey Kahn.

Researchers are also likelyto step up their demand fordonated eggs so they can con-duct similar experiments.

A-3THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

CardinalKeith O’BrienScottish clericgets raresanction, thefirst by PopeFrancis.

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Page 4: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-4 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

up forgoing more than $70 million infiscal 2017.Clifford’s apology to legislators this

week prompted one veteran Santa Felawmaker to respond that many of hiscolleagues would have voted againstthe tax bill if they’d been given theright numbers. “That’s my opinion,”Rep. Jim Trujillo, D-Santa Fe, said onWednesday.Trujillo, who is deputy chairman

of the House Taxation and RevenueCommittee, said he voted against thetax bill despite the more optimisticnumbers that Clifford gave the Houseduring the rushed last-minute debateon the bill in March.Clifford this week apologized to the

committee for giving wrong figures onthe House floor, saying he was usingfigures from an analysis on an earlierversion of an omnibus tax bill.“Secretary Clifford was working from

a preliminary draft of a fiscal analysisduring the lengthy legislation, and thefinal fiscal analysis shows that there is

ample revenue to cover any losses fromthe tax reductions,” a spokesman forClifford saidWednesday.“Over a 17-year phase-in, the tax

bill is revenue-positive early on, dipsnegative for a few years and goes backto positive for the remainder of theimplementation,” spokesman TimKorte said.The tax bill, which could raise the

tax burden on cities and counties whiledecreasing the rates for businesses bygradually eliminating “hold harmless”payments from the state to local gov-ernments, passed with wide bipartisansupport. Only a few Democrats and ahandful of Republicans in the Housevoted against it.

Is Trujillo right that other legislatorswould have voted against the tax bill,had they known about the projectednegative revenue effect in 2017?Rep. Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, said

Wednesday, “I can’t really argue withJim about that. Somemembers mighthave changed their votes.”However, Egolf, who voted for the

bill, said different fiscal projectionsfrom Clifford wouldn’t have changedhis vote.“There were too many things in that

bill that needed to be passed,” he said.He pointed to a portion of the bill thatmakes multistate corporations paythe same corporate tax rates as localbusinesses. Egolf also said the part of

the bill that gives bigger incentives fortelevision series production in the statewas essential for the economy.As for the projected revenue losses in

2017, Egolf said that shouldn’t be a seri-ous problem for the state budget. Hesuggested that putting less money intostate reserves would ease that impact.Trujillo said hewas concerned about a

portion of the bill that phases out “hold-harmless” payments to state and citygovernments for revenues lost by elimi-nating the gross receipts tax on food andmedicine several years ago. He also saidhe doubts supporters’ claims that thelower corporate tax rate in the bill willattract businesses toNewMexico.“I think a better way to attract busi-

nesses is to fix the education system,”he said.Many opponents decried the fact

that the bill — introduced in the finalhour of the the session in the Senate inthe form of a lengthy amendment of afilm-incentive bill —was not debatedin any committee, that the floor debatewas rushed and some opponents werenot allowed to speak.

through an expansion ofMedicaid or a state-run healthinsurance exchange.More than 400,000 New

Mexicans lack health carecoverage.“The number of health care

professionals and their mal-distribution throughout thestate cannot adequately meetcurrent demand, let alone theadditional pressures broughtabout by the newly insured in2014,” the report said.“In the near term, the lack

of supply will result in longerwait times to see a providerand more difficulty accessingspecialists. As NewMexico’spopulation expands andbecomes proportionatelyolder, the state can expecteven greater health careaccess problems.”Auditors said “it’s unlikely

that NewMexico will experi-ence a train wreck” in 2014,but there will be a gradualdeterioration of access tohealth care.Auditors recommended the

state take a number of steps toincrease the number of healthcare providers, includingphysician assistants and nursepractitioners who can helpease the shortage of doctors.“About half of the popula-

tion is basically healthy andcan be cared for by nursepractitioners and physicianassistants, a professionalgroup that can be trainedmore quickly and at less costthan physicians,” the reportsaid.However, NewMexico pro-

duces more physicians thanit does nurse practitioners.From 2007 to 2011, the state’spublic colleges and universi-ties educated 234 nurse prac-titioners, while 263 physicianscame out of the NewMexico’smedical school. There were79 physician assistants edu-cated during that same time.The report said the total

number of registered nursedegrees fromNewMexicoschools dropped from 2007to 2011, despite the state pro-viding $28 million to nursingprograms since 2004.Auditors suggested the

state’s Medical Board shouldconsider expanding the role ofphysician assistants by givingthemmore independence topractice outside the supervi-sion of a doctor.Other recommendations in

the report include increasingmoney for programs to trainphysicians in family medicine,expanding student loan repay-ment programs for physi-cians and reviewing licensingrequirements for all healthcare professionals to eliminatepossible barriers for recruit-ing more providers to NewMexico.Auditors said NewMexico

needs to change the deliveryof health care so that patientswith chronic illnesses, whouse a greater share of medicalservices, get more coordi-nated care.“NewMexico should shift

its emphasis from sick careto wellness and prevention,thus redefining the healthcare workforce and deliveryof health care services beyondthe traditional clinical setting,”the report said.The recruitment and train-

ing of medical professionalsneeds to reflect those changesin how health care is pro-vided, auditors said.At a committee hearing on

the audit, Dr. Michael Landen,the state epidemiologist, saidNewMexico needed to notonly increase the number ofmedical providers in the statebut also to address disparitiesin health care access.Southeastern NewMexico

was most lacking in healthcare coverage, he said.That largely rural area has

the highest rate of cancerdeaths but the lowest numberof oncologists.“We can’t just allow our

health care resources to endup where they will, distrib-uted where they will,” Landensaid.

Continued from Page A-1

Care:Increasein healthproviderscritical

Jim TrujilloSanta Fe Democratsays many wouldhave voted againstHouse tax bill ifimpact report hadbeen accurate.

Brian EgolfFellow Santa FeDemocrat saysprojected revenuelosses in 2017 won’tbe a big problem forstate.

Continued from Page A-1

Tax: Santa Fe rep says wrong numbers swayed vote

Edward O’Brien, Mural Artist, 1910-1975,published earlier this year, the firstbiography of the muralist.O’Brienwas born to Irish Catholic

parents in Pittsburgh in 1910. He studiedart at the Carnegie Tech and then theArt Institute of Chicago, and then helived in a cabin in theUpper PeninsulaofMichigan. A punctured ear drum kepthim out ofWorldWar II. The post-waryears found him roaming the country,riding freight trains and doing odd jobs,but remaining true to his artistic andspiritual quests. For a time, he lived ina TrappistMonastery in Kentucky. Healso visitedMexico to see itsmurals.Upon returning fromMexico in 1960,

O’Brien, then 50, moved to Santa Fe, atthe suggestion of a friend, towork as abook illustrator. Soon, hewas offereda commission to paint amural at theLoretto Academy for Girls. Theworkwas lavishly praised in The New Mexi-can, “setting intomotion eventswhichchanged his life,” Lopezwrites.WhenLoretto Academywas demolished,O’Brien’smural, painted on canvas, wasmoved to amorada in LaMadera.Over the next 15 years of his life,

O’Brien completed six religiouslythemedmurals, each taking two tothree years to complete. In addition tothe two in Santa Fe, he painted one atthe Benedictine Our Lady of Guada-lupe Abbey in Pecos, one at St. Bene-dict’s Abbey in Benet Lake, Wis., oneat the Catholic Parish of St. Pius V in

Chicago and one at the Sikh ashram inSombrillo near Española.O’Brien died in 1975, less than a

month after completing the Sikh mural,which depicts white-robed, turban-wearing, bearded men in meditationsurrounding the Virgin of Guadalupe.His remains were brought back to theSt. Catherine campus for a viewing and

funeral service in front of the mural hehad painted there. He was buried in thecampus cemetery.Lopez, 73, paid to publish 144 copies

of his biography on O’Brien, which isavailable at the CollectedWorks Book-store in Santa Fe or via Amazon.comat $25 per copy. Lopez, who is puttingthe finishing touches on El Campesino,

a 14-foot sculpture of a farmworkercarved from a dead Siberian elm inLas Vegas’ Old Town Plaza, said abouthalf the initial copies of the book havesold so far, and that he will consideranother press run in the future.

Contact Tom Sharpe at 986-3080or [email protected].

Muralist Edward O’Brien died in 1975, less than a month after completing his last mural at the Sikh ashram inSombrillo near Española. COURTESY SIKHNET.COM

Continued from Page A-1

Artist: Mural at Sombrillo ashram was O’Brien’s last

Obama: Criticized for slow reactionContinued from Page A-1

Holder getsgrilling inCongressThe Associated Press

WASHINGTON—Congressional Republi-cans and Democrats onWednesday challengedAttorney General Eric Holder over the JusticeDepartment’s handling of the investigation ofnational security leaks and its failure to talk toThe Associated Press before issuing subpoenasfor the news service’s telephone records.In exchanges that often turned testy, Holder

defended the inquiry while pointing out that hehad removed himself from any decision on sub-poenas. The attorney general explained that hehad been interviewed about what he knew ofnational security developments that promptedthe probe.The investigation follows congressional

demands into whether Obama administrationofficials leaked secret information to the medialast year to enhance the president’s nationalsecurity credentials in an election year. The Jus-tice Department secretly obtained twomonthsof telephone records of reporters and editorsfor the AP, seizing the records for more than20 separate telephone lines assigned to the APand its journalists in April andMay 2012.Holder defended the move to collect AP

phone records in an effort to hunt down thesources of information for a May 7, 2012, APstory that disclosed details of a CIA opera-tion in Yemen to stop an airliner bombing plotaround the anniversary of the killing of terroristleader Osama bin Laden.The attorney general called the story the

result of “a very serious leak, a very grave leak.”Under questioning, Holder said he recused

himself from the investigation though hecouldn’t provide the panel with the exact datenor did he do so formally in writing.“There doesn’t appear to be any acceptance

of responsibility for things that have gonewrong,” Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., toldHolder. He suggested that administration offi-cials travel to the Harry S. Truman PresidentialLibrary and take a photo of the famous sign,“The buck stops here.”

journalists from having to revealinformation, a step seen as aresponse to the Justice Depart-ment’s widely criticized subpoe-nas of phone records from report-ers and editors at The AssociatedPress.The flurry of activity signaled

aWhite House anxious to regaincontrol amid the trio of deepeningcontroversies. The incidents haveemboldened Republicans, over-shadowed Obama’s legislativeagenda and threatened to plungehis second term into a steadystream of congressional investiga-tions. Standing in the East Roomof theWhite House, the presidentsaid Acting IRS CommissionerStevenMiller had resigned andvowed that more steps would betaken to hold those responsibleaccountable.“Americans have a right to be

angry about it, and I am angryabout it,” Obama said of the IRSactions. “I will not tolerate thiskind of behavior at any agency,but especially at the IRS, given thepower that it has and the reachthat it has into all of our lives.”The president, seeking to keep

up his more robust profile on thecontroversies, also said he wouldtake questions from reportersThursday at a previously sched-uled news conference with Turk-ish PrimeMinister Recep TayyipErdogan.Obama had addressed the IRS

matter onMonday, but his mea-sured words left many unsatisfied,particularly given that he hadwaited three days to address thedevelopments. He also repeatedlyasserted that he was waiting tofind out if the reports were accu-rate, even though top IRS officialshad already acknowledged thecontroversial actions.Adding to narrative of a pas-

sive president wereWhite House

efforts to distance Obama fromthe IRS scandal, as well as the rev-elations that the Justice Depart-ment had secretly obtained workand personal phone records ofjournalists. In both cases, theWhite House insisted the presi-dent had no prior knowledge ofthe events and learned about thematters like the general public —from news reports.Obama’s cautious response,

combined with his lack of aware-ness about controversies brewingwithin his administration, openedhim to quick criticism from hisRepublican foes.“If Obama really learned about

the latest IRS and AP secretsubpoena scandals in the news,who exactly is running the shipat theWhite House?” RepublicanNational Committee spokesmanKirsten Kukowski said.But in a worrying sign for the

White House, some Democratsalso criticized the president fornot being more aggressive inresponding to trouble within thegovernment.Robert Gibbs, Obama’s former

White House press secretary,said the president should haveappointed a bipartisan commis-sion of former IRS officials tolook into the issue of targetingpolitical organizations. And Gibbsgently chided his former boss forusing passive language when hefirst addressed the political target-ing during aWhite House newsconferenceMonday. “I think theywould have a much better wayof talking about this story ratherthan simply kind of landing onthe, ‘well if this happened, thenwe’ll look at it,’ ” Gibbs said dur-ing an appearance onMSNBC.The pair of new fresh contro-

versies coincided with a resur-gence in the GOP-led investiga-tion into the Sept. 11, 2012, attackson a U.S. compound in Benghazi,Libya, that killed the U.S. ambas-

sador and three other Americans.Congressional Republicans

launched another round of hear-ings on the attacks last week. Andon Friday, a congressional officialdisclosed details of emails amongadministration officials thatresulted in the CIA downplay-ing the prospect that the attackswere an act of terror in talkingpoints used to publicly discuss thedeadly incident.Obama aides insisted the emails

were either taken out of contextor provided no new informationbut resisted pressure tomake theemails public for five days, beforefinally disclosing the documents toreportersWednesday. The emailsrevealed that then-CIADirectorDavid Petraeus disagreedwith thefinal talking points, despite theWhiteHouse’s insistence that theintelligence agency had the finalsay over the statements.TheWhite House has publicly

defended its handling of the con-troversies. Obama spokesmanJay Carney has insisted it wouldbe “wholly inappropriate” for thepresident, in the case of the Jus-tice Department matter, to weighin on an active investigation, andin the case of the IRS controversy,to insert himself in the actions ofan independent agency.However, legal scholar Jonathan

Turley disputed those assertions,saying there is no legal reason apresident would be precludedfrom learning about the investiga-tions before the public or com-menting on them, at least broadly.“These comments treat the

president like he’s the bubbleboy,” said Turley, a law professorat GeorgeWashington University.David Axelrod, Obama’s long-

time adviser, acknowledged theWhiteHouse could have actedmore aggressively in “the interestof stagecraft.” But he insisted thatthe president’s handling of themat-ters will ultimately be vindicated.

Page 5: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-5THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

Interior chief to focuson Indian eduation

WASHINGTON — InteriorSecretary Sally Jewell told aSenate panel Wednesday that“Indian education is embarrass-ing” as she laid out her priori-ties on issues affecting NativeAmericans and Alaska Natives.

Jewell made her first appear-ance as Interior secretary beforethe Senate Indian Affairs Com-mittee, chaired by Sen. MariaCantwell, D-Wash. The Inte-rior Department includes theBureau of Indian Affairs, whichoversees a school system forNative Americans.

Jewell said some $2 billion hasbeen spent on American Indianschools over the past decadeand that dozens of schoolsremain in poor condition. Shealso said across-the-board fed-eral budget cuts have forced a$40 million reduction to Indianeducation spending. “Indianeducation is embarrassing toyou and to us,” Jewell said.

After the hearing, Jewell saidshe has not yet been on a tourof schools — she was sworn inApril 12 — but has been told ofthe serious condition of someof the schools serving NativeAmerican children. “When wehave a number of schools iden-tified as in poor condition, that’snot what we aspire to,” she said.

In written testimony, Jewellsaid the $2 billion in spendinghad reduced the number ofschools from more than 120 to63, but she stated that the “physi-

cal state ofour schoolsremains a sig-nificant chal-lenge.” Jewelltestified that68 schoolswere in poorcondition butlater said thenumber in writ-

ten testimony, 63, was accurate.Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn.,

asked about the state of schoolrepairs in his opening remarksbefore Jewell testified. He said ina school on a reservation in hisstate is “desperate, desperate” forreplacement and deals regularlywith leaky roofs, mold, rodentinfestations and sewer problems.

“When the wind starts blow-ing at a certain rate, they haveto leave the school because itdoesn’t meet the safety stan-dards. This can be when it’s 20below zero in northern Minne-sota. It puts the Indian educationsystem to shame,” Franken said.

There is a $1.3 billion backlogon Indian school constructionprojects, Franken said. Even so,the president did not requestnew funding for rebuildingschools, “leaving thousandsof Indian children to study incrumbling and even dangerousbuildings,” he said.

Jewell said her agency “cannotrepair and replace schools with-out money.” She said her agencyhas made what happens in theclassroom and repairs, ratherthan new school construction,the spending priorities for 2014.

By Suzanne GamboaThe Associated Press

Sally Jewell

NATION

CIA revised Benghazi talking points

WASHINGTON — Then CIA-DirectorDavid Petraeus objected to the final talkingpoints that U.N. Ambassador Susan Riceused five days after the deadly assault ona U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya,because he wanted to see more detail pub-licly released, including a warning issuedfrom the CIA about plans for an embassyattack, a newly released email shows.

The White House on Wednesdayreleased 99 pages of emails and a singlepage of handwritten notes made byPetraeus’ deputy, Mike Morell, after ameeting at the White House the day beforeRice’s appearance. On that page, Morell

scratched out from the CIA’s early draftsof talking points mentions of al-Qaida, theexperience of fighters in Libya, Islamicextremists and a warning to the U.S.Embassy in Cairo on the eve of the attacksof calls for a demonstration.

“No mention of the cable to Cairo,either?” Petraeus wrote after receivingMorell’s edited version, developed afteran intense back-and-forth among Obamaadministration officials. “Frankly, I’d just assoon not use this, then.”

Senior administration officials toldreporters Wednesday that Morell made thechanges to the talking points because ofhis own concerns that they could prejudgean FBI investigation into who was respon-sible for the Sept. 11, 2012, attack that killedU.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and threeother Americans. The officials said Morellalso didn’t think it was fair to disclose theCIA’s advance warning without giving the

State Department a chance to explain howit responded.

Critics have highlighted an email bythen-State Department spokeswomanVictoria Nuland that expressed concernthat any mention of prior warnings orthe involvement of al-Qaida would givecongressional Republicans ammunitionto attack the administration in the weeksbefore the presidential election. Fight-ing terror was one of President BarackObama’s re-election strong points.

That email was among those releasedby the White House, sent by Nuland onSept. 14 at 7:39 p.m. to officials in the WhiteHouse, State Department and CIA. “Ihave serious concerns about all the partshighlighted below, and arming membersof Congress to start making assertions tothe media that we ourselves are not mak-ing because we don’t want to prejudice theinvestigation,” she wrote.

Email shows Petraeuswanted more disclosureBy Nedra PicklerThe Associated Press

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Page 6: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-6 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, [email protected] Design and headlines: Kristina Dunham, [email protected] BREAKING NEWS AT www.sAntAfenewmexicAn.com

LOCAL NEWS

A longtime department head with the city of SantaFe would become its next city manager if the CityCouncil gives its approval later this month.

Mayor David Coss said Wednesday he believesBrian Snyder, director of the city’s Public Utili-ties Department, is the best choice to replace CityManager Robert Romero, who will retire from the$128,500-a-year post at the end of the month.

Snyder, 38, a state-licensed professional engineer,has been a city employee since 2004, working his wayup from engineering supervisor in the Water Division.He became division director in 2009, then departmentdirector in 2010, with the responsibility to oversee theWater, Wastewater and Environmental Services divi-sions. Before moving to Santa Fe, Snyder worked inthe private sector and for governments in Virginia andPennsylvania.

“He has managed a pretty large workforce. Heis familiar with the union rules and City Hall, withprocurement and in management,” Coss said in a tele-phone interview Wednesday. “I just think he’s a goodguy to step in right now.”

Romero was the third city manager appointed byCoss. His first city manager, Asenath Kepler, is anattorney who was on the job for about seven monthsbefore the City Council voted to terminate her con-tract. Coss had asked her to resign and she refused,later challenging Coss for election as mayor. Nextcame Galen Buller, also a former Public UtilitiesDepartment director, who filled the role for about fouryears. Romero, who had been director of the PublicWorks Department, was named city manager in 2010.

Santa Fe’s city manager is charged with day-t0-dayadministrative control over city operations, includinghiring, firing and oversight of about 1,500 employees.The city charter stipulates that the mayor appointsa city manager with the consent of the council. Thenext City Council meeting is May 29.

Coss already has announced he won’t seek a thirdfour-year term as mayor. That means whoever iselected in March of 2014 will be able to re-evaluatethe manager choice. Four city councilors and a fewother area residents have hinted they are consideringcampaigning for the mayor’s post.

Councilor Patti Bushee is the only person to makea formal declaration of a campaign. Councilor BillDimas said Wednesday morning on a radio talk show,however, that he will enter the race.

“In a way, I’ve made the decision. I’m going to run,”Dimas, a retired magistrate judge, said on the JuliaGoldberg Morning Show on KVSF-FM 101.5. “I’m justnot going to officially announce at this point.”

Santa Fe’s official election calendar begins Sept. 3,when the city clerk will release documents so candi-dates may begin collecting signatures on nominatingpetitions. Candidates for mayor must collect about250 signatures of registered voters (.5 percent of theregistered voters in the city). Voters are only permittedto sign one nominating position for each ballot position.Those petitions are due back to the clerk in November.Those who qualify for the ballot formally declare candi-dacy in December. Early voting begins Jan. 28.

Contact Julie Ann Grimm at 986-3017or [email protected] her on Twitter @julieanngrimm.

A Santa Fe real estate developerwho is negotiating with Santa FePublic Schools to purchase the vacantManderfield School on Canyon Roadwould like to turn the site into aresidential/commercial center withcondos, rental apartments, a coffee

house and several artists’ studios.Neighbors learned of the plan dur-

ing an early neighborhood notificationmeeting Wednesday evening. JenkinsGavin Design and DevelopmentInc. gave the presentation to about25 attendees. Though no one voicedoutright opposition to the plan andseveral offered support, many neigh-bors raised concerns about increasedtraffic and infringement on privacy.

The school board approved the saleof the roughly 12,000-square-foot siteto Clare and Michael Maraist for about$960,000 earlier this year. Clare Mara-ist said during Wednesday’s meeting

that the sale will only become finalif she can clear the usual hurdles indeveloping the site. “I’m not going tobuy it if I can’t do something with it,”she said.

The plan includes 10 residentialunits — four of which are one-storycondos — a roughly 1,000 square-footcoffee shop, and six to eight art studios,each measuring somewhere between400 and 500 square feet. Artists mayconceivably hold art openings and sellart out of these studios.

The project calls for a total of35 parking spaces — 17 for commercialuse and 18 for the residents.

“I like the project,” one neighbor toldthe assembly. “We need to do somethingwith that building. It’s been a blight forsome time.” Still, he raised concernsabout increased traffic in the area.

Other neighbors asked about trashpick-up plans, the height of the pro-posed condos and whether the devel-opers would ensure that drainage doesnot run onto adjoining properties.

The deal still needs to be approvedby the city Planning Commission, theCity Council and the Historic DistrictsReview Board. If all goes well, theMaraists could have contractors break-ing ground by the fall of 2014, with con-

struction then taking about 18 months.Clare Maraist said that every time she

drove by the empty school at 1150 Can-yon Road, she envisioned its potential asa gathering spot for neighbors. “I wantto make everyone happy. Something hasto be done with the building,” she said.

The school, named after formerschool board member Eugenia Man-derfield, was built in the 1920s. The dis-trict shut it down in the 1970s thoughother entities utilized the building intothe mid-90s.

Call Robert Nott at 986-3021or [email protected].

The story about the giant explodingpumpkin didn’t make it into DownMemory Lane, the show that studentsat Carlos Gilbert Elementary School

are presenting this week for parents, teach-ers and other kids. Nor did the tale of the petsnake who got away in the school one dayand whose skeletal remains were discoveredby electricians many years later.

But for the most part, the school pageant— orchestrated by former Carlos Gilbertteacher Dolores Pong and retiring teacherMartha Armijo and featuring Armijo’s first-grade kids — covered the important parts ofthe school’s 71-year-history. The play debutedWednesday afternoon and the students willperform it again at 6 p.m. Thursday at anevent in the gym commemorating the retire-ment of three staffers, including Armijo.

“I don’t feel sad,” Armijo said after theWednesday show. “I feel good about the deci-sion I made. I’ve taught about 900 first-gradestudents over the years. I’ve already taughtkids of kids. I feel good about what I’ve done.It’s time to do something else.”

But she went out in theatrical style, work-ing with Pong — who retired last year after37 years at the school — to put together aplay honoring the school’s history. As thefirst-grade pageant made clear, Carlos GilbertSchool is located on land once owned by theDenver and Rio Grande Western Railroad,which ran its Chile Line down from Coloradoto the old Santa Fe Depot off GuadalupeStreet. The school district paid $3,600 for theproperty and built the school for less than$50,000 in the early 1940s; it opened in 1942.

Carlos Gilbert was a life-insurance salesmanwho served on the school board — as one songin the show confirmed. The school’s first prin-cipal, Lida B. White, supervised 13 teachers ina school that only had three telephones in theentire building and a cafeteria in the basement.In the late 1940s, the school’s fourth-grade hadalmost 50 kids in it, and the teacher who han-dled that crowd earned about $82 a month.

Armijo said she decided to retire in April,and that’s when she and Pong started puttingtogether the show. She recalled opening andhelping to operate the former Cosmic Cafe in

the downstairs hallway, where first-gradersput together the menu (including ice creamsundaes) and waited on guests. That part ofthe school’s history was included in the play.

Armijo grew up in Santa Fe and attendedthe Loretto Academy and later St. Michael’sHigh School. She still fondly recalls her men-tor teacher, Mary Lou Stark, and said of herfirst day of teaching, “I was scared. I probablydon’t remember the rest of it.”

She, Pong and Robert Stark (who has beenat the school about 30 years and runs theAstronaut Club, which is referenced in theplay) were once the young trio of the school,Armijo recalled. The school long has had thereputation of keeping teachers for long peri-ods of time, and it wasn’t until about 10 yearsafter she started that Armijo, Pong and Starksuddenly became the veteran teachers aftermost of the old-timers retired one summer.

Armijo’s last first-grade class is full ofexceptional students, she said. Many of thempraised her ability to teach them math. Butwhen it came to guessing ages, the kids werea little flummoxed. One said Armijo is 37,another 27, and a third confidentially saidthat, because she has taught at the school for38 years, she must be 41.

Armijo declined to correct their math.

Student Olivia McFaul said Armijo is“smart and very friendly and she talks nicebut sometimes we’re not nice back to her …and we have to be nice.”

Maria Gauna, whose son, Michael, playedthe energetic black hawk mascot in the schoolplay, said Armijo “finds something in all of herkids to make them love learning.” MarieleeRasor, whose twins, Christian and Aidan, arein Armijo’s class, said, “Our family benefitedfrom [Armijo’s] years of experience. She’s hadtwins in her class before and she understandsthe dynamics of that relationship, what to doand how to handle the sense of competition.”

Armijo, who is married — her husband’sname is Michael — said she will finish clean-ing out her room next week after the last dayof school on Tuesday, May 21. And then?

“Oh, I don’t know,” she said. “I like buildingdollhouses and making miniatures. I want totake some time off for myself now.”

The best thing about Carlos Gilbert, shesaid, is its small size, which leads to collegial-ity. “I’ve made a lot of friends here,” she said.“And colleagues. And, of course, there’s beena lot of good kids.”

Contact Robert Nott at 986-3021or [email protected].

Coss selectsUtilities headto succeedcity manager

Developer pitches Manderfield School plans to neighbors

A theatrical farewell

By Julie Ann GrimmThe New Mexican

By Robert NottThe New Mexican

By Robert NottThe New Mexican

Martha Armijo is retiring after 38 years as a first-grade teacher at Carlos Gilbert Elementary. PHOTOS BY JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

From left, 7-year-olds Katherine Sena, who played the first principal, Lida B. White,and Lucas Gabaldon, who portrayed Carlos Gilbert, return a chair to their classroomafter performing in Down Memory Lane, a play about Carlos Gilbert Elementary Schoolthat was co-written and co-directed by Armijo, their first-grade teacher.

Carlos Gilbert Elementaryteacher concludes careerwith play about school

Canyon Road site couldbecome home to coffeeshop, condos, art studios

Choice pending OK from councilors

New tenant for ‘oldest house’Bell Tower Properties, a residential realty firm, has

leased the downtown Santa Fe adobe-and-rock build-ing known as the “oldest house.”

Doug Roberts of Phase One Realty confirmedWednesday that the firm, previously based onCamino La Tierra, is moving into the 2,066-square-foot structure on De Vargas Street. Craig Huitfeldtincorporated Bell Tower Properties in 2010.

“They’ll have a real estate office in one part of it,”Roberts said. “They’ll be open seven days a week andhave the museum open with brochures and will beable to answer basic questions.”

The museum was closed in mid-March, when its paidcurator, who ran a gift shop in the building, resigned soshe could take care of her ailing mother.

St. Michael’s High School owns the building at215 E. De Vargas St., along with nearby San MiguelChapel, known as the oldest church. The “oldest house”roof beams have been carbon-dated to between 1646and 1714, but it is said to be built on the foundation of aNative American dwelling that dates to the 1200s.

The New Mexican

Page 7: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-7THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

Timeline uncertain as city works on track liability issues

Santa Fe’s only sanctionedmotocross track could remainclosed for the most of the sum-mer.The gate to the 55-acre Buck-

man Track in the publiclyowned La Tierra Trails networkwest of N.M. 599 has beenlocked since last fall because ofconcerns about liability insur-ance, and city officials saidWednesday that there’s no solidplan in place to open it soon.“I hesitate to put a time on

it,” said Ike Pino, director of thecity’s PublicWorks Department,“but it’s going to be closed for awhile longer.”The track was carved out by

users over the past four decadesor so and was largely developedby volunteers who used shov-els and rakes to create bumps,jumps and ramps for motorcycleand ATV riders.The spot became so popular

that the city plannedmajoraccess improvements as partof its master plan for parks. InOctober, a “grand opening” cel-

ebrationmarked the completionof more than $450,000 in cityspending on a road, parking lotand perimeter fence. But by Jan-uary, the Parks Division put upsigns stating that the track wasclosed for winter. Amonth later,city RiskManagement DirectorBarbara Boltrek said the tracklacked appropriate liabilityinsurance and recommendedthat it remain off limits untilinsurance could be secured.After adjusters fromTravelers

Insurance—which carries thecity’s liability policies— vis-ited the park this spring, theytold city officials the companycouldn’t insure the track unlessa certified engineer reviewedits features andmade changesto make it safer, Pino said. Thecompany suggested that the citycontract with a nonprofit to takeout an insurance policy.Pino and other city staff met

this week with organizers of agroup called “I Ride NewMex-ico,” founded by Daniel Coriz,who had hoped to make a dealto operate the track on behalfof the city and secure privateinsurance. Delays with federal

approval of the group’s pend-ing nonprofit status mean thecity is now looking for anothernonprofit to take on the respon-sibility.The city will pursue a dual

strategy recommended by Trav-elers. Under that plan, a requestfor proposals will seek a groupto secure private insurance andoperate andmaintain the track,and the city will hire an inde-pendent engineer with expertisein motocross safety to figure outa way to make the track insur-able under the standards of thecity’s carrier.It’s not clear why officials

didn’t plan to secure additionalinsurance coveragewhen theyspent nearly a half-million dollarson construction adjacent to thetrack. Pino said part of the prob-lem appears to be that the trackhad been built by hand until justa fewweeks before the grandopening.When the city sentbig, earth-moving equipment tothe site for aweekend to assistwithmaintenance, volunteersand PublicWorksDepartmentemployees decided tomakesome of the features steeper.

“In hindsight, if we weresavvy enough to notice at thatpoint that the track had beenmodified to the point of beinguninsurable, we would havebeen better off,” Pino said. “Ithink it’s legitimate to questionthat.”Boltrek said she first became

aware of potential liability issuesat the track in November whenshe was contacted by ParksDivision Director Ben Gurule,who raised concerns aboutwhether the city should clear icefrom the track.

Motocross riders in the regionhave few choices for legal, safeplaces to pursue their passion.Some have even cut a fence toaccess the Santa Fe track with-out permission.For people like Jesse Bransford,

not riding isn’t an option. ButBransford, a Santa Fe police offi-cer, said hewon’t sneak around.Instead, he hauls his newmotor-cycle toMoriarty, Arroyo Seco,Albuquerque or evenColoradoabout once aweek. OnWednes-day, he traveled to federal landnear Española.

“I’ve got to get out of Santa Fejust to get my riding in,” he said.“I’ve been riding at that sametrack since the late ’80s when Iwas a kid. They fixed it up andput all kinds of money into itand then closed it. It’s reallyfrustrating.”Bransford said he didn’t think

the work this fall made the trackmore dangerous.“Theymade some of the

jumps a little bit bigger, but theywere in better shape becausethey actually fixed them. Theyget rutted from the tires andfrom the weather. The rain espe-cially erodes the track. So whenthey fixed it up, it was, in myopinion, a lot safer because theywere smoother.”He said the city’s insurance

concerns are a bit of an over-reaction. Lots of riders get hurt,and they do the activity know-ing theymight be injured, and“the last thing they would havethought of is suing the propertyowner.”

Contact Julie Ann Grimmat 986-3017 or [email protected].

In briefEatery robbed ofwine, sake, cashSanta Fe police are investigat-

ing the theft of 24 bottles of wineand sake from aCerrillos Roadrestaurant.Owners of Dara Thai Res-

taurant, 1710 Cerrillos Road,reported that sometime between9:45 p.m.Monday and 9 a.m.Tuesday, the restaurant was bro-ken into through a locked anddead-bolted back door.Twenty-four bottles of wine

and sake, valued at about $450,alongwith about $500 in cashwas reported stolen, according toa Santa Fe police report.Officers were unable to find

any fingerprints, shoe prints oreven vehicle tracks inside oroutside the restaurant, the reportstates.

LANL cleanupfunds restoredFederal funds needed to con-

tinue cleaning up transuranicwaste at Los AlamosNationalLaboratorywere approvedWednesday by a congressionalcommittee.TheHouse Committee on

Appropriations approved a“reprogramming” request totransfer funds from other pro-grams to cover the $19millionshortfall facing theDepartmentof Energy in the 2013 budgetyear forwaste cleanup at the lab,according to theNewMexicocongressional delegation. Theshift is intended to ensure the labcanmeet its promise to removethousands of barrels of radioac-tivewaste by 2014.The funds had been reduced

by sequestration, the automaticfederal spending cuts that tookeffect this spring.The lab ismoving 3,706 cubic

meters of radioactivewastestored in above-ground contain-ers to theWaste Isolation PilotProject in Carlsbad. Efforts tomove thewaste stepped up afterthe Las Conchas Fire came closeto the storage facility, sparkingpublic concern over the risks.More than 60 percent of thewaste has beenmoved and thecleanup effort is ahead of sched-ule, according to the lab. Still, theremainingwaste is still vulner-able towildfires.The appropriations committee

was the last of four congressionalcommittees that had to approveshiftingmoney around fromother programs to come upwiththe funds for the LANL cleanupprogram.

County supportssolar programThe Santa Fe County Commis-

sion voted unanimously Tuesdayto approve a resolution in sup-port of the future developmentof a community-owned solarenergy project that would allowpeoplewho can’t install theirown solar panels to purchasesolar energy shares or subscrip-tions fromproject.Residents who investedwould

receive a credit on their elec-tric bills, whichwould offset oreliminate their electric costs. Theresolution directs county staff toworkwith interested residents,the city of Santa Fe, the Public

Regulation Commission and thePublic Service Company ofNewMexico to pursue a plan for sucha project in Santa Fe County.

Liquor licensetransfer gets OKThe Santa Fe County Com-

mission on Tuesday approveda transfer of a liquor licensefrom a Shell station at 7510 Air-port Road to a new location at2200 S. Meadows Road. Thelicense will still be owned byBrewer Oil Co., which plans touse the license in new gas sta-tion and convenience store itplans to open.

Railyard cinemameeting plannedOfficials with Violet Crown

Cinema and the Santa FeRailyardCommunity Corporationwillhold an early neighborhood noti-ficationmeeting at 6 p.m. Thurs-day,May 16, atWarehouse 21.Cinema developer Bill

Banowski will present his com-pany’s plans for the projectand answer questions fromthe community, according toan announcement from thenonprofit that manages thecity-owned property. The boardof directors last month votedto begin negotiations with theAustin-based cinema to lease aparcel in the Railyard for a simi-lar theater, rejecting proposalsfromMaya Cinemas and twoother theater chains.The cinema is planned as a

30,000 square-foot, 11-screen,600-seat facility with anattached 4,500 square-foot res-taurant and bar located betweenFlying Star and Santa Fe Clay.

Learn aboutcomposting tricksThe public is invited to learn

about backyard composting at9:30 a.m. Saturday,May 18, atLa Tienda in Eldorado.The one-dayworkshopwill

be taught by SamMcCarthy,manager of Payne’s Organic SoilYard, alongwithmaster com-poster Deb Farson and studentsfrom Santa Fe’s Tierra EncantadaCharter School.Composting diverts foodwaste

from landfills and helps buildhealthy, productive soil.A complete straw bale com-

posting systemwill be awardedto one participant at the end oftheworkshop.Theworkshop is part of the

GreenCafé series organizedby a local group that promotessustainable living practices.Eldorado/285 Recycles seeks toexpand and improve recycling,composting and reuse ofmateri-als and household items.

College awardsart scholarshipsThe Santa FeUniversity of

Art andDesign announced the12 recipients of its newRobertRedford/Milagro InitiativeScholarships for emerging artists.The students receive either

$7,000 or $15,000 per year inscholarship funds, depending onthe arts program inwhich theyare enrolled.Of the 12 students, five are

fromNewMexico: Cecily Smithof Cochiti Pueblo, for photogra-phy; Korie Tatum of Rio Rancho,photography; Carrie House of

Gallup, film; SeanHennington ofRoswell, film; and Jesse Garcia ofRio Rancho, studio art.In addition, the school

awarded two full-rideUniqueVoice scholarships to AlejandraCastro ofMexico and PriscillaTorres of El Salvador, to coverfull tuition, room and board, andbase fees. Those scholarshipsare aimed at full-time studentswho plan to earn a bachelor’s

degree in film andwho representvoices of indigenous people fromaround theworld.

Bus shelters getupdated designBus shelters across the city

will get new features this springand summer. Revamped bus-shelter prototypes were installed

in October 2012 at three down-town locations, and the newdesigns soon will be installed at40 bus stops for Santa Fe Trails.The shelters and street fur-

niture, such as benches, werepurchasedwith federal stimulusmoney, said TransportationDepartment Director JonBulthuis, who noted the ameni-ties will “provide a better publictransportation experience for

Santa Fe.”Autotroph Inc., a local com-

pany, designed the new line ofbus shelters and furniture, whichfeatures ventilation, wind block-age, seating and lighting on somemodels. The shelters are fash-ioned after traditional punchedtinwork and basketry of theregion.

The New Mexican

LOCAL & REGION

By Julie Ann GrimmThe New Mexican

The gate to the motocross track, first chained last October,could stay closed through the summer as the city tries toresolve insurance and liability issues. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

IT Professionals:ITD is recruiting all

IT disciplines!• Programmers/Developers

(Mainframe COBOL, MS Studio, C#, and Java)

• Network and Infrastructure Techniciansand Desktop Support

• DBAs (mainframe DB2, Oracle and MS SQL)

• Chief Security Officer, Project Managersand Business Analysts

The State of New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department is a High Tech/High Profile StateAgency. We are responsible for the collection of up to $8 Billon per annum in revenue. Allmajor systems are in the process of being upgraded. Upgrades include our tax systems andthe system that supports NM MVD. We are searching for full time employees and contractemployees to assist us in achieving these goals. All candidates with the right skill set arewelcome—let’s see if we can find a way to match our needs as we are hiring both contrac-tors and employees. TRD provides an Excellent Team environment with a 40 hour work weekand up to date technical environment. Full benefits package with pension plan, full healthinsurance, dental and vision benefits.

Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action EmployerYou can submit your resume directly to us, although you will have to ultimately applythrough the NM State Personnel Office website. All applicants will be hired through the statepersonnel classified system and candidates must follow the rules found on the SPO website:http://agency.governmentjobs.com/newmexico/default.cfm

Position Requirements• Most positions require a technical degree; experience may substitute for education in some

cases• Strong analytical and technical expertise preferred, strong written and oral communicationskills required for customer interaction.

• Strong people skills are required due to working in diverse team environments• Reliable, Self-starting, and Strong initiative preferred• Previous IT experience required for all positions

Current Openings by Functional area: Motor Vehicle: IT DBA 2 (3) Desktop Support: IT TechSupport Specialist 1 (2), IT Network Specialist 1 GenTax/E-file: IT Applications Dev 3 Infra-structure: IT Systems Manager II, IT Network Specialist 1 ONGARD: IT DBA 2, IT Generalist 1Data Warehouse: IT Applications Dev, IT Applications Dev 2

We are holding TWO Job Fairs to allow candidates to meet the management team at TRD ITD.SANTA FE JOB FAIR will be held on Thursday May 16, 2013 from 10:30-2:30 at the Joseph MontoyaBuilding; 1200 South St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM (SW corner of St. Francis and Cordova), thirdfloor—signs postedALBuQuERQuE JOB FAIR will be held on Friday May 17, 2013 from 11-3 in the Bank of the WestBuilding; 5301 Central Avenue, Albuquerque, NM (NE corner of San Mateo and Central), first floor—signs posted

Page 8: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

Sheinwold’s bridge

Jumble

Dear Annie: I have an 8-month-old puppy, and I take her to a localdog park so she can run off leashand play with the other dogs, whichshe loves. In the three months I havebeen taking her, “Phoebe” has neverbeen attacked or fought with anotherdog. That was until last night, whenPhoebe approached another dogthat was on a leash and that dogattacked her. My puppy whimperedand howled while being bitten on herneck and back. I tried to get her away,but the other dog was so vicious.

The owner of the other dog juststood there making no effort to pullhis dog away, nor did he apologize.I finally extracted Phoebe from theother dog’s mouth. As I was walk-ing away, the owner said he doesn’tknow why his dog doesn’t like otherdogs. I was too shaken to reply.Besides, I felt sorry for the viciousdog, wondering what could havehappened to make him like that.

Luckily, Phoebe was not severelyinjured. I did my best to soothe her,but it took several minutes to calmher down. Before I left the park, Iwarned other owners about the dogthat attacked mine.

Why would someone bring a dogthat hates other dogs to a dog park?There is a gentleman who arrangedfor the park to exist and is the“leader.” Should I tell him what hap-pened? I don’t want to get the parkshut down, which is why I didn’t callthe police. What do I do? — Phoebe’sHuman Mom

Dear Mom: If the park has a“leader,” then he is the person tonotify. This owner seems ignorantof dog behavior and may have beentrying to “socialize” his dog by bring-ing the animal to a pet-friendly park.But it sounds as if that dog needstraining. It would be a kindness forsomeone to point that out to him andmake a referral before an animal isseriously hurt.

Dear Annie: As an alcoholic inrecovery, it was interesting to me to

observe the self-righteousness in myfamily about my addiction as theywent through their heart surgeriesstemming from their addictions tochocolate cake, bacon and cherrypies. They are just as addicted tofood as I am to alcohol.

They say it’s “different,” but how isit more legitimate to grab a dough-nut when under stress than to pourmyself a cocktail? In spite of theirheart surgeries and the struggleof carrying 300 pounds on a bodydesigned for 150, they somehow seeslamming down a cherry cobbler asacceptable, but my having a beer is asin. Moderation in all aspects of ourlives might not be a bad idea. — NoHypocrite in Paducah, Ky.

Dear Paducah: Addictions,regardless of type, involve the inabil-ity to control one’s appetite, whetherit be for food, drugs, liquor, gambling,whatever. Unlike most other addic-tions, however, one cannot give upfood altogether. So while we agreethat there is hypocrisy, and of coursemoderation is best, there is in fact adifference between food, which isnecessary for life, and alcohol, whichis not. Imagine how much harder itwould be to control your addictionif you were told that you absolutelymust have three shots a day, but nota fourth. Or a beer. Or a replacementfrom the well-stocked pantry

Dear Annie: I agree with “RetiredTeacher” about high school guid-ance counselors. She is right on themoney.

Guidance counselors are not inschools to assist students with per-sonal problems. That isn’t even intheir job description. Their primaryfunction is to advise students aboutthe courses they need to graduate.After that, a multitude of assessmentresponsibilities fill their time. Whilemany may wish they could counselto the emotional well-being of theirstudents, they simply don’t have thetime. — K.

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dog owners usecaution at parks

Hocus FocusChess quiz

Today is Thursday, May 16, the 136th day of 2013. There are 229 days left in the year.

Today’s highlight in history: On May 16, 1943, the nearly month-long Warsaw GhettoUprising came to an end as German forces crushed the Jewish resistance and blew up theGreat Synagogue. An estimated 14,000 Jews were killed. The remaining Jews, more than40,000 of them, were deported to concentration camps.

Cryptoquip

Today in history

The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which oneletter stands for another. If you think that X equals O, itwill equal O throughout the puzzle. Single letters, shortwords and words using an apostrophe give you cluesto locating vowels. Solution is by trial and error.

© 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

WHITE FORCES MATE

Hint: Check, it may be mate.

Solution: 1. Rd7ch! Kg6

2. Rg7ch! Kh5 3. Qh8 mate.

[Topalov-Nakamura ’13].

TIME OUTCrossword

Super Quiz

Subject: CULINARY MATTERS

(e.g., Amandine denotes what

ingredient? Answer: Almonds.)

FRESHMAN LEVEL

1. Cock-a-leekie is a type of ____.

Answer________

2. What term indicates food

cooked in the style of Florence,

Italy?

Answer________

3. What is nougat?

Answer________

GRADUATE LEVEL

4. Baba refers to a small ____.

Answer________

5. Pasta known as fusilli is what

shape?

Answer________

6. Guacamole is a type of ____.

Answer________

PH.D. LEVEL

7. Term for the protein found in

wheat flours.

Answer________

8. What is the literal translation

of foie gras?

Answer________

9. What shape is pasta known as

farfalle?

Answer________

1.Soup.2.Florentine.3.Aconfection(candy).4.Cake.5.Spiral-shape(corkscrew).6.Dip(sauce).7.Gluten.8.Fat(goose)liver.9.Bowtie.

Take this Super Quiz to a Ph.D. Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Fresh-man Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

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 booksharder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — whoreads the questions to you?

(c) 2013 Ken Fisher

HAPPY BIRTHDAY forThursday, May 16, 2013:

This year you see life from a renewedperspective. At times there could be somenegativity around you, but you will do yourbest to find a more positive path or moresuitable alternatives. Leo serves as ananchor for you.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)HHHHH

Don’t worry if you wake up grumpy,because your mood will change quickly.Whether someone brought you dough-nuts or a different type of treat, you havereason to smile. Tonight: Continue beingspontaneous.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)HHH

You are anchored, and you know whatyou want. Someone might try to nudgeyou off that position, as it could come offas stubbornness. Tonight: Head home.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)HHHH

Keep a conversation moving, and don’tallow negativity to flow in. If you feel tiredor drained, consider a checkup with thedoctor. Tonight: Go with the moment.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)HHH

Put 100 percent into whatever you do.You see what others don’t. They appreci-ate your insights, depending on how theyare delivered. A little diplomacy goes along way. Tonight: Run errands.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)HHHHH

A conversation is important, but don’tmake it a bigger deal than need be. In fact,a touch of lightness and concern will pro-duce better, more positive results. Tonight:All smiles.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)HHH

A conversation could be affecting yourmood, and therefore your plans. Couldyou be making more of a comment thanwhat was meant? Talk to an older friend orloved one. Tonight: Do for you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)HHHHH

Your ability to get past an immediateissue will help you to function on a higherlevel once again. You could hear someunexpected, good news from a close lovedone. Tonight: Where the crowds are.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)HHHHH

You might be limiting yourself with self-imposed restrictions. Take today and livein the moment by listening to what oth-ers are really thinking, feeling or saying.Tonight: Could be late.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)HHHH

Get past a momentary sense of inse-curity. You might discover that a brightnew perspective will greet you as a result.Tonight: Why stop?

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)HHHH

Work with an individual directly. Thoughyour friends might mean well, they don’talways have the best sense of direction.Tonight: Chat over dinner.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)HHHH

Others seek you out. Enjoy all of theactivity, and know that you are valued.Touch base with a child or loved one.Tonight: Hang out with a good friend.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)HHHH

You want to turn a situation around,but you’ll need to work within establishedboundaries. Use caution with any invest-ments. Tonight: At a favorite place.

HoroscopeThestarsshowthekindofdayyou’llhave:5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average;2-So-so; 1-Difficult

Jacqueline Bigar

A-8 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Page 9: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

In briefDog bowl auctionhelps homelessA silent auction of dog bowls

made by local artists and aphotography exhibit highlighta May fundraiser for the StreetHomeless Animal Project.Pets on the Patio, set for noon

to 3 p.m. Saturday at the CounterCulture Café, 930 Baca St., fea-tures a photography exhibit byTony Stromberg and the silentauction of handmade dog bowls.Treats for pets and their humanguardians also will be available.The Street Homeless Animal

Project, founded and led byKaren Cain, provides pet food,veterinary care and spay/neuterservices for the animal com-panions of homeless people inthe area. Cain, the winner of aprestigious Milagro Award fromAnimal Protection NewMexico,founded SHAP in 2010 afterworking for years in the home-less community as a licensedcounselor and homeless advo-cate.For more information about

the event or the project, pleasecall 501-4933.

Nonprofit PAWShits 20 yearsAn area animal rescue group

will celebrate 20 years of savinglives with a fundraising event inJune at the MuseumHill Café inSanta Fe.The all-volunteer People for

AnimalWelfare Society, a non-profit dedicated to the preven-tion of cruelty to animals, thepromotion of humane animalcare and curbing animal over-population through low-costspaying and neutering, will hosta dinner at 5 p.m. June 1 at thecafé, 710 Camino Lejo. The eventfeatures a cash bar and gourmetbuffet for both vegetarians andnonvegetarians. Tickets are $100.PAWS operates an emergency

food bank for pets, promotesthe understanding of the inter-dependence of people, animalsand the environment, and worksto save animal lives throughadoptions, rescue and spayingand neutering. President of thenonprofit is Jane Carson; otherboard members include KarenKleeman, Claire Leonard, TomAlexander and Jeanne Pschorr.In addition to the group’s

outreach work, PAWS annuallysponsors NewMexico’sWeekfor the Animals, a September

event that alternately focuses onadoptions, humane educationand spaying and neutering.For more information or

tickets for the June 1 fundraiser,please call 466-1525 or [email protected].

Shelter plansfree spay clinicThanks to ongoing support

for free spaying and neuteringin the community, the Santa Feanimal shelter will host anotherfree clinic for dozens of dogs atits south-side clinic May 23.The first-come, first-serve

event at the shelter’s Spay/Neu-ter &Wellness Clinic,2570 Camino Entrada, offersfree altering to the first 50 dogs.A generous donor, who helpswith free spaying/neuteringthroughout the region, is under-writing the event.

Check-in is at 7 a.m. Arriveearly to secure a surgery slot.Dogs must be between8 weeks and 5 years of age andweigh more than 2 pounds. Ani-mals shouldn’t have food after10 p.m. the night before surgery.For more information about

the event, call the clinic at474-6422 or visit the Shelter’swebsite at www.sfhumanesociety.org.

Raffle benefitshomeless petsA Santa Fe bakery that spe-

cializes in quality treats for petsis sponsoring a raffle to supportthe Santa Fe animal shelter.Pooch Pantry Bakery & Bou-

tique, 301 N. Guadalupe St., israffling off an iPad2 to supportthe shelter. Tickets are $10 eachand only 100 tickets will besold, said Pooch Pantry owner

DaphneWright. The drawingwill be held May 31.The on-sight bakery features

fresh, all natural, homemadetreats made from the best ingre-dients. The store also carriesa full line of raw foods, high-quality dog and cat foods andboutique items for pamperedpets.Wright said she hopes the

raffle is popular so the bakerycan sponsor similar raffles. Formore information, call the storeat 820-1130.

Dog classes focuson behaviorSeveral workshops that focus

on dog training will be offeredby CHACO’s Hub in Tesuque.A six-week puppy socializa-

tion class will be offered Satur-days fromMay 18 throughJune 22; a class on playing(hunting) games, designed tophysically and mentally exercisedogs as a way of reinforcingpositive behavior will be heldon Tuesdays through June 11;and a teamwalking class, athree-day workshop on teach-ing dogs to walk on a leash, willbe held on three consecutiveThursdays: May 23, May 30 andJune 6.Space is limited for classes

and workshops. For times, costsand more information, pleasevisit www.chcodognewsevents.com. CHACO is lead byAlmudena Ortiz Cue, a certifiedpet dog trainer who is also acertified TellingtonTouch prac-titioner.

Sterilized petslive longerA new survey based on data

compiled frommillions of dogsand cats shows sterilized petstend to live longer.Neutered cats lived on aver-

age 62 percent longer thanunneutered males, while spayedcats lived 39 percent longer thanunsprayed females, according tothe Banfield Pet Hospital’s 2013State of Pet Health Report. Neu-tered male dogs lived 18 percentlonger, while spayed dogs live23 percent longer.The annual survey was

based on data compiled fromvisits by 2.2 million dogs and460,000 cats to Banfield hospi-tals in 2012. The survey resultswere published recently in Vet-erinary Practice News.To see the full report, visit

stateofpethealth.com.

The New Mexican

A-9THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

SCOOP Visit www.santafescoop.comfor more about animals, events,photos and the Off-leash blog.

In my other life, I’m a volun-teer firefighter. As mymomsays, “Why don’t you quit

volunteering and get a real job?”In response, I usually just

shrug my shoulders and hopefor the pager to go off.But, to the point of this col-

umn: Firefightersand animals are con-stantly interacting.We’ve respondedto calls with horses,cows, goats, one rat-tlesnake (I still refuseto talk about that one)and dogs.We deal with dogs

on almost everyhome emergency call.Not to brag, but ErikLitzenberg, ex-Hondofirefighter and nowSanta Fe Fire Department chief,performed CPR on a dog andsaved his life.No one who is a part of

Hondo Volunteer Fire andRescue has been hurt by a dog.Watch— tonight, we’ll have acall and someone will be bitten.The only time I was even

slightly nervous about dogs wasat a house during a diabetic call.I was standing outside. Thisfamily had two Rottweilers,both at least 130 pounds. Thedogs trotted around from theback of the house, sat on eitherside of me and simultaneouslyleaned into me. I definitely gotthe sense that the message theywere sending was, “We’re coolif you’re cool … ”I laughed nervously, gulped,

and tried to stay focused. Butthose Rottweilers were so coolthey should have worn sun-

glasses and visors.But there is one dog that is so

terrifying that even macho fire-fighters only speak its name inwhispers and only late at night.You guessed it: We are talking

about that most scary of ani-mals, the angry Chihuahua!

My encounteroccurred one after-noon in April. Ourpagers toned, “Hondo.Single car rollover.Entrapped driver.”I drove to the scene.

I could see a small carsmashed up againstthe guardrail.Our captain, Adam,

waved me over. “Onepatient, the driver.Restrained. He seemsfine. He said he blew

a tire. But the car is crushedand he’s trapped. Can you takeoperations?”I nodded and walked over to

the car. Operations is middlemanagement. Adamwas theincident commander. He wasresponsible for the large strate-gic issues. For example, shouldwe invade Iran? Should we sup-port climate-change legislation?My job was saying useful

middle management things like,“How long is this going to take?”“Put your shields down.” “Couldyou hurry already?”With our big hydraulic

spreader, the crew popped openthe door and pushed it out ofthe way.Mike reached in to cut the

seat belt. Then, “Damn!” heexclaimed, jerking back.He stood up holding the Chi-

huahua. The dog had been hid-

ing under the seat.Everyone began to back away.Mike looked at me.I immediately yelled, “Don’t

give it to me!”But what else is middle man-

agement for?Without missing a beat, Mike,

with arms extended, gave methe 10 pounds of rage.All activity stopped as every-

one watched mini-Cujo and Iwrestle. I had the advantage ofbeing in full bunker gear. Cujowas extremely motivated to findand rip my throat out. I heldhim at arms length, while hestrained to get his teeth into me.I staggered back.The driver, still sitting in the

drivers seat yelled, “Don’t hurthim! Please!”Not a word about my safety.

Not a suggestion on how tocalm the dog down.“Hey, I need help here,” I

yelled.But my so-called friends were

laughing so hard they were ontheir knees.I was on my own.“Put him in your truck,”

Mike finally yelled, “until we’redone.”“Great,” I said. “Where’s your

car?Whymy truck?”But I was out of options.I slowly backed up, holding

the dog as far away fromme aspossible. I finally turned andtossed him— gently— into theback of my Suburban. I quicklyslammed the door and immedi-ately regretted the idea.It was Chihuahuan carnage!

The dog went insane, racingback and forth in the car bitingthe seats, grabbing my iPhone,

shaking and chewing it, rippingup gloves and attempting todestroy anything that had myscent on it.I glared at the extrication

team. They, still laughing, wentback to work.The driver then helpfully

spoke up. “I’ll call my girlfriend.She can come and get Angel.”“Angel,” I thought. “The dog’s

name is Angel?”After the extrication I still

had the problem of getting backin my Suburban. There was noway “Angel” was going to allowthat. Every time I approached,she tried to get at my face.Finally, I feinted toward theback and then jumped into thedriver’s seat. Defeated— tem-porarily — she retreated to therear and continued to growl atme and stare with those bulgingChihuahua eyes.Carefully keeping an eye on

my rearviewmirror, I droveback to our station in full bun-ker gear with my helmet on andface-shield down to be met bythe girlfriend. She immediatelyran up to the car and openedthe door. Angel jumped hap-pily into her arms, sweet as canbe. But as the girlfriend turnedaway, Angel turned and gave methat baleful Chihuahuan look,“Next time I’ll get you in yoursleep, Bro … ”

Hersch Wilson is a Santa Feauthor who longs to knowall things canine. His columnnormally appears every otherweek, but he’ll be taking abreak next time. Email him [email protected].

TracksPet connectionSanta Fe Animal Shelter &

Humane Society: Ace lovespeople almost as much as heloves tennis balls. This pitbull mix is a great big lump ofaffection searching for a lovingfamily. Sky is an easy-goinggal with some special needs.She is newly vision-impaired,but that doesn’t stop her fromfinding the warmest spotsaround to take a nap in. Theseand other animals are availablefor adoption from the shelterat 100 Caja del Rio Road. Theshelter’s adoption hours are11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Visitwww.sfhumanesociety.org orcall 983-4309, ext. 610.Española Valley Humane

Society: Fortune Cookiehas the dashing good looksof a chow and the exuber-ant, friendly personality ofa golden retriever. He loveseveryone and is just about thehappiest dog in the shelter.Sabra is a beautiful 4-year-oldbeauty queen. She is greatwith people and has lived withother cats. She also loves tocuddle.These and other animals

are available for adoption atthe shelter, 108 Hamm Park-way. The shelter is open from10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Mondaythrough Saturday and fromnoon to 4:45 p.m. Sunday. Call505-753-8662 or visit the web-site at www.espanolashelter.org.

Felines & Friends NewMexico: Littermates Danaand Smudge found a hometogether, but the owner hadto give the two up because ofallergies. Both kittens are play-ful and sweet. Dana is a beauti-ful girl with a short black-and-white coat, while Smudge isa handsome boy with a shortblack-and-white coat.Cats of all ages are available

for adoption from Felines &Friends and can be visited atPetco throughout the weekduring regular store hours.Adoption advisers are avail-able from 1 to 4 p.m. Thursday,Friday, Saturday and Sundayat Petco on Cerrillos Road.Become a Felines & Friendsvolunteer. Visit the website atwww.petfinder.com/shelters/NM38.html or call 316-CAT1.

Ace Sky

FortuneCookie

Dana

Sabra

Smudge

HerschWilson

Tales of Tails

Dogs are sometimes scarier than fire

ShAre your pet ShotGot a pet photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican?Email your pictures to bbarker@sfnew mexican.com. All sub-mitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi.Submissions will be printed once a week as space is available.No money will be paid for published photographs. Imagesmust be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Pleaseinclude a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves theright to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.

SOCIAL MEDIA SAVVYElizabeth Enenbach’s cat, Halfie, likes to get on the computerto review feline internet social media sites such as this one.PHOTO COURTESY JOE ENENBACH

The New Mexican

The Santa Fe animal shelteris urging the community tocome forward and adopt dogsinvolved in the alleged hoard-ing case in Edgewood— theso-called Edgewood 48.The 33 dogs released

Wednesday to the custody ofthe shelter are among the48 seized in April at an Edge-wood home. The ownerrelinquished her rights to themajority of the dogsMonday.She agreed to pay for theupkeep and care of 10 of thedogs until the court case isresolved. She faces charges ofanimal cruelty.“We knowmany of you have

asked when and if these dogswould be available for adop-tion,” said MaryMartin, theshelter’s executive director.“Many of these kiddos will beavailable within 48 hours, andwe urge anyone who has roomin their heart and home for adog that may need a little extraTLC to comemeet them.”Some of the dogs are pup-

pies and will require very littlefrom new families aside fromregular training and love. Oth-ers are timid at first, under-socialized or fearful and will

require patience and training.Santa Fe Tails Dog Academy

&Daycare will offer some ofthe dogs care and socializationto improve their adoptabilityand to help ease the shelter’sspace crunch.Emily Burlingame, the shel-

ter’s behavior and training teamleader, who hasworkedwith allof the dogs in the case, said thedogs are coming around con-sidering their circumstances.She said the vastmajority of theheelermixeswill make lovingfamily pets once they adjust totheir new lives.The dogswill be available

after their spay and neuter sur-geries. To encourage adoptions,the shelter will offer a specialadoption fee of $48 for the adultdogs involved in the case. Pup-pies 3months and younger areavailable at the regular adop-tion fee of $156. The 41 puppiesborn at the shelter from the sixpregnant dogs in the case arethe property of the shelter andwill be available once they areweaned, spayed and neutered.Formore information about

adoptions, call the shelter’sAdoptionDesk at 983-4309,ext. 610. Check the shelter’sFacebook page, facebook.com/sfhumanesociety, for photos.

Edgewood dogssoon availablefor adoption

Where small dogs havea wagging good time!

WagsDog Day Care

505.983.8671

by appointment 7 days a weekevenings & early mornings!

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505.983.2122

KLIPPERSStylings for Pets

1005 St. Francis Dr. #121 • Santa Fe, NM 87505 • [email protected]

Two Great Services, One Convenient Location!

Page 10: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

New Mexico needs tostrengthen its regulatory over-sight of a billion-dollar gamblingindustry that includes horse rac-ing tracks and casinos operatedby Indian tribes, legislative audi-tors recommended Wednesday.

A report by staff of theLegislative Finance Committeesaid the New Mexico RacingCommission and the stateGaming Control Board areunderstaffed and hampered by

limited regulatory powers.The Racing Commission reg-

ulates the five racetracks in thestate, all of which operate casi-nos. The Gaming Control Boardoversees the state’s gamblingcompacts with 14 tribes as wellas nontribal gambling at race-tracks and by nonprofit groupsand fraternal organizations.

Gambling generated revenueof about $1 billion last year, withthe state receiving $133 millionin taxes and a share of tribalcasino profits.

Sen. John Arthur Smith, a

Deming Democrat and LFC vicechairman, said the state neededbetter regulation to ensure theintegrity of gambling at tracks,casinos and by charitable orga-nizations.

The audit said the RacingCommission, despite a lawenacted this year, needs moremoney to increase the frequencyof testing of horses to detectillegal drug use. Lawmakersapproved a measure earlier thisyear to earmark about $700,000for drug testing of horses start-ing in 2015.

The report said racing regula-tors need to improve their audit-ing of pari-mutuel wagering, abetting-pool style of wageringused at horse races, to ensurethat tracks are paying the properamount of taxes. The LFC audi-tors also said the commission“struggles to address” unli-censed horse racing that illegallyoccurs in the state.

At a committee hearing onthe audit, Sheryl Edgar, an Albu-querque certified public accoun-tant who worked as a racetrackcontroller, said there were “gap-

ing holes in the audit process”by regulators of casino revenuethat supplements winnings paidat horse races.

“We need real internalcontrols and real audits forthe maintenance of integrityand safeguarding of all of thismoney,” Edgar told lawmakers.

Auditors recommended thatIndian gambling compacts beamended to give the Legislatureaccess to financial informationabout casinos to allow lawmak-ers to better oversee gamblingand the state’s regulation of it.

A-10 THE NEWMEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Legislative auditors fault N.M. gambling regulators

LENNON JAMES MCADAMS

Lennon James McAdams, 92, passedaway peacefully on Friday May10, 2013.Born in Greenfield, Tennessee on Novem-ber 4, 1920, Len was an energetic, posi-tive family man whose presence impactedall of those with whom he interacted ei-ther briefly or throughout his very produc-tive, long life.

Len, Mac, Dad or Grand Pa as he wasknown to his family and many friends,graduated from the University of Tennes-see and served briefly in the U.S. Navy at

the very end of World War II. Upon return from the service, Lenbegan a career with Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporationwhich lasted for over forty years and took him to assignmentsthroughout the US and to Australia and Africa. In 1943, Len mar-ried Annie Theresa Farrell in San Jose, California. After retiring in1982, Len and Terry lived in Alamo, California then Gig Harbor,Washington and travelled extensively prior to settling in Santa Fe,NM close to their daughter Nancy in 2005. They were married forsixty six years until Terry’s passing in 2009. Since that time, Lenhas made his home at Ponce de Leon. Len and Terry loved beingparishioners at the Cathedral Basilica St. Francis of Assisi.

Lennon James McAdams was preceded in death by his parents,Lennon Dean McAdams and Eleanor Deuberry McAdams of SanJose, California; two brothers, Jerry McAdams and Gene "Toby"McAdams, both of San Jose, California; his loving wife of sixty-sixyears, Annie Theresa Farrell McAdams. He is survived by onedaughter, Nancy Eleanor Mroz and her husband, Gene Mroz ofSanta Fe, New Mexico; and four sons: Lennon James McAdams IIand his spouse, Pamela Shaw McAdams of Seattle, Washington,Robert John McAdams and his spouse, Wanda Dawn McAdams ofLafayette, Louisiana, Thomas Dean McAdams and his spouse,Donna Granade McAdams of Mobile, Alabama and William JosephMcAdams and his spouse, Sandra Cruse McAdams of Kingsport,Tennessee; nine grandchildren, and ten great grandchildren.

A funeral mass will be held at The Cathedral Basilica of SaintFrancis of Assisi at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, May 15, 2013. A"Celebration of Len’s Life" will be held at Ponce de Leon on Thurs-day, May 16, 2013 at 10:00. Burial will take place at SantaClara Mission Cemetery in Santa Clara, California on Friday, May17, 2013.

The family wishes to extend their heartfelt thanks to Dr. LisaRobles and Amber Care Hospice, especially Dr. Karin Trohn andVirginia Gilstrap for their loving care of Len. The family will beeternally grateful to the caregivers from Ponce de Leon AssistedLiving for their compassionate care during Len’s final transition.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made tothe Cathedral Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi at www.cbsfa.org

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505

(505)984-8600Please sign our guestbook for the family at:

www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

LUIS E. GUZMANMAY 8, 2013

Age 62, a resident of Albuquerque since1995, previously of El Paso, TX wenthome to The Lord on Wednesday, May 8,2013.

He is survived by his wife and soulmate, Cathy; children, Miriam Granillo andhusband Anthony, Erin Guzman and fiancéChris, Sarah Sparacio and husband Ran-dy; grandchildren, Vincent Bonanno, Isa-bella and Randy Sparacio; siblings: AndyGuzman and wife Sandy, Liz "Mimi" Perez

and partner Ralph, Mike Guzman and wife Connie, GilbertGuzman and wife Annette, Teri Ronga and husband Nick; sister-in-law, Rachel Wessels and husband Brian; brother-in-law, Bill Ritchand wife Cindy; his beloved Memaw; as well as numerous nieces,nephews, cousins and his many friends. Luis was preceded indeath by his loving parents, Luis B. and Paz C. Guzman.

He was a member of Hoffmantown Church for many years. Luisworked for Garcia Automotive Group for the past 15 years and inthe automotive industry for 35+ years. He truly loved what he didfor a living and all the special people he worked with over theyears. He was an avid Green Bay Packer fan and the best fajitamaker there ever was!

A Memorial Service will be held Saturday, May 18, 2013, 2 p.m.,at FRENCH - Wyoming with a reception celebrating his life to fol-low. The family would like to extend a special thank you to Dr. An-nette Fontaine for her compassion and wonderful care as well asthe Presbyterian Hospice team. Words cannot express our heart-felt gratefulness to the Garcia family and all those at Garcia Auto-motive Group as well as BreatheAmerica and its employees fortheir generous and loving support during this difficult time.Please visit our online guestbook for Luis atwww.FrenchFunerals.com

FRENCH - Wyoming7121 Wyoming Blvd. NE

(505) 823-9400

ESEQUIEL LOPEZ

A lifelong resident of Pecos, NM passedaway on May 13, 2013, after a short ill-ness. He was born on April 19, 1916 toEmiliano Lopez and Cesarita Solano.

He was preceded in death by his be-loved wife of 69 years, Terecina whopassed away in September of 2007,whom he missed very much; specialgranddaughter, Karen J. Garcia; parentsEmiliano Lopez, Cesarita Solano andstep-mother, Julianita Lopez; two broth-ers, Jose and Donaciano Lopez; and a sis-

ter, Lucy Branch.He is survived by his family that always felt the wonderful love

of their father. Daughter: AnnaBelle Rivera (Oliver), Nambe; theirfamily- Mark and sons Leondro (Stephanie) their children, Aubrey,Trevor and Julia, and Marcos all from La Mesilla.; MichelleMeldrum (Mitch) and sons Ari and Skyler, AZ; Melvin and daugh-ters Rachel and Andrea, Nambe; Melissa and son Joseph,Nambe; Daughter: Olivia Kesler (Clark), Rio Rancho; their family -Perry and daughter Kaitlin, ABQ; Mike (Margaret) and familyDonyelle, Sarah and Adam, Silver City; Darrell (Jill), SD; Shawn(Amy) and daughters, Abby, Brianna and Jessica, WI; CherylScheibeler (TJ) and sons, Rory, Quinn and Kale, CO; Son: Kelly(Vivian) ABQ; their family- Karla Simoes (Casey), son and daugh-ter, Troy and Hallie, ABQ; Kathleen Sandoval (Geoff) and sonsAndres and Lorenzo, ABQ; Kristine LopezReid (Jason) and daugh-ter Addyson Karen, ABQ; Son: Leon (Soledad), Santa Fe - theirson Leon Keith, his daughter Talia Makai, ABQ; his sister SaraSanchez (Lee), Santa Fe; brothers, Julian (Frances), Santa Fe andGilbert Lopez, NV. Sisters-in-law surviving are Celia Meredith, OR;Maclovia Espinoza, CO; Dolores Roybal, ABQ; and Judy Roybal,Santa Fe.

He was a strong, talented, religious, loving, and humble manwith a big heart who would give you the shirt off his back. This isevident by the countless friends in his life. He had a huge love forhis family and friends. He had a tremendous hardworking workethic. He was never afraid or too proud to do any kind of honestwork.

His passion for music was born very young in his life and it ledhim to touch the lives of many families and musicians in the Pe-cos Valley. Many musicians played in his band, and many fami-lies were touched by his music at the various functions over theyears.

Viewing will be Friday from 1-3 pm at Berardinelli Funeral Home.A Rosary will be held Friday, May 17, 2013, 7 p.m. at St. Antho-ny’s Parish in Pecos. Mass will be celebrated at 10 am Saturday,May 18, 2013 at St. Anthony’s Parish in Pecos. Interment will fol-low at Pecos Cemetery.

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505

(505)984-8600Please sign our guestbook for the family at:

www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

DR. RICHARD ARELLANES

Dr. Richard Arellanes beloved husband,father and grandfather, passed away Sun-day, May 12, 2013 at his home in Las Ve-gas, New Mexico after a long battle withcancer.

Born the oldest of seven children on Au-gust 31, 1946, Richard was raised in San-ta Fe, New Mexico by his loving parents,Maguin and Rachel Arellanes. He movedto Las Vegas, New Mexico in 1966 to pur-sue his undergraduate education at NewMexico Highlands University. There, he

met and married his beautiful wife, Carol Harrison. Richard wenton to pursue his doctorate in dentistry at the University of Missou-ri, Kansas City, graduating in 1974. He practiced dentistry in LasVegas, New Mexico for thirty five years until his retirement in2011. Throughout his life, Richard was a dedicated father andhusband, who cherished time spent with family. He enjoyed golf,reading and playing with his grandsons, Liam and Alexander. Tohis family, Richard was the embodiment of love and fortitude, andhe will never be forgotten.

Richard is preceded in death by his father, Maguin Arellanes andmother, Rachel.

He is survived by his wife, Carol Arellanes; daughter, AndreaArellanes-Lucero and husband Julian Lucero; brothers, MichaelArellanes and wife Irene, Nick Arellanes and wife Esther; sisters:Patricia Montoya, Kathy Arellanes, Sandra Ortiz and husbandGeorge, Susan Padilla and husband Eloy; grandchildren, Liam andAlexander; and many nephews and nieces.

A Funeral Mass will be held on Friday, May 17, 2013 at 9 a.m.at Immaculate Conception Church in Las Vegas. Interment will im-mediately follow at Mount Calvary Cemetery.

Please visit www.nelsonfuneralhomelv.comfor online condolences.

The family of Richard Arellanes has entrusted their loved oneto Nelson Funeral Home

801 Douglas Avenue, Las Vegas, NM505-425-6551

CARLOTTA CLARK-VAN BRUNT

Has passed away after a de-termined battle with cancer.She will be remembered as adevoted mom to her own chil-dren, as well as to a circle ofloved ones she mentored.

Carlotta was a pursuer ofjustice, a fine equestrian, lov-er of travel, good humor, andscary movies.

Carlotta is survived by herhusband, Willie; her sons,Asher and Jordan; her daugh-ter, Abra; and a community ofdear friends.

A graveside service will beheld at 2 pm, Sunday, May19th at Rivera Memorial Gar-dens in Santa Fe.

417 East Rodeo Rd.Santa Fe, NM 87505

Phone: (505)989-7032Fax: (505)820-0435

santafefuneraloption.com

In Loving Memory ofAUGUSTINE "TINNIE" GRACE

November 7, 1904 -May 16, 1973

Dad,40 years ago today you left

us to be with God. Since thenGus and Herman have leftthis world, but I know you andMom were there with openarms to hug and welcomethem home. Once in awhile Iget a silent tear when I ammissing you but then a pre-cious memory comes up ofthe days I do remember I hadwith you. You took the time toteach me right from wrong soI could make good, confidentdecisions. You taught me tolove and cherish what life hasto offer, and believe me Ihave! I have tried to usethose teachings with my chil-dren and, hopefully, they toowill learn what I did from youand Mom that life is full ofpossibilities of their own. Ithink of you and Mom everyday, and it helps me to feelyour presence in my life!

Your loving daughter,Veronica!

DEVARGAS FUNERALHOME AND CREMATORY

Christian Gurule, 24, Albu-querque, Peñasco, May 13,2013

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

Call 986-3000

Funeral services and memorials

Police notesThe Santa Fe Police

Department is investigat-ing the following reports:

u A burglar broke into anapartment in the 1200 blockof Zepol Road about 10:45p.m. Tuesday and stole threevideo game consoles.

u A thief broke into a 2007Toyota Sequoia in the 2500block of West Zia Road andtook several items between5:15 and 7 p.m. Tuesday.

u Three rings, an Xbox360 video game console,several video games and two32-inch TVs were stolen froma house in the 6500 blockof Valentine Way at about10 p.m. Tuesday after some-one got inside through anunlocked back door.

u Two women are sus-pected of stealing computersoftware from the SewingCenter of Santa Fe, 3014 CieloCourt, between 6 and 7 p.m.Tuesday.

u Antonio Guerrero-Luna,22, 3636 Gunnison Road, wasarrested on a charge of receiv-ing stolen property after headmitted to purchasing stolengoods Tuesday.

The Santa Fe CountySheriff’s Office is inves-tigating the followingreports:

u A 2006 Infiniti wasextensively damaged some-time between 9 p.m. Mondayand 3 p.m. Tuesday while itwas parked off Old BuckmanRoad.

u Someone stole gasoline,electronics and a car bat-tery from a 1977 GMC pickupparked off Entrada de Ortiz inChimayó between 7 a.m. Mon-day and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

u A large quantity of handtools and building supplieswas reported missing froma commercial property inthe 2500 block of SouthMeadows Road on Tuesday.A backhoe also was taken inthe burglary, which took placea short distance off Agua FríaStreet.

Speed SUVsu The Santa Fe Police

Department listed the follow-ing locations for its mobilespeed-enforcement vehicles:SUV No. 1 at Salazar Elemen-tary School from 7:25 to 8:15a.m. and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m.,and on Agua Fría Street atHarrison Road at other times;SUV No. 2 at Nava ElementarySchool from 7:25 to 8:15 a.m.and 2:10 to 2:55 p.m., and onSiringo Road at Calle de Sue-ños at other times; SUV No.3 on Siringo Road betweenSt. Francis Drive and BoltuphRoad.

Help linesEsperanza Shelter forBattered Families hotline:800-473-5220

LOCAL & REGION

Workshop onfire risks Friday

A free workshop is plannedthis week to educate the pub-lic about the fire dangers asso-ciated with overgrown forests.

The workshop, from 9 a.m.to noon Friday, May 17, at theSanta Fe County Fairgrounds,will be presented by SantaFe County and the SantaFe-Pojoaque Soil and WaterConservation District. Experts,including urban foresterGeorge Duda, will talk aboutforests, drought, wildfire riskand the role of forest manage-ment. The Santa Fe CountyFire Department will make apresentation about the areaswhere forests and urban areasmeet.

The U.S. Department ofAgriculture Natural ResourcesConservation Service will pro-vide information on federalcost-share programs availableto help reduce fire risks.

New Mexico currently hasthe worst drought conditionsof any state in the UnitedStates, according to federalagencies who publish theU.S. Drought Monitor. SantaFe has extreme fire risks,especially in areas alongthe foothills of the Sangrede Cristo Mountains andin brush-filled open spaceswithin the city.

The New Mexican

By Barry MasseyThe Associated Press

Page 11: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-11THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

By Richard ParkerMCT Forum

AUSTIN, Texas — Thetwin revelations ofthe Internal Revenue

Service targeting conserva-tive political organizationsand, now, that the U.S. JusticeDepartment was spying on TheAssociated Press — all in a fewdays — mean this: It is timeto air the dirty laundry of thisadministration’s intelligenceand surveillance programs— and it is way past time forheads to roll in Washington.

Love it, like it or hate it, onething is clear about the Obamaadministration: It is addictedto secrecy. First, Congressshould launch a bipartisan,joint and open House-Senateinvestigation of the domesticsurveillance activities of theObama administration. Two,Attorney General Eric Holdershould be forced to testifyunder oath, with the potentialcriminal penalties. And thenhe should be fired. Finally,an investigation by Congressshould include investigationsinto the covert activities of theadministration abroad, too.

President Barack Obamaentered office amid admit-tedly difficult economic, letalone political circumstances.He pledged to govern boldlyand with transparency, to healthe partisan and other dividesof the nation. He has facedintransigence, which borderson hatred frankly, from somein the Republican House. Thepresident won re-election bytalking big again. And yet hehas governed relatively small.Aside from his health carelaw — which no one reallyunderstands — his achieve-ments have been spare. Yes,Detroit did not fail. Nor didWall Street. Yet it is hard toaccept the administration’schief argument: Things couldhave been worse. And that’sonly because it is impossibleto prove the negative.

Policy aside, this president’ssecond term is beginningto mirror the temptationsof previous presidents’ sec-ond terms: The excesses of

secrecy, spying and covertwars. It could well be thatObama’s drone wars do notemulate Ronald Reagan’s Iran-Contra conspiracy — and yetwe do not know that for a fact.The administration has evenreportedly failed to send awitness to Congress to testifyon its secret, robotic assassi-nation program, according toThe New York Times.

It is one thing for the presi-dent not to particularly likelawmakers who disparagehim — sometimes in a waythat they would never dispar-age a white president, frankly.It is entirely another for thenational security apparatus ofthe United States to turn itsshoulder to the elected repre-sentatives or the people, how-ever ludicrous or comical thoserepresentatives might be.

The targeting by the IRS ofconservative political organi-zations is, frankly, potentiallychillingly Nixonian, andCongress needs to determineif political considerationsbeyond the obvious were atwork and whether the direc-tor of the IRS acted on hisown, whether officials at Trea-sury were involved — and yes,whether anyone had direction,

official or otherwise from theWhite House itself. Congressshould not politicize thisinvestigation; it should act ina determined and bipartisanfashion, coordinated betweenthe House and the Senate. IfRepublicans or Democratsplay politics, they should notexpect public support.

Last, the fact that the Jus-tice Department secretlyobtained the phone recordsof The Associated Press is adespicable, final outrage. Sofar, the government has notindicated why it seized therecords without prior warn-ing. The administration hasnot bothered to explain whyit broke into the electroniccommunications of not justthis country’s, but one of theworld’s most trusted newsorganizations; presumably thegovernment was interestedin the AP’s reporting of a leakregarding a CIA operation inYemen. But department regu-lations require that none otherthan the attorney generalhimself sign off on spying ona news organization. So, thereare two logical explanations.

One is that the third legof the investigative stool forCongress must be the admin-

istration’s surveillance opera-tions abroad — including itstargeted, drone assassinations.It simply must be exposed topublic scrutiny. This adminis-tration has killed an Americancitizen abroad and stolen theinformation of an Americannews organization at home,likely all in the name of itscovert wars abroad. Contraryto its many promises, theObama administration lovesthe darkness of secrecy farmore than the disinfectantof sunlight. And that is dan-gerous for the president, hisadministration and, moreimportant, the public. Thewar in Iraq is over. The warin Afghanistan is effectivelydone. Osama bin Laden is longdead. It is time to come cleanabout what the Obama admin-istration has done abroad. Itis past time for the Obamaadministration to come cleanabout what it has done athome. And it is way past timefor Holder to go.

Richard Parker writes forMcClatchy-Tribune, TheNew York Times, The NewRepublic and The ColumbiaJournalism Review.

Robert DeanEditor

Inez Russell GomezEditorial Page Editor

Robin M. MartinOwner

DOONESBURyMAllARD FillMORE

Santa Fe’s newest favorite pastime returns today withthe first home game of the Santa Fe Fuego season.In just one year, watching the games at Fort MarcyBallpark has become an essential activity on spring

and summer evenings. The game starts at 6 p.m., with Taosas the opponent.

With 20 fresh faces on the roster, fans should enjoybetter games and more wins as the team competes in thePecos League. Last year, the Fuego finished last — so theteam has little place to go but up. Still, despite lousy pitch-ing and hours-long games, the team led the league inattendance.

Santa Fe residents have latched on to even the bottomrung of professional baseball. It’s a grueling rung for play-ers. They will play 70-plus games, two-thirds at homebecause of Santa Fe’s attendance (a per-game average of600, according to league officials). The team’s day off takesplace July 6, when Santa Fe hosts the Pecos League All-StarGame at Fort Marcy Ballpark. We get the big game becauseour fans show up.

While our Fuego was not on fire last year — competi-tively speaking, that is — the team brought fun and cama-raderie to a city that often divides itself. Columnist RobNikolewski, writing about his experience at the ballparklast year, put it this way: “I saw people from all parts of ourlittle burgh gather in one place and enjoy themselves. I sawparents taking their kids and I saw grandparents in foldingchairs and I saw teenage boys and girls giggling and pay-ing no attention to the game whatsoever. … White menof a certain age are prone to rhapsodize about the greatermeaning of baseball. I’m not falling into that trap. I’m justsaying, having that minor league baseball team here thissummer made our town a better place.”

Here’s to baseball, the Santa Fe Fuego and nights at theballpark. Let’s play ball.

Numbers to celebrate

T he Santa Fe Police Department deserves creditfor the latest burglary numbers — the April ratewas the lowest in 10 years, with just 88 burglar-ies reported. That number includes everything

from residential break-ins, commercial and auto burglaries,unlawful entries, even attempted burglaries. In the all-important category of home safety, residential burglariessince January are down 34 percent since the same time lastyear.

The decline is occurring in Santa Fe County, too. There,residential burglaries are down about 60 percent from Jan-uary through April. Both Chief Ray Rael and Sheriff RobertGarcia say targeted patrols and high-profile drug arrestsare making the difference. Would-be burglars, it seems, arein jail rather than breaking into homes.

It’s a welcome trend, one that we want to see continue— and spread to other nuisances. We can’t wait to hearstrategies to slow aggressive panhandling and combat graf-fiti vandalism, both of which remain out of control. Crime,alas, never sleeps.

Robert M. McKinneyOwner, 1949-2001

The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849OPINIONS

The past 100 yearsFrom The Santa Fe New Mexican:May 16, 1913: A large, well-lighted and ventilated up-to-date

sacristy has replaced the old one at the Cathedral of St. Francis.The improvements were begun by tearing down the second andthird stories of the old residence once occupied by the priestssouth of the cathedral. The ground floor, consisting of severalrooms, occupied until recently by Monsignor Fouchegu, the vicargeneral and rector of the cathedral, was left standing. The parti-tions between the rooms were torn down, however, and also a38-inch wall which separated the apartment from the old sacristy.

May 16, 1963: The state’s crackdown on delinquent taxpay-ers has resulted in the collection of more than $10,000 in backtaxes by the State Gasoline Tax Division of the Bureau of Revenue.The investigation was ordered by Gov. Jack M. Campbell shortlyafter he took office and resulted in the department turning upoutstanding debit vouchers totaling $115,672 which the previousadministration had left. Division employees are making an all-outeffort to collect these unpaid taxes from last year and by May 7had reduced the total delinquency by $10,215.00.

I just finished reading about the lat-est shoot out. It was a New OrleansMother’s Day parade. The FBI

spokeswoman, Mary Beth Romig, saidthere is no indication that it was an actof terrorism. “It’s strictly an act of streetviolence in New Orleans,” she said. Thearticle went on to say that such shootingshave become “more common.” PoliceSuperintendent Ronal Serpas assuredthe residents, “We’ll get them.” How longcan we sit back and say that this isn’t ourproblem? Gun safety is our problem! Thisisn’t about the Second Amendment. It’sabout what we are going to do to addressthis problem.

Paul SchmittNew Mexicans for Gun Safety

Santa Fe

By the rulesOn page A-10 of the May 11 edition,

there was an article called “Student usingSpanish penalized in tennis match.”

The New Mexico Activities Associa-tion assistant director of sports, Joe But-ler said, “The crux of the matter is thatthe United States Tennis Associationcode requires a player to speak in a lan-guage that the official understands. If the

official cannot understand what is beingsaid then there is a penalty.”

However, the NMAA executive direc-tor, Sally Marquez, said that it is withinher authority to override any rule. “Wewill not abide by that rule.” The on-courtofficial was told not to repeat that action.

My question to her is two fold: Aren’tschool sports required to teach studentsto play by the rules? Why cannot a highschool student speak English?

Jake MahrerSanta Fe

Not absent at allIn your Saturday story by Glen Rosales

(“Local runners reach personal goals atstate championships,” May 12), it says:“When it came to team success at theClass A/AA State Track and Field Cham-pionships, the North was noticeablyabsent.”

The North was noticeably absent?I don’t know if you have noticed, butCimarron is about as North as you canget and won the boy’s Class A statechampionship!

Three state championship relays, statechampions in the 800, 1,600, 300 hurdlesand Cimarron’s Henry Sime was theClass A high point individual. A youngCimarron team dominated the meet fortwo days to defeat a great Cliff team.

So the North did show up. You justhave to look a little higher than Santa Fewhen you are holding up the banner asthe North’s newspaper.

Joe Gigliahead track coach

Cimarron Municipal SchoolsCimarron

No loopholesLet’s have a level playing field on back-

ground checks. Have them done online,in stores, at gun shows. No loopholes.

Simple.After all, who needs to avoid back-

ground checks? Not the good guys!

Peter WurzburgerSanta Fe

Section editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, [email protected], Twitter @inezrussell BREAKING NEWS AT www.SANtAFENEwMExicAN.cOM

COMMENTARY

It’s past time for heads to roll

OUR VIEW

Santa Fe baseballis catching fire

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Don’t let gun violence become the new normalSend your letters of no more than

150 words to [email protected]. Include your name,address and phone number forverification and questions.

Page 12: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

A-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Catches of the weekQUEMADO LAKE: On May 11,Kasee Ganado, age 4, from Alamocaught her very first fish. It was a15-inch, 1.5-pound rainbow trout.She was using salmon eggs. OnMay 12, “Pie Town” Karen caughta 24-inch, 6-pound rainbow trout.She was using nightcrawlers.BLUEWATER LAKE: On May10, Rob Covelli of Albuquerquecaught and released a 45.5-inch, 28-pound tiger musky. Hewas using shrimp. From May 10through May 12, Covelli caughtand released 10 catfish between10 and 20 pounds and 17 tigermusky. He was using shrimp forthe catfish and Rapalas for thetiger musky.NOTE: If you have a catch of theweek story or just want to tell usabout your latest New Mexicofishing experience, send it to [email protected]. It couldbe included in the next report.For catches of the week, includename, date and location, as wellas type of fish, length and weight,plus bait, lure or fly used.

NortheastCHARETTE LAKES: Fishing wasfair to good using Power Bait,worms and salmon eggs for trout.CIMARRON RIVER: Trout fish-ing was very good using PantherMartins, poly wing emergers, elkhair caddis, Cimarron specials,Cimarron worms, salmon eggsand worms. Anglers reportedcatching several healthy holdoverfish from previous-year stockings.Fishing at the Gravel Pit Lakeswas good using Pistol Petes,small spinners, salmon eggs andPower Bait.CLAYTON LAKE: Hot spot fortrout: Fishing was very goodusing Power Bait and homemadedough baits for limits of rainbowtrout.CONCHAS LAKE: Fishing was fairusing stink bait and nightcrawl-ers for catfish. A few smallmouthbass were caught by anglersusing tube jigs, senkos, jerk baitsand spinner baits.COYOTE CREEK: Trout fishingwas fair using Power Bait andsalmon eggs in the beaver pondareas.EAGLE NEST LAKE: The boatramps are open and the boatdocks were put in place lastFriday. Fishing for northern pikewas fair to good using spoons,jerk bait, swim baits and clousers.Fishing for trout was fair to goodfrom the bank and from anchoredboats for anglers using PowerBait and salmon eggs. Anglerstrolling did best using Arniesand Platte River specials. Fishingfor perch was fair to good usingworms.LAKE MALOYA: Fishing was verygood using Power Bait, salmoneggs, worms, Pistol Petes, Pan-ther Martins, wooly buggers andparachute adams for trout. Theannual fishing derby will be May31 to June 2. For more informa-tion, call the State Park Office at575-445-5607.RIO GRANDE: Hot spot for trout:Fishing continued to be very goodusing caddis, mayflies, stream-ers, Panther Martins, Fisher Chickspinners, salmon eggs and wormsfor trout. Fishing was good usingstreamers and small jerk baitsfor smallmouth bass. Fishing wasfair using streamers, big leechpatterns and Rapalas for northernpike.UTE LAKE: Fishing was very goodtrolling crank baits for white bass.Fishing was good using senkos,worms, smallie beavers and grubsin shallow water for smallmouthbass and an occasional large-mouth bass. Fishing was goodusing stink bait for catfish. Fish-ing for crappie and walleye wasslow with just a few fish taken byanglers using minnows, grubs andcrank baits.

NorthwestABIQUIÚ LAKE: Fishing was fairto good using zonkers and jerkbaits for smallmouth bass. Fish-ing near the boat dock was greatusing nightcrawlers, jigs andpoppers.ALBUQUERQUE AREA DRAINS:There are still plenty of holdoverstocked trout in these waters forsome good close-to-home fishing.BLUEWATER LAKE: Fishing wasvery good using Rapalas, swimbaits, jerk baits, clousers andspoons for tiger musky.

FENTON LAKE: Trout fishingwas good for anglers using garlicscented Power Bait, salmon eggs,worms, corn, wooly buggers, olivePistol Petes and Kastmasters.HERON LAKE: Fishing for laketrout was slow. A few kokaneewere caught by anglers usingPanther Martins.JEMEZ WATERS: Trout fishing onthe Jemez was good using emerg-ers, elk hair caddis, small copperJohn Barrs, worms and salmoneggs. Fishing on the San Antonioand East Fork was good usingbrassies, egg patterns, hares ears,emergers and worms. Fishing onthe Cebolla was fair to good usingworms, salmon eggs, small cop-per John Barrs and caddis.LAGUNA DEL CAMPO: Troutfishing was good using worms,Power Bait, spinners, smallspoons and salmon eggs.NAVAJO LAKE: Fishing was goodusing tube jigs, worms, senkosand jerk baits for smallmouthbass and largemouth bass. Fish-ing was good using small tubesand curly tail grubs for crappie.The best crappie action reportedwas from the upper Pine and in LaJara Canyon.SAN JUAN: Fishing in the QualityWater section was good usingbrown or grey foam back emerg-ers, green eggs, olive streamers,olive wooly buggers, flash backpheasant tails and parachuteadams. Fishing through the baitwaters was fair to good usingwooly buggers, copper JohnBarrs, nightcrawlers, Power Baitand salmon eggs.SANTA CRUZ LAKE: Fishing wasgood using Fisher Creek spin-ners, Pistol Petes, Power Bait,salmon eggs and worms for trout.Anglers using worms also caughta few bluegills.SEVEN SPRINGS BROOD POND:This water is open to anglers11 years old or younger. The pondwas recently stocked and is agreat place to take youngstersto fish.TIGER PARK POND: This is agreat spot to take the kids if youare in the Aztec area.

SouthwestELEPHANT BUTTE: Fishingwas good using white crankbaits, grubs and jerk baits forwhite bass. The best reports wereceived were from anglers fish-ing the south side of Long Point.Fishing was fair using minnows,grubs and small jigs for crappie.Fishing was good using smalliebeavers, senkos, tubes, chatter-baits, spinner baits crank baitsfor black bass. Fishing was goodusing shrimp, nightcrawlers andliver for catfish. Fishing was fairusing grubs, spinners, minnows,swim baits and crank baits forwhite bass and an occasionalcrappie. The Monticello and DamSite boat ramps remain closeddue to low water conditions. TheRock Canyon ramp has reopened.LAKE ROBERTS: Hot spot fortrout: Although fishing pressurewas down this past week, fish-ing was very good using worms,Power Bait, garlic cheese andsalmon eggs for trout. Fishing forbass should be good.

SoutheastEL RITO CREEK: Trout fishingwas fair to good using parachuteadams, worms and salmon eggs.GRINDSTONE RESERVOIR: Troutfishing was very good usingPower Bait, worms, salmon eggs,small Kastmasters, small Z Rays,Pistol Petes and spinners.SANTA ROSA LAKE: The lakehas reopened to boating but thelaunch area is undeveloped andboating is restricted to no wakespeed only. Fishing was fair usingjerk baits, senkos and tubes forsmallmouth bass. Fishing wasslow to fair using crank baits,minnows, grubs and tubes forwalleye. A few crappie were takenby anglers using worms, min-nows, grubs and tubes.

This fishing report, providedby Bill Dunn and theDepartment of Game and Fish,has been generated from thebest information availablefrom area officers, anglers,guides and local businesses.Conditions may vary as stream,lake and weather conditionsalter fish and angler activities.

Today’s talk shows

Matthew J. Valdez of Santa Fe caught this tiger muskie onMay 4 at Bluewater Lake. COURTESY PHOTO

N.M. fishing report

3:00 p.m. KASASteve HarveyKOAT The EllenDeGeneres ShowActor Chris Pine;Robin Thicke andPharrell perform.KRQE Dr. PhilKTFQ LauraKWBQ The BillCunninghamShowKLUZ El Gordoy la FlacaKASY JerrySpringerCNN TheSituation RoomFNC The FiveMTV The ShowWith Vinny

3:30 p.m. MTV TheShow With Vinny

4:00 p.m. KOAT TheDr. Oz ShowKTEL Al RojoVivo conMaría CelesteKASY The SteveWilkos ShowFNC SpecialReport WithBret Baier

5:00 p.m. KCHFThe 700 ClubKASY MauryFNC The FOXReport WithShepard Smith

6:00 p.m. CNNAnderson Cooper360

FNC The O’ReillyFactor

7:00 p.m. CNNPiers MorganLiveFNC HannityMSNBC TheRachel MaddowShow

8:00 p.m. CNNAnderson Cooper360E! E! NewsFNC On theRecord WithGreta VanSusteren

9:00 p.m. FNC TheO’Reilly FactorTBS Conan

10:00 p.m. KTELAl Rojo VivoCNN PiersMorgan LiveFNC Hannity

10:30 p.m. MTV TheShow With VinnyTBS Conan

10:34 p.m. KOB TheTonight ShowWith Jay LenoAdam Sandler; PhilJackson; Family ofthe Year performs.

10:35 p.m. KRQELate Show WithDavid LettermanBarbara Walters;Jesse Eisenberg; MSMR performs.

11:00 p.m. KNMECharlie Rose

KOAT Jimmy Kim-mel Live ActorChris Pine; actressConnie Britton;Dawes performs.MTV The ShowWith Vinny

11:37 p.m. KRQEThe Late LateShow With CraigFerguson

12:00 a.m. KASADish NationE! Chelsea LatelyKate Bosworth; Na-tasha Leggero.FNC The FiveFX Totally BiasedWith W. KamauBellMTV The ShowWith Vinny

12:02 a.m. KOATNightline

12:06 a.m. KOBLate Night WithJimmy Fallon

12:30 a.m. E! E!NewsFX Totally BiasedWith W. KamauBell

1:00 a.m. CNNPiers MorganLiveFNC Red EyeFX Totally BiasedWith W. KamauBell

1:06 a.m. KOB LastCall With CarsonDaly

7 p.m. on FOXAmerican IdolThe finalists reunite forthe last time before hostRyan Seacrest revealsthe identity of the 12th

American Idol. Viewers will be keptin suspense for a couple of hours,though, as the season finale alwayscontains plenty of filler — entertain-ing filler, admittedly — with the bigannouncement coming in the epi-sode’s final moments.

7 p.m. on CBSThe Big Bang TheoryLeonard (Johnny Gal-ecki) is offered a ter-rific job opportunity,but it means he’ll have

to move overseas — an idea thatwill take some getting used to forSheldon and Penny (Jim Parsons,Kaley Cuoco). Simon Helberg, KunalNayyar and Mayim Bialik also star inthe season finale, “The Bon VoyageReaction.”

7 p.m. on CWThe Vampire DiariesThe season finale givesnew meaning to theterm “school spirit,”as ghosts converge on

graduation day, determined to settleold scores and fulfill their destinies.An encounter with a ghost puts Da-mon’s (Ian Somerhalder) life in dan-ger, and Matt and Rebekah (ZachRoerig, Claire Holt) team up to fighta ghost intent on finding the cure.Caroline (Candice Accola) receivesan unexpected gift in “Graduation.”

8 p.m. on NBCThe OfficeChances are younever looked at yourworkplace or your co-workers the same way

after seeing an episode of The Of-fice. The comedy series that startednine seasons ago as an adaptationof Ricky Gervais’ Britcom ends itsrun tonight with an hourlong finale.Let’s hope viewers get a satisfyingsendoff for Andy, Dwight, Jim andPam (Ed Helms, Rainn Wilson, JohnKrasinski, Jenna Fischer) and therest of the Dunder Mifflin Scrantonstaff.

8 p.m. on CBSElementaryA two-hour episodeconcludes the series’freshman season. In“The Woman; Heroine,”

Irene’s (Natalie Dormer) reap-pearance has Sherlock (Jonny LeeMiller, pictured) flashing back to theevents that precipitated his down-ward spiral into addiction, while heand Joan (Lucy Liu) find themselvesin Moriarty’s crosshairs once more.Aidan Quinn also stars.

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TVtoppicks

Page 13: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

Jemez Valley holds offMcCurdy in semifinalsBy James BarronThe New Mexican

RIO RANCHO — All SantiagoLovato could do was swallowthe pain.

It leaked out through theMcCurdy senior’s eyes, though.

The tears welled up as herecounted the moment his prep base-ball career ended Wednesday — onCesar Rodriguez’s strikeout by JemezValley starter Darian Sando in theseventh inning that capped a 7-4 winfor the Cinderella Warriors in a ClassA State Baseball Tournament semifi-nal at Rio Rancho High School.

Lovato, who labored through167 pitches, seven walks and eightJemez stolen bases, saw the finality

SPORTSScoreboard B-2 Horse racing B-2 Prep B-3 Baseball B-4 Tennis B-5 Classifieds B-6 Comics B-12 THURSDAY, MAY 16, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN

BRolling along: LeBron Jamesand Miami knock off Chicagoto advance. Page B-5

Sports information: James Barron, 986-3045, [email protected] Design and headlines: Jon Lechel, [email protected] BREAKING NEWS AT www.santafenewmexican.com

Returning to form?Byron Nelson defending champJason Dufner looking to turn hisyear around in Texas. Page B-2

NHL PLAYOFFS

Chicagoskates byDetroitBlackhawks use scoringflurry to take series leadBy Jay CohenThe Associated Press

CHICAGO — Johnny Oduya andMarcus Kruger scored in the thirdperiod, goalie Corey Crawford made

20 saves, and theBlackhawks beatDetroit 4-1 in theopener of their

second-round playoff series Wednes-day night.

Chicago dominated the final twoperiods in its first game in the West-ern Conference semifinals since itwon the Stanley Cup in 2010. MarianHossa scored the opening goal, andPatrick Sharp had an empty-netterand two assists to give him ninepoints in the playoffs.

“I thought it was our best game ofthe playoffs, no question,” Sharp said.

Jimmy Howard finished with 38stops in a terrific performance, butDetroit still lost to rival Chicago forthe eighth straight time dating to lastseason.

The series resumes Saturday after-noon at the United Center.

The 75th all-time playoff gamebetween the Blackhawks and RedWings was tied at 1 after two periods,and Howard made a great stop on abreakaway by Dave Bolland 4½ min-utes into the third.

Chicago kept working and wentin front to stay on a heady play byOduya. He drifted in from the pointand sent Sharp’s pass past Howard onthe glove side with 12 minutes left.

“He sneaks in there, and it was agreat play by Johnny,” Sharp said.“I saw him pinching in, I felt like hewas wide open, and he called for thepuck.”

Kruger then jumped on a loosepuck and sent a backhander intothe upper right corner to make it3-1. That was more than enough forCrawford, who caught a break whenDamien Brunner’s rebound attemptwent off the crossbar and straightdown before Brent Seabrook swept itaway with about three minutes left.

“Sometimes you got to get somebreaks,” Crawford said. “Seabs camein there and he made a great play toclear it out.”

The opener of the 16th playoffseries between the two teams wasthe first game for Chicago since iteliminated Minnesota last Thursday.

Detroit closed out Anaheim witha 3-2 win in Game 7 on Sunday, tak-ing the final two games of the seriesagainst the second-seeded Ducks.

Despite the long break, there wasno sign of rust for the Blackhawks.And the Red Wings skated right withChicago despite all that travel in thefirst round and the thrilling conclu-sion to the series against Anaheim.

This one was fast and frenetic fromthe start. Two similar teams morethan familiar with the other’s style,energized by their first playoff meet-ing since Detroit beat Chicago in fivegames in the 2009 Western Confer-ence final.

The Blackhawks struck first, tak-ing advantage of the first power-playopportunity of the game.

Detroit needed less than two min-utes to respond, tying it when Brun-ner poked in a rebound for his thirdcareer playoff goal.

Blackhawks 4

Red Wings 1

STATE SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT

Lady Bobcats face elimination gameMcCurdy meets rival Rangerettesafter falling to Rehoboth Christianin the Class A-AA quarterfinalsBy Angela Maria WilliamsFor The New Mexican

RIO RANCHO — Chalk it up to the jitters.No matter the talent, youth is usually a double-

edged sword. And the McCurdy softball team isyoung, with only two seniors in the lineup.

Boasting a crop of up-and-comers comprisedmostly of eighth-graders, freshmen and sopho-mores, the Lady Bobcats’ inexperience was evident

during the Class A-AA State Softball Tournamenton Wednesday at Rio Rancho High School.

The District 2A-AA champions barely survivedthe morning’s first round against the No. 12 seedZuni, edging the Lady Thunderbirds 5-4. McCurdypromptly fell to No. 4 seed Rehoboth Christian 11-7in the afternoon quarterfinals.

The Lady Bobcats (17-10) continue in thedouble-elimination bracket with a win-or-go-home matchup against district rival Mora at 8 a.m.Thursday.

The game against Zuni (12-11-1) was a bit of acomedy of errors and it was no different againstthe Lady Lynx.

In a rare switch, McCurdy head coach Nathan

Velasquez pulled catcher Poekwin Garcia whenshe made a throwing error that allowed Rehobothfreshman Tyra West to score on her own double inthe third inning for a 2-0 lead.

Garcia’s error in the first inning led toRehoboth’s first run.

“They’re young,” Velasquez said. “Our catcher atthe beginning was a freshman and the nerves justgot her, so I put our number one-catcher [juniorEliana Griego] back in. What you do is shake itoff.”

Against Rehoboth (20-4-1), however, the LadyBobcat’s nerves in the batter’s box cost them the

STATE BASEBALL TOURNAMENT JEMEZ VALLEY 7, MCCURDY 4

Back to the dugoutQuesta’s title hopes endagainst reigning champsBy James BarronThe New Mexican

RIO RANCHO — Find first base.This was the mantra that led the

Questa Wildcats to the Class A StateBaseball Tourna-ment semifinals.

On Wednesdaymorning, Raul

Villegas did everything he could tohide it.

The senior co-ace for the top-seeded Capitan Tigers did what hispartner Tracker Bowen did last Mayto the Wildcats — he held them toone hit.

Once again, Questa senior KendallCordova was on the wrong end of apitcher’s duel as Capitan held on for

Please see game, Page B-3

McCurdy’s Chris Serrano slides safely into second base as Jemez Valley freshman Russell Gachupin catches the ball during a Class A State Base-ball Tournament semifinal Wednesday afternoon at Rio Rancho High School. PHOTOS BY JUNFU HAN/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN

CLASS AA

Errors plague Pecos in loss to No. 2 CobreBy Zack PonceThe New Mexican

RIO RANCHO — Pecos knew there was onlyone way to upset Cobre in its Class AA State Base-ball Tournament quarterfinal matchup.

Thanks to advanced scouting and a few phonecalls, Panthers head coach Augustin Ruiz startedsenior Devin Henderson on the mound with thehope that his repertoire of off-speed pitches couldthwart Cobre’s power-hitting lineup.

It did.However, Pecos’ strategy fell flat with miscues

behind the mound, dooming the Panthers to a 13-4loss to the Indians at Rio Rancho Cleveland HighSchool.

Cobre (21-7) advanced to the semifinals where it

meets Mesilla Valley at 10 a.m. Thursday.“Devin did a good job pitching, you can’t ask for

anything more of him,” Ruiz said. “He kept themoff balance and we did one of the two things right.”

One of those things was hit.The Panthers (17-10) matched

Cobre’s 11 hits with 10 of theirown but leaving nine runners

on base killed Pecos’ hopes of keeping pace withthe Indians.

The bigger flaw was porous defense.Cobre, the No. 2 seed and 2012 AAA champion,

jumped out to a quick 4-1 lead by the third inningthanks to three Pecos errors — leading to threeunearned runs.

“For some of them, it may have just been jitters,”Ruiz said, who’s defense had committed six errors

by the game’s conclusion. “You forget where you’rethrowing your relays. You forget where guys wereon base and stuff like that. I think it was the mentalpart of it where we broke down.”

One of the more egregious mishaps occurredin the second when Pecos right fielder BrandonQuintana fired a ball towards third base in anattempt to throw out Willie Fletcher, but the ballsailed high and allowed Fletcher and a teammateto score.

Cobre pressured Pecos from the start, sendingany and all baserunners standing on first over tosecond.

“We have a tendency to hit into a few doubleplays, so we try to use our running game,” said

Bobcats infielder Julio Molina fields a ball against Jemez Valley dur-ing a Class A State Baseball Tournament semifinal Wednesday after-noon at Rio Rancho High School.

Cobre 13

Pecos 4

Please see eRRoRs, Page B-3

Please see HoPes, Page B-3Please see DUgoUt, Page B-3

Capitan 3

Questa 1

Page 14: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

B-2 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013 NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

HockeyNHL PLayoffs

Conference semifinalsEasTERN CoNfERENCEPittsburgh 1, ottawa 0Tuesday’s GamePittsburgh 4, Ottawa 1friday’s GameOttawa at Pittsburgh, 5:30 p.m.sunday, May 19Pittsburgh at Ottawa, 5:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 22Pittsburgh at Ottawa. 5:30 p.m.x-friday, May 24Ottawa at Pittsburgh, 5:30 p.m.x-sunday, May 26Pittsburgh at Ottawa, TBDx-Tuesday, May 28Ottawa at Pittsburgh, TBDBoston vs. N.y. RangersThursday’s GameN.Y. Rangers at Boston, 5:30 p.m.sunday, May 19N.Y. Rangers at Boston, 1 p.m.Tuesday, May 21Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 5:30 p.m.Thursday, May 23Boston at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m.x-saturday, May 25N.Y. Rangers at Boston TBDx-Monday, May 27Boston at N.Y. Rangers, TBDx-Wednesday, May 29N.Y. Rangers at Boston, TBDWEsTERN CoNfERENCEChicago 1, Detroit 0Wednesday’s GameChicago 4, Detroit 1saturday, May 18Detroit at Chicago, 11 a.m.Monday, May 20Chicago at Detroit, 5:30 p.m.Thursday, May 23Chicago at Detroit, 6 p.m.x-saturday, May 25Detroit at Chicago, TBDx-Monday, May 27Chicago at Detroit, TBDx-Wednesday, May 29Detroit at Chicago, TBDLos angeles 1, san Jose 0Tuesday’s GameLos Angeles 2, San Jose 0Thursday’s GameSan Jose at Los Angeles, 8 p.m.saturday, May 18Los Angeles at San Jose, 7 p.m.Tuesday, May 21Los Angeles at San Jose, 8 p.m.x-Thursday, May 23San Jose at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.x-sunday, May 26Los Angeles at San Jose, TBDx-Tuesday, May 28San Jose at Los Angeles, TBDBest of 7; x-if necessary

LeadersThrough Tuesdayscoring GP G a PTsDavid Krejci, BOS 7 5 8 13Evgeni Malkin, PIT 7 3 10 13Jarome Iginla, PIT 7 2 8 10Sidney Crosby, PIT 6 3 6 9Derick Brassard, NYR 7 2 7 9Milan Lucic, BOS 7 2 7 9Pascal Dupuis, PIT 7 6 2 8Joe Pavelski, SJ 5 4 4 8Logan Couture, SJ 5 3 5 8Henrik Zetterberg, DET7 3 5 8Zdeno Chara, BOS 7 1 7 8

BasketBallNBa PLayoffs

Conference semifinalsEasTERN CoNfERENCEMiami 4, Chicago 1Wednesday’s GameMiami 94, Chicago 91Previous ResultsChicago 93, Miami 86Miami 115, Chicago 78Miami 104, Chicago 94Miami 88, Chicago 65Indiana 3, New york 1Tuesday’s GameIndiana 93, New York 82Thursday’s GameIndiana at New York, 6 p.m.x-saturday, May 18New York at Indiana, 6 p.m.x-Monday, May 20Indiana at New York, 6 p.m.Previous ResultsIndiana 102, New York 95New York 105, Indiana 79Indiana 82, New York 71WEsTERN CoNfERENCEsan antonio 3, Golden state 2Tuesday’s GameSan Antonio 109, Golden State 91Thursday’s GameSan Antonio at Golden State, 8:30 p.m.x-sunday, May 19Golden State at San Antonio, TBAPrevious ResultsSan Antonio 129, Golden State 127, 2OTGolden St. 100, San Antonio 91San Antonio 102, Golden State 92Golden State 97, San Antonio 87, OTMemphis 4, oklahoma City 1Wednesday’s GameMemphis 88, Oklahoma City 84Previous ResultsOklahoma City 93, Memphis 91Memphis 99, Oklahoma City 93Memphis 87, Oklahoma City 81Memphis 103, Oklahoma City 97, OTBest-of-7; x-if necessary

LeadersThrough Tuesdayscoring G fG fT Pts avgDurant, OKC 10 107 82 318 31.8Anthony, NYK 10 99 66 279 27.9Harden, HOU 6 45 53 158 26.3James, MIA 8 67 51 193 24.1Curry, GOL 11 92 35 259 23.5Parker, SAN 9 81 45 211 23.4Paul, LAC 6 49 33 137 22.8Lopez, Bro 7 58 39 156 22.3Lawson, DEN 6 48 28 128 21.3Rebounds G off Def Tot avgGarnett, BOS 6 9 73 82 13.7Evans, Bro 7 16 70 86 12.3Gasol, LAL 4 7 39 46 11.5Bogut, GOL 11 39 85 124 11.3Asik, HOU 6 21 46 67 11.2Howard, LAL 4 10 33 43 10.8Noah, CHI 11 51 55 106 9.6Hibbert, IND 10 45 51 96 9.6Duncan, SAN 9 19 67 86 9.6assists G ast avgWilliams, Bro 7 59 8.4Curry, GOL 11 91 8.3Lawson, DEN 6 48 8.0Conley, MEM 10 73 7.3James, MIA 8 58 7.3Paul, LAC 6 38 6.3Durant, OKC 10 63 6.3Gasol, LAL 4 25 6.3Parker, SAN 9 55 6.1Ellis, MIL 4 22 5.5

teNNIsaTP-WTa TouR

Internazionali BNL d’ItaliaWednesdayat foro ItalicoRomePurse: Men, $4.17 million (WT1000);Women, $2.37 million (Premier)surface: Clay-outdoorsingles - Mensecond RoundJerzy Janowicz, Poland, def. Jo-WilfriedTsonga (8), France, 6-4, 7-6 (5).Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine, def. StanislasWawrinka (15), Switzerland, walkover.Gilles Simon, France, def. Mikhail Youzhny,Russia, 7-5, 6-3.Benoit Paire, France, def. Julien Benneteau,France, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 7-6 (4).Marcel Granollers, Spain, def. Andy Murray(3), Britain, 6-3, 6-7 (5), retired.Jeremy Chardy, France, def. Kei Nishikori(16), Japan, 6-4, 6-1.Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. AlbertRamos, Spain, 6-4, 6-1.David Ferrer (4), Spain, def. FernandoVerdasco, Spain, 5-7, 7-5, 6-3.Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Viktor Troicki,Serbia, 6-1, 6-1.Rafael Nadel (5), Spain, def. Fabio Fognini,Italy, 6-1, 6-3.Womensecond RoundLi Na (5), China, def. Zheng Jie, China,6-3, 6-1.Roberta Vinci (13), Italy, def. NastassjaBurnett, Italy, 6-1, 6-4.Dominika Cibulkova (14), Slovakia, def.Melanie Oudin, United States, 5-7, 6-1, 6-3.Maria Kirilenko (12), Russia, def. VarvaraLepchenko, United States, 6-3, 6-1.Jelena Jankovic, Serbia, def. BojanaJovanovski, Serbia, 6-2, 6-0.Sara Errani (7), Italy, def. Christina McHale,United States, 7-5, 5-7, 6-2.Sam Stosur (9), Australia, def. Peng Shuai,China, 7-6 (5), 6-0.Lourdes Dominguez Lino, Spain, def. YaninaWickmayer, Belgium, 6-4, 6-4.Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. GarbineMuguruza, Spain, 6-2, 6-2.Sloane Stephens (16), United States, def.Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2.Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, def. RominaOprandi, Switzerland, 6-4, 6-2.Ayumi Morita, Japan, def. Urszula Radwan-ska, Poland, 6-3, 6-1.Victoria Azarenka (3), Belarus, def. JuliaGoerges, Germany, 6-2, 6-0.DoublesMenfirst RoundThomas Berdych and Radek Stepanek,Czech Republic, def. Daniele Bracciali andAndreas Seppi, Italy, 6-4, 6-2.Paolo Lorenzi and Potito Starace, Italy, def.Marcos Baghdatis, Cyprus, and Juan Martindel Potro, Argentina, 6-3, 2-6, 10-8.second RoundSantiago Gonzalez, Mexico, and ScottLipsky, United States, def. Jurgen Melzer,Austria, and Leander Paes (8), India, 7-6(4), 7-6 (3).Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (2),Spain, def. Julien Benneteau, France, andNenad Zimonjic, Serbia, 6-4, 6-7 (4), 10-8.Robert Lindstedt, Sweden, and DanielNestor (3), Canada, def. Flavio Cipolla, Italy,and Filippo Volandri, Italy, 6-4, 6-3.

socceRNoRTH aMERICa

Major League soccerEast W L T Pts Gf GaNew York 6 4 3 21 19 15Houston 6 3 2 20 17 10Kansas City 6 4 2 20 15 9Montreal 6 2 2 20 15 11Philadelphia 4 4 3 15 14 18Columbus 3 4 3 12 12 10New England 2 4 4 10 6 9Toronto 1 5 4 7 11 15Chicago 2 6 1 7 6 15D.C. United 1 8 1 4 5 19West W L T Pts Gf GaDallas 7 1 3 24 18 11Portland 4 1 6 18 18 12Los Angeles 5 3 2 17 17 9Salt Lake 5 5 2 17 13 13Colorado 4 4 3 15 10 9San Jose 3 4 5 14 12 18Vancouver 3 4 3 12 12 14Seattle 3 3 3 12 10 7Chivas USA 3 5 2 11 12 18Note: Three points for win and one for a tie.Wednesday’s GamesLos Angeles 4, Philadelphia 1saturday’s GamesColumbus at Toronto, 3 p.m.Portland at Vancouver, 5 p.m.Chicago at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m.New England at Houston, 6:30 p.m.Dallas at Seattle, 8:30 p.m.Colorado at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.sunday’s GamesLos Angeles at New York, 11 a.m.Kansas City at D.C. United, 3 p.m.Salt Lake at Chivas USA, 8:30 p.m.

cyclINgTour of California

Wednesdayat santa Barbara, Calif.stage 4a 83.6-mile road race1. Tyler Farrar (Garmin-Sharp), UnitedStates, 3 hours, 14 minutes, 9 seconds.2. Ken Hanson (Optum/Kelly Benefit), UnitedStates, same time.3. Gianni Meersman (Omega Pharma-QuickStep), Belgium, s.t.4. Kris Boeckmans (Vacansoleil-DCM),Belgium, s.t.5. Peter Sagan (Cannondale), Slovakia, s.t.6. Michael Matthews (Orica-GreenEdge),Australia, s.t.7. Thor Hushovd (BMC), Norway, s.t.8. Sylvain Chavanel (Omega Pharma-QuickStep), France, s.t.9. Jeremy Vennell (Bissell), New Zealand,s.t.10. Jasper Stuyven (Bontrager), Belgium,s.t.overall standings(after 4 stages)1. Janier Acevedo (Jamis-Hagens Ber-man), Colombia, 17 hours, 13 minutes, 59seconds.2. Tejay van Garderen (BMC), United States,12 seconds behind.3. Philip Deignan (UnitedHealthcare),Ireland, 27 seconds behind.4. Mathias Frank (BMC), Switzerland, 45seconds behind.5. Michael Rogers (Saxo-Tinkoff), Australia,55 seconds behind.6. Francisco Mancebo (5-Hour Energy/Kenda), Spain, 1 minute, 3 seconds behind.7. Chad Haga (Optum/Kelly Benefit), UnitedStates, 1:13 behind.8. Matthew Busche (RadioShack Leopard),United States, 1:15 behind.9. Lawson Craddock (Bontrager), UnitedStates, 1:32 behind.10. Cameron Meyer (Orica-GreenEdge),Australia, 1:40 behind.

FootBallaRENa LEaGuE

National ConferenceCentral W L T Pct Pf PaIowa 4 4 0 .500 404 351Chicago 4 4 0 .500 409 438San Antonio 3 4 0 .429 287 329West W L T Pct Pf PaArizona 7 1 0 .875 553 392San Jose 5 2 0 .714 383 354Spokane 5 3 0 .625 536 446Utah 3 4 0 .429 391 399

american Conferencesouth W L T Pct Pf PaJacksonville 6 2 0 .750 440 348Tampa Bay 5 3 0 .625 457 421Orlando 2 5 0 .286 352 432New Orleans 1 6 0 .143 244 397East W L T Pct Pf PaPhiladelphia 3 4 0 .429 397 355Cleveland 2 5 0 .286 330 422Pittsburgh 2 5 0 .286 256 355friday’s GameNew Orleans at Spokane, 8 p.m.saturday, May 18San Antonio at Cleveland, 5 p.m.San Jose at Jacksonville, 5 p.m.Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m.Orlando at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m.Iowa at Utah, 7 p.m.sunday, May 19Arizona at Chicago, 2 p.m.

BoxINgfight schedule

May 17At Crocus City Hall, Myakinino, Russia,Denis Lebedev vs. Guillermo Jones, 12, forLebedev’s WBA World cruiserweight title;Alexander Povetkin vs. Andrzej Wawrzyk, 12,for Povetkin’s WBA World heavyweight title.May 18At Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, N.J. (SHO),Devon Alexander vs. Lee Purdy, 12, forAlexander’s IBF welterweight title; LamontPeterson vs. Lucas Martin Matthysse, 12,welterweights; Thomas Williams Jr. vs. OtisGriffin, 10, light heavyweights; AnthonyPeterson vs. Dominic Salcido, 10, light-weights; Shawn Porter vs. Phil Lo Greco, 10,welterweights.At The Grand Oasis, Cancun, Mexico(FOXSN), Shane Mosley vs. Pablo CesarCano, 12, for the vacant WBC Internationalwelterweight title; Jorge Silva vs. CesarChavez, 10, welterweights; Roberto Man-zanarez vs. Oscar Arenas, 10, lightweights;Sergio Thompson vs. Gustavo Sandoval, 10,super featherweights.

oN tHIs DateMay 16

1976 — The Montreal Canadiens win their19th Stanley Cup with a 5-3 victory over thePhiladelphia Flyers, capping a four-gamesweep.1980 — The Los Angeles Lakers beat thePhiladelphia 76ers 123-107 to win theNBA title in six games. Rookie guard MagicJohnson fills in at center for the injuredKareem Abdul-Jabbar and comes up with42 points, 15 rebounds and seven assistsand is named the Finals MVP. The 42 pointsare the most scored by a rookie in an NBAFinals game.1996 — Steve Yzerman scores 1:15 intothe second overtime as Detroit advances tothe Western Conference finals with a 1-0victory over the St. Louis Blues in Game 7.It’s the second time in NHL history that aGame 7 is scoreless heading into overtime.1999 — The New York Knicks become thesecond eighth-seeded team in NBA playoffhistory to defeat a number one seed in theplayoffs when they beat the Miami Heat infive games.

tRaNsactIoNsBasEBaLL

american LeagueCLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned RHPTrevor Bauer to Columbus (IL).HOUSTON ASTROS — Assigned RHP PhilipHumber outright to Oklahoma City (PCL).NEW YORK YANKEES — Sent RHP JobaChamberlain to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL)and LHP Cesar Cabral to Tampa (FSL) forrehab assignments. Selected the contractof INF David Adams from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Designated 3B Chris Nelson forassignment.OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned OFMichael Taylor to Sacramento (PCL). Rein-stated OF Coco Crisp from the 15-day DL.TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms withRHP Scott Richmond on a minor leaguecontract and assigned him to extendedspring training.TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Sent RHP DustinMcGowan to Dunedin (FSL) for a rehabassignment.

National LeagueLOS ANGELES DODGERS — ReinstatedRHP Zack Greinke from the 15-day DL.Placed RHP Josh Beckett on the 15-day DL,retroactive to May 14.PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to termswith RHP Carlos Zambrano on a minorleague contract.PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed INF JohnMcDonald on the 15-day DL. Recalled INFJordy Mercer from Indianapolis (IL).SAN DIEGO PADRES — Released RHPFautino De Los Santos.

fooTBaLLNational football League

BALTIMORE RAVENS — Announced theretirement of LB Rolando McClain.BUFFALO BILLS — Signed LB Kiki Alonso.CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed P JordanGay.HOUSTON TEXANS — Signed C Tyler Horn.Released RB George Winn and OT DannO’Neill.KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Signed FB BradenWilson.MIAMI DOLPHINS — Promoted Jason Jen-kins to vice president of communications.MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed Gs JeffBaca and Travis Bond and P Jeff Locke.NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed DBDuron Harmon. Released DL Kyle Love.OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed KR JoshCribbs to a one-year contract.

soCCERMajor League soccer

MLS — Reduced the two-game suspensionof San Jose F Marvin Chavez to one game.Suspended Vancouver D Johnny Leveron,Chivas D Mario De Luna, Colorado F EdsonBuddle and Real Salt Lake D KwameWatson-Siriboe one game and fined themundisclosed amounts for their actions inrecent games.D.C. UNITED — Announced the retirementof D Robbie Russell.PORTLAND TIMBERS — Terminated thecontract of D Hanyer Mosquera.

CoLLEGENCaa

CHARLOTTE — Announced men’s basket-ball G Braxton Ogbueze has transferredfrom Florida.EMORY & HENRY — Named David Willsonmen’s basketball coach.PENN STATE — Announced G JermaineMarshall is leaving the men’s basketballteam.RUTGERS — Named Julie Hermann athleticdirector.SAM HOUSTON STATE — Named MikeCollins assistant football coach.SHENANDOAH — Named Chad Brashearsmen’s part-time assistant basketball coach.TEXAS-PAN AMERICAN — Named HannahBurleson women’s assistant basketballcoach.TCU — Suspended DE Devonte Fieldstwo games for an unspecified violation ofuniversity and team policy.

PREAkNESS ODDS1. Orb Even2. Goldencents 8-13. Titletown Five 30-14. Departing 6-15. Mylute 5-16. Oxbow 15-17. Will Take Charge 12-18. Governor Charlie 12-19. Itsmyluckyday 10-1

HOCKEY FOOTBALLTENNIS SOCCER TRANSACTIONS

ON THIS DATE

BASKETBALL

BOXING

CYCLING

PGA TOUR

Defending Nelson champion still shows little emotionThe Associated Press

IRVING, Texas — Jason Dufneroutwardly showed little emotion lastyear when he won the Byron NelsonChampionship in the midst of hisincredible stretch of golf.

The same goes for Dufner whenthings aren’t going as well, such as thisseason.

“I don’t show it, but obviously it’sgoing on inside. I played a lot of roundsthis year with frustration and angeron my mind,” Dufner said Wednesday.“I’ve got a good way of hiding the goodand the bad. But there has been moreanger and frustration this year thanthere was last year, for sure.”

His victory at the Nelson, afterwhich there was no overwhelming

outburst of excite-ment, capped afour-week span inwhich Dufner got hisfirst two PGA Tourvictories and also gotmarried. He followedthat with a runner-upfinish at Colonial, afourth-place finish at

the U.S. Open and made 21 consecu-tive cuts to end the season.

“I don’t reflect on it very much atall,” he said. “Nothing is staying thesame in golf. You’re either gettingbetter or you’re getting worse. At thismoment in time, I’m a little bit worsethan I was last year.”

Heading into Thursday’s opening

round of the Nelson, Dufner hasn’thad a top-10 finish this season and hasalready missed two cuts — twice asmany as last year.

He is coming off his worst round ofthe season, a closing 80 at The Play-ers Championship with three doublebogeys.

The last person to win consecutiveNelsons was Tom Watson, who wonthree in a row from 1978-80. The onlyother back-to-back winners are JackNicklaus and Sam Snead.

A week after The Players, the Nel-son field includes only six of the top25 players in the world ranking, led byNo. 7 Louis Oosthuizen — who missedthe cut last year in his only previousNelson appearance.

“I would rather come in a bit morein form than coming in top-rankedplayer [in the field],” said Oosthuizen,the 2010 British Open champion.

Playing on Nelson sponsor exemp-tions are Guan Tianlang, the 14-year-old amateur in his second PGA Tourevent since making the cut at the Mas-ters, and 19-year-old Jordan Spieth.

Spieth is playing in the Nelson forthe third time, this time as a pro whohas made six of nine cuts and alreadywon nearly $700,000 this season.

As an amateur at the Nelson, he tiedfor 16th as a 16-year-old in 2010, thenplayed on the same day as his highschool graduation two years ago whenhe tied for 32nd.

“This tournament is dear to my

heart, and it gave me a big bump whenI was able to get the exemption andtake advantage when I was 16 and 17,”said Spieth, who played one season atthe University of Texas before turn-ing pro. “Now back in a little differentposition now, not in school anymore,but I could be more excited to be backhere. This is my favorite event of theyear.”

While Dufner might not reflect onthat impressive stretch last season,the TPC Four Seasons conjures goodmemories and those couple of monthsdid give him a good perspective on hispotential level of play.

Thursday could mark another start-ing point for Dufner to make the turn,and head back in the winning direction.

Orb draws rail as 1-1 favorite in Saturday’s Preakness StakesThe Associated Press

BALTIMORE — The Preak-ness draw was over, and trainerShug McGaughey listed a vari-ety of reasons why he was OKwith having Kentucky Derbywinner Orb starting Saturday’srace from the rail.

Then someone asked him,“If you had your choice, wherewould you want to be?”

Without hesitation,McGaughey responded, “Theoutside.”

Despite getting the insidepost in Wednesday’s draw,Orb was made an even-moneyfavorite to win and keep alivehis bid to become horse rac-ing’s first Triple Crown winnersince Affirmed in 1978.

“I saw it bounced aroundin the papers that we wouldbe 4-5,” McGaughey said. “Iam a little surprised that withhim being even money, withthe next shot was 5-1. That’s apretty good spread. We’ll seewhat the public does. Like Ialways say, I wish every horse Irun would be the favorite.”

The brown colt is looking forhis sixth straight victory as partof the smallest Preakness fieldsince 2007.

Govenor Charlie, trained byBob Baffert, added his nameto the list Wednesday for the1�-mile race.

Starting from the insidewon’t help, but McGaugheyreasoned it’s a lot better

than getting the No. 1 post atChurchill Downs for the Derby.

“It’s not nearly the problem itwould be in the Derby,” he said.“The Derby is kind of catty-cor-nered. You got to shove yourway out of there or you get shutoff down in there. It’s pretty

straightforward here. There areonly nine horses. There’s notgoing to be that kind of jockey-ing into the first turn. We’ll justhold our position and see howthe race plays out.”

Still, the last horse to win thePreakness from the inside postwas Tabasco Cat in 1994.

Starting from the rail is adisadvantage because, if ahorse does not get out in frontfrom that spot, it can easily getpushed to the back of the fieldby the other competitors.

“He’ll get a clean break andhe’ll be able to sit where hewants to sit,” McGaughey said.“If he’s good enough he’ll beable to make that run, andhopefully he gets there.”

Mylute, the second favorite at5-1, hopes to take advantage ofworking out the No. 5 post.

“The draw was great. We’rein the middle and we’ve gotOrb and Departing inside ofus, which is great because wecan watch and see what hap-pens,” said Todd Quast, generalmanager of GoldMark Farm,co-owner of Mylute. “Ourhorse ran the same race Orbdid in the Derby but was threeto fourth lengths behind him.So this time, maybe if we canstay a little closer to him at thebeginning, we can maybe turnthe tables on him.

“No disrespect to him, he’s afantastic horse, but I think ourhorse is pretty good too.”

Not to mention, Orb is onthe rail.

“We need to make up threeor four lengths, and that maybe one of the factors that helpsus,” Quast said.

Orb won the Derby by2½ lengths, so he remains thehorse to beat.

“I don’t know that the rail’sall that bad,” said Hall of Fametrainer D. Wayne Lukas, whohas three horses in the race —Oxbow, Will Take Charge andTitletown Five. “Orb is still theone to beat.”

Lukas was delighted withthe post positions drawn by histhree entrants.

“I love mine. I thought it wasreal good,” he said.

Jason Dufner

Page 15: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

of a career that ended much the same wayit did for him this season. He was a part offootball and basketball teams that reachedthe state semifinals, only to be denied thechance to play for the blue trophy.

That honor in baseball goes to theseventh-seeded Warriors, who play topseed Capitan for the A title at 9:30 a.m.Thursday.

As the teams lined up for the postgamehandshake, Lovato soaked in a rush ofmemories compiled over five years.

Yet, it was all too much.“You think about everything,” Lovato

said, pausing in the melancholy of reflec-tion as his eyes started to water.

“There’s not much you can do. Just swal-low it.”

There was a lot to swallow for thesecond-seeded Bobcats. The top four spotsin the order went 0-for-10 with four walksand two hit-by-pitches, leaving the bottomhalf of the lineup to try to pick up the slack.McCurdy head coach Roberto DeVargassaid his seniors pressed too much, perhapswanting to atone for what they couldn’t doin the previous two sports.

“They were trying so hard,” DeVargassaid. “Those four or five guys are seniors,and they wanted a good showing. I thinkthey were trying so hard, trying to do somuch in one at-bat.”

Lovato personified that desire in theafternoon’s climatic moment in the sixthinning. McCurdy (14-7) staged a two-outrally and cut a 7-1 deficit to 7-3 thanks tothree singles and a Jemez error. They hadthe bases loaded with two outs for Lovato,their best hitter.

Sando threw five strikes in the at-bat, asLovato fouled off two of them to stay alive.But Lovato swung from the heels on anoutside curveball and came up empty inthe pivotal moment. Sando used his ownsenior experience to keep his cool.

“I’ve been in tougher situations thanthat,” Sando said. “I was nervous, but I justfocused and threw that outside curveball.”

Jemez (13-9-1) also proved to be oppor-tunistic against a faulty McCurdy defense,posting three runs in the first with the helpof two errors by Bobcats freshman short-stop Julio Molina.

In the third, it was the combination ofleft fielder Dennis Padilla and catcher Ale-jandro Coff that got a Warriors rally going.His throw on Noah Fragua’s single to stopQuinn Padilla at third base bounced infront of and over Coff. Padilla raced homefor a 4-0 edge.

The miscues forced Lovato to laborthrough a combined67 pitches in thosetwo frames alone, but neither Lovato norDeVargas were thinking about pulling himfrom the hill.

“He was my horse,” DeVargas said. “Hewas going to battle, and he earned it.”

“My arm wasn’t fazing me,” Lovato said.“This is all that we had. We all knew wehad to get past this game to get to the next.”

As Lovato said good-bye to his career,the future of the Bobcats responded to thepressure of the moment.

Molina made up for his miscues with a2-for-4 performance at the plate, and his

chopper found a hole between first andsecond to drive in two runs in the sixth tomake it 7-3.

Second baseman Chris Serrano hadthree hits and drove in the final run of thenight on a single to left to score DarrenHerrera in the seventh for 7-4.

But the comeback was too late and tooshort.

For Lovato, that was too much to take.

B-3THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013SPORTS

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARDLocal results and schedules

James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060Zack Ponce, 986-3032 FAX, 986-3067Email, [email protected]

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

Today on TVSchedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local.

CYCLING2:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Tour of California: Stage 5

EXTREME SPORTS10 a.m. on ESPN — X Games in Barcelona, Spain5 p.m. on ESPN — X Games in Barcelona, Spain (taped)

GOLF5 a.m. on The Golf Channel — European Tour: Volvo WorldMatch Play Championship first-round matches in Bulgaria10:30 a.m. on The Golf Channel — Web.com Tour: BMW Char-ity Pro-Am first round in South Carolina1 p.m. on The Golf Channel — PGA Tour: Byron Nelson Champi-onship first round in Irving, Texas4:30 p.m. on The Golf Channel — LPGA Tour: Mobile Bay Clas-sic first round in Mobile, Ala. (taped)

HOCKEY4 a.m. on NBCSN — IIHF World Championship: Quarterfinals6:30 a.m. on NBCSN — IIHF World Championship: Quarterfinals9 a.m. on NBCSN — IIHF World Championship: QuarterfinalsNoon on NBCSN — IIHF World Championship: Quarterfinals

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL6 p.m. on MLB — Detroit at Texas or San Francisco at Colorado

NBA6 p.m. on TNT — Conference semifinals, Game 5:Indiana at New York8:30 p.m. on ESPN — Conference semifinals, Game 6:San Antonio at Golden State

NHL5:30 p.m. on NBCSN — Conference semifinals, Game 1:N.Y. Rangers at Boston8 p.m. on NBCSN — Conference semifinals, Game 2:San Jose at Los Angeles

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketballu St. Michael’s High School will host boys and girls camps thissummer in Perez-Shelley Memorial Gymnasium. The first runsJune 3-6. The second camp runs July 15-18. The cost is $75 forplayers in grades 3-9, and $40 for players in grades 1-2. Registra-tion forms are available at www.stmichaelssf.org at the athleticspage, or call 983-7353.

u The Capital Lady Jaguar shooting camp is June 3 and 4 from9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cost is $40 per participant. For more information,call Tom Montoya at 690-4310.

u The fourth annual Santa Fe Preparatory camp is June 3-7 from9 a.m.-noon in Prep Gymnasium. It is for boys and girls betweenthe ages of 10-15, and cost is $100 per participant. Instruction isled by the Prep coaching staff and former players. For more infor-mation, call Dan Van Essen at 310-2631.

u The Pojoaque Valley girls basketball team is holding a summerleague every Wednesday, starting June 5. For more information,call Ron Drake at 281-6443

Footballu The Santa Fe Young American Football League is holding regis-tration for the upcoming season from 9 a.m.-noon May 24. Reg-istration also is scheduled for June 1, 15 and 29. All registrationsessions will be at the YAFL headquarters. Fee is $105. For moreinformation, call 820-0775.

u The ninth annual St. Michael’s Horsemen football camp isJune 10-13 from 8 a.m.-noon. The camp is open to boys and girlsbetween grades 1-8. Cost is $75. For more information, call JoeyFernandez at 699-4749.

Runningu The 2013 Santa Fe Runaround will be held Saturday, May 18.There will be a 5K, 10K, and kids 1K Fun Run starting at the his-toric Santa Fe Plaza. Registration information can be found atwww.active.com, or www.santafestriders.org. You may alsoregister race day starting at 6:45 a.m. on the Plaza, or in personat The Running Hub, 527 B West Cordova. For more info, visitwww.santafestriders.org, or call Jim Owens at 231-6166.

Volleyballu The Santa Fe University of Art and Design is holding avolleyball camp for children from grades 5-8 from May 28-31from 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. in the Driscoll Center. Cost is $55.For more information, call Robin White at 231-1944

NoteTo get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax informationto 986-3067, or you can email it to [email protected] include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.

HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE

This week’s varsity schedule for Northern New Mexico highschools. For additions or changes, please call 986-3045.

TodayBaseball — Class AAA State Tournament, quarterfinals:St. Michael’s vs. Silver, 3 p.m. (at St. Pius); Robertson vs.Sandia Prep, 7 p.m. (at Rio Rancho Cleveland)Class AAAA State Tournament, quarterfinals, at La Cueva:Los Alamos vs. Piedra Vista, noonSoftball — Class A-AA State Tournament at Rio Rancho: loser’sbracket, McCurdy vs. Mora, 8 a.m. (Field 2)Class AAA State Tournament at Rio Rancho: Robertson vs.Portales, 10 a.m. (Field 1); West Las Vegas vs. Hope Christian,10 a.m. (Field 2); St. Michael’s vs. Bloomfield, 10 a.m. (Field 3)

FridayBaseball — Class AAA State Tournament, semifinals, at Cleve-land High School: Ruidoso/Lovington winner vs. St. Michael’s/Silver winner, 10 a.m. (Rio Rancho Cleveland)Class AAAA State Tournament, semifinals, at Cleveland HighSchool: Los Lunas/Santa Teresa winner vs. Los Alamos/PiedraVista winner, 1 p.m. (Rio Rancho Cleveland)Softball — Class A-AA State Tournament at Lobo Field: pairingsand times TBDClass AAA State Tournament at Lobo Field: pairings and timesTBDTrack and field — Class AAA-AAAAA State Championships atUNM Soccer/Track Complex: field events start at 8 a.m.; runningevents start at 10 a.m.

SaturdayBaseball — Class AAA State Tournament, championship game,at Lobo Field: pairings TBD, 10 a.m.Class AAAA State Tournament, championship game, at Lobo Field,pairings TBD, 3:30 p.m.Softball — Class AAA State Tournament at Lobo Field: pairingsand times TBDTrack and field — Class AAA-AAAAA State Championships atUNM Soccer/Track Complex: field events start at 8 a.m.; runningevents start at 11 a.m.

most. Though aggressive at the plate,they were unable to make much contact.McCurdy ended up with only four hits.

McCurdy did see a little sunshine at thetop of fifth when the Rehoboth pitcherMariah Miller struggled on the moundafter netting eight strikeouts in the fourprevious innings. The Lady Lynx wereup 10-1 when she loaded the bases forMcCurdy.

Relief pitcher Krystin James replacedMiller, but the Lady Bobcats posted a five-

run rally to make it 10-6. But McCurdymanaged just one more run the rest of theway.

It was a learning experience the LadyBobcats have plenty of time to master.

“We haven’t been this far since ’07, soit’s a turning point for them,” Velasquezsaid. “We’re going to be even stronger nextyear.”

And McCurdy senior Amanda Villarealhad some advice for her younger team-mates.

“Just to keep the attitudes up and sticktogether when things get tough and don’t

get down on each other,” she said.

IN OTHER ACTION

u Despite an unexpected 15-4 upset overNo. 8 seed Estancia in the first round, No. 9Mora couldn’t hold on in the quarterfinals.The Rangerettes lost 13-0 to No. 1 Loving(19-2).u It was a rough day for No. 15 Pecos, as

it drew No. 2 Cobre for the tournament’sfirst round and lost 27-0. The three-inninggame was a hit fest for the Lady Indians(22-5) and the Lady Panthers (13-14) strug-gled in the outfield to slow them down.

Game: Cobre scores 27 runs against PecosContinued from Page B-1

Errors: Indians score 3 runs in 4th inning

McCurdy pitcher Santiago Lovato delivers to Jemez Valley during a Class A statesemifinal Wednesday at Rio Rancho High School. JUNFU HAN/FOR THE NEW MEXICAN

Artie Sanchez, Indians head coach.Henderson’s forte quickly became a haz-

ard as his slow wind-up delivery allowedCobre runners to slide into second basebefore his pitch hit catcher Scottie San-chez’s mitt.

“I don’t really have that great of a pickoffmove and they’re quick on the bases [so]you can’t really do too much about that,”

Henderson said. “That’s hard, it puts a lotof pressure on you, especially in a tightgame like this.”

The Indians added three insurance runsin the fourth and fifth to grasp a 10-3 leadand put the game out of reach.

Only six of Cobre’s 13 runs were earned.“Take away those mistakes and it’s

still going to be a close game because it’sCobre, it’s always going to be a dogfight tothe end,” Ruiz said.

The upset fell short but Ruiz is pleasedwith the improvement he saw from histeam and is equally optimistic the Pantherscan return to the state tournament nextyear.

“Yea we lost, but we’re still one of thetop eight in the state and we got here for areason,” he said. “It didn’t work out for ustoday but it’s going to be a learning expe-rience for us [especially] for the youngguys.”

Dugout: McCurdy had cut the lead to four

a 3-1 win at Rio Rancho High School.The fourth-seeded Wildcats saw their

season end to the same team in almostthe same fashion as last year’s loss to theTigers, by a 3-0 score, as they went on totheir second straight A championship.

Capitan plays No. 7 Jemez Valley at9:30 a.m. Thursday with a three-peat onthe line.

It was just a repeat for the Wildcats — ofhung heads and streaming tears. Juniorcatcher Marcus Chavez laid on the benchwith his jersey over his head.

Cordova again smeared tears againsthis eye black, as a stellar career at Questacame to an end.

“I wanted this so bad,” Cordova said.“This whole team wanted it so bad. Wejust wanted it bad.”

And like last year, defense was at theheart of the matter. A fielding error byQuesta shortstop Jesus Ortega, as he lostthe grip on Bobbie Hughes’ chopper up

the middle, allowed Mikey Hamm to breakthe scoreless tie in the third inning. RubenMendoza followed with an RBI single for2-0.

After Juna Cintas’ grounder slipped intoleft field to score Cordova for the Wildcats’lone hit and run in the fourth, Capitan (15-4) responded quickly.

Cordova tried to pick off Dillon Trapp,who led off with a single, but the throwslipped past Cintas and into foul territory.Cintas chased the ball, and his throw tothird base bounced over brother Jo Cintas’head, allowing Trapp to score.

The rest of the day was filled withmissed chances.

The Wildcats (16-6) put four runnerson base with four walks and a hit batsmanover the final three innings, but three werestranded in scoring position.

It didn’t help that three of the runnersgot on base with two outs, leaving theWildcats little choice but to collect a bighit.

“I felt we were fairly aggressive against

Villegas,” said Cruz Chavez II, Questa headcoach. “I was really happy we were tryingto hack. We thought he threw a lot harderthan he really did.”

In the fifth, Isaiah Chavez grounded outto Villegas, leaving Zach Padilla at second.

Cordova was hit by a pitch and Juan Cin-tas walked in the sixth, but Jo Cintas struckout swinging, one of 10 strikeout victims byVillegas.

Matt Maldonado walked with one outin the seventh, but he was left at secondwhen Padilla and Chavez struck out to endthe Wildcats’ season.

Coach Chavez lamented not gettingchances to face more southern teams toprepare his team for the postseason.

“We were lucky enough to see [Mag-dalena, which Questa played threetimes],” Chavez said. “We’re lucky to haveMcCurdy, another top-notch team in thestate. When you don’t see these kids, itkinda flusters you. We try to load up ourschedule, but … I gotta tip my hat off toVillegas.”

Hopes: Capitan faces Jemez Valley for title

Continued from Page B-1

Continued from Page B-1

Continued from Page B-1

Page 16: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

B-4 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013 BASEBALL

American LeagueEast W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwayNew York 25 15 .625 — — 7-3 L-1 13-8 12-7Baltimore 23 17 .575 2 — 6-4 L-2 9-8 14-9Boston 23 17 .575 2 — 3-7 W-1 13-10 10-7Tampa Bay 20 19 .513 41/2 21/2 7-3 L-1 14-7 6-12Toronto 17 24 .415 81/2 61/2 7-3 W-4 9-12 8-12Central W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwayDetroit 22 16 .579 — — 5-5 L-1 13-7 9-9Cleveland 22 17 .564 1/2 1/2 7-3 W-1 11-8 11-9Kansas City 19 17 .528 2 2 3-7 L-1 10-8 9-9Minnesota 18 19 .486 31/2 31/2 5-5 L-2 9-10 9-9Chicago 17 21 .447 5 5 5-5 W-2 8-9 9-12West W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwayTexas 26 14 .650 — — 7-3 W-2 11-4 15-10Oakland 20 22 .476 7 4 2-8 L-2 10-10 10-12Seattle 19 21 .475 7 4 6-4 W-1 11-9 8-12Los Angeles 15 24 .385 101/2 71/2 4-6 W-1 8-10 7-14Houston 11 30 .268 151/2 121/2 3-7 W-1 6-16 5-14Wednesday’s GamesSan Diego 8, Baltimore 4Houston 7, Detroit 5Chicago White Sox 9, Minnesota 4Texas 6, Oakland 2Seattle 12, N.Y. Yankees 2Toronto 11, San Francisco 3Boston 9, Tampa Bay 2Kansas City at L.A. Angels

Tuesday’s GamesSan Diego 3, Baltimore 2N.Y. Yankees 4, Seattle 3Toronto 10, San Francisco 6Detroit 6, Houston 2Tampa Bay 5, Boston 3Chicago White Sox 4, Minnesota 2L.A. Angels 6, Kansas City 2Texas 6, Oakland 5, 10 innings

Thursday’s GamesSeattle (Harang 1-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 4-2), 5:05 p.m.Boston (Doubront 3-1) at Tampa Bay (Cobb 4-2), 5:10 p.m.Detroit (Verlander 4-3) at Texas (Darvish 6-1), 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Quintana 2-1) at L.A. Angels (Williams 2-1), 8:05 p.m.

National LeagueEast W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwayAtlanta 22 18 .550 — — 4-6 L-2 9-5 13-13Washington 21 18 .538 1/2 11/2 6-4 L-1 12-9 9-9Philadelphia 19 22 .463 31/2 41/2 5-5 L-1 9-11 10-11New York 14 22 .389 6 7 3-7 L-5 9-12 5-10Miami 11 29 .275 11 12 3-7 L-4 5-13 6-16Central W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwaySt. Louis 25 13 .658 — — 8-2 W-2 11-6 14-7Cincinnati 24 16 .600 2 — 8-2 W-5 16-6 8-10Pittsburgh 23 17 .575 3 — 6-4 W-2 12-8 11-9Chicago 17 23 .425 9 6 6-4 W-1 9-12 8-11Milwaukee 16 22 .421 9 6 2-8 L-2 10-11 6-11West W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home AwaySan Francisco 23 17 .575 — — 5-5 L-2 15-7 8-10Arizona 23 18 .561 1/2 1/2 7-3 W-2 12-11 11-7Colorado 21 19 .525 2 2 3-7 L-1 11-7 10-12San Diego 18 21 .462 41/2 41/2 6-4 W-2 10-8 8-13Los Angeles 16 22 .421 6 6 3-7 W-1 10-13 6-9Wednesday’s GamesCleveland 10, Philadelphia 4Arizona 5, Atlanta 3Pittsburgh 3, Milwaukee 1Cincinnati 4, Miami 0Chicago Cubs 6, Colorado 3N.Y. Mets at St. LouisWashington at L.A. Dodgers

Tuesday’s GamesPhiladelphia 6, Cleveland 2Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 3, 12 inningsCincinnati 6, Miami 2Colorado 9, Chicago Cubs 4St. Louis 10, N.Y. Mets 4Arizona 2, Atlanta 0L.A. Dodgers 2, Washington 0

Thursday’s GamesN.Y. Mets (Niese 2-4) at St. Louis (Wainwright 5-2), 11:45 a.m.Milwaukee (Burgos 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-0), 5:05 p.m.Cincinnati (Latos 4-0) at Miami (Fernandez 2-2), 5:10 p.m.San Francisco (M.Cain 2-2) at Colorado (Chacin 3-2), 6:40 p.m.Washington (Strasburg 1-5) at San Diego (Volquez 3-3), 8:10 p.m.

American League2013 Team 2012 vs. Opp.

Pitchers Line W-L ERA REC W-L IP ERASeattle Harang (R) 7:05p 1-4 7.30 1-4 No RecordNew York Pettitte (L) -155 4-2 3.83 4-3 0-1 6.1 5.68

Boston Doubront (L) 7:10p 3-1 6.40 4-1 2-0 16.2 4.32Tampa Bay Cobb (R) -155 4-2 3.09 5-2 2-1 16.0 2.81

Detroit Verlander (R) 8:05p 4-3 1.93 4-4 1-0 13.0 0.69Texas Darvish (R) -120 6-1 2.73 7-1 3-0 20.0 3.60

Chicago Quintana (L) 10:05p 2-1 3.72 2-5 0-1 5.0 1.80Los Angeles Williams (R) -140 2-1 3.06 1-1 1-0 9.1 2.89

National League2013 Team 2012 vs. Opp.

Pitchers Line W-L ERA REC W-L IP ERANew York Niese (L) 1:45p 2-4 5.93 3-5 1-0 6.0 0.00St. Louis Wainwrght (R) -200 5-2 2.30 6-2 0-2 11.1 9.53

Milwaukee Burgos (R) 7:05p 1-1 6.86 1-3 No RecordPittsburgh Liriano (L) -140 1-0 1.69 1-0 0-0 7.0 3.86

Cincinnati Latos (R) -200 4-0 3.04 6-2 0-1 12.1 5.84Miami Fernandez (R) 7:10p 2-2 3.65 4-3 No Record

San Francisco Cain (R) 8:40p 2-2 5.04 3-5 2-0 15.1 1.76Colorado Chacin (R) -115 3-2 2.70 3-3 0-1 13.0 6.23

Washington Strasburg (R) -150 1-5 3.10 2-6 0-1 4.0 9.00San Diego Volquez (R) 10:10p 3-3 5.15 3-5 0-0 7.0 1.29

TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON

THIS DATE IN BASEBALLMay 16

1939 — The Cleveland Indians beat the Philadelphia Athletics 8-3 in 10 innings in the firstAmerican League night game, held at Philadelphia’s Shibe Park.1953 — The White Sox loaded the bases against the Yankees in the ninth inning, but VernStephens, who had 10 grand slams in his career, was lifted for a pinch hitter. Pitcher TommyByrne, the substitute batter, then hit a homer off Ewell Blackwell for a 5-3 win.1965 — Jim Palmer, 19, won his first major league game and hit his first homer, off JimBouton. The Baltimore Orioles beat the New York Yankees 7-5.1972 — Rick Monday hit three consecutive homers to lead the Chicago Cubs to an 8-1 winat Philadelphia. Greg Luzinski’s 500-foot home run hit the Liberty Bell monument at VeteranStadium for the Phillies’ only run.1981 — Craig Reynolds of Houston hit three triples to lead the Astros to a 6-1 victory overthe Chicago Cubs.1997 — The Montreal Expos overcame an early nine-run deficit and rallied past the SanFrancisco Giants 14-13 on David Segui’s RBI single in the ninth inning. The Giants took an11-2 lead after three innings. Montreal came back with four runs in the fourth, three in thefifth and three more in the sixth for a 12-11 lead. Glenallen Hill’s RBI single capped a two-run seventh that put the Giants ahead 13-12.2000 — The Los Angeles Dodgers went into the Wrigley Field crowd after a fan ran off withChad Kreuter’s cap in the ninth inning of Los Angeles’ 6-5 victory. The game was delayedfor nine minutes while some Dodgers and fans fought.2006 — The New York Yankees, down 9-0 in the second inning, matched the biggestcomeback in Yankees history when Jorge Posada hit a game-winning, two-run homer withtwo outs in the ninth for a 14-13 victory over the Texas Rangers.2008 — Jayson Werth of Philadelphia hit three home runs and tied the team record witheight RBIs in a 10-3 win over Toronto.2009 — Gabe Gross and Akinori Iwamura pulled off a double steal in the fifth inning of a4-2 win over Cleveland, giving Tampa Bay at least one stolen base in 18 straight games. Itwas the longest stretch in the AL since the New York Yankees had a 19-game run in 1914.2011 — Michael Brantley’s three-run homer and Travis Hafner’s bases-loaded doublekeyed a 10-run fourth inning that sent Cleveland to a 19-1 win over Kansas City. VinMazzaro, the third Royals’ pitcher, was charged with 14 runs and 11 hits in 2 1-3 innings.Mazzaro became the first pitcher in modern baseball history (since 1900) to allow 14 ormore runs in less than three innings.

BOxSCORESCubs 6, Rockies 3

Colorado Chicagoab r h bi ab r h bi

EYong rf 4 0 0 0 DeJess cf 3 2 2 1Fowler cf 4 0 0 0 SCastro ss4 1 2 1CGnzlz lf 3 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 3 0 2 1Tlwtzk ss 4 1 1 0 ASorin lf 4 0 0 1Helton 1b 3 1 0 0 Sweeny lf 0 0 0 0Arenad 3b 4 0 1 0 Schrhlt rf 4 0 0 0Rutledg 2b 4 0 3 2 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0Torreal c 3 0 0 0 DNavrr c 4 0 0 0WRosr ph 1 0 0 0 Barney 2b3 2 1 0Garlnd p 1 0 0 0 Smrdzj p 2 1 1 2Brignc ph 1 1 1 1 Russell p 0 0 0 0Blckmn ph 1 0 1 0Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 31 6 9 6Colorado 010 001 001—3Chicago 120 000 30x—6E—Gregg (1). DP—Colorado 1, Chicago 1.LOB—Colorado 5, Chicago 5. 2B—Rizzo(11), Barney (8). HR—Brignac (1), DeJesus(5), Samardzija (1). SB—Barney (2). CS—Valbuena (1). S—Samardzija.

IP H R ER BB SOColoradoGarland L,3-4 5 7 3 3 1 4Outman 1 1-3 2 3 3 1 2W.Lopez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0Belisle 1 0 0 0 0 1ChicagoSamardzija W,2-5 8 5 2 2 2 7Russell 1-3 0 0 0 0 1Gregg 2-3 2 1 0 0 0HBP—by Outman (DeJesus).Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, EricCooper; Second, Paul Schrieber; Third, ChadFairchild.T—2:47. A—38,083 (41,019).

Red Sox 9, Rays 2Boston Tampa Bay

ab r h bi ab r h biEllsury cf 4 1 1 0 Jnnngs cf 5 1 2 1Victorn rf 5 0 0 0 KJhnsn dh5 0 0 0Pedroia 2b 5 1 2 1 Zobrist 2b4 0 0 1D.Ortiz dh 4 1 1 1 Longori 3b4 0 1 0Carp ph-dh1 0 0 0 YEscor ss 4 0 1 0Napoli 1b 4 1 1 1 Loney 1b 3 0 1 0JGoms lf 3 1 1 1 SRdrgz lf 2 0 1 0Nava lf 1 0 0 0 Joyce rf 1 0 0 0Mdlrks 3b 4 1 2 1 JMolin c 3 0 1 0Sltlmch c 3 1 0 0 Scott lf 1 0 0 0Drew ss 3 2 2 4 RRorts 2b 3 1 2 0

Loaton c 1 0 0 0Totals 37 9 10 9 Totals 36 2 9 2Boston 008 000 010—9Tampa Bay 002 000 000—2LOB—Boston 4, Tampa Bay 9. 2B—Pedroia(10), Napoli (18), Middlebrooks (10), Drew(4), Y.Escobar (6). 3B—Jennings (2). HR—Middlebrooks (7), Drew (3). SB—Jennings(6).

IP H R ER BB SOBostonLester W,6-0 7 8 2 2 0 5Uehara 1 1 0 0 1 1De La Torre 1 0 0 0 0 2Tampa BayPrice L,1-4 2 1-3 5 4 4 1 1J.Wright 1 1-3 3 4 4 1 1C.Ramos 3 1 0 0 0 2Farnsworth 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 2Lueke 1 0 0 0 1 0HBP—by Lester (S.Rodriguez). WP—Lester,C.Ramos.Umpires—Home, Sam Holbrook; First, JoeWest; Second, David Rackley; Third, RobDrake.T—3:31. A—15,767 (34,078).

Reds 4, Marlins 0Cincinnati Miami

ab r h bi ab r h biChoo cf 5 3 4 2 Pierre lf 4 0 1 0CIzturs ss 4 1 1 0 Diaz ph 1 0 1 0Votto 1b 4 0 2 1 Polanc 3b 4 0 1 0Phillips 2b 5 0 2 1 Dietrch 2b5 0 2 0Bruce rf 4 0 2 0 Ozuna rf 4 0 1 0Paul lf 3 0 0 0 Ruggin cf 3 0 0 0DRonsn lf 0 0 0 0 Dobbs 1b 4 0 2 0Hannhn 3b 3 0 0 0 MDunn p 0 0 0 0Mesorc c 4 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 4 0 0 0Leake p 3 0 0 0 Brantly c 3 0 2 0Lutz ph 1 0 0 0 Sanaia p 2 0 0 0Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 Coghln ph1 0 1 0

NGreen 1b1 0 0 0Totals 36 4 11 4 Totals 36 0 11 0Cincinnati 100 201 000—4Miami 000 000 000—0DP—Cincinnati 2, Miami 2. LOB—Cincinnati9, Miami 12. 2B—C.Izturis (1), Phillips (10),Bruce (13), Dietrich (2). HR—Choo 2 (9).

IP H R ER BB SOCincinnatiLeake W,3-2 6 2-3 9 0 0 1 6S.Marshall H,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1LeCure 1 1 0 0 0 2Chapman 1 1 0 0 1 2MiamiSanabia L,2-6 6 9 4 4 3 3Webb 1 2 0 0 0 0Qualls 1 0 0 0 0 0M.Dunn 1 0 0 0 1 2HBP—by Leake (Polanco). WP—S.Marshall.Umpires—Home, Todd Tichenor; First, DaleScott; Second, Bill Miller; Third, CB Bucknor.T—2:58. A—14,866 (37,442).

Blue Jays 11, Giants 3San Francisco Toronto

ab r h bi ab r h biPagan cf 5 1 3 0 MeCarr lf 3 2 1 0Scutaro 2b 3 1 1 0 MIzturs 2b1 0 0 0Sandovl 3b2 0 0 1 Bautist rf 5 2 2 2Arias 3b 2 1 1 0 Encrnc dh3 1 1 1Posey dh 3 0 1 1 Arencii c 5 2 2 2Pence rf 3 0 1 0 Lind 1b 4 1 2 2Torres rf 1 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b3 2 1 0Belt 1b 3 0 1 0 Rasms cf 4 0 1 1Pill 1b 0 0 0 1 Bonifc lf 4 0 1 1GBlanc lf 3 0 0 0 Kawsk ss 3 1 0 0Quiroz c 4 0 1 0BCrwfr ss 4 0 1 0Totals 33 3 10 3 Totals 351111 9

San Francisco 100 000 020—3Toronto 532 001 00x—11E—Scutaro (6), Pagan (3), Kawasaki (3).DP—San Francisco 1, Toronto 1. LOB—SanFrancisco 9, Toronto 8. 2B—Pagan 2 (8),Posey (11), Quiroz (3), Me.Cabrera (7),Bautista (8), Rasmus (6). HR—Arencibia(10), Lind (3). S—Scutaro. SF—Sandoval,Pill, Encarnacion.

IP H R ER BB SOSan FranciscoVogelsong L,1-4 2 6 8 3 2 1Gaudin 3 1-3 4 3 3 3 2Mijares 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 3J.Lopez 1 1 0 0 0 0TorontoR.Ortiz W,1-1 7 6 1 1 1 1Storey 2 4 2 2 1 3HBP—by Vogelsong (Rasmus), by Gaudin(Lawrie), by R.Ortiz (Posey). WP—R.Ortiz.Umpires—Home, Tom Hallion; First, RonKulpa; Second, Mike Muchlinski; Third, PhilCuzzi.T—2:54. A—32,863 (49,282).

Mariners 12, Yankees 2Seattle New York

ab r h bi ab r h biMSndrs cf 4 1 2 1 Gardnr cf 3 0 1 0EnChvz cf 1 0 0 0 BFrncs lf 1 0 0 0Ackley 2b 3 2 1 0 Cano 2b 3 0 0 0Seager 3b 4 2 2 3 J.Nix ss 1 0 0 0Andino 3b 1 0 0 0 V.Wells 2b3 1 1 1KMorls dh 5 1 2 1 Grndrs cf 4 0 1 0Morse rf 4 2 2 1 Overay 1b3 0 2 0Smoak 1b 4 1 2 0 AuRmn c 1 0 0 0Ibanez lf 5 2 2 6 DAdms 3b4 0 1 0JMontr c 5 0 2 0 ISuzuki rf 4 0 0 0Ryan ss 5 1 1 0 CStwrt 1b4 1 1 1

AlGnzlz p 3 0 1 0Totals 41 121612 Totals 34 2 8 2Seattle 700 023 000—12New York 100 010 000—2E—I.Suzuki (1). DP—Seattle 1, New York2. LOB—Seattle 9, New York 6. 2B—M.Saunders 2 (4), Overbay (10). HR—Seager(5), Ibanez 2 (6), V.Wells (10), C.Stewart (3).SB—Gardner (7).

IP H R ER BB SOSeattleIwakuma W,5-1 7 8 2 2 0 4O.Perez 1 0 0 0 1 2Wilhelmsen 1 0 0 0 0 1New YorkP.Hughes L,2-3 2-3 6 7 7 2 0Claiborne 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2B.Marshall 5 2-3 9 5 5 5 1Alb.Gonzalez 1-3 0 0 0 0 0WP—B.Marshall.Umpires—Home, Alan Porter; First, GregGibson; Second, Hunter Wendelstedt; Third,Jerry Layne.T—2:48. A—34,081 (50,291).

Pirates 3, Brewers 1Milwaukee Pittsburgh

ab r h bi ab r h biAoki rf 4 0 2 0 SMarte lf 4 1 1 0Segura ss 4 0 0 0 Tabata rf 2 0 0 0Braun lf 3 0 1 0 Snider rf 1 0 1 0ArRmr 3b 4 0 0 0 McCtch cf3 2 0 0Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 GSnchz 1b2 0 0 0CGomz cf 4 0 1 0 Walker 2b4 0 1 2Weeks 2b 3 1 1 1 RMartn c 3 0 0 0AlGnzlz 1b 3 0 0 0 Inge 3b 2 0 0 0Gallard p 2 0 0 0 Mercer ss2 0 1 0YBtncr ph 1 0 0 0 WRdrg p 1 0 0 0Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 GJones ph1 0 0 0Totals 32 1 6 1 Totals 25 3 4 2Milwaukee 000 000 100—1Pittsburgh 000 002 01x—3E—Weeks (5). DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 6. 2B—Braun (10),S.Marte (8). 3B—Lucroy (2). HR—Weeks(3). SB—McCutchen 2 (9). S—Mercer,W.Rodriguez.

IP H R ER BB SOMilwaukeeGallardo L,3-3 6 3 2 2 4 5Badenhop 1 2-3 1 1 0 2 1Mic.Gonzalez 0 0 0 0 0 0Axford 1-3 0 0 0 0 0PittsburghW.Rodriguez W,4-2 7 6 1 1 1 5Melancon H,14 1 0 0 0 0 2Grilli S,16-16 1 0 0 0 0 1Mic.Gonzalez pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.WP—Gallardo, Badenhop.Umpires—Home, Brian O’Nora; First, BillWelke; Second, Adrian Johnson; Third,Fieldin Culbreth.T—2:45. A—13,554 (38,362).

White Sox 9, Twins 4Chicago Minnesota

ab r h bi ab r h biWise cf 5 0 0 0 Carroll 3b 5 2 3 1AlRmrz ss 5 1 1 0 Mauer dh 5 0 3 0Rios rf 4 3 3 0 Wlngh lf 4 0 1 2A.Dunn 1b 4 2 3 5 Mornea 1b5 0 2 0Konerk dh 4 1 1 0 Doumit c 4 0 1 0Gillaspi 3b 4 1 2 0 Arcia rf 4 0 0 0Viciedo lf 4 1 2 2 Hicks cf 4 0 0 0De Aza pr-lf0 0 0 0 EEscor ss 4 1 1 1Kppngr 2b 5 0 2 2 Flormn ss 2 1 0 0Gimenz c 5 0 0 0 Parmel ph1 0 0 0

Dozier 2b 0 0 0 0Totals 40 9 14 9 Totals 38 4 11 4Chicago 002 120 220—9Minnesota 110 002 000—4LOB—Chicago 9, Minnesota 9. 2B—A.Dunn(3), Keppinger (3), Carroll (2), Mauer (16).3B—Rios (1). HR—A.Dunn 2 (9), Viciedo (4),E.Escobar (2). SB—Rios (7), Florimon (4).SF—Viciedo.

IP H R ER BB SOChicagoAxelrod W,1-3 5 1-3 9 3 3 1 4Lindstrom H,5 1-3 2 1 1 0 0Thornton H,10 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1N.Jones 1 0 0 0 0 0Omogrosso 1 0 0 0 0 1MinnesotaPelfrey L,3-4 4 8 5 5 2 3Swarzak 2 1 0 0 1 1Duensing 1-3 2 2 2 0 0Roenicke 1 2-3 2 2 2 1 1Perkins 1 1 0 0 0 1Pelfrey pitched to 3 batters in the 5th.HBP—by Axelrod (Willingham).T—3:26 (Rain delay: 0:04). A—35,613(39,021).

Astros 7, Tigers 5Houston Detroit

ab r h bi ab r h biGrssmn lf 3 0 1 0 Infante 2b4 0 1 0Elmore 2b 4 1 2 0 TrHntr rf 3 0 0 0C.Pena dh 4 1 1 1 MiCarr 3b 5 0 1 0Carter 1b 3 1 0 0 Fielder 1b4 0 0 0JMrtnz lf 3 1 1 3 VMrtnz dh4 1 0 0BBarns cf 0 1 0 0 JhPerlt ss 2 1 1 0Corprn c 3 1 2 2 Tuiassp lf 3 1 3 1Crowe pr-rf0 1 0 0 D.Kelly ph1 0 0 0Pareds rf 3 0 1 0 B.Pena c 3 1 1 1JCastro c 0 0 0 0 AGarci cf 3 1 1 3Dmngz 3b 3 0 0 1 Dirks ph 1 0 0 0MGnzlz ss 4 0 0 0Totals 30 7 8 7 Totals 33 5 8 5Houston 010 400 002—7Detroit 040 001 000—5E—Ma.Gonzalez (4). DP—Houston 2, Detroit1. LOB—Houston 2, Detroit 7. 2B—Elmore(1), Corporan (2), Paredes (4). HR—J.Martinez (3), Corporan (3), A.Garcia (1). CS—Grossman (4), Paredes 2 (2). S—Paredes.SF—Dominguez.

IP H R ER BB SOHoustonKeuchel 5 2-3 7 5 4 2 3Blackley 2-3 0 0 0 0 0E.Gonzalez 2-3 1 0 0 1 1W.Wright 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Ambriz W,1-2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1Veras S,5-7 1 0 0 0 2 0DetroitScherzer 7 5 5 5 3 7Smyly 2-3 2 0 0 0 2Alburquerque L,0-11-3 0 1 1 1 1Coke 1 1 1 1 0 0Alburquerque pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.HBP—by Veras (Tor.Hunter). WP—Alburqu-erque. Balk—Scherzer.T—3:03. A—40,315 (41,255).

Rangers 6, Athletics 2Texas Oakland

ab r h bi ab r h biKinsler 2b 3 1 0 0 Crisp cf 3 0 0 1Andrus ss 4 1 0 0 Jaso c 1 0 0 0Brkmn dh 4 1 2 2 DNorrs c 1 0 0 1Beltre 3b 4 1 1 1 Lowrie ss 3 0 1 0N.Cruz rf 4 1 1 3 Cespds dh4 0 1 0Morlnd 1b 3 0 0 0 Moss rf 4 0 0 0DvMrp lf 3 0 1 0 Dldsn 3b 3 1 1 0Chirins c 4 0 1 0 S.Smith lf 4 0 1 0LMartn cf 4 1 1 0 Barton 1b 2 0 0 0

Fremn 1b 2 0 0 0Sogrd 2b 2 1 1 0Rosles 2b 1 0 0 0

Totals 33 6 7 6 Totals 30 2 5 2Texas 002 040 000—6Oakland 000 001 100—2E—Lowrie (7). DP—Oakland 1. LOB—Texas7, Oakland 7. 2B—Chirinos (2), Sogard(3). HR—N.Cruz (10). SB—Andrus 2 (10),L.Martin (1). CS—Dav.Murphy (2). SF—Crisp, D.Norris.

IP H R ER BB SOTexasOgando W,4-2 6 4 2 2 1 3Kirkman 2 1-3 1 0 0 2 3Scheppers 2-3 0 0 0 0 1OaklandStraily L,1-2 4 1-3 4 5 4 4 2J.Chavez 3 2-3 3 1 1 1 3Neshek 1 0 0 0 0 1Ogando pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.HBP—by Ogando (Jaso), by Straily (Kinsler,Andrus). WP—Straily, J.Chavez.T—2:53. A—20,414 (35,067).

Diamondbacks 5, Braves 3Atlanta Arizona

ab r h bi ab r h biJSchafr lf 5 2 2 0 GParra rf 3 1 2 0Smmns ss 5 0 1 0 Gregrs ss 4 1 1 1J.Upton rf 3 1 1 0 Gldsch 1b4 1 3 0FFrmn 1b 4 0 3 3 ErChvz 3b3 1 2 3McCnn c 5 0 1 0 C.Ross lf 4 0 1 1BUpton cf 5 0 0 0 MMntr c 4 0 0 0JFrncs 3b 4 0 0 0 Prado 2b 4 0 1 0R.Pena 2b 4 0 2 0 Pollock cf 4 0 0 0THudsn p 2 0 0 0 Kenndy p 1 0 0 0RJhnsn ph 1 0 1 0 Kubel ph 0 1 0 0Gattis ph 1 0 0 0 Pnngtn ph1 0 0 0Totals 39 3 11 3 Totals 32 5 10 5Atlanta 001 020 000—3Arizona 100 040 00x—5E—Prado (2), Gregorius (2). DP—Atlanta 2.LOB—Atlanta 12, Arizona 6. 2B—F.Freeman2 (7), Goldschmidt 3 (11), Er.Chavez (7).

IP H R ER BB SOAtlantaT.Hudson L,4-3 5 8 5 5 2 4Gearrin 2 2 0 0 1 0Varvaro 1 0 0 0 0 1ArizonaKennedy W,2-3 5 5 3 3 3 7Mat.Reynolds H,4 1 2 0 0 0 1Ziegler H,6 1 2 0 0 0 1D.Hernandez H,8 1 1 0 0 0 1Bell S,6-8 1 1 0 0 0 1T—3:00. A—23,524 (48,633).

Indians 10, Phillies 4Cleveland Philadelphia

ab r h bi ab r h biStubbs cf 5 2 2 0 Rollins ss 4 0 2 3Kipnis 2b 4 3 3 3 Utley 2b 4 0 0 0ACarer ss 4 1 2 2 MYong 3b 3 0 0 0Swsher 1b 5 1 1 2 Howrd 1b 4 0 0 0MrRynl 1b 4 0 1 2 DYong rf 4 1 2 0Allen p 0 0 0 0 DBrwn lf 4 0 0 0Hagadn p 0 0 0 0 Ruiz c 4 1 2 1Bourn ph 1 0 0 0 Mayrry cf 4 2 2 0Albers p 0 0 0 0 Hamels p 0 0 0 0CSantn c 5 0 1 0 Frndsn ph1 0 0 0Raburn lf-rf4 0 0 0 Durbin p 0 0 0 0Aviles 3b 3 1 1 1 Horst p 0 0 0 0Kluber p 2 1 0 0 Aumont p 0 0 0 0Brantly lf 0 1 0 0 L.Nix ph 1 0 0 0

Valdes p 0 0 0 0Galvis ph 1 0 0 0

Totals 37 101110 Totals 34 4 8 4Cleveland 002 122 030—10Philadelphia 001 020 001—4DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB—Cleveland 6,Philadelphia 5. 2B—Stubbs (9), Kipnis 2(8), Mar.Reynolds (7), Rollins (12), Ruiz(2). HR—Kipnis (6), Swisher (6), Aviles (3).S—Hamels.

IP H R ER BB SOClevelandKluber W,3-2 6 6 3 3 0 5Allen 1 0 0 0 0 2Hagadone 1 0 0 0 1 0Albers 1 2 1 1 0 1

PhiladelphiaHamels L,1-6 5 6 5 5 2 4Durbin 2-3 1 2 2 1 0Horst 1-3 1 0 0 1 0Aumont 1 1 0 0 0 1Valdes 2 2 3 3 1 1HBP—by Hamels (Raburn). WP—Albers.T—2:59. A—38,440 (43,651).

Padres 8, Orioles 4San Diego Baltimore

ab r h bi ab r h biEvCarr ss 5 1 4 1 McLoth lf 4 0 0 0Venale rf 5 0 2 1 Machd 3b5 2 4 0Headly 3b 3 0 1 0 Markks rf 5 0 2 1Quentin dh 5 0 1 1 A.Jones cf5 0 2 1Alonso 1b 5 0 1 0 C.Davis 1b4 0 1 0Gyorko 2b 5 2 3 0 Wieters c 2 1 1 1Blanks lf 5 2 1 1 Hardy ss 4 1 1 1Amarst cf 5 3 3 2 Flahrty 2b4 0 0 0JoBakr c 4 0 1 2 Pearce dh3 0 0 0Totals 42 8 17 8 Totals 36 4 11 4San Diego 020 201 201—8Baltimore 010 100 101—4E—Tom.Hunter (1). DP—San Diego 2, Balti-more 1. LOB—San Diego 11, Baltimore 10.2B—Venable (3), Amarista 2 (7), Machado 3(17), Markakis (8), C.Davis (14). HR—Blanks(2), Amarista (3), Wieters (6), Hardy (7). SB—Ev.Cabrera (12). CS—Ev.Cabrera (4).

IP H R ER BB SOSan DiegoMarquis W,5-2 5 7 2 2 4 3Thayer H,7 1 0 0 0 0 1Thatcher 2-3 1 1 1 0 1Bass 1 2-3 3 1 1 1 1Street 2-3 0 0 0 0 0BaltimoreF.Garcia L,0-2 3 2-3 7 4 4 2 1McFarland 2 4 1 1 1 1Tom.Hunter 1 1-3 3 2 1 0 2Patton 1 1 0 0 0 1Strop 1 2 1 1 1 1Marquis pitched to 2 batters in the 6th.WP—McFarland.T—3:11. A—32,418 (45,971).

LATE BOxSCORESRays 5, Red Sox 3

Boston Tampa Bayab r h bi ab r h bi

Ellsury cf 1 1 0 0 Jnnngs cf 4 0 0 0Victorn rf 4 0 0 0 Joyce lf 3 0 1 2Pedroia 2b 3 1 1 0 Zobrist rf 4 0 0 0D.Ortiz dh 4 1 1 3 Longori 3b4 1 1 0Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 1 2 0JGoms lf 4 0 0 0 Scott dh 4 1 1 1Mdlrks 3b 4 0 0 0 KJhnsn 2b4 0 1 0Drew ss 3 0 1 0 RRorts 2b 0 0 0 0Lvrnwy c 3 0 0 0 JMolin c 3 1 3 2

YEscor ss 3 1 2 0Totals 30 3 3 3 Totals 33 5 11 5Boston 300 000 000—3Tampa Bay 000 500 00x—5DP—Boston 1. LOB—Boston 5, Tampa Bay7. 2B—Pedroia (9), Drew (3), Loney (12),Scott (1), J.Molina (3), Y.Escobar (5). HR—D.Ortiz (5). SB—Joyce (2). CS—Loney (1).S—J.Molina.

IP H R ER BB SOBostonLackey L,1-4 4 1-3 9 5 5 1 3A.Miller 2-3 1 0 0 0 1Mortensen 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 0Breslow 1 1 0 0 0 1A.Wilson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Tampa BayM.Moore W,7-0 6 3 3 3 2 8McGee H,7 2-3 0 0 0 2 0Lueke H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0Jo.Peralta H,9 1 0 0 0 0 1Rodney S,7-9 1 0 0 0 0 3A.Miller pitched to 1 batter in the 6th.HBP—by M.Moore (Ellsbury).T—3:14. A—15,227 (34,078).

White Sox 4, Twins 2Chicago Minnesota

ab r h bi ab r h biDe Aza lf 4 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 4 0 0 0AlRmrz ss 4 0 2 1 Mauer c 4 0 1 0Rios rf 3 0 1 0 Wlngh lf 4 1 1 0A.Dunn 1b 4 1 1 1 Mornea 1b4 1 2 0Viciedo dh 3 1 1 1 EEscor pr 0 0 0 0Gillaspi 3b 4 0 2 0 Parmel rf 4 0 0 0Kppngr 2b 4 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b3 0 1 1Wise cf 4 1 2 0 Arcia dh 3 0 1 1Flowrs c 4 1 2 1 Hicks cf 3 0 0 0

Flormn ss 3 0 0 0Totals 34 4 12 4 Totals 32 2 6 2Chicago 020 000 020—4Minnesota 000 010 100—2E—A.Dunn (3). DP—Chicago 1, Minnesota4. LOB—Chicago 6, Minnesota 3. 2B—Wise(2), Flowers (4), Willingham (8), Morneau(11). HR—A.Dunn (7), Viciedo (3). SB—Al.Ramirez (7). CS—Dozier (3). S—De Aza.

IP H R ER BB SOChicagoPeavy W,5-1 7 5 2 2 0 6Crain H,10 1 0 0 0 0 1A.Reed S,12-13 1 1 0 0 0 1MinnesotaCorreia L,4-3 7 9 4 4 1 2Fien 1-3 1 0 0 1 0Duensing 2-3 0 0 0 0 1Pressly 1 2 0 0 0 1Correia pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.T—2:44. A—32,023 (39,021).

Tigers 6, Astros 2Houston Detroit

ab r h bi ab r h biGrssmn cf 4 0 0 0 Dirks lf 5 0 1 1Elmore 2b 4 0 1 0 TrHntr rf 4 0 1 0JCastro c 4 0 0 0 MiCrr 3b 3 2 2 1Carter 1b 4 1 1 0 Fielder 1b2 1 0 0C.Pena dh 4 1 1 0 VMrtnz dh4 0 2 1JMrtnz lf 3 0 2 1 Avila c 3 0 0 0Pareds rf 2 0 0 1 Infante 2b3 1 2 0Dmngz 3b 3 0 0 0 D.Kelly cf 2 1 1 1MGnzlz ss 3 0 0 0 Grcia cf 2 0 0 0

RSntg ss 4 1 1 1Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 32 6 10 5Houston 020 000 000—2Detroit 000 032 10x—6DP—Houston 2. LOB—Houston 3, Detroit 7.2B—J.Martinez 2 (7), Dirks (3), Mi.Cabrera(10), R.Santiago (2). HR—Mi.Cabrera (8).SB—Infante (2). SF—Paredes.

IP H R ER BB SOHoustonHarrell L,3-4 5 7 5 5 3 1Blackley 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2Ambriz 1-3 1 1 1 0 1W.Wright 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 2DetroitFister W,5-1 7 5 2 2 0 7Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 2Valverde 1 0 0 0 0 2Harrell pitched to 3 batters in the 6th.HBP—by W.Wright (Fielder). WP—Harrell,Blackley 2.T—2:59. A—34,542 (41,255).

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Choo-led Reds extend winning streak to fiveThe Associated Press

MIAMI — Shin-Soo Choo hit twohomers and four pitchers combinedon an 11-hit shutout Wednesday night

to help Cincinnatiextend its winningstreak to a season-best five games by

beating the Marlins 4-0.Choo hit solo homers in the fourth

and sixth inning, giving him nine thisseason.

“This ballpark is big,” Choo said.“Some balls fly, some don’t. I’m notthinking about hitting homers. I’m justswinging hard.”

The two-homer effort was his sec-ond in eight days, but he came into thegame batting only .225 in May.

“I haven’t been feeling great,” he said,“but tonight I hit the ball on the barrel.”

Mike Leake (3-2) went 6⅔ inningsand pitched around nine hits.

The Marlins had 14 baserunners butstranded 12 and hit into two doubleplays.

That gave the crowd of 14,866 little tocheer about, and the biggest roars camewhen highlights of the Heat’s playoff

victory over Chicago two miles awaywere shown on the video scoreboard.

Alex Sanabia (2-6) took the loss.PIRATES 3, BREWERS 1

In Pittsburgh, Wandy Rodriguezallowed one run over seven stronginnings and Neil Walker hit a two-runsingle as the Pirates beat Milwaukee.

Rodriguez (4-2) gave up six hits,walking one and striking out five.

Jason Grilli worked the ninth for hisNational League-leading 16th save asthe Pirates moved six games above.500 for the first time this season.

Walker, playing his third game sincereturning from a stint on the disabledlist with a hand injury, lined a singleto center with one out in the sixth offYovani Gallardo for his first RBIs innearly a month.

Gallardo (3-3) walked four and struckout four in six innings, allowing justthree hits.

Rickie Weeks hit his third homer toprovide Milwaukee’s only run. NorichikaAoki had two hits for the Brewers. Mil-waukee has dropped 10 of 12.

CUBS 6, ROCKIES 3In Chicago, Jeff Samardzija hit a two-

run home run and pitched eight stronginnings for his first win since opening

day, and the Cubs beat Colorado.David DeJesus led off the first inning

with a home run and Anthony Rizzo hadtwo hits for the Cubs, who won back-to-back series for the first time thisseason.

Reid Brignac hit a pinch-hit homerfor the Rockies, who finished a 2-4 roadtrip.

The Rockies have not won back-to-back games since a season-high eight-game winning streak April 12-20.

They have not won a three-gameseries at Wrigley Field since Sept. 29 toOct. 1, 2006.

Samardzija (2-5) allowed two runsand five hits. He struck out seven andwalked two.

Colorado starter Jon Garland (3-4)allowed three runs and seven hits in fiveinnings. He struck out four and walkedone.CARDINALS 4, METS 2

In St. Louis, rookie Shelby Miller fol-lowed up his nearly perfect one-hitterwith 5⅔ scoreless innings, and the Car-dinals scored the go-ahead run in theseventh on a wild pitch in the victoryover New York.

New acquisition Rick Ankiel’s two-runhomer off rookie Seth Maness (3-0) tiedit in the top of the seventh and was his

first against the team that convertedthe former left-handed pitcher to anoutfielder in 2005.

Shaun Marcum (0-4) made it out ofthe fifth for the first time in four startssince beginning the year on the 15-daydisabled list.

He left the game with two on andtwo out in the seventh and Scott Rice’swild pitch to pinch hitter Ty Wiggintonallowed Daniel Descalso to score thego-ahead run.

DIAMONDBACKS 5, BRAVES 3In Phoenix, Paul Goldschmidt hit

three doubles, Eric Chavez drove inthree runs, and Arizona beat Tim Hud-son and Atlanta.

Cody Ross added an RBI double asthe Diamondbacks won the final twogames of the series after a 10-1 loss inthe opener.

Hudson (4-3) had been 7-0 in ninecareer starts against Arizona before hegot tagged. Hudson allowed five runsand eight hits in five innings — he’sgiven up 11 runs over 8⅔ innings in hislast two starts.

Ian Kennedy (2-3) yielded three runsand five hits in five innings. He struckout seven and walked three.

Heath Bell pitched the ninth for hissixth save in eight chances.

Reds 4

Marlins 0

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Sluggerhelps liftChiSoxThe Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS — AdamDunn homered twice, doubledand drove in five runs, power-

ing Chicagopast Minne-sota 9-4 onWednesday.

Dunn hit a pair of two-runshots for his 35th career mul-tihomer game. He’s hit threehome runs in the last twogames and has nine this year.

Dayan Viciedo also wentdeep for the second straightday, helping Dylan Axelrod(1-3) pick up his first victorythis season.ASTROS 7, TIGERS 5

In Detroit, Brandon Barnescaught Miguel Cabrera’s bases-loaded drive against the wall inright-center field for the finalout, and Houston avoided a sea-son sweep against the Tigers.

Carlos Corporan hit a tie-breaking double in the top ofthe ninth for the Astros, wholost their first six meetings withthe Tigers by a combined 50-12.

Hector Ambriz (1-2) got thewin for Houston.

RANGERS 6, ATHLETICS 2In Oakland, Calif., Nelson Cruz

hit a three-run homer, AlexiOgando earned his first careerwin against the A’s, and Texastook beat Oakland.

Ogando (4-2) didn’t allow ahit until Eric Sogard’s leadoffdouble in the sixth.

The right-hander won hissecond straight decision andearned only his second victoryin seven outings since consecu-tive wins starting the season.

Cruz greeted reliever JesseChavez in the fifth with afirst-pitch drive to left for his10th homer.

MARINERS 12, YANKEES 2In New York, Raul Ibanez again

treated Yankee Stadium as hisplayground, hitting a grand slamand a two-run homer to helpSeattle rout New York.

Ibanez’s slam came during aseven-run first inning. Yankeesbackup shortstop Alberto Gon-zalez got the final out in theninth inning in his first profes-sional pitching appearance.

Every Seattle starter hadat least one of its season-high16 hits.

RED SOX 9, RAYS 2In St. Petersburg, Fla., Jon

Lester stayed unbeaten, Ste-phen Drew hit his secondcareer grand slam, and Bostonroughed up AL Cy Young winnerDavid Price.

Price (1-4) departed fromthe marquee pitching matchupbecause of left triceps tight-ness during Boston’s eight-runthird inning, which Drew fin-ished with his towering homeroff Jamey Wright.

The Red Sox stopped a three-game losing streak that’s beenpart of a May slide.

INTERLEAGUE

PADRES 8, ORIOLES 4In Baltimore, Alexi Amarista

had three extra-base hits, andSan Diego matched its season-high with 17 hits for a two-game sweep.

Everth Cabrera had four hitsand a walk, and Jedd Gyorkohad three singles for the Padres,who are 13-6 after a 5-15 start.

John Baker hit a go-ahead,two-run single in the secondagainst Freddy Garcia (0-2),and Kyle Blanks hit a solo homerun in a two-run fourth as SanDiego took a 4-1 lead.

J.J. Hardy and Matt Wietershomered for the Orioles.

INDIANS 10, PHILLIES 4In Philadelphia, Jason Kipnis

hit a three-run homer, NickSwisher and Mike Aviles wentdeep to back Corey Kluber, andCleveland beat the Phillies.

Corey Kluber (3-2) gave upthree runs and six hits in sixinnings.

A day after rookie JonathanPettibone held the Indiansin check, Cole Hamels gotroughed up by one of theleague’s highest-scoringoffenses. Cleveland had been ina slight funk, scoring just sevenruns in its previous four games.

BLUE JAYS 11, GIANTS 3In Toronto, J.P. Arencibia and

Adam Lind each hit two-runhome runs, Ramon Ortiz wonfor the first time since 2011, andthe Blue Jays won their season-high fourth straight.

Ortiz (1-1) allowed one runand six hits in seven innings forhis first win since beating theMets in a relief appearance withthe Cubs on Sept. 11, 2011.

White Sox 9

Twins 4

Page 17: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

B-5THE NEW MEXICANThursday, May 16, 2013

Rafael Nadal

TENNIS

Murray injured; Nadal wins in RomeThe Associated Press

ROME — Back pain forcedAndy Murray to retire mid-way through his second-roundmatch at the Italian Open onWednesday. He might have tosit out the French Open, too.

Rafael Nadal began his bid fora seventh Rome title by cruis-ing past local hope Fognini 6-1,6-3 in 61 minutes, and two-timedefending champion MariaSharapova eased past qualifierGarbine Muguruza 6-2, 6-2.

Meanwhile, rising Polishplayer Jerzy Janowicz upsetNo. 8 seed Jo-Wilfried Tsonga6-4, 7-6 (5) then celebrated by

ripping hisshirt apart,showing off hismuscular phy-sique.

Murraywalked off thecourt afterwinning thesecond set

against Marcel Granollers.“I have an issue with my

lower back,” Murray said. “It’sbeen an issue for a while.”

Murray took a long injurybreak early in the secondset, getting his left thigh andlower back massaged.

Granollers won the first set6-3 and Murray won the second7-6 (5).

This tournament is a keyclay-court warmup for RolandGarros, the year’s second GrandSlam, which starts May 26.

“I would be very surprised ifI was playing in Paris,” Murraysaid. “I need to make a plan asto what I do.”

Nadal will next face Latvianqualifier Ernests Gulbis.

Gulbis routed Viktor Troicki6-1, 6-1.

Sharapova now meets No. 16Sloane Stephens, who ralliedpast Kiki Bertens 4-6, 6-3, 6-2.

The Associated Press

MIAMI — A fast start and an even faster finishwere enough to send the Heat back to the EasternConference finals.

LeBron James scored 23 points, Dwyane Wadeadded 18, and Miami ralliedfrom an 11-point second-halfdeficit to beat Chicago 94-91on Wednesday night and close

out its second-round series in five games.Forward Chris Bosh scored 12 points and Udo-

nis Haslem added 10 for Miami, which ran out toa 22-4 lead, then was outscored by a whopping29 points over the next 27 minutes before recov-ering. The Heat outscored the Bulls 25-14 in thefourth.

Forward Carlos Boozer finished with 26 pointsand 14 rebounds for the Bulls, who were withoutDerrick Rose for the 99th straight game.

Point guard Nate Robinson and swingmanJimmy Butler missed potential tying 3-pointerson the final possession of the season forChicago, which dropped the last four games ofthe series.

Robinson scored 21 points, Butler had 19, andRichard Hamilton 15 for the Bulls.

And there was drama, all the way to the end.Robinson’s 3-pointer with 1:43 left got the Bulls

to 94-91, and Butler knocked the ball away fromChris Bosh for a turnover on the ensuing Miamipossession.

But Boozer missed an open 15-footer with

about a minute remaining and, when Wadeknocked the ball off Boozer’s leg after a Miamimiss with 45 seconds left, the Heat retained pos-session — with a fresh shot clock to boot.

But Miami didn’t score, and the Bulls had afinal chance. Robinson missed a 3, and Butlerfaked his way free for a good look that hit the rim,before bouncing away.

Time expired, and the Heat lingered on thecourt in celebration.

Wade held on to the game ball as he shooka few fans’ hands, and he, James and Boshexchanged some high-fives — the last threeMiami players to leave the floor.

Grizzlies 88, Thunder 84In Oklahoma City, the Grizzlies advanced to the

Western Conference finals for the first time infranchise history by beating the Thunder.

Zach Randolph had 28 points and 14 rebounds,Mike Conley added 13 points and 11 assists forMemphis, the fifth seed.

Kevin Durant missed a 16-foot jumper from theleft wing to tie it with 6 seconds left, finishing offa miserable shooting night for the three-time NBAscoring champion.

Durant ended up with 21 points on 5-for-21shooting, the third-worst performance of his play-off career.

The Thunder, who made it to the NBA Finals lastseason, were eliminated in five games.

The top seed in the West went 2-6 after All-StarRussell Westbrook guard went out with a kneeinjury that required surgery.

Heat 94

Bulls 91

NBA PLAYOFFS

Heat forward LeBron James, who had 23 points, seven rebounds and eight assists, looks topass around Chicago forward Carlos Boozer during the first half in Game 5 of an Eastern Con-ference semifinal Wednesday in Miami. WILFREDO LEE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Heat beat Bulls, advance

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Page 18: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

3/2 1900 SQ. FT. ADOBE SOLAR, PLUS1200 SQ. FT. 2/1 APARTMENT. PRI-VATE SETTING. 2.89 ACRES. OWNERFINANCE WITH $78,000 DOWN OR$390,000. 505-470-5877

3 DULCE, ELDORADO, NM1600 SQUARE FEET400 SQUARE FOOT

INSULATED GARAGE3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH

Beautiful, Remodeled home on 1.1acres. New Tile, Carpet, Granite,Countertops in Kitchen and Baths,Kiva Fireplace, New Windows andDoors. New Lighting, New Stucco.Insulated finished two car garage.Walk-in closets, Raised ceilingswith vigas in Living room, portals.Views of the Ortiz Mountains.

$319.000Call Jeff at 505-660-0509

Realtors Welcome

5600 SQUARE FOOT WAREHOUSEwith 800 SQUARE FOOT LIVE-INSPACE. Near National Guard. $2000rental income. 1 acre. $290,000. 505-470-5877

5 BEDROOM, 5 BATH.4600 square feet, 600 square foot2 car garage. 2 miles north ofPlaza. 1105 Old Taos Highway.Needs updating. $510,000.(505)470-5877

Exquisite Adobe Home$540,000

Heart of the Historic East SideWalking distance to the Plaza

2 bedroom2 bath

Vigas & Beams2 Kiva fireplacesMountain views

Landscaped CourtyardBrick & Wood floors

Radiant heatTotal privacy

Overlooking a deep arroyo, hometo deer, coyote and many speciesof birds. The Llano Compound wasdesigned according to "green"principles by a student of FrankLloyd Wright and built by thegroup who built Biosphere II.

Uniquely Santa Fellano14santafe.com

575-640-3764

HOME ON 3.41 acres in exclusiveRidges. 2,319 sq.ft., 3 Bedrooms, 2.5Baths, 1 Fireplace, 2 Car Garage. At-tached studio with separate en-trance. Horses allowed. Only 1 milefrom Eldorado shopping center. Ap-praised by LANB for $518,000. Sale byowner $499,000. (505)466-3182.

NM PROPERTIES AND HOMES505-989-88601367 sqft. near Old Taos Highway. 2bedroom 2 bath, study. Price allowsfor upgrades.

HOUSE, GUEST, 4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH.REMODELED. 3352 SF, ON ACEQUIA.PRIVATE WELL, 1/3 ACRE. IRRIGATEDLANDSCAPING, GARAGE. $597,500.505-577-6300

NEW CONSTRUCTION3 bedrooms, 2 Baths, 2 carheated finished garage, 2.5

acres, 2380 Square Feet$495,000.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES505-470-0818

RIVER RANCHPrivate River Frontage

1,000 Acres, high Ponderosa PineRidges. Well, utilities. Rare opportu-

nity to own this quality ranch.$1,599,000

Great New Mexico Propertieswww.greatnmproperties.com

888-883-4842

SANTA FE HOMES FROM$122,750 - $196,250

Affordable new construction isavailable for those who qualify forthe city program. These brand-new homes for modern living arereserved for the working familiesof Santa Fe. Find out if you qualifyand call Carmen today. Homewiseis with you through the entirehomebuying process, helping youimprove your credit, find a home,and secure a safe fixed-ratemortgage. Low interest financingwith no mortgage insurance forqualified buyers. Down paymentassistance may also be available.

Call today to find out how.Carmen Flores 505-699-4252

Homewise, Inc. 505-983-9473www.homewise.org

IN THE HEART OF THECOMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT

245 acre approved development upto 575 units. Residential multi familyapartments, commercial uses al-lowed. Next to the IAIA, and Com-munity College. Utilities to lot line.Priced to sell, Old Santa Fe Realty

505-983-9265

VIGAS1,430 sq ft office, close to hospital,5 offices, 2 baths, very charmingand in great condition. $325,000 or$2,264 monthly.

$9.00 A SQ FT3,000 to 27,000 sq ft. Quality spacejust off St. Michaels

$225,0004 offices, two baths, lots of

parking or $1,450 per month.ELDORADO

5 offices, lounge area, 2 baths,very high quality finish.

Call James Wheeler at505-988-8081

NAI Maestas & Ward

1 OF 4, 5 ACRE LOTS BEHIND ST.JOHNS COLLEGE. HIDDEN VALLEY,GATED ROAD. $25,000 PER ACRE,TERMS. 505-231-8302

3.3 LA TIERRA ACRES. 121 Fin DelSendero. Shared well. Beautifulneighborhood with restrictions.$32,000 down, $1200 monthly or$160,000. (505)470-5877

AGUILAR, COLORADO15 miles north of Trinidad.

123 acres. Trees, grass, mountainviews and electricity. Borders StateTrust Land. $123,000: $23K down,$900 month. All or part. Ownerfinance. (719)250-2776

TEN TO Twenty Acre tracks, east ofSanta Fe. Owner Financing. Pay-ments as low as $390 a month. Ne-gotiable down. Electricity, water,trees, meadows, views. Mobilesok. Horses ok. 505-690-9953

1998 TRAILER CAMPER For Sale.$2500 obo. Sunset Model. Locatedin Stanley, NM. Call for an appoint-ment, 505-500-0331.

FOR SALE2013, KARSTEN, 3 BED 2 BATH, BRANDNEW, 16X80 IN SANTA FE HACIENDA

MHP BY THE NEW WALMART.

SPECIAL LOAN PROGRAM ALLOWSGOOD CREDIT, BAD CREDIT, NO

CREDIT.AND HOME PAYOFF IN 10YEARS.

(2) Available Space #83 and #51.$55,695.00

Call Tim for appt at 505-699-2955

METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED KarstenK-14 2003, 68’ x 31’. Ideal for movingto land. ASKING, $95,000. Purchaseprice $143,506. Call, 505-424-3997.

$199,000. 4 CABINS, 8 ACRES.CHAMA RIVER OVERLOOK, 2 HOURSTO SANTA FE. BRAZOS MOUNTAINREAL ESTATE, Judy: (575)588-9308.MLS#201200754

NEWER 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATHHOUSE ON 1.5 ACRES. 25 MILESFROM SANTA FE IN ROWE, NM.

On the edge of the Santa Fe Nation-al Forest. Large laundry room, alltile and wood floors. Loads of natu-ral light. Wood stove. Excellent in-sulation. Storage shed. Fencedback yard. Plumbed for gray wateruse. $164,000. Call KathyDeLaTorre, Barker Realty, 505-699-7835. MLS # 201300863.

CHARMING, CLEAN1 BEDROOM, $700.

Private estate. Walled yards, kivafireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid.Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

CHARMING, CLEAN2 BEDROOM, $800

Private estate. Walled yards, kivafireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid.Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

1 BEDROOM ADOBE, Flagstone floors,Vigas, Kiva fireplace, Skylight. 12 mi-nute walk from Plaza. $900 monthlyplus utilities. Lease. 505-307-6589

1 BEDROOM close to downtown. Veryquiet. No pets, no smoking. $725monthly plus deposit. 505-982-2941

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATHBeautiful mountain views off ofWest Alameda. Approx. 950 sq.ft.$1,100 month includes utilities,$700 deposit. Forced air heat.

Clean & ready to move-in, includewasher, dryer, Saltillo tile &carpet. Private parking. Nosmoking. No pets. 1 year lease.

Call 505-231-0010.

STUDIO APARTMENT for rent. Allutilities paid. ABSOLUTLEY NOPETS! $600 a month. (505)920-2648

$800. 1 Bedroom,Hillside Historic District.

Great neighborhood. All utilitiesincluded. Walk to Plaza. Privatepatio. Clean. Off-street parking. Non-smoking. no pets. Prefer quiettenant. 505-685-4704

YOU CAN AFFORD TO BUY!

Homewise can help you. Monthlypayments could be lower thanyour rent. Santa Fe homes for aslow as $150,000. Low down pay-ment. Call Carmen Flores to findout how you can qualify to buy ahome through Homewise. Financ-ing and down-payment assistanceis available for those who qualify.

Call Carmen to find out how.Carmen Flores 505-699-4252

Se habla españ[email protected]

Homewise, Inc. 505-983-9473www.homewise.org

1, 2 BEDROOM CORONADO CONDOS:$600, $700 plus utilities. New paint.New flooring. Cerrillos, Camino Car-los Rey. Pets OK. 505-501-9905

BEAUTIFUL CONDO. Granite counter-tops, rock fireplace, hickory cabi-nets, Washer, Dryer, fitness center,heated pool, tennis court, security.No Smoking Call 505-450-4721.

EASTSIDEWALK TO CANYON ROAD!

Furnished, short-term vacationhome. Walled 1/2 acre, mountainviews, fireplace, 2 bedroom, wash-er, dryer. Private. Pets okay.Large yard. 970-626-5936

NORTH SIDE FURNISHED EFFICIENCYwith spectacular views, deck, 2acres. $800 monthly including utilit-ies. First, last, plus security deposit.No pets. 505-820-1910

PRIVATE, QUIETSTUDIO CASITA

Santa Fe River Frontage. Bike path toPlaza. Large sunroom, new kitchen,windows and paint. Nicely furnished.No pets. $850. 303-697-9000

HUMMINGBIRD HEAVEN! 25 minutesfrom Harry’s Roadhouse. SPOTLESS!2 baths, terraces, granite, radiant.Private Acre. Non-smoking. No pets.$1400. 505-310-1829

3 BEDROOM 2 BATH2 car garage, washer and dryer.$1000.

2 BEDROOM 2 BATH1 car garage, laundry hook ups, tilefloors. $900, breathtaking mountainview, trails, golf course, lake.

South of Santa Fe505-359-4778 or 505-980-2400

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, den, fireplace, 2-car garage, washer, dryer hook-ups,tile and wood floors, no pets, $1150mo. + utilities, $600 deposit, call: 699-1043 for appt.

3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, utility hook-ups.Fenced. $975 monthly plus utilities,$600 deposit. 505-471-9744

4 BEDROOM, 3 bath, 3 car garage,near plaza. 2 decks, landscaped,custom amenities throughout.Spectacular views. $3800 monthly.505-920-4024

SUNNY WITH BEAUTIFUL VIEWS,great for Artists! 2500 SQ ft. $1800monthly includes utilities, you paypropane. Newly renovated East SideAdobe home. Country setting, hugeyard, 4 miles from plaza. 2 bedroom,1 and 1/4 bath. 2 car garage, orstorage-workshop. Fireplace andwood stove. 1 year lease. Referen-ces. Dog ok. 505-690-7279

LAS CAMPANAS3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

Furnished. A/C. No pets, non-smoking. 6 month lease minimum.$6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500deposit. 203-481-5271

POJOAQUE: 3500 square foot, 4 bed-room, 3 bath, garage, front and backyards. Extras. Must see! $1,500monthly plus utilities, and securitydeposit. Non-smoking, no pets.Lease. 505-455-3158

505-992-1205valdezandassociates.com

TWO UNITS AVAILABLESpacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath $1,100

plus utilities and 2 bedroom, 2bath front house with old Santa Fe

charm.

STUDIO APARTMENT1 bath, full kitchen, carpet, fire-place, small fenced in yard. $500

plus utilities.

NEWLY RENOVATED3 bedroom, 2 bath, wood floors,vigas, fireplace, washer dryer

hook-up’s, office with seperateentrance. $1,300 plus utilities.

CHARMING2 bedroom, 1 bath home close toHospital, parks and high school.Central location allows quick ac-cess anywhere in town. $575 plus

utilities.

COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BED-ROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes toSanta Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet,affordable, luxury. (505)470-4269,(505)455-2948.

COUNTRY LIVING. LARGE, 2 BED-ROOM TOWNHOUSE. 20 minutes toSanta Fe or Los Alamos. Safe, quiet,affordable, luxury. (505)470-4269,(505)455-2948.

HOME FOR RENT. 3 Bedroom, 2.5bathroom. $1100 monthly plus utilit-ies. $800 deposit. No pets, no smok-ing. Near Airport Road. Call 505-471-0074

HOUSE FOR rent, close to downtown,off Agua Fria St. and St. Francis Dr.Available May 16th. $1000 month. call466-7326, no pets.

PASSIVE SOLAR 1500 square foothome in El Rancho. 3 bedroom, 2bath, $1,100 first and last, plus $600deposit. 505-699-7102

2nd StreetLIVE, WORK, OFFICE1200 & 1300 SQUARE FEET

800 square feet downstairs, 400 - 500square foot living area upstairs.Skylights, high ceilings.

Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

MOBILE HOME SPACESAVAILABLE

Tesuque Trailer Village505-989-9133

QUIET 12.5 acres. 20 miles south ofSanta Fe. Facilities for 5 to 7 horses.Consider rent to own. $1250 monthly.First month down. 505-920-1253, 505-577-4728, or 575-687-2253

2012 KARSTEN2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH

Mobile Home for Sale or Rent, $900per month to rent. $38,000 to BuySpace #193 in Casitas de Santa FeMHP. Call, Tim at 505-699-2955 forappointment. Deposit Required.

2 BEDROOM 1 bath mobile home forrent. $425 monthly. Located betweenSanta Fe and Las Vegas. 575-421-2626or 505-328-1188

BEAUTIFUL DOUBLEWIDE now availa-ble. Gated area for privacy in ElDuende, Rio Arriba County, five milesnorth of Espanola on Highway84/285. Completely furnished. 3 Bed-rooms. Landscaped beautifully withlawns and trees in quiet place. Refer-ences required. 505-929-1818, 429-4427 for more information.

1404 SECOND Street. Great space! 800sqft. Very clean, track lighting, alarmsystem, internet connection. $700monthly. Includes utilities. Call 505-983-5410

BIKE OR Bus for you or clients. Re-ception, conference, two offices,workroom. Close to schools, shop-ping. $1100/utilities. 505-603-0909.

GREAT LOCATION!OFFICE SPACE

Ideal for Holistic Practicioners. 765square feet, 3 offices, reception area.Quiet, lots of parking. 505-989-7266

NEW SHARED OFFICE$250 - 2ND STREET STUDIOS

Private desk, and now offeringseparate private offices sharing allfacilities. Conference room, kitchen,parking, lounge, meeting space,internet, copier, scanner, printer.Month-To-Month.

Wayne Nichols, 505-699-7280.

OFFICE FOR RENTReception area, 11’ x 14’. Office #1:14’ x 11’, office #2: 14’ x 11’, smallkitchen with microwave and minifridge, security, gated parking with24-hour access, heated and cooled.$800 monthly, first and last monthsrent plus deposit. Airport Road and599, available now.

505-982-2511

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE space avail-able for rent in town, lots of traffic,at 811 St. Michael’s Drive, SantaFe: 1813 sq. ft. and 980 sq. ft.suites. All major utilities and snowremoval included, plenty of park-ing. Ph. 505-954-3456

PROFESSIONAL OFFICESPACE AVAILABLE

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

Please call (505)983-9646.

SENA PLAZAOffice Space Available

Call SouthwestAsset Management,

505-988-5792.

RETAIL, GALLERY SPACE. Availabledowntown Santa Fe. 1,440 square.feet. Value priced call 505-715-1858.

RETAIL ON THE PLAZADiscounted rental rates .

Brokers Welcome. CallSouthwest Asset Management,

505-988-5792.

1 ROOM available in 3 bedroomhome. $400 monthly plus utilities.Call (505)490-3560.

$450 INCLUDES UTILITIES. Sharedbath. 3 miles north of Plaza. No dogs.Deposit. Month-to-month. 400 squarefeet. Available 5/2. 505-470-5877

QUIET AND peaceful. $350 PERmonth, share utilities. 505-473-3880

ROOM FOR RENT$475 plus half utilities.

New, 5 year old house, nicelyfurnished, kitchen access and

house share!

Furnished orUnfurnished

Bedroom withPrivate Bath

Washer & Dryer.Safe, quiet, nice neighborhood.

Close to Community College.

Lease preferred, but notmandatory.

Available July 1st505-238-5711

A-Poco Self Storage2235 Henry Lynch RdSanta Fe, NM 87507

505-471-1122

4x5 $45.005x7 $50.00

4x12 $55.006x12 $65.008x10 $65.00

10x10 $75.009x12 $80.00

12x12 $95.0012x24 $195.00

EXTRA LARGE UNITBLOWOUT SPECIALAirport Cerrillos Storage

U-Haul Cargo Van505-474-4330

2 year lease on horse property withhome, barn and 10 or more acres,

budget is $3000 per month.William 970-426-8034

CENTRALLY LOCATEDWAREHOUSE FOR RENT

1,600 sq. ft. warehouse in gated,fenced property on PachecoStreet. 1,600 area includes; 1bathroom, furnace, and office areawith upstairs storage. Walkthrough and overhead doors.$1,600 per month with $1,600deposit and one year signed lease.Space is great for many things;work shop, auto shop, dance co,etc.

Please call 505-983-8038or email us at

[email protected]

WAREHOUSES

WANTED TO RENT

STORAGE SPACE

ROOMS

ROOMMATEWANTED

RETAIL SPACE

OFFICES

OFFICES

MANUFACTUREDHOMES

LOT FOR RENT

LIVE IN STUDIOS

HOUSESUNFURNISHED

HOUSESUNFURNISHED

HOUSESPART FURNISHED

APARTMENTSFURNISHED

»rentals«

OUT OF TOWN

MANUFACTUREDHOMES RE

GUESTHOUSES

LOTS & ACREAGE

LOTS & ACREAGE

COMMERCIALPROPERTY

SANTA FE

CONDOS-TOWNHOMES

APARTMENTSUNFURNISHED

APARTMENTSUNFURNISHED

»real estate«

SANTA FE

sfnm«classifiedsto place an ad, call

986-3000or email us:

[email protected] santafenewmexican.com

sfnmclassifieds.com(800) 873-3362

classifiedsB-6 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Page 19: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

FOUND CAT: FLUFFY grey and white.Big white patch on back. Black spoton nose. Sweet and laid back cutie.Street: Rosina and Declovina area.505-310-1270

FOUND TOYOTA car key and housekey on Calle Ojo Feliz. 505-988-1723

CAMERA. PANASONIC Lumix. Black,az/nm photos. Lost May 9th in plazaarea. REWARD! Call 252-312-7985

LOST DOG IN La Cienega area. Smallgray dog. Huge reward! Please call505-629-8500 or 505-316-1533

LOST EARRINGS. Large turquoisestone and small lapis stone with goldfrench wires. Whole foods CerrillosRoad, Bumble Bee’s downtown.REWARD! (505)438-6299

SILVER DEER pin with wire antlers.Buffalo Thunder or Cities of Gold.505-929-3812

CATHOLIC CHRISTIAN S T R E E TPREACHER, Thomas Horan Jr. lec-tures end-time prophecies, with artpaintings displayed. 5/21/13, MainLibrary, (Washington Street) 10 a.m.

PRIVATE VOICE LESSONS NOWACCEPTING NEW MIDDLE SCHOOLAND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS Spe-cial summer rates available! Begin-ners welcome! Experienced, motivat-ing teacher, 20+ years working withyoung voices. Private or small grouplessons. Students will learn healthyvocal technique, auditioning and per-formance skills. Summer is the per-fect time to begin singing lessons.For the joy of singing.... please con-tact:Carolyn: [email protected]:920-1722

United States District Court. Part-time Administrative Assistant (20hours per week) $28,704-$37,314DOQ. Specialized experiencerequired. See full announcement andapplication at www.nmcourt.fed.us.Cover letter, resume & applicationto: u s d c j o b s @ n m c o u r t . f e d . u s .Successful applicants subject to FBI& fingerprint checks. EEO Employer.

ITT DEPARTMENTDIRECTOR

The ITT Department Directorperforms a variety of professional,

administrative and managerialduties related to overall planning,

organizing and executing allphases of the City’s information

technology andtelecommunications (ITT)

activities and services; and,directs all ITT operations to meetcustomer requirements as well asthe support and maintenance of

existing applications anddevelopment of new technicalsolutions. The City of Santa Fe

offers competitive compensationand a generous benefit packageincluding excellent retirementprogram, medical/dental/life

insurance, paid holidays, generousvacation and sick leave.

For detailed information on thisposition or to apply online,

visit our website atwww.santafenm.gov.

The closing date for thisrecruitment is 5/24/13.

EEO/ADA

CONCRETE WORKING FOREMAN,FORMSETTERS AND

CONCRETE FINISHERSMinimum 3 years Experience

Call, 505-438-0706

ENGLISH LANGUAGEARTS TEACHER

for private all-girls middle school.Preferred candidate experienced,licensed, passionate about teachingcritical thinking, exchange of ideas,excellence in oral & writtencommunication, analytical reading &literature. Email resume to:[email protected] phone calls please.

PART-TIME SPANISHTEACHER

Santa Fe Preparatory School seeksa Part-Time Spanish teacher forgrades 8 -12 beginning August

2013. We are looking for a dynamicindividual eager to join ambitious,

collaborative faculty. BA andnative or near-native proficiency

required.

Please submit cover letter andresume to Lenora Portillo,

Santa Fe Preparatory School,1101 Camino de la Cruz Blanca,

Santa Fe, New Mexico [email protected]. EOE

Special EducationInstructor/Behavior

SpecialistNew Mexico School for

the Arts (NMSA)

NMSA, a public/privatepartnership in Santa Fe, New

Mexico, is seeking resumes for theposition of Special Education

Instructor/Behavior Specialist.

Responsibilities include: Leadingall IEP meetings, Participating in

SAT processes, Developinginterventions, and Creating

processes and protocols

Please visithttp://www.nmschoolforthearts.org/about/careers-at-nmsa/for qualifications and position

description.

VACANCY NOTICESANTA FE INDIAN SCHOOL ISACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR A

MIDDLE SCHOOLSCIENCE TEACHER.

IF INTERESTED, SUBMIT ANAPPLICATION, A LETTER OFINTEREST, RESUME, AND TWOREFERENCES TO THE HUMANRESOURCE OFFICE, PO BOX 5340,SANTA FE, NM 87505. APPLICATIONSACCEPTED UNTIL POSITION IS FILLED.FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 505-989-6353 OR FORWARD AN EMAIL TO:[email protected]. Websitefor application: www.sfis.k12.nm.us.

DOUBLETREE JOB FAIRWe Are Hiring! All Positions! Tuesday,May 21 from 2:30 p.m. - 6 p.m. 4048Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, NM 87507

OPEN POSTIONS:*EXPERIENCED LINE COOK*EXPERIENCED PREP COOKMust be fluent in English.Professionalism a MUST! Apply inperson at 250 E. Alameda, SantaFe, 87501 between 9AM and 5PMweekdays.

PART-TIME UTILITYPERSON

SERVER + DISHWASHER.Must be able to communicateeffectively in English.

Apply in person at250 East Alameda.

Monday - Friday 9:00a.m. - 5:00p.m.No Phone calls please

Experienced, passionate, sharplydressed, organized, positive teamplayer sought for Assistant Man-ager at exciting Los Pinones Apart-ments. Hrly + bonuses & benefits .

Resume to:[email protected]

or fax (505) 881-3980.

FUN AND fast paced dental officelooking for a Dental Assistant.Must be radiology certified withminimum of 2 years experience as-sisting. Fax resumes to 505-995-6202.

MEDICAL COORDINATORAn excellent opportunity with ben-efits. Up to $15 an hour DOE. Con-tact HR department. (855)357-6311

Santa Fe Certified Medical Assis-tant wanted for established Surgeonfocused on Phlebology. PT, FT, bene-fits per Policy, wage negotiable. Faxresume to 623-234-2543.

PROFESSIONALHOME

HEALTH CAREHas immediate openings for a:

• LICENSED PHYSICALTHERAPIST

• LICENSEDOCCUPATIONAL

THERAPIST

We offer competitive salaries.

Please contact Carol,505-982-8581.

Newspaper Distributor

Needed in the Pecos/Rowearea.

For more information pleasecontact Robert at 505-428-7635

[email protected].

TAILOR / SEAMSTRESSPay based on experience. Good

communication skills a must! Nonights/ evening work. May workfrom home.Apply in person: Express

Alterations, 1091 St. Francis; or call505-204-3466 between 10 and 5.

11 VICTORIAN FIGURINES OccupiedJapan. Some marked, some not. $100.505-466-6205

ANTIQUE ICE CREAM Stool & Chair(needs bottom), $50. (505)466-6205

ANTIQUE ICE CREAM Table, $85.(505)466-6205

ART DECO, nude. Very old. 4” tall. Ivo-ry color- black base. $50. 505-466-6205

CHARLIE’S ANTIQUES811 CERRILLOS

TUESDAY- SUNDAY 11-5:30.WORLD COLLECTIBLES of art, jew-elry, pottery, military and more!

We buy. (505)470-0804

COCA-COLA CHANGE tray, 1973. New.(Elaine Coca-Cola). $15. (505)466-6205

COKE TRAY Elaine Coca-Cola changetray. Original. $65. 505-466-6205

ENAMEL PITCHER & Bowl, white. $45.(505)466-6205

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE.401 ANTIQUES OF CARRIZOZO401 12th Street in Carrizozo, NM.

[Directly behind Wells Fargo Bank]Carrizozo is 2½ hours south of SantaFe at Hwy 380 & Hwy 54 intersectionAll Furniture and Furnishings for sale

Sale Prices…UP TO 60 % OFF Listed Prices!Open Wednesdays - Saturdays

10 AM to 5 PM575-648-2762 or by Appointment

575-648-1172

HAND-PAINTED JAPAN, cotton-ballholder. Top removable. Approxi-mately 100 years old. $75. 505-466-6205

ROSE MEDALLION China, 48 pieces.$350 or best offer. 505-466-7767

STAFFORD SMIRE Chamber Pot. Blue.$50. (505)466-6205

GE PROFILE Convection Oven.Model# JKP70SPSS. New, $900. Retail$1369. 505-660-6672

GE Profile Double oven1 convection

GE Spacemaker Microwave XL1400

Raypak boiler

50 gal water heater(American WaterHeater Company)

Nina 577-3751

ASSORTED STEEL BUILDINGSValue discounts as much as 30%

Erection info availableSource#18X800-964-8335

SEARS TREADMILL. Works except in-cline. $100. You haul away. 505-310-4826

HUNDREDS OF TRUCKLOADS. Wethinned 30 plus acres of Ponderosaand some CEDAR FIREWOOD ANDFENCEPOSTS. It is piled in randomlengths and diameters in our forest.SOLD BY TRUCKLOAD DEPENDING ONBED SIZE. $70 FOR 8 FOOT BED. Youload. Five miles east of Peñasco.Call for haul times- days and loca-tion. 575-587-0143 or 505-660-0675

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CLASSIFIEDSWhere treasures are

found daily

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Read theWANT TO RENT

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you need torent?

Immigrants, activists rally for rights at Capitol Local news, A-8

Locally owned and independent Tuesday, February 8, 2011 www.santafenewmexican.com 50¢

State lawmakers grill

utility over gas crisisNew Mexico Gas Co. taken to task

over shortage, lack of alert systemRedflex Traffic systems has sent out 300

notices alerting people ticketed by the city’s

speed SUV that they haven’t paid their fines.

Officials say 20 percent of those notices

were in error. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Dozens of people who paid

were sent default notices

By Julie Ann Grimm

The New Mexican

Joseph Sovcik got nailed by the Santa Fe

Police Department’s “speed SUV” doing about

38 mph on a 25 mph stretch of Galisteo Street

Martinez Elementary School early on

City flubs

accounting

of fees for

speed SUV

citations

16,000 customers waiting for

crews to restore service, heat

SUBSCRIBE TOTHE NEW MEXICAN

CALL 986-3010

DUTCH LADY, reliable, educated,looking for live-in job with elderlyperson, 7 nights, 6 days. 505-877-5585

OLIVAS SISTERSHOME HEALTH CARE

WE PROVIDE : Dr. Visits, assistancewith meds, personal attention, cook-ing and light housekeeping. Thought-ful companionship, 24/7. Licensedand Bonded. Great references uponrequest. Maria Olivas (505)316-3714

CASEY’S TOP HATCelebrating 35 years solving SantaFe’s unique chimeny problems.

Save $15 during the month ofMay with this ad.

Call Casey’s today! 505-989-5775

BEGINNERS GUITAR LESSONS. Age 6and up! Only $25 hourly. I come toyou! 505-428-0164

BEGINNER’S PIANO LESSONS, Ages 6and up. $25 per hour. From funda-mentals to fun! 505-983-4684

A+ Cleaning Homes, Office, Apart-ments, post construction, windows.House and Pet sitting. Referencesavailable, $15 per hour. Julia, 505-204-1677.

AFFORDABLEHANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning,hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees,Flagstone Patios, Driveways,Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina,920-0493

AFFORDABLEHANDYMAN SERVICE

Housecleaning, garage cleaning,hauling trash. Also, Cutting Trees,Flagstone Patios, Driveways,Fencing, Yard Work. Greg & Nina,920-0493

CLEAN HOUSES IN AND OUTWindows and carpet. Own

equipment. $18 an hour.Silvia, 505-920-4138.

Handyman, FREE estimates,Bernie, 505-316-6449.

LAURA & ARTURO CLEANING SERV-ICES: Offices, apartments, condos,houses, yards. Free phone estimates.Monthly/ weekly. 15 Years experi-ence. 303-505-6894, 719-291-0146

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE, PRO-PANELROOFS, PAINTING, FENCING,YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING &ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience.Consulting. Licensed. References.Free estimates. (505)470-5877

TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Constructionall phases of construction, and homerepairs. Licensed. 505-920-7583

PROFESSIONAL IRRIGATIONsprinklers, drip, new installations,and rennovations. Get it done rightthe first time. Have a woman do it.Lisa, 505-310-0045.

AC JACK, LLC SERVICES.All your home and yard needs.

Flowerbeds, trees, & irrigation main-tenance available.

Email: [email protected], 505-913-9272.

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, rem-nants at a fraction of the cost. Ide-al for large or small areas. Call,505-471-8931 for more information.

COTTONWOOD LANDSCAPING- FullLandscaping Designs, Rock, Trees,Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ES-TIMATES, 15% OFF ALL SUMMERLONG! 505-907-2600, 505-990-0955.

Coyote and Wood FencingOutdoor Landscaping, Painting,

Flagstone, Tree Removal,Hauling Trash and Yard Work.

Call, 505-570-9054.

Drip, Sprinkler, & Pump -troubleshooting, repair, install. Allproblems solved. Call Dave 660-2358.

GREENCARD LANDSCAPINGPlan Now! New Installations andRestorations. Irrigation, Hardscapes,Concrete, retaining walls, Plantings,Design & intelligent drought solu-tions. 505-995-0318

I CLEAN yards, gravel work, digtrenches. I also move furniture, haultrash. Call George, 505-316-1599.

JUAN’S LANDSCAPING C o y o t efences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Treecutting, Painting (inside, outside),Flagstone & Gravel. References. FreeEstimates. 505-231-9112

JUAN’S LANDSCAPING C o y o t efences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Treecutting, Painting (inside, outside),Flagstone & Gravel. References. FreeEstimates. 505-231-9112

PROFESSIONAL, HONEST,REASONABLE

Excavating, Paving, Landscaping,Demolition and Concrete work.

Licensed, Bonded, InsuredReferences. 505-470-1031

TRASH HAULING, Landscape cleanup, tree cutting, anywhere in the cityand surrounding areas. Call Gilbert,505-983-8391, 505-316-2693. FREE ES-TIMATES!

Aardvark DISCOUNT MOVERS serv-ing our customers with old-fashioned respect and care since1976. John, 505-473-4881.

PASO DEL NORTE. Home, Offices:Load & Unload. Honest, Friendly& Reliable. Weekends, 505-316-5380.

A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLEPRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR ANDEXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RE-LIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-982-1207

ANDY ORTIZ PAINTINGProfessional with

30 years experience.License, insured, bonded.

Please call for more information505-670-9867, 505-473-2119.

40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. ProfessionalPlastering Specialist: Interior & Exte-rior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a spe-cialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.

FOAM ROOFING WITH REBATE?ALL TYPES OF REPAIRS.50 YEARS EXPERIENCE.

Fred Vigil & Sons Roofing.505-603-6198, 505-920-0230

ROOF LEAK Repairs. All types, includ-ing: torchdown, remodeling. Yardcleaning. Tree cutting. Plaster. Expe-rienced. Estimates.505-603-3182, 505-204-1959.

A VALLY U STOR IT Now renting10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces.Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. InPojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.

DALE’S TREE SERVICE.Trees pruned, removed, stumps, leafblowing, fruit trees, evergreens,shrubbery & tree planting. Debrisremoval, hauling. 473-4129

Plumbing, roof patching, dumping,weed wacking, trim grass, edging,cutting trees, painting, fencing, heat-ing and air conditioning, sheet rock,taping drywall. 505-204-0254

HANDYMAN

STORAGECHIMNEY SWEEPING

LANDSCAPINGCARETAKING CLEANING

CLASSES

LANDSCAPING

YARD MAINTENANCE

ROOFING

PLASTERING

TREE SERVICEPAINTING

LANDSCAPING

MOVERSIRRIGATION

To place a Legal adCall 986-3000

Immigrants, activists rally for rights at Capitol Local news, A-8

Locally owned and independent Tuesday, February 8, 2011 www.santafenewmexican.com 50¢

State lawmakers grill

utility over gas crisisNew Mexico Gas Co. taken to task

over shortage, lack of alert systemRedflex Traffic systems has sent out 300

notices alerting people ticketed by the city’s

speed SUV that they haven’t paid their fines.

Officials say 20 percent of those notices

were in error. NEW MEXICAN FILE PHOTO

Dozens of people who paid

were sent default notices

By Julie Ann Grimm

The New Mexican

Joseph Sovcik got nailed by the Santa Fe

Police Department’s “speed SUV” doing about

38 mph on a 25 mph stretch of Galisteo Street

near E.J. Martinez Elementary School early on

City flubs

accounting

of fees for

speed SUV

citations

16,000 customers waiting for

crews to restore service, heat

SUBSCRIBE TOTHE NEW MEXICAN

CALL 986-3010

CALL 986-3000So can you with a classified ad

WE GET RESULTS!

service«directoryHave a product or service to offer? Call our small businessexperts to learn how we can help grow your business! CALL 986-3000

Thursday, May 16, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN B-7

Page 20: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

CUSTOM MADE Connelly Pool table,100 % Ash Wood, 8 foot table withimported Italian Slate, has minimaluse. New paid $5500, sacrifice at$1500 obo. 505-753-0000, 505-929-3333.

ROCKING CHAIR, teak, with cushions.$75. 505-474-9097

Used single box & foam mat-tress set. Joanne (505)471-1784

VENTA AIR Cleaning-Humidifier. Finecondition. $100.00 505-699-6591

CAL-SPA HOT TUB. 78x78. Moving,can’t take it. $500 you pick-up. Ther-mostat motor ozonator replaced2010-11. Has cover. 505-820-0459

HAYWARD 4800 DE Mico-Clear Filter.New grids engage. $195. 505-438-0722

HOT TUB, and cover seats 4. 220volts. Can deliver $1,400. 505-662-6396

CUB CADET riding mower. 50" cut.Asking $2000. 505-920-1253 or 575-687-2253

FRESH CLEAN MULCH 505-983-3906

HORSE MANURE(free tractor loading)

Arrowhead Ranch 424-8888

HORSE MANURE(you haul any amount)

Barbara 466-2552

Lots of folding wire fencing forvegetable and/or flower gar-dens. (505)231-6863

ORGANIC HORSE ManureBarbara 471-3870

PATIO SET, 5-Piece. 40" diameter. 2chairs. $55. 505-660-6034

SELF-PROPELLED TOROLAWNMOWER. $100. 505-988-5648

24 EL Palacio Magazines. Varied is-sues from 1976 to Spring 2013, $9.505-795-9009

BALING TWINE usedArrowhead Ranch 424-8888

Good quality 6ft artificial Christ-mas tree. Disassembles into 4sections including stand. Helen(505)820-0729

METAL 2-WHEEL CART. Basket is26’Hx15"Wx15"D. Like new, $10. 505-474-6226

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Maga-zines most recent 5 years in mintcondition great for school or read-ing room.Email: [email protected] or989-8605

NYLON POTATO or onion50lb sacks

Dan 455-2288 ext. 101

PACIFIC YURT: 16 ft, 256 sq ft., verygood condition, includes heater, 3windows, fully insulated with floor,platform, $6,650 OBO. 505-466-9339

SOLD!MORSO MODEL 3440 woodburningstove, for 1200 sqft, 35,000 BTU.Excellent condition, $800.00 OBO

Tube feeding sets: 36 sealedpackages of Kangaroo Joey,1000ml pump sets with Feed-Only Anti-Free Flow (AFF)Valve. Suitable for use withpump or gravity drip. Nina(505)988-1889

ADAGIO ELECTRIC Piano. Full key-board, bench. Warranty. Lightlyused. $499. 505-438-0008

3 BUSINESS phones in good shape -Gabe 466-0999

CANON COPY machine. 20 copiesper minute with sorter and feeder.New toner. Jennifer 505-982-9282

FILE CABINET. 2-drawer, letter size.Perfect. $25. 505-983-6676

HP Printer 13X LASER PRINTERCARTRIDGE (505)983-4277

LETTER SIZED file folders variouscolors- Doug 438-9299

OFFICE DESKS in good condition -505-466-1525

KODAK MINI Video Camera. Use withcomputer and Micro SD card which isnice! $25. 505-216-6208

PRO-FORM FOLDING Treadmill, 830QT, $75. You pick up. 505-820-0459

18" MAGNAVOX TV, with remotes, in-door antenna, converter box. $100obo. Must Sell Now. 505-795-9009

46" SONY TV. $100. Call Joey. 505-819-8622

BULLS, BULLS, Bulls. Registered BlackAngus plus, 12 to 16 months of age. 8available, $2,000. Santa Fe. 505-470-1546

BICHON FRISE Puppies, 3 males, BornMarch 3, 2013. Hypo-allergenic royal-ty lap dogs. Registered, Health Cert.& Shots. Parents on Site. Hurry, FREEwith Donation to Charity. $1000.00(941)358-2225

My name is Badge and I am the cut-est little-big guy at the shelter! Iam going to be a very large dog, asI am only 10 weeks old and 30pounds already. I am very friendlyand will grow into a gentle giantwith your love and lots and lots ofpuppy food! My adoption fee is $85and includes my neuter, 1st shots,deworm, microchip and 30 days ofhealth insurance.

For more information call theEspanola Valley Humane Soci-

ety at 505-753-8662 or visit theirwebsite at

www.evalleyshelter.org

SMART, HANDSOME, young, orangemale kitty. All vaccinations, micro-chipped, neutered, licensed. Lookingfor a good home. Veternarian refer-ence required. 505-231-6670

PETSAFE® PATIO Panel 81" x 8.5" x1".White Doggy Door. $100. 505-699-6591 Sacco is an 8 wk old male tab-

by kitten with cute whitemittens

Candie is an 8 wk old chow mixpup with 3 adorable brothers

These pets and more will be atPetSmart in Santa Fe on Satur-day 5/18 from 9am-3pm.

For more information call theEspanola Valley Humane

Society at 505-753-8662 or visittheir website at

www.evalleyshelter.org

FOR SALELamp repair restoration and assem-bly Business established 20 years.With clientele, convenient location

with parking, will train.505-988-1788.

914 DON Juan CARPORT, YARD SALE!Sat and Sun, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Furniture,Art, Clothes, Antiques, Toys andCollectables. Very eclectic, very cool.Visa, MC.

VIENTO DEL Norte Condominiums:Calle Meija St. past Lodge Hotel at St.Francis & AlamoCommunity-Wide Garage Sale:Saturday, May 18th, 9am to 2pmFurniture, Electronics, Household,Books, Clothes, Jewelry, Tools, ArtWork.

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sfnm«classifieds to place your ad, call 986-3000 Have a product or service to offer?Call our small business experts today!

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ClassifiedsGet Results!

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IT Professionals:ITD is recruiting all

IT disciplines!• Programmers/Developers

(Mainframe COBOL, MS Studio, C#, and Java)

• Network and Infrastructure Techniciansand Desktop Support

• DBAs (mainframe DB2, Oracle and MS SQL)

• Chief Security Officer, Project Managersand Business Analysts

The State of New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department is a High Tech/High Profile StateAgency. We are responsible for the collection of up to $8 Billon per annum in revenue. Allmajor systems are in the process of being upgraded. Upgrades include our tax systems andthe system that supports NM MVD. We are searching for full time employees and contractemployees to assist us in achieving these goals. All candidates with the right skill set arewelcome—let’s see if we can find a way to match our needs as we are hiring both contrac-tors and employees. TRD provides an Excellent Team environment with a 40 hour work weekand up to date technical environment. Full benefits package with pension plan, full healthinsurance, dental and vision benefits.

Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action EmployerYou can submit your resume directly to us, although you will have to ultimately applythrough the NM State Personnel Office website. All applicants will be hired through the statepersonnel classified system and candidates must follow the rules found on the SPO website:http://agency.governmentjobs.com/newmexico/default.cfm

Position Requirements• Most positions require a technical degree; experience may substitute for education in some

cases• Strong analytical and technical expertise preferred, strong written and oral communicationskills required for customer interaction.

• Strong people skills are required due to working in diverse team environments• Reliable, Self-starting, and Strong initiative preferred• Previous IT experience required for all positions

Current Openings by Functional area: Motor Vehicle: IT DBA 2 (3) Desktop Support: IT TechSupport Specialist 1 (2), IT Network Specialist 1 GenTax/E-file: IT Applications Dev 3 Infra-structure: IT Systems Manager II, IT Network Specialist 1 ONGARD: IT DBA 2, IT Generalist 1Data Warehouse: IT Applications Dev, IT Applications Dev 2

We are holding TWO Job Fairs to allow candidates to meet the management team at TRD ITD.SANTA FE JOB FAIR will be held on Thursday May 16, 2013 from 10:30-2:30 at the Joseph MontoyaBuilding; 1200 South St. Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM (SW corner of St. Francis and Cordova), thirdfloor—signs postedALBuQuERQuE JOB FAIR will be held on Friday May 17, 2013 from 11-3 in the Bank of the WestBuilding; 5301 Central Avenue, Albuquerque, NM (NE corner of San Mateo and Central), first floor—signs posted

B-8 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Page 21: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

COUPLE MARRIED 41 YEARS, AGES 70& 76 ARE STARTING TO DOWNSIZE!Collectibles, crystal items, furniture,CDs, records, glassware, cookware,clothing, and other unique treasures!FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 7:30-7:30 PM4638 SUNSET RIDGE(1 block from Southside library to-ward 599 on Valentine, make left on-to Apache Knoll, right onto SunsetRidge).

MULTI-FAMILY SALESATURDAY 5/18, 8-2 PM.115 E CHILI LINE ROADTools, kitchen, appliances, art,books, CDs, BOISE player, etc.

TAIL-GATE AT THE GRAND OPENINGOF FLEA AT THE DOWNS, MAY 25Open & Covered 10x30 SpacesFirst Come, First Served, $15 & $20Gates open to tail-gaters and ven-dors at 6:30 a.m. Saturday & Sundaywww.santafeflea.com 505-982-2671

THE SAN MARCOS ASSOCIATIONis having a garage sale on theweekend of MAY 18/19at Helen Boyce’s home3741 SR 14, SANTA FE, NM 87505about three-quarters of a milesouth of the Lone Butte GeneralStore. Starts at 10 am. LOTS ofstuff this time around.

2034 KIVA Road (off Osage)Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.Old New Mexican wpa furniture,carved desk and ropero, display casefrom the Old Taos Inn, Indian arti-facts, folk art, great chimayo coat,old animal traps, fantastic womensclothes, shoes, and accessories,household, lots of odds and ends.

CASA SOLANA SHOPPING CENTER9 a.m. Fantastic Yard Sale benefittingBrain Education Yoga Program.Lap-top, I-pod, Printer, Clothing, Fab-ric Crafts, Sporting Goods, Furniture,,Children’s items, Household goods.

5 AVILA CT., GOOD SIGNS.Friday, Saturday, 8-3.Cleaning out - rugs, books, women’sclothing, men’s hunting clothing, lim-ited edition duck prints, antique Co-leman gas table lamp, high backwicker chair, electric golf cart, muchmore.

HUGE REMODELINGREDECORATION SALE!SATURDAY & SUNDAY 9-240 CAMINO DIMITRIOFurniture, art, china, books, anti-ques, rugs, electronics, exerciseequipment, C A R S , decorativeitems, light fixtures, Hammondorgan. 505-466-1143

450 AVENIDA Primera South, offHyde Park Road. Multi-family ga-rage sale in Estancia Primeria Club-house parking lot. Saturday, May18, 8:00 - 1:00 (no early birdsplease). Folk art, carving tools, pot-tery, baskets, framed art, power &hand tools, furniture, lamps, kitch-en items, small appliances, 5x5"Soccer mom" tent, artificial 7 ft.Christmas tree used once.

825 EAST PALACE DRIVEWAY SALELatilla doors, phones, photo eq, iMac,CD/DVD, preschool math, shoes,books, jewelry, martini glasses-something for everyone! SATURDAYMAY 18 9 A.M. TO 3 P.M.

SATURDAY, MAY 18TH & SUNDAY,19th, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1854 Otowi Road.Propane Grill, Dishes, Clothes &Miscillanious items.

ESTATE SALE25 YEARS in our house, 45 yearsCollecting around the world;moving, starting to divest: antiq-uities; designer and special furni-ture, art and ephemera; designer,ethnic, vintage clothing; trunks;trees; china, crystal, linens, anti-que lace, books; studio and bookarts supplies! Friday & Saturday,May 17 & 18. 9 to 3. 1012 CalleLento, near Governor’s Mansion.505-920-2300.

ESTATE SALEFRIDAY 7:30 TO 12:30118 WEST LUPITALots of collectibles and other fantas-tic stuff, all at great prices!

LOS ALAMOS HUGE SALE5/16 & 5/17, 8-5

5/18 8-2.Barranca Mesa Subdivision

113 El Viento StreetFurniture, Antiques, TEAC & SONIStereo System, Garden & PowerTools; Camping, Kit Applc, Crystal,China, Espresso sets; Decorativeitems, framed posters & books; Chil-dren clothing, Toys, (Play Mobil dollhouse; doll carriages, Barbie’s, Ger-man children books, Legos, Duplo,Brio Wooden Train set & more) Peu-geot Bike. Too Many items to List!Please drop buy!

Saturday, May 18th 9:00a.m. -4:00p.m. Sunday 10:00a.m. - 2:00p.m.222 Closson Street. 5 Unit CondoSale. Art, Furniture, Tools, Books,Clothing, Appliances, Furnishings.Cash Only.

SAVING THE BEST FOR LASTESTATE SALE.FRIDAY- SUNDAY, 9-5Everything must go!Too much to list, contact Ruby,818-590-1044.

WINDOW GUARD for 3/4 Ford truck.Has railings. $85. 505-310-4826

BEAUTIFUL BLACK on Black SS 396138 code 1967 Chevelle. Completelyredone with a fresh big block 454with less than 5000 miles. 4 Speed ,new bumpers but have old ones thatcome with the car. can be seen atMustang ED’s on Lopez Ln. $31,000Calls Only 505-310-0381

1986 Chevy 4-wheeel drive $3800.New motor transmission and trans-fer case. Short bed with 3/4 tonaxles. Runs great. Has about 40 mileson the new motor. New paint but thehood has some hail dents on it. It is arunning driving truck truck butneeds to be finished. Has a suburbanfront fenders and grill. Call or textTim 575-595-5153

1978 CHEVY, 4 door 3/4 ton TruckTOO MUCH to list! This is a completerestored custom truck, with a racingcam and only 2000 miles on engine,loaded with chrome and extras,23,000.00 in reciepts not including la-bor, trophy winner, with first place,best of show, engine, class, soundsystem and more. I can send photos.Call for details make offer. 505-469-3355 $23000

1938 CHEVY deluxe project car.Complete with Fenders, hood, run-ning boards, 350 crate engine. CallDennis 719-843-5198.

1964 FORD GALAXIE 500 In Storagefor 43 Years! Original and in Excel-lent Condition. Two door fastback, FEbig block 352 / 4-barrel, cruse-o-matic auto trans. Runs and drivesexcellent. 505-699-9424.

Toy Box Too Full?Car Storage Facility

Airport Road and 599505-660-3039

1982 Chrysler Cordoba 318 4BBLrear power amplifier, mag wheels, allpower, excellent maintenance re-cords, second owner, $3,400 or bestoffer. [email protected] 505-471-3911

SATURN VUE 2004, 128,000 miles,4 Cylinder 5 Speed Manual,new struts and shocks,runs great.505-424-1180

FOR A GOOD HONEST DEAL,PLEASE COME SEE YOUR

HOMETOWN FORD, LINCOLNDEALER. NEW AND USED

INVENTORY!STEVE BACA 505-316-2970

1967 IMPALA $3,500 obo, 1997 Cadil-lac $1,000. 1973 Impala $800. 22" Rims$650. Fishing Boat (16 Foot) $800. 505-429-1239

1999 PONTIAC Bonneville SE with81,000 original miles, 3.8 V6, frontwheel drive, New tires, Power every-thing, Premium sound system withCD player. Car is in excellent condi-tion $3,800 CASH ONLY Call Jose at505-718-6257

SATURN AURA XE 3.5 2008 GREATSTARTER CAR. GREAT CONDITION.GARAGED AND UP TO DATE SERV-ICES. BLUE, GREY AND CAN BE TOW-ED BEHIND AN RV.

SUBARU FORESTER 2008 97k miles, allpower, auto, all season mats, newMichelin tires. $8900 obo call 505 4638486

1985 580E Diesel back-hoe case load-er for sale. Excellent for small jobsand farm work. Enclosed cab, 24" &18" buckets. $8900 OBO 505-670-7582or 505-757-2926

1996 DODGE RAM SLE 4x4 Ext. Cab.$3200. 153,000 MILES, 2 1/2 inch level-ing kit, clean cloth interior, automat-ic, 4x4 works great! Asking $3200(Will consider trade for a Jeep Chero-kee 6 cyl. (1994 & up) CALL STEVE AT505-316-2970 OR 505-577-5916

2012 JEEP Grand Cherokee Laredo4WD - low miles, 1-owner, cleancarfax $28,471. Lexus of Santa Fe,505-216-3800. Lexus of Santa Fe, 505-216-3800.

2003 Jeep Liberty Sport, 4x4, V6, 4DR,PW, PD, AC, Automatic, Cruise, Clean1 Owner Vehicle. $7250. Call (505)310-9853 or (505)699-9905

2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport - $4400. 4.0engine, 4-wheel drive, automatic,Power windows, mirrors, door locks,CD Player Runs Great Call or text:505-570-1952.

1994 JEEP Wrangler, 4x4, V6, 4.OL, 5speed engine. $6100. 125,500 miles.Has a new battery, bake pads andfull tune-up before winter. Recentlyplaced flow master exhaust systemand Rancho RS5000 shocks. I alsohave an extra bikini-top. Interior is ingreat condition and Jeep runsstrong. 631-259-1995 or 505-920-8719

2003 LIFTED FORD F-250 4X4 - $12000.MOTOR 5.4 IN GAS V8, AUTOMATIC,129,000 MILES, NEW CD, NEW TIRES &RIMS, WINDOWS MANUAL, A/C,CRUISE CONTROL , CLEAN TITLE VERYNICE, NO LEAKS, CLEAN. 505-501-5473

PRISTINE 2012 RAV4. LOADED! 4WD,V-6. $300 for 23 months to take overlease, or $22,582.00 pay off. Save$5,000 off new. Full warranty. 505-699-6161

SOLD!FORD Focus, 32 mpg, manual.Showroom condition. Garaged, 18koriginal miles. New car at 1/3 theprice. New Michelins. $6,250. 505-699-6161.

2011 BMW 328Xi AWD - only 14kmiles! navigation, premium &convience packages, warranty until11/2015 $30,331. Call 505-316-3800

2010 BMW 335Xi AWD - only 13kmiles! navigation, premium & coldweather packages plus xenonheadlamps, fast, pristine, and loaded$33,931. Call 505-216-3000

2004 HONDA Accord V6 EX-L leatherinterior heated seats, power driverand passenger seats, Moon roof, 6 cdstereo auto climate controls powereverything, New tires, all mainte-nance done timing belt, water pumpat 105k miles, clean carfax 110kmiles on the car now thats about12,000 a year charcoal grey with greyleather inside. Clean car inside andout 22 mpg city and 31mph hwy. Ask-ing $8800 or BEST OFFER 505-204-2661

2005 TOYOTA PRIUS. 85k. Grey. Newtires plus 2 snow tires. Great shape.$10,700 OBO. John, 505-473-2747.

1990 HONDA CRX - $2600. Runs prettynice with new clutch, 4 cilynders, sunroof, 5 speed, cd, rims 17", and re-built motor so works great. Ready togo. Call 505-501-5473

2012 IMPREZA SPORT. Only 16kmiles, under warranty. Alloy wheels.AWD, automatic, CD, power windows& locks, winter mats, cargo mat,more! One owner, clean Carfax.$21995

Top dollar paid for trade-ins.Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe

505-913-2900 Open Mon-Sat 9-6

2005 INFINITI G-35 COUPEMANUAL-6SPD

One-Owner, Local, Carfax, 34,421Miles, Garaged, Non-Smoker, EveryService Record, New Tires, Pristine,$19,495

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOURVEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

2008 KIA Optima with only 87,000miles. I am asking $8,500 obo, bookon this car is still $9,800. Please seri-ous inquires only! Please feel free tocall with questions or for any addi-tional questions (505)901-7855 or(505)927-7242

2011 LEXUS CT200h - over 40 mpg! 1-owner, clean carfax, 8 year hybridwarranty, well-equipped $26,891.Lexus of Santa Fe, 505-216-3800.

2010 MERCEDES-BENZ C3004MATIC LUXURY SEDAN. Luxuriousblack-on-black C300, AWD. Specialalloy wheels, unique grill, walnutwood trim, memory seats, garagedoor opener, heated seats, moonroofand more. 36k miles. $25,995.

Top dollar paid for trade-ins.Mercedes-Benz of Santa Fe

Open Monday - Saturday 9-6.505-913-2900

2003 LEXUS ES-300 SEDAN FWDOne Owner, Clean Carfax ,Records,Manuals 60,484 Miles, Non-Smoker,Garaged, New Tires, Loaded Pristine$13,995

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOURVEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

2003 MERCEDES BENZ E320. Loadedpower windows, power locks, heatedseats, 6 disc changer, power seats,automatic, v6, and much more. Verygood condition, luxury and reliable.Just serviced and new tires. 141,000miles. $8000 obo Please call for moreinfo (505)720-1344

2011 MINI Cooper Countryman S AWD- only 17k miles! Free Maintenance til09/2017, Cold Weather & PanoramicRoof, 1-owner $27,431. Call 505-216-3800

1999 NISSAN Sentra with a newclutch. Very clean reliable car. Reallygood gas milage, clean inside andoutside. Clean title, the engine iscompletly clean, no leaking oil, nocheck engine light. $3200 O.B.O. Callor txt 505-469-7295

1988 PORSCHE CARRERATARGA 911

Standard, Clean Carfax, Local Owner,Garaged, 61,548 Original miles, EveryService Record, Pristine $32,000

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOURVEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

2007 SUBARU Impreza. 65,000 miles,special edition package, powerdoors, power moon roof, auto, air,etc. Black. $10,500. 505-466-0806

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ALIGNMENT WILLTELL YOU OF ANYFRAME DAMAGE

BY TOM AND RAY MAGLIOZZI

Dear Tom and Ray:My wife Olivia’s first car (in theearly ‘70s) was a purple-sparkledune buggy built on a VW Bugframe -- one of the least safe butcoolest cars ever. As we havegrown older, she has pined for herdune buggy, so last year I boughther a safer facsimile: a bright-redHonda Fit. She LOVES it, and sodo I. Here’s the catch: About threemonths after we got the car, a20-something boy fiddling with theCD player in his very large mini-van rear-ended her at a stoplight,

pushing her “red dune buggy”into a much larger Jeep 4x4. Ourcar was pretty smashed up in thefront and rear. She was able todrive it home (even though the airbag had deployed), and we had allthe front- and rear-end damagerepaired (at a cost to the insurancecompany of nearly $8,000). Myquestion is: Do you guys think thiscar should be OK after this injury?The repairs were largely cosmetic(bumpers, headlight, hood, rearhatchback), besides replacing therestraint system. The car looksand drives fine. Please tell meOlivia’s beloved “red dune buggy”should be fine, so I don’t have totalk to any more insurance agents.-- DonaldRAY: It should be fine, Donald. Itobviously took a serious hit if theair bag deployed. But I trust thatthe insurance company did its duediligence and concluded that itwouldn’t be wasting $8,000 if thisthing were fixed.TOM: The primary concern Iwould have had is whether theframe got bent. But I assume theinsurance company checked thatand found it to be OK.

RAY: If you want to confirm thisfor yourself, take the car to a placethat does wheel alignments, andask for a four-wheel alignment.TOM: If the frame is bent, theywill not be able to align all fourwheels. So if they tell you youralignment’s fine, that tells you yourframe is fine, too.RAY: It’s always possible thatwith a serious collision, there’sundetected damage: wires that gotpinched, or mechanical damagethat only pops up later. But if theinsurance company didn’t total thecar, if it now looks and drives fineand if you can align the wheels, I’dsay don’t worry about it, and letyour wife enjoy her ride.TOM: And by the way, you’re verylucky to have a wife who’s so easyto please. She wants a dune buggy,you give her a Honda Fit, and shesays, “Okey-dokey!”RAY: My brother’s just jealous,Donald. He tried, unsuccessfully,to convince his wife that the ‘78Fiat he gave her was a Cadillac.Of course, that was two wives andfour Fiats ago.

CLICK AND CLACKKing Features Syndicate

Thursday, May 16, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN B-9

Page 22: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

REDUCED!

2010 TOYOTA RAV-4 LIMITED 4X4One-Owner, 38,000 Miles, Records,Carfax, Manuals, X-Keys, Non-Smoker, Garaged, New Tires,Remaining Warranty $22,995

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOURVEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

2009 SAAB 9-5 Aero - only 34k miles!Immaculate, new tires, turbo, cleancarfax, last year this was available!$17,891. Call 505-216-3800

2011 SUBARU Forester 2.5X Limited -low miles, leather, heated seats, nav-igation, moonroof, rare fully loadedmodel $23,361. Call 505-216-3800

2011 SUBARU Impreza Outback SportHatch - rare 5-spd, low miles, naviga-tion, moonroof, super nice! $18,671

2006 SUBARU Outback L.L.Bean Wag-on - amazing 45k miles! heatedleather, moonroof, truly like new$18,863 Lexus of Santa Fe, 505-216-3800.

2005 SUBARU Legacy Outback XT.94K miles, new subaru motor, turbo,etc. (2000 miles). AWD, automatic,black, cream interior, leather, tint,moon roof, loaded. $9,900. 505-660-9477

2011 TOYOTA FJ Cruiser - only 20kmiles! 1-owner, clean carfax, Up-grade Package #3 $31,951, Lexus ofSanta Fe, 505-216-3800.

2010 TOYOTA Prius II - low miles, 40+mpg, 1- owner, clean carfax, excel-lent condition $20,621 Lexus of SantaFe, 505-216-3800

2009 TOYOTA RAV4 4WD - only 12kmiles! 1-owner, clean carfax, awe-some fuel economy $18,922. Lexus ofSanta Fe, 505-216-3800.

2008 TOYOTA Camry SE V6 3.5L 81kmiles. Silver with black interior, pow-er seats, power moon roof, spoiler,automatic 6 speed transmission,Tinted windows, Newer tires, Fullyserviced by dealer, great car on gas,lots of power, JBL sound, cruise, lotsof options. Asking $14,600 OBO Cleantitle, clean Carfax, always taken careof and serviced. Contact (505) 204-2661

2006 TOYOTA AVALON LIMITEDFWD, Carfax, Records, One Owner,Non Smoker, Garaged, New Tires,

Loaded $13,995WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR

VEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

1994 Toyota Corolla - $1950. 154.000miles, manual, A/C, Electric, CruiseControl, runs very good, very goodon gas, 505-316-0436.

2011 VOLKSWAGEN Jetta SportwagenTDI - low miles, rare DIESEL WAGON,1-owner, clean carfax, panoramicroof, heated seats $24,971. Lexus ofSanta Fe, 505-216-3800.

1999 VOLVO V70 Wagon - $4900. Ex-ceptionally clean, 84,000 miles, leath-er interior, sunroof, automatic Call ortext: 505-570-1952

2004 VW-BEETLE-GLSCONVERTIBLE MANUAL

Clean Carfax, Every Service Record,76000 Miles, Non-Smoker, Garaged,Manuals, X-Keys, Leather, Loaded,Pristine,$8,995

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOURVEHICLE!

VIEW VEHICLEwww.santafeautoshowcase.com

Paul 505-983-4945

2001 WHITE Honda Accord DX.180,000 miles. Runs great, automatic,blue cloth seats, Pioneer Radio/CD, 4cylinder. A/C & heat works. Nice gassaver. Clear title. Comes with blackleather bra. $5300 OBO. Cash only.Call 505-501-3390

1997 XG6 Jaguar. $3000. V6, 4.0 en-gine, all power seats and windows ,leather, good paint. 125k miles. Sal-vage title. Trade? For more info call505-501-9584.

1992 FORD Ranger. 5 speed, extendedcab, real clean. $22001992 Ford Escort. 5 speed, 2 door.$1700 OBO. 505-204-2921

2002 CHEVY Avalanche. 116,000miles, black leather interior, 24"rims, new single din multimidia DVDreceiver, new window tint, has no oilleaks. Runs like new! NOT 4x4. Formore info: Call txt 505-261-9565 if noanswer txt or call 505-316-0168 Ask-ing $8500. Might consider trades. Se-rious buyers only please.

2001 CHEVY 2500 HD 4x4 - $11500 6.0,Crew Cab, short bed, 96,000 miles.5th wheel rails, tow package, newtires $11,500 obo. 505-796-2177

2004 FORD 150 4X4 FX4 OFF ROAD$14,300. 4 DOORS, ALL POWERS, 6 CD,A/C, WORKS AND RUNS GREAT! VERYCLEAN, LIFTED, NEW TIRES, CRUSECONTROL, AUTOMATIC V8 MOTOR5.4, 160,000 MILES, CLEAR TITLE, INVERY GOOD SHAPE, VERY NICE! 505-501-9615

MUST SELL!

1984 Chevrolet 2-ton, 16 footflatbed. 2WD, 454 manual

transmission (4-speed). 56,000original miles. $2,000 OBO!

1988 Chevrolet 1-ton dually 4X4.Power windows, power locks. 454

automatic transmission. $2,000OBO!

Call Andrew, (505) 231-4586.Evenings preferred or leave

message.

1998 FIREBIRD Transam. MUST SEE tobelieve, flawless condition, fast,chip, LS1 eng., Auto, T-TOP, NewTIRES!, garaged, fantastic condition!$12,000. 505-469-3355

2002 MAZDA MIATA Special Edition.Many performance and appearanceupgrades. $12,500 or best offer.Chris, 505-501-2499; [email protected]

1995 Ford Mustang Gt V8. Runs great,has after market rear lights, nicestereo. High miles but runs great!Good heater & AC, nice tires andrims. New paint job only 2 monthsold. Must drive! Interior needs seatcovers and a little cleaning but fastcar! call to see 505-930-1193 $4000

2002 CHEVY Trail Blazer $5400. Au-tomatic, 170,000 miles, very clean ,V6 motor vortec 4200, CD, A/C,power windows. Runs pretty good.Very nice! 505-501-5473

2001 CHEVY BLAZER LT 4X4. $3500(ESPANOLA). V6, AUTO, PL, PW, CD,AC, CRUISE, TILT, GREAT CONDITION.CALL MIKE 505-920-4195

2011 HONDA CRV EX-L AWD - only 12kmiles! super clean, leather,moonroof, fully equipped $25,471.Call 505-216-3800

2002 INFINITI QX4. Runs beautifullyand in good condition. Exceptionallyclean. 122,000 miles. $6,600.505-820-7615

2001 JEEP Charokee Sport. 6 Cylinder,automatic, 147,000 Miles. $4995 CallManny at 505-570-1952

2004 SUZUKI Vitatara - $4900. 87,000MILES, V-6 engine, 5-speed, 4-wheeldrive, Power windows, power doorlocks, power mirrors, RUNS GREATCall or text: 505-570-1952.

2008 TOYOTA Tacoma Double CabTRD 4WD - 1-owner, clean carfax, V6,SR5, TRD, the RIGHT truck $26,851.Lexus of Santa Fe, 505-216-3800.

1997 33’ Pace Arrow VisionMotorhome. Asking $12,000. 505-466-3011

FREEDOM ON TWO WHEELS! Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 (2000 yr)Black & Chrome 18,000 miles Ask-ing $3700 Excellent condition! 505-757-3084 in Glorieta.

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B-10 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013

Page 23: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

ADVERTISEMENTFOR BIDS

RFB No. ’13/28/B

Competitive sealedbids will be receivedby the Santa Fe SolidWaste ManagementAgency and will bedelivered to City ofSanta Fe, PurchasingOffice, 2651 SiringoRoad, Bldg. "H", San-ta Fe, New Mexico87505 until 2:00 p.m.local prevailing timeon Wednesday, June5, 2013. Any bid re-ceived after thisdeadline will not beconsidered. This RFBis for the purpose ofprocuring:

TRACK-TYPE WASTEHANDLER DOZER FORLANDFILL APPLICA-TION

The Bidder’s atten-tion is directed to thefact that all applica-ble Federal Laws,State Laws, MunicipalOrdinances, and therules and regulationsof all authorities hav-ing jurisdiction oversaid item shall applyto the bid throughout,and they will bedeemed to be includ-ed in the bid docu-ment the same asthough herein writtenout in full.

The Santa Fe SolidWaste ManagementAgency (Agency) isan Equal OpportunityEmployer and allqualified applicantswill receive consider-ation for employmentwithout regard torace, color, religion,sex, sexual orienta-tion or national ori-gin. The successfulBidder will be re-quired to conform tothe Equal Opportuni-ty Employment regu-lations.

Bids may be held forsixty (60) days sub-ject to action by theAgency. The Agencyreserves the right toreject any or all bidsin part or in whole.Bid packets are avail-able by contacting:Shirley Rodriguez,City of Santa Fe, Pur-chasing Office, 2651Siringo Road, Building"H", Santa Fe, NewMexico 87505. Tele-phone number is(505) 955-5711. Ques-tions related to thisbid can be directed toRandall Kippenbrock,P.E., Santa Fe SolidWaste ManagementAgency, 149 WildlifeWay, Santa Fe, NM87506. Telephonenumber is (505) 424-1850, ext. 100. TheRFB is also availablea thttp://www.santafenm.gov/bids.aspx.

ATTEST:Robert Rodarte, Pur-chasing Officer

Legal#94564Published in the San-ta Fe New Mexicanon: May 16, 2013

CITY OF SANTA FEADOPTION OF ORDI-

NANCE NOS. 2013-20,2013-21AND 2013-22

Notice is hereby giventhat the Governing Bodyof the City of Santa Feheld a public hearing attheir regular meeting onWednesday, May 8, 2013and approved the fol-lowing:

1)Ordinance No. 2013-20:An Ordinance Relatingto the City of Santa FeFire Department;Amending Section 2-10.3SFCC 1987 to Establishthe Stated Purpose ofthe Fire Department Au-thority and Powers; toAuthorize the Right ofIngress and Egress onAll Public or PrivateStreets, Alleyways,Roads, Driveways andThoroughfares; and toGrant the Fire Chief theFull Authority to SignAgreements With Land-

gowners for the Purposeof Implementing FireHazard Mitigation Activ-ities.

2)Ordinance No. 2013-21:An Ordinance Relatingto Requirements for CityContractors; Amendingthe City of Santa Fe Pur-chasing Manual to Es-tablish a New Provisionto Prohibit Discrimina-tion.

3)Ordinance No. 2013-22:An Ordinance Relatingto Benefits for DomesticPartners; Creating aNew Section 19-3.8 SFCC1987 to Require that theCity of Santa Fe ProvideDomestic Partner Bene-fits for Employees of theCity of Santa Fe Who AreEligible to Receive Bene-fits, Including Benefitsfor Dependent Childrenof Domestic Partners.

Copies of these ordinan-ces are available in theirentirety on the City’sweb sitehttp://www.santafenm.gov (click onG o v e r n m e n t / C i t yClerk/Ordinances) orupon request and pay-ment of a reasonablecharge, in the CityClerk’s Office, City Hall,200 Lincoln Avenue,from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00p.m., Monday throughFriday.Yolanda Y. Vigil,City ClerkLegl #95239PUbl May 16, 2013

CITY OF SANTA FECAPITAL IMPROVE-MENTS PROGRAM

ADVERTISEMENT FORBIDS

SEALED BIDS FOR: F i r eStation #4 - Re-Roofing’13/33/B

PRE-BID CONFERENCE:May 21, 2013 2:00 PMFire Station No. 41130 Arroyo ChamisoRoa Santa Fe, NM 87504

TO BE OPENED AT: Pur-chasing Office 2651Siringo Road Building HSanta Fe, New Mexico87505

(505) 955-5711

TIME: 2:00 P.M. Local Pre-vailing Time

DATE: May 30, 2013

ADDRESSED TO: City Pur-chasing OfficerCity of Santa Fe 2651Siringo Road Building HSanta Fe, New Mexico87505

Bids will be received un-til the above time, thenopened publicly at thePurchasing Director’s of-fice or other designatedplace, and read aloud.BIDS RECEIVED AFTERTHE ABOVE TIME WILLBE RETURNED UNOP-ENED.

Bidding Documents areposted on the City webs i t ew w w .s a n tafen m .govand also may be ob-tained from ChipLilienthal Facilities Divi-sion 2651 Siringo RoadSanta Fe NM 87507Phone number 505-955-5938. StructuralEngineering/drainagedrawings are available.Electronic copies maybe obtained by callingChip Lilienthal 505-955-5938 or hard copies maybe obtained at 2651Siringo Road Building’E’. A deposit is not re-quired.

Any unsuccessful Bid-der, upon returning suchset within ten (10) daysof Bid date, and in goodcondition, will be re-funded his payment. Allsets shall be returned tothe Landscape Architectwithin ten (10) calendardays, regardless ofwhether or not the indi-vidual is believed to be asuccessful Bidder. Con-tractors not returningtheir sets within ten (10)days after Bid date, willmean forfeiture of theentire deposit. N/A

Bid Documents are alsoon file at Builders Newsand Plan Room, Con-struction Reporter, andDodge Reports in Albu-querque, and online

q q ,through Reed Construc-tion Data.

Bids for the project willbe presented in the formof a base bid plus alter-nates if any. Award willbe made to the bidderproviding the lowest to-tal base bid of Option’A’, or Option ’B’, or Op-tion ’C’. Bidder shall Bidall items for either Op-tion ’A’, or Option ’B’, orOption ’C’. Bidder shallinclude in the signeddocuments their licenseand classification. Con-tract award will bemade to the responsibleBidder submitting thelow Base Bid for Option’A’, or Option ’B’, or Op-tion ’C’, however theOwner may award thecontract to the respon-sible Bidder submittingthe low combined Bid(Base Bid plus Add Altsand applicable GrossReceipts Taxes), withinthe amount of fundsavailable, if applicable.

Bid security, made paya-ble to the City of SantaFe, the "Owner" in theamount of 5% of theproposal sum shall besubmitted with the Bid.Bid security shall be inthe form of a Bid Bondissued by Surety li-censed to conduct busi-ness in the State of NewMexico, or by certifiedcheck. The Bidders se-curity shall be retainedby the Owner until theContract is signed; theother Bidder’s securityshall be returned assoon as practicable.Failure or refusal by thesuccessful Bidder to en-ter into Contract withthe Owner will consti-tute Liquidated Damag-es in favor of the Owner.The bid shall also in-clude a signed "Non-Collusion Affidavit ofPrime Bidders", signed"Certificate of Non-Segregated Facilities", asigned "Certificate ofBidder Regarding EqualEmployment Opportuni-ty", a Subcontractor’sListing and; if applica-ble, a Local PreferenceApplication. The projectis subject to the NewMexico Office of LaborCommission, MinimumWage Rates for theState of New Mexico.Such wage rates arebound into the ContractDocuments. The suc-cessful Bidder shall,upon notice of award ofcontract, secure fromeach of hisSubcontractors a signed"Non-Collusion Affidavitof Subcontractors".The Bidding Documentscontain a time for com-pletion of the work bythe successful Bidder,and further imposes liq-uidated damages forfailure to comply withthat time.

The Owner reserves theright to reject any andall Bids, to waive techni-calities, and to acceptthe Bid it deems to be inthe best interest of theCity of Santa Fe.

The City of Santa Fe isan Equal OpportunityEmployer and all quali-fied applicants will re-ceive consideration foremployment without re-gard to race, color, reli-gion, sex, sexual orien-tation or national origin.The successful Bidderwill be required to con-form to the Equal Op-portunity EmploymentRegulations.

Bids will be received bythe City of Santa Fe andwill be delivered to Cityof Santa Fe, PurchasingOffice, 2651 SiringoRoad, Bldg. H Santa Fe,New Mexico 87505 until2:00 P.M. local prevailingtime May 30, 2013. Anybid received after thisdeadline will not be con-sidered. This bid is forthe purpose ofprocuring: FIRE STATIONNo. 4 - RE-ROOFING

ATTEST:

Robert Rodarte, Pur-chasing DirectorCity of Santa Fe, NewMexico

Legal #94676Published in the SantaFe New Mexican on May16, 2013

FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICTCOURTCOUNTY OF SANTA FESTATE OF NEW MEXICO

No. D-101-PB-2013-00082

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF REBECCAMcDOWELL CRAVER,DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENthat the undersignedhas been appointed Per-sonal Representative ofthis Estate. All personshaving claims againstthis Estate are requiredto present their claimswithin two (2) monthsafter the date of the firstpublication of this No-tice or their claims willbe forever barred.Claims must be present-ed either to the under-signed Personal Repre-sentative at P.O. Box1575, Santa Fe, NewMexico, 87504, or filedwith the First JudicialDistrict Court, JudgeSteve Herrera JudicialComplex, P.O. Box 2268,Santa Fe, New Mexico,87504.

DATED: May 03, 2013.

William Lionel Craver,Jr.,Personal Representative

THE CULLEN LAW FIRM,P.C.Attorneys for the Per-sonal Representative2006 Botulph RoadP.O. Box 1575Santa Fe, New Mexico87504-1575(505) 988-7114 (office)(505) 995-8694 (facsim-ile)[email protected]

Legal#94545Published in the SantaFe New Mexican on: May9, 16, 2013

ITEMS STORED by CarolCaskey, 186A ArroyoHonda Rd, Santa Fe, NM,consisting of many box-es, a trunk, coffee ta-bles, kitchen items,clothes, art work, to besold May 31, 2013 byEldorado Self Storage,Avenida Vista Grande,Santa Fe, NM. Call 466-1810 for information.

Items stored by MattTaylor, PO Box 43,Glorieta,NM, consistingof boxes, desk, leatherchair, to be sold May 31,2013 by Eldorado SelfStorage, Avenida VistaGrande, Santa Fe, NM.Call 466-1810 for infor-mation.

Items stored by RobertaFarrington, 2140 RidgeView Circle, Santa Fe,NM, consisting of artwork to be sold May 31,2013 by Eldorado SelfStorage, Avenida VistaGrande, Santa Fe, NM.Call 466-1810 for infor-mation.LEGL# 95129Publ May 9, 16 2013

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby giv-en that thePOJOAQUE VALLEYSCHOOL DISTRICT ,Santa Fe County, NewMexico called forSealed Bids for:

RFB# 05.29.13POJOAQUE MIDDLESCHOOL CAFETERIARENOVATIONS ANDADDITION

The project consist ofinterior renovations,partial demolition ofexisting partitions,electrical and me-chanical improve-ments and metalstud/bar joists addi-tion of restrooms andentry foyer.

Interested partiesmay secure a copy ofthe Request for Bids,Contract Documentsand any amendmentsif applicable from:Douglas Patterson,AIALiving Designs GroupArchitects122A Dona Luz StreetTaos, NM 87571Phone: [email protected]

Please contact Jessi-

ca Sanchez or JessicaRoybal, Living De-signs Group Archi-tects, @ (575)751-9481to be included in thespec-holder list in or-der to receive amend-ments to this requestif applicable.

A mandatory site vis-it is scheduled for2:00 PM Local Timeon Monday, May 20,2013 .

The procurementCode, Sections 13-1-28 through 13-1-199NMSA 1978, imposescivil and misdemean-or criminal penaltiesfor tis violation. In ad-dition, the New Mexi-co criminal statuesimpose felony penal-ties for bribes,gratuities and kick-backs.

Sealed Bids will be re-ceived and opened byPojoaque ValleySchool District-Central Office (Atten-tion to: Lisa Montoya,Controller) 1574 StateRoad 502 West, SantaFe, NM no later than2:00 PM Local TimeMonday, May 27,2013.

As per NMSA 1978,Sections 13-1-131 and13-1-132, thePojoaque ValleySchool District re-serves the right tocancel this procure-ment or reject any/allbid proposals if it isin the best interest ofthe Pojoaque ValleySchool District to doso, and to waive alltechnical irregulari-ties not involvingprice quality or quan-tity of construction,services or materials.

By Order of the Gov-erning BodyPojoaque ValleySchools

/s/Terry CummingsDirector of Opera-tions

LEGAL#94570PUBLISHED IN THESANTA FE NEW MEXI-CAN MAY 10THROUGH MAY 23,2013

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby giventhat the P O J O A Q U EVALLEY SCHOOL DIS-TRICT , Santa Fe County,New Mexico calls forSealed Bids for:

RFB# 05.27.13DUAL ATHLETIC FIELDS

The Pojoaque HighSchool Dual Use AthleticFields is a new construc-tion project that will bebuilt on the existing 7.61acre site owned byPojoaque Valley SchoolDistrict. The dual athlet-ic field shall provide fa-cilities for girls softballand both boys and girlssoccer. The entire fieldwill consist of an artifi-cial turf surface, containboth home and visitordugouts, spectatorbleachers and varioussite amenities.

Interested parties maysecure a copy of the Re-quest for Bids, ContractDocuments and anyamendments if applica-ble from:Douglas Patterson, AIALiving Designs Group Ar-chitects122A Dona Lopez StreetTaos, NM 87571Phone: [email protected]

Please contact IsraelPadilla, Living DesignsGroup Architects, @(575)751-9481 to be in-cluded in the spec-holder list in order to re-ceive amendments tothis request if applica-ble.

A mandatory site visit isscheduled for 2:00 PMLocal Time on Mon-day, May 20, 2013.

The Procurement Code,Sections 13-1-28 through13-1-199 NMSA 1978, im-poses civil and misde-

pmeanor criminal penal-ties for its violation. Inaddition, the New Mexi-co criminal statues im-pose felony penaltiesfor bribes, gratuitiesand kick-backs.

Sealed bids will be re-ceived and opened bythe Pojoaque ValleySchool District-CentralOffice (Attention to: LisaMontoya) 1574 StateRoad 502 West, Santa Fe,NM no later than 2 :0 0PM Local Time Mon-day, May 27, 2013.

As per NMSA 1978, Sec-tions 13-1-131 and 13-1-132, the Pojoaque ValleySchool District reservesthe right to cancel thisprocurement or rejectany/all bid proposals if itis in the best interest ofthe Pojoaque ValleSchool District to do so,and to waive all techni-cal irregularities not in-volving price, quality orquantity of construc-tion, services or materi-als.

By Order of the Govern-ing BodyPojoaque Valley Schools

/s/Terry CummingsDirector of Operations

LEGAL#94569PUBLISHED IN THE SAN-TA FE NEW MEXICANMAY 10 THROUGH MAY23, 2013

MEMBERS OF THE PUB-LIC are invited to pro-vide comment on hear-ings for the issuance ofor transfers of liquor li-censes as outlined be-low. All hearings will beconducted at the NM Al-cohol and Gaming Divi-sion offices on the datesspecified for each Appli-cation in the ToneyAnaya Building, 2550Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe,NM. The Hearing Officerassigned to this applica-tion is Annette Brumley.She can be contacted at505-476-4548.

Application # A853779for a Beer & Wine Res-taurant Liquor Licenseon May 23, 2013 @ 3:30p.m., for Plaza Burritos,LLC/DBA: Burrito Com-pany located at 111Washington Ave., SantaFe, Santa Fe County NewMexico.Legl 95240Publ May 16, 23 2013

Members of the pub-lic are invited to pro-vide comment onhearings for the issu-ance of or transfersof liquor licenses asoutlined below. Allhearings will be con-ducted at the NM Al-cohol and Gaming Di-vision offices on thedates specified foreach Application inthe Toney AnayaBuilding, 2550Cerrillos Road, SantaFe, New Mexico. TheHearing Officer as-signed to this appli-cation is AnnetteBrumley. She can becontacted at 505-476-4548.

Application #A852679for a Beer and WineRestaurant Liquor Li-cense on June 11,2013 at 3:00 p.m. forCafe Greco, LLC/DBA:Cafe Greco located at233 Canyon Rd., Unit2, Santa Fe, Santa FeCounty New Mexico.Legal #95238Published in the San-ta Fe New Mexican onMay 16, 2013

Notice is hereby giv-en of the Board meet-ing of the New Mexi-co Health InsuranceExchange, to be heldon May 16, 2013 from8:00 am to 12:00 pmon May 17, 2013 from9:00 am to 5:00 pm.The meeting will beheld at CNMWorkforce TrainingCenter, MeetingRoom 103, 5600 EagleRock Ave. NE Albu-querque, NM 87113.This meeting is beingcalled pursuant tothe Open MeetingsAct Resolution NMSA1978, Ch. 10, Art. 15. Ifan individual with adisability is in need of

ya reader, amplifier,qualified sign lan-guage interpreter, orany other form ofauxiliary aid or serv-ice to attend or par-ticipate in the hear-ing or meeting,please contactNMHIA office at 1-800-204-4700, prior tothe meeting. Publicdocuments includingthe agenda can beprovided by access-i n ghttp://www.nmprc.stnsurance/healthcare-reform/index.html.

Legal #94677Published in the San-ta Fe New Mexican onMay 16, 2013.

NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that the Regu-lar Board Meeting ofthe Board of Educa-tion for the Pecos In-dependent SchoolDistrict will takeplace on Tuesday,May 21, 2013.

The meeting will be-gin at 6:00 pm in thePecos Schools BoardRoom.

Agendas are availa-ble at the Administra-tion Office on the dayprior to the BoardMeeting.

The meeting may in-clude Budget Adjust-ment Requests.

An Executive Sessionmay take place dur-ing the agenda to dis-cuss limited person-nel matters and/orpending litigation asper NM Statutes Arti-cle 15 Open Meetings10-15-1 SubparagraphH (2 & 8). Action itemas a result of execu-tive session if neces-sary.

FRED TRUJILLO, SU-PERINTENDENT

THE PECOS INDE-PENDENT SCHOOLDISTRICT IS AN EQUALOPPORTUNITY EM-PLOYER AND DOESNOT DISCRIMINATEON THE BASIS OFRACE, NATIONAL ORI-GIN, RELIGION, AGE,SEX, MARITAL STA-TUS, HOMELESSNESSOR DISABILITY INCOMPLIANCE WITHFEDERAL AND STATELAWS.

LEGAL#95172PUBLISHED IN THESANTA FE NEW MEXI-CAN MAY 15, 16, 2013

NOTICE OF REQUESTFOR PROPOSALS

NEW MEXICO SCHOOLFOR THE ARTS

New Mexico Schoolfor the Arts, a state-wide public charterhigh school, locatedat 275 E. Alameda,Santa Fe, NM has is-sued an RFP (Requestfor Proposal) for FoodService Managementfor the 2013-2014School Year. A copyof the RFP and inqui-ries regarding theRFP may be obtainedby contacting Christi-na Yamashiro, Busi-ness Manager, at 505-310-4194 [email protected]. Thedeadline to submit aproposal to this re-quest is July 1, 2013 at10 a.m. There is amandatory prebidmeeting at the Schoolon June 4, 2013 at 10a.m.

LEGAL#95193PUBLISHED IN THESANTA FE NEW MEXI-CAN MAY 1 THROUGHMAY 20, 2013

STATE OF NEWMEXICO COUNTY OFSANTA FE FIRSTJUDICIAL DISTRICTCOURTIN THE MATTER OF A PE-TITION FOR CHANGE OFNAME OF Idalia AmayaNavarreteCASE NO. D-101-CV-2013-

01215

NOTICE OF CHANGEOF NAME

TAKE NOTICE that in ac-cordance with the provi-sions of Sec. 40-8-1through Sec. 40-8-3NMSA 1978, st seq. thePetitioner Idalia A.Chacon Navarrete willapply to the HonorableSarah M. Singleton, Dis-trict Judge of the FirstJudicial District at theSanta Fe Judicial Com-plex in Santa Fe, NewMexico, at 8:30 a.m. onthe 17th day of June,2013 for an Order forChange of Name fromIDALIA A. C h a c o nNavarrete to IdaliaAmaya Chacon.

Stephen T. Pacheco, Dis-trict Court Clerk By: Ra-chel VannoyDeputy Court ClerkSubmitted by: IdaliaAmaya ChaconPetitioner, Pro Se

LEGAL#94651PUBLISHED IN the SantaFe New Mexican on:May 16, 23, 2013

STATE OF NEWMEXICO COUNTY OFSANTA FE FIRSTJUDICIAL DISTRICTCOURT

NO. D - 1 0 1 - C V -2013-00401

STATE EMPLOYEESCREDIT UNION, Plain-tiff,v.

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS,DEVISEES ANDASSIGNS OF LEROYBENAVIDEZ, DE-CEASED;UNKNOWN SPOUSE(IF ANY) OF LEROYBENAVIDEZ; JOHNDOE and JANE DOE,Defendants.

NOTICE OF PENDENCYOF ACTION

THE STATE OF NEWMEXICO TO THE FOL-LOWING NAMED ORDESIGNATED DEFEND-ANTS:

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS,DEVISEES AND AS-SIGNS OF LEROYBENAVIDEZ, DE-CEASED; UNKNOWNSPOUSE (IF ANY) OFLEROY BENAVIDEZ;JOHN DOE and JANEDOE

GREETINGSDEFENDANTS:

You are hereby noti-fied that State Em-ployees Credit Union,as Plaintiff, has filedan action in the FirstJudicial District Courtof Santa Fe County,New Mexico, andwherein the saidPlaintiff seeks to ob-tain constructiveservice of processupon you.

The general object ofsaid action is: Com-plaint on PromissoryNote and for Foreclo-sure

You are further noti-fied that unless youserve a pleading ormotion in response tothe complaint in saidcause on or before 30days after the lastpublication date,judgment will be en-tered against you.

The name and postoffice address of theAttorneys for thePlaintiff is as follows:ALDRIDGE, GRAMMER& HAMMAR, P.A., 1212Pennsylvania, NE, Al-buquerque, New Mex-ico 87110.

WITNESS my handand the seal of theFirst Judicial DistrictCourt of Santa FeCounty, New Mexico,on the 29th day ofMarch, 2013.

STEPHEN T. PACHECOCLERK OF THEDISTRICT COURT

Legal#95186Published in the San-ta Fe New Mexicanon: May 9, 16, 23, 2013

STATE OF NEWMEXICO

COUNTY OF SANTA FEFIRST JUDICIAL

DISTRICT

No. D-101-CV-2012-03396

PNC BANK, NATIONALASSOCIATION, SUC-CESSOR IN INTERESTTO NATIONAL CITYREAL ESTATE SERV-ICES, LLC, SUCCESSORBY MERGER TO NA-TIONAL CITY MORT-GAGE, INC., FORMER-LY KNOWN AS NA-TIONAL CITY MORT-GAGE CO. DOINGBUSINESS AS COM-MONWEALTH UNITEDMORTGAGE COMPA-NY,

Plaintiff,v.

MARY M. JIMENEZAKA MARY MARTHAJIMENEZ, LISAGRIEGO TAPIA, STE-VEN J. VALDEZ,MICHA G. VALDEZ,PALISADES COLLEC-TION LLC ASSIGNEEOF HSBC, RICHARDJEROME TAPIA,SUNWEST BANK RIOARRIBA, SANTA FECOUNTY TREASURERAND THE STATE OFNEW MEXICO DE-PARTMENT OF TAXA-TION & REVENUE,

Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF SUITSTATE OF New Mexicoto the above-namedDefendants Mary M.Jimenez aka MaryMartha Jimenez, LisaGriego Tapia, RichardJerome Tapia.GREETINGS:You are hereby noti-fied that the above-named Plaintiff hasfiled a civil actionagainst you in theabove-entitled Courtand cause, the gener-al object thereof be-ing to foreclose amortgage on proper-ty located at 3048ALopez Ln, Santa Fe,NM 87507, Santa FeCounty, New Mexico,said property beingmore particularly de-scribed as:All of that certaintract of land asshown on plat enti-tled "Plat of Surveyfor Mary M. Jimenez acertain tract of landsituate within a por-tion S.H.C. 688, TR. 1 &S.H.C. No. 1244, Tr. 1,Section 6, T16N, R9E,N.M.P.M...", filed inthe office of theCounty Clerk, SantaFe County, New Mexi-co, on November 17,1997, in Plat Book 375,page 020, as Docu-ment No. 1003,168.

And all improve-ments, including butnot limited to, themanufactured homeattached thereto andmore particularly de-scribed as: VIN12521988AB

Unless you serve apleading or motion inresponse to the com-plaint in said causeon or before 30 daysafter the last publica-tion date, judgmentby default will be en-tered against you.

Respectfully Submit-ted,THE CASTLE LAWGROUP, LLC

By: /s/ __Steven J.Lucero__ Electroni-cally FiledElizabeth MasonKeya KoulSteven J. Lucero20 First Plaza NW,Suite 602Albuquerque, NM87102Telephone: (505) 848-9500Fax: (505) 848-9516Attorney for Plaintiff

NM12-02185_FC01

LEGAL#94275PUBLISHED IN THESANTA FE NEW MEXI-CAN MAY 16, 23, 30,2013Continued...Continued... Continued...Continued... Continued... Continued...

LEGALS LEGALSLEGALSLEGALS LEGALSLEGALS LEGALS LEGALSLEGALS

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Thursday, May 16, 2013 THE NEW MEXICAN B-11

Page 24: The Santa Fe New Mexican, May 16, 2013

B-12 THE NEW MEXICAN Thursday, May 16, 2013PEANUTS

LA CUCARACHA

LUANN

ZITS

BALDO

GET FUZZY

MUTTS

ROSE IS ROSE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

BABY BLUES

TUNDRA

RETAIL

STONE SOUP

PARDON MY PLANET

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS

NON SEQUITUR

KNIGHT LIFE

DILBERT

PICKLES

THE NEW MEXICAN WILL BE TESTING OUT SOME NEW COMIC STRIPS IN THE COMING MONTHS.PLEASE TELL US WHAT YOU THINK: EMAIL [email protected] OR CALL 505-986-3058

THE ARGYLE SWEATER